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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1925)
Sections WEN TO, IE dial Makes 2, r Si of Men r at $10,000 bibes Held As Vl From Leggers W $100,000 7. Thirteen U headed Arlllll Ml a. ro""' " Udlciroeau r rfwt mutey from 0j!td it "" ,h,n , uo" Ksrcat dur- reira. were tree r.lMI lll a'1' J Weo rrrtrd ly U ... aud. I-; Utbtrruwd pullm-i la,lljr tianipnn-d. kiTe uiiiiuii u a arr',t- ke had lefl ae keidiiiiartera. 'hifhfr pulled nd nlfered "Hinhal Shan "Ua. 'ad thai sev- 'm siieml th ENDORSED BY, PAL CHIEF I hu. Xor. r.nnnr- i of Suprr- 'WW le ft fiU hi lea- tot "wrlntendfnt of' l I hat ..i , . meeting of the! held ,1.1. - . ft ... wen. Ul .. . I Vorih i 'Wn ... . cnamiier ' Oend fl'00 a Ri 'P. Mutt, on. Need ants Mllsivel,, I i mm "nifi, 80PPltig THE gwjiorning Except Monday) CI ANT PLOT IS ' NIPPED IN BUI) (IF ! Premier Mussolini's Death Part of Conspiracy Asserts Deputy ItOMK. Nov. 7. Willi,. pullee lu liny allegedly ra drawInK frmn TH Zanlbonl, former anrUtlsl dep. nil king's rouflilunl, confer-! of Hi plot lu kill I'rumlrr Mm j isollul m ixl l end t tin Italian nion-1 ' archy. autlmrltle throuKlinut lhe( ! lAntl rounded tip men suspected of ' having cooperated In Ilia Riant run piracy. Zanlbonl uulil u take nil r ' . it. 111.. 9..m I. I- rlililra e plan mr nun in sunoi am-, cillnl during the loiter', spceiu l, the Armistice tiny crowds. Though he claimed lliul he had ni accomplice. Ih police al Naples,, tinnn anil leghorn bagged men be-1 llcved In have had hand In Ihi- flair In I'll rapacity nr anutbrr j BLIZZARD RAGES IN KANSAS CITY I it..:., d i i I n... yjn mudil IrUI, " "-.. L gwwleac over all r ollow nam atorm a. Tar Irlnl I I ,mi'i Itaruuih llilnj .KANSAS CITY. Mil., Nv. -7.- !l ftlrtd.nu will be Winter lilcw Inio Ills southwest to ut, lime. i night nil a 4U-mll wind, arrninpan- Lw.roa.cd today l"v'' ' Tl"! fctUnd lo Ih one hii.mril nuiiiwra an nii nicni rninl I liqior iialt r- hrtv. j (k Million la aat Tralna Iri-m inn l Wfff n- II kagdrrlaad an- K,rli d ai'yiTMl houra lam iMM-uiir; a lriB.lly xmilcl ( liary allow In w.'trrn han- Mirl(plid polli ! . and lr riiiiiiuunl, nilon a Kidrd. Hiindi'r-1 Tti hlnrin rlddrn un'J iiirtiiliil d lo ml(n Im-'r nnd MIMnurl. Uklu- Ikil Ibom, nb rlcd rloudy wrnili'-r w It It it,fcj-d. la rulil WJul IiIiiwIiir. K.ilnn liuvo mi.rt nil i li,-r Ullin In Ti'.aa. UiuIjiIkiij nud Ok- , iir,rthTfTir'WarJt,i lln""iii.l lli,,i,t,rHIH the weather' was report,,! rlrarltii ' t!B!f l IhuroiiKli , 111 Tv. j at Thee -im'i In tl. low IhiiiN lu mxiHi Texan. t )' 110 hrlliei. flood waters have raiiM-d many fur- odlr.r. are melt lo flee lu higher gronnd. Hall; .ltionwniU of, and lilghwav Irallle was Inlerriipted ' htd.in of p,il-,i the downpour. i latnt. i;.r.,,n . . .... .. j' weiern part of Kansas early today nnd hluliwnyt were filling wlih drlft-l eit snow tonight. j In in i ml parit of Hie slnto lhe blllinnl was prereded by nil all- J nlghl rain. ! Street car nnd motor bus traffic In Kanaaa City was Inlerriipted by the hllnillng snow. ' The storm was expected lo coit- FniWy had plarnl , ,ln" Prl ' night, but Sunday j -ktried with law.'" ne fair and much colder, ac-i a,lr thn necea. ' cording lo the weather bureau. A "MM u lutnlah. . n lul in n in temperature of 3d degrees. ' above aero was looked for. EXECUTIVE READYj WITH MESSAGE OLYMI'IA , Nov. 7.- Oov. Ko-; I..H.I It ll..rttAu'a n, u In Ihn' legislature may not bo delivered un til Tuesday or perhapt Thursday. Wednesday being a legal holiday. It bora mo known at member be gan assembling hero today for the opening of Ihe special session Mon day noon. lttrth lininchos must orgnnlso as ut llio beginning of n regular ses sion. This will ho morn or less a for inn 1 II y lu Ihe setiule, hill In Dm house, while there is no opposi tion to tho ro-oleclion of Speaker Kloyd D. Diinskln of Spokane, there Is a sharp contest for Ihn chief clerk niacin vacant hy thn retire ment of Churlc II. Muyhury. now director of the department f II eenees. Tho suiialo Is