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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1929)
pAr,rcouR THE EVENING HERALb, KLAMATW rALLS, Okt.wiN Wednesday, AugtiHt 21, 1020 Tzvtning. xicralD FekllBhel every efierneoa eseept Sunday by The liaratd Publlahljig CO ItWir ft I UI- eau.n r.nw hwh wmitm, vraw. g;atere4 as eeeoee elaee matter at Uie poeioftloe at mamata falle, iaiD. on Auau.l la, IMS, undar act ol Coaereea, alaro , lit. Oresoa, Ona fear- Kla Month. Three Montha. Ona Monib f Mall .la.Ot . I ll . I.tl . .It ellvereel ay Carries Ona n Monies. Thraa Monlbe.. Ooa uei. a , l.M assouivricu hhkii isiasku wihk MHMHKH l HIT tUHKtl OP I IH I LATIO hM af lee aeaaelalea Th Aeaoelatea Waea la aielualrelr entitled la the wa Or rapueltoe lloa of all nawa dupatehee eradliad to It or not oibarwlaa ereatlee la thla paper, and alto lha local nawa published therein. All rlgbta at re- eutilloatloa ol apaclal dlepatshee baraln ara aiaa reaervea. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1929 To A Higher Position THIS community unanimously congratulates John C, Boyle upon his promotion from district manager of the Klamath division of the California Oregon Power company to assistant general manager of the entire property of the company. It is with deep regret that Klamath Falls will lose Mr. and Mrs, Boyle and their charming children, for they will live in Medford In the future. This family has been here for several years and have endeared themselves to this community. While congratulations are properly extended to Mr. Boyle by his friends due to his promotion, yet the Cali fornia Oregon Power company can very properly be con gratulated upon having such a man as Mr. Boyle in its organization. He has been tested and has been found true not only to his employers but to the people whom he has served in the Klamath country. Mr.. Boyle pos sesses an element of fairness which is never disregarded, and in this his patrons have rested their case many times when differences have arisen in this city. As a man of public worth, there are few the equal of him. He has given freely of his time and of his ability to civic .work, and as a leader of men he has been a pronounced success. His friends will be pleased to know, that, while his new position takes him from this city as a permanent resident, he will continue to have much to do with this growing country where he knows every phase of in dustrial and civic life. The Boyle family will often visit their friends here and they will be mighty welcome whenever they choose to come. Barrie's Gift To Thrums QOMEONE has said that the secret of ambition of the Boznadic Scot is to go back, if possible, to his "land of brown heath and shaggy wood" and enjoy a little of his own countryside. He might also have revealed an other ambition of the Scot to make some contribution to the land of his origin. Were it otherwise, the Scot .would indeed be lacking in gratitude. Barrie is the latest example. He has given to his native town, Kir riemuir, a sports pavilion, which he is to open with due ceremony, and the town, in return, is seeking some suit able way to honor its eminent playwright It is in no disparaging sense the assertion is made that, had it not been for Barrie, Kirriemuir might have lost much of its glamour. To his brilliant pen is due its popularity among tourists. Everyone wants to see the one-story dwelling which inspired him to write "The Window In Thrums;" to see his birthplace, unpretentious, but not unadorned with flowers; the washhouse, his first theater, across the "stage" of which "wild Indians" stole in single file for Barrie relished the tales of Fenl more Cooper and other haunts of his boyhood. He aspired to heights in arts, and even wanted to be a paint er, but lost his ambition when he lost his paintbox. To the outside world the gift of a pavilion will be as nothing to the memories, it is "hoped, he will recount of his early days in "Kirrie." His audience, until the last year or two, has been greatly restricted, due to the impossibility of seating those who desired to hear him. But the radio has overcome the difficulty. And his speech is to be radiocast through the United Kingdom. Were the transatlantic radio perfected, it would be a fine service performed to extend the plans for his speech and send it broadcast across the ocean, where he has a public as