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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1925)
PAGE SIX EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SATURDAY. AUGUST 1, 192 Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Herald Publishing Company. Office: ""119 N. Eighth Street. Klamath Falls. Ore. E. j. MURRAY Publisher ,W. H. PERKINS .... , News Editor Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Klamath Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 189. 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 !n are also reserved. rr B I " 1 The Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath County and the City of Klamath Falls. SUBSCRIPTION R A T K S Delivered by Currlsr U Mall One Year . - - 6.50 . Cna TM - Hit Months! .50 8tl Months Throe Monthi 1-95 i Three Mouths . One Month .- - - 65 ' One Month - J5.00 .76 1.50 .ft SATURDAY. AUGUST 1. 1925 T MAKING PROGRESS The courts of the metropolis of Oregon have recently agreed among themselves a cooperative plan that they will inflict the legal penalty on drunken driver of autOS upon convictions in said courts. Bravo, bravo ! The plain law that has been on the statute books of this state for several moons and which has been ignored time after time is to be enforced. It is, indeed, encouraging. It is even glorious news, and a step forward in good government. The influence of this determination to administer the law legally and without exception will spread abroad. Over in Chicago they have already caught the spirit. Colonel Henry Barret Chamberlain, operating detective for the "Windy City's" crime commission declared only yesterday in a survey of crime conditions as they exist in large cities: "The crime problem can be solved only when citizens make clear to law enforcing authorities that they must solve it in accordance with their sworn duty or give way to other officials who will." Commg from a high official in the department of law enforcement, this placing all responsibility of driving law enforcing officials upon the public's shoulders is surely illuminating. Pay 'em for the work and then force 'em to do their sworn duty is the slogan suggested by the distinguished Chicago officer. The Governor of Oregon in a special press dispatch recently urged enforcement of law! a capitol city judge sentenced today for moonshine operations a certain er ring son of Adam to one whole long year in the peni tentiary and imposed a fine of one thousand dollars. The law makes headway and men fear the results of crime only as officials make enforcement their first sworn duty. And every example of enforcement suc ceeds in reducing crime and compliments the faithful for duty fully performed Ashland Tidings. If you want to get in the movies, just go out to the ball game tomorrow afternoon. The movie camera is going to shoot the whole crowd. Boof we. voo 9 f?e. I SEEM P 1 FHA.E I MOWJ HCVM P i seem smrrw' BUU.S LAST STAWD VU SE.GU GJVM-HE -SAT BAMC-r AFTW , 1" KNOVMS I I HON DECK -tiO-BuV WE STOOD TOO MUCH . TtU. ME VNE.M VYS.OVAJM,1 Wfc. MOW But a CQWW6 SO OCT TOM BE op poutr. so Kin CrO OOVoU. ! n n a ..Ter. v stiffs. v 1 s IMXHIUHITWU In ( ITI Ml'H. I, call M lit 1 1 It of the Iiii'iiI rliniuhor of romuiurcc ol'fliv Ik in Acatpl uf litter from Mr. B Uoyd, old time rcsUlunl of tlilii oily, who In now yIhIUiik with her flnUKll lor, Mm. W. M, Wmtnucr of Now York city, aWlUl for literature on Khiiiiutlt PftUli iih ninny eastern people ara maklna lno,ulrlo About uiir ally, FIRST UKOHOIA CAB Mr. anil Mis, A. I. I'mslier IDO fninlly ara the first tOUrlata to Mu tator in tha Ally from tha fur louth orn nt.it of Qeorgla. Prom ROXANfM Grace and Xltoo Lytla of iionnn tn nro among tio buitnaai rlnttora ttara today, PROM HTOOKTON .i Wallace and family or Btoi h ion, California, urn maklni a mur I of southern Oration. l.llllM I.AKICVIHW Mr and M:-. ii W BtapWiiaon or Lakavlaw ipant (rl(fty in Uta olty on buituau tnattira, Mona Onnvai Olovui, good alRht, pin. lor ItOi K In 111 ut ll K lot lit ii K Rotnnany. KAv, si0 KROM RHAtTV i h'. J, Behntldi, raiAbv: lioatty country, i in the on hualnea mattnra. Of till' Ity iinii i STOCK8 AND DOnDB wa mill' ii rwinMai to tmy or null any uarkatabla iinid loot or un- I Im( till .miriirltli'ii. (tOttva maTkflt for Piiritnt tUttr, Pltnt mid Rlokonbaokar Motor i iaoa; I'ubllo Utllltloa, Prompt attontlon lvan nil orilora, Oaab paid for parabaaaaj ho i"i,tr. Quotatlooi turotabad, HOOD liKO'l'lltJltM h Chain bai of Ooittilaniroa ihIk. Portland Oro, KltOM I'llltl I.WII Ann and Sarah Oorrlo of lortlfnd ! tint Kiit'nti .it i hi' Wlilio I'i'll. aii I today, vJ.h'v.'