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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1935)
.The OREGON ' STATESMAN,, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morninpr, March 5, 1035. . I'llJK 111 " . .. . .. i . .. . .' j. - - - . . - . ' - . . -I, -.h ! ! ' ' : 1 : i . Say What You Will, a Hint of Springs in the Airl Rv CHARLES men ANT MORE MONEY "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman, March 28. 1851 ' TfiE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A. Sprague ----- Editor-Manager Shildon F. Sackctt Managing-Editor Member of the Associated Press TV- Associated Press U exclusively entitled to the use for public tlon of all newa dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited la this paper. . " ' ADVERTISING 1 Portland Representative Gordon B. Bell, Security Building, Portland, Ore. Eastern Advertising Representatives Bryant. Griffith 4 Brunson, Inc., Chicago, New York. Detroit. Boston, Atlanta Entered at the Postoffice at Salem, Cregon s Second-Class Matter. Published every morning except Monday. Business office, SIS S. Commercial Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mali Subscription Bates, in Advance. Within Oregon: Dally and Sunday. 1 Mo. 50 cents: J Mo. $1.25; C Mo. I2.S5 ; 1 year 14 00. Else where 60 cents per Mo., or $5.00 for 1 year in advance. Per Copy 3 cents. News Stands 5 cents. By City Carrier: 43 cents a month; J5.00 a year in advance. Playing Chess With Bureaus n LIPPED under the door in the closing days of the session Q is a bill drawn up by Budget Director D. 0. Hood which j calls for reorganizing state administrative departments on a cabinet model. It is just another blueprint of Hector Mac Pherson's cabinet form of government which was defeated in 19S0 by a vote of 135,412 to 51,248. The proposal was thor oughly debated nd fully considered by the people at that time; and very soundly defeated. There is no change in con ditions which brings a frts.h demand for such legislation and j r.o intimation of any kind that the people approve such a change. There is no agitation now for further increasing tne rowers of the governor. Of the four administration bills urged by Gov. Martin at the outset, one has been defeated, a second is dying m committee, and the two which passed were changed so drastically as to alter their character. The Statesman is ready to meet this bill, the text of which is not yet available, and attack it as lacking in merit, without regard to the previous expression of the people on the cabinet form. The writer lived in the state of Washington some 15 years ago when Gov. Louis F. Hart secured the ad option of a cabinet form. It gave the state more expensive government and no better government. The directors still required the same number of subordinates at the same, or; higher salaries. Each department became a little state with in itself with secretaries and push buttons and swivel chairs. Each high-powered department head with a salary of $5,000 or $6,000 a year became inflated with a sense of his own importance, became a spoke in the governors political ma chine, and a potential candidate for still higher oitice. Oregon's administrative needs are comparatively sim ple. The state is small in population and in wealth. It can get along very well with a simple and flexible administrative organization, without the ponderous and expensive set-up of code departments such as the Hood blue-print shows. The governor himself in this state is directly in charge of most of the boards and commissions ; and with his administrative duties as simple as they are, can handle the work more easily by direct contact with his subordinate bureaus. To impose a new director on top of the various bureaus removes the governor one step away from the actual functioning bureau. There may be situations where such an organization would be an improvement: but it is our observation that Oregon now has a simple yet effective scheme of administration. Re sponsibility is fixed rather definitely ; and on the whole the system is about the most economical that could be devised. Mr. Hood has played chess with the various independent bureaus. He puts the corporation department in the secretary of state's office and the historical society in the department of natural resources.' We are not criticising the various chess moves which he has made, but his whole scheme of adminis trative reorganization with its load of expensive top direct ors. The legislature can well enough defer its adjournment for a day in order to bury his proposal under an avalanche of negative votes. Weakness of the Pound TT1HE British pound has shown marked weakness in the X last few weeks, enough to cause concern in this country and in the gold bloc countries, chief of which is France. Last fall the pound was also weak but rallied after the foreign exchange had been provided for the heavy movement of goods into Britain. Some now attribute the weakness to sea sonal causes. The potentialities are somewhat- alarming and even Secretary Morgenthau has dipped into the "kitty" (as Roosevelt calls the $2,800,000,000 realization