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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1938)
luff .FAGE TWO Tie" OREGON STATESMAN; ; Salem,' Oregon, Friday Morning. 'January 21, 1938 Mttle Fellows to Be- Asked to' Confer ' With FR on Problems Crioss-Section View now Aim Small Company Executives ttt Air Views as Well It as big Business .V it f .. WASHINGTON' Jan. 20.-jP)-Imal business men, at their own aslstjence. are soon to participate hi President Roosevelt's series of Tonfierenee on economic prob- 4e; i .-' . :.' i- ' -i. Wftfte House- aides announced xnetr inclusion today, explaining hundreds of letters had been re ceived asking snch action and pointing out tb.ua tar Mr. Roose velt .had consulted imly the rank ing: officlala of big business. . Consequently, the - president's assistants said, Mr. Roosevelt is sued: instructions smaller eornor utlon officials should be-selected at random from the letters and Invited to the White House. Advisory Council Formed The announcement came as the president worked toward the es tablishment of a council to guide iim In the formulation of policies, a group which Mr. Roosevelt said should Include both big and little business, as well as reoresenta tires , of labor, agriculture, trans- rwi wwib, uiBiriuuuoo, - investors and consumers. j Officials said the organization of SHch a council was distinct from the president's plans for' meetings of the leaders of a single Industry. The -purpose of the latter confer ences would be to estimate, with government -assistance, prospect ive demand for goods, so produc tion and employment might be sta bilized. Aatomea Confer Today la the latter category, apparent ly, falls a meeting scheduled for tomorrow, to whieh Mr. Roosevelt has Invited the lieaas of the great automobile manufacturing com panies and officials of their affil iate which finance Installment purchases of automobiles. However, it was considered doubtful the discussion would reach demand and production. The president has said he is anxious for changes' in marketing practices to diminish what he calls high pressure salesmanship. During the day, the senate un employment committee received an encouraging word from Colby M.-Cheater, chairman of the Na tional Association of Manufactur ers and chairman of General Foods corporation. He said two thirds of the country's manufac turers expect an Improvement in business some time this -rear. A survey of 40 manufacturers, J ae continued, disclosed an 11 per cent drop In employment between September, 1 1937, and January, 1931, accompanied by a IS per cent drop in the total number of hours Worked per week. (mmittee Okehs Reed Nomination (Continued from page 1 "Ho takes the law and the facts nd follows' them through to a conclusion. When he reaches the conclusion, that Is the end of It. "Mr. Reed'a record will beaf the fullest Investigation. He has al ways been a clean, high-class. Christian gentleman." When Logan concluded, Robert ;ray Taylor of Philadelphia ask d permission to inquire about Reed'a qualifications. Taylor em hatxed he was not protesting the nomination. Among other things, Taylor Pre dicted Reed would become a con servative member of the court, offsetting -the liberal vote of Mr. Justice Black;" - LttGremde Loses Pinboll License Feet in Ruling . LA a GRANDE, Jan. 20-)-Pin ball machine license fees, av eraging 3250 per month, were lost to the city this week when Dis trict Attorney George Anderson cormed to a supreme court rul ing and ordered the machines re moved. , VAUDEVILLE - OX OCR STAGE. THE 3 CASTLES Hemming and Betty I JACKIE DOLAN j FRANK MANN " SCREEN ; a?- - m - l i If fill V i I 1 Art Certificate No This Certificate entitles you to one week's Set .of Four Kctures'upon payment of only 39c (46c If by mail), i 1 -., -DITOItTAXT- , Be sore to order Set Na, I eqaeat acta, order the' acxt Prize Picture; "No War Clouds?' V 70 - ' . - . - : 1 ,' ; y,f 1 grodCTlcfc'- PPotogTapli of the president" International News Service photographers scored high in the exhibit of prize, news photographs at Rockefeller Center in New Toxic, win nine; seven of the 23 shown. Hugh Brodericlc, sports cameraman, who won four of the awards, took this picture of President Roose elt af baseball game, and gave it the title, "No War Cloud", Some critics called it the best picture ever taken of the president. Real Shakespeare Signature Claimed round by Utah University Jfrofesson YVT -rtk '. . asm ' m Would He 7tli ot SALT CITY Jatv laboratory of the University of authenticated a hitiierto unknown siimature of Williatn Shakespeare. j Six other signatures of the English dramatist exist. The seventh, subject of 19 months