.U.iAwa OK POUTIjAND H, P. Wah.h nrr-lvctl In tttf Olty j thiti attarnon frnm pofttaad mm la stoppiiiK in tha hotol Whit PalU tin. Stewart's Daily Letter Do- your bit or your two-bits for the street signs. Go out to the benefit ball game at the fair grounds tomorrow afternoon. The Medford bunch may win the ball game, but Klamath Falls will get the money; and that's the main thing after all. See you at the game. S Sideswipes at Headlines . MILT SW.IRTWOOT) BATTER IMP Oh, Skinny, come on over, the Peacock Alley Tigers are playin' the '23d Street Wild Cats this afternoon. At half past one, on Sunday next The Herald baseball team elects To trounce the Medford Mail Tribune In a trial to heal the raw, red wound That , Medford save some months ago. (That Modtord team is not so slow) 11 ii L now the rivals meet again, With all eighteen of mighty men Right on their toes and full of vim. To contradict the umpire' whim, Or even catch a hall or two,. Miss a dozen, and bat a few. Two hits admission at the gate, llrlng all your friends and don't he lato. 'I'he reason of these paltry lines, Is this, The Herald believes in Signs. Flat on his back, and his friends all ran, And didn't stop for a mile or so. To find to their horror they had his dough. And with this mora!, my story ends, It's a risky job to drink with friends. When a man's discouraged. When he' sad and blue. He wants to find a change in life .Hon't blame him much, do you? A plane with opportunity, Is what he wants to find. And when he sees the plac h wants Me soon makes up his mind. And coming to Klamath Seems the best thing he can do. And so he comes and settles down non't blame him much, do you? Every once in a while you run across some poor misguided man who thinks the Klamath country Is the worst this side of Death Valley, liut you can't kid the Owens valley farmers one little bit. B) CHAKIiKS 1'. STEWART JfKA Service Writer WASHINGTON. July 31. Is Rus sia's soviet regime :trying to flood the world with such a deluge of bogus paper money counterfeits too good for even an expert to tell from the real thing that govern ment bills and hank notes presently will cease to he worth anything? It seems like a large order. Nevertheless, the story comes from Kurope that the soviet folk are attempting to fill it. The Russian information bureau in Washington which protease to be purely commercial, without po litical interests, but is the nearest the soviet government has to any thing like diplomatic representation here- takes enough notice of the report to say It isn't true. However, the bureau might be expected to itay that anyway, true or otherwise. That's part of Its job. ' The European version is that the game's been going on for some time, first from IVtrograd, then from Moscow and. now from Kazan or Novgorod. It's asserted tha uioncys made in imitation of the currency of the country it's in&nded to be circulated In. that it's used for the double purpose of financing the Third Internationale s im mediate interests in capitalistic realms and ultimately of diluting their genuine currencies into worth lessness. This campaign, if it really is being v.agt 'l, may caue a lot of-in- cbnvenience, to say the least. Ben counterfeits that wouldn't fool a bank cashier, if beyond detection by the average individual and nu merous enough, would embarass trade frightfully. Imagine how annoying it would be never to dare to accept a Lull without submitting it to an expert first. Washington officials don't seem worried, but some of the European governments unquestionably are. The French, in particular, say, "We know there's no