The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, September 26, 1916, Image 1

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KLAMATH COUNTY'!
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KLAMATH FALLS
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER
HcTfnlli Year-No. 0,100
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1916
Price, fir Owl
f
COMBLES IS CAPTURED BY THE BRITISH
IS KEY TO BAPAUME-PERONNE
BATTLE LINE OF THE GERMANS
VENIZELOS TO CALL
FOR MOBILIZATION
CHIKK OF STAFF OF TIIK OH KICK
ARMY RESIGNS
llrrlln Admit I'leice Drive of Allir
Ah'iiK the Soinine HrliiKM Frill of
Many Village, Although Allied
Low Are lleny Advniiee of III
Miles made lM nlKlit In West by
French and British Forres.
1'nllcd I'rw Servlco
LONDON. Kept. 20. Till after
Dcon (tic British forced caiiturcU Cora
hies, tlio key point lo llio (icrtiiuii
lUpauniolY'roiinu bnttlo lino.
A bailie tliat raged violently tor
eighteen hours preceded the capture,
which ullinlnatc.i one of tlio Inst two
obstacles lo I lie capture of Pcroutio,
tlio renl object it u uf tliu whole Hommo
illlcj otfehahe.
Tlii' capture of Conililos followed
the complete encircling of tlio towns
tr tlio llrltlnli army,
United Press Rorvlee
I'AUIH Kept SB. (iurmaii coun
terr ajtalnbt tlio now French posltlona
In the went Iiiim) been repulsed, tlio
French consolidating their gains. I
A Herman' ntt-ick between Thin
raount mid Floury iiIko has liocn ,
checked. ;
Nino (Ionium iicroptnncH bombard
ing French forillloil positions In tlio
west ore downed lnnt night.
trll-.l n r.
vimru itchh nervico i
ATHKNH. Kept 20. It h liollevcil .
that M. Vuiilzrhm will call n molill-.
Iwllon of nil Greek forces, when lie
reaches Crete. I
When lie heard yesterday nf Venl-
eloa' contemplated departure, KIiik,
Constantino roiifiirrf.il wIMi Hm urn.
mler. The result of their conferenro
' not announced.
It la ruinoiod that Voulxclos may
Immediately lend tliu revolutlonlRtH
Wlnst Constantino.
It la reported that (loncral Mosch
Piuloa, chief of staff ,ti8 resigned.
united PresH Service
BERLIN. Sept. 20. It Ih admit
ted that tliu nlCH havo cupturod vll
"lei In the tmlllle Sommo drive, Tho
Wile la moKt violent and tlio nlllod
l(s heavy,
United Press Servlco
LONDON. Sept. 20, The allies ftd
wed a8l n,Blll n n t,lrtwm.
M'le front.
The HrltlHh captured Morvuk nnd
wsbeuges and th0 French took Ran.
wirt and KrclBlncourt, nnd are now
jnwo n lulf m0 of Monto 8t Qucn.
I'Rlled PrrHR Service
.rfu1118, So"1- 36- The Dulgnrlnna
reaircetlnK powerful attacka agalnH
bu rrCnch l,u'ton8 nt Armenohr,
iw.. J." boon roBoi and are re
"nng disorderly.
Klerato,. Fall.; two KUlerl
l"'d Prea, Rprvco
ROCK I8LAND, Bopt. 26Two
K woro kl,lod und u,re '"J""'1
thi rT6"100" when the elevator In
tone, wngon fftCtory ro" vo
NEW EVIDENCE
DISCOVERED IN
BILLINGS CASE
MYSTERIOUS PHOTOGRAPHER IS
IXCATED, SAYS MeXUTT
On hiirngtli of Statements by Defend
iiiiI'm Attorney, Judge llunlie Con
tinues to KHliirihiy Paining of Sen
tence Fmiii Hillings for Murder.
Pullip Kity Witnesses llavo Hcoii
Threatened by .Mull.
United I'rcKM Service
SAN FltANCIHCO, Supt. 20 - Judgo
Dunne this moriilni; deferred until
next Saturday puhhIiik Huuteuro on
Warren miliums, convicted or murder
for Kottlng a homb duriiiK tlio pro
pnrcdncxii parade. The continuance
wnH granted upon the motion of At
torney McNutt for thn defenBe, who
declared that he him discovered new
evidence.
McNutt piomhiuil to deliver In
eourt tliu inyHtcrloiiH pliotograpliur
who wih on tho roof of a nearby
building at tho time of tint explosion
with A Decaiise, a waiter closely re
Hembllng llllllngH. Tlio protograplier
could not ho located during the trial.
HllllugH today honied a Htatomout
denying tho rumor that ho has offered
to COIlfCHH.
