The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942, March 13, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

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    KLAMATHF)
OFFICIAL PAPER FOR
SATURDAY.!
CITY OF KLAMATH FALLS A , KtJI(J,A (;ouw,x IHW f.'ite Subsidy or Prrfldy
.4a Independent Republican Semper Conducted in tht Interests oj
Same Old Storv
There's Another
He Doesn't Want hi
'a
THE KLAMATH DAILY NEWS
i
ii
Z. ZZZ-. p
It
Wanted: A Law Abridger.
And Sot Entirely For the Scoff lavs
Back a few ccniv.ries after Christ lived
Justinian, the Grea'.. r. Byzantine emperor. In
his time the laws filled many scrolls. He got
busy and simplified them so that the ordin
ary citizen could understand and obey them,
and thereby wrote a place in history for him
self. Within the last few weeks several speak
ers, of political turn and otherwise, have been
telling the people of Klamath that there is a
super-abundance of laws. And the cry against
too many laws is in the air over the country.
There has been a saturnalia of laws with
which public opinion and information has
failed to keep apace. Now the pendulum has
begun to swing.
Ford dealers are campaigning the state of
Oregon in the interest of the motorists who
are harrassed by many cumbersome laws.
One of the Republican candidates for gov
ernor is getting into his stride on the same sub
ject. Oregon has place for such a man, the
state is sadly afflicted. The spellbinders wean
votes from an easily beguiled electorate by
premising more laws.
Oregon needs a justinian. Perhaps some
of the new candidates will fill the bill. Wash
ington got a pretty good man in Hartley. He
- sent the legislature home.
I
lly MUM. 1-I.IMB fcTHtJ
Hear lra Thiiiiipiih 1 lui
ho. I 1h Mum' unhappy riprrtrnia
a 10011 married woman ran v.t I
llliouch 1 have lirru Inn till. I D I
iinti lii a man 1 low wlih ' k
. ,. I '"H I
nity (rum Wo ttatn !o
-h il.lrr n. it l".y mnl a clrl I hat ; " M
m l rr4. n l. miatrii)i him tw. i a
(.in 110 tllliVPil llrl two )Ar 1 'Hue
UK'. Iml I niir (rally knpw
Klthiitlt a (Inubl ttmt lir tlftil ut
tl Mll littirr woltirn Now I j
lllnl InlliT wrltlrn In III ill Uy ,
Rirr:rl niiitiin ht iIU hir 1
liutianl II. unci lm work, t.i j
r'kn ila ntnl Iwo wirk nirlii
Sim -'ak lit hrr indni(ul .it
(ir my hualjanil mij u( llm i
tun l!ir)r lll b tiilEKlhrr Bl- '
a Slip M-ak tt Ihn many I
At u
loa'i a, I
lor t hi
Balkan
IK
l III
bait W
14 fmi.
lltna Ihry ha ! I ha v
latnl him with llila mid hr a
ha iiiiirt ram fur hrr. Uul hail
irllt nut Willi hrr ! plt III
brrauav I wrnl bark bmna nn a
miiniha trip lal aummrr I
Jazz Homes.
Beautifying By Modern Building
The Triumph Of
i
Common Sensei
ki- In- ihl Thu 1'ipiinn waa I
l innl hu ilii-l itiram
:".iV" hr nlAlninl, -fll hot
I
.ill nuli-'l Inr u kla you nil llir
hava filfrrri) him hla frrnlom but
hr ilnrnn't want It. I frrt I ran
nryrr Iriiat hllll attain. althnUiXtl
I ailll li.vr him ami know lhat I
alwaya aliall. Hr samlilra amur
mnl ilrmka mnw, ami I know I !
Im hctlrr iff wlihuul htm. hut I
frrl thai Mr wnulil hr alimnl
IntpnailMr wi'hout him. hhatl I
I rnt hltn anil ru my ryra In
thl!
MHS V. II
Vuur hunhaml'a rrlnaal to ar.
fH'lul
I to atlitt .,
. tbiawk i
lw i
j ahoitld ail i
I
lly ( LA1UC KI.N.lltl.
"Get some color!"
This was the advice of a visitor in Klam
ath Falls recently, a man who has builded
many hundreds of homes.
He pointed to a colorful creation in Italian
pink up on the edge of Ewauna heights. "That
is the most attractive dwelling in your city,"
he said. "Get two or three dozen more homes
like it scattered around and it will improve
the general appearance of the city 100 per
cent."
And architects of Klamath Falls are in full
agreement with him.