mistake about it, tor here are the phony lulls, turning up right along." "How do you know they're phony if they deceive even experts?" is the natural query. "Well, all but the very best ex perts." insist the French. H isn't, impossible the secret service is keeping a sharp eye out for the appearance of -any suspicious-looking paper on this side of the water, too. Its operatives wouldn't say so, if they were. They eschew brass bands. Nut attady. Walnuts Mo, i 'jHO; Filhe-u :.' niin.il; almonds) MJT27; Rraill nuts lSffL'U; Italian j t'aestnuts 21. ' i Hops steady, 92t crop 1 C fi I"; 1923' ai p nominal. Oaicarra bark quiet eft': Oregon grape root SJtc. s Partial Payment Klamath Featured Plan Adopted In ' m oiaie magazine j Inauguration of the American Nominal at. Telephone and Telegraph Company thrift plan for the purch of com- I pany stock on partial payment ar- rOItTLAND. Aug. 1 Cattle. 75; rangements will he effective In compared week igti All classes gen- I Klamath Falls Saturday through an erally steady; week's bulk prices: nfflco authorized by the Stato t'or Reet steers. $6."5ftS: a few at ! poratlon Commissioner. F. It. Punn. $S.25fi S.DO: heifers. M.50iff6; iijocal manager of the Pacific Tele few upward to S.5U; cows. J.1.50 f phone und Telegraph company, an nounced the new plan today. Kliiuuith will be the "lead" uli Ji't of the magazine, "Oregon fills- Incss." in Hi" September Issue, nr.. Carding to Lynn P. Sabln, secretary ' Of the rhumbor of commerce, who! received a communication I" I lis eftuci I.U yo-Herda. ufleraooii. ll i expected that Crater Lake will he1 featured mi the oner of the ning- ulna, CAUTION The thin, extrerudy flexible balloon casing. roPftlfid by III" old iiiethoili, loaves a hard, stiff section which throws the lire off palnOQl and quickly rulm It. Thl Itnwkitison Byatom ellmlnati'ii this difficulty by m iking a re pair of remurkalil" utreuMih .yet Just lis thin and pllnhl" a III" balloon tiro. Badly Injured balloon lire nro not "through" IF thait are repaired the IlawkinHOO Way, A trial Will convince you. We guarantee h repair to ODTLAfJT TIIK TI It K, or your money back. All tires In npected FHKH. g4CE TIRE SHOP 115 South Eleventh We'll have those street signs yet. I-'auioiis Strikes Lucky Strike. Coal Strike. Third Strike. That's out and She smokes cigarettes, she drinks ! all. THE END. bud liquor, the powders, she paints, and slays out all night, hut. she's my grandmother anil I love ner. i AliltlVE i'ltOM j'ORTLA.Vi) (Cottage Drove man loses his bank toll) A shot of moon, or niaybo two, And it's hard to toll what the stuff will do, J.ai.l It. K. Rollout', business man, .Mr::. .!. R, McCarnei and son Jack arrived here Friday from Portland to join Mr. McCarnei, who has been here for the past two months. The Portland family plan to reside In Klamath Falls. MARKETS PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 1. Eggs extra cent higher, current reeolptfl 21); puMets 27 27 Mi; firsts 281. 28 ',4; extras 30H31 delivered Portland. Itutter steady. Extra icubes, city 47 'z ; standards 47; Prime firsts 45; girsts 44; Undcrgrades nomin al; prints 4 8; cartons GO. Hutlerfut steady. Rest churning cream 47c net shippers track ill Z.0HU 1. Poultry, llgcit weak, heavy, col ored stock steady; Ducks higher. Heavy hens 24 25; light 18(19; springs 19125; Young white ducks 2U(ffi22. Onions steady. 4 4.50. 1'otatoeB stesdy, new 1.70 2.00, 08.15; hulls, mostly, 51.00; few at 15.110; best light real calves. 111, less desirable kinds. $5.50 Hi S. 00 ; feeder steers. 5.256.00. Hogs, compared week ago: Hatch ers, mostly 25c higher; pigs, un changed. Week's bulk prices: De sirable weight butchers. $15?fi 15.25: practical top. $15.25: n few at $15.35 ft 1 5.50; weightier klnile. largely J 11.50 lit 1 5.00: pigs most ly $11.004514.50. Sheep, 75: compared week ago: All classes firm; strictly choice Mt. Adams lambs, $12.50: on contract: medium to good valley lambs. $10. ..?r 11.50: a few $11.75 12: fat yearlings, $7K; aged wethers, 18,5(1496. 50: u few ewes ot $4 ft 5. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. I .