n -TT'-Tiyf!J "WIN i. . - " i It V'l: u !. '. s V Brl i,f r w MwlM(Mn 0M wflrWwee HmlfsOwMiUTs. FOR RENT KfcftLY furalehed ajeartmeaU at the Ottawa House, Klamath. Mar Bttta ROOM TO RENT Hot aad coll wa ter, Sfiht, heat and bath la room. R. B. Smith Realty company. -tf FOR RENT Room, iteam haat, mot aad cold water, suitable tor one or two men, at the Claremoat, 4th street, aear Pine. H-tf FOR SALE FOR BALE At a bargain, opriiht ;Krakauer plaao In apleadld coa dttloa. Phone 252. Mrs. A. Oehler, S4B Cth street. ll-6t FOR BALE: Young water spaniel dog, waU broken. Call Dr. A. A. Settle. LOST AND FOUND FOUND Focketbook, containing Inquire Sheriff's oee. 18-lt MISCELLANEOUS CHICKENS I will bay roar chick- aa: will pay good prioea for good uhlakiai aad fair prices for fair ease. C." rwuaoa. -lt rCRNUHED FRONT room, ckwe la; hot aad cold water, with bath, with or wlthoat board. Phoae 60. lMt PROFESSIONAL CARDS waaMWMM CITY AND COUNTY ABSTRACT CO. ABTACT INSURANCB Oregon Association Title Man A. O STRATTON White. Bid. Klamath rails ' ' Toloihoao Coaaaetloa . OU Stoves Mao New Maw la 'the time to get oat yoar lid Boaters aad bars aaw llalaaa amdi No aead to bay aaw stores. Weeaa ax yoar old one as good as Our charges are very mod- PmU, Pintle tit Lorcnz 7M Main t of livery Blga aad Saddle autoes at the MODOC 8TAHLBB Mar, Grata aad Feed for Sale K. L CHILDERS, Proa. How's' Your Roof? FIX IT WHILE THE SUN SHINES W. D. MILLER tBjeee all klads of reoaag aad cob WaUat aad Sib. Phoaa Saw A Car of that Daadjr Rock Serfage "PHACOCK" COAL jWjU. arrive about November 16 th. ,Tlpm yoar, orders to be delivered aa antral of the car. Prjoa 111 , We also handle dry slab, body aa limb wood. Bead la ear er dera.' Phoaa 117. KLAMATH FUEL CO. 005 Mala Street NOTICE!? amaaa havta Heaair.i asiaest baftujaf the aaaia e Ward ar, we bavatahea iVmmm U "adrfee 'aa pallie aaat'aa 'Imt faoaw tag asaaa watt ,aw JaraWml aajsj Eamw" dWAaaaaaBfeVHmjE, drowaaW Aaaa Caamiay, Healed ad HOT aamiiaii!! Tk'1.t, v'w wmi raaaar rora ..ene m. m aa . a r- samaweaaoau I daaaad aader lIAmr Caaaa TheErening Herald W.O.SMITH Editor Published dally eicept Suaday b The Herald FabUtalat Cempeay or Ktamata rail, at 111 rottrU Street attred at the poateaUa at Klam ath Falla. Oragaa. for traaamlaatoa throagh the malk as Meead-claea attar. Subacrlptloa terms by mall to aay address la the Ualted Btataa: Oaa year . . Oaa moath .18.00 . .to KLAMATH FALLS, ORHOON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER la, IBIS INTELLECTUAL STDCULUS JUST as each Individual man needs aa occasional stimulus to keep him at his beat, so the commu nity .as a whole needs such a stimulus. In th'e winter time especially the rural community la likely to relapse into a state of coma when there U so little doing aad all days aad .alghts a alike aad Ufa la so moaotoaoua aa to seem hardly worth aayeort. It la at auch a time the lecture course can perform apleadld aerrlee. Most man If left to their own re sources will not amount to much, will make little progress sad care little for Improremeat. The person who under such circumstances does im prove Is the exception, not the rule. It Is much the same with a commu nity; It needs the stimulus of example and of outside forces to rouse It to emulation. Ita people must be told what Is going on In the world outside. Their minds must be lifted out of the monotonous groove of every day du ties and employements and placed up on the world's highway to be hustled Into contact with the traffic and tur moil of Intellectual and material achlevemeat The lecture course can be aad should be made to perform this ser vice for the rural community during the winter season when otherwise monotony, Inactivity aad Indifference would be likely to reign. The In jecting of new