from devalu ing gold) to support the pound. The treasury is said to have acquired around five or six million pounds in London which of course it is taking a heavy loss at current markets. The danger is that the cycle of devaluation may be re newed. This is what Paris fears, and what New York is ra ther concerned over. Devaluation is like price-cutting among merchants. When one starts it the competitor in the next block undercuts : and so it goes until goods are offered well below cost. There is of course no limit but zero to devalua tion: but the cost on those with fixed incomes and with in vestments evalued in money terms is up to 100 per cent. It is just the working out of a form of inflation. The conservatives have been urging a restoration of the gold standard as a vehicle of international exchange. The recurring weakness in the pound renews the emphasis on this demand, though others; may point to it as proof that it is impossible to stabilize yet Stabilization waits on resumption of more wholesome attitudes toward international trade. If and when the peoples of the world become convinced of the folly of economic nationalism and show an inclination to fos ter world trade on a reciprocal basis then the stabilization of currencies in terms of gold would be a master stroke reviving world prosperity Dn a sound basis. This would call also for a readjustment of the old war debts on a realistic basis to pre vent the outcrop of irritations subsequently. The battle for recovery was lost when tariffs were made higher when this country held to the last ounce of flesh on its war debts, and, when the newly elected president in the winter of 1932-3 refused to cooperate with Mr. Hoover on the war debts and internal bank difficulties. Recovery was thus " postponed about two years, made far more costly in money and of lasting cost because of our own default on the terms of our own bonds. "Simon Says Wiggle-Waggle" 1IT is rather galling to rush through legislation at the behest X . of Washington, especially when the legislation calls for xi j.. m nil. m .... . me expenditures 01 minions 01 aoiiars, ana tnreatens to De come a permanent load on the taxpayers of Oregon. Yet that is what is being done here when Washington used the sim ple expedient of withholding relief money. Oregon was get ting along in the care of its destitute; but the new adminis tration went in for the abundant life. Now the federal gov ernment finds itself sinking in financial morasses and is reaching out to pull the states in with it. But such seems to be the order of events. The Chicago Daily News says we now follow directions from Washington: -, 'Simon says thumbs up!' And. up go the thumbs. 'Simon says thumbs down!' And denrn they go. deep Into the federal pie. "We of Illinois are getting oar state legislation from Wash ington, just as we used to get our fashions from Paris. Got. Horner has on his desk In Springfield a pile of bills, prepared in the New Deal laboratories of Secretary Ickes and Housing Ad , ministrator Moffett. for passage by the Illinois legislature. Doubtless other governors have been favored with similar con sideration. Thumbs up, thumbs down! Watch for, the sign. , "It was very simple until, as .in the old game,. Simon or fl 1 5 c 1 i - '-t-errv. SBSEbbss) Health 15 v Royal S. Copeland. M.D. Dr. Copeland IT 13 disheartening: to the victim ef severe barn or accident to learn that he will be scarred for life. Per manent facial deformities and un sightly scars cause much un happinesa. For tunately, because of the advance ments - in plastic surgery, disfig uring scars are not as frequently Been as in former years. This branch of medicine has been practiced for a good many years. But we owe most of our present knowl edge of plastic surgery to the ingenuity of the mili tary surgeons during the World war. These men were confronted with many plastic problems. It was their lob to restore to as near a normal appearance as possible the parts im paired by hideous wounds and injuries. Popularity Increasing Within recent years plastic surgery has become increasingly popular. Vic tims of nasal defects, bony deformi ties and disfiguring scars have been relieved through this treatment Plastic operations, other than those indicated for the correction of dam aged parts, are sometimes the cause of much criticism. If plastic surgery is necessary consult with your physi cian and follow Us advice. He will refer you to a competent surgeon specializing in this work. It is un wise to accept recommendations from "beauty specialists" and laymen who are unfamiliar with the many diffi culties of this line of work. Bear in mind that no plastic sur gery should be permitted unless it is performed by a capable surgeon who Is recognized as a specialist in this field. He must be duly licensed and of good standing In the local medical society. Avoid charlatans and Quacks who resort to circularizatloa to at-, tract unsuspecting patients. Plastic surgery requires special training and skill. Molds Used The operation must be performed under aseptic conditions and without jeopardy to the health of the patient It consists of reconstructing