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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1933)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, "WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1933 Medford Mail Tribune "Cvtryont la South Ortgai Rudt Uii Utfl rrlbuiM'' Oallj Brant Satunlaf fublUhed Oj MKUKOIIl) PRINTINO CO. 16 3I-JK N Ml 8L PtWM 16 UOBKKl W. BUHL, Editor An Udapeodtot Ntwtpapar tour) u wcond daaa oitWf it UadTord. Oregon, oodar Act ol Mir eft 8, 1879. SUUHTKIPTION BATES A Mill in Aritanea Dally, fur.,.,. 5.00 nail i nnniJiat. .......... a a a I. TO Dalit, out mooib 8(1 Hi Carrier to Adraoea Medford, Art! and, JacfconrtiJt, Cwitral Potot, PhoeoU, Talent, Gold Hilt and an Wcbvan. Dally, om rear ..,$8.0u DalLj. fit nonlha Dally, oot (Booth .80 All terms, cash Id adianca. Official pm of tbt City ol Watford. Official papaf of iutaoo County. UEMBKH 09 TUB ASSOCIATED PUE8B HMwtrint Full Leased Wlra Htrrtr tba Asaodated Preet la aicltwtwll an titled to Um um for publication of all oewa dUpaltba creditor! to U or oUumlM eradlted in tbla paptf tod also to tba local twit puhlkbed Heftln. All rUbU 'or putitlcatloo of pedal dtipattba oarelo ara auo ruenea. UEMHKll Or UNITED PHE88 UEMUKH 0? AUDI! ftUBBAO OV C1KCULAT10N8 AdtertUInt RepreaenUtlM fcL C MOtJENSEN COMPANY Officii to Ne fork, Cbleaco. Detroit, Sao rnoelseo loa Ancelea Seattla Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Annul Herry The 1934 auto will have front aeata with room for three people. The 7- paaaenger car of today generally haa EPI W 3 four couples and a driver In the front " o "--"i v.--. seat, so you can figure out for your-1 That is why the time-honored cry of Wall Street that Big what th. revised quota win be. Bad Wofj B.g Businegg)i(1 s0 effective. The judicious may ah the buemess statistics indicate ieve gnd the enlightened deplore, but when the votes are that humanity la taking money away " . f ' . from each other, faster than a year counted, nine times out of ten it s the fear psychology that wins, ago. . The Portland" Journal proposal to COME clay all this will change, for democracy to survive, must defeat th Bales Tax, by paying the tj eliminate the germs within itself which threaten its destruc rcgular tax, 1 also entirely too sen- . . sibie to ever be adopted. tion. But evolution is a tedious process. That day we fear is ' Next to th. now. that Bolivia and ; Ptty far in the future. Paraguay have ceased a war that no- j 1 body knew they were ngnung, noui lng has created less commotion than the information that Douglas Fair banks, Jr., a film actor, will wed .again In March. Mr. Fairbanks' de nial that he would become a British cltleen, also caused no furoro. Edd Brown, who was killed by a rumor taat week -end, la out refuting the eame as beat he can. The new motor licenses ot black and grey are out. Th secretary of state has again failed to select a color combination that pleases everybody. ' J, Kort Hall, the pioneer thinker who once predicted that "the tractor will never displace the horse," U en joying a visit from his boy, Seeley, now a voter of Seattle, Wash. Seeley used to go swimming every New Year's day In Rogue river, and the ley waters so thoroughly chilled him, that his Paw contracted the rheuma tism. n A referee has been selected for the Stanford -Columbia football game in the Rose Bow), Just the same as If Stanford would neeo. him. The skltng season has started, but as yet nobody wearing ski trousers, has hit a stump, and landed on the other side of the Umpqua Divide. Leading citizens are rapidly regain Ing the cheerfulness they should have shown when the Depression was merriest. "Seven families butchered, and everybody Is now eating backbones and sparerlbs" (Paisley Items.) Grue some note from the wide open spaces. The naval observatory time, as fur nished by the Western Union and PoatAl Telegraph, Is once more in conflict with Jim Bates the barber's watch. An astronomer haa made a bum guess, and the Sun and Moon are Inaccurate. But Just why the government should, in effect, pay a dote to the artists, allowing them apparently to do more or leu what they like lu re turn for It, is not clear. (Kansas City Star.) You are a mean olid Republican! If you were a true-bluo Democrat It would be clear I The financial situation has now been worked around to a point where some of the silver mines of this vicinity will have to prove It. Samuel Iruull, a favorite cuaalng topic for orrgont. who failed to get their clectrlc-llghts-for-nothlng. : per 1830 campaign promiae, has been.tlio timo being, just aa lie pleased tnc producers ol gold, wnen removed from the Chicago social