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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1920)
PAOH BIX MONDAY, APRIL 26 1 "-j THE" EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON " " " """"""" - " ' ' ' r- - , , 1 m " - - 'i "e .SToteANO-tfcjAtfAuorforOjt.ioi ( - M A t FOR60T THe ( Jl WCADIF TW4NTT(6K VIOIICJ 1UU3 SCEPAMRpFPottroer.APK'GOFVfcJrsSPu ( v ' " .J i UW - r" HWPliVJ (0U)Of?THOFONI0rJ"A CXJ Vs,. ) . M j I j ft I sS. ! Give Him a Chants PS or iECOiey ranx, a PKU.0F fStt' I v s!tf j 15 Tnia C kSfB , unenimainance, mm&pcwqsr, abm or silt. A f v VV -;ff J' . SrVfl liftl J&Jm? Mrs. Clancy Give Him gov of matched. 3Vor.yci6R, J ) Jr rnEES '? I' fc III reXjKv a Chance 0F!rAMR-iif k?W T'lf J "J jil 6t atr-.c.Ntp,p.,lct. j . I 2$kJ&. I VWII Hi H I ( t I ! II ! I) "J h K M M i iai i pfircnufiirc i -, --"".o s-.r s - i ii rm v tf hit; m r Una H7 HLL T dUlUUd Ut . h, rip. onra.hoid IHfl VI LI 111 III lp j"m I I yj&l SHOE PO B BEST, FOR-HOJ ,SAVE THB LEATHER! TOE BIOVALUBiPAOCAGM PASTES'aND IJQLnDS TOS R T. tMU&r COUOBATONS l UD BRATEFUL FIR RELIEF Fill Arthur R. Wilson, treatrer for the Klamath County Neap East Re lict committee, has received the fol - lowing letter ot appreciation from J. J. Handsaker of Portland, state director of relief campaign: Please express to the people ot Klamath county the grateful ap preciation 'of our committee for jour initial remittance of $,2,150, for which I enclose official receipt. I am especially Interested in the expression of your bore that ou will reach at least $2500 and I am sure that if any countv ij t i state ha" reason tfor g2neroJ3 con tributions, it 13 Klamath Latert cables frcm jour old neighbor and friend, ' R Ram bo, indicate that the Turks gave him and his two hundred oroham time to 3"ive fie cn of "aioumo before the bombs id e-t took place and t'it t' -rade the inarch of seven - ' i to Adana in safety J' iribo wrote me seme t'nie To tci.,rg "ie of what a wcndrf .1 r-'i lot o youngsters thev he nd th.t the were workhitr dz ind right to meet the no-ds a1 d wants of these two hundred children. Ho stited they range fn ages from three to eigh teen and rrany of them had been in deprrtatfons and when there ' were threats of trouble they were filled with panic, of course. Mrs. Rambo wrote her cousin here in Portland that they had been sleep ing fully dressed and not know- lipH BR iff SIM mtm F w W 4?mMw$ THE GUN store mm rill USHESI JftftttdW ianacxXivw I ing what time they might be call . ed out As long as two Klamath county people can mike contribu t'ons to this relief like Mr. and Mrs Rambo are making, I am not surprised that the rest of the county should want to back them up We are making the most vigor ous representations to the govern ment urging that measures be taken to prevent recurrences of such atrocities However, while , the atrocities do continue, it is a sourco of gre-U satisfaction for us , to kno-v that not one of our five 1 1 undred relief workers has ' ii'andoned his poit, and that such Is the confidence .of both the ''"i-ks and the French that our re I'p oreinimtions are allowed to pss through the lines of both armies without molestation sriii.i.' sTorK i,v .JACKSON CO. Oil. CO. Mrs C. R Satchwell. representing !' Tr'gnnla Oil company of Jack yon county, OTegon. is here for the purpose of canvassing this territory for stock 'n this c-rapany The" com pany, is now drill'ng on their prop erly and has the hole down about 100 feet. She is stopping at the Whito Pelican hotel 1 Landscape gardening is a fine art in Japan, and is carried out in mini ature to perfection. Within the lim its of a single dish or flower-pot there can be seen bridges, paths, mountains, stone-lanterns, all com plete and rerfect. IN Colonial times watches were z good deal more or namental than accurate. Some men carried two watches in order to be on time and usually ."both were wrong. Watches were expensive lux uries for the rich. Today Ineersoll factories turn out 20,000 dependable, good looking watches a day at prices that put watches within the reach of everyone. See our window display show ing the story. iffi m lilli OLIVES HIVE UN T WASHINGTON. D. C , Apr. 26. A shipment of ripe olives renderod potsonous by bacteria which was seized in Milwaukee, Wis., on infor mation furnished by tho bureau ot chemistry, United States department of agriculture, has been 'condemned and destroyed by order ot tho court, according to a statement issued to day by officials ot that bureau charged, with the enforcement of the federal food and drugs