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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1923)
TUESDAY HORNING; JUNE 19, 1023 (ill . . ... . Issued 'Daily Except Monday by . . M ;. r; . x J, 4 TIIK STATKifrlAX PUBLISHING COMPA3CT' ' ' " ? v' !215 S. Commercial St.. Salem, Oregon, . (Portland Office. 723 Uoaid of Trade Building. Phone Beacon 1193) 'i : r" ; t MKMHFK OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS '- The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the nse for publi cation of all news dispatches credited-to.lt or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. R. J. Jlendricks - - , - - - . Stephen A. Stone. ' - - - - -Frank Jaskoekl - - - J- - . - t' TELEPHONES: Business Office - - Circulation Office -Jom Department Society Editor - - Entered at the Postofflce in Salem, Oregon, as second class matter: FACTS AGAINST FICTION I ' 'In a speech at Jackson, Minn., the other i day A. . C. ,,, . , Townley made the statement that farm lands and improye v, ments in America were mortgaged for 70 per cent of their actual value . This Is disputed toy statistics in the Depart w. ment of Agriculture at Washington, where the figures and ;if j figures -don't Iie--show that farm mortgages total less than , $8,000,600,000, while' the fair value of the agricultural lands . .. rand improvements in this country give a reasonable total of " $67,000,000,000. If what Townley tells the farmers were ' ' ' true, the situation would indeed ,be discouraging, but he has been woefully misinformed, and seems to be trying to, make everybody unhappy by the broad dissemination of his match less misinformation. ; v' i I A farm mortgage is riot necessarily an indication of fail : ing conditions and poverty : ' j j : . - Indeed it is the contrary, where" the money borrowed - has 'been used to good purpose, in needed improvements on the land, in setting out fruit trees, eto! and in the purchase ; of live stock that may with prudent handling be made to pay I interest and principal, besides keeping up and adding to the 'I; fertility of the soil. , - i "; i:- -i :;;. r5 :; ; : 'v ; V - -The-highest per acre average of farm mortgages9 may be i found in1 the richest sectionVof this country.' A' ' h Away back in the;time ofBenjamln' Frankliri; a cynic ' t said Philadelphia was an unsafe city in which to do business, because the people of that ' young and growing city , owed somuch ;moriey A .';r - S' . ;l 5;i ,; But' the reply was that they trusted one another, and had faith in the future i and loaned to those who had enterprise and resourcefulness and f need of money for new ventures and development - su . ,. And therefore the fact that much money was owed was a sign of a sound condition, especially as the money wa3 owed to one another of the people there ' .' -', '.::":' i-. THING 3 TO DO V Copyrit, 1CS3, Associated Editova. k .... " " ... . ; -, - T r: V- ' 1 ' ' ! T 1 The; Hat ., -a..- V.. j. J3 (This, Is a little 'act that any t group of glrHcan put on. It may :be eular&ed; kxd added to, as you .:. like. The actresses are six hat rnqdelsj f tha saleslady, and thre customers. It'f j fun for a dress-r- up play. ;),:- ''':':'-:::: - - r " The scene is a millinery shop. A I - couple: of -counters are; made of t drygpoda boxes. . The backs are knocked off and holes are made I I through the top. The hat ' models can sit Inside the boxes and poke their 'heads through the holes. ' Wheii scarfs are "draped 'around ; .th? .tases,; thei iteem Just heads on the- counters.) i . i i-. . First 'model: Not a hat's been sold todayl . . Second modelrf; The season's - slackj I heard, her say4 1 ' " ' Third model: I'd like to help. I wish I could'- ;',, -""!?' K9f r Fourth i model: Let's! how our heads! are more thanf iwod. Fifth model: ril tell you what i--let smilebe gay. : n ).' , . , Sixth model : AUract the 1 cus tomers that way.4 v . , jt First" model This looking sol em'tt rtoen'tajEM-:: V'-;.:. f (Enter .customer and saleslady.) Saleslady: This one is yery aim : ple,,8tUl r; 4 , . ' Customer (sees model wink): -Ztb bh V think I must be ill! ' 1 thouKhtl saw (model smiles) I feel so queer; V THE SHORT STORY, JR. AN HONEST SHORTCAKE "Blackberry 'shortcake and cream! Said Don, "That1, the food for a - dresm!" t:?'--. s-.; "Yo bet it sounds arrest; j - I scarcely csn wait," . r ; Said Dong, wtth v hungry-eyed . - ' gleam.,-?-v.