Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1925)
OFFICIAL PAPERFOR rpTTp TTT AMATH DAILY. NEWS riTV nP kTI AMATH ''.A! "Let n bare) faith that that faith let us to the end aderstand it." Abraham Cheese, Now and Then Malin Product Wins Recognition There is no intention of reverting to the savory edibles of a Thanksgiving dinner. It must linger in memory only. There was an item on the menu, however, that demands at ' tention. That was Malin cheese. The cheese making art is older than cities and written history. Back when time was (young, milk carried in a skin bag, revealed it self to our semi-savage forbears as a solid mass. The men, no doubt, belabored the wo men for this mishap, and left the women hun gry whilst they went out to hunt. Seed cakes were unknown as yet. The women, as, women will, investigated out of curiosity and hunger. They tasted the clabbered mess and found it good. There after the storage of milk in solid form became the custom of the tribesfolk. Transpose, now, the scene adown the aeons. ,The cheese making art has grown apace. The epicure finishes his repast with his favorite cheese. It combines for him the quintessence of all viands. In a small morsel he finds flavors which add zest to the most tempting of banquets, Jo meal is replete (without cheese to millions. Frugal housewives know its food value. The Malin cheese makers have already won recognition for their product. Malin cheese on the menu at the White Pelican hotel this Thanksgiving is a further tribute to the mreit of their product. Facts Will Out Find the Missing Number Within the last few days water users of the Klarriath project were edified with the statement that the district owes $1 68,000 and has about $53,000 with which to pay. Twelve farmers were called into the councils of the district board and told the truth. In the re cently published accounts an important item was overlooked, and that is that part of this Indebtedness, beginning January I st will draw interest at six per cent, enough to pay the total administration expense of the district board, or about ten cents an acre. Thi3 was no revelation to readers of The News. Weeks since the facts were published in this paper, only to be heralded impolitely as misrepresentations. . Shortly R. E. Bradbury, president of the district board, or it may be the board's secre tary, must go to Washington, D. C. Either the district must bear a very heavy assessment to catch up with its payments, or it must have a moratorium for a year or two. If Bradbury can get this district out of the hole he will be entitled to no little credit. But instead of being able to devote his full atten tion to the affairs of the district, report has it that he is beset with the petty bickerings of his own board. He appears to be in a worse hole than is the district. FALLS An InJcpennt Republican Nnpaper Conducted ' . right make might, and in Jar to do our duty a wo Lincoln. J, X 1JJ J.Ja.ss.-e'-- , I COMMUM' Sunny Dick Says American 3foncy to Finance RalT")' Lines in Mexico. This tn spite of the record of arson and (oul play accorded to Yankee capital In Mexico. Is It because we still nave a deep seated faith In the future of our bad little sister re public to the south, or Is It merely that we always bare money to burn? The wife states emphat ically that It is not the later. A Los AngeleB woman Is grant ed a divorce In short order when she actually discovers that the husband she believed to be a pros perous business man Is a street beggar. Before that It appears she was happy and contented. Well, boys, It's a ding-busted sad old world. Is It safer to kid her along and keep our bad side out of sight with the risk that when and if she discovers It she will by then be confirmed in loving us. or la It better to spill the beans first pop and cross her off our list of expenses ir she can't stand the strain? From kings to beggars we can't dodge this question. Oil Stove Causes Death of Three. Father, Son and Daughter Die In Flames When Home Is Destroyed. How typical, unconsciously typ ical, that headline Is of our point of view. The fact Is disclosed In the news Item that the fire was caused directly by explosion or boiling over of a whiskey still, on the stove. But do we blame the moonshine, or the people who paid the supreme penalty