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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1925)
VOL. I. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1925 No. 9 PROWLERS ME FRIGHTENED BY RESTAURANTPMN 'Would be Robbers Prowl Around Sixth Street Of- fices Thursday , Luat Thursday evening two- sus picious looking characters wero.loaf ing around the Ewauna Dux coni- , panyhs factory nifd office between the hours o JO unci lS.' The watchman ordered them oft the property for smoking cigarettes. T.ioy left the , Ewauna .premises, but hung around the , Quick Lunch restaurant for somo time, filially walking up the street, . inspecting . the Union Oil company's office, and stopping by the People's warehouse. B. A. Dahleln, . proprietor of the Quick Lunch, Was watching the two men, and when they stopped by the warehouse- Duhlelu ran over to the Union Oil offico and warned the bookkeeper, who was working over time .that evening; that they 'were about. , . . .. Apparently the men became frightened away by Dahlelns watch. ' fulness ; and mado no 'attempt al robbery, which from their actions they undoubtedly contemplate:!. In a year, from March 1024, to .March 1925, the Quick Lunch roitaurant was robbed eight timos. -"Mr.-. Dah- . leln now slocp3 In his restaurant, and keeps a watch dog with him. Dahleln stated that ho Is awaken ed at aH.times'of tho night by men prowling about his otblishment. ". t. ..- ' . rrgffiiir- ftjlfaxssr-' ' ' JOIX Cf i.K CLUB '--Superintendent E...H., Tiko and Yard Superintendent Bob Harrison of the Pelican Bay Lumber company have joined the golf club. Last Sunday Harrison drove to Medford, where he played on the Medford golf course. - ' , 1KHVX FROM CI1IU)QL"IX Jake Stolgor, logging operator, was In town t'rojn the Stelger camps above Chlloqln last .Wednesday.' . LOGGING CI OF KLAMATH GO. SHIP HEAVILY Total Cut of County Ap proximately Two Million Feet Per Day An average or around one hund red and sixty cars of logs per lay Is being moved over the Soulhorn Pacific every day to the mills' of Klamath county. One hundred and twenty of these care are shipped from Klrkford, from the camps of (Pelican .Bay, Modoc, Algoma, Shaw-Bortrain and Lamm Lumber companies. Ewauna Box and- Wheeler Olnutead bring the total up to an average of one hundred and sixty cars each day, 'the Ewauna1 camp being at Lnmbor ton, between Klrkford nnd Chilo quln on the main line, and Wheel-er-Olmstead'a spur joining tho main .lino above Chiloquln. Allowing a little better than ten thousand to a car, this would bring the log cut "of these companies tq( say, 1,750,000 per day. . ., .;.. This estimate does not Include' tho Chiloquln' Lumbor company, which uses Its own railroad line to1, the mill at Chiloquln, too Big Lakes logs from the Loe camp,. Douglas Puckott's camp, on -the'iwest side of upper Lake, the McCullom mill hi' low Kono, Kltt's mill, the ShaHa View Lumbor and Box company, the Long Pino Lumbor company, t the Crystal Lumber conipany, Kruse's , mill, -Prentice Puckott's camp, the Campbell Towlo -Lumber, - Co., und several others- throughout the cpunty. '.'. ' It' is safe to say that t'.ie lumbor and logging companies of Klamath, county are felling and shipping timber at the rate of two -million Joet per day, ;; , - - ' 'y Paul Bunyan Was a i jTi . w Ana a ureal Lover or uooa uogsi What Is cap without a d ig? Paul Bunyan loved dogs ' as well as the next man hut never would have ono around that could not earn Hi keep. Paul's dags hud to. work, hunt or catch rats. ' It took a good dog to kill tho rats anil m'lie in Paul's camp for the rodents nicked up scraps of tho buffalo milk pan-1 cakos and grew to lie as big aa two year old boars. i" Elmer, tho mooso terrier, practis ed up on the rata when he was a small pup and was soon able to catch a moose on the run and finish It with ono shake.. Elmer loafed around tho conk camp and if the meat supply happened to run low the cook would put the dog out the door- and say, "bring in a mnoio." Elmer would run into tho timber, catch a moose and bring it In and repeat the