MONDAY HKl'TttMlu PAQK FOUR THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON i ID. TheEvening Herald E. J. BIUnRAI, Editor JAMES S. SHEEHY City Kdltor Tiiitiiciinii Hniiv ernnt Sumlny by ho Hernlil PuhiishlnR Company of t Klamath Falls, at 115 Fourth Strcot. Prince Edward Smiles and Iourt Entered nt the postoffleo nt Klam ath Falls, Ore., for transmission thru tho mails as second-class matter. Subscription terms liy mail to any address in tho 1'nitetl States: . .?: oo so One year . Ono month Member of tho Associated Press The Associated Pie Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of nil news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa per, and also local news published herein. All rights of republication of spe cial dispatches herein aro also reserv ed. MONDAY SKPTKMP.KK :!!. tI! , mm VVl.S4C'W.-.iVr 'Xi-kl THA0C MASK &-- ran if i &: ?r ri i - i The City of r I I rdi GOODRICH m ' p"- Pledging Lwbor'a Support to the Striking Actors NOTH'l.' ivm. "-S" "U.M 1' The City of GOODRICH V." Urnn H ll I n tvV.vu, " . ,-rrvi fiZZ&&ZStes&tl ! ' 50,000 r. One Year Ago Today in the War r1- ;.! Sf NtfSvfclSLVS -iirT-"f".v. :. . i .Cf lifr Xu( 1 iCfe If . 1 MTZVMafHKsKi i . ItTT v Ai'NWW..'' SW"-'8sKS,,W',svy3f. v V1&&J ..... N.wi.3taawaKaaaM - fl yi v Pgaera Sell ), Goodrich Tires ft & Vi The Army of Goodrich J Dealers, reuuy to :ur- t i nish the User with M Ten thousand Turks surrendered to British in Palestine. ' I United States trops participated in lively lighting near JJellieourt. British broke Hindenburg lino on . six-mile front between Cambrni and St. Quentin. Prlnco Edward of Wales, endures an endless round tit "coremonlbV and smiles; naturally and good naturodly. Ho is pictured hero pin ning a medal on an old vo'.eran at Quebec. Elaborate, preparations are made for bis tour through Canada to tho Pacific on a palatial special train. It Is announced that his residence will bo aboard tho British battle cruiser Renown In Now York harbor whon ho visits tho U. S. Newport and "society" aro to catch only long distance ellrapnes of tho Prlnco. Today's Birthdays WS'S- Hon. Michael Patrick Cashing premier of New Foundland, born at j Cape Broyle, Nfld., 55 years ago, today. Maj. Gen. William Lassiter, U. S. A., recently assigned to command of Camp Bragg, born at Petersburg, Va. 52 years ago today. i Gabe E. Parker, former Register, ot the U. S. Treasury, born at Fort I Towson, Indian Territory, 41 years, ago today. , SEVEN STATES SAVED MILLIONS IN SEVEN MONTHS WHEN AVIATION WAS NEW Thrifty Westerners' Invest ments Will Earn Nearly Mil lion and One-half Interest San Francisco-. Thrifty folks in the Bven states of the Twelfth Fed eral Reserve District saved $G,4'J7, 308 by Diirchasine Thrift and War Dr. Chas. S. Howe, president of the Savings Stamps from January 1 to Case Schol of Applied Sconce born July 26, 1919, acco.dlng to a repoit at Nashua, N. H., 61 years ago today, j made by the San Francisco Federal Dr. Maldon B. Adams, president tf Reserve Bank. Five ear3 from now Georgetown (Ky.) College, born at at their latP of maturity, those Clarksburg, W. Va., 51 years ago,8' w, b 0. jUSt "''"l'.' " . I million and a half dollars more than ay' they cost the purchasers. In ot! er w-ords, the t'nited Sta.es Government will pay bark to the Stamp purchas ers approximately $8,000,000 for $6,127,308. Every man, woman and child who bus Thrift and War Saving? Stamps 1819 John Henry Luers, first or Treasury Savings Certificates this Catholic bishop of Fort Wayne. Ind.jear wlu s,lare ,n t,le Government's born in Westphalia. Germany. Died "v,1dnd: Get ln, a f ar Savlnsi? " SAnltt1 iti e.r rnnnriin(ti' uni'n .n.l in Cleveland. O., June 29. 