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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1925)
ft ! m Published Daily at KLAMATH FALLS "An Empire Awakening" Eighteenth Year Number ri5.r)3 Shevlin-Hixon , Will Not Enter Northern Thomas A. McCann, Head of the Shevlin-Hixon Interests, Says Company Got Stung Once Entering Town With no Rail Competition If the Northern lines are refused permission to build their proposed extension from Bend to Klamath Falls, the Shevlin-Hixon Lumber company will not start lumber lumber operations in Klamath county. This was the terse statement this afternoon of Thomas A. McCann, general manager of the Shevlin-Hixon in terest, who with J. P. Hennessy, Bend manager of the company, was in the city today enroute to Bend from the McCloud plant of the company. "Wo sot In nnco bfnre whuro 111 I'm wan bill ono mil Hun iiml no ' competition, nnil not hiiiiik!" he -claimed. "Iliu" iiml li i iiiiIiiiIi'I II utrnnitly "wo (loin propose to be Hliinx iiRuin." Whether or not IiIb company will lull Id Dm mux mill In Klumiiili Fulls 'depends In u Iutku measure on whntlinr or not a aultaoin nil" run b procured at a fill r unci reasonable . JM&HCJhU.'rt'iin fll"d., -i "Just nn soon ns tln Northern lino trc Riven permission to extend, If Kurd permission In given, wo will stnrt 1 in mml lulu noKoiluilonit (or a mill Hlto," ho unlit. "Hut wo don't propone to bo bold up. Wo aro will Inn to ny n fair prleo for the Innd wo wnnt, but wo nro mil going to pay several prices for II. (Continued on Pane Kl) True Bills for Fuller, Burke, Owens, Ware Two Secret Indictments Made By Grand Jury Trim bills woro found by tbo grand Jury which adjourned this mornliiK against Jim llurlio, Churlcs Kitllnr nnd Kdwnrd Fullor, rhnrged with (tumult with lutont to kill, assault with n (liiiiKuroui) weapon, nnd a separata Indictment whs made against Jim Ilurko und Charles Fuller for citrryliiB n concealed weapon, True bills woro also found against Ira Waro, charged with assault With Intent to kill, nnd ugulnst T. M. Owen, charged with a utntiitory offoimo. Two secret. Indictments wore roturnad by tlio grand Jury. Sinclair Stock Soars As Result Of Oil Decision NEW YOKK, Juno 20. (P) As the .result of Harry F. Hlnclilr's vic tory In tho RovornmentB suit to set asldii tho teapot domu nil lease tlio markot value of outstanding Sin clair oil HOCiirltliiH bus Incronsod llonrly 1 13,01)0,000 nlrpitily. After tho decision was nnnnitiicml yestcv day tho common slock uf tho Sin clair Consolidated Oil company wont up 2V4 poltiLi lo n 1iIk!i of 24 8-8, first Hen six par cent bonds of corporation ion red four nnd throe fourths points. Oilier bonds of the corporation soured lesser kiiIiis. As Ihoro are about 4,401,80:1 tthnrcs of common stock oiilstnndlnK,' Ihn Biln of valuo for this Item nlono Is fig ured ut $11,220,792. Kdwnrd L. Dohony Is nlso, in Rtatitlnlly wonlthlor on pupor, al though tho Rovernmont won Ha tit so fur ns his com puny In concerned. Klamath H Lines Barred Jay Upton to Aid in Drive State Senator to Speak for World War Veterans fwit fUnntor Jny Vptmi of Prlne vllln will nrrlvo hero Into thin after noon nnd will spunk nt the Pine True nnd Liberty UieiiterH tonight on bchulf of (ho American Ioglou war orilinnn' endowment fund cuinimlKll. Ho will bu given five mlmitoH nt cneh tbonlor through courtesy of Hurry W. Poole, mnnngur of both theiilirK. Senator Upton will speak at tlio opening of tlio Indinii convention nonr Kin inn Hi Agency Monday nfter iKiiiii nnd on Monday evenlnK will liliiko nil offlelnl vIhII to tbo Knights of Pythian Indue, of which ho In grand rhiuu'ollor for the domain of Oregon. Tlio senator In a forceful speaker and member! of tbo American I.eitlon wero Kind to have him prof fer bin services In assisting tbo drlvo In Kliinuitli county. Convict Stabbed . In Prison Fight nilCAHO, Juno 20. (p) Ilennrd Orant, tho young man whoso hair turned gray In Jail while waiting to bo hnngod, and In whose behalf thousands of mon und womon In many cities sinned petitions asking clemency for 111 m of Governor Lon Small, today was stabbed fivo timet and probably fatally wounded by Walter Krnuser, who was convicted with Oriint of tho killing of a po liceman. Mr. and Mrs. Churles Miiuplii re turned to their liumo at Mulln' this afternoon after shopping unci at tending to business Interests licro. Officer Loses Finger Tip As " Brew Explodes