The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 27, 1930, Page 7, Image 7

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    I -
f
FUfflL TODAV FOR
IRS. F.l CREE, 01
Mr. Fannie Walt Cree.
daughter of Mrs. J. J. Mathik
Jtoute- f, died- at her mother,'
horn at the age of 81, December j
K. after a short illness. Mr. !
SS?1 v Cres ha mde r home
.rlth hr mother since the death
Of her husband, Thomas Cree, at
the Falrriew community near
Oreaham about It years ago.
She is aum-ed by the follow
in; children: C. E. Cree of New
berg. Mrs. C E. Clark of La
comb, Mrs. J. H. Hadley of Me
MinnTille, George T. Cree of Sa
lem, Mrs. Ted O'Brien of Klam
ath Falls. Mrs. j. j. Mathis of
Balem and J. B. Graham of Moun
tain View. California.
Mrs. Cree was born In HO In
Corlngton, Kentucky and spent
Iter childhood in Kentucky and
Ohio. She married Thomas Cree
In Covington in 18 IS. They mor
ed to Kansas for a time and set
tled in Oregon near Albany in
Linn county in 1S9. They re
mained near Albany on their
f rm until about 19 ; years ago
when they mored to Fairs-lew;
Mr. Cree. died daring the follow
ing year. Mrs. Cree was a mem
ler of the Free Methodist church
nearly her entire life.
' Funeral senrlces will be held
Saturday, December 23, at. 11 a.
m. from tbe Metzger chapel at
Cresham, with interment at the
Cresham cemetery,
v J ; ;
Derby Expects
To Start Work
Here Next Week
Early next week F. N. Derby
)xpeets to start rebuilding or his
Front and State street nroDerty
gutted by fire & week ago. Mr.
'Derby said yesterday that build
ing had been, delayed - vending
complete adjustment of the fire
insurance policies. The property
was protected by insurance.
Mr. Derby is as yet undecided
bn the method he will .follow in
handling the jrork but probably
he will employ a competent orer
seer and not let a general con
tract. He hopes to hare the build
.lag ready for occupancy again
.within (0 days from the time the
work is started.
Men irvLa Poma
Seek Bodies of
Their Neighbbrs
SA.LTA. Argentina. Dec 2
(AP) In the little Tillage of La
Poma, hidden in the rugged foot
hills of the Andes, the crude
adobe huts which were the
homes of its families, were piles
of wreckage tonight and . men
went about turning orer the
heary blocks looking for the bod
ies of their neighbors.
Disaster . in the form ot an
earthquake- took at least 33 lires
there on the day before Christ
mas and 60 mor persons were
seriously Injured. Most f the
bodies hare been reeorered but it
was almost impossible to make a
definite tally of the number of
casualties.
Pro Golf ers Not
To Ask Share of
Each Gate Taken
CHICAGO. Dec 28 (AP)
The Professional Golfers associ
ation has made peace with the
rarloua sponsors of open tourna
ments by agreeing to forget
about Its demand for 10 per cent
of net tournament proceeds.
The demand, which caused a
storm of protest and threatened
to i disrupt the big winter-golf
campaign at sereraf points, was
.. withdrawn by Albert R. Gates,
business administrator for tbe P.
G. A. who said cash for the up
keep of the organization's tour
nament committee would be ob
tained for some other, source.
fiAAfE XEXT TUESDAY
PRUITLAND. Dec 20 The
Fruitland basketball team has a
rim scheduled with the Salem
Wranglers f at the Y. M. C. A..
Tuesday erening at 7:00 pJ m.
This will be a practice game for
trio. irriiiManrt auintet in prepara
tion of tbe Sunday school league
of Salem in which tney wm join
after the first of the year.
Radio
Programs
atardar. DoeaatWr ST
4. XSX 11SO Ke. rertlaaa
:45-raraa Fleibee.
T :00 Whit Wiaard. -(
T:l5 Morniag aeroaado aai aea-fc,
7:43 raaUly AlUr hoar.
