PAGE FOUR
THE SVENING HEfcALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Monday, January 13, 103i
Crawford..
English
Published every afternoon except
Compear at 101-1IJ south truth elreet, Klamath all. Oregon,
Catered ai second class matter at the poetoffice of Klamath
Oregon, on August 10, ISO, under act of Comma, March 1,
MAIL IIATKH
lljr Mall
Ouiaida
County
$1.76
lis
i.O
la
County
Tkree monlhsil.7e
tlx months. - 1.7e
One Tear t.00
AWStH'MThD I'KKSS LK..tKI WIRN
MMBKR AUDIT Bl ItEAll OF t IKCl'LATION
Member of Ibe Associated Pmm
Tha Aaaociated Preaa la exclusively entitled to the uae or republica
tion of all news diapatchea credited to II or not otherwise credited
Is tbla paper, and alao tba local
of raonblleatlon of a Dec 1st dlapatrbes herein are also marred.
Monday, January 13, 1930
Know Your Oregon
nrO make Oregon as well known to the world as Cali
fornia is the ambition of the Oregon State Chamber
of Commerce and a program
thia hope to full realization.
gram has been outlined by W. G. Ide, manager of the
organization, and comprises a series of Oregon poster
stamps. The stamps are to be sold to the various com
mercial bodies and business houses of the state to raise
an advertising fund with which to carry on the campaign
of educating the rest of the country about the advantages
of living in Oregon.
The first series of stamps has been issued. The sheet
contains SO stamps, each with a pointed statement about
Oregon industries and institutions. Oregon citizens may
know in a general way what their state has to offer the
industralist and housekeeper but it will not be amiss to
remind them of some of the leading industries.
Each stamp contains a brief statement as follows:
Eat Oregon apples the nation's finest and most delici
ous. Oregon : First in Pacific Northwest in prunes.
First in U. S. in hops. Where wheat often yields 60
bushels to the acre. Where you can make greater profits
in dairying. Where poultry pays and hens lay 300 eggs
a year. Sheep lead the world in wool production. Where
truck farming is an exceptionally profitable business.
Ask for Oregon cherries and you'll get the finest Ore
gon grows 80 of the nation's Bosc pears finest
highest priced grown. First in U. S. in fibre flax. Grows
the nation's finest English walnuts and filberts. Leads
the nation in timber. America's fastest growing woolen
knit goods and linen manufacturing state. Where 440
mills cut 4 billion feet of lumber annually. Oregon of
fers industry low power cost; high labor efficiency;
favorable rail and water rates to world markets. Visit
Mt Hood, a year round scenic play ground. Where fish
ing is a $6,000,000 industry. First in Pacific Northwest
in canned fruits over 4 million cases annually! Come
to Oregon See beautiful Crater Lake, 7,000 feet alti
tude, 1,996 feet deep. See the unparalleled scenic
grandeur along the Columbia river. 300 miles of mar
velous vacation land beaches. See the marble halls of
Oregon caves in Siskiyou national forest. See Wallowa
lake and Wonderland, the Alps of America. Enjoy the
thrills of big game hunting and sport fishing. Oregon
Has over 4500 miles of all-year scenic highways. Where
copper mining is becoming a leading industry. Climate
is ideal no floods, cyclones or violent electrical storms.
Where large U. S. irrigation projects are now being
developed. You'll find splendid schools and churches
everywhere in Oregon.
Get your share of these stamps and include one with
each letter and piece of literature mailed out to out-of-state
postoffices. The program has been received with
enthusiasm all over the state and the ultimate outcome
will be a general rousing of interest at home and all over
the country. Klamath citizens can well afford to invest
freely in the stamps and make general use of them, for
nowhere in the state is there more to offer the home
seeker than in this basin. The apportionment has been
made for the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce
and the stamps will be sold and used.
EDITORIALS
From Over the Nation
FEDERAL CONVICT LABOR.