subjects and of new Ideas on old subjects for discussion, the presentation of unique or unusual views, have ail the force of .stimuli and will arouse thought aad discus sion aad la the end will produce aa atmosphere of activity, enterprise aad progress. But the lecture course must be planned to meet the naeda of the com munity, to raise the level of thought and culture, aad to give Ita educa tional, social and moral activities and purposes aa Impetus that will carry them along the highway of progress. The lectures should fit In with some general scheme of advancement so that each year aa the result of the stimulus received from the course there shall be discernible a more wholesome respect for the force of up lift. "MOLASSES FOB FLB38" THE single-term plank of the Dem ocratic platform hald Its origin, presumably, In two consideratiens: First, that it would leave the presi dent free from the influence of ambi tion for a second term and thus en able him to make appointments with out regard to the political influence of the appointees, but solely upon their qualifications, and, second, that this plaak In the platform would add strength to the ticket and bring votes to the candidate. It la manifest that from the be ginning President Wilson had no In tention of being bound by the single term plaak unless developments should Indicate the Improbability of bis reelection If nominated. Positions In government service have bees used for political reward The presldeat did not appoint to a position ot prominence any man who would likely be ar candidate against him la 1016, aad surrounded himself and filled the departments with men who could be of service in securing his own renomlnatlon aad election. This plank, therefore, did not serve its purpose of freeing the presidential office from the evil influence of pa tronage. It may have tarred its pur pose In gathering some votesfor the candidate, but. If so, the vlolkioa of tho plank will result la turning a cor responding number of votes against him in case he should be a candidate for a second term. Mrs. Stacy Hemeaway, 881. Third street, has some beautifully boaad books, slagle aad la sets; would make lovely Xmas gifts. She would sell them at greatly reduced prices., Taey are'aew. 'De Luxe blndmgs. lf'-lt Better see that year Bra pellslae are rlgfct SeeCMIeeter S " i Herald want adi get results. TH1 EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH NmofOnNcitabml Rates Workmen employed oa the Phoe nix ditch of the Rogue River Caaal company construction Friday after noon touched oS a charge of dyna mite uaderaeath a stump, aad halt dollars aad dollars filled the air. The blast uncovered a money cache that had been burled there since the early 60s. Most of the coins were of the mintage of the '60s, aad when the silver began to fall there waa a wild scramble. The cache contained about t500, according to the conservative, but some of the more Imaginative are placing It as high aa IJ.GOO. Ash land Tidings. CaatBeetlt Prof. P. C. Relmer. of the Southern Oregon Experiment station, harvested a part of the augar beets from the farm Thursday and made a carretul test of the yield and the result Is certainly wonderful and shows that sugar beets would be one of the moat prolific and best paying cropa this valley could produce aad especially la this true of Irrigated beets aa the test shows. Medtord Baa. e Rich Copper Strike Mr. T. L. Elgre, superintendent of the Valley View Syndicate operating the copper property north of Lake City In an Interview with the Surprise Valley Record proclsima the copper mines In Surprise a revelation, aad predicts the making of oae of the biggest copper mines la the state out of the "Black Jack" 880 pounds of ore was recently shipped to the Salt Lake smelter for a