Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1925)
EVENING riElTXt t), KtAMATH PXlh, OREGON SATttflbAV. .TUT.V n, inpg ews Of The Klamath 'Country l MIDLAND jr.Mrs. J. I). Hoopor and daughter i()al, Mr. and Mm. William Hooper fad daughter Virginia, were visitors vt tho home of Mr. and Mm. Ibfut Largent ou Sunday evening, i jMlna Helen and Esther Atchison feiro visitor on the Island Satur- lltt.T. I. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. West and family wore visitors on the island Bunday. Air. and Mrs. Howard Wynat and d&tighters Helen and Esther were tpuniuth Falls visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Hilbert Larsx-nt re visiting in the county scut Saturday. 3&r. and Mrs. I.ee Sutton and son James vera in Klamath Tails ut- , SAFETY 3 DRUGSTORE Nowhere are products of crliable qualitytaiore ie-:. 'veseary than in the sick room., Tj nse ;any others ifto flirt with danier. - Sterilized Gauze, Gauie Bandages, Clinical Ther mometers,. Surgfcal Plas otrs land Absorbent Cot ton to mention Just a few necessities are the finest brains and . money ah produce. Ye't the prices are very reasonable. Everything for Emergencies " Everywhere 3 STAR DRUG i, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON ! CAUTION j: The thin, extremely flexible balloon casing, repaired by the old methods, leaves a , hard, stiff section which ji throws the tire off balanco and quickly' ruins it. The j Hawklnson. System eliminates I this difficulty by making a re I' pair of remarkable strength fi yet Just as thin and pliable as ! the balloon tire. !' Badly Injured balloon tires ', are not "through" IP they I are ropalred the Hawklnson way. A trial will convince you. ' We guarantee each repair to j OUTLAST THE TIRE, or your I money back. All tires In spected FREE. qACE TIRE SH6P 115 South Eleventh Phone 93 We are specially equip ped to economically produce booklets and advertising folders. 1 V-.. W. O. SMITH Printing Company ."Quality Printing" tending to business this week. ; Mrs. J. D. Hoopor.t son-John and daughter Opal wore In the county seat Wednesday. The Midland girls hove orgnnired a canning rluh. They held their meeting at the home of thoir lead er. The girls who joined the club worn Mary Sevlck Pauline Hurnett .MarjorlK Calhoun, Anna Hurneu, Liicllo Calhoun, Vernlce Zetsman and Catherine Rurnett. The foll owing officers wero elected: Cuth erlno Burnett, president: I.ueile Calhoun, vice president; secretary. Vornice Zetiman. The tanning club girls will have their next meeting July 27. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flowers and fapilly and father and Mr. Travurs spent tho holidays at Crater lake, Frank Ball of Midland was a Klamath Falls visitor Tuesday. .Misses Ida and Augella Del Fnttl were Midland callers Monday. Charles Porter was calling on the island Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Furber and son spent the Fourth at the Klam- tth rodeo. The California Oregon Power Co. is building Its line from the S. L. Burnett ranch to the Largent ranch. Mr. Largent Is Installing a pump ing plant. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Calhoun and family and Mr. and Mrs. Stew art L. Burnett and family spent the Fourth on a picnic at Keno. Miss Marjory Calhoun spent the holidays with friends in Bonanza the past week. E. L. Hopkins was a caller( fn Midland Wednesday. . Albert Gregory Is hauling lumber this week. He Is planning a jiew bouse on his ranch on Miller island, which he recently bought from the Campbell tract. ' Mrs. Hubert Largent and Mrs. S. L. Burnett were calling in Hen ley district: on Tuesday. Mrs. Albert Gregory has been, on the sick list the past week. Miss Vera ice Zetsman and Miss Lucille Calhoun of Miller Hill dis trict were calling on Anna Burnett Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Arch Spence and family, accompanied ' by Elmer Dowden, spent the Fourth at the Klamath rodeo on Saturday. Mr.. Pauley of the Palace Meat market jaras callltrg on the Island Sunday. ' cAt the PINE TREE New husbands for old! Is that the modern cry,( or, is ,U only the habit of a few- extreme women of today, tired of staying at home, and having too much money, time and nervous energy to be con tented. Especially when the husband him Belf has lost interest in the woman! This is the idea woven around "The Marriage Circle," that marvel ous prodnction of the famed Ernest Lnbitsch, which we liave been for tunate to procure for a showing here. At the Pine Tree Sunday and Monday. In "A Self-Made Failure," at the Pine Tree Theater tonight, J. K. McDonald again scoreB a clean knockout. Those who saw his "Penrod and Sam" and "Boy of Mine" may be prepared to see even a better pic ture in "A Self-Made Failure." The production has everything es sential to a picture success story, direction, cast, acting, sets and pbotqgraphy. But most of all, and best of all, it has human appeal without which ho picture can Impress an