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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1920)
V J , 3 I'Afii: ritiiin; THE? EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON WEDNESDAY, .TANUAKV 11, IMS I Jh p. v (.( HaW TO GET RID " OF YOUR COLD Tho quick way Is to use 'Dr. King's New Discovery DON'T put'ofT nntll tonight what you out do today. Step Into your druggist's nnd buy ju'hottlo of Dr. KttiK'8 New Dlscov -cry. Start taking It nt once. By the llino you reneh homo jou'll bo oti Ihu wny to recovery. Till standnril fnmlly friend hn been lireuklnu cold, coughs, grljipu nttneks, and croup forriudr tlinn fifty yenr. It's used -wherever Htire Jim. relief Is niiprcelittitl. Children jintl Kinutinns" nllko cnri'UBo It there iRjitMllsiigi centre nfter-effoct. Your ilrucRlHt lu It. (lOe. nod ?1.20 iiottloi;. Ulvo It u trial. Bowels Cogging for Help Torpid liver p!e:ulliB for nsulst fnn1 How e.irclei'it il neclect tbeso 1' hiss when Dr. K!iib-u New Ufo 3'IIIh en promptlyt mildly, yet effctv tlvely come to their .relief I m I.rnvliiR thq syplem jinplenned, olopped boweW unmoved, results In licnltlwIi'Htruvllvu nf ler-clTeet8. Ia1 MlmulnilnK, -tonle-In-action Dr. KIiir'h New Life I'llls lirlns you tho liiipplne.HS of reviilur, nnrtnnl bowel und liver' function. it?. Keop feeling tit, doltiK tho work of u mnn or wo innn who llmld relish In It. All ilniKslris Mc In nmklnir tlio host PnrHlnn ruir n woavoi Bponda abqut twpnty-threo luys ovor oach sauuro foot of sur- faco. ' mHfmwwwwtwwwwH Delightful Dinner! For Sundays -. n Our Menu You 1, Our Cooking Jewel Cafe .1lTTH'lfll"Tlf inrr-. .. , .r, , , ,, tli , VM fj -JU Thrift and Little Things Who m'Gj-thomen ancl&wonicn that become -masters over -great.., things?-, They nrdHhoso'who firstof all becomV1 masters over little things. ' Dollar bills and silver dimes are only little things, so little that they often trickle away in every direction and yet they have formed the solid -foundation for many a comfortable income through the following slogan : "DON'T WASTE! SAVE!" Start a Sayings Account tday. First State & Savings Bank , KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON. FINDS QUEER RELICS IN OLD SEA-BED SAN ItKRNAIlUIKO, Jim, U.--Ar-IIr I. Kennedy, nn nt'nrnev of Con llornnrdlno, hnn'roturned from hii ex ploration trip on 1'nlntcd Hill, north of Whltowutor, which 1b forty miles east of this city. He brought with him snippled of Henslii'lln from tlio Rtent bed of n osiu-tlmo ocenn Unit Ih older tlinn Mt. Bnu Jncinta and a Htory of .eolng nn old Spanltn miif.k el and Indian water vnssolf In an m accosslblo place on, tlio bill, Mr, Kennedy plant) to organl70 a party to return -nnd got tho musket, which 'hoVoTleVDS U nt leasC ltfO 'ycnrs'61d, To obtain tho relic, iomn body vill hnvo to bo lowered, from a cliff on a ropo and then swung Into what probably Is, mi old sca-cavo'D, Sonio of tho eliolla, ho said, wore found 20GO fent abovo sea level. He Btatcd thoro probably wore millions ombedded in tho rock fonnnllon. 11112,000,000 iiuikjkt; MANILA, Dec. 1C. (Dy Mnll), Tho eonornl budgot for oxpenBes of tlio I'hlllpulno Rovernmont during tho fiscal yoar of 1020 has Just benn prcsonted to the logUlaturo. It totals $42,2r,G,000. This .Is tho inrgeat gun oral budget ovor prosontcd -for ljglc- laUvo nppfovnl Try 'em Reraia Want Ada. Will Satisfy anil Service ; ,; , J ; J , k ? : p(zm ip i-. V j J" y - . & . iy . (fa - KtLlff IN TEARS 4 WcIna of Real Value In tho Clfc of Mnnkijicl. PrpvWn of- Nsture1o nislicvelh h, JOr'o.J.-Cenler of .ThelrGehilbHilty and Fit Norvous Organization to Cnduro Sorrow. Or-rinnii Mntcuirn Imro shed tenrs JWIii'hrml terms of peace linpbsod llKlt llM'lll liy till! lllllt'R. i 'i , It would wit lii necc'sry for one to lie IWpeleKaly vo'lraf toMic'rcmlwU ed liy Hi) liichlciit of '(ho legfndnry .tenr of (he cmrudlk?''thoiigli indeed it H)'n)inlliiitc uplrlt mlght'liu Inclined to rejoice In the xptTtiiclu of hiioIi weeping, for Germany's own roiiiIi say- i : ,i . . ' , . ina with Hie poet "Shu mum weep, or tdie will die." vThorn nre few phyilcnl functlonn more fninlllnr Ihnn the Rheddlng, of teurH, nnd I here Ik probably none more complex nnd Inxcriitnhlel nino more oiniiiKely mlnsllng