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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1925)
Paw Six EVENING HERALD. KToAMATIt FALLft OREGON Tlmi'sdny, Novcinlnir f, 1 925 saucd Daily, except Sunday, by Tlic Herald Publishing Inmpany Office! 11' N. Eighth Street, Klamath Falls, Oregon. E W ) MURRAY H PERKINS . . . Publisher News Editor New Items Of Interest From Oregon Cities Entered as second class matter at the postoflice at Klamath Falls, Oregon, under act of March 3, 1S79. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of re publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other wise credited in this paper and also the local news published therein All rights of republication of special dispatcher herein arc also reserved. Cat Evening Herald is the official paper of Klamath County , -rer- Thursday, November 5, 1925 THIS IS THE STAKE THEY ARE FIGHTING FOR We have" stated time and again that the fight being carried on in the present campaign is not over the ex penditure of money, the remission of taxes or tilings of that kind. The stake is a large one; one so large as to be worth millions to the farmers of the project and one that means almost life or death to the California Oregon Power company. Shortly after the present board took office it asked the reclamation service to join with them in the prepara tion of a contract, under the terms of which the control of the district would pass into the hands of the farmers. Contracts were prepared and exchanged and a meeting "was held in this city, but no agreement was reached and the question was passed up to the authorities at Wash ington. The stumbling block was the question of the control of the waters of Klamath lake the question thai? is at the bottom of the present campaign and the de termination of which will mean whether the farmers will keep what they now own or whether it will be turned over to the California Oregon Power company by the reclamation service. Here is the paragraph that means millions of dollars to the California Oregon Power com pany and the one condition in' the contract that the present board absolutely refused to permit to be made a part of the contract : "Quantity of Water to be Furnished "38. The quantity of water to be furnished to the . district hereunder shall be that quantity which may be applied beneficially in accordance with good usage for the irrigation of THE IRRIGABLE LANDS WITH IN THE BOUNDARIES OF THE DISTRICT AS NOW FIXED AND DEFINED. In case of shortage AT ANY TIME the amount to be furnished to the district shall be an equitable proportion, as nearly as practicable operations will permit, of the water actually available at the time for all of the" area being watered from the source of supply, such proportionate share to be de termined by the Secretary of the Interior. In no event shall liability accrue against the United States, its of ficers, agents or employes, or any of them for any damage direct or indirect, arising from floods, drought, HOSTILE DIVERSION, interruption of service made necessary by repairs, unavoidable accidents, SHORT AGE OF WATER, INACCURACY OF DISTRIBU TION OR ANY OTHER CAUSE." Farmers, that's the damnable condition to which your representatives on the board of directors of the Klamath Irrigation district, Bradbury and Jacob, refused to con sent. If they had, there would be no opposition to Jacob today; there would be no campaign of vicious tying; there would be no contest, for the reclamation service 'would have had placed in its hands the power it needed to turn over to the California Oregon Power company water rights that are worth millions of dol lars and for which it should pay at the same rate as the farmers of the district. The plan of the reclamation service is to secure 'con trol of the water, under the terms of this paragrpah, then announce the abandonment of the . reclamation of all lands outside of the district. This automatically releases the water rights, which would revert to the California Oregon Power, company under filings now in Salem. Once the title to this water passes out of the hands of Che reclamation service and into the control of the California Oregon Power company THEY NEVER CAN BE RECOVERED. Then under the provisions of the paragraph quoted above, the district would be entitled to 'AN EQUIT ABLE PROPORTION OF THE i WATER ACTUALLY AVAILABLE FOR THE AREA BEING WATERED." This means that the water for he California Oregon Power, company COMES FIRST, and then if there is any water left, it will be distributed between the Klamath Irrigation district and the pumping districts, in proportion to the number of acres being ir rigated. If the supply of water dropped to just that owned by the California Oregon Power companv, THERE WOULD NOT BE A DROP FGR THE IRRIGATION OF THE LANDS OF THE DISTRICT. This, Mr. Farmer, is what the opponents of Jacob and Short want you to approve when they ask you to vote against them. This is what the reclamation service, de mands from the farmers of the project. This is what the Klamath News, the mouthpiece of the California Ore gon Power company, a newspaper that (lining the past year has lost thousands upon thousand:- of dollars, secks to hide in the dust it is stirring up over the expenses of the district, over Bradbury, over Eberlein. This is your fight, Mr. Farmer. It is not Bradbury's nor Jacob's, nor Eberlein's. It is your fight for your rights, and your property. If you want to turn over to I journal isth dinh RUsy It. Allen, editor of thl Hon olulu Btsr Bulletin, accompanied by Mrs. Alton, .arrived in Knr.cno last nislii from Seattle. Thoy are on mute to San Francisco from where thoy expect to emh.irk for Hawaii tn a few day... Mr. and Mr. 