-' . . , -V; '' ) ytAii'il-A 1:-. " "Come onDoug. let's- gQ berry ing," Donald cried, grabbing two shining; palls from. their hooks in the pantry. "I. know where there are Just, loads of ; swell ones. "We'll 'get enough for a shortcake for dinner."' r : , j . " ' ' "Yam, yum said curling up his tongue ration ! vplackberry; and cream! I could eat Douglas. In antici shortcake a bushel." The twins hurried down the-lane. V - : - - - -Manager - ; - Managing Editor - , Manager Job Dept. 23 583 683 106 those who had surplus funds The Blgzeat XUUe lpW lthe World ''1 Models Help iy ; I think I'd better, go,' my, deri2is ; (Hurries out.) , . . I (Enter a fussy glrLX H Yussy girl: I'd like ta see a dainty hat, ' ' ' ' r " ,' ' With frills and ribbons- aU of ; v;that..- - V ,; : : Saleslady: Now here's the very thing you wish (takes hat . off model and turns to girl, j The models all smile at the girl.) f Girl: f x shouldn't have had that other dish-, U.M....,Zl:r, Too much : ice cream, and all that cake - Oh, rye a call I have to make! Saleslady: Now, what on earth! (Old lady enters.) You wish a hatr-L . . . ; LjOldiidy :Ot;corse I, dpi Let's iwkVt'thatr ' Mr land! My eyes!. I knew that I don't belieTe I'll look at one. 5 t(tfeyes, horrledly.) 4 t Salfsudy (catches model smil ing: ) -Thfs awful heat ! Oh dear, my head! (Puts down hat and leares the room.) . ' , -':v ' . ' Models: I'd like to find the one - who saldMvn;?' ,ri;- - ' It pays to smile." Now look at J that, i " " . - r : -; -'' ' 'r Seems like -she'll nerer sell :--,ai hat. ' Jt.-a l, s',iHfJ, -'"-J- swinging their empty pails. They eooa came to a fine 4 patch of ber ries that Donald remembered hay ing seen from a distance. - It was even better than he had supposed. No one had picked there yet that season. The bushes hung . heary with the big. black. Juicy fruit, "Gee, isn't this great?" Douglas cried, as he set to work. After that only the musical "thump, thump" of the berries, hitting the bottom dt the buckets, broke the silence. Soon even that was heard : no longer. It took very little time to cover the bottoms, where the ber ries were so abundant. - , ' They quickly worked around the clump, gathering only ; the best. Their' pails were nearly full when; uddenly. j' both boys . stopped. There; right in .font of them, was a large ! slgn.l "POSITIVELY "'Q TRESSPASINO" It declared lit bold letters. J " . 1 " The twins rrouched low behind the bushes, their eyes big with fright. ("What are we going to do?" gasped Doug. "You're al ways getting us into some kind of a scrape." he added. "We'd better beat it .before, we , get caught."; v .. ' - "But what will we do with the berries?,, We. can't steal IhemC, r Arid the sequel prpved that "the repiy; was based on kbund reasoning, for the -foundations of many great fortunes that have come down the years were laid in Philadelphia in those old days while that city was the ing forces of freedom. , t . , " If there were no borrowers, what would become of the great bankers, brokers; bond buyers and owners of; the ac cumulated wealth of the country? 1 And who are safer borrowers than the owners of good lands? Such as the lands of the Salem district, for instance. The $500,000 bond issue of : the Salem school district must be made to reach over a period of seven to ten years, according to the letter and spirt of the trut. It is a sacred trust. It is a contract between the school directors and the people who voted the bonds. J Handled as intended, with a well considered program, this will make for economy. The district will get greater value for the money than if it were doubtfully supplied in dribs. But handled in any other way, the vote of so large a sum at once will prove a mistake. Let the record show faithfulness to the trust. The Slogan Editor, wil have to prore in .Thursday's Statesman that there is still a hop center. He wants your help. J 1 IX PASTURES NEW An American ' company has established an extensive pineapple canning industry in Ecuador and the cultivation of this appetizing fruit is being mightily expanded. The equator passes through Ecua dor and the climate is pleasantly propitious for the propagation of the pines. ' EDITORIAL GAL. ONE i I A DOUBLE-HEADER James Mlddleton Cox has added a newspaper plant at Canton, O., to -his collection. He must be fig uring . on another nomination. Harding has only one Ohio paper in the family. With two kites to his string Cox may figure that he has the president outfooted in' a pivoUl state. -f V , ' " " " " !i''iVJ The construction of the huge flaxwarehoose at the penitentiary FUTURE DATES I 4 ana is to J4 UkutMM at IMIIm. j una 19 to- 5 Salem Chatauaa taaaoa. Jan SO. Wdnalf Pamoa GrB( Jan. St. TBnrday Regional Ba4 Croat eonfaranra fa Salem. JTaaa St, Thsnday rifty-fiwt rvanWa of Orocoa pioaoort la Portland. July 4. Wednesday Automobile race fair - i groonda. . - .