The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, February 06, 1914, Image 1

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ttintftu literal?
KLAMATH FALLS'
PRINTS THE
NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS
OFFICIAL NI5WSPAPKR
- "ar .rxs
"wl'll Vc-r ' "
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY G, 1914
As Result of Supreme Court's Rule,
Saloon Problem May Go on Ballot
SIIPRFMECOURT'S
ncniQinu riuf$.
CITY BIG POWER
turn w:ijiit
t
jMikrtUVlit II..I.1. 1lit All MtthM.
ulllW lln I"' HUM l HrMM
a (itftl Kl'-" l.llrtt, tl TtMt
,r IKUcUU It" IHetll Al
. U0"Ur" lliiin-
UMf H(tluH all J-r lb" tAl U)
t 4btoo handed itun ty lt u
fif(u tii Ttii conirnd llti ll
cnU kt tbc iuhl ,li lrr
fMUr b c nr ( bdmclil or lijr
i trie ff ihi oonrll In tlM !
fust fc atull lltrlur.
Amt!(r,e l llm tlc"jlllir cllj
i WoloUlr lent.ip Uv la option
!,! lit" rtttl:l-ttt JyfPrl ttl t
s,tjff it ti iynini, ? ttirtt
t(!l?(j tUilrt Jl.jtl option
U, gii ii 111 MthMMinVtv HrM
t( (Ulcin to Aittct-.'l II rhaUrf t
lifoltU llsv U'rnMus lit .aliHIII
llctloft Ibn tbrtif iMwdtl
fwo in . rlljr ' ! " n in hold
t rltlotl )htliT lltr lll Option
U In.VuutaUcr If a rlly vl"
4k n rlrflimi might be It n t tt rati)
jw fetit If dry," only ptr i
)MI I htlcf lb n-ali)ll render!.
ur, ft tlty mn tie voted "Mry" t
l) lift by It resident AUU-ndlUg tU
tttitf forbidding Dm Hr.pume iif
"llj tho home rulo amendment to
the rtinilllutinri a municipality linn
tli (ululp power to llrrni, cn
ol n4 prohibit tl.o ,n of luioxl
"lice lliuur., (( i .ball b a
tiJU Id tho titmlnlun of llio UxaI
ftMlfin U," nr Ju,Kn Kaklu, In tltt
4kUb ThU ilor noi man ihm,
b; the (kI tiilnii plrtllnu lln I'imi
H Miwfr to rotuiwl rlty l
llrni tdr win of llijuorn. Much nn
ltlon itrirnnlitm only whether or
t't II pIirII irohlbllrit frulll llrrn.
Ii ll tumliir, but, If thn oli r
ll ralnt tifohlbltlon, no orlr
tbl bs ImumI by tho county court
Htm no to u, ftp 4,r iiriiblblllou
;h l" f llquoni; ttiRt Ii, m to
(Continued nn )
Fraud Is Charged in Suit
Argraves Says Deed Was
A1Ik1mk that the deed by which
'' Irniufeiriiil tho jnp lleiiuutt"
fifli in Alexander K. Dynr wiw up
fuii'd and utooiitatl by fraud nml
"fiiKli iiilsrniirespiilittliiHM, IJ. (I. Ar
l"U' loilny romineiiied suit to luttv
ll liinlriiiiieni snt nnldo, ArKravim
riUiri.sente.1 ,y y. , Hlmw mid
Arllmr l, n,iy
Arirnve lust y,'r hooiuciI tho linn
"It rami, on tin, Mlillnml road on it
', whurohy ho doeilod lUmnotl Ilia
AfrvrH rooiulng I0MU,
Atrordliiit In thu iiimpliiliit, while
' OnkUiui last full ho uuKotlutod
'" Ali.,l((,r P) l)yuri nm 10 two
'trfcod to mko u ,rui0( DyBr 0 b!vo
rrYes u dee,) t0 u i7.nt.ro um
w resort In tho Hnitla Crui moun
"ww, lu return (or a deed to tho Hon-
i. mmmmmmm
JURY FINDS HANS
SCHMIDT GUILTY
I'nt'itiMi niitr ttjr i'u 1111;
iMuni fi;N,in loit tin;
Kll.l.lSii ,MI IHHMCMIII.'ltlM;,
!' VIM NU UOM.W
tt'nlltil Vim H-nlri i
', N'UW WUlh IVU . flic Jury rmi,U",,' "' T,''"" Will mum IliU
,airiii ii id,, iriat or ifatu rtcbmliltl i:roliis, It U luri.-.! IV,l..wl
lunri rr.trnlflj aflnlliooil llli a I ,. ., ., . , , ., .
