U Circulation
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THE KLAMATH
L171. (Every Morning Except Mondavi
I'AULIFFE
IEC0VER;
ISCIOUS YET
Physician Expect
Recover Today;
ned In Car
cAuliffe will live."
he word ut 2 o'clock
ng, from Dr. J. II.
siciun at Lake view,
well known Klam-
Lnan i.s lying in the
Emergency hospital.
of curbon monoxide
which McAuliffo in-
le in his car, on the
ukeviow, Honiewhere
ily and that city.
ffe has not rcgain-
oumicsH, saiu tne
doctor, who in in
attendance at the
Uttlcman'H bedside.
t him to regain con-
be i ore daybreak.
Kivinir him liquid
nt and he is respond-
Thc poison in rap-
ng from his system
ms strong enough to
the effects."
r old pioneer caltloman
Hi country just will not
jUrsvliiK Hie danger uf
liuulf.ik of bU cattle
hti on a lltllo Inland In
ento river early this
to flood water, Mc-
n a hospital for several
littnej with pneumonia.
of ti Lb exposure In the
mod In rr
kr night McAuliffo wan
Ukevlew In bia closed
fiow he wua overcome la
I question. The engine
i slowly when a stago
M him. crumpled up over
wheel of the car at
the road. Perhapa he
oncoming alrkneaa and
(or a rout. Perhaps he
H and decldod to take
refresh him for the re
fill drive. At any rate,
poisonous fumes from
lilch overcame him, ac-
Dr. Kelly. McAuliffo waa
nearliy ranch house
his condition proved aer-
femoved lo the Lakcvlow
Tatro Shadowed
Gurnee Leaving
Bank With Cash
Coroner's Jury Exonerates
Night Watchman Who
Shot Store Robber
A coronor'a Jury In the case of
Hubert Tatro who was shot and kill
ed early Wednesday inornlnK by
Thomas Gtirneo, watchman at the
11. P. I.ewla grocery on south Hlxth
street, after hearing the testimony
in I tie case yesterday afternoon,
li rou Klit In tho following verdict:
"Tho deceased Itohert Tatro ramo
to his death by a gun shot wound.
the weapon In the hands of Thomas
(lurnce, tho said Thomas Gurnee
waa justified In firing tho fatal
shot."
Tho Jury was composed of llert
Cook, Itoy Oren, Cap Calkins, J. J.
Keller, C. 1. Iteckard, and It. II.
Amlcke.
The following witnesses wore
oiamlncd at tho hearing before
county coroner Karl Whltlork:
Thomas (lurnce, night officers
Drown and Mitchell, and James
lllalr.
Cur nee rehearsed the eventa lead
ing up to the killing In a most
stralghtforeward and convincing
manner. A now anglo In the case
was developed from the testimony
or Jas. Hlalr, proprietor of tho
Kmplre rooms. lllalr said he had
noticed Tatro shadowing Gurnee on
Tuesday, when the latter emerged
from the American Notional bank
with a big roll of small bills and
change for use of the Lewis store,
ft had previously beon suspected
that Tatro had wandered Into tho
store In a drunken stupor, with a
possibility of no Intent to rob the
place. Efforts to link Tatro up
with the gang of safe blowers who
have operated In and about the city
for the past two months, have been
unfruitful. '.
United News and United Press Telegraph Services
KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1925.
NEWS
Official Paper of City
of KLAMATH FALLS
Price Five Centa
V'S.S. Shenandoah Ready to Go to Amundsen's Rescue
LTH mi ipi r
Jmarried TODAY
nb-rn and Miss Cathryno
Hi known residents of
'lis wero murrled lust
re among the first of
V to becomo Juno newly-
T. n Ynrnos. of the
church " performed tho
8 P. m.
11 Mrs. Osborn plan to
lr permanent homo In
Falls.
KKKS IMHtovlXd
June 4. Tho condition
"T of War JohJ W
f110 has been erlilcAllv III
fachuActts general hos-
"0 Underwent an nnnra.
" SIOIICS lliat Vank wo
trailer Thursday night.
10 a bulletin issued by
lans.
Special Train For
Shasta Game If .90
More Sign Today
If about 90 more baseball funs
will sign up for the special round
trip faro of $4. S3 offered by the
Southern I'aciric railroad, Kluin
ath Falls will be 200 strong at
Mount Bhastu when the' Pellcuns
piny the Shaslas under the shad
ow of the big mountuin. Names
must be registered at the Mecca
pool hall or (Hover's Jewelry store
before 8 p. m. tonight. Provid
ing 200 have signed up by thnt
time the special train will leave
here aometlme Sunday morning,
about 10 o'clock, it Is believed,
and will return Sunday ovening.