expected lo reorga nize quickly with K. J. Cloary of Whatcom county, ns president pro tern nnd Vlr.tcr 'ediilek of Seullle, as aecrelnry. If Hi conlost ovor llio hoiisu chief clerkship develops lulu a real struggle, organisation may not ho effected In tlmU tor the messugo lo lie recolved before Tuesday afternoon. A prolonged fight would mean a further delny until Thursday as there la no eesslon on Armistice lay. , Under the agreement reached at the close of the regular session last February, gponkor Dnnskln will be re-elected. KLMSATH NEWS United Neva KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1925 Commissioner ExDlains Whv The M. f Bradbury Board Failed To Make Progress With Klamath District Keplyintr to hectic telegrams of R. E. Bradbury, president of the Klamath Irrigation dis trict. I. W. Dent, acting commissioner of the reclamation service, wrote a lengthy letter. In it he explains the reason taking over O. & M. by the Bradbury board has made no pro- tress i nm newspaper mis printed extracts iron mis letter, ror some unnnown reasuu uun newspaper is challenged to print all of It. Just why Bradbury should want The News to publish it is mystifying. J. L. Jacob is the president of one nnd Charles Wood Eberlein, who should certa inly be willing an interest in another publication. Anyway, here it is: Mr. II, E. Ilradbury. I'm.. Klamath Initiation lilntrkt, Klamath Pall. Ori-min, l,r Sir: lloi'lpt la acknowlnlced of your Wilcgram of Onubir 21 lniulrlii( In ronrd to the preaent talua of nriotlallona of conlrart for turnlnc over In lh dlmrlrl Ilia operation and malDlenanc ot the ronalrurtvd worka of the Klamath project. In yniir Irlritraiii you alntn that Ihl matlwr hat lii-cn i,,fure lliln di'partmvnt for a ronaldrrable lime and uri thai anion be taken to cxpedllo approval of contract form. Your lcliruni evldcmea a mlaunderatandlUK of the ultunllnn. Til U inn, lor haa not been, and la not n before llio di'pnrlment In auch way that arllnn nmy properly lie token upon llio contract. In ordir Hint llio nlluullon may be iinduratond, yii ii r alKtillnu la culled to the following: Secretary Thoma, In Ilia pcrminal lotler of April 30, addreaaed lo lr. Mead, objected to coii ducllnn nianllatlnna throuith the medium of local nfflHiiln. pnrtl, ulnrly to rerialu artlon of Ulatrlct t'oiinxl t'uffey. whlc h . charaiierlied aa ar bitrary Interponllliin by a mi nil rrnlloinan not entirely coneranl with loinl ronditlona. In reply In thla letler the cniiiniiKMloniT. In communication ' of May IS. explulticd why It Uu been and la con aldi ri'd necen.ary In rondml neKotlatlonn IhrouRli local olfrll. The roitcluiliiiii paragraph of thla letter aloled thai If drnfl of contrart Iherelotore Milimlllod l,y tho lonl ofIUIl does pot meet wnn ,l,,l.l,.d l.y tho local otIUIal- ..f the nwrlrt the .... J,, I deslra by .He n......i,rv i.m,I des ra h e hy Hie iiggisied and bit papers submitted to llio superin tendent or district counsel for transmission through regulur channel. In litter ot August 13 lo the commissioner, roiinscl Coffey aimed thai he and the superin tendent had met wllh the district officials for the purpose of discussing In detail Ihe draft of agree ment pr.-vl ly prepared by them and that as a resull of several days' conference It was deter mined llinl Ihe form of ugrceinent submitted was snllsfuctory wit H the exreptlon of certain objer tli, ii they hud lo paragraphs 12i 13. 30. 32. 33. 35 3H."nnd fj?"The directors stated that Ihcy would furnish Mr. Newoll with a written state ment of their objections to these paragraphs. They were advised that If they would do ao. all papers would be transmitted to this office wllh appro priate recommendallona. Mr. Coffey advises In his letter lhat the statement of objections not hav ing been tubmltted lo the superintendent promptly. Mr Newell requested Ihe district lo expedite It submission Ul order that the papers might be sub mitted to this office for consideration. Instead of doing this at agreed, the district s attorney fur nlshed another draft of