I..
s 8
PAGS FOU3
I The CGOZi CTATEZMAIL Colam. (W. Frbbrv Mondna. TnW 91. 1911
PFC oe Hccther
Chcoigea Ectnk
Wish the Winds
AT THE FRONT!
. I,.' . . . ' ew - v i
"Wo Favor Sways Us; . No Fear Shall Aid -I
From First Statesman; March 23, 1851 ' .
.
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher
Member of the Associated Press
v The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of an
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. -
It Was a Good Try
; It was a good try, anyway, this would-be
assassination of Adolf Hitler, and it might
point out in terms understandable even to the
fuehrer that his time is running out
There have been plenty of evidences in the
last 18 months that such was so, for all the Axis
powers, and it was high time that such portent
got right down to the bed rock of personalities.
.Whoever instigated that bombing performed a
real service, j .'. I''-' " j-.v." ';.' ';:;t'- "
, It was not entirely happenstance that the at
tempt on the fuehrer's life came but a few hours
after the fall of Tojo's government on the other
side of the world. Tojo has been in the same sort
of company which led Hitler to his present un
enviable predicament ; ' j
DpIB listed Hitler's Injuries as burns, bruises
and a slight concussion. Domei might have listed
Tojo's as a damaged ego, which wishful think
ing might associate with hara kiri. I
If there is anything to the popular supersti
tion that the third time is a charm. Hitler might
well go into hiding in the deepest air raid shel
ter in Nazidom.
The first war-time attempt on his life was in
the Munich beer hall on November 8, 1939,
when a , time bomb exploded just after the all
high of the nazis had left the place. Now comes -an
even narrower escape. The hour for the third
approaches. - j
The Berlin; home radio said "the would-be
perpetrators of Hitler's assassination have es
caped, but the police are on their trail."
In not too long' a time,' some radio may an
nounce that the would-be perpetrators suc
ceeded and now are chasing Hitler's police.
Old But All-Important
Electrical storms have joined man-made haz
ards to threaten anew the forests of the Pacific
Northwest, and the battle knows no surcease.
" It is an old subject for this time of year, this
word of caution. But it can't be over-emphasized.
The electrical storms are something
against Which no legislation can be aimed. But
their damaging effects can be minimized great
ly by eternal watchfulness and thoughtfulness
in reporting resultant conflagrations. ;
This is no time for Oregon to lose any more
of its invaluable heritage. j
.' The obvious needs of war and peace should
: make everyone more careful than ever before.
There are some things about Maury Maver
ick that set him apart. One of them is laundry.
It seems that about Eastertime a year ago, the
war production board vice chairman surren
dered his dirty clothes to a Seattle hotel laun
dry for a bit of water and starch. He left town
before the cleansing operation was completed.
This week he returned and his laundry was
therealong with a 2.20 bill. It isn't every-v
one who can spare his laundry that long. It's1
lucky someone didn't steal Maury's other shirt
in the meantime. I
.- Marion county is moving up in late tabula
tions on I the 5th war bond drive, and has a
chance to do j even better, through bond pur
chases on the last paydays of this month. The
county now is 6th, among the 12 in western
! Oregon, in E bond sales. That "buy an extra
bond? slogan is a good one to keep in mind
right now. i
i ; . i- .
Editorial Comment
From Other Papers
DULL MONET ' i
The newsmen are having a hard time to get
across informative and interesting accounts of
what goes on at the international monetary con
ference at Bretton Woods. They get their informa
tion in fragments and it is all about the dull topic
of" money that is not for spending. Money for
spending is a popular subject, of course. But money
not to spend but to use for an economic tool is not
understood by very many. The ones who under
stand it generally have a good deal of it and the
ones that have a good deal of it generally under
stand it. - . - ; -N ;v
; "So far as the stories go", the idea seems to be there
. should be an International bank with about $10,
000,000,000 to lend around. .That lets out the aver
age man, who cannot visualize what that sum
- means, and no bank with that much money is go
ing to lend it to him for the things it is pleasant
to have money for. It is going to be loaned around
by those who have it, in which the United States
Is Number One, to those that need it, which make
a rather long list It will not be handed over in
cash, like the $10 or $50 a soft-hearted cashier will
, sometimes advance against next week's pay, but
will be posted in the books, according to the rules.
. It is these rules that the newsmen have a hard
time to find out about and that people will have
a hard time to understand if and when the news
men find out about them. San Francisco Chronicle.
