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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1925)
'Mil tail 'ii newluy, Octobtf 28, l!2.r EN-OREGON TO ANOTHER I try of Dry K ilns to be treated, Pond nnd hum- Shed Enlarged NS BEING PREPARED fcger Uwen ueciare. tldle West 1'rospcrouB jmber Demand Fair 3FOHD. Owen-Oregon Lum tnpany baa tin axtanalvo in. i mi program, it u snnoonosd IM II. OVbi IMfantl manager, liln ii'i'imt ri'tuil.' from BBU vi., arbor ba Attended th I in.: ting "f Hi" company's sri. rin' trKi urn iikiuii.'i nil. iii. : ot another aaWnilll, for which arc holim r-t n i ! ilium ( the program In In Ihj Iii iftUr by Hi"' wweutlv on or tini oompauy. otinr Ini Itnl faaluraa iiiiiiidu iii" an ient ol ii'" pond, luoroaalnic I ol Hi" craua aliod Uon itO 0 fl'OI lOIlt . I tt Ml it 1 1 It I tU II III It. mil imt i-Ulnt-ry III plaaloi laying "f iniicit'l" tM i n ii i r r I ii k IgmliiT from yards to t nine mill. Iintinllailnii of yurd fur hauling wn l dlMrihui Ion ili"r liy electric Imiiiiinin Hull of mi oUctric UMl " mining mncliliK1. and can- on of .two now tout ifl" it ixl y i. iii. , ocTOtlsi iii" Imt" f kiinn in It. Mr Owen Bays .1.11. Wini In priiapnruun nnd ii"r bviloass fuir. fc MILL IS SURED FOR IORTH BEND SilPlELI). - AnolliiT litrn" III Iw built on Coon liny im .till uf it deal niintiuiiceit Iti . U J. Blatpwn whereby IbO r ih" mill unit other property ii Bead lum bass sold by tfis n Ktilnlc 00. luiMon nald tliiti be WSJ not inltlon lo iIIhi Iiihi' Hi" liiilin ii purchasers or the location f u 111 PLAN fine Lathe Work and Machine Work Sawmill and box factory men are fast learning our work satisfies. For speed and accuracy, bring your 4 rush jobs to us! Acme Motor Co. 400 Sixth Phone 680 Electric WELDING (ttttttWttJ-J"t ,ta.a. t.t.A4i- LL THIS OUT It Means More bney And A Better Job For You! umberlogue, Klamath Falls, Oregon. entlcmen: I doslrd' to Bacalvo tho COrroHponiliMifo Conrno In Lumber Bid Construction Information tpOOt to apply myaelt to llio 8l.llllY.iy tins courso mm io cuiupiy 1th tho requirements of administration. In euno I find It im itulhln to continue tho work Willi duo diligence, it In my untlev- Sandlng that tho course will Signed a iJamc of firm or employer ty Street Address (This Course is Free!) Pretty Swindler f.iiiMiutiiii'M. (iiiiniiiiiiln, iah nntt ' "InilicA of prominent Kan Francis ' cans nrn irnltl lo huvn eMPWCd lh I looi of Mm. Dnrbotts Haaunalli 1 beautiful propdatraiw llf nn "xciuivo i.liiu who Ii minnlnif. IJelerilvcn any i aho lit on" uf llm moitt itkllltul IWlnd. I ' lee In III" rountry. it I" Mllnuted I Hint Har v.irluiin Swindle itchcuice I . ..,,,, I l.rr ' 00 th" mill. Inn Him work on the plant probably win atari the firm of the ywir. i h.- purebaMin repreaeni ontalda Ibmbbrlng InUratU which now operate- etaewbare. Althadgh Mr. Blmpaon would not reveal iii" location involved except that It In wuiiTfront property, the tract ii ballorad io i"' on Pony Slough. 'Ih" tract covora ni l"iiii 40 It" !:' Ih" mill will hnv. a Marline cn purlty of '.'r.o.Oi'O f'l a 'lay. It 's reportad. Mother report dihrrfat in North Bifnd today la thut th" McCormlcii Intiiri-aiN of San Friuiclnoo are be hind Ih" project, i I i.. UraW Mountain UiKRliii: ') 04 Kerry, Ore., haa reopened altur hut down i pyer aut m m ii.-i. No for Retail nunner inmiers. i bo re-asslgncd. . . W Slate. T II R Year Of Cold Winter Bad One; Darwinism Confuted; Logger's Account Of Creation Is Given The; year of the cold winter it got ho cool that the air liquified every night, and logging operations in the Btinyan camp on Soap Stone mountain had to lie de layed until the nun came out in the morning and evap orated the atmosphere. Conversation was impossible, even in the heat of the day, for words froze on the lips of the loggers. Bhagllno "Hill Mini Brlnxlivno mil. 