8L Louis Globe-Democrat: The
department of justice contract
providing that -"0 negro con
rieti shall be tv-i-icd over to the
state of Georgia and worked on
tha road gsnga will. It Is said, be
supplemented with an arrange
ment for a similar employment
of white convicts. Tha ostcn-thle
purpose Is to relieve overcrowd
ing In jails and prisons where
federal prisoner! are confined,
and the state of Georgia will not
only obtain tha value of each
man's service free of charge, but
will receive (5 cents a day fur
tha care of each and also 100 for
the capture of any that escape.
Tha contract atlpulatea that
tha men shall work no longer
than eight hours a d, that
they shall be adequately housed,
supplied with wholesome nour
ishing food, "decently clothed in
plain attlra and not in prison
stripes." Corporal punishment or
the ball and chain shall not he
employed In risrlnllns; th-tn, nor
aay blood-hounds ba nsed in
tha recapture of those beromir ;
fugitives. A right of supervision
Is reserved to federal author
ities. The agreement Is carefully
framed, and rtill tha Innovation
la sharply criticised and even de
nounced. Lairs framed as pains
takingly for assuring proper
treatment to prlso-i Inmates
have bsen vliated and given
rise to scandal. The abuses com
monly aecompauylnr tha employ
Editor
-Business Msnager
Sunday by The Herald Publishing
Kalla,
is.
PAl'AULK IN ADtA.NCK
Delivered by Carrier
In City
One month
Three
Six
Ona year
tO.ff,
l.M
1.60
1.10
news published therein. All rlghla
has been launched to bring
The initial step in the pro
ment of convict labor nnder con
tract are not likely to be les
sened, it Is Intinted, because the
contractors In this care are state
officials rather than private citi
zens or corporation. It com
mits the government to a quasi
peonage system while private em
ployers are hetrr prosecuted on
peonage chnrcos.
Tha new plan v. as put la ef
fect without publicity or discus
sion and is a questionable de
parture.
WHAT'S WROXO IX PORTO
KICO?
Detroit News: Having made
his first survey of Porto Rico, Its
new governor, Theodore Roose
velt, Jr., reports that thousands
of Its people are Inadequately
fed, clothed and boused, and
that Immediate relief must be ex
tended to avert dire suffering.
This la not a very pretty pic
ture. The Porto-Kicans are Amer
ican citizens. When wa took over
tha Island wa promised to raise
them out of neglect, to educate
them, and to bring to them, in so
far aa It was possible, the bless
ings of American prosperity.
That waa thirty years ago.
Today, to per cent of the people
are Illiterate, although ona gen
eration ha" -rown ud nnder our
flag and : -r la of school age.
The poi in li mora than
1.300,000, ut In tha 4,470 class
rooms distributed among 3,144
buildings there are but 220.840
children enrolled about one
sixth af the population, and lees
TIMELY QUOTATIONS FROM
PEOPLE IN THE PUBLIC EYE
"The employer naually gets the
employee he deserves." Sir Wal
ter Gllbcy.
see
"One should always learn lo
lore oucseir, for that Is the one
life-long romance." Gabriels
D'Anaunslo.
e e
"A critical attitude may be as
j .iLooks Easy, But Isn't-,
10 3 J 'Jr or
- yL M
Ti !r -
uTr'JTwi.'vS- rTW"
yr srj
it jr.. 45 '
HORIZONTAL
.to Carpet.
4 Olppled.
4.1 ricrr.
44 Prophet.
4.1 .Melody.
4H To merry.
4T llr.
4 To rut Sax.
f Momaeh.
4 Chest bone.
T Tablet.
10 tnsentlhlllty.
11 War flier.
IS Smell.
14 Dry.
15 Hy.
IS l"firquente!.
IT Device for
stamping
dates.
10 Lores.
31 Crafty.
23 Angry.
33 Mesh of Lire.
MATI'KIMYK AXHWKK
quad! cay IQWLS
U'rIg'eL ROTIJ31LC 0
TlEIASlErtDnaASES
O'RaElRliSlJgRAVO
AjMjUlS E5riAmoi
cwsesIC. pUcer
4 Dogma.
3T Animal.
tO To elude,
tl rotuxellatloa.
