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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1923)
THE EVENING HERALD,- KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON sArrniur, inr a t 1 tan.' Pxwe Four The Klamath ' ,' 1kU(mI chilly pxrent -'Huniliiy by . orrirn, tin Norh Kluhth rV R. SOUI.K MI'TH (HULK Rlitrd t tba pnetofflce at Klamath falls, Oregon, tor transmission i: .throtigh the mailt at rohrt class matter. iv; . .. Member of the Aanoelnted Press . 1 X'i Tbe Assoclated: Pres Is exclusively enttllcKt the tine for republica tion; of all newt dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited Id thin paper, and to all local news published herein. All rlgbta b republi cation of special dlspatch'eV herein are also reserved. - - p; R w)ui.B.i..i. it: n. him, .... K C; SWIR. J.......,.!.".".!!! R.,W. REYNOLDS tot tDVenlili Heraia lg the nffipla) paper df Klaiuatn Uounty and the .V .-vV City of Klamath Falls. , 1 - simHCRiPTiour rates Delivered by carrier, OKR VRAR u;,.. . MX; MONTHS TRRKH MONTHS OKR MONTH m , .-t QKK V-RAR MX MONTHS ; PKR MONTH ....! ; By '.A.. 4 . J ',' .IXPOHMATION FOR ADVERTISERS ; , , ' , . . . Copy for display advertising must be In this office not later than S It: m. oll.tha da Dr'acadlnff nnbllcaLinn In nrrfar tn ha (nH,tei4' in h (sue of the paper , of the neit day. . - Want ai and; reading notices the day of lue.i- H- -'! - v.aurarunii ior craiernai oraers or societies charging a regular In itiation;' fee. and dues, no discount. Religious and benevolent order! will 1 be charged the regular rate tor all advertising when an admission or wuv, um ,u in uiauo. . ' ' ' Saturday, jvly si, io2. 'r.;.:-"-:';;Vv-.' -! " :;' - , CHANGE OF SCENE ' : ' i ... .. . . - ; TpHE 'doctors .all tell iis that a change of scene is a - helpful and restful experience, and many people ..get inspiration tout of the new surroundings they, epjoy during their vacation periods. : Yet change of scefte is ' ' .' Some i)f the- calm : and 'philosophical people that used to be developed in' f ormer days never needed any change Jof .scene. Many; of us can recollect some of oqr, older relatives who livedo for years ih:bne spot? without 'any vacation outings.- Some.;of those old tim ers'would go ;al6ng: JO and 20 years without bejng aWay from, home oyer night. They had a certain, grandeur, of soul that could find peace and content nfcnt in any setting where. they were doing good and' useful . work. The simple 'pleasures of the -home an4 th: community,, the; .beauties ..of nature, the satisfac tionVof. doing good -work,1 gave' them-the variety' they' called for.- - . f " v: - r-: : ,f?But the, present age:f, develops ''few personalities ' Of that type. -T.e desire foi-change of scene is some tiHi'ej pure restlessness. -Yet in many cases it results fnv ah enlarged mentality. People who have read about different cities and states and ..countries and peoples desire to see the$e things for. themselves, and compare them ith their home- environment;; 'That W. a- normal, desire, provided it" does not promote a con- : fii-med restlessness, and inability-to settle down.at regular occupations and prolonged periods of effort. ..' But there are many people whose outlook on life is , marred by their personal selfishness and self ab sorption. They are interested in nothing buftheir own comforts and advancement, and they take little pride in good service to home and community. They keep dreaming that they would be happier if they could be somewhere else.-r They suggest the old saying about UNCLE SAM'S VOTERS A N ASSOCIATION" calling itself by the above name is working to induce every citizen old or young arid without distinction of sex, to do 'his duty in the' cause; of good government. The organization, to se cure interest in public questions, and induce people tp'; vote, plans to establish local assemblies all over the country based on the old town meeting idea. k:;.::. Lecturing people about their duty to" take an- in terest in public affairs may pull some out here and there. .'.But the big motive must' always be personal interest. .: . ' . ; ...'.