Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1920)
PACT TWO WmiUMDAV, MHT. 0, ltM 141 is. jlKN:.i fywl y).f f f i THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS,-OREGON GOOD HOT RELIEVES FEUDS of ins ' Jt il)l 3 HH Hi 388 : I fc m' H " LanK 'I H I . Service sna wck nugnty gua sna two " We're mighty Btd to Mar these word anytime. The ftener wc hear them the surer wc are that our .service li getting better and bet- ttr all the time. If you need a new battery remember about the Still Setter WUlardwith Threaded Rubber Insulation the kind (elected by 136 manufacturer! of panengcr cara and' trucks. Link River Battery Station 7th and Klamath Phono 171 THAT DULL ACHING Don't worry and complain about a bad back. Got rid of it! For weak kidneyi, lame and. achy baeki, yonr neighbors recommend Doan's Kidney Pills. Aik your aelihbor. Read this statement: Mr. M. E. Sevlts, 1001 Prospect St., Klamath Falla, aayi: "I was more or leas subject to kidney dls order for some time. About sis years ago I had quite a spell with my kid neys. I bad a dull ache acrcss the smallrof toy back and could not stand on my feet very lone at a time. My kidneys were In a rery weak condi tion and the secretions passed too fre quently. I was so nervous and rest leas at night that I would have to sit up for hours at a time. My feet and ankles swelled and I could hardly get my -shoes on. I decided to use Doan's Kidney Pills and the first box gave me relief. About six boxes cured me entirely, and I havo enjoyed splen did health ever since." (Statement given March 3, 1918). On March 16, 1120, Mrs. Berks said: "X never salsa a chance to rec ommend Doan's Kidney Pills. When ever my kidneys trouble me and my back gets sore and lame a short use of Doan's are sure to give me prompt relief." 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milbura Co., Mfrs., Duffalo, N. Y. COX CONTINUES TO POUND REPUBLICANS MILWAUKEE, Sept. 4. Invading Wisconsin on the second day of his western tour, Governor Cox today continued bis pounding of Republi cans' campaign contributions, and also discussed the league of nations. MILWAUKEE. Sept. 4. The di rect charge that Will Hays, chairman of the Repabllcan national committee bad "deliberately perpetrated a false hood under oath" at Chicago In deny ing the statement regarding the cam paign quota, was made today by Gov ernor Cox, in his address at the state fair grounds here today. A eraM Want Ad will ana at. BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE The American men and women must guard constantly against Kid ney trouble because wo cat too much and all our food Is rich. Our blood Is filled wlthlirle acid which the kid neys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the ellmlnative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weaKness ana a general decline In health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead: your back hurts or the urine Is cloudy, full of sediment or yon are obliged to seek relief two or three times p aight; If you suffer with alck headache or dizzy, .nervous speiis, acta atomacn, or you have rheVmatlam when the weather Is bad, get from your pharmacist about (our ounces of jad salts: tako n tablespoonful In n glass of water be fore brMRfast for n few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combin ed with litbla, and has been used for generations to flush and stimu late clogged kidney; to neutralize the sclds In the urine so It no longer Is n source of Irritation, thus end ing bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is Inexpensive; cannot Injure, makes n delightful efferves-J cent mnia-wawr Beverage, ana oo longs In every home, because no body ana nuka n mistake by having nana kMaey fishing tar tints. ltd ' Si VIENNA, Aug. 14. (lly Mall.) flountlful crops or early fruit and vegetables and promtso of an abund ance of hardier later ycllds from fields and orchards, with tho big American flour credit still available for the rallon of dally bread have given Austria a reprlovo from tho terrlblo hardships of last winter. Fats arc as scarce ns over, how ever, but In this gracious weather their need is not so keenly felt. Meat, too, Is scanty and high, bo yound reach of tho masses. The American, flour credit will bo ex hausted beforo tho winter sets fairly In and no man In Austria knows from where, or by what means It will bo replaced. Strikes and disturbances in the Tcschcn coal fields, tho situation