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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1933 Medford Mail Tribune "Cmyww wt Soutiwn Orttoe fUuH Uii Hill rribunt' Oiiij Iticcpi Stturdai Puttiiitwd or MKUfUKD PRINTING Ctt 15-tT ll N fli BL UOBUHl W. KUHU Bdilof as IndiptiKkot Ntippr Intend u weooo elt oittcr it UtdfonL Oregon, and Act ot Mireb B, 18 TO. suaSTKimoN Rates Iff Mali In Adrian Pally. tf fr IB.00 Ptilj, lis tnootta 8.T0 Dailr. om vootii '0 R Carrier In Adrtne Medford. Aibliod, JickumlUi, Cv'tni Point, PBoeoli, Ttltot, Gold Hill tod en Uisbvajra. Dillf, on few $0-00 Dillj. til monl hi .3 Dilly, om mootb .80 All Uroi, un la tdianes. OffleUl wcw of tot Civ of Mtford, OrricUl oixi of JuktoD Couotj. MEMHKH Of TUB ASSOCIATED tHB88 BecalrUH Pull Leucd Wirt fttrrtt ttM AuocUted Prca It mlill tntUM to Uw tiM for oubuutloo of til oen dliwtcbw credit, to tt nr olhrrwltt erwiltaJ Id Uil ptptr ud alM to Uw local on puhltftMd bereio. All rlbU 'or publication of ipedil dlapatctw Bortln art alio retenca. MB M (1Kb or UNITED PUE8B WEMUKU OP AUDI1 BUREAU or CIRCULATIONS Amertlilnt KepreftoUtltef IL a M0UKN8EN A C0U'AN1 OfHeei Id N York, Chicago, Detroit, Ban rrudieo lot A me let dealt) PorUand. Will Uncle Sam Go Broke? To the Editor: Csn you tell t group of people Interested la our national economy, Juit what the national -debt It. nowr, and hem long thU Wholesale apendlng for relief can continue before the country la bankrupt? Certainly there muat be a limit aomewhere. But everyday we hear of aome more million being shelled out by Uncle Sam. You have stated In your column that Roosevelt showed Europe this country Is no longer soft hearted and soft headed Santa Olaua. Yeah? It looks to the writer aa though Santa Claua Is a flat tire beside Uncle Sam. You also claim this money muat be paid back. Who la going tc pay It back and where la the money coming from? Answers to these questions would be much appreciated. If you can do it. Vox Popull, Medford, Dec. It. Well, here goes. The national debt on November 30th, was announced by the Treasury Department as $23,534,116,000. Probably before the first of the year this total gum will be increased to $26,000,000,- 000. Yes, that's a terrific sum, considerably over $200 for every man, woman and child in the oountry. Yet only a few years ago Uncle Sam owed more money than that. At the World war peak, the government debt $26,594,267,000 or approximately $600,000,000 greater. A period of exceptional national prosperity followed the World war however, and at the beginning of 1931 the national debt was only about $16,000,000,0008 reduction in about ten years of $10,000,000,000 ! Very little of that was paid by foreign debtors. The major portion was paid by the people of the United States. Five years after the armistice, Uncle Sam's ordinary receipts, largely from income taxes, totalled $4,129,- 394,441, and a $4,000,000,000 average was approximately main, tained until the 1929 crash. During this period not only was the national budget always balanced but the government operated steadily at a profit, even though the annual expenditures hit a new high for peace times, at over $3,000,000,000 a year. . , HPHEN the deluge 1 And while the federal budget has not been balanced since 1932, and isn't balanced now, there is no reason why, with the worst of the depression over, it should NOT be. Certainly that is Roosevelt's intention and also the intention of Budget Director Douglas. Where is the money coming fromt JUST where it came from before. . Uncle Sam has taken an awful beating, but he is still by far the richest nation in the world. In 1925 for example the national income of the United States according to the national industrial conference board was ; $78,649,000,000 and the national wealth $480,863,862,000. - it la understood from a reliable uotn national wealtn and income have sharply dwindled IZIZT thT3Sr.rXeTdUrop since the". jU8'how far we don't know, but placing it at 50 per you these few lines to let you know cent there would still be a national income of about $40,000,000,- andYnloyCll . ' VITE certainly don't wish to imply that this spending spree " can go on indefinitely, or should go on, a moment longer, than is NECESSARY to prevent widespread want and suffering. Ye Smudge Pot 0 Artbui Parry Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to die ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letter! received only a few can be an swered.