A
TH NEWS
Friday, October 18, 1923
IREASE
V. CUiei of
l 1 "mth In
i .lace
f
i r
i
Vf
'!
k
in
ted fuurlli In
the flrirt lilii
(wording to a
id by 8. W.
r In compiling
At of Oregon,
l' cities of Oro
ne, Hulom and
at l.ullillng per
; 11,179.18 lsa
lucd In the cap.
comes vltnl. It In noticed that tin
planes have ft demoralising effoct
upon Ilia hens, and that the egg
layers absolutely rafiiHa to perform
In crvdltahlo fnahloii when Iho ma
chines soar ovur head.
A. Ooldmun, rnnchar, hue (one
In tliu county board, of aupervliMirii
ulimit it, unking n n Injunction or
anuicthlng skiiIiikI tho aviators. The
aupcrvlaora are puttied, becauae
tlmy don't know how far Into tho
air their authority emends. They
same, however, that aomethlng
iniiHt be done and ore "conducting
an Invagination."
a also given In
Jdlng report for
m I'orllnnd, Ku
1 Klumalh KalU
m.
.die (iaghsxen. It
1 that the permit
l last year' flg
I In excess of II,.
I 40 preirnt Indl
.he flunrea amount
Willi TO I permlla Is
a 1115. One of the
ir of 1924 win the
ng project of the
OB -Power company
nsnt and building
e. and other pro
Xlsmnih river,
jure compiled In
om i yeMsrdsy how
Alia were laitued In
8 averaxe irt 12,360
jilt..- Similar figures
l ow to Klumoth Kullx
in' l V ! Issued with an
of f Ml.
igTBd ( I 01 t"'11'1
tPrralta. - !lln : fur aggregate
MiruetM easta ot Hl.Ml.os
t bmb Issued daring tho flrat
r" aaontha of 1HS In the 89 clt
,wf the United Staici and Can
als: -prlssd U the I'aclllc coast
To of ,;tha ', Ytlonnl monthly
- md ly
item' volume of
acted In aurh a
thU area. It l
vr than tho total
inartura of 1924,
renter than tho
of 1923, which
period In the
god It l SI P'r
tho total for tho
of 1922.
ml
IK
cjf
Mb!
, . 2
ml
WOMAN SELLS HAS
ON BLEAK DESERT
M.ANOH. Calif., Oct. 16. Prestd
Init alone over the ghaatly collection
of adobe houaee which once waa the
heart of conununlam In America, la
an aged, gentlo woman, a typical
daughter of the deaert,
Mra. I.ydla Nixon, D8, runa a gaa
Intlnn In the deavrted village of
Minion, stsndlng equal and deaolate
In 111" heat-lortiired heart of the
Mojave detiert.
Deaert "rata" and llnran tourlata,
perhaps only two or three at them j
a day, stop ,u her' small place for:
groceries, water and go-inline, chat
V. S. Police Protect Irish Free Sate Envoys from Attaclc
then footed the huge annual de
ficit of the Chicago Opera com
pany, ahe waa all primed to alng the
lead In "Zaza." What happened
then never was made public, but
oh, dear, what a l'U there waa
EXPLORER LEAVES TO
N STUDY MALAY TRIBES
CHICAGO, Oct. 15. (United
N'ewa) Keeking In the " Isolated
hinterland of Madagaacar, the secret
when the program waa wltcne5 : of the Malayan culture of the South
and another opera autwtltutcd and
Oanna waa off to New York in a !
cloud t-f 20th Century . limited!
amoke. I
In 1922 Madame Waleka waa div
orced with a huge caah settlement
by Alexander Smith Cochran, her
third millionaire huaband, and a
few months later was married In
Paris to McCormlck, who had been
divorced from his first wire. Edith
Rocfr)feller, and had decided to
aupport Walika instead cf Chicago . ,'
opera. Anything yon with to sell? Or to
' buy? Tell all Klamath Falls about
Special sale on every dress at'Bejl" " the economical, efficient way
Begln's Dress Bhop 129 So. 7th St. through a little Klamath News Class
' 013-17 ifled Ad.
