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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1919)
MONnAV,HmTMMltBitIB.lBljr PAGE BIX iWTri 7T1 tf TJ ' i.. "'-...i-., f"CrA MaKnnal Anfn Awaccni'ir P.. MOTOR RH BVflttsI? 1U3 OUl UiC XIVUU vivc uuuuuuB uiv i.vvwouijf lUEnpSlliy the Ellgine More Pep Between Main and Pine pjfj' ' THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON niHffl & h lif m PS WITH S LONDON, Sept. 15. Several mem bers of the official party accompany ing the Prince of Wales on his Jour ney to tho United States anil Canada are already well-known to many Am ericans. It is remembered in London that the pleasure of tho royal visitor and that of his hosts was somewhat mar red when, In 1860, the lato King Ed ward VII, then Prince of Wales, tour-j cd the North American continent be cause tho accompanying entourage was composed of elderly men mon too seriously mitfdful of tho respon sibility with which they had been sad dled. This criticism was taken into consideration in naming tho members of tho party of the Prince now in America. Lord Claud Hamilton is a fellow officer of the Prince of Wales in the Grendier Guards. Ho Joined tho army in 1911 serving throughout the war and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for conspicuous gallan try at the front. Captain the Honorable Piers Legh is one of the Prince's equerries, a fel low officer in the guards, a former aide to the Duke of Connaught and a younger son of Lord Newton. The Captain 3 said to be endowed with much of the wit and appreciation of humor for which his father is distin guished. Sir Godfrey Thomas is a personal friend and regimental -.comrade! of the Prince. His mother was a daugh ter of Charles Oppenhcim, the Lon don banker. Todays Anniversaries 1822 Moses Rogers, captain of the first steam vessel to cross the Atlantic, died at Cheraw, S. C. Born in 1780. 1830 Gen. Porfirlo Diaz, famous Mexican patriot and president, born in the city of Oaxaca. Died in Paris July 2, 1915. 1889 Bishop John Walsh was appointed archbishp of Toronto. 1890 F.lre destroyed a part of the famous? Alhambra palace, near Granada, Spain. 1906 Gen. Dimltri Trepoff, head of the Russian police system, died at Peterhoff. 1911 President Taft started on his western tour of 13,000 miles. 1914 The French cathedral city of Rheims was occupied by the Al lies. 1915 Germans under General von Mackensen occupied Pinsk. 1916 British captured new Ger man third line in greatest battle on western front since July 1. 1917 The Waited States Senate passed the $11,538,000,000 war bond bill. HAIR BRUSHES THAT HOLD THEIR BRISTLES A brush! that sheds is dear at any price. If you are looking for the non-shed sort then don't fail to, see the brushes now on display at our store. 1 They embody the finest mate- ' rials and best of' workmanship, t The stock u o complete that every individual taste may be satisfied Prices $1.00 to $7.00 II l '" " l i'i (MOSS riScixlirUmtWil xwl nu)i'i ecu ul ttvod n6 PRINCE 1LE onuiYr SENATORS WHO HAVE TOURS Senators who oppose the League of Nations have started an active campaign to try to offset tho effect of President Wilson's speech-making toui. Three of tham will spoak from tho samo platform In Chicago and then separate for individual tours of tho middle west.. Th y are Senators Johnson of California, Borah of Idaho, and McCormlck of Illinois. Senator Reed of Missouri rcd'tho first volley at Akron, Ohio. Sonator Wadsworth of New York is to address a gathering of veterans off. e First division at Salem, N. . On the same day Sena tor Harding of Ohio will attack the President's league stand on the Hoor of the sonato. Sonator Polndoxtor of Washington is to speak in Dunkirk, N. Y., Pittsburgh a d Long Island City. ALL THAT HE WOULD ADMIT But Old Vcrmenter Did Ur.bsnd Slight ly Vhcr. H! Visiter Presented His "Crsienti.