iStiirtlluK cvldelico of tlio power of poHl-Volslcnd Intox Icnlils limy he foiinil (ill the M'iHoii of Officer Patterson, who In minus the flesh of ono fliiKi'illp. Chief l.oiicks, mill Orriceix Pntteisiiii, Drown and t'olllns wero ilestroyhiK Homo of . tho evidence token In the rec ent Itmlcllffo nlreet raid, when it hot Ho of aliened bcec explod ed In Officer Patlclson's liiinil, severely Inceiiitliiil the tip of one fliiKer. Officer Pnlterson declnres ' (hut the term "aliened beer" Is pni tlclilarly apt, for Ibis fluid, which ho declare must have been iillro-Klycerlii, , KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY, LANGELL VALLEY BARBECUE TO BE BIG ATTRACTION Entire County Invited to At tend Big Program to be Held Sunday A n tprrlnl lidded nllrllrlloll ll Ik iiiiiioiiiici-iI llliil Able (or (Ion, fjiiiioiiM i-oiinI fighter, will 1u IIhIh- I. lulu fool, Iddil boy, mill Mini .M Slim k . mid I'.ddlc Kleuiul will Imh tlllll' two iiiliiul(( roiiiMN. Tin' boys have donated (lull NCI'V'Iri'H. Mori! Hum MOO people am expect- 0(1 lo ho nt I.unKidl'H Valley tomor row for the blit barbecue' and pro gram which In being sinned to com memorate tlio open Inn of water eaten on 10. nun additional acres of land In that famed valley. Jay t'pton of Prlnevllle. ex-presl-ilotit of tbo Oregon Irrigation Con gress, will deliver an address on Ir rigation maitcrn. There will he n baseball game between Tho I.um bcrlogue mid the Kprugun Itiver (ilniitn. a wrestling match, boxing match nnd other events to make It n gala day for all who attend. Tbo barbecue will start promptly at nooli nnd will feature n pair of lilx fat steers, n coil pie of husky porker mid a flock of sheep. There will bo npprdxlina'tely :t 1K1 0 pounds of meat available, besides all tbo pic nic trimmings. PcrxonH who attend nro asked In brlni! their own silver ware, cups nnd plates. Langcll Val ley will do tho rest. It Is hoped by tho, 'Qoinniltteo In charge to have ono or more of the Northern line nill orflclnln nt the biirbeciie. , Tho cntlro county is Invited, and tho affair will bo free to everybody. FIRST FACTS OF POLE FLIGHT NOW K 1! Amundsen and Party Work 24 Days Getting Plane From Ice RESCUE IS MIRACLE Party Sighted on Landing by Small Norwegian Fishing Boat i OSLO. Norway, Juno 20. Captain Uonld Amundsen and his five follow explorers will have an cnthuslsntc welcome when they arrive hero with in tho next few days, on their ro- turn from their perilous airplnna ex pedition Into tho Arctic. Though thoy tailed In their main object, that of being the first to reach tho North polo by air, their ex ploit In flying to n point within 150 miles of their goal, their survival amid untold hardships and their re turn to Spitsbergen In their remain ing piano aro regarded as being a wonderful font. With ench succeeding report of the experience of tho flyers, tho popular enthusiasm grows and It has ulrendy been exprossed to some ex tent In the numerous wireless mes sages Rent to tho explorers, from tho King, tho government nnd their friends. Heroic There Is praise nlso for tho hero ism of Lincoln Kllsworth, American member of tho expedition, who snved I.lef Dlutrlchseu and Oskur Omdnhl, when they fell through tbo lee. Published non-copyright accounts of the fliers' experiences sny they oncounlered n fog soon after start ing from Kings Hay, Spitsbergen, on May 21. Rising above I lie mist, they held to their courso for somo homs until compelled to alight because half their gnsollnn wnn exhausted. Then the, Ice closed' In, immovably Jamming liotfi machines, but Amund- (Coin luued pit rugo Hlv) Associated Press Leaded Wire BUDD SAYS Extension Into Califor nia Also Indi cated HKJHI.KiHTS )! IXTKHVIKW "If the Oregin Trunk ex- lends to Klamath Falls it would hive a terminal there with necessary round hause O und shop facilities. 