audience. Being a farce-comedy It naturally has hokum and more than a bit of slapstick. These had been consid ered outside this producer's realm, but a study of "A Self-Made Failure" convinces that McDonald" has added more territory to his already vast domain of artistic ability. BOY DIES TO AID MOTHER cAt The LIBERTY A "motion picture" cowboy, all dolled up in - circus - clothes and "lookln' for trouble" an ex-gun- fighting sheriff the leader of a bandit gang a mob of lynch law maniacsthe daughter of a lonely homesteader a husky, mannish woman-a wizened, under-the-thumb husband action drama thrills comedy! At the Liberty Saturday. ' The big racn Bcene in Tom Mix's now William Fox production, "Oh, You Tony!" which will open at the Liberty Theater Sunday for a two day run, is punctured with thrills and excitement. Tom Is entered with his wonder horse Tony for the race, the winner of which gets $25,000. Due to the plotting of Earle Foxe and Dolores Rotisse, villain and as sistant respectively, Tom Is delayed In arriving unttl the last minute. It Is only because of a number of false starts that he succeeds In ar riving at all. A Kentuckian la the Inventor of a double walled garbage can, liquids that may leak from the Inner por tion being caught and trontpd with a germicide. " ?"'?,".' NEW YORK, July 11 Thomas J. Daly, Jr., B-yenr-old son of Patrol man Thomas J. Daly of the special sorvlce squad, died yesterday in Union Hospital, the Bronx, of burns received trying to beat out the flames in his mother's drvss. which had raiiKht fire from the .kitchen stove In thoir home. 230 2 Valentine avenue, the Bronx. Sirs. Daly is in Fordham Hospital in a serious condition. Her husband and daughter, Rita. 3, were painful ly burned on the face and hands. Daly was asleep In a front room of the apartment. Mrs. Duly and the children were superintending the cooking of a chicken, which was to furnish chicken sandwiches tor a pic nic later In the day. On a rack above the itas stove hung the wash. A sudden scream awakened the father. He ran out and saw his wife's cotton dress blazing and his older child frantically beatlnc at the flames with tiny hands. The kltehon was in flumes. Daly put out the flro In Mrs. Daly's and Tommy's clothes and picked up the children, one under each arm. He ran with them down four flights of stairs and through tho street two blocks to Union Hospital. Kelghbors rushed In and took care of Mrs. Daly and extinguished the fire. i Patrolman Daly was a flight ser geant in the A. E. F. and served six teen months in France. He became a member of the Police department soon after his discharge from ser vice. , By diverting the upper waters of the Euphrates river into a lake it is proposed to bring 1.000,000,000 acres of desert land in Irak under cultivation. 'KODAK FINISHING Peasley's Opposite Court House Stray Cats And k l , '., Dogs Seek Homes NEW YORK, July 10. Four llltlo yellow cats, living in a .iro In the department for strays at tho Ellin Prince Rpeyer hospital for animals, at 350 I.afuyetto street, nra hoping that some kind persons are In nood of four excellent mourcrs with beau tifully marked coats. So at loust one may Interpret tho wistful look in their big eyes. They are mule kittens, only eight weeks old, but house broken and well behaved, They were born In .the hospital. Their mother died", but Old Mother, a feline atteudant win earns her catnip aud chopped beef by the devotion with which, she nurses overy litter of orphaned kittens that happens along, brought tiliem up. They are now xeady for adoption, A number of other .flue cats, ns welt Us some attractive dogs, are anxiously waiting for homes. Among the dogs Is a handsome black colllo that was picked up ou lowor Broad war some days ago. It U thought that 'he was lost from some 'wugon or automublle from tho country, but his owner has not appeared. He would make nice pet for some one hi the suburbs. c4UTO P arts Weak valve springs ' cause a sluggish motor and loss of power a good stock" at VanDykes Parts Co. With the Hub Tire Shop 502 S. Olh. Phone OlO New parts for all cars WOOD Summer weather has molted down the price of .... Block-Wood to the . extreme bottom. Low summer prices are now on. Don't hesitate but buy your winter's wood now. There will be no cheaper prices. Green Slabs Orders are coming In for that good cheap wood green slab. Our trucks are delivering the best green slab we have ever sold. Order a years supply of blocks, and green slab, and you are safe you can get no better wood. Peyton & Co. "Wood to burn" 601 Main Phone S3S LEONARD HALL IS BACK TO KLAMATH FREE ONCE AGAIN With tho threat of tho heavy arm of Justice removed and with nobody but friends to greet him back to Klamath, Leonard Hall returned this morning, a free man. Through the intervention of friends and the Indefatigable, work of tho Moose lodge, ho was released from tho Michigan Stato reformatory without serving out his complete time. v. When Hall was 15 years of ago he escaped from tho reformatory, where he was serving a sentence for attempted robbery. With the vow to go straight, he wandered to Klam ath Falls, and since coming here has secured a Job, married and now is the father of a baby son. Last spring, , through the local police department, he was appre hended and returned to Michigan to serve out the remainder of his sen tence. Successful pleas of his friends and a letter from Governor Pierce resulted in his dismissal, SCOPES m HALTED TODAY Overland Overland Overland H3' C 8 O WORLD'S LOWEST PRICED CAR With Sliding Gear Transmission 5 Passenger Totrririg V. . .'