-.H." Representative Prank Green of Vor- I mont, who makes the best after-dinner speech of any man in congress, nnd does not like lo been use it interferon i wun . .ruin 01 senous.mnug.u u..H It Is based on the care with which hi j fellow VcrtnonteK take ttrungcra Into their arms. wiuie amming arounn tue sinie during tho recent recess Green visited a town where several of his ancestor' were born. Finally ho came up in front of a village store and encoun tering one of the oldest inhabitants he tried to btnrt n conversation. "Looks as though It might rain," Green suggested. The oldest Inhabitant's response was a quick glance. "Who are you, young man?" he asked. "Oh," Green responded, "I'm young Green. My grandfather used to run the quarry out yonder. My grand-, fattier, too, was born In these parts." "Is that so?" "Yes," Green continued. "I had a lot of relatives born up here, too. One of my uncles ran the livery stable for years, a cousin was In the furniture business, one of nay aunts 'was the champion bread taker of the county for six consecutive years, and I don't know how many of ray folks took' other high honors hereabouts." The resident was Impressed. Look ing Green over' carefully and obit-Wing that theyourig fellow appeared5 to beteUlng the truth, 'the old nian .treeii: ' K ' r H ',fWeH, 'young 'man, It may rain. 'New York Times. I WHEN JIMMY BRUT LAUGHED Spwteman Who Had Bantered Htm en Looking Old Got Consider-' i ' ' 'ablrofa'Joit ' f , - - iu.' , . -i i; Jimmy Britt,' the Immaculately drewed Urttwelcbt-chaiaploa. need to. teUfaeforiabbut BvceaefCorri. the .WUhirefereB2.,, .febS--- "One day In the 8trand.M so j the .toj7in. (."Oerrl came .upjte'ine and Mian e otimu n t-i t .n ,nu Wt'of bpxlnhayen'tour iey .imu;f !j eiVof;, oitt t.iUWjUt, ARRANGED SPEECH-MAKING IN THEIR FIGHT AGAINST LEAGUE OF NATIONS SShimSWSSSvIJ'jl nyC pVvx HBSISSSHHSbKa y Ay t 2j "ll!$VE SJ'JSSi ? '" "'Yes.' snUl r. 'Tliiivt.' U'..1I CM.I.l rntfl (tl.ti.. .Inn. mi quit? Ymi'ro beginning to show sign of what you arc a pugilist on tln dovu grade. Jimmy, my boy, youie j beginning Inn's old.' I "Well, after that speech O-rt took ' me to lunrh nl the Snvny. While vi were lunching n nice-looking couple tit ti near-by table kept lunklng tit us con- ymm8 ,. g.y aa n0WelI ,,, A .. wll0 , ,, mnn?. .. .,,. , . h cscort .,,!. " 'Gracious 1' said the young lady. 'What n brutal face be has!' "'Yes,' said her escort. 'To Judge from his looks he must tie about the foulest fighter In the ring.' "Then n little later we henrd tho young lndy as!:: "'Is he married?' "'Yes; oli, yes,' said her escort. That handsome, gentlemnnly little fellow with hlra Is his sou." To Teach Marksmanship. Students In educational Institutions In all parts of the United States are to have nn opportunity to graduate as expert riflemen from n government training school next summer. Those who take the special course will get certificates conferring upon them tho authority to teuch others. The director of civilian marksman ship plans, ns means of encouraging marksmanship as a sport, to extend a special Invitation to representatives of all student bodies to enroll for instruc tion In connection with tho national matches of 1010, a csngrese of rifle and pistol- shots military, naval and civil ian which will bo held under the- aus pices of the navy department on the rifle range at Caldwell, N. J a few miles from New York, during August The Essential. The new doorkeeper at the museum turnstile had learned the book of rules by heart before taking over the Job. "Here, Blr, you must leave your um brella at'the door," he said to a visitor who had failed to hand over that, -article. "But I harea't aa umbrella," the Tin Iter pleaded. "Then you must so back and get one, aaid the doorkeeper. "No.one la allowed -to, pas in here unless he leaves his umbrella at lhe"door." Ex .- ,.