4 "My 'idea about Joint uso of the line south of Klamath Kalis would be the same as 4 north. In the event a line Is 4 necessary to Susanvllle, Call- f -rnlu. or ia that vicinity, and It would unrely bef wasteful there to construct two rail- r. mils" Kulph liudd. presl- dent Great Northern Railway. PORTLAND, June 20. That the Hill lines, the Great Northern and North ern Pacific, which jointly own the Qregon Trunk line, which now runs from the Columbia river to Bend, in tend to push the contem plated extension to Klamath Falls, Ore., as far as Susan ville, California, was indi cated in a statement issued today by Ralph Budd, pre sident of the Great North ern railway, who arrived here with a party of direc tors of the company. Mr. Hudil also Indicated that the Hill lines would rather have Joint uso of part of the line now being built by the Southern Pacific be tween Eugene nnd Klnmnth Falls (Continued On Piwe Sl) Bonanza Favors Northern Lines Building South By a unanimous vote, members ut the Uunama community club Thursday night voted in favor of tha entrance of Northern lines into that community. The resolution, follow ing, sets forth the reasons why both tho Bonanta section nnd the Nor thorn lines would be benefited. The resolution follows: Whereas; The town of Bouanza, In Klumath county, Oregon, has for the past 15 years been known and recognized as the "Kour Leuf Clover Town", ot Klumath comity; by rooson ot its geogrnp'ilc loc..:ty, it being the' Junction of tho ' ur beautiful wealthy valloys; viz: Spraguo river on tho north. Poo val ley on tho south, Langell valley on tho cast and Yonna valley oti liie west. (Continued on l'nge Six) ' Pl'ltUO 1NV1T1C1) ' Special announcement was Issued this morning by thoo In in charge of arrangements for for the meeting with Northern rail officials tonight, stating that the meeting was emph- iitlcally for tho public nnd that nil citizens Interested In seeing the Northern lines enter this section should bo present. It was said this m iming thai through some error sjino Klum- nth county roildents bad oh- tallied the impression that tho i affair was Invitational and that membership In somo local or- gnnizntlon was n necessary re- quislto to entrance. ' TERMINAL HERE JUNK 20, 11)25 Northern Pacific President Asserts Tonnage In Sight Charles Donnelly Says New Lumber Operations Will Be Started Kvery possible argument will be ("advanced by the Northern lines In their fight for permission to con struct the . proposed extension of the Oregon Trunk to Klumath Falls, declared President C'hn,rles Donnelly of the Northern Pacific, upon his arrival here today. "Although I cannot speak for tho Weyerhaeuser company or any other timber company, It Is only reasonable to suppose that we ex pect to make a showing of suf ficient tonnage before the Inter state commerce commission to Justify this extension," he Bald. "Much of this tonnage, of courae, will be lumber, so it is only a natural conclusion that we will ex pect to show the commission suf ficient additional lumber operations to back up our request for this ex tension." However, those who expect some big definite announcement from the Northern liues at this time will lie disappointed, he added. The visit here is being made to give the New York and eastern directors a first-hand knowledgo of tho topo graphy of the country and an idea of the almost unlimited present and potential resources of Klam ath county and Central Oregon. EXPLOSION K1I.KS THKEE ' WAL3ENBUHG, CMo., -June 20. : Three miners were killed and two injured in an explosion at tho (!or don mine of the Gordon Coal com pany, ix miles northwest of this city last night. C. C. ASKED TO T BECOME KNOWN Sprooule Says Request For warded to Washington Last Night ROUTE IS ANNOUNCED Lawsuits Cause of Delay in Construction, Official States SAN FRANCISCO. Juno 20. (JP) The Southern Pacific company has forwarded to the I. C. C. an ap plication on behalf ot the Central Pacific railway a proprietory com pany, for authority to construct and extend a line of railroad from a poiut of connection with the exist ing line at Klamath Falls, Ore., about 40 miles in a southeasterly direction through Morrill and near Mulln, Ore., to Cornell, Calif., it was announced late yesterday by Mm. Sproule, ptesident of the South ern Pacific. "This Is another step In the Sou thern Pacific company's develop ment program," Mr. Sproule said, "which was stopped by lawsuits In volving the Ceutr.il Pacific, com pelling tho oomp'iti.v to hold in abeyance its plans which nro tho construction of a standard gunge r.iilroad between tho Klamath Falls region nnd tho Central (Pacific main lino ncrosi Nevada, so as to pro vide a direct r.tll route between the northwest nnd tbo lutormountain region, und also between southern Oregon nnd tho cast,' with such brunches and feeders ns may bo necessary to glvo servlco to the public." Hights of way fur nbout 20 miles of tho proposed routo, nlready ac quired In Iho n.iiiio ot tho Mod ic