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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1925)
PAGE SIX EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MON'DAV, AUGUST j 1926 EVERETT TRUE By CONDO C oh i Wa77 evcrcti i i Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Herald Publishing Company. Office: 119 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls. Ore. E. J. MURRAY Publisher W. H. PERKINS News Editor ! WCA f lUl-'NC MY PdUW"iA( r T ' - "" p i mrm, r-- Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Klamath Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 1879. Member of the Associated Press (The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of re publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other wise credited in this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herc 'xi are also reserved. ir ' The Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath County and the City of Klamath Falls. SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Carrier RATES nr Mail Ona Year 8lx Monthsi Three Mentha One Month 8.50 , Ona Tear 3.50 i Six Months 1.96 Three. Monthe - .5 1 One Month - .IB.00 . 2.75 . 1.E0 . .( MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1925 THE CITY PARK The time has come when a definite decision must be reached by the Park Board as to what action will be taken upon the application of the Oregon Trunk railroad to purchase the city park property. The Herald would suggest that the proper thing for the Park Board to do is to refuse to sell any part of the property to the North ern Line. Instead, it should give the property to the Oregon Trunk absolutely free. We know that some will think this is throwing away about $10,000 of the people's money, especially so since handsome prices nave been pam -.or adjoining proyeny. But is not the good will of the Oregon Trunk worth more than $10,000 to Klamath Falls? We paid 300,000 to Strahorn for less. Such a donation will be like cast ing bread upon the waters. It will return an hundred fold. There are very few taxpayers in the city who will object to the donation and fewer still who believe that this property ever could be used as a park. The railroad development projected in the vicinity of this site is so extensive as to make it impractical for park .purposes. The amount of money the city has invested in ''t is so small and its importance to the Oregon Trunk is so great that its donation to the railroad will have such beneficial effect as to make it one of the wisest actions ever taken by any municipality. Let us give the Oregon Trunk the park site to be used in the furtherance of its development plans. MOTORISTS! BE SURE OF YOUR COLORS Accidents will happen to the best of motorists, but the odds against them will be less when traffic signals are standardized throughout the country. In that be lief several highway and engineering organizations have agreed on a code to include the use of luminous and non luminous signs and signals. Three colors have been selected for primary traffic ""' laundries of Klamath Palls control; Red to stop, yellow for caution, and ercen to!ai tne,r A'Wora can give batter aer- proceed. Careful experience showed that at a distance the red lights were most easily distinguished from other colors, and require the lowest light intensity for unmis takable recognition. A red light of 75 candle power could be distinguished at GOO feet, on the average, but a green light had to be of 250 candle power, a yellow iight required 750, and a blue light 1,000 candle power. mi , . ... . ine use ana signiiieance pi trattic signals should be- '''" M baabbali antra used m come so familiar that thev would nromotlv iknt thi in. benefit game reaterdai, The All Laundries Aid Movement For New Signs i Street signs win be a big benefit vice to patrons wild all streets of the ,Uy pr operly marked, A ml the laundries are upprcriiiivo of Um efforts .if fins Kvenlug Herald 10 pus.i I h la movement to au early .oniplot! in. That's why they've come, through like a good hunch ol sports. The New City Laundry will wash m 111 I :Mm I a -iW:fM ' &J ...... v ; wx- jac r Wmuj " & ,. - : SRPINC THE WRONG SIDE FIRST People a., divided into fwo eia.es bv ,heir attitude SdS STSISggWSt inward new thmes. Some jump at them. Others shy at them. Some anti cipate their advantages. Others perceive their dangers. When Faradav in 1832 showed before the British As sociation at Oxford that a spark could be produced by magnetic induction, a dean of the university who watch ed the experiment shook his head and said : "I am sorry for it." He then turned and walked away repeating: "i am sorry for it" As he passed out of the door he turn ed again and said: "Indeed, I am sorry for it. It is putting new