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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1937)
I ,0010 0 I ' WIRE SERVICE the liernill mid News subscribe io leased wire service oh I he Associated Slid the linked Press, the world. En 110111Iii 1114111K orgenizei loos. For 17 I doily world 'lows r ttttt en kilo The Ili News attire on telet ype machines. the Ilern id cliii News uincribe lo full lenge(' wire service of I he ANSOCIAted Free Slid I he linked Preen, the woricie grentest new mutat keelson organic:Whom For 17 hour. dully world Hewn route. kilo The Herald. News of flee on Walnut machines. IF -o) SL JILS : Editorials On the Day's News ft By FRANK JENhiSt4 S v.NATo D lt VANKNIIIiitii. of Michigan (a itapnisticanii alqa: "A now coalition party coni tIoN,1 of liontildicana and limn. twrata oppommi o Hot...volt may v Inorgo for tho 194 0 rioction." lie aildni "Realignment in Inevitable, Indeed, It A MIKA DY PX ISS. I s trite. -I The real political alignmen7 In thin country today IS the New Deal end antiNew Demi. Thin :r RI IgrunNit cuts nquarely across old party lines. Lerge numbers of Deemer:Its are ontiNew Dent and largo number,' of Itopithlicnits ant pro-Now Dent. A nes political fence hes been built cronsInts. wiliV thin new alignment? " The New Deal. since the 1936 elesion halt NEW OBJECTIVES. It in no longer an emergency set up to spit the depresnion. It now definitely seeks a NEW roltm or DOVERNIENT for the Unitt,d Steten It now nyittent In whielt Wnnitington will be imprimis, among the ntates and the Presi dent nupretue in W fl hI n st on. Centralization of power is int tch word. TIIAT is thp reason for the bit tor fight over supreme court reorganization. Centrelization of power to the extent the Now Dent 111111PI fit runs crosnwine to the con stitution. In order to achieve it. It will be necennery to gpt a su preme court thnt will rule as the Now Dealers wish. TIIIS Is OW til,W IMMO: Shell we go On with a govern intent Of three independent brtindwme logimint !vv, juslicint and executive, ench free In Its own field, or hall we have it NEW rtlitM of government, in which the noses-Wive D0911- (Continued On Page Eight) Potatoes AN FRANCIS(O. Sept. 20 fAP-USDA)Potatoes.: 2 Cnlifor nia cars nrrived, 13 Oregon. I Idaho; 10 unbroken. 5 broken on tracks; by !Hutt 2 California, by truck 2 arrived; supplies tunder nte, dpuuuututd Mow, nutrkot steady; Oregon Kintnath district Russets, No. I. 61.25-1.35. Cnilfornin Delta Long Whites 61.10-1.25, choice 65-75. 00. I.OS ANUELES, Sept. 20 (APUSDA)--PotalOPS: 46 California cars arrived, 1 Idaho, 3 Oregon; 58 unbroken, 31 broken on track; 6 diverted; by truck 7; supplies ntodorate. demand tnlr, nutrket weaker for Russets, steady for others; Oregon Klamath dintrict No. 1. 21.326, Stockton Wiscon sin Prides, good quality, $1.40- 01.60, fair quality 21.20-1.25, or dinnry qunlity 00-90. SHANGHAI. Sept. 20 (1p)--The American embassy decided tonight to leave In the face of a Japanese threat to In waste to the Chinese capital, emphasized by a morn ing aerial raid In which 40 civil ians were killed and 40 homes dent royed. United Maim( Ambassador Nel son JOhn11011, with hia aides, work ed feverishly to transfer don mettle to the American patrol boat, Luzon, for the trip 30 miles up the Vaunts() to Wu hu. Amid the rush of evacuation, Johnmon said: "I am too unhappy to tweak. Thia le the first time in 20 yearn of nervice that I am forced to leave nty pont. "Not IN,mert ing" "But, under instructions from Washington..I cannot risk the lives of loyal staff men. I am not deserting. and I hope to tottuto to T TRIAL OF PINBALL OPERATOR UNDER WAY IN JACKSON CIRCUIT COURT ASSOCIATED PRESS Price Five Cents Great Britain Sees Likeli hood U. S. May Aid in Mediterranean. ORSEVA. Sept. 20 league of nations assembly re fusd today to grant government Spain a seat In the league council for the next three years, to the jubilation of member nation', nyin pathetic ith the Insurgent regime of Generalissimo Fraucitwo Franco. The Niadrid Valencia govern. mont failed by 111110 votes to obtain the twn.thirda tnajority neeessitry for a new tent. Studies present three-year term expires this year. Still I44tirtie Spain remains. of course. a member of the leucite. anti may send a representative to council sessions denting with matters con cerning herbut will lack the right to vote