i.ntiti f ulli of itiufilcriite Anna I
IUn , linililt
A Ho Al'lwt.tn In Jolt
Aumullor. ttiul r hAcklnc brr
body to ilcct. thtuliiB ihc pin-"- lu
thn lluil.on Ithrr.
Tine riHci 'r nml drjrcf
iiiuntpr Thl MwHii diAth lu tb
plnctrlc clialr,
tichmtdt'A cilmc mi" of thr
inom horrlblp c-r committed lu .NV'
York. He w wI"K Cuthnllc
nrip.t. nml hpn Arrclct fclsmM In-
Mull). Iiik Ht. KlUnballi command-
nt him n itiftVo hunitin nArrinro
II) l'll)lilK Hnrkt
lr. h !. TniAx Iib ruiuincd from
n ojuurn f nrnl wwV In tli'
Mlddlii Wwl, KlnlUrttb i-tlll tool.
1ml to Mm.
Il niiiijrAiit,c lu tbo llrrnld In n
toitchrr for lt rt'llnblllty-
Falsely Securedby Dyar
It was mutually ngroed, according
tu tho lompliilut, thul thu two should
rnnsuinmiilo tho ilonl Insldu of stip
ulated fourteen da). '" 'hnl t',l,,
should sign u wnrrnnty deed, Hiving
his proporty to tho other, which deudii
wero lo bo placed lu oncrow, nu Oak
laud teal online uimi in rl ""'
illnn.
Argmves iiIIikh Unit ho curried
out hl part of tho agreement, but
Unit ut Um cmd of tho fourteen dn)
ho was told that Dynr refused to closn
tho dual. Argraves nllcgus that IiIh
iIimjiI was not iitturned to him, despllo
lIlllllllUdH,
Tho dood wns nfteiwnrds recorded
hero, nml, a Mhorl tlnui iu;o, Dynr, by
a bargain nml biiIo iIihmI, trnnaforrcd
thu tltlo to tho properly to Mnwle M.
Souuirs. Ho seos huvo u,0lia
deeds set aside,'
.. .. -i-l,-y-ir,nin.rw-Mvuvxnru'uxrur
REBELS CREEPING
CLOSER TO GOAL
QUIET IN CITIES!
.Minuets mmscs
ItCAIMMSs
iti: in
ruilrtl, mikI Hliljn hrol In r lti
Irrtli fin ltr' ,l1ililonllill VtiU
I
: mil Hllt MUllit'lirit ll) I'llliw ll'l.
tUi,.(rt I ,,.. ricrrlru
I WAHiitNtrro.s. i c. tvti ,
SKiulMtoj JM-H'Ihi) S',-I,iiu O'HttAtiKb-
Utr)' hnit mn 4 l'ltli!rril WIl.iiii timi
tin atiti .icti ft .it: U all quirt In
l 11(41. II" tdt tht llffp U Al-
iilKlr i-o Ill fi-llnr. : a rrult of
tilt li'UMMRi nT tKf rlllllJIlt
MllrMM. SK-lllilltie N (r.'haUKlllilSf
. I Ui(irlhe o IA llr AKKfr-
1hi Ktrt'iictli of lil nriny lu the
fMJ ll t'ri-n tIlll!l.l'Uril tl ri'lf
urtiMlou
t nlirl 'tti Mrtlif
UAH'MM.rO.V. I. C. Vb. C
I'lr.lililtl Wilton toJ,) licit lr Ail) In
Irllll ill of lUtfMrtltlou
TJir tiarrlne lartli.tin will lm ivr
inutr.t tu neht It obi vliboui Inter
ufiimii ii) lit li olt 'll,
miptl l'rcA Snrvlr
VKItA CUV. Kob. .- It l rciiirl-
1 Ihft. AinbatnAilor l.lnd Iiak tulJ
'tllrnil (bnl l'rrlilcnl Wllnon rained
(lit! (inbarso to tlxo .blli IJt? a
cbnuro to tlRbl U out. ThU will drill
oimirntti Mblrli i th troui;vr.
