4 . ' . JIWI Squatter on U. S. Land Boun'd Over Air Mail Route to Be Resumed Emory Bavin, charged with un- POKTLANI), Oio., May 11. (fl) lawful occupation ot nnsurveyed Announcement that air mail service forest land In the Umpnua, national on the Elko-Pasco route would be forest, waa bound over to the feder 'lesumed June l, was received today 1 fraud Jury today following pre- j by Postmaster John M. Joues from llmlnary hearing before U. 8. Com- Prank P. Bell, traffic mauager of mlalloner Bert Thomas. He was re-1 (he air mall company. The corn leased on bis own recoguluace. The ' pany will operate the planes over offense is said to have taken place ill (be Diamond Lake district. DK MOLAY MKKTIXU " Regular meeting ot the local Da koagr chapter mill be held at 8:00 O'clock Thursday evening, In the Masonic hall. Reports ot delegates to the La Grande convention will be read.; The fife and drum corps will cold Its regular practice the line for four or five days bo tore starting the service 'lu order that the pilots may become familiar with the route.' : '. KKKAK HKN VANCOUVER, B. C. May- 1 UP) Thia chicken will make s meal for no small family. It has four wings, four legs, a double body and one head, and 'uses all Its legs with apparent ease. .THE EVENING IIEHALt), : KLAMATH FALLS, OltEGON 'Ctv,'-u',"-w.'-l-'JlL.'.;...1. .u.l-.,u.j u i-.i-g'T-'-' -lj i 1 i-1... - 'm. , Klamath Leads World In Yellow Pine Cut; Arnold Gives Figures Payroll from Lumber Industry in Klamath Comes to 700,000 Monthly, Word .!. - of Indian Superintendent TT 0 IRL E S Mbi1aialrfBaMaBaHaaaaamBaarfi 30x3V4 Standard Cord L; 9.56- HUB TIRE CO. C! 60. SIXTH , PHONE CI .1,1 SAVEwvA SAFETY DRUGSTORE The KLENZO TREATMENT vktENZO DentelCreme, KLENZO Antiseptioand a "KLENZO Brush ; together ; male a complete ' treatment lor teeth, gums and mouth- Clean and healthy. . teeth, .month and gums help maintain a healthy body. Use j ne ,, Klenro treatment " jStaf Drug Store tJ $9al& 2rBg Man KLAMATH VALLA, OtUBGOH Installment Buying Flayed Bankers Also Told For ; gery Is the Most Popular Crime SALEM, Ore., May 12. (In stallment payment! are highly detri mental to thrift, Prof, Carl S. Dsk an, ot the University of Washington told 100 banking men, comprising group two of the Oregon . Bankers association, here yesterday. Ha estimated that at the end of 1925 Installment contracts in the country had mounted to 15.400,000.000, an amount equal to one fourth ot the savings bank deposits ot the entire nation. 'William Barnett of San Francisco, speaking on "the modern bank crook," said that forgery Is the fast est growing crime in the United 9tates. In recent years he said tor feries amounted to $200,000,000 an ARREST CLEARS V ' '': - Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt, one bit! Drop a little "Freefone" on an aching corn. In stantly that corn stops, hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with finger . :. 7 . . Your druggist Mils a tiny bottle r.f 'Preoione" tor A few cent, sufficient to remove evory hard corn, soft corn, ot- corn between the toes, and the foot calluses.'wlthout soreness or Ir-gitatlop,.-; ;''' - - THEFT MYSTERY V'Mf Theft of a groat, .quantity of plumbing and other materials In this city bas been solved 'wltti; the ar rest in MedtoTd of George Elmore, alios George King, in the belief of Chief of Police Harry Loucks. - Learning that local officers sus pected him. King, as he waa known here; secured a truck and loaded It with materials which he took to Ashland. - ' . Anicng the list of articles re covered are. sinks, closets," laundry trays, bath tubs, soil pipe, galvan ized pipe, a range, mattresses and other miscellaneous objects, stolen from the Oompton, Kltchln, Gray, Davis, Massey aud Lorent residences or business bouses. In .the loot were' five' auto tire which' King confessed taking' from a Ford car parked near Olene. The owners listed above, together with others who may have lost sim ilar articles, ar erequested to get In touch rwlth Chief Loucks at once, la order that economical - means may be devised. for returning the loot In one load from Ashland. King is also held on a white' slave charge. It being alleged the -woman with whom he was living was not his wife.