Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 01, 1930, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TWO
M KPFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREfiOX, SUNDAY, JUXE 1, 1930.
Medford Mail Tribune
Dally and Hundif
I'ublkbed bt
MED FORD PRINTING CO.
18-37-80 N. -fr'ir BU
ROBERT W, RUIIIi, Editor
8. SUUFTER BMITJI, Maoagar
Ao Independent Nempiper
Entered u teeond elan natter at
Oregon, under Act of Marcn 8, 1878.
SUBSCRIPTION BATEfl
By Mail In Arirance:
IHUy, with flundir, fear $7.60
Daily, ltb BuniUjr, nontb...,, T5
- Dally, without Sunday, year 8.50
Dally, without Sunday, month 65
Sunday, one year 2.00
By Carrier, In Adrinw In Medford, Aihland,
JaeUonTiUe, Central Point, Pboeolx, Talent, Gold
Uill and on Higlmay:
Daily, with Sunday, month I .78
Dally, without Sunday, month 68
Dally, without Sunday, one year T.00
Dally, with Sunday, one year 8.00
All termi, cub In advance.
MR. JOSEPH WAS ACCUSEE&OF NO CRIME
MIMBKR OP TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS
Receiving Full Leased Wire Serrlc
The Aiaoclated Presi la ezclualrely entitled to
the use for publication of all newi dlipatehea
credited U It or ttvtrwisi credited la thli paper,
and alio to the local newa puhluhed herein.
All rights for publication of special diipatcbaf
herein are alto retened.
MEMBER OK THE UNITED PRESS
Official paper or the City or Medford.
Official paper or Jackson County.
A, B. C. average circulation for tlx nontbi
eudii .MarH) HI, If.'tU, 4.122.
Dally arerage diitrlbtitlon for tlx moDtba to
March 31, 1U;I0, i75.
Present presi run, 4K7!i.
MEUfiEB OF AUDIT BUREAU
OP CIRCULATION
Adrert!!lng Repreientatlrea
M. C. MUUBNBKN k CUM PANT
Office fn Ne York, Chicago, Detroit,
rranclico, Loa Angelei, Seattle, Portland.
Smudge Smoke
Bill Coleman Is a 1 1 1 1 hnvinK
trouble with IiIh Great Toe.
Poor lco cream weather and
koke weather prevails.
11. Flewher, the eminent dare
devil, is nut enough ho. to wear
tho latent mode of pants for men.
If lie won't, nobody In the valley
of the masclulne gender will cre
ate a furore, by so doing.
Bill Grieve of Prospect, Is on
the mend after a hcIro of pneu
monia, and his hoy was matrl
mnnlally handcuffed last week.
Ha will be able to participate In
the shivarec.
Tho Pesthole Kitty ball team
downed tho Gold goal creamery
Thurs. when tho latter curdlod.
ToniUH Swem was caught look-,
lnff austere, at tho nunsot Wed.,
but refused to divulge what was
wrong with It. ti
133 of tho fairest and bravest
In tho city, will receive sheep
ekliw next Krl. ond pour forth in
to the cold and cruel world, pre
pared to .conquer It. They will
learn that the economic grind-
. stone Is harder than their noses,
but none of the grads tliink so
now. They do not want .to take
tho world too serious, or tho
world will get down on them. It
they can smile, without singing,
they will como out all ok.
Moat of the first cutting of hay
In tho valley Is still down, as the
farmers could not think of putting
It in the barn, befure It has been
thoroughly drenched by rain.
Mejl Shlnioda contradicted Ills
Paw again Wed., . and received
the usual blistering. The parent
Informed tho writer that tho
spanking, which bo called
'NhehnwRoV hurt him worse than
It did the recipient, who Is l
sprightly lnd.
Tho bearded barley Is not Ror
initiating properly, and will sport
a nose-width niustacho, when it
should have whlskora.
Tho womenfolks are filling up
the dark cornel's with nwileuH,
and other wild fauna and flora.
This Is the first of June. There
will be an average crop of brides
and bridles.
Alex Hparrow hnd nil old fash
1 loned runaway on his place Thurs
Probably left tho horses is gear
and hod poor bruko lining.
Tho hllle arc as green us a Port
lander, In the prcsonco of a slick
politician, or a gang of bunco
artists.
Golfers flock to the lynx, when
they should be homo bludgeoning
the carpets from their better s.
The chinwhtickcrs rlosed up un
expectedly Frl. to fittingly oh
serve Memorial Day.
