Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1919)
fiffi" 'WWlSJfK' THE EVENING HERALD, KIAMATH FALLS. OREGON MONDAY, lIX7ll, AGE TWO SAVED BY , CAMERA How Aerial Spy Prevented Sao rificc of Life. i What Do You Know About Drag Saws? tt Doesn't Rtvealed to Gtneral Foch That Posi tion Ht.Had Decldtd.to Capturt Would Be Too Costly an Undertaking. HHMMMMMMIHHMMMMMMH JTl. Ti - A ' -, !. tost "flBKiHl bbbHbbbbbbHbV "Every man, who ever broke his back with ft cross cut knows that n drag saw does a dozen moo's work nt one-tenth the cost. HUT do they know why the VAUGMAN has such big exclusive .devices on its saw ns the Jiffy Saw Holder ; the metal to metal clutch; tho Safety Angle and the Adjustable Pitman Head 7 If you're Interested in draw saws, find out why tho Vaughan has them. ,Just write for our folder1 It tells you why, and also explains the engineering principles that must be followed to pro duce the highest grade saw the sort 'of saw you want. WE WILL SHIP VOl' A VAUGHAN DUAG SAW IF YOUR DEALER CANNOT SUPPLY YOU. Don't buy n drag saw blindly. Investigate. Compare. Make sure the saw you buy will stand up under hard, lasting service. The Vaughan is sold en merit. It Is time-proven and tested. VAUGHAN MOTOR WORKS, INC,' .476 E. Main St Portland, Oregon M 'i"K""- writ- I clr- Getting the Fur Coat Out of the Moth Balls-Should Be a Reminder That Your Automobile Bat tery Needs a Little Extra Attention "The nverage motorist," said Judd Low, manager of the local "Elide" Service Station, the other morning, "is a queer combina tion of sound American common sense and unsound American easy gotngness. And what parts of his car he never sees or hears n com plaint from he is prone to neglect. And that, of course, is mainly why the battery suffers it never complains. "It does its work, right up to the point where it has nothing more to give, under the most negligent and cruel theatment. Hut, of course, by the time it has reached suoh a point it Is in mighty bad shape, mid building it up again Is going to cost Mr. Careless Motorist a penny that he might very well have saved himself. 'And all this in spite of the fact that we are continually lng our customers talking to them, sending them folders and culars on the subject of getting better performance and longer life from the battery and keeping down big repair bills by giving It the right kind of service at the righttlnie. Right now we aro finding out a little folder showing the Importance of giving the battery proper storage when the car is laid up for the Winter. It has been the bad habit of many automobile owners at the npproach of cobl weather to simply run the old bus, fully equipped, into the garage and then lock the door till next Spring. "Certainly so far as the battery is concerned, this is a mighty poor proceeding. Inside of the battery, owing to its chemical nature, a certain sort of action and reaction is continually taking place, even when It is idle. For this reason it demands certain attention at regular periods. This attention can best be given it when It is stored under such conditions and superintendence as only the bat tery expert can give it. Because of this, we advise our customers to remove their batteries from their cars, sending them to us to be stored and cared fcr in our storage department. The cost of Win ter storage 'is small and there is assurance that nothing detrimental can nappen to the battery during Jack Frost's reign." AUTO ELECTRIC SERVICE CO. 23 Main St Phone 22M tHHWWWWttHtttHt DON'T SAY "OVERALLS," SAY They will give you the service They are Union -Made and have a number of features over other, makesof overalls. First is the material from which they are made; second, all seams are felled and 'triple stitched; third, cord-bound button holes and ull cut in seat. Last, they are Union Made. We handle the complete line. K. Sugarman "I ain't mad at nobody" Ity the ctrrunl fitness of thlnj:? .Sir Arthur Count! 'Doyle should write this I story, for. In the spelliouml ,honr,j In I which Jnconlc brown men In khukl hnd j'liorlxon .blue" guvo It! to me I, visual Ixed , uo que so .much us Sherlock Holme prim, brooding and penetrat ing riding In their plnces miles over the smoke of Plunder; sitting In their places In the mn-lltlcred dugouts be hind the lines of buttle, untangling me ui Merles of uurnnny secrets, Dougltt Held writes In Popular Mechanic umguxlue. It Is the story of the great j est detective s,tcm eer deviled by mail, the Inner story of how the til lie by nerlal plmtograpby mill weird ' deduction from uicimlnglct prlntH of I the German lines solved the riddles 1 1 of the foe the story of the camera, . the '"best spy of the time." Into this story will come the strange case of the liuirnu footprint and the counties ! things of stealth It revealed, nlso the curious "rogues' pjllery" of German I ri'liiTiilo uhlrti llii iillli'il ilotretlVes ,. -..