PAGE FOUR
THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Monday, April 21', 1930
Sly Eustting Hrratf.
O. O. Crawford..
-Editor
raMlabeS ever- atteraooa azeapl BoDday by Tbe tlarald Fsbllaltliis
Ooapea at 101-111 Boat t'tlta a tree t, Kiamaia fella. Oragoa.
Timely Quotations From People
in the Public Eye
' latere, a Mound elaa autlar at tbe poatoftlca OX Klamath Falla,
Orafea, oa tuml IV, u. naaer an 01 uo-gree. aiarca a, .,
MAIL KATKa"
Hr Mall
la Uuuida
Count? Coantj Ona
Tbrea moat-a ll.ti ll.'t Three naontba.
m aioaihi 1.1a 1
Oaa Jeer .. MO S. Oaa
IN AUVANCH
Deil-srrd by Carrier
la City
month ., , t).H
i 1.16
opt hi S.IO
yaar,, a.iO
AlttiOCLVrhJ) fKKSS 1JU WIKK
Simmon AUDIT BUKKAU Or" ClKl'lll TIO.N
Kepreeented Batloaally by
V. C UOUKN8KM CO., Inc.
San Irranclaco
Haw Tork Seattle Ponland
Detroit ChleafO Lo Angele
Co DIM of Tha tlaraid and Mw, togelber with complaia la-
faraauoB about tha Klamath a'aJla market, may ba obtained for
tka asking at aay of thaaa office.
Maaibar of tiie Aseocialed lre-
Tha Aaaoclatad Fraaa la azcloalTely aotltlad to tha aaa or republica
tion of all aawa dlipatcbea cradlted to It or not otbarwtaa oradltad
la thla papar, and alao tha local now pnbllahad theraln. All rl(hu
Of republication of apaclal dlapatcaaa harala ara alao raaarTod.
Monday, April 21, 1930
Hc
Oregon 's Top Line
fOW many times have you turned the pages of your
favorite magazine and read the advertisement of
other states, telling in glowing terms of the recreational
and scenic advantages offered the tourist? How many
times have you read of Oregon's advantages?
The following story related, editorially, in the Oregon
Journal describes Oregon's condition to a T:
He turned leaf by leaf the pages of a bulky national
magazine and hailed a railroad man of his acquaintance.
"I have read," he said, "every advertisement. I found
Seattle's call to Seattle the "Charmed Land. And Cali
fornians Incorporated used the golden word 'California.'
I found a lot about Colorado and something about the
Hudson river valley.
"When I came to the travel advertising by the rail
roads there was much about Glacier national park and
not a little about California. The Union Pacific pub
lished a" spread about a five-day bus trip through Zion
national park that made it almost impossible to stay at
home. But when the Union Pacific turned to this region
it lumped the whole in one expression, 'Pacific North
west.' And that was all. Why?"
The railroad man used the words "generalities" and
"facilities." He explained that Oregon's beaches and
mountains are without superior. But it is difficult to
make the prospective traveler see a mental picture dis
tinctively Oregon by terms so general.
.Mount Hood, with a tram to th. very pinnacle, would
compete with Glacier park as a specific attraction. It
might even induce the Union Pacific to vary its appeal
for Zion national park. "What we need is a top line,"
said the railroad man.
The travel expert touched delicately on "facilities."
"We haven't," he remarked, "entertainment capacity of
kind or quality required by people who travel expensive
ly, except Crater Lake, and it deserves greater fame,
Going into the tourist business means you go right or
you don't go."
On to Oregon, Inc., has just been organized. If it
finds the top line that will make Oregon stand out par
ticularly in the minds of men who write community ad
vertisements, the thousands spent will bring millions
back.
"Parity la (ha latest form of
verbal narcotic to ba widely
used." Nicholas Murray Butler,
e e
"Intention la the mother of
employment." II. n. Butler,
e e a
"It fa not being dead but the
process of dying that frightena
ua." Dean William Kalph Inge
9 m
"Time la no good nlvnt tor
Injustice." Ilevwood Brown.
"Beauty la tha flower
abundant health." Maria Jerlt
This Ought to Be Easy
" 14 I p lb 17 18
"o" - is- rr
(i iT " IT
T " " ' " if" " " " " "
Is- io i "
- '
4- -i'l ..O 1 iV 33 TT"
37 sris
-
. I I 11111 L
HORIZONTAL.
I Art of strlk.
lg.
BTirre.
Serf.
