Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1905)
alter his tat her'» eat.tie, returned to Klamath county this week. KLAM A TH REPUBLICAN THE NEW W. O. SMITH, Editor nd Proprietor. SCHOOL LEADING NEWSPAPER OF INTERIOR OREGON. W. F. Reed, a prominent ell Hen <>f Klatuatb county, who la engaged In buaiueaa al Illy, and hla wife are the guaata of A. W. Walker of the X.tah Livery Stable. YANKEE INVENTIVENESS Masaachusetta Man Knew Mow to Ka- Uugulah a Taper That Was lusatinguishabla. In a little Massachusetts town live« a man who for two cause« enjoys deathless local fame »ays IJ p|H Y’oung Theodore Hooaevelt hint thia For one thing, he 1» the Ml* AI vita Straw, who realded lu Magazine fall entered Harvard, the college of only native of the place who has been Medford prior to her departure for his father. While hla attainment to Kumpe: and he moreover, per [ will depend of course on hi nisei f. lie : Salem, waa uu tbe wilthlatund traiu formed while there the enaulng frat, : will, neverthe less, find Ills pathway Tuesday, enroute to Kiamitli F.tll». which the nelghlxir* still recount with considerably smoother than that of Site will tarry at Yreka ,t shott time. treathlrsa admiration: Let everyone attend the Irrigation meeting Saturday. v bile in Rome the New Knglander the average boy of the class of '09. H. F. Clark waa up from I’hoenlk was shown a certain shrine before i Thia for two reasons, first, because-he Saturday, where he h.u looaled lent- which burned a solitary taper. “That taper." explained the guide In ! la a son of an old Harvard man. and ' porarily. lie waa engaged In mer the President, and second, because lie chandising at Whitelake City, Klam machine built English "that taper he has burned before this ahrlue 7<*> Is a Groton boy, which means a lot ath county, and mar begin bualneaa years He a miraculous taper Never ' to a freshman, for Groton is one of I al some point in the valley ¡won. he has been extinguish. For »even tbe distinguished Harvard prepara long century that taper has mlracu loualy burn before one ahrlnc, amt tory schools and its graduates always not once has been—what you call- step Into the very heart of things at ADOUT COMPRESSED TEA. put out.” Cambridge. Th« Yankee viewed the miracle can dle In alienee for a full minute Then, Are you a member of the Chamber of Commerce? It is a Groton town tiegins ita training leaning slowly forward, he extin with the extremely young mind. Not good time to join. They are doing something all the time. the least interesting of its education- | guished the flame with a mighty "puff." Get in line and help along the good work. al work and which Is destined per-1 **(\>mpressed tea is common enough la Turning with a triumphant chuckle baps to produce greater effects upon Siberia, but so far as 1 know." »ays a to the scandalised and »peeelileaa i modern educational systems than | writer, "an unknown commodity In guide, he announced. calmly: "Waal. It's aout now!“ ¡even the famous Groton “prep" j this country. It Is an ordinary black tea. which is very widely used by the 'school, arc the Groton school gardens | lluriats of the Transbaikal region, by TACTS AND FIGURES ! These have already gained some fam« whom the herb thus prepared la drunk, Australia'« exports of wool to the ‘ and their results are enthusiastically , flavored with sail and »our cream. Sugar would be preferred, at course, I'nlted Slate« have doubled within a spoken of. but It Is either unattainable or too year, Greek and Indian Corn. high priced, costing, as It does, from The total number of |>a»»rngwrs car Mind development and mind train-' 75 cents to one dollar a pound Th« ried by electric line» each >ear in the compressed tea used by the Rusilan United States 1« 5 « l6.Owi.COO The entertainment committee of the Chamber of Com Ing may t>e accomplished as well by officers In Manchuria Is rendered bird means of the study of farm crops as The recent birth rate for St lleorge'«- merce will go to Keno on the steamer Klamath Friday to of the dead languages. The study of by superb modern machinery Such in the-East, Isrndon, the headquarter« has been the pressure employed that of the alien Invasion. 