University Library Published Daily at KLAMATH FALLS "An Empire Awakening" BUY AT HOME; LOCAL MERCHANTS CAN GIVE YOU BETTER BARGAINS Associated Press Leased Wire Eighteenth Year Number ftOKH KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1925 PRICE FIVE CENTS THE KLAMATH UPLIFTER Published. Tuesday, Thursdays nud Saturdays (In-uliilloii Pojfl Kdltor . ' The Hume I.INKVII.l.K CO.OI'KIUTION At n rousing mii'dIIiik of iho Link vlllo cliiiinbur cif commerce the other niniit the iiiun(i(ii r street WIIM lIlHCIIHHfll .t 111 IU Willi eiltllUflllllllll. 'Struct r I k 11 N iir u vllul part of our civic urn." declared Honorabla 1. ii . i n i . . in n burnt uf oratory, which tnc thunderous applause. "Why should m iioiuy sny longer? Wc am it progressive people Wc do not wnlt n quarter of century, liny, not nvcii n decade to put any i HirtK sorosi, Wu imliovn in speedy action. ''Therefore,, I move you. Mr. Pra tldeut, thm our cbumber of -mi-inorcu no on record U fuvuriug the Installation or hIku poiU not Inter than April Fool' ility, U27." Tho silence WM o tcuKc that you could lutvn heard a iiln drop -roller or sitfoty m PrtlldlDt Itlp Vun Wlnklo rubbed lh ulaop cut or hl cytin and gajsed out over that nea or expoclaul furoit. "1 I am overwhelmed by thin splendid spirit or npood and co operation," hcalammorotl, "but It each or uh putM bin shoulder lo Hie wheel, I know iWS 0B put It across. Ifu a mighty lnk but I believe our civic pride will carry uh on to uc ceii." Tho motion wan put. and wan car ried by a glorious majority. A moment later the entire mem bership Joined In singing "When You and 1 Were Youtm. Maggie." anS then the meeting adjourned. TI1K W'KKKI.Y IUHCOHII Utile Lord Kauntleroy. Kdltor (A newu lottor tor all members or the Uplift club.) By unnnlmoun nctlon of the board of directors It win decided to Initials a movement looking toward n f0 reduction In the price or drinks. We have adopted it slogan: "Eour bit! Is too much ror n two-bit drink." Tho committee expects to report proyresH at the next meeting. At tho next forum luncheon or the tJplirturti, Itoy Dunn will be the chief apeaker. Hiking for bin subject, "Why Olrlit I.oavu Home." There will he apodal mualc. by the Uplift iiunrtet. compoacd of Jack tllover, Linn Nes mlth, 1)111 Marx and Perry Del.ap. Thoy will alnit: "You Made Mu What I Am Today, 1 llopo You're Satis fied." Tom Malarkey. In bin usual roalls tle manner, will sing that OUChlttf. hnllad, "JUST A I.ITTI.E DRINK." Tho committee on Pair Play re porta progress on the movement to Induce nil duck and lease hunters not to ntart for the mtirahos until after 8:.10 in the inornliiR. The Up lirterii consider It unfair to make Traffic Cop Knuwles Ret up so early In the morning, because of nil the vicious road violations, speeding on n deserted load during the early morning bourn In the worst. Tim Upr lirters are slartug a f ll nil to give Mlnter KnowlcH a modal, They prob nbly will solect u douhle-cross. An old member, Pnul Kanlngtoii. was reinstated In tho Uplltt cliin thin week. He passed the first ini tiation with Hying colors, but Bill) Hoquontly WAS dropped from the rolls. Since Ills reinstatement ho Is fast rounding Into form like a true Up' lifter. TODAY'S HPITAPH llunentb this mound Lion HnHtun Jonun, He made nine pnnuuH With his well-trained bones, A MOIillKX THOUGHT Will TODAY Kvery mnn thinks ho can euro a cold or raise it family until ho gels one of his own, . Alrt't It The Truth? A guy I hnto Ih DriiiiIo Qdtoh, He nelln me "moon" Por bonded Scotch. a uttio prude In Oortio Grimm, She always calls A leu, a limb, Kiddies' Christmas Fund Will Bring Joy And Laughter Into Many Cheerless Klamath Homes Evening Herald Wants to Make This a Banner Year For Unfortunate Tots Who Might Otherwise be Forgotten Boxers Doing Their Bit While the spirit of Thanksgiving prevails today, it might be well to pause for a moment and give a thought for the unfor tunate little youngst ers of the city who are looking forward to Christmas morning with some misgivings. There are a large number of boys and girls who are won dering if Santa Claus is going to pass them by; if, on Christmas morning they arc go ing to awaken