THE EUGENE REGIS TEB. GUARD
Page Two
III ROTARY MEET
. The American government In faced
with definite choice between two
courses In its relations with the
Orient either to continue Its old
policy of equal trade, territorial in
tegrity and independence for the Asi
atic countries, a policy that will lead
to military action! or, to change ita
policy to one auooroinate 10 me
Japanese courae. So Harold J. Noble,
professor of hiatory at the Univer
sity of Oregon, told the Eugene Rot
ary club at ita weekly luncheon meet
ing Tuesday noon at the Oiburn
., For nearly 100 yeara the Lnited
States bsa developed a policy that
baa varied little In all that time, a
policy by which the American gov
ernment by diplomacy will support
tjie Independence and territorial in
tegrity of thoae countries and an
open-door policy of trade.
Dnrlng eome 70 yeara, Japan, too,
has been developing polsey, one for
territorial expansion and control in
Aala and one to cloae the porta. The
two policies are In conflict and
America has a choice to make.
Why should America keep the old
policy? Mr. Noble asked. It Bounds
altrulstle but It has not been so in
rsctlee. The policy has been better
for American business, it so happens,
,e said. A free and independent
China meana greater markets for
America. But is It worth war
with Japan be asked the club.
Whatever personal opinion may
H, there la really only one aenslble
Snirse. and that Is to give lip the
d policy, even If It means bowing
to Japan.
ZCIinnces of winning In a war with
Japan are not so good and een If
Ala country did win In such con
ct what would It gain? the speaker
Axed. It would mean that aucb a
war wonld destroy the Japanese roar
Ots and It means also-that China
ould be cut off from American
business. During mch a conflict,
Sfher countries, wonld .ten In and
capture the business. Again, such
ar would mean a whole aeries of
involutions, upsets, and other trnu
a In the Asiatic countries that
Would mean bad business for years
come, he added,
i Mr. Noble told his audience, bow
ewer, that he believed America would
ffht chango Ita policy, basically. It
B too well founded, too traditional,
too tied up with a type of blind pa
triotism. Not wi" Japan deviate,
jther, he said. The only thing to
Mop Japan's movement Into eastern
Isle, will be defeat by Soviet Russia,
id that, too, Is problematic, he
added.
The old American policy Is tradi
tional, true, and aound, but It la out
moded, and It Is not aound patriotism
Jb follow a policy that will lead to
national disaster, Mr. Noble said in
wishing his remsrks.
Previously in bla talk, -Mr, Noble
fad commented on the tone In lit
erature during the aeventeenth and
eighteenth canturlea when there was
f general feeling of respect and of
Inferiority in thinking and writing of
Ike Orient. With the middle of the
Sneveenth century, however, there
a decided change. The attitude is
oot one of respect and of an In
feriority, but one of superiority. And
fiost of the Americans go to the
Orient todsy to look, not for some
thing different, hut tor something
Die. they have at home. When they
n't find It. they are Inclined to
grlticlae the civilisation, customs, and
People of those countries. The ma
chine ace brought this change, he
Held. In speaking further of this
itnstlon, Mr. Nobl. pointed out that
rhlle the Japanese hsve demonstrat
ed they can handle this maclunerr as
ell or better than the Americans
nd Europeans, atlll the latter retain
a personal superiority.
J And the ntneae, he said, have
Been more slow In adopting the west
arn node of life. They look back on
their long history aa something to
Creature and they take the attitude
that It Is belter not to junk their
Id civilisation and accept something
iew from the westernera alnce the
jreaternrra themselves are not aure
f wltnt they want or have.
Dean Wayne T. Morse Introduced
Die sneaker.
a llngli E. Roasun, graduate manager
erf the university, was welcomed as a
jtew member, lean Jnmes II. Gil
bert Introducing him. Visiting Rntar-
jsoa at the luncheon included (lien
Smith, superintendent of schools in
Medford; Sid I.ennekln. Jersey City
flub, .lark Sinniger. Knarburg club,
Snd W. M. Moses, Grants Pass club.
