, , ,1.. i ) J Page Two FiiI:iy, August 7, 1 !'-'' "E KLlui.l MURDERS IN AMERICA FAR EXCEED THOSE OF ONE-TIME LEADER ENG.1 T.DVnnV All S .irnitAii Khvi) Knrlislitnen rtSil lhn rrlma alalia. Murder threatens to become a; tic of American culm with aniaxtid lost art la London. Willi American horror. The iwect Drake hotel i cities such as Chicago and New York epIsuJe In Chicago nilcM have been, ponder crime statistic that Indicate! disregarded as a pranker's joke a life a day, lo be the average toll cabled over til Martle the old world; of murders. London is examining but for stories that have preceded' with considerable complacency the it of violent tia:tles and sudden death annual report of the commissioner in the streets of American cities. of nolffA. which riittclnroii (hut unlv! . 16 murders were committed lu the i .2 m.tmnllin .r. rf. ,. l ! ' KANSAS "TV. Aug. 6 United, month, of 19.M. London's popula- "' '. n or child of tioa is nearly 8,000.000 souls. ,0 fv7 ".OuO persons In Kansas City your chance, of losing your life at " donui ' d,e ,he n"1 . the bands of a murderer In this city murd''"r; according to statistic, are about one in 500.000. The fo,m"lcd hire- ' were chances of your murderer getting 3" n'urder- The population of, aaay It .Void over hi., crime in 1;'" C"y " fre'dom aiy rol .-o ..-liucrir.;: ;i i,, " ' attracr .,iuv Ameiicm thug lo l.i.n I-"- dun as a .-.ifc tru.a'ie of .-rime. Kihi SA. i'KA.Ni.! jCu, Aug. 6. liver oi the 1924 murderers committed period of years San Francisco suicide. Fire were apprehended by murders average ;s annually. One of the police and three escaped. each 21.000 Inhabitants is slain! Crimes of violence have decreased, yearly. I the commissioner reported. The 16 1 I murders of persons more than one: XEW YORK. Aug. 4. xew year of age and the 12 infanticides York has one murder to each 19,000 In 1924 are compared with the 27 of Its population, according to stalls-' murders and 15 Infanticides of 1923. tic furnished by police reports. I London traffic, however, is as blood-) thirsty as Its American counterpart.; CLEVELAND. Aug. S Cleveland' Accidents la the crowded unwu n . i a utuiucia reponea in 1924 caused 844 deaths in 1924 compared of which 11 were described a. Justi- vwu ssa r Ahlp hnmlMJoa Tk. . A total of 15,437 indictable of-; population was approximately one to If vFelepK one Operators in ManyLand Jtst 1 .. fenses were committed In London last year, compared to .15,333 in 1923. Ten more cases of manslaugh ter were recorded in 1924 than in 12,000. ATLANTA. Ga.. Aug.S Atlanta offers Its average inhabitant a ap- 1ai . . L - i . t . uftu muauuani a an- 1923 but there were 25 fewer: proximate odds of 30.000 that he wounding, and assaults. Only 19 won't be murdered t 1 1 " drag addicts or peddler, were pros-1 murders here in 1924 A. in other' ZZML CmPared ,0 T""" -St of A,'he'X"! i i ii - . . i i i - r i - , ..... li.ibsij tyT pies were negroes. OREGON COWBOYS TO COMPETE IN BIG CHICAGO RODEO THIS MONTH To capture for Oregon champion ship honors In the greatest 'of all western sports, more than a score of cowboys and cowgirls from this state will descend oh Chicago. Aug ust 15 to 23 for the Roundup and World's Championship Rodeo. The roueo. which will be held in the Grant Park stadium, is under the auspices of the Chicot a...,. of Commerce, with "Tex" Austin. I foremost of cowboy contest directors.1 In charge of the various events I Mike Hastings nt d.j.... ! worlds championship steer wrestler i 1921. and holder of the world's record for throwing a steer in seven seconds flat. Is among those from Oregon who have signified their lllttn- on o.' trilrin . , .. 