Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1920)
NovianiKit n, 1020. THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON I'.MIH TWO i - - JBfKMii ooMi'irru ixm wx tiiaih: ASTOIUA, Ore Nor. 9. At an immediate result of tbo steamers making Astoria a port of ('nil, local Bills linvo been cnablcil to compete successfully In tlio box trado ot tbo Hawaiian Inlands. Tbo Astoria lint MILLS OONSOMIUTK ST. ItKI.HMS. Orn .Vnv !l -Tlirn. PERSECUTION OF FIRE-PROOFING WORKING CLOTHES FOR TJIIO WORKWOMAN . ... ............ V.V. .... VV 1 lumber mills In this section owned . by tlio Charles It. McCormlck Inter-, rots linvo Just completed consolldn-l (Ion under tlio nnmu of (be St. Hoi-1 ens Lumber company. Tlio aggregate rapacity ot tbo tbroo Is 315 000 feet Company ot tbo present tlmo In till ing nn order for 300,000 boxes that territory. for, per eight hour shift All nro running TUESDAY, ; n JW onus MONOPOLY IT I 0 OP TON nt full rapacity nt the present tlmo. P PERFORMANCE: COUNTsfi In Final Analysis You Will Buy a Mack Truck We encourage you, when contem plating the purchase of a motor truck, to investigate all makes of trucks with a view to determine the one that best will serve your requirements. We are confident that if you make a thorough investigation along the lines of per ton mile operation costs, main tenance cost, longevity and all other points of vital importance, you will be convinced that a MACK is the "best truck for you. Have you noticed how rapidly the number of MACK trucks you see in service is increasing? There can be but one reason for this gain in MACK truck popularity. It is that these owners have learned already the same thing that you should know the MACK is as good a piece of motor truck equipment as can be built, and thousands of owners throughout the country declare it is the bt. J. H. Garrett & Son Sixth Street S" "NOW-A-.D says the Good Judge A man can get a heap more satisfaction from a small chew of this class of tobacco, than he ever could get from a big chew of the old kind. He finds it costs less, too. The good tobacco taste lasts so much longer he doesn't need to have a fresh chew nearly as often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco Li3ttXEHstalltfstsBsWiU&fi a jtAiiMLIWbV I A II LastCall for the Cheapest Wood Phone your order in at once if you want in on the most economical wood that money can buy. GREEN SLAB, $4.00 Bad weather will soon stop deliveries on this wood and the dry slab will cost you twice as much on account of rehandling. We have block wood, coal, fuel oil in any quantities. O. Peyton & Co. "WOOD TO BURN" 419 Main St. Phone 535 I NKW VOltK. Nov 9 -Continued persecution of Jew, with bloudshed ntul cruelty, In I'oliiml nml Hungary I Is reported by Morris Itothoitborg. chairman ot the oxocutlvo cunt ml t-1 i teo of the provisional American Jew ! lah congress, who 'returned horn ro- cently from tbo Jewish World rollof j conference In I'nrUbad. Mr. Hotheti- berg declared Hint attacks on Jows ! In Poland havo ceaied nt no tlmo since tbo armistice. Ho sns tbnt whllo untl-Somotlc excesses In Po Inml woro mitigated ,by tlio protest meeting bold In America, "nmuilts upon portions and property In n mnllor dogreo continued throiiRbout Poland." "Oradunlly those assaults assum od larger proportions." said Mr. Hothonborg. "until within tbo last few montbs'Jcws hnvo found It un safe to walk In tbo street. Condi tions canto to such a state ihnt the Jewish doputles In tbo Polish purtla inont appealed to tbo Minister ot War unu sinister rrcsiucnt who, wno promised that they would take ntcps to stop theso outiagcs but nothing was dono." Mr, Rothenbcrg said that during tbo advance of tbo soviet armies on Warsaw tbo Jows readily enlisted In tbo Polish armies, but that they woro attacked and persecuted by the Poles and wcro given tbo "most filthy nnd mental work to perform." Tho Jows complained to tho military author!