agreement almost luenllcal wllh tho form previously submitted by them. The new draft contained nil of tho objectionable feat ures of tho prcvloua drnfl. wllh some added pro- ll iHprs in Klamath Water Users Ii " p . u vi.ea.ihi To tho mcmoera 01 io imitation district: I mm wnnderlnc If you pcoplo aro nol In about the sumo frame ot mind as I am at this time. Possibly I am not capoblo of vory sound, careful reasoning, llowovor. thero are a fow things I do know and hellevo. And Ihoy arc: That I hnvo been very closely connected wllh the affairs uf the project for llio past IB yonrs, and therefore know somuthlng of lis past history and problems SANTA CLAUS BUYS RADIO SET TO KEEP TABS ON KLAMATH FALLS LITTLE BOYS AND GIRLS With a wlrB ,run"' ,rom ,ne t0D of the North Polo lo an Iceberg as hlg ns Ml. Shasln, Knntu Clans has sot up n!W rttl" ,"Hchl" nnd Hie following messugo enmo down along a slant of tho Aurora Borealta lust night to Lee Shep herd, of Klamath Kails, as follows: "Hollo. Mr. Shepherdl This Is San.. Cl.us. I - t1' ,h. hoy and girls of Klamath Palls lhat I am listening In on !... nlchl. I want them to he good hoys and glrla or I will cut out Klamath Falls "Last night I heard one little I hoy getting panning iron, i. and United Press Telegraph Sejvket -4- i Orfobcr II, 1S2S. vl(n likewise ies Pot meet will. here wo were when tho commissioner s letter ot . . , I ehewgee. mnsldecod , , was written.- This offle -agai. uwu1rUA8iC-t,w-.Noi(7.a'nlUd1 dU.rlc. should l,.V thai the draft of contract submitted by Mr. Coffey j ,,, -Four men are known to nisirii - i snoiuu he taken ns a That t mm land owner and tax - .... - -- - j payor. That all I possess Is Invested In projoct lands. That I like and havo fallh In Klamath and nave no desire to live elswhero, and am, thoroforo, very anxious to see this country forge shead and prosper. Hands Around That this county can not progross as It should unless wo got together and work logolhor. Some of us aro, without question, wrong In our opin ions and expressions, and if wo sin (Continued on l'KQ 1vc) mother because he didn't want to go to bed when eho told him to. Another cried because ho couldn't hnvo a third piece of cnacoiaio cake, uml nio more candy. The lltllo girls seemed bettor M'n the little hoys last night. "Tell them they'll have to mind bettor than that, or I'll not slop till I get way down In California. So Long. 8ANTA CLAVS." p g, Keverybody ought to or der early a my toy makers are working overtime alroady. Yours. fl. C." -i newspaper down Maun way, to return a ?2,000 favor, has considered by Mr. Coffey to be A ohjertlonuhlc. Copy of the dlatrlcfa draft wa tranamltted to thla office with copy of Mr. Car nahan'a letter of transmittal and a copy of District I'ounsel Coffey's reply of August 12. Attention Is Invited particularly to the last paragraph of Mr. Coffey'a letter to' Mr. J. H. Carnahan, attorney for the district, reading aa follows: ; I have been waiting for the suggested changea. hut the fact that the directors have now submitted a draft of contract leads to the belief that perhaps they have abandoned prcvloua plans to submit suggested changea In the draft discussed in detail last June. However. 1 am not certain as to this and would appreciate advice In this regard at your earliest convenience. Mr. Coffey in his letter to thla office of Aug ust 11 stated that upon receipt of Mr. Carnahan's reply the matter would be taken up further. I assume that no reply has been received by Mr. Coffey from Mr. Carnahan as I feel sure that It a reply had been received this office would havo been promptly advised. t from the foregoing you . will note that we' have been awaiting advice from the district or Its attorney regarding their wishes. Had the. sug gestions made been followed by the district and written objection forwarded to the varlons pro vision of Mr. Cliffey'a drafk which were considered objectionable, the mailer could have been con sidered and some definite decision reached. , Now. however. 