Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 23, 1934, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORU, OREGON, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1934.
Medpord Mail Tribune
"Crtryont M Southirn OrttM
Rrsdi thi Halt Trlbunt"
Dtllr Eiecpt lUturdav
Cuhllilied or
tiRhh-mtll PItlNTINU CO.
tb-21'29 N. INr 8L foot 16
HOBEKT tt. UUUU aVUtor
Ao Independent Nmptpef
Entered u Mtood elm auU it Utdford.
Oregon, under Act or usreb 8, miw.
St'BSntlPtlUN BATES
Q- H.I J In Ariiarva
n.u? dm f 13.00
Dailj, ti months J.'&
Daily, cne month 0
By Carrier Id Adttnee Mfdford, AjhUod,
Jtrksonrtlle, Central Pelot, Wwenli, TsJfDt, Gold
Hill J on Ulghwajl. nB
Itail?, on rear 00
Daily, ilt months.,, 1.3o
All terma. cut) to sdTtne.
Offtelel pepw of the Cttf of Mador.
Official pip of JwUoo County.
: UEMKKt Ob1 TUB ASSOCIATED PHfcSB
Htcfirlnt ITull Leucd Wirt Berries
The AwUtl 1'reu U etelustiely entitled to
r for putilhttioo or all oewa dupeieoee
eiiitu u'lto othcUe credited to Mil pipet
nd alio ui tin local new pulillthed tHVtln.
All lib(i for pupation of apcdal dlipaUbei
herein are ilk ruerred.
MtCMUfcW OP UNITKD PHKSi
UEMJ1KH OP AUDIT H II HEAD
09 CIHCULATIONB
Adnrtlilni KoprtaeoUtliM
U. C MOUENBEN COMPACT
OfTleita Id Net York, Cbleiio, Detroit, 111
Pranelseo Loa Armeies Seattle Portland.
MEMBER
MRA,
vv
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arihui Penx
Chrtstma shopping wa the order
of the week, citizens rushing around
ell woek ependlng money, the depres
sion to the contrary notwithstanding.
No 111 erfecta were reported from let
ting loose of a dollar, or dime. The
pending perked up business, more
than a speech by a Democratic orator.
Colds are rampant, with many
cures due to use of the Prohibition
Era remedy.
rietch Fth, the boom day tenor,
was scared stiff the 1st of the wk.
by the order of a Marlon county
Judge advising a defendant, with a
noao-wldth mustacho to go home and
fhave It off. The Phoenix vocalist
Is outside the Jurisdiction of the
Marlon county Judge, which U un
fortunate. Intellectual have returned home
from the campuses to greet St. Nick
at the parental fireside.
300 Elks assembled Thurs. eve for
a celebration, and everybody got back
his own hat and overcoat.
Dewey Hill the Prospect hillbilly
and hired man, will awoop down on
Hollywood and other Calif, point In
hie new auto soon. A man he caught
a fish for last summer, promised to '
give him a knockdown to Myrna Loy, 1
and other film beauties.
Unable to see anything, a fog
Thurs. night slowed down local speed
ers before they realized their lice rue
plates were also Invisible In tha murk.
A mm.ucr of valley statesmen are
till discussing the problem of why
they posses so little wealth, and An
drew Mellon has so murh.
The late mean dlst. atty. haa gone
to Portland, where he Introduced a
resolution to tighten up the law
against agitators, who mean no harm,
except destruction of the government.
In any manner that comes handy.
Thla county Is regarded aa too
squeamish about hell-ralaera, by
counties never afflicted with them.
Snow for Christmas and skiing as
yet unavailable. Many aklera can
hardly watt to go to the hills and
freeae and eat fried bacon In the
great outdoors.
Dock Shockley reports .he loss of
the Queen of Heart while playing
brldse with Dock Mulholland. The
Shockley domicile was combed for the
missing card without avail. It dis
appeared as completely as If it had
yn fwnitowrd by the earth, or nock
Mulholland' sleeve.
The Self-Help campaign was re
newed last week, the police hearing
that several lost gasoline, whiskey,
groceries, trousers, tlrca, and over
coats, when the ownera were not look
ing. Rain haa been falling copiously,
and Is appreciated by the farmers,
who however feel It should come next
June, and catch them with hay down.