act. Tho olives were in glass containers and labeled as "Supremo Curtis Quality California Ripe Olives packed by tho Curtis Corporation, Long Beach, California." .The government alleged in t,ho libel that tho olivos were adulterated for the reason that they consisted in whole or In part cf a filthy, decom posed, and putrid cgotablo sub stance. Examination by tho bureau of chemistry of samplo from tho shipment showed that guinea pigs fed from three of tho bottles died, indicating the presence of toxin duo to decomposition of the olives by bac teria which wero lator identified as bacillus botullnus. Olives similarly infected wero responsible for the deaths ot several people within re cent months In Canton, Detroit, Drookljn, Memphis, and olsowhere Defectho Methods Itt"oiisiblo Investigations by tho bureau of chemistry have shown that defects In tho methods of pickling, packing and processing ripe olies aro re sponsible for widespread infictlon with bacteria. The prnctico of ship ping and holding olives in weak brino for weeks and sometimes for months permits fermentation and general ized infection of the olives with many kinds of bacteria. Olives aftor this treatment are much moro difficult to sterilize than those fresh from tho tree and handled at once. As a re sult there Is occasional failure on the part cf tho packer to heat the con tainers to a sufficiently high temper ature to destroy all dangerous bac teria that may bS on (he olives. The failure to sterilizo properly is more likely to occur when glass con tainers are used, probably because of SAGE TEA KEEPS WHEN MIXED WITH SULPHUR TO BRINGS BACK ITS BEAUTIFUL LUSTRE AT ONCE Gray hair, however handsome, de notes advancing age. Wo all know the advantages of a youthful appearance Your hair is your charm. It malccs or mars tho face. When It fades, turns gray and look streaked, Just a tow applications of Sago Tea and Sulphur enhances It's appearance a hundred fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Hither preparo tho rcclpo at homo or get from any drug storo a 00-cont bot tle of "Wyeth's Sngo and Sulphur Compound',' which is ineroly tho old time reclpo Improved by the addlMon of other Ingredients, Thousands of folks recommend this roady-to-jso preparation, becauso it darkens tho hnir beautifully, besides no ono ca,n possibly toll, as It darkens so natur ally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft bruUi . 1th it, drawing this through tho hilr, taking one uranll strand at n tlmo. By u'ornlng tho gray hair dlrappoans; after an other nppllcutlon or two, Its natural color Is restored and It booomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years jounger. UR 1 tho frar that a higher temperature may break tho glass. Tlioro Is no good ronson why ripe olives should not bo completely sterilized when put up In glass as well as when put up In tin. As a matter of fact, howuver, ripe olives In glass luwo been the causo of tho various cases ot botu llnus poisoning investigated by tho buroau of chemistry. Tho only caso In which a tin container appears to havo boon involved was that of a rollsh containing minced rlpo olivos whore condiments rather than ster ilization wore depended upon for preservation. Tho poison would do- volop In tin containers It thoy wvro not sufficiently processed, but as there Is no dangor ot breakugo In tin, u sufficient degree ot heat is usually applied. In all cases ot botullnus poisoning so far lnestlgato(t the ripe olhos wore found to show signs ot decom position. They had an odor char acteristic of spoilage and a tatUo that indicated they wero not bound. In somii Instances whero death resulted from botulism It was established that tho persons who fcorved tho olives and some who ate them rccognlzod that the olhes wore spollod. Tho doolopment of the toxin producod by the bacillus botullnus Is accom panied by decomposition, and while tho Investigation has not been conu plete enough to determine positively that sufficient spoilage to bo do totted certainly by smell and taste always Is present when thero Is enough toxin to do harm, such has been tho fact in all cases so far In vestigated Tho department previ ously Issued a warning to consumers to discard any food that shows indi cation ot spoilage. While all food that shows signs of spoilage may not contain dangerous bacteria or toxins, any spoiled food may contain them and should not bo eaten If the food shows any dotlnlto slgps of spoilage, however slight, It should bo discard ed If tlioro is any doubt about tho food being sound. It should