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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1937)
lor 16. 1937 THE NEWS AND THE HERALD KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THREE ACCEPTS VISED PLAN IGIOET Lead frm Pi union b. rerognl.ed wa thfurl tli.'.l"""" 'h.hc.rrlrd I. . , luidtnM tV't'h'sl 111..' I!"' k"'11 ' ". ei.r until "l "'" ,. " ,.,lr.l ..ur n "'" "'" . , ," ,i.itrd th. federation 1 giving rl.. I" "port. ". veil wee per- ""n'trr I l bringing th h to in ' in. M Lr .- A. B-W. lor. P . , riiinMiir fur Ui4 ilii.tris. "" - - ...... ..ariiiicnl conrKllntor. both ,,d , scries of behlnd-the-negotiations our"1! P""' . llh knowi- lat Ilia i:. L U- "II ilt'lt tint I known to hive own " I ...u-llliVI.. Ill- I in lilt. r.."-. ........ il ,. nlflrll 1 tu lllrf lht possibly " lelllcincni mi.. Liliiit. tl. convention rub- r . j. 11...I lniilntial Mil Luifiii t 11 p. m. MST. I ......... Ii. Ill riava ol I c.incn.'n" In Itl ueics."1" -of poltiy resolutions. Ill- ...,i (,,r a five-day week. . .....,r iImv tu meet th un- flu,ui piublem and pre'hl I depressions- ..lunt fr broadening or iu i KriuMiiiki urogram. endorsement of cdeni!c and n lucluilv public I program. rjurtl Hut Hi federal gov- i,l bin hum or sal ol wsr all tu Japan III profit ainresaloii lu China. ri.iinuipi alio voted all Liu-y assessment of on cent mlier utr uiunlh to build up hionluug ir cbeit. tit Til t It . IlKtiKKVK Press Malf CorrrsMintlelil A.N ilC CITY, N. J.. Oft. lb John L. Lewli closed war council of C. 1. O. bete tonight with ail a'.- ii the New Ileal and con- ud a pledge that non of mantlce lur luduilrtat Or ion vital pullciei will D ed In the propoied peace I with th American d of Labor. ll) delegates who stood eered Lesis at lb close ol iliiute speech unanimously ed bun chairman of the and re-elected bla exeiu- fllcers. The conference :1 a series uf resolutions In- one In which th C. 1. O. -d to Join In a boycott ol e uiiniila.-lured goods and iieI all aKireiior nation ioui. i' ipi-.'tli i-ail douhta lubo. .-xii.tU mm peace me Iruin the projected A L..-1. 1. O. cu.i.eitMu-e. ji.i mote by l.ewla had bceu oih ilialury. lie Icailcii of the American Ion ol Laliur can omul JeilouMo, petty blckeri:iK ronal enioluiiienta well ikI,' h ihuuiel. ' If they fotm-t Ih.'iu, then th r- l.llliy ii Ihi'lri. The V. 1. O. It Is here to Hay." orecant Im reaii'd particlpa- oiKunui-d Inbor In poll i recalled that I'reii- ouH. vcIl repeatedly lili laid e-ililrd ol l he nation a pif- 111-houi.ed, ill-rlad and ill- pr. mil. nt ald let's do '"iK fur them." l.ewli nnlil Imk liren done? Nutliin:! nirem ailjuurned this suiil- ihuut even pualii( lit puny uid n.iui hill. It Is well ilior U orKnnizliiR or poli- :(iun, tieeiiiiie economically ii Ihln din n I ry Ii not yet Uio WOliill. .im.nt later ha brought lex to t heir feet cbeerlim ie i hiiiKeil that the aclni'n- "i had lulled to cone wltb inemiiiivm,.iu problem dur- pit five yeari, and cried Hue of the irent Piinclnlis nil labor iiiiint aland for la t.v man who wanta to work hue a job." . PMAN KILLS WIFE X-HUSBAND. OWN LIFE :es Inueii frum i.Bge 0ne) hoiel corridor, aha had rpd at the hotel under a n name nml obtained a ti-rosH the hnll from the one occupied. The fourth bul- ent Into her own head. 'er Nell Itevnoldi wrote r lister and hrnlhar a-hn fi linllm, Tex., tells the rut nory: r il.tiir and brother: You understand how many tln.es " Wanted lo end things be 1 was ao weary inn. dls- "III the thnimht nf Ih. '" I would cause you has reslrsliied me f"'t hlunie Jack too much. ""in t quit his drinking. l 11 he was never mean, but money we needed for other K'lt Started nlnvlns- ll.o r "d got i ho habit. So Jack l ' ,he fonles and I blamd ''"IT. We ram. I Ik. ..... ' 'he ways. I told Jack I didn't car ho h married after he was fre, but on Womsn from Palm rlprlngs. I was lold sh of fered lo psy for th divorce, but he insured me sh wsin't. th woman, Dili 1 suspected all tl.e II me II waa Noonia Nelson talc). And It was. "I am writing wllh my door partly open, walling for her lo pass." Naomi Nelaon Reynolds, wall ing for her husband lo coma from Iteno, walked pail th open door ahortly afterward, to her death, Keynnl.il cinie here from it no todsy. Th pollr talked wllb him. "Jealousy," ha aald. Hut the pollr found inoie than