- --.,. , ... ,.. ,--..-- , collected, kept nnd used with such sure , might -nlso tlrt odd . . . but n be-, ginning nniM be made. T i There Is no more astonishing thing , i In the whole marvel of aerial photos- j S mphy than the camera's ability to I catch the trait of il walking man. At I two and a half miles In the air the I ordinary aerial camera will show the ! footprints of a njau going across slight- I ly shelled ground. At n tulle It will l show thein on new-mown grass. At five miles It will reenl them trailing across "No Man's land." Consider this: Once the French weri planning to take n certnln bill, knowing that bavarian "Innd'tunn" poor mnchlne-gun fighters held It weakly. At dawn a photographer went up, enme dashing back with, n picture nnd 15 minutes Inter the French gen eral culled ofT the nftnek and snyedjlic lives of thousands of his men. And yet the cameru had caught no remark able thing. It merely showed that one group of men had gone out nnd an other come Into the trenches during ' the night. The footprints of the Ger mans told that much. The Incoming trull, followed buck, was found to emerge rrom n woods, llng beside n fine white road. The nllled detectives bending over their prints, followed that road to the nearest German can tonment nnd proved by still other pho tographs that the cantonment was held by Prussians. Presto I The French stuff know that crock Prussians were opposing them and that It would be nothing short of suicide to attack. Deduction of this sort was more than half of the work of the nerlnl photog raphy sections of the allied armies. The work of snapping pictures (from the-air was picturesque, dangerous, he roic; but for thrill and romance give me those sweating, silent men In the dugouts, studying photographs by the hour, catching a clew here, a telltale mark there that made Illndenburg's plans an open book. Modern photographic science laid be fore each allied general a complete picture, of everyjhlng the enemy was doing and almost everything It was going to do. It shewed him unmistak ably what his own men were doing nnd What they could do. It relieved nlm of conflicting stories from spies, from human mistake for the camera doe not lie. Napoleon could not guess what Wei; Ilngton was planning; Foch could send up, a photographer and within an hour know what Ludeudorff was thinking of. NOTICE OF FINAIi SETTLEMENT I A Gauge. Notice Is herebv civen that th Miss Elsie DeWolfe was talking nt undersigned has filed in the County the New York Colpny club about youth uourt oi tne state of Oregon, for Klamath County, the Final Account of-hls Administration of the Estate of Alexander Cheyne, deceased, and aaid Court has fixed January 10th, 1920, at 2:30 P. M as the time, and the court room of said Court as the place for the hearing of said .Final Account and for the settlement thereof. Dated:-December Cth, 1919. Alex B. Cheyne, Administrator You can Judge people' Intelli gence," she sold, "by their attitude to wards youth. I once heard a con versation between two old maids, the one Intelligent, and the other stupid. As they sat In the winter garden of their Florida hotel nfter dinner, the stupid old maid snjd: I L.IHIK Ul UlUhU UUIJK HIGH UIJI1 i girls flirting under the date palms In the moonlight. Why should young wlth-the-Will-Annexed of the people make such fools of them- Estate of Alexander Chevne, selves?" Deceased. 