The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942, October 20, 1925, Image 1

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    THE KLAgATH NEWS
United New and United Press Telegraph Services
ryTEvery Morning Except Monday)
KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1925
Price Five Cento
N TAX PLAN
WE IS PUT
BUNDING SNOW
FALLS IN EAST
BOTUIINUS HELD
SOCIAL WORKER
TO SERVE TERM
SCEPTRE OF MARS
SHORN OF POWER
TO WIELD DEATH
FOURTEEN HELD
FOR OIL FRAUD
GODDARD SILENT
ON QUERY AS TO
ENGINEER STATUS
Six Deaths Held Caused By
Storms of Sleet and
Ice In Minnesota
Daughter of Ex-Stiit Hio-H
Warrants Issued for Arrest
MD lintl miriQ Court Justice Convicted
Of Promotors Following
Federal Indictment
i
lUll ULrtU UDbllO On Syndicate Law
fiRESS
fferent From
Jer Measure
ion is noted
Unfavorable to
: of Time on
tional Debt
roy, Ofl. 19 -A new
dUs." but without me
Li placed bvfor wa
it ton ruperl". from
mrwum which was
imt "r .
Lh a Ittt propoaala ad-
hm members of con.
L.11I1I maitera. It or-
11,1 to the average ta
coaiWerabt relief to
lit pUn w contain
pit statement, which
tha soo way eud
Into Monday, at the
lit aa heard alien'
-Th. ha.r'warmih o Indian .u.1,.; Bacteria Effect Not
mar ha given wax to www, galea j -v.
and (rearing leroperaturts through- 101111(1 111 ImQS
out th north and mldweat.
Kobraaka. IlllnuU. Wisconsin.'
Iowa. Mlnno... Colorado, th. D.-j pQISON IS . CHEMICAL
kotaa and Wyoming are eipertenc-j
lug anow flurrlt. Storm warnlnxa!
aro dlaplayed on lh great lakea, I ... , . ...
where high wind. .r. blowing with! Mystery of True Cause Still
sufficient fury to hamper shipping, j Unsolved nd Tule.Lake
Monday au deaths in toro-! Warned Against
ral area were attributed to lhe
cold. minding snow storms and
Ice-coated pavements mulled In the
Hotullnue poisoning probably la
death of five persona In arcldent i not rcaponalhlo for the deaths of
In Mlnuexila. An aged woman tiled j duck In the vlrinltr of Tula lake,
of eipnsure at Warsaw, Ind., when i according Id Word received ycslor-
sho wandered out of hi-r home clad
In a flimsy ulihl gown.
The average temperature In the
tnldweal la 19 degreea.
Hava for a few hardy natives,
mountain climbing atopped In Col
orado, where tralli have been oblit
erated by a heavy anow. An auto
mobile parly wat marooned on the
aumnilt of I'lke'a Peak when the
anow blocked the roadway lo traffic.
Tha ton rial were brought down the
long elope by a special log train.
hm grilled rloaely by i
tha committee, partlc-I
Inaorriia who Joined I
m fpubllrina to tear
-Mellon plan" to ut-
Le Kitmalon on IMt
Iterated hla oppoaltlon
il to eiempt Incomea
I (torn the federal lax
oppo4 estenslcn of
ilrrwnt of the public
m beea advocated by
Icadtrs l!h the argu-
tore aiooar cou'd thua
Led Oa Page Two)
k 4 Girls
dBj Spotlight
J OOD, Calif.. Oct. J.
a gpvks, dropping
llllht shot aet at a
die tart late Monday.
- which painfully burn-
Vlisols. director, and
ca. two of them severely.
wer of aparka from tha
no fllmay coitumea of
and fur worn by tha
The material! buret Into
trndanta lore tha clothaa
rla and hurried them to
Hd hotptui, where thoy
erorely burned wero
"ok and Virginia Cook,
cl r lei. whoae namea were
wore tinged about the
oiy.
'aa burned about tlio
Per dear Went her
"0('K, Ark., Oct. 19
"d hall storms hold
1 atcrn atntea In their
on district of Ibla
r Wring for the rain
""mittcnt showers hero
' ' weeks have serloua-
cotton harveat.
KENDALL ASSAULT):
CASE UNDER WAV
Defendant Trio Arraigned on
Charges of Intent to
Kill Deputy
With lh Jury choaen lata yea
tcrday afternoon, and the legality
of the Indictment upheld by Circuit
Judge A. I.. I.eavlll. th trial of
Charle Fuller. Jim Ilurko and Ed
ward Fuller, charged with asaaull
with Intent to kill,' got underway In
circuit court yoelerday.