Tho trip is a beautiful one, and
the scenery around Mount Shasta
la well worth seeing for those
who have never been thero.
In addition, a strengthened
tenm will ho put In the field for
Klumalh Kails In on effort to
mako up for tho lost two games
loBt by a close margin. Tho
Shustas wero beaten by Klamath
Kails in tho league opener hero,
three weeks ago. A wonderful
1 lo 0 game was pluycd at that
time. Since then tho Shaslas have
been going great guns and a real
battle Is expected. Day. who held
the Pollcans to 6 scattered lilts,
will pilch for tho Shasta, whllo
(Hover ' plans starting "Sunny"
Mohlcr for .tho Pelicans. Mohler
struck out 13 Shaslas In the pre
vious game.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH WILL BE
EADY FOR OPENING OCTOBER 1
' "
Trout Hatcheries
In Klamath To Be
Producing Station
Klamath May Be Producing Point of Entire
State for Eastern Brook and Rainbow
Trout; Ryckman Plans Building of New
Hatcheries on Klamath Lake Inlets.
WASHINGTON, June 4. The U. S. diriRiblc .Shenandoah, largest and most
powerful airship in the world, is expected to fill its giant blimpy bag with helium
gas, preparatory for its flight to Spitzbergen, thence toward the north pole, in
quest of Amundsen and his exploring party. Approval of the Norwegian gov
ernment is awaited before the giant ship takes the air.
Eight In Family
Shot Dead By Man
Insane With Heat
75 Are Dead in East From Terrific and
Phenomenal Heat Wave; Worst Country
Has Ever Experienced.
HAMILTON, Ohio, June 4. Of all the cities in the grip
of the great heat wave, the worse curse of the atmospheric
phenomenon fell upon Hamilton, where a heat-maddened
man killed eight members of his family. Floyd Russell, 42
years old, had been brooding because the major part of the
Russell family was about to be taken away from him. Heat
intensified his fear of the separation, and he became insane,
shooting with two pistols, his mother, 'brother, sister-in-law
and five nephews and nieces. '
Mrs. Emma Russell, the sister-.
In-law, recently Inherited aome scorching days and driving ther-
mouey uud with this she had plan- mometerj to new heights.
ned to, establish a separate home
fcr hersolf, her husband and their
six children. The family was prac
tically wiped out shortly after dawn,
In loss than 15 minutes.
Utile Girl KscapM
Little Dorothy Russell, 8 years
old, alone escaped death when she
tainted as her uncle fired. Rua
sell bellovcd her dead. He shot
himself In the chest, but probably
will recover.
"I was droamlng about eating
big piece of pie. when all of a sud
den It seemed to blow up." little
Dorothy told the polire. "I heard
It. Then I sat up in bed and saw
Uncle Kloyd with a gun In each
'' " " Christian church
i. as the date for
' jwvlce, , he(, , ,he
" for which are well
mJ ' T- McCollum has
" ""corlntendent of con-
u? w"h Dr. O. A.
"a ft. li
rburrt, , ll"K committee
c" ' servo In that cap-
Z?, bnm it ir. of
of,., nnw "" Imsomnnt,
'1'ieco and when finish
er b. , rnxlmntely 3B,000.
' 10 added . in 1....1...1.
21 Sunday school rooms, wy...
smnller rooms and a seating caps...,
In the church proper of too pcrs.m..
Several Memorial windows of In
laid stained gl have been sub
scribed, the names of the donors
to appear later with the completion
of the church. Architect for the
building Is William Orr of '
Angeles, a designer of chur. lies.
In tho basement, which Is o
being ullHd a church, kitchen,
a dining room and other work com
will be lal.1 out. making the
one of the most complete in the
i city.
' Poc. Coast Comfortable
The Pacific coast, alone seemed
lo have comfortable weather; the
east and middle west sweltered
more than ever on the fourth day
of the wave. Scores of schools
closed down In various cities; crops
were reported In danger of burning
up in many rural districts and the
fear of disastrous forest fires was
felt in the heavily wooded districts
of Michigan and Minnesota. A few
mills closed in New England.
Every previous record for June
was broken In New York when the
temperature went to 94 degrees.
Five deaths were reported Thurs
day in the metropolitan district,
hand shooting at grandma and bringing the total there to 12 The
brother.
"I screamed nnd rnn. So did
sistor Julia and Grace. I heard Bomo
more shooting upstairs and baby
criod Then thero was another
shot ' and ho stopped.
"Undo Floyd came down etalrs
and caught Julia and Grace In he
kitchen. I heard him coming ana
ran away but he caught them and
shot them over and over.
Hliools At. (ilrl
When he came out of the kitch
en he was laughing and talking to
himself, but when he saw me he
stopped and began loading his
guns.
