Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1925)
PAGE SIX "EVENING HERA tP,' KLAMATH FALI OKEGtilT ' WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1923 - .,)'! awr'u.' YOU'RE A BETTER MAN THAN I AM,t HUNKA TIN . 1 Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Herald;', Publishing Company. Office;. 119 ,N. Eighth Street, Klamath- Falls, Or. E. J. MURRAY : W. H. PERKINS Entered !as ' second, class matter at the postoffice at: Klamath Falls,"Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. . '- v - ' " . ?: !,. . Member of the Associated Press ,...'' . Die Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of re publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other wise', credited irl this ; paper and also the local news published "therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches here iri are also reserved. . . The - Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath' County 4ind the City of Klamath .Falls. ': . , , ' SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Currier Ono Tear ..S6.50 . 3.50 :. 1.95 .. .65 Six Months ..... Tbrae Months One Month WEDNESDAY, AN EXPENSIVE "PEEVE" ; In order : to protect the interests of the'; taxpayers, whose servants they . are, members of 'the county court should refuse to approve any bills which the. acting, dis trict attorney W., P. Myerssubmits for., traveling' ex penses, witness fees and other items by reason.: of. his sight-seeing junkets to various parts of the county to tfy cases which properly belong iri the Linkville district. f Court house report has it that the acting district, at torney is "mad" at Justice of the 'Peace Hunsaker, and' in order to punish: that official, as he views it,.vhe is ' refusing to file any cases' in Hunsaker's court.' : ! Instead, he. journeys about the county, to Bonanza, -to Chiloquin; or to any other district which might suit liis peculiar fancy, ' there to i try - cases - which originate here in ' this district and which should be properly tried here. - , The justice - of the peace is not a salaried' officer. His income is derived solely from-fees charged, in cases or iginating in his court. In his campaign of .reprisal the acting district attorney can materially reduce the income ' of the justice of the peace, even though it is an expensive and wholly unnecessary, venture so 'far as the taxpayers are concerned.. . . :. V . ; ' . . The Evening- Herald has, been reliably informed that; the police magistrate of the city, of Klamath' Falls is an. ex-officio' justice, of the peace,; and is legally . qualified to-sit in-judgment on any case which might arise in the. Linkville district. , ,, . . . u , . , 'Why, then, does the acting district attorney subject the taxpayers of .this, county to this needless and foolish: expense? The Evening Herald holds no. brief .for Justice of the Peace Hunsaker; ,It is:not interested m the quar rel between him-.and the acting district, attorney. But The Evening -Heuald is interested in the taxpayers ot Klamath county, and it. will demand- that: the county couii protect the , taxpayers financially at least, from the Myers' tantrums.' '"j J.. -: The Evening ' Herald knows,: as does-any other ob servant of public officials, that, from time immemorial the-district attorney, has been in: the habit, of' dictating so far as possible the rulings of a justice of the peace. Court house report has it that the acting district attor ' ney failed in-his efforts to .dictate what Justice of the, .Peace Hunsaker should or should not do, Justice tiun- saker is reported to have fold the acting district, attorney that he and he alone would run his court. - . As a result, dust is gathering on. the benches and- desks ' in the- justice court of Bob Hunsaker,,, while, this, man. .; Myers is traveling about .the county at public expense 'filing his cases in outside.'courts, . ,, , " v, ;: 'The county court has within its power the . right to block this childish action on the part of the acting district attorney. It can refuse to pay these needless bills, and. unless we miss our guess, ' this, man Myers will'ease upi a bit in his sight-seeing tours to Bonanza and other parts: of the county at public expense. . .. ,..-,.:.., . TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE; ji la 13 3 b 'Mr a I . tWl , lio i' ' ' Lr,iud- . sL - , . -!.il, Li u. : if ) . pS; , . , 23 34 , . . " ; "TT aC vf aT " "" T p" ',' v PS? " "" RES H ? -Sr-r " 5T; T T 35"" !iTT " " : .r. r iai L,. , i r p SpH 5 n sr1 M 1 fw j" 1 "7" ; s7 rs. .. r?, m&5 , tt " : Mm - iJ . Srf ' . " Lm '' v. . . w rj?Is "St f j -.i '" ' ' Ms ' ' ''" : '!: L : 7 i. ; . 