ho cooked thoroughly uofore bulug soned. ;i eminent Uslnp; Kcry 1'ourr The federal officials have usod oery power conferred upon them by the law to ellminato from tho chan nels of trado all ripe olics that aro injurious to health. Seizure has been made of all shipments coming within the Jurisdiction of the federal food and drugs act which woro found to be In violation of tho law. Tho officials havo no power to act, how over, except wboro tho foods aro ac tually found to bo decomposed or to contain harmful Ingredionts or othor wise violato specific provisions of the law. Only an occasional food package In millions is infected with .bacillus botullnus, and sinco It is physically possible to open and ox amine but a comparatively few of the millions of food packages enter ing Interstate commerco, it Is beyond the power of the otfciials to protect tho public completely. Tho officials havo suggested to the packers that they recall from tho trado all rlpo olives which havo not boon pro cessed at a sufficiently high temper ature and that thoy process the olives at a toraperaturo sufficiently high to Insuro completo storillzatlon. Tho dopartment docs not havo tho au thority to ro'iulro tho trado to tttko tho action suggested, but bolloveu that tho industry will tako such ac tion voluntarily. SCORPION VICTOR OVER CENTIPEDE SAN BERNARDINO, Cal Apr. 23. Tho dosort-old question as to which wins In a dealh-battlo botwoon a scorpion and a contlpcdo has been answered for tho first tlmo, possibly, by J. W, Catlclc, formor mayor of San Bornardino, who witnessed sucl a contest in tho Puiiuod hills of Bti Bornardino county. Tho scorpion won. Cuticle v.aa lifting a rock to obtain a mining monument when ho discov ered tho two crcatiiros of th,o desort preparing for battlo. They paid no SHELTER I y. E NEW YORK, Apr. 26. Thousands ot Now York famlllos, some of tho 73,114 rogistorod as ''homoless" by tho Tonomont Houso Department aro expected to llvo in touts furnished by tho Unltod States army until tho prcsont houso doarth Is remedied, according to mou Interested In tho building trado horo. Just whore thoy will locato tholr now domiciles has not yot boon docldud although an army of roal cstato agouts "mob ilized," as it woro , oornlght In Creator Now York, has vast acreages ot vacant land to leaso In four of tho five boroughs. "From 1.G00 to 2,000 families will llvo In tents In Pelham Hay Park alono," doclarod Waltor O. Martin, suporlntendont ot the Bronx Tenement Houso dopartmont, "and I havo no doubt that many othor sec tions will hnvo wholo colonics of tout dwollors after May . In vlow of tho anticipated Increased dom,and for tentago, especially by evicted fam ilies, I shall wrlto to tho war do partmont for sufficient ennvas to meet all possible need In tho Bronx." On top ot tho prscut houso short ago looms tho prospect of tho usual horde of pleasure Bookers, many of thorn with abundant war profits or earnings, who aro coming to tho metropolis for tholr summer outing Somo of theso will offer landlords attracts o prices for temporary nunr tors and, whero tenants aro occupy Ing apartments from mouth to" month nnd paying oxhorbltuut n-ntB tho result Is oxpocted to bo nn In creased numhor of evictions on Ma) 1 and Juno 1. Evasion of tho anti-rent profit eering laws 'recently pasnod at Al bany Is a common charge In many cases against landlords up for trial In tho municipal courts Thousands of tonomont ''ownors" to circumvent tho law which compels tho landlords to provo tohlr rights to ml ho rents moro than 25 por cent n oar, havo notified tenants to vacate tholr prop erty by Septombor 1. Then thoy plan to rent tho apartments to high est blddors. Anlndlcatlon of tho competition for sholtor In Now York Is afforded by tho Tonomont Houso dopartmont figures which show that, duo to light building and tho romodcllng ot ono-tlmo tenements Into moro profit able business structures, thero aro today actually fower apartmonts In tho city than ther woro this tlmo a year ago. Mcantimo tho war is ovor and tralnloads of oil, stool, lumbor and nutomobllo men and thousands of othor prosperous Americans aro said to bo planning to Invado tho Great Whlto Way. Tralnloads al ready havo arrivod. For most of them It will ho no short vncntlorf. Many aro bringing tholr families. It is estimated tlio,t sovonty thou sand tons of cork aro needed for tho bottled beer nnd mlnoral wators con Eumoil annually In Great Britain. uttontlon to him, but carefully boenn tho "rendezvous with death." Ap parently tho poison of nolthor was fatal to tho othor nnd donth camo to tho contlpcdo eiily whon tho scu 'plnu finally faatonod Its claws about its enoiny and toro off its bond whllo tho rcntlpedo was stiugg)lng to froo Itself. Tho two creatures were ouch about two Inches lone. Tor docodi'8 prospoctors on tho Mohuvo dcsoit nnd In Death valloy havo bcon willing to, hat gomctlous email fortuncn on thb auetrtlon of whether u contlpcdo or a scorpion would win n battlo to the death, It Is said, but ua far an was known novor witnessed fiucli n contest. 