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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1920)
9' FI'll'IAI, I'AI'Wl OK KliAMATH VAIAM OFFICIAL I'APEIl OP KLAMATH COUNTY SgPxy Jfy r-Xfr$,M Fourteenth Year No. 3897 KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1920 Price, Five Cent? fcitjemtm X r ' P1EER PHOHE PROMOTER DEID NM 1 1 fl P n ! T fl I I M I I 1 T I I ll I I I I I ! U U I I I JS L NEW YOltK. pr 10 Theoduru N. Villi. iiKi'il 71, rhul t illllll of the botird of illri'rturn of tho Anii'rirnii Tulniihoiii) ft Telegraph rompnny. died In u hoKpltiil Ift-ro tlilt inortitiiR from ii complication of citrdluc uml kldiioy nllmi'tilM. Iln wim brought to I tho hoNpltiil laKt Htinduy In ii hitIoiih condition and IiIn death wiih not un-' expected. Am primlili'iit of tint Amuricnni Tolephono k Telegraph company, j Theodore Newton Vail was tlm head! of tho (urgent ti'luphonu n)toin In I the world. Ho wait not only Its uom-i Inal licml, hut ho wan from the first tho genius that promoted tho popu lar uiui of tho telephone. Uiu flmt man to establish long-dlitnnco com munication by telephone, and. when pait 70 years of ago, ho won Ht 111 tho Jnfttlntlve hoad of n syBtom that 1 mont. bow and order was oHoctlvo numborcd 9.000,000 tolophono Buli-!'y maintained by a number o shor- crtbora and represented nn Invest mont of 1, 250,000. 000. Mr. Vail was 31 years old when Aloxmidor. flrahnm Hell Invonted tho telephone, and. notwithstanding his:", "" "" , '" , , , 5J . , ,. ,.l TJio oven ng paused without gun ago, ho was filling tho responsible' , , . , . , , , ' . , . . vi . .i II'ly ovory ono bolng too Intont un- posl of general super iitondimt of thu) '! , , ,, . ; V , , ,, i on thu various games and diversions railway mull service. Still curlier, i. , , . . . , .,, . , . . . , , to pick a serious row. Tho four vh6 however, he had been ii telegraph . ,. , ,. , .. . . . ... were removod from tho hull to n lo- oporn or, und. Interested In the .o-,pn u, nt 2 0clock th,8 ln0rn. abilities of e lectrlcal .; ca- w(Jro not ,,, vlctlms of nn at. Hon. ho had visions that Hell s "toy 1 t ,o hoW up Um bnnk na flrst ifould noma rtny bo a great factor In"-.-..,, but ro 8Ufforng from Atnorlcan life. Hell and his asso-, clatim had uqiinUfuIth In Mr. VaU'a jDrgiinlslnB genius, for, ho had alfoady mado n niunu 'for hlii!sclf,,nn an or ganizer In tho promotion of tho rail- Way mull service, and he was easily Induced to resign his government ,y coln,)ntont substitutes having vol post to become the go-;.rAl nmtiuger, nl(;orm t0 Borvo tonight. tri 1878, ofi'tho first Amoricnu-Mloll Tolqphpno compiijiy. Kvcn Iho moat optimistic Imckurs of the tolophono then thought that tho Invention would servo only for local communication, bu Mr. Vall had vlslonn of Its long-dUtanro uso. It was ho who InutiguratodSiuccosslvvi stops of intor-clty communication Tlioflrst lino from Boston to I'rovi-' denco wns ridiculed as 'VtiU8 sldo- uppenrnnoo In town -of a notorious show!" but somo of tho persons who con mnn nnj sure thing artist who Is Indulged In Iho ridicule nl, that time oxprctod to attempt somo of his Hvo'd to BccMr. Vnll telophvonq,,Jiot , tricks on tliojinwary and frosh ox only from Boston to Providence but cltemont Isprotnlsod lonlghtlf ho from Now York to Sail Francisco, In opens operations. 