"For a minute I couldn't move.
I thought maybe I'd better let him
kill me. I stumbled lots and lots
of times and when I got to the
fence, I was. so weak, I couldn't
climb over. I saw Uncle Floyd
shoot at me again and then every
thing went black."
"I thought I'd done for her,"
aid Russell, when advised that
Dorothy had only fainted and still
lived, "She stumbled every time
I shot and that last time, she just
curled up."
thermometor shot over 102 at Hag-
erstown, Md., and to 101 at El
mlra, N. Y. As the mercury mount
ed, more and more victims col
lapsed. Two of tho latest heat
deaths are reported from Cleveland
and Detroit. Detroit reported 06.3
degrees at 3 p. m.
WASHINGTON, Juno 4. The
flaying sun went down Thursday
uftor bringing the tlenth toll In
the present heat wave to about 76
adding scores more prostrations to
the total of the preceding tbreo
McNealy Is Elected
Kiwanis Delegate
To St. Paul Meet
At the regular luncheon meet
ing of the Kiwanians yesterday W.
M. McNealy was appointed delegate
from the local club to tho Inter
national Klwanls convention in St.
Paul on June .22.
Judge Lem L. Gaghagen rend a
report from "Forbes," a national
magasine on business conditions
throughout the United States at
the present time. The report em
phasized the present substantial,
trade and financial standing of the
country.
L. E. Banker, editor of tl)e new
"Westerner" magaslne which will
be published here this fall, deliver
ed an address on "Community Dis
cipline" which drew the closest at
tention of the membership. ,
DIRIGIBLE PLANS
RESCUE TO POLE
Big Shenandoah Preparing
To Fill Bags With
Helium For Trip '
WASHINGTON, June 4. Plans
have been completed for sending
the dirigible Shenandoah In search
of Amundsen among the Ice floes
and frozen deserts of the arctic,
should the navy decide upon that
venture.
Commander Zachary LansdoWne,
of Shenandoab, recently prepared
plans to govern the dirigible's part
In the MacMillan-Navy expedition
set tor next month it she should be
called out. Thursday the skipper
of the Shenandoah sent to Secretary
of the Navy Wilbur, a supplemen
tary plan which showed how he
could operate in quest of the Nor
weglon explorer.
Next week the Shenandoah will
be refilled with helium at Lake
hurst, N. J., if a search for Amund
sen Is ordered, the mooring ship
Patoka will proceed ahead to
Spitsbergen, a journey of 17 days,
where Amundsen established - his
base. Tne, Shenandoah would fol
low, making . the voyage in two
jumps, landing at Pullman, Eng.,
after a 3,059 mile non-stop trans
altnatlc flight, and then making
the remaining leg of 1,539 miles
to Spitzbergen.
Awaiting Norway
Whether the navy will send the
Shenandoah on this expedition de
pends upon the wish of the Nor
weglon government and whether the
venture could be undertaken with
out conflicting with tho MacMll
lan expedition.
It has not been announced that
the Shenandoah would f accompany
MacMlllan, but It Is probable that
she will be held in readiness either
at Lakehurst, or be moved up on
the Maine coast at Wiscassct to
stand by.
Commander Lansdowne believes
the Amundsen searching expedi
tion Is practicable. Members of
tho crew are ready to volunteer. But
It Is denied Lansdowne has recom
mended the search to be undertak
en. Meanwhile the state department
has denied receiving a note from
the Canadian government regarding
title to the polar continent which
MacMlllan seeks to find. Recent
ly the Canadian minister of inter
ior In a speech Indicated Canada
regarded all land up to the pole
as being-under her Jurisdiction.
But no attempt has been made to
establish this claim by correspond
ence with the United States. It Is
assumed here that should MacMll
lan discover a new polar continent
under the arctic Ice, -the United
States would claim the land by
right of discovery.
M. L. Ryckman, superintendent of fish hatcheries for
Oregon, a visitor of Klamath's lakes and rivers during the
past week, stated to officers of the local Sportsmen's associa
tion, who met with him informally last night, that ,his obser
vations on this trip had resulted in determining a policy of
making Upper Klamath lake the trout producing center of
Oregon for eastern brook and rainbow trout.
Mr. Ryckman's plan is to recommend that small isolated
egg-taking stations in various parts of the state be abandoned
and that the scope of this work be multiplied many times
here. In that way the work would be centralized, costs very
materially reducedand we could produce millions upon mil
lions of baby trout here where ideal highways all. around the
lake connected up with through-line railroad' transportation
would make the distribution of the trout fry consigned, to
any trout ' water in the state a simple and most workable
proposition.