-. ... . -: -i - f t-i- -' -i . ; J, " Rmtmknp n It-OnM '-tat fair r 1 LOADS OF FUN Edited by John M. Miller. v'-t j And Thome, Centipedes f ; . .."How old is your little brother, Johnny?" Inquired Willie,, x ."J.ust year oW VfepHed John- V'-.'i Lr"iL h.ii;',':- :- f'Huh.JTvet got Ados just a year old, and he can walk twice as' well as yo Xrotheit':;fr: ' "He ought to; he's sot twice as many legs." ; , . , " ,.t 'Fire's Out" At, ' "l told her I. was burning, with lovo for her.'V , ' ,;. i -What did she do?"? ''Called her father, and he put me out." . ; , King Oat, Wild Dells Old Lady: 'Doctor, don't you think I should go to a warmer cli mate?" . v . I- t Doctor: "Yes. madame, but I am doing all I can , to sare you from it." . '; i "Well, wex can't fasten them back on the bushes, can we? And It Would be silly to leaare ; them here to spoil. Besides, we didn't see their old sign until after we had picked them, and 1 want a shortcake." ' C'- I 1 , i 'A11 right. . if you're a thleti But I'm going to take mint right up there to the house and give them to the owner. They belong to him,", said ' Donald, . Douglab grumbled that Don was crazy a he followed, him to the V farm house. However, he ate as many berries as he could on the : way "We've just been looking ; for two honest . boys like you to pick our berries,'' declared the Jovial faced farmer. "We'll pay you for all you ' pick; 4 And Mother.V he turned to his wife; ''what do you think about a nice I blackberry shortcake , for supper and two husky pickers to help us eat it?' rallying point of the gather will go forward next week. It will be of brick, with a concrete floor, and it will.be located out- Bide the wall east of the shops. The brickr is being burned at the penitentiary yard, and the neces sary lumber is being sawed by the mill there. It will be a big building, but it will not be big enough to take in aU the flax that will begin to go into It upon completion, about six weeks hence Some of the crop will have to be stored elsewhere. ; Another institution of learning, the Chicago university, is finding it Irksome to be tied too tight to a single denomination. It has asked the Northern Baptist con vention for a partial relaxing of the present bonds. Christianity la sot a' hampering influence. A Re ligion is vital to education. Theol ogy is not. " " ' Austria has been able to nego tiate ' as loan Tot I175.000.000. American financiers - are taking some -of it: Austria, of all the nations in the big war. is farthest along on the road to rehabilita tion; j though , she , was .of all' of thm Tf latest'-on. i her back for a long'. time after the peace' treaty was signed. Her rulers are "tot ing" fair with the world. . 4 The working of the hew , tariff law is amazing everybody. .The receipts so far show that it is a far better revenue producer than any of its predecessors. . Imports are mounting under the iaw 'in both dutiable r and nonduitable classes.' "It raises the question whether those who opposed the 1922 act on the ground that it would hold down the importations and those who favored it for the same reason were not equally de ceived. . The new ,tarif f law has evidently been a rule unto. Itself. TRAM'LANTED EYES A celebrated scientist, of .Vienna is making a wonderful reputation through his. "successful experi ments in transplating the human eye. It is said that he has been able to restore sight to the blind. This savors of the, miraculous, but if : he could, .straighten the 'vtfaon of those who. are mentally oblique, it. would be' still more Important. To snatch' an' eye from 'the 'dying to give sight to the living is mar velous, bat to lift the viewpoint of humanity would be a benefaction. Further details regarding the la bors of the Austrian genius will be received with interest..; . , . COST OF HA-JNO ? " One year ago what' was the full dollar of 1913 wduld buy 68 cents' worth of average merchan dise. Now the buying power of that dollar has further shrunk to 63 cents. In other yrptds, the cost of living is really almost 5 per cent more than it was last