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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1920)
r "f. 1 r- iv(ii:tiiiii:k THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON rIliAY. T'VAUlVAnY 27. ! PM unbwtuiu mmiiumii , ' LOOT CARGOES SHI ORIM OF STEflWIEBS OF IfflB : High Grade Ladies' & Men's Clothes MADK TO OIIDKH KINKHT MATKIUAI.8 I11CHT OP WOIIKMAN8II1F LATKBT STYLES I'KIIKKGT FIT OUAHANTEED Price lire very reasonable Your Inspection Invited Chas. J. Cizek MERCHANT TAOJOM BMMaia M. WOOD Phone in your orders for BLOCK, LIMB or SLAB WOOD Our stock is more com plete now than for several months. Prices Right Service the Best O. PEYTON "Wood to Burn" 702 Main St. Phone 187 Qxjru-ij-u-u'yj'-M'vvvvv',Triii-- BE PRETTY, TUMI I R THY flHAXIMOTHi:K'8 OI.I) KA- vom 11: hi:ciim: of ra(sk ti:a ami bt'i.nirn ' AlmoBt ovcryorio knows Hint Sage Ten anil Sulphur, proporly compound ed, brings buck the natural color and luetro to the hair when faded, gray or streaked. Years ngo tho only way to gel thin mlxturo was to mako It at homo, which Is muusy and trouble some. Nowadays, by asking nt nny drug storo for "Wyeth's Sago and Sul. phtir Compound," you will got a large bottlo of this famous old rcclpo, Im proved by tho addition of other In. grodlonts, for about 50 cents. Don't stay grny! Try It! 'No one can possibly loll that you darkened your hair, as It does 11 so naturally and evenly. You dampen a spougo'oi soft brush with It, and draw this through your hnlr, taking' ono small strand at n. tlmo; by morning tho gray hair dlsnpponm, and after another ap plication or two, your hair bocomes beautifully dark, glossy and attract, lvo. Summ U. Anthony, whoso conten nry Is nbout to bo colobratod, was tho first American woman suffragist to bo nrrestod for hor principles. In ordor to test tho fourtoonth and fif teenth nmondmonts, sho cast ballots at tho atnto and congressional elec tions nt Rochester In 1872. Sho was Indicted for illegal voting and n lino imposed. Sho defiantly rofuscd to pay tho lino, but was novor Jailed. Ono of tho boat-known examples of a muph-mnrrlcd man is afforded by Sir Qorvalso Clifton, tho historian of Jamaica, who mnrrlod raven wives, flvo qf thorn being domestic sorvauts from his own housohold, His matrimonial ventures all turned out happily. L SPLITTING SK HEADACH E Dr. James' Hoadaoho Powdors ro. liovo at onoo 10 cents a package. You tako a Dr. James' Ilcadaclio 1'owdor and in Junt a few moments your head clears and all nauralgla and distress vanishes. It's 'tho quickest and surest rollof for hoadacho, wliutlior dull, throbbing, splitting or norve racking. Sond somoono to tho drug ttoro and get a dime pack ngo now. Quit mlTorlng It's so needless, Uo DuroVyou get Dr. James' Hoadacha Powdors then there will bo po disoti. 'polntmcot, IIUKNOH AIUI3W, T..I). 1. (Ily Mull ) Ilellof that a widespread In ternational organization lit nt work Mealing morclmmllr.o from steam- Hhlps Is oxproHHc'd In a report of I ho United Status Chamber of Commerce in Argoiitlna, Tho chnmher Investi gated the loss nt valuable merchan dise by pilfering from ships plying to this port and found "that tho lamo characteristics are vlslhto In thefts of mnrchandlno from Ituly, vSpaln, unit Kngland as from tho United States." Tho InvcNtlgatlon was made at tho roquost of tho Alllqd Chambers of Commerce, which asked all tho mem bers to mako similar Investigations. "Tho Increase In pllferago during tho past few months had beon alarm- Ing," says the report. "An effort was made to deduce from tho ev'ldenco re celved tho value of tho goods stolen, but this was Impossible, although In general terms It would soom to run Into hundreds of thousands' of dol lars gold. "One curious feature developed which was that pilferage occurs with frequency In articles sunt by parcels post, for which thero In no recourse if no value has beun declared. "Tho thefts have all tho charac teristics of itystcmatlzod robbery bv people who know tho morchandlso and nlso know the peculiarities cf the shippers. It would seem, more over, that a widespread International organization wns at work, for the snme characteristics aro vlslhlo In thefts of merchandise from Ituly, Franco, Spain ,nnd Kuglnnd as from tho United States. "Ono hoiiso Imported n lot of 30 automobiles. It is tho custom of this factory to pack tho set of tools In one special corner of tho case. A hole was cut Into this particular corner of 29 cases and tho tool vets wore re moved. Apparently tho thlovos know exactly where to look for the articles thoy desired. "Another houso which Imports dry goods found that zinc lined cases hat boon opened, tho silk contents re moved nnd, an' equal weight of coal put Into tho cases, which were nailed up. Another house, which nlso im ports dry goods, hud several cases cf silk velvet completely rifled nnd In tho cases wore found cotton goods of nn inferior quality. Each