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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1922)
THE MORNIXG OKEGOXIAX, MONDAY, ' MARCH 20, 1922 PHILADELPHIA FAIR NEEDS LIVE HKl Project Declared Too Vague to Get Federal Help. PAPER DREAMS USELESS Definite Site and Cash on Hand Are Declared Necessity for Success of Plan. WASHINGTON. D. C. March 1 4. (Special.) Philadelphia must get busv and raise some cash to back UP its claims -for the Sesqui-Centennial exposition before it can reasonably expect aid from congress. That view was expressed here tonight on the eve of the arrival of the delegation tm,n Philiariplnhia to place me uiu r,rt ,.n.ne of the exposition before vV..;r,i loarff-rs sav the city must show something beside paper dreams inv- itmni to obtain an appropria- f-r.m rdnsrrws , for the world fair would be foolhardy and suicidal at the nresent time, it was said, aa but ti. 000. 000 has been promised for what is confidently expected to be a I40.0d0.000 fair. Even so ardent an advocate of the fair as George P. Harrow unhesitat ingly said that the time has not arrived when congress can be peti tioned for financial aid for the fair. The people in Philadelphia must get hnxv- he sad. San rrantwa. v President Harding for the release of J political prisoners there came Satur- I day a remarkable document an ap peal from an I. W. W. organization based upon Its alleged patriotism and good work during the war. Proudly the appeal relates how this organiza tion, through its members, bought liberty bonds m sizable, quantities, how enlisted and drafted men were exempted from dues, and cites the fact that a service flag for all army and navy 1. W. W. members was bought by the organization. For a climax the appeal emphasize! that the celebration of March 17 the 1. vv. w. legal holiday was post poned "eo as not to hamper the war work of the government." Branch 510 of the marine transport workers' industrial union of the In dustrial Workers of the World sent the appeal. It points out that approx imately 2500 members are now in Leavenworth serving an aggregate of 50 years for convictions under the espionage, and draft acts. The ap peal was .adopted at a regular meet ing of the organization in Philadel MINT TRUSTEE TO CHANGE F. E. SCOBEY TO SUCCEED RAY. MON'D T. BAKER TODAY. Gold Assets of Service Institutions Aggregate $3,000,000,000; Influx Iarge Since War. NEW LIB IS SOUGHT PKODCCTIOX OF CUniiY WOOIj IS OBJECTIVE. . pointed out. had raised 17,600.000 in actual cash before the proponents of that fair made their appearance in the halls of congress seeking national aid. , - Site First Seed. The first step to be takent in the opinion of the representatives who hold the purse strings and who are reluctant to unloose the resources of the nation to aid what at present is regarded as a more-or-less nebulous proposition, is to finally settle upon a site and plan. And the papers here gave a very definite view in regard to tne pian that should be followed out in the general planning of the celebration of the 150th anniversary of American liberty. Thus, they say. the fair should not merely be a series of collections of machinery and exhibits designed to glean orders from foreign nations for American factories, but rather should be an exposition of the prog ress of the nation in the last 60 years. - ' Herbert Hoover, secretary of com merce, has definitely stated that the ordinary run of fairs and expositions would hardly appeal to the foreign nations. The Philaaelpnia wona lair, he emphasizes, must be different as befits an exposition commemorating the greatest event m American nis torr. And the leaders here are waiting fnr Philadelphia to take an active step toward the fulfillment of this idea. They are hopeful that before congressional aid is invoked the com mittee in charge will have developed their plans to the state where the "greatest fair ever" will be visuanzeu to them and something more than mere promises of financial campaigns wilJ be brought forth to snow tnai Philadelphia really means business. House Committed to Economy.' Anv. attempt to obtain the finan eial backing of a house committed to the tax-reduction and economy pro gramme before the city has substan tial financial backing tor tne expo sition is certain to result in failure, they say. 