TIlimtWAY, HKIT,M, ,. i 109 f Atifi EIGHT mum LISTED AT FI AT THE K. K. K. STORE THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON M-im - "fc Jmmw Final Arrniigoiiionta for flu Klnntntli County Fair Will Ho Muili on Sat urday Largo "Xmnbor of Exhib its Arc Diversified 3Mtilil NMS &!$&& fflwW KlMtoreM ia ai Wm5 sm WCawdK JsfPPl mv ml Jit i 11111 hffif i i 111 I KVMVIv '-; y IsfMll S mHt 111 XV Hi HI fall-fit t H MI? kv w U fftrllNi Workmen are hurrying preparn tions for the Klamath qounty Fair that is scheduled to take place near the Wilson Urldgo on October 2 and 3. Tents and booths will soon ho going up and every indication is that everything will be In readiness for the opening of tho fair. A special dressing will be placed on the track in order to assure that it will bo in good shape for tho horse races. Final arrangements for the fair will bo made Saturday at a meeting of tho Klamath County Fair Board. Close to SO contests are scheduled to ho held during tho week, cover ing every possible county product. Klamath County Club members who have completed their projects will be allowed to compete for prizes in tho following centests: Corn grow ing, potato growing, vegetable gar den, poultry raising, pork produc tion, sheep raising, calf raising, can ning, and rabbit raising. Canning team and cookery contests are also listed. An open juvenile contest to boys and girls between the ages of 9 and 16 is listed. Exhibits of all kinds will be awarded prizes under this contest. General exhibits include poultry, butter and cheese, farm products, farm and community, fruit and flower, and domestic science. Bagdad is famous for its breed of white asses. Their ears and tails are sometimes colored a bright red. III I RIGHT lillllllJI III INFIjUKAVK I III I Music certainly Is If I necessary for a sue- I I cessful home life, es- I ' peclally where there- II I aro cu"dren. I II ' lllllil For man' reasons I I j I our store is the logical II Hi I place for Piams, Vic- I I j ii I trolas and Record ser- I I lilllllllil vlce 'II ' JIIIHII EARL ' llllllllll I jll shepherd co. II lllllil rtr,r ioCAtion 57" mam -.. llllllllll i nlll II lllllil llluyiS(UJi I ii lilllllllil II I li I III I IIUMflflMBUf I II II mi l'1'illlllllllllllmwWllfflnillllllllllllllll I I - ,,.. 1,1 ' E-a-ira J I II II ' "' (ml Tf j-n-jr u-H I you have your choice of Kuppenheimer Clothes New, clever styles in suits and overcoats. Rendy-t0.Wea clothes made to your individual requirements, by ED. V. PRICE AND THE ROYAL TAILORS America's master clothes builders. EXCLUSIVE AGENCY FOR BOYS' " DUBBELBILT " Clothes, Suits, Overcoats, Mackinaws GUARANTEED FOR SIX MONTHS' WEAR K. K. K. STORE KUPPENHEIMER'S CLOTHES NETTLETON'S SHOES KNOX HATS Look over our fine Clothing Stock for fall before outfitting STATE MEETING WILL BE HELD NEW YORK, Sept.' .18. A state conference of the Roosevelt 'Memor ial Association will be held In the Hotel Benson at Portland, Oregon on Thursday, September IStlu Judge Henry E. McGinn 'of Portland will make the chief address. In making this NEEDED REST IS TIEN By 'TIGER: INSURANCE WRITER . RETURNS FROM TRIP Mr. and Mrs. George C. Ulrlch and family returned last nlgit from n months visit In the East. Mr. Ulrlch attended tho meeting at Toronto, Premier Clcmcnccau of France. lllcsi Canada of tho Mutual I.I f o Insur Hlmself to tho Country for First nnce men, who had written $100,- Itcnl Rest Since Beginning of the. 000 wqrth of business during the Long Year of Warfare year. There were only 270 men from North America who qualified this LA TRANCHE, Vendea, France, j -vear nn(I Mr- Wrich found himself Sopt. 18. Premier Clemenceuu ai- " unlquo flguro nt tho convention as announcement at tho National ; rived hero tho other day In search ho wa tho