The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 21, 1932, Page 1, Image 1

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III
, .VACATION TOIE ;
Have The Statesman fol
j low yon while on '- your va
. ration; mailed to any ad
dress two weeks, only 25
cents. Call 9101.
Si
WEATHER ;
. Fair, today "and Friday;'
Temp. unchanged;' Max
Temp. Wed. 83, Mln. CO,
river 1.7 feet, clear, north,
wind.
FOUNDED 1051
EIGHTY-SECOND YEAR
Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning:, July 21, 1932
No. 99
1
W
DICTATORSHIP
OVER PRUSSIA
, . - - -.. 1-. , --
Authorities There Declare
Act Illegal; Arrests
Made Wholesale
Martial law Rules Berlin;
Other States Backing
Up Protest There
By LOUIS P. LOCHNER
BERLIN. July 20 (AP)
The federal gOTernment set up a
dictatorship today oyer the en
tire state or Prussia, declaring
martial law In Berlin and the
ProTince of Branderbnrg and
I weeping oot of office every
member of the Prussian state
1 A.
This drastic action predpitat-
d-the worst constitnuonai con-
reieh in 1871.
The Prussian authorities, de
claring the dictatorship to be
jontrary to law, refused to yield
to the demands of the federal
rovernment except by force. In
many cases force was used.
Berlin was under heavy guard
tonight and machlne-guils were
mounted in the court in front
t the federal chancellory Every
precaution was being taken to
prevent oisoraera.
Soldlers marched into and oc-
eupied the Prussian ministry of
tate in Wilhelmstrasse. A squad
ftf jarmed reichswehr "ested Al-
-ww " ,
lent of the Prussian police, and
later a reichswehr officer and
12 steel-helmeted privates took
Into custody Colonel Hugo Hei-
mannsberg. Berlin chief of police.
Under an emergency decree
i..,... k -Dr-iAt i.i vnn
tTinv.... nh.i..iiin. vr.mlon t bid of J 11,5 0 0 H lso
vonon Kama fT-oi -nm.
mlssloner administerlar the state
f Prussia. He named Lord May-
r Franx Nrancht of Essen as
leputy commissioner. rJ ;., . .
The authoriUes of the Prussian Tom of Reedsport.
state took their contention that won two Umatilla county bridge
the dictatorship waanneonstltu- Jobs: a bridge over Jnnlper can
Mn.it.fk. nnm.Mmrt ThM von. S14.325. and a half-viaduct
kr the state of Bavaria and they
trobably will be by other south-
m states.
HMBEinS LEAD
1 MUl! VOTE
lrwr wvi r n . Tnl.
20
iipijnhn m. Kvans. veteran
emocratic congressman seeking
nftmlnatlon from the first dls-
triet. advanced Into a narrow lead I
ever his youthful rival, Joseph P
i
Ilonaghan of Butte, late today In
their nip-and-tnek battle of Tues
day's primary election in Mon
tana. Evans was leading by less than
200 votes with 181 of 434 pre
clncta reported, the vote standing:
Evans 8,284; Monsghan 8,095.
Governor John E. Erickson,
seeking renomlnation by the dem
ocrats, added steadily to his 17,
28 5 as his closest foe. Miles Rom
aey, Hamilton publisher, polled
1.241 in 833 of 1.441 precincts.
Roy E. Ayrt,of Lewlston, con -
SnnAd several rood votfa ahead
tinned
t J. F. O'Connor of Livingston
fci their race for republican nom-
Elation for congress from the sec-
and district.
Frank A. Hazelbaker of Dillon,
tteutenant governor, had built up
a long lead over W. S. McCormack
f Kalispell. former lieutenant
governor, tor the republican nom-
lntlon tor governor.
s
TO PRESS IS CITED
8 AN FRANCISCO. July 20.
CAP) Animosity of "powerful
rrouDs ef national legislators"
against tha press was charged in
a report submitted to the Nation -
at Editorial aaaor.iatioa conven -
tion hera today.
Tha renort submitted bv the
aartatJon' irlaia.tiv commit.
tee, declared tha asserted anlmos-
Ity waa dua In great part to the
tact the press bad -faithfully held
on a mirror of congressional al -
fairs In Washington to the
people."
