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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1925)
Thuridtayi October 15, 1025 EVENING HEHALJ), KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON a rousing story that always shows up on thc"front pafic" of the West's hot cake appetite No other flour can."ralk"to your pneake-taste in the same way because no other flour is blended the Flapjack way. Put it to the taste-test and see! A. f. JfAENIGKE HERE TO MAKE WIDE SURVEY U. S. Forest Service Man to Leave in Morning for Silver Lake To flml out wlipthiT or not ln : beat) lafeataUoai outalda the l.!00, 000 aero r.rou inclmttnl lu llio poutlt- orn Otvson and iiorthorn t'altfortiln plno hoftlo control projoct. uro on ttto inorense. A. J. Jaonlcko. of I'oitluml. forosl Insect export of the V. S. for ost service, will lea TV tomorrow for Silver lake with an assistant. Mr. Jnenlcke's stirvoy is a prelim inary Investigation of tltt pine beetle situation. Ho will ascertain In a en eral way whether or not the ravages of the pine beetle are still as serious as two years Ago. Mr. Jaanlokt la an annual visitor to this territory. li t tub Limit "Cap" Oalkllta, Floyd McMllhun. 0 lomi Jester nml Dl". Paul Noel re mind at noon fiviu the OltKIQ nIIi tilct where fie. bagWl the limit in nlnoHo pheatau'ta Hits inornluf, Casteel Hired By Local Club To Return As Grounds keeper For Golf Club Alt)TS "Albcrs sW'ii'orBetttrBrcay.ati Flapjack Flour Buy Your Groceries at the Package Groceteria Best known nationally ad vertised brands sold in san itary sealed packages only. You help yourself and pay only for what you buy and not for high priced clerks. There 2re no special days. You can come every day and buy at the same prices. Here are a few of cur ev-ery-day prices: Carnation Milk, tall... 9c Kellogg's Corn Flakes . . 9c Best M.J.B. Coffee, in 2 lb tins $1.12 Ghirardelli Chocolate, 1 lb tin 29c Royal White Soap, lobars 42c Folger's & Schilling's 15c spices 12,2C Best Cane Sugar 10 lb 69c Mazola Oil, 1 gal. tins $1.95 Everything in the store at prices correspondingly low Remember the location. E. E. Brodie Visitor Here Ni:V YORK, Spot, a fox ten lor. I has unveil the life of his little mis- j treat, lintiy qi Dorothy Maokaye, I antrcM, twice Ouog be lost a lac I With the grounda of tha Raanjai in I'liilulim a bin ilo that attnckeil I Qblf antl I'ounty club In reinlli.tomi tin' baby, anil now be ban Jus; , (r t planting of the grMI at awakenad :i RoverueM in time to the comlDCrjf aDtiar. Al Caataat u uve the baby from a fire that de- illtauJ rOunlakP of Hie I ,:tk -slioycl the house. j Opiwoko Country club 111 Toil I land hna returned north. OSSININli. N Y. A new resident j Local Jtolf club ineiubers feel they of Sinn Sinn who arrived In goltltrv f:'ttunate to hive mimrt'il liU (Qga lias been put to work shoveling sarrlres u:nl with tit return o) coal. sprJiiR Mr. fasteel will return lu Klamath KbIIh with His tnmWt to i iimUIo penniiiieni ly QftWlVg boon Mf ed an itroundnlieepoi' flu' I lie local club. VQTOUgllDUl I be winter mo long AN the wealher fWllI pennll lalioi. -H will (o on at the links, vvtttl lb" fixing of tenaai end other iitoh no- ceStlltleH. Uaoh Sunday morning finds a Dumber of tfto tana mi I for .i ni 'in tuit taiue on tut link and nil main. he :, an Invited lo play, the glttUDda heiiiK In condition lo til) y a futrlv good Kunie, l'AHis. Cbai. Henry Huborloh, New York lawyer, formerly profai" 10V of Wisconsin. Te.vus and Stan ford UnlvareUloa, is on his boQoy- moOII w ith the former I'rlni N'ln i .Mdlvanl of Itusida, gg, John H. Martin Is Defendant in Divorce Action cruel mud Inhurunu kraaloiaDl In ouargad agaliwl Jotn u Mwtln pnomlnval lo.ui builnoil man, in n milt for dlo'ice llled o onto rclny b.i his wife. .Mrs. POBrl Martin. Hardly 'had tho 01 I P 'Had when Mr. Martlu'ii attorney filed n doniurror lo the connilaltil lioldlnj) thai there oere uol (UffloWnl facli stated In Mrs. Jfarlln'n romplnllil lii ooottltuti) a oallal of action. Tbo tbuplo are prominently Man iifled with aool.il nctlvllloH In Khun atti Kalis. Thoy hm jiyan' lUiirrbld for eleven years. Mm. Martin nam for in alljoumy in lior womplatajl, 802 Main Si. HeiiiK United States minister to Siam is no job for an active man whoso life has been spent in pub lishing a daily newspaper, was the observation of E. E. Brodie. pub lisher of the Oregon City Enterprise, who, with Cliff