'Willi lit" endless freight Icum ait.l u. 'f.itul moasuiiiineiil w'leu a whale the Blue Ox vitllmitly skidded log" Ladles' Aid mcltBJ fUck' ! forth nil wlutor; but iliulr progress wail' from the wall. The mine: men much Impedad hy ihu cold inukin It lniioHulblo to apiiuk i i their chargea In I ha Jargon of the inula ... in.' i and bully.' nicker. They Oyaraana t h In to noma extent t .' I ling "ill In front of Ihu milieu und nub" tad miking i a them oj tntutne of nlgn liinKiiitge; but lhli wan hIow, tot no mailer how ban) they worked, the iaik f going back tr ten generatldna on the anlnial'ii fam lly tree, lonilng down to the prat "ill. mid d" : lliltig I he i- r on i appearance and babtta at their ohargei look lime, in the apriog, A!i"ii tludr fror.on iwjrda thawed out, a Imil of three hundred and n(no ty aoven aoroa of flno wlilin plnp waa bleated an if by lightning. Early Iii the winter, I'aul Dua yan developed "the Inaldloun tiling about It la that oven your beat frlenda won't Ifll you about It" but oa bin breath froxe before It left hla mouth nobody know It till 'Hiring. Then Brlmetpne Illll nworo that tiioro must bo n thousand car icaaaea of winter klllod iiimio, in the wooda, The redoubtable J. Inknllnger ajultkty dovlaod a rem edy. 'Which cured I'aul at once, the eondtlpa bolng merely local, not deep Heated nnd organic, renulrliii! the advice of a physician. The beeUI fill feature of this remedy wan that the lumbe.'Jni'ka found that a little of It could be rubbed on a towel and uned to freahen up wiln after n hard day In lip w-.od.s. I bin renulted, according bo the cal culation of J. Inkallngcr, in a aar lug of one half of one per cent, for Ih" lumberjack'n yearly hath waa now )tnnaoaaaarjr, rroof of the irmh of theao tntuments may b ound In almott any niagatlne to day, for J. Inknllnger'a comprund haa been tnkwa over by a ljrge maMtaCtUKing concern. and la found In practically every fumllv medicine cabinet Iii the United finite. llofxiro that aprlng. logn had been akldded clour to market by Babe nnd the enille freight learn: but that HprltiK the eminent Mr Huuyali ' found that by actunl teat while pint, formation Is a study ot ne growtn waa 99 tt-100 pure, and would an1 ',eM of ""K'an fr sll"ltis la float. This greatly simplified log- western Washington and Oregon," glng. and Paul's ioggera cried out ""J -Mr- .CaW- "T"c l8 work .with childish gloe when tho first , now been carried on for two seasons logs were dumped Into tho water. "'l it. constitutes one of tho most They began to run about on them. 1 comprehensive investigations of this and soon boentnu so proficient that' elaB which has ever boon undertak tiba fullers who were farthest from n In tho United Stales. Its pur- tamp tried lo ride downstream on their axes. They found that the hoad would sink tho nx. so ther overcame thin ba rottiovlnr tho head nnd pulling It In their pocket, 'nd ot different qualities. When putting It ba;k on the handle when completed it should permit the own tboy got to OAtOp In order to sharp- of a sawmill or paper mill to de en It. and then remove It in the tenninc whether his land holdings morning and rido tho axo handle buck upatrcam to work. requirements Of his plant In por- Tho camp well froze clear to tho pctulty. It should permit the re lioltom that wlntor. In the sprlns sponsible officers In the Forest Bar Paul hooked Babe onto It. and pall- vice to determine what amount of r,,rih n i. r i..,, wiiMi .mi ' timber can bo removed annually or down across the United States, tho liuth ot which litis loud scientists tu much foolish tit 1 U ot tho glacial ago, terminal iitornlne, Slid many other ponderous theories. Speaking of scientists, mu:h to-do bus htieii forward concerning, the theorlos of Damvin and