performance until, after a few minutes work, tha coek flgijr 'iX '.'S5"Eal" bno'ngd' Tor a j.;- s.;and would call the dog in, ' Sport, tho reversible dog was the really best hunter. He was part wolf and part elephant hound and was raised on bear milk. One night when Sport was quite, ycung, he was playing around the horse bain and Paul, mistaking - him for a mouse, throw a hand axe at him. Tho axe cut the dog in two but Paul, iiHtantly realizing what had happened, quickly sfijck the' two halves together, gave the pup first aid and bandaged him up. With careful nursing the dog soon re covered, and then it was seen that Paul in his haste had twisted the two halves so that the - hind legs pointed up. This proved to be an advantage for tho dog learned to run on ono pair of lags for a while and then flop over without loss of speed and-run on the other pair. Because of this ho never tired and anything ho started after got caught. Sport nevor got his full growth. While' still a' pup ho broke through four foot of ico on Lake Superior and was ,drowned. ) , f Length of cooling shed increased by . the ewauna box co. A hundred foot extension is be ing added to tho cooling shod by tho Ewiiuia Box company. Trucks from the kilns that tho pinning mill crew is not ready to run may be nin 4i p tills extension, and left un til required. Tho .roof of the plan ing mill will bo extended to cover the addition, and the wall removed so that lu'.nber that is, to lo shipped rough may bo loaded without pas sing over the conveyor chain, to the planor, and boing' pulled fVani tho ftlsij' Mighty Hunter - ' t r i n As a hunter, Paul would make old Nlmrpd himself look like a city fludo lost fro mhls, guide.' He was also a good' fisherman. Oldtlmers toll of seeing Paul as a small- boy, fishing off the Atlantic Coast. He would sail out early in the morning in his three-mast-schooner and wade hack before breakfast with his boat full of fish on his shoulder. ( About this time he got . his shot gun that .required four dishpans of powder and a keg of spike3 to Ioa:l each borrel. With ' this -gun ho could shoot geese so high, in the air they would spoil before reaching the ground. Tracking was Paul's favorite sport, and no trail was too old or 'too dim for him to follow. He once came acro3s the skeleton of a mooso that had died of old use, and, just' for .curiosity, picked up the tracks of the animal and spent the whole afternoon following its trail ba:k to1 tho place where it was -bom, ' The shaggy dog that spent most of his time pretending to sleep in front of Johnny Inkslinger's count er In tho Samp offico, was Fldo, the watch dog. Fldo wa3 the bug-boar (not bearer, just bear) of the green horns. They wore told that Paul starved Fido all wlnto'r and then, just before payday, fed him all tho Nice D066Y 1 boys, and student very marrow was frozen in their bonas at the thought of being turned into dog'fcod; Their fears were groundless, Paul -would never let a dog go hungry or mis treat a human being. Fido was fed rft tho watch ; peddlors, tailor's agents, Insurance agents, 'and camp inspectors and thu3 served a very useful purpose. . "' Cuts and text courtesy o llled Itivor Lumber Co. 5jSg DOWX FltOAI MODOC POINT Tex King, night setter for the Lamm Lumber' company, .was in town over, the week-end. ' XKI.HTOX WIUTR8 Poflfal cards have been received by nob H:ivrloii and F.' Hyson-Sta-lcy from .lack Nelston, who is spend ing his,, .vacation on the coast. Nel ston Is evidently enjoying hiin.ielf hugely. : " '' I. - . ' . . . - , . m . .. M swampers, barn bull-cooks.' The chain onto buggies.. This not only saves one lundllng of; the, , lumber, but wlU - 'not intorefore . .IthjUie opetailon of the."ntanors)".s ..the present .system does.. ' ' ' " -r!,,' ;lV'i;'.:f'l'V'.