Th tlaie'a atar witnesses. K.I did not reveal clinical nor Post
Kendall and Burt llawklna. did not .Mortem symptom lo thla teat. The
reach the eland. They will contend examination of th specimen of mud
thai tha defendanta flrat began i alto fniled to ahow D. Botullnua.
day morning by Dr. (I. S. Nuwsom.
director of lh couaty health unit,
from lir. William Levin, who la
lu charge of the public health sor
vlre, Portland, and who received
epetlmena of lh afflicted fowl.
The letter from Dr. Levin la self
eaplanatory, and foilowa:
llotullnua Not Found
"W are unablo lo find H. Botul
lnua la the duck received from you
aume lime ago. Tha fowl woe mark
edly Jaundiced. It had atrlngy muc-
oua, bile talulod but no other path
tut Ira I condltlona. Culture made
front varloua organa removed at
utopay did not ahow the preaence
of .ft. fliitullnua. Tha tick duck
which wa brought In here by mee
aenger on Thuraday, October ISth
died lh following day. Th fowl
had complete pnralyBla of the lega
before death and well marked paral
yala when It flrat came her. It had
no clinical ayriptoma of II. Holul
lnua lufertlun. The duck waa
aulopalcd and culture made from
varloua organ. It la too early yet
to give our finding on the rulturea
made on the organa of the recond
duck. Thcae will he reported next
week.
tllcnilrnl I'olnoil I'muilliltli)-
"I am led to believe that the
durka did not die from II. Ilotullnua
alnce the examination of the ducka
BAN FltANCISCO. Oct. 19.
(I'nlted Newel Charlotte Anita
Whitney, aoclal worker and daugn
ter of a former atate aupreme court
Juatlre, muat aerve a prlaon term
became of hor conviction under
California' criminal ayndtcalltm
law.
The euprema court of tha United
Btalca Monday held In effect that
the law waa constitutional. Mlaa
Whltney'a appeal waa dlimlaaed
without opinion, thua bringing lo
a climax a five-yoar fight, which haa
been carried on In her behalf.
Thla alate'a criminal radicalism
law waa paaaed by the loglalature
of 1919, during the poat-war anti
red agitation. It makea It a felony
to belong to an orgunliatlun that
preachea violence In lite ovcrtbrdw
of government. It haa been aimed
principally agalnat membcra of the
I. W. W.
Mlaa Whitney, reached at the
Caruivl cottage where ahe haa apent
the aumraor, took the reveraal pbll
oaophlcally. "If there la no other way," ahe
aald. "I will go to prison for my
(Continued On Page Two)
Europe to Breed War
No More, Claim
f iia a di t?o1 . yiT-ii.j '
New) Fourteen official of three j Llty May ttlCC LrOIlg
iniRV va,iBiiuuia suu IC1W UII VUIU
IS
School Directors to Hold
Joint Session With New
Committee Oct. 22
The budget committee which,
working with the achool directors,
will arrange finances for the Klam
ath county achnuW(r next year,,
waa choaen at a meeting of the
board yeatcrday.
The Joint meeting la to be held
'at the courthouse October 22.
The following men were selected
to asalat the directors:
Charles Mark, of Henley; Bam
Uehllngor, Henley: . Harryi Wilson,
Malln; George Oftield. Merrill; Roy
Nelaon. Worden; H. A. Talbot,
Plevna; Francis J. Bowno, Bo-
SECURITY IS SOUGHT
Seven Great Powers Agree
To Refer Disputes to
Board of Adjustment
LONDO.V, Oct. 19. War'a breed
lug ground In Europa will breed
war no more If the treatlea of Lo
carno aro observed by the seven
nations which havo now presented
the documenta for public Inspection.
They are treaties of security and
arbitration leading toward disarma
ment, and designed to prevent the
sudden roll of drams and thud of
marching feet that broke over Eur
ope In 1914.
The texta of tho documenta tem
porarily agreed to at Locarno by
representatives y of Great Britain,
France, Germany, Italy. Belgium.
Poland and Cxecho-Slovakla, were
released for Tuesday morning pub
lication In the respective capitals.
In plain worda, the aeveral treat
lea are promised from the various
signatories to keep the peace, to be
content with their present frontiers,
to refer all disputes either to con
ciliation, arbitration or both, before
recourse to hostilities, and to as
sist In the common punishment of
any nation breaking the pacts.
Throughout Europe the treaties
are welcomed as Inaugurating a
new era of peace, friendship and
disarmament.
