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AN INDEPENDENT
REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER
THE KLAMATH DAILY NEWS,
auiNUAY.A
"Ul ua have faitH that right makes might, and in
that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty a we
understand it." Abraham Lincoln.
Another Haunted House
Klamath Better Baby Movement
The Fate Of A Nation Lies Therein
What, in the progress of humanity, could be more
vital than the care of babies? How hard some Ameri
can mothers try, as all mothers certainly should try, with
in their qualifications, to make good mothers, by their
earnest, but oft misguided efforts, to properly care for
the infant.
Yet. Klamath Falls doctors say. it is surprising how
little mothers know about babies and their care. This is
even more astounding because of the facility with which
expert governmental literature can be secured regarding
the baby; both before and after birth. All this in ad
dition to being under the doctor's care.
A remarkable effort is being made by the local
county health unit officials in the better baby movement,
that has been instituted here during the past month.
True, it is entirely in accord with their line of duty,
these baby clinics that have been held throughout the far
corners of th Klamath country. But it has been with a
great deal of diligence and perseverance that 'the local
officials have conducted their work. Their efforts have
not been without accomplishment. In many an instance,
slight defects have been dis?overed in infants over the
county that can, throug'. - ititch in time, be remedied.
The local he'alth i:u:t Its shown unusual zeal in its
work. It will continue ; i help mothers, uneducated to
fhe new responsibilities r f Motherhood, through free per
sonal advice and litc:':.i...r.
The United States a Railroading Nation
Nation's Growth Coincident Kith R. R. Development
Even the
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Heredity Perils
This year is the centennial of the railroads. It was
on September 27, 1825, that the Stockton & Darlington
railway in England was thrown open to operation under
an act that provided for hauling of wagons and other
carriages upon the line "with men or horses or otherwise."
"Otherwise" was the loophole which allowed George
Stephenson, engineer of the road, and an experimenter
with -steam engines, to persuade his company to use a
steam locomotive to haul its first train. That train, with
its prophetic load of coal, flour and passengers, moved
at an average rate of eight miles an hour.
Only a few years after the opening of the world's
first railroad, in England, our own nation took up the
novelty, with what result you all can recognize today.
Railroads, it seemed, were exactly what the vast land
areas of this country needed. The United States today is,
above all others, a railroading nation. The people of our
country owe more to the railroads than the people of
most countries do, because the greater part of our exist
ence and growth as an independent nation has been coin
cident with the railway era. Today, with only about one
sixteenth of the world's land area, we possess in this coun
try approximately one-third of the total railway mileage
of the world, and our railroads lead those of all other
nations in the high quality and low cost of their service.
Our nation today is the richest and mot advanced
nation of the world. It has become so largely because it
has enjoyed for nearly a century a form of transporta
tion excellently adapted to its great distances and its
wide variety of products. Because of cheap and efficient
railway transportation, available in all parts of the coun
try, the products of all regions today are to be obfained
in every region. The products of every region can be and
are marketed in all regions. Passengers are moved long
distances with great rapidity.
1 o
There is no slackening of demand, in sight, for the
last six months of the year, and price advances are
predicted.
lie man who denounces capital .- em-. ,...
objects if the curse comes home to roost.
" o
Some statesmen are self-made,
chine made.
Politicians are ma-
A smooth road never leads to success and a smooth
sea never makes a skillful navigator.
o
Consider the lowly postage stamp and learn the
secret of success. It sticks to one thing until it gets there.
Hear Mrs. Tuotqpsoa:. I an la
love w It H a girl wIium father and
mother are both deaf amies.
Should Ihla Dink any difference
In my love for her? 1 love ber
with all my heart, sad slit loves
in. i. 8.
I am Informed by a physician
lhai th. grandchildren of deaf
mutes often are affected hy the
condition. Tlia road generation
usually Is affected, ninre tbnn lb
first. Tali Is NOT a rule, how
ever, only a tendency. It you
I wo are considering marriage,
bar her Unilly history looked up
tu arc If deaf mutoa ara re-cur-rnt.
and accept the advlra of a
competent pbyalrlan In Ihe matter.
" 'nil
" 1
stand that.
l'i oarsly
! ma.