-.' ' (FWAIINJl Tfl iflfl iLiiiiuiiii i u ulsu FIIiTO Construction to be Complet ed About the First of September Ewanna Box, company Is adding rfive more kilns fo its drying plant. Ten kilns are operating now, with a capacity between fifty and sixty thousand per , day. The addition of thn new kilns will bring' the capacity of the drying plant to be tween seventy five and ninety thous and, depending .'upon the thickness of lumber cut and the- shifts run. The kilns to be installed are tho sameas the , other ten', Northwest Blower kilns, and they will be in stalled by the Sawmill Engineering and Construction company. Piles for the kilns -vere driven some time back, and tho company expects to have the kilns completed by Sep tember 1. ' . i The additional capacity of the kilns -will more than caro for the drying of tlie shep and better grades and allow rush orders of common to bo put through without gumming up operations. ' . BACK FUOrll VACAT.IOX Glenn Hoatherington, Pelican Bay grader, returned from Baker last week .after spending a two week's vacation visiting with friends . and relatives thorj.-; ; ' THE PAST W Four Deals Completed and a New Mill Planned for Lake County ' Four timber deals were consum ated in Klamath and Lake counties last week, probably influenced by the railway activity during the past month, which has culminated ia the arrival of tho Hill lino surveying par.ty. Prentiss Puckett purchased the timber on a section of land lying between the source ; of Williamson and Spraguo river, containing ap proximately 3,000,000 feet, from the Yamsay Land and Cattle company. The IJoycy Timber company pur chased 1509 acres of government script timber land from F. A. Hyde for a consideration of $20,000. The land lies In. eastern Klamath county and Langell Valley. A small tract of land, evidently a mill stto, was purchased by Fav ell and 'Utley, realtors and timber brokers of Lakeview. Tho reput- :;d mill site is near the junction of tho northand south forks of the Sprague, river. Favoll and Utley fre quently buy for the Weyerhaeuser interests, and thero is considerable speculation among lumbermen over Ho deal. The site, however, is not iultablo for an operation on the Weyerhaeuser scale, and since the Weyerhaeuser company has a mill site on Klamath river it Is unlikely that it 13 behind tho deal. Thero aro two otiier lumber com pany's with largo timber holdins In that section, tho ,' Booth-Kelly Lumber company, and tho Ho'Vey Timber company. It is known that the Booth-Kelly cimpany would like to .dispose of jl3 holdings in this section, which probably aggregate eight or nlno hundrod million. The Hovey. Timber company recently ad ded 1590 acres lo Its holdings in this county and unless Favell und Utley-aro buying tho site for specu lation, it is possible that tho -Hovey Timber company is behind the purchase. . . . Edgerton ami Adanu purchased a tract of ten million feet ndjacent to Crane Lake, and - contemplate securing twenty million, foot of na tional forest. They plan to erect a sawmill .Immediately -and cut some lumber ' this season, ' DRYING PLAIT! TIIEIIIIII JUnWE .DURING Logging Firm of Applegaie and Bunyan Logged Aspen Mountain Captain O. C. Applegate and Paul Bunyan logged off Aspen mountain the year of the Blue snow. Everything was going along splend idly, .until the Blue snow got so deep that the captain and Paul had to put up a scaffolding and add a length to the cookhouse stove pipe every morning to get- draft. In spite of this, they made excellent pro gress until the pipe and scaffolding got so high that it took the captain a half day to get up and down. Then Paul installed tho Aurora Borenlis, and operated throe ten hour shifts, and Captain Applegate worked twice as hard as f armely to make up for the half day he had to spend on tho stove pipe. Every thing was lovely then, and they ex pected to. finish die. thirty first day of Feruary, until one. bright moon light evening they heafd a horrible grating, and looked up through tho hashing rays of the aurora borealis to see the moon hung, on the top" of the stove pipe. : 1 Captain Applegate, at great risk to his life, owing 15 .the uncretaiu HANNEN AND NEILSON ARE CAPTURED AND SECURELY CHAINED La.it Thursday afternoon cries of "Stop . Thief," aroused the", people of Pelican City. On running to the doors the people saw .the supposed ly respectable Dusty