PAGE FOUR Medpord Mail Tribune "EvtryOM IB Southern Oregon Rum Uil Mill Trltone'' D1II7 Eieepl aiturdir Piihltthnt hw tltDKOUD FH1NTINO CO. JSII-JJ N. ru 8U PIMM Tl B0BEI1T H. BUHL, gdltsr An Independent Neirpipef Entered u letorjd clue mitur Uedford, Oreon, under Act ol Mircn 8, 1819. 8UB8CHIPTI0N BATES y Mitt In Adiaote Dii7, one tttt Dilij, ell monthi ' Dellr, one month ".V. 1 Br Cirrler lo Adnnee Medlord, AlMind. Jlrkeontllle, Centril Point, Phoena, llleot, bold Bill end on Ulghnjl. DUlf, one reir..... ; Dtllr, Hi month! Pillr, one month All Urine eub In idriMA. f.'VUl piper ot too Citr of Medlord. OfMelel piper of Jickion Couotr. KEMBElt Of TUB ASSOCIATED PHESS IteceiTini bum - TBI Auoelited Preil li eicluilrelr entitled to tM liie or punilcauun wi credited to It or otherirlie eredlted In tnli inner i. .i i. miktl.harl hrsT'ln. All ibjhts tor publleitloo ol ipeelil dlipitelw Herein ire iiw rumcu. Hr.M:!-:H OF UNITED PIlESS UCMBEH OT AUDIT BUBEAD or CIHCULAT10N8 Adrartlitni BtpreeenUthei U. C. MOdESBEN COMPANT Olfleei lo Hit tori. Cnteiro, Detroit, lea rrioclieo Um Snseleo BeilUe Portlind. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. .HtrM aMntflncd the Oov A IBUCltw ernor of North Dakota to 18 months in prison for conviction of attempted bribery, and endeavoring to defraud Unci. Bam on the day North Dakota voters renominated him for n0 at their primary election. Thl. is no reflection on the Intelllgenco of th. North Dakota voter, but It a gooTthing that Bandit No. 1 John Dllllnger was not running for some The executive was charged with" diverting relief work funds to his own relleti Wednesday Is the Fourth of July, and the eagle will scream, as well it may. . 1 . i... wviIaH there seems UOOUnuiua") ... nnvbody oares to admit, announce plans to raise as much hell as possiowv -, In, on their constitutional rights. This trio Is a good on. and ha. been performed W- t and ins on uioir wiwn-" " , white kicking the constitution around. J Kort Hall, the orchardlst, Is still worrying optimistically on all fronts. There is one nice thing about Mr. Hall's frettlng-h. confines It exclu sively to the nations of the Western Hemisphere, and the Islands of the Paolflo Ocean. To date, he has been unable to register any worrying about anything that ever happened. It begins to look like the weather would now produce some summer days with burning haw, when peo ple wish that they were a flsn. . nmi rari of the Applegate plans to sacrifice himself for the leglelsture and win run ir - - therein. Among other thlnp, he promises to save nogue river for th. poor man. He doea not explain Just how the rescue would benefit either the river or the poor man. Mr. Carl will make the race as an Independent Independent. He urges the use or common sense in making laws. H. might as well urge all farmer, to lift themselves over the fence by their own bootstraps. There Is Just one Item the matter with hie candidacy. He does not vow not to go, If eleoted. Th. Sultan of DJocJa (Java) who has 4.4 wives and 98 children. He receives SSS.OOO a month from the Dutch aovornment for doing nothing. ("Believe It Or Not" Item) 8o It would seem. Lady bicyclists are now reducing on the sidewalks, to keep from being run over by autolsts. It has not been de termined yet where the pedestrians will walk to keep from being run over by either on. or both. 1834 turkeys will soon be big enough and fat enough for armed farmers to ttay up nights with them. i THK TONOHB. The tongue is a muscle located ln--i j - ik. .nri fuitened at on. end. . , Mle la tha innaa on.. In in. 1 1 w 1 1 u giiw - ome Individuals It Is looser than In OWi"i . Th. tongu. Is used to crush food. 4. Mni.ian handkerchief when It Is necessary to wash a child's fee. In public, to move gum rrom on. to th. other, to keep th. upper plat In position, to mas. ouainee. .ur u.- .t. mri in elect candidates If boy has a silver tongu. hs grows up to be sn orator and do hu lira to nolntlng out th. duty of other people. Bllver tongues ars no longer In great demand, ex cept In district, where men sleep In their underwear. Sharp tongues at. peculiar to th. r..u nf (hi iiwIm In Puritan day. th. possessor of a sharp tongu. was railed a common koio ana w ducked In a pond. Now, however, tongues of this type no longer monopolised by th. feminine sex, and male, who poesess them are called reformers and young Intellectuals. If they are reformer, they ouss .very body who disagrees with them, snd If they are young Intellectuals they cuss America. (Baltimore Sun.) Refresh yourself with one of our big 10c in creim solas. Anything you