Tom and Jerry's are being swigged
by the merrymakers as the Yuleudr
cometh. born of the mixologist! are
experts, and others are in the home
brew cni.
lric)cles getthem"Tepaired 01
pA.nted tor Xmas Vcdford Cycle i3
N Fir
AAA WEAK BETTER ClOTHh
Suits snu Ocoat to measure, til 51
up. Klein the Tailor. Upsiairj.
bopping day
Chritriia
The Fate of the G. P.P.
rIERE ia an organization with headquarter! in NeW York,
known as the "National Republican Buildera." Julian
Mason, former editor of the New York Evening Tost, is vice
president of this organization, and once a week, sends out to the
presa of the country, his comments upon current political de
velopments. These letters are always interesting, well written, thoughtful
and intelligent; but the Mail Tribune, strongly in sympathy with
the main purposes of the Roosevelt administration, seldom
agrees with their conclusions.
This week's letter, however, just received, commenting upon
Senator Borah's drive to liberalize the Republican party, pre
sents arguments against such action, with which this paper thor
oughly agrees, in fact strangely enough, they are practically
the same contentions that have been advanced from time to time
in this column.
"The truth still holds," declares Mr. Mason, "that you can't
beat Rooseveltism with a DILUTED Rooseveltism. . . . Both Mr.
Borah and Mr. Nye have been trying for years to twist the
Republican party around into this vague 'liberal' ideal of theirs.
They have had no success, and the party has been in control of
the nation for all these years. They have never been in sym
pathy with it. They have used its label for their own ends. . . .
If they now think they can turn Republicanism into their out
worn 'liberalism' it seems to me they are wrong. They ought to
go, I think, into the Roosevelt party. Certainly I do.not wish to
join the kind of party they are seeking to set up."
A BSOLUTELY true, forthright, supported by a logic that is
unanswerable. The place for disgruntled Republicans, like
Borah and Nye yes and like Norris, Hiram Johnson, La Fol
lotte, and others, is not in a party which no longer embodies
their political principles, but in a party that does, i.e.: the
Democratic party, under Roosevelt control and leadership.
For as has been repeatedly stated in this column, parties
don't make principles; principles make parties. Those who be
lieve in so-called Roosevelt principles should obviously join his
party; those who don't should join the party in opposition to
his principles, which is, or should be the Republican party.
As Mr. Mason states in this same letter, quoting from the
Saturday Evening Post:
"Tha Republican party mutt ehooM. It will not fat any
where with a pale Imitation of New Deal policies. It can not
fight under two flags, nor can any 'crow -eyed' party long survive
a party of which one cannot tell whether It la looking to the
right or left."
The Republican party MUST decide,-and so must individual
Republicans whether they are office holders, or just plain pri
vate citizens.
They must decide in what political principles and purposes
they REALLY believe, and in what they DON'T believe, and act
accordingly.
The time has passed when they can either consistently or use
fully, attempt to rido tandem, with one foot planted on the back
of the lmocratic donkey, proceeding in one direction; and the
other foot on the back of the G.O.P. elephant proceeding, or
trying to proceed, in the other.
This has been the Mail Tribune's contention from the outset.
We are naturally pleased to find it is also the view of such
prominent and enlightened leaders in the Republican party, as
the former editor of the New York Evening Post, and the pres
ent editor of the Saturday Evening Tost.
nPIIERE is room in- this country for only two large national
parties. The Democrntia party under Roosevelt is the lib
eral party, the New Deal party, the party of the "left".
Unless the Republican party wishes to fade out of the picture
entirely because its excuse for existence will no longer exist,
then it must become frankly and squarely the opposition
party, the conservative party, the party of the right.
There js room and need in this country for such a party.
There is neither for a party which is either a synthetic New Deal
party, or a half-hearted conservative party, ending up inevitably
by being neither, because it was brainless and spineless enough
to try to be BOTH I
e
JORE than that. In this direction, of candid clarification,
meeting the essential Roosevelt policies with definite and
opposing polieies of its own the Republican party will regain
its health and vigor, because it will regain its reason for beini?
and its self respect.
For the present and probably for a few years, it mav have
to be content with the role of a minority party. But with Roose
velt popularity and political skill what thev are, that is it?
probable fato anyway.
The great advantage to the Republican party in meeting the
issue NOW, hewing to tho conservative line and letting the chips
fall where they may, is the spiritual satisfaction that sincere
dovotion to principle always gives; and the greater respect from
the American people, the rarty will enjoy when the inevitable
turn of the political pendulum starts, and the time arrives, as
eventually it is bound to arrive for the "ins"' to step out and
the outs ' to step in.
THKN the Republican party will regain power, with no
apologies to offer and no regrets for its past. It will be per-
fectly justified in pointing to its record with pride, a GREAT
party in victory or defeat, a party that in spite of all tempta
tions, remained, through thick and thin, TRUE to the fundamen
tal principles in which it believed, true to ITSELF!