1 NOTICE OF HALE OK U1IAL ESTATE Notice Is huroby glvon that, pur suant to an ordor of tho. County Coin l of tho Blato of Oregon for Klamath County, mndo and ontorod on tho 8th day of March, 1920, tho timlarslRiioil administrator ot tha ostttlu' ot Andy O'Mulloy, decuasetl, will sell at prlvatu sale to tho hlgh ost bidder for canh In hand, on and aftor tins 10th day of April, 1820, all right, tltlo and Inturost awnail and possessed by said deceased at tho time of his death In and tp tho fol lowing described real property, to wit: Sltuatu In Klamath County, Oicgon. Lot Flvo, of Block Seven teen, of North Klamath Falls Adill tlnu to tho City of Klamath Falls. All bids must be In writing and do lhered to tho undersigned at tho law oMIcoh of H. C. Groosbock, Klamath Falls, Oregon, prior to tho said 10th day of April. WALTER E. PERKINS, Administrator of tho Estate ot Andy O'Mulloy, Deceased. 12-19-26-2-9 NO I ICE OP KIIEUII-T'S HALL' ON EXECUTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by lrtuo of a writ of ex ecution In foreclosure Issued out of tho IIonoraMo Circuit Court" ot tho State of Oregon, for the County ot Klamath, In tho rasa of tho Statu Laud Hoard of tho Ktato ot Oregon, plaintiff, nh Mary It Hansott and Wllllnm IlasMitt, Colin V. DymenC, Frederick W Cantons nnd Mary 0. Camti'iis and James A. Hakor, de fendants, which said writ was dated on tho 12th day ot April, A I) 1920, I will, on tho IT. th day of May, A. D. 1920, at tho front door tit tho court house of Klamuth County, Oregon, In tho City of Klamath Falls, Oregon, ut tho hour of 2: IS o'clock In tho afternoon on said date, proceed to sell at publlo auction to th'o hlghoat bidder for cash, all the right, tltlo and Interest ot thp said Mary R. Bnssott and Wllllnm' Hiissott, Colin V. Dymont, Fredorlek W. Cantons and Mary O. Cantons and JumoM A, linker, in and to Tho southwost uuartor of tho southeast ifuartor; tha cast half ot tho southwest iiuartor, and tho north west quarter of tho southwest nuar tir of section twenty-six, In township tlirt)-nlnu south, range twelve cast of Willamette Morldlan, together with tho tonomonlB. horedltnmontH and uppurteminrcs thereunto belong ing or In any wlso appertaining, to gether with all water rights nppur tonnnt to Raid land or to becomo ap purtenant thereto. or so much thereof as may bo neces sary to sutlsry a Judgment rondorod in tho nboo entitled caso on tho list day of March, 1D20, which said Judgmont Is for tho Hum of four hundred dollars ($100,00), with In terest upon tho n-ild sum from tho 9th dny of October, 1917, at tho rote of six por cent por annum ; nnd ono hundred dollars ($100.00) attorneys' foes; and for tho further sum ot ono hundred thlrty-throo and CO-100 dollars ($133.C0), with Intorost on said sum from tho 4th day of Octo bor, 1919, nt tho rato of six por cont por annum, nnd for tho sum of slxty ono dollars ($61.00) costs, nnd tho costs and oxpousca of this salo on execution. Dntod this 12th day of April, A. D. 1920. GEO. L. HUMPHREY, Shorlff of Klamath County, Oregon. By BERT E. HAWKINS, Doputy. Apr 12-19-26-3-10 A Classified Ad will soil It. L E Dr. Jamca' Hcadncbo Powders ro. liovo at onco 10 conts a package. You Inko a Dr. Jamoa' ncadaclio Powder nnd In jnat a few niomcnW your bead clears nnd all nauraluia nnd illHlroas vanishes; It's tho uulcl.iwt ivnd surest rollof for hondatlic, whotlior dull, throbbing, splitting or norvr Mcklnj;. Send aomeono to tho drug rw.m .inn gci ft anno packflgo now. Quit iiifforlnjf It's so ncoillcas. "Da Hiiro 'you got Dr. JnmrV Hcadaciio I iw((.rH then there will bo no diaap polntrnpiit. ATTENTION - FARMERS, CON TRACTORS 'AND TRUCK USERS. Unltod Motors Sorvlco Company Is of firing for salo dlioot to tho tisois, tha United Motor Ti ticks in iVit 2 Ms, 3 ',6 and C ton Mzcs nnd C ton trntt ora. Big discount, snvo tho ngont'a commission For prl es nnd ill i countn, write Thonius Km dlos, cam Ultod MoiorH Soivlro Company, 2C North lntli St,, Pot Hand, Oregon, it u SPLITTING SICK HEADACH :l- .ja-agxa P-JMW.tt'M.-n WWVWI 'UfA,(ii --!