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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1920)
(pje Suimmg Mtmlh oi'i'iri.Ui I'.ti'im 01 KLAMATH IWI.I.H OFFICIAL I'APKR OP KLAMATH COUN'TV m Fourteenth Year No, 3809 KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1920 Price, Five Ceate TEXT OF BILL THAT SEC UK ! OREGON LEADS IN BUYING W. S. S.. 1919 BLOCKING 'Klamath Post AitupU ItnMilullon fur Amendment of Promt Hill, r Hiiblllution of Another Compel. HUB I'liMrr Company 1 Dike. MAN' FIIANCIHCO. Jn 3 Oregon led the Twelfth federal reserve illntrlrt arid wan fifth mining nil state am territories In tin amount of government ar sovlng certificates pur chased during 19I. the district federal rmorn bank announced I oil ay Tim sain for tbe entire country won more thou 124.-000.000 I ! SERVICE IN CO-OPERATE FOR F I BY RANCHING FORESTS. 1S2I -: 'HEARS FROM FAMILY I AFTER FOUR YEARS 1 STAKE TIN Anion by Franklin K. Lane, see- trrtarr of the Interior, has teutporar ID blocked congressional action on 5 bill rcsturing to entry iwamaiu BLY TEACHER DOES NOT FEAR HARDSHIP COLTON. Cal. Jan 3 - ThU la a tory of how two younic ex-ervle! ! HAN FIIANCIHCO, Jnn. 3 "Four! medium of protection for the Call-, lored one men, one from the navy ami Urn olh-j fornla forest am! timber region on er from the army, niacin 117. 00. 42 the Pacific lopo have united and will Jthru l month of hard work nnd o-operate on a Klieantic cnle during, iirnwu iraoing since umy leu on. the year 13Z0." After being cut off from all communication with bin family for three year and ten months, Ambrose TIachlor, a tailor employed by tne Klamath Dye Work, recelred New year7 tiding thai gave blm greater joy tlian anything else could have done the good word that all J well with the In Austria. The family consist of the wife and four children, and during nearly three year of i the war period and up until New ! ! ! FIVE THOUSAND ', REDS TAKEN IN NATIONAL RAID i . I Federal Ofrirrm Draw String of uragnct .Spread Over WboJo United State- and Capture Kaay Radicals Deportation PromUod. their uniform and put on overall. Thl U the announcement of Paul The young men are ChnUer Hart- Itedlnglon. frilled Mate District (Thn Oregonlan ) Thai Oregon teacher, am loyal to their calling and valiant In ovor-1 ley, 33. formerly In the navy, and til brother. Charlo. 21, formerly oldlr They are son of Mr. and !. ketunty mrh land, according ,comlne obstacle, that .u, In tllO Washington dispatches The secretery: way f fulfilling their dutle wi IIim announced ho will wlthold any (demonstrated effectively by Mis Mr Knth Hartley, of lhl city. They wore discharged from the Forester of the California District, who ha completed the organization of the four unit on a co-operative basis for timber conservation. TheAe medium are: The state for-i Yer' flayt thr-e yeaj and ten month In all the husband and father had not a line to tell him how they fared. Now that ho knows that they arc all alive and well, be I plan- nine to bring them to Amer- service -rly lal March. They took; enter working under the direction of. lea. According to the letter, factum on the bill by hi department funill after the hearing of thn claim Jiif thn American t-eglun a to why 10.- !f000 acre of t'tiper Klamath 1-ako Uiaroh land should not b teased for term of 30 year to Doak llrown. In consideration of dlklnis and drain Une the area llolnw la the bill In produced by Mr Hlnnott on lecem r 30 and referred by Congress to tbe Public l.nd. romtulttcMj A bill to restore to entry eortaln land In Klamath County. Origan. fund for other purto, chareo April 1 of the Tropica Itancho o. M. Homan; theAVctern Forentry lkilll)l nt f'itfnn ntt n nilrrlin&M n.. ...... r. u..i- a f.f.