- He Is held In Jail In Jack sonville. While here he. worked for local plumbing firms. ' - Mrs. II. W. Bathlany Is visiting at Walla Walla, Wash., with friends. . , GKORGK BYNON HKIiR -.; , George Bynon i of North Bend, Oregon, si -in the city visiting with Jjlu .sinter, Ml Lolg Bj-noa, ; Klamath leads the world In pro duction ot yellow pine. Pay roll from the lumber Indus try In 192$ aggregated 1700,000 i month. . Pour hundred million feet of tim ber was manufactured In Klamath In 192S, 100,000.000 feet more than the next highest pine timber pro ducing section, Laurel, Miss. There are 23 billion feet of atan-t- Ing timber In the Klamath basin, six and one-half billion of which is on the Klamath Indian reservation. Address by Arnold.... These facts and many more given by L. D. 'Arnold, superintendent of the Klamath7 . Indian' reservation. were the nucleus of one of the most Instructive 'addresses ever given' at th'. chamber- of commerce forua:. Arnold spoke on the relation of nat Ural resources on the reservation to the ' growth and' development o Klamath Falls. He urge" that a closer bond between the reservation and the Klamath Falls corns Into being. 1S Of the seven and one-balf billion test originally standing on the reser vation, one billion bas been cut, two and one-half billion feet it under contract and four billion Is yet to be sold. Indians have realised $4 000,000 from timber-sales, some of which bas been disbursed by the In dian service. . . Arnold told in detail the proced ure In selling , reseration timber units, pointing out the fact that a minimum and. maximum cut was prescribed tor each unit, and ex plaining the. 12 per cent Increase In cost of the - timber on reservation units, every three years. 23 Per Cent In Reservation "Of the 400 million feet cut last year. 205 million feet came from the reservation." he said. "You will be interested to know tbat 23 per cent ot the standing timber in the Klam ath basin I on the reservation, SO per cent on national forest lands and it per cent owned by ten large timber, owners who as yet have not started to cut their stumpage. So from those figures yon can see that this country is bound to be one f the outstanding lumber producing sections in the United States. 'The Indian service has taken the position that reservation timber re source should not be liquidated to-) rapidly. Tbs figures I have givn on lumber production during 1926, were gathered In connecetlon with a surrey made Dy . me ana otner service officials to determine a pol icy in selling units. ;- "We believe that too rapid liqui dation would bring a slump in the lumber market from overproduction, and for) tbat reason' are going to pursue a policy -'of holding " back sliglltly In "selling units.' "" : '' 'W Many Sheep Grasetl The vlndian "reservation -plays a prominent' part in Ihe Klamath ltv jM stock industry. - understand there are 80,000 Head of sheep In Klam ath. " Of tHM' number 84;000 7 were - vet '- i s-. ' 1 . '!:', v.-, .' Ernie Takes Swim ' At Diamond Lake Ernie. Nltschlem holds the honor of being the first spring time bath er in Diamond Lake , Here's bow it all happened. . Ernie with Walter Zehung and Charles Gray, of Portland was en joying the fishing at the lake on Sunday, when Orty decided to sit on the. edge of the boat to better enable himself to cast out. He prov ed too heavy and the party all found themselves In the cold waters;; 160 feet from shore. ' - But Ernie didn't lose bis ,lin. When he landed on shore on the eril'-ef his line was a trout weighing a pound and a half. But tbe. best part ot the story Is yet to come. . . Tbe row boat floated to shore and not a fish was lost. ' The hoys got the limit catch. ' SANTA MONICA, Caljf., May 11. -iiP) An airplane loaded with life preservers circled overhead, rnarty to drop them It needed, during- a rescue ot the 28 fisher men of the launch Klsanto, which burned and sank more than a mile off shore. Two other launches rescued the men unhurt. erased on reserevation land lust year. Receipts from (erasing fuss were S2M00. whlrh Is given to tlio Indiana. "From timber sales, Indians hsv realised $4,000,000. Part of thin money has been disbursed to ths In diana, part baa bean used to defray expenses fur maintenance on the res ervation and still another part I held to the credit of the Indians by the Indian service." . Htatr Has JurlwIU-liou Arnold, made a few. pointed re marks on tlio question ot state jur isdiction, over Indian on tribal lands.