'The" men up in Philadelphia must get busy right away," Representative narrow said recently. . "Every man that amounts to anything in Phila delphia must be in back of this world fair proposal. I am an enthusiastic advocate of the fair, but I am not so blind that I would not advise the people back home that It would be foolhardy to attempt to obtain finan cial appropriations from the federal government at present.. "'Council has done a fine thing in appropriating $5,000,000, but we must have more than that before we can reasonably go to congress and show them that we mean business. The lit tle dissessions over the fair back in Philadelphia 'mean nothing to con gress. They are not interested in .that just so long as Philadelphia pre sents a good front from the financial and planning angle when the commit tees come to congress. "The history of past fairs has shown that congress will not appropriate a single cent before it is assured that the people wJio are staging the fair in their home towns are backing the project up with their own cash and energy. I was somewhat surprised when in Philadelphia to find some of the big men of the city holding them selves1 aloof from the fair movement, but I hope that they will soon join in and help all they can. Definite Plan Larking. "The trouble up to date seems to be that there has not been a definite plan evolved which will visualize the great features of the fair, and which can be the rallying point for a financial campaign. Time is pressing; we do not have any too much time in which to prepare the fair, and it behooves the folks back in Philadelphia to get busy if the Sesqui-Centennial fair is to be the great success that I have hitherto pictured. Representative Darrow has already introduced a resolution in congress extending national recognition to the fair, but up to date no action has been taken upon that resolution, for the simple reason that the commit tees from Philadelphia have not ap peared in congress to show the rep resentatives that they have evolved a plan worthy of federal recognition and are prepared to finance the en tire project. Experiment Conducted by Mo mouth Ranchers Is Partially Successful. Experiments being conducted by William Kiddell & Sons, ranchers of Monmouth, looking to possibilities for the development of a lamb with the valuable curled wool so desired by furriers are being watched with great Interest. A cross of a Karakul ram Imported from the Karakul district in, Asia Minor with a Cotswold ewe already has proved partially successful. The lamb produced was entirely black with the exception of two small spots and the wool had the curl which mal. it valuable for trimming ladies' coats. One of the pelts from a lamb pro duced by this cross was exhibited in Portland yesterday by A. C. Gags well-known publisher of this city. .Mr. Gage estimated the value of the lelt at from $12 to $15. He expressed the belief that further crosses with the Karakul ram would do away n tirely with white spots on the lambs and possibly add a gloss to the wool. The wool of the lambs from which the pelts are obtained has the de sired curl for the first eight days after birth. After the eighth da the curl comes out. The Karakul sheep are famous for the production of these curled-wool pelts. A coat made of them costs In the neighborhood of $2000. Mr. Gage said development of a breed of sheep to produce the eurled pelts and which would be acclmated to this section would mean a new and valuable industry for this section. FRENCH GIRL, SELECTED QUEEN OF FESTIVAL. AS Paris Divided Into Factions Sup porting and Attacking Winner of Beauty Contest. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by Arrangement. PARIS, March 19. (Special cabfe.) The election of Mile. Thenot, the mother of an eight-months-old baby, as queen of the Nancy univers-ity mid lent festival, has split the city into two factions over whether the winner of a beauty prize need also be able to enter a virtue contest. The father of Mile. Thenot s son was a Rumanian student who killed himself because he had brought dis honor on the girl he loved. Now on the eve of the carnival, one of the factions is crying "scandal' and demanding her majesty's abdica tion. They are trying to persuade the dressmaker who promised to make the royal robes to withdraw the promise and are organizing demon strations throughout the city to de mand a fresh election. Mile. Thenot's partisans declare that, in selecting a queen, beauty and not necessarily sterling virtue is to be sought. They point out that the young woman was electee; zs to t oy a jury which included two deputy mayors besides other local dignitar ies and members' of the press. Mile. Thenot herself refuses to lay, aside her scepter, and those who agree with her are showing their loy alty by counter-demonstrations and displays of her photograp'-. in win dows. WASHINGTON, X. C March 19. Trusteeship for a third of the world's gold supply changes hands tomorrow when F. E. Scobey o Texas, succeeds Raymo director of the mint. the mint service institutions aggre gate $3,000,000,(100. The world gold supply is estimated at approximately $0,000,000,000.