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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1925)
PATiE SIX EVENING HERALD KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1925 . -.4: Uift Euwutg literal THE BUSY MAN'S NEWSPAPER OUT OF THE AI Manngvr Ititdlo Dept., Baldwin llnrdwara Co. Issued Daily, except" Sunday, by The Herald Publishing Company. Office: 119 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls, Or. E. J. MURRAY ". W. 11 PERKINS Entered as second class matter Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 189. Member of the Associated Press Thc Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use uf re rul)lir:ition of all news dispatches credited to it or noi other wise iT-dned in this paper and also the local news published cherein All rights of republication of special dispatches here in are also reserved Vl-.e Kvemng Herald is the official paper of Klamath County and the City of Klamath Falls. t SUBSCRIPTION- IMIvrri'd by Carrier One Tear i J6.60 Six Months Three Months One Month ..... $.50 1.95 . .65 TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1925 THE IMMIGRANT VESTIBULE In recent years Canada has beetra sort of vestibule to the United States, as far as immigration is concerned. Immigrants finding it hard- to gain access to this country directly have gone to Canada and then, at the. garliest opportunity, crossed the border. When they came openly, they generally came as Canadian citizens. More immigrants than ever are expected to enter Canada from now, on, because the new American, immigration laws make higher barriers and lower quotas, and it will be natural for a , good deal of the European emigration wave headed westward to flow into the dominion. ; , , :t , , , Canada wants that. She welcomes Immigrants as much as we "discourage them, though she is a little more "choosy" about their quality than we are. Slip needs thetn to fill up her great agricultural areas and to work in her developing in dustries. Canada has almost every requisite for great wealth except population. And her efforts in that direction have not succeeded very well in late years, because of the great exodus of her residents, old -and new, into the United States. Now Canada is taking steps to .retard that movement. She lias a new law requiring five years' residence for citizenship. Thus any immigrant whose real destination is the States will have to tarry for at least five years. . Canada hopes to be able to hold those who have remained that long. The real difficulty, however, as regards both the dominion and the States, is that large numbers .of the newcomers may ignore the immigration and citizenship laws and simply slip across the line without the .formality of visiting a port of entry. That is easy, with so long , a border,, impossible to guard for its whole length. HUNT'S ; j WASHING I ON i I LhTlfcK , By HAERX B. HUM ; NEA Service Witter : WASHINGTON, March 10. The farmer has been framed again, in the opinion ot Senator Arthur Capper. . ..." J .- Two-dollar wheat did It. Wheat at S2 a busiel. Capper thinks, was '. largely 'responsible lor the brakes ! being applied to proposed agrlcul- : turai relief measures, pending In Congress. - . I The result was the failure cf Congress to enact the recommen- ; datloss of the president's agricul-j tural. commission, by which the administration's pledge to agri-1 culture was ' to hare boen re-1 deemed. I Interests ' hostile to farm relief, I Capper charges, with S2 wheat as a club, hammered home tae Idea that there was not and never had been a. real farm problem justify ing the overhauling of the machin ery, of farm marketing. "According to these clalmmts," says Capper, "the farmer is now a Croesus, luxuriating in the t golden stream of $2 