Tbo fnU-tal EunboAt ZarnKotu tin
U'Aiii up, mid lll nail to NVu Or
Iran for Arm nml nmmuulllon.
! (lulled l'rc Hertlc
Cllllll'AHl'A. Fob. ti. -Tbo rbcU
Imlu) occupy lli-rmljlllo, forty uiltiw
north of Torrtiin, uboro tbo fi'dornl
oiitnl vim KnrrlKonpil until a .wrok
iiK.
' VIIIh lutilidi to ortupy Mnilnn.
Cobnu'l t'rblnu In In rbnrKo of thi
llori'l' Kl'lll IO I1UIK1' IIH' lUlillK.
( ! II
Mllillcd I'lrM Service
M CMl'U CITV, l-Vb. ! Th rcbolii
tin' clonliiK In on Trtuiplco. Tbo do-
cIhIxp Imttlo I cH'ftil thin evening.
Tho fedcrnlN Iuinu bnrrlcndoit tbo
irlurlinl ulriM'tn, to hi'lp tho dofenno.
' Mnrliifa ftom four Amorlcnn Ar
mIiIii hh hold In roadlm1 to rciu
tho foiolKiicru
SAYS A. CASTEL
IS NOT DEAD
MrVTKIt OF HIS F1HKT WII-'K SAVh
Itl'.l'OHT OF HIK NtMCIDK IS UN.
KUINinCD, AXD THAT IXHIMHH
' m:siiii:xT is Aiiivi:
Thul Autono Castel, former county
suivoyor, postmiiHtur, cuuncllmuu nml
brower In this city, Is not dwfd, but
i alive, and sho knows'hl wlieio-
iibouts, Is tho nuuounroment uiiidu by
.?,U. Stella l,liperfvrfJlhlslty, Mih.
ii.imiori Is tho HlHttr iifOar. Cnstol's
llrul W'lfii.
I It wiih ronortod hero.hroughT
ter from California, .tluit Castel had
milled bin lfo with Hv pistol. Mrs.
l.lpKrt ay that this In wrong, but
IiisIhIh sho Is not nt liberty to tell of
his whoronbouts.
i'iiririiiiiririiiriiVir -i-i-w i-i- rrrnrrmnri"i-nr-i-nrv i-i-i-f,Wi-ri-T-i-i"i"i"""
Guy Biddinger Suggested as New
Chief of Detectives for New York
If '. JMIlkmp RH
Ni:w VOIlK, Feb. C -Guy lllddlu-.
Ker, now nMlsiant Kenernl mauager of j
tho llurtm dctctho agency nnd head!
of the bureau of criminal luvestlga-'
tlon, was slated by Mayor Mltchel for
iroml ili-min iinllco commissioner
and chief of tho drtectlvo bureau, nc-J
cording to report. If Mr. Ulddlngor
U Appointed to this plnro he will head
Mho tarKrsl dotcctlvo force In the
jworl.f-i'Jiu'pl ttuii at Scotland Yard.
'Sliico the dotcctUe force has beeu ut-l
terly domorallred for the past twoi
yeurs, ho llt luive tho work of recon
structing It. I
Mr. Ulddtnger bus been uno of Wll-I
Hum J. Ilurus' moHt valued men, hav
I UK tlgured Importnutly In the Mo-Xa-muru
rase. He tmd Ilaymond J. Hums, I
the delect he's sou, worked on It to
gether. In Detroit bo arrested J. J.j
McNmnnrn, mid It was tllddlngur who
turn lu chnrge of tho trip of J. 1). Mc
J.'i muni to l.os Angeles, when tboj
'liuriiH mon were accused of huvlugl
Klilunppcd tho labor leader.