The waters of Upper Klamath
are idea! fur these species o! bl
fighting trout, the manner in which
they thrive tbere has been proven,
it Is no experiment. Next to Dla. .
mond like which holds world's hon
or for trout propagation, .Upper
Klamath Is In a class pretty much
to Itself. - , .,
New Hatcheries . ',
Tbe hatchery which takes spawn
ing trout -from' Upper Klamath at,
the present time Ib located on
Crooked creek a short distance
north of Klamath Agency. Under
Mr. Ryckman's plan this hatcbery '
would be increased to. many times '
its present capacity and others
built on equally good streams that
are Inlets of the lake. The Crook
ed creek hatchery now has a big
batch of 500,000 fingerling Loch
Leven trout which It la planned to
plant at once In Klamath and Lake
county waters. ...
Mr. Ryckman made a trip , into
Diamond lake Wednesday with Mar
lon Barnes, 'local state fish and
game deputy warden. Conditions
at Diamond lake were never better,
tho superintendent reports. The
egg taking plant there has taken
Klamath Students
To Graduate From
Oregon University
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eu
gene. June 4. Klamath Falls stu
dents to receive degrees from tbe
University of Oregon .this month
are. Miss- Maybelle E. LeaviU and
Shelby H. Carter.
...Miss, Leavltt,. who is a daughter
of Judge A. L. Leavitt. will receive
ber degree. In journalism. She was
active on the' staff, of the Oregon
Emerald, a student newspaper pub
lication in 1919 and 1921, and on
the historian .staff In 1919. She is
a member of Tbeta Sigma Pbl, na
tional honorary journalistic frater
nity, and is affiliated with the PI
Beta Phi sororlety.
Mr. Car.er will receive his degree
in business administration.
Miss Mildred Hill, of Merrill, ma
joring in sociology, also is to be
graduated.
Officers Will Give
Members of the officers reserve
association will hold a banquet In
the Dutch room of tho White Pell
can hotel on Friday night, according
to an announcement made yesterday.
Reservations have been made for
3? persons and other officers in the
city, not affiliated with the Klamath
Falls group, who were lr! the World
War are requested to attend the
meeting and become acquainted with
the Klamath organization. Major
G. S. Newson who Is president, will
preside and J. M. Glover, secretary
will assist.
ten million eggs this year for ship-
Banquet On Friday i P'ng out to other waters and be
sides mat tney nave proaucea i,
250,000 trout fry for release back
Into tbe laKe.
Inspects Diamond
Tbe roads into Diamond lake are
In very fair shape now and the
trip was made without the slightest
difficulties from snow drifts near
the summit. At the lake the super
intendent and deputy found a San
Francisco sportsman bere for tho
first time camped and enjoying '
fishing which he described as a re
velation that anything like It ex
isted In tbe country. This visitor
was attracted here by a two reel
picture of Oregon hunting and fish
ing shown 1n San Francisco by the
Oregon state game commission. A
part of the picture was Diamond
lake trout fishing and this fisher
man caught the first train to coma
in here to see for himself.
Diamond lake waters would be
(Continued on Page Two) '
NOTED (jOLKKR TIED
. WORCESTER. Mass., June 4.
For the second time In three years
Bobby Jones, of Atlanta, Ga., will
have to shoot off a tie tor the open
gVt championship of the United
States. He was tied today by Wil
lie MacFarlane.
EIGHTH GRADE STUDENTS OF CITY
HOLD GRADUATION THIS MORNING
This morning at 10:30 a. m., 114
students will pass Into the class!-i
ficatlon of high school freshmen
I when they hold in their bands dip
i lomas from the eighth grades of
i Klamath Falls public schools, pre
sented lo them by J. Percy Wells,
superintendent of grade schools In
1 the city. The commencement ex
ercises will be held In the Pine
! Tree.
The musical program under the,
I direction of Miss Margaret Worden!
j Includes many lnteresterlng . num-
bers. Following Is the program!
'as It will he given: j
Processional March, Harold Knox, I
organist of the theatre; Invocation,!
Rev. T. II. Ynrnes, pastor Methodist!
church: Chanson Provencale (Dell
'Aqua) Mrs Francis Olds, soprano;
Selection, Harold Knox; Amaryllis
.Plnsuti) An Old French Air, ElghtU
Grade, Central school; De Coppah.'
Moon (Shelly) Eighth Grade, Cen
tral school; AddresB, "What Are
You Going To Do Tomorrow and
Why?" Mrs. Theresa B. Thatcher,
director Elllson-Wblte Chautauqua;
Selections from Operetta Florlnda
(Marzo) Sixth grade. Riverside'
school; Presentation of Diplomas,
Superintendent J. P. Wells.
Relatives and friends who wish
to present gifts to graduates are
requested to send them to tbe
homes of the pupils, according to
an announcement made from the
schools.
iin iiiuu