other scient ists concerning the origin at man. Any logger knows that's the bunk. When Pnul's logglg operations grow to such ii scope that he hud to have help, Ho took n half day off, auth ored together it bunch ot four-by-two scantlings, a saw. A lituunier, bunch nt nails, ami .manufactured an entire logging crow, ifrom boss to bull cook. One duy Paul was making a flun ky, whom Sourdough Sam declared lilnmolf to bo In great need ot. Someone bothered him, and he botched the Job. It was too narrow at loile and,' and to iwldo nt the otlioi'. So ho thow tho thing Into an old well, hud nndo another one. During tho MIowIiir yours,, Paul frequently spoiled a mnn. Those ho got In tho habit of throwing Into the old well. Ono day ii heard curious sounds from tho old dry WBll. Ho walked to tho edgo and llitened, "Well, I tell you, 1 don't Hko la talk about pooplo but its a sure Ihing that If sho over got out of hero with Ihoso loggers I don't know iwluit the hussy wouldn't do!" Paul, gieutly nntonlshod, lowered n ladder Into tho well. Ills Jiiiw dropped, fourleon mid ono feet by LUMBER L 0 0 U B whom ha hud rant Into the well h;nl become iwomen. This fare little tliankK to Peal, their (tea!: r, you may he cure. They berated ilm for leaving them no long In I well although h never know they oa Itted, ami then promptly in.'-iri-.i hli loggers. S E. II. Clapp, analstant f.,:-ttr charge of the branch of Forest Ile- aearch, Washington, D. C, apent Homo time la Portland. lie has chargo of the U. S. Forest Products Laboratory, Madlaon, Wis. and all of the nine forest expeiicent sta tions of the United Statoj locatde In the following forest regions: North eaatem, Amherst, Mass.; Appala chian, Ashevillc, N. C; Southern, Now Orleans, La.; Lake States, St. Paul, Minn.; Cloquet, St. Paul. Minn.; Fremont, Denver. Colo.; Southeastern. Flagstaff, Ariz.; Priest Illver, Missoula. Mont.; Pacific Nor thwest. Portland, Ore., the only one on the Pacific const. One of the purposes EASTERN Ii CONFER t. t. mm was to discuss the "work of the j Granger and his amcslaMa the in P icif Ic Northwest Forest Experi-; vesications into better utilization mem Station with the director, T. I of t.mber which arc now under rway T. Munger. T.lls station, which was tin this region. An example of this established a little moro than a tear class of work Is a very comprehon oto, Is the youngest of nine federal jslve study of the wooi-using Indus- forest experiment atati'ons in the tries of the state of wasaingion United States. It constitutes a part 'which has been made in cooperation of a plan of the U. 8.' Department ' with tho forest school of the Unl of Agriculture eventually to eitah-1 veralty of Washington at Seattle. Ilsh a forest experiment station In Still another important class of in each of the principal fofo3t regions j vestlgatlve work deals with tho im ,if the United States. 'proved methods of air-seasoning of "One of the most Important pleccjs I lumber. This project, which, has of w-irk iwhlch the Pacific Northwest I ; Ilaiion nas naa unue. u iwo . !,ore 10 onablu the owner of for-1 flPJ land lo predict illh reasonable; certninty whut yields of timber may 1 expacted in specified periods for are sufficiently large to supply t he periodically from unit mcnt with the qertalnt of manajo that corres ponding amount can bo removed annually or periodically In tho fut ure,'" Mr. Clapp stated. Other important lines of Investi gative work which the Forest Ks- perlment Station bus already in itiated deal with forest fires, their behavior under varying conditions of mouther, fuels, topography, etc.. ull of this work being designed for the development of bettor methods of forest protection and ot Improved methods iot forest protection and ot improved niothods of tiro suppres sion. Still other investigations are dealing with more effective methods of slush disposal, uiiii with meth ods ot cutting timber whi.h will in sure tho natural regeneration of the forest without the necessity of cost ly artificial planting. The Forest Sei'.vleo is very anxious that tho .Pacific NOrthWOSt Forest Experiment Station meet ua closely as possible the needs of timber land owners In Washington and Oregon. Ono ot the Important questions dls ..iissofi with tho director uf tho station 'was, thoroforo. tho organlz:i- nrivtitnm council. Tills i ... ,,!... 