In Silesia, virtual suspension of tho Hungarian supply, little, as It was and, finally, Austria's Inability to enforce even the meagre contractual supplies from Ilohcmla, havo pre vented the hoped for accumulation of a modest fuel reserve during the summer months. Public utilities of Vienna are reported to havo but a week's reserve of coal for power and light and less than a month of gss coal at a minimum consumption. The last Austrian pig Iron oven In operation has Just drawn Its Ores for lack of coke. Into this situation has been Inject ed a curious business phase resulting from the Increased value of the crown on, foreign change. In the late winter and early spring the crown dropped as low as 350 to the dollar on private exchange. En couraged by this a small export trade was nourished. Austrian fac tories, famous for certain forms of finished articles, began to resume operations on a limited scale, foreign buyers seeing a good business chance In tho low crown valuo against standard monies. Manufacturers were able to get advances of credit to secure coat and needed raw materials. It was a good speculation for foreign values.' Then the Minister of Finance, Dr. Relseh, dropped a hint one day during a de bate In the Assembly that It would be wise If Austrian retail sellers, were to raise their crown prices to the equllalent of foreign values. They did It. A suit of clothes that cost from 3,000 to 4,000 crowns rose In price to from 15,000 to 18,000 crowns. Everything else went up In proportion. Then the government, acting on the samo principle, Is reported to have gone on the Zurich exchange, which controls crown quotations, with large amounts of foreign money and forced the crown up. Their ef forts were assisted unexpectedly by an Influx Into Austria of foreign money speculators. Appreciation of the monies of the other countries of Central and Eastern Europe made this their last Held for speculation. Pounds, dollars and francs became plentiful with small demand and the crown rose In value until tho official price was 130 to the dollar and ISO In private deals. Retail prices con tinued to go up, so that with the risoj In the crown cutting foreign values one-half, the plan literally "cut its own throat." Foreign buyers quit. Retail trade stagnated. Native Austrlans did not know whetchr to laugh or cry at a straw hat In a window bearing tho price mark of 2,000 crowns. Out they were not sold. The next step .In tho reaction hit the basic Industries. The few fac tories running havo begun to curtail "or close down as orders are cancelled and new contracts fall to come. The Ministry of Socialization is besolged to be permitted to dlschargo em ployes, It being reported that as high as twenty a day have beenrecently received. 'SI KaflJBjjttQ BBD BBwawa ssawi . BBBllsBBsaneAssnwLl ST 1aw . m Bwawal saaal MUJ L "Taannanwiwf iW . ,was , n. na av aiB:Mra."j!bP-M. Mm ..jh Sal BaBul -vAllBHaVl..LLLJMilHHnrrrila ,lOMVrt,, I pMlff llUff In nffiHi JBBaawarB,l Bwawmang'awannsnTtsawannsawawawa w.ll I LJjlllliLj 09mjku) L JfPJEfBsfsWeanrtiJaa nana i art- WSWLfmW 'naaaaarVS'tjt l(V).flflHBB9 MWmmwLJ3Emmm7lJ KmsbwjhssiwB"" nnaE-BvsanVnPsVanr I' -awawaanaw -- i-m SjJvN- Th : t is section certainly owes a lot to the automobile SaJscf your tlraa ac ac eording: to tha road thay harm to t ratal: In sandy or hilly coun try, wherever the going Is apt to be heavy The U. 8. Nobby. For ordinary country roads The U. 8. Chain or Usee. For stoat wheels The U. a. Plain. For beat results vary whmrm U.S. Royal Cords. HB6BLHf won-womoimmomm EOK at it just from the business stand point, compared with, say, ten years ago or tcven five. Everything speeded up made easier.. Nearly every business man depending on the automobile to trans port himself and his products.' n 'That is one reason, per haps, why mo.re attention is being paid to tires why tire costs are being figured closer and people arc beginning to look for better tires. We believe that people are entitled to better tires the best they can get Not only the man with the big cmr, but the man with tho small cmr, and the medium sized cmr, ill We represent U.S.