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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1925)
EVENING HERALD, Til -AM A TH FALLS, OREGON FRIDAY, JUT.Y . 1025 ;i'i Nobody 'Loves a Fuf Guy," Anyhow A Great Life If You 1W t; Weaken , ...... .,-.-sx Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Herald Publishing Company. Office ill 19 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Fails, Ore. ,Mf AW-rWA nc Al I I. I MlN'l ncn. ncv i E. J. MURRAY . W. II. PERKINS . Publisher News Editor '.' '. '. - ''6- No -aw Entered as second class matter at he postoffice at Klamath Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. , . l ; , ,'.,.'i.f r..j -w- v 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 published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches here 's are also reserved. TOC ANYONE I TAG 15 SIX 7 77 The Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath County and the City of Klamath Falls. ' ' SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Carrier One Tear 5 fill Month; : ; 3-60 Three Month! 1-95 One Month s FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1925 CONGRATULATIONS Management of the BIy Rodeo association is to be commended for the manner in which events at Klamath Falls greatest Rodeo were handled this year. Last season some comment was heard on the manner in which events were handled. Delays found the crowd growings impatient and general public' criticism was voiced. ' !. . " ' ' The opening day of the Rodeo this year has served amply as a demonstration that somewhere in the organi zation a change has taken place a big change for the better. ' Not only was event after event pulled off on s'cheduV time, but the events themselves were interesing and well handled. ; , - '.'"'' With one exception every horse in the bucking con tests bucked 'and nearly every rider put up a good ride. The races were ran off snappily and were real races. Similar management today and on the Fourth will no more than any other thing to put the Rodeo game in Klamath Falls back on its feet and insure it the coopera tion it deserves. : Klamath Falls is growing rapidly in prominence as a tourist city and a well-managed Rodeo such as this has ! been on its first day will do much to establish it in the minds of the traveling public as a town wherein visitors in July may expect to see one of the things for which the west is noted a real Rodeo. CALIFORNIA NORTHBOUND California tourists looking for t new scenery, new greenery and cooler air are coming north now by, auto and rail in daily increasing numbers. Oregon has enough attractive scenery and other good offerings to hold visitors all summer. We would like to have them But Oregon is aware of greenery and cool air to De iouna norm auu.jei iiumci north. Washington, with its great mountains, its ramb ling Sound, its matchless system of concrete highways and its aggressive cities, has much to offer to the dust laden, sun baked traveler from drier, hotter climes. Beyond Washington lies British Columbia, a veritable wonderland of tumultuous mountain sceneiy with a magnificently unforgettable sea frontier. Anyone who has gone from California "to Washington for outdoor joys and thrills should go on to British Columbia. No - one has seen all of the best in American scenery who has not spent time in. British Columbia.. . ... On the return trip let California stop another while in Oregon to see some big and beautiful scenes she miss ed bh the northbound trip. It is impossible to exhaust the great attractions of Oregon on one or two or two score trips. me igicgiaui . The Champion Cowgirl of the West 0 m warnm ti4 I.orona Trlckey is niiiklnp a big Iflt ' vwlh Ilodeo fans. , Hortrlck riding, race riding and broneh busting Are tho beat ever done hero' or jm)vh(!rJ elso by o wonum. She's a tsuow till by liorucU, RATES Rr Mall One Tear ..J5.00 .. i.75 1.60 . .15 Six Months Three Months One Month the fact that scenery and -., i4 Ritchie Will Make Effort to Come Back When He Fights Murphy Tomorrow Night All the knuckle pushers who take part in the big Fourth of July boxing card at Scandinavian hall to morrow night wound up their heavy work last night and are ready to punch and be punched when the referee brings them together in the resin-dusted ring. ' Earl Ritchie, once pride of Klamath, says he is going to stage a come-back or go down trying when he faces Frankie Murphy m the mam event which is scheduled to go 10 rounds, i So far as class goes this is one bout that would draw the bugs in any city on the coast, and if Ritchie can stand up for 10 rounds against the clever New Orleans heavyweight he will have staged a mighty come-back in the yes of his friends. 