Jealousy In th II r of Nell Rey nolds. BRITISH PATIENCE NEARLY EXHAUSTED, EDEN TELLS ITALY (Continued from Tag On) ternatlonal situation on th v of tomorrow's momentous non intervention meeting to discuss volunteer! In Rpalu and of th conference of nine powers on III fsr eastern sltustlon. Eden alio hinted lo Italy that ah la hoping In vain If ah hopes for permanent domination of Kpaln through Intervention. Kdeu recalled the Duke of Wel lington'! hundred year-old dic tum lint "there Ii no country In European affalra of which foreigner! ran Interfere with so little advantage aa In Kpaln." Echoing I'rlm Mlnliter Ne ville fhimberliln'i welcome of President Roosevelt's Chicago speech for peace, Eden affirmed that Britain would go to the nine power meeting at Brunei! prepared to "cooperate heartily with (hose who go there to work In the iplrll" of th declaration by "th president of the most powerful republic In the world." Eden then expreaied regret at Italy's refusal lo attend the trl power talks (wllh Hrltsln and France on volunteers lo Kpaln I. Hut he threw light on Hriraln's willingness to let th noninter vention committee try to solve th problem. He explained that "th French government and our aelvea did not wish a breakdown to come If come It must upon an liiue which might be Inter preted !i one of procedure." Rut Rrltaln, he asserted, would not acquiesce lo "dilatory meth od!." He drew a "clear din Inc hon between 'non Intervention and Indifference'." Britain, he added, remain! "watchful" to aee that British Mediterranean Intereata see not endangered, and he Indirectly condemned lialy'e declaration she would not tolerate a Bolshevist Kpaln. ATTENDANCE IN COUNTY SCHOOLS LEAPS 20 PER CENT . (Oon tinned rrom Page Onei Four school! Summers. Shasta. Altanumt gride and Aliamont Junior high operate In that area. Another smashing gain wai marked up by Chiloquin. There the grade enrollment Jumped from 2XS lo 371. and the high school registration from SS to 111. Many other a. hools ihowed iub alantlal gains, notably Hly. Keno and Crescent. Here aie the fig urea Inr all schools In Ihe count., beginning with the- elementary gradea: 1837 19.1 Bonanza. 247 2:10 Cotflnberry Mill IS m Olene It 21 Dairy It 12 Weyerhaeuser Camp. 14 12 Fort Klamath 28 34 Keno 171 155 Illy i:. 11.1 Lorella 20 11 Hildebrand 1 12 Ijamtn's Camp 411 9 Falrhaven 195 lti.i Lower Toe 19 18 Crystal 6 Khssla 210 - 234 Milin S27 192 Merrill 3i.2 192 Crescent 69 31 Summers 2J5 206 Henley 215 2:18 Algoma 59 63 t'hlloquln 371 2S9 Beatty ttt 75 Kprague River 5 87 Lemm a Mill 30 35 Kirk 14 11 Altamont (Klein.) ....272 265 Aliamont (JUS) . .206 Crescent Lake 11 10 Chemult 37 28 Forest Camp . 29 30 Odessa 7 7 Mowlch 2J 3352 2S04 Seventh, eighth graders. High (School 1937 19.16 Bonanza 88 98 Fort Klamath 14 Keno 44 47 Illy H Crystal 2 Malln 78 7J Merrill 81 78 Henley 8 60 Chiloquin 118 98 Kprague River 15 10 Altamont (JH3) J 616 489 MAUN TO GET BRANCH BANK (Continued from Page One) branch, It waa stated. Malln has not had a bank since tho Mnlm Slate bank waa closed about five yeara ago. The First National of Portland has a branch In Klamath Falls and another at Merrill. 00 MINUTK8 IN PITS DUISBURO, Germany, OcL 15 IJIThe Duke of Windsor spent 90 minutes today crawling around In Ihe coal pita of the KTledrlrh Helnrlch mine on his survey or labor conditions under th nail regime. JAPAN ESEHUR SECOND L E ON 10 LINES (Continued from Page One) making a hitler cnunler thrust to slave off hs long expected Japa nese general attack along the 2i mile battle front northwest of Shanghai. A minimum of 1(0 dead and wounded were officially accounted for aa a result of shells and air homhi falling In the itreeii of Ihe settlement snd Its suburbs. Jap Civilians Killed Three Jspanese civilian! were killed and three wounded, a Ja panese ipokeiman announced, during th Chinese shelling uf Hongkew, the Jspsnese-occuplen sector of the Internsllonsl settle ment. On of Ihe deed wss Tomo kato Iwakura, correspondent of Ihe Tokyo newspaper Hochl and younger brother of Prince Iwa kura. One shell itruck the famous Astor House hotel, now occupl. d by Japanese refugee!, and anoth er hit the Seventh Day Adventin hospital on Range Road, the Spokesman aald. There were no injurlei and but minor damage to the two Important atruclurei. The