1S71. ,,', q," ' ""h :. 1842 Order of the Sons of Tern-, nnrat.R unit pet vnur hr nt ,, Today's Anniversaries melon. You can buy a Thrift Stump for twenty-five cents. I w s s"3 ANOTHER OF WAR'S RESULTS perance organized In New York City. 1863 General Louis Botha, South Africa's famous soldier and states man, Dorn at Greytown, Natal. Died at Pretoria, Aug. 27, 1919. 1879 Nathan C. Meeker, founder cl the city of Greeley, Colo., killed oy Indians In Colorado. Born in Cleveland, O., July 12, 1817. ICO 4 XT 1-. -ll a.. f m . . nn.pmi.Ji TI8 ,8 frora AIesunrln, our nelg!l u....a in iub iimeu oiaies cioseo , boring city down the 1'citoiinir. down on account of wage contro-l Jjouseketpi-rs tnere are huvini; quite versles. a time getting "help." uhpculully Koine 1911 Italy made a declaration 'of ) '",H to do the family wash. The ne- Benjamin Franklin Evidently Had Expectations of Its Value, Though Vcntunno No Predictions. Somebody lias- been imlte naturally reminded i events 111 the air, 'if uIki". lieujumin Friiukllii miiiI to Con doreet ulmut ueiuiiautli-s l.:ii .tear i.gu, in I'urib. I'lio Kietii'li eupltul a Ju&t then much Interested In the Imlloou iiM.viiioii! of the .Monluolllet l.iotlirr.s, perhaps even more excited, on the similler M:me of lite lluic-, thiin modi in cities over the actual cioslii' of the Atluntlc, mid uliei eer men came together tile lilture l-ixlhilitli-'N of ballooning made uu liiilMiMluite topic of conversation. Con doreet. meeting Franklin, tked him If lie tlioulit mi iieroiiaia would owr l ulile to steer his lialloon. "The tliii. Is iu its lnliine.," siud FrauK l.h. "It N ueeessury lii wait." "I!ut what Is tin- good -il' Ifr" ilt'iimmletl a duiiiiili.g 'i iiouias. "What usiuil pur-po-e will It serve V" "lientloiiit n." r plled rriiiikliii. "It is a child Jusi born; let us wait to Jud0-e it until lis education is completed." And .'i'iii now the education is fur 1. om Uu-Ithed. V i i B i i 1 I i vjiJ.iuili.il 1 ii us WIO.-IV;- j ever lie ts, or wncre- y ever he goes, means y mnny significant things to him above ) other things, a wide- j( spread approval of y Goodrich Tires. HISTORY NOT MERE RECORD Direct Connection Traced Between Great Conflict and the Annoylnj Scarcity of Laundresses. war against Turkey. 1914 Germans on Western front bailed In attempt to pierce the Allies center. 1915 American financiers and Anglo-rrench commission agreed on terms of $500,000,000 loan. 1916 Germans under von Ralk- kenhayn surrounded the Rouman ians near Red Tower Pass and de stroyed their army. 1917 Bolo Pasha seized in Par!.1? n a charge of treason. IN Till: DAY'S NKWS George Jf. Reynolds, who is to uu one of the prominent speakers at the American Bankors' Association con tention opening at St, I,oul3 today is a former plow!;oy who through in defatigable work has risen to the presidency of the largest banking institution in the Fnited States out cesblty for clean clothes Is one which devolves upon civilized beings. Wars may come and wnrs may go, hut the wuslitub and washboard go on lorever. But It has been haul to get a laun dress In Alexandria. War-time eondi tions have enabled many who earned their living nf the tub to turn to less arduous pursuits, with the result that there Is u scarcity of "wash ladles." Tne condition Is one paralleled In mnny other cities. "Aunt Lucy." said one Alexandrian woman, addressing a colored woman whom Mm hail known for many jears, "don't you know some one who eun do my washing?" ".No, ma'am I don't know no one," sin) said. The woman made a last attempt. 'Won't you do It for me. Aunt Lucy.'' she itsUcd, with a winning mule. ''Deed, chile,'' said Aunt l.tiey, "I don't have to do no washing no more." "Why?" nsked llie woman. 