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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1925)
hursday, December 81, JMfcfi iilV fti i ' EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON Dinner Dance To Draw Big Crowd (ho most prominent On the nodal caioMar for this week, The While l'ellcoi orchestra will fnrnHi tit dance music for the affair. ll With reservations Mill coming for tba dlnnor danco at the hotel White Pelican thin cvonlng, the of- Midnight Matinee at lh Pine Tree, fair (Ives promise of being ono of, Now Year's Eve. lAdv) 30-31 You Can't Realize the Great Necessity of caring for your teeth until they give you pain. The very sensitiveness of your teeth is n lesson of their vital Importance to good health. Don't neglect your teeth. Bee us tor I examination. R. D. COE, DENTISTS (Talnless of course) 108-204 Hopka Bldg. 8th and Main Phone Sit 2 Oregon Players Banned From Team Kt'tJHNK. lire.. Doe. 31 (P) Ted lllllenwaleis. two year veteran guard, and Charles Jost, who earn ed his letter lust year at guard, will he ineligible for basketball thl season, according to the "Scandal Sheet," u list of grades of University students. Just published. The two players did not make the required grades, uccordlug to the list. . jj Coach Wm. Heluhart und his play tWs, on n barnstorming tour tu Cal Itornin, are not aware of the fa it that the two men will be ineligible for the remaiiilor of ink. season. MMntlfht Matinee at the Pine Tree. New Year's Eve. tAdv) 80-31 ill ,4 ii Tr WELCOME cHappy NVemi Those institutions survive as do those individuals who render service taking what is offered them in an appreciative manner,! and in return, strivii to give just a little bit more. This Institution is but a baby in this community and as the sand in the hour glass of time runs its stipulated course, we shall en deavor at all times to see tnat tne treatment of every individual i patron is the highest that we can accord, and in this way we hope to gain tne connoence or tne puouc. As we step forward to greet the New Year we wish to thank each land every one of our patrons for their friendship, and as 1926 be gins its course, we can but hope that we will grow with it and with etx community. . RAPILCHEKCO (Denartment Stores nnsrmas aeais Show Good Record NEW YEARS DAY SPECIAL DINNER $1.50 Olympia Oyster Cocktail '' Crisp Celery Ripe Olives Chicken a la Royal Consomme Celestine Halibut Fillet with Shrimp Sauce Crab Salad with Mayonaise Dressing Roast Young Turkey Stuffed with Giblet Gravy and Canberry Sauce Spring Chicken Saute Provencale Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au jus Mashed Potatoes Sweet Potatoes Southern String Beans Lyonaise Plumb Pudding Hard and Fine Sause3 Hot Mince Pie Apple Pie Pumpkin Pie Cake . Ice Cream American Cheese Swiss Cheese Coffee Tea Milk 12 Noon to 8 p. m, CLUB CAFE With several county school to re ceive reports from on their Christ mas seal sale, Miss Vera Houston, chairman of the drive today an nounced that $805.42 had been re ceived from the various business houses and schools throughout the county. The average is approximately what. 1924 brought, but would have gone considerably over this amount had the schools not been closed, is th opinion of Miss Houston. "All in all I am very much pleas ed iwlth the sum which Klamath couHiy had raised In this ever Im portant sale," Miss Houston said. THE WEATHER The Cyclo-Stormagraph at Under wood's Pharmacy registered but minor changes today and prospects are that New Year's Day will- be bright and snappy. Forecast for next 24 hoars: Clear and cold, with brisk winds. The Tycos recording thermometer registered maximum and minimum temperatures today as follows: High 26; low Hi. Midnight Matinee at the Pine Tree. New Year's Eve. (Adv) 30-31 . Midnight Matinee at theJPJne.liee, Now Year's Eve. (Adv) 30-31 FOUR DEAD IN TACOMA WRECK TACOMA, Wash., Hoc. 31. (VI Divers will be sent down today an effort t- locate more hodl.s ut the bottom of the city waterway in ihe wreckage a Tuccniu municipal street cur ivhleh Inst nltlht pluni ed thiYUKh the open draw of thu 11th street bridge currylnR four persons to death and causing lit Juries to (our others. One of the survivors assorts that ut least a doicu persons wero oil the trolley at the time. This ii denied, however, by the operator of the car who declares that only S persons were aboard. Those knows to be dead are U. E. A. Kar.