Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1930)
J i. "Jim 2.l SOIEfyE WiT 1 Mrs.' Bell Wright Is Complimented ' By Mrs. M'Kennon Mrs. J.' D: McKennon entertained with IB eUBStS VPKtjirrlnu - . . " " " ' "J "IWIUWJU nt her home for Mrs. Bell Wright or IM1IUU. The afternoon, was spent most pleasantly, renewing old acquaint ances, during which Miss Helen and Jean Williams played several selec tions of music, which were greatly enjoyed. This was followed by lovely refreshments, served by Mrs. McKennon.- The home was decorated with flowers. - i- . Those present for tho afternoon were Mrs. Wright, .the honored guest, Mrs. Lydla Orandy, Mrs. Emma Hard ing, ' Mrs. B. O. Prltts, Mrs. C. W. Chandler, Mr. nnd Mrs. L. L. McKen non. Mrs. W. E. Oesterllng. Mrs. ShorWood Williams, Mrs. Lena Pen nington. Mrs. Kavanaugh, Mrs. Allen i and Misses Helen and Jean Williams. Mrs. Bell Wright has been the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. McKennon since last week. Members of Club In Swimming Party Members of the So-No-Ho club en Joyed a delightful afternoon Tuesday at Pine Cone, when following several houra of swimming and visiting, a picnic uiiiutji- iur uie ciuo ana lam llles was served under the trees. Fif teen members were present with one visitor, jyrs. Evelyn McPherson and Mrs. Bernice Maxwell became a new member. The next meeting will be an all-day gathering at Cove, Aug ust 12. Another swimming party last night was held here, tinjoyed by the Misses Lenore-: McCorkle, Mary Nowland, Jacqueline O'Brien. Ethel Harnden, Julia Smith and Conine Baker, at Crystal plunge. Family Reunion . i : At Hutchens Home, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Hutchens en tertained at a family picnic -dinner la3t Sunday on. the lawn of their home on East M avenue. ' Fourteen relatives, which Included several from out of town, were serv ed at one long table, underneath tht. trees, -a pleasant setting for the re union. 1 Those from out of town were Mr. nnd Mrs. J. A. Tulley and son, Glen, from Wallowa, Mr. and Mrs. John McNces and daughters, Lilly and Mel ba of Orleans, Nobr! and from this city were Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McNees, Miss Lulu McNces and Mrs. N. . Stephenson. Miss Cochran To . Wed Mr. Butler The announcement of the coming marriage of Miss Ruth Cochran, daughter of Mrs. Charles E. Cochran and the late Mr: Cochran, and nice, of Mr. and Mrs. George Cochran, of this city to J. V. B. Butler Jr. is or interest to her La Grande friends and acquaintances. Announcement was at a recent bridgo party for which Mrs. Robert Adams was hostess at the h6me of her sister, Mrs. F. Reed Mc Bride, In Portland. The ceremony. which was set for August 7, will take nlarn nf Wactmlnclar ntionnl Tlr- Ior- ry C. Hooper officiating Miss Cochran is a graduate of the University of Oregon and of Oregon Normal school and Is a member or Chi Omega. Dr. Butler Is the son of J. B. V. Butler of Mnnnmnth. dn For those who love the great out-doors, and ' wish to stay awhile where nature has worked its great est wonders . . . the Canadian Pacific Bungalow Camps pre sent a most direct appeal. Seven delightfully situated comfortable camps mid hun dreds of lofty mountain peaks, on lovely lakes and beside swift rivers -- afford a never-to-be-forgotten vacation .comfort, . simplicity and good food with moderate cJiargcs . . . Low Summer Fares now in effect. Get literature and plan to go! Canadian Pacific Travellers Cheques Good the World Over. Canadian Pacific . W H DEACON M Asrnt PARDEPt Ml A BROADWAY PORTl AND MrriJ MItC lAWK HOC .4 i 1 r' f t 1 r- fshtitfciloi ICUhUALOWl L CAMPS ' I i'i.mi - iyK,.regon edlcal "chool and 17 fr of S'8ma A'Pha Epsllou and Alpha Kappa Kappa. - Camp Fire' Girls in Meeting- Monday The Outusl Camp Plre girls met Monday afternoon at Mrs. Ray Will iams when those present received their Camp Fire books. Three of the girls will attend tho summer Camo at Cove, which begins tomorrow. Next Monday the group will meet again at Mrs. Williams. - One member was unable to attend. Those present were: Verna Lee Han ford. Jean Davles, Grace Helen Boh nenkamp, Stella Jean Ingle. Jean Hyde. Jane Williams. Gloria Walked and Dorothy Hennlng. Planning- Tea For 0. S..C. Entrants A tea honoring a group of girls who are planning to enter Oregon State college this fall will