EXPLAINING THE ISMS ;
An explanation of the working of various Isms,
as illustrated by what happens under each one to
the man who Is the owner of two cows, is given
In a short piece handed us by a friend. You will
-be interested in It and here it Is: '
: Socialism You give one of the two cows to
your neighbor. . ; ,
. Communism You give both cows to the gov
ernment and in return it gives you some of the
'milk. - v. . .. -:
' Fascism You keep the two cows and give the
milk to the government - ; .
New Deal You shoot one cow, keep the other,'
throw the milk away and apply, for relief.
Capitalism You sell one cow and buy a bull.
' Natia The government shoots you and takes
loth cows.
A Kind Word From the SoutK !
. when a Los Angelan in official capacity starts
to say booming things about the Pacific North
west, in more normal days it would seem a
good time to batten down the hatches and watch
for a blow. ' - , ' 3 -
There was a time when Los Angeles was ac
cused of trying to kidnap Mount Hood, rope
Oregon into its city limits, and generally claim
credit for all the sweetness and light extant.
Now comes the president of the Los5 Angeles
harbor commission, addressing the conference
of Pacific Coast Port authorities in Portland,
to predict that postwar development of Oregon
and Washington will exceed thatjof his- own
' state.. ) .-, Ji (
He cites lumber and wheat as highly impor
tant in the northwest's potential contribution
to the rehabilitation of the Orient. 5
It appears, in fact, that Los Angeles has given
up engulfing the remainder of the west coast.
Such plans never got beyond the bounds of
levity, of course, but there was a time when a
Los Angeles official wasn't saying many nice
things about areas which might be regarded as
in competition.
If the competition now is to be on a level of
joint boosting, we're all for it, ; ; i
;,, ...... . . ,. .'y.;; v.
Robots From Holland i i
Peace-loving Holland, with its quiet country
' side and gentle home folk, isgiven a' new role
in history by the Nazis' robot bomb, i i
Not from Calais or Dunkirk or the' blood
drenched coast of northern France, but from
the land of dikes and windmills comes the lat
est of these flying terrors. A British report says
they have been observed travelling in a direc
tion which leaves their takeoff point unques
tioned. f
Holland thus far has escaped in large mea
sure the thousands of tons of allied bombs
visited upon German-held territories of Eu-
rope. Whether that nation will continue in its
comparative and only comparative safety re-
mains in doubt. -
There is no question that robot emplacements
will be sought and bombed wherever they may
be. There will not be another Rotterdam, but
there will be no total escape for the areas which
give shelter to the winged death hurled at
Britain. ;
. ; i
Salem isn't the only, place to have J a pilot
- plant for trying out processes for manufacture
of alurnina. A plant in Arkansas will try-out .
low-grade bauxite. Meantime there Will be no '
worry about aluminum for war since it is an
nounced the government has accumulated a
stockpile of 5.5 billion pounds of bauxite. That
ought to carry us through, along with current
production. ? a
si:-. i i i i
Nazi Party Platform - 1944
OtP I
SEEMS
TrmnmnrB
i i
Donside
wasCnimi
DeGauIle Called Patrlofie
Louis Bromfield, the Ohio author-farmer, was
the one who predicted want of food, in this
country over a year ago proved a bum prophet.
There's an abundance of meat, and the wheat
crop promises to be over a billion: bushels this
year. The country will be groaning over sur
pluses when the war ends.
The democratic convention is 194(3 all over
again with minor variations. Instead of lim
iting the convention's choice to one . man this
time Roosevelt gives the delegates; three to
choose from. What a short tether the democrats
have to limit the range of their grazing! To
this has our "free and untrammeled'f demo- -cracy
come. i t li .
