The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, November 21, 1925, Page 6, Image 6

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Pafe Six
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EVENING HERALD, Kl.AMATH FALLS, OREGON
Ralurdwv, Moviwbaii -L HM
J'iV
Issued Dally, exfcept Suiulav. bv The Herald Publishing
Company. Office : ll'1 X. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls, Oregon,
E. J. MURRAY Publisher
V. II. PERKINS News Editor
1 "fears borons
Entered as second class matter at Hte post office at Klamath
Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of
rcrpubliValion of all news dispatches credited, to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news
published therein. Ai! rigltLs oi re pulilieation' of "special
dispatches herein are also reserved. .
The Eyehitjg Herald is the otlieial paper 6f Klamath Onttiiy.
Saturday. November 21, 1925
THEN AND THEN ONLY
Roseburg is having considerable trouble with reckless
motorists, and the Roseburg News-Review says that the
highways will never be safe to careful drivers until we
have done away with the following classes of motorists:
Blotted out the drunken driver;
Abolished the underage motorist;
Outrun the "beat the train" driver;
Shot down the highway robber driver;
Forced the road hog into a bottomless ditch;
Taught the no-signal driver sign language;
Caught the hit-and-run driver for good and all time;
Whipped the smartness out of the smart aleck driver;
Thrown "the bootlegger driver behind the bars for
twenty years;
Convinced the speed maniac that he is not in such a
hurry after all;
Stepped on the loafer driver's rear bumper to give
him reasonable speed;
Eqipped the one-light driver's car with three lights
instead of two ;
And just naturally pounded some common sense into
the bone'-headed driver's cranium with a sledge hammer,
if necessary ; ' '
Then, and not until then, can the average man drive
out to a nearby lake for a picnic supper or a fishing trip
with reasonable assurance that he will return home fit
and whole, and not to a hospital maimed and mangled.
BANK REFUSES
TO TIKE BONDS
(Continued From Page One)
serious as one might suppose, mere
ly involving trie re-opening of bitis
for the bonds. Wewould prba;,;
submit another bid, when the bitis
are re-opened." ,
Following are the communications
informing the city of the stand of
the bank. The first Is a letter from
the bank and the second a coy
of the opinion of D. V. Kuykund-K.
attorney; o'n the bonds.
Mr. Lent L. Gaghagen, Police Judge
City of Klamath Falls,
Klamath Falls, Ore.
Dear Sir:
Referring to our bid for three
issues of improvement bond3 cov
ering paving units No. 36, S6& and
37, we have submitted tho '.rans-
, script winch you furnished to our
Attorney, and he advises in that
the bonds if issued 'On the proceed
ings shown in the transcript, wjuid
not be valid bonds of the city of
Klamath Falls, Oregon.
For that reason it will not be
possible fcr us to fulfill the- term
.of our bid and ovc ask that toe
city refund to us the amount of
our certified check, $7,034. "0 which
accompanied our bid.
We return herewith tho th-ee
transcripts, together with a blink
form of bond. There is ai Jo en
closed a copy of our atlc-ruo'i: op
inion. Yours Very Truly,
(Signed) E. M. BUI'B,
i Cashior.
validity on that account.
In my opinion, the bonds, if issu
ed on the proceedings shown in tr.e
transcripts would not be colled
bonds of the city of Klamath Falls.
I am returning herewith the th:-ee
transcripts would not be called
form : of proposed bond.
Very Truly Yours.
O. V. Ttuykendal'..
STIC WAIST'S
Bj cil.tltl.KS l", sti w UtT
xi:a Service Writer
rarvASIIlNttTOX. Juki OUU key
vV position, in the Washington
of the original lVKufunt deulgu,
remains for a monument of too
Tory first da, and n row in 'on
as to whom ot what It shall lit)
ceded to. , , . .
Of those :riw Key sites ' -Major
I. Kiifaiit'.s plan the first. Bl the '
ter, is aeon pled by the WMhlnRtLn
uiomuuout. On the second, to the
northeastward of the moiiumcn;.
stands the cupilol. To the south
ward. 00 the third, is the Lincoln
memorial, To the northwestward,
fourth, is the While House. Thu
fifth, to the southeastward, dowi
by the Potomac, is vucant.
