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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1925)
r 1 . . ; 1 v t 1 1 ' ' . 1 . " ' ' 'Vj ' WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2M02g j PAGE St EVENTNC? ITERATE KLAMATH .FAIJaS, QPEGQN 7'r Issued Dajlv except Sunday," by The" Herald 'Pablisbinfj Company. Office: 119 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls,' Ore E, J. MURRAY V. M. PERKINS . ,v- Publisher News Editor Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Klamath Falls. Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. ,, Member of the Associated Press P- ssnriated Press is exclusively entitled to the use; o re (ful)lication ,of all news dispatches credited to it or not other vis credited in this paper and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches here in are also reserved. V The Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath County anH th fitv rvf KlomofVi Falls . '' ' ) SUBSCRIPTION. Delivered by Cturier One Year 8tx Month Three Months .. 0n Month .$6.50 ...., 3.60 1.95 RATES By Mall Ons Year Six Months .' Three Months One. 'Month WEDNESDAY, STARCH 25, 1925:-- GOOD HEALTH! GOOD BUSINESS! 1 In accordance with the principle that good health and good business go hand in hand, commercial organizations through- out the country, are giving impetus to the movement for im vroving sanitary conditions of their communities, as well as conditions of employment. V - , : ; Through public health committees efforts are made to bring about the enactment of adequate sanitary codes, to eliminate water pollution, clear waterways of obnoxious and mosquito breeding weeds, remove refuse, and establish school medical inspections and dental school clinics. ' . '-'.- :..-' ., Some chambers have periodical' meetings where . manage ment . problems and the -"health supervision of employees are discussed. Others maintain safety councils. Another has . or ganized a speakers' bureau to reach groups of employees at the noon hour and give them information on question's of sani tation, hygiene, and first aid. . . --; ;:',.Vv; -Adequate hospitals, the collection of vital statistics, and the fafeguarding of the water and milk supply-have been given attention by various chambers. All this" is doiieoti" the theory that sickness is a community liability. - 1 : V. i- ) '..", NOW IT'S THE CALF'S TURN ' ; "..;..:.,' . j uraniu Roberts mu vinm At Crater Lake Hi-Jinks Critter' Iiko Bhrluo Club' him many novul iti'U Fur their ltl-Jluks and vuutlovlllo to bn given Krlduy iiIkIiI, March 17111, 1SII6. at tlio Bcnndl iiitvlun Hull. Ornii K. Itoberls, who has been u Mvorlte singer throughout the oouuli'y ot name of liho must loved ballads that 'buy aver boon written, will uppour .' In n song vnrluly net with Miss Alice llausen and It will bo most pleastug to licur lluuiu two people render sumu of Bur tuvorllo tongs. .-'.'. Also, the three Country Cou.ilim ot tho Ouler l.alto' BlirMli t'lllb prom ise somtithliig extrnonllmu'y In . harmony and coinla sunm.'' They ro rnhoniilnK must OIllKimtly In oi'lur lo put thnlr hoiik In sluipo no tlio will b uiipreolntiut nml will hold up Willi llin bnluneo t.f hn show,. 'J'Ihui ti'om two youun muHto mumorii will be hounl. who will sniu.e the audience with thnlr mom niodurn mutlioda o( ruudurlr.j mu.tlo. The Ihow uh whole, will be, (wltlmul a dolibl, trnih Jut these tow suKKOHthms ot soineior tho sots which nio to bo shown, n bin Hiiccein. TODAY'S CROSS WORD PUZZLE ' - - 1 . - ' - -y v M . ? " " ' ia" is " " "" " is- "T7"" .--.. i i v "" " y f. i 23" as " a" as a " " TT 3" "T a9 37 " " " 31 . " sa " . ir T" " " 57 a 35" W 'm" 43.'. ' - 5 - j s TT ; -4. 7 48 . .. "T" "" - -' -j S "" si- "" T "" sa " " " -. - . sT" ST" "" s "" " "ST b s i3 7" T " " " 1 "" 7 " 5 ' -M 1 JhLhi - -J fc . 47 , . MORIZONTAt. I. In a bin ft manner: .' . ' 6. Iispa. " : :' 11. liecur.- . 12. Haring form of pouch or sac. 15. 811k worm which feeds on cas ' lr oil plant, i 16. Affront. 17.. Shawls worn s cloaks by Spuft- . Ish-Amorlcans. , . 18. Wned 1. rsh witter fish, (carp family.) 29. To' -nose. : 21. to soak flux. 22. ISiin.aod. :. 24. Kcigflc'B nosl. , - 20. 'hlvcr ln Italy. 27, 'I'lii fume.' 80. vLnrgo' fnnhlcal bird. ? 31. ilHoro 'degraded. S3. Viper. . 35. En elector. ' '.'".'..' i 36. 'Diving 'bird. "' ' " 37i Prlond. ' : 38. Separated In tws or more pieces 42. Those who give (ruce horse) tips for an expected compensation. 4S. Checks. (Verb.) : . it. to observe. - -48. T6 nop. " ( BO. Musics! note. ' ' . 61; Not troshly made. S3. Half eft em. . B4. Club used In baseball, -66. ftmBll vegetable (grows in f.ods) B7. fe'ood nymph.'; . 