10 Dralh ae
tlm.
1 a Sagacity.
IS To reproach.
IS More aacem-
noi.
17 Inleat.
18 Social Insert.
9 Ringlet.
23 Golf device.
3 Poem,
svt Why. t
XI Recllare.
29 To total.
S3 To elade.
34 Animal
trailer,
art To lefieeWa.
ferrate aad
chlldrrB.
SB At a thaw.
40 To get ma.
41 Klk.
42 Scatter.
SOippard.
Maalfeaa.
4 Skla mm.
6 Because,
a Foment a.
7 To doaat.
To limit.
0 Te acnatsniac
VERTICAL
1 To ejacalale.
Y RSTKJID A YS ANSWER
II Black kaar.
11 ('oastrllaj.
tloa.
14 Before. ,
la Badge of
value.
0 Kgga af
nhc.
SI Cola).
24 Praaoaa.
23 Kllm.
2d Indented.
27 Embank-
meat.
MT. gaaa
fltedly.
50 Impruper.
to To eraae.
51 Arid.
33 To nlaago
Into water.
SO la ike mMvt.
7 To ,1a.
aaObeae.
ba prond of, and the hero of two
war wended his way np the street
toward the grocery store, feeling
hnmlllated but too brave, proud
and honorable to disobey orders.
News dispatches say Senator Joseph is taking to the
ir for the rest of the campaign. The prospect is that he
won't get down to earth again in time for the election.
And now they tell us success depends on the proper
functioning of the glands. This is especially true of the
sweat glands.
There's one way to make people law-abiding. Speed
limits were raised when everybody decided to go fast.
Maybe marriage was more successful in the old days
because man could easily find a woman who thought
him superior.
The three influences that preserve liberty are prayer,
the common decency of man, and a nice knotty club.
EDITORIALS
FROM OVER THE NATION
"Liquidating the Paef
Toledo Blade: Germany had a
stroke of good fortune when the
new republic elected HIndenburg
president. Ripe In years and lodg
ment, and with a life sohooled to
discipline, the old general has
kept close to the Una of duty In
eiTic service, as he had been faith
ful la the past to his military re-
ponelMllties.
President Hlndenbnrg has sign
ed the oung plan of settling
Germany a obligations. The Ger
mans bare an expressive phrase
for revealing their altitude toward
this method, now approved, of
paying tha fiddler.' They call it
"the liquidation of the past"
Against opposition tha old presi
dent of the Infant republlo had to
call upon aternest qualities of his
character before signing the plan,
which he Bays "means progress oa
the road of liberation and recon-
atrnotlon of Germany."
The HIndenburg answer to
those who pleaded with him to
keep his name from "being dark
ened In hlatory through these doc
uments" was that during hia en
tire Jlfe ha had served In the
school of duty. His signature Is
official acknowledgment of Ger
many defeat. A weak man could
not have signed.
A N'alve Inquiry
Omaha World-Herald: Only
one fact haa emerged from
the prohibition hearing before the
house ludioiary committee: That
if the members of the committee
hoped to obtain any Information
on tha success or failure of pro
amnion from a public hearing,
they were exceedingly naive gentlemen.
There are no accredited statis
tics on prohibition enforcement.
There can be none. The problem
to ba decided la this: Is America
more prosperous and happy and
secure, a more civilised nation.
than It would have been it the
Eighteenth amendment had not
been passed?
Where win the committee go
to get that Information?
Any Individual's opinion must
be based upon prejudice or per
sonal experience or both. Where
ver you find an Atterbury oppoa-
ed, yon will find a Ford on the
other side. One's opinion is
good as the other.
There are enough arguments
afloat tor and against prohibition
to fill every Issue of the Congres
sional Record for years on end.
But there la not an authenticated
Instance of any man's opinion
having been changed by any of
the argumenta.
Minneapolis Journal: Poker
Alice, who onca drank and gam a
led with tha men and awora like
a trooper In the mining camp of
tha old Wast, Is dead. Poker
Alice waa considered quite an odd
ity in those days.
Where the Pnsale Lie
Kansas City Star: Ex-Secre
tary Kail, convicted of accepting
a 1 100,000 bribe from Edward L.
Doheny for a government oil
lease, considers his own convic
tion a "puzile" in the light of Do
heny' acquittal . But In view of
the supreme court's opinion In the
case that the Fall-Doheny tran
saction waa "consummated by
conspiracy, corruption and fraud".
the puzxla is not In rail's convic
tion, but in Doheny's acquittal.