Jnmes Gallagher of Sacramento and
B. P. Ilorrla were among the visitors
STORY
k (CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
ending Instructions from the federal
firing board at Ran Francism,
i Gonmsa No) Identified
Police continued making their
oVholrsalc arresta, but the holder of
$e death gun had not hern Identified.
. S Mntt Meehan, International Long
foremen's Association lorsl off Iris),
srss held for questioning, hut not on
murder wsrrsnt. He wss arrested
then It wee learned he was carry
g a loaded revolver. He was not
St the garage where pickets stormed
tongshnremen who bsd not psrticlpat
ri In the recent strike.
Police, aald Meehan took seriously
a "police commission" given bin In
the spirit of fun when atrlkers and
employers agreed to submit tneir
differences to arbitration.
Raid a Hall Fatal
Conner was killed when he and
other member!) of the Columbia River
Longshoremen's Associstion were oe
set hv a mob Of waterfront pickets,
most of whom were armed with
rocka and other missies. The Colum
bia longshoremen organised as an
anti-strike group during the recent
strike.
Meehan declared I. L A. members
were ordered to picket the uicken-
back dock when it was learned a
number of the Columbia group would
be sent to work there. Meelian denied
the pickets were instructed from
headquarters to go to the Columbia
hall.
While the daylight riot involved
more than 100 men, investlgatora
have not yet found anyone who aaw
the shooting. Two persons said they
beard the shots, whioh were muffled,
as If the gunman was holding the
weapon through a window to ahoot.
Another aaid the abota Bounded as
If fired from Inside the building.
Beys Turn Over Wsapoa
Two boys told police they found a
,82 calibre shell Inside the hall, after
the shooting, and that a man, wear
ing working clotbea, took It from
them, aaying he would turn It over
to police. He did not do so.
The riot which ended fatally for
the newly-wed Conner youth was
condemned by Msyor Joseph Carson
In a radio speech last night.
Carson declared that labor has the
right peacefully to picket singly or
in concert "to Inform the public and
all who would go thereabouts to
labor, of atrlke conditions but this
is for the purpose of Informing
people and never can legally be said
to be for the purpose of keeping
persons from going about their law
ful employment."
Falsa Oootrln. Is Hit
He said' a great deal of the vio
lence of the recent atrike was due
to union longshoremen's "falae" doc
trine "that the men working on the
waterfront owned the position which
they bud left to go on strike.'.
'Any assemblage which Is riotous
In Its nature is unlawful and may
under the law of this state be dis
persed by th sheriff or the mayor
or other city official of any city or
town," Carson continued. "This law
against unlawful and riotous assem
blages bss been the law of this state
for many yeara, waa placed there for
the purpose of preventing large num-
bera uf persons from gathering when
a atate of public feeling exists and
to prevent riots and disorder."
STORY
(CONTINUID FROM PAGE I)
Reich and leader of the pagan move
ment In the Protestant church.
"The time has come to take up the
fight against Christianity," said Hop.
pe. "Germans shall and must realise
their Conversion to Christianity waa
a crime against the race and the peo
ple which put them completely at the
mercy of powera outside the state.'
He urged Germans to "liberate
yourselves from the cultures of sllen
priests who went to make you the
booty of the Jewa."
"IXsrard the last messages of
Christian trnlnlng, so destructive to
ua Nordics," Hoppe advised; "abandon
the Jewlah-t'hriatlan conception of
sin, pity and loving the enemy,"
Calling for youth to be "hard" he
aald;
"Pity and mercy he damned. I'raiae
that which ateela. Christianity's total
ity claim Is a thing of the past."
Expressing araaiement at Hoppe's
step, the Catholic publication Kircben
blatt demanded: "We ask the respon
sible authorities of the atate how
these utterances of Hitler youth can
possibly be reconciled with aasuran
ces for positive Christianity recently
emphasised by an authoritative
voice?
STORY
(CONTINUtO FROM TAGE 1)
my ko (tfr ft larr itura of the
..... ...... That AA.lMlwslV.lt-
inijrht Iffttl to th .( Ion of ft north-
frner to the npftiKfrump or to tne
pott of floor Itailtr.
