Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About The semi-weekly herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1914-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1914)
MONDAY, JÜNB W, 1*14 THE SEMI-WEEKLY HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. PAGB FOUB XTENDING to the people of Klamath County a cordial invitation, not only to call at this store while on your visit to the ’Falls during the Rodeo week, but to make it your store—to use it as a resting place and to feel that you are welcome whether you buy merchandise of us or not. Contamination Is Easy Now E U. S. Department of Agriculture Outlines Some Plans for Keeping the Milk Sweet During Hot Weather (Herald bp«« lai Nerviee) ibottle should be washed uiitl carefully WABHNIOTON, l> 1’, June 39. Wiped with a deeti doth. The cap Duriug the hot weather milk i« par 'should not be pushed down Into the ticularly susceptible to coutamluu- milk It may be easily removed with tlon, and for that reason the United a sharp fioiuteil Instrument without States department of agriculture I k injuring the contents. Issuing a timely warning to house-I The bottle, when once open, should wives: Beware of Uncleuu Milk! be kept covered, and the milk should When milk is delivered It should be I be kept In the original bottle until It put into the refrigerator at once. A Is used up very brief exposure to summer heat I The original cap should not be re- make« It unfit for use. If It Is Im placed, but lustead an Inverted glass possible to have the bottles put Im-¡may be put over the top of the hot ¡mediately Into the refrigerator, pro tl. The bottle, when Uot Hi u < S vide on the porch a box contalulng tv should, of course, always he left In ■ lump of ice. the refrigerator, and any milk that " In In nlnnnln» planning a . house. nrranira arrange <■> to1 IlllS till'll pOUTell from It llltll ¡lllllttler have the refrigerator set In the wall i vessel should not I m > poured back. with an opening on the outside It Oulons and other foods having a ails always possible to provide lock» for strong odor, especially during the hot 3 these boxes or refrigerator doors aud weather, very easily Impart their dis tinctive small to milk that Is left un 3 supply the milkman with a key. The Interior of the food compart- covered. This la an additional res- B I inent should be wiped every day with »oil fur al way a keeping milk In u co* ““ a < lean > loth and thor.mi Mv , .ild.-U ereil receptacle |as often as once a week Milk bottle« should never be takelt Under no circumstance« slum Id the luto a sick room, for as tbev are u«u- drain pipe of an Ice box be connected all) returned to the hi Ilk man. they with a sewer. may thus carry lufectlou* dlaoaaea ■ Before removing the cap from u Into uther homes Ever* milk bottle ¡bottle of milk the cap and neck of the lieft at a house where theie la an In I™.------------------------------------ ------- (<<tious sickueM should be boiled be- fore being returned The beat thlug to do In such vlrcutnetancea is to pro vide one's own milk bottles or covered dishes Into which the milkman may l>our the milk from his bottles, The duty of each Individual to hla neigh* bor In thia connection la moat Import ant In any taae. bottles should be given reasonable care before they are returned to their owner The prac tice of pouring vinegar or kerosene or other liquids Into them temporarily when not In use should by all means be discouraged The containers should be washed lit cold water first and finally In warm water before they are returned to the farmer supplying the milk These little details ut cleanliness ■ re matters which cannot be regulat ed by the federal or state sovereaiont Iliiles and regulations that require pure milk Io tie delivered to the home may l>e rendered valueless by careless individuals In the home. The beet efforts of the mllkuiau or fanner to deliver first class milk will amount to nothing unless Individual honsvwlvea will couperuts for the good of the community : ■ I I I ■■■■■■I BI KIMUIH LANO Field Agent Here. Back on the Job. IM) I It "I' BANKER RETURN E. A. Hamilton, field agent of Southern Oregon Conference of Sev- enth Day Adventists, la in the city from Roseburg. He expects to spend a week or more In the county. H P. Dow, who la building the Dew Mt Laki school houae. returned there today to resume hla