Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About The semi-weekly herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1914-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1914)
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦<♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ REACHES EVERYONE ♦ ♦ IN KLAMATH COUNTY ♦ ♦ LEADING PAPER OF ♦ ♦ SOUTHERN OREGON ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ V------------------------------------- KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1914 VOLUMN XIX IMPORTANT CITIES VILLA’S SOLDIERS TAK « ZACATECAS IS TAKEN ■ NUMBER 28 Resolute Winning With All Sails Set VILLA z RECHECK SO FAR LOOKS LIKE A TIE—CANDIDATES ■ WILL BE MADE. THEY ARE LOOKING FOR DAIRY RANCHES ISAA LOUS POTOSI IS CAPTURED TODAY MADE TUESDAY NIGHT, Believed That 25,000 Fédéral Troops MMM I Will Meet at Aguas Calientes, and to Hold the Rebel Villa Praises Men in the Charges. ¡United Press Service SALEM, June 25.-r^Judge Henry L;j ¡Benson of Klamath Falls declares lie, I I is leading for the republican nomina-' itiön for justice of the supreme court.; • Justice McNary believes , the advant-1 age is in his favor. • . ‘ The rechecked count'of the state returns apparently shows a tie vote. ; The twi> candidates met at Salem today to decide on’what precincts in j certain Counties they Wish to have re-j i counted for errors. As yet the stipulation has not been • agreed to. United Press Service JAUREZ, June 25.-—According to 1 re-established telegraphic communica-j lion from the south, the constitution-j j alist forces captured Zacatecas Tues- j day night. / : Villa wired from there this morn- ■ ing, estimating the federal loss at j aerai Villa 2,000 killed and 4,000 wounded, and; his own loss at 500 killed and 300 j i: e for the next big en ¡PRESIDENT SAYS WHEN COM- wounded. It is believed that he un" iEJ.gement. i ‘ PLETED, BUSINESS WILL GET t loss. derestlmates his own _______ Service l Je ! United Press CONSTITUTIONAL FREEDOM In; his dispatches, Villa says tenured 5,0-00.prisoners, 6,000 rifles,1 NIAGARA PA’ j L-S, Ont., June 25.1 AND GO FORWARD . x trains , and .1 much v ■ am-! „ ¡Despite • the rumors that, ropresenta- 12 cannon, nine ‘ . i fives of Carranza are en route to this munition and provisions. 4city, the feeling is growing that Car- United Press Service Before they evacuated the city the ■ ranza will refuse to negotiate since WASHINGTON, D. C., June 25.— federáis dynamited the principal ¡Villa has taken Zacatecas, Addressing the Virginia Editorial As- buildings. Many were ablaze when; Apparently the fnediators have ra soication this afternoon, President the victorious rebels rushed in. . ceived no assurances that Carranza Wilson said that not with his consent „ , _ , „ xi. u- i. delegates. Pending some would there be any postponement in General Barron and five other high Is sending , „ .. , x- word from him no negotiations will the trust program as laid out by the officers, with a remnant of their com- hejd administration. mands, are fleeing toward Aguas Cali- ---------------------- . “The solid business men of the na tion are back of the program, and entes. If Generals Barron, Maas andj bba lif“£1 fl 1 I/O il T when it is completed business will Velasco join their commands there j lyl 11 V g> U \jJVl 141« get its constitutional freedom and go lor a last stand against the rebels, it| |||U IL II Uli I V II L forward, and when it does get it, I is believed that they will have nearly I prophesy a business revival unprece 25,000 troops there, besides 100 field ¡ pieces and several hundred rapid fire I uU|| | |.|||V|r Kfl|-|l dented in American history.” lilll | PAtUIL DAOIA I Villa has a command of 19,000 I ______ troops. Besides, General Gonzales is I in command of an army of 12,000. ¡PRESIDENT OF WESTERN FEDER- According to constitutionalist head- ¡ ATION OF MINERS THREATENS quarters here, after there had been j TO RETURN TO BUTTE TO COM- considerable skirmishing about Pimi- j PLETE REORGANIZATION co and other suburbs, Villa drove the federáis back to the city by a charge I in which his entire command of 19,- 000 men participated. Tuesday noon!Bnited ^ress Service his artillery silenced the guns of the | BUTTE, Mont., June 25. Word federáis. ¡from Helena is to the effect that it is From'this time until the city wasjthe intention of President Moyer to evacuated, there were repeated |retum to Butte to complete the reor- charges up the hill by the rebels un- i g^ation of the branch here of the der Manclovia, Herrera, Ortega and ¡Western Federation of Miners. Rodríguez. These commanders per-1 Officials of the union fear that his soanlly led these assaults, and Villa'return will be the signal for whole- commended them and their men, de claring it the finest exhibit of patri otic courage he had ever witnessed. The greater part of the population As they fled southward the feder of Baluchistan are nomadic in their áis destroyed the railroads. It will habits and dependent for their liveli require three weeks at least to put hood on a casual kind of agriculture the railroads in shape and get within and the raising of livestock. Dunsmuir Special ♦♦♦ Iln addition to several hundred res ¡This stated that there were several idents of Weed, the Weed band, the ¡hundred excursionists in sight in Weed baseball team, etc., the special, these towns, who were anxious to see the Rodeo and ball games here.