of theso cases Involved losses amounting to noarly 110,000 gold. Ono exporter of silk, from' Kuropo, with tho Idea of deceiving tho thieves, changed his form of packing and also his ship ping marks, but tho thioves went direct to th packages nnd rifled them ns though thoy know before hand what thoy contained. Two se parata shipments, -each containing ICO, 000 sowing mnchlno needles, woro stolon, the empty boxea arriv ing In Iluouos Aires, although hi this caso tho shippers liavo romplcto security that tho morchandlso was lnndcd on tho steamer In proper con dition In Now York. A merchant makes his custom houso declaration in harmony with tho shipping docu ments rccolvcd from abroad and must pay duty on goods that woro stolen. "Tho Ilrltisli steamship com panies nt first, and nioro recently tho Amorlcun steamship companies, hnvo Included in their bills of lading a clause to tho effoet that tho' steamer will not bo rosponslblo for pilferage in nil cases In which loss, can bo covorod by insurance , "Insurance compnnloa aro increas ing tholr riitos and throaton to mako still nioro increases. Tho attitude of tho steamship companies mid tho captains Is a dlroct invitation to un restricted thoft on hoard ship. As thoft Increases, Inauranco rates will lncrcaso, and tho oventunl projudlcq to legitimate commorco throntens to bo very grnvo. "Tho opinion of rosponslblo marl tlmo lusurnncu ngonts and adjustors who aro in close- touch with tho situ ation is that tho only remedy is for tho steamship companies to ronssumo responsibility far pllforngo, and in caso thoy aro unwilling to do so, governmental pressuro should bo brought to bear to compol thorn to ollmlnnto this clauso." ' Mi:XirO CITY, Teh. A (Hy MlII). Hieroglyphics recently discovered mi Mm ffiiitiilfiltfiti Mffinnu ttf llin til rn- mlds of Hun Juan Tootlhunnin, 27' T iiillos northeast of Mexico City may solve tho problem which has perplex- . cd historians and arclieologlsts for lonturloH as to the true origin or the Mexican nation. Theso strange carv ings aro Raid by somo authorities to be Chinese, thus tending to bear out the old tradition that in tho dim past warring tribes from China crossed to a now continent, sottlud within tho present boundaries of Mexico and be came tho progenitors of tho raco which now dominates this republic. So Interesting are tho recent dis coveries that tho Bureau of Anthro pology has beon Instructed to conduct a vigorous research and In this con nection Fong Ttlang Kuang, charge d' affairs of the Chinese legation in Mexico, visited the pyramids and stated that the hieroglyphics woro similar In many respects to certain symbols now In use by tho Chinese. Ho declared tho words "Sun", "City," and "Eye" word clearly 'depleted. Mexican anthropologists who have In terested themselves In the discovery hnvo declined to pass final Judgment until furthor excavations arc made and more'evldenco obtained. Tho pr.am!ds of San Junn Teotl liuacan ns well as those In Cholula In the state of i'liebla aro among the oldest marks of primitive habitation to bo found in tho republic. They stand ns colossal monuments to peo ples whoso history was as obscure to .tho conquering Spaniards in the 10th century ns to present day his torians. Because of their genoral construction, somo authorities believe thoy aro tho handiwork of tho Kgypt Inns who In some mysterious manner crossed the sens nnd denoted their places of permanent habitation with theso stone, nnd cement structures which aro oven .larger than the more famous pryamlds of Egypt. Tho little village of San Juan Tco- tlhuacan which in tho Aztec langu nge meant "City of tho Cods", was In thq early days of Aztec history the -eonn nf extraordinary religious cere- tnon'oi. The two pyramids, one dedi cated to the Sun. the other to the Monnnre known to have been the tombs In which hundreds of tribal dignitaries word burled nnd excava tors hao cxhumod wrought stone containing human bonos, obsidian knives, terra cotta heads with broad faces and flat noses, fragments of rnro pottery and great numbers of arrowheads. Ono of tho most recent nnd most valuable discoveries was a Jndolto mask of somo past monarch with thq brow covered with thodia ilom known to early, Mexican history. Tho prnmid to tho Sun measures 7C1 x 721 feet at tho baso and Is 21C feot high; tho one to tho Moon is 511 x 426 feot nt tho baso and is 151 feet lilgh. Thoy both contain numerous chambers nnd their sovoral stories aro comploto templos In themselves but connected by winding stairs. Tho Inscriptions having Culneso rharactoiistlcs woro discovered thru excavating in tho ruins of what has gonornlly boon known as ha. Cluda dola (Tho Citadel) 'but which, ac cording to recent roports of Investi gntors, nro what Is loft of n pyramid larger, and porhnps, older than the two pyramids to tho Sun and the Moon. aW aV b JBBLB jVbvJPh x m am j mwiwaar r, . i X L iav ' k