- a Jlrlted little -..-.., .... .. ,.-.w..... ...,-, nu vudwiiuuuii vimtKiaiiun, innuc leache at llly.!,r"fl c,4n,",r hai1 u"tt "mPlo',rd " up of all of the timber Interest and an on company iwiore ne enierco uiej ,,orklng under the direction of C 8. service and ho returned to work for; chapman; the Federal forester, un lit no he and hi brother rnnlil havn .i- t...i n ii-.- -.i . .i. . lUeellnC llll " l'- l ! nnillHIWI. u u M wr.,,- d through .now drift I mon",r lo mr'rl lU" 1w f "";ice of the army, working under the 30 mile, on a .led and!"nch n,rl"1 bcam manager of direction of Colonel H. H. Arnold. inn rncu aiwui iv ncnw. Welern Department nlr service offl- Thoy planted the land to sweet Ccr. corn At the end of the sea.on theyi Director Itedlngton. who recently had harve.trd and .old more than succeeded C. du Hoi, who was tran- 300.000 ear or corn, having up Klltaboth Key., tedagogu who Klamath county, eo mile, from Klamath Fall. To attend on Bute Teacher.' Aaodatlon Key travole and .lu.b for when the .ted w engulfed In mud :eutiinil her Journey In an auto truck, covering 34 mile in thl. ve hicle before reaching the railroad at Klamath Fall Kbe reported at Lincoln High Hchoal a fre.h a a dal.y and. deaplte the difficulty of inter travel In the ga brush and the oldest boy. who Is aged 14 years, ha contributed chiefly to the family support. CHICAGO,. Jan. 3. Department ;of Justice official have bagged ! 5.483 suspected "reds" In fifty-one 'cities of the United States In raids last night and today, according to 'figures reported here at noon tidajr. i tin II eeactnil hv thn llollall) Slid ( I l .1 1 .. . .. . M -. Ill,u.e ,Mteiire.enlaitv .if ih I'nli. ' 'crAO',l co"ry, I. an entnu.ia. &.I Htatr. o( Amerca in Centre. .."c ,H,'M,"' tor ' county liembled. That I'm liorretary f 'he i lot' rlor b. and he hereby nu Itni.jrd and dlre't-vl U detdrmlnr n make public isnnoiitti uent J ferred to the consular service and Is l-Jled 10.000 ear dally for a time to now stationed In Pari, ha been hold- a railroad eating house ytem, to, lining car. of the Hanta Fe railroad' and 10 C3 store In Colton. Ban Her-, nardlno and Itlvervlde i I Iff M EMU FOUND IN ILL Ing a series of consultations with re- nreontatlvcH of all of the units, and c- I. i. Jim .1 .. . . ... f specially with Colonel Arnold. opiiaeos oi cuouro ojireai munisi worger ana sympathizer. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. Arrea In nation-wide radical raid laat night and today had exceeded 4 SOS persons at noon, it was estimated by the department of Justice. More than half the number wilt probably be held for deportation, the office an nounced. In the sweeping drive against ra dicals, started last night, the agents of the department of Justice are com pleting today raids against radicals In 33 cltiea of the United Suto. Promptly at 9 o'clock laat nlgbt tbo J operatives moved In concert against i widely scattered headquarters of com- ihat land In and around fopr Kla isth l.ke, In KlamMh County. Ore- ion, tmted to the I'nlled Mate by i idate of Oregon by an act entitled An art to nuthorlre the titlllr.itl. n Ppper Klamath like. !er or kittle Klamath l-ake. and Title or thett ltke, situate In Klamath Coun- Oregon. In connection with the rleatlon and reclamation operation.,,,,,, Mand or ,ab.lullon of II the hilled nereuy autttoriiecj to perform anyj ttnn ail art. and lo make such rule and regulation a. may be neccary and Proper for the purpose of carry. Ing the provision of thl Act Into full force and effect Amendment Prtipoocd At the regular meeting of Klamath Post. No 8. American legion, last night, resolution were adopted urging the amendment of the Hlntioti