-'sSVWAV fr ' si ' " J- --S1 k t.W rttr ."AV ("t IK-"" 'E ,.$: '; r - J-1 la.. "A t. 'it IV, W .( i't l ( , ? $' W . fc.vJV ' .- ft&Zli tf JWM MI ms -5 t && T. i. '5WSBff -,i talfe Ousted Acts. III I III Will II IB MM I MV HM Km fJBMj SwSSw W MwlMMllMllltl. MMUwMlM FOR SALE ,RI (IW 1 gaVtMgatfEsaW BA - rOS gALB-rtnt class new nay. at facta and timothy miaad. Calloot, SS Mala street W-tt I0 CALX Cheep, m Sfc-taek heavy, wide tire wagon, one set of heavy work harness, laautre 23 Pine itnet tt-St FOR RENT rOk SENT Modem room, (or oae or two gentlemen, at the Clalrmont, 18 Fourth street Sf-tf JTOR KKNT-41x room aoaae, aetata, corner Sixth and Fine. B. W. Oowen. Mt MISCELLANEOUS ARM LOANS-Money to farm security. Rates reasonable, itrme good. Wnt aartlealara, eaU or -rite. B. L. SWott. attorney. WUltta Helldlag. Klamath Falle, Ore. 114 OR SALE OB TRaDB High grade louring car; will trade (or well to rated timber rlstm or other property, ixqutre at 201 Vain street lttf MONST TO LOAN oa city or. sarm property, Arthur R. Wilson, U-tf WANTED Beer bottles; wUl pay 16 cents a dosen (or quart bottles de livered at Wleland brewery la aot leas than two doses lota. We will call (or Iota of fire doans or oTer. White Pel leas Mineral Seringa Co., phone 122J. 22-tt HELP WANTED MEN WANTED Six lumber pliers, 14 yard lumber handlers, 4 men oa sorting chain. Pelican Bay Lumber company. Sf-tt LOST AND FOUND LOST Mud guard from motorcycle, oa road betweea Olene and Welsh ft Chamber mill Under coauoaatcata uhR.H.Oa1 Shaath Imlla, SMt Matting remnants and matt rage at asacruee. ' SOU WILLUWOHNSTONa CO. Life, accident herniary, liability and automobile insvrance In leading com panies. See Chllcote. It 00MBSA6ETEA INTO MAY HAIR tHKEN8 HEAUTIULFLY AND RE STORES ITS NATURAL COLOR AND LUSTRE AT ONCE, '.'amnion garden sage brewed Into a eavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol ittul, will iuiu gray, streaked and '4.JeU hair beautifully dark and luxurl iSL Mixing tbo sajjo tea and sulphur tidpe at home, though, la troublesome. a easier way Is to get the ready-to-ue preparation Improved by the add! aoa of other ingredients, costing about 1 cents a bottle, at drug stores, known "Wyeth's 'Sage and Sulphur Com pound," thus avoiding a lot of muss. While gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful ap-i-wtiance and attractiveness. By dark ening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and sulphur Compound, no one can tell, ijccause It does it so naturally, so even ly. You just dampen a sponge or soft iiriiBh with It and draw this through uur hair, taking one small strand at a ,ime; by morning all gray hairs nave disappeared. After another applica tion of two your hair becomes beau uiiilly daik, glossy, soft and luxuri ant and you appear years younger, vvjetb's Sage and Sulphur Compound ir a delightful toilet requisite. It la not Mended for" the cure, mitigation or i-raveatioD, of disease. Adv. Ujm, HUB AND BODY ttaiaehfte),w leaflk. or wWbui wpi.ji vettvwvi inpea'tliselevAai l alwars 4tf. i, , uaw mm ww eeavMee yea. ;)' . ' KLAMATH FUEL CO. Wo o d The Evening Herald W. O. SMITH, Editor PuMlahed dally except Sunday at Tee Herald PuhUehlag Company of Klamath rils, at ltB fourth street laMi t th DostoSt.fi at Klam ath Falle, Orate, tor treaiiHeioa tareagh Ue nulla aa eeeoad-daas matter. Subscription term by snail to any addrans la the United States: Oae year 96.00 oae aemta ee KLAMATH FAXJLB, OMMON THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1919 REPUBLICAN IDEAS WIN MR. WILSON ordered the house ways and means i committee to provide in the revenue bill (or the cre ation of a tariff commission. Until he changed his mind suddenly last winter the democratic party has always been bitterly opposed to the creation of such a commission. It scrapped the Taft tariff board as' soon as It obtained con trol of the government In 1913. It was entirely logical In fighting the tariff commission principle, since the exist ence of a tariff commission Implies a purpose to adjust tariff schedules to economic needs and to make customs rates harmonise with conditions of trade and production, both in our own market and In the world market If tariffs are to be levied (or revenue only, as the democratic party has con tended (or many decades, there can be no need of a permanent tariff commis sion. The secretary of the treasury and congress can easily figure out the Income needed without the aid from experts in International competition or domestic cost of production. Republicans will gladly contribute to the creation of a tariff board. .They will also