The Place of Opportunities Klamath Co. Has No Equal The Railroad will Soon be Here Uncle Sam is now furnishing water for hun dreds of homes and inside of one year will be prepared to furnish water for thousands of homes. Klamath County carried off the first prizes at the Irrigation Congress in Sacra- mento for its irrigated Wheat, Oats, Barley Vegetables and Grasses. Now is your opportunity to get a home. I CAN SELL YOU OOOD LAND THAT WILL ALL BE IRRIGATED— ON EASY TERflS-AT to $30 PER ACRE. I also have some good buys in Klamath Falls, the Metropolis of Klamath Co., that I am offering at a bargain. I am also handling land in Butte Valley on the new Railroad, near Dorris, at prices that will make you buy if you will only go and look it over. WHEN COMING TO KLAMATH FALLS BE SURE AND MAKE MY OFFICE YOUR HEADQUARTERS, as I have all kinds of literature on Klamath County, and will be glad to furnish it to you free of charge. MARK L. BURNS A STORY. It all began when he was youn» Through fortune's hard mischance It came about he had to wear His daddy’s cut down pants. He then grew up to man's estates Continued as before. And when he went in politics The boss' collar wore. He next became a benedict. Of course we may surmise From color cor«j>lnations st ran re He wore his helpmeet’s ties. And though In his apparel, thus. He never cared to choose, He made a failure when he tried To fill a great man's shoes. The moral of this tale is this: For either fame or pelf A tailor poor is circumstance. You'd better dress yourself. —McLandburgh Wilson in Uppincott'a. Taking No Chances. Young Wife (who has cooked the din­ ner for the first time)—Whatever will my husband say when be sees that I have quite spoiled the joint? Come, Anna, we will toss who shall take It In to him— Fliegende Blatter. Th« Amateur Chauffeur. t f "How do you adjust your carburetor, Biggins ?” ”1’11 show you. You see that nut?” "Yes.” "I carefully turn that. You see that screw?” “Yes.” “I gently loosen that. You Hee that ring?” “Yes.” “I slowly tighten that.” "Yes, but what do the nut and the screw and the ring control? What do they mean?” “I don’t know.” “Then how can you get a good ad­ justment?” "You didn't let me finish. After go­ ing through the manipulations already cited I turn the crank." "Then what happens?” “Nothing.” “Well, what is the next move?” The Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Farm Lands and Town Lots “I wiK cereftiTiy into the telephone room, gently take down the receiver and pleasantly summon aid from the factory.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Suspicious. “I guess Mr. Roxley ain’t as rich as some people think,” said Tommy. "You said he didn't have to work, but could jest go around enjoyin’ hisself wher­ ever he pleased.” "So be kin.” said Jimmy. “Well, he wasn't at that dandy Sun­ day school picnic of ours yesterday, an' the tickets wuz on'y 23 cents.”— Catholic Standard and Times. A HUNGRY GHOST. Lots In Mills Addition and Mills Second Addition Are Sure Money makers Story of a Recent Premature Burial In China. This is the tale of a ghost that eats. and It has thrown the towns of the, Siangfu district of China into a com- I motion. The facts are related in the I North China Herald. On March 27 the thirty-year-old son of Tzi Lung, a schoolteacher, was thought to have died of typhus fever. His family be­ ing very poor, the body was placed in a frail wood coffin and buried only a few Inches under the soil outside the western gate of the town of Slang­ yang. On April 6 a man put his horse | to graze on the spot. The beast found good grass near the grave and brought its foot down upon the soil above the ■ coffin, the lid of which was broken. ' In a little while the owner of the horse . saw a gaunt white arm thrust up ! through the hole made by the horse's hoof. Thinking the dead man's ghost was about to rise to avenge the insult of­ fered in the breaking of the coffin, the watcher hurried up and began shovel­ ing earth into the bole to keep the ghost down. A muffled voice expos­ I tulated and l>egged to be freed, claim­ ing to be the living son of Tzl Lung. The watcher fled in terror to the town, where be told every one be met of what had happened. The ghost's fa­ ther urged that the ghost should be let alone and not further disturbed. A large crowd, however, went out of the city to view the wonder. The ghost kept begging most piteously to be let out. One man had courage enough to unearth the cover of the coffin completely and open It, allowing tbe "resurrected” man to sit up. Rice soup and wine were brought and rav­ enously devoured by the ghost, still sitting upright in bls coffin Imbedded In the earth. Finally the unhappy spirit was re leased and confined in a temple until be could prove himself to be a living man.—Chicago News. Have a care of whom you taU; W whom and of what and where.- -Ho* ace. No single lot higher than $300. Choice lots as low as $75. SIO A 7VVONTH >- Frank Ward will show you the lots and help make a selection. Several thousand acres of the best farm, fruit, garden, orchard and grazing land in Klamath County i at prices that cannot be beat and on favorable terms. I » FRANK IRA WHITE American Bank and Trust Building, Sixth Street Side. Y