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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1918)
Wi ,.i n: frr- '-s';; It" v V- JL K jft? fi.j.i 1'U . Ait TWO THE ttVgWIMQ HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUMDAV.m TheErening Herald W. O. SMITH. Editor dally exceat Seaday ky Herald PubUsbIbs Coatuy of tk Fella, at HI roarta itraat. atani at tae aoetoftce at namtfc ffella. Onto, (or tnuualuloa through aha geaUa aa eocoaa-cUea scatter. akaerlsUoa tana hy aull to aay ailiaea hi tha Ualtad BUtaei .oo.wv kb wmmr O aaoat ., TUtSDAV, MAY 7, 191S BeraM's Classified Advs. HELP WANTED WOMAN WANTS work as cook or sec ond cook In enmp. Inquire Nevada rooming house, 636 Main street 7-Ct WANTED Dining room girt for board ing house. Enquire Loggers' head' quarters. -21 WANTED Steam shovel and rock man for railroad work. Apply Stra horn office, Klamath Development tulldlng. t FOR RENT POR RENT Furnished housekeeping rooms at Underwood Apts., Third and Main. 3l FOR RENT Pasture tor several thousand head ot stock in lower Klamath Marsh. See A. A. Mehaffey, 411 Mala at.. Klamath Falls. 16tf FOR SALE aMVMVVVsWklAV1M FOR SALE Furniture In completely furnished five-room house; chickens aad equipment Call corner Owens and Reclamation, Mills Addition. 6-3t FOR SALE Fine Fercheron stallion, named Shamrock, 4 years, 1,700 lbs.; licensed. Apply Joe Dervan, ranch, Merrill road. FOR SALE A 4-room plastered house oa easy terms. Call at 2136 Want land ave.. Mills Addition. 6-6t FOR SALE Incubator; also 7-foot ho tel range. Phone 9SJ. -3t FOR SALE Good milch cow. Enquire of J. H. Potter. MUU Addition. 4-31 FOR SALE Potatoes in Urge or small quantities, 50c per sack. Call 1MJ or address P. O. box 4SL 2-5t FOR SALE 3 U wagen: one horse aHaf wagoa. 213 Main ah 2-6t As c British Officer Dresses in Mesopotamia faB Ylf Wi jr-TBEEflaTT'4t. .1) nEx?&KgaV.i " ""a" Huns Criticise Their Rulers Eastern Policy AMSTERDAM. May 7 In the course We sc only e normmn political dam--AMf ".'" .1 ' . ...h' Ko being done In I'kralne. and not a or a snarp trimuiu " ivn.. the recent events In Ukraine, the Vor- 1 rc-frCS Newt - -- KINO NOTtS - - Snowgoose Is on the sick Charter list. John Ackley Is Improving his log ging camp. He has seven or eight tents erected beside a cook house and a large barn. The logging business Is mm i n r atone fine, he declares, flam morsel of bread to be supplied aer mhv fnini Ihil rount ry." waerts of Berlin states that affairs In Th Hriln Tscoblstt says; the East are In a deplorable condition. ,vo cannot deny that wo hae not , Padgett Is general roustabout for the "The peace concluded therv has be- sucrooded In winning the afrectlon or. logging camp. come a peace" calculated to scare away the population under our mimar rui opponents still at war with us," me or I.itnunia. not to sp i . newspaper says. ' It Is precisely the same In Ukraine. It was agreed with Russia tnat Kcn optimists may see mm in ..- iKsthonla and Livonia would remain, em structure stamn on a i-rj u- under its sovereignity." the Vorwaeets , stable foundation. It was always clear continues, "and three weeks later a that Ukraine, at the earliest possible Dersonal union of these countries with moment, wquld seek union with Hus- Charles (lorden and Dan Oorden Jr. of Worden have volunteered In the t? u nrvlp ami an Friday nlallt the Keno young folks gave them a fare-j well dance and supper at Padgett's halt. I Klnmath Falls, Mlsa LUsle Johnson nml little daughter, Mrs. Freddenberg and Albert Johnson of Malln visited ntd had dinner with Mrs. Virginia Wood at her ranch near Matin Sunday, April 28th.. Kay Pickett and family have left for their homestead In Ungull Vullvy. Tlicy expect to be gone until fall. V.. II. UlfTord nml wife are running the Mulln hotel during the I'lcltott'ii absence. Veto McNeill Is In Malln from his homestead near 8teil Hwninp. I'. ,11 Ilrandonburg is building n residence- t Mulln fur C. Maupln and family. uy mere than your share of Liberty Bends and War stamps, and then buy a home from Chllcote. lit Prussia was benevolently