- S:15 Orfa aioiic. . . .
- p -0 Elaior Tiaewt, teaor, ftBi.
9:15 Grant Merrill, plaaiat. B3.
;30 Kawacaatiag. SBS. '
p't S'ine-l'orTr-PiT Special.
10:00 Ward Irvlaad. teaor. KB9.
jq-15 Robert Meacaa. teaor. KBS. .
10-30 Radio Bor Friend NB3.
j 1:00 Maadow Larks, KBS.
11:15 Boa Bag.
11:45 Tha ProXeaaor. .
j j ;oo Weather report aad im.
12-01 Happy Hoar Girl orchatra.
, 1 :OJ Marshall Sohl. nor, IfBS.
"1:15 Orgaa roaeert, KBS.
. i:i Ron 'a Rhythm Reraa.
J :1 j Stadia program. .
g -00 Matinee ia miniatare. SB 3.
i S :30 Moaieal Racketaora, KBS.
, 8:43 Chat CaUiora. baritone. KBS. -4:90
Orgaa concert, KBS.-.-S
:00 Silent. ,
8:00 CoanopolitaaaV KES.
' :0 Sight ia India.
- S:S0 Kreratat band, KB 3.
10:00 Snaahla progTaaa. KBS.
" 10:30 Wbirhrtad arehaatra. KB.
j1 -00 Via Meyera. ercheatra, KB 4.
11 :00-$ ;00 BeraUora. , - ,
KGW 20 Kc PortUad
ramtioaal aerrico.
9:42
T:00 Orgaa. . .
7:30 Rt.rt tha Day, NBC.
8 -OO H.ppy Tiaa. KB0.
:00 KBC. - -. . -. ; , : .
:15 Cookiar en. -l:4Wra
aad Home hoar WfW.
I0:3i) fiajraii ae of the Air. KBa
il:T0 Foreig FoUey htacbMa, KBC.
1:30 Orraa- ! . .'V'V.
l;(o-T Criar. -
:00 Or
1 ' . 11 seasmea 1
BUTTERFAT PRICE IS XQWERED 3c
JULY WmkTOTURES I'W "DOWN
Butter at Wholesale on
Portland Market is
2 Cents lLower
PORTLAND, Dec. Z(AP)
Wholesale butter market opened
2 cents lower on extras at 30 cents
a pound, standards at 2 J cents,
prime firsts at 28 cents, and 1
lower on firsts at 27 cents,
to he in line with declining out
side markets, but the market was
regards . iocs demand.
Creamery butterfat bid was down
S Mat. k a .
Err mirWt nnonoif .tixii anii
demand fair.,
General Markets
POKTLA.KD. rev Dee. 18 (AP)
Predate exehengo, set prieea: batter, ex-
: etaaaorde 2: prima firsts 28;
Iirsta ST. Ern- (mk . .v
medians 1$. ,
Fruits, Vegetables
rek frail oranges, aarels,- packed.
t9l Jamais, stock. 82JO0S.6O;
ffJPffrit- rriS! U9t Anions.
SJ.25; limes, 6-os. carton. $1.50; bann
aae. 6 la.
. Lemons California. 5.506.TS.
Cabbaga local. lQifce lb.
Cueambera hothonee. 11.50 ?1.05.
Potatoes Oron Descfcstes. $1.60; lo
cal. $11.25: KUmath (ttu, S1.SO; Ya
kima. ll.SO cental.
1 Onions selling priea U retailers: Ore
gea Xe. 1 grade. TOO 80c
Artichoke Calif oraia, $1.25 QUO
dei.
Spinach local. T585e.
Cranberries eastern 817.50 SIS.
Hoefcloborrioa faner. lt12e lb.
hfeleaa Casabaa. 3e lb.
Srapee emperor, 67a lb.; Valara.
Il.tS erete.
l.a:ery I sac y. (OvTJi par doses.
Peppers ball green 7 (i Be lb.