:I4 To dethrone.
aaosder. c
?1 To r'-trST
than half of tha Dumber that are
of school ate. Tha reason the
children do not to to school Is
not that they tall in a desire tor
education, but that there are not
enough schools. According to the
census of 1920, tha population
was 73 per cent white. 23 per
cent mulatto, 4 per cent black:
and tha mulatto and black popu
lation Is declining. The majority
la of good Spanish stock, ambi
tious, eager to make tha most of
opportunities which, unfortunate
ly, have never been sufficiently
provided.
Tet Porto Rico Is a rich coun
try. American capital baa flowed
In; there are great sugar and
coffee piantations, large tobacco
factories, and an Increasing
orange and grapefruit Industry.
But because there la so much
labor and so much competition
for jobs, wages are low, and most
of the population lives from band
to mouth. Government receipts
amount to less than one-half of
1 per cent of the assessed valua
tion, which shows tha Influence
of the sugar, coffee and tobacco
companies in keeping tazoa low.
Most of the stockholders of these
concerns live, of course. In the
United States, and cars less
about tha condition of their em
ployes than they do about big
profits. Consequently there are
not enough schools, not enough
roads, not enough opportunities
by which tha Porto R leans can
Improve their welfare.
So Porto Rico has to appeal t
American charity, when tba tru
appeal should be to Amerirai
justice.
It is estimated that the aver as
human body la worth between f 12
and IIS If the cbemtral material
composing It were sold at commer
cial prlre.
ERRORGRAMS
let ne H,ve that
LUNCH CHESlUE , JOHN,
I WANT TO 6ET Rip
OF THIS TWO-COLLAR
ILL WITH TrlC POR
TRAIT F SAMUEL
Jf FEftSON.
Dii5 never strikes
Trl mi I
There are at least four mistakes In tha above picture. Tbsy
may pertain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing or whatnot
dee If you can find them. Tben look at the arrambled word below
aa1 unscramble It, by switching the letters aroun d Grade your
self 20 for ea-b of the mistakes you find, and 20 for tha word
If you una Gramme It. Fled corrected list oa pass t.
fatuous as tha self-adulation It
re.cta from," Waldo Frank.
"Jass will endure Just as long
sa people hoar It through their
feet Instead of their brains."
John Philip Sousa,
"Words are tha only things
thst last forever." W. Hatlltt.
Kit lit .W.
I Kthtral.
'J KrlemUlilp
.ITo walk
through
water.
4 Knock.
.1 Prose
t KruMrH,
7 Hoi-aehaclt ;
asm. A
MT lervirateT
Recipient.
10 Valuer frl.'
lows.
14 Pause.
IM Ceremonies
JO To turn aside
11 Venerated.
it Collection "f
facta.
27 Trtal.
28 Goat.
2n Kirra tire.
31 Cngnluint.
sa To send bark
13 Region.
.1.1 Indebted.
37 WlneMUe.
40 Robber tree.
41 CoUoaj
'Phoughts We've
Been Thinking
(Continued from Page One)
company Is quite conservative
aa a rule, and again we believe
that they have shown conservat
lam when they estimated the pop
ulation here as only 20.000.
'
GOVERNOR NORBLAD, In
telegraphing Secretary of
I Commerce La mont that Oregon's
' liuildlng program would be 329.-
500,000 In 1930. gave a message
of good cheer to Oregon people
aa well as to the national capital.
Entirely too long we have
heard depressed things coma ont
of Salem. It has been a mecca
for the gloom hangar, and the
ultra conservatives have hovered
around the stats capital always
crying some kind of depression.
The message from Governor
Norblad la refreshing and we
are glad to see that the state
intends to spend some money
on different projects.
EDISON TOO BUST
FORT MYERS. Fla., Jan. 12.
( P) Would Edison ride In an
..wip? No; he'a too busy with
t it. Such was his reply to
invitation.
ROBSION T.I h KS SEAT
WASHINGTON. Jan. 13, (AP)
- John M. RoUsion, republican,
-J3 sworn In as a senator from
Kentucky Friday, succeeding
frederic Md Sa. kctt. who resign
ed to become am'.iHador. to
Germany.
