The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, May 30, 1917, Image 1

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OFFICIAL NEWIPAP1R
OP KLAMATH COUNTY
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If """ "-- M KLAMATH FALLS, OMKIpfc WEDE3DAY, MAY 30. Itl7. J ffS
Canadian Soldiers Now "Ameri LepSif
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AMERICANS IN
ENGLISH ARMY
OEM COLORS
f
SERVICE
NIL IN "T. RAUL'S
CATHEDRAL
Ainkttttdir and Mr. Pat Represent
Americana, ftottlv Cttort Frem
Lady Parity aftd) Rate to Ik Arch
dttten Thinaandt IIm tat "Star
Sstaalrd BatHmeBawd Rlaye the
National Aire.
IAND0N. May SS-rive Canadian
army kettaMeaa twinl of Amcrl
(ui omeiilly kcaat tkt "American
LtgtoaM today wkw tkty deposited
tMr ratata la St fa! cathedral
with eUkerale eeiwatealsa,
Ambassador Bad Mn. Peat, Am
erica lo Bkulaad, rtpraotattd tka Am
ericans aad reivd la eaters froaa
Lady Parlay aflar wklek tkty passed
tkem to tka AraMaaaaa.
Thoataad af kkqUsk aad Amtr.
IcaM Jalaai to tka alaatoi af tka "War
Ultra
kud. farawrly a
circa
laya tied 8avt tkt
TW04MKBE SHIPS
HOIK; BY SUBS
ADMIRAkTV BOARD ANNOUNCE!
INKINO OP A MERCANTILE
CRUISER AND NOSRITAI. SHIP
M EAETIRN WATERS.
LONDON,
May
St Tka admiralty
Board kga
las af tla
tka aubmarln-
itlla crutoer Hilary.
la tka Nartfe ft
roar of tkt crtw
It waa alaa aaaoaacad tkat tbt hot
allal rtlaiMpr Caalla kaa ktta unk
la tkt MtSMWraataa ata oa wklck tli
trt tattle
',
.
Tka Hilary la prakakly a conrerted
cruUtr faratorly af tka Booth Hat
ruaaJat ta Hilary af SWee ton. Tkt
DoTtr Caatl la kallarad to have fop
Marly kaaa tka Ualoa Caatla mall liner
of tht aama Ma.
la Tawn Taiay.
Oay 0. MarrlU waa a city vUltor
today tram tka MarrlU farm star Mtr-
rllL
nuk Braakswi.
Tka JrrifaUaartitak kraak rtporttd
arty tkla waak Mar tka Btirrtll Short
farm, taak aat sarUaa of tka kaak
kaat alaty faat la laaatk. Tka aroak
ooawrad akartly aftar tka watar waa
taratd la ,m4 la aaar tka aama alaea
kar a kad kraak aacarrtd a aauoa
or two as, ftjairrala are blamed for
t kraak.
a
SRIOIAL AOVANTASBS
OF LIBERTY BONOS
. -
0m aaatalal adraaUat ao otktr
kaada, Natlaalsuu, maalclpal
r aaraarata, kara to tkat U tka
UaWad ftatoa dartai tka toatlaa-
tt af tkla war akaU toeaa etkar
w kaada at a Motor rata af latarttt.
tka ktWtra af tfcaaakatrty kaada
w aaya tka Haat to aaakiaaa taatr w
J'Wrty kaada far kaada kaarias
tka alHwr lato af tatsraat, dollar
far dollar. v t
. MfM 0(
NEW
U. S. SENATOR
Charlti L. MeNary
WHOSE APPOINTMENT TO CONO
RESS TO SUCCEED HARRY LANE,
DECEASED. WAS ANNOUNCED
TODAY IV 00V. WITHYCOMBE.
ASSETS BACK OF
LIBERTY LOAN 116
V ! -
OUR NATIONAL OEIT AND OEN
ERAL FINANCIAL SITUATION
EXPLAINED BY TREASURY OF
FICER.
By Frank R. Wilton.
Ftdtral Farm Loan Burtau U. 8. Trtaa-
ury Dtpartmtnt)
WA8HIN0T0N. l C. My 30-Un
cle Sam glanced nt hla trial balance
April 1. 1117 and gleaned the follow
Ins brief statement of hla condition.
AnietK. 1200,000.000,000 plus; liabll
Idea, ll.0J3.S57.W0.
In other word, the total material
wealth of the United States waa in
exceaa ot two hundred billions of dot
lara. somo estimates placing it ai
hlah as two hundred and twenty-five
billions. The Inst official total was
In IMS when tho figure waa one hun
dred eighty-seven billions. On April
1, 1917, our national debt waa slightly
over a billion, uncio nam a uuoia u
compared with hla assets were about
aa one ia to two hundred twenty.
