nAGE TOUH THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH FAIXS. OREGON Saturday, November 20, 1930 LEN TUTTUt. LYNN BIMMKHUAN ..City tdlloi .Advsrtlstag Ilium Vuoiisliea vr iiMUuwn eioepi tJuutlai or Toe Herald Pauluaiui Couuaat at IUHIM Moiiib sin eUreet. Kiawai nut. ureaoa littered u secuud claw njsller at 111 puslotln l alaoialh Pall. Oreioo, on Auiusl lu, I tun. undo act or i.onaress. aierca I. ill MAIL HA1KM I'AiAUlUK I.N AHVANiki Bv Mull Delivered h Omte In Ootslds la City County County Oat Moots If tt Tore months .ll It II H Tore Month 1 811 Months 1 71 I I Bli Month t til On Vur 1D0 On Veer- ll AHMHlMKIt I'KKHH LKAHKU UIHM MKMHKK At KIT HI HKAV Or IKt'l I.ATIO.N Kepreeented ostlonallj by II. 0. MOiilSNtiEN CO, lot San Francisco Nee York Beam Portlind Detroit Chicago Lo Annies Coulee of Tb Herald and Now, lotbr with complete Is liirmation about tb Klamath fall market, nay b obtain! tot lb asking at am ot tha office. Member ot the Aasorlatrd I'm The Associated freaa I eicluaively entitled lo the na or republic tlou of all new donates credited to It or not otharvt credited la thle paper, and alio tbe (oral aa publ lifted therein. All rtibn of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Saturday, November 29, 1930 Thou Shalt Not Kill trpHOU ih.lt not kill." J- Oh, that that commandment could ring in the an of every individual until they became ao impressed .With the aupreme importance of it that murder would be removed entirely from the category of crimes. The pain and anguish and untold suffering which would be eliminated, if men would only heed the com mand. If murder affected only those who commit the crime and those who are killed some of its curses would be re- anoved, but it leaves its brand upon the relatives and friends of the principals, and casts a most depressing effect upon all residents of those communities in which K ia committed. It aids in filling our penitentiaries; it forces representatives of the law to frequently claim the Uvea of those who commit it, and entails an expense which adds much to the weight of the burden borne by taxpayers. But, like other crimes, murder will not cease until the millennium. So long as men are possessed of false pride, so long as men permit anger to usurp the place of Judgment, ao long as men carry revolvers, so long as men whose minds become inflamed from booze continue drinking that poison, Just so long will men continue laying their fellowmen. The crime of murder is Increasing In the United States at an appalling rate. It has become blight upon our much vaunted civilization, and where it will end, unless the fight-thinking people make an organized effort to blot it out, God only knows. There Is need for eradicating many of the eausea contributing to it, and there is as much demand for an increased number of executions of those who engage in it Human life is valued entirely too cheaply and those who slay men with as little concern as they would kill a beast must be impressed with the fact that the rule of "a life for a life" still holds good. There are too few hangings. There are tooj many commuted sentences, too many paroles, and too many pardons for those who murder in cold blood with a secure feeling that they will not only escape legal death, bat that they will serve only a few years, at most, in the penitentiary. Unpardonable delay in the prosecution of murderers through dilatory tactics of defending attorneys, who are permitted one postponement after another by the ac quiescence of prosecutors and judges who have not the intestinal stamina to say "no" to the petitions filed for delays, is adding rapidly to the growing number of homicides. Maudlin sympathy on the part of some members of Jories hearing murder trials, and on the part of citizens itr general, Is another force contributing to the deplor able number of murders committed in this country. Guns, booze, fits of sngrer, and other forces are con tributors to the crime which la putting organized gov ernment to shame, but