r-i . inltm.hed his gold buving plHn. Free silver and permanent later. Mr. Insull is now an exile In i " 1 oreeoe. As yet the social elite of , abandonment of the gold standard, however, are as far away as Chicago have not returned him the' .... wnlii.l.. il.o l.nnt tnr ailvnr i. nil tn the nn.l 7,000.000 h donated for a civic opera house. Several with new suits of clothes, have taken a firm and brave stand against weeds In vacant lot, causing the suspicion to arise they will run for something it tlie spring primary. SO HO WE AM. When we were In school, we were falrlv good at arithmetic, but we remove our hat reverently to old Wil liam de Hart, 71, who worked In a warehouse for 90 a month and inan aaed to accumulate savings of 100. 000. We've figured It out that twelve timet ninety comes to 1080 a yar ana a nine mental arunmetic con- vlnuts us that If Mr, dt Hart saved every cent he earned he'd have had to : work nearly a hundred years to earn 100,000. (San Francisco Ball-Bull,-, tlnj Can' Be A N upstate supporter of the sales tax, believes if the proper campaign is put on, sufficient signatures to the referen dum will never be secured. ' Vain hope! Sufficient signatures to ANT referendum can be secured. Sufficient signatures to any initiative measure can be secured. All that is needed is sufficient money to pay the petition circulators. Whether or not there is a popular demand for the action proposed, has very little to do with the case. Experience has clearly demonstrated that if solicited, nine voters out of ten will sign ANYTHING. Many will sign with out even knowing what they are signing. As the circulators are paid for every signature secured there is no lack of energy on their part. As a result any active minority however small, provided it has the money, can secure referendum or-initiative action in this state, on any measure, at any time, and the people must pay for it, that is they must pay for the expense of the election called. QUCH a situation was never lJ ed the Oregon system. They sentative government, but to brack boss rule, by placing ultimate control, where it belongs, in the hands of the people. In this they succeeded. But in their success, true representa tive government was destroyed, and direct government put in its place. So what we now have is actually minority govern ment, subject to majority control. That is an active minority, can initiate legislative action, and does do so repeatedly, but nothing is settled permanently until the people cither endorse or repudiate that action. WE may be mistaken hope this in t.hn nnrt nt xet-iin n state want. It is expensive, inefficient, bunglesome, it lowers the quality of public Bcrvice, and makes every election a field day for the windbag and the boss rule impossible, it absolutely cal control by the socalled vested And isn't that what the average man and woman, wants! We think so. Fear is still the controlling motive, rather than the desire to place government upon an efficient, rational and business-like basis. Fear of something worse, rather than hope , ml,in u(t, jtrminoci i,r oloMinna Not Free ""THERE appears to be considerable misapprehension regarding A the president's recent silver proclamation, One enthusiastic individual at least perhaps unduly exhilarated by the roports of all night celebrations in certain Colorado silver camps, rushed into this sanctum sanctorum to inform Ye Editor, that at last the Into William Jennings Bryan had been vindicated. "Free silver!" he shoutod, "hot dickcty, now watch the old West hum 1" Hot Dickety may be right, but there is no free silver in volved. Free silver of course referred to the free coinage of silver. It was a real battle cry 40 years ago. If wo remember aright, it was at the Denver mint that a trio of silver miners demanded that the silvor bullion they packed be minted into silver dollars, and when the director refused, started action in the supremo court to compel such action. It would hac been pretty soft for those who had silver, for the market prico for the metal was rapidly declining, but not so soft for those who didn't. Thcso miners went further than Bryan. The Great Commoner merely advocated the acceptance of silver as a re serve for currency at a fixed ratio with gold at 16 to one that is 16 ounces of silvor to equal one ounce of gold. IN his recent action President Roosevelt doesn't enter into this matter at all. The government is merely going to buy NEW LY MINTED silver, at about a 50 percent increase in price, and is going to coin HALF of that into dollars. Not bad for the silver producing states about seven out of 48, Oregon not being among the lucky seven. In