Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1910)
SUGAR BEETS » riX- Havana' railroad on the Florida Keys have been destroyed VERY PROFITABLE CROP TO KAIRF. UNINJURED Bi FRUSTS OR INSECTS Wietonsln Man Writ«-» Interesting Is-tlrr t'ooo-miiig un Industry Timi Will Pay Hem I nary to “Young" Milsllun in the Til I rd Round will bl lvncheu if capumed auve li.e name by which the Thompson mansion is known. The Thompsons s are not willing to lose Mrs. Brown nor her daughter, and both will remain with them HOt IALIHTH HEH HE TO Ht'RKKN The deed to Kate Brown shows that DEH TO POLK K the consideration for the property given to her is "one dollar and the friendship and «fsteem 1 feel for her.' I’ll« lied Balli«- E«' m - cii <I lu-tween Offi The fact Is Mrs. Brown didn't eveD cers and th«- Hlrikers <m the pay a dollar for the property. Mrs. French KailnsuV. Thompson sent for Benjamin Brevort, a surveyor, and had him measure off a generous strip of land from her es- I PARIS. Oct. 13.—A pitched battle late. Sb«- built th»:jeon a substantial I between the police and sixteen social and attractive house, and when it ist deputies and chiefs of the striking was finished she surprised Kat«j by ; walking Into the kitchen and giving ■ railroaders is expected. The social her th«- deed. The Thompsons are lets and strikers took refuge In the w«?altby New York people -New York office of the newspaper La Humanite. Hun. Three hundred policemen are de- , manding that they surrender. The socialist Juarez is hading, and defies The first lightning rod in the world r.he police. Premier Brland has or Is said to have been erect'd at Prm- dered that the arrests b«- made forci dlt. Bohemia, in 1754, by a learned bly if necessary. Th«- railway tieup priest. f» complete FìXIHG lÜWiR tí PAVING PLAIT STRIKE IS REVOLUTIONARY HE Af-HO MORTALLY WOUND« AN OTHER OFFH ER Was Riding on Freight Trulli and Re. Foot Klips and ll<- Was Pr>sipitut«-d slated Arrest—Hlny* Nevera! Twenty-Four F«-«-t to the Ground. I flood« ou nd» Was Eoating Plant While the boxing contest at Hous ’ ton's opera house Friday ulght began HUNTINGTON, W Va . Oct. 14 at a late hour it ended in a short whll< I A negro desperado Is cornered in the neither go lasting over foui rounds hills near hare, and he has already Th« preliminary bout b«ttw««cn killed two and mortally wounded an- "Young" McLellan lusted only a short , other offii'or. Two companies of mill while, Hetinessvy’a seconds throwing lie have been ordered to aid In the up the sponge In the third round. M< capture of th«- man The negro was l.vllsu hud Henn«-uaey all but dut, and | riding on a freight train on the his seconds saved him from receiving < li«-se|M'iike and Ohio railroad Hp<- u knockout I < lai Agent l^-nze attempted to arrest In th«- main event, nch<-du)«-d for I him and be mortally wounded Lense, twenty rounds, between Billy Duffy and also killed Special \gent Charles und "Kid" McLellan, McMdlan knock- Hale. A number of bloodhounds ■-«I his oppoti« nt down In the fourth w«-r« M-t on bls trail, and he killed round three times and r«-celvi-d th“ ► • vernl of th«« dogs and a moment decision later killed Pollc-man Blas He will "Young" Hulllvan of Sacramento, b< lynihed If captured who fought McLellan twenty rounds to n draw u few weeks ugo, sent a t«d- « IIOLEK.I AT NAI’LKN eg ram <hull>-nglng the winner of th< I NAPLES, Oct 15. It is officially main event. au »ounce«! that I w< nty-four new cases II II Carroll was the refere«- and Of cholera hav«> b««-n dlscov«-rerf at "Happy" WlllluniH wus th«- announcer. N.iples Twelve hav«- dl.