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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1925)
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 5, LftJJB T TT E L V M B B It C 0 G U E OLD OREGON TRAIL MONUMENT T She Doesn't Need a won: GHOST CITY: if' f$w& wit ! , ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" ."SS WEALTH VANISHES COLD BOOM 1 NOW -ii. .n. .i iu i. ... hmm .f Dm- titlrro'.l .'ii-rr iti. M .e,t il.- mn ..i. r i . Ufnti Til n It tl J '4.1 , ' t 11 I .in ib (it 111!' lit a l it UK Ah In INi.'t BMl tn at Ju I, 0& i' Miss Topcka - , JT 1 t'n 1500 tnfltt from the thnv-t mh to Topi Ua. Kim., hut thiv KK-f.n't liecp thrm from having Uuh itU iH'UUtUfl. , Mini IIi-Imi Miiv linwn, Koiik.m I'liKiTnity cued, tout ecu chomii 'MM Ti'pclm" lor Itttfc Obeys Bible fez-? Thnman Thompson, 48, ot Clnnlrw tOOk HI'I'IOUHiy mi' iinuH-a. m n hi. Junction, "If ihv iluht lut til offonil1 thee, rut u oir." it.- lay btalda i railroad track and thniHt lilii rignl n. Mi under tlm wheels of ii Ifttlni loi:-j lug It above 111.' elbow. Tilk. II, In J liurpibd hi a Mrrlbtfs eoiimtlflrf. IK explained ' Tin' tori loli! mo lo dc . I'kliilFf'ir.'uiVi . tilth) . He Started New Monkey War Hero I lyoron Wittncr, who stirred lip What promise to be another "ivo lutlon tiS.il" nt Washington by llllnc lUil to withhold pay from teachers who "lich dismnrct to the lllblo" l.y Riving Instruction In various sclcn C.s. lie In hown here talking It over v ttll Jocks, of the monkey tribe. Set New World Record P ffi 4:JP TX four liiwlcs huuK up a new world record for wpntth by &Cf!Otitta?S tho 4-11. yard rrluy iuco ul the NGfQl N itioiml A. A V. Kanica o-.'t o.i lu oint lo 83 98 nconCkli From lofi io right IWy um Hetn !'iik"i ct CbtcQgtk! Ki;rivf Kuppt'it. PhUuik'lpliia, Mftyblli OllUlond, Now Votk, i-nil Bite Cu twi'itit uf i;urt!ka, Cilif. Blllf PHttwV 1ft an nil round iintotf ttirif; a woiid i.vo;l holUt-r U liiv broad jump and tow -hurdU's as wcil. President! Cubs Buy Him ' S. i 2ad Meet the younRWrt nrpfennlonnl baHo ili IruBiie DrcMllont In cnptlvhy t'tl Frknklyri B. lio.in, 17. 0( i.lm. i'hii. He hi" 'ho Ohloilndtona e.Vcult, nit elphl chili oriWlMtt'on. ti, .tccedi BoB Dwlllff, (owner C. C.m.... y'wl v'nlly, tw W ' 2ii 19 . ' . - AVIH Thin Ii. Oiilo BlttUy. Wellnr second bftMmnn of the '8niih0ry IN. C.l club, Piedmont Lensue. who waa sold lo the I'hlcnco Cuba the other day. lle'H renorted to bo a great litoapact; being a hrfl hitter umi dJavcrvfltldor. iJWHjlpin me runs i cloaq ul the ncmiioni c; M afj ta "uKt ly v.jy of pfyrvteg that ijirl dofsn't aljNolutely have to have bot.bet hair lo Ih cornddered Uautlful, ktlm Christine Thomas of Seattle won i lrre un mort beautiful iflrl in u Nome p:;eant ihtre. Her hiir Is ovei u yard long Footloose Attacked n i n ii Elaine Ilandall. actress, who quit the cast of " White Cargo" In San Francisco, had charges of assault filed against W. 1. Ie Dioyt of New Vork. She asaerfa he locked her In a room and attacked her. . mCQ I AST RUNA'AfAY Wl OOW TKf?E6 3TUR1E3 OP 1WN OrW I Mary Hal!, a 13-ycar-old Missouri girl. Is tho champion run-away of the whole country. She ran away from her parents' horno near Kansas City 10 times, and then when they put her in a detention home she ran away five times more. The last time she risked her life to slide down a drain pipe three stories in thti mid dle of tho niht. World Honors To Visit U. S. Thi." ii Hubert tlouben. the il-'i-' man itprlnter who recently -surprised the athletic universe by defeating the ureal Charley Paddock in Berlin, lloubeit is rtgurUlg on' paying this eountr) i vlatl id the fall to show his sbvi'il nd. striye tor jome of.aut Mfeord I This la Mile. Alnur.e of Marseilles Krunco. Sho rccoiuly set n new world, record In Uia 83 meter hunll. event during a Women's meet at tht ColbWibes atadluin. ller time