Page Four THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, OEECON Tuowlny. April 17, 102S 0ff0 'Euestistg Utrnlb FLYERS WOULD H. MAUKKKY.. 11. KN;i.lKH ... ....Ru-Lns Xanairer .lib. label avary afternoon except Hundiijr by The Herald Pubilshlnf Company at 102-12 Houth Fifth atrert, Klamath Kalla, Oregon, t ES Held as Slayer Breaks Record UlCluED Mtitarail as aacond elaaa matter at tin poatofrlca at Klamath rails, ', . , .... .. OrasoB, on August to. 10, under act of Conxraaa, March 1. ISIS. , SAINT JOHN. N. 1 11 r the Canadian Br Mall On Taar .is.oe Mia Month! 1.7i Thrae Montha 1.7t On Month .s Irllv-r- ar Carries Ona Irar .fi I Ft. Montha s.&o Threw Montha , l.at Ona Month . .aft IHMII'IATHI) I'HKH I.KAKKII IKK MKHHKK OK Al HIT HI KK.ltl Or till I LATIOV M-. April 17. Press) Ths Tlmea-i'lohe ami Telegraph-Jour-nat today prima a tlrat hand account of -Miss Oreta Ferris of the Grcnfell Mission of (he ur rival of the Itrenien at Greenly arabfr tf fa Aaao-lafaa! lraaa The Associated Peas la exclusively entitled to the use or republlca- ' Island and the reception of the ttoa of all newi dispatches credited to It or not otliarwlaa credited In : .... thla paper, and alao the local n.wi published therein. All rlahta of ra- : three trans-Atlantic aviators, publication of special diapatrhea herein ara alao reserved. 1 Hor message sent by wire-loss and telephone, was told with la- TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 192S , "Bremen 36 houra. Dublin to ' '' Greenly Island." It aaid. "fog t- 1 j a r i most of way. Arrived noon Frl- S DClayCd Mail jday. April IS. Mistook liKl.t , . l .1. tt j e. i , ., house for steamer frosen In lee. Just why, the I mted States government and the rail-',9t xXrxM ,nd compan tn. way mail service should not co-operate to such an extent I accurate, riane broke through that mail from San Francisco to Klamath Falls cannot be " ind axle, bent propel- ; ler. iitt in same position, riane hoisted on gasoline tank and 'At the present time, mail which should in the day's boards." business be sent out of San Francisco in the afternoon I "Rron cold "" exhausted." . . . . ... ,, ... the simple narrative continued, and early evening does not reach Klamath Falls until the ; . fearel lh ,hey would never following evening, and then those whom the mail is ad- I reach land. Ready to shoot corn- delivered in less time than it is is hard to fathom. i Miss Marguerite liumhatiKh, no. former Warsaw. Ind.. girl. Is held as the slayer of Walter II. Took. Ml. Nil.-s. Mich.. munufartur.T Miss HumlKinr.il was employed by Cook when lie operated a factory j j i i u- i i noninna if hm cam- tn worst. Mn Warsaw. rouce say a qillir- urease-, m hium miu iu me l'uiuiut.e aim ji u, ocdusc " " ,a i,-h, rel followed an attempt towards "settlement of their attain. rrs.'- vaaraaajaji BRIEF NEWS -OF KLAMATH PLANE FORCED ; DOWN AT WOLF CREEK TODAY GUAM'S I'AHtf, (Ire., April I?. (A') A Pacific Air Transport mall oliiiin was forced down at Mm, I'klior railed i:t j Wolf I'rrvk, In (he mountains. ' ! Mrs. Thomas A. Kisher of 111 In SO miles to the north of this illy !..n i.,r, u f..- shortly nfier noon lotliiy. Low i ....j ., j a . Minneapolis, railed east by the sudden death of hor sister, Mrs. j Phil OVouiioll, who passed away on Humtiiy uioruliiK. Mrs. Kisher will remain east Indefinitely on account of the critical condition 'of another sister, who for some time has been an Invalid. Mrs. ' Kisher Is the wlfo of Thomas A Kisher. buihlliK contractor of this i city. clouds unci shortsKO of fuel i caused the lamlliiK. according to ! Pilot 11. C. Miller. The plane j was not dnmuged and the mull wus taken to Medford by uulii. 1 eeeee seaei SEATTLE IIOTKI.ft Protarf Your Santntt Account tm Polf onlin. That ttitpiool Hoitht S1.00 TO $2.50 WALDORF TTSl ATI1KIS , New Richmond flAKAHH f H MM III "1 liprtwiTN IIMItll S) it reaches here too late for the last delivery. i "isaron came ax once 10 iigni i ; house were alven dry footwear. There was a time when delivery of mail within 48 j Refused to eat until his compan- hours or 72 hours in Klamath Falls did not worry much, j ,on ,eft lane ,lr8t- rint meBl , . ,TT , . . waa biscuits and fresh milk. but that day has, surely passed. We now have a tram. Haron feel8 th, M tnxiom out of San Francisco in the evening, and it arrives here'ito reach New York, the next morning at 6 o'clock. It is one of the finest I "Kitimaurice says Labrador is ... T. .. . 