test aad assayed $130 per ton value. Alturaa Plain- dealer. Spreading the Gospel The publicity department, aa ahown by the following figures, hss made aa excellent ahowlng for the first five months of the present management. From June 1 to November 1, 85,618 booklets, 1.884 letters, 160 marked newspapers, 7,518 printed postcarda and 2,500 leaflets have been aent out from the office. This foots up to the respectable total of 47,105 pieces of matter sent out Ashland Tidings. Aa Expcaatve Leak The basement la the home of Joe Lynch, 219 Thirteenth street, was fill ed to a depth of over a foot Wednes day morning aad oil waa poured along the Southern Pacific track for a dis tance of nine blocks, when si draw bar on a oil car waa dislodged, the oar punctured and Its entire contents lost Thirty-thousand gallons poured from the car, which waa punctured while on the Fourteenth street trestle. Oregon City Enterprise. Carrying out promises made both before and after the recent franchise election the Bend Water Light A Power Co. has Just arranged with Steldl & Sweet for the use of the power generated at the North Caaal dam on terms wholly satisfactory to ooth parties. Bead BuDetia. Advertised Letter List The following unclaimed mall mat ter advertised oa November 18th, twill be seal to the dead letter office at Washington on the 87th day of of November, 1916: Baxter A Malone Barnes, P. M. Brlttan, Arthur Burton, Jerome Buford, E. L. Crawford, Mrs. M. E. Chappelle, Mme. (8) Cheadeayne, Jaa. Ferguson, Zola MeCann, Henry Murphy, J. W. Murphy, Con Saadstoa, Mr. Scbirts, 3. A. Todd, Mrs. Margaret Winters, Mr. A Mrs. Harry B. A charge of 1 cent will be made oa all letters delivered from this list la calling for Utters, please say adver tised. W. A. DBLZELL, P.'M. nppw uncTRii ei ciin A COLO OR CATARRH f x ttuir i uct neuci tdmh steaa 7 $ and Nose are Stuffed Up. 4 Instant relief no waiting. Yoar clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear aid you can breathe freely. No more hawk ing, snuffling, blowing, headache, dry- . No struggling for breath at slight; your cold or catarrh disap pears. Get, a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist aow. Apply a little of this fragraat, aatuepuo. healing cream In your nostrils It penetrates 'through every air psssage of the 'head soothes the laaamsd or swollea mueous membrane aad relief comes iastaatly. It's1 Just flat, Don't stay stuffed up wth a cold or aasty catarrh. , American FarmersThink War Times Not So Poor J e During the first year, rlcult- .... - lira I nnrt tarrengPfl tUlfiy- W.OOIUIV nuu wvhi.-m "" two per cent, a atlmulus that caused an Increase of 3.4 per cent In the acreage e Grain exports were thv highest; cotton, the lowest. What the Aaavrkaa Fanner Has to Sell Abroad Thl Year. In excess of homo requirements, America can spare: 376,000,000 bushels of wheat, 885,000,000 bushels of corn, 7.000.000 bales of cotton, 800,000 bushels of oats, 8880,000,000 worth of moat and dairy products. United Press Serrtee WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 16. While sensational fluctuations In Wall street attracted attention, tho Amer ican farmer waa quietly pocketing heavy profits aa a result of tho war-lot The Department ot Agriculture ng- toca from thrco to one per cent; while urea, made available to tho United flax, barley and cotton acreage de press, Indicate that ho selted the creased. HIGH SCHOOL NOTES (By Rollln A student body meetlnx was hold Thursday evenlnsr, Graham Klehl waa elected basketball manager and Rollln Stltser athletic editor. A com mittee was appointed to frame a new constitution, the old one being lost last year. The committee consists of Will Melbase (chairman), Orabam Klehl, Austin Case, Octavla De Lap, George Rlggs, Harriet