lleclamatlon 8efvcr of theJnM aornMVo ,,, bn ,n,r04,ucw, Klale.. and to Cede to the ntei Htnte all the right, title. In- rfrnt and claim of file Htate of j The atuandment prposd rhat;t) ;tho existing hill to specifically .ti- cludo SpanUh-Amerlcan war veter. )regon to au and all land recov- . .rnn, ,,f Ihn ,,hmf,tlllll, inl by iho iorlne of th -r,BMIriw:l0W ,n ,ho prp,pru, f . . iprivllegtit given e-ervlc' III oi nin iahr luenerni iih To further the work and aaaure lut nl,neraI to 8tock a falr-stzed collec-1 Today the number of arrests had rls- AJI dellverle. had to be made be-- ,lccci. these four co-operative unlu ,or's "o'01 haye en turned out byjen to the highest figures of any slral fore 3 o'clock In the morning and o, w, ag ,n appropriation of $75,000 tbe dr"' nt lhe Klamath Oil com-(' lar raid in the history of the country. Charles Hartley, the ranch manager,; trom Congress to carry out the' gl- pan"' WD,cn ,B al wo"k on the JayjTbe government hopes to fill anoth horkrd from twelve to sixteen hour Kantlc program of foret protection ii,ann,nK ro06 ,n tne valley south er ''soviet ark" and aend Jt floating everyday ,' In Montana. Vahlngton. Oregon and of here- ,nce lhey 8tarted opera-(across the Atlantic to the bolsbevlkl. Their corn harve.t called much at-1 California Powerful interest are be- l,on ,lu,l fa" The department of justice estlm- aiea loaay mat with lauu "undeslr- i.-nuon 10 me ropico uancno. wnicn lnK broUKht to bear to obtain this ap they sold at a profit, taking a part proprlatlon payment a tract of 55 acre, let to I , alfalfa near Devore Cal Thl. lndjWELL jOWN FQRJ they also sold, for f 10.000. j When they began operation theyj KLAMATH FOLK WED had only their discharge allowance! from the army and uavy and what' Chester earned with the oil company. Floyd A. Miller, a well known cat Thelr profit on crop, and realty pe-i tie man of the Ft. Klamath ect'on, rulatlons have netted them I1T.00S -I and MIks Nettle 'oe, daughter of a 42, they ald j prominent family of the same dU- Chester U still working for the oil I trlct. were married last evening by Anthracite coal was found at a; depth below 700 feet in an lS-lnch tables caught in the dragnet tbe back vein, and the promoters of the enter- bone of radicalism in America will prise have been puzzled ever since be broken when their deportation, whether to stop drilling and go to has been accomplished. I.. P In e lien .... ..ld land a pnourlty r1w,l,B0' ,or " ,"r,,, of on" y"nr n,,,'r the payment of the cost of wl.l.,,, M.ais. of this net. to comply it Oegoi. I'joJ.. page R3 may i iinrovrrrd and ojwned to agricul tural 1 leloMnenl by ilmltlUE" or llknis not impairing the ue of ld ike fir storage of water for trrlga Sli.ii in Miititi-ctuin with ill" Klamath erlainatmn projert. Hec 2 That title lo nil said Inml Ian be nniuirml by home.iend entry Jiuler the general inmelend Inw lint the provision of thl. Art. and ltd otherwise That the Secretary of the Interior I hereby nuihorUed to )nnn nut drainage illntrlrt organ- ked under the law of the Klale of Iregon, or any person or corporation,; lo dike or drain said land nt n cost lo be fixed by nld Mcretnr and to inv or tun pa) Irnlnngu or diking. That residence inil Improvement on nld Innd by 'ntryinnn .hull not bo required until lis entry shall hnvn been drained. Hoc 3. That those, who nerved in Ihn military or nnviil force of thn Jutted Hlnte during thn war he Iween thn rnllod Htnte and tier- limy nnil hnvn heon honorably tpnrnluil or dlHCluirged therofrom ir placed In tint reKtilnr army or invnl rtvtervo hIiiiII hnvo preferonco inil prior right to fllo upon and en- sr null! land under the homestead iwh and tho prnvlslons of thin Act or n period