-. -If there Were debates , on public 'matters,. local j state ' and national, , in every city neighborhood and rural village,' the Questions of the day would seem real and : live to a iot of now indifferent ' people. :. Folks 'would realize how their welfare, is affected by the way such problems are solved. They would form ropinions on politics and be eager for every chance to ; express them at the polls. ' ; , . " ; f. '.".. uc anugiii, ior uie Business gins to make themselves as attractive as possiblebut they should I riot try to get their beauty sleep in the office. . : v. After howling for taxes to be reduced, a lot of. people immediately begin to shout for increased ap propriations. , - , r,; .;. Claimed the universities should do more research work.. Anyway the students are both searching and researching to find the prettiest girls.- , i yyv.v.-:,:r'': . ,v ;; '-No great anxiety manifested by the business men , to employ the .fellows who quit school prematurely because they know enough already. Evening Herald Tho lftraitl Publishing company. St., Klainnlh Knlls, Oregon ....President nntl Manage! Hvon'tMry-Treanqroi .....-.Rilltnr rltv Killlor ......,,..:;..;..AdverHNlnu;' Mhnasef .......:..Mit'llanlcHl Snperlntendeni .!. . 8.0 j.tn .8 ...iJ.no . a.78 . '.OB Mail . u ... t will be received tip to 12 noon on -:- . -, .,: . - . X.' THIS SEE-SAWING ISN'T HELPING MATTERS MUCH "T-aJ." W . Tl III KXI y Letters from the People DEPLORES CONDITION' "OP" THE DA1LES-CALIF. HIGHWAY Klamath Falls, Ore. , To the Editor:.' . July 20,,1?23. ;,, The writer would -like to Know-or have someone inform him through the Herald columns the reason for fie frightful condition of The Dalles- California highway. Anyone driving a- car knows all": about thn territc wash board" condition of the road It la caused, 1 am toldt by the men who drag the'?6a'd'w'HHaa apparatjii for spreading ' the .gravel.--' - Tourists from other! states. 'who travel this highway are' commenting most- un favorably, and rightly so. - '- u : Someone is responsible for this de plorable condition of . this otherwise spleadid highway. ';Vho It is I have no idea but the Btate highway com mission owes! It to the taxpayers to relieve him of his job and replace him with some man. who knows his Job. P. E. BURKE. N TO EDUCATE ADULTS IN ILLITERACY FIGHT . COLUMBIA, 8. C, July 21. The summer schooljdea, In a modi fied term, is being used by South Carolina In this state's ' tight to wipe out illiteracy. . i " Vacation boarding schools for men and women who . have lacked educational opportunities have been arranged tor this summer by tho state department of education. In co-operation with the authorities of Lander College for . Women, at Greenwood, and Ersklne college for men at Due West. A full month'3 course in elementary subjects is offered at each Institution at a cost of $12.50 to the student, which Includes all expenses except trans portation and laundry.' ' . Pupils whose education has equal led that of an average sixth grade pupil are not accepted for - enroll ment, nor are' boys and girls under 14 years old. The pupils live. In the college dormitories and eat in the - college dining hnllB, and in fact, according to Miss Wll Lou Gray, state su pervisor of adult school Work,; lead the same lives that are led by the college -students during the regular terms. Eighty-nine girls and women at tended the first "opportunity" sum mer school, ' which was conducted at Lander college last summer. The course offored this summer at Ersk lne Is the first made available to men and boys. The ages . of the Lander students ranged from M to 54 last year, the average ago being 18. years. Many of the wo men came from the cotton mill villages, 'and not a few of these had their expenses . paid by the management of the mills In which they worked for the remainder of the year. . "I wanted to be able to help my little seven-year-old son with his lessons," one .of the older women students said last year, when ex plaining what had prom ptod her to leave her family, and enroll for the summer course. I 'I 1 I The Office Cat iWing' aiiti.Hcrupiiiu i ' He raked and scraped ;. Until he had saved " : ; The money for thejseeds. -. He raked an'd scrapod A plot of ground .. : For all the dljforont broods, , He planted them, . ', .. Then raked and scraped . , To keep away the weeds. J His 'neighbor's hens Now rake and Bcrape ; j . And have moBt pleasant foeds. . John" Johnston says nno.her good way to save Is to make more money than you can " conveniently spend. Then, too, hpme Is tho place whore Sunday's roast doesn't disappear un til Wlcdnosduy, wlion It Is serve'd In the form of hash. ": '. ' WJien company comes In at' the tloor, resolution and practises of economy go out the. froat window . . T ' '-: - "If you haven't anything else to worry about,".