0. . . , .inot Ireland la warmer there, equipped trains in the Inited States, and carries postal : Koenl not compMn, ,u VOry railway cars. Why the business mail coming to the peo- j modest. Most thankful to have pie of Klamath Falls, out of San Francisco, cannot be car- accomplished such a feat." ried on that train and be delivered here in the morning is j rz-rT-c MFBF past our comprehension. We respectfully submit this ; i o Mt,tt, problem to the Oregon delegation in congress in order j FAILURE CAUSE that something may be done to urge the postal railway! . , . .. , jji- T.-, iL r. , I (Continued tro-i paga 1) department to co-operate and deliver Klamath Falls mail at a? eoocr.nol,l ,m dangerously low wnen Another promising Joined i he class if distinguished splinters aspiring for places on I he American Olympic team when Claude llraeey, nn lS-ycar-old youngster, run 100 yards In Mi-lil seconds at the Rice relay nines. He had a brink wind ut Ills buck and the record probably will net be allowed. Charley p.i.liloi k saw him run and suid he would be a wonderful sprinter when he lengthened his stride. Hi-vurl G. C. Pacific fltilll SuiTiunrillo- Howard of The S.uithern rnltroud is In the city youngster , his regulsr official visit, lie Is slopping at the Hotel Willnid whl'o h'rr. Haiellon In City ('. M. Huielton of The Olympic Koundary company with head quarters In Seattle la In the city today visiting with lumbermen of this district. PfE?JisW ew7j -iTSi . tsaui. imam rt ixw .-ie. iKMinjjtvLs . z jw'i a. ai-.-- y, : t-"" "''sjawsMtataM "7"aaP'''1' -l iPUIttVCU vtU7ft..i,s.i1 Farrell Picks N. Y. Yankees And Pittsburgh Pirates to Win Pennants in Ma j or League Race : FUNERAL NOTICES "A Radiant Nordic Amazon" j it reached the New Koundland ' coast and soon after saw the light 1 house on Greenly Island. nrrnrr In,;! 17 tm The And now we begin to understand why it is that a poet . two German members of the or ft musician can run rings about any other young man I trans-Atlantic plane Bremen were in the business of courtship. I wai,ln at cr ls'and M" y. , . . i their damaged plane today as the .Percy Grainger, well-known American pianist, is en- j irSh member of the triumvirate gaged to a Swedish girl. Miss Ella Pola Strom. Asked to I was bound fcr this city to obtain describe her, he declared she is a "radiant Nordic Ama-,he parU nMr3r to repair the ZOIl, as beautiful as the morning," ; Majcr James Fitxmaurlce left So there. When a man can use phrases like that to! Greenly island yesterday in a re describe his beloved, what chance has the ordinary man "ef plane p"ted by c" .t . , n, . , ,, ., . . ' , . (Duke) Schiller, to select the got? Many a girl would rather have a man who could paTU necessary to put the Bre talk that way than a less articulate fellow who had a six- 'men again in running order. As figure bank account. , j80011 as are "elected Schiller MS to rusn tnem one iu uir KHANK K. I.IGIITNKK. Frank E. l.lghtner, a resident Algotua, passed away In this Ity Monday afternoon ut 4 o'clock. He Is survived by bis wife, lleulrlce M. Ligbtuer. a daughter. Amy II. Llghtiicr, all of Algoma; one son. W. W. l.lght ner. of Coronado, Calif. Mr. Llghtiier was a u-tlve of Penn sylvania and aged til years at the time of his demise. The remains are In the sin ra lly Henry I.. Farrell of blame ou llronsby In advance, Approaching another m a i o r ' "n''lh k""w' !,"w.l '? leagne season and realising that ' aK P ud. with lbs now Is the time for all good men '" an ,hat ,uVl" ,trn,, , ,n , h., al,l nf the fates jcor. Ull uu u,o land decide the pennant winners , rln hi future. for them, we have the temptation M well string with tho lan- to duck the assignment and lake kecs and the Pirates. If after.),.. room (lf ,lu, Ear whltlock the easier way of saying play-this heavy piece of prophecy the , yneral Home. Pine avenue" at fully but honestly that we don't mugnates will feel It necessary to slx(h W,ro fri.js may ca. know. through tho routine of a Announcement of funeral arrlnge- Thanks to the New. York Van-; schedule, may the playlng-out ; ,,, wlu be anoun.d on ar kees. the burden of being hor- process be happy and prosperous, j rlvll of ,on from California, ribly wrong Is reduced 50 per There will be three other ' cent this year. The selection of places in the money and four!,,.. .... ... ... .. ....I. . n wd vhol . I n V Hllh 1 . 1 . . . . 