uplrltnnllty nnd xclcnee, I'rom the mntcrlnl point of view leiirti nre nnthhiK but nn excre tion of onll wntfr from glands of the eyexT They conxlst normally of the purest of water with n smnll admixture of rommon wilt, or chloride of sodium, Mich us oxlHtx In the blood. In some ahnnrmnl conditions of the body they vontnln other cheir.lcnls. Thus one tufferlng from poisoning with salts of antimony may shed tears "contain ing Hint chemical, so that tears them selves nre poisonous; and diabetic pa tients shed tenr containing sugar. From another point of view tears nre mnnlfcHtiitlonK of emotion nnd al ways spring from tho heart, Thai Is to sny one does not weep because of the mental procews of tho brnln but ticcnuee of llio.feellnjrs of the heart. Kven If the tears be hypocritical and summoned up for nn Insincere purpoxe they are produced by the brain's work ing hack to the henrt nnd making an upprnl to Ux emotion. An eminent nc tbr when nskwl how he was nble to shed real tenrs at will replied that he did so by "culling to remembrance his father who was dead and whom he erently loved. It Is to be noticed, too, that the nervous excltniton which rcsultB In tears Is caused by grief, lint not near ly o much by actunl pain. "In the dnys .before the use of miostlietlcs," says a great surgical authority, "I have hnd patients who were undergoing opera tions faint ; I have beard them cry out and scream until they made the by Ktnndcrs sick nnd pnle, but rarely If ever bnve they shed tenrs." Again, It Is observed that tenrs are of much value to tho life of mankind. Thnt value Is not merely In the fact Hint their flow gives relief, but'sstlll more In the Indication' that lbe?rlef centers nre being reprieved of (heir' sensibility and that. the nervpus organ ization is being fitted to endure sor row with fortitude. "Asn rule,H'snya u great nulhnrlty, "the escape and free escape of tenrs relieves the heart and saves tho body the shock of grief." It Is obviously well, then, that Ger many should weep. To say that, Is not to csulOn'her suffering, but rath er to rejolco In her relief from It. Tlio .suffering Is Inevitable as-fate. It Is well that she shall be saved from the extreme shock of It through recourse to teurs; for. to quote the poet again, "Shu must wivp or she will die." New Vork Herald. Town Mada Famous by Oysters. The oyster season at Colchester, Kngtand, was opened with quaint cere monies. Tho mayor nnd corporation traversed the fishery grounds in n dredger and tho mayor made the first haul of-nystcrs. The mayor and cor poration then consumed gin mid ginger-bread n custom which hud. pre vailed since the fishery was first opened under roynl charter In tho roljjn o ltlchnrd I. A telegram ex pressing dutiful devotion wns sent to the. king nt a luncheon nftcrwards on I'eowlt Island. Tlio early Saxons so appreciated the Colchester fishery Hint they took three oysfer knives for their arms, and tills device jitlll forms tho arms of tho county of Essex, Tlio Cplehester lUhery lost nil their con tlncn,tnl customers during tho war, but tha Ilrltlsh public consumed nil that they could hupply. They had most successful seasons, nnd were able to give 40,000 'oysters to military hos pitals. In the Earth' Interior. From the evidence, available, It. D. Qltlham traces three divisions In the earth's Interior. The sold outer crust, with a thickness of to 1 per cent of the radius (or 20 to 40 miles), has high permtuient rigidity, but from un known causes has been Bubject to deformations, with' displacements of as much as 10 miles Vertically and ,100 horizontally. The next section, about half the radius In thickness, has hlh. rigidity for such stresses as tidal action wjthjojy jlgjdityfor tonfrcoh- nucleus fS- aW uakt ail J I r i l '? i A at Clark. , this iaay ia toocing tor rugs, bn aava Axralniter." t "I'll a'alrhlm JfT'can find him, bo 'rrnofr Bund' 'nere,"-Loulvl!l CoHrler-Jourrtai; !r Thalr Kln. "Pop, what are fabricated, vessels" "I think thajfari Um kind your Vn- at BMry tsefc Wa rwaaAafci vf TT7;T5fi ' .nnueq .airaaa. xiih ceuiini ; has low rigidity. The concluMohs - 'liflnf'lo thtf two' timer "divisions'- : 4tiwri from'4 records' of i.'eartha "BAD MEN" HAVE-CHARACTER London Writer