Sea islands, Ralph Linton, explorer,
will leave Chicago Friday for a two
year stay among the tribes of the
French possession,
Linton, who Is going as agent of
the Field museum here, has already
spent much time In research In tha
south seas. But now he Is to tackle
tha greatest ' ethonological and
archaeological problem of the anti
podes, the background of the Malay
stock. . ; ,
l'oliie protection la licirtp; given 'Irish I'ne Stall- rijinnrntntivrK to the international parlia
mentary confirms 4n Washington, following an attack on ( n. IluliarJ Mulcahy by I ri-.lt Itrpub
lican sympollilxcrs In New Vork. Mulcaliy wn p-ltnl with nnrs stones and vcfrelablrs, and bailed
with the nainra "traitor, murderer, perjurer." and the like. J'liuto allows the Irish delegates: (I. to
r.) Thomas Johincun, labor leader; I'n.f. Miclm'4 Ilavrs; (ic-n. Ahilcihy. Pi-fore ti..-ir departure
it sm annoumt-d In Dublin that they were "uior; rrpn-v-ntativc of In lniid than any Irish vie'lora
to V S, in a nmi-'i of ycara." ' ;
GANA WALSKA TO
l of
r e
v.. -
IW B
iiisU'rt I
ma:
DRE AT
J REFUSE
u TO DAILY EGG
? .
r'KTALUL.. il.. Oct. 16.
ualUd New-)--The butler and
I men of ttla s .burliun rotiimun
tara worrfcid. v
h ampbaala la on the egg num.
tough IB some cases tho two
Sf' ,-t 'i a'l baeauso of the dox
' t - ,a (who. Insist on
I ' lines too close to
a "egg basket" of
f any problem that
'"ft lpal Industry bo-
wlth the woman on Important world
happenings, and pass on to where
the dunrlng heat mirages play
tricks with their eyes.
Out of 2,ooo persons who once
nettled tlla village, Mrs. Nixon Is
the aole survivor. When the mighty
drintii bubble of the communistic
colony burnt aeveral year a ago, and
tho populutlnn moved out en masse,
Mrs. Nixon remained with her hus
band, a tiller of the noil.
Then the water failed: the re
frnitory lund parched and blenched
under the sun; Irrigation dltchea
filled with desert dust, nnd the croya
died of thirst.
All nature rebelled against the
village of dewrlcd houaea, but the
Nlxons atlll atuck It out; their faith
In communism had long gone, but
their faith In themselves . never
weakened.
One day Mrs. Nixon stumbled over
the chuck holes of a deaert trail
to find her husband shot dead. She
chased away tha carrion buxxards
and hurled hlra bualdo a leafless
aiiKelirush. She returned to Llanos,
shimmering In the heat, her faith
In tho ghost vlllago still unshaken.
Wllh 1.15 In cash, the only money
she had, she slocked up with a
simple lino of groceries, bought a
burrel of gasoline and waited for
the desert "rnts" to come,
She mado a garage out of the
hut onra occupied hy Job llarrlman,
communist leader, and boarded
desert "llxxles" for the night. 8he
converted a clothing factory Into
a modern hotel for tourists afraid
lo chance the desert at night.
Hho has fought tho terrible still
ness of the deaert nights with such
a strong heart that in a year she
has accumulated aevernl thousand
dollars. j
Wllh this money she Intends to
plpo water five miles to Llanos,
where she now carts It over a worm I
trail. Her ambition Is lo make ofl
Llanos the flower of promise thati
died In the budding.
Fhe wants to bring Isrce families!
to her desert city of tlfty rent free!
houses and no occupants, and she!
wants lo hear children plavlng about'
the adobe huts now cowering under!
ths sun. i '
Because she wants all of these NEW VOKK, Ort. 15. In no
things. Mrs. Nixon, who doesn't be-1 other generation, our children and
Hove In communism any more, will ! step-children will refer to Oanna
work on serving desert "rats" until Walakit McCormlck, just as we now
she can pipe water to lonely. dry,Pea', ' Jenny Llnd.
Llanos on the deaert.
The difference will be that Jenny
anng beautifully and often, while
Uanna, Mra. Harold McCormlck, will
bo famous not especially (or the
I tlmea she sung, but rather for the
! times she didn't sing.
The heavenly angel who keeps the
book of kind deeds, Mme. Walska's
PALO ALTO. Calif., Oct. 15. j Ill-wishers would say, has just made
While mora than 900 students' another shlnlnr. gold mark against
Stanford Squad
Entrains for Game
"I have sung this role 500 times,
under the greatest directors in the
world. Including the great Toscn
anlnl." !
"And I," announced Walska, rls-'
ing to the full height of her statu-
Jj;eaque figure, "have sung It 13
j tjmes . all over Europe. Don't be
I silly. I went over the stage busl-
ness with Puccini himself."
Carl Peronl, another San Carlo !
I member. Interposed and said Fran-1
I co waa right whereupon Gana walk-
ed out of the theatre.
The most celebrated occasion :
when Mmo. Walska didn't sing was
In Chicago, when, with the high
endorsement of Harold McCormlck,
tho harvester multi-millionaire who
cheered them, 39 members of the
Stanford . football squad entrained
here Thursday night for Los An
geles, where the Cards will meet
the University of Southern Califor
nia Saturday In the moat Important
coast conference game of the day.