fact very good. But not free silver, no vindication for William Jennings Bryan, merely the same sort of relief for the silver miners that has been extended the farmers and gold miners and other needy groups in this sorely harassed country of ours. True it will help. More money will be circulated in thcso seven states, and better business in ono section, means better business in all. But there will be no Inflation. As Paul Mallon pointed out in his column "you can't inflate five billion dollar currency with an eighteen million wad of silver." ' , Moreover thcro is nothing very new in this pronouncement. President Roosevelt merely followed out the international agree ment on silver reached at the London conference. Among the higher-ups the action had been discounted several months ago. "But every little bit added to what you got makes a littlo )it ,llorp," The president has ... . WILLAMETTE CHANNEL SALEM. Ore., Dec. ST. (OP) Shifting of th, Wlllamett, river chan. nel westward Is so rapid that within a few years the docks on th, Salem ,,, would be left on dry land at low water stage. County Enilneer Hlda Swart said last night. necenslnn of recent flood waters here showed the channel had shifted abruptly during tot tUgh waura. Doie AW anticipated by those who originat- did not seek to destroy repre strengthen it. They wanted to we are, but in our judgment mniorit.v'nf thft nennln nf thlR demagogue, but it does render prevents any return to politi interests. Silver satisfied the silver advocates for . . .... PASSES IN PORTLAND PORTLAND, Dec. 27.(AP Prob-t ably the only woman war correspon- j dent In the Spanish-American war, Mrs. Jean Bryan Blckels, M, died her Tuesday. Mrs. Slckela conducted a children's page for the Oregon Ian here prior to I the outbreak of the war, and when I the conflict started the newspaper sent her to the Philippines as a cor-1 respondent. In later years Mrs. Slckela poetry t attracted vld altentioa Personal Health Service By William Urady. M.D. Signed letter! pertaining to personal health and hygiene- not to dis ease dlagnofli or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped velf-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 263 El Camlno, Beverly mils, Cal. HAVE YOU A LITTLE TOO MUCH CARBON MONOXIDE IN YOl'B BI.O OD? A test of the air for the presence of carbon monoxide Is made by shak ing to aaturlatloa In the air a test tube containing a few spoonfuls of normal blood solution, which Is yellow when quite dilute. This turns pink If there Is carbon monoxide In the air. There Is quick and fairly accurate quanti tative test for carbon monoxide in the blood, the pyrotannlc acid metrod, which can be made in a few minutes from the biood obtained by a prick of the finger. Plpeless gas heaters, that Is, heat ers burning In the middle of the room without flues, or In a false "fireplace" without a chimney, are the most common source of chronic carbon monoxide poisoning. Radiant heaters, though most efficient, are nevertheless the most dangerous when used without proper flue connection to carry off the products of combus tion. Unscrupulous agents sometimes assure the unwary householder that "all harmful gases are completely consumed or burned" by the special burner, and therefore no flue con nection or chimney Is necessary." That Is untrue. For safety and health never burn any fuel In a room unless there Is adequate provision to carry the products of the combustion out of the room. By tests of the blood for carbon monoxide It has been found that nearly everyone living in the city has a small trace of the poison In his blood constantly. Following the smoking of a few cigarettes or a pipe or clear the quantity of carbon mon oxide In the blood rises considerably. In my opinion this slight carbon mon oxide poisoning from smoking ac counts for many ill effects of exces sive smoking. Photographers' .hypo',' sodium hyposulphite, otherwise called thlo- sulphate of soda, has proved a good remedy for the after errecta or car bon monoxide gassing and also a good remedy to relieve the unpleasant symptoms of monoxide poisoning. First., like a Dooming quaca, s should provide the prospective cus tomer with some symptoms, I suppose. Well, at that there may be no great harm In mentioning a lew 01 ine more common complaints of persons suffering with chronic Co poisoning. Headache, pallor, impaired nutrition, stomach trouble," "neurasthenia, a NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK,, Dec. 37. Irrepressible Gilbert White, portrait painter and raconteur deluxe, Is in the last van load of self exiles in Paris to pull up stakes for America until the dollar quits