NO, WHV NOT LET H
SPEND THU flEW YETtr
LOW-PACK Bill WITH A
PICTURE CF PRESIDENT
GARFIELD ON IT?
a person iutiny.
BlElNEJ
DAILY LETTER
ON AFFAIRS AT
U. S. CAPITAL
That Fire In the White)
House? Just m Little Fric
tion Among tha Provident 'a
Bevretarlea Washlngtna
Can't I'ntlcrataait Why Thia
Holiday 8eaenn Haa Hern So
Dry.
lly RODNEY DITCHER
NEA Hervlce Writer
WASHINGTON, Jan 12 The
best explanation of the White
House fire yet beard sec in to
b that It was mnmA litf fvltw
tlon among the president's see
retarlea. Anyway, that's what
a lot of people are aaylng, bar
ing heard and read varloua re
porta of conlllcta of authority
and other differences among the
four secretsrles with whom Mr.
Hoover decorated the White
House . . . Anyway, It'a aa good
a joke aa the last ona produced
In Washington, to tha effect
that O. O. P. stood tor Oruudy
of Pennsylvania. . . . Holidays
here have been so dry aa com
pared with the Christmas-New
Year aeason In other years that
Washington Is rather surprised
at Itself. Heretofore It haa al
ways been -officially announced
In advance that the town would
be very dry, whereupon the bolt-
days were very wet. Tbla year
nothing was said and tha holi
days actually turned out dry.
Authorlttea differ on the ex
planation. Soma say few people
had any money to spend. 8ome
say a few quiet raids before
Chrtstmaa contributed. Others
suggest a ganeral lnerita after
a year of hard drinking. . . For
eign dlplomata were much less
Indiscriminate In handing out
bottles to their friends aa Yule
tide gifts. That stuff wss never
more than a drop In the buckot
In tbe holiday supply, but there
hss been so much publicity about
"embassy stuff" in the last year
that the diplomats bars been
getting cagey.
That racket always wss over-:
rated. Even the moat generous
diplomata were all too prone to
specialise In their own "national
drink." often a cheap distillation
of terrific power. 8uch atuft sells
for SO or 60 cents a bottle back
home, where It la used principal
ly by peasants and peona while
the ahoed population goea In for
more expensive Imparted goods.
. . . Senator Borah, after letting
out a terrific roar about prohl
bltlon enforcement lunched at
the White House and emerged In
silence. Next dsy the Federal
Farm Board announced that It
was lending 1100.000 to tbe
Idaho bean growers. Causa and
effect? Oh, well, perbapa not.
President-elect. Ortls Rublo of
Mexico arrived nervously, per-
hapa a little excited amid all tbe
attention he was getting from
the government. Ona observed
him frequently turning aa If to
look over his shoulder for a
bomb and otherwise appearing
ill .at ease. He got over that
after the tint day, however. . . ,
Most Washington girls are wear
ing long skirts, but no ona In
Congress hss introduced a bill
about It.
Among the exceptions are the
girl shooters. Including Miss
Helen Tsylor, captain of the
championship George Washington
University girls' rifle team. The
dignified officials of tha Nation
al Rifle Association were cook
ing np soma publicity, but they
said photographs of the girls
mustn't have "too much leg" In
them. The photographers were
about to shoot at Mlsa Taylor
when someone suggested she pull
her skirt down aa far as pos
sible. "I can't pull e'm down
any further and atlll shoot,"
replied tha kneeling Miss Tsylor,
and that was that. ... In men
tioning tha dry holidays wa for
got to mention the local writer
who reported that he had bought
his Chrlstmaa liquor with tbe
proceeds of a magazine article
about a nationally famous dry
leader.
Checking up to find out why
the recent brief Haitian uprising
hadn't been blamed on tbe Soviet
one learned from tba marines
that there wasn't a communist
In Haiti. One went down from
New York once, figuring that
this waa a grand field for or
ganization. But ha returned In
despair. It appears that Haiti
is an altogether agricultural
country, its manufacturing In
dustry being confined to a few
sugar mills and distilleries. , , .
