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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1915)
.yg "' s ' n O. V j fW. .Y:.. Y.HAIMM $, -fcjtiv; THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH PALLS, OREGON wM,r?m- I'AUK A1 St ft (Set Acquainted ...... ...nr bllsllll'SII you'll f.:c&fe By Failure to brow Sugar at 'PfWfei'K '"VlS'4t ?f&.. - '(l Vf M " n - . .. nl. ..lira cob n onu i "' ' Home, U.S. Loses itl -i , ji .j niftlMaiia rruii- Stive Grocery fen'trrtSfl1 A-f How Frye and Two Other Prinz Eitel Victims Were Sunkl i Kwi,1': - "aim -v. rjnm&m-?m mil mmi nam Tan wva'iw.. T.iw - ir k.twfj; , V k.' a?m.M -bbss. .v.v'bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbi UjnWDKMTHKNUMIIKII M I tt. g USMamHtreet V f fef- - v r 7I2S Monuments IH-f - - S?Mf KLAMATH KALI LwdfAr , A aa. 3 vSgtSasrigaaM , fflremyM7x is-s22af Product of Six Million Acres, or an Eighth of the Total Wheat Area, Virtually Thrown Away. Sugar BeetsThrive in Klamath j. . ' "! Your Horses Here at thi: HK AVK. MVKHV H VRKU IIAKN' "Dick" (IiMMlrll, Proprietor Transfer Co. 010 Mnla Hlrvet H' bandlu pnnongor baggate I freight for Cnlklnt and Ham as to all Upper tako polnta; have inrnR room In con- ttlOB, I Bui enrt olllce, CIO Main l,at 7:30 o in. Phono I9IJ. Our Uptown Office 610 Main Stmt MENDING FREE ijrior Laundry I'liono 1US Kansas Is to See if Prohibition Is Paying of tlio rotation of liquor, crime, Intan Itr, pauperism, Imbecility, depontont LAWUKNCU, Kan.. March Si. Can Knnias bo uod an n bIiIuIdk ox-. amnio to proo tbo contenUon. ot'ind neglected children and to the do both the prohlbltlonUts and the brow Thoso arc actual photographs of tlio sinking of the three victims of the Print Eltol Frledrlch. They ere ob tained 'from one of the prisoners on the German warship, now held at Newport News. They are: The French Jacobion, sunk off Chill, January 28 (shown In tho top photo). The British ship Mary Ada Scott, sunk off Chili February 18 (shown In middle picture). Tho American ship William P. Fryo, sunk off Chill February 27 (In lower photo). The Prtnz Ettel sank In all eleven ships, and from them she obtained coal enough to continue on her career until her machinery gave way find she had to put Into Newport News. The value of the cargoes and ships was very high. In addition some $2,000,- 000 In gold was taken from her vic tims. tokcape Gardewn Hjppg and Spnyki lrte" u 8prayod or White- 'beti. chimnnt. .(....j w , auu wl aarden work done R- R. Roberts f"e ordefB at West bad Qro- I')" or Roburtu iv mi.i. . ... m, ii iiiiuiirii. Xotica of DImoIuIIoh numberod 1, Sansomo street, on the .... , , . ., .... ... I northwest corner of Bansome and But- ... r .' , " ,:. ," tor streets. San Francisco, Calif. Any partnership heretofore existing be- asaesament twocn h. u. uaranor ana v. a. oyi, .... - . ,,,.. nn rv-Hn... operating at Fort Klamath, Oregon, Mth duy of Aprf m6 wU u nautr fii sra siu , ",, , , I delinquent and advertised for sale at FINISH ON SHIRTS "tot be lurnauui fw.Ai. ?!ih,Mta " thmt. '' bundles. rouh - '.mi.. Klamath fai i r . . . . " " . -'am LAUNDRY If HMMMl "'W eraT la Knnsas tho happy, contented state tho prohibitionists picture It? Is prohibition a failure taxes high and crlinos rampant, aa tho United llrewors Association assert? To dcflnltoly settle tho question as to tho wolfare of tbo Jaybawker state, Professor F. F. Dlackmar, head of tbo department of sociology In the Unl vorslty of Kansas, has been asked by tho International Temporance Society to Investigate thoso confllclng sate monts, ' Professor Ulackmnr will find out how much liquor Is consumed In Kan sas In a year. Ho will make a study proclatlon of labor power. A history of tho political and legal aspects of prohibition in Kansas, including the decisions of the courts and tho social and educational past will bo laid be fore the anti-saloon element The nBsortlon by tho browcrs association that prohibition lessons tho demand for tho grain crop will be either dis proved or substantiated. Concerning tho Investigation. Pro fessor Dlackmar says: "Zoalons advocates of both sides often assert what they cannot prove to bo true. Wo