t jPage Four THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Friday, Mnrrh 2, 102 Hurtling, T&trhlb T. 11. MAUllkEY. F. 11. KNOLIHH Ivaltor ..Business Manair.r EDITORIALS From over the Nation Publlshad T.rr afternoon .xc.pt (iunilny by The Herald PuhllshlnaT I Company at 102-ul Bouth Fifth alr..t, Klamath Kail a, Ur.-on. .-' Kntarad as aacond claaa matter at tha postofrtre at Klamath r'slls, Praa-on, on August 10, under act of 1'onitrcss. March J, !:. On a Tear Blx Montha Thraa Montha On Month Br Mall . 5 00 z.ia Lit .llvrtd ht I'anln Ona Year .......li.SQ Bis. Montha Thr.. Montha Ona Month . lil . AsoIATr:i phkn l.p-.Ar:l mirk MKMRIOH OF At HIT HIHP.At OF t'IH I I.ATIO . . . " Asaa.lat.4 Prase .. Jh. Ao4.Iraaa la exclusively entitled to tha aaa er rPObllci , turn of all ntwi dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in ,tnla paper, and alao tha local news published therein. All rlshu of re publication of .pedal dlaimtchea herein ar alao reserved. "- Friday, March 2, 1928 f Appreciate The Indian t! Lest the late Walter H. Page's famous Greensboro :i address, "The Forgotten Man" should apply to the American Indian of today even as it referred to the Toor White Trash in the south of yesterday, steps are being , J taken by the government to give to the Indian every- iintr in Pul,ic education that his white brother receives. Perhaps the most constructive move 'in this direction for some time is the inauguration on a comprehensive J scale of county club work on the Klamath reservation, f County Club Leader F. W. Sexton and H. W. Schilling, g superintendent of reservation education, are collaborat- ing in organizing this work which; it is hoped, will be J the foundation of a new agricultural era on the reserva tion. J .: Such constructive steps should be praised and helped. :i Whites should realize the problems and appreciate the worth of their red-skinned brothers. Some great Indians S hare enriched the' literature and intellect of our nation, and, after all, the forbears of these dusky faced men we j meet on the street, were the first Americans. ' Every step taken by the White race in aiding the I Indian to find himself ,and become firmly -settled in his i proper niche, is a. move Vhich should receive public com-i S mendation and support. " I 3 -V . What Is It All About? i Nicaraguan dispatches for ten days will' give vivid j accounts of the slaughter of rebels, of how Sandino's bands are dispersed and how the rebel general is fleecing-for his life to Honduras. The average newspaper g reader is about ready to consider the guerilla leader cap .jtured and hog tied and to slough off the matter for something of more recent interest when wham! out J comes a story yesterday telling of our Marines, our be i t. loved Devil Dogs being mowed down from ambush. A few days before official dispatches had told of San- ; I dino flying to Honduras, and a week or so ago the marine ' .officers let It be' known hat Sandino was dead as a stone. ) mat ne is not dead and that he is not fleeing to Hon duras or any other country is testified" by the five Ameri ' can lives taken yesterday in the hilly and brush country , of Nicaragua. ; Some times these conflicting government reports lead ; us to wonder just what is going on down there in : Nicaragua. ' We Prefer The Lion ' March may have come in like a meek and mild lamb : so far as weather is concerned but from the standpoint , of building it made its bow with the roar of a lion. On the last day of February came announcement of a $15, i 000 warehouse for Lorenz Plumbing company, and on ; March 1, announcement was made by W. D. Miller of a ; $30,000 addition to the Willard hotel and by A. M. Col- lier of the construction of a $13,000 one story business block in Chiloquin. ....... May the Lamb maintain the saddle so far as weather is concerned but we care not how the Lion roars an- nouncements of new building ventures. 