Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1909)
Trade at the K k K Store Good, reliable merchandise, honest prices Spring and Summer Stocks are beginning to arrive New Shoes for large and small Dry Goods, Clothing, Muslin Underwear, Shirt Waists, etc., etc hi fact everything to he found in an up-to-date store And it’s no trouble to show merchandise KLAMATH REPUBLICAN ♦ e ♦ « KKK STORE Ki «eir/t i ’ ui ,- iii'tr » u < n iinfM* ( m imiKi s. w Amberol Records play for four minutes. At Muiler*. l-lttf There was a dance given at the W. E Nicholson was lu the city home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stan- ley last Friday night, S.unu ut tho»« this week from Fort Klamath. Throe acoro language» are spoken present being Carl und Johnuiv Ritter. Jerry Petersoa, Jehu Don- by the putivo» of the empire of the uell, John Faith, Mrs. W. 11. BliM Cur. rwo DOLLARS PER YEAR IN ADVANCE and daughter, Nellie. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. E. M. Leever »n» in the city Jeff Kirkpatrick and daughter. ¡from Fort Klamath on a viali thia All communications submitted for publication In the columns of this ...... wook. Anna paper will be inserted only over the uame of the writer. No uon de plume Maude, Miss (late I Fitch, .. Smy th, Scy Pool, Bert Gray, Will Will j | Wni A. Wright and wife returned article» will be published. Logue. Dock and Floyd Pool. Hast Friday from an extended trip Mr. and Mrs. Sam Randle* are through Mexico and California VALI A1II.E FEED. GOOD NEWS FROM EVKRYWHKRE now living ou their place In East I Mis* Hasel Burri*, of Mi rrili, I* Yonna. Cities and Towns of Oregon Make visiting with Miss Edna Houston The shareholders of the Yonna Kale is chiefly valuable as a green Gratifying Reporta. Valley Threshing Machine Co. held during the absence of the latter'* feed for hogs.cows or poultry through a meeting at Jacob Rueck'» home parent*. the winter from November or Octo Portland, Ore.. March 22. 1909. The pressure of water I* well II- on Sunday. ber to April. The better types of Corvallis heat all records for en Mrs. Mike Rueck and children of lustrated by the fact that *o light an plants endure the Willamette Valley thusiasm when she inaugurated her winter weather without injury, yield Bonanza were visitor* at the home article a* cork will not ri»« If *ub- progressive movement on St. Pat of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beck last Sat merged twenty feet. ing from 30 to 40 tons of succulent rick's Day with two bands playing, E. T Shortt left lust Friday for urday, and on their way home Sun and nutritious green feed per acre hundred of school children marching, Oakland. California, and will return day visited Mr. under favorable conditions. It may flags flying, banners waving, every with hl* wife and daughter, who also be grown for summer green feed Rueck. place of business closed, and a genu bought Robert I have been spending the w inter there Chas. Carlson although less successfully. ine old-time Fourth of July senti Mrs V I. Snelling returned last * For transplanting the seed should ment prevailing everywhere. On the Laughlin'* place in East Yonna. con- , be sown in drill rows about threej jlapel of every coat there was a tag slstlng of 169 acres, for $2 100, Iasi Tuesday from Salem, whore she has I been spending the winter, and left feet apart, as early tn March as It 'bearing the message, "Be a Booster," » ack. Mr. and Mr». Jos. Welch and this morning for her bom« at l.akc- is possible to get on the ground. If while delivery wagons carried the possible a strip of the best drained | same message in box-car letters. family were visitlng at Wtu Welch's view. ground on the farm should be used1 There was a card in every window Sunday. Deputy Sheriff John Hchallock. Mrs. Geo. Ritter. Mrs John Lind Harry Pearson and Chester Avery re-' for growing the young plants, and' and when the subscription paper was this should be manured and plowed I opened two banks led with $360 each and Mr. aud .Mr*. Theo Hamnier*- | turn> d Thursday evening from Salem in the fall so that it need only be and in a few minutes $3600 was sub