-y.g-. ",,iai. , .1-, .a.i MAKE TROUBLE FOR DENTIST 1 Successful Treatment of Wisdom Teeth Always Is More or Less of a Problem. WMlnm teeth, especially lower ones, (ire iniieli more illllleiilt lo handle than any of 'the others In the moulh. When their nerve dies or has to be killed by the dentist he cannot be sure for Koine time that It Is really dead. The reason Is that the roots of a wisdom tooth are tvlsted"or curved In such a manner thut the root canal cannot bt explored. The uprer wisdom teeth have three roots, "frequently "fused together, forming u grooved cone, which Is usu- I ally curved bnukward," says Gray's an I ntomy. "The roojs of the lower, two . In number, nre compressed together nnu curve nucKnnru. It Is this backward curving of the compressed roots that gives troublo to the dentist. Often the cnnal that runs through each root Is so narrpw nnd so curved that the finest of the "brooches" used to draw out the dead nerve will not penetrate, and some times when It has penetrated It will not come out. When this hnppens there Is only one thing to do leave the brooch and np ply Iodine, which will very soon eat uwny the steel of which tho brooch is made.- Las Vegas Has Future. Lns Vegas was founded by some Mex icans when New Mexico was a part of old Mexico, In 1835, and the Mexican government granted to the new com munity nn area of some 400,000 acres. The Mexicans took up what they need ed of tills land and built a village In the middle of the settlement. It remnlned a sleepy Mexican town until some time In tho seventies, when it was struck simultaneously by several Yankees and Jews, and by a wave of prosperity. The Mexicans, who had been squat ting on a part of the community grant, showed that they were capable of learn ing modern business methods by claim ing the whole 400,000 acres. After a long contest the courts confirmed them la their titles to the lands they.actn ally occupied, byt decided that the rest o tho area balanced to the, community. And so It la today. This town owns great graslng areas, which are open to all cltUeu, and Valuable tlmberlanda. Ultimately Las Vegas will be rich and ker people lax free. ,E E THIRTY YKA11S TKOimi.l'J UN l)H IN' A FEW WEEKS AFTER SHE TAKES TANLAO ltomarknblo, Indootl, woh tho Htoto- , munt mndo rocontly by Mrs. Emma ' Itico, who rcslilcH lit 9303 llnrhti: Cross, Lbs Angeles, Cnl Mrs. Ulco declares thnt four bottles of Tanlao lmvo complotoly rollovod hor of n rheumatic troublo which she 1ms boon trying for thirty years lo over come, Horo In hor statement. "Some astonishing things happen In this world and what Tanlao has donu for mo In tho past fow wooks Is one of thorn. I hnd sufforcd with , u Hovoro pain, like rheumatism, In l my back for thirty years, and whllo I was under treatment a number of tlmos and trlod many different kinds of modlclncs I got no rollof. Then In January of thin year I caught n so vero cold and my IiiuuIh becatno so affected with rhoumatlstn that I wns unublo to uso tlioni to do my work. 1 was also badly run down and ho weak I could scarcely koop up nnu about. "After roadlng In my homo pnpor whore so ninny frlonds and neighbors had rocclvod hucIi good rosiilts from Tanlnc I docldod to try It mysolf and words can't express my grntltudo for what it has dono for mo. Tho pain disappeared from my back boforo my llrat bottlo of Tanlnc was gone. I nm now on my fourth bottlo and fool bet tor than I hnvo In thirty years. The rheumatism linn also loft my hands complotoly and I nm now able to do my housework and attond to my chickens and little. gardon without any troublo whatever. Tonlnc certain ly fs n grand mcdlclno and I can re enmmoud It to ovoryono, especially thoso sufforlng from rheumatism and a run down condition. '' Tanlao Is sold In Klamnth Falls ny tho Star Drug Co., nnd In Lorella by the James More, Co. Adv. Sorry Ho Spoko. Poroman Got a move on with that Job, will you? Laborer What's your rush .boss? Rome wasn't built in a day. Foreman No, but