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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1915)
L P THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, DICIMM W L I Bs(tosiM FOR RENT NICBLT tinlikii acaruaeata at tka Orecoa Hoaea, Klaautk. iw Btxtk fOR RENT Ofle rooau, etatl er a ultt; itm beat aad all eoa Teaiaaca. Inquire W. H. North. Odd fallows Teaapla. FOR RENT Neatly turalakad rooau. Rlcea place, 838 Mala. 14-tt FOR SALE W.O. SMITH Editor Pakllakod dally eieaat Saaday ay Tka Herald Pakllaktag Cesapaay of Klaaatk ralla, at US fourth Street Catered at Ike poatoBce at Klasa- atk ralle. Oracoa. for traasalasloa through the aialla aa secoad-claai matter. "SPIRITS" IN COFFINS SOMKTIMKS TURN OUT TO BE "BOOZD' Subscrlptloa terns fcy atall to aay address In the Called BUtea: One rear It. 00 Oaa asoath .. FOR 8ALE Body wood, thoroughly aaaaoaed; price reasonable. Phone row SMt FOR SALE Oolng to California; all Bay furniture for sale cheap; house to rest. If wanted. No. 635 3d at. IMt FOR SALE Second band Ford In first class condition. Central Oarage. IS-St SITUATION WANTED SITUATION WANTED by practical arse, cook or housekeeper. Phone MOW. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, OICKMBER 30, 1915 NATURK STUDY MISCELLANEOUS STRAYED ON STOLEN Brown mare, weight 1400, age 8 years, branded J am left shoulder; If found notify J. & Ticker, Trail, Oregon., and receive re ward. ""- 37-at PROFESSIONAL CARDS EIGHT PER CENT LOAN'S O S FARM LANDS ARTHUR R. WILSON, 517 Hate Street CITY AND COUNTY ABSTRACT CO. ABSTRACTS INSURANCE Members Oregon Association Title Men Expert Plumbing SHOWERS. BATHTUBS, SOrKSJ Properly IaataUael Cosaplete Lbse of Supplies aad EqaJpsacat Pads, Pingle & Lorenz 70S Main St ARM1NO Is but nature study on a larce scale: the wonderful ac complishments of Luther Burbank are but refinements of agriculture and hor ticulture, and his keen obserraUve fac ulties and bia lore for plants are the most potent factors In making him what he la. Most of us are blind to the most In teresting and significant facta of na ture, and we go through life calling dull the monotonous and commonplace occupations that are teeming with In terest If we but had the eyea to see and the ears to bear. John Burroughs tells of a naturalist friend who on be ing applied to by a would-be nature lover to take him to bear a certain bird's note, replied that If the person bad.not yet beard that note ke never would. His desire came so late in life that he could have no appreciation af the note if ka heard It Country life la the moat Interesting existence conceivable to the person of keen observatien: at every step kla curiosity is excited, his Imagination is stimulated and hla wonder increased. Children brought up in the country are likely to be the keenest of observera in whatsoever field their lot may be cast InUter Ufa. If the relation between agrlcultmre and Insect and bird life were not so la tlmate aa it to tkara woald atm aa rea son enough to encourage young people to study birds, Insects and plants; the reward in an educational way would repay the effort. But the farmer, to succeed must be somewhat of a bota nist, ornithologist and entomologist, and the time to acquire a taste for study of these subjects is in early life. Hence bird clubs and similar organiza tions should be utilized to the greatest possible extent for stimulating Interest of the young people in nature study, especially in Its relation to agriculture. Every community should have Its bird club and the people of that community should in their attitude toward it show a proper appreciation of the import ance of the organization and the value of IU JSSIw;:? flaaaaaaaiaaiiCE? TTvyH IB t!( tJScT aaafX c-. , .., ,,... : . V y-vi ..k Cua aaaaaaaaa aaaW A. 1 rrtHESJ ffi j OSTT ?Xl&&(rL &r WIIWJbf m gsaaOnayvn yoT BsVaA .tr J News of Oiir Nrighbors Mara 0111 Oil has boon struck In the Harney valley not far from Burns, according to reports brought In from the Interior town last week by Frank Dibble. Mr. Dlbblo had with him a Jar of the pro duct of tho well, the contents having nn unmlstakeablo oil smell and ap , pearance. Bend Bulletin. if ye are particular - -..,v , watq I I 5aV ' Fast Flyers MOTORCYCLES that travel at ala sate of speed abosdd atoaaUy have the atteattoa of VEGHTE baa a complete llaa of aaalpsaeat aad a fall Uae of sap EXPERT REPAIRING GUNS TO RENT KLAMATH SPORTSMANS STORE SEE VEGHTE, HE HAS IT Mala St, sear Stb . Scattered Shots .. THERE WAS A fine crop of frozen water pipes this morning, the first of the season., GOD PITT the poor devils In the trenches on a day like tkla. HAVE YOU POUND your favorite soft drink yet? Spirits In coffins have had Tennessee legal authorities guessing. The "medi um" In the case was a coffin company of Chattanooga. The company claims no supernatural powers. It was simply medium or distribution. Neither were the spirits of tho ethereal variety. They were the substantial kind, com monly known as "booze." An employe evidently thought he was doing noth ing wrong although he dldnt teU the boss to use the spirits as a stimulant to the coffin Industry In dry territory, so a few quarts sometimes were in cluded aa "lagnappo" In coffins ship ped to customers. Tho federal author ities could not see it exactly that way, however, especially