ley were visiting at the home of Mr turned this evening from Salem. replowed and worked dow-n at once scribed and this means not less than and Mr». L. A. Sterxl Sunday. Its and Vestal to the penitentiary Harrison Gray returned from Fort for the seed in the spring, thus get a six thousand dollar fund. Word was received here Monday Klamath Friday, his cousin. Bert ting the plants started as early as from Mr and Mr» F J Bowne They Mr. John T. Burns, secretary- trea They re possible. One pound of seed will surer of the Dry Farming Congress, Gray, accompanied him. left New York City on March 17 for port the road being very good, dusty furnish enough plants for an acre. .Sheldon. Iowa. Mr Bowi.isold hoiu»' which will hold its fourth session in Transplanting should be done about Billings, Montana, is making a tour most of the way. ' After a short rest there, they start 1 Ernest Nail went to Dairy last June 1st, if possible, when the plants of Oregon and delivered an address for Klamath Fall», coming by way of are 6 to 12 inches high. Later trans today to the business men of Port Sunday; also Chas McCumber and PoitL-.nd. We can show you the Ear! Aldicd were there. planting is liable to be held back land at the Commercial Club. The Klamath Fall» Chamber of We had a hard »now »torni In bv the dry weather so much as not Milton and Freewater are going Commerce 1» planlug for a big time by Monday th« Yonr.a Friday, but to be ready for cutting in early fall. some in an advertising way. They j at the regular quarterly meeting on, With the ground in fine tilth, trans-1 have raised a total sum of $2680 for weather had cleared up again. April 1st, st which time thoy will re now The Hoppe Bros busy planting of small acreages may be this purpose. Milton $16s0 and Free 'discus the matter of a road to Lak« in Klamath County done rapidly by hand with a long water $900. When they started out cutting wood for Joe Coburn of the view, and also of a colebratlon for Reservation bladed spade, care being taken not they hoped to be able to raise $1600. Pat Colaban and Frank ______ Cutter railroad day and tiu exhibit at the to injure the roots in taking them The executive committee of the Al Exposition. The passed through Yonna with a load Alaska-Yukon up from the drill row. and replacing bany Commercial Club ha-. deter County Judge and prominent busi- of goods, which they »ere taking to them in tne new ground. They mined to continue their advertising ' ne*s men of l-akeviuw will be in FURNITURE ANO HOUSE FURNISHINGS should be placed three feet apart and when one visits that city, which Mr. Coialian's place in Upper Yonna. Mr. and Mrs, Jeff Kirkpatrick and, I vlted to al tend. each way, covered a little deeper,' is now active and growing in the day than in the drill row, the soil firmed ; time and illuminated at night with daughter. Maud«, were visiting at • John Hchallock, while absent on j bls re««nt trip, went to Vancouver around them with the foot and later' hundreds In incandescent light.«. It C. C Pearson's Sunday. Chas. McCumber was surveying 1 •to visit his m»n. Mark Hchallock, who when wilted down, the whole field . is easy to realize that advertising is 'land last week for Mrs G G. Andor-1 Is a member of the Hospital Corp» should be rolled. Plants should be a good Investment. ' son of Dairy. In the r< gular army. Mai k was con left every three feet in the original C. T. Colt, late of La Grande, is Geo. 8myth made a trip to Bon fined to the hospital for several drill rows and all extra plai ts saved active as advertising director of the anza Saturday months a- « result of blood poiaon- for replacing those that may not sur Roseburg Commercial Club. j Miss Nellie Bliss and Carl Rueck I - tug III UUC u. . u baud.«. H« is now We will be glad to make plans, furnish estimate« and save you vive transplanting. ’are absent from schn-vl • n a n‘ .......... . but baa not regained the money, worry and disappointment. Being acquainted with local Transplanting of larger acreages I. ■> he : ' ;ht ii... of Lu baud and It may be sev 'sicVnes* The?