- Mr. Scobey, -when he takes the oath of office tomorrow, assumes supervi- Jiititutions and tons of precious metals and bars of gold and silver. Coins of all denominations will come under his charge. According to a reportTompleted to night by Mr. Baker for his successor, the total assets of the mint service in stitutions approximate $3,676,000,000 stored in the mints at Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco,- and the United States assay office at New York. Much of the enormous stock of gold is accounted for by the tremen dous influx of that precious metal Into this country since the war. Summarizing his five-year term as money maker for the government, Air. Baker said that the coin demand upon the United States mints was larger during the calendar years 1917 to 1920, inclusive, than during any period in the history of the service. During the war period, he said, approximately 2.693.000.000 separate coins were struck' off by the mints at Philadel phia, Denver and San Francisco, while the output for the calendar year 1919 alone was 839,000,000 pieces, or 446 per cent larger than in a normal, prewar year, such as 1915. gotiable Liberty bonds are missing from the Liberty bond branch of the treasury, W. H. Moran, chief of the secret service, said tonight. Secret service operatives have been sent to Richmond, Va and Char lottesville, Va., where two employes of the hranch wanted in connection with - the investigation of the loss, were reported to be, he added. The loss of the bonds became known Saturday, but the total amount missing had not been ascertained to night. Charles A. Clevenger, an em ploye in the branch, was also held for questioning. Secret service officials announced that no charges had been placed against him. Vs-ttMIBE mse up this week Gold assets ol SUIT AGAINST CORONADO COAIi COMPANY TO BE ARGUED. Union Will Have Hearing Before Supreme Court in Regard to Anti-Trust L-aw. U. S. VIEW IS REGRETTED MINISTER SORRY GENOA CON FERENCE REJECTED. Italian Official Declares America Cannot Long Stay Out of European Discussions. ' ROME. March 19. (By the Asso ciated Press.) The absense of Ameri can representation at the forthcoming economic conference t6 be held at Genoa was referred to with regret by Foreign Minister Schanzer in the course of an address in the chamber of deputies Saturday. There is nothing in the reply to our invitation." he said, "that partic ularly concerns Italy; in fact, the rear sons for the refusal of the United States to participate in the conference as set forth by Secretary Hughes, are essentially American political reasons. However, I think the United States cannot long remain aloof in European discussions." Italy, Signor Schanzer declared, has the greatest interest in the success of the conference. mere is at present, he said, a tendency to minimize the importance of the meeting and report it as futile. think this attitude is unjustified. The Genoa conference should be ooked upon as an event of extraor dinary International importance; per haps the moat important historic event since the war, in view of the fact that It is the first time victors and vanquished will discuss together their common interests. ' WASHINGTON. D. C. March 19. Cases of wide importance will be reached in the supreme court this week for oral argument and afMeast one that, of the United Mine Work ers of America ana others against the Coronado Coal company will be reargued. When last presented to the court Secretary of State Hughes was chief counsel for the mine work ers, and made the principal argument in their behalf. Their case seeks to obtain from the court a final ruling upon the ques tion as to whether a labor organiza tion can. be prosecuted under the Sherman anti-trust law on the charge of restraint of interstate commerce. The lower federal court held that it could be. but labor leaders who were convicted on this count following the coal mine strikes in Arkansas in 1914 contend that their unions, not being incorporated, are not subject to the Sherman act, and further that none of their acts was committed with the purpose of restraining interstate commerce. A prohibition case upon the out come of which, the government stated, will depend many millions of dollars in fines and penalties, also -Is in the docket for this week. The point to be decided involves the dou ble, tax and additional penalty pro vided in section 35 of the Volstead act to be assessed against those who illegally manufacture or sell liquor. There are now pending in the courts 700 similar cases, with fines aggre gating $1,500,000. ROAD SOUTH IS PASSABLE PORTLANDERS MAKE AUTO RUN TO SAN FRANCISCO. Carl S. Kelty and H. G. Cliickerlng Find Most of Road Good, but -Some Rough Going. GEDDES DENIES WAR TALK PURPORTED MISTAKE IN QUOT ING ADDRESS CORRECTED. No Statement Made That Four- Power Treaty Averted Struggle in Pacific, Says Ambassador. GHOST TRACED TO BED WIRES' SAID TO FUNCTION AS RADIO RECEIVER