K'tp'.' I PA(?B SIX BVBNlNCf HKtiAUV KM MATH FAUfl, ORKfeoN ' MONDAY, MAUCH 8V ftM' V- ! OEly tiling livraih :: .. ; ; : i. hurrah, EATS t l;lx:.h-i , OUT OF THE timed ' Daily, except Sunday, by :The - Herald Publishing Company. DJfice:. l 19 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls, Or . If ttadluiueiit., DnUwin fanrdttti Co. Unimcr IwilSMMHB II r v r--f , Ue, av . .UtiT- , V it.1 It- ft. J. MURRAY . W H PERKINS News Editor r Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Klamath Falls. Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. f'. Member of the Associated Press fhr 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 alsothe local hews published (herein All rights of republication of special dispatches here ip are. also reserved. -"' ' '" '.;': .'-"-.'....'','' Tb Evening Herald is the bfficial paper of Klamath County n)Hfli- City of Klamath Falls. . Bl'BSCniPTION Peltwrd by Currier Ob Tear U 60 Is. Month . 3.50 Three Months ... 1.95 Month .& RATKS . . By Mall One Year Six Months :.. Three Months One Month MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1925 v OREGON HAS BEST HIGHWAY PROGRAM The. Slogan editor has said and repeated many times that Oregon has the best highway program in the world- .Shd started right and has been going right ever since, and then? Ss every indication that she will continue to go right in the future; sticking to the principle that the User should pav. lis does, pay in Oregon, in license fees and gasoline taxes, lie pays as he1 uses. Excepting those who walk or ride bicyclef or ny horses. LThey, go free. . fvpregon's paved road building svstcm is the best in the world because it rests upon money received from license taxes paid on " vehicles using traction other than horse power, arid upon soJirie and distillate taxes. -These taxes will" retire all the hprids apd finally pay for all the paved highways and. for ex Jpnding them and. keeping them in repair. 1 xTliere will never be a direct tax, though the taxing power of the, state is behind the bonds issued for the greater part of the money so far .expended by the commonwealth in the con struction of the highways. ' The state highway commission, consisting of Vrtv Duby. $aker City, chairman, and H. B. Vim Diizer of Portland and .t-iialpner Cprvaisij vvit)ir Roy . .V IKlein, itate . highway engineer, and a splendid corps of' assistants, has been making wonderful showing, as their predecessors did also! v .. . jn state bond andjnterest paymeh:y-e .are ,ap the eak load! It will be reached in 1928; but; even so this mdst jmpottanl; arm of the stae sen'ice is carrying, on-' , mm f. i The, fedcrar'fiinds are being met; repairs ate being kept up, and new work is being done in .p)acis.'hei'e..'t1ie'm7v.eiehc the pub)iicMcalls-lpudly for; it. .We have to thauk the increasing number of automobiles "and truclis and the growing travel for this. The. money 'is coming-faster for machine licenses'and gasolifje taJcts than we had j-eason to expect, when the system wa adopted,' . . ; ... ' Soon after the peak load is passed,' under the present system, there will be ample idnds to take care of all the new work that atight to be undertaken.--Ashland Tidings. V ? WE'LL Mb A klUINQ, ' J ' , ! . nil nu' viiiT i nr.Tir.rT.i 0 Mnru 1 ,L ' - ' . ..... ' " .) TODAY'S CROSS WORD PUZZLE . . . 1 ia 3 1 s I I U h 18 l l In ' - ' - ' ' , .... TT ... ... IS , 14 ; "I"" . " ' "" ' """" i?- T" """"" "" '7 T ie " " " T5 .. .. ... .... .., ,, .... aa Tt . w "" a. . ,.. ; .. i 37..;. ' . .. V. ,.jT , . ,. '. :" mmm aa. . " 33 "T" s-J1 " 37" . 34 I "T" "7" TT" """" 33T" 40 T " T- " -43 "T 44 " V .:- 49 "" SO " "" " T" ffl " Si ' " sj 54 . . " at . I , T 97 " " " " " 56 "" " " " To mix.' " To give access. Angers. '' A limited amount. Hallucination. Lightly secured. ' . Every one'. ' ' Rock' containing metal. A musical fly which bites. To secure by fitting Into grore Imaginary being, lay or elt. A specialist. ... . . - Conspiracies. .. . v ' ' ' J ' r" '. It thrust.. ... '. Fertile spot in desert. ; What your food Is baked' in. , To eract a 'whip.'" ; ; ' Evening.' ' ' ".'"'... ,Pre;ioifs stone. "." 'Bone.-'' ".'.'' dw;.47-j'-',:,' HUNT'S 'v .f WASHINGTON LETTER VKSTERD.VY'e SOLUTION itIpiaidIeIdc oieeipe q , i. . . " i w 11 H. ' 1. 19. ' SO. SI. S3. 4. it. : ST. II. SO. as. 11 31. ( 17. it, , . HOBIZOMAIi , -,. Shops. 