Dnterpreting
The War News
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON t 3
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAB ANALYST -
Bright with distant promise of victor : as is the
war news from seething fighting fronts on both
sides of the world, even nearer and more glittering
possibilities have been opened before the eyes of
the United Nations fellowship. - ,f
There is plain evidence that defeat Is gnawing
at both ends of the Nazi-Nipponese war axis. It
underscored Berlin's disclosure that a bruised and
flame-scarred Hitler had narrowly escaped death
while amidst his hand-picked inner circle corps
of personal military and naval aides. ,1
Just what these far separated events foreshadow
for the reeling axis mates cannot yet be adduced
certainly. But that each is symptomatic of sagging
war morale in Germany and Japan alike is axio
matic. They clearly indicate rising disunity within
both, hint at impending internal break-downs which
could hasten the day of axis doom. f i
Tojorfall unquestionably stemmed directly from,
sharp Internal disagreement within tbM innermost
circle of Japanese military leadership of war strat
egy. It was an admission of defeat thai called for
at least an appearance of political hari klrt by the
man who had led Japan into the war, -and all his
closest associates.';: ; ; :i .;IN
Efforts of babbling Japanese home-front broad
casts to cover up the schism with meaningless
phrases about the necessity of a "stronger' war cab
inet setup could not conceal It It was self evident
of a drastic split on war policies between the army
and navy wings of the militaristic: Junkers that
rule Japan that a double-headed team of premiees,
one an admiral, the other a general, replaced the
;-fallen war lord. 1, .'' v :
A co-distatorship instead of a single dominant
. voice of command, 'must weaken, not strengthen
Nipponese war making capactty.'ItE would impose
upon the emperor himself the duty or resolving
war policy conflicts between his twin, chief lieu-
tenants. ". t :.s:. " :'::.:J : -A t : 'A
For that reason. If no other it looks ilOte a face
saving Japanese expedient, and interim arrange-1
ment to prepare the way for something else, What
ever its, motivation the fall of Tojo is "evidence
that Japan no less than Germany is sensing im-
; pending doom. '- '";;. t :,; -.: s ;f s . :;;;:
The attack that singed Hitler is no less a symptom
that there Is growing up in Germany a desire for
vengeance on the man responsible. v
(Continued front Page 1)
plowshares without first con
verting our tools, and that costs
money. If we break down the
$15 billion investment in war
plants we will find how limited
is Its utility for immediate pro
duction for peace.! First, there
is what we may call the arsenal
the munitions factories, shell
loading plants, gun! factories and
such, costing $4 billion. I be
lieve the governtnentj , should
keep this arsenal in ai standby
..basis fp defense purposes, y
Seconufywe iive invested
over two billions fin shipyards
and over three biDiona in air
craft production ; facilities. The
demand for ships! and :. planes
will be so much feduqed it lis
foolish to think that either gov
ernment or private corporations
will continue to f operate all tof
these facilities. Mych pf these
plants must either i be scrapped,
preserved! as standby, jor con
verted to other production, which
is not easy. : j ' ; .. i
Thirdly we lave synthetic
rubber plants in which jwe have
invested several hundred million
dollars. Their fate is answered! in
the reply to this question: Will
you buy a tire of synthetic rub
ber when natural rabbei! is again
available?; The declared, nation
al policy is againsf a protective
tariff on rubber; so these plants
will close with tie. return lot
rubber imports, nd jwill re
open only as special or enlarged
markets are built hp taskjin
which private companies will
show far more fatal than the
government J j
Thus, you see, (the question
for large segments of jour war
industry is not: fWho shall op
erate them?,r but rather : "What
use can we makel c them?" Ac-
cording to estimate; there will be
only about $5 billion worth of
our war plant outjof tie S15H
invested that will hav imme
diate utility. This portion Will
include plants for faviaion gas
oline, metals, chemicals, andi a
vast asortment of machine tools.
For much of this there! will.be
demand, both domestic 'and for-
" eign. f I . j7 !
My reebmmendafion i for the
orderly liquidation of such por
tions of our war plant as we do
not require for defense purposes
with a governmentlagericy given
rather broad powers to act as a
prudent trustee to determine the
method pf dispofeitionV price,
terms of sale or lekse. It should
keep these pointsj in fnind: i I,
continued operation of the ' fa
cility; 2,' avoiding sales at a
mere pittance thai might serve
as windfalls to operators and so
be inequitable to established in
dustry; S, avoidmg accretion I to
monopoly. It woulcf be a mistake
to hedge private operators with
too many restrictions, because
they will have a hard enough
time at best under postwar com
petition, under government regu
lation and under ! probable tax
rates. i MA . - '
I am opposed to government
operation of this;war plant, both
because I believe t to be gen
erally impractical and second,
because I do not believe the war
emergency should! be fused Ito
put the country info stafe social
ism by a side doOr. As I have
said, much of this plant will re
quire conversion, i and j I dont
believe the people wiH want to
expend more public money f or
tiui purpose. A large portion of
this usable investment is us-
I ! WASHINGTON This Gen.