for making It? Oh, no. It was the fault of the stpre. Two Soldiers Barely Bavcd from Drowning by Naval Tug When They Swim Out to Save Fallen Airmen Near Honolulu. Why didn't they get sailors to swim out? What does a soldier know about water, anyway? The spirit of chivalry Is not quite dead In the rural districts of Oklahoma, and a few days ago it flared up In a real, old-fashioned pistol , duel over the good name of another farmer's daugh a ter. Tha contest was pre-arrang. ed, and each man had four sec w.wf-n, INUVtlMrrW in the Interests of All Klanatk Cou,,ty; Widow. Guile. Dig Deep 3? OpenYour Heart Chest ASk Fund onds to see fair play. Hut the successful duelist will be tried for murder and likely hung. Thus do modern courts extinguish the last spare.ofeksyvkr. No won der men don't fall over them selves to give a woman their seat in a crowded streetcar. Thanksgiving la on(ot the few days of the year when We wish we had a bigger appetite. i- Buy potatoes by the weight. It Is more econombcul than to buy by measure. Children's l'idoviul Cross Word Puzzle Kunning Across. Word 1. The name of the sistcr of Blue Beard's wife, who watched at the window for help. Word 4. A western state. W"rd It. A continent. Running Down. Word 1. Dry; barren. Wnrd 2. Approaches. Comes close to. Word '). The state of which Dcs Moines is the capital. YESTERDAY'S P(:ZZI.E ' ANSWERED1, SP; fe Jl JL Y , Erf "Dinner Stories An English paper tells of rival butchera. They lived on opposite Idea of a certain street, and one day one of them placed over his shop the legend: "We sell sausages to the gentry and nobility of the coantry." The next day, over the way. ap peared the sign: . "We sell sausages to the gentry and nobility of the whole cpun- trr " t - Not to he outdone, the rival put up what he evidently regarded as a final statement, namely: "We sell sausages to the king." Next day there appeared over the door of the first sausage mak er, the simple expression of loy alty: "God sava the king." An elderly lady entered a store and asked to be shown some table cloths. A salesman brought a pile and showed them to ber, but ahe said she had seen those elsewhere nothing suited her. "Haven't you aomethlng new?" aho asked. The clerk brought another pile and showed them to her. "These are the newest patters," he said. "You'll, notice that the edge runs right around tha bor der, and the center Is tn tha middle." "Is'nt that lovely!" said the lady. "I will take half a doien of these." Some girls and women use now dor and talcum freely, leaving more or less of It upon the rug where they stand. A real labor saver consists of a light-colored rug of an attractive character In front of the dresser one upon which the white powder will not show. Or another Idea Is to have a powder cloth tn spread down while the toilet It being made. This Is meroly a large section of unbleached cotton cloth bound "h bright tape or gay cretonne. This may he ,nIlken out of window, and from time to time laundered as needed. Soloct apple, and grapefruit b.y ""Hat. The heavier they are the "ter Is h la,i,T- Subsidy or Perfidy Publishers Column , Klamath Falls U a good town for advertising, without which no newspaper can prosper. The mer chants have been particularly re ceptive to the opportunities offer ed by thla newspaper, and con atantly a greater percentage of "foreign" or nutlonal advertising Is being received. National advertisers will scarce ly look at a newspaper that baa nut been established a year. Neither will they touch a new magaslne. Loral merchants who know the field covered by a news paper are quicker than the big ad vertising agencies In grasping the irue knowledge of Its worth. . It may be a mystery to some as to why the big national advertis ers will maintain departments to weigh the value of country news papers and buy apace In them. But thla la no Strang occurrence to publishers. Aa advertiser who buya space In a great metropolitan dally knowa that few readers In the crowded aubwaya and street cars unfold their papers and glance over the entire page. On the other hand, the country paper la read through by an entire family. Arthur Brisbane auma up the situation la a letter to Will Rog ers, the famous writer-screen star, as follows: My Dear Mr. Rogers: You will learn by the enclosed that your advertising la read at leaat by one reader. I saw that advertisement of Bull Durham, where yon probably never saw It, In the Hamlet News-Messenger, an excellent Utile paper published la the .active town of Hamlet, North Carolina. ' " tn particularly, glad, to, ace thai J'. 