SHt potataaa Oaliforaia. SU04a
pr R.; aastora SJ baal.
i:aiiftowr Orefoa. 75e$l crata.
Baaaa Calif oraia, 16020a lb.
Pea a California. 14 15c
OarUe new. S&10e.
ToasaUoa bothoaae. $4.8004.85
crate; CaHforaU. S1V50 tug. repack;
Maxieaa. $V75 lag; repacked.
Dressed Poultry
PORTLAND. Ore.. Dee. 26 (AP)
Poaltty tnrker prices aiixer. doera to
2e lower en extreme weights, high or
lev; la ap for middle weights, aroemd 11
la ll panada. veatiooe are oo o. l
(baring rieea Alire. Heary baas wr-
er 4i Iba, 17318c; median baas, la
to dtb Iba, ltfylae: light bens, 10;
spriBga. IT & 18c; Pekia dneka. A lba
aad oTer. lTl$c; turkeyt. Ko. 1.29
ie.
Nutst Hay and Hops
POBTTjAKD.' Ore.. Dee. 2 (AP)
rnits waiatrts. California aw no. r,
27e; alawada, 1420e; panata.
I3z: vecaaa. 27W50e; xuoerta. ltu
-4c.
Hay rholeaal baying prieea, do-
lirered Portland, eastern Oregon timo
thy. $22.50023: do ralley. $19ai.60:
alfalfa. $18.5010.00; elorar, $16; oat
hay. $1: arrow. $78 8 toa; aelling prieea
ai to as asore.
Bopa isso crop. i0Qi7e.
Portland Gram
PORTLAND. , Ore..
Doc. 26 (AP)
Wheat latareat
Open High
lw Close
May 68 i 68
68 68
Jaa. .65
65 65 T4 65
65 65 65
Dec. 65
Caab aaarketa: w
heat: big Bead bloe-
ateaa .70: soft white, weatora white. 60;
hard -winter, northern Bprras, weatera
red 3. I
Oats: Ko. 2 S lb. white 24.50.
Cora: No. 2 K. Y. shipmeat 2S.50.
Millrea: aUadard 17.50.-
Portland Livestock
PORTLAND. Ore, Dee. 26 (AP)
Cattle 109. ealree 15: steers, aho stock
aa.Sv0e.e-: aaodiaai T.aoses.su,
Stoora SOO-llOO HS good S.5O0S.OO.
Vodnat T.5063S.5O: commoa 6.25a
T.5A. Steers 1100-I30O lb-. goo O.ZJ
8.T3; medium T.50v8.25; heifers
550-S.60 lbs. goad 7.25 7.75; asodjnat
COO O 7.25: common 5.00(36.00. Cows,
good S.OO6.SO. Commoa aad medium
4-50 0.OO. Uv eatter sn cotter s,
.. Bn (yesrHnrs ezeraded) S.Oo
(r5.75: eatter. common ana meaiam t.so
GrSOO. Vealora. milk fed. 1O.OO0
11.00: .mediom 8.00 10.00; enll and
eotnmoa 5.0008.80: ealrrs 250-500 Iba.
8.00 0 10.00: commoa aad medium d.50
8.00.
Hoca 1500. iacladinr 1140 direct: ao-
tahl-r steady.
(Soft or oily here aad roaatiag plga
e-crtnded). Light lights 140 lbs, $8.25
4.5. Light weight 160-180 Iba,
a.61: light wetrht 180-ZOO Ibt,
0.50; medinra weight 200-220 lbs. 8.25
CtO.SO; aaedlOBt weight 2Z0-75O IM4 s.uo
i 23: henry weieht 250-200 Iba, T.50
CrS.OO; henry weight 20O-85O Iba 7.00
trs.M. fackinr t79-su ma, aee
diom aad good 6.757.50. Feeder aad
atocker pigs IT0-I3O iba, good ana
choice 8 50 ($0.50. r
Sheep 465. Including 312 on. contract,
qtiotably steady.