1 .an m iae '.ocleo. Others fmm 'Mr rov whj l.av,. tak.n notable part In r io.:. orid championship rodeo Jmu. andVho are expected to WER TO HELP IN COAL CRISIS !t(pnd the Chicago contest are: Fox Hastings, Loretta Butler and Opal Wood, all of Pendleton, and Everett Rlggs of Lakevlew. The Oregon group is anticipating no "soft business" at the Chicago rodeo, however, fqr there they are w meeL a nunriror! rt . , - mui COW- : boys and cowgirls from other west ern and southwestern states bent on the same mission as themselves From the "brush" of h c...... 1. ""MlUBBIl to the ranges of Canada the chal- lenge has gone out to the buckaroo. and these together with the cow girls and steer bulldoggers will there renew old rivalries and perhaps write new records Into the classic l,h'"tll ry. Winners in ooo5 Tw rodeo wi" 8hare in 30,0u0 in cash nri,. sum offered anywhere 'this yearf as : " the Championship belts and trophies. Musical Comedy To Be Shovn In Klamath ! Members of the Klamath Falls I KiwanU club uleHiroH .. . ! : uiiailiuiuua .support of Charles D. Habelrlgg of! v...ries u. Habelrlgg of Secretary Of Commerce f' A edford- fn eorts to present a uuicrence With President Coolidge ti ii i n. rntp of; '':(. nf the! I cli z.i :n t '-iill -II iionn yr.j.),,,, I A cast of more than en WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 -(Unit VI 1 V Pla ' lnclHng ed New,)Seeretary gQ comm'n ADireWS' n0W ,he Bndon ""over 1, expected to cX at i m' r""7' bUt TeM length with President dm L 41 M,"". and George Maddox, tenor, - oa! situation t cZT chautauou. to Swampscott. which Z 1 V' " esldent of 'ori. The ed Thursday ed Th,.r... wae announc; dates of the nresent.,- v..' . ...... wM navtj Deen Hoover expecu , to SwaBlp. 1 " f' . v ",r Pavilion scott By JOHN B. O'BRIEN -tiiiEi voice with the Smll, I Why Is it that this phrase has become associated n) most exclusively with the telt-shona ODeratop in ; America? Perhaps It Is because she cas mora lo smue about ia so other country baa tele- pnone service been developed to the extent that It has in ih ed States. In no other land Is tho puouo more appreciative of Its ervlce or more courteous in its relations to the operator. The United States has C3 per cent of the world's telephones. It has the most comprehensive system In ex istence, and the equipment Is a Bodel for all others lit every na tion of the globe. The telephone, bom In America and gradually developed In thia country. Is essentially an Ameri can invention, but without a public to use U and to demand greater facilities the efforts of Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Wat son and the engineers who fol lowed them might have proved of small avail. The American pub lie, however, has learned to use the telephone with greater free dom and ease than do the people of other nations, with the result that the telephone baa become In this' country an important and neoessary part of our business and aoclal lite: The telephone girl, therefore. Is a vital factor In our everyday existence. ! Telephone operators the world over are noted for their courtesy, and especially Is this truo of the American telephone girl. In many other countries the operator Is Just a government clerk, and In no large country is the number of calls per person so bleb as In the I'nlted States. It Is much more difficult to be courteous under such cir cu&suaces, but hi ih r.u c... tem it has been found that - a rule the most courteous girls axe the most efflclpnt. vhirh helps to account for ths greater ef ficiency of the American service. The outstanding cisrsclcrlnU'S of tho American tclcnhone cocrator are her food h.ulth. hpr hamr disposition, her faithfulness and her willingness to face real d in ger In times of eoitrgcuclo., such as fires, floods, etc Foreign Practices In England a telnnhnna rM t. not an operator. Site Is a "telo- paonisi.- me Jong distance oier ators in Londvu, because of the many communications with tio continent, not only aro rxyulred Lo speak both French and Engl'sh. but must know the formur lan guage sufficiently well to be able to understand It over telephone wires, which Is no amuli f..ai. in fact, French ia the official lan guage of the Paris london line. Recently. In order to ln efficiency In routing long diitance colls, Ixndon and Paris have Inau gurated a scliomo of exchanging tel ephone girls In relays for perl. ids of two week In each city. The English airls work in tlia tVi nrh central offices, and at ih ;imn time tho French operators aro em ployed at tho London end of the wire on tiio long di.i'.ar.re Unrs. thus giving both workir.s knowl edge of the two exchanges ar.il the methods of routine call.it in rut. ditlon to cementing a personal "en tente cordlalo." In Great Britain thn linn I. ni "busr": rather "thn gaged." Another English extru sion usea by the toliiplionlsts which sounds strantre to Amerlrnn oars is "You're through." which moans that you can berin to talk neing the equivalent of the Ameri can "Here's vour nnriv' nii same practice is common In New ai.