Thus Explains Vny Femininity Is So Peculiarly AU traetcd to Them. , jlfolnrlnn vlio try to wrllc of pre historic Union I el I ux flml meti won women In llio)c days liy lirpie force. KtrwiKili In ninn still nppcnl (o upm en treiucndouMjv mid she likes to find her twister. In spite of (ho vote oikTo f'w other thing. w Und wen wninlly show strength of koiiiu sort, Maybe Hint In why they lire nttmctlve to women. Follow up Hie f story of nny erlm Iwil nu lllce, nnd you'll Ilnd n woinnn In the story. No mutter how linil n twin tnny he, he enn usunlly find n woman who will bellcte In him. Why do uonien set-in to like "Blue beard," or nt nny rate hnd men? n n T, ', T I nnd you'll find that ho hns character.- W..I... ...... i f .. ... although It Is hod. He Is untrouhled by scruples nnd conscience, so when ho wants a thing ho sets about getting It. This may explain why, In so many In stances, n bad mnn steps In nnd wlna a woman where many good men had hesitated. You cannot get away from tho old scientific law "Like repels, un like nttrnct8." There Is generally something force ful about a bod man which ap'penls to n womnn ns strength, something primi tive and fine. She feels the personality of tho scamp, for he possesses person ality. Like the moth fluttering round the candle, which gets scorched at last, the woman who Is attracted by a bad mnn usually ends by being bis. , She tnny even be nware of his bad ness, and it does not repel her. In the henrt of a good woman there Is always tho desire to help. She Imagines that her power will be so great that she will bo able to reform him. Women seem to glory In self-sacrifice, nnd tliey revel in making martyrs of themselves. The most cruelly treat ed wife will rarely hear n word against her mate. She herself will tell you of his cruelty, but beware of how yon sympathize. It Is not for you to con demn. K Good women so often get the bad men, whereas good men seem frequent ly to woo women who nre not' worthy of them. Unman nature has many kinks. London Answers. Lumberjacks in Heart of' City. Logging within a block or two of ,the business center of Minneapolis that Is what lias been going on tills week nil nlong Mary place,, says the Minne apolis Tribune. Ulnis, oaks, bnrkbcrrlcs thirty or more of them broad based enough, some of them, to keep the municipal logging crow busy for half a day cut ting them down, wero marked for fell ing when tho city council voted for widening the street. But the oldest oak of them nil, the one that spreads lis limbs In the cen ter of .the grpunda of the Sweet studio, toes tho mnrk nt 'the very edge of tho boulevard to he and will be safe from tho municipal grub hoe for years to come, according to the city engineer's survey. And where does nil the elm wood nnd- oak wood und bnckberry wood, product of the downtown lumbering activities, go to? That's the Irony of fate, for kinsfolk of the forests. Out to the "city yard" that's where the chopped up giants go there to become fuel for the making of asphalt I Real Mental Discipline. A mind is disciplined, not by rea son of the quantity of related or un related matter that has been displayed before It, or, crammed Into It, but when It has learned to confront the difficult with Intrepidity, relying upon methods of attack which It knows It can use with dexterity and precision because It has been using them right along, and which are In tho available kit of tools Just as the carpenter's saw and chisel lie in his chest sharp and ready for Hie grip of lily hand. Mental dis cipline Is a matter 6f the quality of instruction, and the quality of the menfnl application demanded by the Instructor, rather than of the quan tity of subjects presented. Hence a few proper subjects In qualified bands nre enough to make n start with. A. G. Keller in The ltevlew. In No Hurry. A boy wns leaning against a post when a man camo by. "What are you doing?" he asked tho bojv "Nothing 1" wns the nnswer. 