MONDAY, NKITKMllKit PAGE FOUR THE EVENING HERALb. fclAMATH FALLS, OREGON The Evening Herald i . E . J. MURRAY, Kdltor JAMES S. SHEEHY City Editor Published dally except Sundny by Tho Herald Publishing Company of Klamath Kails, at 115 Fourth Streut. Rnorn.l nt the nostofflco at Klam - ath Kails, Oro., for transmission thru tho malls as second-class matter. i Subscription terms by mall to any address in the United States: One year $5.00 -...w- .. - . , Ono month " Member of tho Associated ress Tho Associated Pi ess is exclusively entitled to the uso for republication of nil news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in tills pa per, and also local news published herein. All rights of republication of spe cinl dispatches herein tire also reserv ed. MONDAY, SK1TKMHEK 8, MM. Today's Anniversaries ISO 2 Richard D. Spaight, tho first native of North Carolina to be come governor of tho state, died at New Berns, N. C. Born there March 25. 175S. 1853 World's temperance con vention opened its sessions in New York city. 1857 First overland mail from San Diego, Calif., arrived at San An tonio, Texas. I860 Francis II., the last King 'f Naples and Sicily, was deposed. 1869 A fire in a coal mine in Lu zerne County, Pa., caused the loss of 108 lives. 18S1 President Garfield, who had been shot by Guiteau, was re moved from Washington to Elberon, N. J. 1914 The invading Germans were turned back in the great bat tle of the Marne. 1915 Germans moved on Rus sian port of Riga with fleet and air craft. 1916 French continued vigorous offensive along the Somme, captur ing several German trenches. 1917 German aircraft bombed a -hospital near Verdun, killing 19 and wounding 46. Charlie Chaplin is seen as a "hired man," the much impend upon slave of a hypocritical farmer in "Sunny side," his third million dollar comedy to be released by First National Ex hibitors' Circuit, which will be shown at the Star Theatre tonight. The part is distinctly different from Chaplin's characterizations in "A Dog's Life," in which he played the role of a young city man, and "Shoulder Arms," in which he was a soldier, the two first $1,000,000 comedies produced by Mr. Chaplin's new company. The entire background Is that of a quiet countryside where Charlie shows his unfamiliarity w Tural life in a ceaseless succession of happenings. Those who witness the presenta tion of "The Girl Dodger" at the Star theatre tonight will admit that Charles Ray, the Thomas H. Ince star in Paramount pictures, has been supplied with a vehicle that suits him "down to the ground." It Is a college story, wherein Mr. Itay is seen as a dreamy bookworm or ft student, He takes the place of a 'lively fellow student and gets into a tangle wherein are involved an heir ess and a chorus girl whose identi ties confuse him. The finish is a sur prise and the whole story is typical of life on the campus. Those who have left their college days behind will revel in the memor ies it evokes, while the youth or maiden who) is now enjoying that wonderful period of life college days will be delighted with the ver isimilitude of the picture. At tho thant-wat i "The Jungle Trail", starring the 'so much out of nature; for even In erer-popular William Farnum, will the midst of compassion wo feel within bo given its final showing at the Lib-, us an unaccountable hitter-sweet tit II orty Theatre tonight. This stirring , tUm of ill-natured pleasure In seeing picture is one of life on tho African I nnoth(,r su(tef nm1 (,ve" children are border and while quite unusual from I 8Pnslb,e of "--Montaigne. the general run of pictures, In that the scenes are far removed from civ ilized life, yet the story Is ono of geuntne human Interest and gives Mr. Farnum an excellent opportunity to display his most unusual talents Tonight will bo your last chance to see "Tho Jungle Trail." m Surcty bonds while you wait. Cliil- coto & Smith. O-tf Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst ex- presses tho opinion that national prohibition is "a short sighted con- tril.titlnn to tho cause of temner- WHY SOCKS HAVE "CLOCKS" They Were Originally Made, It It As serted, to Hold the Seams In Hosiery. It Is surprising how much of the past still remains, more especially In regard to tin clothes wo wear. On the hacks of most glows will ho found three thin strips. These marks I correspond to the fourclietto pieces between the tinkers. In earlier times gloes were not made so neatly as they are today, and the stitching of the lingers was carried down part of the way on to the hack of the glove, braid helnjj used to conceal the seams. ! To a practically similar reason dues the clock on a sock owe Its origin, sajs London Answers. In tho da when stockings were made of cloth the seams occurred where