The report from Mexico City
that General Augustlno Bandlno,
tha Nlcaraguan rebel, had been
bought off and persuaded to
leave bis country for a t0,
000 bribe Is not creditod In any
of those quarters here where tbe
fact probably would be known If
he bad.
GUTHEWIEItG BIBLB BOLD
WARSAW, Poland, Jan. IS (A
P) Dispatches from Vydgosscs
state that tha famoua Gutbenberg
bible In tba library of tha Iler
nardlne father of Lubawa baa
been sold to an American for
1,200,000 ilotlcs (about $132,
000). It la one of the ten Goth
enherg bibles reported In exist
ence. Tha association of Polish
bibliophiles has sent a protest to
the bishop against tha sale.
MAN FREEZES JEET
PORTLAND, Ore., Jsn. 13 (A
P) Motron Lump, clad In hit
night clothing and with his
foet bare, heard flames crackling
In his home last night and ran
two blocks to an alarm box. Ho
suffered frosea tr.
Thirty Year, Ago
In Klamath
I'Vmn The Klamath Reiulillraa
weekly
A party of railroad surveyors
from tha north stopped here
taw days during tba heavy storm.
Thsre were tour In tha parly
which waa under charge of Chief
Engineer Heuderson, lly
gentleman who Interviewed the
party we are Informed that they
started from Ontario, Oregon,
soma time In the fall for the
purpose of making a preliminary
railroad survey gathering data
ate
From Ontario they ran the
Una westerly to Prlnrvllle, and
from thence southerly along the
east side of the Cascade moun
tains. The line touched Fort
Klamath and Klamath Aarmy
and from there ran along the
eaat shore of Dig Klamnth Lake
to Klamath Falls.
Another proposed railroad is
heading for Klamath Falls from
tha north, and while the date of
Ita construction may be more re
mote than that of the Oregon
Midland Co., It la reaaonably
certain that It will be built with
in the next few years.
Klamath county la about the
alsa of tha atate of Maasarhusstts.
Compared with tbe alsa of the
county, the population la not
large, yet It la rapidly Increasing,
tha gain during tha past ten
years having' been 04 per cent.
In a county so large and with
such boundlee supply of excel
lent resources, there la, aa a
matter of fart, abundance of
room for tens or tnousanns oi
settlers.
The
rapidly
"rueasley"
abating In
iltuatlon
llnnania.
Is
Owen
killed a
McKendrel of Olena
large cougar recently.
LETTERS FROM
THE PEOPLE
I El:i THE BIRDS
Dear Mr. Editor:
Two little birds one cold win
ter's day could not thiuk why
on earth they were born. They
could not find anything fit to
eat. while the anow nearly frote
their poor little feet. So they
talked It over, and decided to
try just one more time, then
give up and die.
Bo up tbey got. and away they
flew, but tbe prospect of din
ner looked very blue. After
bunting until they hsd weary
grown, tha little brown bird
juat gave one moan, but the soft
bird with the cute little cap.
said, "You atay here and take
a nap and I will fly further
than this and aee It Fortune
will not amlla on me."
So off ba flew, and be chancod
to spy upon a window-sill In a
house nearby the snow had been
brushed away with care, and
ba wondered If he could venture
there. So down he flew anftly.
and, what do you tninai
found right there both tooa ana
drink. Borne one nao inouam
ot tha birds so dear, and laid
out there the food that would
cheer their poor little bearts
and brighten the oay.
He took but ona crumo, iou
flew awlftly away to iu.
brown bird ba bad left In the
tree. And ne zoio u w
him quickly and aee what a n ce
little dinner waa out on
o. .... rfr.nk and tbey ate of
all tha food until they had had
all they wanted, and right then
and there they folded their little
nft wlnaa in prayer. n e
thanks to tha Giver o.
a Ann thine- whoaa praise
each
they
ever hereauer wuwm ....
Yours Truly.
ERNEST W. 1IOLMESLEY
S37 High 8t
CHRISTIAN HCIKSCF.
CHURCH EB
"Sacrament was the subject c I
the Lesson-Sermon in an cnuiv..-
of Christ Scientist, on nunn.y.
January 12.