Lambs (00 lbs, down) $6.50 7.00;
medinm 5.006.50: all weights, common
4.006r S.OO: yeorlinr wethers 00-110
Iba). awdium to rhoiee S.6005.00. Cwea
0-120 lbs, Btedinm to choice 3.259
$.00: awes 120-1501bi.. saedim to choice
2.002.60. All weights, call and com
moa 1.00 432.00.
Portland Produce
POBTULKD, Ore, Dee. IS (AP) -lfiik
fcattorfat Sa lower. Raw milk (4
er seat, St.10tfi2.30 ewt, delirere4
Port was leas l per eoai; graoa u muz.
1.70. Butterfat Oelirerea ia Portions
tic ' ' . -
Poultry eerlr tarter aaarket tone
steaor to cent lower tartars Ko. 1 29
Qtir.. Other poaltrj aacaaaged.
Potatoes teee aaeaaaged.
2 VagsVoads. KBC.
8:00 Jameses, KBC.
S:l$ Black aad Geld room.
S :S0 Tea timers.
4:10 Smolia aad Stone. KBC
4:45 Hire Boad at Adreatara. KBC.
8:00 Orgaa.
S:1S Varieties.
S:S0 Taller Man. NBC
8:00 Pamrosea aad GibWos. KBC.
7:00 Relfe'o dsnee orchestra. KBC
8:00 Cireas, KBC '
S:SO Ann 'n Andy, KBC.
S:4S 8biles, KBC
9:00 Miastrels.
9 :Se Chronicles,
j0:O Dvigbt Johaeea's ercheatra.
10 : 30-1 2 :00 Spotlight . re me.
. XOnr 949 Kc Pertlsad
S:00 KOIK's clock.
7:00 Orgs.
Tree Karrr Bird.- i
8 rOO Mrstis grab bag.
. 9:00 MerrTssakera.
9 :80 Tremala's orekestra.
10:00 Melodtaaa. - -
HO TnUrnatioaal Kitchen.
llt0 Stadia aaroltles.
IS U0 Orchestra.
1:00 Hosteas of the Air.
2:30 Hawaiian entertaiaers.
3 :4S Cuckoo alas. :
S: 15 Newspaper.
8:00 Oerapaook ot the Air. -'
8:80 Kiddies' elob,
8:00 Orgaa.
8:30 Jack aad Jin.
T:00 Varied orchestra.
10:00 Stotsoa eyaeepators.
11:04 WeKlrof'a OrepeniaBS.
1J:0O-1j0O Xerry-Oo oaad. (
XOAOi-SSS Xs. CorfaXUs -'
12 :e-l rOO Farm aowgmaa, ...
8 :30-7 :S0 fan pTBsrsaa. -
Salem Markets
Grade B' raw A uUJc
deliTered la Salem, f2.10
to&2Sewt.
Butterfat at farm 25-SOc
Salem 27c . x r
nUXT AITS TBOZTABXEJ
Price paid to growers s Bslea fcuiM.
Daeamber 2-6. .
Apples; fsncy
je.is
Jtedrass
.75-1.25
ItJUTtSTJa
Oaioaa '
V. 8. Ko. 1 ,.
U. 8. Ko. 2
-50
Potatoes
V. H. Ko. S
so ;
.02
1
0 -
-7
Sonaab, aer lb.
Cnbbara :
8piaach
Celery, per dee.
