The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942, September 06, 1925, Image 4

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    KLAMATH FALlXJ
SUNDAY. -SFptcu
THE KLAMATH DAILY NEWS
AN INDEPENDENT
REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER
SUNDAY, .SEPTEtotf
HI
The Mountain Again Labors and Brings Forth a Mouse!
Perfect. U.e,
Heart & Home
Problems
Hy Mra. KllmitH-lli Ttimiion
"Let ui have faith that right makes might, and in
that faith let ut to the end dare to do our duty at we
understand it." Abraham Lincoln.
h"i tot, " "M
u ".,.
Lakeview's Yothwhile Roundup
They ra:ra:iiz:d CurjLet Us Reciprocate
Now that the Klamath county fair has ended a suc
cessful year, many Klamath country folk, still pleasure
bent, will, it is hoped, attend the round-up at Lakeview,
which is playing today and tomorrow. Elaborate prep
arations have been made at-takeview toward the success
of the roundup, which has always been a worthwhile
attraction. Situated as it is, in the heart of a wild cattle
country, Lakeview undoubtedly has the best material for
a show of this character of perhaps any section of the
country.
Lakeview came over to Klamath several hundred
strong during our own show, and we feel that the com
pliment should be returned. The two-day holiday period
will enable many Klamath people to see the eastern bor
ders of our "empire awakening" without any time lost to
business and labor.
With regard to Klamath county's fair. Very few
realize the hard efforts of the fair board officials and the
real effort that Klamath's agricultural folk toward pro
ducing quality grades in livestock and farming. The
pride that Klamath's farming people took during the fair
in exhibits was remarkable. The benefits that those peo
ple, as well as the entire Klamath country will realize
from "better quality" inducement, will have no little im
portance on our welfare.
It's Fine for Mothers, Rough on Kids
Opening Of School Is Real Mothers' Day
Schools open Tuesday, and vacation begins. Schools
for the children, vacation for long-suffering mothers. Of
course, mothei'3 love their children, often to the amaze
ment of their neighbors. It may be agreeable to have the
little darlings under foot all day, every dayduring the
summer months, but even a mother can get too much of
a good thing.
So the opening of school must come as a relief of
which mothers can avail themselves with no wrench of
conscience. Since education is essential, it is all for the
good of the young ones that the sweet responsibility of
caring for them be shifted onto the shoulders of their
teachers.
No flowers or other remembrances are needed to
mark the opening of school as the real Mothers' day.
Getting Even?
How mil The Governor Reward The Warden ?
Six prison employes, five guards and the turnkey,
have cither "resigned" or been discharged since the prison
break. It may be only a coincidence that their testimony
at the coroner's inquest was not at all favorable to the
prison warden's management, so they are not standing on
the order of their going but going, just the same.
Those who have already walked the plank are
Guards H. L- Foust, Ira Hubbard, Clair A. Baker, L. P.
Murphy and Wright Gardner, and Turnkey James Nes
mith. At least these are all whose retirements have been
made public. There may be others. .
The warden is also slated to go, because of the dis
credit his regime has thrown upon the administration, but
its dollars to doughnuts that he will be taken care of,
pensioned as tax-payers' expense, like George L. Cleaver
and other administration favorites of failure. Salem
Capitol Journal.
To America's greatest necessity, America's greatest
pride the backbone of the nation labor. The heights
attained through progress are the monuments to toil. To
the labor of Klamath Falls, may the nobleness of your
work be impressed Monday upon you. May you reap the
rewards of your efforts in adequate monetary remunera
te through your organizations. We are with you for a
square deal.
President Coo!ide is determined to give the Am
.'.can people what they most wanta rest from disturb
ing new legation. There is no prospect of a special sel
of congress to take up any 0f the panaceas proposed
by a few aml tl statesmen; P P
Went the milnlrv li i,. i iu: . ..
' w 1,1,8 year ' that of quiet and
rest
'
i. ii
The Best of Advice
By CLARK KIXNAIItD
Have you noticed that loss is
said in these wonderful times .
about "the good old days?"
There are still those, however,
who look abroad upon the world,
comparing the past and present,
and shaking their heads over the
current conditions of man. whom
they see burdened with sin and
misery.
