Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1910)
BUGGING A BIG TIGEB The Jungle Monarch Was Trap ped Lolling In His Bath. A FEAT OF MARKSMANSHIP. Only th» Brute’* Head Showed Above the Water, and the Well Plaoed Bul let, Fired From an Elephant, Entered the Noetrll and Broke Hi* Neck. AN INFANT PRODIGY. KEELHAULING. Sir John Cvelyn’* Tribute to HI* Won derful Child. An Old Tim* Form of Punishment For Offending Salloi*. Of nil ill« siorlc* of Infant marvel* tho moot touching I* thill told by Hr John Evelyn In bl* illnry when he r« -ortl* In III* quaint, dlgulth-d style tbv dentil of hl* wonderful little lioy: "Died my dear« *on Richard, to our liiexprtniMlbh- grlcfe mid ninirtlon. tlw year* nmi Ihrcednys om-ly. mil nl Him teiidvr nge n prodigy for win aud learning Tu give ouly a lltlle tnxtt- of them mid thereby glory to God, *en*e of God. at two and n halfe old he could |M*rfectly rend« uuy of ye Ktigllali Millie or French or Gothic lull er*, pronouncing the first three language* oanctly 11« hud liefore Hi« fifth ycare or in flint yenre got l>y heart nlinoat th« entire vocabularle of luilln nnd French primitive* mid word*, culd make congruous *yntnt. turtle English Into ijHiue. nnd vl< ■> versa. construe nnd prove whnt be read nnd did the government mid use of relntlves. vertiee. nulmtautl vex. ell|Hie* nnd uinny figures nnd trope* aud innda connldernble progress In Co- uieulu*' .lamia, began for hltnnclf to writ« legibly nnd bud it atrouge p*» aloti fur Greek. Aa to bl.» piety, avion lahlng were til* applicallon* of Hcrlp- lure to the occasion, lie declaimed ugnlust yc'vnnIHra of tho world before be had seen« nuy. Ko early know I edge, so much piety aud perfection I Buch a child I never sow, and for such n child I bless« God. In whoa» bosom he to.”—Exchange. Very few | ht » oiix know whin keel- Imulliig Is. but before Hie advent ot strum it u>i* >i rei'iignland form of puulaiiinent for offending *nll<>r* and more to I«- d remits! Him even the cut o' nine lull* A line wu* pusssd lienoath the ship from port to xinrlxnird *!<!<•, leaving b I hi UI ii foot of MliK-k under the keel. The unfort utiiHe tar’* feet were se curely tied together and hl* arm* lu*b«d behind III* buck. In thl* belje lea* condition b« wu* ntiiu hrd to tbe end of the line mid drop|>r<l uverbourd In the smothering m - ii * to tie hauled along under lb« xhlp. bumping and scraping ugiilnst ill« bottom In the procea* uiiHI be wne ynnki*l up on the opiMmlt« wide Th« punishment was repeated until the victim became un conscious from fright or bruises, and sometimes by » refinement of cruelty he was allowed to remain under the ship for a full minute until tie was all but drowned Tho ship uever was stopped while a Bailor wa* being keel hauled. and If sometimes th« strain on the Illi« wa* too great and It parted, leaving him to go down bound an«t helpless to an ocean grave, nobody was held responsible for tit* death but ft wa* reported In the log a* an "act of Providence.” Keelbnullng was great sport for tbe captain and mates, but the mariner who once survived tb« experience took good csre never to do anything to merit ouch a terrible punishment sgaln.—New York Preen. An lutcresllug account of u tiger liuut I m glvcu by olio who hud u wldu ••i|M>rh<n<'<> In limiting tlila moat dan gerolia of Iwnata Mounted u | m > ii els- l>bmita. Hie writer mid lila conipnnlona had boeli In-tillng tile Jungle without making a find until, ua they were about |o giro up Ilin scurrli. n sudden dlaturloin. e mnoiig the «*h*|>htint>» up I'carivl to betoken h tiger near nt Land tilting direction* to the other* na to th- order of inarching their ele I haiitx, iho writer ordered hl* tun liout to turn Into the thick fonihered fotingo lo the left III acuri II of n p< <»! <>f water which ho remcml "red to lie ¡ i here There wax u alight descent to n long but mu tow liulluw ubuul IJiiy w al*t> yard* wide. Thia wa* filled with clear water for au uukuowu lungth. I wo* Juat about to make a remark when, Inutead of speaking, I gently grn*|>cd the mahout by the brad a» I loaned over the liowdali and by till* signal atopped the elephant. HELPING A SCULPTOR. There waa n remarkable alght. About 120 yard* distant on my right The Favor Falguter* Did For Young the head and neck of n largo tiger, Macmonnloe. clean and beautiful. re|>o*cd aixivo the When Mucmounle*. the American surfaco of tho water, while the body sculptor, was a young tnnn working lu waa cooling. coticcalcd from view l’aria Falgulero. the famous French liar» wa* our friend enjoying