onlv lnan wll c'0 '"' Hparloiiartnra todav. William Dovce I of peace and quietness. Tie Premier , a 8""' cltv "" second, no came Thompson, president of the AssocI-' looked as If he needed rnst and thorn . farther than any other delegate. ation, said he had no doubt that the was nothing suggestive of tho "TJ! start of the Oregon campaign will I er as he descended fru'u tho diiaty he marked "by all the enthusiasm for I nulf.mobJlc winch had horni hi .1 i the memorial movement which dls-1 I Unguished the regional conference SHEEPMEN IN KLAMATH OX IHLS1XESS MATTEltS. joyed the ocean breeze. The Premier does not like public Pearl Necklaces Pearls, which have been so popular this Bunrnmer, will be even more so this winter. The necklace will be an Im portant feature of tho smart day costume, and tho height of fashion for evening wear. Oriental pearls cost many thousands of dollars ,hut exquisite cojfars arid won derful lrridesccnco are re produced In artificial pearls that servo tho purpose or beauty and fashion equally as well as real gems. We show pearl necklaces, graduated and uniform, In a variety of tasblonablo lengths and sizes of pearls. Each strand Is fitted with a solid gold clasp. 93.00 to $ 35.00 Frank M. Upp JKWKLER ilMMaSC Official S. P. Wfttok 9mte(ot. of the northwestern states held In Portland In August. Colonel Roose velt had many warm friends and ad mirers among all political parties In Oregon and they are united in mak fne an 'effective demonstration of their regard and affection for the. functions and probably the only one great American. The Roosevelt Memorial Associ ation will establish a public park in Oyster Bay near the Roosevelt home at Sagamore Hill; erect a great monument in Washington; and en dow a society for the" perpetuation of the ideals of Theodore Roosevelt. State Headquarters for Oregon have been established at the Port land Press Club and contributions to the memorial fund may be sent to that address. Dr. Henry Waldo PJe, of Portland, who enjoyed a friendship of more than thirty-five years with Colonel Roosevelt, is chairman of the state committee; Thomas B. Neuhausen, of Portland, Is secretary; and Edgar H. Sensen ich, vice-president of the Northwes tern Bank of Portland, Is treasurer. Among their associates aro United States Senator George E. Chamber lain; Arthur I. Moulton, of Portland, Bruce Dennis of La Grande; Mrs. Lawrence T. Harris, of Salem; A. P. Flegel, of Portland; Mrs. Fred erick Eggort, of Portland, John H, Smith, of Astoria; Dr, Andrew C. Smith, of Portland. Judge William Ball Gilbert, of Portland, of the U. S. Circuit Court of Apeals, is a re presentative of Oregon on the Nat ional Executive Committee of the Roosevelt Memorial Association, and Walter Taylor Sumner, Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Oregon, is a member of the State Committee. Although he had a pleasant trip and visited all Interesting eastern cities, Mr. Ulrlch said tills uftor- from Paris to Thesea. Ho appeared "oon lnat lnuv cuiun t Iy 'i"1 old and wan and tired and heaved a enough to make mo wish to livo In sigh of relief as ho sat on an old , the East." wooden bench in tho shady garm-ii of the villa Phlllppon, wiped tin- London gets a shower of soot to perspiration from his brow and en- tho extent oftfour and a half pounds Soveral sheepmen woro In town yesterday attending to business mat ters connected with their ranches. Charlie McCarty, who recently purchased a ranch In Poo Valley, bought several horses nntl equip ment for his now ranch. John Kollo her of Bend bus been hero for hov oral days looking over tho surround ing country with tho view of locating u Htiltablo pasture for 2,000 head ot sheep. Ted Murphy, Con ftirtln, and N'imI O'Connor, sheepmen and innrhors from tho Mrrlll