69. B'i'ry ene. 61. llrlaglng la ll:ie. A very fine s!:k hot. A game played for stakes with three people. Alkaloid for Cnlabar bian (nto- kcyed letter r) . .. Golf term. 66. Upper law body. (0. S.) "jrjrTOjpirc'uinovoTa in ni!."" 62. 63. 61. 65. VERTICAL 1. Hoarse noise of the throat, 2. To defeat. ? ' ; v- S.' said. - '. . ; 4. Emperor, j . 5. Royal palm. (Porto Rico.) 6. Cubic meter.' 7. Ethereal. 8. Covered with thin scurvy scales. 9. riant .the next size larger than "- , a shrub. ; .. 10. One ot females having' same par '..'entage.'. '- ' ' ' - 13. One who surrenders. 14. A Jelly made of fish, folw, etcJ, 23. Most common conjuction." 25. Slick. . .' : '' 26. To fondle, also lump of butter, 28. The Weight used for diamonds. 29. The movie' actress'-' stand-by when In grief. 31. Knives used s weapons. , VI. having margin Irregularly notched. ; '. , - . 3.4. A regular course.: -35. A lar'ge vessel tor liquids. 39. To pare!'. ' 40. Mlmjc. r'-''.- 41. An evefllng meal. 43J Rubber tree. 44. Renters.' 45. Dwarf palm (Florida). I ' ' 46. TJie place' 111 theatre Where the drama oosurs; 47. A tropical tree from which wo get varnishes. ' ., 49. Deal, as in the arteries. , 61. Cansclouiness, mind. 62. Antelope. i o. Bitter drug. ' .' MhXPlo. ' 68. To r aay.'v -.u 60. List. : ' !: Oh cortalh thlBR ahottt Uprlhg Is OYiryili.iiig 8i.'U(u.i no unrlaju, "' Driverless Taxi Leaps Oit Dock Two Brothers Who Are Paisengeft Lfcnd in Mud, btit Chauffeur Hasn't Been Found NEW YORK, March 21. Frank Mooro and his bro ther, Ralph, Harlem druggists, are recovering, at their home 153 West Eighty-third street, today front the ef fects of an experiment through which they passed early today and which they sincerely hope they will never meet with again. . ! ; I HUNTS : WASHINGTON I LETTER. . ; .- By HARRY. B. HINT JiEA Service Writer. WASHINGTON. Mar. K. Assess ment of an arbitrary $10,000,000 or so la lhcome tas against Senat or Couiens, to cover a theoretical undervaluation . Ot the 1913 worth of his stock in the TVird Motor com panyi. may result' in a eltnatlon where the gSvtrnment, instead of collecting a few addition' millions, would have to refund to Coutcna the taxes he did pay as a result of his profit on that transaction. . " Perhaps Secretary Mellon iwould not object to that result. For it would, In that case, be a demon stration of his claim that high .taxes defeat themselves and deprive the. government of revenue Instead of adding lo treasury receipts. No more Interesting demonstra tion of the 'Jlejlon tax theory could possibly be staged In this country, nor one that Would so thoroughly catch public attention and interest. . . i ; . -.. . - Briefly, the 'situation ' is1 this: When negotiations were tinder way bf FDfd' to buy out tho stock of the minority Interests tn the flivver industry,' the minority stockholders agreed to sell at $12,600 per share provided a ruling was procured in odvance from the Treasury Depart ment of a value tor the stock, as of 1913v- satlafadtory to the 'minority owners: ''--- : .. i Under tbe revenue law,' the 1913 value iwould be taken is a basts for determining profit, on the stock subject 'to the fodorai Income tax. ' Such a ruling was obtained by Ford from tho treasury. The 1913 value was fixed at 18300 per sbaro. And as a . result of this valuation tho sale' was cohsumated.' ' " : Ford paid $12,500 per share' for the stock and Cousens and his min ority associates paid Uncle' Sam In come tax on $3600 per snare profit, this being the increase .In value of the stack between 1913 and 1919 as figured by the government's own experts; ' : " Tn Velmtfal to the department's claim that the-fignre of $8900 was more tjian the stock was , worth In 1913, , tnat Its real value then wan only about $2500 a share,, and "that tax mufit be paid on $1,000 per share profit Instead of $3600 per share, the , folowlng ' claim, legal sharks suggest, might be established Pre-determlnatlon by the govern ment of 'a satisfactory value for the stock, : as of 1913, was one of the material considerations bntorlhg Into the sata ; ft was' a 'very definite, perhaps even a. determining - Tactor, in the sale; ivlla'd, the government then fi ed the figure Secretary Mellon now suggets iwould have been proper. Cousens' . net ' return - would have been some $10,000,000 less. It seems quite llkely"the sale never iwould have been made at that trgure. ... .. It the government ts how able to establish and enforce tt. lower 1913 valuation as a basis for taxing the profits on the salo to Ford, It Is claimed the validity ot the whole transaction could be sot aside and Couzens reinstated In the owonrshlp of his Ford stock, should