til* sculptor, on ouo occasion entered hi* quiet bath, while we had been pound Ing away up aud down the jimglea atelier and found there a beautiful Diana thut bad bceu for months "on which ha h id left "Fire at him.” whispered the ma the stocks" and wa* approaching u hout, "or you will lone liltu! lie will perfrctlou measurably satisfactory to tho sculptor hltnself. ■ee um atid lie off.” Falgulern became so absorbed lu the “Hold your tongue!" I answered "ile can't *ee u*. for the aun I* at our work liefore him a* to forget that It back and I* shining In hla eye«. Boo was not hl* own. Ilo begau to twist and pull the dnlnty limbo of Diana thl* how greeu they are.” At thl* moment the tiger quietly rose way and thnt. to punch tier In the rib*, from bl* bath and sat up on end like turn her queenly head—for alio was n dog I never saw such a xlgtit. Illa then only In clay, of courae. aud sue head was beautiful, and the eye* ceptlble to Impressiona—until at last shone like two green electric light* a* he bad prixluccd tbe very poso he de “There, my friend; I like her the auu'S rays reflected from them, sired but hl* huge body waa dripping with better so." lie cried, mid skipped out muddy water, ua he had tieen reelin of the studio lie hnd really Intend cd to do Sine Ing it|M>n tlie nlluvlnl Ivittom For quite a minute the tiger »at up montilo* a favor and hnd Indeed paid In the **iue position. At last, as If him the greatest compliment of which satisfied that be wa* In safety and so be was capable, but the young sculp elusion, he once more lay down with tor waa lu distress, for on comparing only the bead and neck et|M>*ed alxive the remodeled Diana with a photo the surface. graph of Falgulcre’e statue of the ”Ra< k the elephant gently, but do same character bu found the French not turn around," I w ttto¡x*red im man tied unconsciously made a prac mediately the elepliant backed through tical replica of tho other Macmon- the feathery bi mu risk without tho nics did uot rest uutll he bad restored slightest sound, nnd we found our- hla statue to Its original poso. nelves outside the Jungle. Wo could breattie frwly. Billy Rie* and a Pin. "(Jo ou. now. quite gently till 1 pres* Billy nice, the negro minstrel, used your head, then turn to the right, de to tel. the story of a tnnn who picked Mcendiug through the tamnrlak till 1 up a pin no lie wa* leaving tbe office again touch your turban.” of a great mere bn ut after an unsuc 1 counted the elephant's paces as abe cessful quest for work. The mer moved softly parallel with tin* Jungle chant, seeing tbo man a action from until I felt sure of my dlntance A the window, called him back and gave slight pressure u|x»n tbo mahout's him employment, which kindness he head and the elephant tn rued to the rrpnld by tiecoming owuer of the en right. The waving plume* of the dark tire bu«lnes* lu an Incredibly abort green tamnrlak divided a* wo gently time. moved forward, and in another mo Hilly used to end hla story by say ment we stopped There was the tiger ing that be tried that scheme once in the oatm- |x»*ltlon. exactly facing w hen tie was looking for work, drop me, but now about seventy-five pare» ping a pin carefully on tbe floor a* distant bo entered lie stated hla want* to "Keep tie elephant quite *teady." 1 tbo proprietor, who not only had no whispered. and, sitting down upon the employment to offer him. but remark howdali seat. 1 took a rest with tite ed to hla partner aa Rice picked up rifle upon the front bar of the gun the pin: rack A pleco of tamarisk kept wav "Say. If that fellow’s so small aa to iug lu H m > v.Uiil Just lu front of II m steal n p!n off tho floor, how much do rifle beyond my reach. Tbo mahout you think he’d leave lu my till?" leaned forward and gently licnt It down. Now nil was clear. The tiger's Damascus, “City of Magic.” «ye* were like green glaaa. The etc Au orient«I city of magic called up phaiit for a moment stiM>d like stone by a slave of the lamp to realize one's i touched the trigger. dream of the orient; a city ethereally There wn* no response to tile loud re- port of alt drama of powder from the lovely, exquisitely eastern, ephemeral, "fiveseven seven” rifle, no splash In to be blown away by a breath like a tuft of thlstledowu, uot white, but the unbroken surface of the water The tiger's head was still there, but delicately pal« with a pallor holding In a different attitude, one-half below the faintest hint of a sen shell flush; a tho surface and only one cheek and city alcuder. calm, almost mystic In Its