The Best of Advice
By IT A It K KINNAUtl)
ITS YOl'R OWV STORY
There Is a beautiful theory,
i
preached by 'Emerson, that there
Is one mind common to nil indi
vidual men.
'Every man Is an inlet lo the
same and to all the same," be
said.
"He that is onca admitted to the
right of reason I mado a free
man of the whole estate.
"What Plalo has thought, he
may think;
"What a saint has felt, he may
feel;
"What at any time has befallen
any man. he can understand.
"Who hath access to this uni
versal mind is a party to all that
is or can be done, for this Is th?
only and sovereign agent."
.
Of the works of this mind, his
tory is the record.
Its genius is Illustrated by the
entire series of years, months,
weeks, days, hours, miuutes, sec
onds. And thus it is said that man is
explicable by nothing less than
all his history.
If we believe w ith Kmerson that
there is one mind common to all
men. then we believe that without
hurry, without rest, the human
spirit goes forth from the begin- !
ning to embody every faculty, ev- '
ery thought, every emotion which
belongs to It, in appropriate
events.
"Always the thoiiEht Is prior to
th foot," Emerson said.
"All the facts of history pre
exist in the mind as laws.
"Kach law In turn is made by
circumstances predominant, and
the limits of nature give power
to but one nt a lime."
A man Is the whole encyclope
dia of facts.
The creation of a thousand for
ests in In one ncorn.
And llahylnn. Kgypt, Greece,
nnmn, fintil, Britain, America, lie
folded in the first man.
Kpoch nfter epoch nre merely
the application of man's manifold
spirit to Ihe manifold world.
"Tho world exists for t ho 'edu-
t cation of each man.
served. ,
There Is no ape or s!aie of so
, riety or mode of action In history
to which there is, not somewhat
! corresponding In his life
If you wjuld know yourself,
read history.
It's yotirown story.
Dinner Stories
Selenium, applied In the form
of a powder mixed with an ad
hesive, has been found to fire
proof insulated electric wires.
China's first radio exhibition
was held recently nt Shanghai,
which has the only broadcasting
station in the country.
Children's Pictorial
Cross Word
Puzzle
i iz i r-s m
Running Across. ,
p Word I. In the picture.
word 6. A small bag made to
hold money.
. .Word 6. A wise looking bird,
f Running Down.
Word 2, What you ghoot from
a bow.
. Word 3. A monkev. -- i
Word 4. Ajmakc-iiko fish.
YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE V
V ANSWKHKI).
A tourist lo the mountains of
Tennessee once had dinner with a
querulous old mountaineer who
yarned about hard times for fif
teen minutes at a stretch.
"Why, man." said tho tourist,
"you ought to bp able to make lots
of money shipping green corn to
the northern market.
"Yes, I orler." was the sullen
reply.
"You have the Inml. I suppose,
nnd inn get the seed."
"Yes. 1 guess so."
"Then why don't you go Into
tho speculation?"
"No use, stranger," sadly re
plied the cracker, "the old woman
Is too luy to do the plowln' and
plantln'."
One of our prominent authors
and clergymen was attending a
dinner recently when the conver
sation turned lo charily, where
upon the distinguished guest re
marked: "Speaking of charity reminds
me of the millionaire who wus
dying, lie. luid lived a life of
which, as ho now looked hack on
It. ho felt none too proud. To the
minister at his bedside ho mutter
ed weakly:
" 'If I leave a hundred thousand
dollars or so lo the church, will
my salvalion be assured?'
"The minister answered cau
tiously, ! wouldn't llko lo be pos
itive, hut Ifs well worth trying."
KKWIMK AND KIHLIK: Men
who do not keep their promises In
small thin, are likely to be dle
honeat as well la larger melton,
Let your youni men understand
that If they value your friendship
they will have to treat you with
more consideration and not expert
you lo believe atlcb flimsy excuse.
If they caro for you. they won
hesitate ahuut allerlui their run
duct.
Her .tnoloatlen Futile
hear Mrs, Thompson: 1 kept
steady rompany with a young man
far one year and eight months. A
month ago there was a break. 1
bave been try In very bard to for
get him by lolua out with ulnars,
going to daneea and other tblnga,
trying lo get him off my mind.
