The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, July 31, 1923, Page 2, Image 2

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THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
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CITIES STAGNATE .
1 " . DURING OCCUPATION
PrelKlila At HtnmlMlll nml ' Tom
' . lilt Truffle of Olhcr Days
la No Moro r
BTllASBOl'IlO, Qcrmuny, .Jul:
31'. Strasbourg, capital city of Al-imce-Lorralne,
and Mannheim, "the
Inland Rhine port which is the chief
commercial contcr ot Duilen, both
are suffering greatly today as a
result of the continued French oc
cupation o" the Ruhr. Freights on
the river nro virtually at a stand
still, nr.d the tourist traffic of other
days In no more. Hence docks are
deserted and hotels empty.
Strasbourg's factories nro almost
all closed down. Tho canal con
nccting the. city with the Rhine Is
filled with idlo ships. There !s
.little nctlvlty on tho railroad yards.
The streets of tho city are re!a-
tively deserted. Hundreds of fao-j
Wies are working only on par; i
time, and" the owner of every good
automobile has sent it away in fearj
ot , confiscation by the Frem-li. J
Mannheim, with its population of a
quarter of a million. Is listless and i
fearful of the future, and seem I
like a city that I-as gone to sleep,
and few trains cross tho bridge.
Tourists . have turned to other
routes, where travel is easier and
not subject to military Interference,
and the local hotels and cafes are
empty, With its 300,000 inhabit
ants, Strasbourg Is In a sad plight,
and can be likened to a deserted
orphan. 1
In Mannheim miles and miles of
Hot Weather Riding Habit
. Hx$:'f teJ f ; i'x xh
FATHER AND SON
WEEK IN NOVEMPER
Land Whale in the Water
l'l'i'sliIcM KiiiIiiiki'k Movement Spun
sv.wd l(y Y, M. V. A.j t'liansi"
Mailo In Dales
NKW VOKK, July 31. A chiiUKv
In tho dates of national :hor and
?on wci'k, so as to have tho obser
vance center each year anm'd ar
lH.Iro day, (a endorsed by l'lv.ildenl
Ilaidr.is in u )tt : received ut tha
Now York off icej ot the tutormi
tlonal cnnimlttoi V, .M. V. A., whleh
nilRine.tcd the obn'rvancj In 191?
and whoso bo; s' work eoi'iuiml.tee j
e.mtlmiea to lead its p-omtu'en.
The rlianKe from (he week of Lin
coln's birthday, use, I for lli. pur-1
per-e tf tho oliyrrvain-o until thin!
I year, lus been lar-.V in renpo-ise to j
tho oV'Iro of national all.) interna-
; tioaa Sundey r,-hoo o!T:inii':Hlou?,
j The prorldent's letter follows:
I "My attention has been railed to
tlie nutlnnal father and con move
j inep.t, which Is to he lauvrhi'd dur
; In ic national re.th-r uiid : on week.
November 11-1S. It Is a iiiv.it le:v.
i lire tor tm to eomino'id this movr
! ment. wlrleh has a.i it- obleetivo o
j draw together In : move Inilmato
j ay the fa'heVi and nns of Atnrr
j iea. and to stronrthen and duvvlop
this relationship,
j "The iiiic-ess e.f this movement
j (lurliii; the past years has won for It
I a di.;ti:ict place. Since tile move.
ment has becomo world-wldo In
: j character. It Is most tlttltiK that It
TIN CANS NOW BEING TURNED INTO COPPER ceiUc'r '"'omiJ ,,u' AM of worUV
wide slKiilfioanee. arinlstSee day.
j Surely, the coming generation will
i need to be constantly reminded of
warehouses are closed and guarded
NEW BUSINESS REACHES HUGE PROPORTIONS ' obligation t- help maintain the
by French soldiers in helmets and ' peace of tho world, for which mil-
khaki field uniform. Hn. ,r ' i 'ions of fathers and sons have died
gA,S. J
blled urier lltiiu thlrly In tho evening
Tho VVxmt ICti il ('Inns and lintels aro
alluwed to sell leu crciuu unlll mld
n I x ut, while the working' clanwns can
not buy II nl'lor hair paid t t ti . Tho
regulation was emu ted as u wui-
in, mi'iittiicr.
