Tlnii'stl;iv. WovemliBl' IftiilMB
Patre Six
EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
8Clj ?iuntfna lHwalit
Issued Daily. oNocpt Stinday, hy The lle'ral'd Publishing
Company. Office; 119 X. Eighth Street. Klamath Kails, Oregon
E. J. MURRAY .
V. H. PF.K KIN'S
. . . Publisher
News Ktlitor
Fnti red as second class matter at the post office at'Klaniath
Falls. Oregon, under act of March 1879,
Membr of the Associated-Press
The ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the u-e of
re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper ami also the local hews
published therein. All rights of re-publication of special
i';ip.Hebes herein are als.i reserved.
The Evening Herald is the official paper
Klamath County.
Thursday, November 19, 1925
A CASE OF REAL JUSTICE
If circuit judges throughout the state would display
the same courage and good judgment as that shown
during recent months by Circuit Judge Charles M.
Thomas of Jackson county, we venture the prediction
that moonshining would soon become a lost art in this
commonwealth.
News dispatches today stated that Judge Thomas hat!
sentenced a convicted moonshiner to five years' impris
onment in the state penitentiary. This is the maximum
allowed by the laws of Oregon." Others who have dealt
in illicit liquor in and around Medford are now serving
prison terms at Salem because Judge Thomas is follow- j
ing both the spirit and the letter of "the law. '
The chief reason why there is a general disregard of I
the liquor laws both in Oregon and elsewhere is because ;
the courts almost without exception have been far too
COOPERATIVE MARKETING LEGISLATION
One of the items in the president's program for legis
lation by the congress to meet next month is saitl to be
the establishment of a system of co-operative market in
for farmers and adoption of "other measures of farm re
lief." It is the president's idea, according to the dis
patches from Washington, that the cooperative market
ing system shall be provided alonu the lines recom.
mended by the agricultural commission of last year.
There was a good deal of objection by farmers them
selves to the plan set out by the agricultural commis
sion, on the ground that the machinery proposed would
be too much hedged about with government red tape and
restrictions. This is an objection of which due recog
nizance ought to be taken when the work of drafting
the proposed legislation begins, What that legislation
needs to do is. to set up the machinery and point the way
for the fanners to follow and then leave them free to
work out their own prosperity in their own way. Eu
srene Guard.
THK WKATHKK
The t'yclo-Stormagraph at I'ndor-wood's-
Is registering a fulling pres
sure todry hut the movement la nut
sufficiently marked t. Indicate much
change in weather conditions.'
Forecast for next 24 hours:
lienerall fair uud warmer.
The Tycos recording thermometer
registered maximum and minimum
temperatures today as follows:
High 39 Low 35
f. S. Weather Report
Weather: Oregon, fair in the lu
tefttor, cloudy on thu coast tonight
and Friday. Normal temperature.
Moderate southerly winds.
KIP TESTIFIES
ABOUT DOING
E
Kl'VKK.NDALI. RETURNS
Attorney Itohert llenson Kuyken
dali returned Wednesday from Eu
gene an! Portland, where he has
been for th prist week visiting with
lenient, innuenuai inencis, small town nontics. tedious , Mends and attending to legal mat
ters. In Eugene lie attended lae
Oregon-O. A. C. game.
6PORAKK VISITORS
Relatives of Loral lluslitcss Mini
Here From Sixikuiie, Washington
delays and other baneful influences have permitted the
violators ot liquor laws to escape punishment too easily;
The moonshiner, the bootlegger and the hi-jacker fear
jail or prison terms. Imposition of fines means but lit
tle to. them. They smile a little wryly, perhaps but
pay up and renew their illicit operations.
But jail and prison terms have a salutary effects, j Mp H - Pro,wt ,.,.
Five years in state's prison is a long time to serve. The ! md annt ot i!en Hoiiiater. of Ryan's
average citizen will say unthinkingly that it is too much i elpthlng eqmpftny, and Frank ricutn.
for a moonshiner. But if the judges throughout the state 1 bretkeMn-iaw of Mr, noiiister. nr
will follow the example set by Judge Thomas, the men ' rivcd in , KU"nat ,Falls J""
, t j . , , . . ' ... iroai Spokane and plun to visit here
who manufacture this death-dealing poison will soon , imleflniteIv. It pos8l.Ie thu vls.
turn to safer pursuits, and respect for our liquor laws , tors may locate here In business.
Will eventually reach par. i They made the trip by motor.
HUDSON COACH
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WORLD'S GREATEST BUY
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ACME MOTOR CO.
Sixth and Oak Streets
ggj '
Yoting Rhinelander Admits
He Was in Love With
Colored House Maid
W1IITK I'l.AIN'K. N, Y Nov. 19,
(VP) Counsel for Alice Heat rice
Jones, nt . re wife of Leonard Kip
ithineland'-t . wealthy inemher of an
old Homicnol family, who is Keeking
annulment of their marriage today,
begun an attempt to prow that the
youth was perfectly normal men
tally nnd physirully and was not
meiitnlly d li.i.nt u Intimated hy
his own lawyers.