- No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, iB3 El Camino, Beverly Hills, CaL THE CARBON MONOXIDE SEASON IS ON, of all places, LETTER TO SANTA CMtll Hon. Kris Kringle, loebergtown, North Pole. Dear Kris: Uncle Sam Is In competition with you. He will furnish funds to build park on Roxy Ann. Thla la the and enjoying same. There are several things the city would like to havo, so I will tip you off, so you will know what to slip In the Clvlo Sock, towlt, Main stem The present iTghu ,,.," important than figures thus quoted is public confidence,- snowing the effects or an years 01 -once destroy that and nothing could prevent complete disaster, wear and tear, wind and rain, and .. . , , , . . Dumpings by all makes of autos. the national bankruptcy our correspondent fears. sime have had ohunka knocked out But we do believe that a knowledge of these figures, an of them by miners In sudden need , .. , , . , , , . , , of a sample from their platinum understanding of the actual financial and natural resources of claim. Therefore , they are badly (his country, justify a continuance of publio confidence. The bunged up. Wisecracking farmers , . . come to town and claim they mistake recent over-subscription of another billion dollar issue of gov tho leading thoroughfare for an alley, eminent bonds certainly demonstrated that, the government's and claim If their backyard was no i . . . . , better lighted they would never find credit to date, has NOT been impaired, their way to the barn. . ' , AITJTH the most stringent economy in routine federal expen ' turcs, a continuance of federal relief, ONLY in so far as rising east of town and is quite an .human welfare demands it, (i.e: ONLY where the states eminence though not very lordly. The v boya thought it would be nice if you ! nnd local communities CAN NOT take care of it themselves) cTtt'uS" t,le ""Potion of higher taxes, we see no reason to doubt tor grand opera, symphony concerts, i that the national budget will soon be balanced. SS&ZZSS; oTwrn.".".! 11 is no " tht not only demands the strong- too many, when in Mason. The park est faith nnd courage on the part of our leaders, but on the when completed will give an unob nf .a filft (Wlt.t. ,i, tructod view In all directions. In- pflrt f tho P00"0 118 ft whoIe eluding up. you probably remember With that faith and with that courage, we predict Uncle meettng Roxy Ann the la-t time you ; gam wi, hftV(J nQ mor(J difficulty in handling the prescnt dcbt Please leave a couple of gross of j caused by the worst economic collapse in modern history, than fui asnweuthomlmenuiRt We hae ; II0 ,1B( in nNint greater debt caused by the most devas- had several, but they show a strange I tnting war in modern times, diffidence to going broke by taxed to dentil. The wonderful fish- I lng will not hold them, when the ! legislature Is thinking up laws to, chase them Into California. If you ; can scare up a couple of healthy In- ! d us tries to Inflict upon us, It would ' be fine. Both industry and million- : aires are bndly needed to chase out of the state. i Inasmuch as the last batch of , economy was very poor, and nearly bankrupted tfrr body politic, you Dy FRANK JENKINS, need not leave any economy thu!T0T MUCH newa on the wires iime. -me wea is now to be extrava- j ganv, una snve some money, we nave no leaders, and don't want any. Your good little town, JOHN MEDFORD. PS: Don't leave any lawyers or service stations, but help yourself. Nobody will be home for a couple of days, as everybody Is going to a movie, and see it through to the bitter end. From Los Angiles, comes this complaint: We are living In an apartment using a gas range. There Is no way for fumes to es cape except thru a window on the opposite (south) side of the room. When the four burn ers and oven are going full blast and the wind Is from the south the fumes are almplyy awful. I have a weak heart and have been nearly overcome seversl times." &-r. Mi Isn't there a law compelling the owner of an apartment or flat or house to provide for elimina tion of gas fumes? If the gas burns freely and there Is no carbon or soot accumulation to glow red hot. and no red hot iron or other metal there is not much danger of carbon monoxide poison ing in such a kitchen. The carbon monoxide gas which is a component of Illuminating and natural gas, will not escape if the gas pipe and fit tings and burners are all In good