- snbbosts -Fred Dun bar '"get you a fountain pen that won't fountain at' the right time." The .ho'.ior nn office can confer depends almost wholly upon tile size of the men' who have held IL News "Item: Miss Lylo Stocklnfe Is sulng. Paris Garter for non-support. "- , . , Let. others Bae on the finished monument below us as we r,lse. , The . first stock ,' cpmpariy . eVor floated: Noah's ark. .' ' ; t It has, often been said that' from . ooughln' j . ., You are certain to land In your cof- fin, ; -But I've also heard tell, ; You've a chance to get well, If you don't get a coughln' too often 'If a bnker enn loaf three times fl day, how much can a shirt waist? One trouble noted by James Mc Quire Is that too many college pro fessors and too few human being are studying political economy. So live that when you come to die, your death notice will not appear In the newspapers amo-ag the list ot town Improvements. . . . - ; A certain man's' Idea of being In the lap of luxory It la reported, is .to own a bushel ot collar buttons, a V.l, I I lT VXV .1 rk Nr, Wa i .AV QSN.H,ftmB"i i PASiiUtlt Hi IP I, v II-.?- . Mi. t f vtiw f a ball of shoe strings and an extra pair ot suspenders, , Correct this sentence: "I'd like awfully well to have a car," said the wife "but I think we should fin ish paying tor tho house first," ' - Why They Mlsol Piilnd 1 - Lots' ot men would leave their' foot- .-"- .prints, i .(V.js ;:..' Time's eternal sands to grace, Had they gotten.- mother's slipper At the proper time and place.-; ; Wli are firmly and unalterably democratic, but we: hope the king business - lasts long enough to let the Prince of Wales try his hand at it. '' )' ."''.Tvi'.'.' Among the things called by Gab rlol'B horn will be many a bluff. It took Ell Whitney eight years to perfect the cotton gin and even ;hen It was never a good drink. .The Mexican bean beetle has been reported to' the United States De partment, of .Agriculture from Lee County, Ala., 60 miles south of the known Infested area In 1922. It has also been reported from 'the eastera. part of .Mlsslsslpl, a State which was not known to be Infested last year. . ' '. i ' AT THE PINE TREE . "iMlnnie," Marshall Nellau's latest picture, released through Associated First National, will be at the Pine Tree 'theatre Sunday., r ; - "Minnie,", like all ot Nellan's pro ductions, lssaid to be exceptional entertainment,.There Is hot a: -dull moment In It. It Is a very human Btory about a1 household drudge who Is, 8.0 homely that no one hesitates to tell heir so. Her father owns trie hotel in. the town but he Is so inter ested in -a radio Invention thnt Minnies does all. the work Minnie has Ideas and she uses them, to the discomfort 'of everybody, Including herself. The picture is full of inci dents that develop hearty laughter, but ;underneath it all is the throb of drama. -' '..-. ; .- -' '; ! Matt Moore andj.eatrlce Joy are fcaturttl In "Minnie." Others In tho cast are" George Durmlm, Josephine Crowell, Helen Lynch, Raymond Griffith, .Richard Wnyie, Tom Wil son and George Drotngold. "Minnie" Is at the Pine Tree Sun day. :..." '' "The Woman Who Fooled Her self" brings May AlllBon, co-featured with her husband, Robert Ellis, to tho Pine Tree theatre' Saturday In a fascinating drama of love ai)d In trigue written by Charles A. Logue and producer by Edward A. Mac .Man us tor Associated Exhibitors. Miss Allison, plays the role of a beautiful American chorus girl who Is tricked Into taking part in a business Intrigue and then compli cates the whole plot by falling . In love with the man sho has ensnared Today a double bill, "Railroaded" and "The Woman Who Fooled Her self.'" '.' ' - ' ; SURGICAL CARE IS GIVEN SILVER FOXES sroKANKi' WhW'tfUly 41. Surglcnl and medical care for foxes that riviils tho cart) given human bolrigB in the modern. houiillHls la reported b E. II. Robkiuon, p real (lout of a ellvor fox farm' near hore, Thn -ahlmalB are raised tor their pi'lt.i, , which often bring thousands of dol-ij lars each. . . , ,.j ; Ono ot the lmlst 'iutorostliiK casus I of fox surgery 'hore foliowoii tho tils-' oovrry of four siniiii ' round atdnoa In the ifmall lniestlhos of a fox piip whose rospirdtlo'n litid' .. piiise, Whs fust, and whose temperature, was 100 Fahrenheit before the operation, aorordlng to Dr. H. M". Benwmiin who performed the operation. 