Increased second class postage
was condemned as being a burden
which "will result in many news
papers being driven from the
mails," and tha national legisla
tors . and political parties were
eharged with -pledging them-
lelvea to principles removing nn-
fair government competition with
private Industry and then aide-
stepping opportunities t trans-
late these principles Into defln-
Ita MTimnMt BQllcles.' t
, , .. : -i
FRED STEELS WINS
SEATTLE, " July 20. (AP)
Freddie Steele, atraight-punching
Tacoma welterweight, twice bat-
tered Ralph. Chong. New Orleans
Chin to the canvas in a six
' round boxing battle here tonight (tent of 178,317,815 and lllusea.
. to score a technical knockout in! radio broadcasts entailing n ex-j
the final stanza. . pendlture of 221,223,8(2. s
War Clouds Lower
As Bolivian Troops
Head To ward .Chaco
Resentment Rising' Following Word of Attack
On Fort; Claim Paraguay Forces are
Routed With Heavy Casualties
T A PAZ, Bolivia, July 20
of aroused Bolivians, a troop
"for the Bolivian interior," within 12 hours of a reported
Paraguayan attack on the. Bolivian fort, Mariscal, in the
long disputed Chaco territory.
Just after the train left,
;
SALEM FIRM GETS
Tnird Commission Member
Lacking; Next Meeting
Will be Held Here
PORTLAND. Ore., July 19
(AP) Several small contracts
ute nignway commission at a
brief meeting here today and
LhkT, tlw. Mmmi.a,n .nn
t0 mMt agaJn July 29 at gaIem
Carl G Wasnburne of Eugene
and E B Aldrlcn of pendleton.
tne two remainlng member of
thft -ommlaslon aince the rtair-
I nation Monday of Leslie M.
gcott chairmaDf expressed hope
thatka sacces8or to Scott wm
haTe been appolnted DetoT the
Ineit meeting.
- N- PIerc. fof Portland, was
dAed C0?tractT,i fulsh
"50yardI crusfhed T5k XL
V1"on;I?y ec.?
Oregon-Washington highway and
Jbe Nye-Laxlnka ranch section of
the Pendleton-John Day highway
won the contract to grade and
gravel .65 mile of the Holdredge
secyoa oi "B"y
15 In Yamhill county on a bid
uaom Jfc irareiie, oaiem.
low biaders on tne Proposea re-
between Portland and Vancouver, I
WoRh nmnnaini 113.005 for one I
coat and S19.980 for two coats. I
Award of the contract cannot be
mo tintu th bid is aooroved
by the Washington state highway
rflnortmont 1
Delegation from . Tillamook
and Washington counties asked j
v- .mudnn t niarA the Wll-I
... r . . 1
son river highway on the reaerai
UvBterm so it can be built with
federal aid money from the new
relief bill. The delegation was
informed the commission was
studying such a plan.
Late Champ
And Bulldog
Get Vicious
(An-Robln ' Reed'.' Reedsport,
Ore., welterweight, scored two
out of three fall victory here to-J
I nirht over Bnlldoa- Jackson, ef
Klamath Falls, in the wildest
I wrestling exhibition seen here In
I many years.
Reed iwon the first fall in '15
minutes 42 seconds, with A dou-
ble reverse winglock. Jackson
took the second in 1? minutes, 2
seconds, with a hefty right hand
swing to the stomach which
floored Reed. All the Bulldog had
to do was pile on top of him.
Reed -won the deciding fall in
14 minutes, 20 seconds, when dur-
i inc a furious scramble he reached
down, grabbed Jackson's legs ana
uttset him.
In between fans tne wrestlers
kicked, bit, punched, gouged and
pulled hair. Jackson also took a
nunch at Referee Vern Harring-
ton but cama out second best.
! Herrington floored him wua a
I neat punch to the chin.
Early In the first canto Jackson
1 attempted to kick a ringalder la
1 the face. A small not ensuea.
I Heed weighed . 14$ pounds,
I Jackaon 111.
U a preliminary event Tad
Thye, 110. and Nick Ellen. 200i
went five ronnda to a draw, Ellch
h1" ' Md T
l aiun n " luw
Newspaper Ads
Are Preferred
By Large Firms
NEW YORK. July 20 (AP)
-Major Industries continue to
ahow a preference for newspaper
advertising over inai oi oinex mw
diums, tha American Newspaper
Pnblisher'a Association reported
today.