fragile grace, act In the heart of a one large eye still glittering like an great wond«r of greeu, a maze of emerald above. bright and ardent woods, beyond ; Upon cxaniluatlon It proved that which lie tbe desert spaces—this la there wa* no hole whatever In that Damascus from the mountain of .lebcl tiger, the bullet having entered the Kasyun. It bolds oue almost breath- nostril, broken the neck and run along leas seen thut from afar. — Robert the laxly. The animal consequently Hlcbena In Century. had never moved. This tiger when laid out straight, but A Permanent Position. without being pulled to Increase Its “Mr. Smith.” epoke up the young length, measured exactly nine feet and eight Inches from nose to tall.— lawyer, ”1 come here aa a representa tive of your neighbor Tom Jones, with Tonth’s Companion. tho commission to collect a debt due him." Hi* Last Request. ”1 congratulate yon." answered Mr. Charles Dickens used to relate an Smith, “on obtaining so permanent a anecdote of tbo last moments of Faun- 1 tleroy, the great banker, banged for , job at such an early stage In yonr ca- forgery In JH24. Hla elegant dinners had always been followed by some re markable and matchless curacao, the source of which he kept a deep secret. Three of bls boon companions bad an Interview with him In tbo condemned coll tbe day t>efore bls execution. They wore about to retire when tbo moat impressive of tbe three stepped back and said; "Fauntleroy, you stand on tbo verge of the grave. Remember tho text, my dear man, that ’we brought nothing Into this world, and It is certain we can take nothing out.’ Have you any objection, therefore, to tell me now, a* a friend, where yon got that curacao?" Life Is fruitful in tbe ratio In which it to laid out In uoble action or patient pernor eranee.—Llddon. Bl.MMONH — In tho Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Klamath. OVERTAXED It’s a Risky Business For the Man Who Doesn’t Know. LURING ON AN “EASY MARK.” Ths Story of How a Rich American We* Worked by a Crafty Oriental Salesman—Undar th* Mystic Spall of th* Dim, Rtligiou* Light. lluiiilri-il* of Klumutli Fall* K<-ii<l<-rx Georg” H. Merryman, Plaintiff, vs. Know What It Mean* Geo. E. Allen, Defendant. To Geo. E. Allen, defendant, above Thi- kidneys are overtaxed; ( named: In the name of the State of Have too much to do. ' Oregon: You are hereby required to They tell about it in many aches appear and answer the Complaint filed against you In the above en- -and pains — j titled action on or before Thursday, Backache, sldeache, headache. the 24th day of March. A. D. 1910, Early symptoms of kidney His that being the last day for the publi Urinary troubles, diabetes, Brights cation of this summon* and the last i day of tbe time within which the dc- (lixcase follow. The statement below show* vuu a i fendant Is permitted to answer as fixed by the order of the Court for cer'aln cure. publication of summons herein; and Mrs." Zula Herzog, Oregon Mt . If you fall so to appear and answer, Yreka, Cal., *ays; "i suffered for i the plaintiff will take judgment some time from kidney trouble. My against you for the sum of three back wa* very lame and a constant hundred dollars, with Interest there- i on at the rate of ten per cent per feeling of lansltude clung to me con annum from and after November 11, stantly. I tried one remedy and then A. D. 1909, and for reasonable attor another in my efforts to get relief ney's fee* and for the costs and dis but to no avail. I felt miHerable bursements In this action; and for an • order of this Court, that certain per- nearly all the time and it wa* only Honal property, to-wlt. one automo with great effort that I performed bile, and fixtures and attachments, a* my housework. I at last saw Doan's well as all the appliances, tool* and Kidney Pills advertised for such Instruments, belonging to you and trouble aud procured a box. I used I used upon or about the said automo- ! bile, attached under and by virtue of them as directed and In less than two a certain attachment writ Issued here- weeks, I felt like a different woman. ■ in, be subjected to the payment of .The terrible weakness in my back any judgment that plaintiff may ob- and hips disappeared and my kidneys tain herein. This summons is published in the | were soon restored to a normal con 1 Klamath Republican, a weekly news- dition. I am now enjoying good ' paper printed and published at Klam health and cannot praise Doan's Kid ath Falls, Klamath County, State of Oregon, by order of Honorable George ney Pills too highly." 