1« at the rale of meet Governor Chamberlain. All the members of the Greek, savg Professor Bailey of Cor- the formerly soft and yielding leaves CO S per 1.000. '1 hl* I* the highest birth Chamber are invited to go along. This visit of the Gover ' nell, is a no more proper means of ed assume the appearance of a hard tils, rate ever recorded In Kugland. ucation than is the study of Indian i which can with difficulty be cut with a In «plte of the many joke« that are nor will be a great advertisement for Klamath county and corn—the mind may be developed by | knife As a general rule, a mallet or made at the expense of the Georgia hammer Is um <! to break off a piece, We should give him a hearty welcome. means of either one—and classics and | very much aa if the tablet «era of peach crop, that alate pr»lured more peaches than teiiy of the eastern state«. calculus are no mure educational than i stone. I It 1s said that there are over 7.000,000 ti to make th* "Suchong tea la used are machines and potatoes. trees that bear peaches In the state na It aped« The school garden work at Groton' flclal compressed tea. Sealskins to the number of 3 12« were cream because nature hai given It a begins with the slmp'e things which ' slightly creamy taste, and also one shipped from Alaska last season An In naturally interest a childish mind. ! that Is feebly saccharine so that It re dustry pursued Ineldenlally with that of scaling on the I’riblloff islands is that and tbe first thing they know the' quires less sugar than other teas tn of ralsihK the blue fox for Ita pelt. flavor this compressed tea cannot be youngsters arc learning while they , These animals, under the system In use, compared with the natural herb It Is think they are playing. Than in the i much flatter In taste, but possesses the are fed and cared for as if domeatl- next step the interest in the work ' same stimulating properties A piece cated It Is said that the biggest shell ever takes hold of them and they begin to the size of a thimble Is sufficient for a made was turned out by the Krupp peo large, strong cup. No teapot la neces | feel a pride and proprietorship in - It was made sary. Scalding water Is poured on tha ple at Essen. Germany I doing things and accomplishing re-1 nugget In the cup. and in a few mla- for Russia, and weighed 3,600 pounds The cun which Is large enough to us« A grown up peopiedo. . The' utes the tea Is ready I . - ” ‘ ‘ ‘I "No cementing agent whatever la thia shell Is mounted on the lortlflca- wonder of Ute creative idea get« hold lions at Cronstadt. and has a range of I of the children. They plant a seen j used In compressing high-grade teas— IS miles Each time that It is tired II not even sugared water nor artificial in the spring. It comes up, begin» boat. A tablet thus compressed may coats the rear 51.500. to grow, enlarges rapidly, and befort be exposed to soaking rains with littl« In the last nine yerai SI,000 motors they have time to get tired, It is rip< danger of injury Aa a general rule, have been registered In England Of theee 3.500 have t»en used for commer and ready to harvest and eat. They however, compressed tea is kept In cial purposes. The motor-wagon users worsted bags. The official Russian have made it. It is the product of | compressed tea Is not obtainable la have formed an association and It ha» their work. Issued a circular In which It 1« urged Europe outside «.f Russia." that commercial automoblllsm If gen If it is a wonderful thing to the eral. would reduce the coat of keeping mature mind that man can bend the) SEATS CHEAP AND HIGH. up the roads and streets, lessen the foices of nature to bis intelligent will blocking of the streets by congested Elderly Couple Were Going Up the and plant and reap, that uut of tlic traffic and make them lees dangerous Fire Eacape, But Were Called to pedestrians. same ground will spring a dozen dif Down. The 5,313 Arma of brewers In the ferent crops, all useful and tieauliful, Occasionally they develop * *en»e of United Kingdom last year brewed 36,- how much more amazing must it be humor, «veu In Canada, any« tbe Pitta 054 657 barrels of beer, and upon this to the youthful, growing mind. burg Dispatch. Tbe manager of tbe they paid X 13.553,533 In duty to a e na The Sowing and the Harvest. According to a par opera bouse In Ottawa, to tbe north tional exchequer And this idea of the plant and the ward. was In hl* office buiy with the liamentary return there la only one firm harvest, of in reality making the tale of «eat« for tbe evening perform of brewers which baa an annual output of over 2.000.000 barrels Th.