Uk. In to. fountain line at DeVoes. Editorial Correspondence LOOT HAVEN, Pa., June 29th. More beautiful country. Left Gettysburg this morning, motored to Harrisburg, where the senior member of the firm insisted upon securing detailed instruction from the A.A.A. (not the Roosevelt branch) when all we needed was plainly on the road map. However the half hour spent was not entirely wasted, for we saw more of the capital of Pennsylvania, than would have been possible other wise. A very quaint but attractive city on the Susquehanna river the latter a very impressive stream until one takes the time to examine it. Then what at first appears to be another Mississippi, proves to be but a. flat, broad expanse of rock, over which a thin veil of muddy water trickles. The river is not navigable, and in the old days had a canal running along its banks. . The canal is now grass-grown and partially filled up, the river so they say, 11 lower than usual. The highway to Buffalo, N. T., our first stopping point en route west runs directly along this river, between thickly wooded hills, which later grow to be what the natives here call mountains, but which the younger member of the party insists upon calling "NOTHING but hills." She admits however they are very beautiful hills, all fluffy and soft and green without a bare spot on them. And they rise in the air so gradually, back, far back, there to be crested by more rounded fluffy trees, that they give one a rare sense of spaciousness, and a richly uphols tered grandeur. The western mountains are far more majestic and impres sive, but no mountains in the WORLD could be more peacefully BEAUTIFUL than these mountains in central Pennsylvania. Leaving Harrisburg we were puzzled by several little stern wheeler barges not much larger than row boats one attached to a flat bottom scow, which appeared to be filled with coal. Having been told the river is not navigable, this provided a subject for considerable discussion. At another point we saw a man, standing in the middle of the stream the water didn't reach to his knees, plying a scoop shovel at a great rate, shoveling some heavy substance into a box nearby. That pre sented another problem. While the mystery was explained. The bottom of the Susquehanna it seems is little more than a field of hard coal in many places. They still scoop a high grade anthracite from the river bed, and have been doing so for many years. That's getting water washed .coal for you 1 Tbe senior member of the party was born near here, 84 years ago, but was taken west by his parents to Illinois, shortly after the close of the Civil War. He more than anyone else enjoys this trip, through country he knew so well as a boy. But it is rather a sad trip too for all the friends of his childhood are dead, and of his immediate family he believes there is only one possible survivor, an Uncle Samuel Buhl, who at last reports still lived on the family homestead he the third generation. He was his father's young half-brother and if living would be so he figures 104. So we search' for Uncle Sam. The little village is finally found after considerable wandering, a place of not more than five or six hundred people, neat and cleap with a post office, a knitting mill and perhaps ten or twelve stores. A great grand father ran the mill a century ago it was a flour mill then,, it is a woolen yarn mill now. He was also the postmaster. (Quite a MAN was great grand dad I) We asked two venerable gentle men working in a ditch if they know where Sam Ruhl lives, (IF he is Btill alive I) One rises up, scratches his head, and says nothing. The other rises, scratches his head, and expresses the opinion that Sam Ruhl died two years ago. - Well that appeared to settle Uncle Sam, but where did he live having travelled so far all wished to see the old family homestead. Neither of the ditch diggers could say definitely, but they knew it was just a block off the main street and had a fence about it. So we drove on, and in that general direction passed a little girl in a pink dress with no sleeves, and a pair of black bright eyes. . "Could you tell us where Sam Ruhl used to" live t" we ask, "Sure" said the girl pointing aoross tho street, "he's my unole, he lives right over there." .'"You mean he's ALIVE." . . ' "I'd say he's alive I just been over there." Tableaux I Here were unexpected family complications. We were not looking for any young girl relatives, and to be per fectly frank didn't want any. So we thanked the young Miss, and proceeded in the direction of the house indicated, without informing her that we also had