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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 26, 1919)
riiioAr, pnGKMftKK Bfl, If) I ft THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACK VIVK OREGON BREVITIES CNTnitl'ItlHlJ, IJcc. 2G.Entcr lirloo votcrn by un nlinont unanimous veto Imvo iipprovcil of an Issuo of 1 120,000 for cxtonHlon of tho prcBunt witter HyMcni nnil $50,000 In bonclH for piivliiB Htrcut IntorHCctloiiP. It Is CHtlmntuil Mint tho bonilft voted for water workn extension will provide water for a population of 10,000 pco plu. FOR 20 YEARS ME FENS BEEN BURNING L R Annduncement-To-The-Public Having purchased the grocery business of Roberts & Whitmore located at 8th & Main we will be open for business the 2nd of Janu ary and earnestly solicit your pat ronage. We will endeavor to main tain the same standard of BUSI NESS, QUALITY and SERVICE conducted by them. Give us a trial that's all we ask. SERVICE, QUALITY and COUR TESY our motto. HOUSTON and PHELPS Phone 421 8th and Main Sts. ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE PUBLIC Having disposed of our gro cery at 8th and Main Sts. to Leo Houston and Law rence Phelps, all of our fu ture business after January 1st, 1920, will be conducted at our 6th and Main street store. Roberts and Whitmore Telephenes: 138, 85. w&&4&$&$$$Q$.w$&$$ifr&$)Q$$w&$Q&$$$W'4Q$Q& Caf When in doubt what to eat, think of the Rex Cafe. Here you can get the best of service and food. Suggest to your friends that the Rex is the place where you care to go when dining out or for your regular meals. Special din ners on Sundays and an Extra Special dinner on New Year's. Watch for the menu. ex THE REX CAFE AHIIhAN'f), Dec. 20. Two Impor tant garnKo deals were mado thin punt week. Tho Hnrrlflon llrothor' garage closed a deal with 8. K, Mor ris and l'erry A.shcrnft whereby these two expert muchanlcn take full charge of the repair work; tho l'ark'tlre BUrfnce of tho property to a 400 Borage ImH been sold to Mark Hnma- fool Icvo) A atlemptB to extln. kit ano Aiircu Morns oy uio iormergu,flh u hayo faied- owner, O. II. JIntfield, and tho new firm Is making a number of Improve' mentH. PORTLAND, Dec. 2G. The Lum bermen's Trust company is offering at prices to yield 5.125 and 5.25 peri cent Interest, according to maturity, five series of City of Klamath Falls fctrect Improvement C per cent bonds, totaling $97,031.22. Tho bonds con Etltute a general obligation of the oiitiro city. Klamath Falls at tho pre sent time ranks as tho eighth city of Oregon In bank deposits, having advanced from tentli placo since last September. Tho last call, November 17, shows that the three banks of Klamath Falls have deposits of $3,- P04.702.18, a In two months. gain of $8C2,7C9.b PORTLAND, Dec. 20. Much in terest was shown In the Oregon land exhibits on display in tho Union Pa cific building at Omaha this summer. Over 14,000 people visited tho cx it' bit room between January 1 and IV'-ember 1, 101t aesirni'i (' .1 message received bv ii'lar.t Mc Murray, general passenger agent of the 0-V, from R. . Smith, super "Isor of agriculture for the railroad rmr.inlstratlon at Om.ihu PORTLAND, Dee ) --"Hastem Ttnllrnsil officials hiVv even a wider variety of suppositions as to the poi- slblo date of return of tha railroads to private operation than thu w? frn officials," says W . D Sklr-ner. traffic manager of th S V it S who has returned from an extended visit In eastern cltle.i. PORTLAND, Dec. 26. James S. Stewart, member of the legl3latuie from Gilliam county during xhe last session, and now residing at Corval lis, has been chosen by the Johnson forces to manage the campaign of J their oandldnte in Oregbn. ROSEBURG, Dec. 20. A cam paign to effect a dress reform amors high school girls was started here Triday by the members of the Ben ton Parent-Teacher association, which charges that high .school girls are wearing garments not onlyde trimental to health but uncomfort able. EUGENE, Dec. 20. After having been lost In the Cascade mountains for three days and two nights, Henry Holmes, a young farmer of Walter vlllo, returned home yesterday none tho worse for his experience. Only seven metals were known in Ltho days of Columbus. There are now more than fifty in use. It is just one hundred years since the famous Royal Conservatory near i 'Capo Town was established. e n ruaranteed in From speech in U. S. Senate by Hon. Medill McCormick. "Woe unto the world because of effense: for it must be that offenses come; hut woe unto that man by whom the offense cometh." Great powers, political and iinnncial, are eager to frighten and to coerce, to drive senators to subordinate judgment to expediency. During the long months which followed the armistice, was anything done to reduce the costs of living for the people bf this land? They were heavy in January and February, as well as in July and August. No process Was invoked and no rjppcal was made to lighten the burden then, but now we 'must