the part of the body that has been altered by an injury or which is distorted be cause of some congenital deformity. The plastic surgeon prepares molds, and plans the reconstruction before he actually operates. I happen to know a plastic surgeon who uses a plaster model and patiently plans the necessary reconstruction step by step. The model is then used as a guide in the operation. As I have implied, this compara tively new branch of surgery has an-, swered a great demand for the cor rection of scars and disfigurements as ,well as nasal deformities. But I would like again to warn my readers against the tnany unlicensed, unethi cal individuals who pose as "plastic surgeons. If you are desirous of having a plastic operation consult with your family doctor. Ton may be assured of his interest in your wel fare and that he will give yon sound advice. Answers te Health Queries T Q. Win you please give me some information about pyorrhea? A. For full particulars retate your euestion and send a stamped, self addressed envelope. Bits lor Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS Monument proposed for the Dorlon wom.m: S Coming to the Bits man's desk are many letters about the Dorion woman, her burial place having been definitely ascertained. ". S Several persons have proposed the erection of a fitting monu ment. One such suggestion is con tained in the letter quoted below: V S "After congratulating the peo ple of this great state for your de termination, study and attention to the resting place of the always faithful savage and now famous Dorion woman, permit me to make the suggestion that you de velop a plan for the public and the state to erect a monument properly inscribed over or near the grave of this savage whose deeds of valor, fortitude, sacri fice and endurance are so well embedded in the minds of west ern readers. "The rlgil suns that go to make the great milky way shine not on the resting place of a female, aar age or cir lilted, that lived through such ordeals as were a part of her every day savage life. and I am sure the reading public of this and other states will re spond to any suggestion you make. "The state of Tennessee erect ed a monument in the wilderness over tho grave of General Lewis. The grave of Governor Clark is fairly well marked. The repro duction of the likeness of Saca gawea is scattered from the Mis sissippi river to the Pacific coast, and I am sure the public will rally to your suggestions and aid you in the erection of a memorial to mark the resting place of this illustrious savage, the Dorion woman. "Should you desire to sponsor the memorial, permit me to make a small contribution, as per per sonal check attached." S W The check was for f 10, and the letter was from James A. John ston, Corrallia, Oregon, of the Merchants Milling company of that city. S By the next mail came a letter from Dr. I. U. Temple, owner of the Dorion hotel, Pendleton, Ore gon. Among other things, he said: "I had had correspondence withr Father Hildtbrand of Oregon City and. the rector of St Paul's church at St. Paul, Oregon, but had not gotten far In the effort In 1922 I wrote an article on this India woman that was published in the East Oregonian here. . . . At this time I was reading Wash ington Irrinr'a Astoria and was so impressed by the story of her uie mat 1 mere and then decided I would help to memorialise her name and changed the name of my hotel to Hotel Dorion, since wnicn time 1 hare erected an ad dition making it an outstanding institution in Pendleton. ... I imagine I express a common opinion In suggesting that a plague or monument be placed to mark her last resting place, and would contribute to a fund tor tola purpose. . S Is Enough other contacts along Sam said 'Wiggle-waggle!' Then what was a governor or a state legislature to do? Got. McNutt got a new state NRA biU through the Indiana house the other day, and went into political hysteria when he read a dispatch reporting that the president had said he was not asking for any state NRA measures. That was bad enough. Worse was to come. The federal administration withdrew its $4,000,000,000 prfblic-works bill because the sen ,ate tacked to it a prevailing-wage amendment. The wiggle-waggle became general, and confusion spread through eTery state as sembly in session. Now nobody knows what to do. The thumbs are at a loss whether to wiggle to the right or waggle to the left In the Indiana legislature It is proposed to adjourn and call a special session as soon as Washington finds where it is and what it wants. Thumbs may be twiddled in the meantime. To this hare we come in the dependent provinces of the New Deal. the line have been made to indi cate that a movement for a mon ument might be successful, . if pushed and persisted 'a. The $10 check was returned, with the ex planation that the Bits man is too busy now to engage in the move ment, and the statement that. however, he is filing all this mat ter. This is done in order that It may be available to the right par ty or organization, with the res ervation that the proposition would be for a monument worthy of the subject. S As most readers