STATION. GREEKS RELEASE VESSEL France and Italy Expected to Ask Heavy Damages for Seizure. CONSTANTINOPLE, March 19. Conf irmation has been received here of the release of the Italian steam ship A'bbazia, which was seized by a Greek warship a few days ago on the ground that it was carrying contra band of war for the Turkish national ists. -France and Italy will ask heavy indemnities from Greece for her ac tions, according to rumors in Turkisn official circles Greece has- released the Italian eteamer Umbria which was held 24 hours and the relief ship Franceses, which was among the Italian vessels that were seized in the Aegiare and Black seas. The Francesca has pro ceeded to Novorossisk. I. W. W. APPEAL UNIQUE Prisoners Release Asked on Basis of "Patriotism" During War. NKwA'ORK. March 19. (Special.) Out of the flood of petitions to Music, Voices and Strange Crack ling Noises in House Almost Drive Occupant Insane. FALMOUTH, Ky., March 19. Ben jamin Wolfe, who lives in Pendleton county, two miles west of this town. declared today that antics credited to the "Antigonish ghost" of Nova Scotia are tame compared with recent hap penings in his home. Wolfe declared that his sleep had been disturbed at frequent interval.1 by electric shocks and he had been frightened almost out of his wits by crackling noises in the house. Music and voices in the air could be heard. he said, in nearly every part of his house, but particularly about his bed. umally, Wolfe says, he was almost driven insane after he had retired. when he distinguished from a bedlam of sounds the announcement that lecture by someone in Philadelphia would be put on. Wolfe then says he consulted with Fred Fisher, who had Installed a radio outfit on a nearby hilltop, and after an examination they have concluded that the wire mattress or springs in Wolfe s bed have the functions of a wireless receiver station.- Wolfe says the noises continue, but he is no longer fearful of "ghosts." GOAL OJMJILLED POSSIBILITY OF STRIKE STIM ULATES PRODUCTION. OAKLAND, Cal., March 19. Sir Auckland Geddes, British ambassador. today formally denied that he ever had said the four-power Pacific treaty had averted an imminent war, as had been reported in a version of an ad dress he made in Los Angeles, re cently discussed in the senate. Sir Auckland said that as soon as he" arrived here today on his series of visits to Pacific coast cities he In structed his secretary to prepare telegram categorically denying that he had mentioned an imminent war. The telegram, he said, would be sent immediately to the British embassy at Washington and through diplo matic channels to the capitol. It read; "San Francisco papers re port this morning that the British ambassador has been quoted as saying in a speech delivered at Los Angeles that the four-power treaty averted an imminent war in the Pacific. The ambassador categorically denies that any such statement was made by him either in a public utterance or private conversation." His remarks in Los Angeles, in a brief address at the City club, he said, were extemporaneous and dealt with world conditions in general, according praise to President Harding for call ing together the nations of the world. "I did not eay anything that had not been said a hundred times before," Sir Auckland stated. CABINET REPORTED UPSET Dictatorship Established in Bul garia, Is Statement. PARIS, March 20. A dispatch to the Herald from Vienna said It is authoritatively stated there that Bul garian militarists have overthrown : it was said they had established I WASHINGTON. D. C March 19. a dictatorship. .Between $170,000 and $200,000 in n- SAN FRANCISCO, March 19. (Spe cial.) Carl S. Kelty, tfice-presude-n of the Lumbermens Trust company of Portland, and H. G. Chickering, also of that organization, arrived here late yesterday by automobile from Portland, which city they left Thurs day morning. They reported a fairly easy trip. "It is a comfortable three days drive from Portland to San Francisco under present road conditions, said Mr. Kelty. "It is entirely feasible to cut the time down half a day by get ting up early and hitting the high places. Only professionals can do better than that. "Oregon gets all the bouquets for consistent good roads. Barring i mile at Jefferson, the stretch be tween Albany and Corvallis and the Smith hill, just north of Grants Pass, the only thing to disturb the motor. st's ideas of bliss on the Oregon end is the thought of speed cops. We left Portland at 6 o clock Thursday morning and pulledi up at the Medford hotel in Medford at 9:30 that night, after taking out an hour at Salem and another at Eugene for breakfast and lunch. We were ham pered by snow which stuck on thi windshield and made going precari ous at times. We left Medford at 9 o'clock Friday morning and struck deep