1 Whoa they wore operated the xlutlKo was alult'cd inlo the lake. I'pcn asking th street commts aloner why tho nlunta went nnl J being cperatiJ ho answered to Iho effect that tho tanks filled up (stranitc.X and they had no hIuJro bed. That Is truo of (he Second street plant at the pre sent II nio and It Is hardly tho place for a smelly sIuiIko bed, ot which a small area could be used to sluice sludge on without hurting anybody. ' Now, It our fair city Is In such terrible state of filth and our tiULF. , What Is this Golf? Golf Is a form ot work made expensive enough for' a man to enjoy It. It la physical and men tal exertion ma do attractive by the fact that you have to dress for It In a 1300.000 clubhouse. Golf la what lelter-earrvlne. dltch-dlcglng and csrpet-beatlng lake so thick that log. cannot be would be If those three tasks Puned "round In It. why in the had to be performed on the same ; nn eoinmon sense nro these hot afternoon In short pants iid!',,1"' not b"ln 0P,,r"t,l "" ,f colored socks by gentlemen who',hu ,m,K na ' b "lel required a different linplemcut ,u tl,Ilk "onT 11 wl for every mood. Par or ,wo be'" ew W- . 'tem can be put Inlo use. Golf Is tho simplest looking,; ... . u aania In thai viwkl whn vmi il.w " ....i ..,..v ...w ..... .. ciue to taae it up, ana ine tougn- , , ' - -.- , vw,r. est looking .tier you have been - l ,hc,r; " . , ' t it i... e ..Di. ,blte? Dispatches received from Can- It Is probably the only known' N'ow that 300 000 ' & 1 ' ' Wednesday reported that game a mm ran nlv .. ini,. ' uPPe. Judging from history. ! communists from the province of j as a quarter of a century and hen discover that It was too deep for him In tho first place. The game Is played on care- SOLDIERS LOOT CHINESE CITY HANKOW, China. Mar. I. (A." l'.)--A reign of terror Involving inassiuToa nnd looting Is reported rrom I.elchuiig, a clly of 6U0.0uu population lu southern Hunan. Kcporta received here suy thut disbauded soldiers Joined tha lo cal peasant communist uuton In an orgy of rapine, torturing and killing. In ona ruso 300 Iludd hint monks locked their temple which was set afire, nil perch ing. ' Tho communists and soldiery wera stated to be retreating from Hunan and reports have beeu re ceived that they have captured ellla In tho province of Tex ItUknrd's nssislnnl,. Jess Now from Ihn smilhtund comes I . Now Hennlur Kvhs tells tho McMuhon. signed up Hharkey lo news inst iiimra Btriimiig Hr,ml ), w. 01,iy npooflug Iho when lie told was angry with hi in ii bo ill Hint draft talk. Bona. tor Kesa prohubly Is tha first One f Iho !'( 'u)' to give ; mlvli'o Is lu Untcu. for a bout wliit John msKo wiin " " correspondents ..... t. - ...i.... I l.i.clr Vnu never rnn It'll what " " rr 1 1 1 recommend Mc.Mnhon na secre. will happen lu a . presldonltol ! hem ooll. go lory to Iho murines In Nlcurugun. Some policemen nro ijtit very arresting figures. 1 ycaT. senator who ever lied to hows paper men, , thut tha clly will be compelled . Hunan had laid siege to the city to sink a largo sum In a dls-iot Kwetlln, the old capital of posal plant (which will not com- Kwangsl province. Karller re pletely dispose) und that tbo ports said there were 14,000 men fully selected grass with little white balls and as many clubs as the player can afford. These little balls cost from TS to $25, and It is possible to sup-I same will not be operated. I suppose the council figures that ; man proposes and Uod disposes. Mirha an cents j aa. . ' '. no committee ot oauaers is In the attacking force. port a family of ten people (all i om lo ,na "l' ny m0Der adults) for. five months on the'00 disposat plant now that the monev Knrxonuj h ,. haii. state boards have a leverage of lost by some golfers In a single iToted bon,U- Knowing the above a ii u wciui ui lug vmmiwu . . . , . v at by a study ot tho question that a disposal plant Is tinoces sary at least for a number of years. Is it any. wonder that a good many of us hesitated to vnla ftr n iMir.M which la vonH ts small j perhaps in the main but seeming ly leading to the expenditure or j considerably more money, say I one-half more, than Is necessary during the next ten years? Very truly yours. JOHN" C. CLEGHORN. afternoon. A golf course has eighteen holes, seventeen of which are un necessary and put in to make the game harder. A "hole" Is a tin cup In. the center ot a green." A "green parcel ot grass costing about 11.98 a blade and usually located between a brook and a couple of apple .trees, or a lot of unfin ished excavation." The ball must not be thrown. pushed or carried. It must be propelled by about $200 worth of curious-looking implements, especially designed to provoke the ownjer. Each Implement has a specific purpose sjd ultimately some golfers get to know what that purpose Is. They are the excep tions. - ... After each hole has been com pleted tbe golfer counts his strokes. Then he subtracts six and says, "Made that in five. That's one above par." Better Advertising. What Can You See? I "Eye of man spans Atlantic," says a jubilant headline, referring