For some reason the color craze in build
ing has not hit Klamath Falls. The most part
of our finishing is in concrete gray, white, or
other plain colors. Styles have changed.
The rococco house, as architects know it, it
a modernized idea of old things the modern
jazz imparted to building, if you please. The
English outlines were borrowed and incorpor
ated with the old Spanish plaster walls, both
being jazzed, as was said.
There are such colors as blue bird blue,
seagull gray, Pompeiian buff. Roofs may be a
one-tone duo-tons, rainbow, or variegated in
a hundred varieties by using moderately
priced stained shingleed of green, gray and
purple.
People like to live in these newly fash
ioned homes. Homes beautiful make happier
people. Color is worth while. It gladdens the
eye and heart.
Get some color!
It was hc-M by William James
that the greatest cnmmnn m-iii-o
achievement, after the dUn.'. . ry
of one time and un spii'e, prob
ably Is tho concept of permun'-nt-ly
existing things.
"When a rattlo drops out of
th hand of a baby, he doen no'
look to se whtre it has Rone.
Non-perception he urrepts as an
nihilation until he finds a bit
ter belief. That our perceptions
mean beings, rattles that are
there whether we hold them hi
our hands. be-omes an Interpre
tation so luminous of what hap
pens to us. that once employed.
It never gets forKotli-n. It ap
plies with equal felicity In IhiiiKs
and persons, to the objective anil
to the ejective realm."
il.
The noiions of one time anil '
one space as single continuous j
receptacles; the distinction be
tween thought and thinits, mat-
ter and mind; between perma- I
ment subjects and changing at-
tributes; the conception of clauses
with sub-classes within them; the
separation of fortuitous from reg
ularly caiiHed connections; surely,
as James believed, all them: were
onco definite conquests made his
toric dales by our uncesiors in j
their ai'empls to get the chaos '
of their crude individual exper- i
fences Into a more shareable and
manageable shape.
"They proved of such sovereign
use as denkmlttel that they are
now a part of the very structure
of our mind. We cannot play fast
and loose with them. No exper
ience can mart them. (in Ihe
contrary, they appercelve every
experience and assign It to lis
place.
"To what effect?" Jumes asks.
"That we may the heller fur
see the course of our experiences,
communicate Willi one another,
and stocr our lives by rule.
"Also that wo may have a
clearer, more Inclusive mental
view."
Kx'-rlenco kcrpn a dear s- h
but fouls will barn In no i.'hor
way. an l nt.- Is that; fur it Is
true w may gin. ndvlce. but e
cannot give conduct, opined II. n
Jamin I'rauk'ln. ,
Car!;!., put it slightly mffer.
ently. Kipctit tire does t:i k.
dreadfully high .school-wages, but
h" leaches like no other
Kiperlencii ui a process th.n '
continually clvea us new material !
lo digest. W,- handle this ni.!-le.-luully
by ihi. :HH!t f ,li, fs of
which wo find ourselves already
posissed, iihhluiihting, rejectiur.
or re arrani li.g in different il.:- ;
grees. j
fiomo of the aiercelving lil..j.(
are recent .ir,,ulstldns of ,ir j
own. hut nii.,1 f iherh are com- j
inon seiihi; tuulit.uns.or the race. J
Tln.ro is pnili.ibly not a com
mon sense Irmlmon, of nil n,,,.,,. i
"lien we now live by. Iliat
not ,n il,.. rirM ,lMalll
ine dweoverv
f'.it w.is m the mtitruut l kirir.
al u Copy nl tin, "Willi;. ! Vic
tory "
"And phat may ye call Ihot?"
he a-krd an attendant.
"Thai is u statue of 'Vlc'or)-.'
;lr." v.ns the annwer.
I'.it lumcycd ihe heaitlr and
arr.it. -rs statue with renewed in
i.reii.
"Vl. lhry. is II?" he said "Thin.
1" -gurry. Oi'.l like lo .! Ihe other
f. II.,-
I
I crpl the frrnlntn yrtu Cjffrrrd him j
Iniii.-aii's ihi-.t he k CollS.-lnlia of
, liN inlf-iakr. and hr no iluithi
deeply regreta II Klii u l.xr '
him so ttmi-h. why not iclvn him j
unothrr ilinncr If It was lust
spile, na hr sityM. then thrra Is
I lull" danger of hi in ry.-r ulluw-
i
lug the wninan In come between
1 ou two. Hut Inaiat Ihol hr Irlr
j hi r nol In write hi in again, nn j
peril of having hrr lettnra turned j
t iiii-r tn her husband
le trlie. i
run ra! i
fallBlIf
feraoti
Ulaia. l.
lorn urJ
poaalkk laJ
htla. kit
ary.
raaaotlatf
llau ralM
llsu isia
tni. Tki
ra !'-
I ha usi 1
(tin la .