Hallway company, have been tratu lerred to tho Central Pacific, It wua stated KM B 1 Weyerhaeuser Ready to Come Here as Soon as Rail Plan Approved Plans For Mill Completed With All Details Arranged For Immediate Beginning of Con struction as Soon as Commission Grants Northern Lines Permission to Enter District If and when the interstate commerce commission gives the Northern ' lines permission to extend the Oregon Trunk from Bend to Klamath Falls the Weyerhaeuser Timber company will make public complete plans for the construction of one of the largest sawmills of the state in this city. ; ,. This was gleaned today from high officials of the Northern lines who arrived in Klamath FalU today noon by motor from Ashland, where they left their private train at 9 o'clock this morningj , Fred Weyerhaeuser, director: of RECEPTION BY RAIL HEADS TO START AT 8:30 Northern line officials will ; meet .the public nt an inform al reception at ,,tUe wrilte ; l'elicnn hotel this1 "cveiiliiir, start lug nt ::. - President Clmrlos Donnelly of Iho Northern Pacific will snenk briefly and informally, outlining the general plans of the. Joint roads in their efforts to make the Iteiid-KhiinutU ex tension. . , Several hundred persons from every section of Central.. Oregon nnd Northern Cali fornia will meet the rail of. ficinls. Wires received this morning from Kusuuvillc, Cal., Indicate that more than ( will Ik- in the delegation from Northern California. American Legion Drive Is " ; Receiving Hearty Support; Fine Showing Made Already Canvnssing starts today for the American Legion endowment fund, to be raised for the benefit ot war orphans. Funds raised by this nation wide drive are to be used for the education ot children whose fathers gave their lives for their country, and for such charitable hos pitals as the Doernbecher hospital in Portland. Committeemen and prominent citi zens from throughout the county gathered ot the court house Inst night, where final plans were laid for tho drivo, and reports of prog ress made up to date given. After an address by Dr. G. S. Newsom, outlining tho worthy purposes of tho endowmeut drive, O. D. Mat thews reported that the G. C. Lorenz company had ulrendy gono over the top Willi a contribution of S 100, II. K. Geta roportod $130 from tho I WANT TO HELP AMERICA'S WAR ORPHANS To J. A. Gordon, chairman of American Legion war orphans' endowment campaign. I enclose my check for. ..... I 'want to do my bit for the children whose daddies did their bit. ' Yours, in the .BUY AT HOME; LOCAL MERCHANTS CAN GIVE YOU BETTER BARGAINS PRICE FIVE CENTS j the Great Northern and also a dlrec l tor of the timber company which , bears the family name, wag to have i made this Important announcement here tonight had ho been able to , make the trip here as he had plan jned. However, he is not among tho . rail officials, to the formal announ cement necessarily will ,be delayed. " o. .;."ii...( .Vv ' -,..- , given by Charles E. Perkins, of Burlington, Iowa, a director of the ; Northern Pacific, tits. Chicago, Bur ' ligton and Qulncy and a stockholder jot the Weyerhaeuser "dinner Co. -j "In as much as 1 am neither an officer or a director of the timber company, I am unauthorized to make ; any stitement c"n their behalf," he said. "However, It is my under standing that the company plana to start operations here as soon as tho Northern lines are given permission to moke their requested extension.'" i From other members of the party It 'was learned that all plans and blueprints ot the mill &cd mill site (Continued On Page Six) Klamath Lumber and Box company Superintendent . AI Fidler, of the1 Pelican Hay box factory, declared that the Pelican mill and camps would come through with five hundred dollars, and Ed Gowan of Chlloquln, and D. H. Crump, of Lamm's mill, declared that the drive would start In tholr territories to day, and expressed confidence that it would be well supported. Tonight Senator Jay Upton will speak at the Pine Tree theater at nine o'clock in behalf of the legion drlvo, at . tbo Liberty theator at 9:15, and will also make an appenl for the legion drlvo at the I.angoll'a Vulley barbecue, the Indian conven tion, and at Lamm's mill. Most of tho Outside canvassing will be done on bnturdny, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. Wednesday will largely bo devoted to solicitation In Klamath Falls. , . ; ' , j name of humanity, I MM