condition. None la produced when gas burns freely. Only carbon dioxide Is formed In such "fumes," and car bon dioxide Is not a poison, though conceivably the kitchen air may be come so poor In oxygen, as the pro portion of oxygen used up by the fire and the proportion of carbon dioxide given off by the fire (and by the breathing of persons or animals in the kitchen) gradually Increases, that one senses the Insufficiency and Instinctively seeks fresh atr. In any kind of gas, oil, gasoline or kerosene stove or heater where soot accumulates on or close to the burner and perhaps becomes red not for while, carbon monoxide Is given off and In a small closed room this may have serious or fatal effects without giving the victim any warning. A portable gas heater with a faulty burner or a mixing adjustment, which does not admit enough air with the gas. Is always a dangerous thing, especially In a bathroom or a bed room where any one may fall asleep with the gas burning. Probably there is no law or ordi nance such as the correspondent asks about. We can't permit any such ordinance. Might Interfere with the manufacture and sale of pipe less gas heaters. Dumb public Insists on play ing with these deadly contrivances. A few score of fatalities eadh winter but business as urual. , For the sake of the comfort of the cook, the cleanliness of the house, nnd freedom from unp'easant odors, every kitchen where a gas rane is used should be provided with a suit able cowl ventilating shaft above the range, through which fumes, heat and odors may escape up the chim ney or out of the house. If neces-1 sary an exhaust fan should be In- , stalled to draw off the fumes and odors. Where such simple provisions are not available, then at least some means of cross ventilation should be provided In the kitchen. Thus a win dow opened from the bottom on one side of the room and another opened from the top on the other side of the room, or a door and a window both opened to allow air to pass through, Insurance people have reduoed the odds they will pay for accidental death, because there have been many Instances of carbon monoxide gassing of gentlemen by their care in circumstances which make It hard for a coroner to decide whether the de ceased was Just a d. fool or a d, scoundrel. In mild gassing with CO, when the victim is not "frozen," or overcome before he can escape or call for aid, the warning signals are headache, diz ziness, throbbing In temples, noises in ears, oppression In chest, perhaps nausea or vomiting. The face is red The victim is unable to wn'lt oi stand. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Y B Old Till U R. We have been assured often enough that a man Is as old as his arteries. Fine. Now we Just want to know how to keep our arteries nice and soft. h. H. C. Answer Don't stuff 'em with too much lead, alcohol, tobacco, nor sub' Ject them to the toxemia of syphilis, typhoid fever, pneumonia or strepto coccic fos Is. Send a stamped ad dressed envelope and lo cents (coin only) for a copy of booklet "The Re generation Regimen ." Meanwhile, keep your hair on. The booklet ex plains about the artery theory. We have a new one now. Cellular as phyxia. Ultraviolet. I have a double carbon aro lamp. I use It about 10 Inches to 9 feet from my chest and back for 6 to 8 minutes dally. Now I am told this causes all kinds of cancer. My fam ily doctor first treated me with a mercury vapor quarts lamp and I have continued with the carbon lamp. He says he doesn't know much about it. N. O. G. Answer So far as the effects of ex posure to ultraviolet light are con cerned. It doesn't matter whether the source be the sun, a mercury vapor quartz lamp, or a carbon arc lamp. As long as you avoid sunburn It does no harm. Took Out, Calories In It.! Which contains the more calories, an egg or a potato? Careful, now. Doctor, for your answer may cost me four berries. Miss E. F. Answer Medium size potato, 100 : calories. One egg, 75 calories. Sorry. You should send s. a. e. and ask for monograph on Calories, (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wlshlnf to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. AY 1 1 tin tn 11 m fly, M. D., 2R5 El Ca mino, Beverly Hills, Calif. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History From the Files of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY December 20, 1023. (It was Thursday.) Prosecution threatened for trans lent auto lata who bilked a number of kind-hearted local citizens with a sympathetic story about "a starving family and a dying mother." O. C. Lemmon is elected head of the Kiwanls. North end county boys Jailed after fighting at Tolo dance. "Easy payment plan" to be explain ed by New York efficiency engineer" at Forum meeting. Farm conditions growing ate ad 11 j better, Washington reports. Klan to be reorganized in Oregon, with silk Instead of cotton nlgnt gowns, and no masks. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY December 20, 1913. (It was Saturday.) "Ragging" continues at local dances, and dapcera warned they will be ar rested. "You can't stop the wiggling," declares the chief of police, and he l called "an old fogy" by the editor. The Medford Concrete Construction plant will be kept busy all winter crushing rock for the Pacific highway. 'Hypnotizing Mamie," a "rollicking comedy," at the Isls; vaudeville at the Star; the Stanford Glee club at the Page, and "Curses 1 Said the Vil lain," at the It. The University club will hold a 'Christmas frolic' and give ,a number of playlettea. A. W. Walker buys the West Side livery stables. ' ' Phone 255 Medford ' Largest and Finest Theatri COMING' SAT. DEC. 23 FOR ONE WEEK Playing Day and Date with the Paramount in Portland j tlWII CAHIOU'S Comment on the Day's News these words are written. Not much BIO news, that Is, There la always NEWS. Newa, you know, Is whatever people are Interested In, and something la always happening that somebody la Interested In. BWS Isn't alwaya what happens. Somettmea It la what DOESN'T happen. Jack DempetT, former heavyweight champion ot the world and still colorful figure, drove from Bugene to Medford the other day and took little longer tor the trip than he AN EDITOR GETS SMART (Drawnt lllll, Mo., Kens) Tor Instance there Is, we shall say, man by tho name of Henry K. Blnkua. Henry re tuned to take his copy of the Bugle out of the post office. He did not care for It anv more. We wondered what waa wrong might have, with Friend Blnkua. Upon Investiga. ( That la to aay, ht didn't arrive In t on or subscription recorda we found Medford aa soon as he waa ex pec led to. that Blnkua. who ordered the paper, along Irom year to year (will pay for qq a RUMorTanSe that he had ,'" """ " co' J been the victim of an accident on waa behind to the tune of 17.60. He had atopped the paper as a matter of ,h w nd ,or "Prrt ' hour economy to the Bugle. It would seem, the wires all over the United Slates "A few evening ago we stepped . hummed with this rumor, and make iiiw cnurcn ana iieury a melodious 1 voice rang out loud and clear In the org, Mesne Paid It All.' We might have been mistaken, but his earnest nesa Impressed us. The next day we aent Henry a receipt In full and beg ged hla pardon for not knowing he had made such an arrangement for caring for his liabilities" up editors saw rosy visions of beau tiful black headllnta, while circula tion managers calculated possible sales. 1NDT and Anne atarted for Parla lld-Venr-old Kerorrt llrnken. RICHMOND. Tel. (UP) T)r the first tlbe In t years the Port Bind grand jury adjourned recently with out returning. a murder Indictment. Ktg a Hay ('.ended In Jail. BOISE. Idaho (UP) An egg ff.t- unl tinii, U'iIIap In In. in1 days. He allegedly aiole SO ega from !yoU " fhM"1' ol a farmer, taking on at ft time, whole world by the ears? member, but didn't get there quite as soon aa expected. The wires hummed, the radios crackled and anapped, and a whole world eat back tense and waited. How would you like to be so famous that failure to arrive where you were going within a few minutes ot when were scheduled, would eet the VPOU think now. In all probability, A you would like to be that famous, but after you had tried It a while It would get frightfully wearing and you would begin to yearn for a little privacy a little time that you could call Just TOUR OWN, Then, If something happened to get you out of the public eye, so that people would no longer be Interested In you and Intensely curious about you no longer cared c whoop what you did or didn't do eo that you had all the privacy you could possibly use, It would nearly kill you. Human nature la tunny. People are alwaya wanting what they HAVaTNT. STILL no newa of vast Importance on the wtrea. But there MAT Bl at any moment. Newa can happen fast. William Slackowich atruck a match in hla basement yesterday, and "didn't know anything else till he woke