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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1925)
PAGE POUR EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, MARCH 8,1925 r c p p n rj i K vrY p "' I I Hr " rs a ! V i ir ; fT 1 " 1 J . " m m ' - m ' """" i t; i"""1" " tt -" 11 L. u. J-T ' ' -LJ - zr- - "j s- p-TT' rj "nft " - 1 Ivi " - - -j p n n r" -n. "1 ru OLIVER TWIST Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Herald Publishing Company. Office: 119 Ni Eighth Street, Klamath Falls. Orv. '' ..m ,. . . . ' " E. J. MURRAY W H PERKINS . . . . . . Publishei News Editor " Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Klamati Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. ; , Member of the Associated Press . The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use of re publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other wise credited in this paper and also the local news puhlishe.i therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herr in are also reserved. ',' The Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath imi. and the City of Klamath Falls. v SUBSCRIPTION DeliTtred by Carrier Oa Year Stx Month Tkw Month On Month . .re.Bo . 3.50 , MS . .65 BATED Br un One Tar -Btx Month Three Months On . Month -I5.00 t.n .. l.Bfl .65 T.UESDAY, MARCH '3, 1925 ""THE BLUSH OF SHAME Stubbornness, political expediency and a mistaken belief that-Klamath Falls desires to continue to wallow in moral filth are undoubtedly the three prime motives which prompted the city council last night to grant a license, to the notorious hotel Ray. ' " .Y-; '- ' ";V';- This action on the part of these five public servants should be and will be , resented by all! the decent citizens of this community,--for it sends forth; the ' word that Klamath ' Falls now welcomes scarlet women Jnto. the 'fold; invites them to come here and make their homes in "the hotels and rooming houses ctf this city arid flaunt their vice in the .faces of, the women and children, of this city. ;' " ; ' .' 1 ' The action of the xity council was not" unexpected. To those who had attended the so-called "hearings," it xanxe matter of course. ' For the councilmen, instead of seeking to protect the city, went out of its way .to. discredit the peace officers. ' To the credit of City Attorney Carnahan Ut it .be said that he performed his duty fearlessly and well,. in' the face of almost impossible odds. Witness after witness, testified as to the con ditions which have been prevalent jm this hotel. They told of lewd, women openly arid shamefully seeking, to entice victims : of, liquor 'parties! and ;druriken f ights of junseemly conduct during the hours of the night.., . ? .. . . y ; " i But all of this testimony ?fell upon deaf ears so far as the fivepouncilmen were conceriedV Jhejkjmds had been made up almost from the yery srt and, they resented the activities of the city attorney who did nothing more than his honest duty to the city and to the decent people who want to make this a clean pace in which to live.' r. ''' . "' The moral character of" the. Panqsiybman should not have played any. part in the -determination of the. issues involved in the hearings. ; There had never been any charge, direct or im plied, that she had. sold liquor at the hotel, or that she had . willingly, harbored fallen women in the place. ' But the fact remains that-the -hotel has, been a rendezvous forewomen of the. underworld; that liquor parties within the place 'have been frequent and that drunken fights occurred there. It was this woman's business to maintain a decent rooming-house, and because she failed to do so, as the evidence clearly showed, she should have been refused a license. ' Bootleggers, scarlet ' women and tin-horn gamblers will hail with delight the action of the city council last night. To them it" "signifies that Mayor Goddard and the decent people j of the city have lost the first round of their fight for a cleaner J eityi'To their diseased minds it comes as a notice that Klamath Fajls will remain "wide open." . ' ,It will be interesting, indeed, to watch further developments . in Jhe mayor's drive for decency. ;. -s'ZiV. D. B. WORTHINGTON