Out the smile that decorated Uncle
Sani'a face waa not inspired entirely
by the statement of hla comparative
debits and credits. He looked at the
record of national income and aaw
that the total waa forty billions of
dollars a year, or forty times hla dtbta,
He took out hla pencil and made some
comparisons. He found that hla nai
lonal income had Increased more man
31 per cent in the laat aeven yean, and
more than US per cent in the laat
atventeen yearn.
Continuing further with tho Inven
tory, tht old gentleman turned to tkt
page devoted to foreign iraae anu
discovered that tbia item for Mil
amounted to between aeven and eight
bullosa of dollars, or more than double
that of the prtvloua year, ho pterta
oyer at the page whtro la recorded
(h distribution or me wonoa awu
itipply, and discovered that ne poa
uad nearly three billions of dot
lara of gold, or one-third of tht world'a
Caacladtd oa Fas S
Amtrlcant Art Rrlatatra.
waauiNQTON. D. C, May 19 Tka
State Department kas announced tka
aamaa ef ST Amarleaaa which are kt-
Baalllllllw X aBBBBBBBBBBBBBmfl
amaRBamKiomWi amammmi
mVamaaaV IRP' m'Vtml
EmaaaaaaW MlmM,?v
BBBBBBBBBV SmJSMBJLJimV-i
BEBWfSMBJEV.t
p fiflvwiTHYnnyRrir ijtogWsffir
A Memorial Day Call
When the Hag of liberty and union returned triumphant
from 2,000 southern battlefields the American nation set
apart the 30th day of May to forever recall the sacrifice
the soldiers made to preserve America" as a whole free peo
ple and not as a divided nation. Don't deem'it' a sacrifice
to display the American colors in your church. There is
no home, no school, on church, no shrine of whatsoever
character that is not made holier by the presence of our
nation's banner, consecrated by God's favor to the world's
political liberty and redemption just as the banner of the
cross is consecrated to the world's religious liberty and
redemption.
They Answered the Call.
The men whom we honor today measured up to the
full stature of American manhood; they fulfilled the highest
duty of American citizenship.
Where docs human nature show a brighter or higher
aspect than in its love of country, and flag? Long years
before the birth of 'the Saviour of mankind , a heathen
Roman wrote, "It is sweet and glorious to die for one's
country."
'These words touched a chord in the human heart so
true that they were caught tip andembalmed in.the popu
lation and have been handed down from age to age as a
part of the common faith and heritage of mankind., .,v
In the pass of the classic Thermopylae there is monu
ment erected by order of the council to-the rnepory of
rLeoni4a and his devoted 3(XlJtVbeaimsJwrBl
pathetic inscription
"Oh, stranger, tell it to the Lacadaemonians that we lie
here in obedience to their laws."
Let the stranger, whoever he may be, that visits our
cemeteries and looks upon the simple mounds of the dead
soldiers of the republic proclaim to the world that those
brave men lie there in obedience to the call of their
country. General John R. King.
The Guardian Sentinel.
And so in a sense these soldiers dead, cherished by loving
hearts, honored by this great commonwealth, have passed
into the mighty pantheon of our history. They are not
yours any more, but the nation's. And wherever they lie.
- under foreign skies amid the wreck of hard fought fields,
there shall stand forevermore, though unseen by -human
eyes, the guardian sentinel of a nation's love.
Why Men of '61 Died.
The supporters of religion gave their lives for- a prin
ciple. These martyrs of patrotism .gave their lives for
an idea.
What the Men of 'SI Felt.
Uy a secret alchemy, patroitism touches tht most com
monplace of life and transforms it, intojofty heroism. It
hurls men forth, forgetful of themselves, "to hazard life
itself at fearful odds. 4 '
At Arlington and Gettysburg.'
The most impressive of the annual ceremonies are those
which are held at the national cemetery at Arlington and
on the battlefield of Gettysburg. Arlington cemetery, on
the Virginia hillsides, rising in terraces from the Potomac
and overlooking the capital of the Republic, is the last
earthly home of thousands upon thousands of America's
soldiers. On Decoration day a little flag flies from every
one of the multitude of small white headstones which mark
the last resting places of the noble dead.
lWfaaaaj ajpemj aaaa
I, with uncovered head,
Salute the sacred deed
Who' went snd return not.
James Russell
f
eaaaPaava
'.
Lpwsll
') iuvii ii luunuL i wimwi i nMHR in iimw f
BaKI II I . -j. a-. -. .. -fcu . r i-J1 . ft. J J.A
ANNOUNCES HIS
SENATE CHOICE
JUDOE McNARY SUCCEEDS LATE
HARRY LANE
Chairman af State Republican Cen
tral Committee Named and Will
Ltava for Washington Tonight
Will Stand for National Prohibition,
Equal Suffrage and Upheld Admin
istration. SALEM. Ore., May 30 Judge Cbaa.