The fi iti l-li tllitl Hill lint" III''
l.u'mr I'nty to phu'o lliu innttei' bu
foi'e lliu lloiniii uf t'o'iiiminii.
.Ha Hum hi a ,'.em lime In start
1 1 v inn iiih it k n-, !i!--:i.
l''v'.'?J'V w
V l? r L' S
Not a whale ot the deep wanked aaliine, aa It might apiiear at llrnl
Blanco, but n whale of an elephant having u ihiilo of u Jiollu en tho
licach at Atlantic City. N. J.
3 S M B
and ii'eottnltion by I: ritt. "'!:': o'teth
er la: hers ami win In m-hoois.
Ire t'niilll nil tiii.li Ciii.'m',
.TV
f i , , i s
Idle Ships and barges line the canals
and tho banks of the huge Inner
harbor, while the extensive railroad
yards are filled with dead loco
motives and freight cars.
LURID FILMS BLIND
EYES OF EUROPE TO
THE REAL AMERICA
LONDON', July 31. Europeans
entertain curious notions about life
in the United StateV , ManV of them
' get their Impressions from Ameri
can moving pictures, which feature
train robberies, bandit hold-ups, so
cial scandals, shooting affrays,, ex
citing automobile episodes and other
equally sensational -things. -
"From personal observation of
American films in British cinemas,
says a writer in ths London Even
ing News, "we reach the conclusion
that America 1b a large country
entirely surrounded by sin and
' sentiment. It Is inhabited in the
east by unscrupulous, but enor
mously successful, business men,
who devote their nights to squan
dering In cabarets their ill-gotten
galns of the day before. In the
west "the bad men rob stage coaches
and banks, shoot sheriffs and their
partners in crime, and spend a good
doal -of time rolling on the ground
in attempts to gouge each other's
eye oat.
"The north is peopled by beard
ed scoundrels, who go there to es
cape ffrom the law, to steal mining
claims, and to menace lonely girls
snowbound In log cabins. The
south is notable for cacti, sand, and
half-breeds. The last named arc
no particular vice. They are just
bad.
"The rich women of the east are
notable for the scantiness of their
costume, their uncharitable atti
tude towards other women, and for
their remarkable bedrooms. The3
are of enermous size, elaborately
decorated, have at least one tele
phone, and an easy way of egress j
for heroines and ingress for heroes.
, "Sometimes the villain uses one
of ,tiese entrances, and then the
horoino throws a lamp at him and
, rlBKS .up the hero, who was lying
awake waiting for the call.
"He dashes round in pajamas
and uu , automobile to her rescue
just in time to wake up the house
hold and be covered wltb suspicion.
"In the west and south very
little work is done. The men of
the town hang around the 'store
nil day long in case they are wanted
for' a fight, and the women gossip
ovor gates so as to be ready to run
Into the read and welcome home
the blood-stained hero.
VAmerlca must be an awfully in
teresting place to live in; only few
of,4is .invertuurute llrltons could
stand the strain of such an excit
ing llfo. It Isn't so much the
amount of work tho Americans do
as the suddenness with which they f
do things, that must tell on them If
in time. Fortunes 'are made and
homes ruined in America on the
screen in loss tlmo than tho aver
age Englishman tukes to eut his
bronkfast."
PHOENIX, Aril., July 31. The
business of "turning tin cans into
copper," a3 the process is popularly
described, is reaching large propor
tions in Arizona.
The process, which actually con-
sists in recovering copper from wa-'
ter throught use of scrap iron, which j
displaces the copper in solution, is
by no means new, but has been ex
tended and improved in recent years
so that several hundred carloa"ds of
tin cans, as well as large quantities
of scrap iron, are now shipped to
Arizona mining centers each year.
At most of the mining centcrg In
the state the process is subordinate
to main mining operations, bcins
used merely to extract the copper
from water seepage pumped from
the mines. This water contains" a
small quantity of copper, less than
two-tenths of one per cent, in solu
tion. The water is run through
sluices where scrap iron has been
placed. Part of the iron goes into
solution and the copper is deposited
in the bottom of the sluices and is
collected at intervals. The process
is valuable principally on account of
the low expense involved.