bouncing. He ar rives shortly and writes: "Don t let the Blue Eagle moult in the meantime." White' is a brother of the novelist, Stewart Edward White, and for 20 years has circled the Place Vcndome with the magnificence of an Augustus John. His weekly Jets at the American club luncheon are often printed In full in the Eng lish speaking dailies of the city. His summers are spent In his 200-year-old chateau, now modernised, a half hour ride from Paris. His young wife, the beautiful Dodo, former mod el, la his constant companion. A great artist, some suspect his Buffalo Bill hair and Latin quarter hat are concessions to a love for comedy. In his apartment In the Rue Jadin are perpetuated the old and glorlom French salons. In a not unusual gathering there one winter afternoon. I recall seeing Mrs. Mary Harrlman Rums er, Floyd Gibbons. Marcel Proust, Jo Davidson, the famous Fra telllnl clowns and Ralph Barton. There was the time White missed a taxlcab step and waa trundled home with a severe strain. A local Jotting in the Paris edition of the Tribune next day announced: 'Gilbert White la forced to remain in his room for several days with a well turned an kle." From hie couch of pain he dispatched a petit-blue to the editor: "What do you mean forced?' Manhattan's reigning Grand Old Man is Col. Cretshtcn Webb, a tzal lanl and handsome remnant of that fine old Knickerbocker stock that once supplied the city with Its real 400. Col. Webb la 80 and wears his crisp white mustache, evening clothes and silk hat with the Jauntlness of a young blood. A chevalier. whoe rib bon was handed to him by Marshal rvvh In person, he has the courtesy and repertory of genteel phrases of a long-lent social era. H's firm double row of teeth are without a single filling and he has the springy step of an athlete. tar jf t- i So far as I've noticed, only one chauffeur-driven car maintains a footman. The car Is owned by an upper Fifth avenue nouveau rlche. who employs two press agentsone for the social end. one for feature stories. The livery has a double row of brass buttotui marching down the front, and collar and cuffs are pure sable. O ye, the laprobe Is of er mine. Lou Jlraiuiicid a loot itu in flan peculiar fact about the pallor of Co poisoning Is that a blood count Is likely to show a high red cell count, quite up to the normal or even above the normal average number of red corpuscles. The diagnosis of chronic monoxide pelsonlng is a question of your physician's opinion, which may or may not be corroborated by the result of a quantitative test of the blood for monoxide shortly after exposure to the gas. Change of occupation of environ ment and plenty of open air life are the best means of restoring health. It Is unlikely that the symptoms would persist if the poisoning does not occur constantly or repeatedly. Much relief has been obtained, as already suggested, from sodium hpyo- sudphlte. The sufferer takes one-half teaspoonful of sodium hyposulphite once a day, or. twice a day in recent case. It is best taken dissolved In water with some syrup of any desired flavor. Take It occasionally, or for a week or two, then discontinue. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Side Ache. What is the cause of what children call pain in the side, usually brought on by running? Mrs. W. O. Answer Distension of the right side of the heart, which responds to the effort by pumping a greater vol ume of blood through the lungs for aeration. It is a good check on the child's endurance effort. Tuberculosis Complicated. I am 27, have husband, four-year-old son, tuberculosis ytce 1926. and am pneumathorax case. Doctors have tried every remedy to stop menstru ation, without avail. They can't op erate on account of my condition, and they dislike to use x-ray In one so young . . . A. R. Answer If x-ray treatment controls the menstrual bleeding it la the right treatment In your case, I should y. The objection is that It tends to pro duce sterility. That would be not un desirable In such circumstances. Something to Eat. Please give me some suggestions what foods to avoid. I am told I have symptoms of peptic ulcer . . . I. M. Answer Let us not worry about that. But I'll suggest something for vou to eat If you will send a dime and a stamped addressed envelope and ask for booklet, "Guide to Right Eat ing." (Copyright, 1933. John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to " Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. lis, France, resulted In collecting a lot of good stories not between book covers. Some are for the drawing room and others for the smoking car. Almost every new yarn is dubbed "a Bromfleld." The Blltmore has