cheerfully support the section In the revenue bill which seeks to pro tect by higher duties the manufactur ers who are trying to establish an American coal tar dye Industry. By a sensible use of the taxing power such an Industry can easily be domesticated. Just as the tlnplate Industry waa cre ated here In 1891 by a few lines In the McKlnley tariff law. Organized Sneezers to Hold Convention United' Press Service BETHLEHEM, N. H., July 27. No body nose how many members of the National Hay Fever Association will attend the annual convention up here In the White Mountains August 21st But there are 200,000 sneezers, sneez eresses and sneeserettes enrolld, and ajgood many, thousand of them will be here, from all over the country. According to the report of President John R. Plnover. these sneeze-ridden sneezers sneeze some seventy-three sneezes a day, for an average of forty- one sneezy days a year. This gives us 6,003,200,000 sneezes to look for ward to this year. Most of these young explosions will, as usual, wait until they catch their victims In the middle of the preacher's prayer, or some place like that before demandlna expression. In volume of noise these sneezes will be equal to seventeen European wars and a municipal trolley system. They will necessitate the use of six handker chiefs per day per sneezer, a total of 1. 200,000 fabrics a day (or the 200,000, or (60,400 hankies to resistor the hav (ever vote of the ayes and nose (or the season. Present and sneezlnr at the conven. tW will be Henry Altaian of Bast 87th street New York, the noblest sneezer of them all. Altman has tried 100 remedies, Including psycho-analysis, suggestive therapy, Bahamlsm, Yogi ism. astrology, osteopathy, bleeding, hypnotism, autosuggestion and auto runblllng, singing, science and scores or others. A number of rose feverltes will be among the hays, the hays last year de ciding by a straw rote to welcome them. The case of a Texas member who sued his Insurance company (or double indemnity because be suffered complete disability ' (or two weeks aa the result of being' hit by a sneeze germ while riding on a train, will be discussed. J Moving Pictures Rather a good program of comedies will be shown at the Star tonight along with the ninth episode o( the myster ies of Myra." Mr. Frank Daniels will be seen in one of his funniest come dies, "Mr. Jack Trifles," and you are sure of a good laugh at this laadiar comedian. A Luke comedy, showing bis troubles In a studio, will also be seen aa as wall "The Stolea Pit." and doat forget that the Peerless Orches Forest Receipts This Year Highest Recorded (Herald Special Service) PORTLAND, July 27 Receipts from national forests for the fiscal year 1916 reached the high water mark of approximately 12,820,000, according to figures Just complied. This is 2341,000 above the 1916 total, which In turn exceeded any previous year. Officials say the gain was due to Increased de mand for all classes of forest products. There was a decided growth In the revenue from all sources, the largest being that of $203,000 in timber sales. Grazing fees showed a gain of $77,000. Receipts for water power development were over $12,000 more than in 1916. Yuan Shi Kai's Children Scattered PEKIN, July 27. In accordance with , the late rresiaent xuan am Kars nnai instructions, sons and daughters of the dead ruler are preparing today to be sent to many widely separated places in charge of government officials. Before his death Yuan Shi Kal di rected that his eldest, second and third sons and all his daughters and concu bines should return to his native place to be cared for by Yuan 8hl Fu, his fifth youngest brother. His fourth, fifth, Bixth and seventh sons were ordered sent to England In charge of Yen Hsiu, former minister of education, for their schooling. His four youngest sons were entrusted to w i&l She' be tea-happy She has sent for the Taste Packet and now she is finding out -which Schilling's Tea just exactly suits her. Please don't misunder standthere is only one quality of Schil ling's Tea, hut there are four distinct taste types. Whichever you like best is the kind for you to use; all four of them brew tea of indescribable charm. Send for Hie Taste Packet The taff ilmfU, tun j tt git thi right tit. CiauinifiurtirthnjaiuvtUttiifJM, Engluh Bntkftit, Cijba, Oiling intugh fir fiwt ir lix tuft ifitih. tiUi4 primpth ib ritiijt if so unit (tumft ir tiin). Aiirisi: A Schilling & Qimfinj 333$icim4 Strut, Sin Frnnditi Schilling's Best s-ik. s2i THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH Sales of turpentine privileges and charges for