I The association's bureau of ad-
I yertlsing announced tha results
of a aurvey ahowed"4S5 naUonal
advertisers spent $148.3 65.0 JO
In . newspaper advertising last
year. Magazine space was used
by 190 of these firms to tha ax-
(AP) Cheered by thousands
train left here today bound
a military communique said
500 Paraguayans had surround
ed the fort July 18 and that the
nV. H.Mnn. ! I
f.n..U8lns the enemT hw
1U399. I
uur iroops resisiea vananuy
ror a aay ana a nair," tne eom-
munlqne went on. "Our losses
were o aeaa. o wounaea ana z
missing, a uouvian aetaenment
u marcmng in gooa oraer to-1
warm tne next ion."
(It was not clear Just what
was meant here, but it would ap- I
pear the Bolivians had left Mar-I
lscal after a day and a half of
fierce fighting.)
Two thousand women naraded
to the presidential palace today,
carrying banners and pledging I
their lives to the fatherland.
Anarosa Tornero. nrlnclnal of
the La Pas normal school.' ex-
horted the women from a palace
balcony to henready if necessary
for Red Croqs service "on the
field of battle."
Protest meetlnrs were renort-
ed from various towns in the in-
tenor. They denounced "Par-
aguayan aggression.'
F
Pomona Officers and Three
From Each Local Group
Will be Included
wu.iv.. wa uiauo
a,,- -;-
council idea by State Deputy Ar-
thur Brown of Roseburg. Mr.
Jones of Macleay was chosen tem-
Porary chairman and Miss Ethel
Fletcher of Salem, secretary.
The grange council will meet
T7 three months, and on it will
be the master, lecturer and secre- !
tary or every local grange as well
the county officers. The coun-
1 j . . . . .
vwj was wngmaiea oy
Brown, and has been successfully
wed in two southern Oregon
counties.
About 150 grangers attended
the Pomona meeting, for which
Red Hills grange was host. The
next Pomona meetlne will be
aeia ai iiuiieviiie tne tnird Wed- I
neeaay m October.
A. eouniy council meetlns- has
Deen called for August 24. at
worm Howeii.
mv . .
a n morning session toaay was
given over to reports and was
presided over by Pomona Master
L. S. Lambert Of Stajton. Po-
mona Lecturer Is Daisy Bump of
North Howell
J?fophlircr Tfnma
I vf JWWM 6
Uets $2,000,000
ROSEBURG, Ore.. July 20
(AP) Word received here to-
day from Representative Hawley
said the "total sum of $2,000,000
authorised by congress for eon-
gtruction of the Pacific north-
west national soldiers home at
Roseburg has been appropriated.
Scene of
COUNTY COUNCIL 0
6MH IS
UHD
i
S rowviuuMti o i r q rr r X
tfT StHAavs Bvre locks W W t O t w
J a, K rr PiJ$ X V wwim Jy
FSazS.w' if yr YORK Ijr
I VnBy KriM-4NC5cS JCTRonr vitCJr ERIE . t L
Above la the Great Lakes-SC Lawreace River area In which the United States and Canada are to create aa iatermatloaal seaway reach lag
. front Dutatlw Mlnzu, to Montreal, Canada, and aivina access to the Middle West to ocean commerce. The nrelect la to coat approximate
ly SSOO,000,000, will employ
Ute Washington and Ottawa administrations. Ia Inset is shown the territory extending for 48 miles
which la Involved in the power development program, catling for the const ructioa of ; two dams and
8,000.000 horsepower. This feature of the plan baa tact with opposition by New York State aathoritiea, who take tne atasa tnai cue mat
ter of cost should have been agreed upon by the state and federal governments before aay treaty with Canada waa completed.
iBH
Nation-Wide Conference to
Organize Jobless aid
New England Idea
Hope to Increase EmDloved
Total ten per Cent;
Find Outlook bad
-f. . uiuiu cvuieisuce
calling a naUonal conference
- VI.), .U t
uon sDonsorlnr the flexlbla work
day and week as a nartlal aoln
tion of the unemployment prob-
lem.
The conference was attended
by more than loo miiMi
(economists, labor and Industrial
leaders, college presidents and
ocial workers.
The conference found that
unemployment continues with
(increasing problems, despite all
enorts to curb the lessening of
business activity and cooperative
nauonai action to achieve Job
security by job sharing seems lm
Peratlve.