work, after «pending Sunday with his family here. I HOM Illi Mrs. Rlcliardeon W ovee. Court Reporter R. M. Rlchardaon left Sunday morning for Chicago in I answer to a summons, stating that Mrs. Richardson’s condition was According to a telephone meueage received from Mlaa Perle Dow, abe will remain with J. C. Johnson and famny at the Pelican Bay logging camp until the middle of July, In- stead of returning right away. New Espee Depot for SAN FRANCISCO. June 29—Plans waiting room 117 feet long by 60 are complete for tbe new passenger feet wide, with the ceiling 40 feet depot which the Southern Pacific | high. Provision is made for a capa- CIOUS room for ladles and a smoking company will construct at Third and room for men. and also for a restau- Townsend streets. Announcement is rant 40x46 feet, with kitchen and made that construction will follow service rooms. without unnecessary delays. The Southern Pacific Coast divi The structure will have a frontage I sion headquarters will be In the new of 260 feet on Third street and 111 building. feet on Townsend street. It will be The change in the track arrange in the mission style of architecture, ments Involve tearing up and relay with a plaster finish exterior, three ing every rail in the freight and paa stories high and capped with a red senger yards and the moving of all tile roof. The facade on Third street freight buildings southward toward will be set back twenty feet from the King and Berry streets, In all there street line to provide parking space will be twenty-seven paasenger and for automobiles and hotel busses. On express tracks in the depot. tbe main street fronts there will be a The depot will be finished before covered arcade twelve feet wide. the opening of the Panama-Pacific A feature of tbe interior plan is a exposition. I Miss Icy Wareham and Father-in Lawof Duke She Sues for $100,000 worse. IMI Oregon mineral products Increased , Eugene engineers are preparing a In 1913 200 percent. j 1100,000 drainage project. There are two kinds of Insurance. Accurate information about t'liilcote writes the kind that pays. Klamath Basin. Nee t'hilcote. n:<3 Main. Main. Start a Savings Account Now Begin to savs now by dspoa- ttlng «very extra dollar with us, add to It, allow the intereat we pay (4 per cent compounded ed every ala months 1 to remain and old age will not And you tic one, and all are confident much good will come from the organization. home leas and forlorn. T STATE and SAVINGS BANK Hotel Arrivals KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON White Pelican DELEGATES FROM THE EPWORTH H. G. Wilson, Roseburg; Mrs. J. LEAGUE AND CHRISTIAN EN W. Carson, Miss Canon, Mias Beil, Will Campbell, Eureka; Dr. A. R. DEA VOR SOCIETIES ORGANIZE ¡Brown and wife, Los Angeles; John* M. Madden, Washington Dadge, wife I AT MT. LAKI MEETING and son, San Francisco; H. J. Lustig,' 'Everett, Wash.; H. L. Walther, Med- j (Herald Special Service) iford; Alexander J. Roseborourg,; 'Oakland: Albbert F. F Duhme, Duhme. Mlnne- Minne- ' MT. LAKI, JuJne 29.—A meeting of'Oakland; delegatee from the Epworth League lal*olls' and Christian Endeavor societies of' Hotel Hall Klamath county was held Saturday,!, •Po’*‘x:k' p<,rt- June 27, at Mt. Laki church, for the I“*?1 **, 1 purpose of forming a County Chris- * ^dred and wife Quincy, Calif.;, tian Endeavor Union. Over sixty rep- £oll!,18 an* T“y,or' raHa; t I E. E. Porter, ■ - ___ Swanson, Dorris; E. E. Porter, Wat Wat-' resentatlve« were present , from Mer-. sonville, Calif. rill, Klamath Falls and Mt. Laki. Sunday—C. R. Mitchell and wife. After an informal picnic dinner the Gazelle; J. F. Callahan and ball team ! organization of the Union was per Jas. Hibbard, Yreka; F. P. Cronemil-j fected, and the following officers were Iler, F. P. Cronemiller Jr., Mrs. Jay J elected: ¡Beach, Mrs. Daniel Cronemiller, President—Louis Tolle. ____ ______ Lakeview; Emma P. Barnaby, Green- Vice President—Mlsa Daisy Hayden ,castle, Ind.; T. F. Bell’, F?*A. Fish. Secretary Miss Eva Hanks. Mrs. Braxiborn, Mrs. Osborn, Dorris; Treasurer—Charles Dorr. c o Beatty, W. J. Morphew, Port- A resolution was adopted that the land; A. H. Williams, Oakland; A. Klamath County Christian Endeavo Lauterback, Redding; R. G. Snuda Union go on record as opposing the an(j wife, Napa, Calif.; Miss Ada manufacture, aaJe or use of fntox-.Rice, Agency; A. M. West and wife, (eating liquors. Malin; John Shook, Dairy; L. J. Hud- The meeting was a very enthusias- son, Montague. DON J. ZUMWALT, Pre« E. M. BUSH, Vice Pres, usd Trees. BERT E. WITHROW, Secretary Surveyors and Irrigation Engineers Klamath County Abstract Co. ABSTRACTING MAP», PLANS, BLUEPRINT». Etc. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON I Till) DALLE» BY ALTO, «)) Illis REGION Aft»r a trip ihtuiigb the Eastern and Central Urcguu country, lb« fact Hi il Klamath tin« muir to It than any other county lu the ■tale la notlce- ulilr Just a» soon an the auto strike« llivi timber right al the county llue till i that, cuiut-a th* beautiful Wood lllvi-r Valley, then the Upper Ixike. and the great Klamath liaaln spread out Other towns that ar« making more of a holler and a booster move ment than Klamath Falla, don't begin to have such u fine region surround ing them." Thusly carols Charles J. Ferguson, who camo In late Friday from The Dulles with Will H. Bennett, vice pres ident of the First State and Havings Hank in the latter's car. After the Medford convention. Bennett went to Portland, and Ferguson was called from Portland to Walla Walla by the lllliesa of Ids daughter. The two met nt The Dalle«, and came down via Bend. Ferguson state« that already the residents of Pendleton are boosting for the 1914 Round-Up, and their big hats and cowpuncher boots are every where In evidence. He says that there at Mt. Auburn, a suburb of Cincin ,ia a tryout ut tlie grounds every Sun nati, and there lived. Mr. Zimmer day man has been a widower for years. Miss Helen Zimmerman, bls only daughter, 1s now the Duchess of Man chester. Miss Icy Warehum, who 1« describ ed in New York as a "dog fancier who has exhibited In many shows In the East,” has sued Eugene Zimmerman, the Cincinnati millionaire, for 1100,- 000 for breach of promise. Mr. Zim merman is father-in-law of the Duke | Advertised Letter I Jut of Manchester. The following unclaimed mall mat "We shall stand by him," said tbs ter. advertised on the 27th of July, duke the other day when he was will bo sent to the dead letter office asked what action would follow. office at Washington, D. C., on the Miss Wareham says Mr. Zimmer 11th of July: (OINT) CLERK IS INFORMED man promised to wed her four years Browner. Henry THAT THE STATE'S FUND FOR ago, and has continued ever since to Baker. R. A. promise her. Yet when she brought BOUNTY ON PREDATORY ANI Curnow, J. J. him to the point he found cause for Henry, Jerome ¡delay. Little Is known about the wo Huot, Mrs. Omn man. She has nothing to do with, ■ Holt, Mr. C. According to a letter received this New York society, as has been stated. I I morning King, Alvin by County Clerk De Lap Mr. Zimmerman was born In Ross Kerr, Clyde L. , from Secretary of State Olcott, the county, near Chillicothe, Ohio, about Morris, Lester I state's fund for bounty on predatory seventy-one years ago. His wealth > Mgr. Editor The Messenger animals Is exhausted. De Lap was has been estimated at 130,000,000. Mallory, R. Verde (8) ordreed not to send any more bounty After serving through the Civil War Ollvero, P. claims to the state until the legisla he went to Cincinnati, and there was Palmer, Ed ture makes another appropriation. fortunate In meeting Alexander Mc Pemsford, A L. Heretofore, the state has paid half Donald, a former Ross county neigh Rogers, Mrs. Oscar O. and the county half of the bounty bor. About that time John D. Rocke Rouse, B. clnlrns on coyotes, bobcats, timber feller, then of Cleveland, was looking' Stephens, P. H. ¡for a good man in the southern part wolves, etc. Schure, Albert and Harley ¡of Ohio to handle Standard Oil pro Rulllvnn, H. L. ducts. He met McDonald and offered The manufacture of logan berry Turner, Mrs. Llssle. Juice and sawdust brlcquets are new 'him the agency. McDonald accepted, Wilson, J. T, Industries being considered In various 'and needing a partner, took In Zim- mreman. This business connection A charge of lc will be made on all parte of the state was tbe beginning of Mr, Zimmer letters delivered from this list, In man’s fortune. Mr. Zimmerman mar calling for letters please say adver- The campaign for a two-mill limit ried Miss Evans nearly forty years Used. on state taxes will be made by the ago. He bought a comfortable home | W A DELZELL, P M taxpayers in the Willamette Valley. TO BUY SCALPS