---Eggs, firm: receipts and first up cent; Current receipts. 29 l-2: dozen; pullets. 27 1-2W28C; firsts, :il 1-2 32e; extras, 33 33 l-2c de livered Portland., Itutter. firm: scarce; extras, cubes up l-2c; ex tra cubes, city, 4801 standards, 47c; prime firsts, 40c; firsts, 43 l-2c; iindi rgrades, nominal; prints, 48c; canons, 50c; Hutterfat, firm, scarce Best churning cream 47c net ship per's track In zone one. Poultry, light poultry, weak; low er trend; heavy breeds steady. (Less 5 per cent commission). Heavy hens. 24c; light, 10c; springs, tDKPZDCi young wnue I ducks, 22c. Vegetables, spuds, onions, steady. Onions, 445fl; potatoes, new', $2 2.15; lettuce, $1.25 fi 1.40; spin ach, 75c crate; radishes, 20 25c per doz.; garMc, 17 1-2CJ cauli flower, $1.75; cabbage. 3tc lb. Peas 8 10c; beans, 7c pound. Nuts, quiet. Walnuts, No. 1, 28 01301! pound; filberts, nominal; al monds. 2 5 if 27c lb.; Brazil nuts, I S 'a 20c pound. Italian chestnuts, 21c pound. Hops, 1921 crop nominal at 20c. Cascara bark, nominal; buyers out. of market. Oregon grape root, I -2c pound. ... 1 I The local tolophonc office win a hmneh uf Hi.- n.'ii Tefepnorioll BoClaffUoi eompany. which wn fArm- j . ii several vfiirH arro to pIonor ilw-'J direct ftlop ami partial payment e.-tr. Kvtv finnluV'- or Hi. 'IVlmihtm 6blBpaiiy will b a nalonmun tor the Sccnrltli'H company and will ink- apr J ptH-aitouM tor purOliaao of the btOCR on oltln r a casta Ot partial payment basiH. Since a scparuty waIch forc wUJ not be malntainvd tln;r win be ao added cost in operating the thrift plan. 1'rior to extenaloii of thli arrflaxce- meni t' )nKon, pnronaaerj of A, T. & T. Htock had heen forcnt to make ( direct purcttasee tbrout h hrokurn. Dnnn jinnouii cd that tftfl partial payntont option provlilcd for draft- j Iiik or cdotracti providing for pay-I ftjent of $ 10 por Khnro pot month. I 9 lnt(?rHt of iix percent on nil partial j J payment! win be avowed and in tbe ! sYont of a purchaaer deetreti to ran-1 5 eel hl.i aKrconii-iU, hft moniy will he j r-turned plun four porcont. If "The eioek purchased Ih not now j or tn-uHiiry .stock", Hald Dunn, "hut -in Htock that 1ms hocn InHuftd and listed on thn Now York iitoclc ex change and 1m bought for purehafiorH through bro!;'rs who urn niotnherH of ' (lie exchange."" Second Annual Harvesters Dance At Morrill Community Hall Hay's all up Wo want to step FRIDAY AUGUST 7th We use "Velox" only for ALL Kodak Work. Kodak work in at 9 a. in. out at 5 p. m. same day ,'(itiniinin.iiivn.Kimin MUNICH. The rocont census takon In Bavaria shows tho popula tion to bo 7,898,677. Tho total represents an Increase of 343,211 Imso 1919 and of 51 0, 440 since 1910. AUTO PARTS Quality Piston Rings and Mackay Valves Will put New Heart in your Car A good stock at VANDYKES PARTS CO. 502 S. Gth. Phone 016 "New pnrU for all cars' Hie Hub Tiro ShpP" Weather Forecast For Week Is Given I I t f T T ? 1 SAN FRANCISCO, Aub. 1. TJie 'E weather bureau forecast for the efllulng week for the Pacific co.ist J W as follows: Fair in interior: C insiilerablo ! & OlOUilfnOBs anil tng along coast; (A tomp'oraturoa normal. The fire u- f aril will - ontlniio relatively hlli In I f all Interior sections and low on IIi'm V Coast. j 3 VKOit PoU VmilM? Mr. John MctaU, wife of one of I lie prominent dairy nusn In Hie f'ie Valley country, stopped In the city yesterday. A Duty Every JVIother Owes Her Children Children who are taught habits of ilnifi early jn life will seldom be f(unl ambngf the tailurds later on. Staii your ihilil (in the right pfttli with a savings account, You can start with one dollar m- mpre. We will lend you one of our handsome little coin banks, to lake home. It will surprise yon, as well as the child', how rapidly the bank aceouiil will grow front the odd nickels and dimes Ihe book bank collects. "The habit of saving is itself an education. It , fosters every virutc." Theodore Munger. I.IUVIXti COB IDAHO A. I,. Deanils and Paul Kdmun or Algoma, arrived ihcro last evonlmt and after spi.ndlnn "the week-end horo, will leavo lor Idaho whore they plan to royide. The First National Bank V Members Federal Reserve System J