the cUvl.s are now displayed, the decoration holm; utilized to ldde tho seams. The little how which will Invariably he found In the leather band Inside a man's tint Is a survival Vf the lime when a hat was made by taking a piece of leather, boring two holes throurh It and drawing It together with a piece of string. Handkerchiefs were not always square. At one. time they were shaped to the user's fancy. It chanced that this Irregularity displeased Queen Ma rio Antoinette, who suggested one win ter evening at Versailles that a uni form shape would be an indication of good tnste. The result was a decree by Louis XVI, issued in the early days of 17Sf, enacting that all pocket hand kerchiefs should have right-angled edges henceforward. IN HEART OF MOORISH CITIES Houses to Which Few Visitors Pene trate Are Frequently Luxurious in Their Appointments. Through the narrow lanes of Moor ish cities the water carrier, who has filled his goat-skins at the nearest fountain, piles his trade from house to house. The town of Morocco does not extend open, smiling arms to the stran ger. The houses present cold, forbid ding fronts. Tho winding, irregular streets twist nml turn In a bewildering fashion, and .the low arches, often link ing house with house, convert the streets into a series of hlgh-walled, semlopen courtyards, still more con fusing to the uninitiated. But If one is privileged to enter through the mas sive gates formidably re-enforced with heavy Iron bands and heavily bolted, one may step Into courtyards Inlaid with mosaics and ornamented with laced arabesques, surrounded with arched passageways, richly carved and covered with luxuriant hangings; into a melancholy garden flagged with an eient' white stones, where a marble fountain plays softly and grent or- ange trees are outlined voluptuously I against the white wnils and the un- I clouded sky. Who knows how many wistful harem ladles have languished there, ,what fantastic tragedies have been spun on curiously fatalistic silken threads? From "Through the Gates of the Moghreb," by Elsie F. Well, In Asia Magazine. Sport in Haiti. "Roosters that crow night and day and have no sense of proportion at all," Is the way William Almon Wolff de scribes Haiti's only fowl of any Im portance, In nn article In Colliers. In addition he accuses them of not being educated, "like the muss of the popu lation," and of holng Ignorant of the fact "that a cock's business Is to let nn unobservnnt world which wouldn't notice the phenomenon Itself, know that the sun has risen." "When It comes to cock lighting In Haiti," Mr. Wolff writes, "the rooster plays a very Important role. Sundny afternoon Is the great time for that," he says, "and all day Sunday you mny see sporting Haitians going about with a gamecock or two under their arms. There nre two rings In Port an Prince; thousands of men gather there every Sunday af ternoon nnd bet on their favorites. Haitian cockfightJng Is not n very bru tal affair; the birds aren't spurred. It Is the custom for the owner of the los ing rooster to cry quits before much damage is done." Human Frailties. Our structure, both Citcnial and In ternal, Is full of Imperfection; yet there Is nothing In nature but what Is of use, not even Inutility itself. There is nothing in this universe which lias not some proper place It it. Our being Is cemented with certain mean qualities; ambition, jealousy, envy, revenge, superstition, despair, have so natural a lodgment In us that the Imago of them Is discerned 'in the brute beasts: nay cruelty Itself, a vice Did More Than Come Back. : Jane's inuinina left Jane home nlnno for a few moments while she run ! around to the store. Before going she I told Jane that she positively must not Inf tliik suit In linfnKt olwi intiitniwl Til lift assured her mother that she would do ' as she was told and not let him In. I Ten minutes later Jane's mamma re- turned and Jane sat where she left 1 her, petting the cat. I "Jane," said uiainmn, "I think I told you not to let kitty In until I came back." "Vou dd, mamma," replied .Jane, "'' du" 1(;t ''I'" ) Ho opened the door hlssulf and walked In." "NOTHING DOING" IN COTTON Kitchen Maids of Sultan of Morocco Entitled to Nether Garments of Expensive Stuff. Tho sultan of Morocco was nlwuys nn absolute monuroh, uml In that ca pacity tho revenues of the country I l'ri' ,u-s- lw ,mu "evur m',M1 "" ' illiillliill lull li.itm.iiiti lilllillit In ! liilMliil I lllll IH'( V I II IIIIMI. IIIIKI It 1111 pilwito funds all belonged to the snl- tan. It was therefore no easy task to arrive at an agreement as to which were state and which private debts, so Inextricably mixed hail they been In the past. There was, for instance, a hill for some hundreds of yaids of very expensive and very line crimson cloth. Naturally the protectorate au thorities scheduled this uniting the prl- 'A"'o debts. Th.