Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1928)
r.tro Four THE EVENIN'C HERALD, KLAMATIL EALLS. OREGON JJI)0 2Eimtutij T&vvalb R MAI.ARKBT. B. JCNULIHH ..DuitDMi Manager '.Tufell.h.o' everr aftarnnen tiopl Sunday br Tha Harald Publishing timpanr at 1(11-111 Mouth Fifth atreat, KUnulk Pall. (Mik I Entered as eaeond elase matter at tha poetofflea at Klamath Falls. Or'agoa. oa Autuat 10, isos, undar act of Conaraaa, alaroa a, isis. Baa Taar . an Months . Vkrea Months Una Month Dellverta hr Carvtee On a rear 1 " . Six Month. . l it Thraa Months , I . . Ona Month , . AlaOrlATKD PHEftB I.KASKD WIHM MHMMCR OK AlUIT BI'HKAD Or CIRCULATIOH IV MnaWr af ka Aaallf4 Pvaaa fa Aaaoetatsd Prvaa la asrtualvrlr antltlad to tha una or rapnhtloa tlan of all ptvi rtl.patchaa credltra to It or not otharwla aradttaa la thla papar. and alao tho local aaws publlahad Iharaln. All rlffhta at re publication of apaclal dlapatchaa haraln ara alao raaarvsa. T WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1928 vaniaso over Ernest Vlorkoettor. tho Uvrnian who was la aocoiid place. Lon dfstanra swimmers In ojuest of turns and fortune In tho annual aquatic classic, the Vrl vy marathon, wore sent off on tholr fiftwu-mlto Journpy through the Ire-cold waters of Lake On tario at 11 o'clock thla morning. O 1 1 r e GaitsrOam. liJ-cjr-oli Seattle, Washington, mermaid, was the only feinlulna swimmer in the field. MUs Oatterdara was runner-up ; to Ethel llertle of New Tork )n ' the women's ten-mile swim of i last week. The five first fin ishers lit this event were privileg ed to compete with the men but four of the five failed to take ad vantage of the opportunity. v Waters through which the con testants in today's f $0.01)1) event were to toll for more than seven hours. If they were to reach the finish, ranged In temperature from 49 degrees outside the breakwater, where approximately three-quarters of the struggle takes place, to about S? degrees In tide the breakwater. BUILDING SITE j IS SELECTED r (Continued from pate 1) World Peace Yet a Farce $ "Peace Pact" "Disarmament" "League of Jsa tinns" "Mediation" "Arbitration" "Conciliation." I News headlines have bristled with these pithy and plcific expressions since November 11, 1918. World Deuce has been a universal topic for the past decade be cause millions suffered cruelly in the cataclysm of " appropriated by the to-; I ment Jor the construction of the 1914-18. building and J50.000 for the! Conferences have been held; the league of nations has I purchase of a site. However, Mr. deliberated at length; disarmament proposals have been I Roberts reassured the chamber! . .. . , ,, ,, ,- ,i . committee this morning, the, considered; and, finally, Mr. Kellogg s peace pact has . momy MWi on the purcha80 Cf been signed. J "' S. r " site will be applied on the; j . What does the casual observer believe? He thinks construction cost of the building. that the foundation for. international peace has been laid g0lahfor3'fj",1to.eavlng.'lbaN i d tiring this past decade. ' ,. ' iance of :69uo whkh win bring j Kelly smiles at Scene of Slaying 11 1 i V i r t i in, 1 if 1 i" I- FIRST DAY QF E Inuei Imvo ulri'udy been expeiiilud I lu repartitions nil ! work fur ro llublllillu."i ' .Wednesday, Sentomlior ft, 1928 FIVE DIE WHEN PLANE CRASHES AC OVER I Unfortunately, he is wrong. ;;,When all is said and done, international efforts to- the amount available for struction up to 1228.900. Locking more like a genial host Itr his own estate than the de.ltween llarrlsburg and ritlshnrsli fendant In a great murder trial. Leo I'. Kelly, right. Is nhnwn with a I while 1'aul Charles, flying