11 appears that we are sutislanlialiy where wo were when tho commissioner's letter ot base and written objections forward ed, drafting. If considered advisable, revised ar ticles to he' substituted for those considered ob jectionable, supplemented by an outline of the reasons for the objection in each case. The lat ter Is of particular Importance ns it Is necessary lhat something of this kind be had In ordor that intelligent consideration may be given hy this of fice and by the department to the various matters In controversy. Ucplying lo that part of your telegram which relates to relief matters, I havo lo advise that nothing can be done under the provisions of Sub section K of the Act of December 5. 1924. until the reports and recommendations have boon sub mitted to and acted upon by congress. The act mentioned provides for certain other measures of relief which require no action by congress. Most of Ihe relief, however, can not be given until the operation and maintenance of the project has been ' turned over to the water users as provided In Sub section 0 of the act mentioned. Anything along this line, therefore, must necessarily await favor able action upon the contract for taking over op eration and maintenance. Very truly yours. (Signed) P. W. PENT, Acting Commissioner. CAMPBELL RITES HELD PRIVATELY AT 4 P. M. TODAY According to announcement made last night, the body of the Into Jonn Campbell, who died Thursday atier noon of heart disease, will He in . . ... Ihrnn n'etnek Oil! II four o'clock this afternoon In Whlllock sJ morl uary. Tho funeral service will bo con ducted privately with only Immed iate friends ot tho family present. Services aro scheduled for fonr o'clock. Interment arraugomcnla will bo announced later.- PRINCE OF WALES CONTINUES RECUKU l.iiMtnv Nov. 7. (United rress) The Prince of Wales' rec-1 ord for falls from a horse roso to day when tor the second tlmo Ih s week he tumbled off his sleed. whllo following the hounds In the Whad don chase hunt. The first fox had Just .been turned up when the prince's accident occurred. He ln-; ed safely and, as on Ihe first oc-, caslon this week, was uninjured. TrinityHEffecteddtao;EXAMINATION OF Warrant Support of riKTBIlT RflDK the District Voters?'"'"1 V "" . Iu MeHsa-M, Ilradbury, Jacob uiul Thomas, present officer of the Klamath Irrigation KlslrM, tienestly believe they ran bring ubout any condition In thla dis trict other than chaos? Have they done, or accom plished anything, that warrants their continuance In power? Tbeae two question' might effectively be asked at the ad ministration meeting at Henley today. Dut they won't be. That meeting will be fully' program med. Honest questioner will be howled down. Resolution will be produced and paawrd unanimously. In ef fect they will say that the rail road and the power companies are the issue In 'thla campaign. Haven't these gentlemen harped on that at ring for year? They have told their unthink ing follower that' the power companies could be made to pay the entire cost of thla project. But nradburr and Jacob missed a good election issue by not in sisting that the railroad be made to haul produce to market as the price of running through the dis trict. That Henley meeting will get just that .far toward a sensible and economic discussion of the. problems of this district. 4 ARE KILLED IN FALL OF BUILDING Tourist and Workmen Lose Lives As Roof of Cafe And Retort Crashes have been killed and an undetermin ed number Injured when the roof of the Tlvoll cafe, famous resort, crashed late this afternoon. The dead: . Kdward Jones, an American tour ist, believed to be from St. Louis. Luis Yelai and Ernest E. Mar tines, both local workmen; and one unidentified man. Yelax and Martinex were working on the rool when the crash came. A cordon of Mexiran soldiers was swung about the building. Firemen from central station at El Paso came to the aid of the Mexicans and as sisted In digging In the ruins to de termine whether any more were killed, and rescue others believed to have been Injured. F FAILURE TO DIM Continual reminder