« flrm things which are good to eat, which ' ance when a policeman called him out alone used 6.293 »6.1 pounds of hopa and on the sidewalk and. pointing to tbe will satisfy hunger and sustain life, fire-escape on the front of the build 4.359.715 bushel« of malt, while Its is embodied strongly in ti e human ing. asked him to explain the sight that payment In duty amounted to m- Who is to be the man to fill the unexpired term of Coun breast. It needs only to be inteili-1 met his astonished gaxe. An elderly 614 1 shilling and 6 pence. cilman Ward? The town Council will elect a successor at gently awakened and fostered, and I couple were laboriously mounting tbe All Wool. slender ladder leading to tbe roof, th* Irate Customer—h*re! That suit their meeting next Monday night. They have full authority the great success of school garden I old man spurring his aged helpmeet to work all over the country shows the mount a few steps further with tba of clot bra | bought of you yesterday la to elect whoever they will, but it has been their policy to tremendous importance of this kind words: : "We’ll soon be there, mother, full of motb-holRR Deafer KM to an rwtt, mtn* Meet an’ you'll ferglt all about the climb follow the wishes of the people. The third ward is with of education. Moths ntffcr «»at cotton, an’ von ladles when you'ro looking at the «how " out representation and what is the matter of their getting in To men who have never watcher! ‘'Hello!" shouted the manager, at- an’ ahent!em*na aeo dote holrt dry and putting up a candidate. The right man from the third anything grow, have never assisted tractlLg their attention, "what do you knowi you rears only high-priced, all- vool goods —Smith’s Weekly, in its production, it may never in all want up there?" ward would stand a better chance of being elected than a their existence have occurred that "We got gallery seat«,’’ shouted bark Hereditary. the old man. ’’an’ we’ro getting there, man from any other portion of the town. If the new coun life is sustained from the soil, and though He— Yea. but you should have seen It seems to me It's a pretty hard cilman should not be selected from this ward it will be the that every man can provide ills own climb fer the old lady. Wlsh't I'd paid the ooes my great-grandmother used to bake! sustenance from the ground. more an’ got low down seats " fault of residents living there. She—Why. what on earth can you The manager then shouted that the At Groton the average size of th<- know— child's garden is 10x40 feet. The entrance was below, and the way they He-I've heard my grandfather had chosen was the flre-escape. The Village Improvement Society fur- old people began a troublesome descent, speak to my grandmother al>out them. Many of the first signers of the petition for the cleaning of nisbes the tools and pays the salary assisted by the policeman, who had —Judge. gone to their aid. ie streets and the removal of obstructions on the sidewalks, of a director. All other supplies are And Her Friend« Loved Her. furnished, most of the seed from the j "An’ that's what comes of your meas were found to be the worst offenders in this respect. They Department of Agriculture at Wash ly stinginess." snapped the old lady to Careful Mother (on return of little her spouse, aa she wearily backed down girl from party)—I hope you didn't ask wanted their neighbors to clean up but did not want to be ington; all that 1» expected of the I the last step of the ¡adder. fur anything, dear. Dear» Oh, no, ma— compelled to do so themselves. They were notified that children is to work tbe garden. Th« NOVEL GARDENING WAYS. Careful Mother f Interrupting) — t’ley would have to take their medicine, and though reluct director tel!