he so desire. , j " - For the valuation previously fix ed by the 'department constituted a very definite arid valuable considera tion and formed a basic part of the agreement' on iwbieh- the sale' was concluded. . . . ''-;.. In event this contention was up held . In the round, the government Instead of collecting additional lax 4a from Couzehs Would huvo to re fund taxes heretofore collectod on the sale. .j: And' Henry Ford would have to mako an accounting to Couzens on profits made during the. last half dozen years. Which would bring Fort ' into tho fight and Insure litigation tast ing 'cars beyond be span of tho present administration.; . lfllrprHlTIIIirlfJTI?!' i, And In Manila, the horse races are held early in tho morning, leav ing all dny for cussing. A family may como In hundy. You can ask the Judge to lot you ' off Just-this once for their sake. "' i Thuy lookud for tint rliauffimr. lie was nowhere to be seen, Tito brothers limped la a garage at 430 Kan 110th street, nearby, where Patrolman Carroll of the blast 104tli treot station found them. T'"y wore treated by Dr. liubotllu or the Keceptlon Hospital and t.ikou to their homo. the early morning and, kjlllsg Yellow tnxlcab, llrrctt-d the chauf feur to drive them to their home, TSoy stttlvd back In tbelr Meats. At a 'o'clock a Yellow - Uilcab turned east luio 110th street and proceeded rapidly through the sll Kticn and darkness toward tha Kaat river. The machine did not ton Neither man can explain tuw tlio j but continued on, over the pier l macniiia happened la full off the pier. The pollco are looking for Nelsen Young Ot 619 West Forty- second, street, who wua reported by the tnxlcub company a hnvnlg been In rhurge of the mtu'hliiv. . . Tho two men wore at 129th street and Lexlngtou avciuo during mord the edge and the water. There was no one there to wit ness tha strnngo spectacle , or ' to shout vut un alarm. Willi nndlm Inlshed spued the- tsxl.-oli reached the-end of the pier nnd fall;. over It. landing with a (lull thud and the kpllnterlng of glass lb thW mud. A Germsn scientist has Invented a machine to test fatigue that drops metal balls 'on a person's muscles, the hlgbpr rebound the' bettor tho condition ot tho muscles. ' ' A Massachusetts Inventor's tele phone for deaf mutes conveys mes sages by illuminating lettered elec tric lamps to epeell out words when corresponding keps oh, a special typewriter are. -touched, "Baby; Markets v. . ... , ...Rii aL'T'm kJi " ' m - : (,.&. , '"- - . N " , I 1 Mqrkuts wners fMbles are sold ar.. the objective of the latsst lnvet, saltuh by ls Ansetcs authorities.; Around tlOO Is- the -average 'prlou' rhurnt-a for. Inronts In bousfit wllere vxrteetunt mother ore knpti ' olTlclml ; eharite. One arrest Iws been mfcdoj tn I'otinentlon with the invtstltfuUhn, that of Mr. Hassl Blmsi 'She was' traei'd througH an aOVertlmmsnt in a ' Iwut n(,wrirwf which: read,! "Adoption. Have private home for I uiifiirtiinute girls. Babies adopted." ' Khe reftiKc to romment on the ' TTT",. " I'liarrss. 1 .,77- Your OW Dictionary ..-,.',-.' " ' i . ; ,- 1 ..,-.'. ;i. i ' H now oat of dte am) kere't a new one to take ito place. No word that are oat of use no obsolete words no "filler" words taken from itednkal glotsaric which naturally makes room in this enlarged Itoeainilar for the latest words of everyday ue of which there are thousands of new one expressive, forceful word, with which every- ' body should be familiar. The publishers abandoned their old printinf plates, so let the babies play with that old dictionary now, and get youf new one through this offer in .. : " ' ., , t ';' " .' ' . . '-' . ". The Evening Herald The Popular Coupon Plan Places It Within ' v Eaky Reach of Every Reader KEEP UP WITH OLD FATHER TIME - ..." - .: ' ' ' '. ' : ! ,' 1 - "'. . .. -. In these days of lively sports, games, and amusements we are Iftoked upon as back numbers if we don't know the language of Golf, Radio, Football,' Aviation, Tennis, Baseball, Autdmobiling, Polo, Lacrosse, - and other modern activities. .You'll find dictionaries of each one' of , these, and many' others, in this educational volume. So the older folks can keep up with, the young fqlk4 and the youngsters will be . enabled to use the proper, terms in their sporting endeavors with 'tjns, Dictionary of Dictionaries always at hand.j . .. , r, '.', Clip Your Coupon and Get Yours Today MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED ' . v Crosi Word : Puzzlers Need . ; ; r ; ' 77iis Enlarged Dictionary I is" Eem thh tittle off of the top givet an idea of the size or . thi boo. TOOArs COUPON v Dirt- . i,i,piM.wr..ar, , i 1 , , -nsh .isriisTiiiW aV M Jl