- Tires for that reason becauso their policy is the same as ours every tire s good as you can get it, regardless of the size of the car it is to go on. It was that policy which led to the introduction of tho strmightside automobile tire, the pneummtio truck tire. And you can't beat it IV U. S. Tires are guaranteed for life, with no limitation of milemge. . It will pay you to talk to us about tires, if you are looking at them from a business standpoint ' (5 V.' United States Tires White Pelican Garage RATES SHOULD LUG COST NOT 1M r WEATHER RECORD Hereafter the Herald will publish :he mean and maximum tempera tures and precipitation record as tab. en by the V. 8. Reclamation service station. Publication will cover the day-previous to the paper's Issue, up to 5 o'clock of that day. Pre- . Max. Iain. ciplUtlon Sept. 1 81 49 Sept. 2 8t 66 Sept. 3 SO 64 Sept. 4 86 40 Sept. 6 83 44 ' Sept. 80 43 - Sept. 7 88 47 Claasltag aa will sell It. Frank H. Fayant, assistant to the balrman, Association of Railway Ex ecutives, states that if the, cost of liv ing is raised more than 2 per cent by the $1,200,000,000 J u crease in freight charges, It will be plain evi dence that middlemen and retailers 'are taking an unfair advantage of the public. We have passed the peak of war Inflation. It is reasonable to believe, therefore, that prices will 'fall rather than rise after the new rates are in effect. The fact Is that in the production of most articles of common dally con sumption, the transport charge Js so small that an Increase In rates has no appreciable effect In the family bud rat. In bulky articles like coal or lumber, where transportation is a rery small part of the process of pro duction and distribution, an Increase In freight rates ncceimarlly muans higher prices. Hut even theso com paratively largo Increases In partlc ulnr commodities may bo abxorbod us a result of other forces working for lower prices, Tim public will pay $1,600,000,000 of additional .freight and passengor revenue Tho recent wage award In Chlqago gave to the railroad employees un additional $626,000,000 a year or an avorago of more than $300 each. During the two years of government operation of railroads, the railroad administration raised wages by more than $1,000,- 000,000 a year. Tho total Increase In wages, therefore, since May 1918, when the Lane wage board made its first award, Is more' than 81,600,- 000,000 a year, or considerably mora than the new freight and passengor rates will produce. Practically all of the additional revenues of the roads will go directly to the 4,000,000 rail road' workers. Frankie Mason, American fly weight champion, claims, to have fougbt nearly 460 battles, which is believed to be the high record for prominent pugilists In the ring to-day. NEW FREIGHT HANDUN .00 Four oinplnyees of tho freight do partment havo boon discharged and two more quit, reports M. A. Callag han, Southern Pacific agent horo, und tho epldomlc of petty tbofts from freight consignments that has been annoying local morchants and the railway claims department Is be lieved to bo over. Uocauso the discharged men will continue to live here Mr. Callaghan Is not making their names public. With tho excoptlon of the foreman of the frolght house the entlro frolgbt handling crew Is displaced; , None of the Individual thefts wore large, although' the total of the series was beginning to stack up sor- lously, when a railway detective Went to work In the freight house. Ho soon secured ovldenco that could not be gainsaid by the guilty em ployees and all were ready to avoid arrest by severing the connection with tht company. NO. llHOl TltKANUItV DKPAIITMKNT Oftico of Comptroller of tho Cur rency. Washington, D. C July 30, 1920. Whereas, by satisfactory ovldonce prosented to tho undersigned, It has boon mado to appear that "Tho Am erican National Hank of Klamath Palls," In tho city of Klamath Falls, In the County of Klamath and State of Oregon, has complied with all th provisions of the statute of the United States required t obe com plied with before an association shall be' authorised to commence tha business of banking; .N.0W tnrforo I, John Skeltoa Williams,, Comptroller of the Cur roncy, do hereby certify that "Tha American National Bank of Klam ath Falls." In the City of Klamath Falls, In the County, of Klamath and State of Oregon, Is authorised to commence tan business of banking as provided In Section Fifty one hun dred and sixty-nine of the Revises Statutes of the United States. In testimony whereof, witness mr hand and aaal nt Affix thi. m.i.. tleth dsy of July, JJIO. JNO. BKBLTON WILLIAMS, (Seal) Comptroller of tha Currency. -Aug, 18-l0-27-8-10-t7-84-t-816. A million minutes have not elana- ed since the"Annistlce was signed!" -5.