extensive as in his own homeland. TIMELY QUOTATIONS FROM PEOPLE IN THE PUBLIC EYE "Many brains eould b mads much mora aeeful by paraulng proper methods ot development." Fredrick .Tllney. (The Drain, from A pa to Man. a a a "Thar U ona thing that places a woman quit beyond tha pale to eomb her bobbed hair In public." Helen Hathaway. (Lib erty.) e e "A highbrow te only a low brow pint pretentiousness." H. 0. Walla, e "Ill-temper la an adverse factor In all tradea." Alfred Pearce Dennis, Ttra chairman U, B. tariff coninitsslou, e a a "The foundation ot American buelnaaa la tba Independent bust neaa man. , . , We muat main tain bli opportunity and hie In dlrldual asrvlca." President Hoover. Short and Snappy I I 1J I1 I' i1 I1 H "I- t . 1 n 3 b ' rr r- rr- o it vt rc - "" ' ' n ' I irrtsT" jr ,i hj Ttf- l L rr- ,1 H -- j !c Jaf Si " q n " n ji """"""""eenMeLBameaeVeeaeeVeaei ei ' HORIZONTAL, 1 Hie. laiiinl earn. 41 Wiala, It On the toe. U raea.ehaaea ay. 14 Net eke aa. la stettrrs aeeat. 14 Ta bar. IT rm (amlly. 11 Tatela. aa oraaa-a. Za CaU dartre, ba Cant a aaaaV an aviara. AT CbaaaaffV aa aiaiuaa ea dan key. 11 Made at ant- ml. S Trrr lata. aa Taken dewa. ar Ibmu. aa Bad.. e fa cat lay. dl Ta ketdav ea. ar A maple. t Wrtttaat I B J2 J eaatter. w VKKTICAL t Mleai, YESTERDAY'S ANSWER DLrNqpnCANADAl in u BlTIQ I Cri f-;Q I .144 a laUiary. Artiartal aaa. fcaabaianl. 4 Te eel. a rive. 1 Madew a I aaa. T Te aeuead. 8 Baa;). beardlrr. ia aianiaa weiee, 11 Trap. ia Brrd-a H, XI aaaare at aa- llea. Sd Te area te naaraa la, la Itaar rag. m ICaaart. la Ta divide, aa Barb baa, aa Abatlaral. aa Ta animate. ae a uuie aia. aa if mi. aa Tana. et Metaiiie reek. 41 Te marry. THOUGHTS 0 STATE AFFAIRS In its effort to abolish extraterritoriality, China should have at least one group of fervent allies the newspaper headline writers who are supposed to squeeze those nineteen letters into space meant for thirteen. EDITORIALS From Over the Nation (Coa tinned treaa race One) doga which are bow peU In mas; famUlea. a a e OYER in England a butcher re Mnt V. rtnA In. IKk. South American lamb aa Canter bury Iamb. Tha latter meant excluslrely New Zealand lamb. Thla la lomethlng for butchera. restaurant men and railroad din ing cars to take notice o( in the United Etatei, aayi tha California Wool Grower. How many times bare yon seen adrertlsed sprint lamb when tha appearance and Ltarfta differ decidedly from the actual spri-j lambT TELETALKIE IS DEMONSTRATED LONDON, Aug. II. (AP) A demonstration of the "teletalkia", or broadcast sound film, was given today in the stndlos of John L. Balrd, Inrantor of the telerlsor, the telerlslon apparatus for instantaneous transmission of scenes by wire or wireless, and of the noeotorisor. Tha "teletalkie" method per mits broadcasting an ordinary talking film similarly to talari slon and recelrlng It oa an or dinary telerisor. Tha linage oa tha film Is transmitted on one ware length-and the sound on another. Engineers hope by perfecting tha telerisloa and the teletalkie methods to make combination programs of actual pictures of in dividual people performing by telerlslon, and large groups per forming by teletalkia. AMERICAN ENTERPRISE Kansas City Star: The old theory that a period ot depression must follow prosperity, that the country couldn't hare few years of material well-being with out paying the price in slacken ed production, employment and near if not real panic, has been pretty well exploded. Tha theory too often held in the past be cause there was neither the i knowledge of industrial and gen eral economic! conditions that ex ist today nor the means ot hold ing prosperity within reasonable bounds to the end that an unfort unate period ot reaction might be arotded. Today the forced of production ara better organised, they ara most closely in touch with tha rosponslre to publta de mind for goods, labor Is mora tiblllsed and dependable and draw batter wages, the credit ad financial situation Is held la proper check through the Federal Raeem bank, and, altogether, machinery (or leveling down the o-eilled buslnaaa cycle hat been et la motion. It eaa be further perfected and siren a mora ax tentra nee; but tha start has been made. All that Is behind the reassur ing report cf President Boorsr'i committee on recent economic changes. ' The committee, made up of industrial lea'-rs and auth orities on economic and