* train to reach here on the morning of In addition, the Weed boosters have July 3 will carry large delegations i ordered several hundred special hats, from towns as far south as Duns to be worn by the contingent from the muir. box factory town. These headpieces A letter to this effect was received will distinguish them from the rest this morning from Weed by officers of the throngs here and will be sou of the Rodeo Amusement Association. venirs of the trip. German Newspaper Man and German i „ . „ .. „ . _. ¡Federala Lose Heavily, According to Farmer-Capitalists Come in From - ® Dispatches Sent to Torreon——Huer- Portland to Look Over Klamath [ ta Forces Are Retreating Toward County With a View to Locating a I Colony pére—Thrifty Teuton Is ' Agua Calientes, Where the Next Big Battle of the Present War Will Most Desirable Settler. i Be Fought, « Ml Resolute, candidate for cup defend- the water. The sail area was so I er < against _ . e made _______ Shamrock _ IV, a beau-¡great that it dwarfed the vessel her- tiful sight as she crossed the line, ise^- She seemed in the distance a speck covered With enormous winning on the Sandy Hook Course i | mere . I Wings. In this race she beat the fast- against the Vinltle. With her main ■ est time ever sailed over the course sail spread on one side, a big balloon before by a vessel anywhere near her sail spread on the other, her largest ¡size. In fact, her time was much bet jib out in front, with a balloon jib Iter than that of the 90-footers which on the other side, she tore through | raced for the cup in the past. PROTOGOLSIGNINB INITIAL AUIO PLEASES CABINET I RIDE IS FATAL PRESIDENT BELIEVES THAT Nt)W | MAN BOUGHT CAR LAST NIGHT, THE INTERNATIONAL FEA- j TOOK OUT PARTY OF FRIENDS PHILADELPHIAN SAYS ROCKE- FELLER MADE GREAT MISTAKE TURES ARE SETTLED, THE FAC- | AND PLUNGED OVER A HIGH TIONS WILL UNITE BLUFF INTO THE OCEAN . j IN THE MINERS STRIKE IN COL- United Press Service United Press Service WASHINGTON, D. C., June 25.— i ORADO SAN PEDRO, June 25.—Japanese Officials are greatly encouraged over I fishermen this morning found the the signing of the international sec- i PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 25.— tion of the proposed Mexican pro-1 bodies of Percy Townsend, a wirless •operator; Mrs. Laura Townsend, his “Should employers recognize organ-! tocol last night. As a result, it is ex-j ized labor?” John Wanamaker wasj pected that Huerta and Carranza dele-i ¡mother; Lora Townsend, his sister, asked in the course of his examilia-) gates will get together and settle the | ! and Myrtle Brandon, in the surf near White’s Point. Their deaths had been tion by the federal commission on in- j internecine strife. j caused by plunging over the bluif in dustrial relations. Thfi The intArna.t.iona.1 international section section of of the! the j an automobile, the wreck of which “It’s an insane thing not to recog-1 protocol, which was ratified at Niag-1 was found near the point, nize it,” was his reply. “I believe I ara Falls last night, provides that i „ „ . , . ' , . „ i Harry Baker, driver of the car, labor suffered frightfully in the past j America, Argentine, Brazil and Chile i .. . .. „ ’ ’ , . , I was thrown out as the car fell, and through poor leadership, but a better! shall recognize * n „ in- . the . ■ . new provisional , ., . 'was found on the bluff, fatally class of leaders is coming in. I think government m Mexico when it is j jurej labor and capital both have the right i formed, and that this will be formed j u e to organize.” at the meeting of the Huerta and Car- Baker bou8ht the car last niSht> Wanamaker added that he might be ranza delegates. ' i and started with the party for the mistaken, but he considered that John _. , .. .. . . . ¡first ride in the machine, when it It also provides that a commission , , D. Rockefeller “made a great mistake , ,, , ‘ x j . K x „ Plunged over the 125-foot cliff into shall be appointed to adjudicate all .. when he put President Wilson in the , , „ , ‘ , x the ocean. claims for indemnity by private par position of having to send troops into I ties, but the United States, in signing | When the wrecked machine was LA^i5, MUI« LUU UXXXIA3UL ULC4CUO, AXA QX^XXXXX^ j Colorado.” the agreement, waived all claims for ! righted the body of an boy was found. • Rnrlxr H q a nr\i boon i Han ti fi ori Hilf’ ; indemnity on the part of the nation. I The body has not been identified, but Tabor Improves Establishment. I it is believed to be that of a boy who A wholesale as well as retail busi- came with Baker from Los Angeles. Golf Championships Start ness will be carried on by I. P. Tabor at his Fourth street emporium. Work United Press Service men have just completed shelving, ' KINGSTON, N. Y., June 25.