up In the hospital," he told reporters who became suddenly Interested In him. Because he struck a match In his basement 90 squire blocks In Chi cago's north side were rocked by sub terranean explosions and more than million dollara damage done to property. No lives, fortunately, were lost. ORB NTWB: Police Investigating the explo- NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, Deo. 30. There are various gradations of the celebrity chaser In Manhattan from the gawk- tng autograph seeker to self- exploiters who y gather at famous does not hold candle to tne New York flame to be seen "with people who mat ter." The minute headlines pro claim a new un usual the chnsc is on. All the ingenious devices to meet them are put in motion. The most highly sought In the past year was Noel Coward. He lapped It up kitten-cream fashion for a time but it finally made him a recluse with a phone dead to Incoming calli. Social climbers are most persistent of the pack. They try to use celeb rities aa stepping stones for ascent to the heights. To flaunt them at a ringside supper club table or A on the aisles at first nights become a passionate obsession. And highly amusing. About the only celebrity eluding them Is Lindbergh. It's difficult to slee ip what constitutes celebrity here. Often it is the small bit act ress sweeping Into the room as though It were a stage set. A long hair spouting the latest communistic ca bal. Or Just a rude vulgarian with a mincing walk. Mnxlne Elliott, with the rork bound aloofness of her natlre Maine, may remain in America following her first visit In 10 years. She is. at 60. ex traordinarily beautiful In a white haired, black-veletted. regal manner. Her personal fortune is enough to permit freedom from stae activities, a calling which was, oddly enough. distasteful to her. Many years ago I remember watch- "Judge" to pilot "Life." While he displayed aome hurrah there he did not click In & big way until he launch ed, with Qeorge Delacorte as a backer, the ribald Ballyhoo. The twig became a giant oak with a million clrcula tlon over night. He did not hold it there but It remains one of the comic weekly sensations. And Anthony, a sucker for candy-striped shirts, has on a percentage arrangement banked a quarter of a million out of the enterprise. (Continued from page one) production now gradually until a peak Is reached in April. It will pull steel up along with It. The only dark spot in the picture Is the fear that there may be a strike. There have been some quiet rumors that a certain body accessories com pany may have labor troubles after January 1. That would tie up per haps 70 per cent of the entire auto mobile Industry. Notes A certain Justice of the United States supreme court has privately devised his own tax reform program- He cannot espouse It publicly but you will see It announced soon by some one elae. It provides higher Inheri tance and surtaxes and the adminis tration may take over some parts of it. . One of the main purposes of the TV A was to supply electricity to near by Muscle Shoals towns, but the whisper is now that most of the towns cannot take It because they have no money. Legislation to reach that situation will be enacted at the coming session. Economic experts generally agree the Brookings Institute criticism of j the gold policy was the most Intelli gent thing written on the money i question to date. ! UMtc&m m Wyweft&4id' wi CHARLOTTE HENRY., ai and RICHARD ARLEN ' ROSCO ATES GARY COOPER ' LEON ERROL LOUISE FAZENDA W. C. FIELDS SKEETS GALLAGHER CARY GRANT RAYMOND HATTON ' K",4.",, HORTON ROSCOE KARNS ' BABY LeRpY MAE MARSH ' POLLY MORAN JACK OAKIE ' EDNA MAY OLIVER MAY ROBSON ' CHARLIE RUGGLES ALISON SKIPWORTH ' NED SPARKS and FORD STERLING Oirtctsd by Normon Mcltod A Paramount Pictvr BIG DOURLR RIT J.