ri At" Pf a Four" ' THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TITHDA oi'NT at, man. NEARING THE END? Issued dally except Sunday by The Herald Publishing company. Office, 119 North UlKhth St., Klamath Fall, Oregon P. K. 8017LB RUTH SOULS Kotsred at the poitofflca at Klamath Fall, Oregon, tor transmission through the mailt as second elan matter. Member of the Associated Proas ; The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled C- the nse for republica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or n otherwise credited Id this paper, and to all local news published herein. All rights of republi cation of special dispatches heroin are also reserved. r. r. Bon.K H. R. HILL P. C. NIOKLB H. W. REYNOLDS Ttt XraalBf Herald is the official "paper of Klamath, County and the ' , - City of Klamath Falls. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier. ONB rEAR IX MONTHS THREE) MONTHS ONE MONTH Br ONB TEAR 1. BIX MONTHS PER MONTH INFORMATION FOR ADVERTISERS Copy tor display advertising must be In this office not later than t 9. m. on the-day preceding publication in order to be Inserted in the issue of the psper of, the next day. ' Wast ads and reading notktes will be received np to 11 noon on the day of issue. - : - Advertising tor fraternal orders or societies charging a regular in itiation fee and dues, no discount. Religious and benevolent orders will be charged the regular rate for all advertising when an admission or other oharge Is made. TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1088. ALLITERATIVE PROBABLY a rose by any other name does smell as sweet, but we cannot go the-whole distance im plied by the poetical statement and agree with the Eugene Register that, the name of the rail link that is to connect the east and west sides of the Cascades should be changed to "Eugene cut-off." In the first place it is contrary to all ideas of euphony, and in the second place it immediately de prives the advertising man of "apt alliteration's artful aid." And the advertising artist, minus the opportun ity to turn a neat alliterative phrase, is in sore straits indeed. There's an alliteration of sound, at least, in Klam ath cut-off. If the phrase doesii't meet with unanimous approbation, we might; compromise by changing the. initial letter in cut-off . and make it Klamath kut-off. Future generations of publicity, men would rise up to call us blessed. ( 4 - . ... ... , ThTs'T;su'glrested :"! " case" any'"charige"'ir found ' necessary. For ourselves; the good old 1 name 'is en tirely satisfactory. Let it stand as Natron cut-off and we'll never whisper the slightest criticism. - But if others advocate the change, we shall urge the alliterative argument and, having thus secured the backing of all the ad clubs, we see nothing but sweep ing victory for our side. '',."' A COCKY THlE editor of a Wisconsin paper published a news article bearing upon a criminal trial then in pro gress in his. town, whereupon the presiding judge ( called him before the court and warned him against the publication of news that might prejudice jurors or veniremen. The editor replied that the accuracy of the article in question had not been disputed and sug gested that it was duty of the court to prevent the reading of newspapers by jurors and' veniremen and not to deprive the public of the right to the news. To do otherwise "is a new departure and an encroach ment upon the freedom of the press," in the opinion of the editor. To permit the courts to exercise a press censor ship to defeat the very ends of justice which the court presumably seeks to attain.- Respect for the law, and reverence for courts are lost unless they are sus tained by public opinion, and in order that the public may form sound opinions it should have access to all the facts. The newspaper" in question was seeking only to publish the facts, and that i3 what every reput able journalist tries to do. The position of the Wis consin editor not only meets with 'popular approval, but undoubtedly is sustained by the law and by. pre vious court decisions. Some of these folks who kick about the fly pest may be the same ones who leave garbage uncovered. ! The motorists who get smashed up at a railroad crossing ought to know pretty well how it feels to be a pedestrian.. ' The people who can't remember to pay their bills promptly, usually call around quite regularly to get their pay envelopes. The folks who throw waste paper in the streets may not be hogs, but they don't seem to mind if their town looks like a pig pen. . ' If the soviet system were applied to the public schools, the teacher of course would not be permitted to whisper to any of the children. I sill 1 .-1. 11.11 -.. . ,1 1 1 1 1. I . . 