- iius uui tut twun.uuuii ni qui mi tlgatcd, he charged. "Immediately after Iho first vic tories all Jowlsh soldiers wero driv en from tho various fronts," Mr. Ilolhenborg asserted, "their ammuni tion was taken away, their uniformsJ PKKINO. Oct 12 (My Mall) Tbo Japanese botrny nil iitiililtlon to motiupollto tlio oiiuratlon ot tbo Chl- ne.io Kastorn rallw-uy. In an Atiturl can, a Kit licluiuin and nn Kuglluli mitti winch wan sent by the Clilnow government to Manchuria and Kant em Siberia tliU Rummer 1o liuiulro Into political conditions thon par ticularly as they affected tbo rail way. The romiiiltwlon wis enmposod of Ir. J. I'. Kerguson, American mll sor to tlio president, ot Ohlnn; M. Pa-' doux, Kronen tluuuclnl ndvlsor to tbo ClilncHO Kovcrnmonti nnd I!. lonux-' Simpson, llrlllsh wboio oftlclal tltlo Is statistician to tho president. I They left Poking Juno 10 nnd In spected Iho whute lino ot tho CM ncso eastern nnU later continued I their Investigations In Vladivostok. ' In n report. to tho Chinese, govern-' incut tho commission states: ! Tho Japanoso toward Iho Chlnoiw Kantem railway today Is correct In outward appearances; nevertheless' beneath tho surfaio nro to bo soon numerous Indications ot their deep desire to dominate. If not to control llf administration. "They overlook no opportunity to Interfere with tho working of tho line; they constantly watch tho movement of traffic, nnd they have I mado ort-ry possible attempt to In stall themselves In n commanding position bath along tho railway nnd ' In building belonging to tho com-' puny. Ijint year they mndo n dellber-f ate attempt to nolle tho section soutu or naroin n nnngcnun-iiaroini oy moving up to Harbin nil material nifrmiiirv fit nmvnrt Ihn linn fmiti Itu.tlnn liriinil-tfniitr.. tri irtnifittiril ' " . .. ...w .. ,....-. ... .-..(,....,.. J Klre-proof clothes for Klre-proof clothes men nnd of a typo that can bo iron ?:lly used everywhere promlio to eppcar on the market soon. At the working Iter fat caiino and othrt constltu- requeit of ono of Uto lari-est nunu Incturers of work clolhes In the country l-Ytn A. Howard, tho noted ciienitst of South Knston. Mass- has produced a formula for fire, proortnu tcxtljcs whf.h will not rot fabric, change tlio color of thi 1-oo.ls, nor has It sny odor. Mr. Hownrd has brought his now ills covcry to the point where cloth which has been Imi.ersed In the solution absolutely resist lu-nltlon. A years test has rroved tlint i'.t folutlon unlike most of those now ust-l will not rot tho fabric. Mr Howard has developed n process whereby milk Is treated, the but- ents belliL' taken cut whllo nil ntlirr food values that can bo assimilated by typhoid fever and other patients of low vltnllly or poor digestive ability nro left In. The fnrmuln was developed for patients of the Into Dr. Helr Smith, Professor of Materia Med lea of llntton Univer sity, and Mr, Howard proposes t donate It to the medical profession He hns achieved marvels In develop Inc fo nmlae for manufacturers of IkmiIs, shoes, luather belting ni.. prlovrs. His latest Invention, korlu . hti lcn proved to Inuhle the lit. of leather under ictua' wrnrhi tests. 'Die chemlrnl Is said to tiermnnentlv nfTect the fibers nf th leathe and to render the leathe Impervious to water although !) inittlnu air. rcmovod nnd they woro put underi gauge (South Mnnchurlan system) I guard as though they wcro offend en. Tbo Polish soldiers began to regard tho Jowlsh soldiers as crim inals. Iery tlmo tho Poles took a city thqy killed Jows who camn their way, and numbers ot old Jows woro shot without trial. Tho officers In charge afterward said that they kill ed bolsheviks. This was a lie. In or der to cover theso outrages tho min ister of war Issued an announcement and frequently plundering -tciiinurs nro said to niimlwr fiooo to 7000 In and Junks. jihls district alone." "Tito territorial officials maintain.", tho report continues, that mint Jap- Wll.l. (illllW 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 t X ntteso evacuation Is carried out hl" IIANDON. Ore. Nov. 9. -Plans nn effort which was sucscnifully re sisted by tho agents of the alllod powors. Slnco then they hnvo at tempted to cover this f alio re by of fering to loaso fromo tho Clilniwe nastflrn fnr n tnrm nf vniirit nil thn freight space on tho Changchun-Har-, d8n,!t'r wl tllnappear They point, hnvo been put under way for colon- bin section and thus to establish an, to thn great number of MelJI rifles j Ixntlon of local raw lauds for tho effective Japaneso monopoly, nn of- captured nnd thn arming of the binds purpose, of establishing thn locanher Jort which also has coma to naught ", with Jnpsne.in machine-guns ns proof ry Industry hero It Is believed that tlnitnr thn htn1 nt prllleUma nf that fornlrn nntlntis hnVn nuliliul St