be given Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Chas. Reynolds. The affair Is sponsored by the Greater Oregon State committee and Is under the SUUervlRfnn nf th. lo n-t i ouaH. riieun iKlopfensteln, Melba Hanks and Mrs. t.iiuiiierman. Mlss Dorothv been traveling throughout Eastern wveuil iui liic paat two weeics rep resenting the Portland ofllce of the Greater Oregon State committee, will be present to meet the girls. Misa Crawford graduated from Oregon State college with the class of 1930. Whlln An tV,D . active in student affairs, having been ovww;uy vi liib stuaenc Doay, presi dent of Cap and Gown honor so ciety and president of her sorority, Alpha Chi Omega. ? patronesses for the afternoon will be Mrs; Chas. Reynolds. Mrs. E. L. Knlffht. Mrs. Melvin I.nrspn nnd Mm. William Heughan. Blue Bird Girls Pick Group Name The Blue Bird group which was or ganized last week - with Miss Mar gueriette Hesse as the leader mot Tuesday afternoon at the La Grande hotel. They chose the name Ntssakl, meaning at the foot of the mountain, for their group name. Each of the girls chose an Indian name for her self; some of them are planning to go to the Camp Fire girls camp at Cove this Thursday. Those present were: Patricia Long fellow, Ann Stoddard, Barbara and Gerald ine O'Brien. Maxine Peterson, Marjalee Purdy, Betty June Stalcup and Phyllis Westenhaver. . Announcements In compliment of Mrs. Edna Pol ley Who 1b stopping here with her son. Dr. C. L. Polley, the members of the Am erican Legion auxiliary arc planning an ;aftemoon Friday at the home of Mrs. Walter ..Palmer at 2110 Second street with all auxiliary members re quested to. attend. Mrs. Polley -is a i delegate -from Alaska to the national at Boston and Is here for a while be fore going east. . . , ' '- ' Tho Ladles Aid of the Lutheran church will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Fred Johnson, 1302 Eighth street at 2:30. All ticket money for the quilt is requested to be turned-in. - - -; ' The Crystal Rebekah lodge will meet tonight at the Odd Fellows tem ple.' All members are requested to at tend. "FIRST LADY" APPEARING ON TURK HORIZON By Prlst-llla King ' (Associated Press Staff Writer) ANGORA. Turkey H) A "First Lady of the Land" is at last appear ing on tho Turkish horizon. Socially replacing Latife Hanim, tho divorced Wife of President Mustapha Kemal, and replacing the exiled Ha lide Edlb, politically, Afet Hanim, is now coming forth as Turkey's most prominent woman. - In another year she will probably bo Turkey's first woman member of parliament. In a few years more she may oven be the first woman cabinet member. : Afct Hanim is one of the five war orphans Kemal has been educating. Alter studying in Switzerland and in Istanbul, Afet Hanim returned to her adopted father's villa In the capital, and quietly took a Job as teacher of civics and history in an Angora school. Her name never appeared in tho Turkish press until this spring, when with the extension of .the franchise to women, it was announced that rhe was the first woman to be ad mitted to the People's party, Kemal's party, and the only political party allowed In Turkey. Sinco then, accounts of this stu dious, good-looking young woman, and pictures of her clad in trim tai lored suits and small hats pulled down TELLS HOW FAT MEN CAN LOSE HALF A POUND A DAY Here's a simple way to get rid of that corporation and quickly feel In both body and mind the Joy of liv ing. - It's the safe way. too for every day you continue this easy method of losing unwanted and unneeded flesh you'll gain in energy, vigor and endurance. Nine times In ten obesity means inactivity It means that your blood Is starving for the sU vital salts your internal organs ne?d to keep you youthTul. active, ambitious and keen In mind. When you take one half teaspoon ful of Kruschen Salts every morning in a glass of hot or cold water you get these sx vital salts which mod ern foods and cooking do not supply. Start taking Kruschen Salu that's the common -sense way to reduce but don't take them with the Idea that they possess reducing qualities in themselves. This is what they do they deal out the impurities in your body by Well A Thirsty Sailor Vowed to Dig Restored In Massachusetts Town AMESBURY, Mass. W A ship wrecked sailor's monument to his awful thirst will be rededlcated here July 