Charles DeGaulle, leader of the
French National . Committee
what sort of man is he? .j
I j What is he 4n the flesh and
Spirit? Not in the printer's ink of
the j published word.' Nor the
voice of the radio commentator.
Nor even in the lines of the
soundphoto flashed across con
tinents and seas?
I I What is he actually made of
f Snaps and snails and puppy
dogs' tails? Or sugar and spice
and: all things nice?',What IS
DeGaulle made of? I
j j I've asked this question lately
Of everyone whom I suspected
might have met the general.
The answers I have received are
hereby summed up. LetT call
the J paragraphs ."DeGaulle in
Words of One Syllable."
jj Charles DeGaulle is a blunt,
unconipronusing fellow. He is
tactless. He is without charm.
Almost instinctively he says the
wrong thing. He has a talent for
: irritating people whose co-operation
he needs.
But DeGaulle is truly patri
otic in the best French tradi
tion. Not in the French tradition
' Of the last 50 years or so. But
in the French tradition: that bred
warriors and heroes 4- fighting
men and the words and music of
Xa: Marsellalse." ' j
j DeGaulle Is not attractive to
look at. He has drooping shoul
ders. None of the square robust- .
;ness that we associate with the
jinilitary. ; He hasn't that elusive
Quality sometimes named "It,"
possessed by Messrs. Franklin
jD. Roosevelt and. Winston Chur-
j DeGaulle mostly means what
;he says. He is as near lan honest
jinan as a 1944 Diogenes could
jfind were he searchinir-through
this grimy world with his hope
ful lantern. He also represents
the j courageous France of today;
Not .the smooth. camnliat4
Tance that went down before
the German invasion.
asj not the suavity of his rival.
pen. Henri Giraud.
I Giraud in his manner mI ;
thoughts reflects that finesse of
jjic-wai x ranee. II uevarSUUe bas
finesse it is an accidental . qual-
ty with him. He never heard of
1
gton
Fighting Frenchmen Blunt
the word. Certainly ! he can't
, spell it
DeGaulle v realizes that since
the invasion has begun and is on
its triumphant way, he must co
operate with the allies if France
is ever to be free again and if
his kind of Frenchmen are to
have a part in the government
of their now prostrate nation.
j ..
The other day, after a trip m
and out of the Connecticut ave
nue shops, I had begun to won
der if we American ladies are
as smart as we think we are.
Foreign women have their
own way of managing their
dear husbands which every hon
est woman must admit is a goal
to try for. The other morning I
saw a brisk lady, accent French,
leading a tall, helpless male into
an art store where he paid a
large sum for a painting of a
cow in , a creek. , .
The French lady was firm
from the, start and obviously had
not a moment's qualm - as she
forced art down the poor fellow's
tight throat
A few moments later I heard
another accent let's call it Vi
ennese for the sake of the war
effort. It was feminine gender
and it was in the millinery de
partment of a smart shop. -
The voice was saying to a big,
, strong man: "My dear, you take
the kinder to the; movie. I stay
-here and buy the hat I be home
When you get the potatoes peeled
for the din-ner." ;
These two incidents would
have made me 'despair of the of -ten
advertised charm and power
of the American Woman had I
not next visited a little jewelry
WITH THE AET IN ITALY,
July lMDelayedj-iR-Pvt Joe
; Haxher ,'is private first class
again and he aims to celebrate
" the commission" quickly before
something else happens.
Joe is a medic from Des
Moines, la., and the stripe sta
tus , of his sleeve is . changed
more often than : a woman's
Today'G Garden
By LILLIE MADSEN -
Avoid watering phlox, chry
santhemums and roses so late in
the day that their foliage does
not have an opportunity to dry
off before night. Going- into night
with damp foliage frequently de
velops mildew and blackspot
Mrs. A. V. B. writes that she
has purchased a number of roses
during the past three years and
among them are several which
she does not like. She wants to
know "if it would be criminal
to throw away those I do not
like even if I did pay gqpd
money for them. It doesn't seem
good garden practice to throw
them away when they have been
purchased and were recommend
ed as being very good. Maybe
my Judgment isn't as good as it
should be. What would you do?""
