The semi-weekly herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1914-19??, August 20, 1914, Image 1

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    »»«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
» A,,KK or •
♦ REACHES EVERYONE «
♦ IN KLAMATH COUNTY ♦
»•«•MS4 4M44
X
VOLI'MI- 'I'
NUMBER 44
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, 1HURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1914
GREWSOME LOSS OF LIFE IN LAST FIGHT
y
I
!
Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg,
the Man Behind the Guns
First Notable to Be
Killed in the War
OF POPE’S DEATH
EBERLELN
glana m Northern II» dglutu bat« beeu
ib »pin
l it I
num'“'
M,MS
(«IRMI Art
DRH I
«»
lompvlieii
SEES
GOOD
PRICES
PATRIEN
von crops
I nil cd Pre»» Score» l ire Hour Scoop
Prekidcut of Enterprise Laud and lu-
on <lie Ollier New» Agencies of the
vestment Company, Here on Huai*
to retire before uti over
win lining Geriuati infantry udVSUl e
Ali Atiivleril iu disputili says th»-
HelK.an» I n le evacuateli Muine»
The war uinee Until«-» that
41.1.1» It» » Oil»'.
FOR WIH CO.
British troop
»r« i-i.gugo.; in lighting
along th> Itelglau <»r French borders
Ite. This Increases tin- triy»ter» of their
»lieroa tioiita
1 he Belgian <• ihij I staff lute to-
day wire« that H <>vm naled Ì3>>IVHlll
to prevent ¡is destruction
Geritimi
World—New»
ut
the Pope's De.iUi
Nui Vnnouuced by the < tiurcii Div
< ou ut rie» Facing Famine, and With
iiiturl*-»
No Prospects of a Normal Crop for
.IOIIIK «unni D«-ln)«-»l
Three Years, .Muet Look Hare.
cavalry »nd artillery have • apt u red
Tlrl«- taunt
I lilted Prosa Hervite
NT I'ETEKNIII ItG
United I'tsss Service
PAIUH, Aug
war depart moni det tar»»» a g«-n*-ral
IO.—Tonight's new» offensive move against Austria I»
dHpekhrs deacritor ) «-stent») 'e tight- progressing
belcher)
Cossacks
crushed
the
Veritable Auulrlau cavalry guardlug the fron­
tier
The German l««w alone Is
lug before Belgium
a»
a
isUmatrd al a.Ooo
CoUud Press Service
lhe Ulf sat r* adv an« r of the tier-
The government
PAKIH. Aug JO
maa srai) »s* oirrw helming As fast 1» day annoiinc»»l that French troop
ss uien sosld is- »lio< down rru-n- have I« -xrupled M Illhuixeti. the Ger
fotvenieata would rush up, and the re- man city the) capturnl about ten
Mlltsa Mnh luMat'l Brussels Would days ago. and then lost before it
roMlnae,
sweeping ilvtmnu silvan»«-
lastrad of itrlug ills« on« et taxi
b)
tile lewra. the Ge, mat,
soldier»
<harr<d deni. mlnrally. Tin- Ik-lgluma
une furr«s| to almndon their atlvancv
•■<*» la the fare of >ui h op|»«silh»«i.
Iilliilag «aa heaviest at Arrucho*.
The Belgium» then sought the eta-
■ reactimeau along th«» road, mid
masked their artillery in the woods.
Itlbougli the) mowed ttie enemy, the
tiermaa »drame continued, amt the
beigiaaa fl nail) retreated
The Belgian legation den lea liiat
llruam-l. |iaa tallen.
|(
holds
that Uurain haa not Imen taken
T**
ronhlnr«!
armies
have
a
•trunglj entren, heti position near
’tmweia. T|lr t,«-rman advance for
the past two days has Iw-rn alow, hut
lln- r«-port says the city fell lu -■
sharp engagement, lasting since Mon
day
The Germans evacuated their
poult Iona went of the town after being
•helled by the French gunners
' 'Our entire position la excellent
said the war office "The udvance in
Alaace-l/orraine continue» The Ger­
mans report of a French defeat at La
Grace la without foundation, ns the
German retreat toward Strnusburg
continues.