1915, 30 years later. Further, Inj. : October In that yoar, they found that ,,i,yS(lU0, n0 Wan six Joot, two it wns possible to soud tbo human ,ncIl0i, lal!i ailtV weighed about 2S0 voice nioro limn half way nround tbo ,lollmi8i with this great physlquo world, ns was dono by wiroless tolo- l()- ,U, , ininila capacity for hard phono from tho government station wo(.kj um, n K0''juj disposition, at Arlington, Vn , tbo words .being no was "boin'iu Cai roll county, O., rocordod simultaneously nt IIo"-juy ic, isiG, .of Quaker nncestry. lulu, In tho mld-Paclflc. ami tbo I JUa fllt)lur( 1)aV8 Vall, removed from Klffol Towner, In Paris. jollIo t0 Mnrrlstown, N. J., when tbo Mr. Vnll was known as "tho goat telephone man In tho world,' not only In tribute .to his gonitis for both mechanical mid flnnnclnl or ganization, bu,t from tho fact that ho was personally a man of remarkable MICKIE SAYS, A.U VMVM cn.vJr ?ou joovc omc (V&.v. stecv: ov evivjcu3pc V va,p&r 43rre)cvv m oaoe. vnuw -fUCS'ue GOIKttA. V4EE0 WASTtfVD i lUWrtVA, OVA-TA. TUtM'aG. AV-V. .OOf M -TWCVA COSUiW TW' " - - J 'poor. pwvi-CewJ V poor uu mauve, -r Pieces 2 ow.wiM'i S5 n, cnoou oO mo.-o llil i i mSmmtm . v ,MK1 ) U Wr '1(1 MOl'l! "J TIHIOl'Mli I . S. ON 80NOKA 'ABHINUTON, Apr. 1C milmd pcrnilmtlon of fltntoii to inovo ,r'""m lll""":h Al"rll',n lorr- t0'y '" "r,1' '" "ll"Ck l,' Ht"l "f H,",,,rn' whlcl1 hat declared an InUopcndi'tit government, from tho north. No nctlon hns boon tnkon in regard lo tho request hy tho I'lliti'il Stntoa, It was said at tin Htnto d(p'irtiHut toilay T With tho exception of tho four Klka who operated tho cashier's cago at tho 101 ks Tomplo last night, no caUHUalltlos are roportcd at tho re sult of tho first of the three nights of wild and wooly westorn cnterthln Iffs and deputy mnrtihals who amass etl'all thu exporlenco nocded In doil Ing with tough characters when A1U loiio and Dodge City wero In tholr " ntAtlP IwijiHa vnllilt L . ,,, ,'L,,.1,i, ,,m nnirnr temporary paralysis of tno linger j Joints' and forearms from, tho' jrpH . ." w ... ....r,. lougeu oxuniun ui 'iiunuiiii0iu"t monoy. Thoywiilb'atVvright In u day or two, and In tho inriiintlmo the L,. ,. ,,,,i . nn.i Tomorrow night Is tho wlniicp of tho threo nights' Jnmboreo and tho mnnngoment Is thinking of building tt tent pavilion In tho rear of the hall to tako euro of tbo crowd that Is cx- ported. I-'ist night nil nvallnblo spare was filled and flowing ovnr from tho tliuo"tlio doors opened until long past midnight. Special ofllcors today roportod tho NIGil CRAMS BUG bIg-'!Hoii was four yonra old, and bocaino associated wltli ft brother, Slophon Vnll, who had founded tho Speed woll Iron works, near Morrlstown, whoro they built much of tbo ma chinery for tho first trans-Atlnntic Btotunshlp. ' Aifrod Vall, nnothor brother, was ono of thoso associated with Samuel Morso In tho lnvontion nnd promotion of the tologriiph. Theodore Vall wbb educated at tho old academy at Morrlstown, nnd for n tiino studied modiclno, but becom ing hitorostod In tho tolegraph, ho lenrnod to opornto tho koy and wont wost In 1SC8 as m oporator for tho Union Pacific railroad at Pine Bluffs, Wyo. Pine Bluffs was at that time tho principal supply point for wood for tho Union Pacific, which had not yot boon completed. Through tho friendship of Oonornl Grenvillo M. Dodge, clllof engineer of tho Union Pacific, Vnll, In tho noxt yoar, was nppolntod n clork In tho rallwny mail Borvlco, nnd horo his ability to sys tomatizo and organlzo was soon felt. At that tinio tbo railway mull sorvlco wns In nu undovelopod Btngo, and Vnll prepared special studios on tbo question of distrlbul'ion nnd dls putchlug of mall, which brought him quick rocognltion from tho authori ties nt Washington, n wns Just nftor ho lind boon promoted to tho gonornl siiporlntondoncy of tbo rail way mail Borvlco that ho actod ' against tho ndvlco of hlu frlond3, nnd nccoptod tho position of gohoral man- (Continued