The prospective sequence of events
leading toward that desirable trinity
la tentatively outlined aa follows:
1: Evacuation of Cologne tone
by mid-November.
2. Formal signature of pacts In
London December 1.
3. German application for mem
(Contlnned On Page Two)
panics were Indicted by the federal:
grand Jury here. Warranta for their
arrest on charges of using the malls
to defraud Investors of 120,000,000
were Issued Monday.
The oil companies Involved are
the Invader Oil and Refining com
pany of Muskogee, Okla.; the Owen
wood Oil corporation of Fort Worth,
Texas, and the Owcnwood Pool No.
3 of Fort Worth.
These Indicted In the Owenwood
organisation were Owen A. Wood,
president; B. Frank Wood, vice
president; Bert O. Wood, attorney
and treasurer; Otis C. Wood, field
superintendent; Harry II. Hay, vice
president; Lloyd Kenyon Jones and
C. E. Zimmerman, publicity direc
tors; C. W. Bishop, secretary; J. F.
Canterbury, controller, and C. Poll
ard, secretary.
Tha Invader officials indicted
were B. Frank Wood, president;
Otis and Owen Wood, directors;
Bert Wood, attorney; Robert Ogil-
vey, vie president; M. Board, Mus
kogee banker; L. C. Boyd, secre-
Litigation
ASPECT HELD SERIOUS
Alderman Demands T o
Know Why Council Was
Not Kept Informed
Due to the fact that he concealed
from the city council an official
letter from the atate board of engi-'
neer examiners, in which they re
quested the aldermen's attitude con
cerning the unlawful employment of
Eugene B. Henry, aa city engineer.
Mayor Fred B. Goddard may be re
sponsible for limitless litigation in
which the city of Klamath Falls
may.be Involved.
Such was the opinion of several
persons. Including a prominent lo
cal attorney, who are Interested In
the city's business, after they had
learned that, months ago, Mr. God-
tary: J. L. Nourse. director, and C. j dard had been formally notified
E. Zimmerman. that Mr. Henry la not a registered .
engineer, and that he la practicing .
violation of the atate law cover
ing such matters.
It waa through Police Judge Gag-
hagen, to whom the atate board
finally appealed, that the council, at
shooting in a gun battle. June 19.ja,0 ,ho waler from the Lako "';,,.' j. Q. ilamaker. Bonania
during which Kendall suffered se
vere wounds.
According to the slate, the sher
iffs office had received complaints
on the day In question, that three
men, whose car wa broken down,
were atopplng passing motorist, de
manding help, and were extremely
belllgaront.
At that lime Kondall, now acting
Justice of the peace, was a deputy
sheriff, and ,ha and llawklna rushed
to the acene near Olone. There they
had their altercation with the throe
defendanta.
Kendall waa shot, and ha says,
reinitiated by wounding Burke in
the foot. Kenunll was in th hos
pital for 32 days following Ihe fight.
The Jury selected comprises How
ard 8. Abbey. W. II. Jllmmclwrlght.
Frank Kester, W. L. Frum, Alfred
CoKlel, F. E. Masten, (1. W. Hous
ton, Lawrence Arnott, Anton Crick,
J. W. Ilasklna, J. A. Thompson and
A. M, Collier.
negative of B. Botullnua. Tha mud
was very heavy In Ita contenta of
hydrogen sulphide. There Is ' a
(Continued on Page Two)
IT Ft tho railroads nf
LEj the United States
may have mls
,"l,r 'or. thoy hnva cro-
-- upriive, useful and
Ctlnann - .
---Fvii lynuim oi inna
In Ihe world. Thla
ti.". nea wnn very
ZZ" "n,S Malnat an
i - oi oppoaltlon and'
&,l'.'n to "'at in
--i nits country the
, . "'iKesi amnio
L, T " ,,,B wlfnro
flll 14 the people.
men win ft-., .. .
t,!... , '"" "is store
. L tr,d' iMh lor
ciothes.
pVN0THINp
- - J
Ptlint w
" irecs
Attack Again Made
on Miner's Fortune
BAN FKANCI8CO, Oct. 19.
(United News) A new attack has
been made upon tho $20,000,000
in back royalties which (loorge
Canipholl Carson, "desert rat" and
Itinerant minor, believing he had
won through a United State aup
reme court ruling lust week on a
smelting patent Infringement,
Tho American Smelting A Re
fining company Monday potllloncd
llio United Slulcs circuit court of
npponln hero for n roopenlng of the
enso, claiming ovldonro had linen
discovered which . would nhow tluit
Cursnn did not Invent the coppor
furnace uMd by the concern. Car-
sun Is 59 yon rs old,
$20,000 Per Toe Is
Asked in Complaint
LOS ANGELES. Oct. 19. (Unit
ed News) Damages at the rate
of $20,000 per toe were aought by
Mlaa Helen R. Goldman In a court
action here against Dr. Proston M.