(Cnntlnueo r.jm page one)
moua Vlner report on commercial
credit waa that It did not touch on
the two blK auhjerta which Prof. Vln
er and his treshmen brain trust
were commissioned to study last
summer. The omitted ,ub)ecta were
the two loudly ones- taxation and
bauWlnc reform. You rmmot find It
out omt-.ally vet. but there mil be
ii" ippor. on mose ttt tnin -a until i aprnta; "Where are
jou are uetimj your old age pension, eenaule' charterer"
There waa no political reason tor
tartlng a municipal power plant In
New York. The voters' rej'atratlon
flgurea were published on the name
day aa the Roosevelt-La Ouardla
move. They showed 1.40.000 register
ed democrata and S20.0O0 republi
cans. There la a sub-braln trust In the
deal now. It la composed of about
twenty-five thinkers who meet every
once In a while to talk things over
among themselves. So far they here ,h 'rl,ln S0" "n
successfully avoided any publicity
Personal Health Service
By William lirady, M.D.
Signed iettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis
use dlugnosls or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped
self-addressed enyelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written tn
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an.
awered. No reply can be made to querlea not conforming to Instructions.
Address Or. William Brady, iHi El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
CHEESE IS NOT BINDING AND IT IS FINE
FOR Kilt: I'M ATIZ
Ginger, mustard, horse radish, sour
pickles, pepper, vinegar, cocoa, tea,
sour wine and port are binding in
effect, at least
upon many per
sons. But no
foods are binding.
Some foods are
more laxative
than other. Water
is the best of all
laxatives.
Water taken with
meals or between
meals; first thing
on rising or last
thing at night;
hot or cold. Just
before a meal, or in tne course of a
meal, really atimultea the secretion
of gastric Juice and aids digestion.
Indeed a glass of water Is given now
Instead of tho old time "teat meal,"
when we wish to procure a specimen
of gastric Juice for analysis. The old
theory that water taken before or
during the meal diluted the gastric
Juice and so delayed digestion was
based on conjecture and has been
disproved by more precise scientific
observation In modern times. .
Neither are such foods aa cheese,
mlik, white oi egg binding nor Is
there a difference In Individuals In
this respect. People who fancy they
are made costive by this or that food
labor under a misapprehension. It
la true that If the diet la restricted
to milk there Is a very 'nmall residue
left after digestion, and hence no
need for evacuation.
Associated with this popular no
tion la another one propagated, I
think, by the nostrum makers and
certain quacks who have to bring In
new suckers or else . . . This is the
morbid notion that "autolntoxica
tion" or poisoning of the system Is
Inevitable if the regular evacuation Is
retarded for a day or two. There Is
absolutely no ground for this Idiotic
notion, but It gets the business, and
so the charlatans, great and small,
spend a good deal to keep it alive in
the wlseRcre mind.
The old timers, the best physicians
of their day, harbored a vague con
ception that protein of animal origin
waa somehow bad for the kidneys If
tne patient had kidney disease and
bad for the joints If the patient had
Joint disease. Viobably the unwUse
restrictions In the diet In many such
cajws did as much norm as the disease
Itself. At any rate we know now that
there was no eubstantlal ground for
that notion, and both nephritis pa
tients and those suffering with ar
thritis today are found to fare much
better on a liberal, well balanced diet
which includes adequate amounts of
protein material, of course.
I haven't sufficient data as yet to
substantiate or conjecture, but it can
do no barm', surely, so I offer It here
In the hope that a few readers will
try It out and tell us how It works. I
believe a liberal use of cheese of all
kinds Is especially helpful to persons
who suffer with one or another type
of chronic arthritis.
Less than five pounds of cheese a
year la the per capita consumption In
the United States. It would be good
economy, good nutrition and good
sense If we consumed 10 times that
much cheese all of the 18 varieties
from cottage cheese to Limburger.
QUESTIONS AN1 ANSWERS
Frown
I am 23 years old and tn excellent
health, but have two deep wrinkles
between my brows, I think from the
habit of scowling or squinting In the
glare of the sun. My eyes are not
weak, but bright sunlight makes me
frown . . . (Miss H. ., Texas.)
Answer Why not wear moderately
"smoke" tinted glasses or goggles
when you are exposed to glare of sun
light? Kraut
Writing In regard to the value of
sauer kraut Juice to the system. Have
a quantity of It which I have canned
and sealed . . . (Mrs. T. D.)
Answer Sauer kraut or Its Juice Is
wholesome for those who like It. I
know of no special health virtues.
Doesn't kraut keep well in the crock
or barrel In which It was made? Why
can It?
Goat .Milk
Neighbor who bought a doe restored
a sickly Infant to health with the
goat's milk. But we tried goat's milk
or our 5 months old baby, but it
didn't seem to agree with him . . .
(R. E. A.)