'Well, honey, hit Is Jes like this; .side of New York City. Mr Reynolds 'I,'"I"'I A""t I.uey with a nli-e ills spent his boyhod on an Iowa farm ''' "I'' Civil w-ar made us rr.-e. -mi ,.oi0.i ,j. .!.... .- .. .. ""', (Ils lu?ro worl' war has made, us and received lihs education In the ills' trlct schol. When lie became clerk in a bank in his native town he found what seems to have been his independent." Washington Kuir. Tho mild surp.-ls" .V J. vi h which huh right calllne. Fivn vra into,- i, "rusliimilly noes n,,. (,-iuie of a lor. moved to Des Moines, where lie bo-' l'lK"1''1,',u!' l"'"" , '" of '"niches Y-iin.n ...i,i. ,. i i . , , , . puicliai.ed In the Ln ted Suues may yamo cashier and later president of a ,)l!fol(! , ., (0J5W ()f ,.,.; local hank. In 1897 tin was Invited m,aHll(, le fllM,wll. . r r-alren, to Chicago to become cashier of ono Manchuria. The world's appetite for or the leading hanks of that city, i mutches Is apparently Insatiable. An and this becau.se of his record. By American company lias been studying ' 1910 ho had risen to the presidency Munclinrln and Siberia from the match of tho institution. Mr. Reynolds ! n,anuf'a'turl"B m,tl,t of v,l'w' l,ul m was offered tho treasury portfolio ln",ms " "'"-f Jl'anese concern, and ihU h Tnft l.i,i. i, , , " concern. It now seems, wll hi; I rut In he Taft cabinet, but declined.. In!,,,,. flc, , na; L.ief Man-, 1.08 he accompanied tho Tumour cliurlnn port. But then If Japan were Aldrich currency commission to I pot llrst In the field In Manchuria, Kuropo as expert financial adviser. .where would she be Brat In the Held? Writer, to Set It Down Successfully, Mutt Use His Constructive Imagination. There Ir no commoner cnusc of hl- i Kirical nils-Judgment than the ten- ueoc.v in reim uie events or me pas? teo exclusively In the light of the present, and so twist the cold and un-f-"Mclous record Into the triilnlni! servhe of controversial politics. And yet history Is Inevitably to n great ex tent a work of the Imagination. No rood historian Is content merely to re pent the record of the past. He has 'o undi rstand It. to see behind It, to find more In It than It actually sii.k. lie cannot undersland without the use of Ins constructive Imagination, and he cannot Imagine effectively with out ll.e use of his experience. I be lieve It is one of tlie marks of u great hNtorlan to see both present and past, as It were, with tho same un collided e.v, to realize the past story as if It wete now proceeding before him. and envisage the present much In the same pi!rsp"ctlv as It will bear wii' n It Is ns one chapter, or n many pages. In the great volume of the past. We know In filhhoti'H ease how much the hlstni-lnn of the Roman em pire learnt from the captain of tho Iluripclilre (''I'Millers. And It wotilu surely be follv to tell n man who had I veil through the French or Uus.ian n volution to f'i-:ot his own fpei1 enco vlion lie came ip treat of similar events In history Gilbert Murray. But first it menns that 50,000 dealers, more than half in the country, have confidence in Goodrich and Goodrich Tires: that 50,000 men whose busi ness it Is to know tires, believe in the skill and sin cerity of Goodrich tire making, and the certainty of Goodrich tires making good in road performance. I 8 i. Furthermore, the Dealorlike the User, is safeguarded by the frank open-handed certification of GonHrirh'n uH.. mn a -i:.. ft I'lUIC-milCBItC IUJU51- Tj ment 6,000 Miles for Fabric Tires 8,000 miles V for Silvertown Cords. The Goodrich Certification c measures out as every- thing else you buy Is maitrjk4 I tha minimum k' .W.JU i.y, tlie f IStillttlUlll you, with proper usage, get from Goodrich Tirea. Finally, 50,000 Dealers en- listed to furnish America fj, with Goodrich Tires be- JJ cause they were first to K know what the whole mr.n-.n ...H-t.l l .v.willlg vvuiiu IIUW Tj'. knows and says Jl "Goodrich has THE TTT3T7 " fl 'i r. . . . i nay ucxxfncj Jiret l from a Dealer ADJUSTMENT j Fabric . 