'! 21, 1936
THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
,v'
PAGE THREE
COUNCIL cms
LICENSE FEES
0
CIRCUSES
A new elrc'iu ordinance redue
In a previous exhorbltant II
ennaa (ao for ehowlng within tho
city limits, end setting now
license at $100 per day lor any
type of carnival, elrcue or me
nagorlo -how, waa Introduced at
tim Mnniluv evening mooting of
tho oily council. Tin ordinance
waa passed to second resdlng,
and by apoolal motion read for
the third and rinai urn ana ep
proved and passed by ,lhe eoun
ell.
An ordlnanoa reposllng all for- j
ii ..).. nf atnl mitMllnns. 1
limr iivwh-,,ii -
dart gnmee and so-called lmi
of ah III waa punned to tho third
and final road In g and' adoptod.
Many Mreiiers Inpe
Chief of Police Krank Hanim
waa authorised to arroal and
prosecute any firm or atora
which Issues and distributes
hand bllla on city alroota. There
la an ordlnanra prohibiting thla
practice, which hae become an
abuse In the city, accordlnK to
Councilman J. J. Kollor, and fu
ture infringements will be, dealt
with according to provisions of
thla ordinance.
Police Judge Itlchmond called
the council's attention to the
fact thut many milk and moat
dualora, as well as rooming; house
and hotel operators had failed
to renew their licenses which
fell due on Junuary 1, 1 B3.
Ileer Itrfnial Iteconsldered
The chief of police waa au
thorised to notify managers of
these establishments that the II
cenao fees must be paid by May
1, or their placea of business
closed. ,
A beer package license appli
cation for a neighborhood store
at 1060 California avonue which
was refused at a recent meeting
of the council waa re-consldnred
Monday evening and allowed,
fnllcwlm atudy of a resolution
governing Issuance of beer li
censes. It waa determined that
the resolution which prohibits
the Issuauce of any more beer
licenses applied to Main street
establishments only.
MiM-kley Ilun May 1
P. fi. Hockley, state PWA ad
mlnlslrator. will be In Klamath
rails an Mar 1. according to a
communication received by the
police Jmlgo and read to the
council, llocgiey uesirou 10
mentlne arranged for that
data, at which PWA achlevo
menls may be discussed. The
mayor, city onglnoor, members
of the council and othora who
havo boon engaged lo adminis
trative work on i-WA projects,
m be nreaent at this meeting
The council voted to allow the
council chambers to be used
Wednesday evening, April 23, for
a mooting of all food and , bev
erage dispensers of the city.
The meeting has been called by
ii,. nroion Pood and Dispensers.
Inc.. and auch mootlngs are bo-
in scheduled over the slate,
Members of the Orogon liquor
control commission win be pres
ent at this time, and win au
dress the dispensers on intor
nret&tlon of the Knox liquor law
and other mattora rolatlve to the
business.
nnilillne nermlts aa approved
bv the building Inspector and
other license appllcatlona ap
proved were passed by the coun-
ell.
Acting Mayor J. J. Keller pre
sided Monday evening In the ab
sence of Mayor W. K. Manonoy,
Suspect Denies Role
In Wendel Kidnap
NP.W YORK. Anrll 21. (UP)
Martin Bchlossman, a 20-year-old
, laundry man, waa arraigned and
pleaded not guilty Monday to a
charge of kidnaping Paul H.
Wendel of Tronton, N. J. a
maneuvor that kept Druno Rich'
ard Hanptmann alive three daya
bevnnd his allotted span of life.
There still waa much unex
plained tonight about the atory
book actlvltloa of Wendel In thi
Mnuntmnnn case, but District At
torney William F. X. Oooghan
appeared to be confident that
be had taken the first step along
a path that will lead to an uiu
mate solution.
No ball was set for Sohloss
man;. ' - 1
Highway Board Lifts
Reduced Load Limits
Notice of lifting of reduced
load limits on state hlghwaya
In Klamath county and eastern
Oregon wns received Monday
from the state highway commis
sion hy state police here.
The notice road: "State high
way commission Saturday lifted
reducod load limits on follow
ing hlghwaya, to-wlt: Maupin to
Bond, Dairy to Bonansa and
Klamath lake secondary high
way. Order takes effect Imme
diately," Tho limits on the Bend-Klam-ath
Falls section of The Dalles
California highway are apparent
ly still In effect, state police
said.