Hart, surgeon.
Miss Goldman asks a total of
(100,000 for th loss at a log upon
which Dr. Hart had operated.
She chsrgoa that carelpasnesa In
an operation to straighten out hor
leg caused gangrene poisoning to
set In which made amputation nec
essary;
I Ray - Loosely, Fort Klamath, and
! W. C. Balfour. Chlloquln.
1 School officials yesterday ex-
preased satisfaction over the board's
choice. Considerably more money
will be needed for the schools next
year than waa required for 1925.
but whether a special election, to
get around the six per cent tax
limitation law will be ordered. Is
not yet known.
GKN. BIX IN" NANKING
LONDON Oct. 19. Chekiang
troops hare occupied Nanking after
driving Chang Tso-Lln'a Manchur-
Ian troops from the city, according
to a dispatch from Shanghai. The
occupation was without incident ex.
cept for a ifew minor street en
gagement from the advancing
Cheklangese and the retreating
troops of Chang, who withdrew
across tho Yangtse river.
ARMY FLIERS ARE :
KILLED IN CRASH
Martin Bomber Strikes Tree
When Engine Stalls and
Machine Nosedives
GAME OFFICIALS
Hunters of the Klamath district
were "warned not to shoot ducks in
the Tule district until some' definite
information was received ascertain
ing Just what ails the birds there,
by George Tonkin, U. S. Game war
den for the district of California,
In an afldress before members of tho
Klamath Sportsmen's Association,
at a meeting held In the chamber of
commerce rooms last night.
Mr. Tonkin informed members
of the association that ducks killed
CAPE MAY. COURT HOUSE,
X. J., Oct. 1 (United News)
Cnpt.- RKjt.'-S&iocu,sLlt. Jib
bolt C. Martin and Staff Sergeant
Joseph Colaon, army aviator
winging; thrlr way from Mitchell
Field, L. I., to LanKI.-y Field,
Va., were killed late Monday
f hen the Martin bomb-r In
which they were flyhte; crashed
Into at (trove of trees near here.
The flier were returning; to
the southern field after spending
the summer In anti-aircraft prac
tice with the coast nrtllleryj
Klnloch wa hound for a fur
lough In hla home at AsbeTllle,
X. C when he met hi death.
All three men were dead when
persons living near the scene of
, the accident arrived. The bodies of
the filers were crushed and tangled
in the wreckage, on the back of
each was strapped a parachute but
ao rapid had been the descent that
none had been able to jump from
the plana. 1
Those who witnessed the acci
dent said that It was apparent that
one of the motors of the big bi
plane went dead. The bomber
started to descend, when within
it regular meeting last night, event
ually learned that the board had
communicated with Goddard, and -had
requested a reply, outlining the
council's position In the case. It
was pointed out that persons against -whom
assessments hare been made,
may refuse to pay them, claiming
that the work was performed under
tha-aucervlslon of an enelneer-.who.
the atate has held, aboard not b
(Continued on Page Seven) - .
Leviathan Fired on
By Government Ship
could not be eaten with the as-1 about 400 feot of the ground It
surance that no ills would befall ; suddenly banked steeply toward the
NEW YORK. Oct. 19. (United
News) There is talk of bringing
peaceful passenger vessels Into New
York harbor under the protection
of a convoy, following the arrival of
the big liner Leviathan amid a hail
of shot and shell Monday.
So strenuous has the enforcement
of prohibition about New York be
come that members of the crew ' of
the giant .United States liner were
forced to lie down on the decks to
avoid a rain of bullets, which whls
sed over the great vessel, tired from
a rum chaser.
A rum runner apparently had at
tempted to slip Into the lucrative
metropolitan market under the pro
tection of the Leviathan's huge bulk.
An alert coast guard patrol boat
started In pursuit, and opened fire.
Dodging around the Innocent Le-
KLAMATH FALLS HAS BEST CAMP GROUNDS ON
COAST, EVEN STORK DROPS AROUND FOR VISIT
Klamath Falls boasts one of tho
most attractive and cleanly of the
camp grounds along tho. Pacific
coast and whnt can be more Import
ant In this hustling day and age
than a place for tourists In the sum
mer to rest their weary bones after
a atlff day's drive over dusty roads
and long?