Many residents of this section will learn with regret of the parsing of D. . B,, .VVorthington,' former newspaper publisher .tjfjhis city, who died recently at Beloit, .Wis., where he had resjdedifot many years and built up a newspaper plant for which he refused an offer of a quarter of a million dollar. Mr. Wprthingt'on made many friends during the time he pub-lished-a newspaper in this city, but he sought a broader field ior his talents and as a result Beloit profited immeasurably by his removal to that; city. It was mainly through his efforts that' he Warner brothers, manufacturers of automobile ac cessories,' built their Beloit factory. . . : ' . -, ,; . Had he elected to remain in Klamath Falls there is no qucsUon biit.;that he would have been a powerful force in. the comhuihity ' and would have been an important factor in the growth and, development of the Klamath country. HUNTS WASHINGTON "LETTER Br HARBY B. HUNT ,. , NBA Service, Writer . .WASHINGTON, March S. The administration - got . Its . economy -Ira crossed tie other day and the result was abort circuit that hooked Budget Director .Lord to lh- mint of .HnAAflhlAfULnans. ' ' ' . 'While the White fiouie was of fering., a $10 reward for sugges tion as t how 13, 500 could be trimmed trom executive office ex panses,, the .Bonata,, without a .roll call,, approved an amendment Il creastaf congrossteMlf sataMeaufrom lt Aa . at a aa i t wyfw 10 tiv.vuu. or an increase in -ft k - 1 - - . . M innuii irnnrrvHinma i tvnv irmi nr . Maybe Senator L. Helsler Ball of Delaware, 'who proposed the amend ment, was trying to have a little fun with sis oolleagues. ". Ball is a lame, duck, having been defeated for renominatlon by . the o. o. p: ; - Perhaps he Just wanted . to test out; by actual experiment the per sonal ' sincerity of his colleagues who, had recently defeated the pay Increase to postal employes. But It It was a Joke to Ball, It wasn't lb other senators who pro ceeded without debate to piss It with' whoop. - i Brig. Gen. ': "Billy" Mitchell, air service agitator, DID call at the White. House to eo..Pcetldent.iO0lt ldge-'btt 'Feb!'1!. He'shoW tha'tir. Ident's hand add"' the ;i 'president passed between them. Newspapers on the morning ot the 19th' announced that Mitchell had been summoned to the execu tive presence to receive the official sx because of the furor be had stir red up In army and .-navy -circles by his fight for a separate - air service. ; - " Officialdom was all agog, waiting breathlessly . for ' what all agreed and many hoped wai to be an executive execution.' But when Mitchell arrived It was In gala attire. - He-was togged but in his full-dress. - uniform, ' - his shoulders sagging a - bit beneath the weight- of the medals and deco rations pinned across his chest and hung around his neck. For he had come not as a culprit to be beheaded but as a guest at the army and navy reception, the last big social shindig of the sea son on the White House calendar. And, for the minute at least, Mitchell had the laugh on his ser vice enemies. Rubber tubes, that' can be Inflat ed with ir feature's the soles of recently patented shoes. , OUT OF THE AIR . ' , . By JVUV8 MUKLXKJt . . Manager Radio Dept., Baldwin Hardware Co, ; Armless persons can -write wltn that bas been Invented in England. Three Pacific Coast stations. KFI, KLX, and KPO, will broadcast the Inaugural address ot President Cool Idge on tho moralng- 'of March 4 th, at exactly nine o'clock; Pacific time. KGO so. far has - not announced whether the address -will be broad cast from their station, but the three above mentioned stations will bo on their owa wave lengths, of 468.6 merer. 008.2 'meters, and 428.3 met ers respectively, and can be tuned In at their regular dial sottlngs. It is estimated that three million people In the United States out of a possible twenty live million lis teners , In will hear.Uhla message, which will ba carried across the continent by a nation wide hook up made possible through the coopera tion of the American. Telephone and Telegraph company, and many of the powerful stations throughout the land. I'roKram For Wednesday KFI, Los Angeles,' 8 p. m., pro gram by the Goodwin, Kllnger Mo Kay, company; . 