"Tbs French force outnumbers the
Germans "
rr. PETERSBURG. Aug 20
Novoe Vretnya despltches confirm the
rer>ort of a mutiny among Austrian
troop»
•”•**), with appalling 1—vr~.
Sterling» Ix-ave.
Xanur la aaid to tie In grave dan-
Mr. and Mrs J. W Sterling and
the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs
Wylie, left this morning for Califor­
lYltsd Pre« Hervir«
nia -Mr Sterling has just disposed
LONDON, Aug jo - The war offic. of his Interests In the Orpheus the­
»»neune«! « confirmation has been ater to Arch Tindall, who Is plannlug
fecelved Of tbt report that the Bel- some improvements
I
trr of capture
Are Making Twenty
Millions per Day
(Herald Npe«BU Bervlce)
tary's office can ship it to th» appli­
W ashington , d . c „ Aug. 20.—I cants.
"Had II not been for this act and
^»•nty ®uijOtli of dollars In national
the preparedness of the department to
k not«» every twenty-four hours'
turn out the emergency currency with
"th” re<:o,,d of the production of the promptness and dispatch," said Jos.
ur»au of printing and engraving, the E. Ralph, director of the bureau of
th“’ >MU»d being author- engraving nnd printing, "a frightful
1,(1 by the Aldrich-Vreeland bill, monetary panic might have occurred."
Apropos of Mr, Ralph, who has
tre
,h*' secretary of th» [ been "on the Job" twenty out of
its Ur,r' *U 9,1 <'n’er2cn<'y, to accept twenty-four hours every day for the
,i# *’ munl< ipal and Industrial bonds past week, looking aftor the work of
turning out this new money, hl* wife
••curdy tUf national bank note»,
"“w t|„, terln, of thnt a(,t, whlch said to him the other morning
"Dear, I would like to have fit). I
looked upon m one of the srsi several enticing bargains adver­
tlon
" P!* <>f ro,")tfuctlve leglsln- tised nt the stores, and now Is the
lh»
,n thl’ «eneratlon, time to buy."
under *th*lllCl' lhetreM“TT nw
"Joe" skirmished around through
itious
l,,nou
nts to
to u the
in,,... _ ° B< t "
.... uiiih
----- enor- his pockets, and Anally Ashed up
noie«
11 ' • 2on
200 -°00,000,
'000,000. Th«o
T
noieH "m
,n “f ,l
11.75, all the money lie had.
belns o'
bel«»
ii' 9 fU
f111 " ‘*nl lender,
•ender, and are
"Isn't that the irony of fate." he
the ' H,||,’u,ed to bnnka throughout I remarked to his better half, "only a
can Dred'17 ** ra<’ld1» «"
presecs dollar and seventy-flvo cent»—and I
the money «nd the socr«- jmnde a million In the last hour."
"The European war and the Pan­
It) HENRY Will
Ron.<- CorreitjKindeut United Pie»»
ama canal afford Klamath county the
biggest opportunity It ever had to ee-
RO. II. Agu. 2". -Tim di.ith of
tabllah luelf as a crop producing sec­
Pop P ins X. was officially announced
tion," said Charles W. Eberleln*. pres­
by t church dignrtat*«*» at 1:20 t’lls
ident of the Enterprise Land and In­
nt« ning, but person» in close toujh
vestment company, who is here from
tn the Vatican know that the pon­
San Francisco, attending to business
tiff breathed his lust at 6 o’clock >n
Prince William of Llppe was the matters.
We .nesday evening.
European countries are now on tns
'• lie delay in the announcement is nrst European notable, so far as the
not unusual. Similar delays were meagre reports have made known . to point of actual starvation. The mil­
not- d when Pope Leo XIII and Pope be killed in the European war. He itary activities of the countries at
departed this life The and his son led a charge against the war have absorbed, certainly all of
Plu. IX.
