Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1909)
I X'EWENT NOTEN OF SCIENCE: dinary purposes follow the instruc tions below: Sunllght Is said to check Influenza Good 1‘rogn-ss Has Already Been liiten-Kting InformatiiHt Furnished by To three parts of good sharp sand Car for Omaha Corn Nliow Will Hohl epidemics. a Man Wlio Knows. Made and Very IJttle Remains and gravel put one of good Portland on hillsides are Holies of County and Oilier In Sheep pastured Yet to Ik* Done. cement, form a heap of the ballast, Having had many inquiries regard teresting Exhibits. said to become near«lghte«l In ono throw sand and on top, th«-n cement ing cement and concrete, 1 shall try eye. Many months ago the council ap Commence at on«* side of th«* heap ami I'ho reclamation service will aid It Is ■aid that person« with rd pointed a charter commission whose and reply tolerably Intelllgably on throw It aside until It forms another hair are th«» least likely to becom«» In sending the exhibit from Klamath office it was to prepare for submis- these interesting subjects. heap. Do this four or five times be county to the Corn Show at Omaha. sion to the voters of the city a new Cements are manufactured from fore wetting. Repeat this, adding bald. It Is their Intention, If possible, to get Twelve cases of cancer in England charter for Klamath Falls. A great limestone, having as an associate eith water at th«» same time, Use a water uso of th«» the relief map of the Klamath project to the have been truced deal of work was done, but the labors er glacerial clays or shales of the pot for wetting. Mix on boards If from Washington, D. C, and piuco of the < commission were never com- proper analysis. Th«-se must b«» iu possible. Dirt is injurious to con X-rays. Hint on exhibit for the Easterners to There ar«» 1,000 electric lights In pleted. The imperative need for a clos«* proximity to the limestone to crete. About one cask of cement, 4u0 new charter has again brought the be profitably manufactured, and the pound«, is usually reckoned to go to the streets of the ' ancient city of view und gain some Idea of the Im- mouse amount of wirk that Is bo- Damascus. matter to the attention of the city limestone must carry 53 per cent or 'one cubic yard of gravel or sand. Sixty-nine entirely new varieties Ing done In this county by th« gov officials and the members of the com- 54 per cent calcite, plus carbonic acid Concrete, except for foundation-«, I of roses were shown at a recent ernment toward reclaiming the arid mission, and steps are now being gas, 4 4 per cent, which would give a 'require« facing. To make this pias desert lands and building Irrigation French exhibition. taken to perfect the document so that chemical analysis of 97 or 98 per ter us«» one of cement to one of tin«- ditch«-« through th«» valley. An average orange tree produces it can be submitted for the considera cent pure lime. In the manufacture standard sand (not potato soil). Th, During the past season alone water 20,000 oranges, and nn average tion of the voters of the city. of cement the* word "Portland" seems mor«* thoroughly mixed the batter wns supplied to mor«- than 21,000 lemon tree .8,000 lemons. One of the leading spirits in the to be misconstrued. This Is applica concrete result«. acres and wus available for about Th«» available Iron supply of the effort to again interest the members ble to all cements manufactured by Th«» concrete business has grow-i United States Is estimated at 4.785 - 10,000 mor«» If Hi«» landowners and of the commission in this work is ' the use of limestone, clays or shales, 4,000 per cent In the past eight years settlers hud made application for 000,000 tons. Mayor Sanderson. In the discharge and the word is the name of the in- l i America, and today is only In Its their water, One condition. however, American plows and cultivators of the duties of his office he is con ' ventor. infancy. which accounts In some measure for ar«» turning up th«- soil in mor«» than tinually running up against some Foreign cements are manufactured JOHN HARRYMAN, th«» vast acreage under the ditch on seventy countries and colonies. provisions of the old charter that ef on such a large scale that the Amer Superintondent Hydraulic Stoni» ami which the water Is not lu-lng usetl Is Russia is th«» largest producer of fectually prevent his carrying out ican manufacturers have been com Brick Company. the fact that a good part of this land barley; Germany