ST. MA A UTKNHD YK, Holland,
May 31 (!') A no! Ice at the en
trance of the park In this Dutch
town says: 'Person, of different
ox occupying tho benches In this
park are required to keep a uH
ttttice of not less thnn ono meter
(40 Inches) between them. (Sign
ed) Tho .Ilurgomnsier."
GENEVA, May 31 (fl'l The In
ternational Labor offlco lias re
ports showing that the movement
for giving manual workers annua)
Vacations with pay, on tho namo
plan as "whllo collar" workers.
Is growing steadily In all modorn
countries.
TIRANA, Mny 24. (IP) Tho
government says that 1.400 miles
of mads have been opened In Ala
hania slnco King Vms took power.
Home of these are suitable for
motoring. In former days traffic
followed cattle trails.
Approximately 1,174. OSS timmds
of turkey were eaten In California
last year, according to tho slate
Turkey Growers' association. This
was an average of 2.8 pounds for
evory man, woman ond child In the
Mat. i
Dr. Robert M. Iluncan, alt:yit
professor in government at Tex.ts
Christian university, is to spend
the next throe years at Peipln.
China, as political science profej
eor la Tenoning university.
Flowers for co-eds have been
banned at the Junior prom of the
V'tah Htato Agricultural college.
Expense to collegians and the wear
and tear on (ilk adorned with a
corsage was the reason.
Distribution offish from state
hatcheries has passed the 1,600,000
mark In North Carolina this year.
yilE I'ENDMiTON KAST OKK(iONIAN deplores (lie fact
that Mr. Joseph was debarred, by members of his own pro
fession, and maintains he should have been tried before u jury
of laymen. Cnntinnin; this line of reasoning it says:
"Were a man accused of saying something derogatory to the
national guard, it would not be fair to try him before a Jury of
national guardsmen."
Wouldn't it? We miiy he mistaken, but it is our under
standinu; that this is the procedure in the national iiiui'd, us
well as in the l:nited .States army. And for a very fjood reason.
The individual concerned is not accused of any crime against
society, lie is accused of conduct miliecomini; a member of the
orf-'iiuizatioii to which he belongs: And, whether or not he has
violated the rules of that organization, is a matter for the mili
tary court martial of that organization, not a civil or criminal
court, to decide.
. .
OU WJTII the Joseph disbarment proceedings. .Mr. Joseph
was accused of no crime. He was merely accused of eon
duet unbecoming a member of his profession a profession that
has its own rules and regulations and it seems to us entirely
proper that the decision should be made by the members OF
THAT HfOKKSSlOX, through the proper legal channels.
We agree it would have, been better for all concerned if Mr.
.Miiiiuix had brought a charge of criminal libel against Attorney
Joseph, and the matter could have been decided by a jury of
laymen, in open court. Kor, with members of the Supreme
Court involved, it was unfortunate, and embarrassing, that the
final appeal hail to be decideit by that court, even though the
individuals directly involved disipialil'ied themselves.
, lint this was not done. And that it was not done, was not
the fault of the Supereme Court, nor to the credit of Mr. Joseph.
" I 'UK LAW provides that all disbarment proceedings must be
heard before a board of referees, chosen from the legal pro
fession, and that any appeal from their decision must be de
cided by the Str.ve .Supreme Court. .
The disburmcnt proceedings once filed against Mr. Joseph,
there was no way of doing the job hut in the way it had been
done. This was not deying Mr. Joseph a fair trial; it was
merely leaving the cpicstion of his retention in a profession up
to the members of that profession themselves.
"""HUTA IXliY the Kast Oregonian wouldn't advise the matter
of disbarment beiiig left to juries, chosen by lot, with no
s eeial knowledge of what constitutes professional or unprofes
sional conduct.' Knell a procedure would he as absurd as to turn
over the matter of medical ethics to a Literary Digest poll.
The fallacy in the Kast Oregonian reasoning, it seems to us,
rests upon its failure to distinguished between criminal and civil
action; between depriving a man of his liberty, and depriving
him qf .the right to practice a certain profession until he" con
forms to the principles of that; profession. To our mind a very
vital and important distinction.
Brief explanation of the crime wave: Nobody gives a darn.
Incompatibility : A legal term meaning the husband doesn't
play bridge. '
President Hoover has one fine (puility as an engineer. le
doesn't waste any steam on the whistle.
Prosperity is like happiness, not something to hunt for but
something that just happens when you go to work to forget it.