been opening a rendezvous for on-the-loose collegi ates. especially from Princeton, Yale and Harvard. Many hotels have such a vogue for a season or so, but the Blltmore has maintained the lead. At tea time the dining rooms and divans are filled with them and their high pitched chirpings. Most New York hotels are too large to provide the pleasure afforded by a small town inn. the sort that flings ltseir Into quick activity to give the best it has. No subtle flattery Is comparable to the sudden bustle that follows such an arrival. How delicious the deference of the landlord, in per son, who flings open the door of his best room to "hope It will do I" There are smells and sizzle from the kitchen, the bent back of the sleepy varlct kindling the fire, and perhaps the stray dog that wanders In to look you over and respectfully retire. Somewhere there must be one of those pi ay -on -word puns in Claire Luce's 25,000 a year separation from her young sportsman husband but. after a long romp with the dog, I can't handle it. The best I can do until I catch my breath Is: Claire's Luce. (Copyright, 1933. McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) by congress, and may not do so. Be fore Henry Morgenthau went into the treasury, he had made up his mind to attempt to float the Issue In the open market. The treasury raised a howl at that time and told Morgen thau he would interfere with govern ment refinancing. The truth seems to be that the bonds would have to be sold at a sharp discount and treasury experts do not want that. , Morgenthau. In his new Job. Is caught between the two conflicting fires. Mr. Roosevelt will ak congress to do something about It. The farm credit administration must have the money. Oregon rather. Unsettled tonight and Thursday; acoslonal rain in west and north por tions; little change In temperature; moderate to fresh southeast wind off t shore. j 4 I Adult education classes in Los An geles are larger by 3000 enrollment? than a year ago with IT, 5 7 8 regit-Uffsrf 1 JSmm f (Continued from page one) t Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. HOLIDAY business In Southern Oregon this year was unexpect edly good - much better, In gen eral, than a year ago, and In some cases the best In three years. Whether this was true of the country as a whole, we have not yet had time to find out, but presum ably It was. There was no special stimulus In Southern Oregon to make business better than average. So we may assume safely that busi ness EVERYWHERE was better. WHY? "f Well, people spent more money. Spending more money Is the only thing that CAN make business bet ter, for business Is a matter of buy ing and selling. So we can answer that question without a bit of hesitation. THIS question arises: Why did people spend more money during this holiday season? This must be the answer: Because they have recovered their confidence sufficiently to believe that If they spend the dollar that Is In their pockets they will be able to get ANOTHER dollar to take Its place. For nearly three years people lacked this confidence. They felt, uneasily, that the dollar In their pocket might be the last dollar they would ever be able to earn. Feeling that way, their inclination was to hang on to money like grim death, spending It only for the -most elemental necessities. llE TALK about lack of confidence, ft Just what do we mean when we say that? We can't mean lack of confidence In stability of this country, for even In the darkest days last spring, with every bank in the country closed, there was no lack of confidence In the future of the country itself. So what we must mean Is lack of confidence In our ability and the ability of others to earn more money lther In the form of wages or in the form of profits. If we lack confidence in our ability to earn more mono, we will natu rally hang onto what we have Just as long as possible. When we begin to spend again, It MUST mean that we are getting back our confidence in our ability to EARN again. ANOTHER thlng helped to make business better this holiday sea son the CWA money. This money was relatively small In amount, but It circulated , rapidly. Within a few hours after the first CWA payroll checks were issUed, they began to show up In the stores. In other words, this CWA money moved, and it moved fast. It is the speed with which money moves, you know, that' makes business good. 4-4 THE CWA program, In this writer's humble Judgment, Is the first government program for the stimula tion of business that has ACTUALLY WORKED. It has worked because the CWA money has got out Into the hands ol people who promptly spent it for goods and services. You