1 Murphy met up with a little bail I ' 1 luck after his Indian convention lutes they will bo oarnlng tholr flro flght last week, but he's now back cracker money. In condition again and will have no ! Somebody ought to topple In the excuses to offer if the Klamath Falls wrangle between Heinle Myers and big boy stows him away. But that j Wilbur Harrington. Myers drop is something very few battlers have ped three times In tho first round been able to do in spite of his lack of weight In the heavyweight class. Johnny Carlson, who meets Kid Starkey In the Bix-round semi-wind-up Is a pleasing little battler who keeps wading in despito the one-twos to the jaw. Cool as cucumber, Carl son never knows when to quit, and ought to give the Chlco mauler plenty of action during the 18 min- Harry Greb Wins Over Mickey Walker in 15 Slashing Rounds NEW YORK, July 3.The world's mufdlewelght ring crown was still snugly fitted to the head of Harry Oreb today after 15 tempestous rounds of fighting with Mickey Walker, welterweight king. It was the final bout of four thrilling struggles for charity last night in the ring of the Polo Grounds marked by two stunning knockouts. Harry Wills, veteran negro-heavyweight challenger, took only two rounds to dispose of the Newark come-back, Charley Weinert. Jimmy Slattery, sensational Buf falo, N. Y. middleweight, fell an un expected victim to a furious attack from the Golden Gato centered in the fast flying fists of Dave Shade. Floored three times In the third round, Slattery was saved from a ten count when Ills seconds tossed in the towel. , , , Jack Sharkey and Joe Lynch, rival veteran, bantnms, fought a four round draw. For 13 rounds of a bruising mill with Walker, Greb fought at close quarters. Then he cut loose. Coming out of his corner In the 14th, with a terrific right, he spun the challenger around with a blow to the jaw. Another right found tho same mark as Walker went to the ropes, and for the first tlmo since he became champion of the 147 pounders, the Elizabeth, N. J. boy waB staggered and groggy. Greb leaped upon Walker and drove hlin from rope to rope. The challenger, his face bleeding from steady pounding, strovo to. protect himself and then, In one final effort, he lashed out with right and left at the astonished Greb. The rally kept the middleweight Desperate when they met hero a month ago, and then came back in Iho second canto and put the Indian down for tho count. They bad tho funs standing on their feet, and will do it again ff they put up the same sort of a scrap. A four-round preliminary will be added today by Matchmaker Brown ie. . champion at bay until tho bell, and ho went vigorously after a knock out In the IStli, but Instead of a wilting foo, ho found a wounded lion. Six times Walker ripped sledgo-hammer drives fhlo "tho Pitts burgh man's stomach until Greb, recovering, went back at his oppon ent. Tho crowd of 65,000 was electri fied by a spectacle of two champions belting each other. Thus tho final bell found them Greb majoHtlc In a clever and decisive victory over a foe he outweighed at lf9 by seven pounds; .Walker, great In an exhibi tion of fighting pluck which cost him none of his prestige as a cham pion welterweight. ." , , Tho bottle had the spectators on their toes throughout with Its speed. Walker, a dangerous, hitter at a dis tance, was given fav opportunities to mix as ho would like to have done. Greb quickly took tho fight to close quarters. ' Where ho used his weight and every trick he knew to outscoro Walker with a flying right that never, ceased In Its wind mill Journey. 1 Wills, who has for several years perched patiently on Jack Dempsoy's doorstep, han muscles that arc still limber and strong. At 213 pounds he hnd a 28 Vj pound weight advan tage on Wolnert. Wills quickly put Weinert on Hie defensive In tho first round, and then finished lilm lifter one minute and 45 seconds of the second. Perhaps Jack Koarns took note If he sneaked into the light from which the' state eommlHslon barred him hecnuso ho would not match Wills and Dempsey. Jimmy Rlnttory'B defeat gavo tho crowd Its greatest shock of tho hlght.- SliUtery had been winning spec- tucuhtr flchta In New York una Was a HtrnnR fuvorlte. The clever Slut- tory could not solvo the crouching, bouncing, Coldeu (into culgmn. A sharp left hook In the Srd ciuulit Slnttery mpiaroly on tho button nnil ho went down, to cotno up at the count of nlno. Down ho went twice more, Then, hs he was stumbling around the ring,-a towel fluttered from his corner. ""They weighed: Shade. 1S3; Slat tery 162 !. Stewards Daily Letter ' WASTIIN'CTON. 'July ' 3. Coot Idgo has forgotten Oklahoma." This was gutting to be quite a slngun nmong "sooner state" republicans. Job after Job tins come up In Washington to he filled, but no Oklnhomuns woro picked to fill any of them. Again und itga'.n tney thought they had a dandy candidate. Time after tlmo It looktd ns If their man was sure to win out. Just as regulurly, somebody else nosed In ahead of hi in at tho last minute. . This went on until Oklahoma republicans began , to show signs of considerable fractious ness, which was alarming, Okla homa being a very doubtful Htnto politically, with a senator to elect next year, not to mention eight congressmen. ' But Coolldgo hadn't forgotten. Ho simply wns waiting for a duly qualified . Oklahoma candidate's name to be submitted to him for a nice fuderal appointment. . When, finally, such a candidate did turn up, tho president prompt ly nnmed him asslstunt attorney genernl in charge of government land litigation. , He's Burt M. Parmonter. The mysterious qualification? Oh, he's