shall find out the ex act status of theso statements, ana havo available Information as to tho welfaro of Kansas." , Iloyt, has been this day duly dissolved by mutual consent. All outstanding accounts will be collected and all bills public auction, and, unless payment Is made before, will be sold on Wed- a ana an um. . mh d f mB paid by 8, B. Qardnor, Dated at Fort I, ' J,.anf ....mnt to. Klamath, March 23, 1915. B., Gardner, I3-St O. B. Hoyt. LEGAL NOTICES Aaaeaameiit Notice Tho Klamath Development Co. Lo cation ot principal place of busi ness, No. 1 Bansome street, on the northwest corner of Bansome nud Sutter streets. San Francis co, Calif. Location of works, Klamath' Falls, Klamath County, Oregon. Notice it hereby given that at a nutting of the board ot dlrectora ot the Klamath' Developmt eoapMjr, held on the 8th day -of, March, 1916, an asseaement (No, 8) et Mr" aharewas jlTled upon the capital itock'Qft the corporation, payable; laa iieiUly51ai United SUt gold aeln io tne aieretary ! tkt Mipur t tag flee of.tks) eoMpnnV in' tht building to pay tho delinquent assessment, to- set her with costs of advertising and 'expenses ot sale. I Ily order of the board of directors. ! JOHN C. HILL, Secretary. .Ofllce No. 1 Bansome street, on tho ! northwest corner of Sansome and Sutter streets, San Frcn 1 Cisco, Calif! 10-17-24-8M I L : Notice ot Contest (Serial 0100, Contest 807) Department of the Interior, United States Land OBoe at Lakevlew, ' Oregon, March 10, 19U. To James B, Freeman, record address, Bly,.Orogon, Contessee: You are hereby nottfled that Jesse B. Crawford,, who glvea Care of O. 8. Blanchard, Tuffs buildings, Grants Pass, Oregon, aa tola .poatoSea ad dress, did on; January IB, 1916, tie In thlsVoBlce his duly corroborated application to contest and aecure the oanoellatlon ot your kMiwtMn amtry, Serial No, 0100,' made, July IT.,1901; for NEU SE, Sec. 29, Bi BW, NWH 8W'4. Sec. 28, township 36 8.. Itango 14 E., Wlllametto Morldlan, and ns grounds for his contest ho al leges that at no tlmo since the filing of your said entry, bavo you, nor has nnjbody elso In your bcbalf, cultivat ed or improved said land or any por tion thereof; that no fences have been constructed, nor has .any land been cleared nor have any buildings been erected thereon, nor have you at any portion ot the said tlmo lived thereon or otherwise or at all manifested any Intention to comply with the home stead laws relative to Improvement and residence; that you have wholly abandoned said homestead. You are, thoreforo, further notified that the said allegations will be taken by this office as having been confeeeed by you, and your said entry will be cancelled thereunder without further 'right to be heard therein, either be fore this office or on appeal, If-you fall to file In this office within twenty days after the FOURTH publication of this notice, aa shown below, "your answer, under oath, specifically meet ing and responding to these allega tions of contest, or if you fail within that time to file In this offioe due proof that you have served a copy ot your answer on tho said contestant either in person or by registered mall. If thla service Is made by the delivery ot a copy ot your answer to tho con testant in person, proof ot such aer rtce must be either the said con testant's written acknowledgement of Nerve-nicking, eplltting or dolL throbbing headaches yield u Just a few momenta to Dr. James Headache Pow ders which coat only 10 cents a peek age at any drug store. It's the qaiak- hi. receipt ot the copy. .howUtj ; tha iZZZlMt suffer. " Mm According to the Department of Commerce, approximately $120,000,- 000 of American money was expend- .cd last year for foreign-grown sugar 'Imported Into the United States. Ot , this, tho lion's share went to Cuba, mo total imports from other coun tries being, valued at leu than $, 000,000. Tbo summary of foreign commerce gives the figures for the ' twolvo months ending December 31, 1914, as follews: Cuba $115,617,902 Santo Domingo ....... 