Unl It Is Impossible. I run think
of nothing or no una but him.
lie go out with other glrla and
seems to enjoy nlinself. He acta
a though he cares nothing for me.
It waa my (anil. Mrs. Thompson
this misunderstanding. 80 I have
done everything In my power to
rltihl my wruog. but he will not
listen. I am afraid. I am losing
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twl
jgu , fc
you, he win ,..
If he doe.,1, lkji1
of h,!
Tr I,. ..1.. . 'I
- '" 1 Itrn
thought
off buys and ia
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me aunjmu
house party tmii
l out of dotw.aJ
alng. whti It a
mere raa D,
graph mutlc, ciiw
beach rlara kakti,
noon In a ik.4; ,
evening, car m,
or ca.100. or Mt. J
(luesslng
Inr dlversloM.! TW
lions lor lb 11
flowers, or mvUlu
and auggeati olu
l'1'ZZI.K OIRU tj
engaged, yog iWnkJ
or ak him l artaa
witn aayont tin. a
are oldr. t tklik mi
aa many frltto)!
At a ChrUtaatgr
oanu 01 oa 01 us at
very lata. J
"I ban rent sk
home," be eipltlat j
"Ob. my datlfcr
Ihe bos less, ")
sooner?"
t
She woDderai
.rowned.
With recently r.
shelf baskets cut,
height by bait I
him entirely, and I eould never j articles they aoH
STEP-WORD PI
ffpVNT APPUCO FOR)
CopyTlcM. H. Kins FlurtM BrMlcaU, Inc. UrtU nrtUHt
(llflltll (4 tftll Ml tTtr.W. a t lav tM. Mart V IkW-'
By ARTHUR WYNNE, .
.. " Originator of lh Moitrn ru.Worthib
To ehanea from STRAW to DFRRY eenerallv asa)
of Ave dollars, but here ww have it in step-word paxsat saal
19 steps. .See if you can solve the puxsle by chantiajolfl
on eacn step and substituting- a new letter to spell
spoading to the numbered definition given below. 1"
yesterday's pussies given herewith, will eerve to ilhiWS'
word pusxles are worked out. So abbreviations ail !
nuthina but atandard American Hlrtinmrv five-lcttar
The solution to wovr
appear Monday, lofttsa-
tertaining little sevss-IJW'
puasle -PICKLES t.
M stens. T f
PICKliS U
morrow wltk
the dennllks
appear withtUf
FST RAW
I j, ; 1 1
Jlr. Junes was a prominent
member of the It. P. o. k. At the
lireakfast table the other morning
he was relating to his wife an
Incident that occurred hi Ihn
lodge Ihe previous night. The
lreldet offered n new silk hat
to the brother who could stand up
ad truthfully Mv lat (,1rjn(? Mh
married life he had never kissed
nny woman but his own wife.
-uu, would yon hellers
Mary?- ni)l )(((1 )(n
..eorge. ' his Wf ,,,
.1 1.1.. 1.
'inn 1 you ainnd up?"
"Well." ho replied, "I wos go
lo, but I know I look like hell
I" n silk hat."
It.
"why
Argentina
suitable for
"""". nnd has begun t H,p
Is quarrying onyx
Interior finishing r
Solution to
yesterday's
Step-Word
Pussle
ARMY to
NAV.Y la
12 Steps. .
I
3
M
Moads.'.
10
12
13
1
1o
tr
18
is
15
B
11
5-Si'ia'W
u Kvery
8 Diversions
7. 4 minute ofP
Celestial j-J
.. . .a, a nwinne.
1 A lonif, narrow strip of leather IJ "r-u, turtrr
" hom Z
DEFINITIONS!
fitted with a buckla
Z A rnior sharpener
a A
4 To play on a atrlnged Instru- aymVanlngl
ment careleasl and noisily sa-.j'-
-A raxor sharpener TainUd j!t
-An instrument to prevent malt 5i,imiL
from oveiflowing . 17""m on b,
I T
1 l.l
lilllll"1"
.'.test
, of K'1
tiuutb
iirrn I
II
IW
lh '
. 1
Itfi o'
I (too 1 11
lacllll
Lull
" ne l imed Htales.
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