34. Off to India when he was 18 sailed Valentine Bagley, to be ship -wrecked on the Arabian' coast and wander, tortured, for- weeks In the searing desert. Bagley's story, handed down In le gend, is confirmed by a tale published in 1704 by Daniel Saunders, one of several qthers cast up with Bagley. Natives robbed the sailors of every stitch of clothing, and they set out naked for Muscat, 400 miles across the sands. Terribly blistered, famished and thirsty, a group of friendly natives were at last encountered and hired to take them by camel to Muscat. M8i: IS I rTirM rf .aj. y , , ,. i J Hhen Valentine Itagley, u sailor, was shipwrecked more Chun 100 vram nKO, he vowed. If saved, to dig u wen so mm omera iiiigns- noi. kiiow tnc inirst ne uui. The well (above) has recently been restored at Ames bury, Mass. Inset tliowf it before restoration. Women Pisplace " Men as Chief : Of Bandit Bands HONGKONG (JP) Women are push ing men into the background In the Chinese bandit picture. Roving bands of women brigands aria sacking villages In . parts of Kwangtung province, according to re ports here, with men bandits in sec ondary places. In one instance the band was es timated to consist of about 210 wom en and 100 men. The leader was a woman with her husband .as first lieutenant; . This band. It is charged, swooped down on Shekkl City at midnight, firing it after robbing the occupants. Later the band sacked Woo Chung and fled to the hills with 100 citizens of the better class, holding them for ransom., Ten were released twhen the chief bandit convinced herself they were poor and had no property. Another daring coup by women robbers is reported from Manchang, on tho Island of Hainan. Under pretense of paying taxes four women entered the bureau of militia. Taking officials off guard the leader shot the chief dead as he sat at his desk. The Aamazons then lined the staff up against the wall and ransacked the place for cash, arms and ammuni tion. Canton authorities are taking-steps against the women robbers and Ad miral Chan Clink has been sent to Hainan with a force of marines. AIGRETTES WORN BY PARIS STYLE LEADERS PARIS m Aigrettes, forbidden plumage In the United States, aro worn by some of the recognized style leaders here. Senora Martinez de la Hoz, consid ered one of the best dressed women in Paris, appeared at the Autuell race course recently In a lace straw hat of beige with a brilliant orange ai gretto fan at the back. Another aigrette trimmed hat much commented upon was worn by an English woman at the garden party of the Maharajah of Kapurthala. G II. MOKE ELECTED SALEM, Ore., July 23 tVP) Vernon Gilmore of Portland, Oregon State I college graduate, was last night elect ed head of the physical education de- partmcnt of the Salem High school. 'He succeeds Eugen (Luke) Gill. (over short bobbed hair, appear con j stantly In the Turkish press. I As oldest adopted daughter of Presi dent Kemal, she figures socially as I first lady of the land, and accompan ' ies him to nearly all official func tions. keeping the bowels, kidneys and liver in splendid working shape and fill you with a vigor and tireless energy you'd moat forgotten had existed. The urge for activity will be so marked that even at the end of a hard day's work you'll feel ready for any social activity or recreation. you can play as hard as you work. And after two weeks your excess flesh starts to go you'll know it -feel It see It the scales will tell the story. As one. once corpulent man re marked 'I feel so energetic that 1 want to get up with the lark and I'm Just as lively as a cricket." uschen Salts is not a purgative or a cathartic, but a real system cori dltioner and for those who are the victims of constipation or toxemia it-. dally use soon means blissful regu- t larlty. ; Get an 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts lasts weeks at the Red Cross J Drun store or any druggist In the I world. Adv. I Only six of the 17 who started ar- glad and lucky. When Interest In rived. the well was revived, it long since While wandering In the desert, the had fallen into disrepair. Even the (legend goes, Bagley prayed as never underground stream that fed; it before. Whit tier, the poet, a later dwindled away. ' - resident of Ainesbury, put that prayer Somewhere In the years it had Into verse: been named "The Captain's