Tho pollco Hay Kovoral of tho Ktnlo'n
wltiiPHKeB received thiojtenlng letters
during the hoiub trial.
GRAND OFFICIALS
ID VISIT CAMP
UtVAh HHAXt'll F I. O. O. V. T()
F.XTKllTAIN TIIK IUNI FATIU
AHCH AND (JltAM) MAUSIIAL
NKXT Mt)XIAY
Uwnuna Kucampment No. M, I. O.
O. F., Ims boon notlllod thnt (irand
Patriarch Karl A. Wllilumaand Grand
Marshal It. V. Klrknntrlck will make
an offlclnl visit to Kwaunu Kncnrop
mont next' Monday night.
At tho regular mooting of tho En
campment tonight preparations will
be made to rocolvo tho worthy broth
era, and all members of tho camp aro
requested to attend tho session to
night In order to assist In planning
the reception.
Tho meeting Ib colloid to order at
8 o'clock, and tho Chief Patriarch ox
posta to seo all mombora In their
chnliu this ovcnlng.
New Maine Governor
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j CARL. E.MILLIrCg?"!
TIiIh Is n snapshot of Carl 10. Milli
ken, the new republican governor of
Maine. Managers of tlio HiighcH cam
liiign liislit that his election by a maj
ority of ia.000 IndUutcH tho country
will go republican in November.
DUCK SEASON
OPENS SUNDAY
yUAIIi ALSO MAY UK KILMvl),
XKXT SUNDAY, HUT ONLY FOK
Ti:. OAYH MANY PAHTIKH TO
CiO OUT SUNDAY
The report of shotguns will give a
ring to thn air next Sunday morning
long before many good people will bo
out of bed. Tho guus will bo heard
along tho livers, tn tho lakos nnd
marshes and oif tho hills.
Tho occasion will bo tho opening
simultaneously of tho duck and quail
season. For tho water birds tho soa
son will be open until January 15th,
but It will bo lawful to kill quail In
Klamath county only until October
10th.
Allitough somo small lakes nnd
ponds in tho country south of Klam
ath Falls havo boon drlod up this
jour, there aro probably us mauy, If
not more, ducks this yenr than havo
'icon heio for boiuo timo. In tho wa
tors around Upper Klamuth Lnko the
ducks aro reported to bo very plenti
ful, nnd most or tho hunting parties
being made up for next Sunday prob
ablo will go to thoso waters.
Quail also aro reported as plenti
ful, the country east of Bonanza to
lingull Valley being particularly
good torritory for these birds.
Von Jagow Visits Gerard
United Piess Bervtce
BERLIN, Sept. 20. Following the
visits by Herr von Jagow, foreign
minister, und other officials, It Is re
ported that Ambassador Gorard may
cluitgo his plan to eatf to America
soon. Tho nature of these vUlta Is
not revealed.
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'S''SP''VS'S''''I''''
SAYS PROSPERITY
MUST NttI DEPEND
UPON WAR ORDERS
O. O. P. NOMINKK CANNOT FILL
iKK CANXf
ALL UF.gUKSTH TO BPKAK
If
In Ohio Campaign In Giving Much At
tention to AuierlraiiiMiii ami Tariff.
In Making 8c em I AddrewteH Daily,
und Receive DciimihIm for More.
Throat Improve Under Care of
j
Spcclalixt.
United Press Servlco
TOLEDO, 8cpt. 26. "American
piosperlty must be put on an endur
ing basis, and must nut have to de
pend on war orders," said Charles
Evans Hughes in 'his speech here to
day. Amorlcanism ind the tariff con
tinue to take up':biost of the time of
tho republican .standard bearer in the
Ohio campaign. .Dally he Is receiving
many demands to deliver speeches In
Ohio towns. The people everywhere
In this state are anxious to hear him.
lie is now making from seven to ten
speeches daily. J
Mr. Hugbcsx trrfoat Is 'much better
today, duo to the constant care of a
specialist.
CALIFORNIA TO
BUILD JEW ROAD
WILL RUN FROM REDDING TO AL
TURAS, TOUCHING AT RIE1IKR,
FROM WHERE THE ROAD TO
KLAMATH FALLS IS GOOD
A new route cor automobiles from
Oregon Into tlio Sacramento Valley
will bo opened by the California stats
highway commission, according to an
nrtielo in the San Francisco Exam
iner. Tho new road will run from
Redding to Alturas by way of Blober
und Aden, across the Sierra Nevadns.
According to tho article, tho new
route into California will bo open
twelve months in tho year, and will
permit travel from Southoru Oregon
into California when other routes are
practically impnssablo becauso of
snow and rain.