-d An article printed In the Herald a short time ago und reprinted In the Republican concerning the raising of sugar b«-«’ts and the need tor n sugar factory here hua creatnd much Inlet -st lu other states, and a letter has I hhui rocelved from u Wisconsin furm- < r which indicates that the capability of the soil In this portion ut Oregon Is known to others besides th«- cltl- zens of.Klamath county. A. G. Cox of Osseo, Win . owns land near this city, and he Is so eiitliusins- ’ tic about the possibilities of the Klamath country that ho is willing to contract to rals»' 20b to 400 acres of I sugar beets in case a factory Is lo > ated bero An Interesting letter from lilm fol Iowa: IHE oxi AT BLY IH A.X EX< I I UOI MIEI» IS QI IRREL ON MIH Klamath Rupubllcuu, Klamath I'ull HOI RI 11 XXi II i.l'.X I Hilft < I I R|. Oregon. October W, 1910' Gentlemen« I have i«ad with mm h Interest your artl«l«- of BeptemlM-r Gal«- histrtii Has Voted fora M- h I- tii M.««.'l.'H l ight Chan p*on «’r1/» 'ght« i I« in Hevdoas Conili i..ii—Hear-h- Structure to lie Krerted J9th entitled "Need of a Beet Sugar Factory Here," and. having laud nt This Full mg For Hi* X -. liant Naylox, wish to nay for myself that I a tn very desirous that you will suc County Supei Inlt-tidcnt J G. Swan HI'RINliFIELD, Mo. Oct 15.— ceed In wt-uring »m b u plant at your (••turned Friday from a visit to the Stanley Ketchel, the world's cham city. I have been raining stigur beets *< bools at Pm- Valley, Yonna Valley, pion middleweight prizefighter, was Io Wisconsin for the peat ten years, Lorclla, Bonanza and Bly. and Is very shot through th«- right lung at It. P. ■md hnve found ihrrn to he u very much ph-awd with their condition. Dickerson's ran- h n«-ar Conway thl« profitabli- crop. \l Illy the handsome urw oulldlng morning, and his «ondltion I* now Our factory here easily arranges just < «onpli'ted by D E Burrell is one ( dangerous. for famlll«K to com«- from th<< cities of the best In the stat«- In a country Ketchel w^s idiot by n man named to do the hand work necessary to «-are district It Is lighted from one side Hurts during a quarrel. A posse of for ten. fifteen or twenty acres, as and tin- rear, and is heated by a Wu- ■ farmers is seeking Hurt*. Li|>un r«*- the cane may be. The usual prt«-e letbury h- .iter, which gives the same («• Ipt of tii<* news Dickerson who for this work Is 420 per acre, but II lesultK as a furnace The floor of Hv< <1 here, chartered a np»-cial train is also customary to ullow them 41 this sc hool Is oiled, obviating dust in and lift about 9 o'clock with aevernl tier ton extra for a yield of «»ver and the room, doctors anil two bl«M»dhoundM No above a given number of tnus, say all Th<> school al Honanxa is especially details of th«- shooting have Ixn-n re- over twelve tons (w-r ucr«- All team <>od. and under the direction of Fred ' c«-iv«-d work of plowing, w-edlng, cultivating, I Peterson, principal, assisted by Mrs. Ketchel has be«-n Dickerson's guest lifting and hauling to market. Is done Eldred. Miss Urac«- Lytlo and Misa for -M-v«-rnt w«M»ks. and only recentiy by th" owner of th«- lun<! Kuby Nichols, maintains a high school asHUincd the presidency of a lumber We raise only ten. fifteen and some '*lth twelfth grud«- work company which Dick- rson is finanç ttm«-s twenty tons per acre, hut It has . Two of th«- m -I hhi I h lu tin- district Ing. He had been a week ât the •x-nifMl to nn- that th«- Irrigate«! soil an- not runnlug on account of th* lack ranch hunting and fishing. there will «-airily produce double th«- of teachers. Walter Hurts shot Ketch«-l in th<- < rop that w<- are getting here I feel Gal«- district, three miles «-ust of back with a rifle. The bullet entered mi sure of thin that, whenever a fnc- Merrill, lias just voted S2.5OO bonds his left shoulder and ranged down lory la ready to offer terms such as to be um d lu building a M-hooi build ward into his lung. Three physician» are given here, I nm |■••ady tn «•oiitrm t ■ ing Illis fall. It **111 ulso be ah up- I are attending him. but tn«- chances i with it to raise JOO to 400 ncr«-s of to-date school. for his recovery will not be known for -iigar b««-ts each year for a term <»f Superintendent