arms into the hands of the incendiary." Nobody can deny that his apprehensions have been justified. But the learned gentleman overlooked the electric light of the future. At the time of Charles II a law was enacted to prohibit coaches on the streets of London because of 'the de struction caused by their Vheels to the paving stones." There was undoubtedly reason for such legislation. Coaches did wear out the pavement. So do trucks now adays. But it would be better to strengthen the- paving than to abolish the trucks. Neophobia is a dangerous disease. common among men, doctors say, although it is a rarity among women. That conclusion may explain why wo men never miss a bright bit of color "in a show window, be it hat, gown or lingerif. But it doesn't explain the wear and tear caused by folks who see red all the time. The hue and cry over the traffic problem has had ex pression in all sorts of slogans. Why not "Be, sure your colors are right, then go ahead?" Klamath Superior Laundry .1 :nateil 111) to the Met ild road, and the Troy laundry sent In Us eherk for $i. This sort at oooparatloa on tin? part of t'.ie lnuurirle. Is the sort that :.i maktDg Klamath Kalis a honor plaee to live. Jack McAuliffe Is Taken South MKKT n 'HI HIHH MACKH The christian Kndeavors of the l I'restiy lerinn muu i nnaiiaa uaurvuoa . , , , iue with Mls Douiiit Min ks on Sini- Skfn Grafting Operation Ex- Uay at tna Wacka horn i tha road nectctl m He!i) Klamath I1" Merrill. Aboul tweatjf of Hie Stoc': Grower Acoompanlad by Mrs. kfoAuliffa anil hi;' nurse. Hlaa Krunees Olafka, Jhck McAulttfa l"fi on this loom- I lugs train for Han Pranclaco, wharA CRATER LAKH he win I,., pfaoad the ear., b't Mr Mr"' Tm ,,"u"" Dr, Mcboitlgaa, the family largaon. '" "'I'll"" Watt and Cy IVrry wl, ni ,,, him ,i ui aK ei'Jey-'il a tr Crater Lake Sun- for appendleltls. It Is the plan of tha family to have the atti-uillni; Imambera attaadod the mMtUiai ! whlrh was followed hy an Informal ! aftrrnoou I Sideswipes at Headlines MIUT SWAETWOOD Gosh, Monday cornea around in a hurry. You fi-t to lied Sunday night with no premopition of disaster. Get up early, sore and lame from your fishing trip and feeling as though old man Time had played a lietnlouB Joke by putting Monday on sueh a day, you start off for a mis erable try at a day's work. Mere's Some Trillh "An' yo' say dat little twin baby Din a gal?" inquired Parson Jones of one of his dusky flock. " Vassuh." "An' de other one. Am dat of de contrary sex?" "Vassuh. She am a gal, too." We feel like something of Ibis kind today, so why not spill it? Me: I'm alius sottin' in the nun, Jest aettln', with my cheer again (he wall. I ain't gol nary a trouble, not a one, "l'aiiit everybody boasls of one at all. Money in the bank, but not ho much: 'N'uff 1 guess to last me till I'm thru, And keep a place lo eat for mo and Butch. There's nothlu' else fer him and me , lo do. The Jotlge, lie stopped and spoke i 'ol her day : Asked me why 1 didn't go lo Work. ' Rays, "Just because you're hair's a ! actttn- gray, Is no sign you should sit all day and shirk." But 1 jest grinned, and Jedge he passed on by. His head held high. 'n. Oh you know the way; Like he'd first mortgaged all the earth and sky. And goin' to lease the moon that very dny. The Jedge, his house Is made of brick. You see it standin' thar atop the hill, Lookin' like a place to keep the sick. It can't be called a home, and never will. And Jedge. he's rich. Richer than the rest for many mile. And yet his boys they kluda like to snitch. And no one ever saw him crack a smile. - His wife is kinda funny, seems to me. They say they don't get on the very best. ) She's like a poker, stiff as she can be, And always saying' "My" and. "I'll he blest." Well, Jedge, be works all day you know. Goes home to see a naggy wife at night. A t'igiirin' all the time about his dough, And wohdOl'fn' if tie1 balance dome out right. I guess the Jedge is happy, 1 don't know. A flrsggln in Hie money every day. But folks is happy many djfferebl ways. Me: I'm alius sittin' in the sun. Jest sittin' with my cheer agin the wall I ain't got nary a trouble, not a one; 'Taint everybody boasts of one at all. It isn't hard lo tell how lazy we are this morning is it? In fact we're so darn lazy that we're ending this column before we think ol' aomo thjng else to say. V.A Wl Auto Turns Over r'AI.f.S CITY, NEII, Aug. .'!