Bancaed Tearatahma
Taraips, per des. bunches ,
'Beets, per do, bnnehea "
Carreta. per dos. boneheo -
40-.60
40
40
40
Radishes, per doi. benches
Graea onions, per dos. benches 40
TZTTiU '
Retail Prieea. Dec SJ. ltSO
Calf meal. 2$ lbs. , 1JO-1.45
Scratch, tna S5.00-40.0e
Corn, whole, toa S7.O0-4O.OO
uraeked aad rronnd. ton 38.oo-4I.oo
Mill ma, toa .20.00-21.00
Rran. ton 22.00
Egg math. ewt. 2.25-2.45
zoos
Baring Fxleee. Dec. SS. 1S30
Kxtras
20
Standards
Uedinias -
.IS
.1$
POTJ1.TBT
Baying Prieea, Doe. 86. 1S30
ftootere, o d
0T
Broilers, colored
14
Heariee, bens
Medinm bens .,
IS
10
OS
.'JJ-JO
i
11
Light hens
Turkeys. No. 1 toms
Tarkeys. No. 1- heas
Tarkeys, as za
OBAXH ATD BAT
Xatu PUcaa. Doe. 26. ISM
Wheat, weatera red . . , .St k
80ft waite o
Barley, toa
Oata, grey, bm.
.23.00 to
21.00
White, bo.
ZH$3
Hay: baylag prieea
Osts aad retch, toa
11.00-12.00
11J0-12.00
Clorer - . . ...
Alfalfa, ralley.
secoad ratting IS. -18.
F.sktora Oregoa
.22.00
.15.00
1J0
Uo
PEPPERKarr
Oil -
HOPS
Top grade
WAXinTTS
16
Price
21
Worth PaeUte Vat
rrsaqoettes
Fancy
MICKEY MOUSE
WSillGUCSS
XU. GO SEW HOW
MINNIE FEE US APTEtK
I AU.THC RECENT"
POLLY AND HER
KALEIDOSCOPE
-aJ JHOULTD
If
r
at
WORRYy 1 SHESMlSSlKT Sj
aW . ea ii I
- Wi.
LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY
AROOMD ALLX HcAJciNG " , 7, f '
TMFV CANfTGN ME AtJDB FVJT ILL A ' 1
TO 6"yESrSWftM !
r I
TOOTS AND CASPER
f IT -WAg jlCE or the hoofers C - v : v.m
T0OB1cg! IF ) WAb fSg. I I OTTl
oar?, i ccxET S25r uax VXSraS? J
.- -jf-X V . FEET, . I : :
) Hoa Kms Feaasma Syaaimia. lac. Coast Seamo oama hiiim4 ' I "I
The OREGON STATESMAN, SalecL Oregon. Saturday ftlorning, occemDcr 27, 1930
New Crop Lacks Help
Of Uncle Sam;
"96 Returns
CmCJLGO, Dec 2. f AP)
Wheat collapsed todsp to the low
est lerel for Jolr delirery 'here
since 1888. Selling- which smash
ed - Tallies down was ascribed to
European sources. Jarjr wheat,
representing: the 1921 crop, which
unlike the 1930. crop has been
without Darin- support from gor-erameat-backed
bodies, was spe
cially handicapped by eomprehea-
sire adYlees Indicating- the condi
tion ot the growing domestic win
ter wheat crop was somewhat
above the usual average for this
time of rear.
Wheat closed unsettled at near
ly the day's lowest flgnres. 4 to
3 cents per bushel lower than on
Wednesday. Corn closed 3)4 to
2 cents down and oats to 1
cent off.
Boris L. Lerner. who could not
speak Knglish when he emigra
ted from Russia six years ago.
has completed high school work
and now is attending the Unl
rerslty of Texas.
Iargo
Jf
-It
Standard .
Soft shell
Fancy
Large
Standard
ICayettea
Fancy
.25
.IS
s
Large
(DeliTered ia S-ooaad ban)
Meats
Light amber balros
- Balros aad pia
pauama
30-35
$5-40
40-42
42-45
45-SO
-04
-03 H
-03
-03 Vb
.02 to JD
sZAT
Bsyiag Prices, Dos. 26. 1S3S
Tjambs. top 05K-.0S
Hogs. 160-200 lbs- ,
Hogs. 200 lbs, ap
-S.T5
Steers .
Cows
Heifers
-05-.06U
.JS-.03
.8.00-6.50
00-.12
11-1$
Dressed real
Dressed bags
WOOI.