Swan Is proud of .hours. They quarrelled over an Im- years. the hbowlng mad«' by the schools of i piement, th«- witnesses asserting that I suggest that the factory be lo«-at- th«- county, and says they will com- Ketchel was shot when his back was d along the lak«- shore as well as the l>are favorably with those of anj turned Hurts escaped. The feeling railroad, so that beets may bo d«-llv- against him Is most intense. county in th«- state. ' red by boat as well ns rail. A far A posse is seeking Hurts, who is tory will bring many families from } surrounded In a patch of woods in the the cities for the slimmer, as It Is IlH ! Gauge River bottoms, where Hurtt is looki-d upon by the laboring class ns | believed tn b<- in hiding His capture a fine oportunlty for an outing, and ■ Is imminent. ii. iuiiful Hom«- <d I' K. Wat'<-nbiii-c this work pays them well. Ktitchel is still un«-onsclous and th«- Hc«m«- «»4 a IK-tigli:>ul Th«- te-ot growers will get good big (is en rout«- here on a special train Gathering Friday returns, too, as a fixe«! price la uiad<-' He is in a critical condition An op- them by the factory nt the beginning Then- are a number of R«-b< kahs in , «-ration to remove the bullet will be of the year, and they take no chances thia city, both iiictiibeis of th«- local ' performed this evening. of fluctuation* of the market. Th«.- price paid her«- now Is $5 25 per ton lodge and visitors, and In order that D. W. Murphy, former project en- .they may hecotuc acquainted with f o. b. cars. ! gineer of the Klamath project, r»- I know of no Insects which harm • acli other Mrs It E Wattenliurg ! turn«-«! to Washington, D. C., Sunday the beet crop, and no storms have Friday afternoon gave a reception morning. been known to injure b«M-ts. I hnv«- 1 i«t her henutlful hum«- on Washington known hall storms to destroy nd- rtu-et, to which ull th«- members of mining «-rope and to puncture beet that order in the city were Invited leavoa full of holes, but it seemed to Whenever Mrs. Wattenburg has a make little If atjy difference to th«- function of any kind at her home it is growth of the beet. Early fall frosts, always a success. and the reception which usually occur her«- to kill down yesterday was no exception to the anv corn, potato vines and gardeu rule. Those who were pr«-s»-nt were: truck Still left, do not hurt the boot tope, and they always keep on grow .Mesdames G. L. Humphrey, J. F ing until fully rip«- or until the win ■ Goeller. Clyde Briggs. A. W. Pie). H. ter weather. After digging, frost E. Momyer. K. Van Riper, Charmion does not harm the beets for sugar Bit-hn, Jack Osborne, R. J. Sheets. H. l>tirpoM>H. ho that they do not havo C. Chamberlain, Mary Fish. Margery to b«> prot«*cted. an do potatoee. A Hoagland, J. A. Houston. J. W Mc factory lets the beets froexc as they Coy. H. Parrish, George R. Burn, K. will, and works them up frosen or D. North. Strubel, Townsend, Mang, Hall. Sloan, Uerllng, Hardcnbrook, otherwise, just th«- same. A sugar factory repri-sents necea- McGavvrn and Bailey, the Misses arlly a big Investment, usually said wells. Miss Melinda Sauber and Miss to require a half million dollars to Dement. handle, so that It will probably need I to be assured of some 3,000 to 5,000 ILIJNOIH PRIMARY LAW IB acres of beets being grown for It on DECLARED CONffiTTTlONAL «'ontrncts extending for n term of three yearn, This arrange ought SPRINGFIELD, Ills, Oct. 15 —Th«* easily to b«- secured for one. ft supremo court has declared •' e dlroct would briug many new families to primary law constitutional, »-is'iin- -our country and would boost farm ing Attorney General Stead's demur values Very truly voura, rer. Two other primary laws ha*e A G. COX been declarod unconstitutional within f four years. While he was putting up the tower on th«- mixing plant of the Warren Construction company at the grounds on Histh street about 4 o'clock Thurr- day afh-rnoon, J. H. McDonel, th“ erecting foreman, fell and sustained a broken wrist and rib and several other painful Injuries. He w. t about twenty-four feet from the ground when his foot slipp.