Well" and Pity me, Godl For I die of thirst; tan old sign & Utile shed over it Take me out of this land accur'st; was all that marked it. Aud U ever I reach my home again, . But now, thanks to the gift of Where the earth has springs and the former Stato Senator and Mrs. James sky has rain, H. Walker, It is to have a beauty such I will dig a well for the passers-by as It .never had. And none shall suffer from thirst as I. ' Restored, with water once more Homo Bagley did come, six years flowing, albeit through pipes into a later, and with his own hands dug modern "bubbler," the well will be the well. Then he sat back to watch officially presented to the Town 1m-passers-by quench their thirst, aud provement society by Mr. Walker, to reflect upon what a good thing Is Mrs. Walker will pull the strings water and plenty of it. unveiling the restoration and Col. It Is 100 years and more since Ned Arden Flood of Mew York will be Bagley came back from the seas the cay's orator. South Plans Giant Co-operative To Market Fruits And Vegetables 13 W. J- Davis . Associated Press Staff Writer) ' ATLANTA W) A giant new cooner- atlve Is in the making in Dixie. Tho' proposed organization, which would Join fruit and vegetable pro ducers of the south, got Its Inception at a meeting hero of commissioners of agriculture from seven states. The plan will be taken to tho fed eral farm board in Washington. Tho co-operative would revolution ize methods of marketing- fruits and vegetables in the south,, which in the last decade has added a rapidly grow ing output of truck crops to its lame fruit output.' . t. Action of the commissioners was tho first move ever mado to form an organization serving the entlro south for distribution of farm prod-, ucts, other than cotton and tobacco, to eliminate competition between states and communities. New Ship Canal To Bring Water Lines Eastward OSWEGO, N. Y. (P) Three shipping developments that promise to affect northern United states from tho Da kotas to tho Atlantic seaboard, and much of lower Canada, are In the making. This summer is expected to see the opening of the $116,000,000 Wei land ship canal, connecting Lake Erie and Lako Ontario, for the first time, to largo ships plying the other Great Lakes. Opening of the lower Hudson river to ocean vessels, as far north as Al bany, is slated for 1031. Tho third project Is the federal government's $3,500,000 program for opening tho Lake Ontario harbor of Oswego to Great' Lakes shipping for tho first time. The Welland canal will enable ships now making Buffalo their eastern terminus to extend their lanes into Lake Ontario. Their possible termi nus then will be Oswego, 171 miles nearer tidewater. With the Welland and Hudson river projects completed, tho shortest dis tanco by canal between big lake steamers and ocean-going vessels will bo the 100 miles between Oswego and Albany, whereas now it is 500 miles between Buffalo and New York. Oswego thus hopes to revive the days when the city was the "Venice of Lake Ontario." Saving to western shippers la seen IN DETROIT SHOOTING TRAGEDY Y4 tyswl v Associated Press photo Andrew Steffen., member of a prominent Michigan family, was arrested after he hot and killed Mr. Irene Harder, 33-year-old divorcee. He accused her of extortion. Commissioner William A. Graham, of North Carolina, proposed the co operative. Harry D. Wilson of Louis iana, president of the Southorn Asso ciation of Commissioners of Agricul ture, was. an enthusiastic second. Tho other commissioners favored the plan unanimously. , Details of the organization will be worked out by Graham and Wilson who, with other southern commis sioners and state market bureau chiefs, will submit the plan to the bureau of agricultural economics and the federal farm board in Washington. Out of the Washington meeting, Graham and Wilson believe, will ,como a strong union that will onable each state to know at all times what the1 other Is placing on the market ;and govern shipments to avoid glut- ' ted marts and low prices. In . the opening of Lake Ontario to Great Lakes ships. If faster connec tions between Oswego and tidewater than tho Oswego-Albany canal are desired. 