« see. A GREAT WATER FALL. may be done by plowing and placing conditions and materials, wu guarantee economy, affleioucy form of measles going through the eral weeks before It can be deter the plants three feet apart in every and satisfaction for the money expended country. mined whether bi* recovery will be I-arger than Niagara is the catar third furrow, covering the roots but Godfrey Beck and family will i»erai:«n>»nt. not the leaves, with the next furrow act of the Iguazu falls, almost at the move over to the Jas Wight placo I turned and following the day's ' work intersection of the three frontiers on the 1st of April, as the new owner LAKE llll'NT» WOOL HAI.EM. with a roller. Missing plants may of Paraguay, Brazil and the Argen Kelacy Block Opposite Anx-rimii Hotel of the Beck ranch, Mr. Childers, will Joe Fuller ha* stepped into the be replaced later by hand. tine Republic. The river takes Its take possession at that date. As market to buy wool. Last week he Instead of transplanting the seed name from a Spanish word meaning soon as the roads become good. Mr. purchased Manuel Sanders' entire may be dropped in hills three feet great waters. About 12 miles from Beck will start to the Coast, where clip, amounting to probably 60,000 apart each way, several seeds to the its mouth the bed drops suddenly he Intends to locate. pounds. Mr.Sanders Is the first sheep hill, as early as the ground can be down a rocky perpendicular clifl D. Y. Gray and family moved off man In Lake County to sell bls wool thoroughly prepared. Later each some 213 feet high, hence there is ¡the place Tuesday which they had this season and Manuel's financial bill slould be thinned, leaving one a waterfall of that great height. At I recently sold. They moved to Fl. condition Is such that he Is not obllg vigorous plant. As a rule this meth this spot a delightful little island, ' Klamath, where they will live. Jeff ed to sell unless he get* his price. WHAT WILL YOU NEED FOIt FUTURE LIFE? Commercial, od does not give as good yields as beautiful .with vegetation, divides Shorthand and English arc taught hero In such a manner that Kirkpatrick accompanied them to We understand that Mr. Sanders re transplanting. the river into two arms so that the help take the goods up. our students win success. ceived somewhere between 16 and After transplanting or thinning the total width Is about two miles and Modern furnishing», thorough course of trnlnlng, practl- Mrs. Egll and son, Fred, of Kilver 16 'n cents. Mr. Fuller Is looking field should receive frequent shallow a half. The Brazilian arm of the cal Instructors, Individual Instruction, and liealtbful location, Lake stopped at Geo. Smyth's Friday for more wool. Herald cultivation to conserve the moisture river forms a tremendous horseshoe give our students a decided ndvnntnge. night on their way to Portland. until the plants branch out so far here and plunges Into a great chasm Earl Beckdolt of Bonanza has left OUR GRADUATES HUCCEHH IH OUR 8UCCE88. Addi ORDER TO HllOW CAI HE. aB to prevent further tillage. with a deafening roar, while the arm there and is on his way to Canada, tlonal Information may be liad for the Asking. In October or November after the on the Argentine side spreads out In the County Court of the Htate of it is reported. Oregon,for the County of Klamath. green corn has all been fed, the kale, in a sort of a amphitheater form and Miss Hazel Fitch is absent from although not fully grown, will be finishes with one grand leap a littlej In the Matter of the Guardianship school this week. ready for feeding. The plants should of Irene Myrtle Crance, a minor, over 229 feet. John Ritter Is on the sick list be cut off at the ground with an axe Now, on this 22nd day of March, Below the island the two arms this week. or shash, and the entire plant tossed 190», this Court having read and unite and flow on Into the Parana Mrs. W. II. Bliss, who has been on to th- wagon or sled and hauled the petition heretofore considered River. From the Brazilian bank th«| working for Theo. Flack us of Bonan- to the feeding place. Enough may be llled and now presented herein by A. spectator, at a height of 280 feet,:za, returned home Tuesday an ac- cut