FLAPJACK KING
YOSEB1TE, Car, April It. (A
P) Bill the Bear, who ha eat
en 37 flapjacks without a atop, I
awake. Annually after hla hiber
nation he calls on his friend, Bill,
the cook, at the mess hall.
ERRORGRAMS
Good Road and Birth Rale
Boston Transcript: Good road
ara causing a declining birth rite
la Patrick county, Virginia. It is
so alleged In a letter addressed
to Dr. W. A. Piecker, registrar
at tha state bureau of vital statis
tic. The explanation Is found In
the fact that tha good roads are
not in Patrick county, which Ilea
at tha foot of the Blue Ridge
mountains of Virginia and adjoins
North Carolina, whose system of
modern highways is extensive.
Walter Anglin of Woolwine. who
makes tha complaint to the regis
trar, aay that a large percentage
at tha prograaslva young people
of Patrick county are leaving it.
They give aa a reaaon their
knowledge that North Carolina
and near-by Virginia counties
kava better roads. "Tha cost of
wear and tear on our transporta
tion machinery over our ungrad
ed trails of mud takes the profit
out ot marketing our product,"
Mr. Anglin explains, adding that
"nndsr such a burden the young
er and mora progressive people
who ara about to establish their
owa homes are attracted else
whore." Hare I a suggestion tor stud
ant of population. Tha building
of modern road oa a large ecale
la this country haa been In pro
gress for a quarter ot a century,
but there are still many region
where dual and mud Instead ot
concrete mark tha course of the
highways. Virginia has no mono
poly ot that condition. When the
figures of the census ar available
nerhan one of the experts will
favor us with a monograph point-
lng out the effect of road building
on population movement.
In the meanlme. fh maa
from tha Blue Ridge mountain of
Virginia where the trail ot the
lonesome pine meanders through
the Virginia mud provides one of
the novelties in the new. Few
people have heretofore given
thought to the effect ot good
roads upon the birth rate.
81 III a Good Soldier
AHoona. Kan., Tribune: Old
Mace Llverwurst was telling a
crowd down in front of the cala
boae Monday that at the cloae ot
the Civil war he was considered
the strongest man In Vigo coun
ty, Indiana, and aa an example,
one day ahortly after he return
ed from the battlefield, ha was
sitting on the bank of the Wa
bash river, near the wagon bridge,
in Terre Haute, fishing, and the
admiring throngs were pinning
violets, daisies and sunflowers
upon hla coat when suddenly
creams came from the direction
of the bridge and he saw one end
of tha structure beginning to sink,
and aa there was a steady atream
of vehlclea upon It and danger of
many lives being lost, he rushed
to the scene, got under the bridge
and held it np with hi back
agalnat it until some heavy aup
porta could be placed underneath.
Maca said he waa decorated with
the Grnce Demolamaaha Chromo
badge for strength, valor and
bravery. Just then Mrs. Llver
wurst appeared on the scene and
told Maca If he didn't get her
loundry soap she sent him after
an hour before she yould give
him soma decoration be wouldn't
NOT I A purtP
PCCC4ATEP WITH
RMClNiTOrte
MAPI" tt OtlK
pari won.
i nzrut
iontTt6
pLAINCff, i
pie as t a
m
s" ll a.e'JI i. PZZTcfiH
. a " 1 e-aJg . laa
DAILY LETTER
ON AFFAIRS AT
U. S. CAPITAL
I'rniuyhanla'a Priinarlee Are
Attracting Lola of Alton
Hon In Waahingtou, I'lilr-dy
Ifc-raiiae the Key alone
Mtate'a Polltlre Ara Cnt
lug Much Hlranaw llnlfidlowa
BV HOIINI.V M'TVHKK
NKV Hvrvlr Writer
WASHINGTON, April 11
No matter what bappvue In I'en
nsylvanla' faaclnatlng Republi
can primaries, there will be
plenty nt folka here, there and
everywhere to exult over the de
teat ot the vanquished while be
moaning the aurcena ot tha win
nera.
Those primaries eoutiuue to
be the moat abaorblng topte ot
political diacuaaioa lu Washing
ton and with ao much interest
in them It la surprising how
few persons have any eulhuslasiu
whatever over a possible victory
for Joa Grundy, tha hard-boiled
tariff lobbyist, or Puddler Jim
lavla, tha eocretary of labor,
who opposea Jo for the senator
ial nomluatlon, or tor Mr. Fran
cla 8huuk Brown, the gubernat
orial candidate, who shares with
Puddler Jita the honor of hav
ing the aupport of the Vara ma
chine in Philadelphia.