4 ''Get any pay for It?" "No I" "Why don't you work? I can offer you n Job." "Itegulnr?" asked tho boy. "l'es." "And pay?" "Np," said tho men--"not for the frrst week, but the second week I'd pay you'- j '."Well," replied the boy, "I'm all right here, so .I'll come round the sec ond, week H A Philosopher. I confess I have a soft dIim 1b at heart for that rare7 character who la tntwit;w'ltli'thev world as he Inda.'lt' kal who'dori'horattemWt tornDDroBrt-. jati'any more-of'lt to hlawaif taws aMe-luteJy oaeda from day to day. Hf kMwaYfrom .tho' beginning that the Horld could gt pntwlthQut him and ua iiu uBver una nuy huxjcit iu leava any, result behind him, any' legacy fortheVorld'to quarrel'over. He1! reiiy;n exouc ana mi nre ia set petually misunderstood by ,hl neigh-, bora beeawe he eharee nose of their atetr'ahoht tetehMt e ta M," Tliarlaa Dddler 'Vinic.' ' ... WHEAT ONCE WEED Most Important Cereal Has Been -, Developed. Exhauitlve Reearchee Hdve Proved That It Had a More Humble Orl- fll'i Than Any Other Known Artificial Plant Tho original parents of all our rou-iilg wore grasses of ope kind or other, often belonging to remotely dif ferent groups, but utmost nil Indfgen ous Inhabitants of tho central Asian und Mediterranean regions. Tho pedigree of nhent, the most Im portant of nil our cerenls. Is fimnenhat obscure. It has vnrled to a greater de gree from lis humble original than nny other known nrtlllcinl plant. Fortu nately, we nre still able to recover the steps by which It has been developed from what might nt first sight appear to be a very unlikely and Ill-endowed linncestor Indeed. j no kngiisn couch-grass, which often proves such a troublesome weed In our own country, Is represented around tho Mediterranean shores by an allied genus of annual plants known as goat-grass; and one of these weedy gont-grosses has now been shown with great probability to be the wild form of our cultivated wheat It Is a small dwarfish grass, with very petty seeds, and not nearly so full a spike as the cereals of agriculture. When mnn first reappears In north em Europe, nfter the great Ice sheets once more cleared away "from the face of tlio land, we find him growing and using a rude form of wheat from the earliest moment of his re-establish-ment In the desolated plains. Among the pile-villages of the Swiss lakes, which were Inhabited by men of the newer stone age. we find side by side" with the polished flint axes and tlyj handmade pottery of the period sev eral cereals raised by the lake-dwellers on the neighboring mainland. The clinrred seeds and water-logged shocks disinterred from the ruins of the villages Include millet, barley and several other grains; but by far the conimonest among them Is a peculiar small form of wheat, which has been named scientifically nfter the ancient folk by whom it was used. This lake-wheat.' how ever, thougb It dates back to the Tery beginning ot the period in Europe, cannot be con sidered as the first variety developed from tlie primitive goat-grass by the oarllcstcu!Uyators;,ItJs so. superior ln character to the wild stock' that It" must already have undergone a long course or linageana selection in mora. Ki'iiiiii cumulus, unu inusi nave oeeu brought back to .Europe in a ,cpnipar atlvely perfect condition bythe short dark' people' who settled our continent Immediately nfter the termination ot the glacial era. From the neolithic time forwnrdthe Improved seed has continued, to, grow bigger nnd bigger, both in the size ot the shocks 'and In the girth of the In dividual grains, untii the; present rday. The 'original small la'ke-wrheat, indeed, lingered on In use In Switzerland and the, north down to' ttfe'(laysvo'f the Roman conquest; hut, meanwhile, ,in Egypt and the South, still better varie ties were being gradually developed by careful selection; and we find both kinds side by side. In some few In stances; thus showing' that both were grown together at the same time by races In different stages of civilization. With the Introduction of these befr tcr kinds by tho Greek and Roman col onists 'into 'Gaul and Britain, the old lake-wheat became quite extinct. In deed, In every case the cultivated seeds nnd fruits which grew In neo-' llthlc garden plots wero much smaller than those of our own time, whereas the wd seeds and wild fruits found under the same circumstances nre just ns large as their congeners of the present day, A Inpso which makes relatively little difference to the stable wild weeds makes relatively great dif ferences