to the television featrecently performed. r Probably it's wonderful news, a triumph of science and .? all of that Yet it does seem as if the real issue is, not '-."how, far can you see?" but "what can you see?" f i It won't do U3 any good to look across the Atlantic if : we are blind to certain things that are happening on our own doorsteps. Let's let trans-Atlantic sight wait until , we have cleaned up a few messes like our oil scandals, . our city slums, our coal Btrikes and the like. . . Reporters Seldom Misquote T "I was misquoted." ' How. often have you seen that remark used by some public man in denying statements credited to him in the newspapers? Pretty often, no doubt It's a favorite i excuse. - - i But usually you can disregard it. ' A competent re i . porter almost never misquotes a man he interviews. Too 'frequently it happens that the man giving the interview -discovers afterwards that he said more than he meant tto, or that the public isn't reacting to his remarks as.he . thought they would. So he denies he said it and puts'all 'the blame on the reporter, , It's a neat stunt. But it doesn't mean anything. ' 1 ; ., If "Doubting Thomases" ever snickered at the tale of ,geese being shot from the crest of Ewaima Heights addi ction in pioneer days, they would have swallowed their j derision in a gulp of wonder this morning. Two great honker geese silent as is their wont when flying close '. to the ground skimmed over the top of the hill behind ,'the Klamath county high school within easy gun range of any householder. . To have brought down one or both of ;the8o great gume girds would have required a careful shot or two from a back porch, and that would have been all there was to' it " " - CURTISS FIELD. K. Y., Mar. j 2. (AP) Colonel Chsrlcs A. Lindbergh landed here today on bis flight from Boston. Tbe col onel and his three passengers were met at the field by. Major Thomas G. Lanphler. Harry K. Knight and B. F. Mahonev. Thov left the field for New York by! motor. . WOOD We have moved our office to 126 , South Seventh Street near the Telephone office. Peyton & Co. "Wood to Burn" 126 S. 7th, Phone 535 Letters From the People . Feb. 29, 1S2S. The Evening Herald: Now that the sewer Issue has i been put over and the smoke of . propaganda has cleared some-' what, a constructive criticism may j " voicea witnout en-jj uauseriug loe passage ot the Is sue r r h.lna I . i. . ty politics or professional Jeai-' ousy. While acting as city engineer about 131J. the septic Units at ! the Second street plant were not being operated. The Mills Ad- j ditlon sewer proposition coming on, an application was made I to tho state health officer to ; permit dumping raw sewage into ' the river. The application was neither approved nor rejected, j tint tha .1). w.. ii d sins: several inousana dollars in septic tanks. - An inspection last Sunday revealed that neither of the plants was being ope ated nor had been for some time. If there is anything in Late Sheet Music Pianos, Phonographs, Portables, Rec, ords, Electric jewing Machines,. Bench Pads, Accessories, Mus ical instruments of all kinds that you want we have. Ion ; t er::0 ne. , WIRTZ MUSIC STORE Between Main and Klamath 122 So. 6th St. ; Phone 125 Out Our Way vNl-W 1CWA80O! 'agoiki -r see A ' GAL Oni "TrtT" CROCODILE ? tF . HftE-r WAS ME., ID TAKE. "TH rIMEST tUsNCTr-' OUT" FIT. DAT 3ES VVI-M'SO AM t.Cr A FAILURE. ttiiCC tE .AIC VjHE.r4 AW RDE.e v UP, Av VAAM-T 'EM ' -SAW IN4 -WHOT W VAJHICH OAT HAMOSOME MAM AM RiOlKl' WOT VJHOTS DAT" OM OAT WArJOSOME HAvJGEy v. v i r- v sh m l m- wan k wkt i p4a 1 TO rniuil.A.. wlonhoenr Advance Style Notes id the SPRING F00TWEAK PARADE 0.00 to 8.85 Idealizing tho injfonnity of cleverest shoe modiutca those advance creation of lovely footwear. Observe the Novel Strap t The Intricate Cutouts The Use of Latice Work The Two-Tone Effect ALL IN SHOES FOR MADAM AND MADEMOISELLE Buster Brown Shoe Store MB- 'C&i Hi NTfte Newest Coats Fur and Furless Models are Equally Smart The interesting coats Bkctched de rive their chic from their smart tuck ed back, belt and Himplo collar and . cuffs, ' 12.75 to 29.75 Ensembles for, Every Occasion Smart Tailored and , Dressy Types Wo have a very extensivo and authentic collection .of new aprinp; ensembles, in every new tnatorial snd color. Two and threo-pioco modols. 16.75 to 27.50 McDonalds Ladies Shoppe 114 North Eighth Street Around the Corner from Forbes Drug Store 8EAU1V AND THE BEAST. IWT tT Nf tfUVtCt mc MT.O.