at one time for one or several E. Ciam«, the guardinn of the per gazes out over two and a half miles count of her daughter, Nellie, being days’ feeding. Frozen kale should son and estate of Irene Myrtle of some of the wildest and most fan- sick, be allowed to thaw out before feed Crance, a minor, praying for an I. Jackson was a business visitor tastic water scenery he can ever ing. Where It Is thought the older order of sale of certain real estate steam, seethe, in Bonanza Sunday. hope to see. Waters PROPRIETORS plants may taint the milk they should belonging the said minor, Irene Myr Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cummins and leap, bound, froth and foam, "throw be fed immediately after milking. tle Crance, and It appearing there Ing the sweat of their agony high In mother and father stopped at Oeo. 40 pounds of kale per day with 20 from that «aid real estate should b<- Smyth's last week on their way to pounds of good hay,such as vetch and the air and writhing, twisting, moan Hold: Lakeview. They are from Nevada. oats, fed in two portions, makes an Ing and screaming, bear off to the It Is Hereby Ordirei!, That, the Ed. Sedge of Dairy, who has been Parana." ideal ration for milch cows, very lit SAUSAGES OF ALL KINDS next of kin of said ward, or minor, When a high wind Is blowing the on bls homestead In Lang< II Valley, tle or no mill feed being needed. The and all per.oiiH Intel esled In I be said is very III with appendicitis, They kale may be fed as needed clear roar of the cataract can be heard estate, appear before this Court on brought him to his home in Dairy nearly 20 miles away. A rough es through the winter until April or the 22nd day of April, A. I)., 190», Tuesday. later. For summer feeding seed may timate of the horse-power represent at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at the Mrs . John Lind of Yonna was be fall sown and transplanted early ed by the falls Is 14,000,000. Room of this Court, lit. Kia quarter of flection Tw«nty-four, In three weeks, bcglnnlg with the 25th Court Dr. Few sightseers ever catch a sight taken seriously III Monday. In tie spring, being ready, under math Falls, In the County of Kin- Township Thirty-six Mouth, of Rango day of March, 1909, In the Klamath Truax of Bonanza was called, The favorable conditions, for cutting dur of the great Iguazu falls, because It math, Stale of Oregon, then and Two, west, Willamette Meridian, In Republican, a weekly newspaper last report said she was much bettor. six days to make the plctur- takes ing July, Aubust and September. Un there to show muse why an order Oregon, which Hiild Interest she In of general circulation, published at less the ground could be Irrigated, esq tie journey of about 1200 miles should not be granted for the sab herited from her mother, Elizabeth Klamath Falla, Oregon. how< ver, once or twice the yields are from Buenos Ayres. of such real estate, described In Crane«, now deceased. Dated this 22nd day of Man’ll, not so heavy at this season. An undl 320 acres of cattle or fruit ranch— said petition as follows: And It I h further ordered, That, 1909. Plant life seldom thrives under plenty of fine water. Inquire at this vlded one-eighteenth intmest In nnd service of thia order be made by pub J. B. GRIFFITH, office. 3-lltf to the South half of the Southwest lication thereof for the period of 3-25 4-16 ash or yew trees. Salem built 338 houses in 1908. County Judge. E. .1. MURRAY, Editor. LEADING NEWSPAPER OF INTERIOR OREGON think of it that you pass more time in your sleeping cham ber than in any other part of the house, you want the place as comfortable as possible, Let us start you out with a handsome new bedroom suite or, at least, one of those ele gant metal bedsteads, fitted with soft mattress and gent- ly-yielding springs We are offering some special induce merits just now. GILLETTE Best Ranchers’ Range VIRGII & SON Building and Construction CALDWELL BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTING CO Ashland Commercial College Ashland, Oregon RITNER, A. M President City Meat Market NIEISS & ARMAND ALL KINDS OF FRESH. ’SALT AND SMOKED MEATS