considered, sla." Sells Twenty Skunks To Help Kill One CLEARFIELD. Pa.. May 7. Mrs. Charles F. Sloppy lives in the heart of the Alleghenles, and spends the lonely days of the winter reading the newspa pers and trapping the fur-bearing anl- muls which may still be found In the receipt was being made out, each rep resented twenty skunk skins. She ex precd her sincere regret that she did not have the "hide of the kaiser to sell with those of other skunks." Mrs. Sloppy has sixty traps scat- Mr. Snowgoose has been appointed to conduct the Eighth grade examina tions at the Keno school house. Mr. Hundley has purchased a new wood saw and engine, and Is making the wood fly. Miss Ethel Pickett has returned home from Idaho, where she has been teaching school during the past winter. Mrs. Kittle B. Puckelt has purchased Die Padgett dwelling house on the cor ner one half mile north of Keno. - - -- MAUN MENTION -444 - When a British officer la leading his troops in the hot sands of the deserts of Mesopotamia he must dress for com fort, despite all the rules of the army about uniforms. Look upon these troucrs cut off above the knee, and it may then be realized how hard fighting is In this scene of the war. NOTED WEALTHY WOMAN DIES SARASOTA. Fla., May 7. Mrs. Pot ter Palmer of Chicago, died at bar wia- ter home here yesterday. fastnessee of the forest She has beentered thru the mountains, ana ne is deeply Interested In the progress of, usually rewarded with pelts enough to the war, aa are all the mountain DeopJo( make her dally round of the traps well of Central Pennsylvania, and when the worth while. But her captives are not news of the Third Liberty Loan reach- nlwa skunks. Occasionally she gets cd her humble home she decided to a mink, for which tho traders cheor- lend to the government uch money aa fully pay her 113. ana rrequenxiy a she had accumulated from her winters weasel, which Is almost as valuable. worK Mr. Sloppy Is a ginseng farmer, ana So one morning she walked fifteen he. too, Ims been able to buy tineny miles Into Clearfield, and entering a bonds to tho value of 11.000. But ho bank asked for eleven -1100 Liberty J earned every cent of It from his last bonds. These, she explanted, aa the season's "digging." AGREEMENT REACHED ON DRAFT EILL JAPANESE OENY MILITARY ACTIVITY AT VLADIVOSTOK The Shasta View school closes on May 17th. R. E. Hermann and family are camp ing at the lake lands, putting In slitr acres of barley. Mr. and Mrs. Jacobs and son. J. J. Parker. Mn. Mrs. R. E. Smith of SmaU Pill SmII Dose Snail Price FOR Constipation have stood the teat of time. Purely vegetable. Wonderfully quick to banish bllllousntae, headache, Indigestion and to clear up a bad complexion. Star Drug Co. Klamath Falls, Oregon Early BirdSoyt ah ViiWk Jmm 1918 Spring Sljles Fnini mi. -.. . . 1 -inrainoiBi ,-j from eer, tlr point, osru- HpHimSl)lenitithr.viCi, oftiitteit lleadnrar. Wl,j ITIiii)limihntil.WHlrii,,ni K. Sugarman ATTENTION, K. or P. The meeting tilKlit list bntkii , All l.ol KnlKhts airfqite4t,i, at the Castle Hull m 1 p. bluvw day ceiilnn. May 8th.-C ft(w Inu. C C. I IIArtYCIIIX "ui,i.liMarwai . 0.. I, ,r a- Mis, V 4. Uj ) I.,, Um - rUljm.Mff& 1 Aak Chllcote about tho new law ceet The amendment ptaclag WASHINGTON, D. C, May T. The mnfrm on the hill extending tha draft law have reached aa agreement ' sian foreign office that the Japanese ndment ptaclag tha boys arc placing machine guns at ladlvo- MOSCOW, May 7. The Japanese consul has officially denied to the Rus life, accldtnt and health aollclee of tho Travelers. It reaching tha ago ot 21 years at the bottom of the present eligible list haa been retained. LOST AND FOUND FOUND Bunch Herald oSlce. ot keys en Sixth at MISCELLANEOUS WANTED To rent furnished bunga low or apartment; good care of fur- altare guaranteed. Apply 124 S. 7tb, S-ll WANTED Team good horses, 1,600 or heavier; S to 6 years old. Pelican Bay Lumber Co. l,6t Ladles' Trench and Sport Hate at Itf K. K. K. STORE. TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN: My husband, T. M. Seuart, baa driv en me