68.:. 69 1 , fJ! Jo ' "TT ft .ydiL I 1 1 WiM I I Kl I I 1 1 I I li HOlUZOifTAIj Small Instrumetit' to ooen locks. Baking dish. . .. , Publisher , News 'Editor RATKS By Mall One Year .:.. , - Six Months ..... Three Months -'. One Month ............... .$5.00 .... 2.76 ... 1.58 .65 MAY 13, 1925 13. To ve-j... v('- 14. : Lament j. . , 1 6. The . front, v; ; 17. Wcniler worker. 19. Meadow grass, i 20. Wading bird. , , 21. Decorated. 23. Spines (on roses)'.' . 25. Elthor's partner. 26. 'Epoch. 28. Sea eagle. '' - , 29 Hebrew 'word 'for God: 32. Officers of'the navy. ' '".'. 36. Dug for ore. '' ;. ' 39. To mimic; :;' 'K'-'- '; 40. To cancel. ' , ' .43.. Propeller of a. boat. 44.' Upon. V ... . 45'.! What the boss said when I asked.fur p raise;:.'. . 4'6. AVhat I wanted him to say. 47. Blackened. ., ;'-" ;. - '. . : ... ; 49.. To piece-out.. 51 How to! land in JalU 53. Strange; : ' .'' ( -' 56. 'Half an em. ; ', 58. Bleat of asheep.-. J . 69: 'Taxli 61i IPald publicly. 62: California's fruit. 65. To stay. 67 Foretokens. 68. Wing part of a seed. 70. Inclined. ' i 72. Elevation. . Chemical which- yields sugar. To cook slowly. To perform. Unit. " - . ' . . : Vessel used for Eucha-rlst (a is . unkeyed1 letter; 79. What the . chicken gets in tno ';;.-;.neck.:' ,".' '.;.'.' ;!i,.V'' v VEimCAI 1. ouug goat. 2.. Mistake.. 3. iForm of -jou. 5. Like: . g. Mature. (. Demonstrative pronoun.' S. Exists. . . Rent (verb). ;. 10. Sprang up. 11. Pig sty. 13. Four and five. 15. Energy. : . . . 16i Ilouao' plant.' . . . . 18. Challenged:" '" 20. A draft- animah ' 22. Light brown. 24. Old chicken. 25. Unit of olectrical resistance 27. 30. 31 33. 34. 35. 37. Part of the moutlu Sheltered. Boa; .'!' Wiser. Animni similar to civets. Stratum. Electrified parttoles. 38. Before. -' " 1 41. To- knock.- .- 42. To obsorvo. r': . . - 47 Wrath ' ' 48. Officers in college. 50. Shrub-'used by Arabs for tea. 51. iA ' rascal. 52. Accomplished. . - 54. '''raftor. .. 55. Frozen water. , 57. Opposito of phonetic. 58. ' Woe or pest. . ' 60. Stops. 61. To attach. . 63. To sloop.- 64; To rellovo. 65. Frog, : 66. A particle. .67. English monoy. v 69. Behold. , 71. Female sheep.-. .73. Upon. 71. Printer's measure. The-radlp set keeps some at homo and so' does the onion sot, but the society set doesn't.. . . YKsxKRftars solution ' 1AMPIE1DM5T10IWI I W . Many--a young daughter ro3embles her, mother because "they paint alike: 'ft'; ' 'h : an Pms oTT L g P fflOEJtJSp A I no Sa n n o vEpbbeEn 1 TEMsgH lEgsBNly l l , : sItI5 rImieOScIaIsIt or , ... r ,; , rrT, r i "' ' fiWNT TO 'BOMBARD : SPANISH MOROCCO PARISi. Ma4y. .12. Franca Is ask ing Spain, for authority to bombard or attack the concentratians in Spanish " Morrocco of the- Riffian tribesmen now engaged in an in vasion of. the French, sone." The Spanish! are further asked to-stop .the provisioning of Adb-El-Krim, the Riffian leader, through: the fort 'of Agidir. .'. ' . - . ; These requests are being made; in the-formj of "conversations," - al though 'there-is no great confidence here in the results to: be expected, the French- feel that they are en titled to ' some help from Spain-In the present- ..situation as"- tnoy ' say The Haunted House TALES about it wert as numerous as its dark, broken windows. Oaks shadowed it thickly; winds sucked through its halls. The shutters sagged and were ivy-eaten the windows giving in to f . . . . .' '. - . ... .. l - t y , .. . . ... . emptiness at once foreboding, Excitement ran agog when the place , was bought. School children huddled to watch the rooms renovated. A sign swung out: "Stop here for tea." Lights sprang up. It became a fre quent pleasure to drop, in of evenings. Ia time, the towns people loved the place. -The inviting sign, the cleanliness, the light banished fear. Many a product you didn't know and- might not have trusted, has become intimate to you through' the clearness of advertising. Family standbys in your medicine chest, baking powders, ex tracts products that might endanger if less than pure you know to be pure because widely advertised. You are sure of their quality wherever you buy. j'You feel' safe in using them in using any product that invites, through advertising, the test that proves its worth, t Your one-time fear is now a willing ... j.,-, ,'! ,1 -.jr-h.