The team, headed hy Coach Glenn
Warner, will arrive' In the southern
city In time for a light workout at
tho coliseum Friday,
From llruynilll lloim- Miss Fay
Cornell of Draymlll Is among the
visitors In tho city this week from
out of town to spend severul days
with friends and ahop.
More 1'ollco flrlst Towey Brown,
Indian, who spent Wednesday and
half of Thursday In the cHy jail
recovering from a severe attack of
"being drunk" was fined $20 In
Police Judge tlaghagen's office yes
terday afternoon.
her name, and exulted over the
angel who keeps the other book.
For Oanna didn't make her sched
uled debut in the title role of Puc
cini's "Madame Butterfly," which
ths San Carlo Opera company put
on here Tuesday night. Tamaka
Miura, the Japanese soprano, ap
peared Instead.
According . to the beat available
accounts here. It happened during a
dress rehearsal Monday when Wal
ska, wearing one of the gorgeous
costumes she bad bought for her
New York debut, was kneeling and
weeping while Franco Tafuro, the
regular company tenor, was singing,
"Beautiful Creature, Why Do Vou
Cry?" "Why," Franco Bang In an
undertone, "do you turn your head
away from me? 1 must see tho tears
In your eyea." Consequent dialogue
Is described thus:
"Why should. I look at you?
Can't you hear me sobbing?"
Special sale on every dress at Bee j
Begln's Dress Shop, 129 So. 7th St.
013-17 ,
HOTEL ASTOD
2nd 4b HM Los Aanba V
EVERT ROOM has PRIVATE TOILET
SOt Baths New, Modern
Close to Shopping District and rhostres
FREE GARAGE Tar.ff from Sl.M
SAVE $35
$5 First Payment
No Interest
Have one of these set aside for Christmas, as
soon we resume regular prices and terms with in
terest. Earl Shepherd Co., 507 Main St.
.... u -it- - . ' u nuujU-UiUumiiin-iii r-i iiuiuni li.u.lh.j j
i Edcrle, Back Home, Blames
for Failure in Channel Sivim-
t
s
i. -
TIN
.4
4
oil'.'
I
iwim i
tlrl
,woi.:,
ill)ws
v 4
1
i
f " - '
ol ? . 1 'J
I
Hie futnlly flrcaiile from her unsuccessful attempt "to
Vlili clinnm-l, Cli rtrmlo .Eilcrlc, youthful American
stuf, l Illuming lnconiictcni7 of htx coach, Jsbel
It Lilliirt-. l'hoto taken on Kr arrival from KrsnceJ
he was tanned by licr Intensive training. . v
....... ..
t : d
Three Day Special
Friday Saturday Monday
COATS
Fur trimmed dress coats, reg
ularly $52.50 : ;
$40.oo
$25.0
Latest fur trimmed flare and
tailored models in the newest AA
shades. Priced regularly at
$42.50
Tliere are also many beauti
ful new fall coals which are
regularly priced at from $30
to $35. Reduced for this sale
to , ,
All Dresses 20
Discount -
All Hats 10 Discount
MI-LADY'S
SHOP
Wickersham'a Style
Shoe Shop.)'
822 Main Street
i
Phone 80S-W.
Men! Get the Women s
Vision of a Better City
'I,
AjtJleX K S ' bTsTT7 v '
Equalize City's Attractiveness to
Industrial Prosperity
PLANT TREES plant trees la the
urge, the appeal, being made to
the home owners and property
owners in Kliimath Falls. The appeal Is
being made by the leading women of the
community. This appeal is made from the
characteristic and dominant Instinct In the
(Iner sensibilities of women tor the beau
tiful. ' This Is an Inspiring Instinct which
men should follow and attempt to appre
ciate and give all possible aid. Planting
of trees should be but the beginning. Beau
. tlfylng a city is a continual Job of vlslon
Ing, planning, advocating, doing, as Klam
ath Falls boundaries continue to expand.
CIVIC PRIDE pride in appearinco
of a city always rides In the wake
of Industrial and commercial pros
perity. That is ss natural as sunset and
sunrise. Civic pride Is the collective ap
preciation of the folks of a community to
Its industrial and commercial opportunities
tor making a living, to its attractive streets
of beautiful homes and lawns, between col
umns of trees-impresslng the guest and
adding to the Joys of living. Men, with one
hand reaching forward to greater Industrial
and commercial affairs heed woman's urge
don't lose grasp of civic pride and lis
future possibilities. . - . . :.
Plant
Trees
lij.i.ki.uwiMuCi-1 '''SI " , i
and Chiloquin
Plant
Trees