1 Noland, Judge of said Court, said or For sale by all dealers. Price 50 der dated the 5th day of February, cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, , 1910, directing such summons to be New York, sole agents for the United so published for six consecutive i weeks, the first publication to be on States. Remember the name—Doan's—and the 10th day of February, A. D. 1910. H. M. MANNING, take no other. Attorney for the Plaintiff, Postoffice and Residence Address, Klamath Word wa* received Friday evening Falls, Oregon. 2-10-3-2 4 from J. E. Swanson, of tbe Klamath NOTICE. barber shop, who to visiting in Los Angeles, stating that he expected to Partie* wishing sagebrush land be home with hto family about the clearer call on or write, W. W. MASTEN, first of April. 11-ttf Klamath Falla. Or*. Mr. and Mrs. McReynolds were In the city Friday from Poe Valley, where they recently bought a ranch. Mr. McReynolds is breaking and seed ing a large acreage. Writing of "The I’aaslng of the An tique Bug" In the Century. John Kim berly Mumford tell* thl* story: It I* beyond question cheaper to buy In America your rug and tbe ingenious tale that goe* with It than to wait on- til you vl*lt Constantinople or Smyrna or Cairo or Tiflis They are much more nklllful and insinuating over there They IWtve tbe advantage of local color and environment, and your common sense I* under tbe spell of the east to begin with. Here 1* un Incident to Illustrate. A (»arty of rich American* arrived in Cairo one day several winters ago oo a yachting trip and |»a*xed a week or more lu sightseeing. One of them bad Just finlxhed a palatial bouse uot far j from New York and throughout Eu rope had Ixjugbt marbles nud bronzes, woodwork nnd velvet* for It with a lavish hand. The jouruey to Cairo wa* made In order to secure rug* What happened to best told In tbe words of a dealer in the bazaar, from HIS WIFE’S TRIUMPH. whoa: I bad IL “There was a fellow In our con A Memento Thst Wse Inspiring to cern.” he said, “who wa* nlways buy John Richard Green. ing ulghtmares, and 1 bad to work It has beeo tin- fate of tnsuy men of myself black In tbe face to get rid of letters to have III health bearing them them. The week before the Ameri down aa they struggle on toward lit cans came this chap bad takeo In a erary achievements. Thus beset to re shocking;» bad pair of Klrinau*. enor cent times were Ktevenson. Richard mously big. new and. to my mind, ut Jeffries and J R. Green. Each of terly unsalable. When tbe bead of these. It liappeiii*!, bad a high hearted tbe house saw them be held up bi* wife to keep him up. even to help him bands s:.<d shouted. 'Get rid of those with tbe actual tabor of writing. “Tbe thing* for a hundred pounds to tbe Life and lu-tter* of J. II. Greeu” abow first person who’ll buy them.' forth a great and sweet man. They “So I rolled them up and put them show, too. a wife whose sympathy and one side, intending to send them to a fortitude helped to muko bl* accom commission man In the bazaar to un load. Next morning In came Money plishment possible. In copying tho rent amount of manu bags from New York with his wtioie Don't Get Kun Down lie said be wanted to see Weak and miserable. script of her husband's books Mrs. company If you have Green contracted writer's cramp and the best carpets I bad. aud be saw . Kidney or Bladder trouble. Dull waa forced to stop using her right them. I turned tbe place Inside out. pains. Dizziness, Nervousness, Pains hand This looked like a Anal obsta Nothing pleased him. for tbe reason in the back, and feel tired all over, cle tn tbe way of the Invalid, who did that I made the common mistake of get a package of Mother Gray's Al’K- much of bls thinking In bed and could showing him too much. He thought I not write himself. But Mra. Greeu bad something bidden away, so he TIIALI.VN-I.E\F. the pleasant herb set to work at once learning to write winked me over into one corner and cure. It never fails. We have many told me who he was. 