Another clever game is to observe a representative govern
ment and try to guess what it represents.
A woman doesn't muke a fool of a man. Is the candle to
blame if it i'ool moth doesn't know it will burnt
What's the use? When college expenses stop, it just means
that, the kids will have that much to Npend for gas.
Home is a place where the youngsters stop to say ''Hello"
before spending their vacation somewhere else.
A boob is one who pretends to believe something he doesn't
believe to keep from being called a boob.
The great issues of the day arc those a Supreme Court nomi
nee never has expressed an opinion about.
Executive: One who slrays iu trouble while his subordi
nates get out and make enough runs to win the game.
The doctor who sends his neurotics away for a rest is wise
enough not to ay whose rest.
"Jf you expose yoiirsell' gradually you won't blister," sayi
an M. 1). So that explains the survival of stomach linings.
Ami you never see a bronze statue of a man who wondered
why somebody didn't do something about conditions.
Fifteen Years Ago
This Week
(From the files of The
Mali Tribune)
One great trouble with this world is that nobody eim scud
the umpire to the showers when he goes bad.
In this faec-varnish era, full many a girl is born to blush
unseen.
There's one consolation. You can become a billionaire and
boss the country without having to tell anybody what your be-
liefs are.
Tin
icre isn I much Communism iu America unless von fount
the way people fed about an umbrella.
Correct this sentence: "I don't care how stylish they are,'
said the flapper; "I won't wobble along on high' heels." '
ha
If the crack of doom isn't A "wise crack," it may not be so
SHANGHAI. May S 1 P -hej
V. .l. C. A. of China Increased Its
lm, tlllA ! trn.. l.,,t itntlnltt.. ..-!
llKlcni, fork did not grow. Attend-1 'r,,mb youih. The faculty of Law
onco at Blblo classes dropped 60 i at the I'nlvcraliy of Paris counted
PA HIS. May S ni The ltftal
profession Is losing ground witn
per cent since the peak year of
i24. revolutions nnd constant po
The l.nliulallnn of
ChrlPlan area of the
the non-I'hlllpplne
archipelago Is estimated by the
provincial governors at 1,565,786.
40 per cent of tho registration be
fore the war. Now It has only 87
per cent of the total.
Value of piniltry raised In Louis
iana last year was H.tS'gi'O' nnn
that of eggs 14.147.000,
Mmiduy
WuKhinglon Kaiser asked to
cxpluin his stand on U. B. note
on Lusitanla sinking.
Hlxteen GristzUes hike to summit
of Friz-zly Peak,, and "have their
eye of Mt. McLaughlin."
Klower thieves operate through
out city, and leave a spade in tbe
yard of the University club.
G. Hay fc'atchwell mado o mo
torcycle trip to Grants Pass and re
turned "bruised and battered, and
the worse for wear and tear."
Former Medford telephone girl
weds a Santa Rosa, Calif., mil
lionaire. Tuesday
Georgo and Ned Vilas returned
from their studies at tho stale
college. .
Kecloy Hall drives auto to Klam
ath Falls "in remarkable time
of six hours and 17 minutes."
Crater Lake Union Christian
Kndeavor opens district , conven
llon. . Portland General Federation of
Women's clubs deplore "mania
for wearing feathers in hat."
Swimming season formally open
ed by boys going swimming in
Bear Creek.
Wednesday .
Miss Carmen Hlttson graduates
from the pharmacy department
of the O. A. C.
A. C. Mayfleld complains to the
police that he bought a horse
from a stranger for $18, and Is
unable to find man, horse, or his
18.
According to Wilbur Ashpolc 4 8
different makes of nutoes arc
owned by residents along Uutte
Creek. Ho defies any other creek
to mako as good a showing. .
Seasonal rainfall shy 11.43
inches.
Dr. J. M. Keene declares "high
school boys , who took barber
poles, should not be condemned,
as worse things have happened in
this city."
Thursday
Burglar cache found along the
banks of Hear Creek.
Thcro appeared upon tho edi
torial pago of the Mall Tribune
yeetorday a picture of rrlncess
Wewona of the Sioux tribe. Chris
Gottlieb knows tho lady, but says
her nnnie is Lucy Smith, and that
she Is a crack shot . with the
pistol.
Attorney Gus Newbury reports
buying In full swing on tho Ap
plegnto. "I wish, I could get out
Into tho field with a pitchfork,"
said the popular attorney, us ho
returned to his law-office. Ser
geant Pat Mego of Ih police
force, said ho could see nothing
that was keeping Attorney New
bury from bis deslro to work.