1. , 1, S am, n , . . n .... I. I .. . . ' lie favorite may be wrong, how-'gue. If It Is Important for the ever. Jiayoe in, lauas -om securuy ana tne comion ui tnelof , Yankees psrtlcularly mn tile jiiu.iii-n rauc " iianiiu, 11,'iv a ,iu hiq b.wii.ii.i. nant. But If they lose, rvery ex- will look when the boys take pert in captivity will be wrong, their soap boxes to the parks lu and the attending-misery will be New York and Pittsburgh for more palatable as long as there the all-night vigil In front of is plenty of company. The National League? Oil. yes! Well, we're writing the Pitts burgh Pirates on our card. That also entitles us to a seat In "rw"Breme.,'wi of on parry.- V.werell , i Big Bill Mourns William Hale Thompson of Chicago is grieved be cause the rest of the country thinks Chicago is a wide open town. He plans to hold a series of parades to prove that, Chicago, after all, is really peaceable, law-abiding and tame. It is an excellent idea, worthy of the brain of a true statesman. We suggest, for a leading float, a tableau showing a group of thugs bombing the home of a poli tician who opposes the city administration, with a figure of a, mayor, at one side, looking resolutely the other way and tilting vigorously with the ghost of his Britannic majesty, King George the Third. I The fliers' plans then call for Captain Hermann Koehl and Bar on Gnnther Von Huenefeld to fly the Bremen here to pick up Major Fitzmanrice and con tinue on to New York the goal Editorials FROM OVER THE NATION set to honor the St. Louis Car dinals with our nomination until Rogers Hornsby picked the Pi rates ahead of the Cards. And say what you will about Hornsby, or believe what you hear about the series ticket windows: National Iauc. Pittsburgh. St. Louis. Chicago. Boston. New York. Cincinnati, ilrooklyn, Philadelphia. American lcn-uc. The Pirates and the Yankees no jfoubt will start as prohibitive favorites among those who are willing to back their selection with cash, and In addition they I action. The real tip-off on the strength nd the Pirates is In the lengths to which tho critics are going to grope fur reasons why the two clubs should not repeat last year's victories. The general opinion seems to be that the Yanks and the Pirates will lose only from a disaster that would como from within themselves and not from and knockout punch from the competition. i I i- PAINT SAVES MILLIONS J'uint brightens, beautifies and mives enor mous material depreciation by protecting the surface . . . preventing decay. Puinting is economy ... it costs less to pain than to deny yourself its protection and decorative benwfit. Hut use C'crtnin-teed reliable pnint of quality time trietl in this climate. Big Basin Lumber Co. Lon-lell IKS Uaik ' LVER'i TIIIS'C TO CVILD WITH" Phone 107 Spring and Main Klamath Falls. Ore. they set for themselves wben they I him. that boy knows his baseball will be somewftal of sentimental and he know the real Inside of choices as they are popular ball the St. Louis club. In addition, clubs with colorful personalities, his judgment for public expres- The Babe and Lou Gehrig and sion never hit been Influenced Tony Lazzcrl and Wnlte Hoyt by personal sentiment or prcju- have worn off a lot of the pro dice, and he's usually. right. Babe vlnclal dislike that used to be Ruth Is the same kind of a directed at New York clubs and judge. He picked the Cardinals, tho Pirates have a huge appeal but we will play the Pirates be- to the public in the romantic cause we feel that Hornsby knows Waner brothers, in the scarred better why the Cardinals should, old A. K. F. battle warrior. Joo would be flown here today so .not win than the Babe does. Harris, and In Donle Hush, a that no time would be lost in This probably Is shifting a lot fighter who doesn't always need stripping; off the needed parts and starting them for Greenly Island. headed out over the Atlantic from Ireland last Thursday. Schil ler would act as guide tor them in his plane. At Montreal, "where It had been flown from New York for jnst that purpose, was the slstr ship of the Bremen, the Junkers F-13, with all the necessary parts for repairing the ocean plane. It was expected the F-1J HILL AVHITE VXMASKKD, AT LAST! Kansas City Times: We always believed If people kept at It long enough and sternly dug In, they wonld discorer that Old Bill While of Emporia and the Uni ted States is a dangerous char acter. And now the D. A. R. of Massachusetts has made that dis covery and In panic has under taken to protect Itself from In sidious attack by putting the Emporia editor on its blacklist. Wa shall sleep more soundly now we' know of these protec tive measures. We always were afraid this desperado from the junction