There la mora aytupatby than
hope for Glfford Plnchot, fight
ing Brown for the governorship,
but not very much ot either.
Looking at the thing from a
nice high moral plane tne tact
that Gallant Glfford haa no
wealthy corporations to pay hla
hllla or any atrong political ma
chine back ot him la line busi
ness. But from tue sinnapoin.
of practical politics In l'ennsyl
vania that a Juat too bad.
Hi hard to Imagine a more
complete aesetnbly In one con
test of all the factor that make
American polltlre so largely i
am of tnalncerlty, hypocrisy
machine rule, big money and big
hiifttnena.
There Is, tor lustance, an om
theory that nrlmarlea gave in
people In each party a chance to
pick their own candidate. The
ta that tnere wasu l a ua-
mihlk-an In Pennsylvania gulll
ble enough to run for the Senate
iht theory. Puddler Jim
went in because he had the Vara
-.ehin behind him ana uio joe
.t.rtert because be tnougn ne nau
the so-called Mellon machine In
Pittsburgh. Wben irouoie a-
..Innerf In P ttSbUrgn UIQ Joe
nn nearly decided to wlthdra
aa did hla proepectlve running
mate. Sam Lewis, who up to that
time waa going to oppoae Brown.
Old Joe Is regarded the nnder
dog now because the organisa
tions aren't behind mm ana n
wouldn't be In at all If he did
n't have the support of his pow-
.rfiil Pennsylvania Manufuctur-
r" Aaaoclatlon and aome am
munition conalatlng of Inside In
formation on the crowd which la
supporting Puddler Jim.
Then you get to the Issuus and
If von can find any except that
aa to which faction la the worat
you're probably tntuamg oi v'"
hibition. Both candidate orl-
.in.ily nosed as drys. Puddler
Jim is the candlate of the wring-
wet W. W. Alternury auu
the extraordinary wet Vara ma
chine. The trouoie is tna. ruu-
dler Jim, who haa no vioiem
antipathy to a glass ot neer,
tha Vare-Atterhury candidate and
by remaining in me cauni-...
.nta to nose as the candidate
of a dry administration at the
same time. Brown, meanwhile,
aa a move to offset the entry of
an honeat-to-goodness wet can
didate in the gubernatorial fight,
has declared for a referendam
on the elate prohibition art.
One amusing aspect ot tne
show Is the way in wnicn i,ai-
lant Glfford and Old Joe are
fighting aide by aide against At
terbury, the Vare gang and the
Pittsburg gang.
Of course, everyone Knows
that Grundy stands for about
everything reactionary in public
Ufa while Plnchot atanaa tor
nearly everything progressive.
Each, in his way. Is aa extreme
aa the other. But under the
nreient setup every hot shot Pln
chot throws into the other camp
la o much help for Grundy and
every acore by Grundy Is a boost
for Plnchot.
The relatlonshrp of their can
didacies probably won't produce
any real alliance. Once, In one
ot the Republican factional
flKhls, Grundy hacked Plnchot
and aaw him olectod governor.
Then Old Joa went to Gallant
lllflonl and told liliu not to
make any appointments; Old Joe
would lake car of lliem bltuself
Plnchot laughed at him and Old
Joa never bothered him agalu
He Just decided Plurhot muatn't
aver hold office la Peuneylvnnl
any luore. Hut today It seem
that once nguln Old Jo would
ba at leust aa willing lo sea Hal
la lit Gilford at lha elata capital
a Mr. Brown, tha Vara ratidi
date.
South Americans
Visit Crater Lake
Guv Daniels, of South America,
accompanied hy hla parenta, Mr.
and Mra. U. K. Denials, and alater,
Veeva Holt, had their flrat glimpse
of Crater lake Hiiliiiilny after
noon.
Together with Mr. and Mrs. W.
W. Floyd. Jimmy, Mildred and
Jack Floyd, Ihey made the trip to
the lake and were able to gel
within two miles ot the rim by
car. From there they hiked to
the lodge.
"It I lb most wonderful sight
ws bav aver seen aud wa certain
ly can prouounoe It the highlight
of our acenic trip which haa taken
up all over the Pad lie coast." Mr.
Denlela atated.
The visitors left Saturday
for Portland and wUI leave from
there for tiaa Francisco and then
to lx Angeles, taking the Bed
wood highway route.