a i mnnn n,t will tutrln nil deDUtV (in the norch of the hnilliMd Ii,. re hn la i'hMril with miirl..i. lit., i . WBrds establishment of permanent Universal peace have!the project Is-vet unknown. How- ln Mr- -Myrtle .Melius. Los Angeles society woman. Kolly. It was I sreuged "near Heaver l'a " been a Sickenine. revoltinir farce. Everv conference ha3 t ever. Mr. Roberts pointed out. '" " clandestine sweetheart of Mrs. Melius. ; , : ; been hypocritical I.ISI.H UKT T'll'.M (Colilinuaa lion page ti HAI.KM, Ore.. 8'M't. 4. . tl!ll I (he aompany; W. Wlumtley, ' nonunion! of f. J. I.lslu of Huli'in': brother o.( Hi l""l l'"". ' L ...I.... hrflcer for Iholf. MclmiH-r, a company mm'liai.lo j.talo irilulng school for boys nnd liu.liaiid of Mrs. H.haper, as COl.t'M llt'S.. O.. Sept. 5. (AIMlWa, ulinounced here today. Lll. piasengers. Completing the first day's :, Smnlh-Aiiierlmn war veteran. (I. t'. Miller, airways eslensluii flight on their cross country . ma ,(.n engiigiMl In newsimper siiMrvlor for lliu depsriiiieut of nice from New York to Uis Au-Miul pul.lliliy work for u Hum-. commerce, lodiiy was liivesllgat. geles In the national air derby, j tor of yeurs. ' tUo 'rl1- seven planes had Undcd at Nor-1 ' ' ton field here shortly after' noon There are only four tnlc-- Klclly Is 10,000 siiara mllea today. Three stopped at Youngs-1 hitler, salt, uud ucld. ;ln "' town but later resumed flight. ! " Kurl Kowliind, Wichita. Kits., led from McKeesporl to t'olnni bus lundtng first at both fields. He leveled his Cessna A mono plane at 11:10 ij m. and lauded at Norton field reudy lo checlw his plane and rullro for I lie day. The planea get away at dawn to morrow on (ho aocoud day's flight wast. Hubert Pake. t'ltlsliurgli. brought his American Moth to eirth at 11:1 a, in. for second honors In leading the racing van guard. Others landed In the following order: V. N. Kmery. Jr., Ilrailford.! Pa., In his Trnvelitlr al 11:3S a. in. Theodore W. Kenyon, lloston. Challenger, 11:6 a. tn. James 8. Charles, Klchinomrt Vs.. Alexander Kagle Hock, 13:03 P. m. . Kugene Detmer. Tarrytown, N. Y.. Travelalr. U:tlS p. in. Tex Itankiii, Portland, Ore., Waco, 13 06 p. m, ' Two of the ' rompetllors were unreported, ono of them, Wll ford tierbracht, piloting a Trav-. elalr. was reported down be- NOTICE! MEDFORD - KLAMATH AND KLAMATH - LAKEVIEW FREIGHT LINES Now Permanently Located at PEOPLE'S WAREHOUSE PHONE 704 SOUTH SIXTH ST. -all words; no deeds. Disarmament I th,f, s,,e " twill Ma 1 1 ma In hreaklnv n(f provea io oe a aeiusion; me peace pact is so our- , ground for the federal project deped with ifs and ands that it is a mere expression of (good will; the league of nations has conferred at length, but that's about alj; and throughout Europe the ol4, "behind-the-curtain" intriguing diplomacy is under wife. ' :j These statements are not idle editorial .'.effusions. There are facts to back them up. 1 1 Does the average man realize that the immense sum of 15300,000,000 is being expended each "year on arma mdtats? Does he realize that, on the average, every hihian being in the world pays $2 annually fort this nnrnnsp? i .'