'Now,' said be, testimonials from grateful people with her left hand. One of her first practice pages, which ’I want you to limber up. I want tbe who have used this wonderful rem she was about to destroy with tbe rest, best, nnd I don't mind price If 1 get edy. As a regulator it has no equal. her husband took quietly and put tn what suits me.' Ask for Mother Gray's Australian- "1 wan In despair, for 1 had actually bls pocket. Yenra afterward when 111 Leaf at Druggists or sent by mail shown tbe tnan every carpet I had. health seemed unbearable and lu dis for 50 cts. Sample FREE. Address. couragement be felt that be could oot All of a sudden I thought of these two work be used to tuke out that piece of freak* baled away the day before. I The Mother Gray Co.. LeRoy. N. Y. paper, a living record of bls wife's tri almost laughed In bls face, but finally umph over difficulty. When be saw I pulled my mouth down and began Mrs. Samuel Hines and children tbe paluful. pa He tit strokes by which salaaming and asked him why in tbe left on Friday's train for Oakland. Mra. Greeu had learned to write with world he hadn’t told me who he was 1 Cal. her left hand he could work on with in tbe beginning, then 1 shouldn't have wasted hto time and abused bis pa something near to Inspiration. Mrs. Woodin was a passenger on tience so. Friday morning s train for Dusmulr. "He grinned triumphantly. ’1 thought Poison of tho Centipod. Tbe centlped is popularly supposed you bad them,' be said. Mrs. Neff, wife of the forester of “‘But.’ said I, 'It will take a little to carry a sting on each foot, but I this district, is a visitor in the city. have several times haudled one after time to get at them, and I must ask ita bead was removed without tbe 1 you and your friends to wait pa- You know what a good teacher claws producing any result It la the ' tlently.’ "They waited, and I tell you for tbe I means to a child. You know what first pair of claws only that are ven omous. being hollow and provided with next half hour tbe men around that he means to a community. We must poison bag* like a snake's fang. Tbe shop earned tbelr pay. We went up have schools and we must have largest I ever saw was eleven Inches stairs and unrolled those two rugs. teachers. The Normal School ques In length, n grewsome creature. A bite We bad a great big curtain of green tion is now submitted free from poli- from one of this size would most like plush, which we bung against tbe Itics. That's the way you want it ly have been fatal to a man In weak wall. Then wo pressed tbe carpets health. Tbe tarantula, though hla out and put them up against tbe cur kept. If you pay taxes on $1.000, it powers of offense are nothing like tain. That, you know, is worth 50 pec will cost you 4 cents a year to main those of the scorpion or centlped. to. cent to tbe looks. Then we adjusted tain the State Normal at Monmoutb. however, a more unpopular character tbe lights and stationed men all Vote Y«* on this bill, 3-24-41 than either. Tbe horror of these large arounu *o look as sole mu as worship — spider* eutertalned by many people to ers. Nobody was to speak above a FOR SALE CHEAP—New boat, aux curious aud unaccountable. I have whisper, and every man was to mur- iliary, seating capacity 15 Ad seen Australian buabmen, who in | mur 'Masballab!’ at appropriate inter- dress W. M. Knight. Fort Klamath, i vals. everyday life scarcely seemed to un 3-24-3t "When everything was ready I ush Ore. derstand danger, turn white aa a sheet ered tbe customers up and on tiptoe at tbe sight of a small "triantelope.” led them in. There to no doubt about ns they called It.- Chambers’ Journal. Ii. G. Laughlin arrived last Friday IL tbe effect was fine. At first every- night from Stockton, Cal. i body was still. It was like a church. Practice end Preaching. ” 'Ah.* said the great man. 'that to When the late Ittsbop Hare was pre NOTICE siding over a Methodist Episcopal what 1 came for. I knew you bad church lo New York city a large re them. You needn't tell me the price. ception was given in hla honor to Just send them to tbe yacht at Alex- To the Stockholders of the Klamath Water Users’ Association. which n brother of hla, a lawyer, who : andrla.' "That night I went up to tbe hotel closely resembled th« bishop, waa In You are hereby notified that a spe where they were stopping and got bls vited. cial meeting of the stockholders of During tbe evening a member of the check for 00.000 francs for tbe pair. the Klamath Water Users' Associa confereuce who bad never met the And that wasn’t tbe best of IL I bad tion will be held in the Houston bishop's brother approached him and, got Into my stride then, and while be Opera House. Klamath Falls, Oregon, shaking him warmly by tbe band, was busy annexing tbe Klrmans I bad tbe porters bring up seven of tbe car Saturday, April the 16th, 1910, at said: "Good evening. Bishop Flare. 