fwday, February ao, mao. THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAOB RiaHT fTTTTTTTTTTI MM tH-H"fH"ttfti i ' ' " ' . a.a a ... a ----AAAA iii fVTTTTTf " ""t II Personal Menfion ; SHtcJlt0mon5tore X J. L ' ' WINTER has nearly knocking at our doors. vanished and Spring will spon be ,(. WILL YOU BE READY ? WE have anticipated your needs for the season,, in all our many departments. NEW SPRING SUITS are arriving daily, in wonderful crea tions of the many popular materials so much in demand. - JERSEY CLOTH, made into suits, is demanded, because of its wearing quality and not creasing so badly. THERE are a number of bewitching dresses on display in our windows and in our dress cabinets. THEY are worth your atten tion, as they are entirely new. CORDUROYS , , ,: THESE corduroys are in suiting widths and come in t;he most delicate shades of Blues, Greens, Tans, Browns, Yellows. They are especially desirable for this Spring's wear. BLANKETS WE ' are offering the finest values in "Nashua Wool-Nap" Blankets. They are of extra size, very heavy, and of the finest . colorings. WE are exceedingly fortunate to be able to offer you these values at this time. Specially priced at $6.75 H. N. MOE, Proprietor !Hit ! ! 4M4m1im '' Neatly Is hero from Cottugo business niul Jo vllt hit Grove' on daughter Mlxs Franco Hentty. Mrs Ilonry Uolvln has returned from a two mouth' vlU lu Sun Joko, whore her son, Harry, Is atlvmllnff college W. K. Uoliloln. who has lioeu very III wth pneumonia, Is reported to ho much Improved. Mrs. Marlon J Uiirmu, who Imh been here lulling hor mothor and other relatives, accompanied hy her two children, left this morning for Agcr, Cal . to Join hor husband on his ranch near that place, yi'lTS POLICE POUCH FOR imiUKTlAYIN(l .IOU TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE Horses harness, lum ' ber wagons. Ulg UaIn Lumber Co. 20-23 FOR SALE 3 good milcb cows ana one Duroc Jersey bear with papers. One mile north of Shasta View School house. Call oc address O. E. .Hunt, Merrill. Ore. 20-S1 "On the other hand, the workers' wages hare reached a stupendous figure. The man 'who before the war would have earned the equivalent of five shillings, at present refuses to do the same work for less than four or fire pounds per day. Cabmen reach the supreme height of extor tion at Constantinople. Shipping is fairly actlre in the port. Sereral Allied warships He In FOR SALE: Dandy little, p room!tile Bosphorus. The historic Goeben OUQKaiuw, on cumcr .ui, nuaut: is in the Gulf of Ismit. "The British are engaged In re building the road to Therapia. It is singularly new npd interesting to witness the spectacle of British, French and Italian troops in the 'streets; Highlanders in kilts. Royal FOR SALE 5 passenger' Maxwell 'Ita,ian Carabinlers; and sturdy seirc CaUt A2?CrS!Ji IV!!, '" by with their Phone 121M. 20-2G J band. "The Sultan, of whose impending fate we hear so much now-a-days, still goes In State to the Selamllk erery Friday. The psychology of the Turks in Constantinople appeared to me to denote Indifference, in the sense that they did not seem to care much what political future awaited them. Although the Asia Minor Na tionalists were said to be more or less actlre, there was no evidence of their activities In Constantinople. There the young Turk is at least in visible. "Of the Germans not one is left, save a few Inrallds. The former Gfer- trees, lawn, chicken house and yard; basement, hot .and cold water, bath, toilet, lavatory, glassed-ln-porcli, pn ry $2,250. $750 cash, balance to suit. . " J. T. WARD & VI. 20 123 S. 7th St. FOR SALE Good, clean restaurant and small grocery business, stock and fixtures also tease. Sickness cause of sell'ng. 1122 Main St. 20-21 A ISIG RARGAIN. . , xr.cr .- Sot of six Emersout2,4 inch Disc Plows, all steel frame, weight two tons. In fine condition, used last season. Lot of extra parts. Vill sell for $"300 cash if taken quick. This is, one third cost price! 'On the Snyder ranch. Swan Lake.APhone 11F11. 20-26 'U ' - BIDS WAXTKD FOR LOGGING. 