snow five miles' above Ashland The Jackson county road authorities use snow plows to keep the road passable. All the snow in the Sis- kiyous is on the. Oregon side. "The road Is fine to Yreka. From there It gets progressively worse to weed, and between Sisson and Duns muir it Is mostly mud, deep ruts and sticky gumbo. There is about 20 miles of excessively bad going. We got into Redding at P. M. Friday and left there at 10 this morning. From Redding through Red Bluff and ten miles south of Anderson there Is plenty of rutty, bumpy road, with lew detours. Just south of Cot tonwood the pavement begins, and irom there to Vallejo driving Is joy. -ravemenu are smooth, curves wide and well banked and long tan gents make a temptation for speed. At Vallejo there is a choice of two ferries. From Oakland to San Fran cisco the motor ferry runs every 45 minutes. "In Oregon the weather was cold ana aisagreea'Die. jsiue skies ore- vailed south from Medford. We left Keddmg at 10 this morning and caught the 8 o'clock ferry at Oak land tonight. Aiybody who beats that will dream of speed cops." COLLEGE EDITORS CHOSEN Chief of Albany College Annual's Staff Announces Assistants. ALBANY COLLEGE, Albany. Or. March 18. (Special.) Harold Hof- lich, editor-in-chief of the Orange Peal, the college annual, has corn- Levels Surpassed Only by Peak of I Pleted the selection of the staff. He announced his assistants in this work as follows: Mabel Howard, associ ate editor; Minerva Braden, assistant editor; Gertrude Braden, organiza tions editor; Lural Burggraf. business manager; Dan Lawrence, advertising manager; Anna Holman, sales man ager; Miss Elizabeth Irvine, faculty advisor; Edward Sox, athletics editor; Lester Wilcox and Roberta Fry, art editors; Melvin Olen and Clyde Archi bald, feature editors; Helen Grigsby, senior class editor; Marion Patterson. junior class editor; Vera Green. sophomore class editor; Mildred Coie, freshman class editor. War Boom Approached, Reports Geological Survey. WASHINGTON, D. C, March 19 Production of bituminous coal in the United States, stimulated by the possi bility or a strike on or. after April 1, Is- climbing upward to levels never surpassed except during the peak of the war boom and the following in dustrial expansion, according to esti mates issued today by the geological survey. During the week ended March 11 the output of reporting mines was 11, 058,000 tons or 4,100,000 more tons than were minde in the correspond ing week of 1921, and only 2,000,000 less than the greatest total ever mined in a similar period. Anthracite production also increased, the total for the"week of Maroh 11 be ing fixed at 1,982,000 tons compared with 1.913,000 tons the previous week and 1,925.000 one year ago. LUCK "LUCK is that which happens when OPPORTUNITY meets PREPAREDNESS." OPPORTUNITY may come to you at any time. Be PRE PARED Jo meet it. Begin to PREPARE by build ing a CASH RESERVE in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. A substantial SAVINGS AC COUNT is the best form of PREPAREDNESS with which to meet OPPORTUNITY and it EARNS while it WAITS! START YOURS NOW! Savings Accounts opened for $1 or more THE NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL BANK PORTLAND OREGON Member Federal Reserve System Floyd is 11 years old and ha a striking personality. He has wandered all over the northwest, riding freight trains and receiving lifts by auto touristts. He was recently placed in a home at Spokane, but did not stay, according to Rev. J. H. Martin, dis trict superintendent of the Washing ton Children's Home society. U0-MILL LEVY HELD VOID Supreme Court Sets Aside Grays Harbor School Election. OLTMPIA, Wash., March 19. (Spe cial.) After setting aside a school election held in school district No. 44 of Grays Harbor county, the supreme court yesterday held that the 10-mill special levy voted at the election was void. Notices of election proposed the special levy "for building pur poses," but the certificate of election to the county commissioners read for school purposes." No special building plan was planned by the directors, the court found. One di rector testified that the board did not want to be hampered by-any re strictions, but that it contemplated building a gymnasium and auditorium and equipping a playground, and it there was any money remaining, to build a teachers' cottage. The decision censured the directors for the veiled proceeding and for holding an election for a special building levy without first having the sanction of the voters to the building programme, as the law re quired. - I " ' P0INCARE UPHOLDS WINE Drink Is "Health, Courage and Life," Declares Premier. PARIS. March 19. "If wine were bad for the health, this fact would have been known since tne days or the Roman and Greeks since the Genesis," said Premier Poincare last niht at a banquet held in connec tion. with the closing of "wine week." "America," the premier conttnuea, is, of course, the mistress of her own internal legislation, out. iw must recognize the truth aa stated by the Anglo-Saxon poet wine is neaun, courage and life. Lumber Mill Reopens. YAKIMA, Wash., March 19. (Spe cial..) The mill of the Cascade Lum ber company here, which was snut down when cold weather set in early last winter, has resumed operations, employing from 30 to 42 men. 6. A H. green stamps ror cash. Hol man Fuel Co., coal and wood. Broad way 353. 