'Alton will be given a dinner nt the Osluirn Koto! nl 6 o'clock this ovculn? by members or iho SlRina ivlta Chi. Journalism frnterinty. mid the Thetii Sigma Phi journalism sorority. Mr. lren while attending the 1'nlvcrsity of Washington wrote sports for the Seattle P, f and is wejl known among newspaper men and women of the Pacific roost. Eugene UcRlster. C: . AG A I N I STARS WITH MAiirXKS Bob FurRo. former Salem huth school .student who Is with the murines at Mure IsUmd. is placing excellent football, according to sev eral rftpplns soBt to Ills mother who resides in Snlem. Kargo went to Salem high atmut a year aud a half ago but quit school to Join the marines. During the - first year there he made the football team and has been one of the mainstays, of the team this yetir. A letter to his mother glvinx ai account of one of iheir games with the St, Ignatius varsity football team tells of the ability- of the ma rine?. The marines lost the game 13 to 0, but only after a hard foug it name.- - Salem .Capitol Journal. $n t.KI) BY TBI Henry Ptoyd Fisk. seven-year-o'd son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. rtk of Veneta. was hilled instantly on tlir road near his home yesterday morn ius when he was run over by i motor truck driven by Erie Neun- wander of Santa Clara. The boy, uccordiug to two girl schoolmates who were with him at the time, attempted to rlimn aboard the trttrk and slipping fell beneath a rear wheel before the Jrlvcr even knew that he was near. The cries of the little girls attracted his attention and he stopped and went to the boy's assistance, but life was about extinct. Yesterday was the boy's birthday. . Coroner Branstetter bald that no inquest will be held as it wa-i plc':i to be seen that the driver was not held at fault. Funeral services will bo held at 2 o'clock Wednesday at the dates cemetery. The Branstetter chapel is In charge of the body. The" boy is survived by his parents, three brothers. Allen. Walter and William j and ..two sisters, Bert ha and F.lsjo j all Jiving at Veneta. Eugene Regis ter. J OFFERS GREATER VALUE July 23rd Nfnsb introduced new models by lout; odds the finest motor cars Nash ever built. These new models presented new and uniquely original body designs, far-reaching improvements in construc tion, and many notable refinements in engineering and equipment till at far greater manufacturing cost. BUT -NASH DID NOT INCREASE PRICES! NOW J PRICES REDUCED Reductions up to $300 The above price reductions arc effective November 1st on exactly these same models. t It is possible to make such price reductions only be cause of the tremendous volume of sales inspired by the manifestly QREATER QUALITY and GREATER VALUE of the Nash product. In the first 3 months these cars have been on the market the total sales have more than equaled one-half the sales for the entire year of 1924. R. R. R. GARAGE 831 Klamath Ave. 'he California Oregon Power company water rights that are worth millions, then defeat the men who are trying to save them for you. According to newspaper report?, :he California Oregon Power company has been pur chased by one of the big members of the Power trust, for $20,000,000. Ic requires no financier or mathema tician to figure how much of that twenty million dollars represents the value of the water rights of the company. That is why The. Evening Herald urges the farmers, of 'he district to stand for their rights, for their property, tor the millions that are at stake and that will be won if Jacob and Short are elected. $5000 OFFER STILL STANDS The offer of the Evening Herald to pay to such char ities as may be selected by the Rotary Club, the Kiwanis Club and the Chamber of Commerce, if the Klamath News can produce anything that will show that Charles Wood Eberlein, or anyone else, has invested a dollar in the Evening Herald,' directly or indirectly, still stands. There are no strings to this offer. All of our books, papers and confidential information are at the disposal of certified accountants at any time. The only condi tion is that if the Klamath News fails to prove its charges, it will turn over to the organizations named, $5000 to 'e distributed for charitable purposes. The statement in the Klamath News is a lie. It is just part of the vicious, unscrupulous,: untruthful cam paign it is waging in a mad effort to defeat Jacob and Short and to secure control: of the board of director- of ihe Klamath Irrigation district for the California Oregon v. cr company. If the Klamath News has any such in formation' that it cjaims to possess, it should produce it before (fte election next Tuesday so the people may know Which, newspaper is telling the truth' in this campaign. There are no stockholders, or investors, no- individual or corporation interested