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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1925)
Monday, apiul 13, 1025 THE LUMBERLOGUE PAGE ELEVEN Teasant Embroidery Doris Keny on Wears a Youth' Jul Frock Made Lovely with Colorful Stitching. E i , 1 ' . IS PICKING UP T T il 1 I 11 m u , s m eh t V a- Lumbermen! You Can't Beat Kelly-Spring fields at this price! Kelly-Springfields 31x4 6-ply'corda ........... ,..$ IfeOO 32x4 6-ply cords 21.95 33x4 6-ply cord 23.95 33x4 8iply cords 28.70 33x5 8-pIy cords 35.54 30x5 8-ply cords .'. 34.44 35x5 8-ply cords 33.75 36x6 12-ply cords 60.00 40x8 12-ply cords 122.80 32x6 12-ply cords 58.65 . ALSO ' , . ' From $1 to $2.50 reduction on each tire if you put it on your car yourself. ALSO Tire insurance, saving you from worry about any road hazard. Ask about it. HUB TIRE SHOP Chas. Johnson, Mgr. 502 So. 6th. Phone 616 Advertising Space in THE EVENING HERALD Pays 100 Cents on the Dollar Woods Workers Here's a lot of reading for a nickel. 4-page Comic Section 6 Pages News (Associated Press) 6-page Magazine Section Yours for $2.50 yearly ' (52 Issues) Published every Sunday The Klamath Sun ... 119 North Eighth I ........ if - r.&yf 'iA -ski miA ' I t 'it & nratBRB has como to greet Ui earliest dan o( spring ct ona plecs frock which li as unusual as It la charming. Btralght, at courts, arc the Uses which the youthful allhonotte demands, and possessing for its beauty the embroidery found on the blouses and dresses at the peasant lands of Europe. Blouses which come from Hun gary, Cthocko-Slcwokta and the far places of Russia are artfully utilis ed In this new type of gown. Sleeves with the quaint and charm ing fullness of the old world, with coiorf-i ernrro'iTrry artistically em ployed In silk or worsted, with brosd collar or shirred .necks, are seed with a straight lino frock which Is cut low In front and la Without sleeves. f ! When the frock Is 6f beige ben. j gallne or the new Kasha cloth, the blouse which nsea vivid reds, blues or greens la most effective. Dark blue or brown, too, may be success fully combined with these lovely blouses with their gorgoous stitch ing. Doris Kenyon, In First Nation al's "The Half Way Girl." wears with great success a frock which combines the art of the old world i with the new. Hera Is a straight lit tie froclt, scalloped at the bouom lu ' two rows. A long enpa which fastens at the nockllno In the hack falls gracefully to the knees. The blouse which la worn with this . frock la embroidered and shirred ' la the most successful and colorful ! manner of the peasant lands of Eu rope. The alcove, a huso affair. Is . long, and Is caught In at the cliff with tho silken material used to fashion the gown, which Is the season's smartest shade, beise. i LUMBERJACK JIM WINS PRIZE FOR HOME-MADE YARN Some modest tnlo-tollcr who hides his Identity under tho pen name ot "Lmnbcrjiirk Jim" wins the hmid-pulnlcl penvy as woll as one ot Luuiboi'loKUo's perfectly Rood "bucks" with his contribution.' thin week on the "home-brew" series of Paul lluiiyun Btni'les which Tho I.um berlogun Is Inaugurating. Hln I'iiiiI Umiynn story la n Rood one, as you'll agree when you hunt It tip somo where In this week's Issue and cast your lamps on It. fluvornl others also wore received but Lumberjack Jim wins the dollar pi'b.o which I.nmbei'logtio offers this week. ... We want, a lot moro ot these Paul Ilunynn strolcs frrim -the mills and camps. 9c just got out life old pen cil 11 ml weave us n yarn about tho mythical Paul and see If you can't be. tho ono to win' tho dollar next week. . . JACKSON MKAX DAXCKR . Poosle who nttcndod , tho hist Community club diinco docliii'6 Hint It Ace Jackson nuts half as mean ft glldoln tho nlr as ill a does on tho . dnnco floor Hint ho will desorvo his niimo of Aeo, , ,, , h Red River Plant in Califor , nia Cutting Steadily, Reports Show SAN FHANCISCO.- Flno spring wnather Is facilitating building op erntl'jns and retail dealers ara do ing a fair volume of busness and ura. buying a llttlo lumber. .Many stonm schoonero are tied up, and fir shipments to Caluflrna ports are not oxcesalvo. Japan and Australia uro taking somv fir. Parcel shlp- incnU or redwood are moving to Australia, and offerings of new bus iness are being conxMercd. Tho Kcd Itlver Lumber Co., con tinues to niul'.n a good output of white pine at' Westwood. There Is a moderate asuurtmcnt on hand. The new veneer factory Is mnkln a good output. Logging Is pro gressing favorably. Tho Standard Lumber Co., will make a good cut of California white and sugar pine ut Standard , this year. D. 11. Steiiimetz, general manager, has been conferring with W. A. Pickering, head of the W. H. Pickering Lumber Co., about plans for operations. A good output of sash and. doors In being made. J. M. While, general manager of tho Weed Lumber Co., thinks that tile lumber market for 1523 will be good, both on the coast and in the east. Tho company Is plan ning an output ot 135,000,000 feet which will make