Answer: In my opinion there
is only one thing to do with a
plant in your garden if you, or
members of your family do not
like if take it out
i If. Mrs. A. V. B. can find the
one who recommended there par
ticular roses to her, she might
give them to that person. A gar
den is or should be for one's
own delight and if you don't
like something in it even if L.
H. Bailey, Dr. Ernest Wilson
and Homer D. House all insisted
that it was the finest thing on
earth, throw it away. I believe
Dr. Wilson ' made ; this recom
mendation himself ; at one time.
It is economy to visit the gar
dents are in bloom if one has
the gasoline. Then the gardener
is not so apt to' purchase some
thing he doesn't like. .
There . are certain definite
principles of good: taste in gar
dening as. in house furnishing,
but when it comes! to individual
pieces or plants; one should
choose that piece or plant that
. makes one the happiest If your
'garden lends itself to pink ros-
; es and on recommendation of
someone you have planted Pic
ture and Madame Butterfly and
later find you prefer . Imperial
Potentate and Sterling, by all
means take out the Picture and
the Butterfly although I
would not be able to understand
your taste. Don't ! ever hesitate
to grow that which you prefer
among the things that are suitable.
mind. He has been pfc three
.times and was made a Tt once
and T5 once but every time
' something! happened. - -
It started back in Camp Clai
bourne Latest May 2, 1941,
when Joe ifirst made pic on
ly thereafter lie got a pass into
town.' I v '- - . "
-"Them puses never run on
time in Claiborne,'' he explains
Hie anHMisj ( .
Later he was made pfc. again
and T4 but ! well, ah the bust -was
made again. And that sort A
of thing kept up until Joe's
shirt sleeve began to look like a
practice ground for the jewing
circles. He's fatalistic about this
-new stripe, i wV,";:';- '; :
"111 be jbusted again," he said
with assurance. "I don't know
what for but- 111 do something.
T f4 Vi m man, irmv m
A VOAUO WW IUJ. III.H m w
buck and 111 go out a buck."
Someone out of - the cannon
company, was - supposed to go
home on 30 days furlough and
Capt. Paul W. Blowman, Clear
field, Pa., had to decide who.
There were three guys eligible
three top .sergeants who came
overseas together in April, 1942.
They were Lester Mazelin,
Monroe, Ind., Bucky Walters,
Newark, NJ, and Robert Mucha,
Duluth, MinBu ; : ' '
To save the captain further
embarrassment the three guys
agreed to cut the cards. First
they "had j a - preliminary cut to '
see what jthe final cutting order
would be; It; was Mazelin, Mu
cha and Walters, h - '
Then as their buddies gathered
and gaped they cut the deck for
. the big chance. Mazelin turned
up ; a king. Everybody gasped.
Mucha cut jdisspiritedly and
turned tip a ; king. Everybody
whistled, j Walters was just go
ing through the motions listless
lyand he turned up a third
king; Everybody : swore in
amazement . . - :
j To cut the cuttings short they
cut again deeply into the deck.
Walters cutting first this time
.got the two ef hearts, Mazelin
the six of diamonds and Mu
cha did the impossible, turning
up the fourth king in-the deck.
Duluth,' here he comes!
shop. Beside the earring coun
ter stood an avid American la
dy. She'' was done in a bright
yellow suit a red and yellow hat
and a lapel pin composed of a
yellow rooster with a red beak
and red eyes. She also had a hus
band in a checked suit sprawled
admiringly on a nearby chair.
The avid lady had a dozen pair
of earrings out on the counter.
As she tried each pair- on she
turned to the husband for an
opinion. With complete sincerity,
he, the proud male, gave advice.
At last he said:
; "Honey, why don't you Just
take them all. And ask the clerk
if she can find you some others
to match that rooster. I think
you'd look swell ' with rooster
earrings." -
US Prisoners
In tip Camps
Get Packages
The Literary Guidepost
fcble only in relation (to other,
privately owned facilities, or is
jan intermediate step in the man
ufacturing process.
j . The government owns many
machine tools set up Jin private
factories. It has financed wings
jor bays of existing plants. These
portions are of little or no use
except as they are operated with
irelated facilities. Obviously pri
vate industry will want to hold
to wnat it nas, and the govern
ment surely isn't going to take
over more of private industry.
