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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1925)
Friday, October h;, 1025 EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON Pago Five f Y i ? Y A Wash-out Yes, We Will Do Your Washing In The Street With a Maytag Saturday Evening at Ninth Old Main Streets, in front of Lloyd Ryan's Store raw GIVES ELF UP; FACES GIVEN AWAY FREE A prize for the dirtiest blue shirt in town K. P. Ollis and Associates Phone 483-R Klamath Falls, Oregon I X x y y y T X 1 ? f t y 1 i I 'i i X y 1 y t Y 1 T x J; X MURDER CHARGE lb MEXICAN BEAUTY UK, uAltlis I ll.M WORK AH Mission OF GOOD Wll.l. HOLLYWOOD, Cnl (! Hi i DnliiniH fl( tllo, wealthy Mexico City society woman, regards her r work biters tin- cameras ol Holly wood spmotbihii if ad Intimation nl mission. Hoiiorit d,d Rio, who bcouuio n motion picture in I r-:.H at the mil:- Kontion of a Hollywood director who mrt her In Mexico, believes she will !)o tola to belp overcome pfi rented south of tin- 111" riritndo by producer formerly In tin- habit of sending to Mexico fllma j featuring Uwloana or Spaniards as VllllllllH. Although the enetoin of making "-Miihii" synonymous with "vll- iiutt" has boon cast into the discard, Banora del itio points out that then atlll remains a slight coolueaa In Mexico because (f it. In nililltlon to lii i ni l Inc. Konorn di'l Itlo Ik undertaking n aerie of rllolaa) on the films for publication In Mi'Xli-ati newspapers. Sure! Our Service Is On ALL MAKES IT'S a R-e-a-1 Service, too the kind that helps you get all the performance out of your present battery first. If yours is a Willard Charged Ijo'nc "dry Battery, you've got a big advantage. We'd like to tell you why. FLOYD HENRIOT CO. Automotive Electricians 234 Main St. Phone 397W GUYLER IS HEHO m CITY Honest Wear in Every Pair of LEVI STRAUSS TWO HOP S B Bib Overalls For Men A new pair FREE if they Rip It was His Crash in Eighth Which Gave the Pirates World Championship PITTSIirilGH, Pa., Oct. 10. (IP) P pillar opinion may net up llaiun (Klkl) Cuyler an tie uiilslnndlng hero tif the Plrntea over the Sen ators ti the tltl WOrtda series, for It was his mighty hlow In the plneh that won the seventh an, I deciding game, hut an annlsls W the re cords falls bring out any surpas singly prominent figure such as was Ducky Harris In the triumph of Wnsilivgton a year ago. Cuyler mat only struck tbs decid ing blj- yestoriluy, hut bla h!.'nic run clinched bla second (Una for the Buccaneers, while his field. ny, was (frequently sensational. Novc thele.n the remarkable all-around work of Pie Traynor, bright third F ickcr of the new champlaos; the spectacular hitting and base run ning of lie veteran Max Carey; and the stellar twirling of Vic Aldrldge and Hay Kremer also figured large ly In the Pittsburgh victory. For Washington, tho most conspicious nark Included Johnson's bright pitching In his first two starts; Sam Rlce'a startling defensive work, par ticularly his catch off Smith In the third game us well as his consistent butting; and the slugging of Qotae Goslln, and Joe Harris iv'.iv was tie most clangorous man In tho Semi tor attack In tho pinches. EXPERIMENTS PROVE EFFICIENCY IiAOS UNDER HIGH TEMPERATURES F.RIVAN. VP) Science hna come to the nld of the man who does not want to work In hot weather. BxpbrtmsntS carried out by the Near Blast Relief among the 15,000 chil dren ill its orphanage schools and workshops hero prove that mental and physical efficiency are seriously lowered when the temperature rises above 711 degrees, Tho experiments covered summer temperatures ranging from 05 de grees to 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Maximum efficiency in classroom or workshop Is secured under tompor nturcs Of 07 to 7.1 degrees. Tho human machine's ability to work ef fectively decreases rapidly ns the temperature rises above 7H. At a temperature of ill) degrees, the num ber of mistakes Increases by 02 per cent. Friday, Saturday and Monday spe cials In coats, dresses and huts. Mi lady's Shop, S22 Main. 15-10 William H. Turner Comes Back from Germany and Will Face the Music HAS STRANGE STORY Says he Knows Nothing of Death of 2 Men Wife Got His Insurance NF.W YOHK, Oct 10. VP) WU Hum II. Turner, former coal mine foreman of feudist pike county, Kentucky, tired of in ma "dead" in Germany, Is back in this country to face charges of murdering tho un identified mine worker whose tomb stone hears Turner's nani. He also is uccuscd of tie- murder of Henry Wilson, another mine worker killed in n mysterious ex plosion In u coul mine at Mcf.'arr, Kentucky. The fa'al Sgploelofl was considered an accident, until Turner, who Manas other for th affair, got homesick In Hamburg u.M wrote to a Kentucky friend u letter that reached the nutborltlos. Arrested t Once When Turner, under weight from abort rations uud with bis belong ings In a papier-mache niitcasc, Stopped off the gang plunk of the steamer Itesolute, arriving from Hamburg yesterday, he was greeted by Taylor Hatfield, one of the fam ous feudist clan and a deputy sher iff of Pike county. Hatfield show ed Turner o warrant for his arres. Mrs. Turner, who has been living In Trenton, N. J., with her five children since she and Turner's sis ter, Mrs. F. F. Farley of Coral gables, Fla.. collected '61,000 after Turn, r's supposed death, said she had thought her husband dead and had been bringing her children up In that belief. She said she had no part in Identification of the body. ReMtite Also Held In Williamson, W. Va., Joe Jacks, Turner's father-in-law. v.ho was an elertrlcian for the Auburn mine a, the time of the explosion last Jan uary, had been urrested on :i mur der charge also. "We were blasting through gravel to a new cut." Turner began