in some cheerless home and find that tears and hear-aches are to be theirs instead of joy and happiness. This is an appeal to you grown folks. Just let your memories wander back through the years to the days when your mothers tucked you in bed on the night before Christmas. Can't you recall how ex cited you were? How, in childish fancy, you imagined you heard the sound of the reindeer? How you awak ened in the morning and rushed pell nu ll into the warm sitting room to find that the mysterious Santa had not forgotten you during the night? Or there may be some of you who may see a far different picture on the seared canvas of memory. Are there those of you who had no Christmas? Whose hearts ached in silence because you had been forgotten? Tim livening Herald, In conjunction with the Christmas Chest, Is promotlOl n fund to be used exclusively In making ll a real Christmas lot thd kiddles ( Klamath Fulls tho Utile t Is whose parents are un ulilu to provide ilium with the little Wyland flfta SO dear to tho hearts or the children, and without which It Is not o real Christmas,. Those rhlldion who are recommatlded as deserving by the Christmas Chest InvcstlKittiiiK committee will he supplied with toys; inexpensive llltlo gifts which will make childish laughter echo through the drear honiea, ior. the city. The Christmas Chest will take care of the families in the way of olOtfatnf and focd and other supplies; Hut the Kvonlng Herald's Kiddles' Christina i (and must supply the Christmas caeor lor tile bora and gill". First response to the Herald's appeal was made by Johnnie Sylvester and Jack Median, promoters of the boxing cards. Ten per cent of the proceeds of the surrj next Tuesday night will be donated to this fund. (Continued on race Two) State's Wards Will Have Big Thanksgiving Special Programs Pre pared in Institu tions KAI.EM, Ore.. Nov. 28, Today will ho a day of Joy for the wards of the state, all the way from the liny tots at the state school 'for the blind to the most hard boiled "eight minute egg" In the peniten tiary, thanksgiving dinners and programs will he the order of the day. BeoUuSO of Ha high price lurltey will he eliminated from the menus except In the Institutions that do not have u large population, mu! In some of tho others where the officers may have a snack of tur key.,' Here is the menu at tho stale hospital lor the Insane: Two thousand pounds roast chicken; 100 gnllons glblql gravy;! 1(10 gallons fruit salad; lllo gallons' innshed potatoes; 1000 bunches of celery; 4 bnrrelH cranberries; 300 pumpkin pies; 800 mince pies; 100 1 boxes apples; 000 gallons cider; (100 pounds rnlsln cake; 200 dotenj eggs; 200 gallons milk; 200 gal lons coffee! 200 gallons tea; loo pounds plumb pudding, mid all "trim mill's", ,At the ItatS penllenllnry u vniide vlllo program and motion picture will be put on in the forenoon. aii the othor state Institutions will he entertnlned by million pie lure shows una lmvc Special Thanks giving dinners. - , 1 ' f UN STUDENT NEAR DEATH IN MICU.I ru Frank Humphrey, Enroute 1 Home for Thanksgiving, ( is Seriously Injured OTHERS IN HOSPITAL Skidding Car on Wet Pave ment Causes Crash, Wo man Driver at Fault KI'fiKNK, Hie.. Sov. if I. ' Homeward lioiiinl tor Thanks giving', I'ViiiiU Humphrey, n Mil drill itt the UiilvcrKlty of Ore. goii, was perhaps fatally Injur? ml, and five oiler ivunlo uon llli re or less wrlituf.lv llJUIl lute yrslei-ilay eltel'itiHtll In nil automobile aal l 'iii six mil.1 j north of i '..: Humphrey Buffered n fractured skull, unit little Input are. expressed ! at the lioHpita.1 wh-r; he has liien : tukeii that ho inlKli: liv ! Mm. Hazel Cnnter :i;ul Mr', line j I Blllott of 1'ortlnnil. anl Vr and Mr?, i Joint Toeves of A'lerdeen, Idaho, are also in the hojpilal. vlctlaui of the same craBh. Jerrv Harnard, also a student at the aniv irslty and a bro ther of Mr. Cantor, was baiilv bruised and eufr-i".! a wrenche,! huto sn-up ones, inn returnee i- i:ie iraieiiiiiv . . , . ho:,se vhero m. i.e. HMng. A hunter is either lost or Mr. and Mrs. T.:eves were In ' seriously injured OUt in the one machine, while the others were dangerous marshes of Tule In the second car. jake