It is a mistake to think of a
successful industry as consist
ing chiefly of a fine capital plant
Of even greater importance are
such factors as location with re
spect to raw materials and mar
kets, - ability of management
teamwork of employes, skill in
marketing production! Govern
ment by its nature in a demo
cratic society, is ill adapted to ;
perform these functions. Politi- '
cat pressures, "bureaucratic red .
tape, wasefulness . we have
seen too many evidences of all
these in late years to have faith
that our government: can take
over and run "successfully those
plants which were built in a war
emergency for highly specialized
performance.
By JOHN SELBY ,. . . '
"The Letters of Alexander
Woollcott" edited by Beatrice
Kaufman and Joseph Hennessey.
, (Viking; $3.50).
In spite of its; self-confessed .
limitations. "The Letters of Al
exander Woollcott" is good sum
mer reading. It is almost wholly
unimportant;, the letters have
very little significance. But they
go down with the exotic .taste
of a dead-ripe literary manga
; Woollcott wrote a lot of let- .
ters. Once he liked a -man or i '
woman, he stuck. Sometimes his
friendships were a little quaint 1
and his taste and his Judgment
were fallible in the extreme. But
they were his, and he lived ex
tremely well by them. More in
teresting, ; he worked at them :
like a slave. The letters show
(if it already had. not been established)-that
the common pic
ture of Woollcott as a lazy Bud
dha sitting on a silk cushion is
fallacious to the point of idiocy.
But Beatrice Kaufman and Jo
seph Hennessey, who have edit
ed the collection, honestly , de
clare that their book is not the
whole Woollcott Woollcott could
be just as rude as he was charm
ing, and he wrote a lot of let
ters that maceraied the recip
ient's feelings like an old-fashioned
cabbage knife. Sometimes
he deliberately capitalized on his
rudeness, as his delight in "The
Man Who Came to Dinner" ac
knowledges. But bis editors say,
nobody sent in any letters of this
sort It seems incredible, but
there is nothing to do but take
their word for it and Byrap'
thize.?-; ;.'-;;-v;.;-hv '::r'
Woollcotrs prose - style was
Hudson PJver Gothic, and its
foundation was laid in his boy
hood. He never made one word
do when two could be used; he
(like . Henry Mencken) would
scrape the bin for a long while
to find a curious word or phrase.
He built his literary edifices to
noble 'proportions, sometimes,
but the buttresses and pediments
and gargoyles ' were, like Mr.
Downing's churches, of wood in
stead of stone. This made them
charming, often, but also vul
nerable. I suspect Woollcott
knew it very welL
The letters are sparse up to
the thirties. There are a - few
.from his boyhood, and quite a
number to his adored sister, Ju
lie written during and after the
last war. The style grows rapid
ly more ornate, and the opinions
more positive, as the book progresses.
Materials for relieving the mo-'
notony of j prison camp routine
have now reached- American pris
oners of War I in . eight Japanese
prison camps, according to infor
mation received by the Oregon
War Chest from the National War
Fund. j ; ,
' The report stated that 23 cases
of materials, shipped by War Re
lief Services, NCWC, a participat
ing service of the National War
Fund, had, been received and dis
tributed at prisoner of war camps
under Japanese domination lo
cated at Osaka, Tokyo, Hakodate,
Zentsujt Fukuoka, Korea ,For
mosa and jKiangwan. - , : ,
Each case was packed as a
complete unit the report stated,
and contained books, occupational
kits and games.
Contributions made by residents
of Marion county to the County
War Chest help the National War
Fund finance j the work of War
Relief Services and War Prisoners
Aid which are active in endeav
oring to make easier the plight
of Americans interned in Jaoan
ese and German prison camps.
Newport Coast Guard
Station
to Be Retained
Rep. James W. Mott said Thurs
day that the coast guard station
at Newport, its headquarters and
considerable equipment recently
destroyed jby fire, would be re
tained but that construction of a
new building would have to wait
until the close of the war.
V
Brokers, Salesmen Are
Given Examination Here
13'
Fifty-one prospective broken
and salesmen wrote in the t9t
real x examination here Thursday.
aaore man zoo applicants will
write in similar examinations in
Portland Friday. x
li !l
: DI ABIONDS
,0F "
PRICELESS
'BEAUTY' . "
. V? t --..j-, v .r-.V-Among
our wide telec-
tion of sparkling stones
you wul find the dia
mond ( you've alwaya
wanted to own.
A
work
Kraving
la
. she.
11 Jewelry (ff'. A
Credit If
Desired
I