of research by Prof. B. Roland Let's Know Rules Is Chester's Plea WASHINGTON, Jan. An industrial leader told the senate unemployment committee today that business is ready .to "do anything it can to end the slump even to "taking it on the chin" through .government regu lation. - Colby Chester, chairman of the National Association of Manu facturers, asserted that all busi ness wants to know, is "what the rules are' and it -will go ahead. The gray-haired chairman of the board of General Foods' cor poration called for an "armistice" in "all of this mud-slinging be tween government and business." referring to speeches made by Robert Jackson, assistant attor ney general, and Secretary Ickes. Scotch Program Offered Tonight ! WiUiam McGllchrist, sr., for the 17th consecutive year ever aince- its conception, wUl preside over the Scotch program that begin at 8 o'clock in the lobby of the- YfflCA. tonight. : The 17th annual gathering will be honored by vocal solos ren dered by Mrs, William Tshopp, Mrs. Gordon McGilctrlst. Mrs. Robert Hutcheon and William Dunnvill. ; i On the program is an instru mental jtrio, composed of Mrs. Ted Gordon, pianist, Mrs. Clar ence Vowes, violinist, and Mrs. Apis H. Cannon, flute. . Mrs. -Dennlson will accompany the soloists. , j Democrats Election Tuesday ; Members of the Young Demo cratic club ot Marion county will convene Tuesday. January 25, at the Marlon hotel for the annual election of officers. The election was previously announced for Thursday, January 27. : The : new offices . to be filled are president, four vice-presidents, aecretary, treasurer and a councilman and eouncilwoman who will go to the atato conven tion to be held in Pendleton Borne time !n AprlL A speaker and program are being arranged for the. Tuesday meeting. Tariff Move Explained MEXICO CITT, Jan. ,20.-P-Finance Minister Edonardo 'Sua- rer today assured - United States ambassador Josephus Daniels that Mexico's sharply. Increased tariffs were . only : a temporary move to bolster the peso. ,. 83 If ya have that or sab-. a umbered Set of 'Foar. WT - m wsrv - Kind, AVorth S75,U0u 5ft 7 APTh. ChoVota Utah announced todav it hid . -Oijewis, is iour mcnes long on. a piece ot paper eight ty two Inches, apparently cut off an old docu ment Prof. Lewis declined to set an exact value for the scrawl but de clared 375,000 has been paid for value." The signature is In the custody ot Prof. Lewis, head of the Shakespeare laboratory. It was given htm for study by a friend and he said he was not at liberty to disclose its history. " "It is impossible, from the sheared-off piece of manuscript, to determine the nature and con tent of the item from which the signature was removed," said Prof. Lewis. i Prof. Lewis listed the following steps in his literary detective work: analysis of the ink and the paper showed they were the kind used in Elizabethan times; com parison ot the signature with the six definitely known signatures made 'it virtually certain that the man who wrote the six other sig natures wrote this one also;" and ultra-violet and infra-red photo graphy revealed quill pen had been used and that beneath the ink there was no pencil tracing, a practice common in forging a rare signature. Prof. Lewis said three known signatures of Shakespeare exist on his will and three others on for mal court documents. No manu scripts of his great dramas are known. Officers Tell of j Wright Summons . j LOS ANGELES, Jan. 20-Jpj-A graphic word picture of how two police officers found Evelyn Wright and John Klmmel lying mortally wounded in Paul Wright's Glendale home was given in court today.- ;: Harry W. Reed. Glendale police officer, testified for the state! in the trial of Wright, former air port manager charged with mur dering his wife and Klmmel, his "best friend." ? Reed was with Officer Robert Trowbridge in the ambulance which hurried to the Wright home at the defendant's frantic call.- Wright met the ambulance' at a street Intersection near his home hatless, coatless and with out vest, said the witness. Reed quoted him as asking them: ; "Why are you so long in getting here? My God I'm a murderer! I've just killed my wife and Imy best friend." i Job Compensation Checks to Go but The state, employment compen sation commission will be ready next week to send benefit checks to at least 17 of the 23 state em ployment service offices in Oregon it was "announced at commission headquarters here yesterday. The number of checks going to claim ants in the initial distribution had not yet been determined. - j The commission as ot Wednes day night had received 1749 claims for unemployment compen sation from -the Salem employ ment office. - v 1 . Adamick Kayoes Singer - ST. PACU Jaan. io.