least 1000 ncrri Mill lin ilnnalml that a largo number of armed Jewish 'Chinese policing, the commission ro- brigandago In order to break down i for this purpose, oolshovtkj woro found in many clt les. This Information was fed only to tbo Pole and was not mentioned In the dlspatchos for the outside world because It was apparent that theso statements coulU not bo sub stantiated." Mr. Itotheaberg charges that the Minister of War and Minister Presi dent Wit oa refused to see Jewish del egations who called upon them to complain about aatl-Semotle outrag es. "The spirit of the Jewa In Po land Is being utterly crushed by these tdnibto events and tboy feel that they .cannot much longer bear up unless these terrible execssca are stopped," he added. According to Mr. Ilotuenberg, 300 Jewa have been murdered In Hun gary from December, 1919, to June, 1920, and be charges that tho offi cers and soldiers of the White army are the chief fomenters of antl-S-mltlsm. Ho said that tho "young nationalists" declared that they were wllljug to stop the pogroms provided laws were enacted that would des troy tho Jews economically. "This Is now being dono," said Mr. Itothenberg. "l.aws have been pass ed punishing profiteering by (log ging. Hut tbo producersaro not af fected by this law, It Is only tho mlddlomen, which means the Jews. Th ono who arc found guilty aro flog ged and put In concentration camps and exiled " Ousting of Jewish clvll-sorvlce em-, ployen In Hungary Is also roportcd I by Mr. Hotbenberg. "Lawu aro nlsoj being passed specifically directed against tho Jews without mentioning them," ho said, "as for Instance II-' censes of all persons engaged In com-1 merclal or Industrial pursuits aro ro-l ...bn,l m.I nnnllAflllAn . . I .-I ""H4 UIKJ Ufl'lllUliUU lUUtl UUIIIUUU, I for now licenses which may bo Issued jut tho discretion of tho department I In charge. Suph licenses aro not be j Ing grantod to Jows, thus utterly pro venting them from pursuing their former occupations. A law was pass ed that only those bolonglng to mill tary formations could bo udmlttnd to universities. -As Jowh are not allowed to belong to these formations. Jow lsh students are iinablo to get Into tho universities. Many of them havo been compelled to go to neighboring countries In order to pursue tbetr studios and are experiencing terrible want and suffering." plrtcd that "country districts, par- Cblneso control At tho station ot tlcularly thn Sungarl valley and thei Imfanpo, 100 miles east of llabln n sections of the railway In the moun- car full of hand grenades was soiled talnous districts of eastern Klrln, are by thn Chinese garrison a few days full ot bands of hunghutto (Chinese prior to thn commission's visit, evl bifndlts) preying upon tbo country dently consigned to brigands, who 1 haven 1 go much roonij but have always got room for ono morn article, nspoclally If It Is a used one. Thn Kurntshnr of Happy Homes, ntf There will be a regular meeting of Aloah Chapter O. B. 8. No. 81 Tues day, Nov. Dth at 7:30 p. m. Visitors welcome. Post matrons and patrons guests ot honor. EKFIB S, CHABTAIN, 8 W.M. m . The Furnisher of Happy Homes. Stf sure does need filling up and my now for so long. stf Sowing and Wooden Avo. dress-making, 1404 0-ll A suro cure for rheumatism In tho now Hot Springs Iluth House. 8tf Now that I havo my home furnish ed I can turn mv attontlon In vnum. I Tho Furnisher of Happy Homes. 8tf $7,500.00 Cash Investment In this New 36-roonv APARTMENT HOUSE will yield you .4173 per cent on your money and a 3-room apartment to live in besides. INCOME 4 front apartments at $40 per month, $160. ..$1,920.00 6 side apartments at $35 per month, $210.... $2,520.00 1 apartment at $30 per month $ 30....$ 360.00 One apartment for owner. EXPENSES Taxes, about $ 400.00 . Insurance $ 150.00 8 per cent interest on $12,500.. $1,000.00 Water .... $ 120.00 $1,670.00 $4,800.00 Less expense $1,670.00 Net profit $3,130.00 NOTE This building is just being completed, and is the best and most complete little apartment house in fc Klamath Falls, the rooms are all decorated, each apartment has its own private woodshed, its own sep arate electric light" meter, built-in cupboard, clothes closet; every room outside and complete, even to the fire escape signs and ropes. (Have applications for every apartment.) J. T. Ward & Co. Phone 375. 834 Main St. ' i) l