I
Unit <t I Press stored a scoop of tour Belgian forts protecting Liege, and the surplus products. If not every­
or fl.• hours over its competitors In word has come that both were killed. thing, and with the men compelled to
leave their work In the flelds and go
the glv i ng of the news of the deinl e.
to the front, this year's crops are rot­
It la i be».- ved that there Is a ■ uauce
for a foreigner, pemu.uly an .«rneri an,
ting in the flelds.
to become pope. During hl* admin­
If the European, lighting continues
istration, Pope Pius raised the car-1
six months, it will be three years be­
dinal college representation from oth­
fore normal crops will be raised again
er countries until there are as many
over there. In addition to calling for
photograph of hav manag'd the whole situation cardinals In other countries as there
all of the available products, the war
Chaniellor llethninnn ■ liollueg lbs lie I.aMi't the power of Bismarck, who are in Italy. There are In all sixty-
times will also result in the consum­
ing of the seed stocks of the European
man behind the gun» Next to the filled the same position at the time of six cardinals.
the Franco-Prussian war. but this war
When the Austro-Servlan war SPRINGFIELD EXECUTIVE AND farmer.
emperor, he lu the most powurful man 'may »how lie l>as the ability Just
threatened, the pope sent by Cardinal
"Now this enormous dsfleit has to
III German). perhaps in Europe It is now Emperor Wilhelm »blues as the
FAMILY LEAVE OUT THIS MOR- be made up by shipments from other
Campiuelli a letter urging Emperor
generally believed that thu Germans -troug- -i luaii in Germany Bismarck Franz Josef of Austria to be lenient
placee, and the greater portion will
XI NG FOR CRATER LAKE AND
not only knew Austria was to declare had an eiiiperor less able and forceful with the Servians, and begging him
come from the United State«. Fot
war on Servla, but consented to the --tl.^ ¿¡uUdfutl.ir of the kaiser—to not to begin bloodshed.
The em­
that reason, the products of the
MEDFORD
l>lan
Thu» Bethmann-Holweg may cope with.
peror delayed ten days before receiv­
American farmer will find a ready
ing the meesan ger,and by that time
market abroad, and the prices re­
I
the war had started.
"It has been several years since I ceived will be better.
Another source of tyartbreak to visited this section, and 1 can see
Klamath county products can now
THE N AME OF THE WAR
the
aged pontiff was the fact that some wonderful Improvements,” said And an outlet that they never found
By F. S. Tiedale In Evening Telegram
hundreds of foreign youths studying Charles L. Scott, mayor of Spring­ before—the European markets. With
Oliver Wendell Wise 1). D.
for the priesthood in th» seminaries field, Ore., Just before he started his the opening of the Panama canal, the
Win writing himself n hie-to-ree.
lie fared quite «ell with th«- ancieut Greeks; he g<»< by dean with the here were forced to return home to car out of the Central garage, bound cost of shipping to the Atlantic Is cut
fight.
for Crater Lake and Medford. Mr. ■ more than half, so both the prodcuar
Turks and Sikhs.
Large crowds stand uncovered to-1 Scott and family are touring Oregon, and the ultimate consumer will be
Rome and Egy pt and llabyion he met and conquered then» one by one.
He tugged his warsand he tagged 'em right; there wasn't a single snag day In St. Peter's Square. Prayers coming in here via McKenzie Pass. benefitted.
for the pope are offered up in all parts Bend, Paisley and Lakeview.
"Crops were never bettor in the
lu sight.
Till lie got deal down to the present year, and the »»rap on the other 01 the world.
A stop was made at Paisley to vilst Klamath country than this year. The
The Eternal City Is plunged into' the Brattain brothers, who are cous- crops will soon be in demand at high
hemisphere.