- - , "Indians are cltliens in Klam ath," he said. They have the same right to Vote or to run for office as you. Why then, if they can help moke the laws of - tbe state and county, should they be exempt from obeying tbem. It hardly seems con sistent. "These tacts on Klamath and the Indian reservation ' should impel closed bond between this city and the Indiana.. For the prosperity of Klamath Falls, tp ' great extent finds Its source on the Klamath In dian reservation." ' ' Coroner's Jury . Exonerates Hale Death of Indian Lad Is Held Accident by . Body Death ot Frank Duval), five year old son, ot Mrs. rabelle . Duvull, who was struok ' down and killed Monday sight by an automobile driv en by C. D. ' Hale o this city, was held to b accidental', late yester day afternoon by a coroner's ury following an-Inquest betd'st Earl Whltlock's funeral borne. The coroner's Jury was composed ot C. C. Low. C. C." Colvln, B. S. Grlgsby, Henry Bagby, R. B. Ami eke. and P. B. DeLajyr The Jury re turned its verdict at 6 p. m. yes terday. ' ' The Duval, child was killed In front of the White lunch on Main street while his mother was eating in the restaurant. V.V!V.V.'!f'l ' U.COB NOH SIGHT --' (Continued From Page Otic) enees will be held with a view to reaching an understanding along the lines of the commission's decision: These conference probably will bs held in Now York.;.,, r : Some time ago it was said by Robert E. Strahorn, projector anil builder of tbe Oregon, California and Eastern, which.. more recently, became tbe property of the South ern 'Pacific system, that ultimately the interested .executives pt th-i rival railroad companies would gnt together around a table In a Now York office and settle the contro versies in a few minutes,'' Dey Absent. In the . absence from Portland until the latter part of tbl weak ot ' Try Our Butter T Horns Made Fresh Every Day : , CLUB CAFE 534-36 Main "Series Ypu Rlghe witinewlny, May 12! 1D2(5 SUGARMAN'S Flannel Pants Week "The finest, largest, selective stock of ' Flannel ;Pahts in Klamath,"- we boast i ; this,, and proud of being able to as a result of j serving this community for ; 20 years- .!';. 01 -5 Eton, Oxford, Bobby, flannels, in Greys, Tans, Birch, Bisc, in a host of patterns, at prices within range of every man. 1 Excellent Patterns at I . ,.r- .:i-vr.' . - S . 1 r I . " 't; a Look at your shoes others do War Florsheims at all times K. Sugarman "1 Ain't Mad At Nobod?' E Ben C. Dey, Southern Paciflo at torney; no on Is willing to make a statement-of ' lb-Is -railroad's atti tude toward the commission's deci sion. , Officials ytrft 'iHliS mnciscu said they wsutdalt ?ths .text of the decision: ' ' ,"-' . Charles A. Hart, member of the law firm of Carey and Kerr, attor neys for the . Great ' Northern Northern Paoltlo group, says be In confident that the solution proposed by the commission la workable and that the condltlous of Joint use of portions of the Southern ' Paclf c line radiating north and east from Klamath Falls can be met, Probably a few day will elapse before railroad attorneys and exec utives hare had opportunity to ab sorb and analyto tithe full text of the commission's order when fj received. "' Hold Indian on u q Theft Charges Joseph Jackson, charged with theft of auto accessories from the garage of Levi Barnle, on the Klam ath Indian reservation, iwas .this afternoon bound over to tbe foderal grand jury by V. 0. Commissioner Bert Thomas, - Jackson waived pre liminary hoarlng. Boud was sot at 11000 which lio was unablo to raise. He is in Jail. -"Applauding at a ; movie - is safe, Thoy can't give tin' "encore," ' It will pay you to Investigate my Chiropratic Health Service ! Dr. O. H. Mather 715 Main St. Phone 404 Opposite Pino Tree