I Ho uas born lu Clnclnuntl In 1S75. j
uud was appointed to the Chicago po
lice force by Major Harrison alter a
'civil iicrvlco examination. On his1
fourth da) lu uniform ho arrested a
bunch of dangerous negro hold-up
men, niul was mndo u dctectlvo at
'once. Later he took three dangorous
bank suoitkH. uud fur that ho was
mndo u dotcctlvo sergeant. Klght
eurs hko ho Ma nmde u civil service)
jdetecllvo sergeant, and lu thul posl-
Hon ho had many exciting exporloneen(
lu Chicago.
Four years ago ho woul to tho
(Hums agency. Ho had more to do!
with tho McXnmnru enso than to run
down tho .MeNiuniiruB, for ho It wu
who supplied tho strongest ovldcuco
iigulnst Clartmco S. Harrow, tho labor
lawyer, who wiih tried for bribery.
I Aimi)iiti fmiiniitt ensn was that of
o seven tnembers of tho West Vir
ginia legislature who were trapped In
bribery lu thu contest which rosultcd
lu the election of Judgo Ooff to thu
United State senate. He worked with
llrun In the trapping of u,v .er
men of Atlantic City who accepted
bribes.
Illddlngcr Is a large, keen man of
tlerlos cuercy. He knows the detect
ive business as well a any man ou the
Now York force. It he becomes chief
of It the detectives will have to work,
and In tho way that has made William
J Hums successful.
CIVIC CENTER TO
COST MILLIONS
I'HIiaDKl.l'lllA WU.Ii D1SHUH.SK
t)UUTi:KX .MlUilOX DOl.IiAltS
IX Ml'.MCll'AIi HU1I.DIXGS JUST
l'ANXKD
United I'ress Service
FHILADKM'HIA. Fob. 0, Four
teen millions of dollars will bo spont
by Philadelphia in the erection of
public buildings, to comprise what Is
claimed will bo tho most uotublo
Kioup of municipal structures lu tho
world, according to plans nearlng
completion today.
Starting nt tho city hall, tho build
ings will be erected aloug n broad
parkway, with tho muulclpal art gal
lory at one ond and a temple of Jus
tice at tho other.
Other structures will bo a central
llbiary, central munuul training
Hchnol, Franklin Institute. American
Philosophical Society building, and a
school of Industrial art.
Tho muntclpul nrt gallery und the
tumple of Justice will cost 13,000,000
each, and the central library S,500,
000. Tho school of Industrial art la
to cost U.000,000.
EAST SWEPT BY
A CHILL WAVE;
UNDERMINE ZERO
SLV IlKMnV AT OMAHA AT .VOOXJ
TODAY
Or.nr Fear N Felt for Um; Calllr All!
Hit I lie Middle WcaI At Drnter,
i lie Mercury ItetcbtcrrJ SJttrt-o Ue-i
lor Zto .Vctirm!, the Iakotaa
nl U'jooilng Are Hit, aad la Some
1'larm, Tu nil j -Too llt'low.
United I'reu hernc
j CHICAGO. Vth. 6. A coU vrr
lurid blizzard I srcepliig tbo lllddlc
'.lt- In 3cry ;rery Itntance tht
Whtrtuometcr U far below ero.
The tor in and cold ware U accom
,pauft'd by snow. Trains a're delayed,
and much suffering U feared.
United lreasSntce
OMAHA. Fob. C At noon the ther
orametcrs registered six below zero.
This evening. It U predicted. It will
drop to ten below.
The poor of the city are In a plta
blo condition, and there Is clamorlujf
f for aid.
' A northwest wind prevails, and
.there Is much snow.
' The cold wave Is general all orer
Nebraska, the Dakota and lower Wy
oming. In Wyoming, near the moun
tains tbo mercury Is 22 below.