1 . People, who ask why eggs are higher than they used to be, might look around and note all the garages in places formerly, occupied by chicken coops. ; - ..President and Manager Beoretary-Trraaurer .Editor City Editor ..Advertising Manager Mechanical Superintendent a.iw . S.00 l.TS .03 Mall 5.00 - a.7s .03 ARGUMENT J JUDGE THE GAME IS UP WILLIAM J. SIMMONS, emperor of the Ku Klux Klan, has sent an S. 0. S. call to Edward Young Clarke, with whom he recently quarreled, offering Clarke full control of klan affairs if Clarke will return to the organization. Clarke is a shrewd publicity-getter and was the brains, undoubtedly, of the whole nefarious project. Poor old Colonel. Simmons, animated with a sincere : desire to right evils that he saw out-cropping, living in the romantic atmosphere of an ante-bellum south', . saw in the klan an instrument to advance the cause , of righteousness and wreak vengeance on the wrong doers " iff :S- '-. ' , " . - The task of putting over the idea was too big " for him fom the beginning. He" danetFiWClarke, ' who immediately saw the possibilities inThe'-.masked ' mystery, the secret rites, the noble sounding titles, all appealing to the natural dramatic instinct of man. Clarke commercialized the idealistic dream of the old southerner. As a press-agent he was the superior product of this era of publicity, an evil genius, it is time, but nevertheless a genius, k As an organizer. he is equally evil and equally excellent.' He" stopped at nothing, stooped to everything, and soon old Colonel Simmons saw his dream child, that was to reform the world by gentle suasion, grown to a terrible maturity, swashbuckling .through peaceable communities and countrysides, a coward- ly, bullying hulk of a thing, leaving a reign of terror in its wake, hiding behind a mask, scourging the weak and ignorant, maiming, . killing, torturing a' despicable, cruel un-American thing. The chivalrous spirit of the old southerner re volted, and he threw Clarke out with the aid. of . the courts. ' 'r 1 With Clarke, the press-agent gone, public, in terest withered. The orders for memberships at ten dollars apiece and pillow-slips and nighties'at $G.&0 more per costume, ceased to come in. Simmons, beneath the devil and the deep sea, admits this in his invitation to Clarke to return. The curiosity that prompts the majority to join the klan, deprived of the stimulus and constant appeal of Clarke-directed publicity, has waned. 1 In a statement to the Atlanta Journal, explain ing his reasons for the offer of forgiveness to Clarke, Simmons says: "Development and progress of, the 'Ku Klux Klan is stopped and disintegration is setting in throughout the entire bounds of the invisible em pire, due to lack of leadership and want of con structive programs of activity." He declared further, the story relates,' that "men of greats influence had either become indif ferent or have withdrawn from the order." . ; " Clarke may come back, but he, not any other man, can restore the breath of life to the klan. The public has seen beneath the cowl and gown, and . knows what loathsome skeleton is concealed there. And what is more Clarke knows. He is too clever a bunco artist not to realize when the game is . over. We predict' that he never comes back. He will seek new fields for the exercise of his warped talents. And poor deluded fools, all over the United States, who have played the suckers' parts, will tear up the membership cards, burn the para-' phenalia, and charge the $16.50, if they were lucky . to get off that cheaply, to experience. Within a year there will be no Ku Klux klan, but the misery and hatreds and community strife and distrust will not bo wiped out so quickly. The passing centuries cannot atone the crimes, or undo , the damage, committed in the name of the klan. .v The OfficelCat Anothor good endurance test Is a 3-year-old son who develops an up 'polite for' water at '2 a. ' hf."""-"'-" ' Clarence Mcintosh thinks a bach elor Is a man . wise enough not to get married until 80,' and then too wlso. One of the two things a young girl thinks about Is the man she might go with next. Have you ever noticed, asks J. Perkins, that the man who kicks the most about hard work does little of It. Many a poetic girl who raves over violets and lilies knows exactly what to do with a good dish of ham and cabbage, says Clrant Raymond.' Yes, chimes In Loyd DeLap, but If she Is not watched she will mince the ham and make slaw of the cab bage. N 4 It Is unreasonable, bowovcr, to expect tho farmer to keep on rais ing oats whllo the city kocps on raising wages. , From what wo know and hoar, aye Imagine some people measure thnt throe miles in tho wrong di rection. Man spends half his II fo cussing tho old. fogies and the other hair worrying about tho rising genera tion. ' Children are an 1 educations' force,, at that. No parent could keep up with the now ailing with out them. . ' i. A lot in Dm kicking Is dona by tho longiio than the foot, oplnos Bert Conk, Thin Is a Life of lips and Downs so reads the motto of tho Kluvut or. Hoys' Union, " ' Roma