-FVJIm-my . Adamick, IS 8-pound Detroit whirlwind, knocked out Ixsy Singer, 115-pound New. Yorker with a powerful left hook one minute and S9 seconds alter the atart t the third round in their scheduled tan-round bout to night. ,''. 1 linotypes Are Rolling Again Cheers Break Hush While Blerping Papers Are Rushed to Press "(Continued from Pagw 1) Wednesday afternoon when they informed -1 E. J. Pelkey, Seattle, northwest representative ot the International Typographical un ion, parent body of the Portland local, that they desired to offer the 245 striking printers a new. proposal. - Pelkey drove to Portland Thursday morning. At 1:30 p. m. the proposal was submitted form ally to the strike committee. The committee, accepting it, submit ted it to the printers with recom mendations that: they accept it. Less than two hours after the voting started at 4:30 p. m., the proposal was history and The Oregonian and Journal, organiz ing their news ataffs with amaz ing speed, prepared to roll from their presses the first direct print ed local and national news the city's 325,000 residents have had since Saturday. The new proposition was de scribed by the publishers as em bodying all the basic fundamen tals of .all previous offers by them and which, answered the objec tions of the onion to the points of all other propositions. 'A settlement meant the re sumption of publication of The Oregonian, which until Monday morning,; never iad missed its publication date ainoe It wstart ed aa a weekly 87 years ago and 10 years later became morn In r daUy. Psvlmer Hovt, managing editor of The Oregonian,' announced that the re-aasembled crew was work ing at top speed to get out a full fledged morningjaper bnt that It probably could not be finally produced until midnight or later. Donald Sterling, managing ed itor of the Oregon Journal, Baid his newspaper, a six-day evening and Sunday publication, would start regular editions tomorrow. Tho News-Telegram, six-day eve ning paper, was expected to fol low the same- course. Union headquarters announced some 30 minutes after the vote that the new contract, which will be formally signed as soon as pub lishers and union representatives can meet, was retroactive to Jan nary 1, the date of expiration of the 1137 contract out of which grew the strike. The union na M tViot aov.. .un VlkUVl B1UC could reopen the question of hours ana wages for conciliation or ar bitration on July 1 only after hav ing given notice 30 days previous ly. When the contract expires Dei cember 31, 1038, a new contract will be negotiated by local concil iation only. The dispute dates back to last fall, when both sides began nego tiations upon the 1938 contract. On January 15, the union, after rejecting proposals of publishers, notified its printers to walk out at 1 p. m. The settlement accepted by the union calls for a wage increase of 45 cents a day over the 1937 scale but represents no change in hours. Find Bodies of 2 Kidnaper Victims (Continued from, page 11 ily and the burial place near Spooner, Wis. Far back, in the woods, off a lonely side road north ot Emily, the federal agentsat the direction of Anders located the kidnap hide out, described by Hoover as a shallow wood frame dugout, im planted level with the earth, in which Ross was kept manacled for about 13 days. Hoover said the structure was about six feet deep, six feet wide and ten feet long. It had been pre pared beforehand by Anders and Gray, Hoover continued, and indi cations about the place were the wealthy Chicagoan had undergone suffering and privation while a captive. The Call Board GRAND Today Love and Hisses" with Simone Simon, Walter ' Winchell and Ben Bernie. Saturday Grace Moore, Mel vyn Douglas and Stuart Er win in "I'll Take Ro mance.". ELSIXORE Today Double bill, all . color "Ebb Tide" with Ray MiUand and Mickey Roon ey In "You're Only Toung Once" and Floyd Gibbons adventure "Playing With . Danger." CAPITOL Today Double bill. ' "The - Patient in Room 18! with Patric Knowles and "The Girl Said No" with Robert Armstrong and Irene Her- vey. : - ' . , . STATE ; V Today Eastern circuit . vaudeville and Guy Kibbee and Cora Witherspooa la "The Big Shot - A p - Saturday midnight preview, "Stella Dallas,' - . HOLLYWOOD 5 Today Double bill, Johnny" Mack Brown in "A Law- ";maa if Bora and James Gleason and Zasu Pitts in -Vnrtr Kanrtitv flirt. : - Lakeview Shivers With 20 Degrees PORTLAND, Jan.- 20.