—With New Electric Presser. etc., the room adjoining has been con many of the best golfers of this sec The new Hale Electric Pressing ma nected with the main room by a big tion entered, the annual Hudson Riv chine just connected up in the Klam arch, and an extension of the bar er Golf championships started here to-1 ath Dye Works is the only model of through this additional room makes day on the links of the Twealfskill I its kind west of Chicago. The ma generates its own steam by — - - - elec- it possible for twice the number of ' Golf Club. The preliminary rounds chine i were to be played today. The tourna- tricity, and steams, presses and dries thirsty to be accommodated at one | ment will continue tomorrow and Sat-1 automatically and at one operation. time. I It is shaped for pressing every kind of i urday. garment, from men’s suits and over Miss Ann Forsyth has accepted the Over 100,000 women pay taxes in coats to all kinds of wearing apparel position of policewoman in Aurora, for ladies. Michigan. Illinois. I A German colony of fifty families | may, make Klamath county their! United Press Service home, according to A. E. Kern and} TORREON, June 25.—The consti- Frank Ott, who are here from Port-1 tutionalist troops under General Gon- land, to look over Klamath county j zajes captured San Luis. Potosi, ac- lands, This forenoon the Portland-1 x , ers went to Dairy to look over the i cording to dispatches received this ¡morning at rebel headquarters. Shook holdings. The details of the battle are not “Mr. Ott, who is a practical Ger man farmer, is seeking a location fo'r given in the dispatches sent. It is a colony of about fifty families,” said ¡reported that the federal losses were Mr. Kern this morning. “The mem I heavy. bers of the colony are either natives I The defeated Huerta army is re of Eastern states or direct from the Fatherland. It is their desire to en treating toward Agua Caliente, where gage in dairying and stock raising, several divisions will mobilize to and we are here with a view to learn make a determined stand against the ing the advantages of Klamath county constitutionalists. in this respect. If the land is what Agua Caliente and Queretao are the we think it should be, and . the prices only federal strongholds there are left are right, the colony will in all prob ¡north of Mexico City. ability be located here.” Mr. Kern is of A. E. Kern & Co., j Portland’printers. In addition he is editor and publisher of the Deutsche! Zeitung, the most widely read Ger man newspaper on the Pacific Coast. I The thrifty German farmer is the I type of citizen that is desirable in any j locality, and if Klamath county is for-1 tunate enough to secure this settle ment it will mean a substantial ad- i ¡PORTLANDERS BELIEVE CON vance for the county’s farming pros-1 pects. Like the Bohemian and Rus-1 GRESSMAN LAFFERTY IS ONE sian, the German farmer was taught! OF THE BACKERS OF THE RUM- in his European home to utilize every | foot of the land he owns, and to util-; ORED PUBLICATION PAPER TALKED ize every by-product of his farm or i stock; so that he gets the maximum I PORTLAND, June 25.—Of the profit out of his farm, with the mini-' many* rumors floating about Portland mum amount of waste. 'in regard to the establishment of a Besides this, he loses no time in new morning paper in this city, one is becoming an American citizen, if not certainly true, and that is the proposi already naturalized, and his children tion is being talked about. ' are sent to the American schools and According to Attorney L. M. Lep taught from childhood the ways, per, whose name has been connected principles and language of America. with the enterprise, there will be no And to go Still furthier—Hans Wag immediate steps taken toward an in ner, “Dutch” Schaefer, Bauman, vasion of the morning field so far as Schang, Zeider, Schalk, Baumgartner, he is concerned. Financially respon Kuhn, Zimmerman and others Who sible parties both in Portland and out have made history in the major side, he says, have been looking over leagues, are far from being of Celtic the field, but have not as yet come to descent—if the Irish do monopolize any decision as to just what course most of the big jobs in the big cir- they will pursue. cuits. Among the rumors current respect ing the proposed morning daily is one The whale has the thickest skin of I to the effect that Congressman A. any living creature. Its hide in Walter Lafferty is to be one of the places attains a thickness of fully principal backers, and that it will be independent in character. two feet. Gigantic Store Fails United Press Service NEW YORK, June 25.—Receivers were today appointed for H. B. Chaf lin ,& Co., one of the biggest dry goods firms in the entire world. Over $25,000,000 are involved in their fail ure. Federal Judge Hand named Jose Martindale and F. A. Juillard as the receivers. They are under $500,000 bonds. They asserted that the retail subsidiaries will be taken care of. It is understood that thirty big banks here held the firm’s paper. It is probably that 2,000 banks else where also handled some of the firm’s business. The Chaflin company has big branch houses in many large cities in the East and Middle West. It is im possible to state whether or not the other stores of the company will be closed as a result of the receivership. A friendly equity petition preceded two bankruptcy suits.