social science, feels certain that tha country's prosp-rlty, already pro longed weU beyond the or-"nary period, can be maintained Inde finitely. It can be dona with maintenance of tha balance be tween production and consump tion and - other factors, includ ing big' nagea (not fcr all, un fortunately, but fir considerable numbere of workers). Tha Am erican system, with thi wan scales, mass production and eon-su-nt!?n, hrs become tha marrel of the 1 r trial world. It has attracted the attention of foreign obserre-s who repeatedly hare studied It In an effort to get at Its secret The secret virtually la in the genius and daring of the American people, in a nation that bad tha temerity to atuet econ omlo theories of long standing and to abow they wera neither sacred n tenafci. The aame Initiative d enterprise eaa be turned to further account to the end that the mst'-ial -alfara of the country may be maintained and broadened to Include the largest possible number of Its people. LETTER GOLF A SWIFT PCZZLE Today'a pussie 80ARS SWIFT which may not be good gram mar, but H'a a good puisle. Par la eight and ona solution is on page eight. SIOIAIRIS! DAILY LETTER ON AFFAIRS AT U. S. CAPITAL aopwiuiiaoo eomujaxjo Atri unM am jo eoinui iliiK)-qnH 4q aJlvKriawui g o sjyjo UjjojuM-n IwinauiujdAoO q euuaeniMa'i TUB RULES 1 Tba Idea ot Letter Oolf Is to change one word to anotbar and do it in par, a given nnmbei ot strokes. Thus to change COW to HEN, la three strokes, COW, HOW. HEW HEN. 2 Voo ebanga only one let tar at a time. I fou must have a complete word, of common usage, tor each lump. Slang words and abrevia tlons don't count. 4 The order of letters cannot be changed. Ona aolutlou la printed on page eight. Tha new money is shorter than the old currency, but tha wife re ports she can stretch It Just as far. EXAMINE RECORDS SALEM, Aug. tt. (AP) Charles T. Goodwin ot tba state corporation department will leave Snnday night for Minneapolis where ha will make an examina tion of tba records ot the W. B. foehay company, whleh operates In Oregon. RED BALL STAGE LINE Two Stages Daily for Lakeriaw, Oregon Leave K. P. 8:80 a. m. Leave K F. 2:00 p. m. Office 6th k Main PHONE 999 Klamath Mineral Hot Spring! Especially beneficial for rheumatism. Tub bathe, showers and plunge. Water In plunge changed Sunday, VVemesday and Friuay nights. 503 Spring Street Give Your Hair the Benefit of Cocoanut Oil XLENZO OOCOATiTT OIL SHAMPOO Biz Ouncee 50 cents Coeoannt ell and olive oil ara two ot tba best scalp and hair cleansers known. Xlaaao Coeoannt Oil Sham poo contains both. Try It) old only it your H exalt Drug Store. STAR DRUG CO aX ItODXKY Dl'TVllrUl NK Bcrvire W-ttor WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 The National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement has assigned a tubcommttt-i to lnvei tUata and report oa lawlessness by governmental law enforcing officers. Tha commission ta In an ex cellent position to go after that problem. It preeenta a common ly acknowled.-ed sllu"-tu which haa doveloped untouched per haps tor tha reason that thorn hse been no official organisation to deal with it. Law enforcing officials seldom Investigate and criticise themselvrs and their lawleseneaa haa had only the courts to restrict them. The courts, ot course, ara them selves part ot tha law enforce ment system and It la almost certain that tha eommlsalon will eoxntdor tha axtra-logal acts of Judges themselvee before It Is through. 80 tha commission especially ap pointed by President Hoover Is the only agency which can go Into thla new field ot Inquiry The fact thrt It haa Included law enforcement lawlessness as one of the main pdnts on Its offlcl. ar-nda demonstratea that this collection ot high-grade lawyers believes or feara that 'he high handedness of policemen, prohibi tion agents, prosecutors and erec judgea haa tended to create hat red or disrespect for law Itself Maajr Angles to Probe1 Many will suppose that the commission plans to devote this study ostly to hillings of In nocent cltlsens and other abuses by prohibition agenta and coast guardsmen. But Inquiry reveals there are quite a few more angles. Take, for Instance, tha viola tion of rights of prlaorers by aide-spread nso of third-degree methods. The New Tork Bar As sociation last fall reported flag rant poll- brutality toward prl sonera and recommended iroea examination