his story to Hatfield and New York police yesterday. "Henry Wilson and some other men were setting dyna mite charges. I was in another part of the mine." Ordinarily, according to Turner. It Is a safe and simple thing to at tach wires to a dynamite charge, hut tha circuit must have been closed and the explosive went off ns soon ns tho wires touched it. Wil son and his companion were blown to pieces. Says He Was Drunk "1 didn't know anything about It," continued Turner. "A brother-in-law of mine took me out to dink some white mule. He wouldn't let mo go where any one could see me. He kept making me drink and when I was good and drunk, he pulled a gun on me and said I would have to get out of town and stay ou'. Ho told me where to go and what to do. I went." The remnlns of Wilson were iden tified, and when Turner's absence continued for several days, the other body, badly mangled, but about the right weight and measurements, was identified as his. An insurance com puny paid his "widow" and his sis ter his Insurance without protest. Went to Norway Turner went to Columbus. Ohio and thenco to New York, where he was met by his father-ln-lnw, Joe Jacks, who had tickets for Norway. V Y ? T ? ? ? ? t 1 ? i ? ? Stone's Buy Out The New Terry Market 719 Main Street ? ? y ? ? ? i y I t ? f y y y i i y y 1 y 1 i y y t t y y y The new Terry Market, at 719 Main Street, next door to our store has just been taken over by our meat department. This will be of special interest to meat consumers. With two meat markets in Klamath Falls, we will be better equipped to serve you better and save you more. Try this new market. The same kind of meat and the same kind of service will be given as at our old market 423 Main Street. If you are not now satisfied with the kind of meat you have been getting, try either of STONE'S markets. 717-719 Main Street Meats and Groceries 423 Main Street Meats and Groceries From Norway Turner went to Ham burg. "I got sick of hearing German, and no American all the time," ex plained Turner, and, "not getting enough work or enough food, I just decided to write home and find out what ft was all about and get in touch with my wife." The friend to whom he wrote hurried with the letter to the sher iff and shortly afterwards the grand jury brought indictments against Turner and Jacks. '. FRENCH STAND APPROVED PARIS. Oct. 10. (P) The coun cil of ministers today gave unani mous approval to France's adhesion to the security pact drawn up at Locarno. Union Oil To Construct New Klamath Plant TO recover your splendid vision to got back your normal sight will stir you with enthus iasm. A scientific examination and tile proper glasses are inexpensive. Dr. H. J. Winters Bye Specialist We grind our own gluasos. Klamath Falls, Ore. v"-5 "A dollar for this nnd 11 ' J. dollAr for that while r) eyes go from had to worse careless llirlftlessness. r. v . -y Wholesale Center Soon To Go Up In Chiloquin Construction of a I'nion Oil Co. wholesale distributing plant at Chit on u in was announced today by C. C. Colvin, Klamath manager of the oil concern. Work on the plant will be gin Monday morning, October 20, and it will be completed In 30 days. . Many thousands of dollars will be Involved in the expansion move of the oil company in Klamath. It was said. It will Include two large stor age tanks, with a total capacity of 10,000 gallons, two oil trucks to be used this fall and a third to be added to the plant force next spring, and loading and unloading facilities. "in other words," Mr. Colvin ex plained this morning, "It w ill be mere ly a typical wholesale oil plant, sim alar to ninny that you see in Klam ath. "Tho movo is to meet the natural and steady development that has been enjoyed by our company slnco its entrance Into this territory. Our fig urea show that tho time has come when such a plant In Chllonuln would benefit our company and our customers, so wo aro going ahead with the project." No announcement of who will be in active charge of the new plant will ho forthcoming until later, Mr, Col vin r lU. PORTRAITS of MERIT For gifts there is nothing 'better Q i f t s that Time SMakes SMore car! A dozen photographs solves a dozen Christmas problems. STINSON STUDIO 737 Main Street McCAMPBELL AND TODD CONVICTED MEDFORD, Ore., Oct. 16.- -William ntcCampbell and Wm, Todd of Klamath bounty, charged with the violation of the possession clause of the national prohibition act. wv.- found not guilty by a jury in the federal court Thursday afternoon. Tho pair appeared before ' Judge Wolvertou this blQrnlng for sentence. Roth were given fines of $500- tho maximum for the first offense, under tllo federal law. Mc Campbell was given until tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock to raise the fine. Todd admitted his Inability to gather so much money on short notice and will serve it out in fed eral prison. MoCamphell, besides the $r,i)o fine was ordered to pay the government . the cost of subpoenaelng ami call ing four witnesses from Klamath j couuty, itsm The Testimony of Others JN my new book which may be had FRKE upon request, on PILES and other Rccl.il and Colon dis orders, 1 have reproduced nearly 100 letter! from among those received from my thousands of patients. These tell you frankly of their years of siiffcrlnK of their trying home remedies and even opera tions, and, finally, of their complete cure byrayiNO.V; I ItCICALincthod. These arc Ironi men ami women nf every frl.i!ten.miuiy of whom you 0te laay know, lull will Ic Am by ain,! ilia i ioiik way 1 1 an yjvs IVIlTrrEN CttAKANTKK In ire your Plkt ol return your fee. ;aN. K)..lnc SF.A1TIE ofT'crs: i Jli V.fl ftulMIn I" r Pie LI1 i I t T t y t f f t y y T t y y y y T y t f t t y 1 y Y y t t y f Y y y y t Y y' f i