year and this in spite of the .fact that many prices have been re duced, j Hogs, for instance, are only bringing $6.75 at the Chi cago stockyards, which is less than has been known for twelve years. But we are not : living al together onpork-jiv - GIVE VS A SONG In connection with some sort of a silver Jubilee the city , of New York Is in need of a song. There fore.' ''a prize of $1000 is offered for ' the words and music- of a song that shall, best represent the spirit of the old town. They have had "The Bowery" and "The Sidewalks of New York." 5 but they want one that will hit both East - Side and West Side. The skyline and Wall Street have never yet inspired the ballad mongers. There is material . a- plenty for the song-builders and t is not likely that the advertised void will long be empty. Within a few weeks New York will have a ballad that Mayor i Hylan can warble for the entertainment of every arrival. r . '!, ;.. ' BANISHING THE FOG . The people of London" are go ing to ab lish fogs. They are not sure that this can be done by act of parliament, yet they are of the belief that some legal enactments may help. Samples of some of the heavy fogs have been chipped oft and essayed. It is found that the average fog of 97 per cent density includes thirty-units of smoke and coal dust in its make-up.! There are some 9,000,000 chimneys in London. ' Every stove or fireplace has Its individual top-piece. When they are all going full blast and the'r air is moist or s rainy the chimneys can create a fog: condi tion of their own. If the dust, dirt and smoke can be extracted from the fog that which Is left becomes . reasonably transparent,' So the Londoners figure that if they can clean up the chimneypots and outlaw some of the smoke and grime the fog will be to thinness that ' will reduced permit neighbors to recognize one anoth er. It Is worth trying, at any I rate.,. EINSTEIN'S THEORY FILSIED ' Out' of the millions who have heard of the Einstein theory of relativity thee were up tilW a week ago but twelve besides Einstein himself who had the faintest idea what it was all about. But, thanks to the motion-picture Industry, the long reign of dark ness Is over. Hencefbrth relativ ity will .be - as easy as a' fox trot or a flivver. That alusive theory has : been imprisoned in a screen story so that now its nieanins is simple to the most unscientific of buman beings, j Indeed, the more unscientific he is the" more readily will he grasp the Einstein theory visualized in a four-reel shocker. Audiences are said to come away from the theater muttering des perately "It Is true haven help us light Is bent!" THE DEVIL'S FUNCTION To think, to speculate, to won der,' to query these imply Imag ination, and the devil has just one function In this, universe- to de stroy, to kill or suppress or to di vert or prevent the imagination. Imagination Is the divine spark, and old Beelzebub had had his hands full ever ' since that spark was born. . "As you were," is his one i military command. His dia bolical energy Is challeneged to its utmost - when he hears! the words "Forward march!" There is not much nothing -of beauty or no bility or achievement in the world that he has not fought; and all of it has .been the fruit "of imagina tion, the working of .the creative mind. Franklin K. Lane's Let ters. '-' ' . - - ! THE RURAL MARATHON . Dashing damsels who hunger to win Marathon honors should take heed to some figures recently com piled by an indefatrgafafo statistic ian. ? These1 relate - t& hhh number of miles traversed daily by a farm er's wife-'In performfng:,her j little tasks in the kitchen! ' It seems that the-minimum -nhmbe ! is twelve miles; which she gains dur- ing the course of constructing the three hearty meals a farmer ; and his help are wont to consume. - This does I not include extra trips made to the henhouse, the fruit, cellar, dairy and. the steps taken in her daily housekeeping. These, it is estimated, would eas ily run the grand total up to twen ty miles. , t r Here Is a glittering opportunity for those restless If em ales, who en gage in! dancing ; Marathons to prove 'their superior endurance. Just maray a farmer and they can turn their energy to good use. al though .they will secure no public ity or plaudits, while doing so. But it is possible that the blithesome girl who can shake a wicked foot for sixty hours.running in a danc ing; contest j won Id faint' from fa tigue in half a day if she