524.225 South America 1,400,649 Other countries 1.774,277 The government report includes also 155,473 long tons of sugar from the Philippines, valued at $7,802,241, which Is omitted from the above tablo. as it Is actually the product of American soil. Sugar also figured among the ex ports of tbo United States during 1914 to the extent of 14,334 long tons valued at $772,198. Deducting these exports from the figures given above leaves 2,247.434 long tons, valued at tho ports of. entry at $18,444,855, as the net Imports for the year. These dry figures contain material for some interesting comparisons. Wheat Exports. Exports ot wheat from the United States in 1914 amounted to 173,861, 944 bushels, with a total valuation of $187,184,100, an average price of $1.07 a bushel. This was the highest prlco at which the export wheat crop had been sold for ten years. Even with this unusually high price of wheat, however, over 63 per cent of the whole amount exported, or 110,696,126 bushels was required to pay for the Imported sugar bought from foreign growers and dealers. To grow the wheat that went to set tle thla sugar bill It was necessary to till 7,806,500 acres at the average yield of the past ten years. This is nearly one-eighth of the normal wheat acreage ot the entire country and represents an area almost equal to the combined total of tho Improved land in the three large Western states of Montana, Wyoming and Utah. Practically all tho wheat grown In the four great agricultural states ot Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa was required to foot the nation's bill for Imported, foreign-grown sugar. If it wore impossible to grow sugar In tbe United States It would be excus able to use this large proportion of our wheat crop to pay for sugar im ports. As statistics published by the Department ot Agriculture show, how ever, there are no less than 278,000, 000 acres In the country adapted to sugar growing, and all the sugar im ported into tho United States last year could have been grown on ap proximately i,800,ooo acres of our own land. Bulletin 260 of the De partment of Agriculture gives a list ot nineteen states adapted to sugar beet growing, and adds: If one farmer in four In these states wcro to plant a three-acre patch and give it the care that could readily bo bestowed upon so small a plat, it would be unnecessary for us to buy foreign sugar. Two-thirds of 1 per cent of tho improved land in this area is all that would be re quired to accomplish this result. More than that acreage lies Idle, absolutely unused, every year. ,Any on ot the states of Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Mis souri, Minnesota, Nebraska or Ohio could produce all this sugar, and then have the beets occur only once la a ten-year rotation; several of the oth ers could do it alone on a five-year rotation. As a result of tho purchase of sugar supplies from foreign coun tries and the export of wheat to pay for it, the soil of the United States is being drained of valuable elements of fertility. In consequence the land becomea steadily less productive un-! less the elements of which it Is rob bed are replaced at heavy cost. As a matter ot actual practice among the majority of American wheat growers no consistent effort Is made to pre vent this progressive soil exhaustion. The relative effect of wheat and sugar upon the land Is shown by tbe fact that an acre of wheat takes forty pounds of nitrogen from the soil, while an acre of beets takes thirty pounds. In tbe case ot heets, how ewer, none ot the nitrogen is con tained in tbe sugar itself. It la all in the pulp and tops, which, as by-pro- of 1 ducts of sugar extraction, are fed to stock and so returned to the soil. In t exporting wheat, on the other hand,'- the precious nitrogen goes with" It" i ,jhk St v rt'fcl .a7WV . & -iV 'i fjfV , JtW . ' M and is lost to the nation. Tbe not result ot the uneconomic! policy of tho United States in failing to grow its entire-sugar supply and in paying for tbe Imported portion in' exported wheat involved alosato the, 5-A:' . i A 5-&I & roxlmately 100,000 tons of'nltroi.; -. rVsK . Sugar itself Is made up of car4 sft?, , hydrogen and oxygen. It mar-beff1 '&jsj JS- country In the single year ,1814 approximately 100,000 tons of nitron.; gen bon, haul dearlhtl n. erv.tglfvAit anatiln' stored In the beet or cane plants by nature and extracted by man. In im porting sugar, therefore, we are buy-l Inr foreign sunshine. In aendtmcl abroad American grown wheattto balj' ance me -account we, are selling laex very Ufeblood ot the'soll. The ruln-& ous ultimate result of this policy upon the agricultural tourcei'ot the ' ' country is obvious. - or- ? s HAVE YOU HOnSESTO 8ELL7 W - 3S ' 'i V tVU oi !... 