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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1925)
AN INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER "Let us hm faith that right make mi.ht, and in that faith let us to the end dare jo do our dutr as we understand it." Abraham Lincoln. THE KLAMATH DAILY NEWS Get Up Napoleon! It Looks Like Rain! KLAMATH pah. THURSDAY, AlJcffi Bound For Hell With A One Way Ticket Yea. Verily. It Must Be So !j These blatant headlines, editorials, opinions, and , (editorialized ."news stories" are false, ven though E. J.- Murray, in the Evening Herald has said them. A few, J jut a mighty few are going to fall for that, bunk which I we brand as a disgrace to the city, e. j The columns of the Klamath News have been de ' voted toward construction rather than destruction. The j fcews stands its ground for the building up of a progress ilve community, with hatred and malice toward none, ftome down and have a talk with us and be convinced. iVatch our columns for the unbiased truth, and make 1 your own decisions. A Sample Of Pierce Efficiency - Let The Board Of Control Back To Power 1. Strahorn has sold out the city of Klamath Falls. ? 2. Paul Shoup, vice president of the Southern Pa-i-cific rail system, second largest corporation in America, 'is a damned old pussy footer, from the road of a thousand rblunders, that seeks to throttle the Klamath country just for spite. lv 3. Secretary of the Interior Work and his gang of cut throats ought to have their hearts taken out and -aten. Pnishment should not stop with that. They i should be hounded beyond this life and through the very , gates of hell. :)' 4. This is just a big hick town. jj, 5. Charles Wood Eberlein saved the city from the ! faUi of Pompeii at the hands of the Southern Pacific. 6. Mayor Goddard has been the most constructive .jnayor in the city's history. He won't let the Copco grip him in their icy clutches. jj 7. The lumbermen of Klamath Falls permitted the i railroads to bribe them. The lumbermen betrayed the i city of Klamath Falls. 8. The city council is absolutely rotten because they : wouldn't permit the lowest bidder on the city printing to ..save the city some money. 9. The Klamath News is a mouthpiece of the South , ern Pacific, and a mouthpiece of anything that will serve , to get the people "down" on them. ' And as frequently mentioned before, the Klamath Kews should change it name to the Copco News. It has 'ho soul and its life is fast ebbing away. !!; 10. r:Everybody is wrong. We are' right. Nothing is good.' Tear the whole fabric of progress down. I Heart and Home PrrJ' It, MUM. KMXAIIKTII THOMAS Getting Tired of Wait The Best of Advice i By CLARK KlVXAIltD Dispatches from Salem tell of a big prison break and killing of guards and convicts at the state penitentiary. State penitentiary is'the only institution not under .control of the state board of control. Governor Pierce , himself has full power to appoint the warden. Prison rules call for a complete inspection of the prison twice daily, also an accurate checking and counting of convicts every time they are called from their cells, either for meals or for any purpose. The news dispatches tell of the convicts involved in the break, hiding in their cells when the other prisoners marched into the mess room. Apparently they were not checked nor counted into the mess room. One instance of gross negligence. Then it is said the hiding prisoners got into one cell, through which a hole had been cut into the roof, and making their way to the roof, let themselves down into the prison yard. It must have taken many hours if not many days to cut this hole into the roof. If proper in spections were made twice daily why was this hole not discovered? Another instance of gross negligence on somebody's Wt. ,,. The state penitentiary is the only state institution which is not under the state board of control. Governor Pierce has full power, and appointed the present warden of Salem penitentiary under protest, when he removed, without cause, Jim Lewis, for many years head of the institution. Another instance of the "efficiency" of Governor Pierce's administration. He's a mean man who will deliberately walk be tween a woman and a milliner's window. Follow the news from Russia. The course of events there is an education. The Russia of today Is serving s useful purpose. It is affording u an opportunity to see bow a!l of the ideas of men about