wheat. "But this is not a true picture. "Speculators and gamblers, not the wheat growers . reaped thla Chicago wheat pit hirvest. "The facts are that last 'year'3 wheat crop brought ' the wheat farmer between SI and $1.25 and not the 2 he is now credited with getting. "; ' ' "To be sure, $1.26 wheat, and an unprecedented large yield per acre, made last- year's crop the most profitable since the war. '.'But the farmer sold his wheat the vast bulk of it bofore Nov. 1, and when wheat soared to $2 In Chicago, 'the farmer who hid plowed, planted and harvested the grain had none ot It to sell. ' "Price Increases between ; elec tion snd the new year wero such that toe , farmer, according to: Julius Harnos, merchant exporter, lost Just about $400,000,000 by his early selling. ..." . "The consumer of bread will pay this $400,000,000. But tUe farmer didn't get IK" ; i General Isaac Sherwood, who Retired from Cougreis March 4 ut , . . Publisher News Editor at the postoffice at Klamath KATES Ii Mall One Year :....fS.OO Six Months Three Months . . One Month J.7S .. 1.50 .85 the age of 90," treasures as one of the mementoes of his later days in Washington, "a large-crowned, broad-brimmed hat given to him by the late Julius Kahn, former chairman of the. military affairs commlutee, wiose wife has Just been choaen by California voters to fill his sat in the next Ccngrees. "uJst before Kahn took his list departure. from Washington," says Sherwood, "I met him in tbo corridor. He had on a peculiar hat. I said: ' ' , " 'I've been looking for that klrd of a hat in Washington, but couldn't find one.' "Kahn pulled eff his hit and said: "Try Jt on.' When I did so he said: It's lust your size. Your thinking apparatus and mine are the same. I'm going .to give you that hat, with my compliments, and I hope you will wear IL' "I'm still wearing that, hat," says Sherwood, "as my tribute to Kahn." TOM SIMS SAYS The sap Is flowing in the trees, there Is a weakness ra our knees, we've shed pur heavy beeveedeeze. In the Tennessee ' mountains a dude is- a man who gets his hair cut in March Instead of April. Oh, what Is so Tire as a day" In June? Our guess is a player piano In tune. An Alabama dude is a man who cuts a chow ot tobacco with his knife instead of biting it off. In Mississippi, a lazy man is one who hasn't enough energy to make his boys go to work. . " "You never -oin tell- when 4 woman's going to change her mind." That's a new eon;, We can. "Al ways."1 . - - - Andlf you don't know why one changes her mind It's because "be cause." . , ... . . " 'J The first sign of spring is e, bat'a. lug girl on a magazine cover. m . v (i -Socks I , '-----55 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I Z S 14 IS r P'T' ie I ' ' I" I" ' y fi Yr r 7 55 3.3 . 3 zsr 1 "j a " -srn -itS- - W L ' , Vni &'JL.. LJ !J iS 3 37 P. - M nns wi" r"" 4 so sV fj ,: .. , r l LiJ JkLs I Ef ,. eft, r F 1 HORIZONTAL To , exaggerate. . Female heir. . Ranges.- Exist, ' t ' To rent again. " Preposition. Small open pie. . Inspired with feeling of fear. Accomplished. . 1. 7. 13. 14. IS. 16. 17. 19. 21. 22. 24. 26. 27. 29. 30. 31. 33. 34. 35. 38. 40. 41. 42. 4S. 48. 49. SI. 52. 64. E6. 58. 6. 61. 62. 63. 64. 66. 67. Electrical particle. Revolves on axis. Light brown. ' Imitates; ... i Covered with wax. i Finished. ' ! Female sheep. I free.. ' . j Machine for changing air cur- t rent. I I.aymon who superintend i church's spiritual Interests. Declines. . Melody. FIXw An oil 'children don't llko. Alluvial deposits at mouth of river. By means of. , Yellow matter from a sore. Form of precipitation. Tart. , Holy person.' Garden earth. , Perched. Those who disjlpate property. String fence used tp tennis. Neuter pronoun. ' iPlnches (verb). ' Organs cf sight. Part ot verb to be. Winding part pf a stairway. To do wrong. One who alms. Saluted. ; v Sleeping powders. VERTICAIi To satisfy. To march In u body,. Second note In scale. . ' ' Dine. - , Monarch. A maker, of headgear. Warmed.' Angers. 