Autoa from Klamath Falls can
make uso of the now highway by go
ing from hero to Straw, from Straw to
Blcber and from Bleber to Redding;
thence to Sacramento and San Fran
cisco. COUNCIL HOLDS
SHORT SESSION
PETITION TO VACATE PROPERTY
PASSED TO SECOND READING,
AND PERMITS GRANTED TO IN
STALL SCALES
Tho city council met last evening
for only a few minutes, and then ad
journed to permit the members,
Mayor Crlsler and Police Judge Lea
vitt to attend tho republican rally.
Before adjournment was takan,
however, the petitioner Klamath De
velopment company for vacation of
certain stroets and lota In Shipping
ton addition was passed to the second
reading.
J..C. Rutenio was granted a permit
to Install wagon scales at his ware
house on Sixth street,
LAW MAKERS ASK
GOVERNOR FOR A
SPECIAL SESSION
WANT TO PASS LAWS TO AVERT
IMPENDING WALKOUT
Governor Whitman Is Said to Be Op
hncI to Special Sewdon Ruihling
Trades Unions to Strike In Sympa
thy, Hut Not Until Thursday, Say
Leaders Attacks by Strikers on
Elevated and Surface Cnra Continue
United Pro3s Service
NEW YORK, Sept. 20. Members
of the New York legislature Intend to
nsk Governor Whitman this afternoon
to call a special session of the legisla
ture to pass laws to prevent a strike
of all union men employed on street
cars in New York city tomorrow
morning.
It is understood that Governor
Whitman does not favor a special ses
sion. All men employed in building
trades in the Manhattan district will
not walk out until Thursday, eay the
leaders of these unions.
Tho lsts of the various unions
whoso members will strike Is encour
aging to the strikers' cause, yet" the
number who will cease work will not
be so large as first announced.
Attacks by union men on the ele
vated and surface cars continue, and
aro becoming more numerous and
more violent.
KLAMATH FALLS
MENAT RALLY
TWO CARS OF LOCAL CITIZENS
WILL HEAR THE G. O. 1. TALK
AT THE FORT KLAMATH RALLY
TONIGHT
Two carloads of Klamath Falls cit
izens left this afternoon for Fort
Klamath with Honorable Wallace Mc
Cumaut of Portland, to take part in
tho republican rally there tonight.
Sheriff Low is taking in his car
County Clerk De Lap, C. K. Branden
burg, republican candidate for circuit
court clerk; Thnt McHattan, repub
lican caudidate for county commis
sioner; W. M. Duncan, democratic
candidate for district attorney; A. M.
Sutton and Forrest Poll.
lu the other car are Mr. McCamant,
County Chairman A. U Yeavitt, J. S.
Kent, republican candidate for dis
trict attorney; W. H. A. Renner and
Roy Moore.
Reply Is Received
United PresB Service
WASHINGTON. D. C. Sept. 26.
Tho reply of tho Austrian government
to President Wilson's appeal for a
Polish relief agreement was received
today, and has boen forwarded to the
president.
m
Ijccate Mining Claims.
Affidavits of locatton of mining
claims on the Upper Deschutes havo
been filed with the county clerk by
F. D. Swingle, Oliver H, Swingle. H.
F. Swingle, R. A. Dozler, S. L. Ben
nett and A. M. Swingle.
Chiloquln Merchant Visits.
E. H. HoBley, who conducts the gen
eral merchandise store at Chiloquln,
Is spending a few days In Klamath
Falls on business,
DEMOCRATS HAVE
BROKEN PLEDGES
SPEAKER AT RALLY CRITICIZES
WILSON ADMINISTRATION
Points Out That Democrats Have
Killed to Keep Many of Their Sol
emn Obligations to People a Set
Forth in Platform Says Wilson
on Both Sides of Some Qaestions
and on Wrong Side of Others.
The failure of the democratic party
to keep its platform pledges, the weak
policy of Woodrow Wilson towards
Mexico and his lack of a positive and
determined stand on the big Issues
before the American nation were ably
set forth last evening by the Honor
able Wallace McCamant of Portland
at the republican rally that opened
the 1916 campaign In Klamath
county.
Mr. McCamant was heard by a good
sized audience that gave him close at
tention and greatly appreciated his
remarks- He Is a speaker of ability
and happily combines earnestness and
elegance with logic. His speech was
so effective that one nOtabToTCiamalh
county democrat- was heard to say
after the address:
"That man made some mighty good
points, if he Is a republican."
Mr. McCamant opened his address
by stating common ground on which
all true Americans can meet and
agree.- These were Americanism, love
of country,, desire for its prosperity,
jealousy for its honor, fulfillment of
party pledges.
On the last point the speaker laid
particular stress and showed con
clusively and clearly that the Wilson
administration had played false to the
American people by neglecting and
refusing to carry out these pledges In
the 1912 platferm:
Single term for the president.
Discontinuance of extravagance.
Lowering of the high cost of living.