according to word re- Auto suids I ceived this morning by the According to the story told here, . r. c. u Wl the part;, of three had left Eugene j sheriff S ohce. Me IS W1I ror Portland. Mrs. Cantor was :liam Hardberger, sawyer for I driving, and had been following an other machine, t'.'o machine ahead slowed down, suddenly at a road crossing, and In attempting to slow down Aor light bnpe, Mrs. Cantor applied the brakes. The car skid ded, and was struck broadsld; by the Toeves car. Both machines wore practically demolished. Humphrey was thrown against the wlnrshield and bracing of the closed car. Mrs. Cantor suffered a badly sprained ankle and tho ota crs In tho mishap suffered cuts about their faces and heads. All were Suffering from severe shock. GENEVA One thousand treat ies have now been registered with the league of nations in the open diplomacy which Woodro.v Wilson stressed. CAL.EXICO, Calif. Nearly one hundred American women have been ordered out of Mexlcnli. Uncle Of Kip Rhinelander Was Once Married To Servant Girl Declares New York Newspaper Evening World Digs Up Evidence That Rela-i tive of Wealthy Youth Had Same Sort Of Trouble And Was Disinherit ed By His Relatives J NEW YORK, Nov 26. (AP) The New York Evening ! World cays today that Leonard Kid Rhinelander, in ihis marriage to the daughter of a nearo hack driver. ' from whom he is now seeking an annulment, followed j the marital example of another Rhinelander, one of his ; uncles, who twice married beneath his social position. j ! This uncle was William Copeland Rhinelander, oldest I brother of Leonard's father. He married a servant of ; the family nearly fifty years ago when he was just out , of Columbia college, and was at the age of his nephew I j who is now in a marital tangle. Nearly twenty one years ! after his marriage to the servant girl this uncle married again tnis time to a waitress Local Hunter Lost In Marsh Of Tule Lake Last Seen of Will Hard berger is Yesterday At 2 P. M. the Ewauna Box company, and his hunting companions have not seen him since he plodded o.i' into the marsh yesterday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Authorities at Malin were notified this morning by the sheriff's office and plans were being formulated this morning to carry on an ex haustive search for the mis sing man. Hardberger. accompanied by Mr. an,l Mrs. E. J. Carter and Roy Haren, journeyed to the 101 ranch on the east side of Tule lake and near BIcody Point. The three hunt ers separated, each plodding his way out luto tho marsh and tuies, which border the 101 ranch. That was the last seen or heard of Hard (Continued on l'agt Four) in a qutcK tuncn piace. After his first marriage William Copeland Itbinelander was disinher ited by his grandfather. William C. Rhinelander, for whom he was nam ed. He was cut off from a fortune or Sl.UOO.OOO. His parents, William ous men. fresh from the soil of Rhinelander and Mathilda Crngeri their native heath In England, ur Oakley Rhinelander. later cut him off I ,-ived a year In a strangt- country from his share in an estate valued j and with the odds against them, at $50,000, leaving him an Income When the late fall rolled around of only 15,000 a year. His aunt. Miss and their harvested crops were e Zrcna Rhinelander. who left an estnte j cure in storage shacks, they felt of $2,000,000. did not even mention him in her will. Weds Servant 0ir1 William Copeland Rhinelander was barely 21 years of age when he shocked society in 1876 by marrying Maggie McGinness, a servant em ployed by his family. Miss McGinness claimed to be the direct descendant of an Irish king, but the father turn ed the couple out of doors. John Drake, family lawyer, made an ar rangement whereby they received $100 a week. In 1884 Rhinelander was arrest e.1 charged with trying to kill DruUe. whom he accused of trying to alien ate the affections of his wife and of- icriog iier money to go to treianu anu never return. Drake was shot in the shoulder and died six months later. I Rhinelander was never tried for the Bhootlng. Second Ituuaway This Rhinelander attracted atten tion again in 189". by a runaway marriage with Juliette Maier,-pretty waitress in a