Endeavorers to Attend State Conclave
m
' tihm uroun Is a nart of tho Klamath county delegation of Christian Endeavorora who are planriln:;
to Journey to Kugeno this wek to attend the state C. K. convention. Heading from left to rigni.
nrst row: Una lilcks, Vlolette Pearson. Una Hooper, tlell Clapp, Lee Smith mell.Bowne; second
row: Kleanor Kvans. Iluth Metcalf. Krv. Hooper. Ituth Brooks Lav.n. , M ,1'um' ' ""'S "drj!!
third row: Marvin Halloy, Kay uniig, mil Mussoimun, anmr """"" """ Z T
dene Ilolilnson: fourth row: Mrs. Oeorge McUoiium, uiive uiapp. jneima cvaus, ui.., .....,
Phyllis Collier and Ueraliyno wicKorsnam. i neraiu-nows mum-... ..,.
SALESMAN MILS
1
WM.
BIBDER, Cal. D. L. Cook, a
traveling salesman of Redding, Is
credited here with trailing 40
miles and finally halting single
handed until police arrived, an
automobile carrying three In
dians and some whiskey which
waa believed responsible for the
overturning of another car and
te Injury of two of ita occupants
Thursday at Canby. ' -
After the accident, In which
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Royce of
Cedarvllle suffered head cuts and
bruises, a car that had forced
them off the road kept on going
Southward. Cook followed it
and phoned from Adln to put
Bleber police on the lookout. The
Indiana probably slipped through
here after dark.
Cook caught up with them
that night in front of the Pine
Cone Inn on the mountain alx
miles southwest of here ana
herded their car to a stop In the
dltcb. Two Indians ran Into the
brush and disappeared. Cook
borrowed an - unloaded platol
from Earl Buckley, the Innkeep
er, and waa detaining Albert
BBaaBBSBBBB-s-BBSaaat-a-B--e-a9aBHBa
iHoss and ttjj jer Tjjhen Deputy
Bnerirr L.mtto jjeepun sou irai
fie . Patrolman Arthur Oloster
got there from Bleber. . Search
was made for the fugitives, but
they were still at large Saturday
so far as known hore.
Hoss, an Indian buckaroo from
Likely, paid a 15 fine In-Justice
court here Friday for being
drunk on the public highway,
which he confessed be was. Hess
said the car was his but that
Ivan Oneal waa driving It at
Canby and Larry Oneal did the
driving after they left Adln. Hess
said he did not know of the ac
cident. He waa headed for the
Red Bluff rodeo and lamented
that his. riding boots had run
off with Larry Oneal. Hess said
they got tome whiskey at Al-turas.
Captain WIU Smith of the
highway patrol said the Royces
told him the Canby Operator' dis
couraged them from phoning
news of their accident to his of
fice in Alturns; he did not learn
of It until after they reached AI
turaa, boura later. .
Weather
The Cyclo-Stormograph at Un
derwood's pharmacy contlnuea to
register a low barometrlo pres
sure, and while no disturbance
of magnitude la Indicated, un
settled conditions with some
cloudiness will pfobably prevail
during the next 24 hours. Tem-
pornturea likely to remain pleas
ant. The Tycns recording thermom
eter registered maximum and
minimum temperatures Tuesday
aa follows:
High
Low 61
Forecast for next 24 hourat ,
Generally fair, moderate.
Dieael Engineering
If your future means any
thing to you Investigate oar
plan of Diesel training.
Practical and Home Htuily
courses. Special low rate.
Transportation allowed.
Write HI IPs Vocational
Schools, Portlnnd Olfi.
House Rebukes Zioncheck by
Ordering Remarks Expunged
WABHINOTON. April 21. (UP)
Tho house of representatives Mon
day roared a rebuke to Repre
sentative Marlon Ztonchock, dem
ocrat, Washington, In ordurlng
expunged from the congressional
record his attack upon political
and personal activities of Rep
resentative Thomas I., uiantou.
democrat, Texaa.
Not one mombor arose to de
fend Zioncheck but 272 con
gressmen shouted "aye" on tha
resolution of censure otterea py
Blanton.