Tho Farmers and Fruitgrowers
bank Install a new burglar -alarm
-ystom.
Friday
City without gus for several
hours when workman falls to re
turn from fishing trip on j time.
This newspaper out of commis
sion all morning. !
Threat of water shortage to
bring new regulations. I
Tho city council hue dodged
tho responsibility of, enlarging tho
city hall, by referring" it to , Un
people nt the rnll election.
Court Mall Is planning to make
a trip to Crater Lako In n hedge
auto. In an effort to make a' new
record for endurance, mileage and
elapsed time. ; ,
Wnter users plan campaign to
educate farmers to needs of Ir
rigation. Saturday
A calf wandered into the busi
ness district this morning, nnd
emitted one mournful bawl. The
young bovine eluded tho efforts
of the police to Impound him. He
wos finally captured by Wig Ash
pole, who nearly twisted the tall
off the beast when It balked.
Tlio mercury roi-o to 2 de
grees yesterday the hottest of
the year.
First grass fire of season on
West Jackson street.
Police stop tight rope walker
from performing on .Main Street
unless he provides something soft
er thnn the pavement.
The Honorary Commercial Com
mlss'loners of the Orient pass thru
the city the end of tho month.
Five Medford property Owners
fined for not turning ofti lawn
hose on lime.
Police declare war on reckless
motorcyclists. , . .
! And yet the Oregonian, us a
good party paper, must support
the party nominee. To do other
wise would be political heresy ac
cording to its llghu. So it nn-
' nounces that It will support Mr.
Joseph though it can say nothing
for him other than it has never
doubted that tie "would be honest,
courageous and resourceful in con
ducting the office of governor." Wo
doubt whether Mr. Joseph cares a
fig whether he has that papei'-
support. Certainly such a lam
ally eon be of little help.
Anr there Is the Corvallis Gazette-Times,
another of those dyed-
in-the-wool, blown-in-the-bottle, j
rock-ribbed organs of old-guard
renuhllcanlsm. Nn nnoer in the
slate tore more patches of hldo off j
Joseph than did It during the pri
mary campaign. It branded him as
a half-democrat in one breath and
a whole-socialist In the next. Hut
this paper's stomach is not yt
strong enough to accept the duiv
nominated candidate of the party.
"The republicans have two choicts.
in the fall," we read In its editor
ial columns. "They can vote for a
man running with their label on a
socialist platform, or they can vote
for a democrat who is opposed
to the only vital plank that now
remains to separate the democrats
and the republicans the tariff
plank. It's a heck of a choice."
Yes, it's a heck of a choice for
the G-T, but we anticipate that it
will follow the Oregonian . even
though H have- to A'omit frequently
to do so. (Astoria Budget).
;
Refrigerator Shipments Set Record
W7
By Klcluml Matwoclc
NEW YORK. iMnrgaret Ander
son, while editor of a now defunct
magazine, the "Little Review," was
an Indofutigablo nnd redoubtable
talker.
She talks, therefore, in her aut
obiography, "My 30 Years AVar,"
about hcrseir, James Joyce, Amy
Lowell, Emma Goldman, John 8.
Sumner and a diversified lot of
contemporaries.
Her own enjoyment in the tell
ing of her anecdotes is contag
ious. '
Spicy, droll and frankly contro
versial, her sharp, staccato sen
tences are an introduction into the
camp of the intellectuals.
Mary Anderson is an Indiana
girl and she explains she has been
fighting reality for 30 years. She
also defied the authorities by first
publishing Joyce's "Ulysses" in
her magazine.
She makes pointed criticism of
Sinclair Lewis and other acquaint
ances, but she is equally forthright
about herself, her fads and her
friends. Her personality sketches
of various artists from Krnest
Hemingway to Mary Garden are
entertaining and revelatory, and
tho account of the extraordinary
Baroness von Lorlnghoven, who
wore tarnished tea-balls as orna
ments, is unforettable.
Press Comment
Flying Simplified
Aviation has provided material
for a number of books, but one of
the first simple, non-technical ex
positions of flying has been pro
duced by that once stormy airman,
Gen. William Mitchell.
The former director of military
aeronautics calls the book "Sky
ways" and leaves the history of
winged transportation to others
whllo ho tells how to fly, describes
planes and equipment and reports
on the commercial, military and
sporting sides of aviation.