-.na and Australia. ' Wbn the Amerlmn fplor.liM, girl answers vour .lurml .v,. i 1 Quires In a smiling voice 'with ris Itng inflection, "Number, please?" In Franco ths operator announces horself with, M'eauIo." which means "I'm listening." In Ger many she says, "Here's the ex change," in Norway, either "Cen tral" or alniDlr "Y." h in Sweden there Is a practice which is often the cause of aoma twrnUi. ity to the foreigner using a SucJ ;ia loicunono for the drat tune. On inline? the receiver from ih hook ths first thing ho hears may nn morely a number for numiiin "Thirty-nine." Ilowotor, tills Is not a telephone numbor, but Is sim ply the numbor of the otMrtr whn Is answering Uio calL In sorne parts of Sweden the operators fol low the Draetlce commnn In Rnl. glum, which Is to mention the ex change name as the equivalent of -ftuniixx, please." OuUUe of the EMtlUh. SDoaklnr nntlrins ami Switzerland, however, tho equiva lent of "Dleoso" Is seldom heard. The Moshl Moshl Girl The telcDhnno elrl of Jinnn u known as the .Moshl Moshl-glrl, the term xaoslil moshl buin Uio Jap anese fHiuIvalint fur -hi.!'n, l't. ally alio Is very young, otten being not more than lourtccn years of aso. AM Japanese lelcphono operators the city of Tokyo ore rtsiulri-d to wi'jr a uniform co.:iunn which c.-mslsts of a sort of skirt called a "l ikaina." which Is worn over a nurklug kimono of coarse, white c!':li. mi sleevos are not as full ni llmro of tho ordinary Umr.no ni l aro tied with a cord Just below Iho elbow so as to prevent them l.r:n Intorfcrinc with thn move ments of Iho operator's hands. Tho "iiak.ima" lias a carh tied In front. The ntllro lr. complctrd by a pair of white clolh foot covers and straw sandold, Thoy woar no otock Inm. While the Japanese oporators nro very young girls, quits the reverse conditions prevail on the Island of Cuba. There, widow, with grown daughters are given the proferenco. 1 Usually the telephone, axohange la located In a dwelling house whsrs the widow la Installed as toaaMar and her daughters become ths op erator. Oulalde of ths cKy of Harana there la mors or toss of prejudice against girls going to business, so that by having Uvs tele phone exchansa inatmlUd la nrl. vuts home ths old 6 nan Mi mdl tlocs may be malnuined. while, (he same time, ths fatherless fam ily is enabled to earn a rood living. Accomplished Linguists Only In San Francisco ta ths fa mous CliinaUiwa ssohangs ta this country ars telephone opemiors rmjulred to be abls to apeak mors than one language, but In certain parts of the globe, to be a telephone operator, a girl must also be an so, otimpilshod linguist. la Bombay, which is ullod with the sounds ol -many tongues, ths operators wh handle ths telephone, train o ars sa peeled to apeak not only their owa native language, but, la addition, . English, French, Juiianose, Ohtnsss I and Arabic. Ia Cairo ths tslouhona I girls must know not only their own language, but French, English, f Creek and Italian as wall five In all. Throughout the Far East, op erators usually must have at their command at least one foreign laa cuage besides their own. In many large cities of ths Faf F-tist, where so many different laa fruages and dlulonts or iiwkM to cause serious difficulty In ths or uio (eiupnons. ins problem Is hclnc solved by ths automatic or machine switching toIeDhons a.rr. loo. Whether It be In fnr nir Ihn. stnla, wlinro the operator In hsi hot under ths eucalyptus trsoa not only makes sll ths connections, but also doss all the talking, or In ths land of Uio Mikado, In Europe or in our own united States, tele phono operators