FUNERAL PLANS
ST. U)U1S, Auc 21. ( The
bmly of lUnry T. Rain j, lute pnkr
of th houAfi of rtprtntfttlTit, will
IfftM 8t. Lmitf. mriy tomorrow on
final trip to "Walnut HHP th Rafny
entitle nrr Carrollton, 111.
The hotly will lie In atate at the
(..rem county rourthmie. In Carroll
ton, from ft a. m., until 1 p. m., Wed
nfPliiy, American le jilonnairea will
itand aolrmn iiir1,
Funeral nervier will he held at
"Walnut Hill" at 4 p. m., a few min
ute" after the aeheiluM arrital of
Prft-ident RooTelt from Wanning
ton. An Rpiiropal itrrire will be
read and Speaker luiney will b bur
led in the Carrollton cemetery, hetidt
his father and mother.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.-1)
1'reaident Ilnonevelt decided today to
return to WanhlngtoD from the fun
era) of Speaker Itainey In Carrollton,
111,, tomorrow before proceeding orer
the weeken. to hit autnmer residence
at the family home in Hyde Park.
X. T.
STORY
(CONTINUED FKuM PAGE I)
afternoon after the boy and a num
ber of acquaintances had been ques
tlonud by an examining board com
posed of Sr. Edmund 8. Conklin of
the University of Oregon department
of psychology, Dr. II. W. DeBusk of
the university school of education,
Dr. Orville A. Welter, and Dr. Jt. C.
Romli;, county health officer. Judge
Fred Fisk presided at the hearing.
The examining doctors held that
Bobby is a high-grade feeble-minded
boy, that be ia not to be considered
as dangerous at the present time
but that the next few years might
see developments in tbst direction
unless he is carefully watched, that
the feeble-minded borne at Salem is
most nearly able to give him the care
needed.
Dr. DeBusk stated that results
obtained from the Binet intelligence
tests given Bobby Monday morniug
showed the boy, 13 years 11 months
old, to hsve the mental development
of a child slightly over eight yeara.
He showed apeed in problema involv
ing motor skills but showed lack of
judgment in completing problems in
volving common aaaociation of idetia.
Simple problema in arithmetic gave
him trouble. The tests, based on
thousands of observations, showed
Bobby to have reached bis probable
mental level, the doctor said.
Drowning Story Changed ,
Tbe teatintony at the hearing
tended to allow that while Florence
residents had never considered the
boy aa normal, there bad been no
real concern in regards to bim until
the drowning of Htewart Gorski and
Dean Coulter last Tuesday. The only
teatiraony directly connected with
the death of the two boya, pktymatea
of Bobby, was given by Grant Treat,
deputy sheriff and marsball at Flor
ence. When Jerry Gorakl told him that
Bobby Lund had returned from Ruck
lake without bis two companiona,
Treat said that he asked Bobby to
go with him to show where tiiey had
been. Bobby told him, be aald, that
b had put on Ms clothes and waa
leaving aa the other two were com
ing out of the water and that be d'd
not nee them again. Later, Treat
aald, after further questioning Bobby
stated that the Coulter boy bad
jumted Into the lake; leaving hfm and
the fiorskl boy on the dock. The Gor
akl boy pushed Bobby and Bobby
then puehed tbe Gorski boy into the
water, Treat said Robby told him.
Talking to Coroner Charles Poole
later. Robby reverted back to bla
story of leaving while the other two
were still awlmming,
Ne Emotion Shown
The boy showed no emotion over
the death of the two boya, Treat
aaid. beyond aaying that he was
sorry that they were dead and that
he waa glad he had told what be
knew about It. He did not tell of the
drowning when he reached Florence
because he did not know whom to
tell. Treat stated the boy informed
blm.
Treat ststed tbst Robby bad not
been a problem boy, that he had
dealt with blm in cases of petty theft
much aa is the esse with msny boys,
thst b bad Investigated, rumors of
Bobby hsvlng trouble with other
boya but had never found foundation
for the rumors.
Stayed Out Lata
Lincoln Lund, the boy's father.
stated that the only trouble Robby
bad given him was In staying out
late at night, 'playing around the
ferry, and that be would not work
except when watched. Robby never
waa quarrelsome, played mostly by
himself or with younger children,
waa teased somewbst by other chil
dren hut never seemed resentful and
could not stsnd to see aufferiog in
any auape, the father declared.