haste. In our haste let us not forget that in the awakening Orient, in China, and in tbose conquered empires yonder, , there are twice as many millions as there were in all the countries of Western Europe which were engaged in the - war. If we shrink from our duty, if (under the present terms of the league covenant) we consent to the guaranty of territories, if we consent that America shall be an in strument to repress revolution, we shall not only con secrate the wrongs of the past, but by our act we shall pledge America against conscience and judgment to take part in the great war which this-treaty promises. Our young men will go forth to defend cities of which they never heard. In the high places of Asia the snow wili cover the frozen bodies of Aniericans perhaps now un born, and American mothers little girls today, mayhap, playing in the summer air about the dooryards will mourn their sons fallen in the desert wastes of Syria'and ' Egypt. JEROME, Ariz., Dec. 2C. Tho fire, which for more than twenty years has turned In the upper levels of the United Verde Copper Mine hero, Is about to bo eliminated by a drastic nrocess of loworlnc the en- It Is tho general opinion that tho fire was started by a slip in the rock produclnR sufficient friction heat to ifjnlto tho ores rich In sulphur. It has burntd Its way through veins of copper, gold and sulphur. Tho process of suppressing the flro Involves the removal of 14,000,000 cubic yards of material. The area to be evacuated is roughly estimated at 400 by 800 feet. Monster steam shov els aro to bo employed in the work. U is expected that tho task of re moving the entire top of the mine, and to extinguish the fire, will oc cupy several years. DON'T LET RIFLE RUST YET. SMS SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 20. (By Mall) Sir Joseph Cook, Minis ter for the Nay, is urging military rreparedness upon Australians. At the annual meeting of the Navy 1-eague, he said: fapend your last dollar on prepar Ing for a fight to the last. We have1 signed the peace, but Europe is still' full of mutual hatreds, even among the Allies. Until there is a general movement for disarmament, as I hope there soon will be, we must Must to the League of Nations and keep our powder dry. "We cannot afford to let the rifle rust yet awhile, though we have a League of Nations which we hope will fructify," he told the National R:fle Association. "Our rifles must be kept well oiled, and you must be able to shoot them as in times gone by if this country is to be safe. We nay yet need our rifles here in Aus tiaiia." To the Women's Reform League, Sir Joseph said: ''Our hope must be centred in the League of Nations. It in the one great hope of the world, but if we cannot make It effective in the near future we had better get ready for the next war, which will otherwise come as surely as the sun rh-es." The The velocity of electricity far ex ceeds that of light. Light travels at the rate of 136,400 miles a sec ond; electricity at the rate of 248,- 500 miles a second. i The celebrated Muzo mine in Col lombla is the only mine in that coun- try which produces emeralds, and s& far as is known is the only mine of its kind in the world. American Blood AUSTRALAN How The Brunswick Attains It EVEN the most casual hearing of The Brunswick gives instant and conclusive evidence of its tone superiority. Your car immediately' detects the difference. This betterment is due to the Brunswick Method of Reproduction, which includes two new ideas the Ultona and the All-Wood Tone Amplifier. The Ultona plays all records at their best, whatever make. Just a turn of the hand and the Ultona presents to each type the proper weight, diaphragm and needle according to its exact requirements. Perfect reproduction is followed by perfect tone development through the new All-Wood Tone Amplifier. No metal is used in its construction. Investigate The Brunswick before you buy; a visit to our shop will give you new standards by which to judge. H. J. Winters Jeweler and Optician 706 Main St Phone 149W rffy -- A L - PHON O C WAPM3 IN ONE. IB Large Can Saves to 25cts on the Dollar and Crescent Baking Powder' docs not deteriorate. Even niter the can is opened Crescent re- , wins its original btrcngth and efficiency Therclore you make this posi ive saving in the 5 lb. tins o( Crescent. c know indeed thai iit&cytit un stand the severest tests (or baking efficiency and rmmm all around good quali ties, (or not a pound can get by the rigid , tests and technical , : scrutin"- ' ' "i chem ists. Ctetceni raised foods aie light, tweet, and whole tome CRESCENT MFC. CO. Seattle, Wuh. vjfejv 5-g Yu l-Ofr cm supply 0j LeseeBt Baking Powder LIBERTY THEATRE "TJE PICK OP THE PICTURES" H .AV. POOLE, Oh nor. HARRY llOREL, Musical Dliector I 1 TONIGHT "HITTING THE HIGH 3POTS" with Bert Lytell A Red Hot Mexican Oil Field Story J . ., v SUNDAY We have our old friend WILLIAM FARNUM ' " " in " "ROUGH AND READY" t it K ill in if -M"' i I nwyJL L