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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1926)
i tleF !e? IE The yrj Morning Except Monday) : -- prD S. P. YARD PLAN 0 fiux CALLS BIG SUMr' S. P. Supt. Outlinct Tenta tive Plan of Road Construction Klamath News united News and United Press Telegraph Services KLAMATH FALLS, OPE., SUNDAY. MARCH 21, 1926 Portraits of Coolidges Chosen to Hang in White House Gallery Section One 16 Pages Cast Approslmatnly 1 1. null. 000 will spent by tha Southern l'aririr In I UlmtiMlh L' 1 1 . i j . ! .. . iiuiKiivrq irarx- . II waa Indicated to members of the Hlxh Hlrooi Ituprovemen rlub and members u( (lit city coun cil. A feature of lh construction work will bo a heavy cut to lower Ih grade out of Klamath Falla, to- DIE IN RIVULETS JOF MOLTEN IRON ;! Furnace Tips Over in Alabama Plant g.ther with a low.rlug of the grade I WORKERS ARF TUT OFF about three feet ., Hl.th street. KL lU I Orr Trapped Small Office Wade Through Metal In Tentative plana for an Immmufi concrete viaduct over thirteen Millvvri ghU for I ho Klamath Falli advisory body of rlll.nna and members of the rlly council. The itile highway romnilMlon waa al represented. S W. Kline,. Id. superintendent of ' "'RMINOIIAM. Ala.. March 20. the Shasta division, J. A. (II van and t 'United Press) five death M. II. Ilus.ell. enalneers. left re.-lw"r oae1 lonlaht to the toll of terday after a two days' conference, during which the plana were up proved. j - c l'nlted on prohl m tonlKhl public ra the largest ker held In quetlloo. ance of the to ulliiw a rat In favor nrvhlbltloo bl. dl-rue- Iff II UiV l.l.ir 'MI tino.otK). The viaduct plana and other eng. (Continued on Page Klght) IN RUMMIX-UP Bootlegger Caught on Hit Rounds Makes Slick Get Away I considerably I fcimo newa- kllh the 426 ' groups, co- WAHIIINGTON, Murch !0. (United I'reaal A supposed boot legger making aeveral Irlpa In the house office building Saturday waa detained by capltol police, but ac cording to meaner Information to- night from thoae cognizant with ,hc 0wed affair the man racaped though he left behind "four quarta of Scotch." Representative lllanton, bemo eratlc dry from Texas, wltneaaed pari of the Incident, but refuaed to- prohlbltlon night to dlaciiui the mutter. Other pome of thf HiamliMH f eiiiitfn.iui were, ennaltv be available rrt,.pnt nm he story romlng ao .Inmlu n hn Kn ...... .1 1 Ul.n.l . t- Mease of Soul ll Carolina that boot leggera Infest the rapitol mused a tremendoua atlr. the furnace explosion in the Wood ward Iron company here, which now haa taken a total of 21 1 1 vet. Pour of the all men. lying In hos pltala, suffering from the terrible burna of molten metal, are not ex pected to live. The men were trapped In a atreara or sizzling flowing white-hot Iron In the plant today, when an NO-foot steel furnace toppled and fell, and fro ma huge crater In lta top aent rlvulela of the molten iron about the room, trapping the flee ing workers. Four of those who died tonight were millwrights, trapped in their small office near the furnace. The room waa flooded with molten Iron, through which the men waded In a vain effort to escape. Although reaching temporary safety, they were so badly burned that death fol- -...,.!..,,... n-nj, i. ,j, I I !,'.. iiluh aj ini.L.j ..M - Pi J - A- laniasai m a n ki iiawrr"'"iiiasain' 'iT'T T Future occupants and Visitors In the White House will get Inv ptssions of Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge from these portraits, which have been chosen to hang in the executive mansion's collection of paintings of presidents and their wives. They, are the work of Philip de Laszlo, for whom many royalties have sat. IN HIS NATIVE VT. FATE OF KILLER Simple Rites Mark Cere- Omaha Slayer To Go To mony; President on ' Electric Chair For TO INVESTIGATE ASHLAND ITEM Local Chamber Wants to Know About False Arti cle on Klamath More in sorrow than In anger the Klamath county chamber of com merce yesterday Indicted ' a letter to the editor of the Ashland Tid ings. The body of the letter follows; "A clipping haa Just been brought into our office taken from an Ash land 'paper with headline "Typhoid Hits Klamath; Bad Sewer Cause.' Will you kindly Investigate where this report came from and let ua know by return mall, ao that we can correct such false statement. "We have just conferred with Dr. Newsom and find that It la errone ous, and therefore detrimental to Klamath Falls." The article which prompted the above letter from the chamber fol- lows: j "KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., March j 19. (Special) Klamath health au- thorities were aroused yesterday when it became known that IS cases (Continued on rage Two) WEDDING IS A BIG SURPRISE Grace Hoagland and Stan ley Hajicek Married By Rev. A. L. Rice ret to non- nuppnrt ac- the ainaller Hiilitiea with 10.000 Jollied rltlee In ak- ktlou or repeal were many ugly for the Mnii IMnlnrd. Sergeant-at-Arms Joseph lingers of the house told tho I'nltod Prose that a man had been detained, and that the police had seised . four quarta of "Scotch." which he had carried in a hag. He bad been seen mnklng several trips Into the build ing and wns finally held up by the special rapitol police, according to Itogeni, though tho police them selves proteased Ignorance or the case. From other sources It developed that the lliiuor was turned ovor to the prohibition enforcement agents here and that a warrant waa sworn out for the arrest of the man who Is said to be known as one of tho men mentioned by IHcase. KirnH- Jlyntrry. Itogers was vngue as to how the r" and In the' rirot nir.-enlinir that i man - " 'era are tn hill ... n ant rlrlnk of lous hills seek- water," after a policeman said he, I. no rlty of population fa-1 leadlsm. New n three polls, majority, as ted. The na tion and Al io which prnhl- -t showing. Irys. show as much as waa ex tho Carollnaa e only atatoa ns- liimn. bave occasioned All White Men. The five men who died tonight were all white, Qus Watcher. J. F. Densmore, H.rW, Hopgood.'Wllllom B. Acker. C. A. Humphreys and Hen F. Wise, millwrights. Tho death lLxt now Includes. Howard K. Mussey. furnace su perintendent: K. II. Martin. Jesse Worth, mil Iluthurford and Forest Hawlcy and twelve negroes. Of the six Injured who are still ullvo, four are white. Tho accident was the aocond of Its kind In the history of the Ala noma mining district. The walls of the furnace gave way without warning and the debris completely covered the workers. It had been removed tonight, but the entire nlnnt was shut down OXCOPt for necessary workers. Frank M. Crockard, prosldent of tho Woodward Iron company, said tonight that property damage to the plant would be heavy. A furnace of the type which collapsed costs approximately 1750.000. The Woodward furnace was a total loss. Deputy Coroner Crowe announc ed no official investigation would be made. Way Back to Wn. PLYMOUTH, Vu, March 20. Il'nlted Press) Colonel John Cal vin Coolidge rest tonight In the cold, snow-covered hills of his na tive Vermont. Not as the father of the nation's chief magistrate,' but as a simple New F.ugland cltlsen whom all his neighbors trusted and admired, he As a distinguished son and daughtor-ln-law, the president and first lady of the United States were there and paid silent tribute to tho 80-year-old patriarch, but the serv ice was utterly lucking in pomp or display. The solemn, majestic ritual of the Many Crimes OMAHA. March 20.(United Press) One of the strangest mur der trials In history came to a close here today with the sentencing of Louis Clark, alias Frank Carter, "sniper murderer" to death In fhe electric chair. - The jury found Clark guilty of murdering William McDevltt on was burled this V V Fe'r.itfJ -VfiiiS-'-Ht. iOalee On February 17, after less than two hours of deliberation. The Jury's verdict was a foregone con clusion long before the case was turned over to them. During tho trial the jury watch ed the spectacle of Clark determin edly opposing every effort of his Episcopal church was used at the ' attorney to save his life through Coolidge homestead and again at the snow-driven burial ground. Last Look. There was a moment for a last look upon the faco of Colonel Coolr ldge. then the casket wns closed and six national guardsmen in uni form careful)' lifted It to a waiting sleigh. In silence it was drawn to the vllllage cemetery, where stood a Bhaft erected two years ago, under (Continued on Page Three.) Legislation Aims to Aid Cattle Man V Polo Fancier Is Klamath Booster reo nation-wide. co-operating prlao association.1 peratlng: ..... 