prompt and vigorous action on the part of those whose duty it Is to convict criminals and administer justice will go a long, long way in aid ing potential killers to heed the commandment, "THOU IHALT NOT KILL." EDITORIALS FROM OVER THE NATION about. W, get theory and (ben try to Dak tb reels fit the the ory. We da aol look deep saetiih. People dont alwsys wear ea their coat what they really think, what they really want. Inspiration 8 pea tin of Emerson ess reeds: "A rush of thouihU ll lb only eonrelrabl prosperity that eat come to as." few of ns erer set such a rush, and eo w are poor Indeed, Einstein Made Plain Omaha World-Hersld: Just a w had becun to feel that w had at last explained Prof. Einstein's theory to tb eatlsfsetlon of vr one, along conies a letter from as estlmabl friend who say It la nut yet quite clear lo him. There are a few detail he want Ironed out. The easiest mihod ot procedure would seem lo he to to through the whole thine aitaln from the bemnntnf. It won't take leti. as there are only aavaa other people In th world who anderstand the theory, and they seem to her beat tt wlthoat leering forward Ins addressee. Th Einstein theory, then, tars down the broad aeneral hrnothe- sli that th world la sadly In need of a theory of tuns kind. "Th oryltii need of tbl generation," said Prof. Klastsla In bis now Im mortal Gettysburg address. "Is a theory," and what achool boy does not recall th famous words of on of Shakespeare's character: A theory, a theory, my kingdom for a theory!" Raskin went a step farther by Insisting that "we can lire without a theory but not eo It." II le troe that Blsmark (tt may hr been Knot Rock) maintained that "It le a condition we face and not a theory." hut this was befor the time of Ein stein, and the (snout old warrior must be Judged la th light of his feneration. It wonld appear to be the consensus ot opinion. Daily CAPITOL News Letter Legislatures. Oregon' Laws. Salaries. Sessions. EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO IN KLAMATH How Fast We've Come Sums might b Interested to know that the first brick par ing was laid In Charleston. V. Va. And It was no longer ago than IS?!. Most of tbe mechan ical world as we know It now has been devised In a few yenrs. One wonder what man was do ing In th fifty or a hundred thousand years he has been walk ing no and down the earth. Not that be has don much better of late or Is doing much bettr now If be continue to confine so much of his effort to paring and such. Excitement Fades Whsn th thin its that used to stir and excite and unset aa do Bo longer we ought not to regret: we ought to rejoice. Con tentment come with th stillness of th year. Timely Quotations From People in the Public Eye Most freshmen regard the eootball coach aa If be' a deity on duty for th season. Knate Rockne, Notre Dam coach. e e e Bonn and snonsr will neyer win the world for Christ. Rev. Jacob w. Knapp, D. D. ess The first qualification of a poet tg a private Income. Iror Brown. e While actions apeak loader than words, some empleyers ears are better than their eyea. Evelyne Milliard. e Thankfulness Is an attitude that comes from a reasoned con sideration of our past life wKh Its responsibilities, and a Tlaloa of the great opportunities for which we hare been pqt hero In tbls world. Loring A. Schnler, editor of th Ladies' Horn Journal. Politicians ot the old school dose their eye to facts, or meet them with the traditional remedy of a mere empiricism. Edottard Herriot, ex-premier of France. BY DENNIS LANDRY I'nltcd Press Staff Correspondent SALEM. Or.. Nor. tl. (UP) Legislator ot 10 oat of 41 sistes ot th Union will eon Tn la January. 111. OREOON aa wall aa II olhsr state to meet In January, hare ast tlm limits to their see Ion. OREGON session la llmlUd to 4 day. That Is th lowest whlla sessions of othsr elate vary from la to Connecticut's lit. Mom 80 Day 1XTT-UAY sessions ar ealled la January la Arlsona. Rhode Island, Arkansas. Delaware. Ida- bo, Montana. Keyed, New Mail, tco. North Dakota. Oklahoma. South Dakota. Texas. I' tea, Vir ginia. Washington and West Virginia. SESSIONS In Alabama and Kansas are schsduled tor ID days, Indiana call tor II days. Maryland and Minnesota 10, Tennessee tl, Mississippi II and Iowa 100 days. No Limit STATES ot California. Oolo rado, Msssachuseti. Nsw Jsrtsy South Carolina. Maine. Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio. Pennsylvania Vermont and Wisconsin bar set ao limit. OREGON will ho represented by go senators in th neit ses sion. Ot th its tee to hold ses sions In January, only six will bar a smaller number of sena tors than Oregon. They are Arl sona II. Delaware IT, Maryland IS, Nerada IT, New Hampshire 14, Wyoming IT. West Virginia has th same number aa Oregon. Minnesota, with 17, will hay tbe largest representation of state senator. Term Vary TERMS of offlca for senators vary from ono to four year. Oregon la on of II statee to elect senstors for four-year terms. NEW HAMPSHIRE will have 131 represents tlree In th next session, th highest ot any tat. Oregon will bar II aad la on of II itate to hay lee that 110 representatives. Salaries Paid EXCEPT In six states, repre sent tlrse. Including those of Oregon, aro sleeted to two-year terms. New Jersey and New York selsct them every year, while Alabama, Louisiana, Mary land ard Mississippi elect erery four years. i SALARIES ot legislative mem-! bers rang from II a day paid by Orsgon. Kansas and Mlchl- gan. to thi. $11 a day of Arlson After yrl stormy sessions la which crime of all aorta war considered, lb Klamath county grand Jury was formally die charged by th court today af ter serving sine last J una. A spei-ted, the Jury didn't con sider any new buslaeea, but re turned indictment only against sis ina wno bad been bound over to tb Jury, aad against on man who la ao longer in thta section. Ia It report th grand jury confined Itself to a criticism of the methods la affect la tb management ot tha county Jail, aad tha roomnindatloa Is msds that tb circuit court tak actio la th rn! ot th coun ty court falling to acU A uppimsntal unofficial re port wa addsd to th official report of th grand Jury aa fol lows! W further report i That w ar glad that w are don: That w will tyer do tt again! Thai va ar gorry for tb a sit graad jam That wo bay a ear aaough caudal and gossip to supply aa old mslils conventloa for 10 years! Thai only Dlvln Providence can sara this country If It Is a bad as soms neoole think: That ascent tor member of tn grand Jury there l ao a decent man In th nounty, tt all w hare heard la true. P. I. Bom hav even been (o creel a to want lo Include th grand Jury. That r thsr wsre a aews- Kper In Klsmsth Pall It should suppred: aad o oa ad In finitum. " - No Indictment wes returned by lb grand Jury Just discharged agalast Chsnowsth Umpqua, th inaisu wno is enercwi with th murder of Prank Jack, another Indian, in Port Klamath a few weeks ago. This fact was re ported to Indicate that tho In dian might not bay to face a trial, but the report was denied tbls afternoon by District At torney KuykeodalL Th charge win a taken aa at tae e oa of th a sit graad Jury, which wm meet aext week. Mrs. Steers Hurt In Auto Smash-up Mrs. Raymond Hears, ot 1111 While avenue, la a patient at the Hillside hospital, where sh I sintering from a broken shoul der and sever bruise received when th steers' ear was struck by a Chsvrolet coupe, drlvn by Ales Pearson, near the Allsmout hrlrig aarly Tuesday venln. Mr. Steers was driving and. tailing to th coup ap proaching, started to turn lulu a aide aireet, when Pearson's car bll the Streets' rar on tb right side, turning It eomplelelr around In th road. Both rara wr badly damaged. One occupant In the Pearson ear, whose aim could not bs learned, rerelvtd cut oa the face and arm, and with Mr. and Mr. Steers was rushed lo the Hillside hospital, where he re calved Biedlral aid. Mra. Steers will be runflued lo lb hnspllsl for about two wsks, hut Mr. Ulcere wee only slightly Injured and was released