« how and when to plant How Cucumbers May Be Successfully Mother's darling! and provides a good rotation of crops. Dear (continuing)—I helped myself antly they have complied with the new order and our Main Turnips, carrots, cabbages are plant Grown from a Barrel—An —Ally Sloper other Plan. street now presents a very neat appearance. As soon as ed after radishes, lettuce and peas A Good Judge. Secure an ordinary barrel «nd bore these people get used to it they will find that it is just as are done. Sandy McPherson had been asked his Enough to Supply the Families. ft serle« of good slzed boles a few opinion of Irishmen, and he replied: easy to keep their wagons and boxes in the proper place as Tlie children have enough In their Inches «part cióse "Eh, mon, the Irish chlels are a' rleht; to the bottom. on the sidewalks and in the streets. They will also find it gardens to supply their families with the only thing that I ha' to c<implaln Place It In th« shoot wl' them is the decflculty they to be a paying proposition as a neat and clean appearing vegatabies and to sell some, if not center of the spot seem tufln'ln speakin' Enrllih Kh. mon, keep some for winter. chocen for yoor but their auccent la simply awful!"— tore will always draw business. cucumber bed. «nd Many of tbe Groton gardens, have | Ally 8loper. flll half full of «ta been perfect all the season, the best I ble dressing, mizad wlth hay, «traw or Misunderstood. gardens receiving prizes each Sep I leaves and a little dlrt. Uncle Hiram—Matilda, what did that The coming years will see one of the greatest eras of rail tember. I Plant cucumber seeds In a circle young man say he wee going to send road building throughout the United States in the history of There is nothing like a garden, I 1 around the barrel about 18 Inches away you for a birthday present? Matilda—Some ‘‘quotations from Da- Every normal from it. Attach strings to stake« tn the world, and it is now beyond doubt that Klamath county says the director, con.” ffro,lnd Ju*t insld« this circle of child loves it. Back to nature Is the Uncle Hiram—Gosh! He must he In will receive her share. Medford papers have been publish tendency of the times, according to seeds, and to the top of the barrel aa the cut shows. When the cucumber terested In the pork market—Chicago ing a story to the effect that the town of Ashland was to be Professor Bailey again. We must vines begin to grow, train them up the News. wiped off the face of the railroad map by a change in the come into contact with actual things, strings. Every day pour a pall of Chose the Long Route. water Into tb« barrel to force the cu route of the Southern Pacific, and Ashland has been contra not with museum« and collections. Young Man (with young woman on The ideal museum is the out-of- cumbers. «rm. to pMser-byl—('an you tell me dicing the story in all seriousness. Now comes the report doors Itself, and the most workable Another excellent plan, as outlined hla the way to Jubilee street? by the Farm and Home, is to dig a thart both the towns of Medford and Ashland are liable to be museum or laboratory of any dimen trench about four feet or longer and Young woman (Interposlngqulckly)— And please, sir. will you tell us tha long feet. wide. Make side tracked by the new line of railroad from Eugene td sions is the sclicxd garden. The time It two about est way round, because we are In no one foot Is coming—has come with some I hurry?"—Tlt-BIts U’eed by way of Klamath Falls. We never heard it stated schools deep and flll half —when such a laboratory will full of stable dress- * t. iut the local trade in the Rogue River valley was not a pay become as much a part of a good ¡ng’ with a The Probable Kind. "What kind of sail are you going to ing proposition tor the Southern Pacific and we can feel sure school equipment as blacklxiarda and few Inches of dirt on top and at fre u«e on your yacht nest year?" asked Interval« during the summer mat the trade will increase rather than diminish in the com charts. The practical school garden I quent the enthusiast pour water Into the trench. Drive is a coming institution. "Sheriffs, I guess." replied tha own- stakes Into the ground near ing years. The fact of the case is, however, that Klamath er. who had Juat looked over the stew a little earth. Put corner of county is going to have a railroad. The railroad officials ard's accounts—Cincinnati ConiMar- tbe trench and nail narrow stripe ctal Tribune. FROM EXCHANGES. . of