He tells how to prevent a plane
stalling, says the ability of landing
at a minimum speed is the greatest
life saver and devotes only one
chapter to his old arguments for a
separnte branch of military avia
tion, the controversy that brought
about his retirement from the
army.
Vitv lite poor old OreKonlun.
Humble, ehastenert by lt recent
licking. w a Mowing Its pride and
holding Its nose. It drag Itself Into
tho Joseph camp, pitches Its tent
and raises the Joseph standard.
What r spectacle!
Here Is the Oregonian to whom
Joseph Is no repugnant that he 1
anathema. It h-s such violent per
sonal, commercial nnd political ob
jections to him that it discarded Its
customary hsnds-off polloy In tho
primaries to urge his rejection by
the republicans.
The Oregonian Is regular hi Its
republicanism, and Joseph In mint
Irregular. Tho Oregonian is Intense
ly partisan. Joseph I o non
partisan that he had many demo
crats openly working for him. The
Oregonian 1" staid, orthodox, a de
fender of tho established. order, Jo
seph Is demagogic, an opportunist,
a flaming firebrand, a confirmed
tipper of the apple-cart. The Ore
gonian l opposed to every polloy
and platform plsnk upon which
Joneph predicated his appeal to
the voters. Johp'i attacked the
very Interests of which the Ore
gonian has long been the cham
pion. He would ftbolUh the public
service commission, he would have
public ownership of utilities and
public development of water po
wer. Theso and other causes tie
espouses are about as contrary o
the oregonian policies as aoctallsm
Is contrary to Imperialism,
Kcforincr ami Radicals
In history nnd biography, tho
choicu lies between Charles Ed
ward ltUHHeH'fl "Charlemagne.
First of tho Moderns" nnd How
ard K. Realc's "Tho Critical Year."
Charlemagne reformed the dark
ages, substituting art and educa
tion for ignorance and butchery,
and he became an emperor with
out splitting heads as had his pre
decessors in the forests of the
Franks.
His story Is more glamorous by
Its legendary nature than that of
Andrew Johnuun and the year lSiiG
that Inaugurated the mis-named
reconstruction of tho war torn
south, which is what rrofessor
Beule of Bowdoln college writes
about.
Reale digs further into what
Claude Rowers called "The Tragic
Kra," and, defending the much
mallgnQd inheritor of Lincoln's
troubles, finds the minority rad
icals used claptrap propaganda to
defeat the president's policy" of
conciliation.
This leaves only the "Groat
Sea Stories of All Nations,'1 In
which H. M. Tomllnson, the editor,
has compiled l.loo pages of mari
ner's lore of alt ages, from Homer
through Conrad to Masefield, most
of It seeming to mako of tho sea a
mean ol' davil. It Is, obviously,
for vorsclous readers of adven
ture narratives.
,,,., ..JZi
VMM JmJ.
Less than two weeks after launch
ins a million dollar newsnaDc,
advertising campaign, shipment reo
ords of Frifridaire were broken An,i
SO when 214 carloads of electre
refrigerators left Dayton, Ohio fac
tories for 46 states and five foreim
countries. The previous record it
was stated, was Hay 31, 1929 when
121 carloads were shipped. i
Part of the loading platform w)iS(4
sixty cars can be loaded at one timJ
is shown here, as well as a number
of the freight cars that carried the
record shipment. The
2 campaign, which began April 17
was rtredicated unon n ivn.j i , '
ing first quarter and a 100 nei
cent increase in showroom visitors
BY SPEICH MADE WITH
( iuted aviation gasoline and Cyool
aero oil, and that his original
choice of Cycol to lubricate his
motor dnring the grueling flight
had bct'U lunre than justified by
the oil's efficient lubrication.
the
Dr. Fu Manchu Will
Return to Craterian
, r " "" "7, . ;,, ' Those who enjoy their mystery
n oior o., . , uv " ; thrills served up In siilnt
!ft" ,'XTI ' LU.nn will certainly Bet
making of aviation records. In
motor cars and ships, the element
of faith plays a large part In tho
persons of Otis Harlan ,r
Eddie Gribbon. alwo turn in hid
ly amusing performance's.
