The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, October 22, 1925, Page 6, Image 6

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    EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THuradaft O. li.Lcr 22. 1025
(Ely? Euemttg Hralft
Kor home Ircntiuonl of colds with
chlorine an lobular Mid lonwotoi!
thai win ililply irtougli KM tor OM
utrsoll bus been Invented.
,l bMUty shows, nil of It IdOOli
Boy Hero Leaps From Bridge fl
hi i mi i i
ing nuimi meetings ot protest, it's
doubtful If they'll do any goad, No-
body carta what the Wkitilugtonlani
want. They ought to be ihlnlni
oxatnploK to the couutry, ( He .
won't do it voluntarily, tha only
way
law
to ueeompllnh II Is forcibly, bv
Bouiotbttm about work mitka
Issued Daily, except Sunday, by The Hi' raid Publishing
Company. Office: 119 N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls; Oregon.
so mud Wll would like In gl
and murin' u rich widow,
E J. MURRAY Publisher
VV. H. PERKINS News Editor
The 1. mania Ticklo
Entered as second class matter at the postotlice 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 herein
are also reserved.
Page Six
The Evening Herald is. the official paper of Klamath County
and the Citv of Klamath Falls.
Thursday, October 22, 1025
A "COMMON SENSE CANDIDATE"
We are informed by the Southern Pacifie-Copco mouth
piece, The Klamath News, that its candidate for coun
cilman for the second ward, 0. A. Smith, is a "common
sense candidate." That may be true, but one thing i
certain, he is not a "common user" candidate, and tha.
is what the people of the second ward are interested in.
We have contended all along that 0. A. Smith is
backed by those who want to bottle up this city and if
possible prevent the entrance of the Oregon Trunk. His
support by the Klamath News confirms our contention,
for if he did not cany the "0 K" of the Southern Pa
cific, he would not be receiving the support of the out
spoken advocate of the "Southern Pacific prograr ,"
program that hag for its sole purpose the prevention of
railroad competition.
Up to date, the Southern Pacific has been blocked it,
every move it has' made through its inability to pa::;'
measures over the mayor's veto. If Smith should be
elected, this condition would be changed, as it is gen
erally known that he will line up with those members
of the council who are opposed to Mayor uoddard. 1 ne
man selected by the voters of the second ward should
be one who is sympathetic with the ideas and plans
of the mayor and one who has his support and indorse
ment, for only through such friendly cooperation will it
be possible for the mayor to maintain the present status
of the railroad question. Smith's election would be ;.
repudiation of everything Mayor Goddard has done to
ward securing fche entrance of the Oregon Trunk and
would immediately be followed by the granting of ever
' request that might be made by the Southern Pacific or
R. E. Strahorn.
There is no dodging the fact that the second ware
election is irrevocably tied up with the railroad question.
Smith's defeat will mean that the people stand for tht
Oregon Trunk, stand against the granting of the Sixth
street franchise, stand against the proposed euchering
of the Oregon Trunk out of the city park property, stand
against any compromise with the Southern Pacific to
the city of less than the $iUU,UUU it put up tor tne mulct
ing of a railroad to Bend to bring in the Northern
lines and will be an indorsement of the splendid fighi
Mayor Goddard has made for the rights of the people.
iNMMMtpv Hr Twit
' fSM
ttowly weftpfd donth In trying to pet hix
r. tUwMl Tll-llt 0 nun
-riin'ed brother to a sate spoi on a rimuuu mwao "Ml"
i foJt train trappe.l them. After trying frantically to lava hla brother. Ml
leaned from the bridge when the train woa or.ly n few feet away. MM
Wotl-cr'w.is killed Instantly. Stunner tin.-et) la shown re enacting the Jump,
Klamath Has Remarkable
Poultry Ranch; Chickens Are
Raised On Rim Of Canyon
S. W. Kesler, Former Traveling Salesman,
Satisfies Ambition; Clears Away Pines
Builds Big Poultry House and
Log Cabin in Forest
We find this interesting plank in 0. A. Smith's plat
form1 "I favor a cleaner city, morally. I believe that
more can be accomplished along this line by education
AND SEGREGATION THAN BY ANY OTHER METH
OD". Do the people of this city want to go on record
as favoring a segregated district? Every vote cast for
Smith means just that thing, if his platform means what
it says.
For some time there has been a quiet movement on
foot to compromise with the Southern Pacific in the
matter of the $300,000 that the city has invested in the
Strahorn railroad. The first move was for fifty cents
on the dollar. This was later raised eighty-five cents on
the dollar. Then for some unknown reason we began
to hear that the bonds should be given to the Southern
Pacific so that the city would not have to pay interest.
This latter proposition is the one that was going along
at a fine pace when Mayor Goddard dropped a wrench
into the machinery by appearing at the interstate com
merce hearing and demanding that Klamath Falls bu
paid in full. The success of the mayor's efforts will
be dependent upon the defeat of O. A. Smith as council
man from the second ward. We must have a man who
is in sympathy with Mayor Goddard's railroad program,
and this $300,000 is part of it.
Entertainment Is
Declared Success
I Falls for their cooperation which
j helped to make the evening a suc-
The following program was given:
LOWER SWAN LAKE, Oct. 22. Song, America, audience, flag sa
The entertainment and pie social ' lute, pupils of both chooin; financial
given nt tho school house Saturday
night was n pronounced success.
