I'AUIJ MVH THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON JTOXDAV, JAtfUAIlV , Jfrai. jf ifrGAIN PAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY I " . l flf MARKET Mi Street SHLMON r 11! B,jlb. .35c .27ic NrSTUDO M Street EtfOTOGRAPHS $7.50 $4.95 r TT E' CAFE Ml. Street A'LUNCH LA VOGUE .' Fifth and Main Streets GEORGETTE BLOUSES Regular Price $7.50 Bargain Day Price $3.95 B.P.L MS 223 S. Sixth Street LENOX LAUNDRY SOAP Regular Price, per bar 10c Bargain Day Price, per bar 5c .70c .50c ! RNITIIRE CD, A Street fSj TABLE SET $2.50 d $1.25 Eld GROCERY la Street ft JfARGERINE IfcL 37c v lb' 31c LIBERTY THEATRE 614 Main Street "THE LITTLE GRAY MOUSE" Regular Price 25c Bargain Day Price 20c PALACE MARKET 524 Main Street CHOICE STEER POT ROAST Regular Price, per lb 25c Bargain Day Price, per lb 20c PEOPLE'S MARKET 532 Main Street LARD Regular Price, per lb 33c Bargain Day Price, per lb 25c 1 Sth Street AH NEEDLES iu 10c pr pkg 8c Ml STORE , ain Streets IVE SOAP cce.... 12$c i or 25c, 7 for 55c ffrORE Main Streets ETON SHOES Hi , $20.00 r pair $14.85 RK HTR 126 N. Sixth Street LEGGETT No; 5$ BED SPRING Regular Price $9.75 Bargain Day Price $5.76 ROBERTS & N 422 Main Street NAILS Regular Price, per lb 12c Bargain Day Price, per lb 10c - W. H. ROSS 906 Main Street ROME NICKEL-PLATED TEA KETTLE Regular Price $4.00 Bargain Day Price , $3.25 2 S IARGAIN DAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY WEDNESDAY BARGAIN DAY Moil Hint prompted tlio Ilnrgnln Day Page. Tho merchants whoso ndVortlsemtmlK appear hero nro offering ono nrtlclo nt o upoclal prlro. No two nro offorlrig tlio iinmo artlclo. Tho objoct Is to get you to vlHlt their Moron and whllo thoro Inarn that tho prices thoy nro charging nro no higher than what you hnvo been paying the oul-oMown merchant. Wo hope to make Wednesday tho Dig Market Day of Klam ath Falls. Wo hopo to Dee tho pcoplo of tho county mako out a lint of what thoy want and get tho price from their homo mer chant. Wo havo no fear of tho result. Wo know that tho monoy that linn bcn going clsowhoro will remnln In Klamath county for It up-building and you will bo getting toIuo received for tho monoy you upend. EARL SREPRERD GO. Fifth and Main Streets '' J, EMERSON RECORDS Regular Price $1.00 Bargain Day Price 79c SPOT CASH BASKET GROCERY 822 Klamath Avenue LIBBY'S SOLID PACK TOMATOES Regular Price, per can 25c Bargain Day Price, per can 22c SQUARE DEAL DRUGSTORE Eighth and Main Streets GARDEN COURT FACE POWDER Regular Price, per box 75c Bargain Day Price, 2 for 75c STAR DRUG STORE Fifth and Main Streets MAXIMUM HOT WATER BOTTLES Regular Price $2.50 Bargain Day Price $1.85 UNDER! PIR1C I VOOD'S Sventh and Main Streets 8-in. Hand-Polished PYRALIN COMBS Regular Price $2.00 Bargain Day Price . $1.29 f ITMAN DRUG CD. 520 Main Street WHITMAN'S SAMPLER CHOCOLATES Regular Price, per box $2.00 Bargain Day Price, per box $1.65 IT 1134 Main Street LADIES' CLOTH DRESSES Regular Price $45.00 Bargain Day Price $25.00 THE IIVS STORE '"I 512 Main Street 18x36 HUCK TOWELS Regular Price .. .....35c Bargain Day Price, 17cj 6 for , $1.00 3 D 2 m m o JO I i 2 w D 2 M to 5 DO JO 2! O H w o 2 m to D co jo D hJ 3 tn a z M to a CO JO a Hj 3 w D 2 M to D CO JO O 2 W jo SITS RACE SUICIDE; HNS BIG MRORODE WASHINOTON, D C Jan. 3. For many yearn Koprrscntallvo Small of North Carolina has ! agreement been presenting to It. C. Illand, a Carolina farmor and ono of hid constituent, n suit of clothots for onch additional child In hit fam ily. Having presented thirteen sultn, nnd being recently notified to noml tho