6,000 miles 2 Cords . 8,000 mils U . J GOODRICH I t TIRES "BEST IN THE LONG RUN" ! frcr. Plfce of Ancient Mctcer. Meteorites of laillealed ere 't a"enro cnnjileiioils by their nhseiice from mil ' mi e."!li'oiloiis, niiil It Is sii -: eil tint such Mieeiuietis I my d's'litef'r ite mid il'snppear ttnm the rocks within n rc'iitlvrly "hoi't time after rall'ug. Tie PrltlKh museum, however, Iris bile Iv iiciiulrcd a slice of somewhat les III. Ml II piltlllll fi'lllll II IIK'teorle li'illl thai Is believed to r 'present mi ancient tall. The slice Is from one of two sim ilar musics lint wvk found In Janii tin. Iff', wlililn it few miles of Ihw sot. Klondike, and that from their P-!tl'"i deep In the oldest gravels of' U'f dlsirict aro th'niglit to have rested there since the Pliocene age or before. J'V"ii Ills spjdv of llio orlglniil sped mens In tho Museiiin of the Geologi cal Hurvey nt Ottawa, II. A. A. John Ron eoticlinleil that they are port of a single meteoric shower of "Tertiary time. ' ra? fl T-nnrT7JirV1'v.'-Tt-nX i jwvsviricavi.- v mmfmHK?& ju t ran Jk" v v i 4. Jfc A Skk s r mtpi' irr Ti NlW'ieii ii. ... ft ...v ;.? ' KKKnv ""wi.H Hi" Hoard or lllrlc ,,5 VEN k. "' Klnm.ui, (;!, tyT'I)ISTRg ""id iippriivcd i.i u, .""""'ndow.' ;iiHlnirtio or lie. ;!" to ikj I"" '"""""'""h of i, P?,Md,Kul lilmiliim 111., rut , , , ,, '"'"Wwi ,, '"ir.ee in c H j i,'pp ti04: I I ""mix Mill . i,,,1"'0 1st U, ' Kl.n-.il. K.,l. ),"'"? ,'1"' .;. .:.. wi,,:,!1:,; 'Vi posnis win i ,,.,,... r. . "itii their tiffii ,. IMI ,, reeeli,.,! i, ,ru PM- .... . . ' un 1 lloari l I, i V '"' "' Hie ,.,,, ,."'"r't, I "Ih. I'll-. rr ,,"'. '" October -" union o! '""Ikini ot J, ltI kh i.,ih..r in r,0" (l w' die ( lllllnol ..III t ' ' m IM I(.t I,. ,, , i.i.i.i.-r i.t ii... ii.i.,i,,r ""!ri,',c -me the llrl.i , r ,. "''" . Hi's ,., , , r,J nnv or ,n -""- I I.I or, ,,,,, ', ,,n'1 " "" '"" ti i ,tk? i , , ',,n.yl, I list i iet intiTMia (lt th. AllV pKISI.ll .11 .rt,mv """ i in.iv I. IUr,l,l .. ,.' - I'lJIIll Ullk 'una. I iM.,v i. .;.,., "".on I ..m i i, ,.., ,,","7 V" l ;, ', :,:.,,.i.'!i,'' , , '. inr uio tuiik ful i-rtoi,,,,,,,,, ,.r ,,, 2Hr ' .' I'll YARD ...,., iv . uie KnicriirliK I,. rlgiillon Ulstriri 2C-l!t lll't.ll I'ltAVNi: This plictoKruph wan taken while MukIi Frayni) of tho Auierlcnu Ped oration of Labor wis nildrcHHliif; a meotliiK of Htrllclui; nctorH In Now York. pledKiuK tho support of organ ized labor. I A. F.Graham I I General B I Concrete M B Construction Shasta Sand Used H Exclusively H SSMHIHHHHIHHIk ' PINK AND PRETTY If you wish to have a skin that Ik pink ntul beautiful, try Nyal's Vanishing Cream It Ih a wonderfully refreshlnj beauty riiilHlte. Uelfcatelj flcnted. Try a small Jar- for we are satisfied Hint after you have tested 11 yrti will n.mt a moro liencroUH iiiinntit) Price 65s (intierwooftPiia m V KLAMATH TALLS OREG0MTrb7' .ja .j " '",i tsssi Last Showing Tonight THE GREAT NAZIMOVA IN "The Red Lantern" SPECIAL PRICES FOR "THE RED LANTERN" MATINEES 10 AND 25 CENTS EVENINGS 15 AND 35 CENTS l LIBE RTY THEATRE "THK 1MCK OF TIIK PICTUBK8" H. W. Poole, Owner Matinee Every D TONIGHT THE LAST SHOWING OF "THE RED LANTERN" STARRING THE GREAT NAZIMOVA TUESDAY BEATRIZ MACHELENA IN "JUST SQUAW" An Emotional Drama of the West ' "' "' ' i ' ---i i "" DOORS OPEN AT 7 P .M. i