terrific Chines artillery and Infantry attacks were carried out against the Japanese positions on Ihe Chapel front, a Chines spokesmsn declsred. to determine the sctusl strength of the Ja panese troops manning that aec-tor. GRIZZLIES TIE (Continued from Psge One) first-hand assistance from Archie Huff and Pete Ureen and stalwart support from an Impregnable Klamath line, executed the Usrrl aon finish. Fifteen aeconda from the end of the game found the Pelicans In possession of the ball on the Ash land 4 7-yard line and trailing by a S-0 score Just as they had since way back In the early part of the second quarter. Paiisea Click Passea were In order, as they slways are under aucb circum stances. Passes were tried, too but Instead of falling dismally to the ground or being snitched up by opposition backfielders as tbey ususliy are in Ihe case of auih desperute resources, the Pelican heave-hos wonders of wonders clicked. There Here only two of theiu Yancey rifled Ihe first one 25 yards over the right side of the line to End Archie Hulf, who csught the hill near the edge of the field and waa dropped In hi tracks. The second went to the led. clear down by the last while stripe, where Pete lireen. standing Just behind Ihe last Ashland de .ense man, anagged It in and fe!l barely Into the end zone with half I a dozen ticklers on top. Tliue- I keeper "Doc'' Wright's gun went olt si the very instant Green i grabbed the ball, the score was 6-ti j and Ihe game was over except fur ! Ihe chance to try for point which the Pelicans had earned by their ' last-second touchdown. I Conversion Flops Then lol lowed the worst fiasco of many a Klamath football sea i on. While the stands waited ..us 'ly. the two t umi lined up In front of -the goal posts. Quarter back Ben Angus smoothed out a place in Ihe dirt for the ball to stand. Fullback Dorn (ilovaniul set himself a slep or two back of Angus, ready for the placement ami kick. It was Just what the Pelicans had drilled on all week. Tlrny knew every step of the procedure, and they were determined this would he one time wheu their con sistent record of fizzling all con version attempts would be shat tered. Suddenly there wai a commo .ion In the line. Both teams moved forward, but no ball was snapped bark to Angus. There had been some nilxup in the signals, some foolish error In the Klamath for ward wall, and the Pelicans' hopes for victory were blasted. The crowd went bom. Previously long previously- Ashland had capitalized on one of Ihe game's biggest break!. After the first period had end ed with Ihe ball In Ashland's hands on Its own 42, Steve Fowler, the 1.1 this ns' all-purpose fullback, punted to Pete Ureen, Klamatb safety man, on the Pelican 22, and Ureen fumbled the catch, Aih land recovering. Ashland covered the remaining 22 yards In Just three plays Ihe only time during the evening that the valley team managed lo ma so much yardage at one whack Fowler slid off tackle for yards on the first shot, Charlie Warren, on a quarterns. sneak, carried the ball two ya more to a first down on the Kl th 12. Then Fowler faded hackJp- shot a nass to Don Uoettllngix lan rlarht flankman. wlu waiting In the end tone. attempted placeklck ahade low. Ashland Out gal For the rest of Pelicans ploughed ii the fleld.showlng on the stralghtawa on the hills. Th, yarda from all ioi: Ashland and registered 11 (list downs lo five for th Llthlans, Hut th Klamath attack, as It has on pravlotis occasions this sea son, bogged down when It neared pay din. It bogged down, that I", until th last, desperate thrust caught an already victory-confi dent Ashland off guard. I'ellcana lteckles Fumbles, psss Interceptions and recklesi, sometime! needless, lal erala were principally reipomlhle for Klsnialh's failure to turn yardage Into points. Practically the entire second half waa played In Ashland territory, but when the Pelicans gut within smelling dis tance of Ihe goal line, they Invar iably threw Ihe ball away, and a veteran Ashland secondary w,is always on the alert to make re coveries. The Llthlans Steve Fowler did most of the ball-carrying as well as all Ihe punting and passing on the other hand, were, able to make hardly any headway through a Klamath line that, both on of fense and defense and from ei.d to end, played as bang-up a game as