of prisoners by tha police. Perhap- tha Hoover Crime Commission will make a similar recommendation. Prison en have sometimes died from the effecU of third-degree beat ings. T'le commission is aware that thi Tactics haj spread tn the highest branches "t govern ment and doubtless recalls the cse of the radical P Issdo, who Jumped from a high window to his death, allegedly tt escape further abuse fr m Department of Jnatlre agents. The hlghrst courts an Con nelly undoing the deparlun from law ot lower courts and prosecuting attorneys. Tbs arbl trary aetlona of a J-idga ortcn rob a defendant of the protection which bo la supposed to be guar antred In the Interests of the Innocent. The many ixceiitlous taken by lawyere In trial rasas, resulting In successful appeals, tends to show tha fp"'bllliy of Juilrrs. Clv'l LRinrtiea VkdatrU Prosecuting attorneys are Is most Inrarlibly Imrr rsed In politics. They often point to their records ot convlc"us when seeking re-election or higher of flee, whereas tha legal theory is that they ara parte ot tha court and supposed to see only that Justice done. Tha prosecutor's duty Is to protect the Innooent as much aa It Is to conrtct the guilty. But In these days the one Idea of the average prosecu tor seems tn be to get a convic tion. Fr ona Morr-v cine. In which the framing ot avtdonce la event"- lly exposed, there pre sumably ara hundreds ot minor criminal cases where tha tacts an navsr dlsclos-1 because ot the victim's lack of popular sup port. Vlolstlons ot civil lllwrtlos by policemen and Jud. cs are per slslent. Even to "ay tha tactics of col's In brushing up pullilcai and protect mvollnge are rotiiltils cent of old Captain Hchnlttuvrsnr of New York, who some years ago answerod a cltlinn'a asnnrtlun ot constitutional rights during the buiit-up of a political niootlm In Madlsou Hqiiere (Inrilun with the dictum: "To boll with tuu Constitution; we'll give 'em the club!" Often the police break the law In acting against laborers on strike and some:' nes tho cloak ot legal authority Is form ally given to hired gunmen em ployed against the workers Sometimes Judges co-operate with them by Issuing Impr-per strike Injunctions. Political connections ot prose- cutors and J"dgea freq ently re sult In favoritism and somstlmos In actual corruption, but It Is not yet known whether the sub c. iimlllne ot lha collinilaalua will consider legal discrimination. In favor of wealthy or political' Influential men to be a form of this type of lawlnaminss. foreign born prisoners ara customarily treated With leas regard for their legal rlKli's llisn are the native born anil In nisuy similar courts liter ara likely lo suffer severely through luck of in ln,"-prstar, Tho whole phase of law en forcement lawlessnsas probably will provlils one of the most In-ter-itlr : sub-reports of the Hoover commission. Tbs Inter- eating news sow, however, Is that the eommlsalon recogiiltea It aa an Important problem Just as do moat other thinking persons. The else of taxis hss bsen reduc ed In New York. And pedestrians had Just learned how (o dodge the old ones, tool Used Can1 SpecnaD: 1928 CHEVROLET SEDAN This car just like new. Has bumpers, spare, license. ( 1924 FORD COUPE Lots of miles for less than a hundred dollars. 1928 CHEVROLET COUPE Reconditioned and has lots of extras. License. 1925 DODGE ?i TON Delivery Truck This is some buy. New paint, license. 1928 CHEVROLET TON TRUCK and cab. Has . platform. 4-speed and good tires. 1926 FORD ROADSTER New duco paint, 11 cense and other extras. See this. 1928 CHEVROLET Imperial Sedan Wonder ful condition, fully equipped, license. 1926 CHEVROLET Landau Sedan New paint, reconditioned, license. A real buy. 1926 FORD COUPE New duco paint, license. Has excellent tires and in good shape. 1927 CHEVROLET ROADSTER Recondition ed and painted. This is some snappy wagon and priced right 1924 CHEVROLET COUPE Some buy for less than a hundred dollars. License. 1926 CHEVROLET COUPE New paint, good " Ures, license $295 1925 CHEVROLET TOURING Has 4 good tires, paint and excellent motor $160 LocEse Motton Co 522 South Sixth St Phone 49 Last Cair 500 Small and Large Feet Wanted Any Pair of LADIES' SHOES in the House Now Going at the Small Price of $2-98 and $3-98 Values to 10.00 Hundreds of Narrow Widths and Combina tion Lasts Don't Miss the Wonder ful Bargain Buy Event Buster Brown Shoe Store