Is second, and the plans for the betterment of the af pelled to meet competition. Foreign Is In the hands of sp«»culutora who uro United State a close third. fairs of the city, or else he finds that cements are dutiable at 30 cents per CHURCH WORKERS GET XO EX- not farmers, but have bought the Th«- luclfer match was Invented In he has no authority to proceed with barrel. Cements vary in tensile COIRAGEMENT 1829, after many years of experi land us an investment awaiting a his work. strength, due to the chemical change rise In price, When the government menting by several scientist*. The city charter is a good deal like in the ingredients used, and especial A Mun U ho Has Usliered Eiglit«-en Telephone communication between puts the law requiring the payment the state constitution—badly in need care must be taken in the amount of Years Got No Thanks. London and Madrid, via Purls, will. of the wuter tax in force, moat of of repair. It was made for a town, magnesia (M. G. O.) that may appear A gentleman spent several weeks It is thought, be cstablish«»d by th«» these speculators will. In all proba with little provision for the future. before manufacture, Tests can be bility, sell the land to farmers, and When the growth of the city demand made for soundness in the following in our town, where he was an entire | end of this year. so it will lie cultivated as Is the other ed a change in affairs the old charter ways: I stranger, says a writer in The Delln- Th«» latest estimate of the depart alreudy owned by the ranchers ntid eator for December, During this was always a stumbling block, and Briquettes, 3 of sand, 1 of cement, time he atended our ment of agriculture is that the year ’ s homesteaders In the valleys. church every so great a nuisance has it become kept in water at 80 degree cent. (176 Sunday. A day or so crops In this country, as a wh-l«». As has been already stated in a before leaving that little headway can be made un F.) and tested in two and seven days. he had occasion to enter a shoe store, will be 2 per cent greater than In previous Issue of Th«» Herald, about til a new charter is adopted by the Gauged with 7 Vj per cent of water by and recognized in the man who came 1908, und 9 per cent greater than half a million dollars Is available for people of the city. the average for the past five years the reclamation work next year, and weight, it should show a tensile The work of the commission is la strength of 200 pounds on an average forward to watt upon him the usher Of wheat, the estimated yield till« this large amount of money In the borious and was undertaken from of seven days setting. This should who had seated him the previous year is 725.000,000 bushels, aa hands of so competent an engineer ns purely patriotic motives. As far as be the breaking weight of briquettes, Sundays. After making his purchase, he against 665.000,000 bushels Ian* | Mr. Patch may be expected to ac- it has gone it has done the work well, lxl inch net*section with weight run spoke of the pleasant little church. year, and 650,000,000 bushels for . compllah wonders toward the comple- and if the members of the commis on at the rate of 100 pounds in 12 said he was about to leave the town, five years. A similar percentage Is - tion of th«» ditch«« and the reservoir sion can be prevailed upon to com sections. and thanked the usher for his kind found In several other principal at Clear lake, and next season will plete the task the result will doubt For soundness—Normal Portland services to him every Sunday he had crops, a greater one In potato«*«, nnd possibly see another 30,000 acres of less be a blessing to the city, and one cement expands slightly when kept in been there. The latter was greatly u decrease in but few, notedly cotton valley land under Irrigation. that will be fully appreciated by the t water at the ordinary temperature. If pleased and touched by the stranger's But !t is also to be considered th"»» citizens. A. D. Hurpold has moved th« not perfectly sound test bars kept at appreciation, and said that he had population and consumption are • « a higher temperature, E-G 150 deg. ushered in “our church" for eighteen yearly Increasing, so that the prices ranch house which formerly stood HE TpOK THE PRIZE: F., expands largely and may even years, but could not remember that of these food necessaries arc likely i near the big barn and has placed It « ______ to keep up. And the co«t of living clos« to his