Hannen, poet laureate of'Pelican City, being pur sued acrossthe hills back of town. The rumor flew from house to house that Hannon. had rpbbed..,a. loank,1 but it turned -.out iatiit;- that' fie 'wa's merely being pursued by a herd of Elks, who Were trying to gather him into the fold.' , After capturing Hannon, the ant lered posse overcame -Pete Neilson, and returned to town with both victims. Neilson was chained in front of the Gun stove, aad Han nen in front of Gertrude's millinr ery store. . , ... . " , ' ', Neilson declares that he had quite a battle to keep the ladle3 from car rying him away, chains and all. The men, however, declare that a string of people strung In and out of the gun store, inquiring whether the queer animal in - front was a high-behlnd or a tigermuhk, arid wlfere.it w;as caught, and wht bait was used. ..The men of Pelican City and the Elks aro agreed, however, that tho ladies greatly admired Hannen. Nearly a score stopped to inquire where he got his head gear. Hannen. is contemplating presenting a bill to Gertrude and company for services as a model. . ' TO MEDFORD ' Noel, Turner, planer', boss for Pelican Bay, drove to Medford' and back 'Sunday. , ; .. lumherlogue Lumberlogue wishes to apologize for an attempt at jocosity in regard to the methods .employed by Pierson & Son in initiating their Star touring rcai in the light of the following letter received from them.. :..'; ; " , Editor Lumberlogue: '; .. ,..'.,. - , . We noticed an article in a recent issue of the Lumberlogue that is rather sarcastic about the way we break in cars. . .To the layman, it may seem odd, but as we have been breaking in cars since '72 we feel that we know our stuff. ' As an illus- . tratiQn of.'h6w this works : On a recent trip to Klamath Falls, .we brought this car to a full stop . ' on the' curve at the. beginning of the Algoma hill. Then. we started it, and at. the speed of ten miles per hour we through out the clutch, shut off the gas, and coasted to. the top. Our speedometer registered 55 ; miles just as we reached Lookout point. Let some of these wise birds duplicate this feat before they begin to criticise -others that know 'their business. ', : , ; : ' ; ; '.':-. . . . . ' ; Pierson & Son. P. S. This was done without a carburetor. Lost ours just as we were going out o fthe garage and: didn't know it until we got back. . ' Son. ' P. S. S. The ; Kid doesnt know, ' but ;K had . the emergency brake on all .the way up, because, he is rather a reckle.ss driver. . .. . P.a,d. ' 1 light of the aurora borealis, dash ed up the scaffolding and removed several lengths before . Co moon ooujd lib diverod from its regular path. Thereafter the, Captain de voted his entire time to tho stove pipe. ' He would climb the s.af- foiding' in the morning, -.add' a length so that it would draw above the snow, return to the ground in time for dinner,' and climb .up again in tho afternoon in order to remrVe the top lengths for the safe -passage of the moon. J ... Applegate & Bunyan had set their hearts on finishing the job- before February 30, so they decided to alter ; the calendar thnt year, cut ting out the thirtieth day of Feb ruary, and advancing it till the next year..-. Next season, however, they forgot to put It back. The tru'th of this story: ia vouch ed for by Captain O. C. Applegate, and. by the well known fact that there are but 2S dcai's in February except leap year,' when thero" are 29. ;'. ' ;:'.;'. LOCAL BANKER FINED FOR ATTEMPTING TO STOP FOREST FIRES At a recent meeting of the Rotary clyb, -v. E. Lamm, president -cf the club distributed -verses'. to be .read In connection with national forest week. -Most of the verses dealt with forest fires and their prevention. After they were read, J. A. Gordon, president of the ' First ; National Bank., rose from his chair,, declared that'liff-'had been 'deeply. "affected by. tho verses, and moved that the Rotarlans place themselves on i cord as favoring fire prevention by quitting smoking . ror - the, summer months. ' . ... ; . Several, voices cried "fine him, fine himi;' and president