on pngo 4) THE NEW Ni-xt V"linviluy, April 21, thero fichool lilmrirt No. 1 two Importnnt of tho ilfHtrlt t ptircluiHO u now ncliool purchase one of two niton submitted. upon tho question of tho two sites Unit of thu advisability of buying a site will Iw discussed nc l Wo "ro "lI""f "I" "10 'lliCBtlon of tlui 8lU:s tlilu enrly, fo rW0 ro going to appeal to tho voters of the district, to vlt , voted upon. Weather conditions permitting. Sunday will ho a good day to '1n,iu. r.n in mich nun of Iho sites, look thnm over carefully, nick out tho , had points of each, weigh ono against tho other and solect the site that you court here today hy the attor- J( lem th(j ganltatlon probiem. the Ju ! believe will host servo tho Interests of tho district, for In doing so you arc ney Kcneral. vcnl'le delinquency problem and a .nly serving your own. Home years ago a gravo mistake wns made In tho selection of tho site for Iho IUverslde school tho ono lurched on the hillside on the west sldo of tho city. There was not a person, voting on that slto, with the possible exception of two, that really knew tho exact location, and It was with a gasp of astonishment that oven tho advocates viewed the spot when tho work of construction started. Lot this In; the last time that the voters of tho district shall bo guilty of this blunder. No man or woman 'can Intelligently pass Judgment on these sites without a personal Investigation, , utid It becomes tho duty of every voter within the district to fully acquaint I himself or herself with all tho facts connected with what Is going to be tho most Important more made by tho district since its formation. Tho Herald la going to do its part in placing beforo tho voters all of tho facts connected with this question, to tho end that a full vote may bo polled. The first step in this campaign Is for the voters to visit the sites. They are lecated: Slto No. 1, Ih tho block bounded by Sargont, Donald, Fulton and Worden street. The BCuthorn end of this block was for several yean occupied by tho Catholic church. , Slto No. 2, is tho block bounded by White, Donald, Lookout and Upham. This block is located at the corner where tho turn is made onto the Shlp plngton road. After the tunnel Is passed you turn east for about a quarter of a blcck, then you, turn north onto tbo Shlpplngton road. Site No. t is the block nt your loft as you faco Shlpplngton and the ono through wh(ch tho deep cut Is mado. Tho Horald would suggest that tho school board place appropriate signs ou both sites co'nfuslon -' .. .. .,,. as a runner means oi cnnguiening me voiers.iuo rieram win oe giaa - -v fnet7hat'th. ,.rlchtaat gtar I to receive miggestlons for or against either site. Thoso suggestions may be!8"1 ne ract lnal , urlue5t starl verbal, or they may bo written. If written they must not exceed 30.0 word.,1 jjf ath"mP remaln-j .The writer's name must bo signed, but it will mbo published unless! Mn( LJ1Jjan Je petr th(J ru..oiou. ii ruio i uuoi.ieu bo us iujj-uio any emuarrassnieni anyonei mlght feel about stopping Into the limelight. Under no circumstances will, tlJeiaiiio of the writer boTovcaled cood :alth. Vm 1 v i 4 'sit tho sites Sunday.; STRIKE HENS BEFOREGOVT'S T TTH WASIUNQTON, Apr. 16. Tho) Further cvldenco of the tremond railroad labor board perfected a 0us strides forward that Klbiuath temporary organization at Its initial . Falls 1b making is to bo found tho mooting tcdny. Henry Hunt, formor'gain that has been mado ir bank de mayor of Cincinnati, was elected! posits. Only a short timo ago this chairman and G. W, C-angor, of city was in tho thirteenth place, then Washington, secretary. Both