It' been grunted, however, by
a congressional Joint resolution
adopted Ket). 11, 1125, for n Rooae
velt memorial. Now the cry goes
up that this resolution was pasted
in too much of n hurry that t'ol-
onel itooscvelt was :'!! rigot but
not necessarily the only man th
country ever produced worthy to
class with Washington :ini1 Mncoln.
Admirers of the late President
Wilson atv pnrticiilnrly emphatic In
disputing, the colonel's claim to be
regarded as one of the nation'.-,
throe greatest men. Woodrbw Wil
son takes precedence of him. ,he
say.
Others think the site should be
occupied by a memorial or mouu
ment to no single individual: that
it should represent some ideal in
stead. , ( 1 4
A third group believes no monu
ment should be erected in the cap
ital to anyone who has been less
than 50 years dead.
The McMillan commission, up
pointed in 1901 to see that 1,'Eu
fant's plans were adhered to as
'Washington grew, favored me
morial to the founders of the con
stitution. At'auy nue,an effort is sure to
be made to have the Roosevelt reao
lution rescinded when Congress
meets. It is equally sure to be
hard fought.
Collision Causes
Loss of Submarine
LONDON. Nov. 21. Loss of the
Monitor submarine M-l with 6S
lives last week now appears to
have been due to a collision with
a Swedish steamer, the Admiralty
announced today.
Information sent by the captain
of the steamer Vidar, now at Stoek-
j holm that he felt a shock at the
i time and in the vicinity of the
submarine's disappearance lead3 to
the conclusion that the M-l struck
the Vidar and sank immediately.
The admiraly statement was is
sued after an examination of the
Vidar's hull. The admiralty thinks
the collision occurred while the sub.
marine was submersed and adds:
"Under th circumstances it is
certain that the .M-l was rapidly
and completely flooded and that the
ere perished immediately."
The Vidar Is a freighter of 2119
gross tonnage.
Br
. V? rr ,st
Prof. Karl F Meyor, California me.1l
sal research oxsarti declares Amorl.
e:i-moro iiitaiKcred by morons than
by criminals. Ho blames tho pratv
lice of "the tit bearing no chltdraa
und the unlit raising large families."
WASHINGTON. Not only tho
fundamentalists, but a good
many evolutionists, . too. are lik'-!y
to be startled by some of Prof.
William Jasper Spillman's theories.
Prof. Spillman is a consulting scien
tist of the agriculture departnrjn'.
a prominent member of the National
Academy of Sciences a very big
man in the scientific, world. A
long succession of races, as highly
developed as ours, may have inhab
ited the earth before man was oven
a tadpole, ho says.
"A complete process of race evo-lution-from
the lowest form of
germ life to decadence and extlnc
tion takes," continued the doctor,
"no more than five billion years.
The earth's age has not been ex
actly determined, but we know it
tnust be many hundred billion years
old. Thus, since its beginning,
there has been time ror almost anv
number of complete processes of
evolution. We have no reason to
believe they didn't take place."
"When the earth was first form
id," Dr. Spillman went on. "of
course it was entirely different
from the ,-:;rth we know now. I:
was much imaltor and probably sur
rounded by different kind of at
mosphere. Its living conditions may
have been iinstiitcd to the evolu
tion of a r.i.-o like ours, but well
suited to the evolution of a race
with different physical characteris
tics, yet couul to ours in cnpablllty
und inteiriRcnce." '
'
"Picture," said toe scientist, "the
passage of a few billion years. The
earth's character changes. It TOWS
larger. Its atmosphere assumes a
new quality. It becohies uninhab
itable for the first race, which per
ishes and is buried far underneath
the meteorites' wMcfa are striking
the eartb constantly nnd increasing
its size. But conditions now may
be suitable .for the evolution of a
second race."
'
"A few more billions of years
pass by." related the professor, "and
the second raco suffers the same
fate as the first. Nobody can guess
how many times this happened bo
fore conditions becatne suitable Jor
the evolution of the human face."