quick lunch place in .Manhattan. It is believed he had ob- j tained a separation from his first j wife. After his second marriage Khiuelander posed as the man who ; had sacrificed "millions for love." He obtained a pittance from his; fnther's will on the stipulation that j he would live away from New York. For years he resided in Canada and Brooklyn, then a city by itself, and I finally settled down in Schenectady. I where he lived as a recluse. The last I known of him was in 1914, when he i was living in a furnished room In Schenectady, blind and paralyzed. His second wife was still with him. 1 THREE ARRESTED S IN BOMB OUTRAGE chicago, Nov. 26. Two men! and a girl were captured and an-! other man was thought to . have ' been killed early today when scores j of policemen ambushed a gang just I as tney exploded a bomb whicnl wrecked a hardware store. Miss I.ee McClellan, Columbus, Ohio; Fred Wuimquist and Joseph Aveqgl were arrested. The men wore shot about the head, in the Chase that followed the explosion. The supposed dead man was believed to have thrown the bomb. wtw c L o -a i Will Oust Smith As Oregon Coach SEATTLE, Nov. 2C. lP) A new I football coach for the University of Oregon has been signed, but his itlontit is not to be made known i until December 10. Virgil Earl, ath - tettc director at Oregon announced hero today. National Forest Earns Big Profit BAKER, Ore.. Nov, 2G. (ff) Figures released here today show that Whitman National forest eam jod n pr.ifit 61 $85,427.10 duilng tho (pnst. 12 months, The total revo jhue from the forest was 18,264,83 j including $151,475.09 from timber 'sales and nearly ?2S,000 from stock grazing. MY OF THUS CELEBRATED BT KLAMATH PEOPLE Community Has Much to be Grateful for During Year of 1925 TURKEYS REIGNING Football Game to be At tended by Many, Before Thanksgiving Dinner ; Once acain the year lias rolleil .around to Than kmrlvinc ilnv nn,l once again the Klamath populace arp ' eiebratinK this day of thonks hi''llrPeaprt"n"ar di"PO!,"ion Today ITtbe 30M anniversary bt Thanksgivini?, a holiday strictly nicncan. It originated in 1021 among the Pilgrim fathers on the hard and rocky soil of Xew Eng land. These Coil-fearing and rouraec- that some expression of thanks .o the Almighty would be appropriate. - Peelnre Thanksgiving . So a day of Thanks was declared, a day on which tho chores were for gotten and on which worship pre vailed In the morni.Tf, and feasting and celebration marked tho late af- j 'f110011 and evening. So fitting was me custom ana so perfectly did it j fit into the habits of the average j American, that it was adopted as i National holiday and. has so en dured for 304 yers. i Locally speaking. Thanksgiving j will be celebrated Just as It will j be celebrated fa thousands of other ; communities within the boundaries nf Mi.. FTnltarl Qtntua Tha.a uH1 j be church in the morning, for those who feel the call to worship at the altar of their God. There will be the football game in the afternoon which will undoubtedly be well at (Coutinucd on 1'ugo Four) Thieves Enter Waldorf Cigar Store At Night Sixty Dollars Stolen By Unknown Prowlers One or more burglars last night broke into the Wal dorf card room and cigar store, stole $50 out of the safe, took about $10 from a money drawer beneath the counter and made their es cape, leaving no clews be- bind. The robbery was dis- covered when the place was opened for business, this momine . . , . . ...v r..r....... ... r...v. believe that one of the burg lars hid in the basement during the evening and re mained secreted until after the place had closed for the night. This could be ac complished by lifting a Ismail trap door when no- body was looking. It is thought this prowler then opened one of the doors for , , .i . ,r 4U h P1' nd tna ,then j proceeded to rob the place. I The small safe- in which j Ue er wag cached, had been left unlocked, although the burglars were compell- ed to iimmv open the inside money box of the safe. They then cut out the lock from the counter money drawer, where they got the $10 in silver. There was no evidence that the visitors had taken any large amount of tobacco or other articles of merchan dise, i