Want Organization
To Make Effective
tne proposed national con-
'rnce, resolution said, "Can
be effected an organization
which will help make operative
throughout the states a shorter
mMa more iiexioie wora aay and
weex. bj wnicn new employment
may be offered to some millions
of people, approximating, it is
hoped, an additional 10 per cent
to the number of people now
under employment."
This plan would "be put into
effect without increasing oper
ating costs of business, without
necessarily Increasing plant In
vestments and without lncreas-
im:
deducted from payrolls of wage
earners still employed at least
two-thirds of their normal hours
and by the necessary remaining
contributions from -salaried exe-
COLLEGE RECEIVED
ALBANY. Ore.. July 20 (AP)
-Dr. Frederick R. Stockwell.
of th board of Christian edu
cation of the Presbyterian
church, told the Albany college
board of trustees here last nirht
the college compares favorably
with the 53 other colleges in the
United Statea mlnf1nl h thm
church
President Thomas W. Bibb, of
the eollesA nresAntivl him lnnml
renort to the hoard. TCnrollmant
iw year, he said, was 188. The
i - '
eoller a dnrtnr th nt tpdf
hoTr hA a'doU nt its nnn
which resulted in paying faculty
memhera onlv Eo nr cent of
their salaries In cash and the
other half in notes. The deficit
was attributed to declining in
come from endowment funds.
President Bibb reported a cam
palgn for funds had netted $12,
1000 which was applied on the de
ficit.
V. F. W. TO CONVENE
EUGENE. Ore.. July 20. (AP)
The anual state convention of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars will
open here tomorrow. Delegates
and department officers began
registering today.
T ON ALBANY
Project to Bring Ocean to Middle West
about 20,000 men and require seven
There's Beauty
Even in Turkey
If!
1
Kin ' .
: v .
Selected as "Miss Turkey 1932"
in a beauty contest staged at
Istanbul recently, Kerlman Ha
lls BZanem (above) will repre
sent her country in the forth
coming international beauty
contest at Brussels, Belgium.
Miss Hanem la a graduate of
the FeziaU university.
DEATH TOLL FROM
HEAT IS GROWING
Twenty -one Fatalities are
Reported; Idaho, Great
Lake Areas Envied
(By the Associated Press)
Sullen, irritable and exhausted.
most of the nation continued to
bake in stagnant heat yesterday.
Torrid temperatures prevailed
especially In the middle west
Twenty-one persons died of heat
in the nation and temperatures
mounted about 100 in many sec
tions.
Chicago had an official reading
of 97 hut thermometers In down
town areas showed 108. Three
persons died.
St. Louis led In the number
of deaths six with a mercury
in the middle 90's. Other deaths:
Kentucky, 1; mlnnesota, 4;
North Dakota, 1; Pennsylvania,
3; Wisconsin, 1; West Virginia,
1, and Nebraska 1.
The soutnwest sun recording
readings near the century mark.
was hopeful of cooler weather.
Despite a storm Tuesday in
the Rocky Mountain country, the
mercury climbed past the com
fort point Wednesday. The Pa
cific coast had normal tempera
tures.
Idaho and the head of the
great lakes region were the envy
of the nation Duluth, Minn., re
porting 71, and Pocatello, Idaho,
slipping several degrees below
Dnluth.
Marshiield Gives
Power Franchise
MARSHFIKLD, Ore., July 30.
i(AP) The Marshfield elty
council last night approved the
new 20-year power franchise
with the Mountain States Power
company. The franchise calls for
payment of two per cent, of, the
Ross earnings of the company's
property witBln Marshfield for
the first I years, 2 per cent for
the next four years, and 2 per
cent for the last IS years.
years to complete. A treaty lor tb
I - Vt-t
STATES' TREND
TOWARD SALES
TAXES IS SEEN
Half of Nation Soon to pay
.Special Levies; Seek
- "Painless" System
Income tax Also Favored in
; General Effort to cut
Real Estate Load
By RAT BRENNAN
(Copyright 1032, the Associated
Press.)
CHICAGO, July 20 (AP)
Citlsens of America from coast to
coast are paying special taxes on
thlnga they eat, drink, wear, or
burn, a survey revealed today
the trend in perhaps half the na
tion's 48 states being toward mod
ified sales taxes.