At Ajo, a mining camp. In tho
southwestern part of the state, the
principle has been extended and the
scrap iron method is used as one
step in the electrolytic process of ex
tracting copper from ore. The pro
cess, according to mining men, is
not confined to Arizona mines but
is also used in Montana and Utah.
Since the object is to get scrap
iron with as much surface as pos
sible in proportion to its weight, tin
cans, which are actually made of It ;
and not tin, answer the purpose ad
mirably, i
Most of the tin cans are shipped
. i , . ,, in past years.
In from Arizona and southern Cali-i .... , . , , ,
It Is hoped that all Individuals
fornla cities, although some shlp-j as Wl;i constru,iu. .onelcs .in-
tacnts are also made from eastern i tcrosted in the boy life of our tuition.
states. I will give this week due consideration
it la: hers unit nous In schools,! . ... . y uA TOfti
eluuvliea. ehilM ami oilier place i. I 't,-N"N'- "" ' ' liai'l nil ! A itT Ux )Ji
m. nsi.ist.ng Co y, f ,. ' f, V"" . - ' '
, l.lhllll.!l hill, a li l'i (ilea , , I iN.-.'KX'Jj
of coaipaulotish'p with tU"v I'iith- ' li.-'i-c-.:-.:,., nl !',!,: ai , on. ,l,e :,:. Tk'V; ,4fiW4
'" 'o,u o ;,(,, it -ti.., ..I,, ot i. e ,,., I K'.lr '.w:
.:"d -loll lliillkl .vo'lld mil:.,
TH: V, nil einleii-i.
It you have .-invtliiii,; to build r, t
Van. be builds iinyinin:;. ','bone ' ode;- P , ,..) th.- ... I of
"l'"-V S. i I hi-, il.ly. of v. ,,'i-e li. n 'tl! is pli.il ; .
utf l' ! u ...... h. . . J j
t Ana..-ufULt.vAii;1: .E.'iJivLAi,
I
I Phone
Our
ft
it's
RedCrovn
for the
experienced
motorist
antror
jtj?" Phone
426 Main Street
The Large Store of Klamnth County
uarantee
E FLOUR is milled entirely from the best .elected Kansas Turkey
doI ao yfn aSd guaranteed to give you perfect satisfaction. If, after trying
POLAR BEAR, you are not highly pleased return it to your merchant, he will
refund your money.
POLAR BEAR FLOUR will yield more better loavca to the barrel, making it
an. unexcelled flour for family use.
The New Era Milling Co.
Arkansas City, Kansas
$ .60
1.10
SMOOTH ACCEUEM110N
EXTRA
MILEAGE
12 Pound Sacks
24 Pound Sacks
.e Ts r
rounaacKa 2 10
Extra Fancy Elberta Peaches
Regular Crate
$1 .15
If you want Extra Fancy Peaches yoi: will nut lie disappointed in purcliaine
now the price is a little high'to can, but it alwavs will !e for Extn Fancy
Stock you must .seolhe.se to appreciate their value.
Extra Fancy Gravenstein Apples
STANDARD OIL COMIViNY
llAblF.llNIAl
Box "Wrapped
'Solid Pack"
$31)0
3 Pound
These apjiles are Extra Fancy no seniles and are cheaper than poor apples
at .$1.00 per box.
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A. B. Moore and Family, Managers and
Operators of
CENTRAL HOTEL
For the past twelve months, wish to thank
each and .every individual who has, either
in word or deed, contributed to our suc
cess in business.
TV 3 Phones 34 and 64
We invite you to phone your order and our employee will make prompt deliv
ery and collect -al your home. We maintain our own Individual Delivery Ser
vice A Service equal to the best in O.cgon.
AH orders given us before 5 o'clock P. M. will be
delivered j promptly the same day, all ordersgiven
us after 5 o'clock the P. M. Will be promptly de- ,
livered the next morning.
10 per rent i-eiliiojmi , 1,,(1,
'ullil wi'nr ut, li K K. Sliu-o, ;t.
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- FEE!
100 ll8. Cotton Seed Meal (jj JEJ
100 lbs. Scratch Feed v 3 10
100 lbs. Baby Chick Scratch Feed 360
100 lbs. Cracked Corn ' frx
1001b. Sack Chicken Grit I 45
ICO-lb. Sack Fancy Eastern Oyster Shell 165