---Mrs. Krnest E. Ileeh. it, of St. l.ouis, .was Instantly klllctl and her husband was probably fatally In jured when their automobile over turned on the King or Trails high way, four inlhs north of here early Escaped Convict Caught Near Salem , David Jackson From Klamath County, Captured on Jefferson Farm SALEM, Ore., Aug. 3. - David Jackm.n, n (rusty who escaped from : the state peullenliary potato patch last ThurAdny was .cuught yeslcr- , day near Jefferson, Marlon county. Philip Davles, another trusty who I" ' at tha same time, Is still at large. JackHiin was sent up frjni iManiai.i county to serve twi year.i for forgery. J Put alius work ill' and a worryln'so, 1 ' 1 . : . Cu IMA SQUAW SKIRT OM AM TAKE AT IMA PACK TURMS AT CARRSlW V M out Too. This -fa Papoose, indim -'' " "' . PAPOOSE. IS GOT PAPOOSES AklT SPOSEO LEGlS m t' walk , am' chiefs TME. P.lf:TAMIr-T'. .- 'Ms tA irnCf, . I phyalclaa start tha grafting of skin upon hta baraad limb as stum as he reaches tin- southern city. iiis condition oontlnuaa to irn- brovo and the attack of rhctimutbttn wlii.-h he auf(erad several days ago has left, so that his many friends hero feel he will stand the trip In good shape. II Is hot expected lie will return to Klamath Kails now until he Is able to Is- on his f.'et again. KIM Uii Mi (..inn The road around Otater rial la es aaltonl accordlag to reports brought !.n k yaaterdaw from Oratar UakjO by H. G. Shldler. A. G. ChUroha .'"I. T. T, Chaves and C. K. Brandon hurg, who drove around the rim road yesterday. Mr, Shldler re ported the lake to be beautiful and tie lourlsta nunierouM. There Is only one bad stretch of road, and that Is between Anna i reek and the Klamath 00 trance. 80S) BOB DIVOKOH Winifred c. Smith loday broughl suit for dlvotvu from Alec II. Smith on Hie 'barge of cruel and Inliumni treatment. The suit was filed In circuit anuria lull owing lo summer adjournment the COBe will not he tried ii ii 1 1 1 September. day. Mrs. Delaolli one or iin. city's finest recent brides seeing Hie scen ic ipot for (ha first time. i WAV DOWN sot Til Visitors over the wek-end from the extreme south Included M. II. Roioatball Jr. of Memphis, Taan,, and M. l-'rledlander of Ciiluinbjin, Geurgia. who were guesls at the Hotel While Pelican while here, leaving this morning lo aaa Crater I. aki. on tln lr lour of tha west. si h.wvii.i.i; PARTY t II. 1). lliirroUKhs, .lohn II. Spald ing, A. K. De Forest and Robert M. Cook, all of SueaBytllOj California, making a motor lour of Oregon, topped hern over Sunday enroute to Orator and Diamond lakes. MltS. MAItTlN If Kit!-: Mra, Thomas Marl In arrived l.ist night from San PraUQlaco where she has been (convalesclng following a serious operation, Sne was met ut tha train anti taken Immediately t'o her 'some In High street between SlXtlb and Seventh si reels where she will convalecre further. Vijbtb rtRTHfi'R JOIINHON Whooping cough claimed a victim early this morning al 1 o'clock when Floyd Arl'iur Johnson, thir teen month old abb of .Mr. and Mrs. Archie A. Johnson ol Shlppliiglon died. Cause of death was declared. to lie complications us the result of a severe attack of whooping OUglt. The little ohild wan horn In Klamath county, llo had been ill for three weeks. Funeral services have been set tor Tuesday afternoon lit 2:110 o'clock hy thu graveside i.inkviiie cemetery, I'llO.M I.OM VIKJAS Mif. and Mrs, it. Jagger of l.us Vegas, Nevada, making a tout of Oregon and Washington urrlved her,' this morning from ,lho north and will molor on lo Crater laikclonmr rov, after which they will rotUiW here (or ii short visii before suing soul h, HKK LAVA BROS Mr, mill Airs, oils Wilson with the Misses Catherine 0' Riley and Itath- iiilne t'onnoly fnotorpd to tile I. live Beds Sunday, returning home fate I flat evening, , KANSAS CffS PEOPIiK In making a lour of the uiirlh- west, Mr d Mrs. Waller Harding or Kansas city visited Klamath Falls Saturday and Sundae made a trip to Orator Lake, Mr, Harding Is In the icsluuriiut business In thu aouthorn city, ORATHH I.AKi: I'ABTV Mr. and Mrs. F, I.. Ball, t. JL Ball and Mrs. Leonard all of Ktna, California, were guests hero Sunday on their way to Crater I, like. to i t i.i; LAKH A. .1. Connolly and Jimmy Dainjh en.. QlOtbred to Ttlle l.alte Yester day where Ihey spent tu day. ATTMNDIXa HiWrTlNCI Lkoyd Ryian, local merchant, wllir Harry Ooodlng left Sunday for l'or. laud where Ihey will spend Ihe week attending tha "Buyers Week" in I he northern clly for clothing mer chants throughout the stale. SWI.MMI.Vti I'ABTV Mr. and Mrs. F. it. HamblcH and Mr. and Mrs. Junior Daggett motor ed lo Wlul Kse beach yesterday uf tornoon for a swim -and ate their dinner mil in the open. HNilOX HWIM , Mr. mid Mrs. Harry doallpr and Mrs. rfate Ottorboln were among the local people who motored lo Wlul Kse beach yosluriliiy fur a swim and picnic lunch. j I ItOM FRISCO Mr. and Mrs. L, V. Ornllam of Han Francisco nrrlYeti In tllO illy tills afternoon. IfltrdUNia msitobh Mr. and Mra, II. A. Han are guesls here todfly from .lielr home al F,u- gene, AT THU IIHAt II Mr, mid Mrs. o. M. Hector apont Sunday al Wlnl-Kse hunch nnjoylng a swliiimlng party mid picnic lunch,