Fink, students, and V. T. Motschenbachcr, faculty member. Not enough Interest Is shown In the student organisation. Thursday af ternoon Just about two-thirds of the students were thert School activities cannot exist unless the students give their utmost sup port and loyalty to this organisation. In doing this, each student should at tend student body meetings. In order to express his opinions. His vote Is a protection to this organisation. It was suggested at the last meeting that each student not present at a atudent body meeting Bhould be fined & cents unless no could produce a reasonable excuse. The profits de rived from this would be placed In the athletic fund. Philip J. Slnnott, who haa been managing the Klamath county booth at the exposition, gave the High School an hour's talk Thursday morn ing. Cards and elides were shown of the grounds at the exposition. Particular interest is shown in the debating league, and the prospects are exceptionally hopeful. The m terlal Is also first class. Some have had previous experience In debating last year. Next week debates will be held In Senior English. Most of. the Seniors possess forensic talent, and many have entered the league. League entries to date follew: Mar garet Dowllng, Margaret Wood, Har riet Fink, Laveta Jackson, Henel Du Fault, Emma Honzlk, Florence Boogs, Frankle Adams, Helen Zurapfe, Ida Thomas, Hazel Fry, John Houston, t mmmmmmm i asataawaasassi' , -gpnjgjg-g- aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaw .daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa kYgYgmTdaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaam U aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa L -'i.-X:' saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa i JP'H THE aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa pBaaHjv onfaMar BBBBBBBBh aaaaaaaapw I lFjaaT'laaaWaHamraaavBVri saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaassmaaaBaaaBBBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasm BM aaaaaaal .mJBJWWFBMBf aaaW aaw BaauaaawAfJI OleSBamfmeJiBai IIU IklaWaaal L FALLS, OREGON tiyuchologlcnl moment to boom ills business, llwillslns that Kuropo brought more of his guodj than over 1 .....1 n.nnn.l ! n WflV 111 sVlTI '.. .. ,,.... .. .....utttA ,ki.itfnriw iinuo iievmiiK '"", it"v", w ... -said American farmer promptly plant ed more land In order to meet the larger demand, Much ot this Inud went luto wheat, where Ith to food the nrmlea flfiht Ing each other on tho urcnt fronts of Europe. The onco vast cotton crop of tho south was decreased, because n year slnco the former found him self cmbarrjsetl by tho amall figures tho crop brought abrolul. Tiio ntcgrcgaio croim i estimated nt evcn per cent larger 'than last year's when tho farmer ex- ported about one-tonth of his total. It half of the Increased production Is available for export this year, the export total will be twenty-five per cent more than last year. Increased acreage In sugar beets, sweet potatoes, rice and wheat from thirty to ton per cont; tobacco, com 'am oft(R ncrCage Increased upwards live por cent; hny, rye and poU' Stltser) Clarence Williams, Robert Elliott, ' tMAMk Tiirntn WnVnft KNMAA- lillAl. riajtn m.,'m, .... ..---, Dorr, Chas. Honzlk, Rollln Stltser, Graham Klehl, Cecil Adams, Austin Case and Lawrcnco Motschenbscher. There win be three teams, each of six students, and one team of four mem- bora. Tho school team will be select ed by elimination contests. Captain Jsko Stelger and his squad, also Captain Holen DuFault and her squad of girls, will begin practicing basketball at an early date. There la much Interest and talk at high school about basketball. It Is probablo that about thirty stu dents will turn out for the high school team, whllo about fifty will turn out for