. ; . ... . . .648 Roadster 648 Coupe (all steel body) 825 2-Door Sedan (all steel body) 850 4-Door Sedan (all steel body) ... 950 2-Door Sedan, 6 cylinders 1095 4-Door De Luxe Sedan, 6 cylinders . . 1355 , (Prices in Klamath Falls) 52 Weeks to Pay u i OVERLAND-KNIGHT SALES CO. 4th and Klamath ' Phone 499 t TTTTTTTTfTTTtTtTttTttVttTttTV r a a O o o I Overland Overland Overland (Continued From Page One) Hall's Catarrh Medicine :T- rid, your system of Catarrh or Deaftwa" caused by Catarrh. . Sold by druu "uu for ent 40 yah 9. I CIIENEY & CO- TUda. OhV STOCKS AND BONDS We solicit Inquiries to buy or sell any marketable listed local or un listed securities. . Actlvo market for Durant - Star, Flint and Rickenbacker Motor is sues; Public Utilities. Prompt attention given all orders. Cash paid for purchases; nb delay. Quotations furnished. HOOD BROTHERS 6 -Chnnibor of Commerce Dld. ' ' ' Portland, Ore. " v1 or not Scopes taught that man descended from a lower form of animal. The administration of the oath to the Jury Monday, followed by the reading of tho indictment and the arraignment of the defendant, will bring the apposing contestants to gether. Symptoms of such a clash were revealed several times yesterday in the objections of Mr. Stewart to the manner of questioning pursued by Clurence Darrow In examining prospective Jurors. Mr. Stewart, both at a brief exchange of views of opposing attorneys and 'during the selection of the Jury, objected strenuously to tho injection Into the trial of anything which would indicate that it would develop into an attempt to reconcile the theory of evolution . with the Bible.. - Case Outlined ' In a statement to tho Associated Press last night ho said: "Since the defenso has mado known its posi tion concerning the competency of tho proposed evidence of scientists tending to show that there Is no conflict between evolution and the Bible, I think it but right thnt our position should also be definitely stated and that it might be under stood that we Intend to back our program as vigorously as we know how." Continuing, he said It was his understanding that Scopes would not deny he taught the high school students that man descended from a lower order of animal. Law Violated ' "If this be true," he said, he is guilty of the violation of the law and all the evidence of the scient ists within his reach cannot save him. The law Itself says that It shall hot be taught to the students in tho public schools that man de scended from a lower order of ani mal." ' Whether or hot scientists nilght be brbiight Into cotirt to expound the belief that man descended from a lower order of animal by the process 'of God's creation, ho fult would mako no dlfforcnco, declar ing tho law says such cannot be taught. Production of expert 'witnesses by bbth sides, he said, , would lead to a "never-ending proposition and would In tho end bo bttt a babblo ofitbu&uos," ' ' ' ' ' - I'l ....Jrf. - " : ; J' 'Racine- ' ' "VtsT 1 1 'multi-mile , J; No Axe to Grind , ... i . Perhaps your tire problem has to do with air pressures; perhaps you wonder whether you should equip with low-pressure tires of standard size, or balloons. ' . . We are in a position to advise you fairly and without prejudice because Racine builds -and we sell both kinds, . ... Moreover, both kinds equally uphold RACINE'S reputation for building first quality products only. MOTOR INN GARAGE 230 Main Phone 294-J t ' ' i . , . . ,-. I . - - ' 1- c A " ' Report of the Comptroller of the Currency 1 X 1 (Condensed) , . of the condlttea of 4 - THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK f X of Klamath Kails, Orojton V. V ' , AT TilK CL09K OK UUSINl-'.SS, JUNE 30, 102B -. ' Resources ' S' '. " X ' Hills Receivable $1,522,351.41 J t U, 8. Bonds- 6IS.n00.00 ' . V J Othor bonds, wnmmts and socurltlos 106,600.60 ' '' X Kodernl Roservo Stock - OOO.OO .Real Estate Furniture and Fixtures 8M;1o!g8- jf V Five per cent Redemption .fund 6,000.00 V Cosh on hand and duo from banks . 780,484.42 J ' ! $3,020,601.09 V ! Liabilities A Capital 'Stock ..$200,000.00 X X Surplus and undivided profits .14,894.67 j , Circulation : , ; 100,000,00 ' y. ' Deposits A. 2,091,807.43 - J- '"' $3,026,601.99 If' I The First National Bank f i .... ; Resources Over $3,000,000.00 ' - ' ' ' ' 'Members Federal Reserve System l &j $ g; .. . .