one of Uncle Sam's nephews, and several grand nephews and nieces in the car. A few minutes later wo were duly presented to Uncle Sam, whom we oxpected to find in a hand, ear trumpet in the other, below his skull cap. Far from HI Uncle Sam didn't look exactly like a college sophomore, but he had no car trumpet, he had a head of hair, as thick as an Irish terrier's and only a few streaks of grey in itt and his false teeth weren't in his hand, thoy were in the bath room for Uncle Sam wasn't expeoting visitors and he only wears his store teeth at meals and when he dresses up. In faot Uncle Sam expects to abandon them entirely as soon as his third set of teeth como in. A friend of his grew a third set. And Uncle Sam is sure ho can do the samo for he has grown a head of hnir yes sir, at 70 ho was bald as a gooso egg, and now look at his hair. He blithely referred to his house keeper to confirm this statement, but tho housekeeper reminded Uncle that she had only been with him ten years. She did ngrco however that his hair was much thicker than it was when she came. "Well It's true anyway" said Uncle, "and I spelled down" the class at the school tho other day. Yes sir. I have jest as good a memory as I ever had, and novcr forgot my letters. The word was MeEwinvillc that place back the road where you came lotiay anil uncio proceeded to Rpell it M-o (Capital) E-w-i-n-v-U.l-e. That stumped 'cm, all but me." e ' And then the little girl in the pink dress was exnlained. Uncle Sam's children all died in he and his late "wife adopted ono had a couplo of nice girls of her everyoony caucu nim uncio pronanjy Dccauso Ins name is Sam. ' Well we had a nice family reunion, and before we departed practically the entire village came along to look over the feneo anu seo wnat wns going on. Hut the senior member was mistaken regarding Uncio 's age, IIo isn't 104 he is only 94 just a mere spring chicken I (But wait until his lineal descendant starts growing his sec. ond crop of hair 1 1) ft, -j OFFICER'S AnACKER PORTLAND, Or... July 8. (API Accused ot having kicked and fatally Injured policeman, Oeorge De cor ner, at, was held In the city all on a murder charge while preparations were made for a preliminary hear tag In municipal court today. MEDFORD WATT; lunching at Seeling's Grove wheel chair, false teeth in ono and not even one hair visible infancy so about 50 years ago she grew up and married and own. They call him uncle, Patrolman Charles M. White, 60, died Saturday night after he had been kicked In the abdomen by De Coreey while attempting to place the latter under arrest on a drunk chsrge. A long leaf pin. tree In Duplin county. North Carolina, Is 110 feet tall, measures 44 9 Inches In diam eter at point 46 feet above th. ground and th. first limb Is 80 feet from th. ground. Mrs. Ina M. Huaon Is now at ttio DeVoe store and will b. glad lo hav. her friends drop in anytime. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment wlU be answered by Dr. Brady It stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.. Owing to the large number ol letters received only a lew can be an swered. No reply can be mad. to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. WW lain Brady, 265 ei camlno, Beverly Hills, Cat. WHY DO WB OVEREAT? Instinctively th body crave food at least once t day. Actually moat plain and fancy eating la done for w&rm other reasons than hunger, or for no good reason at all, Hunger Is the primitive demand of the cells or tissues tor (1) fuel food to con vert Into ener.ry or -vital heat, or for growth and the repair of wear and tear; (3) vit amins, each of which .serves a special nutritional function and la essential for life and health; (3) minerals .which maintain proper fluid balance within the cells, and enter Into the formation of strong teeth and bones, vigorous muscles and nerves. Due to Improper selection, ultra-re finement and faulty preparation or cooking, our diet generally Includes an excess of fuel food but a shortage of vitamins and minerals. In the In stinctive effort to appease hunger we are likejy to consume a greater bulk of fuel food than the body can readily handle, and tbe surplus ac cumulates in the body, stored in fat layers under the skin. In the abdo men and In and around the Internal organs, especially the heart, liver and kidneys. In health a certain amount of fat is stored in these same places in the body, to be drawn upon for fuel In case the food supply falls or falls below the body's daily re quirement. You skinny ones know I love you as long as you can take It on the only chin you have with a wan