Hage. Portland pub lisher, was a visitor in the city last evening. Mr. Ilrodle for four years was minister to Siam. About 90 per cent of his duties were attending rounds of dinners, teas and other social functions, and he got so "fed up" on it that when his four years were up he was glad to get back to his Oregon City editorial desk. It has been four years since the Oregon City publisher has been about the state and he is now on a leisurely automobile jaunt in order to acquaint himself with conditions. Mr. Gage is publisher of the An gora Journal at Portland, and is likewise taking a keen interest iu the "See Oregon" tour on which they have embarked. cMedford (-Masons to isit Local Lodge Stone's Buv Market Owned by F. Terry Stone's Market, number :!. is the latest addition to tho looal store, according to announootnoni nmdo today, with tho buying of Terry';1 market at 719 Main street, a wide archway will be out between Stone'. CJ roee ry which will tn I k o t h o t w o stores into one. Q. A. llartlott, who has been in charge of Stone"s store, number om will be placed in charge of tho market, being an experienced cutter. Ho will supervise tho work at store number one as well. The market which was taken over about a month aso by Fred Terry, recently here from South Dakota, has been remodeled and is now among the most modern markets in the city. Mr. Terry was forced to dispose of the business due to the critical illness of Mrs. Terry. Air Policy Is Declared Weak Admiral Sims, Retired, Criticizes Navy Bureau Dinner Next Monday Evening Will Honor Visiting Lodge Brothers On next Monday evening local Masons will be hosts at a dinner, honoring some thirty master Masons from Medford at 7:30. Tho Medford degree team will put on the work In the master Ma son's degree. On Saturday evening work in F. C. degree will bo ei- cmpliflc-d in the Masonic hall. STEAM SHOVEL IS NOW AT WORK ON LEGION BUILDING Thin, Pale, Tired? Look Out For Chronic Fatigue One of the most insidious ailmenta today is chronic fatigue. Thousands are only half-alive, constantly suffer ing with weakness, nervousness, pal pitation of the heart, headaches, etc. continually taking medicines when, in. the great majority of cases, the real trouble is chronic fatiffue. Chronic fatigue is entirely different from the "healthy" fatigue you feel after hard work. Chronic fatigue comes, from within. Your nerves, muscles,! organs, etc., have become run-down and cannot function properly. To conquer it you must go to itsi cause in the blood. For it is from the blood that every muscle, nerve and tissue gets its nourishment. So when' you are thin, pale, tired and run-down, it is usually because your blood is thin and pale, lacking in sutiicient organic, iron to carry strength to the starved tissues. i What you need, then, is not mere tonics, but more organic iron in your blood, so it can carry strength and vigor to every part of your body. But don't take the older mineral iron medicines which many doctors novf say do little good. Take organic iron Nuxated Iron which is like the iron in your blood and like that in spinach and lentils. Unlike ordinary mineral iron it will not injure the teeth nor dis turb the stomach, but is promptly as similated. Take Nuxated Iron for just two weeks and you'll be amazed howmuch strong er you feel how the color comes back to your cheeks and the sparkle and life to your eyes. Money back if not Improved. At all good druggists. The buzz and hammer which al ways accompanies the construction of a building was heard this morn ing on the court house grounds with the first real work on the American Legion Memorial build ing. A huge tractor steam shovel wib at work this morning scooping away dirt for foundation and for the basement- Under the direction of Louis K. Porter, president of the Porter Construction Co., and Sydney Ab bott, his assistant, the work will be pushed on rapidly. It is expected that county prison labor will bo utilized in the near future. 20 discbunt on all dresses at Milady's Khop, Friday, Saturday and Monday. id-is mm gaM i Fur Manufacturing. Coat Remodeling All work guaranteed Mrs. Wm. Bt-ssler 430 Klamath Ave. Between" Foil rt h" a n d fi f th Next to Moose Hall WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.) Rear Admiral William S. Sims, re tired, V. S. N told the president's air board today that "It is well known" that the navy has no "def I n 1 1 ,.