are mombers of tbo public group. UNDATED. ltetum of strikers, and gonoral improvement of sorvlco, in "' ",u "" ,u"'u """ "" was roportod toilay, by railroads In BraDh business and payrolls. Nover various sections as tho nowly ap-'-ln tll 'story or tho stato has a f ity pointed railroad labor board assom- "ln(l tllQ roctml Klamnth Falls hns bled In Wifshlngtcn to consldor tho''i tbo matter of bank deposits. The wnso dcinnnds of rail workers, m1 c'l- to u0 ovorhnuleil is Baker tbo Now York district there woro, c'. " 8l'o '3 on ?200.000 ahead conflicting ropOl'tS Concerning tUO number of who men returned nftor ... i tho railroads last night had delivered1 an ultimatum that tholr laot clymco , would exnlro at noon tomorrow.! Somo roads announced thnt strikers aro flocking back; 'Others roportod sporadic walkouts. Chicago, Apr. 1G. Spoody dlsln- tegration of tho unauthorized rail-IBUl "'""" lul " 1 -- " " m,i n.riun, in th pii n,i fnrbuslness that Is transactod horo by wost sections was forecast tot1ay wlth a serious blow struck by tho us lum l" "uuv,r "-" "" govornment In tho strike stronghold.! ,u San F'anclsco. Consequently ho Chicago, by tho arrest yesterday of n C Kts "0lU or muf lm 25 atrlko leaders. wln appcar ,n tho ba,anco suoot f this city boforo long, If tho plans for expansion now undor way aro con- CHICAGO, Apr. IC Plans of tbo jsUmmatod by tho Klamnth Stato Industrial workors of tbo World to i,nnk and tho First Stato and Sav- ndvncnto a ono big union movomont, ng8 bank. during tho present unrest among J Tho cltlca ot Ul0 8tato stand In tha railroad workers Is revealed In nfoUowlnB ordor ln the matter of statement by William D. Haywood, ' bnnk dopo9,f8. Portland, Salem. former general secretary and troas-jA!tor PomUoton Eugene, Baker. uror of tho organization, and John, KLAMATn fXllS, Albany and auiiiigruii, raiuir oi mo ono uig union , moniuiy, puuusiiou noro touay. Fivo cars of mcrchaudlso nro at tached to tho freight duo horo this afternoon, roportod tho S. P. station today. Yesterday only ono morchnn dlso car got by tho cmbnrgo nnd on tho previous day thero wcro no cars.' ovonlng opening ot tho county clerk's Tho IniUcntlon Is that tho rood Is 'office. The offlco lias beon kopt getting sufflclont labor to hnndlo'opon sovernl evenings this week ljan traffic Thero nro ovor thirty plants usod ln dlfforout parts of tho world as substitutes for ton. SCHOOL SITE Ih to bo fUlhmltted lo tho voters 'iiimUonn. First, shall tho directors alto at thin time; second, shall thuy Today wo nro going to tou'h only that nro to ho sulimltlod .for Detection next week. r tho reason that Islt the two to ho so that thewmay be no doubt or . .. .' .. and it is asked only as an'evldenco of 'S M T NTT n LpJT'youn tenth. Now sho has forged forward ( to seventh, passing Medfori and Al- l.nnif In Hin fn Hint lo o-nlno1 tr nil f ' ""' " " '" " "" ' "V alongsldo Portlnnd, ns sho now nno innni nnn rnro nvmnr iini una "" ' " -i-- - leml wl" B00n lm overcom?, thus put- t,nK t,lls cltJ' ,n B,xth l'lac- Prom tUoro on tho RInS will not bo eo lnsl lor ul "G" lour lwiis aro in tl10 fivo million dollar class. That is nil of them havo moro than five mil lion dollars In deposits. This city is working under a heavy tinmltnnn Innnmllrtli Ma nlti dn03 nrtt " ' ' '"uo"""-" "a ,"'"". " tbo big timber people. Their dopos- Mndford many nnoisTim AT night Many porsonB nro taking advan tage of tho opportunity to register for tho .primary oloct'Ion through tho 7:30 until 9 o'clock. It will bo open again tonight nnd Monday night, the Inttor being tbo Inst opportunity lo register. Tho office will not ba opon tomorrow