In no time was man's life what
he calls a happy tine; In no time
can It be so.
A perpetual dream there Is of
paradises, where the lion and the
lamb are loving friends, and the
brooks run nectar, and the trees
bend with ready-cooked viands;
but it is a dream, an impossible
dream, as we know.
"Suffering, contradiction, er
ror, have their quite perennial,
and even Indispensable abode on
this earth," Thomas Carlyle ob
served. "Is not labor the Inheritance
of man?
"And what labor for the pres
ent Is Joyous, and not grievous?
"Labor, effort, Is the very In
terruption of that case, which
man foolishly enough fancies to
be his happiness; and yet with
out labor there would bo no ease,
no rest.
"This evil, what we call evil,"
must ever exist while man exists:
Evil In the widest sense we ran
give It. Is precisely the dark, dis
ordered material out of which
man's free will has to rrcalo an
edifice of order and good.
"Ever must pain urge us to
labor; and only in free effort can
any blossedncss bo imagined
for us."
Dut If man has, in all ages, had
enough to encounter, there has, In
most civilized ages, been an in
ward force vouchsafed him, where
by the pressure of external things
might be withstood.
Obstruction abounded, but faith
also was not wanting.
"It is by faith that man moves
mountains;" while he had faith,
his limbs might lie wearied, his
back galled with hearing; but the
heart within was peaceable and
resolved.
In the thicket r.lom there
burned u lamp to cuidc him.
If lie stnucb d em! snlfcred.
he felt th:tl M sftnu'd Ii" "(i.
Fallh save him nn Inwiird vill
lugness: n worltl. of strength to
combat u world of difficulty.
Faith (It lias many other
namcM strengthens us. cullKhtcns
us; with faith we can do all. and
dare M. ' '.
Faith In v.'h:it? In man In him
self. We need this faith to eo on.
Sunny Dick Says
Clxntic Kail Merger To llo Ask
ed lly t'oolldge This will bo an
economy all rights (or the cap
italists. I'inc Tree Thca're Has Notable
Fight Card; II. Poole and N.
(iregory' Mix This mnniiKcr ccr
tulnly takes a personal Interest
in putting on a good show.
Children's Pictorial
6 Cross Word Puzzle
Vanderbllt Was About To Make
(iovernment Offer for the Ill
Fated Shenandoah and the I.os
Angeles for Commercial Purposes
Can't you hear the millionaire's
Klgh of relief?
Scarlet fever Prevalent As
School Opening Day Approaches
I Something suspicious about this.
Tom Word Won't lie Penlten
tnry Warden You needn't hosl
tate. Tom. You can't make It
uny worse than It is.
Running Across.
1. What Little Bo-Pcep
Part of the Lewis farina' egg
display reminded us of the time
Jeff said to Mutt: "Quit reaching
out of the aeroplane, Insect. That's
'not a string of pearls; that's the
great Inkea." Their row of grad
uated hen's eggs ranged (rotn
robin's egg sizes to huge douhlu
yolkers.
: Word
lost.
Word 4. What a blacksmith
pounds upon.
Word 6. One thickness of any
thing; such as one of the parts of
a cuke.
Running Down.
Word 1. A slow-moving animal
which lives in iti shell.
Word 2. A dinlomatic repre
sentative from one country to an- "upper was served,
other. 1
Word 3. Pertaining to the north
or soutn pole.
SATURDAY'S PUZZLE
A.NSUkHKO.
Pigs Is pigs. The ono Inno
Ihrkshlre porker that constitu
ted the hogs part of the exhibition
building, marked bogs and sheep,
looked sad and lonesome until bis
Judging from the remarks they
dropped, the drivers In the auto
races, cannonbnlling out of un
opa.iuo dimt cloud at tho turns,
w re very much annoyed becauso
they always missed tho boys who
ran across the track between
rs. It muit have been the
drivers' fault they missed 'em.
Lord knows It wasn't the boys.'
The Mulin exhibit was vory
Hood, but ono looked In vain for
'he name of tho community In
'ho bl booth unless he happened
l like cheese well enough lo go
nn.l gloat over It. Bo that some
city slicker wouldn't think It was
butler, it was plainly marked,
"Mnllii cheese."