C. V. Rrnttaln. Florence butcher.
aaid that many in Florence had felt
uneasy shout the boy. knowing him
to bo sub-normal. Robby often was
seen hiding behind a tree while
watching other children at play, he
said.
T. C. Torgersnn. auto man of
Florence, testified that he knew the
boy quite well through serving as
scoutmaster of the Roy 8cout troop
to which Robby belonged. The hoy
waa a "lone wolf," he aald. taking
no interest in games, appreciative of
Interest shown in him by the others,
never unkind but rather jetting others
run over htm. He was ahead of time
for meetings and did not need to be
reminded what nlghta to come but
waa wholly unable to learn tbe acout
oath or make progress towsrd earn
ing merit badcea.
Bebby Net Qsarrelieme
Mra. Anne Dndley. former Red
Cross worker, stated aha had known
Robby for over 10 years, that there
was no barm In th boy but that
she did not consider him aa good
company for younger boys.
Chief of Jollee Carl Bergman of
Kugene. who has known Robby for'
years Ihronrh living In Florence, stst-
ed thst the boy wss not dsngerons.
thst he wss not qusrrelecme. tbst :
h d'd not fight bsrk when bothered
by others, and that be was tender
hearted, fearing to cause pain In
others,
Mrs, File Rrownson of Fugene, who
Fridsy, testified she bsd found Robby
baa taken care of the boy since last
a "good kid." that she had found him
responslre to kindness, and that she
"wtsildn't mind baring him to take
care of." Her dog and cat, she ssnl.
made np with Rnhbr readily, the boy
being very gentle with them and pet
t'ng them a great deal.
Bebby Likes Spelltaa
Mary Annin Zinlker, -Red Cross
executive, stated that teachers who
had worked with the ly found bim
unshle to learn by experience, thst
be bsd plsyed with matches long
sfter the usual age for such things,
that he stole articles but made no
effort to bide them but told what be
had done instead,
Tbe examination of Bobby himself
came after the background had been
Bupplied by the othera. Bobby said
be liked to play ball, to ride horses,
that be didn't know how to box but
he. "could fight all right" slthough
he didn't start scraps, that he would
be In the seventh grade, likes cars,
likes spelling snd language best
among school subjects snd liked to
draw houses.
The best fishing on the Siuslaw is
at Cushman when the tide is high, be
told Judge Fisk. The best time to
catch crabs is while the tide is com
ing in. About 8A0O csrs crossed the
river on the terry In th, past two
weeks, he said. Bobby hasn't decided
what be wants to do for a living.
STORY
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
In government insurance a a i n t
losses in making the loons," Hong
him explained.
"Commercial banks may not make
unsecured loom, for lonjr terms, thus
many property owners feel unable to
undertake Improvements because of
inability to repny the loan in SO, 00
or 00 days. Under the new set-up,
property owners may obtain loans for
as long as fire yeara. The UTtrage
loans, however, will run from any
number of months to three yeara."
Red Tape It Reduced
Tied tape virtually la eliminated In
writing these loans. It was said. .The
applicant foes to the local agency,
meets the qualifications provided,
signs the personal note and receives
the money. Since in tbe majority
of cases agencies other than banks
are not allowed to make unsecured
loans. It Is expected most of the
loans. will be handled through banks.
Money obtained from this source
must be utilised In Improving real
property.. This means that buildings
may be remodeled, permanent fix
tures installed, but no new const ruc
t'on moy be undertaken and no per
sonal things may be purchased. Thus
a room may be remodeled, ft house
repainted or reshingled, ft bath tub
Installed, bnt new stoves, refriger
ators, furniture or similar Hems may
not he included.
Interest is five per cent on a dis
count hnsis, Mr. Uouglum stated. In
most instances the interest charge
will be deducted at the time the
lonn Is made. Thus If one borrowa
1100, ?5 will be deducted and the
payments divided Into 12 equal
amounts. Pnyments must be met'reg
ulnrly and to Insure this, one 'of the
specifications In obtaining loans Is
that thp applicant must have a reg
ular Income, the Income being at
least five timi greater than the an
nual payments on the n-tte.