-i!P-A 20-degree minimum temperature today made Lakeview the cold est spot in Oregon. The weather bureau forecast rains for the west portion and local snows for the east. Other minimum temperatures included ''Baker 22 degrees. Bend 22, Medford 36, Newport 40, North Bend 40, Portland 38. Roseburg' ZBr "Siskiyou summit 28, Wolf Creek 32. Dr. Erb Reveals High Aim at U0 President -Elect in First Speech Gets Oral i on i V Cites His Goal , EUGENE, Jan.1 20.-()-Pr. Donald M. Erb, Stanford univer sity economics professor -and University of Oregon president elect, said today in his first pub lic appearance aince his appoint ment he would chart a goal ot academic distinction for the uni versity. Dr. Erb received a tremendu ous ovation from students, fac ulty and townspeople after his talk on "college spirit, in which he stressed loyalty, based on honest belief and affection; pride, based on valid accomplish ments, and distinction, the urge to make the beat of every oppor tunity which, finds its expression in the deeds of the students. faculty and alumni. Sports Not Unessential - "Understand me," Dr. Erb said, "when I say that not even ath letic prowess can be considered essential. I believe In athletics. I enjoy sport. When the Oregon team plays Montana I shall be there and if things are going well I shall probably behave in a manner most unpresldential. I believe in a wholesome and general participation In sport and athletics and in a sound pro gram of physical condition, but all these things are Incidental to those works which make for aca demic distinction." 'Going Wage' Left Off Building Bill WASHINGTON, Jan. 20-OpV- Legislation to stimulate a housing boom emerged from a senate house conference today minus a provision requiring.- that "prevail ing wages be paid on government Insured construction work. Senator Lodge (R-Mass), who had the provision put into the bill, announced he would try to have ij re-inserted when the mea sure reaches the senate floor. The senate-house conference ironed out difficulties in the hous ing bills passed by the two cham bers, and the resulting legislation will soon be voted upon finally. It would permit the federal housing administration to insure mortgages amounting to 00 per cent ot the value of homes costing up to $8000. On 310,000 homes, the first 86000 of the value could be 90 per cent insured; the re mainder 80 per cent. Air Squadron to Head for Hawaii HAMILTON FIELD, Calif.. Jan. 20-(JP)-United States army authorities announced here today an entire bombardment squad ron of 13 planes, 30 Officers and. 180 men would be transferred shortly to Hawaii In a further move to fully strengthen air de fenses of the vital mid-Pacific islands. The transfer, which is to be permanent, involves the 31st bombardment squadron of Ham ilton Field, and the personnel with their families will, sail from here February 1 aboard the army transport Republic. Boy Spends Fare Home, Still Broke PORTLAND, Jan. 2Q:m-?o- lice hope someone will soon teach Gordon Elliott. 16, how to con serve his funds. ; He appeared at the 'station pen niless two weeks ago and asked for assistance to reach his father, Ernest Elliott ot Spokane. The boy's mother, Mrs. B. Sheffield of San Francisco, forwarded train fare. Gordon left the train at Van couver, Wash.,- returned to Port land and spent his money. Detec tives picked him up at a hotel lob by last night and. placed, him In the city Jail until his parents eith er send money or come for him. in Today and Saturday TWO SMASH HITS , Robert Louis Stevenson's Famous Story Allln Color! nrnffiin1, 1 i - U UUhl w Farmer Taacea Ray Miiland AXD 2VD HIT : Mickey -Rooaey Lewis Stone. - Plus Floyd Gibbons "TRUE AD VENTURE" M r. " Commoner now Egypt's Queen Youthful King Farouk Is United to Farida by Ancient Ceremony CAIRO. Jan. z.-(jpKlng Far ouk'a childhood sweetheart look ed on today while the 17-year-old ruler made her his bride and Egypt's second queen since Cleo patra. Pretty Fartda Zulflcar, modern. 16-year-old daughter ot a com moner, watched her own wedding through a lattice work partition at ancient Koubbeth palace. She and Egypt's boy king were married in the orthodox Moslem fashion a wedding in- which only, men took part. ' . Tonight "Farouk" promised to take his dark-eyed bride on an in cognito tour through the city where their ' wedding was being celebrated with glittering oriental pageantry. Bedouin horsemen galloped about, firing rifles Into, the sky; drums .throbbed; bullocks were slaughtered for the poor; wine flowed and there was dancing in the streets. Women Not Participants No women actually were pres ent at the 10-minute ceremony but Queen Mother Nazll, the king's four younger sisters and the bride and her mother watched through the separating grillwork and saw Farouk, in the black and gold ot a field marshal, extend his right hand to Farida's father, Yonssef Zulflcar Paaha, for the symboli cal handclasp. The two pressed upright thumbs under a silk cloth, and the bride's father said, "I betroth to your majesty my daughter. Fa rida."