tho class looms. Last year the Sophomores wero tho champions, but It looks as though the Seniors will he Huccesuful this yoar. An orchostra of sixteen pieces is holding weekly practlco each Tues day night. At an early date a few numbers will be presented In assem bly. Tho orchestra Is led by Mr. Tay lor, tho music teacher. Much Intoreat Is shown In this work. COLD WAVE SWEEPING NORTH FROM THE GULF United Press Service WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov, 16. The coldest wave ot tho season is sweeping the Quit States, and moving north along the Atlantic Coast, ac cording to tho weather bureau. Northern Ohio la having Ita first big snow storm. Nearly 17,000,000 pounds of wood pulp was exported to Europe from the United States during 1914. Can ada ranks second, receiving from the United States over 7,000,000 pounds. You should be interested la life insurance. Ask Clillcote about the "Dividend paying company of Amer ica." 6 Fish and Oysters FRESH EVERY DAY Hales Fith and Meat Market Steve StraMcr, Prop. 71M Mala Mt. Phone 1ST FIIKKII SALMON EGOS Auto DeHvery Your Choice ALUMINUM WARE, FANCY GOODS, ART WARE, CROCKERY, UTENSILS, STATIONERY. EVERYTHING NEW Henderson's 1184-SS Mala Street Come to the Garage that Guarantees you Satisfactory Service in everything Whether you store your car with us permanently or just buy occasional supplies, we guarantee to please you in both Quality and Price. The Best Grade of Gasoline at the Lowest Market Price. Try our Service once and notice the difference. Howie Garage M-aaaaaV FFlraaaaaaaaaaaaaa CaPjPBaaaaaaaaVlaTl J JaCaaaaaVaaamaaaaaa "fHff JSSn maaal imaP &laaMBaaaaaamMBm8pflfl Laaaaaaaaaaal wf Mi I U Quick and Reliable Service Freight, baggage or patttngtr. Equlaptd with auts busts snd aute trucks. Mttt all trains and beats. Day or night strylet. Western Transfer Co. Phontt Office, 117; flttldtncs, 2M.R. FIRST STATE M2 SAVINGS BANK KLAMATH FALLS,, OMEOON DW30t1WWi admW TUESDAY, NOVKMHIsn 10, 1,,. KU8MU1 Fall Athletic CVak adUalf BAta senate.... ... nifwrnniw lUsVtilAYt NOV 11 PAVILION Membership Fees, it.oo. Social Membership, 75c.' HINTS ON EYESIGHT If you biivo friMiiciit lisadicliM which medicines du not curt; If you see distant objects mors (or less) clearly, or need to hold printed matter nrater to or fur ther from the ' than formtrly, or need more light; If you havt observed any of thcao things, yoar sight needs tho aid ot correctly adapted glasses to nutttt as wall: as preserve It. Accurately tlttod classes art only possible when Hie sight hu been scientifically tested. Wt have every facility for doing this, and exercise tho greatest cart, to that you may receive the utmost benefit from wearing (lutes. We offor you accursto service. H. J. WINTERS iwwvitww Van Riper Bros. GROCERS A man l know it by the cumsaay he krrps, mm well mt n tnerrhsatbf the stork Im ranir, unil Hutsssaa Jk Worwiwr, mIio utantl fur quality, liavr- lct their M. W. Ilae wKh Van llljer Ilros.' who stand far M-rvlcr. CIkiIco m-bvllnun nt FltUITS, UKIUUKK, JIXLIKH, JAMS, OI.1VKH, VKGKTAIILK.S, CONDIMKNTH. "Get the Habit" Phone 85 6th and Main THE ROAD TO FORTUNE U through the sailings bank roalt. No one who doesn't save will sfsr have. Open an acount here an acquire the habit of saving. You II find It more and more pleasant a your tarings grow, and you'll al ways be glad you acquired the tar ing habit, Mai nClS a 'waf -"amaK WuriTnT VERY LATEST . . ,. wtli brush Tae easy ww'7'" Jw, m" the mark. Made of raa. ber,1 fits a taa iadex finger. J bristles te eeaae out) reacass all Mtrfeeaa.of the teeth. Mas. sages th fHa. Kneoracd f tlwrtesta.aidrfcyalclaat. PMIOMBeo ! Jt 1 1 t J A-l , i i S 8 1 ! 'm-4 W "rf; tfr:i ABvertmsmsat ., F'j-'i-i ' " 'W -5i A f. ' ' BaaSBBSSBSSBSSBSSBSSBSSBSSBSSBSSBaaSBBBS . .