The success of this program
largelv depends on the willingness of
persons who can qualify, to borrow
this money and make Improvements."
Mr. Hougium pointed out. "This win
create employment and stimulate bas
in es.'
Loans under the federal housing
administration are in no way con
nected with HOT,C renovation loans,
It was declared.
SCHOONER RAMMED
lNrOX. Aug. 21. (U.RV- The
Italian schooner Kfisiaserra sank to
day after a collUtnn with American
steamship Thochordft according to an
Exchange Telegraph dispatch from
Turin. The crew was saved. The Ex
ochorda ia a 10,000 ton freighter op
erated by the Export Steamship corporation.
PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. 21. U.
Eddie Hogan, Pacific northwest
amateur champion, carded an even par
72 in the morning round of the North
west qualifying trials for the national
amateur golf championship at Port
land Golf Club todsy.
STORY
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
country, had been picking up consign
ments of money from federsl reserve
member banks and manufacturing
companies.
As it drew up In front of the Rubel
Ice Company'a plant "at 19th street,
between Cropsey and Bath avenues,
in a thickly settled sector of Brook
lyn, three men, wearing aprons of ice
company employes, quickly uncovered
a machine gun- mounted on an ice
truck,
"8ay a word and thia apits," one
of the robbers told Joseph Allen, driv
er of tbe truck.
At this point two automobiles,
which apparently had been following
the armored car, screeched to a stop.
Fire to a dozen met, witnesses were
uncertain of the exact number,
jumped from the two cars carrying
half a dozen sub-mscbine guns.
Csll for Hslp Blacked
One of the robbers walked to the
door of the Rubel office, reaching It
just aa Lilllentbal opened the door.
He Jammed his gun into Lillienthal's
back.
An employe in the Ice company of
fice reached for a telephone on the
counter. The'robber grasped it and
yanked it off the wire.
He turned to Lllllenthal, reached
into his arm holster and disarmed
tbe guard. The robber then ordered
Lill'enthal to "march out."
Meanwhile, the rest of tbe robber
bsnd had surrounded the armored
truck, training machine guns on It.
Four men pushed Into the truck,
shoving Allen ahead of ttiem.
Then the robbers began the trans
fer of the money bags to their own
csrs.
The tranafer took about three
minutes, the robbers working precise
ly and speedily. They found the
money bags, which contained coin
and currency, so heavy, however, that
in theirv hurry they left one contain
ing JI20.000.
Siuslaw Searched
For Missing Man
The body of Temple Sharp, 35, was
being sought ic the Siuslaw river
Tuesday after hla clothing was found
on the bank of the North Fork Tues
day morning.
Sharp, who came from Idaho about
two . monthe ago. had been working
at tbe Elmer Johnson plsce on tbe
North Fork. At sbout 0 o'clock
Mondny night, he snnnunced that he
waa going for a swim, as bad been
hla custom every night. He waa not
missed until bis clothes were found
Tuesday.
IVputy Sheriff Omit Treat and
coast guardsmen headed a search
of the river which was continued
until high tide at about 1 o'clock
Tuesday afternoon. The search was
to be resumed at low tide Tuesday
night.
Sharp's father Is J. VT. Sharp of
Springer, New Mexico.
BREVITIES
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
Attorney Carl C. Donaugb of the
Oregon district said today.
ROSBBURG, Ore., Aug. 21.
Announcement that work ia to be
started aa a winter project by the
Steamboat CCC camp on tbe exten
sion eastward of tbe grading of tbe
North Umpqua road, waa made here
today by V. V. Harpham, euperviBor
of the Umpqua national forest.
SALEM, Aug. 21. (A The Salem
city council voted to accept the public
works administration proposal for ar
bitration to determine a fair purchase
price for tbe Oregon-Washington wa
ter aervico company'a aystem here,
and wilt immediately urge the PWA
to appoint the third arbiter, aa it of
fered to do last spring.
GENERAL
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Aug. 21.