69. 70. 72. 73. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10, 11. 12. Scarlet. , Hebrew name for God. Kind ot an automobilo. One who klllcs by throwing stones (pi.) I - I I A I - - 18. Fabulous bird., 20. Married. ' ' 23. To want. ' ' 25. Dry. ' 26. Measure for coal (pi.) 28. Perspired. 30. Spotted. 32. Mistake. 34. Renowned. ' " " 36. Meadow. 37. Polite form of address. 38. Boy. 39. Epoch. . .j ;' 42. Stopping. !' ' I 43. To .eject saliva. : 44. To please. 46. Double. 47. Hunting dogs. , 49. Promoted. 50. ' Scoffs. . 63. To supply food. 54. Fluid In plants 65. To attempt. 57. To resist authority. 69.' Wither. - 60. Line where two .pieces ore sewed. 63. Born. . ' : 65. To err. ' . ' 68. r' Pronoun. 71. ' Mother. ' U.ifc.:w:jiwi:JJj.iiSatit:iV'J II it it-ifi:n Hw lKt'lIl"' ITiftl I COURTS j . . Deeds - , F. C. DeChaine et ux to Law rence Wilsoy et ux. 9-27-22, NV4 lot 4, blk 4, Shlpplngton addition. ' Joe Eskelson et ux to Tom Pap pas et ux. 2-10-23. t;60 I. R. 8. Lat 12, Altimont Tracts. ' ' uBrt E. Hawkins, sheriff, to .Elsie Luebko, 1-19-25. $17,72 cousldera- LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE The Editor Soveral ot your sub scribers, , tho water users ot the Klamath Project, nro now hearing something about land classification and they oro likely to hoar a great deal more In the Immediate future. -Just to show that the -thing has been dons "before, and rather suc cessfully at that, and as another In stance that "there Is no new thing under the sun" see the fallowing: "So (Joshua) sent men to mea sure tholr eountry, and sent wlti them some geometricians, who con Id not easily fall of knowing the truth, on account pf their skill In that art. He ulso gavo them a charge to estimate the measure of that part of the land that was the mopt fruitful, and what was not so good; for such Is tn nature of the land of Canaan, that one may sea large plains, such as are ' exceed ing tit to produce fruit,' which yot, If they -were compared to other parts ot the country, might te reck oned exceeding fruitful, yet If they be compared with tho fields about Jerlco, and to those that belong to Jerusalem,' will appear to be of no account at all. And although it so falls out, that these people have but a very little of this sort of land, and that It Is for the main mountain ous also, yot does It not come be hind other parts, on account of Its exceeding goodnoss and beauty; for which ' reason Joshua thought the land for tbe tribes should be di vided t by estimation of its ' good ness, rather than the largeness of its measure, It often happening that ono acre of some sort of land was equivalent to a thousand other acros." Josophui, "Antiquities," v. I, 76-78. Let us hope that the "geometric ians" employed iere will be up to the standard ot those Joshua em ployed and that tholr work will bo as beneficial and as enduring. A. M. THOMAS. tlon, lots 11, 12, blk. 10, Bowno addition to Bonanza, , " 0, A. McCarthy et 'ux to Thomajl Laugiioad. 2-2-25. ' $.50 I. R, S.. Lot 5, block 13, Falrvlew addition No. 2. Frederick O.Markwardt et al to Katheryn West. 2-7-25. $1.00 I. K, &, Block 1, lot 8, Chllonuln. Circuit Court Flllnjcs ' No. 1980 Law. Filed 3-7-26. E. L. Elliott, fttty. tot pltf1. C. R. Bow man' vs.' Thomas Lang and Lulu Lang,' ihusb-ind and wife. Plaintiff demands Judgment for $769.20 and for costs. . , X. Y. KAI1III HELD NEW YORK, March 10. -Rabbi E. B. M. Browne, head, of the American Jewish seventy elders and pastor of Temple SSIon In tho Bronx, was arrested today on a warrant which the complainants, Calvm