'is v: 1 , ' fehoats of gross; weapons with Jlong handles. . Ulstake. Hade of oat etrsw or stem. ' iPoltrt between north pole and - Europe; : ., . One who speaks a treat deal of Bto owij. affairs; blmifautlve for' mother.' To obstruct. ' r.. : Pointed tower. Pine tree;. Very: small particle. . ( Before, c. ' - "Nil: on -time. Hyad officer under college president. , la a short-4ime. Bask of a bird.: A filed routlbe as of study or speech; . . - . Not boated. A foreign ;olni - . ; Twisted rapidly, , , ( - i - 41. Mimic. . " .; J 43. Genus of fish to', which pikes and pickerel belong. 45. Tree of geuns lumus. . 46; 8mell. . . , 48. To yelp. 49. Toward. r 60. Calling out; summoning .forth. 52. The direction Cape Oood Hope Is from us. ' Si. The thing upon which your ' , meal is cooked. - .; 58. A giant personifying the sea. " 87. A monistic order of Jews, sec ond century B. C. 68. Topmost.' ' ' ' ' VEKTICAL '": ''; 1. Light silk fabric. - "... 2. To pay another's expenses as nn expression of friendship. - 3. Conltuicllon. 4. Iht ijs of flaJos. 8. Units bf work or energy. 7. To strike' an attitude. 8. To dine. . . w ., , . PropjBltlon of p1ac4. ' PARSI POINTERS Many Oregon fruit-growers are constructing epray towers on their spray rlg In order to insure bet ter protection from pests In tho tipper third-of-trees over 12 years bid, explains the experiment station. Most;.. of.., the. damage done by scab and worms has been on these un protected parte' in "be past. At this season Oregon potatoes In storage must be kept well ven tilated to prevent sprouting .which the warmer Weather Is beginning to cause ' in many parts of the state, the experiment station has learned. It the potato piles are opened and the potatoes spread out, ' and the storage places are opened oh cold nights ahd kept closed during tho warmer period, the potatoes can be held In good seed condition for a longer period. ' The rosy apple aphlds are hatch ing and feeding on the leaves,, ac cording to observations by the O. A. C. entomology department.,' Nico tine sulfate spray Is the standard remedy for this pest. ' It Is Usually applied between the delayed dormant and'' ping., stages.. The experiment station is conducting a series of tests ,to determine' the best time to oil spriy has already boen applied apply eprays for these aphlds... An to destroy the eggs of the insect. By HARRY B. HUNT JiEA Scrvloo Writer WASHINGTON. Mar. 23. What Is a political party and wny- Rsdlcally different opinions on this question have boen developed by . Republican senate leaders dur ing the set-away short session of cue now Huute. ....... The divergence of opinion on this fundamental proposition seems like ly to lead followers of the two 'the ories so far presented far apart before tbe congressional ' and sena torial eleetlbns of l2f.; i "The two conflicting' schools of political thought Id the senate O. O. P. ore not unlike those repres ented In tha debate" here between Claronce narrow and former Senator A. O. Stanley. - .:" M- . " : Harrow and Stanley debated 'the Issue of capital punishment, 'the man who saved the necks, of leb and Leopold contended that society should seek' to reform, not to kill.- The maa who- la criminal to day may be a good .elttxen tomor row, he held. If society does lu part to help him to a respectable and responsible part In life. ' - Stanley stuck' up for- the good bid Kentucky principle of an eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth or even two or throe if you can get 'em. - , . In the Senate's political parallel Borah of Idxho may be likened to the Darrow of the' debate. Jim Watson of Indiana is cast In the Stanley role.-- ' ' ' . Borah eontendf that Republicans who have transgressed party disci pline should' btf given a chance to repent and reform.- ' Republicans, ' like Individuals, he holds, areMhe product of differing environments.- They are not all cast in one mold. Allowances must be . made for variations, even ' for occasional .abnormalities. To Watson,- however, a good Re publican is a 'good Republican. He Is first and last a member of, the clan. Whoioevcr denleB for one day constituted . party authority, who runs amuck in the family circle, becomes an outcast,, disinherited and condemned. , . ...,,.,' : ''' "A political party," saye Watson "Is In reality Organized for one election.. If Its policies are continu ing, the organization may be con-, tlnued.;:' ', "But after alii' It lis. designed for one contest, one election, subscrib ing to oho platform and one set , of principle. ;:' ;-.v.v" - . ;' ' ' "I nni mt concerned with what S Eat ; Better Fbi Less " .-'.'. .?'' '.