the up lift of humanity work out in real ity. Most of these ideas having been tried, and proven a failure, as thoughtful men knew they would be. are being discarded, and Russia Is gettinc back to what Is known as "normal." It may never I have a czar again, but it certainly i will have a ruling class, a profes- j slonal class set apart from the ' peasant class. Just as in all other , countries, regardless of whether ! they profess democracy. The well meaning men who set up the present government In Rus sia thought it fur the best to obliterate classes and castes and set every person to work wllh his hands. But now the present lead ers are finding that there must be a privileged class,' and are mak ing it easier for scientists, artists and teachers to live comfortably, working their brains instead or their hands. It Is easy to see. that a nation of nothing but peasants would do lttle ni the way of discovery and Invention. Science and the Arts are them selves children of luxury, and I hey discharge their debt to it. The work whleh they do is to perfect technology In all lis branches, mechanical, chemical and physical an art whleh in our day has brought machinery to a pitch never dreamt of before, and In particular has, by steam and electricity, accomplished things the like of which would in earlier ages, have been ascribed to the agency of the devil. In manufacture of all kinds, and to an Increasing extent in agriculture, machines now do a thousand times moro thau could ever have been done by the hands of the well-to-do, educated, and professional classes, and could ever have attained If all luxury had been abolished and every one had returned to the life of a peasant It is by no meanftlac ri h alone but. all clause, who derive bene fit from t hese' Ind list i it s. TliinKS which in former days hardly any one could afford are now cheap nd .abundant, and even thiv luwaai cUu-'scs ure bett er off In point of cnmfoi i In Middle Ages a kiln; .if Knglaud' once borrowed a pa:r of silk stockings from one of his lords, so that he wight wear them In givlag an audience to the Frfnch ambassador. Kven Queen Elizabeth was greatly pleased ami nstonldied to receive a pair of ('liildnn's I'ictiiriul v Cross Word I'u.zli them today a New Year's present, cry girl lias them. It Is being predicted now, even by such a conservative as Henry ry Ford, that machines eventually will supplant human labor; or at least will make It unnecessary fur men to work more than two or three hours a day. Hut even then, it Is likely there will be a class apart a privileged class. Dinner Stories Running Across. Word 1. The bridge under which the trains are running in the picture. Word 6. A period of time. Word 6. Past. Gone by A long time . Word 7 A southern state. , Running Down. Word 1. The capital of Austria. Word 2. A country in Asia noted for its horses. Word :. A city in Illinois. Word 4. A city in the state of Washington. Johnnie l'i, one of the famous Princeton fonthnll family, and In cidentally a great-nephew of Kd gur Allen Poe, was a general In the army of Honduras In one of its periodical wars. Finally, when thiiiS, began to h,k black with peaie ami the Amerlcuii general discovered that his primly pay when translated -nltMl States money was about fin cents, a day, be siruc k for the coast. There he found a Fulled stales warship and a-k.d transportation liouu-. "Sure." the commander told hliu. "We'll be glad to have you. Come aboard whenever you like ami bring your baggage." "Thanks." said Poe warmly. "I ll sure do that. I only have G4 pieces." "What!" exclaimed the com mander. -What do yon think I'm 'mnitur? A freiKhtcr?" "Oh. well, you needn't get ex cited about It." purred Poe, "My !' pines Consist Of one nnle ,.r and a pack of playing The young man who endeavor to pile up "nest egg" before his marriage. In assure a safe voyage through the heavy flnan rial was In the early years of marriage, desire the sympathy of the gill lie la keeping Walling. She should understand Hint he la doing it for her sake and proiec Hon. A girt write me: Dear Mrs. Thompson: I sin en gaged to wonderful man of JS. who lives and works In nearby city. I am 19. This Is what I don't Use: When he comes In see me he's wonderful, and before Its leaves he .iys lie will Write III me twice a week, but lie seldom writes. He Is engineer for a large firm, so do you suppose II Is hi business that keeps him from writing? He doesn't go nut wllh other