It Is feared that much stock will be
lost. Trains are delayed.
Some of tho Nebraska temperatures
below xero follew:
Cbadron 29. Scotts Uluff 20. Long
lne IS. Valentine 18, O'N'elll 1C.
United Freas Service
DKXVER. Feb. 6. This morning
tho thermometer registered 16 below
sero. This is the coldest wave of the
winter.
Going to Arizona.
C. V. Hodge, who has been dolnt;
stenographic work here for several
mouths past. Is planning to go to
Arlzoua or Texas. He will leave In a
few days.
Heal estate untaxed and ownod by
religious and charitable bodies In
Philadelphia Is valued at about $230,-000,000.
Can Perpetuate Range
Government Has Plan to Restore Grazing Areas
That a serious decline In the carry-1
lltf s-4'V1jJ We IUOV eseva nmvtj
grazing lands, duo largely to the fact
that stockmen fall to give the rango
plants a chance to keep growing, can
bo remedied without closing these
ureas to cattle nnd sheep, is tho state
ment made by tho department of agri
culture tu a bulletin recently Issued
on' range Improvement. Excessive
grating In the spring before the for
ago crop Is mature, and such grating
continued yoar after year, says the
department, are the main causes of
rango deterioration.
On tho national forests, tho de
partment points out, where the gov
ernment Is doing away with these
evils, and stock la handled under gov
ernment regulation, the range laadi
have Improved to a point where It la
again possible to market large num
COUNCIL MAY BE
ASKED TO PLACE
ISSUE ON BALLOT
DATE FOR LXmATTVE miKO
! HAS EXnaJED
Xctrn of the tUUas by tk 8Uto'
HicbcM Cort In CmmwI lYlbii
to Take Rcawwed Utcrcat am ak
QomUo of HHbmlUfaaS taw MattT
to the Voters of Klaavilh rail ter
Tbelrl
There la stilt some chance of the
saloon question being injected lato
the municipal campaign la May. aa a
result of the ruling of the aiipraaM
court.
It Is more than possible that the
city council will be aaked to subaalt
to the people at the election a propos
ed amendment to the charter, forkld-
ilng the issuance of saloon licensee,
I
ThU will Receive conalderatioa at
'once from those who seek to have the
clty Join the "dry" ranks.
A short Uaae ago a pTsimf-stty.
'ordinance, prohibiting the ante at
liquor In Klamath Falls was drawm
up and an initiative petiUon was cir
culated, to have the ordinance aab
'mltted to tht people at the May
tlon for their approval or rejection.
Arthur Wilson and Edmuad M.
Chtlcote were at the city hall Monday
night to Ole the petitions with the
council, but as six members of the
council were not present, there was
not a quorum, aad no ateetlns was
held. Instead of tnslstina- on a flllnf
being made then, tas ceauatttss
withdrew tho petition. Baser the ml
ing of the local optloa law that the
matter be voted on at November elec
tions, and as announcement was made
that this would not he placed before
the voters.
Since the rutins or the supreme
court has become known, those fos
tering the "dry" movement are recon
sidering. Tho withdrawal of the Ini
tiative petlUon has removed this
source of getting the question oa the
j ballot, as the law provides that petl
' tlons of this kind must be Bled ninety
days before the date of the election.
Instead, It is understood, the ques
tion of inking the council to plsce the
Question oa tho hallot In the form ot
a charter amendment Is being con
sidered. bers of beet and mutton animals di
rectly from tho range.
In the "free-for-all' period ot early
days, tho department goes on to say,
tho most palatable forago plants were
so closely cropped that they were un
able to develop the necessary plant
food, and so literally tarved. In ad
dition, the roots were frequently In
jured by trampling or killed from
exposure. As a result tsa at klass
cf vegetation grew weaker trass sea
son to season, aad where the prattlee
of early and close grating waa coaUa
tied, the rango at last became prac
tically denuded.
The vegetation which tarnishes the
grating crop has much the aaaM
growth requirements as a tern srsf .
No farmer who hops U MaMijsas)
(Continued
I)
Av