it wns fired In a day, and so are you. A person who Is partially dbaT'can hoar best when riding In a railway train. Tho rumbling of tho train causes tho drum of tho car to vibrato, nnd In this wny excites tho capnclty to hear. I H I ASTONISHED CXXSTS IiKHS THAN FIVK CENTS A OOItl) TO HAW YOUR WOOD WITH A VAUGHN POHTAIJLK DliAG SAW si9s EBP B jSiMBw P,-JSiPiGt-'7 The only drag saw with tho Jiffy saw holder. Grips or releases saw Instantly. No holes to drill In saw-hoad. Only saw wltn drlvo straight bohlnd saw. Motalic clutch. Tostod. Seo your dealer or wrlto us. VAUGHAN MOTOR WORKS, INC., 476 E. Main St SPECIAL NOTICE Prom and after Monday, the ICth day of Soptombor, 1919. ..J",1' ncss hours of tho following named merchants and stores will bo as toow Week days, except Saturday Open 8:00 A. M., close 6:00 P. M. Saturdays only Open 8:00 A. M., close- 9:00 P. M. Dry Goods and Clothing Tho Woman'B Store, H, N. Moe 510 Main St. K. K. K. Store 5th and Main St. Golden Rule .. 415 Main St. C. K. Brandenburg 423 Main St. Nr B. Drew 6th and Main ,, , Tturnffl Klamath Dye Works t 431 Main - irnLW.H O. M. Hector 908-910 Main. St. K. Sugarman 6th and. Main Streeta. ju L, M. Martin ...'. 419 Main ! ! ' v Groceries Garlch Grocery i. 220 Main St. , - Ashland Prult Store 240 Main SL 1 ' M The Winnek Company 326 Main St. Roberts and Whltmore 6th and Main Roberts and Whltmore 9 th and Main Klamath Cash Grocery ."...717 Main The Sunset Grocery 10th and Main, 1 Boots mad Shoe ; L. G. Van Bellen 515 Main St. The Bootery, Chaa, P. Magulre 78 Main St, 1 Fmrtre and Hosuw Earaiftliiafa . The Perkins Furniture Company ISO N. 6th St. Johnstone Furniture Company 719 Main St. Hardware Baldwin Hardware Compaay '. 414 Mala St Roberts and Hanks 422 Main St ., .0.1 MM Klamath Hardware Company 614 Main Bt. '" . ,.. ',. ' I TODAY'S EVENTS ..cording to liiimnmorim-r-r-J today innrkH th., ,.t ... . em, hat season. ""'".,, William II. Tuft. frmor ,, of tho United Sl,,.,.s. M ' dc"1 todny. ' m i Tho four Cmilruf American , t lies today colohrntn tl, ,', " -o"l' American , Jj l'roaldo,,tVllso w, j; West. Is scheduled to tMh ' " dress today at Portland, Oro Tho WiwhliiKlon State Kalr, ,. tho largest nnnui.l nxhllilton, . ,h. Northwest, will open today at v.l Inm. "' Portland. Oro.. will lo tho meeting plnco today of the annual convcntloi of tho Pacific Coast Klro Choir, A. soclatlon. SAYS VR MUST KKKP KKET DRY AVOID HXl'OSUKK AND ' KAT IJCSS MKAT Stay off tho damp ground, moMm posuro, koop foot dry, oat less mut, drink lots of wator and abo vi tn'ko a spoonful of salts occasionally to koop down uric acid. Ithourantlsm Is canned by polsov ous toxin, called uric acid, which li gonorntod In tho bowels nnd absorbed Into tho blood. It la tho functloa of tho kidneys to filter this add from tho blood nnd cnRt It out la the urlnt. Tho poros of tho akin nro also a moans of freeing tho Mood of ihli Impurity. In damp and chilly, coll weather tho skin pores oro closed, thus forcing tho kidneys to do double work, thoy bocomo weak and sluggish and fall to elimlnato this uric acll which koeps accumulating and cir culating thru the system, eventually sottllng in tho joints and muscles causing stiffness soreness and pain called rheumatism. At tho first twlngo of rheumatism got from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon ful In a glass of water and drink be foro breakfast each morning for a weok. This Is said to eliminate uric acid by stimulating tho kidneys to normal action, thus ridding the blood of thoBO lmpurltlos. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless and Is mado from tho acid of grapw and lemon Juice, combined with lltbls and is UBod with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rhoumatlsm. Horo you hare a plcasnnt, offorvoscent llthla-water drink which ovorcomes uric acid and Is bonoflclal to your kidneys as well. Adv. Portland, Ore. RHEUMATISM NOW