8-15-22-29-5 , ...Maybe.' said the Intelligent ' old Demorest, Dentist, over Sugar.' T1"' .'if8 ,,ecause they "uvc "" man's Store, 6th and Main. 2-tf c""nce ffcfrOHj LOuf 'MA December 11, 12, Precocious Youth, Mary and Iluth were discussing plans for ploying house und Mary said, "I'll be the mother and you be my lit tle girl." "No," suid Huth, "I want to be tho father." "Oh," suld Mary, "let's play we've got plenty of money, and then we won't need a father." KXECUTHJJXr NOTICE OK FILING FINAL ACCOUNT In tho County Court of the State of Oregon for Klamath County In the matter pf tho Estate of William Whltlock, Deceased. Notice Is hereby given that 1 have filed my final account and report as I-xectitrlx of tho Last Will and Test ament of William Whltlock deceas ed, nnd that the above entitled court has fixed upon 2,30 P. M. Saturday the 10th day of January i$2u en the time and the County ourt House of Klamath County, Oregon In tho City of Klamath Fulls, In said County, as tho place when and where any person may present any objection or exception to any thing dino v me i K.xocutrlx of said Last Will and Testament, and at such tlmo and place tho above entitled court will finally pass upon and settle said account. Amelia Whltlock, Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of Willlarh Whit lock, deceased. 8-15-22-29-5 Any More to be Slylish We have a fine 'assortment of the new models for men and young "men here; they have the value tail ored right into the fine all-wool fabrics. They look best, last long est; and at the prices we are selling them, give you most satisfactory service for your money. One fine thing about Hart .Schaffner & Marx clothes is that their superior style doesn't add a cent to their cost. You'll find some excepr tional values in suits and overcoats here now. It'll pay you to make your se lection promptly. K. Sugarman "I ain't mad at nobody" The home of Hart Schaff ner & Marx Clothes Sat. Store Opens nt 8:.10 A. M. Close at 0:00 I. M. 'BBBBBBLM 1 BBBrf m mwtfial If f BMhMjY.uV ikJ ur-'daBBBBBsBALBBVaBbbBb. L. JnBmBB5!?!WiPk)y H HBBBBP BC-'SsBBSLTty IBBBHl bbbLHbT 1'is W3SSSv9tlm I fj I I If ir'ltiPvW JBBHafwUflBBBP BVBBBBBBBBBBBBBV '' Kf BBbW "i'ijBKJLj KfaBLBW bLbbLB I I aw 7 JBBBBBH HbBBBbV.r 9 BVBBBBBf HH vj JBllBBaBT IBBBBBVriPB Afaraf - CoDvricht 1919. Hart SdiafTnrr A Get th GnuinL1 and Avoid 3CXlJ v'mBH jyiiy rrsav m nr I lBUb 2k3L2M Economy in Every Cake WHEN SUN BEGINS TO COOL Humanity In Its Maturity Will In All Probability Be Able to Con terve Heat We enn rnlculnte the evolution of the temperature of the enrth In the fu tore. The sun will crmv smnller nnd Dancing to that Victor Ilecord of cooler. Thus n HSO.fXiO years, when Tho Yellow Dog Illues at Shepherds the radius of the sun has diminished C-2t I by only one-hundredth part, our tern " peroture will be not more Hum 20 de grees C. (78.8 degroeq P.) at the equn tor. It will hnvtt fnlleti to 0 degrees C (82 degrees K.) nt the li'lltndo Id degrees, and ut Purls It will be be low 7.rrp (c'ontlgrmlu). Flnullv. In 6no.(XM) vears. when the radius of tho sun hns lost only five ' one-hundredths of Its diameter nnd .merely MK) degrees O. of Its tempera ture, the temperature of the equator will have fnllen to zero centlgnido nt'd the entire enrth will he frozen. Hl' joglc evolution, which nscendH luto thv pnst for n mllltim years, may descend Into tho future for an equal period of time. Moreover, the energy of the sun, whence proceeds our terrestrial en ergy, will bo then diminished by only one-tenth. Mankind will doubtless by that time have long been capable of capturing this energy directly, oi (rhtiNfoinilng It as tho chlorophyl of plants uo admirably does, of making t servo perhaps for several million yenrs longer Jo sustain his life nnd jhe development of Ids thought. I A. F.Graham I ' General . I M Concrete lj I Construction i H H1 I Shasta Sand Used Hi H Exclusively H LH bH I I ibBaiBiaH DeBt yet. Herald Want Ads. I December 11, 12. . BAD GOLD GOT YOU? FEELING GRIPPY? Dr. King's New Dwcoveiy soon starts you on the road to recovery ONCL tried, nlwnysusefl. That's n I rte oxpret-slon, but on never more HI'Hllble m it Ik to Dr. King's, New '&. You will like, the proi I . . ness-IIUo way It loobcns l Wc. congebtod chest, wiotlies tl'O i or tired throat, relieves (in oil or a $1.0 u bottle. At our druggist. Don't Continue Constipated Don't lot your ; bowels JralMjJ your H.vstein. Jlnko t H" i l W(j resnlarly-lveep '''' ".c"k ug's of waste inntter with vr. 'h Now Llfo Pills. , l IJIllousness. sick headncjie, sour furred tongue, Imi lr ca ",. of tho oinbnrnissineiiU , . '" jiow forts truciiblo to Vl, 'hv 6 eiiHlly they're recllllc 1 by "vte Hloiuil use of Vi. W'KH nlootlilY Pills. Movo tho ,I'"WS Miitcht Al In it Hurely. Try hcui "lM't- A druggists Uoc. ns usu't- GRIT, BONE, MEAT SCRAPS, EGG MASH FOR Murphey's Feed & Seed Store CHICKENS we sou, sfani. st vhm " -ibibbIbIbbbbbh MlBM t HBB1BBBMBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBM