MOIfPAT, AVQVHT W, IPfll THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON I'AOR TWO The Evening Herald J.r Muntuv. Kr.n hoiii.k . Killlnr ..City Kdlinr penbyTrivaterNavy" Published Jally except Sunday, hy ("be Herald Publishing Computi.v of ! CJsmatb Falta, dt IIP KlKlilh Street ! Jtntered at the postnfflre at Kl ,aatb. Falls, Ore., (or transmission through natter. tha malli as aucond-ulns HKM1IK1 OK TIIH siiSflCIATKH PRKHH.. j ins Associated rre-s it nxeiuaiToi intltled tot the use tar republication it all new dispatches cred'lod in It, vr not otherwise credited In thlai taper, and also the loel news imh. ( Uaher herein. " ' MONDAY, Aim'KT 20. tffJt I II mi m i i i 4CLaLLLLLLMLLLLLLH alalalalalalalalalalalaalalalalaialalalalall aarolaiatSaiaiaB5a5S!,i''wW T'l M W.MiIaUyH fl iTltMttitt HKSfl BILL WILL I THE FJIRMERS Herald WsathlBgton Bureau WASHINGTON, Aug. 3. AVhtlo Senator McNary made no effort to poah the reclamation bill daring tho pedal session In deference to tho wishes of Prealdent Harding that all fforta be devoted to the tnoro pressing matters of tariff and tax atietu the Baeasure la In good shape and will be brought to effective conitdaratlotn In the regular bos alon. Senator McNary was responsible for baring enacted tho substitute for the Norria bill which brings re lief to the fanners of the coun try. In rerlew of this moasaro usual ly known aa the McNary agricul tural relief bill, Senator McNary aald: "Sine congress baa passed tho bill enlarging the actlrttlea of tho war finance corporation, I believe that there will be an improvement In business generally, starting first with the farm. "The president's prompt signing of the measure within a few hours after It paased the congress, Indi cate: bis confidence In the ef ficiency, of the explanation. Advance la MJUIoas "The adrances about to bo made by the corporation to tbe agricul tural interest of the west run Into millions of dollars. I think the grain and fruit growers of the west will recelre a benefit that will bo at once noticeable. "Conferees of the senate and the house had considerable difficulty In arriving at a decision whero they could compose the differences with respect to the taking of foreign se curities. It was' finally agreed that no foreign securities would bo con sidered adequate unless they had tha Indorsement of some reputablo institutions or associations In this country. BjU la Acceptable "The hill is practically in the form in which I ottered it to the state, and it Is acceptable in OTery way to the secretary of tbe treas ury and other members of tho war finance corporation. "thbak tbe people of the north west should be very happy at the se lection of W. Ix Thompson of Port land to an advisory position with tbe board. He knows the agricultural and livestock conditions throughout that territory and Is sympathetic with the effort being made to bet ter business conditions. I am sure he will prove of great value fn the' exocutlon of tbe law." if Secretary of tho Navy Dcnby can'l cot away from naval matters even on bin vacation, Witness, lilnt In his private battleship" on Iko Oakland. That body of water adjoins hU farm Ml Cllnlom Wo. Mich., mid tho jeseritai x.s.baUllngthe,caaVnnitcr denizen with hook, lino and sinker. H The foundation for tho boundary volutin retorted she would lay claim dispute una laid, according to Mr. i to Chicago anil overythlng to tho STiTS m STATES SUING THE STRAND. The feature offering at tho Strand theatre, tonight will be "The Sport of Kings,' an adaption by tho Buffalo Motion Picture Company of the colo brated norol by Arthur fiomors Roche. The production Is a sensation in Its action and story volues. Its thrills and exciting drama Includo tho burn ing of a liner In mid-ocean at, night, with tbe escapo of hundreds of pas sengers in life boats, tho Jump of a race horse from its decks forty feet above tbe water, and, In tho later action, too actual death of a Jockey at a Southern track, riding tbe horao in an epfsodo of the story which calls for It to foul bacauso of Whipping. The producers also haye included in their effort a very thorough plc turelsatlon or tho Illegal methods em ployed by a large bucket shop opera tors to fleece hundreds of thousands or dollars a year from tho pay enve lopes of people whoso Incomes oro extremely limited, and who, therefore are easy proy to the temptations of a little extra money through betting on hone racos. MAD1S0IN, Wis,. Aug.. 29 Michi gan Is threatening to sue Wisconsin to obtain possession of Hurley, tho "richest village" In tho world nnd 360 squaro miles of Wisconsin terri tory; Illinois and Wisconsin arc in dlsputo oxer their boundary llne.'nnd tho Upper Peninsula of Michigan wants to sccedo and form a now state of Superior, while Wisconsin hopes to annex tho rich pontnsular country to herself. And a mapmakor's error In the year 1755 is responsible for all tho trouble, according to Reuben 0. Thwaltes, secretary of tho state his torical society of Wisconsin. Tho mapmakcr, a man named Mitchell, made tho mistake of charting tho foot of Lake Michigan in degroo ac cording to Mr. Thwalto, was rospon slbluo for tho "Toledo War" between Ohio and Michigan, for the placing of Chicago and it8 rich north shoro suburbs In Illinois Instead of Wiscon sin, tho annexation of the Upper Pen insular to Michigan, and all the boundary disputes which havo grown out of theso events. Subsequent map- makers and surveyors who followed In Mitchell's footsteps made one or two other mistakes which contributed to tho general contusion. When the congress of tho -thirteen" states. In session at Philadelphia, July 13, 1787, adopted an ordlnanco for tho government of tho Northwest Territory embracing tho present states of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Il linois and Wisconsin, Mitchell's map was used as a guldo. Tho ordinance provided that two of the flro states should Us "north of an east and west line drawn through tho southern bend or extromo of Lake Michigan.' The preamble of tho ordlance stated that Its articles should "forovor re main unalterablo unless by common consent." A' pencil lino drawn on this copy of Mitchell's map, still on fllo In the state department, passes about midway between tho River Raisin and tho settlement of Detroit. Thwnltv, In 1S02, when tho pcoplo of Ohio held their constitutional con volition at Chllllcotho to demand eii' trance Into tho Union. A trapper who happened to bo In tho vlllagu told the delegate)! that tho actual foot of Lake Mlchcgau was no mo distance south of tho point shown on Mitch olt's map, so tho canny delegated stip ulated that If tho proposed east and west lino laid down by congress should fall so far south as to miss t.nko Erie. Ohio would then claim all territory to tho northormest capo of Miami bay. In 1S0S congress created the te:l- tory of Michigan and fixed the south- orn boundary as provided by the- or dlnnnco of 1787, with tho result tlml tho now torrltory claimed a strip somo six miles wldo across tho vntlro south ern sldo of Lake Erie. lncludi.i tho port of Toledo. Tho dlsputo Usee I until 1835, when Michigan became a state and sought to enforce Its claim on tho Lake Erlo strip. Civil war between ftho two states threat ened, and scmo actual fighting oc urred before congress sottlcd the dlsputo by recognizing Ohio's claims and compensating Michigan with tho gift of tho Upper Peninsula. Michi gan did not grow enthusiastic over the now territory until a dozen years lator tho first copper and thon Iron oro was discovered In tho peninsula. In ISIS, when Illinois was cro.itod. north under the "forever unalter able" clause of tho ordinance of 1781, nnd tho matter was dropped. The question of the Michigan-Wisconsin boundary wan rained recent ly when tho Wisconsin legislature re jected a resolution Inviting the peo ple of tho Upper Peninsula to nocodo nnd Join this "lata Representative from tho Ponlnsula In the Michigan legislature followed with a resolution proposing they bo permitted to form a scparato stato, to bo called Super ior. Finally tho Michigan legislature appointed a committee to Investigate tho stato boundary, nnd appropriated $10,000 for Its oxponses. Tho com mute recently rocommended to Clov- ornor Stoopcr that Michigan bring suit to recover 3C0 square miles of Wisconsin torrltory on tho ground that surveyors choao the wrong fork of tho Montreal rlvor when they ran tho stato bordor lino. Tha recom mendation followed n refusal by Gov ernor John J. lllalno. of Wisconsin, to arbitrate tho question. Another map. maker's mistake Is Involved In this dispute, according ! to Mr Thwalto. A committee of the I United States senate fixed the hound-! ary line, using a map published hyl I,. Judson, which represented tho Montreal and Menomlneo rivers both rising In I.ako Vlnux Desert, thus! making an Island out of tho northorn peninsula, Senator William C Pres- waters of the Wisconsin rlvor, unit has no connection with either tho Monlroal or Menominee, and Captain TIiouiiui Jefferson Oram, ot tho topo graphtrnl cnglneem, reported to con- I groan that It took nn Indian without pack eight days: to travol from tin: lake to tho Montreal rhor. Eventually congrenii snloulud n , boundary following In part "tho main I'linnnel of tliu Montreal river" Mich- , Igan now claims thu wrong I'hiititiel was followed. In connoctlon with the boundary ' illsputen Mr. Thwalto hu:i recalled n , plan proposed by Thomuit Jefferson In 1784 tor tho division of tho north I west territory Into ton stated, with such classical n King's ns Hylvnnla, ' Mlchlgatila TMsunlspla, tlllnoln, Poly- I pntiimln, HhorsonosUH, Molropotninla, Saratoga, I'ellnlpla, and Washington, I i Ills report nnd map, In his own hand writing. rn In tho archived of the Mate department. Statu boundary disputes are not routined to tho middle west. Okla homa and Texas had dispute lant year over their Hod rlvor boundary nnd residents of tho northern neck oti Idaho recently proposed that they Join Washington, with which stato their Interests nro closely linked. Anil hi South Dakota there Is n move ment on foot to chitngo tho namo ot the stato to Roosevelt. MtMUKIl IIATICH IIKAHO.NAM.M. WASHINGTON. Aug. 20. Hall raton on Northwest lumber finished and roahlpped In Mlunoiuila hnvo been round roaictmblo by tlm Intorslato cHiiimirco iuiiviiiImIuii. .-1,, . .iij.hi jj-au W. U. KXTKXDH CAULK MO.WIY OHUKII HKHVICK Baked Bms & LaneA! - baked hjust-fhe right-"fvrn" rouWJth Hie vrav thiyr The Western Union Tolegraph company anuounccs that their exist ing direct money tranafor services with Franco havo been extended , so an to cover an eastward nnd wealwnrd service through tho Cher bourg offlco as woll as through Havre and Paris, This sorvlco through tho Cherbourg office be came effective August 15th, 1931. Advertising brings efficiency. 79fotonp& Doitfhfwte 3i Of lHn4 IX iAi rOPAK WORK I Leave Your films before 9 OclocK-Your AM Pictures are f eacbf aV 3 QttL &fi Nathaniel Pope, her delegato In ron- ton- ot goull, Carollnn. proposed this gross, argued for u northern bound- n0ged river highway as n fair dlvld ary whoro Mitchell's may showed InK Ilno aml hlg ,,jan wnll npprovod. tho foot ot the lake, Instead of wLcro tho southern bend actually Is. Ho doclared tho new statos's commerce must becomq Identified with tho northern lakes or else flow south down tho Ohio and MIsslslppi rlvors with tho result that tho state might Join a southern coufcrucy In cuku tho union wuro disrupted. Congross beedo d his plea and gave the now stato Chicago and a strip ot terri tory running CI miles north from tho foot ot the lake, and west to tbe Mis sissippi. Surveyors who ran (bo new lino mado another mistake, with tho re sult that a wedgod ploco of Illinois Is actually In Wisconsin at one end o tho lino, and a part ot Wisconsin Is In i Illinois at tho othor. Illinois claim's that tho city ot Oololt, Wis., bolongs to that stato, and tho Illinois constitutional convention last fall considered asking a new survey. Wis- Surveyors ovcntunlly found I.nko VIoux Desert Is really tho head- ff It sMllfsfarafl7af 11IUIUWWUO euOt-rv KLAMATH FALLS OREGON WlfflfV WHERE PARTICULAR PC O PLC BUY THEIR DRUGS ?&v Champ Swatter Beats Champ Castef Bad weather often proves a bless ing In disguise by affording, people something to talk about. steHli3B THE SACRED HEART ACADEMY KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. AN EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION CONDUCTED BY The Sisters of Charity Without Coat or Expense to the City or County Harold O. Lentz, world's champion surf caster, tried to beat Bab Ruth'a swat record of J0 feet in a contest at tho Polo around. iJenti, tutor a. fouwiunze lead, cast 449 feet. The photo shew both la action. The Courses of Instruction are according to the Oregon School Law, and are entirely without Religious prejudice, and the advantages of training and educa tion are accorded to pupils without regard to Creed or. Belief. THUMB Tuition, Day Hcliolaia '. 9 U.00 per month Hoard nnd Tuition .'. 9:10.00 per innuth Tli In Includes board, laundry nnd ordinary medicine. For two clilldreu, 923.00 per -month. For doctors' calls tlio locul fee is charged. MiihIc I.i-HsonM $7.00 per month Hoys from O to 14 years, Hoarding Department SCHOOL REOPENS SEPTEMBER 6, 1S21 Address or Apply to SISTER SUPERIOR for further information. V