Coarse
Medinm
.14
-IS
acoHAia
Old
Kid
-18
3S
PALS
BUT
5rt& 1DOJT
WHAT
aa
r
mm
I
aVo,
:gTis
mess. "znu.. 3i i rv sav ik v, s l
The New Feudalism
Present economie trend likened to old English feudal sys
tem, wherelat small IsjadhoMer surrendered rights to overlord ia
retnns for protectionj posUion of iadiTidoal jsow similar, am be
face corporate eaicroacluneiita in erery field t typical mast now
finds greatness not in what lie
Curtis J. QuJtmby, Jefferson City, In the Missouri Bar Journal.
Ghain organizations, branch
banks and other giant bus
iness bouses are economic
ally Justified by their efficiency
and will be patronised and pro
tected by a public which de
mands the utmost ralue for Its
dollar, aad which, if you Insist,
has little foresight. The United
States to dedicated to the propo
sition that man mast exploit the
resources of nature ia the most
rapid and efficient manner, re
gardless of the traditions and In
stitutions - which must be sacri
ficed to effect that end. This
movement toward - widespread
chain organisations for merchan
dising, branch banking, giant
public utilities, widespread man
ufactories will continue. . and
such organizations will grow, ex
pand, merge until they . reach
that mythical point t which fur
ther expansion, ceases to make
far efficiency.
Such mortment has now car
ried us past the- half-way point
in the cycle ot politics, and the
distance on the circle back to
ward ideal democracy, wherein
individualism thrives, is already
greater than the distance to
ward some form of government
in which authority is concentra
ted in the few. surrendered by
the many. Nor is distance atone
to be considered; momentum is a
factor.
The feudal system of England
grew out of the necessity of co
operation in- defense against pri
vate wars. The small landholder
surrendered many ot bis rights
and pledged many duties to his
lord in exchange for the protec
tion offered. He was no longer
self-sufficient; he ceased to com
pete. He served in a co-operative
organization. He owned no land,
had only an estate or interest In
it. Eventually no land was own
ed; all land was held.
The situation of the individual,
formerly self-sufficient, trader,
artisan, manufacturer, .business
The Minstrel man
"Ashur's Won't be Painted"
IVCr HOM BRflfTS &OUGHT IT AT A fst fl
TRICK SriOr?. !: Q
ARE A WH&R6 THEV M ,1 ? !1
C
"Some of the
AN'VaARM.TDO-ffEE.n ,
NEARANtCE.ViAKKJ
BlAniffKiATrl.
'A Fair
does bat in organization he
man of the United States today
is strikingly analogous to that of
the small land holder at the com
mencement of the growth of feu
dalism. Ia the words of Dean
Pound. "He has had to content
himself by transferring his bus
iness to a corporation and taking
shares In Its stead.
"labour economie order, bus
iness and industry are the sig
nificant activities. They stand to
ward the social order ot today
where land-holding stood toward
the social order of the Kiddle
Ages. Everyone ' in business,
great or small, is in a sharehold
er relation In which things are
due him as shareholder, not be
cause of any special undertaking.
He is not freely competing. Tbe
great bulk of the urban com
munity are upon salaries and owe
service to corporations which ot
late hare sometimes shown con
sciousness of owing a reciprocal
protection. The individual bus
inesses are more and more giving
up and going Into corporate
form.
"The corporations art more
and more merging. Chain stores
are bringing about a feudal or
ganization of businesses which
until now bad been able to exist
on the older basis. It a new do
main of business or industry is
opened, those who have conquer
ed it distribute stock as a great
feudal lord distributed estates. It
is coming to be the general
course that men do not own bus
inesses or enterprises or indus
tries. They hold shares in 'them.
Moreover, as one who held sev
eral tracta of land might owe
services to more than one lord,
so one who holds Investments
may be a shareholder, with the
reciprocal duties that relation
implies, in more than one corpor
ation. "Today the typical man (tor
the city dweller, not the farmer,
is the type for his time) finds his
greatness not la himself and in
what he does, but In the corpor
Comforts of Home"
GEE.rTIS NICE AM HOT
VOCS. SUMMER! CAM
V0O IMAG1ME OS BBMC
SO
LUCKY f"WrSt5 SWELL.