in the Evening Herald except the throe whose names are given in our report to the nof toff ice department, and if the Klamath News will produce a scintilla of evidence to the contrary, it will have earned for charity 'the $5000 we herewith offer. "FiGURES DONT LIE," but liars ys'ill figure. That is the trouble in the present campaign. Liars are figur ing to tiy and prove that the present administration of the Klamath Irrigation district lias "squandered" the people's money. The financial statement of the directors will speak for itself, The f-uincis are not going to be taken off their feet bv the coterie that's trying to deliver to the California Oregon Power company water rights worth millions. They are going to stand by the men who have stood by them Short and Jacob. We would like to ask the farmers this question: Which would you choose between the statements of a newspaper that has lost tens of thousands of dollars during the past year, a newspaper that stands t(fr the California Oregon Power company and the Southern Pacific company against thtvinlerests of this community, tjr the men who have had the courage to stand up and tight for the interests of the district, in the face Of the most vicious attacks and calumny in an effort to save to the flifitrict afisets worth millions? Someone is paying rh'- hill- of the newspaper and if it is worth tens of thousands of dollars a year to maintain a newspaper that will spread lies and misinformation, then there must be omc-thing worth while to gain. If it is worth tens of thousands of dollars to get that something; then it should at least be worth your yote to keep it. .That is why you should vote for Short and Jacob and keep the water rights that are worth millions to the district. In the end these vater rights will pay the cost of the Klamath project. ' i'i KAPPA Af.MM wins Pretty en-ton kimonos unpacked "Hi'UVith All OvpT Hi World" wim today ill lien IIukIii'h Press Hhtip. for the fHJfttair, and a (arte grobd, the !! ?. JWf Udv) diirpratltm KCjjnm of the prlse-vln- Minn iirm-.i'i-inr.lrr!- fI :Ii -displayed byj IM Kappa Atplftfr'Ttniffla ilif scdony J Miss Rogers Gained 15 founds in Six Weeks "klmiv Mi a nml IVmn Gain rl Pound In U( n.u . sf Moury li.uk My iirar Prlasdj; After my attack of rin I wha tbln, ratf-doMi mid (trsski 1 had a sal low oomploxtOD, my CftMki woro iiiiiik III and I wan continually troubled wlili sat aa my atomarh. I full stuffy anil hart lout my ap polite. I liiid road .ihoul McC'oy'a Coil l.lvorV Oil Compound Tahlota nml d'K'Idoxl lo itlvn ihuiii a trial. At once, I began in pick up an ap-4 pellto, my HieoU filled 'out and my oilnplMlon btosma 'hmiiiiiy lioklnic and I talnari Ui poUltdl In hIx weoka ami nm yon ihiinttful fur what Mu Coj'a rod UvtT oil Compound Tab let did for mu. i Mb. Alhorta Rdgsra, 2(4 W. Cor fu Ctoi'da St., noontur, ill. 'in laUn on woIkIii, ki'cw atronn and flgoroua, to fill out ihu hoi Iowa in ctkooka and inu-k, try Mc Coy':! Cud ,iycr on Compound Tab lota for SO days, mi T.ihleta 60 ccnli at the Slur llniK store, fjn dj)i lod'a pharmacy. Whitman's Drujj Co.. and live driiKKlala evory Whoro, if thoy don't Hive you won derful help in no dSW, nut your money haojt -jiou bo tha Judge, uut be iNiiro nml Bak for V.eCoy'a, Uiei orlKlnnl and senulnn, , DtdSjbil K.OU mid 1I,.00, nt Darnhart'a. aloCartny Bldg. 3-7 (adr) V your nlralk'hf'ltlWl'l KHpfla Alpliei ha won CM trupliy. 1 "i;y hie nnily. Ily tfjj Tnae" Vaa Irl motto ut.:Hn' t.iiiiii.t ot aoeond prize'. eibli;ilod by Aliiiio' ifl Ijelta. PortrniiK of the iaiily pb tqd Foun; tain and the tryfJt!tfeM fOTniirt thoj Backurouhd. A ptfframoru of the eititipeK with tlie idoifiin "Our Bplrll Fla.nen lllRh" rave Ifetila Pill HI (5 mii ililnl pine. "The Hlrrila thin year anoiliad to portray tlio Komocomlnl spirit more than ever hi-Ion ." Mid It. It. HjBWttt, akslstsAl profepanr or political m'l- eni'i', on the Jtnlgfna oaniniltthoi "THe committee foptiil it lo rd m narrow the Bbblco diiwii lo A dozen. I lien finally to tliruo. All ol them showed nigiia of careful wprRinnnahlp and pr.:.aralioii. O, A. C. Itaroinon r. Cross, Irritable Husbands Often Victims ictims s of Chronic Fatigu iTVTANy a wife thinks that Ihw.i '.irongthen your system by restoriJiR 1V1 her hiisbtind in always cross and 1 lids oifjanlc Iron lo your blood. But ilrrltsble, criticizing ujnl eoniplalnlug, don't take the older mineral Iron metll (that he does riot love her any lower , tines which many doctors now say do or that he iB working too hard when !H9 n matter of fact the real cause of hi:i '"flare-ups" I b chronic falinue. ' Chronic fatigue la entirely different from thcordimiry fatigue you feel niter hard work. Chronic fatigue coblCS from mthm. Your nerves, nrpan :, and muscles have become debilitated due to lack of Sufliclunt organic iron In your blood. To conquer chronic fatigue you must little good. Takcprganlc Iron Nuxnttd iron which is like the iron In your Jilood and like that in spinach and en-,' Ills, Unlike ordinnry mineral Iron? It! will not injure the teeth or disturb the stomach, hut Is promptly assimilated. Take Nuxatcd Iron foY just two weeks and you'll he astonished how mifbh i stronger and better you feel, Money back if not improved. At all good druggists. i