board to top of stakes at each end. » cognize the immense development of this section of Ore and lay two or three narrow board« They Caught Beak. I gon and the necessity for transportation facilities, and will i across them This will make a trellis (Medlord Oregonian) Mrs Grumbleton—I do pity those or framework for the vines to run on. not be long in supplying that need. Railroads are always 8. J. BoiiMoin and his family have Plant the seeds along the sides of the prior policemen who have to be about looking for new business and no fear need be entertained become residents of Klamath county. I trench, and when the vines begin to In all weathers it's a wonder they don’t catch their death of eolda. grow train them over tbe treilla, and 'hat they will overlook such a paying proposition as the Lewis Pankey, who has been In you Mr Grumbleton—They never catch will And It a very eaay matter to anything. Don't move fast enough , ___ _ thia valley several weeks, looking t pick the cucumbers. constantly increasing trade of Interior Oregon. TWO DOLLARS THE YEAR IN ADVANCE Klamath Falls, Ore., Thursday, November a, 1905. Agitation of a sewerage system for the town has begun. Parties are advocating bonding the city for this purpose. The town council will now be called upon to enforce the fast driving ordinance since the rocks have been cleaned from the streets. • ♦ • • • ♦ • The flour mills in Klamath county are compelled to run night and day to supply the big demand. Klamath county flour is a world beater. Martin Bros, made one shipment of twenty ton» to Fort Klamath Monday on the Steamer Winema. Good quarters and best of care at REASONABLE UsXTlCN Driving Teams arc Specially Kept for the Public. HEADQUARTERS FCR CITY DRAY Walter Marple, Proprietor ---------------- ——------------------------------------- -——J BURNS & HORNING REAL ESTATE INSURANCE KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. The land fraud trials seem to follow the Fairs. Now that the Portland exhibition has closed and the Lewiston Fair opened, the Idaho land frauds are receiving attention. It is expected that many indictments will be found against prominent people in the state including Senator Heyburn, and that trials will be commenced in the spring. acres of the very’ best farm land in Kl.imath County, FOR SALE CHEAP. I ■ ■.... “■ Terms reasona Also have some good residence property in ble. Klamath Falls at a bargain. Correspondence Solicited. " Reference First National Bank. Klamath Falls. Or. »••••••»tk.ALlf -rr T r r-r • ••••• V,- i- •.• THE LODGE Portland business men have got the excursion craze. They have just returned from Lewiston, Idaho, and now they are arranging another trip for the middle of next month. This time Ashland, the Granite City of Southern Oregon, is the objective point. Stops will be made at all the towns along the line of the Southern Pacific. If they would only wait until next year, or later, they might come to Klamath Falls over the new railroad from Eugene. t Will sell in Urje or small tracts to suit purchasers. — At Inst week’s meeting of the local lodge of A. 0. U. W.J report was read by the Financier which showed the :guiu\hich «••nount of policies paid to the families of deceased mom-! bers during the 19 years since the organization of the local lodge. During that time benefits to the amount of $23,000 has been paid at a cost to the parties carrying the policies of less than $2,000. This is a record that probably no other lodge or insurance company can equal. A 5 J. H. RICE, Proprietor PELICAN BAY, ORE. NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS : I f ♦ f ♦ ♦ T Boats for the Angler. •F 4- * -r -r •{- •> F + -F 4 FI T he ¡ og ( abin * AGENTS FOR THE OLD FASHIONED TEA CEP WHISKEY ROANOKE RYE ASTOR WHISKEY 4- * * * * w i the finest line of imported n d domestic liquors in the city ( rry Pure Bred Stallions Buff Cochin Chickens 1*110110, Xlrilii 1-T M A S C O T LIVERY, FEED & SALE STABLES KLAMATH FALLS AND MERRILL Largest and Best Equipped Stables in Southern Oreg** TOURIST S TRADE A SPECIALTY C. 'T. OLIVER, F»roi>rlotor ow noow y », “THE CANDY MAN Freeh Candiee and Bon Bone, Stationery, Notion!. Cigare and Tobaccf DAILY «/. A. GREGORY, PAPERS Main Street near Poetoffice t a