(U.R) Kathsrlna Breschkowsksya,
called the "Grandmother of tbe Rus
sian revolution," wee reported dying
today in a village near Prague. In her
nineties, long blind and almost deaf,
she has been suffering from dizziness
believed to be Induced by brain clots.
Alexander Kerensky, head of the po8t
rcvolution provisional government in
Russia, was at her bedside after an
airplane flight from Paris.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 21. (U.R)
President Roosevelt today reappoint
ed Adolph G. Miller, for a term of
12 years, as a member of the federal
reserve board.
NEW YORK, Aug. 21. (U.PJ Dun's
Insolvency Index for the first half of
August recorded a new 1934 low at
54.2, compared with 66.9 in July and
ftft.l in August last year. The August
figure compared with a in2fl-lf29 av
erage for that month of 90.9.
NEW YORK, Aug. 21. (U.R) An
impartial Investigation of the recent
vigilante movement in the San Fran
cisco general atrike, similar in meth
od to international nnofficial reich
stag fire Inquiry, was suggested today
by A. Tj. Wlrln. counsel to the Ameri
csn Civil Liberties union. Wfrin said
the commission of Inquiry might In
clude' such well-known liberals as
Heywood Broun and Theodore Drel-
" BALTIMORE. Aug. 21. (U.R) A
tiny spider's cunning and pstience tri
umphed over a garter snake todsy,
ending a 120-hour battle between tbe
unevenly matched foes. Tbe Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani
msls Intervened. Tbe snake was killed
and tbe spider credited with a tech
nical knockout.
CALLENPAR, Ont., Aug. 21. (U.R)
Excsvatlon for the Dafoe hospital
waa completed today and granite and
timber from tbe surrounding country
waa put into the foundation. The hos
pital will house the Dionne quintup
lets. ASTORIA, Ore., Aug. 21. (U.R)
Saved from danger of bleeding to
deatb, Dagfunn Kelvik, 24, of Bergen,
Norway, cook on the ateamer Califor
nia Express, was in hospital here to
day with flow of blood stopped from
a severed artery in his wrist. Dan
gerously injured at aea when he fell
on broken glass and almost severed
the wrist.
HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Aug. 21. (U.R)
Douglas Fairbanks, catranged
globe-trotting husband of Mary Pick
ford, returned to Hollywood today
after an absence of more than 14
months and refused to say a word re
garding a rumored reconciliation with
the actress.
NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 21. (
New Orleans stood by expectantly
todsy waiting for tbe opening salvo
In Senator Huey Long's new campaign
against his bitter political foe, Mayor
T. Semmes Walmsey. But Long has
kept his next move a dark secret.
LONDON, Aug. 21 (P) Attempts
to reach an agreement on export
quotoa were definitely abandoned to
day by the world wheat conference,
which has been in session for a week.
Unrestrained shipping of wheat by
all countries is assured, at least until
November.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. OP)
Tbe Washington Post says administra
tion officials are reported to be con
sidering shifting the NRA compliance
division to the department of justice.
Such a atep would be one of the
major changes in a proposed reor
ganisation of the recovery unit.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. OtV
Senator Hastings of Telaware, chair
man of the republican senatorial
campaign committee, today declined a
proposal of Senator Lewis of Illinois,
chairman of the democratic senatorial
committee for a joint debate on cam
paign issues.
MISSOULA, Mont., Aug. 21. OP)
The little town of Avery, Ida., was
believed safe this noon, though still
threatened by r. mass of fire, six miles
long snd one to three miles wide,
sweeping down river, fanned by a
strong east wind.
SACRAMENTO, Cal.. Aug. 21.
OP) State forestry officials here
were confident today the- black pall
that has darkened the, aky above
many of the state's forest sreas will
be cleared awny by sundown sfter the
most hazardous period of the summer.
The fire in the Plumas national forest
had destroyed more than S000 acres of
valuable timber and an undetermined
number of buildings and ranch homes.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21. UR
Embattled cotton textile workers.
oecoming "ick ,,, tj ' ;
conference, with
Francis Orm.n . ,"'
United Textile Work?. ? " .
said today. '"" Aa,,:
WASHINGTON i,
the country', member w,? i
bank, sinoe the Msreh iS
crisis waa reported toiS
era. reserve board in
' NEWPORT, wile? An.