Hut the credit does not go to
Klamath Falls, It Is due Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Gnrlch who have worked
unceasingly In providing tho best
shadows from Ihe tall trees and
the flickers of sunlight that drift
from them are working wonders
for the "camp baby" and she Is
growing fast.
There nre In the camp now, ac
cording to Mrs. (larlch, more tour
ist than during the month of
August's average. .Tho reason for
thla Is hardly explainable unless the
fnct that tho eternal quest for a
location has brought many to Klam
ath Falls- for the winter.
' "We havo acorns of people horo
th wreckage were unable to de
termine who waa piloting the craft.
Notified of the disaster, officers
from Mitchell field Immediately
set out to Inspect the crushed ship.
those partaking of them, and also ! earth and fell. Those who viewed vlathan, the rum runner escaped.
stressed tho fuct that a wounded
duck might carry the ailment afar,
spreading It to other feeding
grounds and thus put further ban
on the duck and goose hunting.
Owing to the situation in the Tule
i lake region where thousands of
ducks hare been found sick and
dead, the Sportsmen's association
havo postponed the annual duck
and goose dinner until some time
in December.
Army Lieutenant Is
Released from Jail
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19. Lieut.
Mr. Tonkin and M. E. Arnold.; ' '
spi lor wuum mo aiuif buu
RACE POSTPONED :
. SALEM. N, H.. Oct.' 19. With
IT of the world's foremost racers
ready for the start, a heavy rain
Monday afternoon again caused
postponement of Inaugural 250 mile
race at the new Rockingham speed
way here. The race, originally
scheduled for last Saturday will be
held October 31.
HTKAMKIt IIKFMATEI
VICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 19.
(United News) The sleamur Kem
lyk of the ljolltinil America line,
was refloated at high tide Mon
day afternoon, from Ihe rocks of
Ilentlnck Island.
In Iholr camp grounds for the men every week," said Mrs. Gnrlch. "who
mid women, children and perhaps
tholr dogs Hint come from California
or ennio from Now York. ,
There have been several romances
culmlnBlod In the park but not un
til Inst week was there a birth. Tho
first child to be born slnco Mr. and
Mrs. Gnrlch took over the Altamont
Grove and mode It Into the Mecca
It Is.
Mr. and Mrs. It. 8. Glllotte of
Hollywood, California aro tho par
ents of the child, their first daugh
ter and second hahy. They have
named her Wanda Patricia and the
are staying long enough to find out
the result of tho entrance of the
riillroad.i Into Klamath Falls and
If thoy foci snro that cortaln lines
will eomo they nre going to stay,
alRoifor thoy figure that there will be
competlon and- more work If an
Increase of the railroads is had."
Another big feature about the
Altamont camp ground atmosphere
Is the fact that there Is not an Idle
man in the ramp. Although a num
ber of hunter are guests beneath
the big trees, they ara always doing
something worth while.
who accompanied him here on his
Investigation of the Tule lake sltus
( Continued on Pace Two)
CHARLESTON HELD
TOO FULL OF PEP
CLEVELAND. Oct. 19. (United
News) Tho police have decided
that the Charleston Is altogether
too thrilling as now danced In the
local honky-tonks and officials have
drafted a now law aimed at the
Charleston exclusively with pro
vides: -
1 Elimination of the back klclt
and, any "shivering movci f nt."
- 2 Minors shall not be allowed
to dance the Charleston anywhere
unless accompnnied by a parent or
guardian.
3 All dancing schools shall bo
required to teach a nice, modified
"decent Charleston" if they leach 'of the value of his services, to our
It at all. country."
the navy and possibly President
Coolidge pleaded, was released from
a local Jail Monday, after serving
five days of a 30 day sentence as
an alleged "hit and run", automo
bile driver,
MacDonald. credited by Gen.
Maaon Patrick, head of the army
nir service, with being "one of tho
best fliers In the country," hit an
automobile owned by ' Admiral
Brownsnn, failed to stop and was,
arrested and sent to Jail. Patrick
and the admiral appealed to Police
Judgo McMahon to freo him. Justice
McMahon refused. Sonntor Borah
waa represented as Intending to
see President Coolidge about it.
MacDonald was freed and placed
on probation for a year.
Judge McMahon said he released
the erring flier because of the "rep
resentations that were made to me
In the Center of Klamath
Falls Shopping District.
Our
Gives complete footwear ser
vice to all, every age, and
footwear at' a price that is
worthy of your satisfaction.
We feature ladies' dress slip
pers at $5.85 and $6.85.
- iL fin
and Chiloquin