under took the less frying role of presid ing over the cuisine on a. farm. , Many -sincere church ' members of various denominations regret the 'undue attention given by pure ly 'religious conventions to the scientific question -of evolution, and 'yet something more than fu tile' wrangling and dteedfficatlon might come-to all this if It were to lead . both the church and sci ence to come together tnd' defin itely decide where the province of one ends and that of the other be gins. Several months ago a New York physician announced impres sively. that he: was about to launch a new' association composed : of leaders in all branches of learning, both sacred - and profane, who should put their heads " together and solve all the problems of the wqrld. The grand' idea , of the earnest doctor everybody has al ready forgotten- his name was talked to death: within a week of its birth. Too much was attempt ed. But if acknowledged leaders of the two' distinct field c'ould on ly be brought together to agree upon a -modus vivendi It ; would surely be a great help -1 j ' ' HOLD A SPELLING BEE WITH NUMBER ONE ;;i . Recently, at a BDelline bee helt in a country school, according to a news tem in an r exchange. . a former champion went down to de feat because he misspelled "Suc cess" with one ;"c". The erstwhile chamoion Is not the only man who suffered defeat because he spelled "Success" wrong. . ,-iI,r'::- - : Ever since time began men have been failing because they do not know how to spell "Sucess." There spring. to m'nd at' once half a dozen men who . worked hard to become successful bank ers, but who failed miserably be cause .they mlspelled "Success" so --M-o-n-e-y.-.-..- r. ; And. there are the famous cases of Napoleon and Alexander y and others who landed uo in an'actual or, figurative St. Helena because their Idea of spelling 'Success" was so "C-o-n-q-u-e-s-t." --. s- .And hosts of business men en down daily to defeat because-their spelling of "Success" la faultV: they misspell it so "P-o-w-e-r." .Tbere are other incorreet siell- lnrs of "Success" there is one so many fail In-"F-a-m-e." And 0, P-o-p-u-!-a-r-I-t-y." Perhaps one of the best wavs to spell "Success'' Is the old-fashion ed one "S-e-r-v-l-c-e " At' any rate. It won't hurt to hold ; a little spelling bee with Number One vrv nnm in urhii 4-and ask thin Number One. "How do you spell 'Success'?" , 3 A GREAT SYSTEM There has been a legislative la alleged star- qulry concerning an Tation;farmJln.HlI 5unS-nd 'realrrethe rdicTne. used It was found that the .absence or a diet was the bfg card. f auen -.j,. The diet .s.lmply There wasn ....-- :zn h.d gators founa two P"" ""avs: not tastea 100a ior lu' ' Apparently, they were ose rivals ut. a Mv. but they ratner wm - -r a said they had never W better ta their lives ana iucj - -any goggle - eyed bothering around. - It wa8,tneir own business. -If theyrwanted pay money for . the privilege of SoinR without food it was their Private ; concern. Also there were two women at the sanitorium who had respectively fasted for nine teen and sixteen days and who nrA inst .heeinninK to saiu mcj 4,,- .ninr health. They were Just resUng on cots in the open sun-lla-ht and doing Without food. Did anybody have the right to inter- . ' - j 4..A. h o r era la at rerei" ine uucw practically no expense. . He gets ing and he furnishes no food. The patients pay him $25 a week end are happy and free of pain. VHEN A MAN STANDS OUT (Herman J. Stich in Los Angeles :. Times) v. '" "How did you happen to , ad .noA this fellow?" once asked Charlie Schwab of the manager of a large steel plant. . "Well," explained the mans ger, "he was the foreman of the day shift and I noticed that when te day shift went off duty and the night shift came on he stayed on the. Job till he had talked over the day's problems ' With his successor. That's why."".'- t-.i: i . : ;The many are vsaperf iclal and indifferent. v . ' ; : 1 ;As soon , as a man realises and .eta on - the i knowledge that he Is as much interested in the business as the bossfsHbeoBS: merely sup- Dlvlnz the bhpital he immediate ly sUnds oit from the rest. " The most vaiuaDie ana me mosi sought for employee is not. neces sarily the brainiest or the clevejr; est. . . - i . . ; -s .. ; It Is the man who works hard est, thinks deepest, puts himself out most and is generally willing to be uncomfortable, for the good of the "house." Wa'are ifav more Indebted, to in dustry ana loyalty than to Ingen uity; an ounce of honest-to-good-ness interest is frequently worth at least a pound -of talent. J It is the man who can be. de pended upody under any and-all aorta of condition . to fall In ajnd dq his level best, ; who gets a pro- mouon and a bonus. .:-' ". ; r The Democrats of Qhio ; are or ganizing 'viotory pluha'v.for serv ice in .the. coming ijatlpnaV cam paign...'