fourteenth, noprescntottvo Small hnn Informed IJJand that tho con tract will bo "off with Mr. flinntl'H jrotlrcmcnt from congress on March 3. Small and DIand made their com pact a number of jrcars nrn whon Small wan making a campaign ipooch at itobersonvlllo, near hero. Illand then had twenty children; ho now baa thirty-four. Twenty-six of tho thlrtv.fonr rhll. dren arc living, and tho present Mm. Hland, Illand'a second wife, In tho mother of nineteen, nine of whom woro born during tho last ten yenm. Including one net of twlno. Eight een children still Jlvo at homo, but Mm. DIand doclarcn nho get lone somo nometlmca "because no many havo gono nway." Mr. and Mm. DIand recently bad a group photograph taken of tho family still remaining on tho tinj farm. Whllo tho photographer was working a buzxard cast Itn shadow on tho ground. Illand was asked If he was superstitious. "No." be said, "I'm not afraid of buzsardn. but at first I thought tho blame thing was a stork." In calling tho children togotbor for tho photograph, DInnd simply cupped his hands and In a sten torian voice cried: "Chlld.'jn." Insults were Immediate Children appeared from evcrr riioi Somo of tho "children" were grown men ana women; others were bare ly able to toddle forth. nn,i nn. ... still being carried In arms. DIand says It Is no more troubio to bring up fifty children than it Is to raise ten. "After you pass ten," he nays, "the older ones are a big help." The children wero not unusually noisy, DIand said, althcngh "thoy made consjdorablo racket when fourteen werer taken down together with whooping cough." Tho blond grocery bill Is coulvalent m icn a week, nlthough DIand produces a large part of his food. On one oc casion he says ho spent most pf nn night computing tho cost of koop- ing his family comfortable, but that tho figures reached inch nlnrm. Ing proportions ho gavo up the Job EXPERIMENT IN FERTILIZING Tho best fertilizers to use en r.ir. lous grades of soil to be found In tho state of Oregon havo been shown as the result of a series of experi ments conducted bv the noil, iinm-. jment of tho state agricultural col lege. Experiments have been con ducted with 16 representative soils and tho trials show tho pffsri. nr different fertilizers and the elements in which the soil is most deficient. Thp trial on the Ilcaaeltlnn trr near Klamath Falls, are classed as lukima sandr lonm. Th nrri. soil Is a light brown sandy loam, with a darker subsurface This ex periment was begun In 1920 ulih sulphur Buper-phosphnte. rock nhn.. phate, gypsum and muriate of nnt. lash. Potatoes aro bolne used n ihn experiment crop. Where muriate of potash was used a definite lncreaso In yield over the check plot was noted. The other fertilizers ravn nn Increase. Alfalfa on this tvno of soil has given profitable lncreaso from this treatment. Tho Nelson tract near Klnmnth Falls Is clay loam soils. This ex perience was begun In 1917 nn shows that where sulphur was utied tho yield was Increased by two tons tho fourth season after trentmnn. Eighty pounds of sulphur hns mado about eight tons lncroaso In yieM during a four-yearDerlod. s.ilnhnV doubled the yield of alfalfa In Qooso Lake valley the last five years. The McCormlck tract Is a slmiinw pea soil, formed from decomposition of tules and swamp grasst In tho swamp and shallow lako recinnn if Klamath county. This experiment was begun last year and no appreci able lncreaso In nlslko and timothy In yield was noticed the first year. except with ' sulphate of potash. which showod a small Increase over tho chock plot. Portland Oregon!- an. r