Legislative leaders everywhere
were reported mapping -painless"
taxation programs while state ad
ministrations trimmed expenses to
the minimum, botn movements ne-
. f a w I
S.2SI?2?,i i!
tate and personal property.
income Tax Laws
AMO are riannea I
tnala ttlDhon hill.. atok
transfers, amusement tickets,
marriage licenses, and legal docn-
SilZfr 7 tJ 7:
majority of states, taxes are col-
lected on gasoline to finance road
building, and movements toward
state income laws also were gen
eral.
Two states, Mississippi and
West Virginia, reported sales tax
es as providing much of the reve
nue which ordinarily would come
from property owners. West Vir
ginia has had a gross sales tax
alnaA 181 atei ta AffUta 1m w am
ed, and It is one on the principal
sources oi revenue. Mississippi
likewise has found its general
sales tax an important factor in
balancing the budget.
Alabama and Illinois, both of
which may have special legislative
sessions within a few months, are
imoDr a doxen states in which
sales taxes are being considered,
in Illinois, Chairman Martin Carl-
son of the state tax commission
said he would recommend passage
of a law similar to MIssiasiDni'a
the legislature.
T
north REvn n int. .A
f API v. w. piv.t. f
TRIO SAVED AFTER
wnooA
Jacksonville and Elmer McCne reeMgalt are Detectives Pat
and Carl Jewell of Coquille clung rick 8h"Ie Mar"l Chagnon.
to an overxurnea noat in Coos
bay for an hour and a half to-
day before they were rescued by
uruce Lattln and John Halltren.
The men were chilled hut -
in J ured.
ROSEBURO. Ore., July 20
(AP) Parties were organised
at Scottaburg today to search
for Paul Saxman. 48. who ttM"m'XL
not been seen since Monday h ?,d reT
when he went on a hunting trip
on thm AMA h.t.n Smith
on tha divide between Smith
river and the Umpqua river.
( API Frnl slndJn 17 of
iAf7rErit. Siri "uSi
nrVZr .1 iZ J t
"wlnimlni r at - Ocean Lake today.
He was caught in a strong un
dertow in the ebbing tide
Miss Lena Croop. swimming
with Sandean. was rescued
enterprise haa been agreed to by
oa the. border of New York State
power bouses which will generate
JORYi COMPLETED
1WE1R
Eight men and Four Women
As Alternates; Regular Venire Exhausted by Number
Of Disqualifications and Challenges; Preliminary'
Statements to be Made This Morning
Defendant, Nattily Dressed,
Great Interest; Silverton People Crowd Courtroom
On First day; Manning Testimony is Expected to be
Strong Point in State's Case
NOT until a special venire of ten Marion county citizens
had been called to the courthouse yesterday were attor-
fA. fv lainf4ff Aofora W uim Inr-w
vj kv av a4 aww47 viv W -- jua awa.
the trial of Dupree Poe, facing a charge of first-decree mur-
der for the slaying: of Night
verton. Completion of the trial
fornfltca mom aneH Vitt R n
jurvmen iuui ueen uxiauskeu.
Eight men and four women will comprise the trial jury
with two men serving as alternates. Attorneys for the stat
will open their case this morning at 9 o'clock with a prelim-
inary statement to the jury.
ARREST THIRTEEN
Varied Charges Face Police
Officers; Third Degree
Killing Is Probed
I NEW YORK, July 20 (AP)
T flirt eon Nassag eouniy poucemen
were arrested looay on cnarges
ranging from second degree mur-
or lo negieci oi aniy oecause oi
tne deatn or uyman star, a un
oner they are accused of having
put through a brutal "third de
gree.
Deputy Chief Frank Tappan. a
i wealthy man who has been in po
lice work only since January,
went free on ball of $13,000. The
otherg were released as fast as
they could make ball and be ar
raigned.
Four detectives were charged
with second degree murder
Lieutenant Jesse May forth and
Sergeants Leslie Pearsall, Barry
Zander and Charles Weeser.
I Tne men enargea witn seeona
" vU, . . ""
nd "J
?' tn om an whom Stark and
1 .. . c" .
m a roDoery; ana ra
trolman Lanls Ray aad Harry Lil
Jegren. They were released on
1'i0fl aU...
V?1"7 tfllw tappan waa ar-
'"lou " ""f."1' oc"uu
.7"'c"
1FT?l Ma him tO Strangle
to death. He was charged with
conspiracy and neglect of duty.