Wsdneaday. AIU IIIIIMIUH' IMIWUNtt dii;m in ht. PACL St, Paul. Minn., Nov, II, (A P) Archbishop Austin Dowllna, II, head of the Roman Catholic diocese ot Ht. Paul died at 11:11 a. m. bar today. Complications, paused by a ..., rrm wtileb be had suffered for several yeara, caus ed death after s crinrsi mm of a month. (Irater lke Cranberry Sher- hert at your dealer. Mad by the Klamath Kails Creemery. Il-ct LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE WIDOW DESPKRATKI.Y IN hr.V.lt OP WORK Klamath Falls, Or Nov. IT, 1110 Editor Evening Herald t What I th unemployed wo rn! lofog to dot I bar walk ed th streets here almost beg ging for work aad hare gone to the Salvation Army aad Chamber of Commerce. I am a widow. My father and mother wr Oregon pioneer and my father waa an Indian war vet eran, t find that 10 per cent of th women working ar mar ried. They hav husband mak ing a good living and hav their homes, yet they hold th lobs som of u need p badly with rent past an, money all gone. I am getting deeper! and ao work. W do not want charily, but a decent Job. . A WIDOW I Mr. Herbert Neleoa of Modoc Point suffered a fractured collar bone Wednesday night when her daughter, Mia Ret Nslson, lost control ot thslr car. Herbert Nel son aad Miss Nslson esrsped with minor bruise. Klamath Business College oa-ete I. o. o. p. aidg. Klamath Falls. Ore. Phone ST0 School In session th n tir yoar. Both Day and Evening Class. Complete Bueinoe Coure taught. Tuition charge reason able, Rnmll amy la this echoo! that glvea you real beat ees training. and tb 13,000 per session of Pennsylvania. Applicant For Judgeship Have Grown to Fifty SALBM. Ore- Nov. II. (AP) Tbe number of Portland at torney wbo are candidates of the Mnltnomsh county circuit Jodie position left vacant by the death of Judge John H. Steven on grew to IS today when nnmber of additional nam were placed before Governor Norblad. Som of tbe aspirants have applied in person, but most ot them are being nrged npon the governor by friend. Governor Norblad said that be 1 a believer In a non-partisan Judiciary, and that In making the appointment he will not be ruled by the party affiliation of the candidates. Of the 11.000,000 acres In fionth Carolina nnlv ahint g.AOO.. ' 000 are nnder cultivation. Medals Now Eddington, famous English as tronomer. Is given the "honorary freedom of the town" his birth- filace In recognition of his work a life. On a scroll the town coun cil wrote: "Kendal Is determined It will not leave tbe recognition of It niOKt famous son to a future generation " We ought to do more of that In American towns. Do you know a man or a woman who has served faithfully? Let him know you know It. He will be little pleased nd little Interested when be Is dead. Why Not Be Fair? Tierce, Chicago university ed ucator, says text books used In th schools of this country ar de rided ly pro-American, and there Is no danger of th youth of the land getting disloyal Ideas of tor sign propaganda from them. He ha studied 400 text books and finds no excuse for tb oharge that many are pro-British. But why should text books b tre-anythlng? Why should his tory bo written In such a way as to be pro-Amerlran any more than It should be written pro-British r pro-Frenchf What th world ad most I accurst Informa tion. There la no substitute for facts. Young and Old It was brought to this writer's attention the other day that a wlI-known manufacturing firm had msds a rule to employ no on vr 40. Strang that so many seemingly bright employers have gone so far wrong on tbe relative values of yonth and age. On ot the principal difference between youth and sge Is that tbe very young man la irresponsible while age has a feeling ot responsibility. That quality alone make the old er man more loyal and more valu able to an employer than th younger. And usually his Judg ment Is better, bis skill greater. He Is more steadfast, more care ful, more fatthfnl. Nearly always be Is mora needy, more deserving. Kept Promises Too many of as are