297.376 j 1.178 Pa;o Two) relief to mil for your SpoCifV Dnnirh will come nig washed now- iiii work Ironed. !" unit atnckincH month, only the wearing apparel iwn and Iron at '"Is week? Y DRY (Contlifticri on Po Three) Chances Not Good for Rodeo in 1926 So money has been ralsod to hrini- the rodoo to Klamath Kails this summer. It was reported yes terday to tho chamber of commerce by Bd Vonnlco, chairman 01 in ro deo committee. The Illy Hodeo association which manage, the rode, had to have cash lforo It could make a start. There hss been no money forth coming, .nd r t-e presem least, there Is M ' """' at , FFoX ATTACKS 11KIM 20. (United of Oover- pufiKN'K. Mrlh Pressi-AU-fted Wluw . ll...A tO ,i n. was the object of an moderato Intomntj lax rodi.otlon of , )1(inu of 0ahu attack of J". ,,,, nom- wall last night I eep his promises of Bob Coyne, Los Angeles polo rionv fancier and capitalist for none but capitalists can fancy it yesterday came In from his fcdge wood ranch to meet Captain K. Snenecr Fisher, polo authority, who Coyne Is bringing hero to monage his properties. Coyne and Flshe wore In confer ence with J. Frank Adams, who knows more about cow ponies, from which polo ponies are mode, than any man living. Klamath's elovation manes n ..,.. i oiimntA for the raising of ponies, according to Coyne. He and Fishe see the possibilities of bring ing renown to Klamath by tho es tablishing of a polo field here. talk hero money was ji.i.li for i"" Innlion for governor, in lhl afternoon. ,.f nubile the governor, charged ngalntjb .. ,. c.n.lav and Mon varlablo winds, bo- QI'AKKH IX HAWAII HONOLULU, March 20. (Unit ed Press) Local enrthquokoa of to intensity were leu on mu Maul and lin- nnd today. They were tho most acvere In years. The heran at 10:30 p. m. last night and lasted seven minutes. Korords at the Ewa observatory showed short horliontal waves. A second tremor of minor Intensity occurred ot 7:30 a., m. today. No extenslvo damage was re ported, i WASHINGTON, March 20. (United Press) Proposed legisla tion to aid the livestock industry was received by tho senato public lands committee today. Drafts of two bills which would legalize rattle grazing on some 90,000,000 acres belonging to the government went to the commit tee from tho department ot agri culture and tho Interior department Both will be incorporated into a single measure and reported out by the committee as a compromise substitute for tho Stanfield bill. The legislation will benefit some 30,000 livestock Taisers In a dozen western states with about 8,000,000 head of cattle. It was said, and ac cording to agriculture Secretary W. M Jardlne "will promote stability in the livestock Industry." . IXKLIKXZA OX DKTMNR WASHlNC-rrON, March 20. (United Press) Influenza which threatened 'or "mo become a national epidemic, Is now on tho .decline, although several sections nro si 111 suffering from the dis ease. Dr. Hugh 8. Currlng, surgeon general of the United States pub lic health service, said tonight. IIKIDOK MAX Ilr.ltK. A. E. Eberhardt of the Union bridgo company of Portland, is a vis itor In Klamath FalU. His brother. Fred Ebcrliardt, is also a bridgo' specialist, and Is connected with tho highway department In Hint ca pacity, with residence In Klamnth Falls. an insanity plea. Public Defender John N. Bald win, Jr., who was appointed to de fend the "sniper," contended that his client was a moral Imbecile, with a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde personality. Clark, easily the intellectual equal of his attorney, fought Bald win cn every point, declaring that he waa just as sano "as anybody In this courtroom." Itnttlo of Wits. It was a battle ot wits from the start, with Baldwin trying desper ately "to establish his Insanity theory. But Clark outwitted his youthful' attorney at every point. Early In his examination he took the case away from Baldwin (Continued On Page Two) Residence Burns . Early Saturday An un-occupled dwelling, 625 North Ninth street, owned by J. 0. Beardsley, was badly damaged by a fire which started about 4 o'clock yesterday morning. It was wrapped in flames when the fire depart ment was called. The huildins was valued at $3000, end was partially covered by Insurance which reduced the loss to about $800 or $1000. No cause for the fire was as signed. Tho possibility ot defec tive wiring was advanced, but there was no way of tracing where the flames started. House Burned on J. A. Gordon Place Flro caused by a defective stove pipe entirely destroyed the house and sovernl outbuildings on the J. A. Gordon place, one mile west of Hildebrnnd, about 6 o'clock last night. Tho house wns a five-room .struc ture and was tenanted by E. P. Poole, who has boon engaged to look aftor tho place. Tho loss will run around $6000 and wns partially covered by In surance, according to Gordon. Coming as a great surprise to their scores of friends was the mar riage of MIbs Grace Hoagland to Stanley Hajicek last night. Rev. Arthur L. Rice of the First Pres byterian church read the ceremony. Miss Hoagland Is the daughter of Mrs. Nate Otterbein and one ot the most attractive and beautiful girls of the younger set .The date of Zitt i'.i;;.ra- oeeu pfc- b:r,H for several weeks and last night, with Mr. and Mrs. Leland Willlts attending, Miss Hoagland and Ha jicek were wed. . The bride wore a frock of print ed apple green crepe de chine and carried a corsage of roses and lil ies of the valley. Her hair was arranged simply and without orna ment. Mrs. Willlts wore a frock ot sott silk which 'became her. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Haplcek left for a two weeks' visit in San Francisco and valley cities In the south. They will be at home to their many friends after April 1 in their home, 923 Delta street. Mrs. Hajicek - Is employed with the Wilson Abstract company, Ha jicek is affiliated with the Pelican Bay Lumber company. American National Gets School Bonds Bids for the $26,000 bonds for the erection of the new Chiloquin high school were opened In the res ervation city Saturday afternoon, and the Ameracan National bank of Klamath. Falla proved to be the successful bidder. The Klamath bank ottered Btt per cent and a premium ot $217.50. Two other bidders. Ralph Scb nee lock & Co. of Portland ' and the Lumbermen's Trust Co. of Portland, both bid 5 per cent, but the pre mium offered by these two bond dealers was somewhat lower than the Klamath bid. R. C. Groesbeck, local attorney, represents the high school district. FORD CARS TO WEAR OREGON MADE TIRES PORTLAND, March 20. (United News) Officials of the Ford Mo tor company signed a contract here today to equip all cars assembled at the Portland branch with tiros manufactured here by the Colum bia Tire corporation. The first Ford cars equipped with C-T-C tires will be In production and distribution to dealers In this locality about April 1. It Is anti cipated that production of 120,000 tires a year will be necessary to cover tho Ford requirements alone. This Is the first tlmo In his tory that a western- made tire has been adopted as standard equip ment for any automobile Price Five Cents EXPECT PROTEST ON S. P. ENTRY TO CITV PARK SITE Deal Ringed on Pro curing St Right ; TO SUBMIT FRANCHISE Matter Expected to Come Before Council Next . Monday Night That there owald he a protest to come form to the granting of the Central Pacific and O. C. St E., request that these railroads be per mitted the use of Klamath avenue, was authentically indicated yes terday. . It was reported that the Oregon trunk railroad had already . telegraphed Us Intentions ot pro testing before the city council at Its last meeting Monday, tut no record of a telegraph was found here. The reason for the Oregon trunk protest was said to be that the granting ot the franchise . would close the last link around Lake Ewauna that Is now. open to an other line reaching the lake shore, other than the Southern Pacific. When the Southern Pacific, or Central Pacific, submitted Its writ ten offer for the purchase ot tha Riverside park property It speci fied that It be permitted to reach the park via Klamath avenue and a Y brige across Link river. The Southern Pacific had been stopped at the Weyerhaeuser property from continuing its present line along the shore line. It would run la along Klamath avenue. At the last meeting of tha city council it was understood that R. C. Groesbeck, attorney representing Robert E. Strahorn who submitted the bid for the park property, would draw up with J. C. Carnahan, a bid In more acceptable form. The bid was to be accompanied by. spec ifications which could be Incorpor ated in an ordinance, and showing just what the railroad Interests wanted in the way of franchises to use the streets. "It Is my understanding that the city charter clearly provided In what manner franchises shall be granted, and the use of the streets amounts to a franchise," said one ot the In terested parties yesterday. "The purchase of the city park property Is one proposition and the granting of the franchise another, and I am not ready to approve ot the method in which the matter was submitted by Mr. Strahorn." ' -' Members ot the park board said that none ot the protests had been registered with them. They nave made recommendations that the park property be sold by the city and It Is now up to the council, la their opinion. They expressed unofficially to the effect that It was their opinion that property tn the neighborhood of Klamath ave nue would be enhanced In value by the presence of the Tatlroad. The matter is expected to corns before the city council Monday night If Groesbeck end Carnahan hare the papers drawn up tor tha consideration ot the council. Mrs. Dresi Wife Isn't It Just As Necessary That Your Husband Be Well Suited As It Is For You To Be Finely Frocked? Center ot Shopping District. n"-:, coasl. 656 coming so