- The king thrice Intoned: "I ac cept her betrothal to .myself from thee, and take her under my care and bind myself to offer her my protection and ye who are present bear witness." Groom, Father Sign Farouk and his bride's father then signed the Eygptian marri age contract which was like all others except It did not mention a dowry. The contract stipulated, however, a secret sum Farouk would pay Farida if they should be divorced. After the ceremony Queen Fa rida drove home and put on her wedding gown of shimmering sil ver lace with a 20-foot train and gossamer veil for the afternoon drive to the palace to be presented to Farouk's relatives and take up her official residence. The first of three great state banquets will ba held tomorrow at Abdin palace tor 1,500 guests. After further festivities Saturday and Sunday the couple will leave for Farouk's country estate, 40 miles northeast ot Cairo, and Fa rida's $25,000 trousseau will be for the eyes of the Icing alone. Iinfield Speaker Wins Extempore Stanley Cornils of Llnfleld col lege won the state extempor aneous speaking contest, held at Llnfleld Thursday. The general topic was "The Columbia Valley Authority and Cornils discussed "Reallocation f Industry." Aldus Smith of Willamette university was second, discuss ing "Moisture in Drought." Jean DeWitt of Oregon State college won in the women's divi sion which discussed "Uncle Sam's Payroll." Her topic was "The Fruits of Office." Frances Anderson of Llnfleld was sec ond and Barbara Toung of Will amette received honorable men tion. Indians Plea not Guilty of Murder MEDFORD. Jan. ta.-3-3n. seph B. Ball, 27, and Leonard uoaowa. zs, Klamath Indians, Bleaded not auiltv to mnrder ehar. ges in the federal court today. Ball was Indicted for first de gree murder id connection with the death of Lee Jordan, 22, who was shot January 7 near Chilo quin, Godowa was indicted for second desrree murder fnr th fa. tal shooting of William Truan, 30. a cowooy. Nine persons nleaded mlltr of selling liquor to Indians. Six pieaaea not guilty. Vibration Is Blamed BOZEMAN, Mont., Jan. 20.-(JP) Vibration of the tall that mar have weakened and caused rudders and vertical fins to be lost in night was given as a probable cause of the crash of a Northwest Airlines transport piaae near nere in testimony be fore a federal board of Inquiry to- uay. . . - Today and Saturday TWO SMASH HITS I pats:: c:rns ;ta vnntu II ewwhsj.sbikp; And 2nd Big- Hit The Girl Said No" With Irene Hcrvcy and ; Robert -Armstrong Steiwer Urged to Favor NLRB Fund PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 20-(iP) Monroe Sweetland, Oregon Com monwealth federation, said today a telegram signed by his organ ization,. 14 AFL unions, 15 CIO onions and two Independent la bor groups had been sent to Sena tor Frederick Steiwer nrging greater appropriations for . the national " labor relations board. The telegram, Sweetland said, read: "Oregon-labor Is counting on you to support greatly Increase NLRB appropriations aa proposed in house bills now before senate.'' Seized US Vessel At Franco's Base Insurgent Warships Take Nantucket Chief Into Mallorcan Port PARIS, Jan. 2Q-(JP)-The Unit ed States embassy announced to day two Spanish insurgent war ships had escorted the American tanker Nantucket Chief to Gen eralissimo Francisco Franeo's air and naval base at -Palma, Mal lorca. The vessel, flying the United States flag and carrying an. Amer ican crew, was reported reliably to have been seised two days ago in an attempt to run the insur gent civil war blockade with a cargo of Russian oil for the re publican government at Barce lona. An embassy spokesman said the American consul at Palma would "handle all dealings" between in surgent authorities and the Wash ington state department regard lag he snip. Earlier, insurgent sources in Paris had professed a lack of information but said seisure was "the logical fate of any ship that tries to break the- blockade." The embassy forwarded what it could learn ot the incident to both Washington and to Rear Ad miral Henry E. Lackey, now at Genoa, commander of American naval forces in European waters. However, it was said Lackey had not been asked to take any action. (There are three American na val vessels in European waters the cruiser Raleigh at Genoa with Lackey and the destroyers Mauler at Gibraltar and the Clax ton at Vlllefranche, France.) Both French and American au thorities here said it had not been determined whether the tanker waa taken In