-ow, S3. ToloJIro Obayashl, G7, Mrs. Alice Scott. Louis Scott, G, her sou. The injured: Chris Nelson, 36, arm uud should er broken. Luclen S. Siinnrd. S3, cuts about the face. K. Kagamoga, 40, cuts about the face. f Earl Hurd, 54. badly bruised anil suffering from shock. Failure of the breaki on the street car is blamed by Clyde Staley, op" erator. for the accident. Staley de clared that he ap'pllcd the air brakes in the usual manner as the, car came on to the bridge and he noticed the warning lights on the flowered gates. At their failure to respond he used too hand brake and then released the sand and throw his motor Into reverse, he asserted. The street car then struck an auto mobile standing before the first gate and knocked the machlno through tbls barrier and oft to one side against a second, inside gate. Seeing that his car was beyond control and an accident unavoid able. Staley threw open the doors and, shouting a warning to the pas sengers, leaped out. Ha landed un hurt on the deck of the bridge. Hurd, the only one of the pas sengers who had an opportunity to heed the warning, also leaped but not until the street car had toppled from the bridge. Hurd plunged through the air SO feet to tho wat ers of the bay. The street car, which was one of those built during the war to carry ship yard workers, broke Into sev eral pieces as it fell; witnesses say. The fact probably accounted for the rescue of the four Who survived. Counties Will Urge (OonUttUCtl I ruiit Page One) delegation In cmir.rens add the In traduction of the needed appraprt ntlou bill. Mr. Wlesl further hellevus llmi speakers should he engaged to up pear before civic bodies throughout the state in tut effort to enlist state wide support. This WOUld Include uppcuiunccH before the the Portland and Oregon stale climbers of com merce, i. ;jv Pivccdm Shown The fuel thai the government has already reimbursed ut least, two of the six counties for miusy lost In taxes through the removal of those lands from the tux. tolls Is hollered by Mr. Wlest uud others 16 be uf flcloul pr.Qfudiuit to demand n full acooumlng from the government tor luxes lost since these thousands of acres of land rovertcd to iho gov ernment. Although Klamath county's share would not be so large us some of tho counties through the valley, jot It would amount to several hundred thousand dullars and It worth going after. In the belief of Mr. Wlesl and members of tho Klamath county court. Will Organize Juvenile Band For This City I'litiiN are beliiK laid In orgiiuUe a hoys' hiiud for Klamath Kiitl-i. R0 OOrdlnR to 1 A. Hclull, hand direc tor, who has been urged hy a niitu her of parents to take the lead lu (Otllm such an orKiiiilrallou In get her. . Mr Sid uk says there ut'O unite u number, of biyn who have sufficient talent to form tho nucleus of siuh an nrguillrnlltui; litnti he wants all boys who, might bo IntVrosted to send in their nitine. io him. Ills address Is till) South Hl.itii street. Steps towurd forming n prnfes slotutl baud are also progressing favorably, Mr. Selak said, and he ex pects baud practice to he started shortly nfter the first of the year. TO ltl-.T.UX post WAHIIINUTON, Dec. 31.-(P) -('. f. Mct'hord advised President C'aolldge today he would continue as an Interstate commerce) commit sloner until a successor iuitllfles Building Permits Are Over Million With a total ut $1,(11111. N47 lllll' etl In huililliiK permits by Police Judge Oiighiigen for the year 1 0 2 r. , It Is evident thu yuur will close lucking about 140,000 of what 1024 permits iwero. Forty Penults were Issued for (he mouth of Ductunbur uud the total amounted tu close to $43,001), liurlng December 1084 Ihe (etui per mits Issued umotthtvd lo 34 with Just $19,310 spont, However during lite year of 1024 building - permits In Kiiiinnlli Full created a sum of tl,tH2.ti;. 1020 will cl.iHD with a total of 11,030,347. lu mis amount t tit- addition to the Klamath Valley hospital which am ounts 10 $30,0(10 Will' totaled U, i.uoo was In (h Telophono Hook, We are Just North of West, Hut In the liiiiiirancn World Otl( Companion heud Iho list. The Walton, Wright Com pan) I'll UIIIW tttJ..t4t.;..ttttttt.HfttM4ttlH4-Hvttmtttntrt444444444444 ; Ha l Moonshiners Get Jail Sentences C. H. Parker, S. n. Fordham and D. W. Llghtner were brought to the county Jail last night following their -conviction In Justice court at Chiloquln on charges of operating a moonshine still. Fardham and Llghtner each mere given 00 days Id Jail and fined $1000, while Parker drew 30 days and a fine of $00. New building contracts through out the country show a 69 per cent gain for September over 1924. Don't Discard Your Worn Tires Jf they have a sound body, we can retread them. If they are injured or rock cut we can repair them and see that they give you ser vice. All our work guaranteed. At The oACE TIRE SHOP 115 South Eleventh Phone 843J T Imported and Domestic Groceries Our complete stock of staple and fancy groceries is open to you each day from 7 a. m. to 9 p, m. including Sundays. Coffee Roasted Fresh Every Day Italian-American Grocery WE DELIVER FREE wish you each and everyone HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR K. 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