'it Is pointed out that three railroads provide facilities from Os- wego to New York. 1 Engineers fort see a marked Increase in barge canal commerce, especially In grain, as a result of the now water ways. Oswego, dating Its port back to 172b',. claims It was tho first on the . Great Lakes. YOUTH OF 23 IS DIRECTOR OF 50 FIRMS NEW YORK (Director in nearly 60 Industrial concorns at the age of 23 Buch Is the responsibility on the shoulders of James C. Brady Jr. Slightly more than a year ago "Jim' Brady was graduating from Yale, proud of his major 'Y" won as a member of the hockey team, and of his membership in Scroll and Key, senior honorary society. In college ho had forecast his own future as that ol a banker. Now ho has plunged Into the financial world .that brought vast fortunes to his uncle, Nicholas P. Brady, and his father, James C. Brady, both new dead. Taking up the reins of the family fortune, he Is about to succeed his uncle on the boards of directors of a list of companies that makes up much of the "blue book" of American In dustry. Already ho is a -director of 3 m w& i m . mi wCa si I the New York ttdtson company and the Electric Storage Battery company. Soon he will be helping direct the fortunes of such 'concerns a Union Carbide and Carbon company. Ana conda Copper Mining company. Cen tral Hnnover Bank and Trust Com pany, Chile Copper company, Brook lyn Edison company, Chrysler Motors and many others. 1 ' " In his. Yale days Brady often was a weekend visitor at Northampton, Mass., where Miss Eliot Chace of Prov idence. R. I., was attending Smith college. They were married soon after Brady was graduated from Yale. Both arc social reglsterrtes. -' ;' Pajama Gown Keeps Vogue; Jacket Loses By IMaua Merwin (Associated Press Fashion Editor) PARIS Chiffon pajama frocks promise to keep right on going when autumn and winter styles ore launched. Evening pajamas la the name bifur cated chiffon frocks go under and ' they re having a colossal success for wear In their own homes. - Full skirted pajamas which fall into I long straight Grecian lines are most ! favored. Paris prefers chiffon but , the people wno make tne styles nmt that satin and chiffon velvet pajama frocks will be forthcoming for winter. Most of the evening trouser-dresses havo special coats which contrast strikingly in color. In that they are still faithful to the pajama idea as contrasted with the one-color ensem bles for formal evening wear. Coats for pajama frocks may be bright colored chiffon velvet, supple lame or printed satin or taffeta. One Parisian pajama costume combines gray chiffon pajamas with shirred hips and a pigeon ruby red velvet coat lined with gray. A handful of style leaders have decided to dlsoard short evening ; wraps In favor of mantles which are ; long lu back and elaborately fur trimmed. ' - ' Tho feminine half of society got a shock at the recent opening of a fashionable night club when the out standing style-leaders, almost to a woman, appealed In heel-length wraps. Some women go even further and sponsor trained evening wraps for formal wear. An Important model of the trained type Is cut away from a surplice front which crosses Just below the waist. Some of tho new long wraps follow closely on the Roman toga line, with senrf collars banded with fox fur. Others aro closefittlng affairs of chlf ifon velvet with wide sleeves bordered witn fox. All the ambitious wraps of hem-ltne length are fur trimmed, with fox tho favorite. Women To View Coronation In Sheba's Land Ry Sue McNamnra (Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON (VP) With trunks carrying format dinner gowns Har riet Chalmers Adams, - president of the Society of Woman Geographers, i Is embarking on an expedition nt variance with her usual following of hazardous trails. ,....,. Mrs. Adams will attend the corona-' tion coremonlcs of His Imperial Maj esty, Hallo Selassie I, King of Kings of Ethiopia on October 7. Instead of the trusty- knickers, tweed coats and hob-nailed shoes worn on her ordinary explorations, Mrs. Adams will be arrayed' In silks and velvets to mingle in the colorful 30 day festival which marks the, coro nation. She will be the gtiest of the U. S. minister. Nowhere else, outside of Hollywood, say thoso who havo witnessed similar ovonts in Ethiopia, Is there suoh a gorgeous costume display. Gold and silver and precious stones, plumes and gold braid will mark tho coronation of the new monarch In this land once ruled by the Queen of Sheba. - Tho coming coronation Is expected