Then he acratdied his whiskers and he scratched his head, but finally the deepest mourning. Bells tolled i ins of Mrs. Scott. All In the party prices, and the Klamath farmer, la
all night, and the newspapers, edged unite in pronouncing their drive addition to having an outlet for his
gave it up and said:
in deep black, ignored the war news through Eastern Oregon as delightful.
"There’s no way out—linust call It
(Continued on page 4)
In extolling the virtue» of the depart­
The
ed
pontiff.
Gracco-Belgo-Portuguese-
The dying pope protested to those
Serbo-Franko-Japauseo-
about hi» bedside, asking them not
Anglo-Turko- Russian-Prussian-
to weep. He bade farewell to his sis­
Polish-Bulgnrian-Yustro-Hiuigarlaii-
ters,
Anna and Marta, but when told
Montenegarlan
[that his brother, Angelo Sarto, would
War.”
arrive Thursday, said "That will be
too late."
These were his last words
State May Print the
Textbooks for Schools
>M
WASHINGTON. D. C., Aug 20,—
I I:At the request of President Wilson,
! MB Secretary Bryan cabled the following,
jto the Vatican:
j SALEM, Aug. 20,—There Is a prob-
. the initiative and other election pam­
The president desires me to ex- ability that the next legislature will phlets, owing to the faster presses and
; press his sense of the great loss the be called upon to pass on the ques- better printing facllltlee the state
,
iCbrsItlan world has sustained through tlon of whether the state shall print would have.
jtCs 1110 rieml9e of hls hollne9B- Pius X. By.text books for use in public schools,
The question of whether the state
his pure, gentle character, his un- as arguments are already being ad- I Is to operate a state printing plant at
affecteil piety and broad, thoughtful vanced to show that such a move all Is algo likely to be fought out la
♦♦♦
sympathy toward his fellowmen. he would be a good thing
the next legislature, as the law under
eta ami coals will also be plain and'adorned his exalted station, and at-
r is pointed out that California
United Press Service
which the plant is now operating will
iiutton
dose
about
the
throat
traded to himself the affectionate re- ha8 euch a law, and It is said a large
CLEVELAND, Ohio. Aug 20. —
be succeeded January 1, 1215, by a
Low or "V necked walats, too. -gard Of all feeling hts wide lnflu-having to the taxpayers has resulted,
"Military In mode and touo"-la the
law
reverting to the contract system
dictum of Cleveland manufacturers must conform strictly with the new *>nce
, if tho legislature should enact a! The law which will go into effect
tor fall and winter style* in ladies' , mode in dress. A loug straight step I Novel StohZ
'aW providing for the printing of January 1 abolishes the elective office
and stiff carriage of the bodv will be
cloaks and auits
* '
¡school text books by the state, a much of state printer, and provides for the
No longer will milady appear in the the only mode approaching good form
A film of more than usual Interest larger printing plant than the state appointment of a state printer by the
sheer blousy waist and peg top skirt. .Meanwhile buyers and other people is one depicting trout culture, from now has would be required. Advo- state board at a salary of >1,200 a
Present styles In coats and Jackets are who lay down the law of dress are the egg to the full grown fish, which ;cates of the plan, however, assert year It gives the board full author­
doomed, for war mad Paris has de­ marooned In Paris, becoming fully is being shown al the Star theater that the cost of the enlarged printing ity and control over all the public
decreed that ladles' wear must be mil­ imbued with the military spirit. They rhe Alm wu made In on» of th« plant would be saved In one war to printing, but makes no spscifle provi­
will be back soon with their trunks of world's biggest hatcheries, and every ithoso who have to buy school books
itary .
sions ’for the operation of a state
Skirts will be plain, and only samples. With them will come the step Is carefully explained and pie- It 1» pointed out, also, that a saving printing plant. It provides for lot­
"military
"
straight lines will be tolerated. Jack-
ture<1
would be made in the co»t of printing ting the printing out on contract.