I . THANKSGIVING WEEK ' I
98c 98c
At Baldwin Hardware Co
I OtTcrinn n Largo V.uiety of Useful and
Practical Merchandise tit art Unusual Price . ,
'
I . : -.-.I
mminnj fii iliis Special tine sucli standard items ft
iicce ( nfAMrtg Sets A piece Kitchen Cannlster Sets, Jets n( U W itter
(ilasijes set of Cut Glass StiRcr aitdCreauic'r 6 quart lumtntttu tinil
Granite Covered Sauce Pans - 7 piece Wito Kltchcii Sots jflecc
(iffissWare Sets Console Bowls - Aquariuiinj 7 piece Hem Sets
Sets of Silverware S)ioons and S pict-e Unlhroon) Fixture Set', hite
Unomeled.
Atiy of the Above Articles of Sets ft8c
(I khI tpility Horricr Li.ttgb3
lid Ware, Bern1 Set.
Will. rtOgeri Set "f ti
Te:i Sputiiis.
'. . i'qoIc S.-'. I pleie in
iliice coiit'i lilue Vnil't-r
ana' Green.
G.T.' - - 'I ".'
!ihmI Serviceable piece set
A kitchen necessity.
i leaf I Inn i.iuw i Lean
ed Pop Glasses, Attrac
ts efv Bh) bossed.
ti
l iraiutt
t '.i ers,
quart
. I it 1 1 1 1 titit it and
Sauce PatlS with
The Above Show Just a Few of the Splendid Specials
We Offer Thanksgiving Week - November 21 to 28th
SEE OUR WINDOWS
Hume 261
BALDWIN HARDWARE CO.
The Winchester Store 418 Main St.
.Sllit: l.lt.'HTH OX FASHIONS
AXD I'HKIKT.M.VS KCOGKflTtifWS
KliV dark 'i:rey stockings as
beer us spider's web are
smart with Hack or grey shoos and
with f-wry costume, colour but
brown. Tile slimmest of ankles are
daring-1 rough to choose black heels
I 1
for these grey stockings. TIs whim
pered that the light chiffon lion
are passe.
Some of the smartest DSK malss
pare of flesii satin and embMldST I I
with, ribbon and silk. Black sutlu
ones aro ulv.nys smart und can In
worn with u negligee of most any
type. Oold kid appilQas trtinntlns
on the black satin are extremely
smart. , . j
The woman who wears red m tint
make sure that the final effect of
KM cdttnriifl and lu r .mskv-up Is
bnrmonlo is. To go out with cerise
lis and a claret colour coat Is lj
fatal as a lapse In vanity ns tin
choice of a conflicting colour In n
hut or a purse.
Wien Your Teeth Are Cared For
by us. you have at your service everything, tlmt modvr't
science ran supply. Our motlertily sqtllpiwd laboratory nii l
our scientific experience Is always uviillable to you. V,V glv
free examinations.
R. D. COF, DENTISTS
i I ' . 1 1 1 1 1 . of course)
s0t-SO4 llopku illtlg. 8lb iitid- Main Pttons SSil,
The American .N'atl'nal Bank
Klumatlt Tails, Oregon,
tieutlemen:
I have examined t':e tbrni tfntts
ri pts which yijii hatrled lo md
Mowing the prnreedtngn or the city
of Klamath Ptfrtt In connect' in wf.h
the nroposed issuance ot three is-.
suds of improvement bonds f:u lln
purpose n paying ror puving nnttf
liiim'bers': 3G. Iiiia. and W '
ecfioq 77 '.'f the charter r,i tha
city of Kluniath K.ills provides "On
ordinance siiall be passed ly t'.':
council on the day of its iiftrs-
ductlcn nor within five dav.i tb"re-
after." In eaeS of the pro .iciluc.s. : ,.,,,,,,. , ,,, Arrentlne shows tlmt
Studebaker Cars
Leading in Rio
The' Argentine republic wrested
from Australia during the month of
August the title of the largest con
sumer of exported motor cars In the
world.