know, the United States Daughters of 1812 for Oregon have already obtained permission to place a bronze marker. in the St Louis Catholic church over the burial place of the Dorion woman, and they ex pect to dedicate it during the spring months on a date yet to be decided. (Later: Since this matter was written, the date has been fixed at Sunday, April 7, at 2 p. m.) The Daughters of the American Revolution also wrote the Bits man, and that organization would no doubt have arranged for a marker in the church had not the sister patriotic society of women been so prompt in the undertak ing. The matter of other markers, and regarding a worthy monu ment of size, is open for sugges tions. What organisations shall un dertake the projects? Where shall other markers be placed? What shall be the location of the monument? U U S There is Boise, the site of which was f list seen by white men who were guided by the Dorion woman and her husband. There is the place of the win ter encampment of 1814, not far from Cendleton. There is the donation land claim home of the family in the Mlddlegrore district, near the northeastern suburbs of Salem. And there are Astoria, and several (Turn to Page 7) SYNOPSIS 4l Jasper Iiigram, wealthy pro moter, takes, liis secretary,' love It Cathleen McCarthy to . his Grangelands" estate so he: can transact business while attending the charity garden party gin by his .wife, Laura. Cathleen, the sole support of a large family, is fasd nated by the surrounding luxury sad wishes she could attend the party. Marian Alipaugh, the gold digging wife ef Homer Alspaugh, Ingram's confidential secretary, is clsarette airl at the fete. She flirts with the Marques d'Alhues, Mrs. Ingram's special guest Seward, Ingram's son, is infatuated with Arline Martin, an actress, but the ruthless Arline realizing the sen ior Ingram could be more helpful in furthering her career tries to impress the latter. Later, he calls at her aoartment to Usten to the reading of a play, the success of which means the arrival of herself and its author the man she really loves. Failing to interest Ingram in the play. Arltne tries to win him over by flirting boldly with him iust as Seward arrives, lne boy eaves in anger. Next day, at the office, Ingram tries to explain to his son, but the latter refuses to listen,' referring to his father's other affairs. Seward tries to make an appointment with Cathleen but, due to the difference in their social status, she refuses. The persistent Seward arranges with Alspaugh to let him know the next time Cath leen works over time and so meets her "by accident" at dinner She finally agrees to an appoint ment. Mr. Ingram gives Cathleen's brother, Joe, a position. CHAPTER XI When it became plain that the royal lady to whose household the Marques d'Alhues was attached, must flee from Spain, he bad taken command and had got her over the frontier by a surprise dash into Biarritz. Returning alone, he had salvaged what he could of his own possessions, including the family jewels, a few objects of art, and all the cash he could lay bands on. However officials on the frontier found and confiscated his jewels and gold. Fortunately they did not, in searching him. find the yards upon yards of precious lace wrapped about his waist Ever since, he had been living on that lace, or more literally, upon the money he had received for it in London. Alas, now that fund, never large, was nearly exhausted. D'Alhues had been admirably fitted to his office in the Infanta's service. It had been necessary for him to understand aU sorts of in tricate points about precedence, etiauette. and tradition. To ar range and supervise that had been his work, and he had been far from an idle man. Now idleness and a rapidly emptying exchequer were all he had left. He thought a rood deal, accord' lngly. about the seductive Mrs. Alspaugh, who had met his over tures so warmly at the Ingrams' garden-party. There he had met other attractive women, but except for the interlude with the cigarette- KUi .-w mw9M w - stantly attached to his mature and stately hostess. As a result, uie slim laughing person in pale chif fon intrigued him and he regretted his faUure to tind ner oexore ieav insr Graneefield. Marian, however, had no inten tion of letting their acquaintance languish. When her excitement of the af ternoon had died down, the image of the handsome Spanish Grandee was her most persistent memory. She Bimr.lv had to see him again. and she let the social lines she had thrown out lie untwitched, whUe she was held in the restless pre occupation of a romantic dream. Ennui was eating at the soul of d'Alhues as he busied himself mounting new oaths with which to curse democratic Spain and bour- golse America. He was engaged at this pleasant pastime when, upon answering the phone, he was sur prised to near the flirtatious, high pitched voice he bad thought never to hear aarain. Lack of familiarity with the lancuare. blinded him to the commonness of Marian's inflec tions and ehoice of words, but the voice itself had a pretty music, sug gesting a genuine desire to pleasn and provoke. "I'm in town for the day. and