- sultan protested. The cloth, he said, had been purehus 'd for governmental purposes In fact ,for the trousers of the Imperial kitchen maids; for there are several hundred .slave-women employed In preparing the palace food. The protectorate govern ment refused to be responsible for this debt. The ex-sultan drew up a historical treatise to prove'that Im perial kitchen maids were part and parcel of the state, and passed, like the palace Itself, from sultan to sul tan. Tho principle wns accepted, but the debt was disallowed on the ground that, these good ladles did not require such expensive stuff for their nether garments. A cotton material, they ar gued, would have equally well served the purpose. The sultan's reply was unanswerable and crushing. "In En rope." he said, "it may be the custom for the Imperial kitchen maids to wear cotton trousers, but In Morocco we have more appreciation of the dignity of their position." There wns nothing more to be said. The debt was paid by the protectorate government. From "The Liquidation of a Sultanate, by W. K. Harris, in "Asia" magazine. FOLLOWED PATHS OF PEACE Aborigines of Texas Unlike the Fierce Tribes of. Other Sections of the Country. Stone Implements found In ancient workshops In Texas, antedating French, Spanish or American settlers, prove that the original settlers of this stnte were not like the tierce tribes encountered In modern times by the white settlers. Little Is known about the aboriginal population of Texas, which lies be tween the Pueblo and mound builders' area, hut Dr. J. Walter Kewkes, chief of the American bureau of ethnology, aided by Professor Peace of the Unl versity of Texas, have located some long-forgotten village sites. Their In- t vestlgntlons lend to the belief that the ' original people of the middle part of ' " state were hunters, while those of I the eastern part near the timber belt. were followers of agricultural pur suits and were skilled In the manufac ture of pottery. They resembled the mound builders. The western part of the state was a more elevated and less arid plateau. Here the people re sembled the Pueblos of New Mexico. Some of the tribes are reported to l... t ,,.-. . .. nuc uecu L-uiiiuoais. in me opening or the eighteenth century Apaches, Comunches and other bavage tribes roamed over Texas, following the buf falo, or raiding across It Into Mexico. There seems to have been constant hostility with these Indians, In which many smaller tribes were extermi nated. Remarkable Chimpanzee Dies. A few weeks ngo there died n chim panzee who had spent the eight years of his life defying all rules laid down for the well being of chimpanzees. His name was Antony, and he was the only one of his trlhe of monkeys who has ever managed to stand on English climate unmitigated by artificial heat. He came from the Congo In 1911, when he was very young and small. At that time he weighed 14 pounds, by last summer he was Just six times a heavy. During the whole period of his civilized life he was 1;ept In n brick building facing southwest and indicat ed, and he slept in straw without blankets. Chocolates nnd sweets poi son to ordlnnry chimpanzees were the special treats of Antony's dietary, and he had a less comprehensible feney for beans, Manchester Guard ian, The "Amen Corner." The phrase "nmen corner" Is said to have originated In London, where, at the end of Paternoster row, the monks at one time finished their recitation of the "Pater Noster" as they went in procession on Corpus Christ! day to j$t. Paul's cathedral. They began in Puternoster row with the Lord's prayer In Latin, continuing it to the end of the street, und then said "amen" nt the corner of tho row. As used In this country the phrase described the cor ner of a church where tho elderly mem- 'hers sit nnd pronounce the word "amen" at Intervuls. Fisherman's Mascot. A mascot to which deep-sea fisher- men attiich great Importance Is a tiny flat stone or bone found In the car of plaice nnd other fish. The wearer of "f tliese ?tonf ls RUlI,he1 0! n'llll! ,0. 'f !ll'"Ker wnliB. i IS easy IU mm llli-nt; biuiikb hi iuu ears of fish, although they are no big ger than a split lentil. Anybodv who pares to look for one and to examine it will see on Its surface light and dark rings similar to those found on n larger scale In tree trunks. The nutn-liervnf-'rlnss tells the age of tho fish, as a now ling uppears each year. MARIE DRESSLER URGING THE STRIKING CHORUS ,...-.. r- rnrT.y .7-rr" y.c '""&y8rTXrpZ&JgSBSE - v !j iilMJIMU"' VJJ1 ,,.. - im ,1 Hk tV.-yTr..i.'!t-----.,-r.".yv..