a native , Vormontor. Bethel's his "old homo town" about 15 miles from the Coolldgo place. . Also in Attorney Ocnoral Sargent's nock of tho woods. Par mentcr lived there until ho was 20. . i For all his New England origin and accent, Parmcntcr's a thorough Okluhoman now. lie landed on the site of Lawton 24 years ago. Tho Hlto nlouo was there at tho tlmo. "The Kiowa, , Comancho and Apncho reservation," ho explains, "hnd Just been opened to settle ment. Tho government hart cut tho land Into farms, to bo drawn for. "In ihelr midst tho town of Law- ton hud been decreed and stnked out In city lots. They woro auc tioned off." ' "That town certainly wns mado to order," Parmonter reminisced "At the - beginning of the week virgin wilderness. By mld-wook a thriving little tented city of about 800U! "I wasn't quick enough to get a number for the farm lottery, bo thero was nothing for mo to do but buy a town lot, pitch my tent on It und settle down to fcrnctlco law. ; "There was precious llttlo of It for tha first few weeks a llttlo federal authority, but not much, and no local organization at all." The man who failed to put o nickel In tho' plata will toll tho preacher it was a fine nermou. KlillliK the ii ii' r t n t buck of it wild M.'rr is cr.Mil 1 1 1. if you dnii't wmiki'ii. A loiipln of liiii-hMruim iriid It yoslri'iluy with Imd n-nulls. Others will try It tmlnv nnil tomornnv. SE ADIILKSTONK. Hurrny, England. July 3. (Pi What he dnirlli' an "tho luxy hul.lt of wlrulen'i'! bus been strongly denounced by the Ituv. A. (.'limine vlr.ir of Addle stone, In his purlin maxuiltm. "There Is no longer the packed church to which wo have linen ac customed during Lent." asserts the vicar, "and tho reason fur tills Is tho wireless. "Anybody who thlnlm he run worship Cod by lulling hack In an easy chair and listening by radio to the beautiful singing of the choir nt Kt. Ho-nud-Ho's, or thu oratorical ef feels of the 'lllnluip of Kum chntkn,' Is simply living in a fool's parndlso. True worship demiiuds sacrifice. I'eoplo who urn too Inxy to go upstairs and put their tilings on und comn to tho house of Coil on God's day ore grossly neglecting their duty. "Ve face tho fact that lu'wlruleiu hus been fi.'inil another powerful recruit added to tho phalanx or counter ntlrnulotis which. In their various wnys, niilliiuo to keep tho people out of the churches." Thu Ilrltlxn broadcasting com pany, which controls most of tho wireless entertainment in the Lon don area, hus recently declined to broadcast Sunday sermons, except ing on raro occasions, hern u ho of the objections of ministers that their congregations would bo ma terially reduced If tho practlco was followed generally. Poor Teeth Held jBad For England i i LONDON, July 3. () During tho Inst few generations tho tooth of tho nation have been getting steadily worse, according to J. II. said Mr. Budcock, it ftp pen rod that address to tho 45th nnnunl meet ing of tho British Dental associa tion, contended that tho strength of tho country Is being supped by den ial disease. Bad teeth, ha said, was onu of tho results of civilization, and roughly speaking, tha nearer pcoplo got buck to nature tho better the teeth. been strongly denounced by tho 50 or 00 years there had been a great change In tho nation's food, and that tho Increase In population and tho concentration In' cities hud Involved tho Importnllon of mora food, largely 'canned or proservod. Tho softness of modern food, Mr. Budcock believed, failed to provide that friction and cleansing to which gums should lie naturally subject In tho mustlcutlon of hard foods, Taking tho nation as a whole, rector of tho Pan-Pacific Union and at least 85 per cent of tho popula tion under 20 years of age, and an Increasing perceiitugo over that age, woro suffurers from dental diseases. Thero was ft higher Incidence among women than men, "Dental dlseaso wns to be found among nil civilized people," averred I ho spc'ik ur," but wo In these Islands un doubtedly exhibit -a Imd pro-eminence. II. Is Slipping llm strength of tho nation," Promptness and efficiency are Madam 'n Pnnnrln's watchwords. j Moo's Beauty Hhoppo. Adv. 2U-0 1 The Plaster That Sticks or Mends Almost Anything You run uh It n mend a limp shade r n hiinebnll but. I w'nd a golf stick or n tennis racket, t; il the crack In n window ptno, tu Insulate your radio Hires. In handy and no valuable In mail)' wuys, m home, offlro ship, am i, cunipi:r's k't or lnveler's bag n't nilil bo .without It. The Plaster That Sells Faster STAR DRUG 7710 SSi KLAMATH FALLS, OHl'GON HOSE A guaranteed non-klnkabln, moulded hoxo at less than tho price of ordinary bono. Flvo miles of thin hosn now In uso In Kliiinnth Falls, There's a reason. Invosllgato before you buy. Try LORENZ CO. ' Firat . Phone 371 ' V On Gth near Main j Headquarters for Garden Hose Beautiful Eyes Are Admired by Iivoryolio BUT :' Hqtilnly Eyes, Eyes With Tied or Inflamed Lids, i ., ,. Are not nlco to look at. '' Glass wonrers usually havo bright, clear, simppy eyes, showing that tho strain is re lieved. Come In and let u.'i tell you the cause nnd remedy. DR. GOBLE 701) MAIN Kvcs ' . masse Examined .Fitted Ilepnlrs Quick Hervlco