.. . - ; r T" Although Mr. Roberta' recom mendation Is not final, official- j ly, in effect his selection will be endorsed by the United States government. The? last work on ; the site Is left ln the hands of : the treasury department I HORACE DUNLAP RESIGNS TODAY DIRIGIBLE m BEG SEARCH ROME. Sept. 5. ,T The diri gible N-5. a- sister ship of fhe lost Italia, Is being prepared f)r a final attempt to locate thfete of the Italia s crew last seen LOS ANUKLKS. Sept. (TIM Holding that Iho HI. Pruncls dam disaster did not Justify an ll-ceut tax iucreasi.iu Los An geles. Mayor Oeorge fryer today vetoed the tax ordinance. The, mayor said -"over two millions of' PART OF RUM CARGO TAKEN (Continued tram pace I) tallied five bottles mid another . dollars taken-from current rove six. There was no broken glass In the bottom of Ihe sacks. I Customs men said Iho 1.051 cases or sacks contain 12, CSC buttles of assorted liquor. ' Captain Robert Pamphlet, skip., per of the Posrawhn, said in a (Continued rrom page One) Judge Goddard and Commission er Short declined to discuss the few with the gas bag, says C.ionale I ""'""r mat he wns certain the Italia today. Tl dirigible will Hl'iuor bad been tampered with. have Maihach motors and In technical details will dlfferf IIHow many people are aware that Europe today has .'i,ua,h)n ty" mmi man oemo1 ont kottla tk.n 4l. 1 . 1 08 resignation , - f ..." m . . 1 1 v. u mm & (u; lui vokbjc mail uii iuc . C ui 1 0WS xnq great war; tnat even the little nation, otand has 26,000 men under arms? ijDoes the world realize that the BallWB'sitiiartiow isi" seWous; that Italy and Jug'o-Slavia are at the brink of iComn misunderstanding; that the East Prussian situation threat ens and that Soviet Russia is making progress in its prop-' aglnda campaign in Europe? ' t j That's why we say that the peace talk of the past decade is a farce- What ineffectual mover have been made toward peace have not been actuated by asincere effort on the part of political powers, but by the swelling crl of humanity demanding surcease from this recurring plague of mankind. That's why they have failed. jjUnless some definite and binding peace plan is de PORTLAND, Ore.. Sept. 5. (,?) A bottle of rubbing alcohol put In an appearance here today as .t'nlted States customs officers were confiscating the 1.063 case Rqnor cargo of the Canadian rum runner Pescawba. . The rubbing iic.hil bottle was found la one. 1 from its ill-fated predecessor. It read as fol- is said General Nobile hlmnl( 1 Is supervising the work and it Is "To the Honorable County l expected that the N-.' will bo Judge Goddard and County Com- i taken to the Clamplano flying missioner Short; 1 herewith sub-, field before the end ol tne weeg. nw resignation a , count The newspaper says. Uuit Uen- commUsioner ol. -Klamath, eoaa, eral .'"roniie ana. ,(lm.iUfr experts iof (no uacit ciinlalnlng what cus- - wno are preparing ior tne x-itom officials said was the entlro (Signed) Horace Dunlap. i pedition aro akenilcal about lheBnd nmouehed flrlto of n,0 Pes- Short at first suggested thit ran Joset lana acceptance of the resignation be significant of the where- withheld until Saturday, but f-' "bouts of the missing men from mi i. wi,h inHff. r.ort-ithe Italia. They are determin- dard both officials decided to accept It today. . . . Whether or not 'Sir.' Dunlap's resignation was Impelled by ill visfcd before 1938 there may be another, world war. Bythat time the memories of the last war's horrors will hate dimmed; the millions who fought and suffered will be "old-timers," and a new generation, excitable and patriotic, will be ready and willing to hurl themselves inte the maw of death for the Mother Country. health, or the press of his pri vate business is not known offl- 'cially. However it is known that. Mr. Dunlap was concerned over, ed, however that something must ! be done within a few weeks as the long Polar night Is at hand. ' The newspaper relates further , that General Nobile is going over eawha. Dottles without labels on them, bottles with labels but without seals, ' and bottles wrapped In . Portland newspapers gnve fur-1 thcr testimony