little smile. But I certainly like my women plump. I'm apeaklng, of course, as a health authority purely. However that's the way I like 'em anyway you take It. Now as your sympathetic friend and 'admirer, dlscrlmlnatlvely, may I not suggest that you read over the preceding three paragraphs care fully and make sure you grasp the little lesson In nutrition that Is com pressed into them. Don't cut It out. It Is really quite simple, and If you are not a veritable dumbbell you should be able to learn everything said there so that In your own words you can tell It to anybody else. Clip ping such things and filing or past ing in scrapbooks Is the worst way in the world to learn, though such flies or scrapbooks may be Interest ing keepsakes or relics. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, July 3. Diary: Out to a a rand. Central lunch counter. And the man next stool was hand- .b. cuffed to an un. S3 der-sherlff going ounglsh fellow I rz1 11 who could not le . Y) keep back tears. So across town, speaking to Jim my Johnston, and Billy Seeman and gazed upon th. Increasing de. cadence of Broad way from Louis Mann's step at the Aator. mi ViiiMffaildaiaflSf So the afternoon writing a maga zine vignette about America's most widely discussed newspaperman, Da mon Runyon. Then to the Bex Coles for tea and, wandering Columbus avsnue, picked up a fey volume of Sir Arthur Qutller-Coucn and stop ped awhile to talk to Roxy. Driving to th. Sleepy Hollow coun try club with my lady to din. with th. Will Hayses and Will's brother, Hlnkle. And on the road horn, a motor was upside down In a ravine, a woman killed ana her busbsnd, swaying from drink, was shrieking hysterically. A sorry picture. The Sleepy Hollow Country club, built 4 years ago, was ones the home of Flnley Shepherd and wife, the for mer Helen Gould. The housekeeper Installed at the opening still presides. There are 17 bedrooms for' club mem bers furnished as they were originally and the largest In America. The largest, occupied by Mrs. Shepherd, encompasses the space of at least ftve ordinary rooms, th. cloMt doubl.- decked with winding stair. What was once a front terrace Is now the golf course. Prom every window the view Is so sweeping that psstoral serenity becomes somewhat torpor. You want to hear the care go toimp. One of the 7-mallest, most select town clubs Is ths Coffee House, whose membership Is made up of pslnters, writers, sculptors, architects and ac tors. The rules are confined to a single mandate, vis, there ahsll be no rule. The purposes of the organi sation were set down by the late Joeeph H. Choat. at th. opening din ner: "No offloeta, no Hvertee, no tips, no set speeches, no candidates for membership, no charge accounts. no rules." Frank Crownlnshteld is a prime mover. Hotel Figueroa Ftgueroa St. at loth, Los Angeles, Calif. On. of Los ,;; !' Angeles' newest 0 0 Outside Rooms of Comfort. Downtown. Oarage In Connection. Rates from 11.50 per day without batb ft.oo per day with bath $3.00 per day. twin beds and batb A ft. smith. Lessee. OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 2, 1934. Natural hunger has long since ceas ed to be the main reason why we eat. Artificial restrictions or conven tions of civilized Uf, operating as does captivity or domestication upon animals, modify the normal factors of hunger and condition the reflexes concerned In eating. How often we eat because host or hostess expects us to enjoy the food offered I Social eating la a universal sin. Most persons Vill partake of un wanted food at any time for the sake of trying some novel dish or flavor or change of environment. Like Pavlov's white mice we easily learn to water at ftie mouth in re sponse to the dinner bell, Instead of reacting to hunger In the natural way. We eat because It Is time to eat, everybody's doing It now and we hate to be even figuratively a skele ton at the feast. We eat because we have learned to enjoy tbe stimulation we get from certain foods, particularly meat and meat extractives as In broth or soup, sauce or gravy; and having cultivated this habit we feel let down and "weak" when we are unable to have our accustomed stimulation at the usual time. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Streptococcus Is the germ streptococcus always fatal when it gets into the blood stream? (Mrs. H. P. T.) Answer No. But of course such septicemia or blood poison is a ser ious Illness In any case. Bran Before and after I received your leaflet on constipation I used bran, and I believe you are right about.lt, However, I cannot find the undoc- tored article at grocers or bakers' A friend of mine says you recommend taking a teaspoonful of flaxseeds now and then. Does this mean flaxseed meal and should one pour boiling water on It first? (A. B. MoG.) Answer Peed stores or flour mills would have plain bran. Send 10 cents (coin) and stamped envelope bearing your address, for a booklet "The Con stipation Habit," which tells you how to use flaxseeds. The corruption leaf let is free to readers who provide the stamped addressed envelope. The booklet sets you back a dime besides . Ed Note: Readers wishing to should send letters direct to Dr. communicate with Dr. Brady Wllllcm Brady, M. D., 265 E. Ca mlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. Personal nomination for the moat enthusiastic voice among radio an nouncers that of Graham McNamee, Sumner Blossom, lean young maga zine editor, does not pace tbe room, tugging at a forelock, an old sanctum custom In discussing stories with writers. He is a chair gymnast in stead. He may sit on one leg, then the other, or Bv.ddha-llke, on both, And In tense moments almost ties himself In a knot. Lord Northcllffe waa another editor who liked to sit at conferences with legs doubled under him. Perhaps the only editor to relax In office pow-wows was the late Ben Hampton. He stretched out a chaise-lounge puffing a big cigar when talking things over. Bob Davis used to pencil hieroglyphics furiously on a desk pad but never missed a word. Ballard Macdonald. long one of Tin Pan Alley's crack song writers, Joined the expatriate. In Tahiti months ago, after closing up affaire for a permanent Isolation on. that outer fringe of the world. But after six weeks of cultured beech-combing Georee white postcard forwarded from his New York address reading How about some lyrics for my new show?" sent him up the gangplank of the next steamer so hungry for the civilization he left flat on its back he walked right up and kissed the Times building. His dresm of exile, Is usual, waa pleasant only In planning. The remaining expatriated Amerl cans In Prance believe the unprece dented fine of nearly a million for Jenny Dolly was merely the outward glow of inner emberlng toward for eign success there. A French trick The Dolly sisters have been stepping high, wide and handsome fop many vears In Paris and alone the Riviera. This definitely puts a crimp In their strut. Jenny Dolly will remove to &OJMY0UR INDEPENDENCE btj paying if our bills J tTLT b independence month an ideal time to declare your bdopendenc from money worries. If you owe several bills, let us furnish the money to pay them off. You can pay us back in small weekly or monthly payments. We wiD lend you up to $300 on your own signatures no tndorsers required. Call, phone or write far full details. OREGON WASHINGTON MORTGAGE CO. 45 So. Central W. F THOMAS, Mgr. Llccn. .No. 8-19? London or return to New York, is through with Prance and versa. 8hs vice Bagatelles: Count Von Luckner eats but one meal a day, but It Is one a whippet could not hurdle . . The original Plea Circus, finding West 42nd street too tawdry, seeks another location . . , Herbert Bayard Swope discovered Irving Berlin In NlRger Mike Salter's Chinatown cafe and wrote the first feature story about blm . . . Lucius Beebe has been first to devise the chatter column Idea for Park avenue. From a literary agency clip sheet: Mc In tyre seems to have changed his writing pace a bit. He's now graver than gay." The New Era columnist! (Copyright, 1934, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) . Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THE UNITED STATES protests Ger many's moratorium on $1,600,000,- 000 In German obligations held by Americans. Moratorium is a polite word mean ing: "We're not going to pay our debt till we get good and ready." The crude, coarse, rough word for the same thing Is "repudiation.") w HAT will the United States do about It besides diplomatic talk? Well, nothing much, if you Insist on the unpleasant truth. There isn't much that can be done about It, right now except go to war, which would mean that the cost of collec tion would be Immensely greater than the debt Itself. B TJT there IS something that can be done later. The next time the Germans come around wanting to borrow another billion and ft half, we can say to them: "No, thanks; you didn't pay your debt the last time, so we'll lend you no more money." BROADLY speaking, that Is AL WAYS the trouble with not pay ing your debts whether you are a nation or an Individual. You may get away with It at the time, but the next time you want to borrow money you'll find lenders un interested. N Paying honest debts Is a mighty good policy. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, In an ad dress delivered In Washington, re views his recovery program and claims for It substantial gains In the way ot business Improvement. Administration supporters will claim vociferously that these gains are wholly due to the recovery program. Opponents will claim Just as vocifer ously that they have been made In SPITE of It, and would have been greater without It. This humble Individual is thankful INIMMTIOJULV.. Car at . Oregon. tnr the lmorovement, doesnt csre whether It hs. been mads became of th. recovery program or In spit, of It, and hopes It continues. A CHICAGO dispatch says: "A stifling heat wave simmered over the eastern half of the country today, caused more than SO heat pros. tratlon deaths, led Indirectly to al most 100 drownings snd caused agon ising discomfort to millions of per sons." Do you suppose the best wave really did cause SO deaths from heat prostra tions and nearly 100 drownings? Prob ably not. People are apt to Jump to conclusions in such cases. But there', no doubt about th. discomfort as you know if you've throuah an eastern hot spell. w sunt know what real heat Is out here on the Paclllo coast. WILL ROGERS says he doesn't know Just what congressmen are going t nrnmUe the voters this fall In order to get re-elected. He thlnki about everything has been promised that can be promised. Why not try promising a plain, common-sense administration, with no 'effort to raise ourselves by our bootstraps and no rellanc on mat lng everybody rich and happy with out work, by the slmpls process of passing a law. An election platform of that sort would be so novel In these times that it might catch ths fancy of the voters. At least, It would be Interesting to see somebody try it, (Medford and Jackson County History from the Flies of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 tears Ago.) TEN YEARS AUO TODAY. July 2, 1924 (It wss Wednesday) Bryan makes pice for McAdoo as democratic presidential nominee, and starts fuss. McAdoo assures business. "I will not tinker with the money or the tsrlff." Riot prevails before 36th ballot taken. Eighty thousand pounds of Oermsn wsr material allotted to Oregon. The mercury soars to 103 degrees. No relief in sight. A Flint auto climbs th. Crater Lake rim road In "high." ' Frank snd King tent show contin ues to draw crowds nightly. High coat of living will b nat ional campaign Issue. Air mail to start night flights. TWENTY YEABS AQO TODAY. July 2, 1814 (It was Thursdsy) No Issue of the Msll-Trlbun c July 4. , - Frank Ray was fined 15 snd costs by Judge Chsrles B. Oay for apeedlng in his low rakish machine on West Main street. Miss Oanell h. Jackson of Eagle Point and Harry L. Young Jr., of Flight o Time . . . most dramatic and exacting atmospheric test America could impose . . . from the lowest spot on the continent to the topmost motor travel limit of the highest mountain in U.S.A. e . e all within a few hours time . . . every effect of rapid altitude changes recorded by precision in. struments . . Thus was another essential quality of this wonder gasoline developed in Nature's great laboratory. wM TETRAETHYL Companion to Mobiloil Vorfd't Largest Selling Motor Oil CORPOMTION A - IOCONY. Brownsboro, were married this after noon by the Rev. W. 7. Shellds ot the Presbyterian cnurcn, The "Sleepy Seventh" will establish quarters in the Nat, so "young men will have some place to go evenings." Sunday morning three men walking and carrying heavy packs lunched in a certain oamp ground on the Crater I4k rotd. When they had finished they put their empty box and papeia In the stove and even brushed th. crumbs from the table. Later an am. omobll. party lunched In th. same place. They left papers all over th. plsoe. They showed bad manners antl lack of respect for others who will come sfter them. -Flounce Rock iTllle Correspondent, The University of Kentucky Is In cluding as a major subject In Its poultry school methods of determ ining the sex of day-old chicks. Experts figure erosion takes about 1S1 billion pounda of plant food from the soil In the United States annually. 20 ANYTIME HURRY! HURRY! Last Times Tonite iW'wwv'VW i i""T-- 1 P' vr.il CAN'T t BUY EVERYTHING MAY R0BS0N Starts Tomorrow She Stowed Away on the Danger Ship to Sail for Buried Gold I And sU faced a thousand perils on (ht hie of Kong with the man she loved! with Robert Armstrong Helen Mack Frank Refcher John Marston Victor Wong Lee Kohlmar Ed Brady ERNEST1 B. SCHOEDSACK' VACUUM COMPANY 1 t kVk J rm L '1