in council. The major powers hold perma nent Comte on the council, which is In effect the league'a executive committee, but Spain has hold one of the four seats rotated among minor nations at three year in tervals. The assembly elected Peru In the council to Wire Pf(1 (11110 WhOlge three-year tern expired and named trait to succeed Tut'. key. A successor to Spain le not yet decided. "As Afar no Ever" The vote Citt HO at a session wherein British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden declared that 'peo ples of the world seem as far as ever from attaining peace," Eden, pledging Britain to tin. stinted effort toward premerving peace, nevertheless helittled the Importance of Bermany4 detnand for return of war-lost coloniep . some of them now under British control. and inferred Italy herself was to blame for the limited pa trol areas offered her by the Nyou (Continued on Page Eight) MEDFORD. Sept. 20 (P)Si kctton of R Jury in the trial of Earl A. Sims. local pinball agent cherged with "setting up and operating a lottery" wee under WAY In circuit court today before Judge D. D. Norton. Dearing of testimony wilt be held this afternoon. A half dozen protninent citizens who played the linVieell before the ban was en forced by the sheriff and district attorney will be called to give ex pert views of whether the con troptions are "a lottery" as the state contends. or a "gnme of skill," as the defense holds. A pinball machine seized fol lowing the arrest of Sims teat Au gust 25, was placed in the court room as an exhibit, and witnesses will probably be called to give demonstration of their ability, the district attorney maid. The case Is expected to be In the hands of the jury Into today. II U. S. Embassy Quits Nanking In Face of Jap Bomb Threat Nanking by motor during thtih'essla forced absence. Furthermore. the Luzon and the Guam, which is also going to Wuhu, can reach Nanking in a few hours If the emergency requirea." The embassy staff planned to leave for Wnint early Tuesday morning, thereby observing a de mand by the Japanese naval force. The JIIPRIIPRO had warned that foreigners would face danger of (I oat from the sir beginning at noon Tuesday. Japanese officials declared Japan would not be re sponsible for loss of foreign life after that hour. Disappointment Housed Johnamt's decision to withdraw roused bitter disappohnment among Nanking officials, some of whom felt that the ambassador should remain as a gesture of boy ACiontinued on Paga Eight) t k) C) l' 'IS ' ) 1 0 LL ,,t,, bNP.: 00 4 VA Loyalist Spain Ousted from League Council i Early MAIBIO DENIED , .., . . t ANOTHER TERM BY CLOSE VOTE ,44-1,,i4j X.1:11ZPN Dick Miller or the Marshall Cornett company was hack in town early Monday with a buck he idiot at 7 a.m. on Pothole creek, in the illy district. HONTEll HIED ON MOUNT HOOD Opening Day Brings First Fatality ; Luck Gener erally Poor Here. DODD RI Vle, R. Sept. 20 Otto Smith, 33, died of a. bullet wound I day on I he nort h slope of Mount Hood, t he first victim of the opening (lay of the 1937 deer hunting season. Sheriff John Shellenbrake of Hood River county and State Trooper Robert Raney said South. a lumber worker. was ac cidentally shot by his hunting companion, Al Draper. The officers maid the two sportsmen had separated and Sin it h sat down het ween the trees to rest. 1Vben he arose Draper, apparently t hinking the movement in the brush came (Continued on Page Eight) 1000 LONGSHOREMEN IN BAY REGION MAY UHT CIO SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20 on A major break. possibly secession of 1000 longshoremen from the CIO. was forecast by various dele gates as they gathered today for an A. F. of L. "council of war." From a reliable source CMS word that a "definite develop ment" was likely today. and from a CIO spokesman came a similar expression the meeting was called to effect "secession" from the CIO affiliated International Long shoremen's association. As the An leaders went into RPRAtOrt, chieftains of the rival CIO, Harry Bridges, west coast organizer, John Brophy, executive director, and Lee PITOSMIIII, gen eral counsel, departed for Los Angeles to confer with CIO offi cials there. HULDA1114 ItEPHATS CLEVELAND, Sept. 20 (R)--- Ralph Guidahl of Ching, nntion al open champ:on, won his sec ond straight western open golf championship today. defeating Horton