special uses were both con siderably In excess of the previous year. Officials say that tho national forests are Important factors in the prosperity of the regions In which they are locat ed, on account of the Urge amounts of timber, range and other resources which they hold available for use as needed. Business conditions aro re flected In the receipts of the forests. Consequently tho showing for the past ear Is regarded as an index of in creased business activity throughout tho sections where the national forests are found. as Per Will the care of Hsu Shlhcbang, former secretary of state. Several weeks hav ing elapsed since the death of the ruler, the tension at foreign legations here Is decreased, and fear that a dis turbance similar to the Boxer war,' might be imminent, has been dissi pated. For some time after Yuan'a death foreigners believed danger near. At several of the legations entrenchments were thrown up, machine guns placed at advantageous positions, and large Mores of food prepared for a siege. Foreigners were warned to be ready to seek the shelter of their legations at a moment's notice. BsagSkCV itt;)Ls: Sold through grocers only In ittnisri tckgu,8'iza FALLS. OREGON Figures in Immi gration Fight Representative William S. Bennett mado serious charges in tho house of representatives against Frederick C. Howe, immigration commissioner in charge of Ellis iBlsnd, where nine tenths of the foreigners who come to America enter. He said the island was badly mismanaged, and that the com missioner was Inefficient and negligent and that immigrants arriving there were not treated properly. Mr. Howe Is from Cleveland. He had been known as a social worker and at the time of his appointment he was at the head of the People's Institute, a charity and social society in New York city. Everything for the camper but the camp. Hammocks, folding ooU. stools, stoves, etc. 20tf WILUW0HN8T0NB CO. lAAAAAAAMAWWVWVWWVW Howards Auto Line Now Dally Except Sunday KLAMATH FALL8 , ANDA8HLAND Reservations at American Hotel Leave Klamath Falls S:30 a. m. NEW CARS, CAREFUL DRIVERS Every LittleHelps So place your order for Green Slabs and Blocks now Seehorn GETZ Wood Phone 72 r22 Main Street ATTENTION FARMERS AND CHICKEN RAISE We will pay a premium far First Clan Friers and Pat Hens. Also for Strictly Fresh Eae that you are willing to guarantee. I sbHK'IS;bb1 rBBBBsBBW bXheV bbeV."jHbeS( ' jgi C iL gflBgaflLm eaXSMsliL ntisilT BUILIC Just returned sflcr communing with nature. . This In accomplished by allowing nil Lie dlucrcnt kinds of Inwcts to paratlo tho shape nt will and use ono for n pallium, and cat n lot of solt-cookcd grub, not food, snd He around the cuittpdrt' and K'roan from sheer tutaory In bod, and sot up so tired that you can hardly walk, and ko fishing and get no llnli and net wet as tho devil, and take n fresh cold, and live In a prohi bition state, and como home with a dome filled with Hwcel icmlnlscences of fir trees and blue Jays and a lot of places partially healed on the chassis. Who said U. V. D.'sT This Is to remind you that wo hnvu Home seasonable articles that wo would like lo Imvo oii "fall" for be fore fall. And. Florence, wo havo still sumo diamonds, so you had bolter havo this guy net busy, 'causo It won't bo lonn before wo will again bo fast In the grosp of "Winter's mitts." i Have ou the tlmoT Wo have, in . MirlniiM ronim. "Time Is money," so saycth the wlso guy, so ou can make, a trade with us If you have Hie money. Wo got a new batch of liiRorsoll v. .-itches. A big now line of Tiffany diamond mountings. Pine new Btock of Kronen Ivory. We have no money, and ask your assistance. No. Sit Main street, between heav.m and earth In this city. This Is tho scream .if poor MclIATTAN. JrTEn M. Ordway, professor of Chem Istty, says: "Dead air space is ab'o lutet the best Intutatloa that ckn he utitd l'i refrigerators." Our refrlgern torn tre built with a dead nlr space and provision chambers lined with oitorlofs white enamel. Come In iind 'ei u demonstrate them to you. No trouble St- tf WILLIS JOHNSTON K CO. LEGAL NOTICES Notice ef Final Account In the County Court of the Stato of Oregon, in and for the County of Klamath. In the Matter of tho Estate of Ueorgo Schuel, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, as administratrix of tho es tate of George Schuel, doceasod, has filed In the abovo entitled court her final account of tho administration of said estate, and that tho sold court has fixed Monday, the 14th day of August, 1916, at the hour of 10 o'clock am., as the tlmo, and the county court room In the court house at Klamath Falls, Oregon, as the place for tho hearing or objections, If any, to said account and the settlement tboroof. JOSEPHINE SHAW, Administratrix of the Estate of George Schuel, Deceased. 