Battery "D" Wins
Editorial Praise
The Oregon Guardsman, offi
cial publication of the Oregon
National Guard, In their laat
Issue published an editorial en
titled "isn't It Right?" which
remnrka on tne wonderrul rec
ord which the local Battery I)
has made In marketnanshlp. The
article atatca:
"Battery D. 149th Coaat Ar
tillery, at Klamath Falls, Ore
gon, haa on exhibition the na
tional trophy for rifle tiring for
lilt, which proclaims to the
world at large that they out
shot every natloual guard In
fantry organization la Oregon
during the past year.
"Each company In tbla natat
ion haa a rifle rang avalluhle
lo every man. There la not a
man In the battalion that can
not qualify with the rifle."
Tha article. In making a plea
for better marksmanship. Is con
cluded with the followmg reso
lution:
"Resolved: That I will devote
at least one day to rsnge fir
ing during the summer ot 1930.
and that I will qualify aa marka
man or better."
IXH.TIU.E OF ATONEMENT
"Doctrine ot Atonement" was
the subject of the Lesson-Sermon
In all Churches ot Christ, drleu-
list, on Sunday. April 20,
The Golden Ten waa, "It any
man be In Christ, he Is a new crea- i
ture: old things ara passed away. !
behold, all thtnga ara become new"
(U Cor. S:17). ;
Among thu citations which com
prised the Lesson-Sormon was the i
following from the Bible: "And
you hath he quickened, who were !
ead In trespaaaes and sins: . . . ,
For through him we both hsve I
acceaa by one Spirit unto the
Father" (Eph). 3: 1. Hi,
The Lesson-Sermon also Includ
ed one ot the religious tenets of
Christian Science, from Ita denom
inational textbook. "Science and
Health with Key lo the Scrip
ture", by Mary llaker Eddy: "4.
We acknowledge Jeaus' atonement
a the evidence of divine, efficaci
ous Love, unfolding man's nnlly
llh God through Christ Jesus
the Way-shower: and we acknow.
ledgA that man la saved through
Christ, through Truth, Life and
Love as demonstrated hy the Gall
lean Prophet In healing the alrk
and overcoming sin and death"
IP- 47).
EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO
IN KLAMATH
Shot dead on what waa to have
becu hla wedding day waa III
fat ot George Smith, a Yalnai
Indian, whose heart slopped Just
before noon loday when a bul
let entered H from the pistol of
Chief ot PoHce Samuel l Walk
er, Walker wa trying lo arreal
the brave, who waa drunk, and
quarrelsome In couseqtieuee, on
the vacant lot Just aouth of the
Jasper Bennett livery barn ou
Sixth street, and the two men
had a vary lively fight whl.h
quickly attracted a crowd.
They struggled together across
the common for about forty feet,
aud both fell lu a spot of aoft
ground which plainly ahowed ths
course of the contest. In the
niele the Indlau got the offtcera
club away from hltn and began
beating Ii I nt with It aa they
ought desperately back tha way
they had come. The Indian hit
the officer eeveral tlmea with
the mace, one blow back ot the
ear. laying open the scalp and
making Walker a loss waver un
d hltn. Every tune Walker
reached to get hie club, he got a
whack with II. byslandera say
and finally when the two had
recovered about half the dlataure
to the point from which th
atarted. falling to get hie club
he reached to hla hack pocket
for bla revolver, aimed at the
tndlau'a heart and fired. Smith
fell dead.
After the killing Walker waa
taken In an auto to the offlcee
of Urs. Roy Hamilton and Leo
W. Chilton, where hla wounds
were drnaaed, then he wa taken
to hla home on Walnut atroel.
which la wllhlu a short distance
of the tragedy.
The dead Indian had route to
thla city from Yalnax on Friday
with a party of other Indians
from the reservation to see the
circus, and made camp ou Sixth
street. Smith Intended to be
ninrrled today to ljtile lull, a
Klamath Indian girl. They were
to have procured a llcenae this
afternoon and returned home,
bnt It le believed th condition
ot her lover had been causing
delay to their plans. II had
been on a apree ever alnce his
arrival In the city.
capital ou
certainly."
account ot the un-
ilorae lor Male Young, broke
single or double. Km Win. Wag
ner, neil lo Sparks theatre.
Front page ad.
Cries of flying geese dis
turbed the oluorwlaa quiet Hnli,
limb day aud evening yesterday.