residence on hls place An Englishman was asked to speak crack and go to pieces. In purchas any one had ever before spoken a Is not likely to fall appreciably In near Bonanza. It is being enlarged at the Al Fresco Dining club. He ing cement secure a material sound, word of thanks to him. It Is partly consequence of bounteous crops. Yet and remodeled und a relative, who arose, stuck his monocle in his eye well burnt, and prepared from thor this thoughtless neglect of expressing as a people there will be plenty to be recently arrived from Nebraska In oughly mixed raw materials. Me our gratitude which makes church and told this story: thankful for on Thanksgiving day. tending to make hls home here per * 9 £ “I was at Chicago at a dinnah, you chanical test for ordinary uses can be work so discouraging. Portland Journal. manently, will occupy It. These suggestions, if all carried know," said he, “wheah they were to made by a series of tests, thereby de out, will not fill the In our ! church give a prize for the best story. One termining the residue. For an exam Oregon dairymen will meet In state Over in Lakeview Creed McKen- town or other churches in other 1 fellah got up and told a story and sat ple, as follows: !dree has severed his connection with convention in Portland a month towns immediately, but they might 38 p. c. residue on 200x200 sieve. down, another told another story and the Oregon Valley Land company and hence. They might hire a hall, the 25 *4 P- c. residue on 120x120 sieve. strengthen a few- weak portions of is now in the business of reporting Oregonian says, for exhibition of the sat down, don't you know, then they our armor and send us forth better 7 p. c. residue on 76x76 sieve. asked me to tell a story- I arose and state board of health's disease ml- on land for contract holders. equipped for the conquest of the began: 1% p. c. residue on 50x50 Bieve. crobes and make a sort of livestock The above would show the cement world for Christ. ** ‘I am an Englishman with a The soil and climate of Formosa show out of it. to be finely ground and free from sense of humor.' have been found so well adapted to Don't let this weather affect you “And to my amazement they gave foreign matter, which would deter As a general rule, roots extend on the castor bean that a company has me the prize before I could say an mine the strength and soundness. each side of a tree to a distance equal been formed to plant 200 acres and too much. Of course It fee’s like Regards mixing of cements for or- to the height of the tree itself. other word. You see what I mean?" dot-and-gun times, tut hold «toady erect an oil mill. REVISING THF. CITY CHARTER X CEMENT INIH'NTRY LINT OF J rHOHN Th«» fidlowing have been drawn us Jurors for the December, 100», term of the Circuit Court of this county. J. Y. Johnson, laborer, Klamath Falls. O. A. Stearns, farmer, Klamnth Falls. I. D. Hoss, furnier, Redfield. Boivin, plumber, Klamnth IL Fall«. Fred Sanderson, mayor, Klninatli Falls. W, P. McMillan, carpenter, Klam nth Fnlls. K B. Hall, real «««tut«, Klamath Fnlls. II. W. Tower, farmer, Keno. A J. Manning, farmer, Klamath Falls Thos. Stanley, fai liter, Dairy. C. T. Wilson. farmer, Merrill. Frank Ward, merchant. Klumath Falls. (’. K. Van lllper. merchant, Klam ath Falla. M GulariK-au, farmer, Klamath Falls. George Chnstnln, merchant, Klam ath Fnlls. John Hagelstein, farmer. Klamath Falls. J. G. Stevenson, farmer, Klamath Fall«. J. W. McCoy. farmer. Klamath Fall«. Dan Cofer, carpenter. Klamath Fall«. Jeff Wilson, farmer, Langell'« val ley. F. I*. Nelson, farmer. Ken«» C. It. Withrow, capitalist, Klamath Falls. W. A Turner, farmer, Merrill. John Hibberts, farmer, Klamath Falls. Fred Goeller, millman. Klamath Fall«. Jacob Hueck, farmer. Dairy. T. M. Durham, farmer. Merrill James Taylor, farmer. Bly. H. J. Ixjckwood, blacksmith, Klamath Fall«. Samuel Padgett, merchant, Keno O. Heltkemper Jr.. Jeweler, Klam ath Fall«. • J D. Hereford, the Lake county cattleman, and one of the earliest settlers In Southern Oregon, recent ly paid 120,000 for 160 acre* which lie bought from H C. Fleming Th«» Fleming ranch Is said to bo one of th«* beat In that section, with an In dividual water right and about 500 full-bearing fruit trees. The Oregonian who thinks that”! Pluvlus la too persistent In his at- tentions should consider the eight tort of snow In North Dakota and other bllzzardy whisperings from the effete East. He may then heave a sigh of content. €