WW. 13'r, aeconds. Hhe'a one of tht greutoal Rill ..nthletea l''rnncc.ha Marysvillc, Montana, Source of Much Gold, Soon Abandoned HOUSED 7500 PEOPLE Mining Town once had Ball Team Which Beat the Coast Leaguers HELENA, Montana, Aug. 5. Marysvllle, Montana, to he wiped off the railroad map within a few weeks aa It has been erased from recorda In Its other activities, onco was tho Koal of a race between two great railway systems and In tho 30-odd years of lbs life was the source, of metals valued at not less than 100 million dollars. The town, Inciden tally produced a baseball team with a record of defeating all Pacific Coast leaguu clubs of its day and of sending several players to the major leagues. A quarter of a century ago Marysvillc had a population of 7500. Petition of the Northern Pacific railway to remove lta tracks from Helena to Marysvillc relegates to the backwoods what Is left of the one time famous town and again it is to become a stage coach town 15 miles from a railroad. Years ago tho (ireat Northern, which lost the race tor a terminus within the city, and ended its line just outside the boundary, abandoned Marysrllle and gradually, as the mines worked out, the surviving line limited its ser vice until, during the past year, a train operated only when there was an accumulation of freight for its haul. Truly a ghost city, with a hand ful of sharks and tumbled founda tions left of its once bustling busi ness district, scattered, weather beaten houses outlining its resilience section, possibly 50 or 60 families claiming it as home. Marysville In dicates its past glory only to the Im aginative. The famous Drum Lummon mine, chief source of its wealth. Is stlU be ing worked sufficiently, It Is said, to pay wages to a handful of men; some other of the older mines are operated on the same scale and there are numerous prospects whose own ers optimistically forecast a renewed activity in the old camp. Neverthe less, the Montana railroad commis sion, after an exhaustive investiga tion, has pricked the bubble y hope and has given its consent to aban donment of the railroad. The Drum Lummon mine, discov ery of Thomas Cruse, alone is said to have produced $67,000,000 worth of gold. Cruse sold the mine to a London syndicate for $1,600,000 when the vein had just been scratch ed. The new operators honeycomb ed the surface of the hill and, so the story goes, made millionaires in Boston, Helena and New York, as well as In England. Many other mines paralled its development and, from one of these, the Penobscot, Nate Vestal brought down to Hel ena what was then the largest bar of gold in the world, valued at $50. 000.' v What is said lo have been one of the first concentrators ever con structed on a commercial scale was built below- the Drum Lummon to work the tailings of tho famous mine. Tho ruins of the giant plant still mark the road to the city. VENEER PLANT TO T SHIFT RUN MAIISHFIELD, Aug. 5. - The night shift of tho Coos Veneer & Box company will start Monday night, President Benj. Ostllnd an nounced today. Fifty men will be started on the shift to begin with and later extra girls will be placed on the day shift to take care of the work produced at night. The panel season Is about 30 days earlier this year, Mir. Osllud stated, and he believes the night shift will be operated all winter with addition al men put on the Job at a later date. Thero has only been one shift at w:rk for ubout .1 months. Tho business In buttery stock anil veneer this year Is very goo l, and this has been tho first year that the plant has not shut down lor a short period at least. Mr. Ostllnd net with good business success on his trip east from which he returned last week. t Lady: Officer, some men are shooting dice down mi the corner." Officer: "Madam, what do .you think I nm, a game warden?" ' Vandorhilt Musquerader,