13-20-27-3-10 Sale of Timber, Klamath Indian Res ervation Sealed proposals, in dupllcato, each en velope marked "Proposal for Timber, Klamath Indian Reservation," will be received at the office of tho Superin tendent of the Klamath Indian 8chool, Klamath Arenrv. Ornmn until 19 o'clock noon. Pacific Coast time, on Teach the Youngster to Save And you will hs contorting upon him a 'blessing that bo will thiok you for again and again. The habits of saving acquired in youth will be his comfort and mainstay In timo or trouble or when old age approaches. Why not open a small account here In his name and start him on tho road to prosperity. FIRST STATE M SAVINGS BANK KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON UPPER LAKE TRAFFIC We are ageau for Calkins lluuillioii's mall, iMMCHger sad rn4Eht hoate on tho Upper Klamath Lake. IHwew leave tills ..(tire etery morning except Bandar, at 7iSO, I'HOMC mi Keep Your Wear Household Rubber Gloves 50c, 75c -$1.00 perlpair uuu THURSDAY, JULY ZT, IBIS Saturday, August 19, 1916, for tus ann chaso and removal of npproxlnutti. seven million foot of yellow pn fourteen allotments in Townnhin. i nnd .IS south, Range 7 oast, on thi Klamath Indian Reservation. n tracts for tho purclmso or this ttmb, I nitifl t'o mndo by the successful blddE 'I ui'der this nuvortisomont with the in dividual nllottoes or tholr helis, t, minimum price per thousand ft? board invasure, which will be accsntls Is $3.00. All tlmbor must bo cut Vu lemovod under tho regulations dm!' scribed by the Commissioner or lodiu Affairs betoro Juno 1, 1918. With & proposal n certified chock In tS amount or $1,000 on n solvent Nations! bnnlc, drawn In ravor of tho .Superb? (endent or tho Klamath Indian Kchool must bo submitted, Thoso checks win bo returned to unsuccessful bidden, nppllod toward tho payment fur timber U bid Is accepted and contractu untww littn. und rotalnod us u forfeit If thi btil Is ncceplod nnd tho bidder fulli to comply with tho roiiulioiuotits or hi bid. Tho right or thu Commissioner of Indian Affairs to waive technical J. fectn In tho ndvortlsoniont and pro pusalr, nnd to reject any and all em. Iponnln, Is reserved. Furthor Inform lltm no to tho timber and copies of is. I prom! regulations and form of cob tract may bo obtained from Mr. vn 'limn II. Pieer, Suporintondoiit, Khun. lutli Indian School, Klamath Axoncr Oiegon. CATO SELLS, Commissioner of Indian Attaint ( :o-:s-2M-3-s-io-ic Notice of iond Salt N.itlio luUttiiK Proposals to I'urcUie ! City or Merrill Refundlm; llondi and Water Bonds, Sealed proposals will bo lecelved b; tlu Itecordor of tho City or Merrill, Oiokoii, until August 12, 1910, at Um hour of 8 o'clock p. w. (at which tlm lnoposaU to purchase will bo opened mid considered) for tho purchase of U.hOO, or uny part l ho roof, city of Mori 111 lerundlng bonds, ptiynhlo Jul; 1, 1931, with tho option or tbo city to pay tlieiu, or uny or Item In uumirletl older, from nnd after July 1, 1921; sild bonds to bo Issued In denominations I fSOO nnd ono bond In tho sum of (3M Also for tho purchase or $0,000 or say part thereof of water bond, payable July 1, 1936, In denominations of SM Said bonds aro Issued for tho par poto or refunding tho oulstacdl&i warrants of tho city, nnd for tho pur pose of providing witter and lire pro tectlon, nil under tho provisions or sec tion 13C of the charter of tho City of Merrill. Suit! bonds are to bear Interest it the rate designated In the succeuttl hid, not to exceed G per cent per u nuiit, pa) able neinlunnually on July I and January 1 of each year, at tat olllro or the treasurer of said city, In United States gold coin. Each proposal lo .purchase mutt be uccompanled by a check, certified bj some responsible banking Institution, to the amount of c per cent of the pro tin ml, made payable lo tho Recorder or Merrill Proposals must bo sealed nnd endorsed "Proposal to 1'urcbiie Refunding Honda" or "Propositi to pur clmso Water llonds." Tho council rosorvos tho rlijhi to re ject any and all bids. !)ntol nt Merrill. Oregon, July 7, 191C FRANK D. OLNEY, Recorder of the City of Merrill, Oregon 7-30t itSRflBeaw JjSbV Jif 1 1 n aEsK' i SirM'tn I V-..I.M" i Western Transfer Co. MAIN HTRKKT, NKAR FIFTH Hands Nice 'Vr KLAMATH FALLS ORE30H ' iJ, tra will "be .there" with the music, as !" ST.- i . mtmrnt ssawii ltt PEOPLE'S MARKET U. 1 A" J. (1 ?S,i-- jm -- , . - IJ-Ii rTOliT73 uy their oruos) f -i'