'i.. it., ,,,,,, i, i.rahin ren- woiim luuiuua i" .... ."i- resentativos of ussoelatlmn ot tin.- hoi- land nnd lumber manufacturers nf stntn forest orgnni.titi.ins and other organisations Interested timber production and management lis runotloii would bo to ndvlso thofor portt Mill ' compauy' und Forest Servlco regarding tho tor-1 chari0H Jicormlck and James est problems of tho Northwest most I pyown for the McCormick Interests. Darrowian Ht' ' ' ' '' Is Clarenco Llurrow to be the new Mylc dictator of America? The co-t-l of the University of Texna arW ow wearing rcifular "Darrowian' galluses" lo bold up their iflkJrts.' "They're Just as sensible us the Oxford bags the boys aro weorlr-g." nys pretty Thtlma Winder. In need of solution through research. Eventually such a council would undoubtedly perform an Important function also In the co-ordination c-I the investigative efforts of the fed eral and otier research agencies In the Northwest. An additional purpose of Mr. 1 Clupp'a visit to Portland was to dls t his vliltjcuss with District Forester C. M. been under way at tiiree ol tne larg .uiuoci iiiuuu.'.",. y.- . - - Norl uvest during me past sear o"i a half. U so far completed that the resulta are being made available to the lumber industry. Flftrirta Ts A. iVa.aM Good Market For Lumber PORTLAND. In Florida's land nnd building boom O. E. Sovereign, president of the Aladdin c6mpany. sees an expanding market for Ore- gon lumber. Ho is on his animal visit to Portland from l.ranu uap ids. Mich., to inspect tho company's local plant which produces the na tionally known ready cut lumber for constructing homes. Recently he studied conditions In .Florida. "Two weeks ago at Miami I could not find a million feet of lumber after calling at 2G lumber yards, neither codld any quantity of nails or cement be purchased there." said Sovereign.' "Although that state is closo to bases ot sup ply ot Southern pine, there is an opportunity to market Oregon lum ber in that distant state. According to Sovereign, the Alan din company's Portland plant is do VelODlng a largo export trade with South America and tho Orient ready cut lumber houses. The Aladdln'8 North Carolinn plants are busy supplying Florida demand for ready, cut material. McCormick Buys Big Timber Tract KELSO, Wash. Deeds were nieo. hero this morning conveying timber lunds to tho Charles McCormick Lumber company of Delaware by the Pugot Mill company iu a $13,500, 000 transaction. Involvod in tho transaction, ac cording to the papers. Is 90,000 acres of valuable timber lands in Cowlitz. Pierce. Mason. Mtsnp and ; 'iu "?.. f """ Affixed to the deeds were docu- in ! men lory slumps worth ?13.500. Tho papers were signed by v. u. IT,.ll.,o ntAVSA IMn.i nnd fi. R. Helms PINE 9IDGE Ken Puicell of th" Owou, Oregon ; Lumber Co., of Medfird, as hero Idn.a.. UrtltlMM Ihn mill 'fl .Mr. and Mm. Chflt. Flury of Callo j iiln vljlleil at the W. Doney homo iSiindu afternoon. ffUm BW K'lllllill "I llVlt'l. spent Sunday visiting Miss .M.irgurol llenson. .Mr. anJ Mrs. Frank l.lghlnor speni Bdtnrdky erenlng in Klamath Falls on business. Alex llonaon, ,f F.wauna camp spent the yeek end hero with his mother, Mrs. W, A. Oens;n. Mrs. Win. demons and .n and Mrs. Chaa, Itlchards motored