1 great pets be bad refused downstairs and 1 the hour of 2 o’clock p. m. for the ly enjoyed tbe sermon you gave us to showed them tn that dim religious purpose of increasing the par value day. It to juat what this church light, unrolling them as if they bad of the shares of stock of the said been sacred and sighing soulfully every j association from the sum of $20 per needs.” ”Tou are mistaken tn the person,” now and then. He bought the whole share to the sum of $30 per share, said the brother, smiling, as be point seven and to tbe day of bls death fully and for the further purpose of au ed to th* bishop on th* oppoatt* aid* believed that 1 was tbe original wlxard thorising the Board of Directors of of the room, “that to th* man who of the ea*L” the said association to levy assess- preaches. I practice.” meats against the stock subscriptions KtHwatto of Latter*. Eighty years ago the etiquette of of the said association sufficient In A Leng Jeb. “Where have yon been for *o long?” tetters waa far more rigid than now. amount and against each and every Tho Goealporo. Even the twopenny post was not con share subscribed to reimburse and to asked the head man of the menagerie. “They say she will create no end of “Been watching one of the animal* sidered good enough for correspond ! pay back to the stock subscribers un gossip.” clear hto throat str,” replied th* at ence addressed to persons of any der what is known as the "Upper ’’Welt. I guess tbe jobbers In that standing, in her "Reminiscences of tendant Project” such amounf or amounts as community will bo able to handle her “But does It take half an hour for an an Octogenarian" Mis* Louisa Pack* output”—Louisville Courier-Journal. tells u* that when her father had oc such subscriber or subscribers have i animal to clear Ita throat?” "Tea. air; it was th* giraffe, sir.”— casion to write to Londoners In hto from time to time paid to said asso- A Tip Ho Wanted. own class of life tbe letter was al ' elation upon the assessments made Yonkers Statesman. Artist (to burglar, who I* making ways conveyed by a servant not for ■ and levied by the Board of Directors away with paintings)— Er-by the any reasons of urgency, but because I of said association for the accom Mean. way, If you should manage to dispose Th* Bride (from Chicago)—Thia to the post was considered a vulgar me plishment of the purposes of this as- of them would you mind sending me my third bridal tour. The Groom- dium of communication for person* I soclation; said stock subscribers be yonr customer's address?— Life. Welt my dear, I hope that it will be residing in the same city and only to ing limited to those whose stock sub your last Tbe Bride (bursting into be used for the conveyance of letters scriptions are hereafter cancel'cd by to the country.—London Chronicle. Had Shown Good Bonce. tear*)—You selfish thing 1— Puck. Hie Secretary of the Interior. Hewitt—That rich old fool wouldn't ALBERT E. ELDER. let me marry hla daughter. Jewett- A hope!*** man la deserted by him ■very man should keep a fair ataed Well. be may be rich and old, but he’s cemetery tn which to bury tbe faults self, aud be who deserts htaiMlf to Sxretary Klamath Water Users' As ao fool.-New York Timas. sociation. 3-10-4-14 of hto friend».—Henry Ward Beecher. soon deserted by hl* friend* ELLSWORTH &. MITCHELL VETERINARY SURGEONS AND DENTISTS Office CrlMler-Sltlu Balldlu* Phone 726 C. C. BROWER ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON ROOMS 7 A 8, MURDOCK BLDG WILL A. LEONARD DENTIST White-Maddox Bldg. DR. C. P. MASON DENTIST Office in American Bank A Trust Com pany’e Building PHONE 614 KLAMATH FALLS OREGON R M. RICHARDSON United States Commissioner i TIMBER AND HOMESTEAD PROOF TAKEN 1 Office, Third and Main, opposite Citj Library. Telephone 301. BENSON & STONE ATTORNEYS AT LAW American Bank and Trust Bldg. KLAMATH FALLS * OREGON Nyal's Vege table Prescrip tion i* indicat ed is all ordi nary diseases of women. This remedy never disappoints, its gsod effects be ing perceptlbl* from tho very first. It is com posed of th* purest and th* most reliable drugc; mercu rials, opiate* and other har mful drugs be ing excluded. The many <la- coneertlng In ti u ea ees te which womaa 1* constantly subjected ren der her liable to many functional disorder* that not only tend to destroy her comfort and happiness, but which gradually merge into chronic and serious dis eases. Nyal's Vegetable Prescription la without a peer for th* successful treatmnet of femal* weakness, pain ful and disordered msnstrutatlon, hysteria, cramps, "bearing down pains," inflammation and falling *f tho womb. This la a remedy of sterliag worth. UNDERWOODS PHARMACY Cor. 7th and Mnln Streets Klnmath Falls • • • • Oregon