IttifKlltll -aaxird
-
bt BtBT M
It I
tho rtrlrt
trtt"l
' It ain't thai." piped bark this
one In Ijil. n- ly as th,. r,.,t ,,r ih..
olll'li X lttoll tJIII.-d Kllspli'luliily
at liiu. "I cuu'l gel up I'm
I .11.1I) ii d."
ii-ar Mra Thonipson Peg told
tue in write uiid you would help
me in my troubles. I.al li lac Ii I I
wai going fiuiii M-hoiil. a coll.-K
lute looking chap gave me a ride,
lie lold tur hla name, nnd I fell
"IM a)
hive
aland '
al Hit MM
In.lanlJ '
rinlirh II 1
"Ah-
pcrrlm a
ami.
' ihe ilisir.
linn "
was
a genu-
1
Dinner Stories
There was on a golfer on the j
links above M,,nt! iilrl vU) j
would never blame lilmseir rr
his had strokes. Homebody ,ad !
coughed -somebody bad Ii, ui.l,. ,1 i
somebody had mbve'il .n 10 j
had bun rlHtraited'' i
This golfer, hunkered one
hiad... a ve
lay.
ry ' iirr-ful stroke, only
"i 'lig nholil a pniiarn yard
' '" looked -round
companions
"f I
al his
furiously, but llov '
M v.-ry , ., ,,
luiposill,,,. , ,.,,, ,
'I.' I, he waved Ills hi
"""l "be blue .Mediterranean
few liny sails, two j
"'"""IKl feet. .w j
""P '' .' III.-,,, play g,,,,,..
'"' r"i,r"'. 'hh nil I hose M.ip, I
n "R I'nek iin.l rni. " !
Af"r an hr r mr(, ,)f (,row
ln -'! his t(wraWi , 1)iishrul
Some Pages from American His:
Uy VICJOC
iiiitTii or m: ntwhi.iv
II. njiimln Kronklln has been call
ed ihe first great American.
Whether or not ,e should he
railed "flrsi" . , ,.rlllllly
great American nnd we must mil
pass up his birth year win,,,,,, mHK.
Ing note of i.
Franklin was t,n v .,., f
large f,iv. wn, ,t)i.
Ion. Massa.hiiseiis In the year I7utl.
We lire lolll tlml II .
I". tun i-oiiiii
ruiiember when ho ,- tl -t
" ik lit years
was sent the II,,,,,,,,, Krnm.
II Was foi'liinale ihiit
111 n riliniiiiniii. '-.I
"chools were advanced for ihut Hv
only went there a year. Then
nol
read.
old h
mm' school
he v
Me
... , ,,, nn, ,,., ,,...,.
" wrl,lK ""'I ..rllhmeile.
Wb.n he wns lo Vm. ..i.i i.-
H""",K"1 " .'ted enough.
I'"" 111 his business l.. ... l
Soll,-,r ,, ,... "n"
years.
'I'll" next ,j,
P In
l,U nr..
r""" r I-.-...S,. ,ir;(
MORGAN
him Into (be printing; b.l
was upprrnllrrd lo his
wns sinning a nepnrrr'
New Kinland Courant.
Ilenjamln M
used lo writ. Hill I"""
. .t .r He sllPI
nroiner a i"'i . M j
under Ihe door ud ''
.r ..ir..ied aome sii""-
after awhile he admHC!
Af.r , whik. h.wj'jj
...rmlued lo l.rk .-W J
liruihers niiani"-'
down l New Yor'h
I'lilludelphla. . '
iWpM.. Vp" f." :
a .f a Dim'--
Into the empio)' - ' t
Franklin ...
of Ills finger.. ' ,rtis
occuliy lilmseii
some of will'" we
a Utile later.
. .. i.. wai trw ...
..... .. must ... .
tllic, oi.v , e 4
with l'"
ni.r"
clenee wna very
nun really knew
. ..... ..i that "
sclenuiir no -
everyday II f-
el
fpo .
Moreover, no " K
ll.eri.ry way.
very famous ninil.
iltK1
li
.lt
f0il
Ml"
w
dul
.roll.
tilni
hi
lln
.iluri
h
ril
.la
ill
bo'
ng man fllllllv ,,.,,
I
I