Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1923)
T MONDAY. AnU'HT III, I USUI. THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Four HOPE DEFERRED MAKETH THE HEART SICK She Emuthui '3BvraI& Issued ilnllr except Kuniliir by The 1lerrl.il I'liMMilntr company. Offlro, 110 North Klghlh 81., Kliikintli Kalis. On-con I; ! "r. r. i1 ' If.. i' !!.!. .114; jliii m liiil ' iiiii jlii i I i a A 3 v K. II. HOl'liK ninn KOULK .. k rrolili-nl mill MuiiNRPr . Stvrvtnrv-TreaMirer Entered at the postofflre t Klamath Kalis. Oregon, for transmission tbrough Hie malts as second class matter. Member of the Afceoclntctl Pres The Associated Press Is eirluslvely entitled t'" the use for rennhllra , Hod of all news dispatches credited to It or n. otherwise credited In -thin paper, and In all local new published herein. All rights of republi catlnn of special dispatches herein are also reserved V. R. HOl'l.B II. R. HII.I, P. Ci NHIil.R H. W. RKYNOLDS . .... Krtltor , -lv Killlor I Advertising Mnnscer . Mivhanlrnl Sutierliitenilent C yu. ,B Loaf f !?,' - The Evening Herald la the eftlrlal paper of Klamatb County and the : r: . . City of Klamath Falla. I SIKSCUIPTION RATK8 Delivered by carrier' ONR VKAR NIX MONTHS TflRKB MONTHS ONE MONTH OTVR VKAR KIX MONTHS I'KR MONTH Br MaU ..it.nn no I.7B . . ..a.voo IS.TS .03 a fffr movies -m INFORMATION' FOR ADVRRTI8KR8 i Cony for display advnrtlalng must be In this office not later than S , p. m. on the day preceding publication In order to be Inserted In the issue or tne paper or to next aay. Want ads and reading notices wl.l be received up to II noon on tha day at Issue. Aderttin(t tor fraternal ordnrs or societies charaina a resnlar In itiating fee and' due, no discount. Rell;lniis and benevolent ordnrs will he chanced the reaular rate tor all advertising when an admission or other charge la made. MONDAY, Al"Gl"ST IS, 102:. i . . ANOTHER FARM CANDIDATE ';v,' ; , . : - p EORGE MANSFIELD, wealthy Medford rancher, retiring president of the state farm bureau, an nounces his candidacy for the democratic nomination -for United States senate. Thus another professional friend of the farmer capitalizes his activities and on a platform of platitudes seelvs public office and pay-' roll as a njeans of alleviating agricultural ills. . Walter M. Pierce, who has been weeping with farmers for decades, and most of the time in public office of some kind, is now governor, at 7,500 a year, with traveling .expenses and the family on the payroll. C. E. Spence, who for many years has fanned the far mers, is state market master at $4,000 a year. Many other farmer friends are also saving the rancher by ' getting on the public payroll so why not one who has "made a science of - it, like Mansfield"? ' ' "Mansfield is a man of force and action, a vig orous speaker, 'an indefatigable campaigner, a good handshaker, a lawyer by training, a cattle-raiser by choice, and will be a formidable candidate. He talks progressiveism and will probably make the same kind of a senator that Brookhart of Iowa is. r THE NEW CHIEFTAIN 'vyHE accession of President Coolidge to the white 1 house should bring with it no economic or po litical disturbance," says the Republican Publicity as sociation, through its president, Hon.v Jonathan Bourne, Jr. "His hearty support of the policies followed by Harding is well known, and he will be surrounded by the same men who have parried them to such success ful application. The strictest economy y;ill continue to be practiced, the reduction of the debt will go on, the lessening of the tax burden will be accomplished as soon as the condition of the treasury may warrant, and the- administration of the executive departments "will be on the same high plane of efficiency as before. - President Coolidge 's administration will be based ... essentially on law andorder. He became a national ;. figure, when, as Goyernor of Massachusetts, -he stood .. out boldly against the striking Boston policemen. ; 'There is no right to strike,' said he on that occasion, 'against the public safety of anybody, anywhere)- any time.' It was probably that courageous statement,'. . more than any other act . of his career, that brought him prominently to the attention of the Chicago con vention in 1920 and won him the vice-presidential nomination. . '. - .."Mr. Coolidge's concern for the welfare of the people, as distinguished from the interests of any spec ial class, has been evidenced on numerous occasions since- the Boston police episode. 