"You were a perfectly human fel
low, weren't you?" asked I.eo 1'ar
soiis Davis of defense rounsel nt the
resumption of cross examination
this ruoruinu.
"Yes," said Khlnelunder. Mr.
Davis brought out that Leonard
graduated at the bend of his class
at the ranch school in Arizona, that
he was the editor of the school paper
the "Tyaok" and that he had been a
frequent contributor of articles und
editorials to the paper.
Shifting again to the color ques
tion, Mr. Davis uskod Khlnelunder
about Ills first meeting with Alice
and her sister, (iriiee. In 1921,
brining out that Leonard hud no
suspicions as to their color. Rhine
lander admitted that cvou now be
could not see traces of negro blood
In the Jones family.
"When yon first saw Alice," ask
ed Mr. Davis, "was there any In
dention In yoatr mind that there
was negro blood there?"
"No," responded the witness.
"Now that you know there Is
colored blood In the Jones family,
do you see traces of It?"
"No." .
There is a possibility that Philip
Ktitneiamter. .Leonard s rather, who
tried to break np tho friendship of
his son for the nogro housemuld.
will testify. Asked whether the
elder Rhinelander would take the I
stand, Isaac N. Mills, counsel for
the plaintiff said:
"Wait until we come to that."
Your palate will detect unaccustomed
COFFEE-FLAVORS
deep flavors of rare "aged" coffees
You'll detect an unaccustomed coffee-flavor
when you try S&W. For you will experience, ,
perhaps for the first time, the full goodness nat
ural to fine coffees, but which develop only when
the coffee is aged in tropic warehouses before
shipment.
Few have realized true coffee-goodness because so little cofl'cc is
permitted to remain in the tropics to age properly. The immense
demand for this product makes prompt shipment necessary.
There is a treat, then, for coffee-lovers in S& W. There is a deep,
mellow richness awaiting your palate satisfying flavors put there
by nature and brought to your rup by nature's slow method of agi ng.
S & W" is a blend of those prized aged coffees secured at greater
cost. To this blend is added a trace of new coffee to give emphasis
to the mellowed flavors of the old.
If you have used other S & W Fine Food Products, you have roar
fully up to the S&W standard of quality.
clcd at their extraordinary excellence. You'll find S&W Coffee
The World's Best ;, j
in S&W 8SB
SW piclti where the bestu grown. Proio anil vegetable! trw pMf pf .
California's famous eropi, grapefruit In Plorida, berries i,t Pacific
Nonhwcsr.fruits in California. Tinicaaddiusmeafr no bafflers tu$W
goodness the bc that is to be had. Over a quartet of a century's ailhce
ence to these standards of met it has won for S W in enviable I cputatiua.
FINE
FOOD
PRODUCTS
Electricians to
Stage' Big Dance
Mexican Is Freed
After Serving 52
Days Behind Bars
After 52 days of 'looking from
the Inside out.' Miguel Gonzales was
freed fr m the county Jail today.
Gonzales was sentenced to a term
In county Jail following lib plea of 1
guilty to a charge of larceny, lie !
had been caught re.d banded In u ;
hotel at Kirk stealing pocket mon
ey from the clothes of ono of I he
guests, the sheriff's office said. I
Local electricians will sponsor fine
of the outstanding dances of. Thank'. -
j itlvlng week, when November 20th,
I they will be hosts to their friends
at Altamont dance pavilion.
The decorations which will be
carried out In varied colored elec
tric lights, Including the Hlur.H,
moon and a colored rainbow. The
boys promise to give Klamath Fulls
folks something to talk about and
Intend to spare no work in decor
ating for thu uffalr. ,
William Hock will be In charge
of the dance and Joe Cass will
handle the electrical work.
Direct from H solid
week Curran Theatre
San Francisco.
Hunt's Craterian, Ph. 100
Medford, Monday Night,
November 23rd
8:30 Curtain
LOUIS 0. MACLOON'jteff
7k amumetatpith Arthur hopkins
THE HARD BOILED COMEDY
At MAXWELL ANDERSON & LAWRENCE STALLINGS
STAGED By LILLIAN ALBERTSON
cjhe moil Tulked. about. Play in att ihe World
SUNDAY RACES OFF
.lack He n Oountf l'llr Association
Compile ulili Proa chert'
Rcqneft
MBDPOni), Ore.. Not. ID. Com
pi) Ing with the rtquMt of the Jack
son county ministerial association,
the directors of tile Jar-kaon cuuntx
fair aaaorlatlon ' today doclded to
hold no more sporl.1 ur utttomobllo
rucita nt tho fulr ground on Dun
day. ..Sovorul Sunday events hnvo
been put on In tho past over tha
protest of the local ministers.
'" -x '?
... - -;
with BMMBTT t:oiiiti(iAN and :s otbera, Prluoa
Inidiilng war tax: 1st 18 rows 52.7G; next (I town
52,20; luai r, rows $1.05; balcony, 1st 2 rows gl.05;
liulnnce $1.10. Mall orders now. Ilox otflco opened
I'lidtfy, Nov. 23, 12 o'clock.
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Jjf) liuJ
-vivvy
ChjOsotfak. (8.?.&udz VKOKAm-
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okane, Portlar
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