, Cml
Exchange
rM. Itjmt fwc SjiSriM. I
j& Xl MATS TO
i A I EYCHANB THIN6ev
lAOOU, minp t ernLL, i mlAmt A
3iUri 1 ' A& VVELU HAVE. r t"
ation he serves. If he Is great, he
is published to tha world not as
having done this or that, but as
director in this compsny snd
that.' If he Is small. vyot he shines
in the reflected glory ot the cor
poration from which he draws a
salary. Moreover, the chain of
subinfeudations, of subsidiary
companies, and affiliated com
panies, and holding companies
has come to be aa intricate as
that ot main tendencies . before
Quia Emptores. It may yet call
tor some analogous statute to put
Intelligible simplicity into the
tenure by which our businesses
and Industries sre held.
-
But the significant point is to
contrast the federal self-sufficient
community with the indi
vidualist selftsufflcieat man. and'
then contrast the latter, as he
had a real existence in the pto-
Beer, rural agricultural society
ot the past, with the emnlove.
shareholder. Investor of today.
held at least la one and often in
many relations, with shares or in
terests rather than ownership in
the things which count; co-operating
rather than competing;
finding his - satisfactions in the
achievements toward which he
contributes rather than In what
he achieves of himself.
In the old feudal system con
trol of the land brought control
ot the military and with it sov
ereignty. Control ot business, big
business, creates power today,
not governing power, theoretical
ly, but the step from superior
control of wealth and rast polit
ical control ot wealth and rast
political Influence to governing
power is an easy one. The move
ment toward a government of
business barons is self-accelerating.
How rapidly do we approach
such metamorphosis? Let the
reader calculate this from ' his
own answers to the following
questions:
How large are the largest cor
porations today? How large were
they 10 or IS years ago? Ot
these, how many plan merger
and expansion? How many pros
per and how many languish?
How many persons do they now
employ and how many did they
10 or IS years ago? How many
stockholders do they now hare
and how many were there 10 or
15 years ago? How many indlrl-
WAlffT ir WARM
Sritala tiehts i
FDR. ME.
TOOT5?.i
3U6T LIKE SLEEPING LNDe? V-
I ! I wtaBEASwaxpLAcef
I j TOSLEEP.tF ITOOlllX
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i
BRITISH PEER
1
Viscount WOlingdon, formerly
Governor-General of Canada, has
been appointed by King George as
Viceroy ef India to succeed iuerd
Irwin. Lord Willinrdon has been
Governor-General ex Canada sines
1926.
duals having SS000 or $16,000 ot
capital emplcy it and their own
time in an Individual or small
corporate enterprise? How many
did this 10 years ago? What has
replaced any ot these which have
gone?
Last, but not least la what
business can aa Individual en
trepreneur Invest, not $5000
but $25,000 today and secure
profitable employment ot his cap
ital and time? Aad If yvm name
such enterprise, how long caa it
withstand the onslaught of some
far-flung and mighty corporate
competitor?
t
o
LUCXETB ARE GUE8TJ
HAZEL GREEN, Dec. 2C Mr.
and Mrs. Orvllle Luckey aad child
ren, Ernest. Iola. Cecil, Kenneth.
Norman and .Edna, were guests
Christ mss day at the home ot Mr.
Lacker's father and sister, James
Luckey aad Rev. Leila Luckey ot
Portland.
Miss Luckey wss pastor ot the
church here for six years.
By IWERICS
L r
By CLIFF STERRETT
By BEN BATSFORD
AN COSV ?
By JIMMY MURPHY
VE, THrr-s .
pipMT have Your.
rZE 50l EXCHANtTP
"THEM FOR. TM1 PA1B. .
OF BOUPOlR,5LlPPER;
r
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