hss been witnessed on Modoc field In recent yean. . From atart to finish the Urlzzlles managed to garner only 76 yards and three first downs from scrimmage. Penalties Few All the Klamath backfield men and even tbe ends had a chance to carry the ball In the course of the evening's exhibition of Coach Snowy Uuitafson'a diversified at tack, and each one turned 111 cred itable performance. In the second half five of Wes Yancey's seven paases were com pleted, the other two being Inter cepted. Horn Ulovaninl played his uiual reliable game, hitting the center and tackiei and skirting the ends on reverses for consis tent gains. Pete Ureen got in some nice punt returns and some nice pasa cliches, and Ben Angui, at quar terback, wai In there to bolster the line whenever the line needed bolstering. Archie Anderson, sub stituting for Yancey In the third quarter, tore off two long runs before be was bottled up by the Llthisn defense. The game was featured by Its small number of penalties. Only, two, for 20 yards, were called against Klamath, and only one when the Lltbian safety ran after signalling for a fair catch, on Ashland. The affair waa run off at a fast pace, too, being complet ed well under two hours. Another near-capacity crowd braved the threat of stormy weather to fill tbe covered grand stand at Modoc field and over flow Into the bleachers on the other side of the gridiron. Starting lineups: Ashland () l'o K. Falls ((I) (loettllng It K Huff Newbry RT Kwtng Forsythe it ti Sample Weaver C Harding Schilling I O Wilson Brady l.T Blwer Jessel LE Crapo Warren Q Angui Carter II H Pete Ureen Mc.Nalr LH Yancey Fowler FB Ulovaninl Score by quarters: Ashland 0 Klamath 0 0 0 R 0 0 Officials: Joe Peak, referee; Fred Flock, umpire: Harold Hen drlckson head linesman; George I. Wright, timekeeper. PIERCE IN FAVOR OF CROP CONTROL, PUBLIC OWNERSHIP (Continued from rage One) concerted action and prophesied that action on Ihe proposed proj ect will be taken in Ihe near fu ture. As a secondary project he spoke of the possibility of Bonnevll.e power being brought to Klamaui county at a low rate In the not too far distant future and ol the feasabllity of moving water now held In Ihe Tulelake sump to the old lake bed with this power. While water from the Klamath, river will be used In the sib gested re-floo.llng of the lake bed. water from the sump may also be sent around the hill between lake and sump at a not phohibi live expense. Pierce made the loop of Ihe Merrill and Malln district In com pany of A. M. Thomas, Malln. While here he spoke also at Shasta View school house and al Olene. BRITISH POLICEMEN KILLED BY ARABS IN HOLY LAND JERUSALEM, Oct. 15 I.TI Guerrilla bands of Arabs siruck new terror In the Holy Land to day and two young British police men fell In a pre-dawn ambush on the Bethlehem road. Constables Norman Harrison and Austin Malta were added to the list of dead which already In eluded folir Arabs. Twelve Jows had beer Injured In the last two days. were expected to ightly curfew and pos- in martial law unless ary moves brought thing Is certain that Ishment of members gher committee had orlsm. bands apparently ig in a well knit of Jerusalem Ith military de- civilians weic weapons. TWO KILLED 01 A Aiithjr! declare Ii slbly v VI Brltsf lt ordjr thf sfn I, I l .V-Wv X- I JA , cf? 'ii Yen thr Vv plf 1 Vt la found VHaleakala, V (Continued fruu. Pag One) foggy windshield may hav hid den Ihe train from Phillips' view until It was too late for lilm lo stop as the engine screeched a warning whistle. It was not known whether he attempted to beat the train across. The cur was aliuor.t over the tracks when It was struck by the engine. There was no mud on the cross ing itself. The' next crossing at Portland street la 250 feet above the Ala meda ci-oaslng. It Is equippi-Ml wllh a bell, which Is visible at In tervals for a block before crossing Alameda street. Visibility (iixxl Visibility at the Alameda grade crossing, at the end of Modoc field, is said to be unusually good. A driver, 62 feet before reaching the crossing, can see 1500 feet of track. The engine crew brought the train to an immediate stop. The whistle was blown for aid, train men, after looking over the wreck. uiovej the train on Into the depil and called authorities. The train was g.ilng about 35 miles an hour at the time of the accident, It was estimated by 8. P. officials. Inleriu.1 Injuries Deputy Coroner A. A. Ward said ho believed Internal Injuri.