8 T .y We want from 100 to 500 head ot horses for French artillery service ' We want horses ot the blockr type,f like a halt braed Percheron or shlreis' welchlna- 1200 to 1300 Bounds, from' . .? K O . rAA knv otlno till llU- ' S i i-.? gray or, white. irom.lS-lJto.lS handsf 'V5 . . . a -- - r.a m . . fJ'., SSR J". At USl , 4i, nign. Anyone nHTins wm m.w v Uawmab nAttfw nm at'tliA A if mat vA-aftWi j liwisa uwm wa w T. iBJfa -ifVv ' Merrill: or Hotel Hall. KUmaa " " T ' f . Falls, and we. will W glad v to, look at thera. French Inspection will announced later. We will pay 'for WP. gK &raHttp- tbe horses when we accept them; aardless ot action ot "the Freneh government. v ' 5-tt J. FRANK ADAMS SONA fcsiiif3J-v- r zs iir tf PAY YOUR BILLS WiTHiCHEGKS SS It not only Is the handiest way,' but the better way. Each cancel led check Is a receipt for , money paid. We offer you every courtesy appertaining to a checking ao count; besides, we pay you inter est on your deposits. Let, us ex plain tbe conveniences of our sya-5, tem and tell you how you mayv beneflt thereby. ' ' " i -sJAA FIRST STATE M2 SAVINGS BANK KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON - . jirswSW? 1 l'$ I ; HEADACHE STOPS, NEURALGIA GONE Or. Jamas' Headache gir isataat rtliaf-Ots dime a paokif. date of its receipt, or the affidavit ot tbe person by whom tho delivery was made, stating when and wher the copy 'was delivered; it made by agjs- tered mall, proof of sucn service, mast consist of tie affidavit or tn. parson by whom taa eopy was mailed, stating when and the postofflce to wktfklit was mailed,' and this affidavit aVMt U accompanied by tbe postmasters re ceipt for tha latter, ?' "j You should atate In your, anawsf the nam ot the poatoffioe to; wait you desire future notices to )oaJKBt o you. . . Sv . JAMM r. BUJtQMW. Bagistar. Data of 1st publtoatJon Marak ITilf II Data at Id Dublleatlon Marek 14. 1111 Data at l'?HtlloaUeaMiLrekll,.19ll Date at tthpsbUeatraa Aprtt 7,-1911 agony and d litres now I sYou can. Millioas of men and women S) have found that headoebe end neuralgia mUory is ncedleut. Get what you ask for. We cannot maka It too em phatic that the frepiJTif tf MefciMS Hence on trained man. AW of tour men are ragiaterad. , rip ijmrnx ' f ff"-- -T4 5'f t- it -fc ny. v - ii I j j .a ni p' p. if ( lOH WUaUWlJSIMS$JQI HfS sU UK MM rK OisWItt, . Phone 252W. Klamath near -8th- ' All Domestic Animals treated , DR. PRENTICE - veterinary, surgeon , , - V M w ;j I4.$h .vf W&5 - L 5k ..Wrf 1 :. 2tmi r., . -,j ?.-i.r"rw vtf&i , K-fcVVJ&S -l W?"W, ,- - j w U. V J . 1 I ' ' Builders and Shelf Hardware GLASSWARE STOYESCrX g-ill C - WADMIGUCC 'nVviM' V,UJ T 'V-H-: j, t.f ft1 OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT. OCR !Kl4VasaJ8 ARK fROMPT ' Wra. C. Hum Hard ware Company Telephone 183 ?'" - 5thand Main 3 .i& mm m wm JTO fi ,' siSc ar4SIR "R4- a . ?,& ' .. .. i . -Sit r..il m S5 .r rj &u ism -v i .trsT ? MR. ACTOMORnJ! OrNaWl x i ' ' AfWiAlk. Have the Little Troubles Fixed and YfWT'M. flaw nov.TjiBa nv VniTR RKPAIK aiurciTi , ' ' " ,...... . jf. ' " ' lSsil "? - B5S5 j. K. .Howie HOWIE GARAGE "See the tVulcanizingvMan" 640taW fc. U&M iyt zt.x?y-?M sra1 srjixt m&mim n.;'r st3fai',v Mmhf'4 a-yb js NS -I r4 iifr",. ' ?p'.J'jiv- wwmmmvm wm. SIMMM.v'Tn'XM; W4S.0 1 CRN -I KAWW :jlkciu; (. hl 4i-jiF aH "'rt i v, j- ' 1. wess. n Kemember . K.fji " tfiw .A ,xt T fit. :iit&SW mMl&SkWmn . &' th.. fii K" rP 9k " lBssv SBmmm ssslBBaJal a mm .'anaaav h M IO Mi i2???rw 'Ik J .j ftH J'i KklA t nVWSikSr ci&.&mtAM'&c. iEk LT-! 1 WsP ' f.i F $3m Aji i mm If 3 , .ir. -" 1 1 . t fer- y t. V $'' .TR" t -A-Lifiv SisStUT.VrtrU 4 44Ka r.ci T &&tAgS& $& iWlT ft' .p-ic. , V" viPTV tem&mmm&w