girls, for he Is mil lhal type. He say he Is so busy pro vlding for the future that tie ran'l write. Shall I believe hint? Here Is another problem: Wo were In have been married in June. Homo thing turned up. so we hsd lo postpone our marriage. I know he loves nie, for he show It. When I k him when we are In be married, he says. "I'm awfully sorry, dear, but won't you wall for me, so I call be fixed financial ly so as to have home nf our own?" I tell him I'm willing to start on a small scale, but he doesn't like In do that. He be lieves in owning your awn home. I have been engaged a year. m what shall I do? I'm willing lo wall, Mr. Thompson, hut not for ever, and I've gone with him for over two years. Do yott think he is ton old for me- !J and 19? M. P. Men often are' very careless about letter writing, and there are many persons who detest cor respondence, even with Ihelr dear est friends. Your fiance may be of this type. If he did nol see yon regularly, anil was far away from you. he would pay more attention lo this matter, I believe I am nol excusing him. mind you, but Just ottering a possible explanation for his failure lo write. I think yon should sympathlie with his desire lo be on a sound financial basis before Ihe marriage; It Is for your protection, you know. I do not I HOcks cards. YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE A.NSWKKKUl A lady, who hud given a dinner Party not i.r doeto, )n ,10 1)lreel be following day. and stopped In !cak to him. "1 am so sorry, doctor," she ""id, "that you were unable to come t lny dinner' party last nl;lit: It would have done you good to be there." " lias nlreailv d "Idled tersely. " have loll for three of Ihe, (IV?. he prescrilu.il gu "Sl.S." Mo-1 politicians will stand for what they tlinl , ,n w fall fr. ""liberation lTinWM7 good in " ' hot H lias broken mighty few records. a maasi.. 1 glfl of o. II I'll l ,f..T sepi rump.,, years old. ltd II- died .hum ,kl can t luri, lo make Iks Wti.J be happy , seems I w I be friends 1 nni m admired and mother and t a friend sbust t , J liave had to aor, ,J with him. u; as engaged, I u nave nol gott haven't hsarg , I still think f ,ii vise nie. LovrjJ I Itnagln. !0, , dlfflculi to ti, J in nsv I el it dead lover uiUh si lhal you tnn fc meet. I doll tl want you la il n, Cherish hU tMaan.t let him prsvnt n happiness wltkuotan fill, and I tstik ng friends. i n K. J : If foi sas n your letter dl4 ufcW hint a little sou act J now see miiim lis! light and retrH nc If he Is Ihe rlihteai reIVs II la lh antra evident he still omJ It Isn't alwinttia Ing man who pin 11 There Is no fUel for the benefit tlaatti sou got Into troii had his hair bobM r.oi Into trouble i u( Take care of ;l" some one will raw scheme lo tuks fin1!! Inrs for you. Few people loofl!"1 as you are good, il start out lo burros It lutcres! Is very kirk. STEP-WORD PUZffl Copyright, li. Klrvf F-tur Fndlctfft Inc. FVKntMT ARPUCO FO) tlreat Brltils BK"r" s.p ! t ins i ii "sTie waso.'' w e a m. emn It -s,M i ilisift. ! it MiMt SM giM f eiwiw e"" Ey ARTHUR WYNNE, . ?. OriofMor ot the Moiern Cnu-Wtri ' 'J ( ' Apples and peaches are In season, o here's a t puxxle for you to solvo from At'Pl.K lo PEACH In ."iKJia you solve it with the aid of the deAnitions given bt' ow , 1L the solution to yesterday' step-word puxxle, appearing " will see how these puzzles arc worked out by ilropping; the word on each step and replacing it with new JJjltaw new wuro. win - tsial on each step, and IW J"" , i order of the other lctt" The solution UL lie will I -: .,i altered. ether with n",Jlltl from SM"1 .tcpa. Ho- far . h cn win , tomorro" A1PIP L ET ill I i : 3 - I 4- (c oipipieiri I : . 'MOOLER , , l OO L E Dl ' I coo k e qZ I ; 7c 5??k Fr , ;! c 55 kITd) A . , 7cEr"ieQ1I I 1 ARTE R) 9 "I C A S T E R HtT 'J ,0E5SlIEL 11 FALTER J , "It rEr 1SI5IAII IVlP IpI Solution to Yesterday's St.pWord Pussle COPPER lo SILVER In 18 Stspi. DEFINITIONSi 1 Quite sufficient 2 A transparent, aromatic liquid used in making perfumes and mineral water 8 To entertain P E AjClH fl To degrade n To eraie ...mlafi'1 7A leek-green itw 0 -To coat wit" - -metal , l?ZSApr,1r.t.,0n.nten.nnt r,f.KN'''Y' I' u.rlll el l" ' 1 - Ultchrll nil '" U to n. A. " trout I o where i""' I. yi.t ltli if kut " .till- '" ljolllln U.I ' Iks' ' rtlsnrl. II ind V" , MVrii'ii tt or L Jkl i tlll Liriua. Hfl'tV ot m. Tl tnl IMr. i1 sit MO. Ill ft kin if i oil . t Pit n. 1 ind roui In Mrs. the tiMl Ion 4 lo Illtreal