coo-.:cgo, :.:r. Coolldga and Frank Stearns Charged him with unnoylng the president, The rabbi Is 72 years old, that trash piles . on lower Pluk We kicked the moth out of our bathing .suit last night. , Ho had eaton a hole big enough to make six doughnuts, . IVoKvmn For Witliienduy KFI, Los Angokis, 8 p. in., Owen Fnllou's Cnllfornlnn's, Marlon Dus cnborry blucktiicad comedlun uccom puuylng lilnisvlf oil tango ukelo; 9, p. m. Examiner' program; 10, Put rick Muruli Orchestra. ' KMJ, l.u Angxlus, 8 p. in., Dr. Mnrs UouuiKardt, lecture on astron omy : 9:30, Lincoln tlulghls Com uuirclul association program. KNX, Hollywood, 8 p. in., Secur ity Trust and Savings program; 9 p. m., KNX Feature program; Hollywood Orchestral " i Behind the TwinklinJootlights With Those Mysterious Showpeople ..'r's Hy LOIS ANNK DYNON Wrapped In n aura of mystery, In a shroud' of mystery, tho public -ondem wlmt Is behind tho foot lights. The lives of show people are mora or less covered with an ambient glow, envtloplii thslr personalities that thoy throw across tho foot lights' to tho public, the theatre poo plo that come to bo pleased: a fiokle public It Is truv, but uevorthnlnns a public that wants to k pleased and petted; a public that til content to bask before the lights of those be hind the rim. "Snooky" Wlilto, off the stage, tho- furthest from a "Snooky" per sonality that otlo bus ever sn, lias brought to Klamath Falls a girl rovuo; a tall bloud girl; a red-head: a sassy Irish lasa; a blond Iitily with pretty eyes; a dark one with wtn somo ways and another dark one that put herself over. And lust but not least a typlcil eako-etttnr, a Tony Olrrnrd, who adds color. That Is what appears to the public; the exterior ot the llttlo girls who found tholr ntdv In Ufa to produce laughter and bring inllos to. hundred who drop Into a theatre seat fur a tew hours relaxation. First of all, show girls are punc tual: they are on tho dot, and when the "flashes" ecme Into their dress ing rooms they know to minute havr much time they have and when they are expected to go on. How easy It looks from a logo, scat!' Evory girl In unison, ovory step the saniA dlsluucu, with lyrlea and side bit to learn cn tho mom ent.' Tbe hudlcmce, through a trick of nature that comes to one easily, puts themselves in the nVJro ot the' porson nctlnj before them. Uncon-'1 sclously they Imaglno they con. do that sort of thing. But can tliuyT- In Mr. Willie's company of ytlrtsy evory personality In the conglo.iiuru tlon of human makeup Is found. ' , . There Is Miss Gertrudo Nolda, tho prima donna who shares a droning room with Palsey Riley. Putting them both together, what a mental complex they would produce Oor trudo Is tall, slender, a lovoly girl who took her chanco behind tho foot lights In order to give her voice a chance, a girl who has made good, while little Irish PatsoAa quick wit tod,' straight bobbed' child, has vocabulary , of ethic at her hand, that would make Wobster's Un abridged Dictionary "look like a Piker." Bho said that herself. , Mao ChateFalne,. a dark haired girl, .has a soft voice and a firm handnhn.ko, portraying the traits In nermost in- one. Eyes, tbo windows of tho soul, are tho most, exproaslvo toatures or Tholma Hammond,, a Ulondo, tli'at might wall have patent ed tho baby stare. . There la alio Mabel Jlughes, dark, poppy and pretty, a delightful combination' for a girl who has the work of .throwing herself across tho lights. . .And laat but by no .means least, Is the Hod- Head. Thoy call her that and shachlnory. -- ' U9mmt t nnffi 1 - ttrMMH4lM.