since tho coffins were made use of by "lire ones." Tho new form of the old gamo of bootleg ging, varieties of which are sold to bo Increasing In proportion to the spread of legalized prohibition, was unearthed by Inspector Webster 8patos of the de partment of Justice. Washington. Care ful Investigation of the spirits by sev eral well qualified officers Is said to have confirmed the fact that it was real whiskey, similar to the variety which led tho little mouse to want to hunt up tho cat nnd the proverbial rabbit to spit In tho bulldog's eye. Aa Is customary In bootlegging casea In dry territory, no attempt waa made to smuggle In the less harmful malt bev erages. Quicker action was said to be desired. Opponents of atate wide pro hibition are asserting that the case evidences the fact that the only real solution to the temperance queatlon Is through education, not legislation, or through the substitution of the less al coholic beverages for the more Intox icating spirituous liquors. Twelve Months of War as Seen by Great Britain (Continued from page 1) would have done the most good. But John's dignity couldn't abide the press agent methods as skillfully employed by Kaiser Wilhelm. Bulgaria frankly put herself up for the highest bidder. and the safest guarantee. Germany having a field In the advertising line, with no effective counter measures on the part of the allies, the Bulgars nat urally concluded that the central pow ers were the most Ukely to be able to deliver the goods. It pays to adver tise, not only for recruits, but for pos sible allies. The Englishman's fondness for grumbling, which he simply cant curb even in war times, is another token of his indifference to outside opinion. It Is the inalienable privilege of the Brit Ish soldier to carry a grouch against his officers, as It is the right of the British clviUan to denounce the gov- we AiA,atrrouD-iva a'comin- to eminent But this characterlaUc doea ure of the big push on the western front In tbe spring and fall, the Ger man occupation of Poland, the obliter ation of Serbia and the British retreat In Mesopotamia, against which tbe ac cession of Italy to tbe aUled cause and , army, bcr recent brilliant operations on tbe lines to tho Balkans, weakening them Isonzo front, the British conquest of correspondingly In tho west and east German Southwest Africa, the nutting Military experts estimate that she has out of business some sixty German been losing men, killed and seriously the cloakers, although In some In stances their energies undoubtedly have given a certain amount of aid and comfort to the enemy. On the threshold of the new year Britishers are extracting considerable satisfaction from the old Napoleonic maxim: "Wars are won, not by the occupation of territory, but by tbe smashing of armies." With tbe excep tion of the one In Serbia, the armies of the allies are Intact On tbe western front Gormany has not gained a foot In tho last year; on tho eastern front she has acquired considerable geography, but sbo hasn't smashed tbe Russian Meantime, she has extended her us; but never too old, let us hope, to know better. ONCE AGAIN we're at tbe mercy of Me-jsrs. Boreas, Peyton and Seaborn. Hiram Says: These saappy aaoraiaaa caa to to 'pear alee aad warn with aa aradoad of blocks or a above! afeaaL r KLAMATH FUEL CO. Ara dealer fa ALL KINDS OF WOOD AND COAL. 1ST. 5M Mate St. WHY NOT a hatchet-burying for New Years, with tbe interment so deep that tbe axe can never to dag aa. r A GOOD ROAD makes the distance between places many miles apart seem very short A bad road, aach aa that to PeUcan City, makes a nearby sub urb almost Isolated, and aa easy to reach aa a place naif way across the country. not detract one whit from the bravery of the one nor the loyalty of tbe other. It would be a great mistake to regard the recent' hot debates in Parliament, the outspoken and at times bitter crit icisms of military miscalculations and diplomatic blunders, aa evidence of mutiny or even weariness of tbe strag gle. True, the Englishman baa found plenty In the last year to which to ap ply his traditional prerogative. From a grumbler's point of view it baa been submarines In the North Sea and ad' Jacent waters, and the successful In vasion of the BalUc by British sub- mnriLet, make a comparatively meagre oflVet In the grumbler's opinion. After all, Great Britain really owes r. jod deal to the whlmperen, as Pre mier Asqultn, in a moment of petu lance, recently labeled them. If It bad not been for these whlmperen the cocntty and tbe war would still be Managed by the old onw-partf cabinet It was tbe grumblers who exu sed Ibe lack of high explosives, and by per sistent denunclaUon if those respon sible brought about tbe creation of wounded, at the rate of 200,000 a month, and they figure that even with tho boys of the classes maturing In 1916 and 1917, tbe only human re sources she haa yet to draw upon, aha will be unable to atand the strain much longer than another year. Eng land and Russia alone, in the mean time, will to able to put nearly 10.