country were in Klamath Falls yestordiiy looking for hay hands ils well as pur chasing supplies for tliolr ranches. WILL ATTEND COU,K(ii; Etlwnrd Cantral, son of Mrs. N M. Cantral, loft this morning for Cor. vnllln, wlii-ro ho will entur the Ore gon Agriculture College as a fresh man. Mr. (';uitra I, who graduated from the Klumuth County high Hcliool, will taku up a courso In civil I onglneorliig at tho college TWO GOOD BUYS Corner In! at Sixth mid Klamalh. If r.:t!i II. 100 and getting bolter all the time. Onli SI (1,7(10. Par SI 000.01) cash and SI.IHIO nmiiuU)' nt ? itit fitfit. ' Fine coiner nt Dili mnl Main Sl. ! ItSt 7(lv IOO ft. mill Mi-he 88100 fur I (iilcl( wile. It will Mini) grim Into money for oil. Chllrnte iV.Mnllh.U'U Alitlll St. l--i The Store With the Yellow Front per acre every day., I, of the past few months, oxecptin those of the retrlevement of Alruce Lorraine, at which he did not ftp pear bored, was the Victory Day parade. He has lost none of his good humor, howover, and when asked how ho had enjoyed the trip from tho capital, replied: "Somewhat tiresome but tho coun try Is so beautiful. Yesterday wo vis ited several chateaux on the Loire I should have enjoyed greatly having a little sleep at Nantes but tho crowd, after midnight comnlenced to acclaim and cheer me under my very windows at tho Central Hotel. What a funny idea." j Accompanied by a couple of dd, , weather-beaten fishermen, tho Pro mlor of Franco went for a stroll along tho beach, speaking with thorn In the dialect of the province. , What la believed to be the largest mass of ice in the world Is to be found In the Interior of Greeland, where It began to accumulate before the dawn 'of history. The block Is about 600,000 square miles in area and a mile and a half In talcftThest. Try 'em. Herald Want Ada. In China every business man has a shop name and a private name, and among his family and acquaint ances ho Is known by tho latter. If the appetite of a man were as great as that of a sparrow in propor tion to his Blze, he would eat a whole sheep at one sitting. KLAMATH COUNTY BUCKS One hundred and forty head of fine wool and Corrdale Bucks for sale. Prices reason able. E. M. HAMMOND Merrill, Ore. Look in the Dark Places MANY PAIRS OF SHOES Lying In collars and dark closetH should bo repaired because shoo ropalrlng Is real SERVICE to tho public. Two hundred million pairs of shoes were ro-mado In the last twelve months. Shoo ropalrlng means real economy and comfort to thoso who uso such service Quality Shoo Repairing doubles tho llfo of a pair of shoes. Bring or sond your shoes to Bradley's Shoo Storo. Work will bo promptly dono. Good workmanship. Only first-class material used. BRADLEY SHOE STORE 727 Majn Street TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE Two Ford Touring cars and Ford dellvory car. Hoag- lang & McCollum. 18-tf FOR SALE Good four room house near depot at $1000.00 on very easy terms. Immediate poasesslon. Chilcote Smith, S3 3 Main St 18-tt FOR. SALE Good four room house near High School. Price $1000.00 on eaay term. Possession Oct. 1st. Chilcote ft Smith, 633 Majn St lt-lt ' MHMH4"Mfr MRS. L. B. HAGUE Public Stenographer Notary Public Court Reporter 211 Willits BIdg. Klamath Falls Oregon Typewriting machines bought, sold, rented or exchanged. Spe cial rates to students, Type- writing supplies and stationery. Phome ISM ttMMMIIU? of SPECIAL NOTICE Election of Officers To All Mombora of Lncni i7a Miiimnn je- rtnimakers' Union the U. B. of Carpenters & JoInerB of Amorlca. ,,A BDec,al election will bo hold on Thursday, September 18' 1019. to fill vacancies in the offices of President and Trustee, w term. Other important business and Message Moose Hall, 7:30 Sharp. Bring your books. . ' "- , oV '' 5Utr.iuw