. The plan la being; fostered by. State Chairman Bill Durbin1 of Kenton, who la., the Main f street legerdemainist of . the, Buckeye stale. Durbin. is the , fellow- who can pull a bunch of rabbits jout of a silk hat with his hands ttfed be hind him. , ; ; ' . r . ' " STARTING ' : I, -1 REGULAR V ; !,v PRICES -, V.;;;; J, at the pv - Jy xS y & t WURLITZER Jjr ' .My W l Xacoming today :p. : zfl V , J Z; V- JACKIE COOGAN IN "DADDY" 0 ; ' - ' - , MOVIE : XIL.GII- ' 0. Warren Kerrigan In Coast of Opportunity." The ' OREGON . t - Gloria Swanson In 'The rrodigal' Daughter' ' Greenwich village! The magic name of ..Washington;; Square, America's Quatier Latin, has been the magnet which has attracted many persons to Manhattan, rath er than the "more general lure' of the big city and the White Way. Especially have those with artistic yearnings been drawn like moths to the "yellow lamps" of the Vil lage. :" v . " . v - . What is probably the -most ef fective presentation of life about the .; Square evfir ,.. given on the screen is. included -In. "Prodigal Daughters.", a Paramount picture starring Gloria Swanson a Sam Wood production; which ,will be thee feature at the Oregon theatre for three days -beginning today. It is here that "Swiftie" Forbes, otherwist, Miss Swanson, . seeks the realization. of the freedom for her sex that the J demands r 'and finds harder to exact from her fa ther. ; With her she takes her sis ter, Marjory, played by1 Vera Rey nolda, but the latter gets-married and there quite upsets the con yentions of the Villagers or that particular portion of them which regards the marriage tie as a bond indeed. . t ' w ; :. .. - ,v ' ,'; Her studio is a marvel of real ism and pictu'resqueness, Unique mottoes adorn the;.walis. .There are .queer.; cublstIq1hiigSrt every thing '" seems lb',' be-J i protesquely ihaped;, . The. V Villagers"ri are all yonng, smocks an'd jCordurqys andF nowng ties, bobbed, bsJrK,oi the Simple Siinon variety long haired men and ahorhalrdwism611"-" predbmlnatfngj t ( : Starts Fri. 7:30 P. M. OREGON A tender little story filled with lauKhter i and heart thrcbs. You'll find the most ' Adorable known -f t M j TODAY TWO GREAT STARS TH EO DO RE RO BERTS ' The Grand Old Man of the Screen lixj ,1 I !i tl III :-.'.c i(Jm . GO. Here Swiftle Is living ner c. life, rubbing shoulders with unconventional chaff of the .: And she Is just a bit disillusic Her own sweetheart played Ralph Graves is almost force: abandon his hopejDf making ; see her mis'takershe is figt' against her own better self, i end Is one that will probably -main unguessed, like a good r tery story, till the last scenes. 1 supporting cast is excellent. J. Warren Kerrigan, star many romances, is seen to adv tage in "The Coast of Oppcrt ity" a W. W. Hodkinson Cor: atlon release, which began & day's " run at the Bligh, the: yesterday. , 1 1 The "Coast of Opportunity" the ' story of Dick Brlstow, young mining engineer who ' been left a copper claim in I ico which Julian Mafr. a railr magnate owning land adjoL Bristow's claim, attempts to : from him. How Marr's nc part owner of the land, aids I tow in his fight' against the r nate, and they win, not only t fight but each other forms a L" i ly entertaining plot. ; The supporting cast Is excel: headed by Fritzl Brunette, 1 beauty and winsome' person: are always refreshing. ' The C. tlon is by Ernest C. Warde by this 'picture adds one m success to his already long 11. ' In the list of presents -given the" Duke of York and his. be: bride one has failed to notice t presence of a rolling pin ar vacuum cleaner. ' .? TEETHING AND HOT TTt VH are very hard oa the little c: Summejr diaordera of Stomach i ijowela, weakening- diarrhoea, 'etc' infantum, quickly controlled fcy CHAMBERLAir;' COLIC and DIARR1ICI REMEDY Helps children and older persons ! x WARREN j KERRIGAN ; i - i In ill- J:-j iU-H : Jhc V . .i Coast or i -1 tOcDoriiinltv i X 5 x. SEE the modern jazz mad girl at her dizziest pace. See the ' riotous revels, the mid- night bathing party. Soe J Gloria's flashiest love- ? '