of the Cottonwood and the Neosho might gumshoe his wajr to the top of Beacon Hill, Boston, and snatch the sacred cod from its place nf honor in the statehouse. The Massachusetts T. A. R. has saved the common wealth from such a calamity. Hurray, hurray, hurray. II AIR Time: In Fulton, Mo., recent ly.' a newsgatherer gazed upon a hoard containing 100 circlets of human hair In every conceiv able color. The circlets were lied with ribbons. Under each waa a woman's name, an ad dress. Five Insets adorned the hoard, four containing tin-types of handsome human females coifed and prinked as was the fashion thirty-fire years ago. The fifth Inset, placed In the midst of the collection, showed a young man of Apollonian mien crisp, curly hair, square fore head, forceful jaw, roguish eye. That was the way one J. Hoy Turker, now a slightly bald, por.Hy, oil man of 65. looked In ills oollegs. days. . Mr. Tncker was not reticent with the news : gatherer. I "How'd I get those locks of .hair?" he said. "Well. It Is a i long story but I csn tell it In a few words. I bet a fellow-Westminster college student $100 that I could take fifty girls buggy ; riding on fi,fly successive days without taking the same girl twice, and get a lock of hair from each. I not only won the bet, but found (he quest for locks such a pleasant one that I did not stop until I had the hun dred." . Mr. Tucker employed an Eng lish type of phaeton, two high steppers that could trot a mile In less than 2.30 mln., and a 'small Negro "tiger" (coach-boy) ' up behind. On rainy days he , used a closed carriage. He kept his sister in reserve and had to fall back on her one evening to ; keep up his lock-raping contin ' nlty. The newsgallu rer Interviewed a one-time passenger of Mr. Tucker's. Said she: "Hoy was just crand.'' PAST MASTERS PRESIDE OVER MASON MEETING Pungent Paragraphs San Antonla Express: Reading that employment In the North Is on the up-grade, the Weary Wil lie may conclude to tarry longer In the balmy South. I St. Louis Globe-Democrat: 'Contempt of court might be In cluded among the - extraditable offenses in the new extradition ; treaties. I Chattanooga News: Overtime I employment on the stock ex change has not yet extended to tne country. . Pant Masters of Klamath Falls Masonic lodge presided at the lodge session on Monday evening at Masonic temple with more than 150 Masons In attendance. Judge John S. Orr, second old est Past Master of the Klamath Falls lodge along with 18 other Past Masters were In attendance. Alex Martin, the oldest living Past Master of the Klamath Falls lodge now resides In Port land. Following work In the Master Mason Degree the members ad journed to the banquet room where a banquet was served. T. S. Richardson presided. Judge John S. Orr gave the principal address of the evening. Hills Floral shop presented the Past Maulers with a beautiful floral piece. Each of the Past Masters were presented with In dividual bonnets. OAXACA TOWNS DESTROYED BY SEVERE QUAKES MEXICO CITY, April 17. (A. P.) Press dispatches today sold several towns In the state of Oaxaca were believed to have been destroyed In the earquake which rocked southern Mexico last night. No casualties were reported. The shocks were most violent In a large zone In Oaxaca and many buildings collapsed in Oaxaca City. The shocks were also felt In Mexico City and the center of the disturbance was officially esti mated to be 168 miles to the southeast of the capital, for result! use Herald Class Ads. . lea n 095 -OOOa SEDAN, r O. B. DETROIT M off T4t atiditoicL itd fend More horsepower per pound than any other car in its clasi, gives the Victosy an advantage which it rivals simply cannot hope to com . pete with. , It leads off first and loltli its lead and when the hills are reached all attempts to follow the Victory abruptly end. Rakish, rugged, roomy and the fastest car in its class! Drive it and prove itl Tune In (odny for Dodire tlrolltrrV Radio Pronrnm every Thursday at to ;; throultli KUW K(.l KIT . I'millc Network OSTENDORF MOTOR CO. 515 Klamath Avenue Phone 272 VsctorySix BY Dcjobs- Brothbrb lQ THE STANDARD SIX 71 TO 1970 AND THE SFNIOR SX IH70TO 11770 Place Your Orders Now For The Evening Herald Railroad Development Edition Over 70 Pages On Klamath County Special Features Lumber Industries Homes Schools Winter Sports Hunting Fishing Scenic Attractions Agriculture Dairying Cattle and Sheep Raising AH orders placed before May 8 will be wrapped and mailed any place in the United States free of charge V