- I STARTING NOW- FOR 3 DAYS WHEN DREAMS OF LOVE COME TRUE! His Drtim ot Love wn iurna mio nignimsra oifu Hate for th child who.e ugru 10 live cost wo lilt oi tho woman he adored. But Destiny took a hand. .V'the Innocent cause made his Dream ot Love come true! Dave Levy, Broadway's best known haberdashery clerk, has attained full membership in the firm of Nat Lewis for which he has labored many years, Beginning as a package boy. Ltvy became a hero worshipper of Broad ways parade. By a bright-eyed grao lousness he made himself known to al Important of the street. Damon Runyon and other chroniclers of the Broadway scene have glorified him. Actors sneak him a bow or quick aside from the stage. For years he was constant first-rower at the Pal ace's remembered Sunday night's. Add ambitions: James Thurber wanted to be the broken -dam runner in his native town, Columbus. O. Bob Brlnkerhoff's five-year-old cousin toddled to his studio gravey to ask about marrying the girl, three and a half going on four, next door. Just as gravely Brlnkerhoff inquired how they would live and the lad thought as they were not heavy eat ers he might take them in. Brlnker hoff thought that all right but ex plained there might some day be children and then what! "O." he said carelessly, "we have fot that out. If there are any eggs we are going to step on them." Judith Anderson is one of the most important actresses of the legitimate stage. No player more deftly puts over an emotional scene. She can raise goose pimple by a tilt of chin Yet her shows usually open and close In quick time. Proving again the play Is the thing I slon "believe that an explosive mix-j lng Nat Goodwin, whose marriage to ture mltfit hare been formed in I Ml" KUlott w" ulckl chM ,. . . aaunterlng over West 34th street in sewer lines by mash from a bootleg I th SuikU- mornln, deflation. He A gentleman from Perth Amooy called today. But I don't remember thing he said. I could only think of the time my putty blower hit the mark, the back of a school profes sors bald head. Thste the way tt founded perth amboy. (Copyright, 1D33. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) Meteorological Report December 20, 1933. Forecasts. Medford and vicinity: Occasional rain tonight and Thursday. Little change In temperature. Oregon: Occasional rain tonight and Thursday; little change In tem perature. Local Data. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 61; lowest, 30. Total Inches. monthly precipitation, Excess deficiency for the month, none. Total precipitation since Sep tern- 1 ber 1, 1033, 3.39 Inches. Deficiency Inches. for the season Relative humidity at 6 p. m. yes terday, 88 per cent; 6 a. m. today. ! 99 per cent. W.-5? f the woman he adored. 9 1 A&n?4 I ButDestlnytookahand-and&J LB -d 0&NUU-'J- I -"Ji-v , I M Joseph Cawthorn k F KshSI Tomorrow: Sunrise, Sunset, 4:43 p. m. MR Joseph Cawthorn Beryl Mercer-Buster Phelps PLUS SHORT REELS . 1 1 IH f Swat SI liquor still" Bo, jrou aee. In aplte of repeal, and bowled hooch at three dollara and half a pint, and eeerythlnt elae, we atlll hare bootlei stills and moon shine mash. What a world I What t world I stopped before a window exhibiting a photoiireph of Magnificent Maxlne. He atrollrd on, then turned back In attcay pause, continued and atr.ln swung around. Then, with a ellsht shruf. he walked on and turned Into the old Waldorf bar. Prosit l Norman Anthony. Jr., has been an other maeaalne editor surprise of his ror rum. oiu aenrery. Phone J33 j pr :r-n.cn Ho first pricked ewsre Relnklnj Trucking Co. Pump a.id ness in publisniiw circles when trans- JoiiC hose. We give 4V 4 H. atampi. tetrad Irom ft sub-editorship on WILLAMETTE NEARING FLOOD, RAIN CONTINUES SALEM. Dec. 20 (AP) The Wil lamette rlrer was but four feet from flood stage at Salem this morning, being 19 feet above normal. Rainfall the past 94 hours was .98 of an Inch, with no letup In sight. Already this month the rainfall here has exceeded all previous records for December. Sthelwyn B. Hoffmanns Semi-Annual Clearance Sale Now la prog rasa Boston 1- 48 30 P. Cdy Cheyenne 48 38 Clear Chicago .... 38 .1? Rain, Eureka 60 38 .02 Clear Helena . 60 .... Los Angeles , 76 53 Clear MEDFORD 60 38 T Foggy New Orleans 70 53 Clear New York 46 34 .03 Rain Omaha ................. 46 38 Clear Phoenix 73 40 Clear Portland . 62 6 1.12 Rain Reno 64 .... Roeeburg 66 46 .10 Clear Also MARY BRIAN in "ONE YEAR LATER" with Russell Hopton and Donald Dilhway Coming Productions FOOTLIGHT PARADE DEC. 30 HENRY SANTRY'S BAND JAN. 6 DANCING LADY CRAWFORD-GABLE JAN. DINNER AT EIGHT Jan. 13 Salt Lake 4 San Pranclsco 60 Seattle 48 Spokane ...... 46 Walla Walla M Washington, D.C. 44 4 It your Fuel OH Tank la In an in conrenient location Ph. 319. Eada fo CAREFUL OH delivery. 3d .19 Bain 49 .96 Rain Heating costs can be reduced Po complete beating - serrlce call At' echmldU. 416-1663. MAN torn MtRSII AND THE KI.KS I.ODCE SPONSOR Free Matinee Sat. Morning at 10 A.M. for the Kiddies HOOT GIBSON in "SPIRIT OF THE WEST" ADMISSION: KRl'lTVEti I. TABLES OR ANVTIIINO KtTtni.r for the Ni rnv