'wANTBD-to let-contract to log man ",s''"a' aB been converted In- eighteen million feet timber at rate of six millions yearly beginning this season. For particulars inquire of Nine Lumber Co. Boxll2ITK. F. 20-2 V?ft, TURK CAPITAL : HAS CHANGED ' . r LONDON, Jan. 29. (By Mall). Constantinople Is much less picture sque than it was before the war; yet the extreme charm of the East .lin gers as persistently about th,e,cjty as It 'did In the past, writes anonymous ly an Allied official of high rank in the Pall Mall Gazette. "When I stood on the 'famous bridge over the Golden Horn," he went on, 'tho incredible diversity of orientals one was always wont to see passing was there, but at least 76 percent of them were'dressed as Europeans. Some no longer even wore the fez. f "A business-like aid pervades the principal thoroughfares, not because the Turk himself has suddenly devel oped high commercial instincts, but owing to the great Influx: of business men from the Allied and neutral countries. "All commodities command the most exaggerated prices. Great-quan tities of goods have, however, begun (o arrive, so that prices will soon be gin to decline. to a British hospital, ''The Robert College, one of the foremost seats of learlng in the East, continues to function. The ordinary native system of education alsb"gofls on. i! "It was rather striking to find the big mosques free from the tourists; The cost of travel coupled with the difficulties associated with passports form a barrier to tasual, sight-seeing visitors," tff NO WHITE CANNIBALS ON T1BURON ISLAND LOS ANGELES, Calif., Feb. 20. Member, of the mining expedition Captain Harry de Wlndt, an English explorer., said ho iilans to lead to Tiburon Taland in the Gulf of Calif ornia need not fear "white cannibals" reported there, according to Los Ang eles residents who have visited the island. Persons returning from Tiburon, however, have given it an unpleasant reputation. They have reported that it is overrun with reptiles and that the few Indians living there, while not actively hostile, are sullen and distrustful; Stories of a strange white tribe, using poisoned darts and an ancient blunderbuss to bag occassional visi tors to provido native feast, are scouts here, Some Los Angeles resid ents have reported having seen nat Ives carrying modern firearms. WILL CONTRAST OWN VOICE WITH RECORDS In order that the people of Klam ath Falls may have opportunity to judge the extent to which the Edison, phonograph reproduces the quality ofi the human voice", George A. WIrtz, the local Edison dealer, has arranged for a tone test at Houston's opera house, Monday evening, March 1, at which Miss Marie Morrlssey, the not ed contralto who has produced many popular records for the Edison com pany, will sing In person and by proxy. That is, Miss Morrlssey will contrast her real voice' against that voice as reproduced by the Edison phonograph, and the audience may detect the difference if they can. The machine used wit) be one of the stock Edlsons carried by the WIrtz store. The Edison company maintain that Its machine reproduces the exact tone of the human voice, In every sbado and Inflection, and Is sending one of. its most popular artists to Klamath' Falls to prove Its assertion. The pub-, lie Is to be the Judge. Admission to the concert will be by Invitation. Tickets may be had for the asking at the Klamath Falls! Music House, 725 Main street. Miss Morrlssey has been appearing In a, series of concerts in conjunction with, the Edison phonograph throuch- out California and press reports say that she has taken California towns' by storm. In Bakersfleld recently the audience that packed the big aud itorium refused to leave when the curtain fell, and raised such pande monium that the singer In order to quiet' them was forced' to extend the regular program for-an hour and even the,u ''the crowd hesitated In depart-' ing. PASADBNA, Cal., Fob. 10 Carl Lang.itaff has resigned from tlio Pas. nilena police, at n salary of $120 per month, to go to work at a brlckmason In Texas for $11.00 a day. Coramls slon'or M. H. Salisbury remarked that as a Texas brlckmason receives, more than a Pasadena police commissioner he was tempted to giro up hl posi tion to become a helper to the former patrolman. rROTKUT TRAFFIC ROIjKS. jfUs&T K 3rVPi iiimCP fir MUqUCTSJ'TOIJ MAJOIIAniR, H.Y. 1)0 haa tunt anmn in nmonn in ntks hit hoi yi 'Only In fe ana- uoni could bunlneati b dnvo3opil to tho pru- nt iUko nd still he a 10 iraity of tho poi. lbllltlas unlouchoil. vty lmproislon of Or, (ton la rirat, that you hv a aandarful country) cond, that you have lona voiidirful thinpa with lt and third, that you can do atlll -nip wondorful thlnga." Oregon has cedo raptil itrldaa In th paal ra yar and tha potaloUUtaa for Ilia futur ar alnoit Unltlaia. tvn H bahoovaa ovary toy al tltllMi to Ril hahtnJ Oregon lcduitrtaa and MOST, i but orucoox moDucTS Aaaoalatad tnduatrlaa of Orc Tja RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. 