Many flocks of the migrating
blrda were beard announcing
their pilgrimage from aloft and
the curiosity of the people was
often aroused by thnlr pasaan-,
old hut ever new, Th bird are
seeking their haunt to the north
of the city where Ihey will pasa
Hie summer In security. If thev
dilay going south anlll too lata
they are very likely lo get It In
the neck or eotne other region
of their anatomy from the gun
of the hunter.
Thla la the opinion of a heavy
property owner of the prpnsed
new city charter:
'It la auperanuated. non-pro
gressive, and Is stepping back
ward. It adopted It would
reuse all our property to de
preciate In value, would dis
courage building, and keep nut
ItM-TXIla KAI.AUT.
SAI.kM. Ore.. April II, (AIM
The atate "conscience land '
waa lucreaaed to lllll.'O tods,
when Walter W. ItUSeell of Mr
Mlunvllle refunded tha till thai
wss voted each member of lb-47-day
legislative session of III.'
at the rate ot II a day. Huasell
wss a member nt the hoeee,
servfld alao In th till bown
nd this year Is a candid tor
the aeiiat.
o
f ' aa
feme
Price
for over 38 yean
25
USB LESS
tfajn ol hidi
prkl brsti
Nit-Liana , r
uaB bv ona cot
ijjV2522!l
New Oldsmobiles
New Willys-Knight
At Cut Prices
Account changing lines we
offer those fine cars at a
substantial saving.
Pelican Motors Inc.
DeSoto and Graham Dealer
30 FT. ON MAIN
Clogc to First National. Two atorjr brick hnlMlnj.
For quick gale non-rp.iident owner la making
gpaclnl prire of
$21,000
See U.1 Totlay
CHILCOTE 8C SMITH
, Roaltorg
727 Main St.
y it with ikmri.
There ara at least four mistake In th above picture. They
may pertain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing or whatnot
Be It you can find loam. Then look at tha acrambled word below
and nnacrambla It, by (Witching the letter around. Orad your
self 20 for aacb of the mistakes yon find, and to for tha word If
yoo onscrambl It. Torn to the back page and we'll explain th
mists see and tall you the word. Thea yon can see bow near a
hundred yon bat.
The ROBOT on the RUN!
Millions of Th.oh.got
Demand Ral Music
Musi lWvra vrrhr - In sis t
nf that tkm Inspiration and baatiiy of
raal art rairail ky llvlHff Musicians
ta km tkaatr rasterad t thaaa.
Th Muil Dafansa Lafa, tliroufH
which tha Amaritta pnblla ara voicing
than -ahamant protest agalnat tha
llmlnaUen of raal music from th
thaatra, la trowing with astounding
rapidity. Tha Laagu haa paaaad tha
two-milllen nark In laaa than thra
hart months of alfart. Votaa la da
lanaa nt BaUoMl culture a till pour In.
If yarn, ton would Ilka ta raglitar
your raaantmant aaainat aubstitntlna
I aaullass asachanlcsl raaraduclloa
THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OP MUSICIANS
(Comprising 140,000 prlsstnmi rmtslsltmt In the Unltid Jfafrt msj Cenedm)
JOftEPH N. WEBER rresldsnt, 1440 Bra4wir, Naw York, N. Y.
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H fern would I Ik to Insist upon
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MUSICIANS
1444 trasdnay, Nsw Vsrfc. N. Y.
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KSBMJ ...
Addrtst
City
Announcement
After making a careful investigation of the
protective measures taken to prevent fire in and
about Klamath Falls, I find the need for more
protection very urgent.
I have been studying the different methods
of extinguishing fire by means of chemical fire
extinguishers and have been trained to refill
and service all makes of chemical extinguishers.
The "FYR-FYTER" Company, manufactur
ers of a complete line of "government ap
proved" high grade fire extinguishers (also in
spectcd by "Underwriter. Laboratories," and
endorsed by all "inaurance companiea" has
chosen me as their local distributor, and I am
in a position to refill all makes and to render
free of charge first class servicing on all makes
of chemical fire extinguishers.
It is my desire to vist every home and place
of business in Klamath county, pointing out the
need for more immediate protection from fire,
and to demonstrate the efficiency and reliabil
ity of "FYR-FYTER" equipment.
I have made Klamath Falls my home for the
past two years and anyone having had dealings
with me wilf vouch for my honesty and character.
FYR-FYTER
Sales and Service
Phone 1758 1802 Johnaon Ave.
GEO. E. MUELLER
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