L. MeNary chairman of the 8Ute Rep
ublican Central Commute aad former
ly a member of the Supreme Court,
waa named by Governor Wltbycombe
to day as the successor to United
State Senator Harry Lane, who died
la 8aa Francisco Wednesday algkL
The governor the middle ef laat
week reached a decision to appoint
Judge MeNary, bat decided to make
no formal aaaoaaetmeat of kit choice
until after tka funeral ot Senator Laat
which waa ktM yeaterday
in Portland.
Tkt governor feeta tkat It la Imper
ative, during the pretest crlale, tkat
Oregon have full raaraaaajtaUati to
Caagrett
liB!iri
Republican Central Commute direct
ed the Hughea-Falrbaaka compalga,
'and to him belongs largely the credit
for Oregon registering a majority for
the national Republican ticket when
there was a national landslide for
President Wilson. He la an able
speaker and brilliant lawyer. Aa a
Jurist, he made a splendid record oa
the Supreme Court bench. He waa
reared on a farm near this city and
after acquiring kda education, em
barked In the practice of law ia tkla
city with John H. MeNary, hla broth
er, widely known In State Republican
politics.
Judge MeNary will leave for Wash
ington. D. C. tonight to Immediately
take up his duties and Oregon's In
terests In Congress.
He said today that he will support
national prohlbiUon, national equal
suffrage and stand by the administra
tion In "every legiUmate effort" la
the war and for the best Interests
of hia country.
Judge MeNary ran for the aecond
time for a place on the Supreme Bench
at the election three years ago and
was defeated by State Supreme Justice
Henry L. Benson, of this city, at pres
ent a member of the bench aad former
attorney and circuit Judge of this city.
EAST ST. I
SUFFERS RIOTS
ILLINOIS GOVERNOR HAS SENT
TROOPS TO RUT DOWN RACE
RIOTS AND MOBILIZATION OF
NEOROES.
SPRINGFIELD. III.-, May SO The
governor kaa ordered tve companies
of Infantry troops aad cavalry troops
In command .of Ututtaaat Ceteael
Claytoa, to proceed to Hast 8t. LovJa
to restore ordtr.
Tkt atate attorney of St. Clair coun
ty telegraphed tke attorney geaeral
yesterday tkat ka aad aakad tka iav
eraor to aaad troops to But SL Loaia
to quell rata rloU.aad prttttt aersaaa
aad property aatll swat la restored.
Tka
said tkat tke
are aaaMIMag and urged prtatot aa
UIS
Rtvktio
Philip HekaMtmian. member of tka
Reichstag, it perhaps tke boldest of,
tke weU-kaawa aafa of Germany, for.
ia tke aaaetlas af laat body tkt other
day, kt said If.naact aad Rnglaad
reaoaaead tka aajamf aanexatioa tkere
weald kt a rtvakUaai la Germany. He
meant tke German) people would rite
aaalast tka KaJsssl should aa, oppose
peace under, stake coadltlaat. Sack
teJalaaa ajsgalr azacatatd Wceutd
Tj
,.b
PUSHOANSALE
i'
MEN AT MEETING ENTHUSIASTIC
AND WILL ACTIVELY COOPER
ATE. TOTAL IS NOW EIGHT
THOUSAND DOLLARS.
Tkat tka Klamath Coaaty Liberty
Loan EsecuUve Committee la to be
come a forceful body aad tkat tke
work of disposing of Liberty Loan
bonds la Klamath County Is to be
putted statoutly, is indicated by tke
manner those appointed are taking
hold of tht work.
A number, wbo were named at the
meeting Monday night, were Interview
ed yesterday aad witkout excepUoa,
they voiced a desire to cooperate
actively la tkla cause.
Eight tkousand dollars are bow sec
ured for tkla Investment and more Is
In tight
Manufacturers art discussing plana
to assist employees ia buying bonds
oa the liutoUmeatftea. f --""'
Chairman Robert A. Johnson left
this mornin oa a brief business trip
to San FraacUco, but will return la
a few daya to follow up tk campaign
aad will devote aU kit time to it
TturltU Filter Thrtwak.
Almost dallyaaw at least one tour
ist car pessee'tkrowgk tka elty, tkt
advaact guard of tka summer travel
not waiting leas oa road to become
perfect
"
Health Fhytleian Ratian,
Dr. R. R. HamUtoi kaa toadartd bis
rttlgaatlM aa city-kaaRk oalctr to
tkt oil to take effect teaaorraw. Me
gave aa hia rtaaoa lack af Uaw to
give tk work. fftr atttatloa.