that dimming of auto lights on wet pavements Is a Jaw, having failed to bring about 100 per cent compliance, Traffic Officer Knowlea last night slated that leniency In res'poct to this law had gone tho limit. Arrests will follow when and where violations ot this law la noted. L. C. Carroll was arrested by Traffic Officer Knowles for falling to dim his lights last night. E. S. Weaver was hold for operating with a foreign license. Freely Morris and Jtoy Pltlman for speeding, and T. 11. Hawkins tor not carrying a light on a wsgon. Drivers should remember that such laws are compiled to prevent damage to property, Injury to others and possibly mean tho ssving of human llfo. declared the officor last night. Usually it Is Just thought lessness, rather than deliberate, vio lation, ho said. SOCIAL JTllr;itlN(l HELD The Parent-Teachers' assoclnllon ,of tho Lamm's mill tllsrtlet held n social Catherine Friday night. A I Urge flumbcr of poi sons w as pre i sent. ' ' . THE WKATHEH Oregon: Cloudy, probably rain west portion Sunday: warmer; fresh to strong southeast wind, shifting to ' southwest gales along coast. ARREST OLLOWS Three Sections 18 Pages Price Five Onto Nil! WANItD I ILL AFTERACTION Audit Undesired For Time Being CHECK-UP POSTPONED Refusal to Face Figures to Farmers Held Damaging To Ballot Issue . Evading until after election the Inevitable revelation of the Klam ath Irrigation district's financial af fairs, the present board has in structed lta publie accountant that they do not want him to go over the district's books "until after the first of the year." It will not be until then that the water users will know the of ficial facts of the sad plight- into which tho Bradbury board has engi neered the district, too late to In crease the landslide vote that now Is certain to overwhelm the Brad-, bury-Eber'.eln candidates. Refusal ot the administration to permit Its usual accountant, O. Ed Ross, ot Salem, to check the books became known when Ross was ask ed if he was ready to audit the Klamath district booka as usual. Xo. the board doesnt want. me. untU after the first of the year," said Koh. Considering tho large sums Ihe board has admitted spending in per-, feetln bookkeeping system, em ploying extra help for the past tev- , l,i,. the refusal of an at eraJ-.moj-.tbt. .fW".j "V Is Utaa-to mean they wish to a auaiiv keep ' concealed for the present, the finan-, cial standing of the district Xoi a dollar ' would remain in the county treasury to the credit, of the district at the present time. If the district had patid it bill due last June, to the government. . Ievcu8nt obhtogon mmhfin gwd , This bill amounted to $59,598. 59. The reason It has' not been, paid Is that there Is only 153,000 to the credit of the district in the treasury. This amount is now- con stantly being drawn against by the heavy administrative expenses, the IS.C19.G0 "budget , tor which has long since been overdrawn by total expenses of more than $12,000. Ex penses cannot be held under $14, 000 for the entire year, and the board Is now publicly attempting to justify Its extravagances on Its ac complishments, say Us opponents. Had Bradbury deliberately at tempted to wreck the district's credit In the vain hope that sym pathy of congress would have been enlisted, and .relief found In that channel, he tould not have proceed ed more directly on his course, ac cording to thoso who know him. For. knowing that taxes had been reduced by his predecessors in of fice with the expectation that O. ft M. would be taken over by the district, he has purposely Impeded that job. NEWELL SELECTED PORTLAND. Nov. 7. Wilbur K. Newell, of Eugene, has been select ed and recommended for the po sition of assistant prohibition admin istrator for Oregon. ' "He liveth best who lov cth best, all things both great and small." Ho who bleats ot his poverty, for sympathy. Is tho oqual of he who boasts ot his riches In vanity. Servlco and valuo Is Iho ter minal 'in human rotations on ' which all permanent friend ships grow. . Center ot Shopping District