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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1925)
Page Eilii EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH PALLS, OBJBGON Ti'H(ly. October 18, 102f COURT RETURNS FROM PORTLAND HavltiK done t In-i r bit tor tho Norlliorn Much, by testifying In their behalf before the Interstate commerce Ganimlmilon mil hearing In Portland. Comity Judge It. It. Hunuoll and County Commissioner Hurrcll Short bava returnod to Klnmuth county and w. in to havu mot thin uflcruoon to transact county business. Judge llunnoll Mas aatfified with tho showing of th Northern linos at tho hearing. Chamber Directors Postpone Luncheon Recnuso of the abticncc of so many of tho chamber of commerce directors tho regular weekly luncheon today has been postponed until next Tues day, at which tlmo the accumulation of buslnoas will bo considered. Former Matchmaker Held in Jail Here Karl Brown, fortnor Klamath Falls boxing promoter, Is now quietly waiting a preliminary bearing In jail. Brown, who was arrested follow, fng the RItchlo-Hcrman tight in Marahfteld, was lodged In jail In Marahflold and retained there until the arrival of the Klamath county traffic officer, It. E. Knowles. KnowlCB took Brown In custody nd brought him back te Klamath Palls where ho will answer to tho charge of Issuing checks without funds. Brown was formerly the promoter for the boxing commission and just recently resigned. Ho is well known In Klamath Palls and prominently identified with professional sports. Miss Bee Begin, proprietress of a Klamath Palls store, is complaining witness against Brown. WIZARD OF CUE WILL PLAY HERE AT MECCA AT 7:30 Billiard Expert to Give Free Exhibition of Skill in Popular Game A wlinrd at fancy shots, and de clared (o bo the world champion In this line, 0. J. Mills will give n fr. exhibition nt tho Mecca pool hal tonight at 7: SO o'clock, It was an nounood today. With 2S9 difficult shot.i of fancy origin. Mills will entertain pool room habitues tonight with what promts os to be the most startling billiard and pool exhibition ever showu here. Not only that! but .Mills will stage an exhibition game with several of the local crack shots. Ho will bo hero for two nights. This Is his firBt visit In this city, although on other na tional tours he has played In ad jaceut towns. Tho export makoa tours regularly each year, taking in all of the prln clpal cities In each state In the union. DINNER DANCE IS POSTPONED Date of Next Dansant at White Pelican Hostelry to Be Announced Later According to announcement made today, the dinner dance which was scheduled for Thursday evening it '111. hnl.il Whir.. ,.... v.. . postponed indefinitely. Tho date of the next affair will be announced by Mrs. Kllbourn, manager of tho hostelry. During the winter months a num bor of the dances have been plan ncd, which give promise of being even more popular than they wero last winter. Heavy Frost Wipes Out Last of Melons ROSEBURG, Ore.. Oct. 13. The watermelon season waa officially ended thla morning when growers awoke to find their fields covered with heavy frost. Although the wea ther bureau did not classify It as a killing frost, yet It waa sufficient to kill off the melon vines. There still remains a large surplus of melons on the local market, but this will lie exhausted In a few days. The temperature at 8 o'clock this morn, ing waa S3 degrees, the coldest re corded for the season. MISS CLARKE AT KKDPORO Miss Francis Clarke motored this afternoon for a brief visit with friends. She plans to return home tomorrow. Miss Clarke recently re turned to Klam ith Falls from San Francisco, where t'.ie has been the attending nurse of Jack McAullffe. Her many friends here welcome her return to the city. Local Woman Badly Hurt in Smashup Suffering from a fractured Jaix bone and the loss of several trout teeth, Mrs. Linus LaRock, of Klam ath Palls, is a patient in one tu Portland's hospitals, the result of an auto accident on the highway between Portland and Salem. Mr. and Mrs. LiRock wore re turning to KlamaUh Falls from a miontih'a vacation in Portland with val.llvui - .1 ..;.,., . .... i ... . ini.iin ... .u ii I1-UU3, sun nuio aim- oring south betweoa Portland and Salem, when their icar skidded into a truck, throwing Mrs. La Rtock through the wind shield. As soon aa Mrs. LaRock is able to, they iwill return to Klamath Falls. She Is suffering from severe shock. SOUTHERN' BIHIVESS VISITOR With plans for spending sovoral days here on business, C. G. Basham of San Francisco arrived in Klamath Falls this morning. MACDOKL BUSINESS CALLERS J. 8. Bailey and Everett Bailey motored up from Mucdoel this morn ing on a business trip. They expert to return home late this afternoon. . i : The Walton Wright Co. for INSURANCE Fire, Automobile. Casualty Phone 643W ADVANCES IN Wood Come without any warning CUKAI' IMtlCEM are on uow Don't be one of man; who will order too late. Winter la near. Phone your ordera. BLOCK WOOD is our specialty PEYTON 8c CO. "WOOD TO BURN" 601 Mail, Phone 535 Donart and Donart Kill Two Mule Deer Dona.-t and DMiart, husband and wife, ere oxcusably proud today. They returned this morning with two larje fat mulo tall bu:k deer, weighing 250 poundB and 185 pounds each. Donnm and Donart are Mr. and M:s. Walter Dcwrt, who accom panied Mr. and Mrs. P aries Deli art have been In the Barnes Valley ccuntry for the past few days. Mrs. Walter Donart, with a mil placed shut, brought d:wn a five i 'int buck that weighed in tihe neighborhood of 250 pounds. Her ihusband brought down another five point buck that wogher 185 pounds. Diaries Donart. Walter's father, i was just along with the party aa camp cook and general all around guide. For ho has already killed his limit In deer, one a four point blacktail buck and the other a two point black tall. The two couples have been away the past three days. Wanted: 600 men to buy their Full and Winter suits and o'coats at reduced prices. Sugarman's.