'I am for a govern t ment of all the people,' he declared at another time, ' 'founded on right, and truth, and justice. I am against a government of force or terrorism, of group, or class, or selfish interest.' It is his bold championship' of the rights of the public at large that has endeared him to the hearts of the people, and that assures their sup port if his term as president develops any emergency in which those rights are assailed. "But President Coolidge's vigorous espousal of. the public's cause has not blinded his judgment to the riehts of organized labor. Representatives of labor who dealt with him while he was the governor of Mas sachusetts, testify to his fair treatment of them. 'In , all mv years of work with the legislature,' remarked one Massachusetts labor official, 'I have never met a man in whose sense of justice and courage I had more trust.' As president Mr. Coolidge will have frequent opportunity to weigh the counter claims of labor and employers of labor in various fields and will be called . , upon to strike a balance that will be fair to both par- !L MO COO" AT Till: I.IIIKIITY , j lliivn your fi'li'tiil lolil ymi nlmul "Tim Kit i'ii on llin lluiTO.mi Klinir"? Have .von Inld your frlind' If you jliiivm't 1mm-' to llin Liberty I liviiti o. t:ll(o your fl'VlHta with yml tnulKM, This Is I hi l't lime !" l'" pliotoilny will lie show", 'in k Pnnl dlrm'iod this plrlurti nnd It miirlts nnothi'r utou upward for lilm. Henry II. Wnllhiill plays Hie male lead n Interestingly n lie li ever per formed In ntiv screen product Inn. The slnry will grip you. the rant will delliiht your sense of Hie fitness of thing. Few picture i lulvo coinn V I lie l.lhrriy theatre this yeur Hint have j proved liinia Interesting, more thrill I Ing and morn comtiflllng than this William Kox special production. Ilonry It. Walthall never In Ills en t're hIiiko career gavn n more pow erful cliiiicterlntlon ami the rap able support lie received with 'lluth Clifford and Alma Dennett 1s most worthy of commendation. London nvlntor striking for more liny -itood It's nronnd and gnt.lt. AT Tin: I I M-. 'J iii:n The old lliciili'li'til lioarillug lloiisn. I lu chorus uuiM.u's 'swell uimrlmenl' Hio shyiilnr lawyer who hangs about on I he fringe of (lie tlieiili'lial win Id, living off lis k'I'I'mI "'' '" Hi" "KsjjitloiiiMi fileuiln" of the alago girl, urn e'.eiue:il. In "Tim (Inltlnn ilnllnws." llin Vli'liitl'iiVlnllaiiil iiinun xlim siory which was flliuml hy Unl vnrsnl ami la now nl llin rjlno Tro thealre, s Mini tin I'lint Is Hie alar. Al though shn has hail very llttln slagn experience, she knows tile llfi) of (tin thnuirn Inllmnlely, and every oilier uiiinlier of Hie ll'lilvenml null which Mined "The (loldun Hallows" has had llin benefit of long years before the footlights. ICilwIn Mioveis and Elinor Hancock were wl h limit of tli lending Ingltl male Slavs of America hofnre they entered plctuirs; Jak Mower had unite n long rtictch of work on Hie stage, I'nilgliu Herrnrd. had a l.on- I ilmi and Cuntlneniul rvputntlnn as n fine nctnr and Eve Southern, liar- barn Ti-nnn.it and Oenrge II. Wll j I'ams. each had standing In the old ( er profession. AT THE LIBERTY ii'lo-lm i:.'iv livening Mr. Il.irry Morel. Olrertor ties while donsc-rving the interests of the people at lare. His record in that respect commands our confidence. "Mr. Coolidge is a worker without ostentation. 