- air policy." and that naval air development is hampered by a kin l of conservatism so extraordinary ft is almost unbelievable." Treseat dissatisfaction and unrest in the navy, he said, is due to "a lack of confidence" in naval lead ers and he pointed to .the Shenan doah disaster as a case. "It may be presumed," he ad ded, "that the commander of the Shenandoah and his assistants were the best men the navy had, but If they were not It would have been a criminal .act to pfit them there." FULLER TALKS J. H. Fuller, secretary of the Ash land chamber of commerce, brought homo to the Klamath chamber yes terday, the Importance of securing a government appropriation for the completion of the Crescent City har bor. In northern California. At a re cent meeting held In Crescent City, at which four senatorial members of tho rivers and harbors commftt"e were present, Mr. Fuller appeared before the committee and on behalf of southern Oregon, urged that' the half finished project be completed. SIGX FOR IIOL'T NEW YORK, Crt. 14. (Arti cles for a 12 round no-decislon fight on Monday, October 26, at the New Ark Armory, Newark, N. J., between Harry Wills, Inegro heavwelght challenger and Floyd Johnson, of hwa, 'were signed this afterno aclrdlng to an announcement by Will:)' manager Pad:ly Ity.m. HCN8AKER IMPROVED A. J. Lyle this afternoon receive 1 a telegram from the Lane hospit.l In San Francisco, telUag of the slight Improvement In the condition jf Justice of the Peace R. E. Hun-suker. RHEUMATISM Cannot Exist in the Hainan Body ir Von will Use Trunk's Prescription It. is presposterous; In fact, It is a shame to suffer with Rheumatism. Tills Prescription does not ruin I he stomach, It does not depress the In-art. Eat all the meat anil good food you wish while taking Trunk's Pre scription. Contains no mercury, sali rylale soda, oil wlnlergroen or nar cotics, but positively overcomes any kind of rheumatism or gout on earth. What more do you want? It in inl ine, slide tn get something bottor, The greutest uric acid solvent known and ulso n BttpoHOr liver niedfciin. Trunk's Prescription sells for $1.76 (! z for sr. at sine pru store, Features of SUGARMAN'S 20th Annual October Sale Buy It Where You Can Buy It for Much Less I IWI IHKaj 6 Underwear Specials That Deserve Your Attention 25', wool a good garment for d0 "7C those desiring this weight ymt t J 50' ,. wool answers the purpose of the outdoor worker and will wear extra well J0 (C an sizes aPO.OO All wool in various grades. One of these numbers should have your partieu- A QC lar attention aPt.OiJ Men's fleece lined Union Suits. All sizes, good heavy quality, cut full, worth d1 OC much more money piJaJ Hart Schaffner 8C Marx Suits and Overcoats all Included in This Once A Year Sale The only thing we mention is the savings you make. You know the rest $25 Suit or Overcoat at $19.75 $30.00 Suit or Overcoat at $22.75 $32.50 Suit or Overcoat at $24.75 $35.00 Suit or Overcoat at $29.85 $37.50 Suit or Overcoat at $31.50 All Others Reduced In Proportion The Big Sale With the Little Prices. Once a Year What About Your Winter Shirt Supply - Look A good heavy flannel and buckskin shirt in tan, grey, khaki and brown. All dp OC sizes, and a bear for wear, at p"OiJ All wool shirts in a large selection of patterns and sizes. Look these over. Values 1 A O C to $6.50, at Z- Men's dress shirts, madras, prints, flannels, etc., with and without collars. d1 OC Values to $3. Extra, at y 0J Reductions on all other shirts in stock during this once a year event. Over 3000 Pairs of Shoes on Sale Every shoe in stock reduced. We men tion only a couple here. One lot Men's work or dress shoes J0 OC black or brown. Special, at PO.O Boy's pack style shoes, the best you d?0 OC ever saw for wear DOD Men's 16 inch boots, dT ojs now, at V I All Florsheim shoes in stock substantially re duced. One lot patent leather g rjEj Last Year's Records Shattered. Our Low Prices Are The Reason Any Suitcase, Trunk, Vanity, Hat Box, Bag, Over Night, Steamer in wStock Worthwhile Reductions Wool Mixl niankctii 66x80 $4.25 Sheet Blankets, large sizes, $1.95 $2.25 All wool, Oregon City and Others $9.75 Bath Robes Are Also Reduced Why Sugarman's Store is the favorite place tor the workingman. Headquarters tor 19 years Overalls at 95c Heavy Flannel Work Shirts 1.85 Genuine p. Work Shirt 1 .50 Moleskin Pants, Sweet-Orr 3.35 2 piece Underwear at, each 75c