- 000,000 additional men In tbe Held. In the matter of munitions tbe allies at lost' have the ascendancy, Thanks to tbe marvelous work of Lloyd George In organizing the war Industries of tbe country, and the effective co-operation of Japan, not to mention the vast and School Sank at Marehfleld In January Marshfield school will Mart a school banking system. This linn been under advisement for somo time. Its purpose Itr to encourage thrift, Thrift habits are the only com pensation of the school and the banks. Five centH and multiples o( five may bo deposited. Individual accounts may be opened ns soon as one dollar baa been iloi'onltoil. These Individual ac counts may bo opened In any bank In the city. Marshfield Times. 8inr fast and Interesting contests am scheduled for Thursday night at the Pavilion. lilt The .1:iim leads lha world In accf lent lnurnnrr. Hee Chllrote. 11-tf DRINK WATER TO AVOID SICKNESS, SAYS MINORITY QLA88 OF HOT WATIR SIPORS BREAKFAST DAILY KtIF THI DOCTOR AWAY the ministry of munitions. It is these steady stream of supplies from Amer- pestiferous naggers who are to be cred ited with tbe scotching of tbe German spy system in England through the wholesale internment of enemy aliens. tbe reduction of Germany's high ex plosive resources by making cotton ab solute contraband, and tbe partial reformation of the censorship whereby at times tbe veil of secrecy baa been lifted from tbe battle front In fact, tbe experience of the last q dismal chapter. The Dardanelles year generally baa shown the crokers disaster, the GaUlpoll fiasco, tbe fail- to bare been more useful patrloU than lea, tue allies now are prepared to throw two shells to enemy's one, and tbe proportion Is gradually Increasing. As for money, Germany Is manifest ly approaching tbe end of her tether, whereas tho resources of tho British Empire, tbe real reserves of tbe allies, have barely been tapped. So, if the winning of thla war Is to depend upon men, munitions and mon ey, Great Britain and her allies feel that they have small reason to view the outlook pessimistically. Sanitary science haa of late made rapid atrldea with results that are of untold blessing to humanity. The latest application of Its untiring research la the recommendation that It la aa acces sary to attend to Internal sanitation of the drainage system of the human body as it Is to the drains of the house. Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold. foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom ach, can, Inatead, feel aa fresh aa a daisy by opening the sluices of the sys tem each morning and flushing out tbe wholo of tho internal poisonous stag nant matter. Everyone, whothor ailing, sick or well, should, each morning before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In It to wash from tbe stom ach, liver and bowels the previous day's Indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonons toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire ali mentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach Is wonderfully in vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives ono a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your breakfast the phospbated hot water Is quietly extracting a large vol ume of water from the blood and get ting ready for a thorough flushing of all the Inside organs. Tho millions of people who are both ered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatic stiffness; others who havo sallow skins, blood disorders and aickly complexlona are urgod to get a quarter pound of lime stono phosphate from the drug store. This will cost very little, but Is suffi cient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of Internal sani tation. Adv. 1M LssmTi Children are InUrcttlno In stags or their dtvetopmtnt Let plcturts ketp thim is they sre todsy pictures full of untsn. scloutnsss, unsfftcted grace, aad the Individuality of tht child. Make an appointment for thsmls Inspect our plsyroom. Henline Photo Shop PHONE 39 327 Main Street L-"-" ""i,",r--""ii'mrirarTi.rm.a.' wsaaaaataaaaw Now U the time la Have Your Auto Overhauled And nit In shape for sariaf Mr work I fully guaranteed, aad my prices sre rjibt. Wm. Immel At Central Gartfs Wholesale Prices on Beef Beef by the Side . Hind quarter ....... Front quarter .. -Is .111 J. W. Hawxhunt Meat Co. How's Your Roof? Pl.t IT WMII.K THK MUX HIIIXKM W. D. MILLER lhwa all kinds of rouflag aai eta creta work Walnut aad Stb. Life Insurance gives you a feaUag of security. SeeChllcote. 11-tf Hard Times Ball AT Gray's Hall FRIDAY NIGHT, . v DICIMSIR S1ST - S . i K THERE . . . Ford Cars Repaired We do Ford repair work exclus ively. Satisfaction or money re funded. ' CARS FOR HIRK Huuii Falls Arts Ct . 11S7 Main St Phone 17 J. S. MILLS & SON httmtiMul Hanrester NsCsaaMrjr 1SS Skrea Street MERRILL era House ARE YOU GOING? Masquerade Ball o. THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 30, 1915 Grand March to Start. Promptly at 9 o'Clock $10.00 PRIZE WALTZ CONTEST Cash Prizes for Costumes ami Characters. Supper Served at Midnight. Pirst Class Music. George Rudolph. Floor Director. Tickets $2.00, Including Supper. Spectators, 50c. ISave Yourself along Tramp In your searek far quality aad oeta omy combiaad. Come right aere and you'll tad just wkat yet leek In Ue way at WOOD and HAY Qualities ristt prices rifkt sortments laxfV service parfatt Why leekraruV er wkaa yeS-SSS do so waU karat Seehorn GETZ Wild maj Mla Street. skaVaVsil raeam" KlamathFallsAthUticCik PAVILION 'uauclas Kvery Saturiay a ' t t K C-' 1 " v,