all over ths world have one attribute In common they serve ths puhllo. And, svery thing conslderoil, they servs It rs markably well Veteran In Oregon Dept. Phil Neer, Palo Alto, elimi- jnated tSanley Alnifiuist, San Fran- and return kI, " " 10 oe lven n the open " 3Avi ainnii in K . . .... wnen he .will have to be hero for u V, " ,ne falr Srounda. I the meeting of the Amorn 1. """Irigg will be director for the funding ccmmlJWn. wmt th0dUCtl'm "e hM tu hi Present to Coolldge . !n fa,,n,;,0taBlhB" '' Ml from San Frandsco to a tl, f ,"23 and "nobln od" pre-! JUDiiee celebration In that city in I eatord in 1S24. September. L ' Hoover declined to say whe.her DRASTIC REFORMS IN m . . . summoned by Cool- . I, T1' beca of the uimcuuiea iiA(waon auiurar ia m n. .. o.- trgl nnrl nn a . . " I .pWn) Toa.ki .. ... i.iors. Dut It Is under-l.. . 's involves a crlm- siuou tne vn vin . , t '" " er tne elt-i EDUCATION ASKED LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6.-(U,ed Waste Of hlltnnn . Alexander Silverman, of the Unlver "Ity of Pittsburgh. .... Hoover wa. engaged nearly anrldreM,be'or8 h American Chem ir Thursday in I lcal ociety, meetln, hlch discussed plans for trtagta.j m?lie ' in the teaching he bureau of mines, recently tranSJ ! hd8 of L1 oto and college, ferred tn ih. a . '. I were ursert h . j. ""tes uation very carefully. To Meet Later oay Thursday in 'erred to the department , con.lW ers by a do.en speaker, "orce from the department ' '"""""ng universities and tec": C ,.V2T Cn,aCt ''V-try00'" ' 'He noer, f New york, WM - J who ( favored rrg,,,,.,"- an of the conference. KtlaK ,ystem of ,,,. Another n.eetln h"'ro an 24 trt,. v."' age or Inferior students. rf l ut Justice Kesigm Job C,3C- 7"5. These three win ners and Elmer Griffin, Sun Fran- PORTLAND, Aug. 6. Tom Word, -lwo who wa victorious yesterday1 veteran department of Justice agent! 'll compete In the semi-finals. i In the northwest has resigned his Seml-flnalistx In the mens don-' position rather than go to Phoenix, ''les Include: Klmer C.riffii, Arlr on a permanent assignment. . c"a Wolfard, Phil Ncer an,I Hut Word protected his transfer and ! 'on Miller and E. P. Stclnmcts and wa. .ordered to go to Pho.m, 'C. II. U;,iv.. resign. Me sent his resignation at once. Word has lived In Portland 36 years and during that time, he was twice sheriff of Multnomah county. KLAMATH VALLEY HOSPITAL Our nursery accommoUutos f.uirtotn "allies. Haaslnctts reserved on ro quest. adv. 3 Try a News Cluss Ad. KODAK FINISHING 8 Hour Berries The Peagley's Opposite Court House CALIFORNIANS MAKE CLEAN SWEEP IN ORE. ruHTliASD. Anr I,.,...1 News)Callfornlans made a n0; aweep of the men's single, In the "sn state tennis tournament 3 the play moved Into the semi-finals here Thursday. I Herbert Ruhr San Fmnei,. i... w. fl. .-nacwio. Porllnml l.r. - e Catlln Wolfard. San Franel.ro, dc! eaiea ,uod Kendall, Portland, 8-2 WANT TO HEM.? LlSt VOlir nrnna.... -.1.1- ... v... . - .--Kiij wiiu lis. we Ke". c"ntn"ously In the real, estate business In Klamath Fall, fr! the past 1 year and are ulway. In tnnek l,k 1 I. Vi.vi. ""Jers. 11 your price ' right, we hustle to make the sale Three salesmen on the Job or'phonVT. a" Bt 7" M'"n CHILt'OTE & 8MITII i AC-7 KODAK FINISHING m at v out at 6 p. m. The Peagley'g 1 """""'e Court Hoiiso ffHICAN LUNCH THo ll,)nl0 ,)f (h0 ,,(.Irnn STEW LEWIS' SPECIAL COFFEE OUR OWN BLEND U Iwo pounds for 95c. SOcanonni! FRESH FRUITS AND VFr.rTn. rAPP.1?. T T. T 3 OA,LY tfen 1J. Lewis, Grocerv "Tlie Old Rl.,M.a rlfr..UCY.ry I ' I "aw I N, o. "tttl ..''"'"Ir, ' 'Masti eZT' il ii Win Ala 11 a.. . "igssst as. Lewis 223S.6A I Oood Wa 1014 m Bro Paint 1029 M CashaK, 110 taasl SalU Froa gM Z.PETE, Teacher of Tx ArrmNtrd If KducKtlon. IW MRU. RATI ttt. Real act Ua Phoat FRBP Btat Real KfUt. Firs IM 10M Mala Bt, H l,F ii -,' f ill KttnEESE .'- J- LZ lit DR. F. Ifc Osteopathic IjJ. moan - I I. U, U. - Klamath rh BEND-KU"18! ftTAOS Now Oporall CENTRA Ii 108 Bo. 7th I tu J n 1 Attorney and Co.-J', Bults No. .y triangi The plaes , OPENAU"" j 29-? crt o:..sC el 'ce oute." ff Main. -W. UIAUI Ol. ean Maia