The program, in which the local
report, Norma Stiles, treasurer; re
itatlous, Kathelne Nyhert, Vena Ar
i nette, Chares McKeen; song, school;
school was assisted by the pupils of 1 exercise, seven pupils; recitation, Iva
Upper Swan Lake and others, was j Stiles, impersonation dance, Thereon
enjoyed by a large audience. The I Swap; recitation, Hay Arnett; reel
bidding on the pies waa spirited andtation, Ituby Arnett, solo and ehor
tho highest pie brought four dollars j us, five girls; recitations, Portio
bolng sold to Joe Carlisle. The sals McKccn, Anna Htlles, Halph Arnett;
netted the school the sum of (38.26. song, lour boys; recitation, Ora Ar
After supper games were played nett; readings, ZeltBa Stiles, Mrs.
by old and young, and a general good j Delia Nichols, Walter Keck; recita
tim was had by ull present. Muchjtion, Clara Coleman, pantomime,
credit Is due to tho people from pupils from upper Swan Lake; song, ; have furnished problems which
Upper Swnu Lake and their teacher, pupils of Lower Swan Lake address, must solve.
A narrow forest road branches
from tho Ashland Klamath Fa!'-:
ighway, about two miles west c
McCollum's miil. It proceeds sev
eral hundred feet through a clearing
-ind then plunges into t'Je fcuof
shadows of pine forests.
And ti tho average Kliina: : real
lent, that composes the knowledge
A that particular road.
But a few, spur.ed on by a nat
ural curiosity, kept -en and wove
presently immersed in the coolness
of forests. The road wound In
and out among tall trees and sud
denly .without warning, opened out
onto a clearing.
A trim, neat and substantial tog
house, first caught the eye, then a
long rectangular building frjm which
came musical cMrpi and sounds of
scratching.
All of whlcu is a prelude to tho
description of one of the most re
markable poultry ranches in the
state.
A few years ago, ono .. W. Kes
ler traveled far and wide as a trav
eling &.ilesman. His home In New
York, but bll hopes and ambit! ins
wero in the west. Finally tho
every day existence of a salesman
began tj pall, and be answered the
;all of his ambition, to ov.-a a poul
try ranch.
He acquired a large tract of land
along the rlrtt of the Klimath can
yon, worked like a trojan In clear
ing tiie tract, built' a beautiful log
bouse, a garage and a large laying
house. He bought hunderds of tlnv
Rhode Island reds and outlined a'
poultry development which will In
time, make him one of the (fore
most poultrymen in the state.
The work was ardous. When tho
chickens were young 'he slept In til I
poultry' (house, ,and for weeks on
end, arose at half hour interval;
during the night to take care .if
the chicks.
This summer and fall, ho reaped
his first harvest front his enterprise.
.Merchants of Klamath Falls bCUg-.lt
his product and in a short time Cits
young chickens were gone.
Now, he has 800 more Rhode
Island Reds, which be 1111 car.
over the wlntor months for ibreed
lng and laying purposes and to the
spring plains to construct a brooding
house.
From an artistic point of view,
his poultry ranch is unbeatable, nut
the icool sundews, the rocky soli
anil the lack of sunshine that make
his property so pleasing to the eye
be
cultivate the land grow hl3 own
feed. Then there Is sunshine, on
whl.'h the young chicks thrive and
fatten. But this i-a 111 be solved by
extending his clearing.
Mr. Keslnr's ambition now. Is to
own tho best and the most efficient
poultry ranch In the state of Ore
gon, and there aro those who look
to see inlm realize his ambition with
in tho next few years.
VI
i-wr
VWA
' A JU Vf 1 1
WASHINGTONTmr
LETTER"
By CHARLES I'.
NBA Service
w
SlSHIKOTON.
worried
STL" WART
Writer
Waslngton Is
by the throat of an
epidemic of blue law enactments
whon Congress, its city council,
meets.
Left to its own devices, the cap
ital tends strongly toward worldll-
ness, not to say wide openness. It
was a pretty swift town in the old
days, it is yet. insofar as up-to-date
circumstances permit.
Self-governing, it's safe to say,
would be very sparing of restric
tions on Its pastimes, innocent and
otherwise. It's governed, however,
exclusively from outside itself.
Now, certain of the outsiders hav
noticed that many Washlngtonlnns
are lax, among other th(ngs, In tho
matter or Sunday observance Said
outsiders believe much unnecessary
business Is transacted in tho cap
ital on tho sabbath.
They disapprove fif Sunday theat
ricals and movies, to Which tho pop
illation la much addicted. They
frown on .Sunday golf and other
sports, which are extremely popu
lar In the city's neighborhood.
They were especially scandalized
by the big turnout for the recent
world series Sunday gume of baseball.
Mr. MInier, the people from Edge- Clifford Stiles; auctioneer,
wood ranch, l'oe valley and Kamath j Stiles, clerk, L. L. Arnett.
B,
Probably
that o feed.
the hjSft difficult
lie plans however,
! ''one; - ,, Is going to be krged to
stop all this,
j Several WRo aro scheduled to bo
Introduced on tho subject In De
cember. It any one of them should
pass, judging from advance de
scription!:, an early-day Now Kng
lander, dropping Into the capital ot
a SUnday, would have to walk a
chalk lino to keep out of Jail.
Numerous other things, besides
Sunday observance, aro on the list
ts for attention, too.
i.j I Wauhlugtonians are already hold
Wdp-" (A TfiooBtswfe
TTf- r""y i
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