to surpass anything of the kind ever held In Africa. There will bo parades, sham battles and reviews of troops. Tho Abysslnlans are expert horsemen and Indulge In the moat spectacular stunts at these festivals.. ' Adls Abcba, the capital of Abys sinia, or Ethiopia, as it Is now called, is situated 8000 feet above sea level. It Is a stronghold of boautlful ohurchos as the Abysslnlans are the only Christian race In Africa. MISSOURI'S STATE FLOWER IIAKIIORH PEST OF APPLES COLUMBIA, Mo. P The hawthorn. Missouri's state flowor, la a wolf In sheep's clothing, say officials of the Missouri agricultural experiment sta tion. According to Dr. Leonard Haseman, state entomologist, the hawthorn tree whose color addB to scenic beauty in the Ozarks, harbors perhaps the most Injurious of applo pests, carposlna fernaldana. It Is a maggot-like worm which enters the ripe applo lato In the season anil causes damage after fruit is packed. The fruit of the hawthorn tree, called "red haws," supply the. only safe refuge during the winter for the pest, says Dr. Haseman. i . PARMER IS SCULPTOR RALEIGH. N. C. (! Sculptures of W. T. Covington, a farmer who has had no art training, have attracted wide attention In North Carolina and havo been praised by Lorado Taft. His best workdeals with farm subjects. SIT ATE Present THE ATTORNEYS TO CONFER 7 SALEM, Ore., July 23 P) City At torney Trlndl will confer with City Attorney Frank 8. Grant of Portland relative to the Oregon statute con cernlng street vacations by city coun cils. The Oregon Pulp St Paper com trade street so that It mav build an extension to the plant. A petition of protest has been filed. Trlndle be lieves the protest, under- the law In the case, is a complete barrier to the vacation unless the paper company produced a petition signed by two thirds of the citizens of the city ovei 31 years old. MAHEL EIDSON LOCATED EUGENE, July 23 WT Mabel Eld son. 16, for whom a search was start ed yesterday after she had been re ported missing by friends, was lo cated late yesterday at the home of a family she- hod been visiting since Monday. ; CONDITIONAL PARDON SALEM. Ore., July 23 W) A con ditional pardon that restores his mo tor vehicle driver's license was grant ed by Governor Norblad to Henry Kosh of Prlnevllle. Kosh was convict ed of driving his automobile whlls drunk, and paid a $180 fine and serv ed 60 days In Jail. His license was suspended for a year. DIES IIUFOKK SON'S FUNERAL SALEM, Ore.. July 23 (P) An hour and a half before the time set for his son's funeral David A. Harris, 73, dropped dead at his home at Rickey, near here, yesterday afternoon. The son. Frank Harris, died In tho Veter ans' hospital at Walla Walla. POPULATION. OF ; U. S. ESTIMATED (Continued from Paso One) Weat Virginia .. Maryland .... Connecticut ...... Washington Florida Nebraska - Colorado Oregon v Maine ' $outh Dakota . Rhode Island .... North Dakota .... Montana ' Utah .... Dl&t. Columbia New Hampshire Idaho - 1.738.610 1.625.379 1,002.813 1,667,640 1,480.036 1,380.619 1,033.166 799,062 691.008 687.020 681,273' 633,619 . 602,040 . 486,710 463,746 18.1 27 j 12.1 28 16.1 20 I 14.7 80 61.6 32 6.9 31 9.S 33 34 4.1 36 8.5 37 13.7 38 6 3 30 2.8 30 11.8 40 1 11.0 42, 4.7 41 ,43 16.2 44 1 New Mexico V - - ' i.-. ..: .- REDUCED PRICES . Wash Suits, Wash Dresses, Underwear' Hats, Caps, Bonnets, Sweaters, . " J Sun Suits, Swim Suits, Silk Dresses, Outing Togs. SELLING 10 to 50 OFF , NORTON'S KIDDY SHOP , CupCusfard Imitated, ut Indefinitely Serve Cup Custard Cookie-Cakes AS dessert or WITH dessert. They're good at home, at picnics, at camp. They keep indefinitely. Order by name from your I grocer'One of famous Qookie-Qakes TRU BLU BISCUIT CO. Spokane, Portland, Seattle ; ; THRILLING UNDERWORLD TALKIE ! PLAYING WED. - rage Three Vermont li.i..- 36ff.03 I A .w.-4 Arizona t 4$ Delaware ' 236.068 6.3 (fT ; Wyoming - 324.603 15.0 "" 48 Nevada 9059 164T - '49 Unannounced. . Decrease. - ), These preliminary totals from sup ervisors' districts are subject to re- ; vision by the census bureau. ? HOLEPROOF Simplifies Choosing -with Care . . ; Selecting your Holeproof Socks is as rapid as it is pleasant. Holeproof s national reputation assures quality and the attract ive designs are certain to suit you immediately. 0c 75c . $1.00 ;!r Never Squalled the (Many " ; ; ; --"t. THUR. I KHOLEPHOOFdVi rt