K mlr V t .r TjfJ iV b aat'lll lllll'l1 ' ll'PH jl -- m Lompl Tr , L.. .r 4J fel L (v?fr i-fwii xftT FUNERAL COST IS RAISED IN CHINA Tho first magazine, In America conducted solely by women was tho "LowolJ Offoring," a monthly periodical published frcm 1842 to lh'19 by girls employed in tho mills of IjowoII, Mass. Lucy I.arcom wna ono of its frequent, contributors. , A Herald Want Ad will tcll It. HANGTUNCS, China, nJn. 2C. (By Mall). Tho influenza epidemic In this district has caused so many deaths that thoro Is a shortago of caskots and tholr price has risen 400 por cout In recent weeks. llocnuso qf this many bodies hnvo boon burled 'n shrpuds only, a prnc tico uncommon ovon' among tho poorost Chinese, Another departure that has boon forced upon tho peo plo by tho oxistlngsltuntlon ,1s that Fong Shul, or ho prnctlco of goo mancy In connection with funerals by which' grnvo sltos and tlmos of burial' and othor dotnlls aro dotor mlnod, is bolng Ignorod for, tho first tlmo, for n'o longor can notlco bo takon of unlucky days for holding funornls, Wholp households aro bo lng wiped out bytho opldemlc. . lete Showing of Spring Millinery Monday, March 1 VWVSrWAipMrVW'WVWWWW We take pleasure in announcing to you that we have this season added a Blouse and Petticoat Department to our Millinery. Upon March 1st, the day of our Spring Opening, we will have ready for your inspection not only- $ the largest and most beautiful selection of Dress and Tailored Hats, including New York reproductions' of French patterns, but Paris Hats also, imported direct by ourselves. . Also nearly five hundred Blouses, in Georgette, French and American Voiles, etc. These will include new models in Blouses, Smocks, Russian Blouses, with long, three-quarter and plenty of new short sleeves; and in all the new shades, such as 'Bermuda, Blue Dawn, Chrysis, Peach bloom, etc Silk Petticoats of best quality and high-class workmanship. Every Hat and every Blouse has been personally selected in New' York by our Miss Gertrude Eckmari, and only from makers having a national reputation for high-class models. The styles, are exclusive. In this new department our aim will be not so much to see how cheaply we can sell an article, as to supply you with our hats, something that is satisfactory and that you can wear with full assurance .that no one can obtain a duplicate of it in this city. .:..x..h..m...:..x..:..:..h:..:":..: ,. A A A A i L - M T IN,f IIS T 0 T N Take n tablespoon fill Hack hurts or Bladder bothers. of Salts if Thoro is a notlcenblo chnngo In tho style of, play of tho rookio wonJ ders signed hy tho "hlghor ups" now adays. Provlous to this , year tho youngsters woro socond Ty Cohbs, hut now thoy all hit llko "Babo" Ruth. Wo oj-o a nation of moat eat rs and our blood is flllo.l with uric ntld, says tx well-known authority, who warns us to ho constant! on guard against kidney trouble Tins .kidneys do tholr utmost to freo" tho blood of this irritating acid, hut becomo weak from tho over work; thoy got sluggish; tho eliml natlvo tissues' clog and thus tho waste is rotalned In tho blood and poison tho entlro system. When your kidneys ncho and feel liko lumps of lend, and ou have stinging pnlns in tho hack or tho urino is cloudy, full of seoMment, or tho binder U lrrltntahlo, obliging you to seek rollof during tho night; when you havo sovoro nendaches, norvous and dizzy spoils, slooploss noss, acid stomach or rheumatism 'In bad weather, got from your pharma cist about four ounces of Jad Salts; tako n tablespoon In a glass of water heforo breakfast ovory morning and in n fow days your kidneys will act flno. This famous salts Is mado from tho acid of grapes nnd lemon Julco, comblnod with llthtn, and has boon used for generations to flush nnd stimulate, clogged kldnoys, to noutrnllzo tho acids in urino so it is no longor a source of Irritation, thus ondlng urinary and blnddor dis orders. t Jad Salts is inexpensive and can npt injure; makes a delightful of forvoscont llthla-wator drink and nobody can mako a mistako by tak ing jv littlo occasionally to keep tho kldnoys clean and actlvo. During tho winter months the blood of all hibernating animals gets lower in temperature, and the heart beats slowor, and thoso aro the two chief reasons why they are able to get along without eating, for their store of vitality laid up during the summer is only slowly- drawn upon. ""H1 S' "ifiK:5fZfcrY W&Jbur Problem in J5r Community- The It Threatens NOW! . - " .?:!? .J.1? Iimj. J.W !MK if ! vSwaar Mm m1W)!wfBl A ' HfiNBHaiBHr ,vv7jHbP1bIIM ws aai ? Ji; ;' m bbbbm BiaaaaH siisiJHfe'i. aUKWI sbbbbB Lt !i T 'm9I bibbbb! Tha Hon. JOSEPftUS DANIELS Secretary of the Nay and a score more men prominent in public life. HeeirtilyEudarse James Kxjttc'a nmrkbt PHOTOPLAY TREATMENT ofThta 'vest Subject of the Hour 53ITENTERTAlNSA)TinUJLS IT LEAVES ATHOUGHT BEHIND MONDALE SUNDAY and MONDAY t' . 'j.l