Executive interference with legis
lation. Rehabilitation of the American
merchant marine.
Lowering of the tariff.
Making of ability, and not political
standing, the standard for appoint
ment to office.
Protection to citizens of America.
As to tho point made by Democratic
campaign speakers that Woodrow
Wilson has kept the United States out
of war, Mr. McCamant said in part:
"So far as the European war Is
concerned, I don't see how any presi
dent could have broken Into that war.
No power In Europe wants war with
the United States, and no power in
Europe has given us a cause for war.
But the president has not kept us out
of war. We have had war with Mex
ico; Inglorious, ignoble, Ineffective
war, but war beyond all peradventure.
Reflect on the Tamplco and the Car
dial incidents and consider it that is
not war."
The main trouble with Woodrow
Wilson's Mexican policy as set forth
by Mr. Camant Is not so much that it
has been vacillating or meddlesome,
but that the president has had the
wrong point of view.
"Instead of giving protection to
American lives and property in Mex
ico, be has tried to run the Mexican
government, to settle the agrarian
problem, with neither of which he bad
any business, nor any success," said
the speaker. "Mr. Hughes has the
proper point of view for American
leadorshtp. His slogan Is: America
first: America efficient."
Mr. McCamant was severe In his at
tack on the democratic argument that
the Wilson administration has passed
much benlflcent legislation. In turn
he showed that the rural credits law,
the antl-dumplng act, the child labor
law, the Adamson eight hour law and
the federal reserve act were wholly
ineffective measures, unworkable and
passed only to gain votes on Novem
ber 7th.
On the other hand, Mr. McCamant
pointed out the legislation passed by
republican congresses' such aa the
public land laws under which the
West had been settled and Joined with
the East, the establishment of the
credit of the American government,
the national Irrigation systems and
the building of the Panama canal. To
show Charles E. Hughes can follow In
the footsteps of his republican prede
cessors in law making, the speaker re
ferred to the insurance laws passed In
New York when Mr. Hughes was gov
ernor of that state.
Attacking the vacillating policy of
Woodrow Wilson on nearly all polit
ical Issues, Mr. McCamant said:
"President Wilson will stand out In
American history as the president
who has been on both sides of many
of the public questions of the day,
end on the wrong side of the re
mainder." He referred to Woodrow
Wilson's flop on the questions of pre
paredness, an impartial tariff com
mission, organized labor, initiative
and referendum, protective tariff, and
many others.
"Both tbe republican and demo-
eratte-partles-naTe-beem'ee-Tttt-r11!
side of all political questions at tome
time," said Mr. McCamant "The dif
ference between the two parties has
been that the republican party was on
the right side at the right time. The
democrats have been on the right side
after republican brains and repub
lican leaders have solved the great
questions. Was not the democrats
wrong on tbe question of slavery, on
Lincoln himself, on the green back
question, on the 16-to-l money pol
icy? No longer do they stand as they
did once. Apparently they have been
able to get on the right aide only
after the way had been cleared by the
party founded over half a century ago
and which has guided this nation al
most continually since the time of
Lincoln."
Mr. McCamant closed hidjjrass
by drawing a clear cut 'coapertpon
between the policy of the republican
party toward Cuba, and the Philip
pines and that of-the present admin
istration toward Mexico. "
"Early in the-administration of
President McKinley we were con
fronted with conditions of distress
and disorder on the Island of Cuba.
The aspirations of the people of Cuba
for freedom from the Spanish yoke
had borne fruit In a revolt as brave
and heroic as that of our forefathers
who had fought at Bunker Hill aud
Saratoga. In her effort to put down
this revolution the measures of Spain
wero as cruel and ruthless as In the
dayb of tbe Spanish Inquisition. Tho
republicans who wero in power at
that time wero big Americans; they
believed that tbe American people
had some responsibility for happen
ings Immediately beyond their fron
tier. They resented the destruction
of American property in Cuba, and
especially tho death of American sail
ors In Havana harbor.
"With strong arm and stout heart
they won deliverance for Cuba and
took up the white man's burden in
Porto Rice and the Philippines. In
all the history of political achieve
ment there Is no chapter more credit
able thau that which tolls the story of
American intervention in Cuba., and
the American government of Porto
Rice and tbe Philippines. It tells of
the restoration of law- and order; of
sanitary triumphs, unparalleled;: .of
yellow fever stamped, out ejtf .lerefy,
on tbe run; of schools in every settle
ment: of enlarged vision and .oeper-
tunity to peoples who had beenwUkr, Y.$
out hope." , - :&(
"In contrast reflect on the pltaWe .
condition .of Mexico today,, alter, $ Tf
rni,r vfiBm of Woodrow wnson. twb . (,y,
. ... ii. ., T.sih 7tfc am ;'
go u mo j " - .viwfl
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