poople, In an effort to "bring homu the bacon" spill tlio fat In tho fire.' , Drains make a mun smart, and so (loos woolen underwear, Biiorls Austin Huyden. Home Modern Marvels Tlio guy who la "Always Chasing Rnlnbows" and never gets tired or dlscouruKcd, Tho bird who declares lib Is get ting by "Forever Wowing Hub hies." ' . ' The guy whoso Ingenuity gets hi in a line on how to exist "Always liulldlng Cnstlos In tho Air." AT TUB MDEHTV J. IS. Williamson's remarkable un dersea picture will be presented for the first time In Klamath Falls nt the Liberty theatre, nil today and Wednesday as the feature uttractlun at that house. "Wonders owllia 8ca" Is a gath ering of marvolouily beautiful un dersea scenes with highly dramatlo episodes, such as a battle with a deadly ihoray and a vicious barra cuda, and the capture of a shark on a hook before the eyes of the eamera. riotnantla sunken ships art the scenes of undersea exploration, and a delightful story of an ocean ographor, a stowaway boy, an artist and a bonutlful girl binds It to gether Into an unusual novelty. Tho Into Alexander Graham HolH the In ventor of tho telephone, appears In tho picture, making a trip along the bottom of the sea, and the now chomlcul diving devise by which It Is possible to go about unencum bered with ropes und airlines Is also lntorostlngly presented In tho now Williamson production. AT THE LIBERTY m Orcliretra Kvcry Evening Mr. Hurry Itorel, IHrertny ' WKT OIl.UMY HOT Oil TLl Winter or bummer f ' 1 KlamnUi Fulls MUST HE Entertained! " That's why wo'ru going to show "WONDERS OF THE SEA" Today and Tomorrow Instead of holding It back until next winter. i It's tho year's mast Interesting picture! That's saying a LOT but the riCTC'UIS proves It! ' I ought to know I saw It myself. . II. W. P, "Without work man degener ates," thinks Yale Review . writer. With work, In August, man evap orates. , - .', i ' . . ' : "My ambition Is to beat Tllden," says a tennis player In Sport. Ours Is to whip a collector. "Oaths are conservative," says a Bookman writer, who maybe never bit bis finger with a hammer. "Many think authors a suporlor class," thinks an Atlantic one. Some think some aro second cluss. "Books are llho friends,", says Book Chat writer. Wo don't think so. Books never borrow money, '.'Taxes are like death," says Sul livan in Metal Workers' Journal. And, we add, so are taxis. "China has no commercial crook edness," says a Harpers' writer. As you know, aha Isn't modern. "Colloge life's lp a statu it In nocuous dCHiictude," snys California educator. Wo thought so. After vacations come the breach of promise milts. ' ' "Stars have sor.Iiil Instincts," say.i Isabel Lewis. Movie stars, wo add. have a divorce Instinct. MICKIE SAYS 6 i ABOUT A DlSAOVAUTMe OP TVV ) WA GOTTA QUrf FIMOIWCi (FAULT WITH OUR PATBOUS AlLTrfJ flKA6 OR. QOlf, " SO MOD MUSTOTl TAKE MB TOO SERIOUS WHEU t vaaue m uC eoaaestioufi c.-n va Qcntrt 1 1 twe wa. i FIM 'M vJOOV-tAXf WORK v wo PiAce Me eur RtavtT HERS. . AT TUB WXIfi TIIMO ' ''' A diversified array of pleasing novelties will be seen, on I ha new hill nt tho I'lne Tree tlicatro on Tuesday and Wodnosdny. Hnydois unlnula In a trained ani mal novelty, tho Inst word in ani mal training. This Is a feature per formance of trained goats, monkeys and rats, performing unusual feats and comedy situations, Tho per verse nature of the goat Is knowu to almost everybody and It Is a coil stsnt source of wonder ind smuss ment to watch them . 0 through many tricks, Adams and I.s Dells, a clover pair, of fomalo Impersona tors,. Jack Collins, a wise old bird, who has a penchmont for fun mak ing In '"Flames aud J'jillosophyi" with an orlgnal line of comedy that Is away from all other comedians and prosented In an exceptional manner. Wallace and Weir In "A Woe Drop of Bcotoh.'" both are gifted with sprlghtfulness und an nbundanco of talent. Their dances show skill, graco and poetic motion.- - Tonight and Wednesday FOUR ACTS OF ' Wallace & Weir 1 "A Wee Drop of Scotch' Jack Collins Comedian. Adams & La Delia "Some GirU" . Snyder's Animals Trained Animal Novelty Be sure and let the young folks see this last act. ' Also .' CORRINE GRIFFITH in Island Wives and CHARLIE MURRAY in ; Social Error KOVAfj rOITI.V (itt'IHIOl) HKAH, WILLIAM LIVKW AT IMK)lt . Vaudeville I1KEMI5N, Aug. 2t.-Mnck III tli-j old days when William Holumsul- ' lorn, now living quietly In Holland, used to enjoy traveling about Kur- opo as tho Gorman emperor, tho steamer Dromon often saw him In iitnlled In tho Imperial suite, built gaudily for his porsonal uso. And at that 11 m o It, was related, Hioiikh never proved, that n sumptuous royal coffin was always carried on tills vessel, In enso of eventualities, It now appears this story wnn true, Thw. Ilrnmon Is today tho Constantinople, running hatwoon Sandy Hook and tho Golden IIorn, Down In her hold there Was found recently tlio coffin rnfprrnd tn. ;