-,giti 1-nislllll II I mf'pl Hsyillslslssllllslal 1 Old dlcttoiuirlm should be discanUd, reemt activities have , brought additional wards Into' ourjsnsuage, and tb pub" llskwrs had to discard thU old prirfBnf plates, Hsre Is lb . nawly compllad .dictionary larger hod more compUt than any similar on enlarged voosbulary all tb dW"VofJi and dw special flurs now ready for vry rsailsn easy for: ybt of th coupons, pnttd or maJIwl to this nwtuipr Mail Orders distribution, If hr null, Include 9enti pottni up to ISO rnlleaf 10 (Jtntt up io 900 mllttioriorirtlr dlttancci mil your ttoert matter fbrrftU on S pound. Your Old Dictionary is Now Out: of Date ThU If ihSCjttlmal book far $otoing Crow Word Pumuhw . W " , . KI'.X, Oukliiud, .8 p. ni, Htiuiio ru'OKrum presutilvit by tho tftmuu. vx ' cuinpuny of Onkliind" rwnbirlojr the Woodwind Quartette, audvu 8i Trip In. Hung. Tills ' om'ulhliig unusual. i ' i . K.I'0Snn Frunclsco, 8 1. m Doe VjH,v4Xylophone solos, M R0V,. I'orllund, I p, ui., Concert araii'U by Mrs. L. W, Waldorf. m .KFOAi The Tlinoa Reuttle pro srmu'a p. iu., featuring Pilgrim Chorus, -.n 1 -- '. K0A! Dwver, J:10 Hludlo -pros luivujitilrlng woman's quurlutlo, . . ' ! in- ' doesn't seem to mind like must of thuin. Limber and quirk to pick up the. most Intricate steps, she Its found her wajr In life ready to plenao the mosfc fastidious fanv HeV truly name Is Ruth llnynes but be hind the scones she's just (he llttlo "rod-head." Quirk to respond, ready to cog form la publle opinion, bard work ers that st'.irt In the morning and work 1th both their body and brains; not an easy life, that of 4 show girl. ' Wltb one catch of her voire, Ihit public is Jout Jo hot. With ono m'stako In tho rarrlago i f her body or tlin snap ot hasten, shn hu fulltin from Ilia ubljo' eya. H Is quick to perceive anil htlrd to forKet tlinse mistake that, F,0X I autka a thousand time a day.? ' ' . Changing froJi Hie evury-dsy-work-a-dA llfe they are to those that know nothing at all about the lives cf the people behind the drops a delightful people, a mysterWue people, but more human, more tang ible by far than you or 1. . WHEAT TREATING MACHINE -8IMIM.H AM I.NKXI'KNHIVR A- machine f ir treating ' seed whtl!h capper carbonate - fr s'it 'rtmirol, simple and Inoxpon airkvMOevlied by Oeorg W. f KahleTlculturl englaeer of the O, A. C. extension service, can be 'KWf3i'T9r farm In a few bour. It hus' at cspnolty ot two bushele and WU fVoSjt lS to 40 buhhols an hour, t Need for an effective method of treating send wheat far a relatively emu II acreage Is met In this ma ehlyei '" '"Jr large scale produotloa Yiattrft'troatlng machines with larger, cipaclly may be purchased. iT be effective In killing the spore ,nt common smut on wheat the cop per rarbonalo must coat every ker-, nel, which requires soma sort ot special machine, The copper carbonato treatment was Introduced Into Oregon by the experiment station and extension sorvlce In 1921. It was proved, by fnrmor-county agent dempnatra tlons to be so successful ' that It has become an established pflsctlee on the large wheat farms of east orn Oregon. It Is being used more largely In other parts of .the slats as its superiority ovor other meth ods booomes better known. , Only 125 acres wero planted wltb coppor carbonated whoat In 1921, while more tban a bait million acre thus treated will be planted this year. Two ounces of tho dust are re quired for each bushel ot wheat. This kills the smut spores without damage to tho grainallowing, it por cont loss seed, giving the young seedlings a quicker start, and per mitting storago of troitod soed without ' damage. - Too heavy appli cations will cause the 'dust to ac cumulate In Clio drill and may ce ment ana cause damage .to the Jna- Ybu tq get wiin numinsu mum m wvw u wt iteiiiu ttc, amount Ilil Ingtoonly . . . . . tfU UenU Entitle tvery fader to thUN$W Enlarged Univ trait it Dictionary Without Purtbor Eapotno or Oblltktloii-" and Manor Baok U Not eWtfaiW ,