The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers nearly everyone I know is away. Won't yon take pity on me and come to lunch? Don't say yon have an engagement, Senor Marques!' "If I had fifty engagements, would I let them stand in the way? Ton restore life to me, most kind lady- Half hour later, Mrs. Alspaugh, not indifferent to the envious glances that followed them, led him to their table. Patterning her man ner and the nse of her eyes on those of a popular actress, whom she hoped she resembled, Marian kept him . stimulated and charmed through the meal, over the remains of which they lingered smoking. "I'm often in . town." she said. "There's so little to do in the coun try. Mr. Alspaugh's always busy. cut you, -benor Marques, what do you. do with yourself au day 7 Wouldn t yu like me to show you some of the sights?" Marian, in common with most able cross. "He cares for nothing but business." "Poor little dove," he sighed, lay ing his hands warmly on hers. "And I too am unhappy. - Da you not see, as I do, a true happiness, a radiant happiness, within our grasp? Quer ida, queridisima, let us not deny the love that is springing in out hearts. . . . I, the exile, demanding sym pathy and beauty, and you so young, so lovely, so unappreciated jet us make each other's happiness t For that is the miracle of love, that out of two sorrows can be made one joyl- Marian, unspeakably thrilled, was suffocated with her emotions. It was for moments like these, and for what followed them, that she lived, This delicious trembling, these shiv era of anticipation, made up for th boredom, the annoyance, the frus tration of every-day existence. "Ah, Marques," she breathed. TAKES SLAM AT GOVERNOR Editor of Statesman: I notice the governor says he wishes the farmers would stay home and mind their business. Just what is the farmer's bus iness? He has stayed home too long now, there is where the trouble lies. If our schools in the rural dis tricts are none of onr basiness just whose business are they? Some white collar guy in the city, who perhaps isn't interested la schools at all, I suppose. Here at West Stayton, we have a three room school, employ three teachers, and at our annual school meetings havo over 1D0 voters present who are interested lu school, and school affairs. And they voted unanimously against the county school unit-We have been able to run onr school af fairs here without the aid ef any white collar help, and by the re ports irom the high schools where our nnpils go we are hav ing very good success. In ISIS they didn't eay for us to star, home and mind onr bus iness, bnt said come on, we need more cannon fodder, and when we got in the camps, under the "You are so beautiful, carisima mia," he said simply, gazing into her eyes. New Yorkers, was woefully ignor ant of the wonders of her own city. She was always planning to climb the Statue of Liberty or visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art But she never did. Now accompanied by the handsome Spaniard, she made these trips of exploration and found them highly unsatisfactory as they afforded little chance for Intimacies. Their circuit of New York in the sight-seeing yacht was more suc cessful. By this time they were consciously, though nnadmittedly, in love. They bad reached the stage of meaningless talk since neither was interested in mere words, but was tensely alive, to the revelations of eyes and gestures, to the excit ing communications of their throb bing senses. The yacht was the scene of d Al- hues's first open declaration. Not many people were on the boat, and they were sitting alone on the un popular side. This gave him an opportunity to abandon pretense and to put in words the emotion in which each was absorbed. "You are so beautiful, carisima mia, be said simply, gazing into her eyes. Marian smiled, veiling her eyes. "And better than beautiful de sirable, troubling, unforgettable Yon are not like other Americans I have met. Yon are adorably a woman. Ah. yon, like the women of my own country, could live for love. let yon are American, too, and that adds piquancy. Answer me one question, lovely lady your hus band "Ob, let's not talk of him." she said suggesting by tone and look that Homer was an almost unbear- "only you men of the old world know bow to make love!" "Because our old world has wis dom we know where the true sig mncance of lue is to be found. Money bah! Something to have and forget Love and death, death and love, only these two have mean ing and power. Tell me, mi eorazon, that you love met" Marian reached Lone Island that afternoon only a few minutes be fore Homer arrived. Her face was still scorching with d'Alhues's pas sionate kisses. While driving out she had lived with him, in spirit, in a ridiculous old castle in Spain. By contrast with this imagined Elysium, the conditions of her actual life seemed so stale, so sordid, that she could have wept in self pity at the fata that obliged her to stop at the rail way station, among the other wives of commuting husbands, to pick up Homer, to submit to his unwanted kiss sacrilege, on top ef those she so hotly remembered and to sit