'An anaesthetlo treatment was given and . the stones successfully removed wUh I ho knife, ' the same care aiid sanitation being observed as In tho ' I I D C D T V: : I . Ja-i X RJ lj IV 1 'J Orrhewl rn ' Kypry Evening Mr,' Hurry Rnrol. ' Dlri'fnr ',' PLAYIXU TODAY ' '"''"').'' Ki ' JACK HOAIE comes to tn In ' i ' , . ' I!;-.' . ' . A superb story of the west, . '. ';; '' "GALLOPING THROUGH" . . Another excellent number shown today U t Round Nine of "FIGHTING BLOOD" Hunilny HARRY CAHEY In " tr' ; "DESERT DRIVEN" ComlngThc great Roman spectacle - ; . "NERO" Ono of the most stupendous productions ever :-.:::tlo. " '" AT THE X11JKRTY , The" New York Evening Post,. writ ing ot the super-specla) 'Nero'' dur ing Its New York run, under the heading, " 'Nero,' a Sensation at tho pLyrlc 'Theatre," gave It -the follow ing high praise: . , : : .,-. -', "The motion , plcturel world, has thrilled u,a ..never. before by,,the pro-, ditctlOn ot-)tlio screen, matserpiece . , ,'Nero;' Fo . rmaj jai! y.d3 and ;l tu. pendous scenic effects 'Nero' has ., never boen equalled. It 'la the groat-' est, most cosfyy produo'.'iotii .cvar made in, the history of tho world. The 'story deals with the rise to world power of the tyrant N3rp,; hi-, . mad Infatuation for a young Christ; j lan grl, her love romance with a victorious young Roman .who . 'ni l-' mately saves her .from., the tyrant, and the downfall and death of Novo , through teh evil plottings of tho Empress Poppaea. One 'of the most gigantic . pltcorlal effects ever ac complished Is the burning of Rome shown In this picture: It la with out the slightest doubt the crown ing climax of motion picture a chievement up to the present tlmo. Its success at the Lyric theatre has boon .treniondous and enormous crowds have boen flpoklng-there at every performance." . ; . "Nero" will be shown at tho Lib erty thoatre noxt jroek.-.. IRELAND TRYING TO AID UNEMPLOYED . DUnLIN,f .tuly 21,-VThere ' aro more than' .62,000 persona without work ; In .the Irish Freo State for whom Ihe government ;ls struggling to fliid employment. The unem ployment difficulty, and the libera tion of 12,000 political prlsonors still' Interred,' .constitute Ireland's most formidable problem. I it Is estimated that the Free State army now consists of 40,000 men, and before the end of the year the minister of . defense hopes to bring this figure down to 29,000. The government .Is puzzled to know what to do with the 20,000 soldiers when they are demobilized. " The x prob lem is common to all Europe where, through a disturbance of markets, there are more than caii he absorb ed la Industry. Fortunately, the Irish Free State Is In a better posi tion to absorb these men than most other countries would -be. It starts oft with the- Important fact that It Is a creditor nation,- exporting In bach your a great deal more than It Imports. COMING EVENTS July 25. Prize baseball dance at the open air pavilion. 4 July 26-27 Visit of Ro- tary clubn -of California and Oregon to Klamath Falls and Crater lake. ' August 19. Community ptc- nlo at Crater lake;-.: - casn of-huiuaiH. ViV . ' ! In nhotlier - Instnuco a fox's In-),. Jlircd !wuiMiimiulutnd Within?' af . vcrjt few laya tlia bndu!eB .wcyo re-, moved and' the tux qil.lqkly. lf.irtlfid, to "Hot - along With Ultk' remumlnB ' throo "lags., Both sldca of. .tho. . ot a foi 'v'flrn.-bi'nkt'iy' at;'iiatlier..! tlnio.. For oight iliiyV-.lt.,had. .to .ba .' frd with A inorilnlno -ilroppor but . (ho surgical troatijicnL resloroll com plete nnrmaley to tho unlmali'' 'ho' doctor report . . -burinB. tho fit i oiul u 1-, y ou r ' i o a a liib' liliiount bf Ifsderal f'iriltis spont tn " hli!hwaya..i)j. thn t'iUtct) etftes ' bpimi'tinont of - Agricuitura totaled r),0fl8,iD0,' winch, eomtrtttlia -t,W '. , nitlea''. o( 'forest ''roads rt'rt 4,100 , mllGH of forest trails,' An additional ('950,000. win secured for tills oon. . Btrnotloii. work.. from .State ani co unty authoi'ltlus. - During, this same year 4,5650 miles : of. roads and 19,000 mlles-pt trail .. were, hialn tallied at a cos' of J 500,0 00. SUNDAY IF YOU WANT TQ l,u ainl.imafetATl Violin Selections v i , MR. PETIT Comedy , FELIX CAT ' m TONIGHT , Does it Pay? Oanld he - confess 'that he had been a thlet,--und lose he love? Until he had , met her he de splred life. - Every man's hand was raised against him. Carl Labmmlb Pamsbnts u jrrrmn,u cum. iuikvj itim mmmm URaihoadedl 'a universal I VP I C TU RB;-", ': .