If thin girl's Ufa la uuv trag
edy, her unlhliiklh.1 parents sro
lo blame.
Hear Mrs. Thompson: 1 am a
girl of twenty. Am considered
good looking, have hllla eyes,
brown curly hair, bobbed, and
good features. I dress well,
though not beyond what I make.
I seemingly have plenty of friends,
and yet I havm't. Five years ago.
In Ignorance I niado a mistake.
Thinking my Infatuation (or a
young man was love, and know
ing no better, I let him lead ms
down the wrong path. My par
ents found It out, and thinking to
teach me a lesson, and help me,
turned mo over to the probation
officer, who In turn sent me to
the reform school. It however. Is
called by the Inmates the deform
school, and Is Justly named that,
for I, as well as every other girl,
learned more wrong out there
than good. Now I'm home again.
Every one seems to know where
I've been. Though they throw no
slurs, though they seem friendly
enough to my (ace, I'm never In
vited out. I have no boy friends,
like other girls. Dear Mrs. Thomp
son. I made a mistake. I admit
that. Hut II was because I didn't
know any better. I've suffered
terribly for five years. Why do
have to keep on suffering? I
was only a kid then. I suppose I
ran have men friends, but I don't
care for the trash of the streets.
They are all willing to admit I'm
pretty. Mrs. Thompson, yet they
go with girls much less so. I'm
neither a prig nor a (liijipcr, but
Just In between. True, I don't
believe In petting', having had
enough of It. Hut, oh. Mrs.
Thompson, I want someono to
love, and someono to love inw!
I'm not so silly as to believe In
and await (or a perfect man, and
at the same llmr I realize I'm not
r.rro,..u7'
" lo a rtfort, kIi
i
"' M . un
vn ,gt.
''c'. Yo, did tl
In putting the bor U t
' ' ' I
YVONNE: A girl
respect her mother's in
gardltig I he prowrunnJ
ales. Howortr, your BctfcJ
change her nlnd ibon hJ
tlculnr bov If m tntuJ
permission to latlts kla
home, so that ihtnUM
' .
! It'll 1 l'l n . . .
" r.. nans-
one reliable school al aw.
the Paramount man i
Long Maud studio. is
reiiulrenienti art rtrt, .
representatives wltcutj at
ueni oouy. lOtrtincirtd
dc nee "schools" Is aioi J
si ting, but II Is ishNu J
that you rsa Inn utuai
It In that war.
That New York bafts'
who are all ono a
through rolU-to r IrdW
may be shrewd noiri k
time they get throniika
to hrl.ktarlni.-Sisist!
istcr.
The Portland tH
Ix iiirn tiis oitior diilil
Is refresh Ins to (I eft
that ran iliow op
slate prison mMria-
ford Msll-TrlbuM. j
STEP-WORD PIE
(PWMTNT APPUltO O0
Cupyrlihl. IKI. Klni ralurM JJrodlct In. Qr.it Briult WW
(RtH...MlM 9t tfc tilt UIP-WOHD. M. H-tfrtl '"!
J
By ARTHUR WYNNE,
Originator of I he Moirrn Cross-llors' fiuk x-
Tlv the time you hnve solved to.lny's rten-wenl ( Wj'
STROP In 22 steps, it is very possible that severs! 115'" ,
the less valuable words will have been added to yoor wriw"?'
the words used in these step-words are In stsmiard Anno"
and abbreviations are svoi'OT- 'j
are i ot ww;n
You will W."1
aries. Mere prcfixics
toi.Aili.,1 fnt BP
dictionary: alio Is U
i ; .nwinr US
viseo venwn.
notes annlirabfc to U ""I
-.i i k.'Vfiaitns
h. civen withl V"!
" niTC III H
".rsirti
Solution to
yestsrday's
Step-word
Putil.
RAIN to
SNOW in
25 Steps
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(.'..'IMTIONSi
1 Tliblical term mentioned In
II Kings, 111:24 (revised ver
sion margin)
Z Chief city officer
H Estate of a lord
4 One under age
o coal digger
0 Bores
7 Distances
8 Factories
II Mixes
10 Dismisna of
11 Marine mammals ' ' '" i
12 Cauterizes
13 Long pieces of timber
-' . 1 4-Rowels "JSLV
a;f i I)iverlo"