8. Hill, who I suppose Is your boss, puts his advertising In many of the smaller papers of tha county. Those) are the moat Important newspapers and, Inci dentally. In proportion to their circulation, their advertising re sults are the biggest, and their ad vertising ratea are the smallest In the country. They ara read through from end to end. Every ' copy of circulation means an en tire family, not a family that Uvea la one room with a can opener, but a family that owna Ita own house, and land around It, at least , ninety times out of a hundred, a family that buya everything from the root on the houae to tha ce ment on the cellar floor, from the hat on mnther'a head to the skatea on the boy'a feet. I hope you will persuade Mr. Hill and those that reprosent the advertising department of this big company to continue to aend ad vertising to what are called "the country newspapers." They not only pay well, but the service that their publishers render to the public, la, In my opinion, tha most Important aervlce rendered by any class of cltliens In tha United States. Editors are distributors of Information, they reach the minds of the boys that leave their farms and they ara the natlon'a mental police force. Sincerely yours, ' ARTHUR BRISBANE, . I, B. H. Stevenson, secretary of The Klamath Newa Publishing company, depose and say tjiat the following are the holders of the entire Issue of capital stock of The Klamath Newa Publishing company, a corporation: MYRON HUH!) NATE OTTERBEIN WALTER 8TRONACH II. H. 8TEVENHON. That no others are financially Interested In any manner whatso ever; that no person other than those named above, no corpora tion, no company, nor any Indiv idual or Individuals have any fi nancial Interest In any manner In The Klamath News Publishing company. Further that no cor poration, no company, nor any Individual other than those above nsmed has any control over the policies of thla newspaper In any manner whatsoever. Any state ments lo the contrary, either Im plied or othorwlse, are false and misleading. B. II. BTEVENBOM, Secretary, Klamath Newa Pub lishing company. Attest: . .Walter West, notary public In and for Klamath county,- Oregon My commission expires February , 129, I "r Mrs. Bh, j "...I.. 11,3 111 Mtnr.lr However. I . ,j7 "'da ao luetM, , attempts la uat lag In amoiii courageous!. JJ Pendent. Tire,,, ardent pl,a (, an who, tfitr 1 1 business ti, would taki b lunch hour Is bli a.' clsred hU lot, (ol , e about ay ,), offered me aiy u need. Often,, and refused, tBIU would need It'tUj every time i( tt agala sad Btka him know II k 80 when sty tank was foreed Is jkt courage to let kisi helped me a Hub 1 waa always vtrfu, ful to BS, u4 a- welfare aad ay n proposed turnip, learned he kid 1 1 going lo dltorttW co u rsged tks lea sympathies win ta though I ksdsnei when he tele Mill I'd try to tniatfe he would SHiist alter, I talMatk decided lo f us work. Retif rsji I accepted U l i there In kkov. ih would be ssjuiisli good, lis ta at me lo wrlUllDsf I wanted to tens' lose my plan m rams hark. Next I dechMil further ea. ulst porting. Hi seS funds for ar n cet'dra a whlU.kii I might fail. Ins would seed at ' sac. HeaefUt me once: bat as I k my mind I "X waa trying to 1 friend wsoa I all Ihst dsy. I Mis forgsve II. Ik1" to help wbsalstn and called for it to another toviMlj again while I ssrta The saml IkUl a helped me Uu ' back to lhilttil before, and " ' whom I loarMcti anyone beloti. ' down becsssi 1 this msrried aU W fesr be wo.U Now I bars ben Ing to fori U; new work, and tth ,r,ry week WrW; necessary ali. P"J I have met aot" clarea 41 to marry H. W ' feel to.m Wj f' turned , married ilk I" It wouhlat be H ,y this one M".;1; help of , and 1 py.andmsrbeW" sPhou.d I - J p,.c. and W - J off from tWo'lP'1' you "!; become fM' 1 a haVf) you roia v , 1. had M vn -rra.d that .."3 th ,.n y -J hard. 0f his i-Wal think of , until TO" will r 1 ,re goln 10 " (e elf uncealn V iigiousif. tj;';i ry wit" would be ;", 1 tl,lrd,.!.u ,ov, him, j- whirn ine - J in " - you. '-