Lamm ad ministered a fine, of fifty cents. This may, seem rather harsh treat ment for one sponsoring a worthy cause, and might put the Rotary club in a rather peculiar position, . But members o'f the club state that.' Mr. Gordon .uses . smokeless tobacco, which put3 another face on the af fair. ' , ; .' ' ' ', ' . BESSLER IMPROVES ToHijBossler, of Lamm's mill, who has been, in the Klamath General hospital with a severely, sprained ankle fcr the past week, will bo discharged from the hospital today or tomorrow. Bessler sprained his ankle-playing baseball. .. ;, .. ; . . SAWDUST BURNING STOVE L. T, Frost, formerly of Denver. Colo., now resident in Portland, i; placing on the market a stove for burning sawdust. Eight pounds of sawdust will produce heat for four to five hours.. izes Apolog JAMES STEVENS WHITES YOLIf ON PAUL BUNYA Lumberjack-Author Publish es Interesting Book of '." . ' Logger's Tale3 Paul Bunyam by James Stevens, recently published by . Alfred ..A., Knopf, is a highly '.entertaining col-; lection of logging camp, 'legends- of. the redoubtable Paul, b-ginning with the finding of Bubo, during -, tna winter of the Blue Snowy aucbehron Icllng the ir.arvelou3 exploits of Paul, Babe, Hels Helson, and the other inembers. of that mighty or ganization until It J tragic disin tegration under tho evil Influence of the mechanically inclined Ford Fordson, and of women, who claim ed Paul's loggers as fathers for their children. .The book, is excellently. written, containing several .- beautifully im aginative' descriptions ; of fantaitic happenings, particularly th03e .deal ing with the ' Winter of the ; Blue. Snow, the Kingdom ot Kansas, and New Iowa. This virtue of the work also lt3. chief defect; for tho Bunyan stories; to be at their , bast, niust be told in short, -crisp, matter of fact vernacular, arid ' if written, a style as near . colloquial as; poa-, slble adds to their- cnarni:.- Mr. Stevens gives the only plaus ible explanation cf the growth of the Paul . Bunyan legend that wo have heard. - ;IIe traces'. Paul- Bun yan back to Paul Bunya:!, a-mighty French-Cariadian wiro fought' against the English in the Papmeau Rebel lion of 1837The French-Canadians exaggerated the exploits or this log ger and- fighter,;, believing seriously their , own distortions. - Then .ths American lumberjacks of the norti.-' ern state3 re-exaggerated the tales, burlesquing' the Canadians, and en joyed the sport so much that Paul grew to stupendous proportions. . The book sontains some ' .very1. amusing satire. Bab ' Babbltson is self expanatory; Prof Sherm Sher.n 3on, the cdvocats of tho moral Noi'- dlc blond, arid 'Ford' Foi'ilson, the mechanical geniiis, aro certainly concealed very thinly; '-,'- '. !'' ' Mr; Stevens, who has - boon a lumberjack, a dirt-mover- a hard ro:k man; and a skinner, knows lumberjacks, cf the old order, which is rapidly vanishing - And he has admirably caught the pathos of tho passing of the old wflite-p ne -jacks in his last chaptor; when Paul- and hil heroic crew are left along , in their camps, all the loggers having deserted Paul lor woman, and for Ford Fordson.wilh his ten uour day and nil mechanical donkeys. ' Tho book may be. purchased thru any book ' store, or ' ordered , direct frcm Alfred ' A.:' Knopf,.. 730 Fifth Avenue, New York City. The price is $2.50 plus postage. V, 7; ;. t :- ICE PRESIDENT OF LONG - BELL SITS Accompanied by J.M.White and C. W. Murphy of Vecd Lumber. Co. J. D.. Tonnant, ' vico" proshlenl of the Long-Dell ' Lumber company, . C. It. Fleming, assir.l.int to Mr;. Teu nant, C M. Murphy, logging super intendent for tho Weed Lumber, company at Tonnant, and J. -M. White, general manager of the Weed Lumber company arrived In Khun--nth Falls from Tonnant Friday morn ing, and loft s.iorM.v after lunch for Wood by wnv of Ashland. . "Just driving through', ,1s oil, and stoiiping ut the Big Hnsln brunch," said Air. White. Mr. Tennaat,. and : hU nsalntant, Mr. Fleming, will attend tho meet- ihg of the board of directors of the Long-Boll Lumber' company to bo held shortly in San Francisco..' IT