660-21. Adr. 3 JOBBERIES REPORTED DRUG, STORE, Olli STATION AND GARAGE ARE LOOTED. Phone your want ads to the Ore- ponian. Main 7070. Automatic 560-95. Corns? $170,000 IN BONDS GONE Negotiable Securities .Are Missing From TJ. S. Treasury. BIGGS BOY IS BACK AGAIN Lad Who Created Sensation Here Is Put in Juvenile Home. YAKIMA, Wash, March 19. Floyd E. Biggs, a red-headed boy who cre ated a sensation in Portland last October, when he appeared at the police station there and related a story of his hardships after running away from the home of his foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. "Weber of Grand View, Wash., and who subse quently was given a home by a Port land patrolman. Is once more in the juvenile home here after an extended absence, according to authorities. Blue Hay to your druggist t Stops Pain Instantly The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain in stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in two forms a colorless, cler liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid the action is the same. Safe, gentle. Made in a world-famed laboratory. Sold by all druggists. rrrme: Writ Bauer A Black. Chicago. DtpUjS far valuable book, "Correct Care of the teeU" H. D. Hall Complains That He Was Held Up, but Is Arrested on Drunkenness Charge. Three robberies, thought to be the work of a slippery pair of combina tion hoTdup-sneak thieves, were re ported to police last night. G. H. Ray, druggist, 401 Third street, was confronted by revolvers in the hands of a pair of masked men who demanded narcotics. When Ray told them he carried none in stock they shoved him Into the prescription room in the rear of the store, bound and gagged him, swore heartily and helped themselves to $15 from the till. C. E. Tabler, tender of the Shell filling station at East Broadway and Larrabee street, informed police that someone sneaked $21 from the cash register while he was waiting on a customer outside. Sneak tactics were employed in the robbery of Couchman s garage. Nine teenth and Couch streets. While the night clerk was upstairs working on a car someone made away with $100 from the cash register. H. D. Hall, who told the police he lived at 329 East Thirty-ninth street North, complained that he was held up and robbed of about' $4 at the roundhouse on Front street. Inves tigation by inspectors ended with Hall In jail, charged with being drunk. river was rising rapidly, height of 40 feet her. with a Woodmen to Initiate Claw. ESTACADA, Or., March 1 (Spe cial.) Eagle Creek camp. Woodmen of the World, after Increasing thetr membership iOO per oeni during the last SO days, nave launched aaothar oampalgn which will terminate with a big claae Initiation April . Th team and officer of Arleta camp of Portland will confer the dirre. CONTINUOUS 11 A. M. TO 11 P.M. Second and Last HV - -' 'i 1 . l,mtM m it , ia - NOW MARK TWAIN'S Woman Autolst Is Injured. Mrs. Annie Tenney, 17 East Thir tieth street South, sustained a frac ture of the right shoulder and In ternal injuries when an automobile in which she was riding collided with a street car at East Thirtieth street and Hawthorne avenue yester day afternoon. .She was taken to the Good Samaritan hospital. Hos pital attaches reported that she was badly hurt, but apparently not fatally. Mississippi River in Elood., MEMPHIS, Tenn., March 19. Flood stage on the Mississippi river at Memphis was passed today. The f NOW! " STTPnEMF COSTETIT TWITm H AND WM. FOX'S CiRKATRST OF" ALL BIG SIPBH PRODUCTIONS. 1 7 The storjr of a girl with a chiffon soul. Written by Fannie Hurst Directed by Frank Borzage both of "Humor-esque." "Women Must Weep" Special Bruce Oregon Scenic Portland cast. Toonerville Comedy Screenland News I ST.! ' " I "S '..J ( "A CONNECTICUT i5 a YANKEE" -'N i vi COVB-1 rr. r'J KfL S I V ': Li J I MERE WORDS CAN- f f NOT DESCRIBE THE PJl MANY WONDERS IN I If US J THIS SUPER- - A tC I i ATTRACTION FOR fl'l THERE NEVER WAS V ANYTHING LIKE . --J rjJ "A CONNECTICUT VT 7 ri YANKEE" i V J I ; U N- (J . m AMbafk IpsA MttHlliMtf IwMl alkaWMlil M It Has Sent All Portland on a Laf Jag! f NO ADVANCE IN PRICES I! I MATS. J J( L'blue mouse orchestra n - aawim IvKMMMit fiwwwf Sw f'"1 1 11th at Wash. I (toil