While American tars make up the
most of those Imported into the Ar
gentine, yet practically every make of
car in Hurope alsb rinds markets
there. '. , ' ". , . . ' j
Ueing far removed from any lo
cal Influence, the lArguBtine is one of
the most critical still' highly competi
tive nfolor car markets in (he world:
each car has (o stand on , its own
merits, ImviiiL- no local. Influence to
help; - : f r '! njij'l u"
it Is significant that, against nil
foreign as well as domestic; compe
tition, an actual count of ull auto
Smoking Out Another One
the flntil ordinance authorising thi
issuance or the bonds Wa3 pSkSSd
on the day or Its introduction, HI m e
the ordinances were enacted In a
manner In dliecl conrilct rwltli "
plain provision of the city chartor,
I do not btlleve thai they are v.i'-
Ordinances of the city of Klaifld'.h
Falls and I utrtd not advise iii"
purchsse of these bonds on account
(if 'm serl.'H. (jucslton il's I" th"eli'Stu.!ebal;nri.
Studebakers make up more tlmn 4u
per cent of all curs selling nl $1.00(1
or more.
itio do Jonerlo, Brazil, Is unothef
slinllai'ly flfttlcal mniket. Actual
count of all cars registered there
during the iirst 'six months of the
yor disclosed (hat of all American
made cars in the fine car field. Just
;i fraction less Hutu "(' pr cefal wero
j Tfeize ceeSiKLy j ' 1 :L" 4V
I vuaze a idT op m I j ? J y,
'em in This olp If , y i-' W
SToMP . Vk,
s J l)f ' V)0- ft TlV'-.r-
MM um rJ A
Mexican Is Held
In City Jail
Domingo Dsrcls "BO savSO BBS
leOU." So until ho does 'siivcu',
or until an Interpreter Is secured1!
hn will remain In Jal.j parcls l
i bargAd iwlth having ciusod an aul i
mobile accident this BlOrlltpg on the
corner of Klghth and .Main strceis.
lie is charged with openittng a '"r
without bfakob and without it prop
er license.
When brought be-fore Flecortlor
aaghngsn this morning, ho evinced
total Ignorance of the fcnglMi language,
BLY LIVESTOCK
SHIPPED SOUTH
California Cattlemen's Associa
tion Continues to Ship
Stock for Members
Population of via inn t it livestock
In the Hpragtie .Itlver valley wan
doplirted lodtiy lo.tlir cvient pi
clghl freight cgTl loiiiln, whWh wort'
loaded wltp tSl rows at Bprhgttq
lllvor today, ThoMijqWs, owrwi ;
I sf ( , l.ni r, i. ri..J
i. it. ,,iren mm sun, I'lttun ciiien-
iriiii and McDonald .& Islder. will
Be shipped to ICIinnnth PBlIlK Irani
hlericd t" the S. '. linen and hauled
to Hacramenio where they will be
t'rraJLvered', to ftvfuti itiri .v Kiirii in". a
iack"rn; '
Another cur loud of cow's from
tho Vniniray ('utile company and
still BBOthOr load of calves from
the l.lskey Ill-others riinch near
Mulln and the V. ('. DSltpn ranch
on the BtAte line, leaves for Sim
Prnriclsofl today WhSre n will bo de
livered lo the men' packing firm of
Allan t I'yle enmpnny.
Wood
We have arranged for an oxtm
good supply of'-
LIMB-WOOD
nnd the first car Is being un
loaded today it is Hi Inch.
A car of 12 Inch wilt bo In
Monduy. Wo enn also furnish
this high grade heater wood In
'i and I ft. length, on ordors
for It.
Wo ndviso early buying as tho
supply mny ho snowed yh, n
little Inter.
frompt sorvlco and fair prices
will prevail.
We hnndlu all kinds of
Womi Ooal & Pool on
PEYTON 8C CO.
"WOOD TO BUIIN"
601 Main Phone 685
A yT
rtomotnllnr thai handkerchiefs
make ii rlM thai In always appro
prlnta, fhg sriiartesl are linen in
'k .KlUch ..hold u viirleiy or
colors,
-AM! rlHIf Is die price of
IllSglect, Von bttn depend
ii lion our optometrist, Vou can
have purfeci confldenaq in regard
in bin tixiimliintlon unll his pro
serlptlbrri Wo tnsKa (hd glasses
Dr. H. J. Winters
BySslghl Hpeclnllst
Klunmlh falls. Oro.
i.rWfl.r.!d our mvu mBBJjjg,"