Smith of Chicago by four strokes in an 18-hole playoff. The two tied at 288 for the regulation 72-holea which ended yesterday. Ou 'dab' scored par 72 today. while Smith skidded to Ide 11 all cnin IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., MONDAY, SEPT. 20, 1937 ., ü TUMBLE FROM CAR FATAL TO INDIAN Mystery Cloaks Death of Clarinda Ball Lang Near Shady Pine. Clarinda Ball Lang, 27, Klam ath Indian, wan killed on The Danes California highway near Shady Pine Still day morning when PI )10 either Jumped, fell or wag pushed front a ear driven by her father, Ed Ball. George Santerno. a Wineonain Indian. watt quarreling with Irtt. hang in the back seat of the ear just before the woman fell woman, WAS riding in the front seat with Ball. Ball Storm Car Ball brought the automobile to a stop when he realized his daughter was no longer aboard. He and Santerno returned to tho place where she was lying in the road. They belied down an automo bile. whoan occupants went to a house at Shady Pine in an at tempt to call officers by to',0- phone. Clifford Ambers and Lester Huntley, who were at the Shady Pine house. got out their own car and drove to the scene of the mishap. Held as Witaessen Santerno and Ball were held at the county Jail as material witnesses while officers pushed an investigation In an attempt to determine if the woman came by her death through accident or homicide. Mrs. Lang officers believed.; had been drinking prior to the fatal incident. City police saiti ! their records show Mrs. Lang had been in the city jail a num her of times on drunkenness charge's. Skull Fractures Fatal A post-mortem examination showed that Mrs. Lang died of fractures of the akull. Two frac tures were found. according to Dr. George H. Adler. coroner. Sauterne was to be taken to Chiloquin Monday afternoon to face a charge of trapping with out a license. No charges have been filed against hint or Ball in the Lang death, except that officers have taken the formal action 11PCPS wiry to hold them as witnesses pending the investigation. EARLY MORNING AIR RAID MANEUVERS HURL BERLIN POPULATION INTO UPROAR BERLIN, Sept. 20 tinAir raid netters threw Berlin into an uproar todaythe population was driven into cellars, the propagan da ministry waa burned "theoret ically to a cinder," and the Kaiser hot hotel, opposite the foreign of fice was "destroyed." Warning siren!' sounded at 8:19 a. m., and crowds en route to work Jammed into the cellars. Bombers droned overhead 20 minutes later, and were met by fire from anti-aircraft batteries on roofs of high buildings. A direct "hit" was scored on Air Minister HP1111(11111 Goering'a new ministry building, but the thousand!' in its cellar were "saved." Goering himself directed relief operations as the fire department, air defense corps and police am bulance!' dashed about. Great clouds of black smoke shrouded the "damaged area" until the "de bris and victims" wore removed. The rald's end was signaled at 8:58 a. m. It was the dramatic opening of the week of the third reich's greatest program of war maneuvers. GOLD STRIKE BAKER, Sept. 20 (iv)--What believed to be one ot the richest gold ore strikes made in Oregon during 1937 was reported today by operators of the Argonaut mine SO miles west of here. Tests of the ore show it to carry values ranging from WO upward per On. IM 00 kest Car Rolls Info House af Olene to the pavement. He and Ball ' i This car. driven by Paul Lewis Belin of Miami, Okla., slipped on wet pavement, told investigating officera that logs a jumped front tho car. nd rolled into the corner of a house at Olene. The house was slightly damaged, the woman .a wreck, and Harley Jackson. Chiloquin, a passenger, was taken to a hospital. Bertina Isaacs. another Indian . I TWO SPEECHES SET Nil WESTEBN TRIP Roosevelt Plans Major Addresses At Chicago, Bonneville Dam. HYDE PARK. N. Y., Sept. 20 ()Two definite speaking en gagements were placed on Presi dent Roosevelt's west coast itiner ary todayat Bonneville dam near Portland, Ore., and Chicago as officials continued to chart the 6000-mile Journey. The cross-country swing. plan ned to give the chief executive a first-hand picture of administra tion projects and an opportunity to gauge interior and Pacific coast sentiment On his broad economic objectives since congress adjourn ed, will start from hero late Wed nesday. Two Weeks Long It