evoning. lo .MAitv I'KKioiti) imvehci: !' ATT.lriCni, IIV KBATH MINDEN, Nov., Apr. 1C. In tho Interest of tho state of Nevada, a suit asking that the i decree of divorce granted March " - l0 uiauys aioore, more ramii- larly known as Mary I'Ickford, from Owon .Moore he set aside . WW c "led In tho district $ Music lovers who have seats for the concert at the Houston opera house tonight probably will not agree with the statement but the important member of the Bulottl family Is not here. Charles Bulottl arrived last night and' is rested and refreshed after the trip and promises that he will do in perfect voice to night Mrs. Bulottl accompanied her husband, and enjoyed jMio trip, ono of the,, few they have taken to gether since their marriage. Be fore they were married she was ttie noted tenor's accompanist and tour- ed b0ib, cast an,d st ,b -Jl!?' Mrs. Gleason, Mrs. BulottPs another, lis also alone but that does not les- tonight's Program ., t. ., ..- .-.- brought the Interesting. information ARTISTS HERE FOR CONCERT to light In a pertinent and pointed ! tudinous charms should not be con question "But what on earth did cealed under a bushel ncr yet a you lo with the baby?" smaH fraction of that .measurement So Mr. Bullottl explained that hej "ani1 that bonyl applies both be lefi the treasure well guarded, lnas- J low and above thethorak. Just bo-t much as the housekeeper who usual- cause they can't change ,what .Nature, ly works only on day shift. Is stay- eave 'em to conform 'with' the latest lng overnight while he and his wife' styles, they want everybody to stop aro away and-also ho added, ''my being stylish," i'-f : four sisters-in-law live In the Bame.j It's nothing against tho 'fertility block." I Qf Klamath county to say that It la developed on Inquiry that the ounger Bullottl Is well along in his second year, a lusty specimen of I raascuunuj, wnose auveni was jiuruuijs ii a jusi as wen. ll. may ' greeted with flowers from a humor- stavo off temporarily that return to ous friend, and a card which In place the earliest mode of dress which the Of tho usual felicitations read t prophets predict, as far as this local "Conratulations, but I hopo to God Ity Is concerned. But at the present he isn't a tenor." Mr. Bullottl says rate of upward and downward revl ho Is confident he will be a tenor, sion of tho schedules any relief Is novertnoiess. All of which Is merely to Indicate that tho artist has a happyf norma, .. . . ... . . borne life and is not to be tnken to inilicato that he does not tako his profession seriously, for ho does, Tho first step aftor breakfast this lnorn!nB wa3 a rehearsal of tonight's p0I4formanco nnd 'ho nnd tho pianist Uopt hard at work until long 'after noon. Mr. Bulottl came especially for in. i . i Aab o vi iifmak uiu luuai cuntmi iium nio umuu in San Francisco. His nest scheduled ' appearance Is in Los Angeles early ll0xt month, and he will appear In roruanu in juno ir. t mi Tnrr.,n nni tM n n.' comer among tho artists of the west.t"U, erf 0nef af ' ts' b,ut H eom8 She is tho wife of Paul Petri, tenor. Particularly ont of place In a climate and sho nnd hor husband maintain soparato studios ln Portland. They came wost two seasons ago, having previously had studios ln New York nnd Newark, New Jersey, which lat ter place they called home beforo tho transplantation. Now thoy are of tho west and never want to go back. For several years beforo the war thoy toirrod .Europe and wero rocolv ed most favorably by the critics. Sho is nn artist who has tho ideals of tho profession always foremost, fortune bolng a small consideration. Howovor far sho travels on tho