of the nature and j origin of at luust some of the1 liquor which was destroyed to-j aay. Reports had been circulated re peatedly that a considerable (quantity of the Pcsrawha liquor There' a Fella named LaDieu with AJax Tires on hls'Ponllac. He represents the Herald, and cv.tnes around after copy all the lime, and I sometimes feel like cussin him, but I net a chance lo see the wonderful mileage he la getting on A lux Tires. I have aome compensa tion when I don't feel like writing an ad. JIM HILL'S SERVICE pho'nk n.vt I'l.l M HT. Ride with Sou&tfihieii'im ffegoim Stages TERMINAL DEPOT 615 Main - Phone 999 The Pioneer Line of Southern Oregon operating local service from Klamath Falls to Chiloquin Ashland and Medford, with connections to all points North and South. This company has served you faithfully in . the past years and will continue giving your excellent service. Busses leave from Stape Terminal, G15 Main street for Ashland and Medford at 7 a. m. 10 a. m. 1 :30 p. m. 5 p. m. For Chiloquin and way points , 8 a. m. 12:30 p. m. 3:30 p. m. 7 p.m. Southern Oregon Stages THE WORLD HAS A NEW AND FINER MOTOR CAR road Inspection problems ln-'to be adopted wltn the N-5V lr volved in the Fort Klamath road projects! j Mr. Dunlan waa elected in No-1 ADMIMSTK.TR H VOTH'K vember, 1926 and has been In office one year and 8 months of a Tour year term. . Although the court was not all the scientific data brought back from the north In the of finding something that will aid In determining the methods h3(1 Lwn temp,.re, wltn , land and that sorao of It had been substituted for a less palat able or less costly grade. Customs offiiers had denlcC the rumors. . OK FIU; KIXAIj At OI XT In the. County State of Oregon Connty. Court of thn for Klamath Science explains everything: except the manner in ready mak ny utsmel" re-i Notice is hereby given that I . . . i voFHInv f Till n las. a tt r tl I, A fiatul u-niiitt inn KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UP) Carl Nasnllo, Sept. 4. 20 the which t jpf the navy is serious in its desire to find a substitute for.the word "gob," it must change those pants. : '- jjjThey say wind blowing into the mouth injures the to!i8i!e. Mention this to the driver who occupies the back seat. ii ' : jlf5he's old enough to be called -"miss" if she won't tackle corn on the cob until she gets back to the kitchen. LARGE GAIN IN SCHOOLS NOTED (Oantinned From Page One) routine of study for the year will be carried out. ' ' Teachers were all on duty this morning and this aftcrooon'spent the greater part of the time out lining work for pupils. With the exception -of Miss! Etta Karr, newly appointed prln-1 garding Mr. Dunlap's successor, bave tiled my final account and youngest suspect In the Home ,,,e; Trust Company bandit gang, wno "e-1 killed Patrolman Jnmes II. probably be a p p o i n t-' ceased, ana tne ai.ove Sm,h. a. . . . , . ... . . a great moral principle Denelita by one nation's . m i. .rtminiiratnr of tnpit 01 another S territory. cles today that a commissioner i estnte of Oeorgo O. Porter, de-, kiIori patrolman James IS I would nrohahlv be a d d o t n t- ' ceaseo. ana me smih. went to 'trial today with ed nntl, the genera, election tSrofTrM-V itafs.h ' ' "etermined on h, when a special county election (Jay of o tober. 192S, as the time sime punishment as In two prcvl would be held to select a man anj inc county court' room In the oua convictions the death to fill out Mr. Dunlap's unex- court house of Klamath county.,' penalty. plred term. ,-. Oregon, 111 the city of KlamaUi . raiin, as ie piuce, whcu uu j where inv nerxnn RI&V Dresent W.PICKERING ' r objection or exception to: a ixr a rl-v"l- v twtv-t .anyinmg cmajm u n.