will end two weeks later, most likely at Washington, after a speech October 5 dedicating the federally-financed outer drive bridge in Chicago. Mayor Edward J. Kelly tele phoned the president last night inviting hint to lunch either be fore or after the speech. Secretary Marvin McIntyre said the Bonneville address, a date for which has yet to be selected, prob ably would be the only formal one of the trip. Others, to be made en route to Seattle where the president will visit his only daugh ter. Mrs. John Boettiger, and re turning east, will be of the rear platform extemporaneous variety, It was said. Prepares Material Political observers meanwhile wore wondering whether the pres (Continued on Page Eight) STORM LEAVES SIX INCHES OF SNOW ON CRATER RIM, WHITENS MIENZIE PASS BEND. Sept. 20 (IP) A week end snowstorm dropped about six Inches of snow at the rim of Cra ter lake and whitened the McKen zie section of the Cascade moun tains. The range appeared brilliant in Its first wintry coat of the season today. Mondays skies were cloud less. Motorists arriving front Eugene said only a light fall occurred on the McKenzie lava fields. The storm was more severe on the peaks above the timberline. Crater lake autoists encounter ed a blinding snow storm near the north rim Sunday, but later found the lake cloudless. Many sections of the Deschutes forest received more than an inch of rain over the weekend, and hunters found the deer country wet down. MEDFORD, Sept. 20 (P)--The heaviest September rain in sev eral years fell over the Rogue River valley last Saturday after noon. The precipitation amount ed to .82 of an inch, according to the weather bureau. Itrat LS '001 Car Rolls Into House Near Olene Slipping on slick pavement, avl, automobile operated by Paul Lew is Be lin of Miami, Okla., left the Lakeview highway, catapulted across two logs and rolled into a small house at Olene early Sun day. Be lin and Wilford Stone of Carson City, Nev., were not hurt, but a third occupant, Harley Jack son, Chiloquin, was taken to a lo cal hospital. Minor damage was done to the house. Parked Car Damaged C. H. Redford of 1427 Oregon avenue reported to police head quarters Sunday evening that an automobile parked in front of his residence was damaged when struck by a hit and run car. Redford ran outside when he heard the crash and found an abandoned car about a block from where his maoltine was struck. The deserted car was virtually demolished. with the left rear tire gone, the WIndshield broken. (Continued on Page Eight) WEEKEND'S RAINS NET .29 INCH MOISTURE, LIFT TOTAL CLOSE TO NORMAL Saturday night's rain storm netted .29 of an inch of precipi tation for Klamath Falls, accord ing to weather bureau reports. Precipitation records are kept for the stream year. ending Sep tember 30, and with less than two weeks to go, figures to date stand at 12.12 inches, or only .85 of an inch behind normal for the year. Klamath residents who visited in Medford Saturday night re ported a virtual cloudburst, with rain coming down In sheets. The forecast for the next 24 hours is for fair weather, mod erate temperatures sod north and northwest winds off the coast. Baseball First game R. H. E. St. Louis 8 14 0 Boston 6 9 0 Trotter, Bonetti and Giuliani: Ma.rcum. Walberg. Newsom and DeSantels. Second game: R. H. E. St. Louis 5 12 1 Boston 7 14 0 Walkup. Koupal and Giuliani; Gonzales and Berg. R. H. E. Detroit 0 4 0 New York 5 9 0 Wade and York; Gomez and Dickey. NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. Brooklyn 4 6 1 Chicago 5 9 0 Frankhouse, Lindsey, Ilenshaw and Phelps: Lee, Bryant, Logan sad Hattaett. lionir Tonight anti Tuesday Mat' 230 04 31111111111ln 41 PRECIPITATION 10110101I to date 12.12 Dint year to (into 10.29 UNITED PRESS Nornoti procipitntion 12.47 Number 8047 tit11 WEATHER .,l'air Tontig2Itt3onnri Tuesday 31111111111ln ,AAAoft.,.ft,,,to,,A,oAA. r 'oiroi UVL OLfU P:40 04 vaulted the car two was LEGION CONVENTION OPENS IN NEW In 20,000 Throng Madison Square Garden for Initial Session. NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP) Twenty thousand legionnaires and visitors packed into gayly festooned Madison Square gar den for the opening session of the American Legion convention today and heard Governor Her bert H. Lehman of New York urge continuation of the fight for "Our great principles of de mocracy and liberty." Harry