from his home, and I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by him. Mrs. T. M. Stuart 6-3t s All kinds of Army Sheea at 6tf K. K. K. STORE. FOR SALE Small bouse, lot 65x15, .frosts oa two streets ; fine garden soil, city water, electric lights, large barn aad garage and chicken house; street paving and sewer assessments paid In full; cost owner 11,500, will sacrifice for 1950. f 350 cash, balance 15 per Kaoata. J. T. WARD CO., 15 Mala Street Something new In motor hats and cape at GERTRUDE A CO., ORPHEUS THEATER lueblrd Photoplays Presents Violet Mereereau In THE QIRL IV THE ROADSIDE" Also a One-Reel Comedy Admission 10c and 15c CfZ Klamath Lodge No. 137, 1. 0. 0. F., axeeta Friday sight. H. F. Esell, N. O., Nata .Otterbeln, Secretary. Swauna Encampment No. 46, 1, O. O. F., meets Tuesday night. W. A. Hasten, O. P., Nata Otterbeln Scribe. ''aak aw Regular communication! Klamath Lodge No. 77, A. F. ft A. M., second Monday ot kstk. A, R. Leavltt, W. M. riiBMlT veils In all the popular iMhsitac tope, purple, brown 'F,mmA klaafc. at Oet a standard tire Insurance policy from Chllcote, S3 Main St It m Ladles' up-to-date- shoe shining par lors, 531 Main. Bucks, suede, olse, etc., a specialty. Courteoua treatment 26-lm Have you a W. 8. your home? baby bond In stok and arranging forces there. to Increase the A Thrift card In your pocket beats half a dozen flags on the lapel of your coat FlQSttC Ladles' 6tf Outing-Wear at K. K. K. STORE. H OUSTON'l Metropolitan Aweae meats I HOUSTON OPERA HOUSE DARK STAR THEATER Could you sacrifice your money far your Happiness? See Vivian Martin The country-wide favorite In "A KISS FOR SUSIE" In which a girl forces her father to lose bis money so that they can bo happy again. TEMPLE THEATER J. Stuart llaekton Presents Anita Stewart In "THE MESSAGE OF THE MOUSE" e An unusual patriotic drama of dle- lomatlc intrigue. Also f A Big V Comedy ADMISSION 10c aand Its MERRILL OPERA HOUSE MOTION PICTURJat TUESDAYS AND SATURDAY! dnomic&l f fee you (taw- can buy irurriw Vacuum packed br se)cialprce)M You can make more cups of good coffee with lest M.J.B. than with any other coffee. Compare M.J.B. Coffee spoon by spoonj cup bveup, with any other coffee and you will be convinced that M.J. B. Cof fee is the best and most economical coffee you can buy. M.J.B. is scientifically blended from the finest flavored coffees grown in the world. It is never roasted until thor oughly mellow and is vacuum packed to retain its strength and flavor. It Reaches You Freeh M.J.B. Coff Why? Both Ends ( Producer and Consumer ) Against The Middle (.The Packer) The consumer wants to pay a low price for meat The farmer wants to get a high price for cattle. The packer stands between these conflicting demands, and finds it impossible to completely satisfy both. The packer has no control over the prices of live stock or meat, and the most that can be expected of him is that he keep the difference between the two as low as possible. He does this successfully by converting animals into meat and distributing the meat at a minimum of expense, and at a profit too small to be noticeable in the farmer's returns for live stock or in the meat bill of the consumer. Swift & Company's 1917 traiuactions in Cattle- wcr as follews: Avtrag Per Head Sold meat to Retailer for . . . $68.97 Sold By-products for .... 24.09 Total Receipts $93.06 Paid to Cattle Raiser .... 84.45 Balance (not paid to Cattle Raiser) $ 8.61 Paid for labor and expenses at Packing House, Freight on Meat, and Cost of operating Branch distributing houses 7.32 Remaining in Packers' hands as returns on investment .... $ 1.29 The net profit was $1.29 per head, or about one-fourth of a cent per pound of beef. By what other method can the difference be tween cattle prices and beef prices be made smaller, and how can the conflicting demands of producer and consumer be better satisfied? 1911 Year Book of intereatlng and instructiv facts sent on request. AddraM Swift Company, Union Stock Yards. Chicago. Illinois Swift & Company, U. S. A. ;.v 1 TWUPE ft 0, f .' W. ,rf ,Me kU