(Adv) f ? j Hp Fur Manufacturing. Coat Remodeling All work guaranteed Mrs. Wm. Bessler 436 Klamath Ave. Between Fourth and Fifth Next to Moose Hall Two Workers Meet Death at Florence Kl'CiKNK, Ore., Oct. 13.--Newa of two fatal accidents at Florence Sat urday was received hero late yes terday. Fred Saubert. of Cuahman was drowned In the Pacific ocean when the boat in which he waa flailing capsiied. Ills body has not been recovered. Frank Heady, with other work men, was ralslug a residence when tho supports gave way and the building caught him and Oscar Muff toady was Instantly killed while Huff was badly bruttad. MURDERED YOUTH FOUND IN HOUSE ST. PAH,. Minn. Oct U --The mutilated body of FranclJ l'lolettl, 1 1 -year -old nephew of Rev Louis l'lolettl. pastor of the Cath olic church ot the Redeemer, was found today In the attic on the third floor of a vacant house here. Discovery- of the body was mail by Patrolman Jno, ItOIO. I'ollee expressed the belief that the boy was murdered al another apot ami lila body tr.i unpolled lo the vacant i house. The boy waa laM noon at n ColiifDaai Duj baUQUtl Monday aa-nldti NAVAL DAY PROCLAIMED BALBM, Ore., Oil i:i. -Governor Pierce today issued a proclamation I netting aside Tucsda.i O. tolior L'? us Nuvui Day, i The flrat real elgu nt fall la when everli dy ni.iiLh thinking v..ulc,i must bo here. THOMAS FISHER LODGED IN JAIL Matt Acaisctl of Attempted Murder Is Broun'it to Klamath Kails The massive and ponderous Iron door or the Klntnnlh county lull slowly swung nhut laid night behind Thomas Fllh'or. To I lie 18 Inhitbltiinta of the Jail. Klsher wun merely tio (TO; lint to the dixtrlrt attorney's of fice he was (he man who Is churgod with attempting tu murder one How. nrd H. Heaver on Hunday morning. KIhor wna brought 14 Klamath mil lall BlIB' l,y Hhrlff ii, ,i. ,i r Oraaoant Ml had been j held lu custody In Crescent since his urrem ..nun. i' t.i. Fisher Is charged with being re sponsible for snverul fractures of the skull which Heaver Is suffering In it local hospital. II" Is ehurged with having eulered a cabin III the Solo mon DUtt lumber ramp In northern Klamath, and In the presence or his wife, who worked nt the rump, hav ing struck Heaver over tho head with a suck filled with rocka Back Op A Bocid Name Rarely in manufacturing history has a name entrenched itself so firmly in the confidence of the entire world as the name Dodge Brothers. Everywhere and to everyone this name means but one thing: a product built honestly of the best available materi als and sold at a just price. Behind this product, this price and this enviable reputation lie certain impressive and fundamental facts. So important is a knowledge of these facts to the motor car buyer that Dodge Brothers, Inc., have determined to publish them, from time to time, until every newspaper reader in America may be presumed to have read them: Dodge Brothers, during the past eleven years, have built and sold more than one million four hundred thousand motor cars and more than 90 of these cars are still in service. This record requires no com ment It stands impressively alSrie in motor car history. It has never been Dodge Bro thers policy to build yearly models. When an improve ment, rijar is really an im provement, is discovered, it is made at once. Their slogan, "Constantly Improved But No Yearly Models" is familiar the world over. Dodge Brothers build one chas sis and only one. This policy materially Is wers manufactur ing cost It also enables Dodge Brothers engineers to concen trate their entire time and thought on the betterment of this one type. Dodge Brothers have never had an "off year" or an "off car." This is because they have never used the public as a test ing ground for "new models" or lowered the quality of their product in the slightest degree. Every change has been an im provement on the original design. Dodge Brothers pioneered in building the first all-steel open car and the first all-steel closed car. These epochal develop ments have saved Dodge Brothers owners many millions of dollars by materially prolong ing motor car life and by effect ing marked economies in man ufacture. This construction has also reduced incalculably the danger from accident and fire. Dodge Brothers sell directly through their dealers to the purchaser. There are no sec tional distributing agencies to increase the cost of distribution and the cost of the car. Dodge Brothers have never given so-called "free service." The car is sold at a fair and honest price. Nothing is added to this original purchase price to pay for service that the owner may never need Dodge Brothers Dealers were pioneers in unanimously adopting the flat rate service system. By this system, the owner knows in advance what any service job will cost There are no unpleasant surprises in his bills The sturdiness and long life of Dodge Brothers Motor Car is reflected in its resale value. Comparatively few Dodge Brothers Motor Cars are ad vertised in the resale columns of the newspapers. The values they bring testify unanswerably to their goodness and the pub lic's belief in their goodness. -us: : oyi . . The time has passed when transient novelties can lead a thoughtful buyer to overlook the great essentials of motor car worth. A few of these essentials, outlined above, go far to explain why Dodge Brothers name is accepted, the world over, as the hall mark of dollar -for -dollar value. Dod g& Broth brs. Inc. D &TROIT on;