Swiss Hull Mentioned
The two democrats have, been
feuding for months over a reso
lution adopted at the last session
which forbids teaching of com
munism In the District of Co
lumbia achoola. Zioncheck Is
leading a movement to repeal
the legislation while Blanton Is
fighting to keep it on the statute
bonks.
Last Friday, the Washington
congressman obtained permission
lo revise and extend his remarks
In the record. He Inserted a
broad attack on the Texan and
at the close Included a news
paper article headed "Rats Face
Hynlhotlo Jitters So Sclonce Can
Study Ihe Case." There was a
reference also to the Swiss bull
named "Hitler."
Illanlnn Pale, Angry
Today, as the house met at
noon. Illnnton, pale and angry,
arose on a point of personal
privilege. A few fc away sat
Zioncheck, flushod and jovial.
lllanton ottered his resolution
A
0Th only cats in the low-price pelJs
ihat offer yoti the &s-savlnjr
condemning Zlonchock's remarks
and demanding thoy be stricken
from the record.
The clerk began reading when
Zioncheck leaped to bla fe.t. '
"Point of order, Mr. Speaker!"
he explalmed.
"The gontleman will state It,"
said Speaker Joseph W. Uyrns.
"I make the point that this
resolution Is not privileged and
that he has lied In it a few
tlmoa and . . ." Zioncheck began.
C'hnmlx-r In Confusion
Byrne banged bis gavel. Blan
ton turnod furiously and shouted:
"I ask that the worda be taken
down."
Thla Is the parliamentary pro
cedure preceding a move to
eliminate offensive worus from
Ihe record. Zlonchock's remarks
were read. Then bo arose and
withdrew them. By this time
the chamber waa In boisterous
confusion and Byrns waa having
difficulty maintaining order.
Finally, Blanton concluded his
observations and called for a
vote on the resolution. Thore
waa a roar of "ayos." Byrns
announcod the vote and It waa
promptly challenged by Zion
check who called for a atandlng
vole.
A total of US members were
prosent. All voted "aye."
Zioncheck was still dissatis
fied. He demanded a roll call.
He sat silently aa Byrns said:
"Tho ayos are 272,. tho nays
none. The ayes have It and the
resolution Is adopted."
A momont later, the Washing
ton democrat bounded back Into
the fray. Standing a few feet
away from Blanton, he obtained
recognitions and explained his
reason tor forcing a roll call
vote.
"I wanted to show that I was
Just aa much entitled to pursue
obstructive tactics as the gentle
man from Texaa," he declared.
President Approves
McNary Power Bdl
PORTLAND. April 21. (UP)
President Roosevelt favora the
McNary bill for distributing Bon
novlllo power and wants It passed
at this session of congress, a spe
cial dispatch to the Journal Mon
day reported Senator Charlca
L. McNary, republican, Oregon,
as saying after a White House
conference.
McNary said be went over his
hill In detail with the president.
He called Mr. Roosevelt's atten
tion to aome recent telegrams
from Oregon residents who felt
that the bill does not go far
enough toward allocation of pow
er to public organizations and
districts.
The senator quoted Mr. Roose
velt aa saying that these critic
Isms are without foundation and
are unjust.
Announcing
THE
Closing
of our
Salon
'of
Beauty
for .
Re-Organization
La joi rite's
Saves up to 25 in gat, up
to 50 in oilt Minimizes
engine wear I e Gives you
an entirely new kind of rid I
The Nash Automatic Cruising
Gear) Available to buyers of the
lowest-priced cars for the first
time, at slight extra cost, on Nash
"400"andLaFayettel
The Cruising Gear acta aa a
"fourth gear." It comes into op
eration automatically at speeds SHCIAl TOueietO sutwshi Blssplag
above 45 miles per hour. Engine Car Any Nash "400" or LaFsycttesedsn
revolutions are reduced about one- Instantly converted brtp. a sk-foot bed
with seat cushkms. Large leajgssje
Cosasertsaesx in every asodeL Aaae
malic OsJeiag Gees- gives 4 e Issue
revolutions are reduced about one
third. Every moving part runs
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what a difference it makes in the
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It gives you additional savings up
to 25 in gasoline, up to 50 in
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miles ner
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