of six month following fin t lino auld lands nrn opened to Ury. That In opening until lanih ir hnmoHtnnd entry tho Secretary of Itie Interior Nhnll prnvldo for tho llspoHltlott thereof to ald hoIiIIiim, tllors, and inarlno by draw I nit. Indnr Konoral ruloH and rcRiiliitlon ho prnmulKntnil hy lilin: Prnvldnd, flint thn right and hciioflts rnn- srrnd by (IiIh Ant Hhall not extend In Iny portion who, IiiivIiik boon drafted k no rv leu 'undor thn provlnloiiH of lio Holoctlvo-Horvleo Act, elinll hnvn )fiiHi)d to rundur Htich mirvlco or to roar tho uniform of hiioIi uorvlro of io United Htatoa, Hoc, 4, That said IiuiiIh wliall not lotiHoil otliorwlnu iUh)ohoi1 of ox Bit uiulor tho prnvlHlona of thin Act, lid tho Secretary of tho Intorlor Ih men settling the Upper like lands Tim alternative bill I along the same lilies as Iho bill quoted abuw. unit the addition of thi oection ! "That the uecreiary oi tho Interior hall require the Califomln.Ort'gcin Power CompHiiy to dike and reclaim. trw in ciinrge, all or tlm tule or tuamh Innils t the United Htnte stirroundiug the Upper Klainnth Lake. In return for the rourenloiis, franchise, and benefit conferred upon ald Cnllfornln-Oregou Pouer Company hy that certain contract entered lull) between the United Ktateii of America and nfd company, dated , 1917, and should nlil company fall, neglect, or company Chnrle. ha bought an In- tho Uev turvi in a bustnc m. i ence. Their father, a eteran trader.' Mr. and Mrs. Miller plan ;j spend think thev have "done mlehtv well."! the wlnlor nt . Dlllnril. Oreron. but will return next spring to make thelr'sidea of the well. I . .. .. . . ........ .......' I nome on one o .ir. Aiuiei ranci'eJi I near Ft. Klamath. mining coal, or not. They have kept, on drilling, however, and the bolej Ms down about S00 feet. The latest "strike" is manganese of Iron, mag netized to an extent that the parti-1 cles cling to a knife blade or other bit of steel. If placed close to it. The Iron sand also showed a trace i I.awrenee at his resld-lof gold when "panned"' on the sur face. Drilling Is temporarily halted now and more casing Is being in stalled to prevent caving of tho MUIUUS op SOt.lUKltS TO iu: immt.iir to a.mi:iu! with It term und condition rein tlvn to tho diking nnd reclamation of said inn mil land, then and In that event Raid contract Hhall he cancelled nnd held for naught, nnd all rlghtH and privilege ox ore I noil thereunder by snld company shall con ho und determine. That rvMtlonco and Improvement of h.MiI land by entrymeu shall not bo required un'.ll the Mimo Hhall have been drained." The contract alluded to In the paragraph give the power company utorugo roncoHHlmiH on Upper .Klam ath Lake and provides for raining and lowering the luko to certain fixed maximum und minimum levels by thn building of tho Link Ulvor dam. Tlut Legion, as prospective settlers of tho Upper Lake mnrshus, hold that If the lako level Is rained ho that tho land Ih mibjort to over flow, tho power company hIiiiiM he compelled to protect It hy diking, hence the Hoetlou In tho altonuulva hill HUKK'OHtOll. Chairman T. W. Millar of the na tional leglHlntlvu committee of the American Uiglon, with hondqtinrterH nt Washington, Iiiih written tho local pom nHHiiring ilium Hint tun commit- leu will nld In every way posHlhlo In tho fight to provont the leaso of tho Upper Luko marsh IiiihIh anil Hocur Ing (hum for homustoad by ox aorvlco mon. ritiLTV mav virr in: UATIFIUD ON JAN. ti PAULS. Jan. 3 Tho French gov ernment has granted permission for the removal of 20.000 soldiers PA1US. Jan. 3. Kxchange of hurled in Franco to the United : ratification of tho peace treaty be .State. The bodies are those burled' tueen Germany