Spanish territorial waters. The French destroyer Vauquelln reported to the French naval ministry it had sighted the tanker In the western Mediter ranean, 60 miles north ot the Balearic islands, accompanied by two Insurgent gunboats. liisiirgents Bomb 3 Spanish Cities (Continued from page 1 ) erali&sfero Francisco Franco's at tempt to blockade government porta which led Tuesday to the capture or ine American tanker, Nantucket Chief, en route to Barctlona with a cargo of Rus sian oil. Travelers crossing; the frontier aaia ions or bombs were poured on Barcelona, striking a populous quarter. One, traveler said the Plaxa Palacio was "one hole" 0 feet deep as a result of a direct hit. The insurgent bombers dumped dozens of explosives on war weary, virtually sleepless Valen cia, which was subjected to three raids in 12 hours yesterday. First reports said only a dozen or so persons were injured today in the suburbs of Rezafa and Nazareth, where the attackers were forced to drop their bombs after ' being held off from the cltv proper by anti-aircraft guns. More than 150 Basque chil dren, sheltered In Belgium since the fall of Bilbao, crossed the frontier during the day on their way home. ripens 611113 STUAR ERW IK f M j TOMORROW 4 If m vi hi ;'a m VYN -; J i1 n F - 3 Teacher Group Joins Defense Portland Council Claims Invalidation of - La w ' Would Be Harmful (Continued from Page 1) recalled that It had been " sub ject, t various attacks, "among the grounds being that it per petuated teachers in their po sitions to a time beyoud which they could not be reasonably ex pected to have the degree of cukicucj wnicn iney lorxneny , possessed." These attacks, the petition asserted, "have threat ened1 the existence of the entire said teachers' tenure law." If the tenure law : were, re pealed, "the efficiency of- the teachers and employes of the districts under the teachers' ten ure law would likewise be mate rially decreased through free dom of school districts to dis charge efficient teachers for no good pedagogical reasons, but for purely personal or political -reasons not relevant to the ef ficiency and skill of the teacher or employe . . . to the Irrepar able damage not only of the in terests of such teachers and em ployee, but of the school chil dren and of the public gener ally," the petition alleged. Would Mean Fight A Rains t Tenure Law The petitioners averred that invalidation of the retirement section of the act, as sought in the local suit, would 'result in renewed efforts to have the en tire, tenure law repealed. "So-called teachers' tenure laws have been quite widely adopted throughout the United States and the fact that such laws are- a declaration of a wise public policy is now !' generally admitted." the petition; declared. The petition and : demurrer were signed hy Thaddeus W. Veness, Portland attorney, as counsel for the Interveners. Circuit Judge L. G. Lewelling last Friday granted the plaintiff, Principal Miller, temporary in junction restraining the Salem school district ' from enforcing the retirement act. which other wise would be effective as of February 1. Determination of the case la expected to be on the basis of a demurrer filed by District Attorney Lyle J. Page with arguments to be submitted by written brief and at an oral hearing. Auto Pushed Half Block. Train Here (Continued from page 1 ) age six, S40 Trade, who was also a passenger In the car, was first taken to the central fire station, by a fireman who answered the first alarm, given . aa a lire, raisy x.ou was later taken to the Deaconess where it was found she was considerably, bruised and was suffering from shock and fright, but not se riously hurt. Fromm escaped without in Jury. Mrs. Fournier, according to first aid men, was knocked com pletely out of the car and was lying la front of the front wheals. The ear, witnesses-: said, es caped with little damage the -heavy freight pushing it down the tracks instead ot "rolling it over. i . tKO-SADlOftCTUtt And 2nd Feature 4 ADDED I Mickey Mouse in Tluto'g Judgment Day" News and . "Secret Agent No. 9 STARTS SUNDAY CSB CHI.NKSE HKHBS WHKN OTHKKS FALL CHARUKCBAN Chines Herbs BKMKD1ES Healing virtae has been tested hundreds years for chronic all nests, noae, throat, sinusitis, catarrh, ears. S B- Toaa I tings, asthma, chronie cough. stomacb, sail atones, colitis, constipation, diabetia, kidneys, bladder, heart, blood, nerves, neuralgia, rheumatism, high blood pressure, (land, akin aoresu saale. femala ast ,kn. dren disorders. 8. B. Fong, 8 rears practice m uuaa, Herb - Specialist, 12 N. Cosamerclal St a-i.-. Ore. Offlcn hoars 0 te p, m. 1 0 -M at. - tf tftm't flt siaa wed. 9 to. 10 a. m. '