opposite him through dinner, lis tening to his dull garrulity. After dinner he sat down before the radio to listen to a talk on busi ness conditions. The loud authori tative complacent voice was intol erable to Marian, in whose ears were the wooing cadences of the enamored Spaniard. "My head aches!" she snapped. I'm going to bed, and for God's sake, turn that thing down and keep it down." For more than an hour Marian lay repeating the words of her lover and dreaming of the ecstasy that lay so immediately in the future. (To Be Continued) IMS. k Sitae tahra mai la white collar officer he didn't hes itate to inform us "you're in the army now, and not behind the plow." Of course that was dif ferent then, we had no say, only took orders, as some wish we had to now. If the farmer only stayed be hind the plow the; amount of hours that our state officials stay on their jobs I wonder what gov ernor and congressmen would eat? No bacon and toast for breakfast or steaks' for dinner I'll bet And they draw a fat salary whUe we draw more taxes, mort gages and debts. If farmers had more to say and stayed less behind the plow they might get out of the rut But as it is, they don't have time to think, so I suppose we'd better be satisfied to let the white col lar man run the business, as be probably wouldn't or couldn't do any real work. Yours truly, B. H. CHAMBERLAIN, West Stayton, Ore MAN THE HEAD OF HOME To the Editor: We noted with interest the let ter written to Safety Valve by Mr. Jones. He asks for opinions on his letter. We would, like to say that any mother who sits back and lets her daughter-in-law treat her in that shameful fashion would let her also grab three-fourths of the 9200 ner month, also there are too many girls these days who. as soon as the coveted "Mrs." is tacked to their names, start right away "wearing the trousers." I may be old fashioned, but a good man is, by nature and God's law, the head of the home. No respect from a woman, meaas no love. I repeat - a good, broad-minded man, then harmony for be counts on fifty-fifty. There's a law would protect MODERN WOMEN Need Net Safer Bxsathry pats aad delay do to eolda, oarvMBtmn.expaera or similar cauKa. Chi hai ttIXmodBtiuidPiitarflectrT. tebaMa aae em uetek Reset, bom oy eUdnagKiatelarovereijwni. Atkfee . 'IMS SIAMON0 SeAMS this mother, whom Mr. Jones has mentioned, against such treatment from a weak son influenced by a selfish, narrow-minded wife. He says they are Christians. Are they Christians only in the sight of the' world or Christians also in God's sight? The Christian life that will stand the test when we are called upon to surrender all the. things in life upon which we have set our "hearts and planned. schemed and plotted to obtain. MRS. M. M. ALLEN. GRANGE POLITICAL TO START WITH To the Editor: There seems to be considerable misunderstanding as to the na ture of the grange. The grange was founded as a political organ ization primarily, and its other functions, social and educational are secondary. By a political or ganization 1 do not .mean a po l'tical party. On the contrary, the grange indorses principles, not candidates, economic: and social measures and not politicians. The grange was organized in the 1870s to combat unfair rate Jug gling by the railroads and to pro test the contraction of currency by the demonetization of silver, It was. and is the political voice of the farmer. Anyone else who has an idea which be wishes to incorporate In the laws of the state may (resent that idea to the grange where it will receive careful consideration. If it seems desirable and practical it will be debated' by the subordinate grange, passed through the grange council to the county or CHAPPED LAPS Te ricUy relieve ehappfaeg. roughness. tvacktad apply sMtMaiS, 1 LH.I Pomona grange and thence to the state grange. If it receives the support of all these it will be pre sented to the state legislature by the legislative committee elected by the grange. Anyone who thinks that these men are self appointed should become acquainted with the difficulties of gaining and holding one of these positions. It is like unto a camel trrine to pass through the eye of a needle after he has had all he wants to drink. I should like in a future letter to show how the grange has con tributed to improve the whole field of social and economic wel fare. To limit such an organiza tion to matters of the plow could only be proposed by one who is accustomed to regard farmers as cannon fodder. FRANK JUDD (Rt. 4). O Year ewe cnggist Is aefWixed to cfcaifsltf nfial yr lossy ea ma spot if ps are set relieved by Crttssstsioa, Dp. Chan Lao . Chinese Medicine Co. Without operation, most ailments of stomach, liver. glands, skin and ur inary system of men and women can be removed by using our remedies. We have many thous and s of satisfied customers la and around here who have used our. remedies at one time or other for the last 17 years we have been 4a business Licensed N. D. Physician. . 893 H Court St. Corner liberty Office Hoars 10 At. to I I'-M. 6 lM. to 7 FJL Sat a relay Only Consultation, Blood tresswre. aodi Urine Tests Free of CJtsrc? KM Or.