T-.tln. If .1 . 1 I J -1
h h4 "Bot Uf btSt doubt
Utark died becausa of what hap-
" Police headquarters.-
fact man WM CTimInal
made no difference, he said.
CUT IN CAR CF!.
Two persons, a child and a wo
man, received bad cats and bruis
es in an automobile collision at
the Hammer corner on the Hazel
Green road about mid-afternoon
yesterday.
Tha child. Alice, Helen Perrine,
age 4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Perrine of route nine, re
ceived a bad gash on tha face.
Tha woman, Mrs. W. .Little, of
tha west saiem aato camp was
brought by tha Salem Taxi am
bujanea to tha Deaconess hospit
al here, where cat on her leg
were treated, i She was released
! from tha hospital later In tha day.
Mrs. Dorothy Wackea was driv
ing tha car In which the child
was riding. 1
Hotel, Landmark
Of Toledo Burns
TOLEDO. Ore.. Jaly 20 (AP)
Tha Commercial t hotel, well
known land mark at this city, waa
destroyed by fire shortly - before
midnight tonight. The loss waa
estimated at between $7000 and
110,000. Otlgia of the fire was
not determined. i :
. Mr. and Mrs. James Boyle, tne
only occupant of tha hotel, es
caped. r., l.-n .-: -N. , .
il MURDER
GIRL SUFFERS OA
Seated With two men Chosen
Watches Proceedings With
Officer James Iverson of SU-
jury and selection of two al-
m off ai tho f iVof nannl 9Q
Taking of testimony will begin
snomy mereaner.
Objections to capital paaiaa-
ment on the part of Jurors ox
their expression of an opinion re
garding the Iverson case gained
after reading newspaper aceoaata
served to disqualify a number of
jurors for cause while other Jur
ors were disqualified under tha
six peremptory challenges allow
ed the state and the 12 allowed
the defense.
Four Women Upon
Jury As Accepted
The trial Jury will be: Merle
F. Ramp, housewife, Brooks;
Harold E. Brunk. auto wrecker,
Salem; Basil H. Zell, fPhlt sun,
Salem: Richard Harrison East
Gervals, farmer; Clarence W.
SUeey, fur breeder. Sublimity:
Pearl M. Klnxer. housewife, Sa
lem; Laura Ditmars. housewife,
Fairfield; Carrie H. Beeehler,
housewife, Salem; Jesse A.
(Turn to page 2. coL 1)
iiTE OF INTEREST
RELIEF BILL ISSUE
WASHINGTON. Jnly 20
(AP) Fixing the rate of inter
est to be paid by states, nsnai
clpalltlea and private firms ob-.
talning loans from the recon
struction finance corporation un
der the relief act remained to
day the biggest point to be set
tled In administration of the
government's great unemploy
ment aid plan.
The president, expected yester
day to put his name to the new
enactment, did not sign It today.
He was allowing ample time te
map out reorganisation of- the
corporation's board before mak
ing the bill law. White Hoase
officials said he would not place
his signature on the bill before
tomorrow, and that possibly even
more time might elapse.
The rata to be paid waa a
question featuring frequent in
quiries at the corporation offi
ces. The bill fixed interest en
loans to state and municipalities
for relief of destitution at 2 per
cent. The rate for loans for pas
lie works aad to banks, private
corporations and railroads is left
up to tha directors.
Mussolini Gets
Two More Jobs
ROME. July 20. (AP) Fre-
mler Benito Mussolini drastically
rearranged his cabinet today emsa-
ing five ministers and 11 aader
secretaries and taking for him
self four Important posts last was)
of the two ha baa been holding.
Slgnor Mussolini now is pre
mier, minister of interior, snxai-
star ef foreign affairs and
star of corporations.
"Dollar Daf ,
Bargains Offered
In Many Stores
A
merchants today offer
nsnal bargains te the
lie is s cooperative Dollar
Day event, la each, of the
peitJcfpating stores special
dollar day spedsls have
been . arranged. While or
dinary prices en wirrrhsn
dise are low nowadays, to
day! specials will far oat
rank those raises normally
offered cwstomera.- . ,
Window -' and store dis
plays - as well as special
newspaper , advertisements
are being ased by mer
chants far the dollar day
if
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