-d from th«- mud which had accumulated on his ahoet, and he was prec ipitated to the ground. He is a h«-avy man, weighing 205 pounds, and his left arm waa broken at the wrist, one rib was broken and his right arm was severely sprained. He Is glad that his Injuries are not more serious than they are, and he expects to be out again in a few days. Mr. Mr Donel's home Is in Portland. = Closing Out Entire Stock FINE NEW SCHOOL BUILT FMiltlDA IXIA.MT DKVABTATED IH' % TROPICAL HTOR.M EM inmt cd Death Roll Will Reach UHI Villages and Campe Arc Wrecked KEY WERT. Oct. 15 --Cuba und the Florida Keys have boon de vast at- I by one of the fiercest tropical hur ricanes over known hero. The deaths uro r fimntod to be from 75 to 100. I Itrceivr Wireless Message NEW YORK. Oct. 15 Th«, United Win'lcss company announced th«« fol lowing message from Wellman's di rigible balloon: "Good slsrt, every thing working well. All happy, 11 a. m." "It: 10 a. tn. Fresh north east wind, fog thick." "11:15, sun coming out, clear. Everything excel lent Making twenty knots nn hour " = at the COMdtAOO TO HELEUT « »XDI- ItATKN BY AHHEMBL1EH Nairn* Will Ik- Placed on th«- Ballot'« in th«- finkr of Th«'ir Hti-i-ngth- in the Primari.-« I i DENVER. Oct. 14.—Both hous«.-»' of tb>- legislature passed the direct i primary bill, and Governor Schafroth I will probably sign it. The bill pro-! vide* that party assemblies shall cast 1 on«- ballot for each office, and the names of the candidates receiving 10 I per cent of th«- assemblies’ vote will ! ap|>«-ar on the primary ballot in th«- order of strength shown by the votes I they received in the assembly, Any other aspirants can get their names on th«- primary ballot by getting 500 names to their petition. The candi- dates receiving the highest votes at the primaries will be the party candi dates. The candidates for United States senators ar«- chosen in the same way and are voted upon at the gcn«-ral election. Goodrich Cash Store - ’racker». (carton |, regular H5< .75« Flake Oats and Wheat, regular 45c . .35c Table Frail. regular 25c........................ Table Fruit. ¡>er dozen, assorted . . 3Oc «2.25 ( ream, nine cans . ......................... . .»3c Spices, regular 15c tans.............. . . lOc Rolled Oats, 10 pounds for. .. . «1.00 Pearls of Wheat. |*r package . . 15c Regular OOc T«-a, per |«>und . . . ,4Oc Men’s and Boys’ Clothing Keguhil M* and 922.50 Suits .......................................................... *14.00 Regular 917 Halts........................................................................................ *11.00 Regular 93.30 Pauls................................................................................... Sl'HHT XXTIAI, REt OGXTTIOX OF FAITHFUL SERVICE Oher Prices in Propor ion Because sh«> has been a mode) ser vant. Kate Brown has received from her employer, Mrs. Julia Dewindt Thompson, wife of Dr. Thompson of Ferris Lane, a suburb of Poughkeep sie. a gift of a new house on a lot of ample sise next to the Thompson property free and clear of all en- cumbrances. Thts novel recognition of the services of a servitor became known recently when the deed con veying the property from .Mrs. Thompson to Kate Brown was filed in th«- Dutchess county clerk's office. Dr. Von B Thompson said tonight that his wife was not well and could not be interviewed, but that he was willing to say that Mrs. Kate Brown had been invaluable as a cook in his home for thirty years. Her daughter «•as born there, and is also a family servant in The Wilderness, which is CROCKERY Agateware Glassware A Large Line to Select From at Your Own Price Produce and Eggs Taken at Market Prices Same as Cash. No Goods Delivered I