to Klamat i Falla Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Doak of Algoma -amp were In Sunday. .Mr. and Mra. D. Cramblltl and lioyd Potter of Cbllouuln were bus iness visitors In camp, Monday evening. Ed Savage who had both arms broken last week and waa othir wlse badly bruised, is roported rest ing as well iii could be expected, at a Klamath Falls hospital. His many 'rlends here hope for hla speedy re covery and early return to hla home. Mr. and Mrs. II. V. McGec and K. P. Ollls were here Frllay ad vertising the Maytag washing ma chine. Mrs. Robert Bropiy spent the I week end visiting Mrs. Harold Mai-j Oregon's cut of three and a half bil lory at Ft. Klamath. i lion feet, the second largest, waa 7.0 C'nas. Scvlts of Callnus camp , spent Saturday evening here with his family. Mrs. Ed Savage and daughter Nlto, have been driving to t-own every day. to visit Mr. Savage at the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mansfield were visiting In Klamath Falls Sun day. Mrs. W. Doney spent Tuesday in Klamath Falls, visiting frieada and attending buslne8s affairs. Quite a number from here at tended the party given by the P. T A at DuVall's hall. In Chiloquin. Friday evening. All report a time. fine LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE ' Friends or J. M. Bedford are at a loss to understand why all the spat tering over the speed cop's actions in last week's Lumberlogue, when they recall the times he got by with 65 milea an hour on the Dalles-California highway. At 5S he must have been driving with ono hand and hart bis mind off the road. We don't presume he objected to parting with 15 bucks. The question is. who whs with him? H. R. C. n n inm iwnitwii i . ! Lumbermen! t With every Kelly-Springfield, you get, free, an insurance policy guarding you against all road hazards or tire defects for one year. Hub Chas. Johnson, Mgr. 502 So. 6th. Phone 616 PROOUGTIQN OF LUMBER IS LESS IN FOR 1924 Last Years Cut Shows De- crease of From 4.3't to 6.1 REFORESTATION NEED Eastern States Using Vast Quantities of Timber; Produce None WASHINGTON, Oct. 27. Cen sus figures showing Hint laat ycar'a cutting of lumber from Amorlean forests amounted to ::.i,930,986,000 board foot, a 3.3 per cent decreaao from tho previous year, wore vlowod In a statement by W.L.Crcely, chief of the forestry sorvlco, as "far from reassuring to thOBo interested In for est conservation. The bureau report showed that the state of Washington produced more than six billion foot, which although nearly; twice as much as any other state, Ws a 6.1 per cent reduction from the previous year. per cent reduction. Loulsana s slight- jy more than three billion feet waa a decrease of ;. I per cent, while Mis sissippi's total of slightly less than three billion feet was an Increase of 4.3 per cent. California and Nevada Jointly produced approximately two billion feet, a decreaae of 5.7 per cent. Mr. Greely'a statement emphasized the seriousness of the. fact that "nearly all Important industrial and agricultural regions are consuming billions of feet of virgin timber from the south and far west and growing but little on the forest lands within their own boundaries." "The drain upon the nation's tim ber supply," he said, " is a predom inating issue and the American peo- 1 pie must regard it as such until the rate of timber growth catches tip i with the rate of consumption. This drain is now believed to be four times the rcgrowth." FIIOM CHILOQCTX Wayne Ireland was in town over the week end from Chllociuin, visit ing friends and in general taking part In tho social whirl. Boston man gives the preacher 550 when he misses church, so ab sence makes the preacher's heart grow fonder. You Can't Beat KELLY- Springfields At Any Price! Note the secret of super performance Shop