'We need more of the office desk,' he once remark ed, 'and less of the show-window in politics. Let men in office substitute the midnight oil for the limelight.' We may rest assured that those thoughts will control his actions while in the white house, and that reports of actual accomplishments, rather than promises of future achievements, will feature the news from the executive mansion. "President Coolidge is fortunate in having in his wife an aid to his success as chief executive. Possessed of marked tact, an unusual faculty for making herself popular with her associates, and a high degree of personal grace and charm, Mrs. Coolidge will emulate the fascinating social atmos .phere which Mrs. Harding bestowed. on the white house. "The administration of President Coolidge will have the support of the people. He deserves only pood wishes for his success, and there is every in dication that he possesses them in generous measure." SEEK SAFETY FROM :Wnrm 'rnn iarrrm ,Mn EXPLOSIVE DUSTS; mi.,1 xb,. o ,i,e iw-s 1 I.ONriON', Aua. 13 The greater WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. Do- warmth of the water surrounding velopmcnt of a method of testing the Foroe Island.!, 1.1 the North Sea, the amount of explosive dusts in ha3 caused the temperature of ,the suspension in the air at commercial Islands to undergo a radical change plants, with the aim of reducing the during the last few months, number of disastrous explosions, is ; Scipnufi,, Investigations have under way by engineers of the bur- Bhown lhat a wnrm ocean ,,,-ea,,, eau of chemistry of the department fl.om , 80Uth ,s cnt.ir0ing the ! of agriculture which expects short- iads. and that great ouanUtics of ly to announce the. perfection of a 6tra,:ge fsn ,Ctties have been wash successful testing ins.rument. Such e(, aanore. These scales belong to a device, It is said, would result in B (.pe of octoplls that inhabits wes,- the saving annually of many lives crn K,.0pCan ,vaters, but hitherto ur.d an untold amount of property. ; nns ,n becn known t0 exist north .. Processes. in -many -industries-.re of lhe soMh colat of Kn(,lunni productive of considerable dust , ,i, iuinn,l Uouda. which, hanging finely M.-: bt.pn ,t(jn,ljly increasing and the vogetatlo.i. has grown more rapidly, The Office Cat T.-'-rm' A plrtnie of s niiitiiinal Itirllli. romnn e, beauty, ad venture a high tension iiii liiilraina Is "The Face On the Barroom Floor" Willi lllOXIIV II. W.U.TIIAI.I. T"M"itltmV The plcturo of Iho hour "HAS THE WORLD GONE MAD?" v t IMayitm nKttln n ' "THE FOUR HORSEMEN" The nights, which usually nre cold. Any suit 1-3 O.'f. pended In the air. form a combina tion that Is highly explosive. Amor.g tho establishments In this calegory ycry m1(1 are grain elevators, rubbor working plana, spice, flour and feed mills, j and plants in which powdered Ml-: gar, corn starch, sulphur and alum-; inum are used or manufactured. ( f Through a period of many years ; ( fires and evploslons in these and , other Industries have taken an Im-; nenre toll. The attention of engl- Hugarinan's. 11-14 f.TICKiZ SAVC- necrs has been applied to their pre vention, and lbs government has j organized a laboratory ur.der tho , direction of David J. Price, In the department of agriculture, for the sole study of dun explosion preven- j Hon. As a result fires and explo sions In several Industries rtave been reduced almost to a minimum! es pecially is this true In flour mills. The problem of the engineers has beci to discover how much dust must be suspended In the air to form an explosive mixture. While the lowest limit., was not definitely ascertained, It seems to range from a ! content of from 7 to 35 ounces of dust per thousand cubic feet of air. The Instrument devised by Price and his engineers Is to enable plant en gineers to check up on this condition bv drawing tha dust-cliffl-ged air through a paper filter, and compar ing the weight of the collected dust wlih the amount of air thus anal yzed, 1 MOVO va UW tf k ip noo hvo tt t-okva noie am' OCPEU0 OM WR FRlEMOS T& SEJIO IM' slBUS. VUOUtD A LETTER. j EVf&t TWO MQWlHS Sf ISFH MOtH I IP WOO HAV6 A FR.IEW0 IM THIS ! Fix, sou HAveifV fiwa fo wftixe AU TH' NOWS IH A.V)EVoil UTTER, 'l BUT Mft KM CASlUi MAAie U9 uei pwe.tscur MIA uei PAPExsott" r WA , Say It With Mc:oly "Our Earnost" . "Are You Playing Fair?" You nro away down there "In Yamn." while I am on the "Hln Rlnny Shore." It was "In Itosetinie When Wo Said (iooilbye." hark there In "Ohio." "Oh I.oveable Eyes," on this "Mys tic N'lghl" t realised that "Nobody Med When They Said that I Crlod Over You." I of en have a dream of your "Smiles" and wonder If you could be happy with me In a "Jungle Bur.gatow-; underneath a "Hindu Moon." "My Run Cpd." "I'd Itather Loved You and Lost You Than Never Have l.ovel You At All." "Don't Forget." you promised "Over the nndlophono," to be "My Buddy" Do you ever see "Georgette," "O.enrviovc," "Mary O'llrlen," "The Sneak," "Angel Child." or "The Dancing Fool?" Wo nil seem to "Toddle Along." some to "Chicago," som to "Cali fornia." some to tho "Dtxlo High way." others to "Argentina," or "Bamboo Bny." Rome have ovon gone "Down Virginia Way," whlln "Someday." I hope to get back to "Sweet Indiana Homo." The other night at a dance while I was "Stumbling" with some fel low I had to tell him to "Keep Off -$!y Shoes." He sure was nn "Ag grnvn In' Papa." Well, I must stop as It la "Three O'clock In the Morning." "Toot Toot Tootsle Ooo' Pye." "Tenement nose." To If Im Tbnt limit Hlinll Flo fllven lohn I), to Henry gnvn n (limn. Halleluiah, lhe Lord tho Lord "be praised I This dlm0 Invested will In time few more dimes for Henry raise. The grea est rompllmont you can nny a girl Is to ull her that you llilnk she'd look adorable In a bathing suit, ITS! Layer German mnrks and our wheat aro less than a dollar a bmhel. Senator Johnson, of California, Is go, ling so mad ho oven may split with an infinitive soon. What Is more fitting than red tape causing trouble In Russia? Monster fish about a million years old has been seen In Nobraska. Ho Is late this year. Department store burned In Ash land, N. C. All wo hope Is It got somo folding beds. A million Fords have been made this year. Police tell us nothing ran bo done to stop It. I Lasker wjnts two more t.evi aihans. Why not six. linking one for every day In tho week? I New York Is bcromlng so wicked. Maybn she needs a governess Instead of a governor. Washlng'on la alarmed over shirk army enlistment,!. Truth Is fewer men nre getting mnd enough In go and Join the army. Tho slight PttrHmmike which lilt California wfii mistaken for n presi dential boom at first. fltrnngo noises coming from a Flo rida swamp are thought to bo n ra dio entortalnor on vacation, Today Only , MISS DU PONT i in v Golden Gallows NEWS COMEDY Tuesday and Wednegday 4 BIG ACTS 4 Vaudeville Also EARLE WILLIAMS in Bring Him In A story' of. mystery, sus pense and action, inter mingled with an unusal love Interest, which takes 1 queer twist. - 111,1 . -.i Coming Thursday THE GO-GETTER By Peter B. Kyne Pome men nre late rome of the lime: rnnie men ore Into most of the time; but nil women nro In In all be time. We will soon have tho harvest moon, and harvested moonshine, Women nre entering all branch es of business. One bit a baggage man In Spokane. It takes a train only otic sooond to win tho decision over an auto, Crops nro a little Into this year be cause tho farmers hnve to wnvo lit ihn tourists, WILL ATTEMPT TO SCALE CONTINENT'S "ROOF" WITH PLANE ANCHOn AOE, Alaska, Aug. U. Mount McKlnley, tho highest elovn Hon on tho North American conti nent, will bo scaled for perhaps lhe first tlmo during August, If tho at tempt of Carl n. Kllelson, former army aviator, nnd C, J. Lincko, An chorage newspaper man, to Innd In nn airplane on tho frozen plntnnii at Its summit proves successful, The trio will be mndo for Hie purpose of securing nlr photographs of Hm fa mous peak and tho national prfrk which encloses II. Closo-up photo graphs of great herds' of innuntnln sheep aid Mm grent Alaskan brown Jicnr which range thn' mountain fast nesses will also bo taken, Thn start of Hio trip will ho mart a at McKlnley a ntlon, at tho entrance to thn pnrlt, where thoro U a nat ural landing Hold, Othor landing place urn nlso being locatod In var ious suctions of tho park whoro addi tional fuel s bo lug storod, On tho trip from Falrbanka to Iho entinnrn of tho park tho explor ers hopo to photograph tha great migratory caribou hords that atari down from he At'ctlo during tha latlnr pnrt of August, and tha roln doer herds griming In' Broad Pasi. Kntorlng tho park thoy will spiral to an aliunde of perhaps 25,000 foot, roconnolter over tho plateau sevoral miles squnro at the iiimmlt, and It tho Ico will permit, actually make a landing on (ho "roof of tho con tinent," 20,aoo fut ahov tho oa, MAKONH ATTIOXTION Kimdnl commiinlcntlon Tuesday evening, August 14, nt Mnsonlo hall at H o'cIock, 10 conduct services In respnet for memory of Into Warren (I. Harding, prosldont of tho United Hiatus. I'ltmnn ha present. . , J. H, OAIITEII, W, M. aLIa, I f , . , . ) 9: .t.i