not will ing to keep, on dark days, the promises made in brighter hours. Many regard promises as only fair weather matters. Perhaps the promises are made to others, perhaps to ourselves. One re calls tb noble lines of Matthew Arnold: "Tasks in hours of In sight willed can be through hours ot gloom fulfilled." Youth and Religion The young Rabbi Brenner of Philadelphia opens the doors of his Liberal tempi. His church Is undenominational In that cler gymen, authors, statesmen, dlplo mats will deliver addresses there Significant Is the rabbi's remsrk thnt "youth's dwperute cry for re ligion Is thunderous to him who does not close hts ears." Perhaps the rabhl Is right. Too many of us get an Idea that youth or men and women want this, that, or the other thing, and we don't knew what wo ar talkies HORIZONTAL 1 Ingredient of powder, 5 Hneke. Observed, I a Melody. IS Driving; com mend. 14 To Impel. 15 Nobleman. IS Conjunction. II fury. IS To swerve. 21 Constellation. 24 Itclgnliig bf'Huty. V Wine vessel. It Aromatic berry, .in Nautical. U2Yokel ns linrses. 84 ItlKurons, B5 To instruct. 37 Hmell. 40 Beret. Not Hard, But Not Easy nrirjrj is i i i is p 1,3 in 1 IS ( T" 3 i5 Z Ia !3" "" 55" srprp zz 58 15 m- 3 29 " 35" ST " 35 W ia 1 1 35 -Ifc- 1 ' iTTiTHT 33 143 UT 5 42 TT' aq 5BT I I 1 1 1 I K 41 Tidings. 43 Carol. 40 Cuckoo. 47 One. 4 Oak. 40 To scatter, SO Disagreeably sharp. VKRTICAIi t To rap lightly, t Verb. 8 Falseliood. 4 Small oliloho; of pasteboard. Aloe. fl Pertaining; t old ago. t Foot lever. 8 Certain. OAro. . YESTERDAY'S AXHVYKIi m. EH ISTEDSIrVlEilftl no F D RID E iMUNJGJ ilEIOEITIEIAI ll I U I IkIAJYI 10 Helf. 11 Dorn. ' 10 Receded. M Dogma, 21 To perform 99 To regret exceedingly. samrlpetf faerie SO Hall! SO Blemish. 27 Beer. 20 Te arise, 81 Ntreet, SSOnM coin. 84 Having flavor. Wanting stick. 87 Kiln. 8ft bron hen, SO Cult. 43 To finish. 48 Too pee. 44 fir laaaoas TO THE PUBLIC All Barber Shops Will Close at 8 p. m. Every Saturday Beginning December lt N Chang Ia Berber Price We Sell Genuine International Repairs Msd For q Line By tha) International Harvester Company REPAIRS made for International implements ana) ethar him quipment by th Harvester Com pany are the only repairs marie from th orifioa! pattern. All other ar copied from copies, and this roundabout reproduction they may loa la correoV a of aKape. sharpness of detail, cJoeeaee fa (hm and quality of material These repair ar made fo Uaennc MeCormieh. Milwaukee, Titan and elker Intamtionalnad machine. Genuine flj) Repairs Are Better in Quality Fit Better and Wear Longer Th Harvester Company stand back of It machines. Co fair In th matter. Do not aubsrirut imitation repairs for th f anuineand expect best service. , "PS?; 2y 0,KoT concerns and marked "Mad for ornViUfil.reivfsuinIHCrepirk Tney often lack veitht. aro not always correct tn shape, ar imperfectly bntahed, do not fit properly, or are mad of inferior material Buy Genuine International Repairs for your mtarnetioaal Farm Equipment Beware of Any Other Kind I J. W. KERNS rams Machinery aad applies 1S04 Be. Mrfh a. PTMvee K8T-J sw I r.Dlim MIliABB tnite SATURDAYS! I . to 1.30 .. KPO aoerrenoss HP I la Angeles KOW . . . orilen' KOMO ... otne end FRIDAYS, t p.m. H t,43 b.sl INI . .. Hellyweed e4snrwii'x' JtUJfe ALWAYS INFERIOR If Other Gasolines were Better . . . Why Imitate Gilmore Blu-Green? Imitation art always "ihoddy," r. gordlesi of how c'osely they may reiembl the original and genuine. Ofhdr gasolines are imitating the peculiar color of Gilmore Blu-Green Gas oline, but they can no more equol if quoL ity than cotton can equal lilk, copper equal gold, or glass equal the diamond, because Gilmore Blu-Green ii patented (U.S. Patent No. 1654259). Read the Carbon Guarantee. You are assured of the genuine Gil more Blu-Green Gasoline from the familiar Cream and Red Pump with the Lion Head trade mark on it at Independent Service Stati ons and Garages. Accept no other. THE ONIY PREMIUM GASOLINE A e V iTi w AT NO EXTRA COST V3 A 9 U LI N E