can pile up money in the vaults of the banks until these vaults are ready to burst, and It won't help business a particle. You have to get money OUT WORKING before It can help busi ness. The CWA program has done Just that. It may bankrupt us In the long run, but there Is no denying the fact that It is helping right now. A new centrifugal type pump usm? gasoline to cool Its motor helps sri gasoline through a pipeline from Ok lahoma oil fields. BORAH SPEAKS e mm AW. Senator William E. Borah (right) a, h, spoke before th, national grang, convention in Boise, Ida., urging Inflation of currency and restoration of th, anti-trust lawa. Louis J. Taber, national master, la 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 27, 1923. (It was Thursday.) Paul McDonald is elected com mander of the American Legion. County tax levy is 249 mills. 1.8 mills less than last year. Both marriages and divorces In crease in past year in Jackson county. Three prospective candidates for sheriff announce "I wouldn't have it on a silver platter. I can't afford to make the race, as business Is too good. One-man "tax revolt" in Beagle dis trict subsides, and he pays his taxes. Statistics show that Medford is -'overrun with Jazz orchestra; there mutt be close to 25 but not all play ing at the same time." TWENTY YEARS A(JO TODAY December 27, 15)13. . (It was Saturday.) Agitators deported from California towns. A cold wave sweeps over the valley. Grants Pass man. on visit here, cla'.ms he was given "knockout drops' and robbed of $500. Police doubt It. Eggs drop 15 cents in three days. Swedish Yule-fest at Smith's hall. New Year's day. Water to be shut off all day to repair a broken main. Meteorological Report December 27, 1933. Forecasts. Medford and vicinity: Unsettled with occasional rain tonight and Thursday; little change In tempera ture. Oregon: Unsettled tonight and Thursday. Occasional rains west and north portions. Little change in temperature. Local Data. Temperature a year ago today: Highest, 54; lowest, 36. Total monthly precipitation, 1.97 inches. Deficiency for the month .57 Inch. Total precipitation since September 1, 1933, 3.44 inches. Deficiency for the season, 3.43 Inches. PolnflvA VmmlrHtv nt ft n. m. VeS- tcrday. 91 per cent; 5 a. m. today 100 per cent. Tomorrow: Sunrise, 7;I Sunset, 4:47 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 a. m., 120 Meridian Time. Boston . 28 8 .78 Clear Cheyenne 20 16 Clear Chicago .............. 14 -10 .04 Clear Eureka 1 62 48' Cloudy Helena 16 10 .02 Cloudy Los Angeles 60 60 T Rain MEDFORD 42 36 .01 Mist New Orleans 74 40 .02 Cloudy New York ...... .... 16 .96 Clear Omaha 8 2 T P. Cdy. Phoenix 78 48 Clear Portland 40 36 .14 P. Cdy. Reno . 60 30 Clear R08cburg 60 38 Foggy Salt Lake 62 38 Clear San Francisco .... 62 42 Cloudy Seattle 46 40 .08 Cloudy Spokane 26 24 .02 Cloudy Walla Walla 28 24 .04 Foggy Washington. D C. 34 14 .66 Clear Mat Results By I'nlted Pre. At New York Coliseum Dick Shl- kat, Philadelphia, threw Harry Field, New York; Paul Boesch, Brooklyn. drew with Vanka Zclzniak, Russia: Tony Colesano, Italy, drew with' Bull Komar, Lithuania: Little Beaver, Oklahoma, threw Mike Venke, Chi cago; Jack Humbert, Italy, drew with Andy Brown, Chicago: Jack Sherry. Chicago, threw Sid Westrlch. Bronx. FOR INFLATION 1 ' I i 3 lis oity 9 : I ('i 9 v 4 STALLED AUTO NEW YORK, Dec. 27. (UP) An eight-pound boy was born today In an automobile stalled at a busy Bronx street Intersection and unable to proceed toward a hospital because of snowdrifts. After his car had stalled, the father hurried on foot to the Bronx Mater nity hospital, but the child waa born before aid could arrive. The mother, who was alone In the car. announced the stork's arrival by vigorous blasts of the auto horn. Mother and son were then taken on a stretcher to the hospital, where they were reported "doing nicely." Hospital officials did not make public names of the parents. ' Mrs. Emll Peters of Georgetown, Ky., Is the first woman to be e!eV4 a trustee of Georgetown coll'ge, there. ONE WEEK StartsSat.Dec.30 'em 300 Oirfl...'20 Stom.-.tiHludine JAMES CAGNEY RU8Y KEELE R DIC K POWELL JOAN BtONDEU; Here Till Friday Night It's for Both Old and Young LEWIS CARROLL'S CHARLOTTE HENRY oi "Alic." RICHARD ARLEN ROSCO ATES GARY COOPER LEON ERROL LOUISE FAZENDA W. C. FIELDS SKEETS GALLAGHER CARY GRANT RAYMOND HATTON !5r.Vi? HORTON ROSCOE KARNS BABY LeROY MAE MARSH POLLY MORAN JACK OAKIE EDNA MAY OLIVER MAY. ROBSON CHARLIE RUGGLES ALISON SKIPWORTH NED SPARKS FORD STERLING Direct by Htmmn MilMtJ A Paromciiat ; ALSO Charlie rha.r (iintPd. "The f'rnrkrd li-eman" Nr Itri-I t artimn. "The ".pile Hunt" NJOAN lONBU with