The Ooldco Text was, ne
hath tny eomraanamems,
keepeth them, he It Is that lovetn
me; and ba that loveth me aha:l
ba loved ot my Father, and 1 will
love him, and will manlfect myseu
to blm" (John 14:21).
Among the citations which com
prised the Lesson-Sermon wss the
following from the Bible: "Verily,
verily, I say unto thee, except a
man ba born of water and of tha
Spirit, be cannot enter 1nti thu
kingdom ot Ood" (John 1:5).
The Lesson-Sermon also Includ
ed tha following passages from th
Christian Bcienca text-book, n
ence and Health with Key to the
Scriptures." by Mary Baker Eddy:
BAPTISM. Purification ny spir
it; submergence In Bpint IP
t81). "Our baptism Is a purincs
tlon from all error" (p. B),
The term "surname" is suppos
ed to come from tha French "sur
nom," meaning "overname," be
cause a person's family nam was
formerly written above Instead of
after the baptismal name.
Don't Whip Children
Or acold old people who wot tbe
bed or are unable to control
their urine during the night or
day because R Is a dlsoane and
not a habit. Write to us torluy
and wa will send you free sealed
Instructions how to quickly ban
ish this trouble without the use
of poisonous drugs. Zcmnnlo Co..
Diipu 87b. Uux It; 4 3, Milwaukee,
Livu-d,
EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO
IN KLAMATH
A wedding of unusual Interest
among tha young people of this
city look place , Sunday, when
Mlaa Orpha Schallock daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John Schallock
became the biido of Junior Dag
gett, iuo young woman Is well
known In Klamath, and deserved,
ly popular, while tha groom is
alao fortuuata In having mini
orout trlemls. He Is connected
wun tun freight dupartiusut of
the Suiilln in I'arlflo railroad In
til la city, and a brother of Coun
ty Trvaaurvr Claude II. "Doc'
Daggett.
The wedding wss solemnised
st the home of the bride's par-
enta borore about twenty-five
guests, by Rev. J. 8. Stulilil.-
field of Llnkvllle Presbyterian
church. Following the riles th.
young people ware presented
with a numtier of handaome pre
sents. Last Thursday W. II. Dudley
came near spending tha night
in an exceedingly uncomfortable
position part wsy between earttr
and hell, says the Merrill Demo
crat, and although a good Christ
ian man, he wont went to repent
the experience. Mr. Hartley
pent the afternoon drawing the
water out of a well on the old
llaynea placs, northwest from
the Hoyt ranch. The well waa
equipped with burketa and over
Dreams of Fire,
Patient Jumps
Out of Window
Orln Dlllard worked two vears
at a local hospital aa lanltor.
drawing only a modest wage and
having the balance credited to his
account. He was saving for an
operation.
Early this week bs hsd the op
eration a major operation and
It waa all p.ild for. Then he lay
as a patient in the hospital where
he had been so long employed,
(irahs I'illuw and Blanket
He was recovering from the op
eration satisfactorily but he
dreamed that Ihe hospital wss on
fire Wedneadsy night. He aalu
that hs drank all the water In his
room, thst bis watch begsn to
melt and. too, he dreamed that tbe
ourtalna in his ward were on fire.
Clasping a pillow over the lop
of hta head and wrapping a blan
ket over hla pajamas be dove
through the window into the chil
ly night to avoid the fire of whlci
he dreamed.
Crawls to Hotel
He lit la a box used as an ash
can. The bog upset and ba start
ed to crawl to a doctor's house to
warn blm of the fire. At a local
hotel ba thought that his strength
would not permit him to reach I
tbe doctor's borne so bs entered
end crawled ond)r a tabli. a
was but three dsys after hla oper
ation.
Police were called by Ihe hotel '
authorities and Orln was returned
to the hospital.
Recovers "HatUrsx'torily"
Last night he waa reported aa
recovering aatlafactorlly from his
operation and his early morning I
escapade, clad only In palamaa
no a oinnxet in the anow. nnl.
three days after a major opera
tion seemed not to have hindered
his recovery.
The story was told to nolle.