W. Colmery of Topeka, Kan., retiring national comman der of the Legion, presided. His report warning of nazi influence in America and calling for pro tection of the constitution and for an independent judiciary was to be a highlight of the day's program. Champion Rand Plays The national champion Legion band of musician's Post 394 of St. Louis, MO., touched off patri otic fervor with strains of mar tial music. and Lucy Monroe, star of opera and radio, sang "The Star Spangled Banner." The Massachusetts color guard, at the call of Commander Col mery, advanced the national col ors while the packed galleries sat tense. Besides Governor Lehman. Mayor Fiore llo H. La Guardia of New York and Major General James G. Harbord, president of the American Legion 1937 Con (Continued on Page Eight) LOCAL Clarinda Ball Lang, 27. In dian woman. dies in fall from car on The Da Iles-California highway north. Had been quar reling in back seat with George Santerno, Wisconsin !Ulan. Page 1. Car hits house at tette. num erous other automobile accidents occur over weekend. Story and picture on Page 1. - Saturday ntght rain storm boosts year's precipitation total almost to normal. Page 1. Year-around Boy Scout camp at Crescent lake wins approval at Modoc council conference. Page 1. Tule lake lots to be sold at public auction Tuesday, Septem ber 21 by bureau of reclamation. Page 8. GENERAL Prison guard, two convicts killed, eight others. Including Warden Clarence Larken, wounded-in unsuccessful escape attempt at Folsom penitentiary. Page 1. - League of nations refuses Span ish government another term on COOLER WARDEN GIVEN 500 CHANCE Or RECOVERING Eight Wounded in Brief, Unsuccessful Attempt to Escape Prison. FOLSOM, Calif., Sept. 20 (AP) A Folsom state prison guard and two convicts were dead today and eight others, Including Si far den Clarence Larkin, were wounded in a brief, deadly and unsuccessful attempt at a prison break. Warden Larkin lay in the pri son hospital with 12 stab wounds In his body. Two guards and five convicts were wounded in the melee of flashing knives and swinging clubs that climaxed the warden's usual Sunday interview with Folsom inmates. One of the convicts, Ed Davis. reputed in stigator of the break, was be lieved near death. Seven Inmates Rush Larkin Twenty minutes' fighting, which began when seven long term inmates stepped out of line and rushed Larkin in the office of the captain of the guard, end ed with all the convicts badly beaten and prostrate. Captain W. J. Ryan and Guard James Kerns had serious knife wounds. H. E. Martin, a guard, was stabbed to death. Convict Clyde Stevens. instiga tor of an equally desperate pri son break attempt at San Quen tin prison in 1935 involving the kidnaping of the .state board of prison terms and paroles, was dead, as was Benny Kucharski, convicted robber serving five years to life for a robbery in Los Angeles. Other injured convicts were Albert Kessell, committed from San Francisco on a 70-years' sentence on seven robbery counts. Wesley Eudy. Los Angeles rob (Continued on Page Eight) YEAR-AROUND CRESCENT LAKE SCOUT CAMP LIKELY BEND, Sept. 20 ()The con. struction of a Crescent lake year. around Boy Scout camp to serve all parts of the huge Modoc coun cil, thus uniting the northern and southern districts, won approval at a conference here yesterday. Delegates attended from Klam ath Falls, Lakeview, Bend, Red. mond, Prineville and Altura. Calif. If the program material izes Klamath Falls will abandon Its Lake o' the Woods camp and Bend will give up its own lake site. The site wanted is along i sandy beach on the southwest shore of Crescent lake. District represen tatives will confer with Deschutes forest officials this week. TODAY'S NEWS DIGEST league council. Britain hails Sec retary Hull's speech as indicating U. S. may aid in Mediterranean crisis. Page I. Otto Smith, deer hunter, report ed killed on Mt. Hood in first fatal accident of season. Bag rect. tively small here. Page U. S. embassy decides to evac uate Nanking in face of Japaneas threat to destroy Chinese capital. Page I. American Legion convention opens at New York City. Page 1. President Roosevelt schedules two major addressesat Chicago and Bonnevilleduring two-week swing to west coast. Page 1. Stocks slide to loweitt points in 18 months or more. 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