road to fame, tho climb will be unswerv ingly upward for sho tolerates no compromise with hor ideals. As an oxnmplo alio, appears horo tonight bqenuso sho was told that an appro .clativo audience, oager for tho hot ter kind of music, would groot her. Sho wns In tho midst of a hard study program at homo nnd tho money consldorntton did not weigh heavily but tho argument of a sympathotlo nudlonco provnllod immediately. Two press notices by American orltlfa glvo. nn idea of tho pianist's chnrm; ono from tho Chicago Musi cal Lender, before tho European tour, ono from tho Newark Nows on the return: "Mr. and Mrs. Potrl muko n (Contlnnod on vPjige Five) L HI L II, iHlhh U LOU LL'! L U H LOO US TARGET FOR iGRITIGS' MRT5 Now along with the housing prob- , few other problems which the com imunlty betterment survey has called attenticn to, there comes another problem baffling In all of its phases to mere man the problem of how to get enough clothes on the backs and. well, this is not an anatomical essay of the fair sex to save them from falling victims to any of the different brands of pulmonary dis ease and- protect male promenadera. from shocks, that while perhaps less deadly than the pneumonia germ, are not without a noticeable effect la upsetting normality. Where there is much smoke, the sage said, there Is likely to bo Jo, small blaze and from the discussion of the topic of women's dress, or lack: of it, heard In a good many different circles, the writer gathers . that a small conflagration. is under head way In itlamath). Falls. "jXhe'- ultra. consorvaUresr declare vln unmeasured termsA "against the situation, which, they assert has gone too far by sev eral Inches, viewed upwards or downwards, and by seTeral layers vlewed fr(mt or back - ' -They're a bony bunch of 'bnsr bodies," is the declaration of the. radical element, who evidently be- Mleve that the light of their nulchrl- !lieve that the "Bht of their pulchrl- not a fig-growlng region, and at tha ,, present rate of progress toward the " prevailing mode of dress in EdeniT fenly temporary, according to tho mora iiDsnimieiix ni,,ra , Juat SMe 0f tho rlchtmiB nnd fho .n,i. opini blo'ak is a nrotectlon to tha pedestrian's' vision on the street but a rouna of 6Uops and oftice3 ' uld COUVince the most unobservant maintain the critics that "something" shouUl bo dono about u Abandon. mt q wrapvhen nl,lad3r Bett, d employ- - ment reVeals exactly what the world Is coming to or perhaps moro ex actly whre It started from, the crUC3 ,jeclaro Of OftlirsP If la Tinf n lnAql AnnL ,.. Uw, wut wvuua us turn us una. . iu Arizona, wnera torrldlty compels certain concessions to comfort, one would think to find tolerance. But tho clergy have had to set 'a firm foot down ln Arizona as the following dispatch Indicates! PHOENIX, Ariz. On the doors at all four entrances to St. Mary's .Catholic church notices appeared today saying that "entrance into this church Is forbidden to women wearing low-necked dresses." Tho name of Itov. Father P. Novates, rector, was subscribed. Membors of the congregation said Rov. Novates frequently had pro tested in public utterances ngalnst present-day tendencies ln women's clothes. INSTALLING BOOTHS Now booths nro bolng installed rn Tho Mnzo confoctlonory, noxt door to tho Rex cafo, for tho benefit of cus tomers who deslro a degree ot prlv ncy. The improvomont will add greatly to tho comfort and convont onco of patrons?. . V- v DIVOHPM Ifi HRAIUk ir ,T Testimony )TO8 tulvtf In- Ui.j Us. cult court yesterday jn tha UlV5coj suit of Jogupbln' ttottttirB. afuftjst' Marion S, Cqnfixra nl Uie ccuji ' decision An(rtrrtvUpyf', : i