it rank as one of the largest producing concerns of California. Tho Diamond Match company, at Sterling City (Butte county) has commenced Its operations for the 1925 season. Tho Penman Lumber company, a new concern, Is building a new mill near Blalrsden, Plumas county, and expects to have It ready to handle tho season's cut which will be about 10,000,000 feet. Radio phone tests, between shipi, have recently been successfully made by ships of the Matson Navi gation company, tho Maul's Tadlo teleplione set Is a 5-tube, 250 watt Installation. Tho Matsonla has a 1,000 watt set, Installed so some yoars ago. The two vessels talk with each other on every trip. WOMEN OOP T Craze for Bobbing Hair Brings Jobs to' Feminine Sex LONDON. Apr. 11. The wo men nnd girls ot England are being absorbed buck Into Industry far moro quickly than, tho men nnd boys according to recent statistics on un employment. Hulr dressing, owing to the bobbed hair crnie, has given oniployment to a lurso number ot young women who earn better wag es than tho men barbers because ot tho extra chnrges mndo for trimming bobbea loeks. Men in London pay approxlmntely 25 cents for a hair cut while women- pay double that amount. Lust spring thero were 300,000 i ictsenary Vt$ now out of date, and here's a new one to take its place. No words that are out of useno obsolete words no "filler" words taken from technical glossarieswhich naturally makes room in this enlarged Tocabulary for the latest words of everyday use of which there are thousands of new ones expressive, forceful words, with which every body should be familiar. The publishers abandoned their old printing plates, so let the babies play with that old dictionary now, and get y on new one through this offer in THe Evening Herald The Popular Coupon Plan Places It Within Easy Reach of Every Reader '' KEEP UP WITH OLD FATHER TIME . . . In these days of lively sports, games, and amusements we are looked upon as back numbers if. we don't know the language of Golf, Radio, Football, Aviation, Tennis, Baseball, Automobiling, 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 folks and the youngsters will be enabled to use the proper terms in their sporting endeavors with I C.ip Veisr Coupon and Get Yours Today MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED Cross Word Puzzlers Need This Enlarged Dictionary Even this little off of the tap or TODATS COtJfcPN : ON PAGE women among the unemployed ot Great Britain, while today the num ber Is something like 250,000. Al though about 1,000,000 extra wo men and b'1"'3 ar now at work cof pared with' the figures of the year before tho beginning of the war, wo men ar.d girls together do not rep resent one-quarter cf the totala of un-employed. Government officials say thero Is every Indication that the number ot unemployed, both men and women, will be greatly re duced during this year. I;' " ' Perfume in Ear Ring "rvm I '4 X W'1 '''..Vvr.K (.! NO tanger livd m'lmly &ny he' t'uinq in ttio overawed vanity cases. Hollywood fashions linyo decreed n much simpler method, the ring ana earrtnsji Jqoelyn L, lm no-uso, Is slft with ,tW ' ,vrfuinu osrrlnr," WhH Kuireiils. nilbefl .purftM lW PQi'fme (l 0, tl.sy gold llask ' tconqcfttwrWittiin'lifr rjhgi . . .. ..I.iriri- .liiMilii - . w Ask Paul Bunyan I made the watch he used. It had a crowbar tor a second ihapd and used nlno acres ot glass In the crystal. t Send in your watch to mo, well packed, and I'll return It to you "by parcel post. Oran W. Loud 107 SOUTH SEVENTH 1LBT I5UILWXG Jack Nelston Chased Crippled Jackass All Over Hills of Algorha Jack Nelson, of Pelican City, took a hunting trip after mule tall deer last season. He had no luck, but on his return reported seeing many split tracks, which he knew had been made by mule tall deer. The men of Pelican City assured Jack that mule tall deer not only had itnils like, mules, but , that their hoofs were solid. . .. . A few d.10'9 later Nelson made a trip ' tl the hills ouck of Algonui, DtSSTOX SALESMAN HEItf) Bill Terrell, salesman for the Dls ston saw people, was making the mills tiii'.l camps sdjacont to Klam ath Falls last week in tho Inter, esta of his company. Mr. Proctor, trouble shooter for the Dlsston peo ple, accompanied Terrell. t and chased a poor crippled old Jack-1 ass that had been abandoned by j somo sheepherders all over tho hills I Although Nelston never caught sight I of the' Jackass, we understand that: ho Is bocomiiig a llttlo skeptical ; about those solid hoofed doer this , year. , ' MAN'HTRW w.wtkd Charlie Strom, ot Pelican Clfcy, declares that he would not mind going cat flslilug, If the fish would have themselves 'worked over by some cuto llttlo manicurist. COI'l'KK OX CHAIN Homer Coffoo, w-ho has boon gy pohig at Ewaniia' ciuiip. 'hits' veturh d,,t'ton.' Coffee I "working ' on 1"? Rwmjpa.Bvecu chilli, TAILORED CLOTHES are an economy made as I make them. J. V. LOFQUIST Tailor I 115 So. 9th St. Klamath Falls, Ore. Fine Materials ' 'Fifte Workmanship