-s were tj.ii chief cause of both deaths, with crushed chests and skull fractures possible contil butlng causes. The physician who attended Nolan said he expected the ninn to recover. Phillips Is survived by his wife. Neva Phillips, his mother, three sisters and a brother. Beck is bIho survived by hi' wife, a fabher, three sisters and our brothers. The remains were taken In charge by Ward'a Klamath Fun eral home. CHINESE KKK HITS U. S. IN CHAIN LETTERS (Continued frum Page One) advertlmncnts leading ChlneBp hoys and girls to act funny like Ihe actors in the cinema, while a slight knowledge of English led to an admiration and desire lo buy only from America. "What is worse, Americans sowed In the hearts of the Chi nese generation the seeds of antl- Nlpponisro. "Do not fool yourselves about American help against Japan. . . . They will let their own parens down If selfish Interests are In volved. Japan has been for lO'lO years under one emperor's famil. and certainly has better tradition than America which la only 150 years old and started as an exile. To font nil Pacific "Let us cooperate with the Japanese because the service ren dered the occidentals Is unappre ciated and they only allck up their noses while the Japaneae would be most grateful, , , . "Tho Yellow sea must be made LAKESHORE INN Dining and Dancing Chicken and Steak Dinners Oc to SI.2A Mixers Only Orchestra Music I'hone 608 the 'yellow ocean' by luimedla'e action of the Japanese army and navy and Cblneai, reaourcea before, completion of world-wide rearm a ment In 19 43. "While the Italians are strug gling to control th Mediterra nean, we must own the Pacific and control Hawaii, Luion and other islands." Tientsin was seised by Japanese troops early In July when tbe war began In North China and la now dominated by the Japaneae. India's white elephants become royal property at birth. In the United States they are passed around and wind up aa publle property. For whifor lrh, i sweat)!- breath 5 15 (P) The of Chicago Park rose Sunday, John O lis. (frolonelittttrpliij QUALITY WHISKEY 90 PROOF DISTILLED RIGHT PRICED RIGHT NOW 1 YEAR OLD $p Lm u-95 QUART HALF-GALLON GALLON SPECIALS Oil Permanents $200 ... 75 Mary's Beauty Shop Shampoo and Finger Wave, Dried 432 Main Phone 1359 Upstairs Over Klamath Variety Store Under the new beauty of Buick, modern engineering makes history, co-starring the DYNAFLASH ENGINE and Torque-Free Springing WHAT HAPPENS inside the 1938 Buick engine happens no where else in the world. That is not advertising language, it is eold-stccl engineering act. Speeding through the raceways of the intake manifold, the fuel mixture vapor hurricanes into the cylinders at speeds around 250 miles an hour.- 'A s it sweeps past streamline valve con lours, a scientifically designed Turbw lator, built into the piston face, flings it into airswirls of terrific turbulence. The spark that leaps through that compact storm-center sets off a flash ing cyclone of power, exploding with tornadic forcet Sitting in the driver's seat you become aware of power that is livelier and more brilliant because gasoline is giv ing up more performance than it ever gave up to motorists before I TO MATCH this incomparable stride, Buick engineers now. give you a kind of springing you will likewise find on no other car in the world. Poised on jarless coils ol easy-flexing steel, Buick floats free of bobble, jar, chatter, jounce. The car will not over-steer or under steer skidding, even on icy high ways, is blessedly reduced. . Rear tires no longer scuff half their life away through power-wasting wheel-slip. Through winter and summer, without need of grease and without "seize" from rust, dirt, water or ice, springs keep their gentle, even cushioning for the life of the car. YES, IT IS a great story, the story of these twin engineering triumphs in the 1938 Buick. So great a story that it obscures half a score of other advances, themselves enough to make any car a wonderful buy. We invite you to learn more about them this week at any Buick show room. "BUinrTmth,y- FTj9mJ M YOUR MONIY OOES FARTHIR IN A OINIRAl MOTORS CAI H. E. HAUGER 1330 MAIN KLAMATH FALLS, ORE.