High Ttatktrt Laav.
J. Read Bala, C tka KUautk Coun
ty Hlgk Bekaat taatklag ttaff, toft yes
terday morning for sea arttr an
yeart work kara. O. Ckaatar Hur
gtat.'iastnictor aad atklaUa
leavat la tk maramg far Wa
atBaltat. He will asaad tka' tummy
atutas Mf mauraaaa.
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Xmtf Irtt patrtotto--tywBay
Liberty Bead. , v ;
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UnLtllUlf IsV -MaJftf
tawm cLniia wLaeaa aar
- NEBB FOR DAY'' ' '
Flats Fly at Half Matt TMa Marahta,
Praaram Btaritd-at 1 O'Ctotk-WWIt
Flag Ralainf and Addraw to Bakatf
a . t !.
Chlldrtn an Main Str tej Camatary
VltKed Oravtt 'Dataratod-
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inf Iff tsjMair)o
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Klamath
rails
p
Meaatrtal Day to
.i.
day, by tka claatag af tka atoiaaVeitr
aad coaaty
ceremoaiet to tka paktte
i . g rti
Most of tka tttrea. eltstd toavtvat
U aad 11 o'clock wmBa tkraaalm'atai'
pttMte mem wr dm tvt m&i
Many Baaa were aaaaj at,katf sajat ''
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fJSsTOiBafBJBJ UM BJBBBBM IBjJaBBBBJBBBBBJBB; W
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fsBaaaretl
HMaat to tk Aaad af -tka
'? Maanotiafr i rimaiim '
skorUy after 1 Velatk Uslt
wKktaeptoylag'tf
-"--t- 'k-T
.i WJa . . -iiuTI
ita street ai lamtanaauoammt areata us 'ivi
aad Mam streets. Taaw,atowfjr.
raised as IlMebamof tkwkatlaaal -
aathtmwtrt pmyad. ,7 ,,
' Following -tho Sag ralabQT tlatkag
which tht assemblage oa tk atnat,
school children gather around tka post.
members of tka O. A; Rv aad'W. . CU
in line or marca carrytag aaaay aow--ii
art to be placed oa tk gravte, atoad
wlU bared heads. Rev. Geo. 1
aett. pastor of tk Metkodtat c
addressed tkt cnlWrea. x
ana.. -.a A-.SJ U .kllAiuBf BbWa
.- Z.ZIj, ..-fcLjil
1HI BiBULBJSr BJIlllwf.ASV CaaiaasTWSSl' aaaa atasmw . t.m
hw mm mma in isunwi um " v ,
tkt blue birds aatker
iS
aparrowa from tketr
wtoc.to
their destrucUve kakRa aad froaa tk
story drew aa analogy of tk rastfft'i;
nt nut Bum nfklas in tk GlvH war
and tkt spirit of pairtotlamrrw"!:!!4
kin to tkt atari aad taiatwtesjaat Af;
of tk home," ko said. -;V" -
Rev. Deaaettaaakaof tke sateaaaRy.
of tht Memorial dafaat-ae a.da'y.;dt 7
ctlthraUon aad Jtajr.ka;, ot tjtp)t '
respect aad honor tor aaa dead wktok '
Hb. Iii knnnrMl mvM. Us4 wklak. ''
Ma m knlr IIMIBlf MlA'-thA
w mmm - .-- ww , .
nastor. He asked tk ekfatoaatto
respectfully observe Meaaartal djr-aa,W
they would tke day of atatk f-4 ;p(
father-or mother. v vV'rt"
5-i f rp-
"Memorial day la a day e'rW
ia commemoraUon of tka dad attk)
ClvU war whea SSS.S9S aaaAmartSSa
cltlstat laid down tketr Uvea far" tka "4;
sake of their aatrteUam. said tkf-f
speaker. "Tkat -war. tost rr ftV, I
wnnrv, (iwu uihihh shuh i n -.
AAA MAA A IL....! L...u . -a -V
rougai in umi lew yssua n waa .Slvl
ana several muuoama pamamaaa,-i
A .... V-H.1
(Continued oa paa
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W LIBBHTY B)OND ... &- &
-. . .KA.. ..... iJ&.t.tt-'. '--l
ARE NONTAXABCf ,d';g
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J wil
1.Tl.?i"W
t Tkty ar aoataaakl' M
elty. eouaty r Btato taaaa ate ,?(
three mills oa Uiakw,Va,:a;'':7,
u ttayJSBpjBsy
tkaBaasmSamBBBBw'
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miuiui iav. tmmMM .
uirataut to
kaada or atktr
lag als oadaat-kair sar'aawaV-- ?,;ft
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'ar vsfVMBTvHsvwsvss) sansWK t . ,
wktok war'
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