Tho plot deals with the adven
lures of tho throe gobs who
out, while on shore leave, to fin'
a blonde who has tricked one
their number Into t'inins aw,
half his pay. The complication
are heightened when Tryon, icnoi
ant of what he Is doing, wins .
dance contest carrying a prize .
uuu, a oungaiow and a bride.
thrills served up in spine-chilling
an eye-
fuT and curful of entertainment
from "The Return of Dr.
iJUtii.iA, .May 31 Mr
ui.Mi ien per cent of the a.iniu
expenditures of the Irish
Fu stale goes for old age pisnk
The total is $14,000,000 ami m
a large pan mxn?. .,lft.,. refusal of tho eovernmeni I,L
selection of a motor oil which t ' De VilWa nrno.,i
will be unfailing in its protection ; y. . W1 this bv Sl.50fl.ooo hr , JT
The production is based on an ( porary defeat of the Cosgraveea:
of rapidly moving parts against
friction. But in the air such pro
tection is usually a matter of life
and death.
Among the remarkable records
made by aviators using Associated
aviation gasoline and Cycol aero
oil Is that established by Venn
Speich at the Long licach airport,
when he shattered by more than
an hour the former world's record
for solo non-refueling air-endurance.
Choosing Cycol lubrication be
cause of hly complete confidence
in it as a motor lubricant, prov
en in every test to which a motor
oil may be put on land, sea'.and
is a sequel to the now-famous
thriller. "Tho Mysterious Dr. Fu
Manchu' in which Warner Olnnd
established himself as a talking
picture genius with his portrayal
of the central character. The
clever "had man" of the flickers
is again wicn as the insidious and
conspiring doctor in "The Koturn
of Dr. Fu Maichu.' He is sup
ported by this same leading play
ers who wcro seen in tho first
picture O. I'. Heggle, tho King
Louis XI of "The Vagabond King"
JeaJi Arthur, Neil Hamilton, ro
mantic lead of "The Kibitzer"
S05
In thn nil- lie tool? off at OUWn
over a shuttle course between and William Austin. Entillsh-char
Lone Bench and San Diego in his I "oter comic of "Kweetie".
Zenith biplane. j '
One hour, four minutes and ")' A Z... D
forty-eluht seconds after he had I UaTTteS AtOy flayS
broken the former recorder thir-f T , m. E p;fi
tv-slx hours, flf.y-slx minutes and lOW at t OX Ktalty
thirty-six seconds set hy I.leut. I
Herbert J. Kahy. Speich brought j
hlH plane. Htlll with sufficient fuel ! Antics of three wonicn-fenrlllK
and oil for many more hours of 'sobs make "Dames Ahoy," the,
fllBht. down to a perfect l.indinK ! comedy now at the Fox Ttinlto !
at his point of takeoff. Only his p heater, ono of the funniest talk- j
fatigue and the danser of f.HIIne; j inn pictures ol the current sea- i
asleep in the dark caused him to ' son. ,
come down after boUerins the Olenn Tryon b nt his laujjb- j
previous record by n safe mnrln. provoking best as a youn sailor !
Speich declared that ills piano (who goes aground on the reef of!
performed perfectly on lis Asso-1 m:itvi?mniy. Ilis fellow-gobs. In!
11
9 'tfSEs S m' toftWIOi.
REGARDLESS
of tho condition your car's bod;
may be in, our superb facilities mi
long experience will restore t,i
moderate expense, to a conditi
like new. , - .. .... '
We make close estimates.
War Drama in Film
Coming Wednesday
Krich Maria Kemarque's beau
tiful nnd artistic narrative. "All
Qffiet on the Western Front," has
been filmed under Lewis Mile
stone's direction. It h coming I
Wednesday to the Vox Craterian
Theater, to bo exhibited at this
thester's usual admiOion prices.!
although it Is still playing at the!
Carthay Circle In lxs Angeles n
a road show attraction. "All tjulet
on the Wostcrn Front" was writ
ten from the personal O'hmrva
tlons of Hemartiue, who took part
iO the World war. He was oni
of (lermany's "school boy army".
the company of youths who threw
down their LO;n grammars and
fencing rapiers to Join the most
bloodthirsty onslaught In history.
This tremendous slash in current Chrysler "77"
prices is occasioned by the fact that sometime
in midsummer Chrysler will introduce a new
model to take the place of the present Chrysler
;'77' 9 Other Chrysler models, "70", "66"
and Chrysler Six, are being continued tm
changed. J Meanwhile the supply of Chrysler
"77" models is rapidly melting away at $200 to
$350 off regular prices. An opportunity like this
won't last long. Bring in your present car for
appraisal. Libcralnancing facilities are available.
'. '
J. J. OSENBRUGGE
128 So. Riverside
Phone 1109
0
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