-' : ' . At the ' , ' '. . WASHINGTON CAFE ,.' ; ,' brop In and see for, yourself why so many people ' '.. prefer to eat hero and why, once they start the stay right with ui. AMERICAN AND CHINESE DISHES 12S SOUTH KTH. ' ,r ,.4 '.' . h -., . . WEB SHI NO, Prop. was dona IB 1913, or 1914 or 19J0. ' I . -am concerned , sfbout i- what ' wa dond'Ih $924. f'Aad I know .4t at that' particular tlmo Senators Uook hart, Frailer and Labb left the Republican party." '. , . , ' , "It is good Idea,. In tbe boar of victory, to lcA ahead and prac tice some degree of tolerance," argues Borah, in reply. "I prefer to determine my course by a survey of coming elections rather than by dwelling on those that are ovec "I would not know where to-c. tnbllsh the line of loyally or. party devotion under conditions as (hey ouve prevailed In , jthls country' for the last 10 or It years. I do not know what the- tost Is. And snlean I know the test. I fenr I may get outaido the lino myself." i Radio, as a means of jdvlug nit llonnl aid In such a calamity as tho tornado lu middle western America came tu Its own when the nuws .of tho storm reached Chicago over crippled tologrspa wires. As soon as the first report reach ed Chicago, three of the groat br.ailcuatlng stations begun broad casting au appeal fur doctors, nur us and uiony to bo sent over the Htrtrkea area on - the special 4rnlu provided by the . Illinois C'oalral Railroad. ... , : 1 - For an hour the usual duhco music and programs from the three Chicago eintkms were' suspemlotl for ths worthy cause. '' '"HUadreds are dead, and 4hous ande Injured In the tornado, In southern Illinois. We want doc tors, nurses and money.1' 1 ' In very short time answers to the radio calls began ti pour In to the offices of 4he broadcasting sta tions from all part of Chicago, im( In only a few minutes 130 doctors and 80 nurses wers assembled wait ing to go to the relief of the stick en ones. Stations WLS, operating throughout the nlrfht announced that 111,000-Ud teen received through gonofoui contributions be fo.ro mornlng;.:-,v ,;rr . Program for Tucsdny KP1-.Los Ansului, I p. b! Los Angeles Gxamlner Studio program. I p.' m. nance brchsstrt, 10 Pack ard Hailed Honrv Hh ; Ihiokard Melody OWJ j i . KI14 Oioa Angolin, S p. m. pro gram, provided 'tiirouiih . tbs cour tosy . of the fell CanW Apartments presenting, tho JfarmoDy. Mala quar- WU. ; -;'.( !, i- !, ' . ' . ' KWX Ifcllririoiid;1 9 9. m. pro-, gram by the Bllta Catering aomptny abd ; Independent MsaliJattUrlug comptthy; 10, Xtbbas4dor hotel. KLX-Oukidd ! I to 7:10 p. m. Aunt EUlo's fluniet hour. . ' , . KK Oaklahd, I p. m. Ibermsn Clay present studio program, of diversified Instrdweillal srtd tolcal selection. . trtt , KPO flan Frahclseo, 8 p. m, program under management of Jack Tbomts, Tenor. :. ; i t Tou can't' beliefs bvttfytlilnt you hear. No telling how many fair ladli faint hearts have wen. . I w sa MS s Sl j ro Ttir rtrriintn irn 1 1 1 't-iii ' M, ro ritp rirriiiiTn urn 1 1 n vy-i maocaj I nr. r.vr.rairai Hr.it aiji 4 : OM dtctfotarlm theuM U dUearaVsl as nasi sMrMea aUtiaaal words tale mmt ' katMst, aJ ta f aW had to discard their old Sffiatiaa siaSM. Hat Is tU swwly eewpUad Utkwy lare ed m esssate Msks) any tbnilu amm enlsnsd essseslsry eB ) sw spsissl I tones rsssy rar assry EASY. FOR YOU TO GET A VtstfM at tham onDona. wiiiatt. m witb BoauMi tmm nmi mm m Hs 1 - - a- isw dtoaltxdop. ., ummm QQ Mall Ordr If tw svrt.tiwtada ttanti ( jp t IS WltOI 10 U M ItolasIM? fetirMMf 41 ft Htm4liWl4H Mlk)Wii logiooaiy . . t.eyU MOTS Entitl xry nmdsrto thkNmi EnIargdUnhrdH0Dl6itat? ' . WkWM twtkm sj.ii iwhUsslii't T;'!l mUmUamtmmM0MtmllmlH ft: tit;.' -j ! i if - ; 't v f -. Your Old Dictlonury k Now Owt of Date . IMs Ms ssmI M ft eaMas Owes ITsie'rUss ) t ,t ) I ii loll !' V .if . ' ; !..,,(.:.,-V'?v, ' !'', is. .-. ,-:itv ', ' Color of i ;.', ,.S' Life V' ,J . - M-V i' !' ' I' V6U use silverware and linen, hang up curtains and pictures, wear fabrics carefully cut and adorned all for the purpose of coloring the drab facta of food, shelter and clothes. li. .';,'.. ' Advertisements enable you to put this color into your life. They bring you ..nevVs of i. improvements ;to quicken 4 your pleasure, increase your, efficien- cy, lessen your work to ; feed ; your ; ' ' hours ' with; , every comfort - and con- venience men have thought out j for .' you. . . J :' .' . . ; Read the advertisements. Their time ly messages, their intimate lessons in economy,, their assurance : that ad-., Vertised goods will please help you color your life even more., When you choose from advertised goods, you choose from the safest goods known. They are value-true. Read the advertisements in these columns. By their, guidance you can obtain the best today; economize for the best tomorrow. i: K ; - 'I - ii ..'' Advertising reduce the cost of pro - - - ......-.,- duct that add pleasure and ' , '';' comfort to, living ,!' i . ." ' .f.' .''',