10 p. m., Patrick ' ' ' ' " Marsh Orchestra. j KIM, Los Angeles, 7 to 8, Uni versity of southern California pro gram; 8, Dr. Mars BaUmgardt, loc turer on aalronlmy. " '' . - ; KNX, Hollywood, 8 to 10, Paci fic; 1 Automotive Service Co., spon sors of program; 8 p. m., KNX fea ture program. ' KLX, Oakland, 8 p. m.. Studio program featuring KLX hawailans. ' KPO, San Francisco, 8 p. m. Gllda Baaufleld, pianist, andt others featuring old time ballada. v KGW, Portland, 8 p. m., 8tudl0 concert; 10, Colburns &felody Men. KFO A. Seattle, 8:30, The Tunes program. . ; '. ':' ' ' KOA, Denver, 8 p. m., Studio pro gram by the Denver Conservatory of Music, i 1 ,.'! '(; -.:. 1. . 11. 12. M. 18. IS. 1. 21. 21. 23. 25. 26. 27. 2.' 31. 32. 33. 36. 38. 40. 42. 43. 44. 46. 47. 48. B0. 61. 63. 64. 2. 3. 4. 6. 6. I 8. 8. 10. 13. 16. 17. 18. 20. 22. 24. 26. HOIU7.ONT.Ui iJlsh of raw vegetables ' Hoods ot plants. Act ot selling. Fragmonts ot cloth. Atop," Thoughtful; , ' Towards. Kgg ot an Insect. Itobbed. In place of. Froion waturs. Punching Instrument. Wool cloth; A hundred pounds. A turn at work; a abort porljd (PI.) Spanish tltlo. ' Measure of cloth. Supports for building. Fainting fit. Journey. Metal from ground. Tidy. 4 Flsb. ' A spice. Place of mlnoral springs. ' Belonging to me. . ' Things by which ship aro steered. Prlntor's measure. ' Certain. One-fourth of an acre. Temperate. To chock or to bar. ; ' VKHTICAI, . Like. - To lick up with tongue. Beverages. .. j.... Pertaining to tooth. Restaurants. To bo. rabid. tTlme ono has lived.' To be. A medicine. 8trongholds. ' Dainty. To plant. Tax. Spiral shoot of plant. Parts of a wheel. Flagon (or holy wator. ' Criminal. , 28. An Insocl. ..... 30. Seat In a church. 33. Brunches of flower. . 34. Three In curds. 35. Fusible alloy. 36. Ilurd to bear. 17.. Hear part ot neck. 38, To .mark, 41.' Five and one-half yard. 44. Act ot healing. . 46. God ot.lovo. 48.' To wlpo. 48. Iiiteinperate person, 61. Thus. 63. To perform. YK8TKIUA.-8 A.VBWHFi OOATl o r HI CJL n 0Pi AIT Q R Air ruoouio tax par got so mad ho told us ho considered the Statue of Llborty a memorial. Now secretary of agriculture ask for better break for farmer, but othor consldor them hotter broke. Wild Chicago now today, found a single man poisoned. Denvor musician' missing, a drummor, a trap drummer, they searched out at the works t '. They He' Have boiler you see Buick pull away in front when the traffic starts is the extra power ; in the Buick Valve-in-Head engine. Buick's get-away arid Buick's mechanical 4 -Wheel Brakes take care of any ' traffic emergency. , ; BUICK AND STAR GARAGE Opp. White Pelican Hotel - i . 1 nn;i h-iv", in ii',jn Vbei C0UPARISON OF TRENDS IN BELL TELEPHONE RATES AND WHOLESALE COMMODITY PRICES SINCE 1895 30Oi i i i i I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I 300 :ltt::ltt: g 160 too - : I' SO -- - - ; iiii.siiSiii wnottaoit Commodfty Prlct 1 E B 8 e a s : s W Ift i "1 hoo. The Cost of Service ON the loyalty and skill of , the human clement depends the character of telephone serv ice. The providers of this service must not only meet the market prices for materials. They must alao maintain at any cost a high standard of work- . mahship. : . , ' Because of advancing prices, the telephone dollar goes only Hal f as far as It did ten years ago. More than three-fifths pf this dollar is necessarily expended for wages, f Less would neither ' ':.5 attract npr hold the high-grade;..'!; ,,; workers essential , to. mAintain ; ; America's standards. , - . " J' ' , That Bell telephone rates'' r .y have advanced much less than ' j other prices is largely due to' , v' economies in methods and ap- paratus that have been developed and introduced It is also because . ' , the proportion of operating.. , plant built at pre-war prices i9 still large, though this is steadily , ; decreasing because' of new con- ' , ,. ' struction made necessary by the. nation's telephone needs. J it The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company ; :- ; system, r-f l ;. ",-,11 : Oa-fPolioy bne:8ytea'; '. tJniveri-l B9n&m'f;.ii--:. fi.3S7.soo.'-' shook, his. And not a hard word .f 'a'''1 v,