Orln. Hospital authorities eon.
firmed that he was recovering sst
Isfsctorlly. TO BCPEKVIKE t'FXMl'B I
WASHINGTON. D. C. Jsn. '
1. ( AP) Archie C. Mclntyr.
of Pendleton, Ore., has bean an- ,
pointed supervisor for the 1030
census for six Oregon counties I
with headquarters In Pondleton.
The counties over which he will J
have supervision are (illllam. :
Morrow, 1'matllls, fnlon. Wal
lowa and Wheeler.
Quick Pile Relief
Dr. Leonhardt'a Heni-Rold Is
guaranteed to banish any form
if Pile misery, or money hark.
It glvee quick action even In old.
ituhborn rases. Ilnm-Rold Is a
harmless tahlof that removes
blood congestion In the lower
bowel the cause of piles. It
brings joyful rellof quickly and
lately or costs nothing. Under
wood's Pharmacy and druggists
everywhere sell It with this guar
antee. Adv.
Coall Son4 IHIeaH
YOUNG COAL COMPANY
70!l KLAMATH A E.
Optometrist
Kilt H. 71 h HI.
head pullers and after tha tlrat
soma job ot getting the w.t.
oul. Mr. Iladley went down ul
to the well, which la fifty f,J
deep, to wash tbe rock wall. Ha
depended upon Mr. Uleuu, wbJ
lives on the place, to pull
up whan he was through,
this ha overestimated
Glenn's alrength and after
eral attempts made by
neighbor,, Iladley had to
bint
Oa
M r.
sav
fa
atari,
"P thef rope hand- over hand.
Ileprogresaed well enoUKh until
helfuiind thai ho could a i no'
further without spitting ou his
hands and ba waa too badly1
winded to aplt. 8a ha wound
tha rope around his legs, and'
sent for help. Glenn secured
the aaalatanra of L. M. Robinson.'
and Iladley waa bauled out af
tha well long after dark.
Lloyd DeLap, son ot County
Clerk Charlea R. DeLap, la suf.
taring pala la bis right band aa
lha result ot an Injury austsln-
ed In basketball playlnc at tha
Pavilion a few nlghta ago.
Formal announcement la made
In today'a lasue of the candidacy
of Dell V. Kuykendall for tha
nomination for prosecuting ate
torney for tha district ot KlsmsU
and Lake counties on tha re
publican tlrket. Mr. Kuykendall
la tha present Incumbent In thai
office.
Pricilla Kernan
Dies in Klamath
Mrs. Pricilla Cordelia Ker
nan who baa resided In tbla city '
for tbe past eight year, died
at ber home. 1411 Eberleln.
Saturday afternoon about 4
o'clock after an Illness ot several
daya.
Mrs. Kernan waa ona of tha
taw remaining Oregon pioneers,
having crossed the plains from
Missouri In ISO and settled la
Roseburg. She was born In Mis
souri and wsi 71 years of age
at the time or death.
The pioneer woman Is survived
by two sons, John J., ot Eugene
and Henry, of this city, one
daughter. Mrs. Maggie Agee of
this city, two grandsons, Ralph
Turner and William Norman
Kernan, both of this city, three
brothers. J. J. Thornton, of Eu
gene. J. L. Thornton of Portland
and B. Thornton of Itoaeburz.
and a alstor. Mrs. Jane Murray
of Glenwnod. Waab.
Tbe remains will be sent to
Roseburg this svonlns whare
funeral services wl be bald and
Interment made In the famllr
Plot.
HT YOl'Il OWS F.YEB
We have ready-lo-wssr spec
tacles, all numbers, for
rssdlng and far and near.
i M.f0-AO
YORK'S Cash Store
1114 Mala Hlreet
Klamath Falls. Oregon
'-,,,.-",-,
Industrial
Installations
Our Specialty
Power Equipment
MOTORS
Ml kinds aad alsea. bought,
old, rented traded and
repel red.
CONSULT US
iiefore having tbat wiring Jot
lone.
U4 HOl'R BKIIVICK
Phone T7I-W
Night I'hnne T7I-K
Industrial
Electric Co.
7th A Walnut
PHONE JOP7
No Drop I himI No lime I n.t
i
s