-t:?. ' "' , M - ;:'' f .. - ' ' -'-... ':";', confidence... ", i, .!...", - ,... , Read the advertisements that are worthy of BY CHARLiES p.' STEWART I XBTASHINaTON Congressman j y . Martin : I,,' Davcy of Ohio , esumaios or. aa be puts 11. Kucsscs that America could dou ble her farm production if she '. tried. Few farmers, even,: have etuciifd the soil as JJavoy has. He calls himself a. t'trce surgeon." 1 think "tree aoctor" Ills better, with the- emphasis on "tree dietet ics." . , . Of course if a tree needs an op emtlon. Davey operates. Ho has to be something of a general prac titioner. - Aboreal medicine ' Is young;. It hasn't reached the stage . of much specialization. But in the : . main, it seems to me that Davey prefers doctoring- to the knife. vLike most, good doctors, he con e'erns himself principally " with - what his patients eat, depending 'little on drugs. 1HE! broad and butter, meat J, and potatoes, cake and ice cream' are the soil, with a lit tie . flavoring and a few , relishes which they , Absorb from the air. So. as a tree dietician. Davey stud-' leg tno sou.) v. ; "Karmors study the soil, too, but . ;Divey'B' study has. to be mors. . thorough than theirs.,- For a troir- ; lias such an nppetltck "It's only n big plant; after all," observes .Davey. Yea, but whereas o, plant- . like. a stalk of grain requires only cubic Inches of soil, a tree re quires cublo yards. It follows that Davey has"-to go -Into it more deeply in the literal as well as - the figurative sense than almost onybody. except a miner or a prospector drilling for oil. Thus . what he knows ubout the soli Is the lust word. A AS ; on export, . theni Davey points out that very little soli remains on earth which isn't already being farmed. As for this country, "all the land available for cultivation and not now ' cultl-': voted," ho nays, "is about' equal ta the state of Illinois. When this they: are placed at a. great: dlsad vantage in repelling tho Riffian In vasion through the ability of the tribesmen to. make all preparations for attack - whilo - sarely ; on the Spanish side of the border. " The modorn Ciridorella completes hor happiness by getting alimony,,.. dreadful. to recognize products your confidence Mfttonal land Is reduced te culti vation thore will be no more.' i ,. AMERICAN farmers are ' coll1 toward the suggestion of 'in creased crop production Just now. With a surplus already-or ; what Davoy calls an "anparedt , surplus" they ask, "Why raise i more?" "Our present-day, . prob- lem." they say at the Agriculture Department, "is one of marketing. Production will take care of Itself; i '"But our. Increasing - popula . tloni'" Davey ' urges. "When we -reach the subsistence' limit what ' tiion?" "That will be long tlmeiil answer some. "Less than a gcnerV : atlon. Judging from the past," In. : slsts Davey. "In my own short life I have seen farm after farm abandoned, exhausted, that In my, youth produced-excellent cropB." ' "ATe. the worst we can trek elsewnere," argue the (op timists. "In all the worldi" responds Davey. "there remains but one spot capable of abundant production . which is ' not under cultivation now the South Amer. icon valley . of- the River Plate". And that Is being settled rnp. idly." ' - i ., '. ' , "ssin'jf 44 A S we can't spread out," con; XTL tinues Davey, "we musty intensify. Much . of our exhausted land can be reclaimed. That which Is unexhausted must, be safe-guarded from exhaustion) - that,- as -requlredr-its-productivity-- 'may be increased. ''Otherwise, 'though thev- rich, al; ways -will be well fed, this will be come a country of famine for the" poor. An abundance of cheap fer tlllzers!"' Davey was discussing tho importance of Muscle Shnale ' development. "That's our heed.". - . ' '".. V . i BUT whsr.worry about what's to' the future, until we come to .. it? "It's .Dbor nolloy." renllca 'I t Davey, "to neglect the question of. ' ytiur your food supply until you , Aejgln to.jtarve,1' N ij.i BROOKLINE, Mass.'Mny 13. A striking, figure has bcn rempyed from contimporary literatures by! tho.' death of Miss; Amy LowollV'poet.'and critic. A paralytic stroke'-caused hor death at1 'her home yesterday. Sho was in her' 51st year, j '" ' l . , : C I . ' ' I ' II- u ' I - ' V '- ... s-wisr-i I .-;: . -'Hi ' ' ' 1'' f,.i: ' . ' ' ! -'' '- . -- :: ; j Mt r-eow-..n..-.)l j I. To Taj) Ufchtly, f ' I 11 I; j V ' ' - ': i. '