In the very plastic and care fully selected cultivated plants. Grant Allen In Colin Clout's Calendar. VVorld'a Oebt to Richard Burton, Richard Burton, to whom the world Is Indebted for n vast fund of Infor mation, gained while on his exploring expeditions in the Far East, died Oc tober 20, 1S0O. Burton acquired a familiar acquaintance with the lan guage ofthe Orient, and In this wny wns equipped to make explorations. In Arabia In tlie guise of an Afghan; pil grim. One of his journeys, In 1839, led to thediseovery of Lake Tangan yika and the, opening up of tlie enst ern part of Africa. Burton left behind numerous books which described his 'journeys and gave an Insight to those countries 'that had never before been given: ' r s " - "Qettlnj Sacked." From the shores of theBosphorui, somber, gloomy, menacing for many, 'comes this addition' to our, staaa'dle tlonary. One ot the sultana of Turkey, i , ways lagenloua It, matters of this Wad, conceive oz a liw.airaWjOx.eiiiw: lug of members i of hfi 'harew'ef wfcoir he had tired.. The'tformer.bbJecV.. his arectlonr'Put rnf'aWck"ead .thrown Into.' the YBosphWoA, ndtraT' elera in Tartey71earlBf oTtMilaofel Droceaa, brought back with them 'to .the civilized' W6rldheexprei16a ''get- ana; ine hu. Rtte'rt Ceurteeu. . He Statistics show that' more bteh don are crlmlna.1 than married man. toe-Thitvl beeoee tlM'Mehtiaai hwrt ! Mutt ..' '" "13gg y-,; " ) n 'TWO '-'' P I - - - . -1 IN liBH -; For the mlddje-agedior' olderly person who re-, quires ono pair of glasses., for reading and another pair fcr out-of-door use, we recommend our InTK slblo Bifocal or double vision glasses. They aro really twa pairs ot glasses In' one two lenses fused together without any visible 'Jols--1 lng. There Is no prom inent seam or" joint to tell the public" that thar wtfarer Is "getting alone 4n years." With our Invisible Bi focals even yonr cloeeet It friends cannot detect that. you are wearing dOHhM ' vision glasses. Call "aeT iee them. H. J. WINTERS. JEWELEK AND OPTICIAN Phone 149W 706 ThO" "1920 ceiisuT closes January; IS. Are you listed? Phone 460 Ice Cream 729 Mala at Candle " PASTIME Jack Monrow, Prop. Cigars, Tobacco, Soft DrlnkJI Peel and Billiards Barbor Shop In oCnnectioa oun MOTTO !'Courte&y-aad Service".-. a. j - t - Jt i V.nrtvJif s 0- LoiUM'asfe,, . Industries Opportunities - e.- , Zhvestmeata '"" - . Good boys la farm's, and 'city homes , - "V ,tt - Jas. M. W.atirins Jr. Suite J.Styaasoa Bldg. Phone '484 Sarety bonds wnlle yoa wait..Chaa cote & Sinlta." tMat" Tho 1920 census closes January 15. Are you listed? ' ESTRAV n Came to my place at Round Lat" about Oct 15 the .following cattle: one roan yearling steer and one red. white-faced heifer, both branded Dl on right hip, crop oft right ear, under slope on left ear. Ono red yearling netrer. oranaea quarter circle box on right hip, heart on right shoulder, crop and under bit right and left ear and upper crop on right ear also. One red yearling blotched brand. on left hip, Swallow fork on right ear, crop and swallow fork on left ear; also split on left ear. And a dtilap on brisket, wattla on left leg., 12-14 WILLIAM LAMBERT BUY YOUR HOME NOW New 5-room bungalow on pare--merit, three blocks 'from Main street Completely furnished- A bargain at $6,000. Good terms, Seo this at once. Six-room house, one block ott pavement. Could not be built for the price asked r $2,500. Easy, terms. r Three-room house 'on Eleventh, street'. $1,350. -1 i ., New 5-room bungalow ln'MllUv Additlon. " Modern' throughoat $4,750. Terms. , ---1- Four-room housed Mills Addlt!ev $1,300; easy terms. n -v ip Hbx ''''!'! - ,Three .K0o4.,,houseB, one I w .' aB&ka hKiiaaa Ana niw" from Malnatreet"-$3,500 and t andiwrerar-otheri.'See .thera. pi si?nt!4 i-?, jiAla Ir;luiTifof ulcfc sale a halt. doen,of,the,choioe building; lota I4 this city, location "to suit. The prte. Is right -fidv the-terms .easy. The above prtoesi Willi notv be cheaper, aev- take advantage Ot taem, liow. . il.bare money, to. loan en buslaeaa and' residential' preperties: Invest ao?r and '.take advataM C profits that ate' aetra'te 'eoaee aoeau "l M S! 1 1 . . MMMMMUkm&M!mmmmUMm :J?!if Sv l-J3itttxTvvyK ,. w Wt'l&ftW14MWiW&tf&UtiJ?tJ.if4.- , t f 1 F tfl.tf: f'