und the Allies Is sti!l In remoterle outside the rone of! possible. In the opinion of the army occupation, and doe not In- "Matin," which points out that the elude those gathered into the big, Germans still have time to forward EARL C01W NEW YORK. Jan. 3. Kadlcala held here today as tbe result of laat night's raid numbered between 100 and 150. Another 600 or 700 seized were released during the night after investigation, but will keep watch over these as suspicious characters. Department of Justice agents were examining literature with a view ot ascertaining whether Ludwig C. Mar tens, self-styled ambassador from soviet Russia to the United States was connected with its distribution. If his connection Is etabl!shed his deportation Is assured, they said. PORTLAND, Jan. 3. Twenty ra Idlcals under arrest was the net result TAKES COM American cemeteries Inside the arm; zones. explanations demanded hy the peace conference before that date. r THE VAMP sin Cfl T'Va yjrjiw)T tfmmmMfjmn n mm m m 1 1 uw tm ' niiiH MF,T1.. I fi n"mfT,l, i iTalT -mmmmmmmmf ' I. - OF BOX PLANT I of last night's raid here: Seven ot 1 those In custody are said to bo suo 1 Ject to deportation. A printing ottlco 1 was operating at radical headquart ers running off "red" literature, when the federal officers descended upon them A change of considerable Import-1 nnce to tho business life of the com n.unlty. took place quietly yesterday. when the Karl Fruit Company, of Sacramento, took charge of the plant of tho Klamath Manufacturing com pany, which they purchased several months ago. Tho plant will bo operat ed hereafter under tho tltlo ot Klam ath Lumber & Dox company. No change was made In tho per- sonnel of the plant by tho transfer ! ot control. A. G. Krause, who has been manager for Mrs. Robert A. Johnston, sinco her husband's death, will continue to direct operations for the now owners. W. H. Tralnor, ot tho Sacramento office, Is hero for n fow days in con nection with details ot tho transfer. Tho Klamath Lumber & Dox Com pany will supply tho Karl Fruit Com pany, which Ir said to be the largest handler ot deciduous frut In tho West, with shook for Its containers. Thl.1 Is tho first box manufacturing plant that tho Karl Company has nt topted, but It Is understood that thoy havo a California plant for turning out matorlal for grapo packing. Their fruit handling plants aro located in all ot tho principal fruit producing' confers ot tho Coast and their own consumption ot shook will require n large output from tho local factory It any surplus exists abovo tholr own requirements It will bo marketed to other concerns. N 1 T BELOW NORMAL' The review ot general business and agricultural conditions in tho Twelfth federal reserve district out line by John Perrln, chairman ot the board of tho Federal Reserve Hunk ot San Francisco, reads as fol lews: Prospects for excellent crops la California in 1920 have been ma terially Improved by rocent rains. In the Pacific Northwest, however, unfavorable climatic conditions dur ing the early planting season retard ed the sowing ot wheat, so that tho Washington acreago ot winter wheat will bo only 60 to 70 per cent and that of Oregon 90 to 93 per cent of normal. In many localities in Washington farmers aro holding spring seed wheat in anticipation of having to resoed, ulthough recent snowfall has materially improved tho outlook. Iu Oregon it Is antici pated that much land sown to whut during tho past two years, becauia ot tho guarantee ot price, will be seeded to barley and oatB. during tho coming year. In tho dry-farming sections ot Utah and southern Idaho there has been much larger sowing ot tall grata than In 1918, under extremely favorable conditions.