38. (By Mall). The Chauffeurs' Union, members of which operate tnoro than 1,200 taxlcabs, recently went on strike for one week In protest against traffic regulations and low taxlcab tariffs. Many driven of privately. owned cars joined them and while tho striko wns In force the streets seemed strangely deserted. Tho strikers returned to work af ter tho street car employes failed to Join them. Tho city and fodoral au thorities refused to Investigate tho strikers' claims while they remained on strike SAYS UK'S QUALIFIED. SAN FRANCISCO, Fob. 20. Horo Is an advertisement that nppoared In a daily paper here recently: 'WANTED Position In kltchon or .general housework hy man that has riecn keeping bar for twenty-olght ears." ' Tho applicant, John Kornahrons, according to a newspaper interview, suggested that as household help Is tacking the "members of a noble old Jifofesslon might come to the rescue." DKNVEfl CRAFTS MKN DKMAND MORE I'AV. I'TAII DF-MOCUATS WII.1. MKKT AI'ltlTj WU DENVER, Colo., Fob . 20. De mands by throe additional building cratta for wago Increases ha been made upon Denver contractor, nnmo ly, tha hod carriers, plnsterurs nnd brlcklayeri, and their domands will In all probability be Bottled by tho re cently formed arbitration board, con slstinf of roproaentatlves of the un ions and tho contractors. Both tho plastorers and bricklay ers ask for a flat dally scale, of $10 as compared with tho present wago of i $9. The hod carrlora ask an Increase, to $6.50 por day. Formal reply Is askod by tho brlcklayors by March 1, whtlo tho two other unions huvo glv en tho contractors until April 1 to decide. PROTEST PROFITEERS. LONDON, Fob. 4. (By Mall). Agitation against profiteering In Jamaica, British West Indlos, has bo como so wide-spread that the local government has been asked to pass legislation similar to tho English Profiteering Act. 8A1.T LAKE C1TV. Feb. 20. April 3 has boon set as the date for the meeting of tho Utnh Democratic state central committee here for tho purpose of choosing tho dato and se lecting tho city for holding of the Democratic stato convention nt which dologntos to tho nntlonnl convention nt San Francisco Juno 28 will bo named. Utuh'x congressional representa tion allows this statu eight full votes nt tho nntlonnl convention. W. R. Wnlluco, stuto chairman, bollovoa that tho meeting of tho stnto body will bo held about May 10. Tho Republican state central com mittee will moot Feb, 23 to fix thn (Into for tho selection of delegates to tho ropubllcan natlnnnl convention WEATHER REPORT. OREGON aonorally fair, modor ato northwest winds In Japan tho total of a bill Is pnt at tho top antl tho Horns benoath. i I WEATHER RECORD 0-. , ; o H.ereafter the Herald will publish tho mean and maximum tempera tures and precipitation record as tak en by the U, S. Reclamation service station. Publication will cover the day previous to the paper's Issue, up to 5 o'clock of that day, Pre cipitation "XaJaaaaaaaaay V 0f00 Blankets Comforters A Herald Want Ad will sell it. Max. Min. Feb. 1 45 29 Feb, 2. 51 26 Fob. . 3...... 47 26 Fob. 4. 54 26 Feb, 5...... 55 25 Feb. ...'..: 52 30 Feb. 7.... 50 25 Feb. 8 40 19 Feb. 9. 45 19 Feb. 10 45 20 Feb. 11..,.. 63 23 Feb, 12 54 26 Feb. 13 54 27 Fob. 14 59 24 Feb. 15...... 66 27 Feb. 16 65 26 Feb. 17...... 54 28 Feb. 18 62 25 Feb. 1 ,... 58 30 We've Got Lots of 'Em, and Good Ones, Too t WITH THIS CHANGE OF WEATHER ON HAND, IT IS BETTER TO TAKE NO CHANCES, AND FOR THESE REA SONS AS WELL AS OTHERS YOU SHOULD HAVE PLENTY OF BEDDING FpRTHE PRESENT USE. t ' WE HAYS A FULL LINE OF ASSORTED BLANKETS, COMFORTERslfsHEETS, AND PILLOvf CASES.PRICES TO SUIT YOUR PURSEA'ND BEDDING TO SUIT YOUR BED. n i K. Sugarman " I Ain't Mad at Nobody " Sheets Gr PillowCases .MWWwwwMWMwwwwwvwwvwwvvvwWMwvyLrLaruuvvtrtaixriAAArtAJl) tej "- I IW l '.-.!