-r';tw.ri Well known nctors and actresses havo joined tho ranks of tho striking players. This phot rraiih y Mario Drossier urging hundreds of stage people, tho majority of whom uro chorus girls, to "atlik to" u i ii,, Sho spoke at a mass meeting at tho Amsterdam opera house, Now York. "nish. - - - - - 1IOXAXZA LOCALS. .Mr. J. B. Mason or Klamath Falls is attending to business Interests at Bonnnza. Mr. B. Hubbard arrived in Bonan za this week, where ho has taken charge of tho Johnson & Johnson Drug Store, during the absence of the owners. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hroshe.tr. ac companied by Claude Hechdoldt, motored to Klnr.iath Falls Wednes day. Jack Hamaker has "returned from Bly, who.ro ho has been for some time. o SPRING LAKE DRIPPINGS. e- . Mr, Jim Stewart and family arriv ed here Sunday from Knnsas Mi Stewart came through in his caic and Intends to make h s ' 'ino I ore Mr. Chas Mack and daughter Dort wero collnty sont visitors Thursday. Miss Chase arrived hero yesterday preparatory to starting .chool Mon day. Mr. Frank Stewart had tho mis fortune to lose two of his horses Wednesday. Wo make a specialty of fire, life '"(1 accident insurance. Phono 60 and I ii-n'll fin thn f!tll!fltA Jt Smith. we'll do tho rest, Chilcoto & Smith. tf BCHOOIi OPENING SPECIAIi. Ono pair souvenir chop sticks free with each bowl Chinese noodles. Crat- or Cafe, 7th St. B-Bt "THE TONIGHT I TONIGHT TONIGHT I Liberty Theater nr,-, unmioir T-v TtlP riMICIIII m .. . (jlKLa 1U "3in-rv iu inc rinwn i MASS MEETlN r: (iiiinT-iiriBTrTaMiTir"',-'---rr-,T I ANNOUXCKMKNT. Tho mnnagomont of tho White Pelican Hotel taken pleasure In pro- snnHrif? to llin imhlln nf Iv lutiuil li Falls, Prof. L. A. Hepburn, who will commit classes In dancing every Tuosdny, Wednesday and Thursday -- n - --..- .t,lw. ti.lll ovonlng in tho hotel dining room, bo- ginning Tuesday evening, Suptombor I. These classes will bo in session from 7:30 to 10 o'clock each even- Ing For tho conveniences of those iv'n -n v riii'i it 'mnosiuiiio to at tend tho evening classes. Prof. Hop oi.in will couoiict UaHse.4 from 'i.'H) to 4 o'clock each Tuesday, Wednes day and Thursday afternoon; also on the same afternoons from I to r.30 for children. Tho charges for these Instructions, w'llrh will consist of ten lessons will be: Gentlemen, ?s; ladles $4; por couplo $10; ehlldieii $.", ; single liw sons $"1 each. I'rof. Hepburn also wIsIich to an nounce In this connection that ho will also conduct classes nt tho M0030 Hull Monday, Krid ly and Saturday ofnlngi. Those wishing may Join cither or both classed. Tho charges ara thosamo for either place Tho opening, or introductory les son on Monday ovonlng nt tho Moose Hall and Tuesday evening at tho White Pelican Hotel, will bo free, at which tinio tho classes will ho organi zed. No spectators, except chaporoiiH, w'll bo allowed. The admission to each nlaco Is free, the charge being ,for tho lesson only. I Engagements may bo made by telo- ' phone, by calling tho Whlto Pelican Hotel, G. ATTENTION MASONS. Thor wtll lie n at.ntnrl fTntnoiiintrn 'tlon of Klamath Lodgo No. 77. A. F, & A. M. at tho hall on Monday oven- 'Ing. September 8th nt 8 p. m. A gen - oral attendance is desired. By order of W. M 6-2t O I ccasod. C. Applegrato, Socrotary. 11-18-2C-1-8 - WILLIAM FARNUM IN JUNGLE TRAIL" REGULAR PRICES NOTICE. ' Thoso having lnundry at tho Wonr Tlltn 1nun,lrv twill i ... .. ...... . ... ,i,i iiit-uau rn u.i..i ..... t .....,.. . vf sumo nt onco. Laundry is located ca Klamnth Ave., near Oth. K.m In the, County Court of the State o( 'wrcgoii, i-or mo nmiity of KUm. atli. In tho .Matter of the IMato of Alma H. Alexander, Deceased. .Notice iti huruhy given that thu iindoi signed has filed Ms final ac count uiul that Saturday the 13ta day of September at I o'clock p.m. In the (( ii'room of tliu uboto entit led court, In tho Comity Court house, at Klamath Kails, Klamath County, Oregon, bus been flxcJ by the I mil I us the time ami place for liL'uriug the same All persona having objections thereto will file the Mme or appear at tho time anil place set for bald hearing and object thereto, K. I.. ALEXANDER, Administrator of tho estato of Alma S. Alexander, deceased. 11-1S-U5-1-8 In tho County Court of the Stnte of Oregon, Por the Count) of KUm- Hill. In the Mutter or the I Mate of Henry Schwindt, Deceruicd. Notice Is hereby given that the iinili'i-HliTTicil has duly nualiflcd as administrator of the above entitled muito. and that all persons having claims against tho estato will please present them, properly verified with vouchers attachor, at tho office of this administrator In tho hoomls I building, at Klamath Falls, Oregon. I within six months from the date Of - IM nntlpo Doted Klamath Falls, Oregon. Aug- ust 9th, 191!). , . H. M. MANNING. Administrator or tho Estato of Henry bciiwinai, i- TONIGHT ancc