-Cesare SabelH
trnnaatlantic flyers, be,., 5 '
Ing their wrecked alrpC r "
I'a Vinci, on a mouS lu"
U hope of an earl, '
lantlc flight dlssin- L'aV
LONDON, Aug. 21. -ajj -posals
for a gix.ntlc lV
wheat pool to control
price, provided a tu.tffS'
a session of the drafting JS, "
of the world whes,
fixed percentage o( the 1
port, of wheat would
the pool as a re..-- "'"
TTVir.iOir ...
.., .. Amis, Au
Om-Fatber Bernard HrtSfc
Alaskan explorer, known , 2?
cler priest." was her. todu IV1
photographic expedition t. b z
terious "disappenrinu" volcanic tw
ATHENS. Aug. Kl. (UJB A
vore earthquake was f,t nn, l '
today. Heavy dam,,, w "
hilt no rn.iinltlA. ... ,, . .
....Ea ncrB mitt.
PITTSBURGH. A,,- , ... .
demand that 8700 striking 'aba,,,
ann omcisu of the Alumij
Company of Americn plsce their die.
puts before the national labor rt.
tions hoard if they cannot reach si
immediate settlement waa mnj, t
day by Federal Mediator Fred KHilfc,
Mercury Mounts
During Tuesday
Tueedsy was due te be sea af a
warmest, if not the wsraurt li; n
the summer.
At 3 n. m. the merrar rfMl uu
with indications it wonld t HrW,
In July the thermometer west tew-at
tbe hottest dsy so far for tae H
summer sesson.
whew! it's hot!
n
JV
and nothing tiu the tpb! b thia
weather like a bowl of crisp Kellogjt
. Corn Flakes topped with cool Hi.
Try it for breakfast or lunch.
Kti&fytff CORN FLAKIS
Th Season's 110 VAIUI
Nettie Kjetfe
P0V2Iin rouge
a ill .Or Have . .
nutshell ns- a,,, skin
rougevs. unattracu-
Vr
-I
Cv.ry night oad '"
free. mok,t. N.ni.
mHfl ir.sly witb lea
Raxall factory to You ALI
New In Progress. Save up to
Ona Third.
TIFFANY-DAVIS DHUO CO.
Your Rsxall Drug Stor
CO.
"I
ASTHMA
Pmroxytm
No CoM If Wheaaia Cmsarlilaa Not
UUorod Asm! BraathiBti MaaVa
Eases la 14 Hosurtl
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tl BRANDY
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I I II want 1 1 JWU I W 1 1 1 W Ws Wall I IW 1 1 Was? 1 1 IW IWS S J -
way you quard aqainst uqly COSMETIC SKIM
CANADIAN
PACIFIC
T H 0v ,.1A,( PW,CV,M6S'
rUn. Am Im4 OW. BR oOlt. FeAUW ;
NETTIE is up-to-the-minute
in everything that concerns
beauty I While she uses cosmetics
as most modern girls do she
nevor risks Cosmetic Skin.
"Why should I," she asks," when
It's so easy to protect complexion
beauty Hollywood's way?
"In a few minutes I can re
move make-up thoroughly
take every bit of stale rouge and
powder out of my pores with
Lux Toilet Soap. It's the simplest
way in the world to keep a satin
smooth skin."
Cosmttfct Hrmltt if
rtmovtd thlt wty
Cosmetics need not harm even
delicate skin unes you leave
stale bits of rouge and powder in
the pores to choke them. Then the
pores become enlarged dullness
tiny blemishes may result
signs of Cosmetic Skin.
Lux Toilet Soap is made to re
move cosmetics thoroughly. Its
gentle lather is ACTIVE, removes
every trace of stale rouge, pow
der, dust and dirt.
Every night and before you
put on fresh make-up during the
day wash with Lux Toilet Soap.
Screen stars use this soap to keep
their skin utterly lovely , , , you
should, tool
777
S " ' t
Ves, indeed I
use cosmetics.
But by removing
them regularly
with Lux
Toilet Soap
I quard aqainst
Cosmetic Skin