-i ...... mi YVtIUILU Ulll anything done by him , ministrator, and and LOS ANCKLKS. Sept. 4. (VI') 4 Statements by Mrs. Minnie Kennedy, mother of Mrs. Aimeo as ad- Semple .Mci'lwrHnn. that 12.600 that at such ! had been paid Judgo Carlos S. r'nin. lime ana place me aiwve en- tinrdv In connect Inn . with the was opened to bids from Klam- 'ule', t01""' wl" finally pass up- kidnaping cane of Ihn evamtellsl, ath operator:. 1 " "d "krIViJ fTkt'ciVkr met with Tree admission hero to- Almost simultaneously with! ' Administrator of the Ks-'dajr bjr ,l10 JudK0 nd repreacnta Southern PacUic began to acquire I . tatc of (;corn0 r). Porter, "ve of evangelist. It was rights of way north of Alturas, ; deceased. ' j paid, they said, for ordinary legal the dispatch said. ! S5-12-19-26-03 advice. t year school was not opened be- caiism of the epidemic of In fantum narnlvala ' rl!a lr,M i Iferald reporter this forenoon. 1 .clPal ' H'versklet school -who "Then, when school did open, 1 t"k,e" tne P of Miss Chloe mart' of the mothers were reluc- Pa,mfr- resigned, the principals tant to allow their children to i reain ' " 'a5ne as " year as' entor for several weeks." I A Cetral school, 'Mrs. Len A; check or the enrollment nf ' "ekett Is principal; Falrvlew, 2 - .. . . . i Mrs. Rhha eaoa of the schools against the;, . "ennety Fremont, opening date ono year ago, shows'"" Augusta Parker: Mills. Mra. iKiiea l.b sesun, ana i'eucan City, Mrs. Myrtle Helm. Mlhj school In the lead with an enrollment of 454 students to day. . 1 i..iiii,i - ' Following are the enrollments CUIMMCDC s"I TT foriioday and one year ago: i J T llVllVlCKO UU 1 I Fremont .. Cehtral .... Faltvlew .. Mil Pejltan City 1928 192 .. 892 218 21T 454 .H0 Ititarside 182 i! Total 1573 320 ; lit ! 136, 223 109 144 ; OF LONG RACE (Continued from page l) f . ful Canadian coimoeror of the ' Catallna channel grind. Robs suffered chills in the icy water and was unable to meet ! 1050, the surge of Young who shook The morning hours were de- off the effects ', tbe qod water vototl to study and this after-lafter a few minutes near the nooi children were dismissed. To-' Ihree-mlle point nnd went on'tu moEIow morning pupils will re-1 luke the lend. Young at the five ' port on . time and the regular, mile mark .hadbalXjniliL-adT 1 ft 72 Famous Child Evangelist to Speak in Citv , SEPTEMBER 5-6-7-8-9th Violet Van Gundy, 11-year-old child evangelist will begin 'short campaign at Klamath Temple tonight RADIO CONVERT Violet is a Radio convert of Aimee Semple McPherson. At the age of 3'- years she was on the stage in Hollywood, California.- She also took important parts in plays with Mary Pickford. YOUNG SOLOIST Jack Van Gundy, 9-year-old brother of Violet, will assist his sister a9 rojoist during the meetings. The general public is invited to attend these meetings. KLAMATH TEMPLE 331 South 8th St. We'll ledpe it to you just look at the body designs of the other 'i i . new cars, then look at the . Nash "400" Salon design; The "eyes" will be for Nash. NA " Leads the World in Motor Car Value OTHER IMPORTANT FEATURES WO OTHER CAR HAS Til EM ALL Aluminum alloy piilonl Cavar Sinn) 7-bcarinl erankthaft UtlhmtmtHmt) World's sssieit itearlnl Torsional vibration damper Salon Bodies Twin If nitioa motor 12 Aircraft type spark pluji Iliah eompreMioa New double drop frame Houdaills and Lovsjoy shock ebforhsrs Mu'm Nuk ) TEMPLAR 11th and Klamath Ilijur centralized oliasaia luhrioalion l'lcctrio clocks Short lurnin rsdiut Ixinr whselhsiei Nsih-Speciil I)tiln front and rrsr bumpers MOTOR CO. Inc. Phone lOlO' 23'