Answer Feed the baby goat's milk
Just as tho it were the highest grade
cow's milk. I don't know why It
should not agree.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with1 Ur. Brady
should send letter direct to Ur.
William Brady. M. D., 265 El
Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, Dec. 32. Dawn.
crumbling Into Its shifts of pink
and matigold, offers a glowing vista
for looking back.
For recapturing
lost chords that
reverberate a mo
ment and trem
ble away. At 5:00
a. m, a huckster
clip - c 1 op p 1 n g
across town
brought a sud
den awakening
and cascade of
memories.
That strav waif
7 i oi mo iciiemciits,
VVvvJ 'or instance, that
some backwash of lire lodged on
our editorial step on Pulton street.
He may be a young man of affairs
now. But then he was a bit of hu
man flotsam the currents did not
carry on. He stuck and ran our in
glorious errands and slept In the
mallroom.
We called him "Rags. Rather
cruelly, that described him. Desper
ately thin and spindly, we tried to
fatten him. One .Saturday we chip
ped in for an outfit. Yet next dAy
he appeared In his tatters. He had
given them to his brother. "He has
worse cough than mine, he ex
plained.
And traglo Celeste, cigarette girl at
Maxim's. They sent me to Interview
her after learning her earnings sup
ported a social bounder husband
whom she married when he cracXed
up In a wheel chair. "Two ship
wrecks bound together," she phlloso
phlred, "msy stay afloat longer,"
In that toy Holland town of Delft.
with Its smsll ribbons of canals and
foot bridges, another membrane of
memory releases a knife-blade flash
of long ago. A belled milk cart with
lta faithful dog straining underneath.
A careless motorist rounding a turn.
A craahl The shawled carter stretch
ed bleeding along a gurgle of stream.
the dog be.Mde her with a broken
hind leg but wagging furiously, lick
ing her face and releasing whimper
ing barks bucking her up until
medical aid arrives.
outrageous hat to Ninon, Fleurctte
and Fin. It will be difficult for Paris
to be the dandified Paris of perfume,
muBlc and kisses without Sem. '
There are many examples of Time's
alow healing. Earl Carroll has never
passed the theatre he built and lost.
Although his professional life Is cast
In the area, he has always managed
to keep away from that block.
Jimmy waa a bright-eyed, curly
haired waiter in an uptown family
hotel who served us several years for
breakfast only dinner was cheaper at
the tea rooms around the corner.
Jimmy talked the mixed hobble
gobble of George Givot. He married
and lived in the tenement house that
was actually reproduced for the play,
"Street .Scene." He had a peculiar
scar slant-wise his forehead. I rec
ognized htm. despite a portliness, by
that scar at the premiere of Dorothy
Hall In "Page Miss Glory." I bowed,
moving out of the lobby, but his an
swering bow waa honestly vague. He
had no Idea of my identity. A waiter
sees so many faces. But Jimmy rode
off In a rather smart car. There's a
little spurt of pride In America about
that. It could not happen In Russia.
Dawn recalls the Columbus Circle
Chtlds. There we breakfasted in what
Shaw calls "bleary oscltancy" and
rolled away In a marauding cab tn
roistering days. Bickerings that flew
like sparks across the room wound up
tn sidewalk slugglngs several times a
night. Then the Childs places were
white, sanitized and pleasantly mid
dle class. Now they have gone high
hand-shake with Peter Arno clubman
ads., Jacobean things, tapestries and
cocktail bars In modern decor. Where
batter-cake Jugglers used to perform
are stiff shirts and sable. Life or
nothing la quite the same anymore.
Be correctly corseted In
an Artist Model by
Ethelwyn B Hoffmann.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
OUTSTANDING business leaders of
the nation, representing both the
National Manufacturers' association
and the United States Chamber of
Commerce, meeting at White Sulphur
Springs, la West Virginia, draft a
recovery program cn the basts ot
which, they say, they are willing to
co-operate with President Roosevelt
and his New Deal, Their program
contains these major points:
1. A balanced federal budget.
3. A standard dollar.
3. A major offensive against de
pression In the durable gcods industries.
f ET'S define
sU
Dais need
federal
budget."
In simple, plain words, such aa all
of us can understand, It means this:
That the government shall spend no
more than It takes tn.
W
hy are these great business lead-
ernment spending persistently more
than It takes In?
Because they know that If the
government GOES ON Indefinitely
spending more than It takes In It
will rtin out of GOOD MOSuT with
which to pay its bills and will then
have to start the printing presses
and pay them with BOGUS money.
When that happens we will be
starting on the read that has always
led to DESTRUCTION.
WHAT Is a 'ndard dollar?'
It Is a dollar that wtu be worth
as much when you sell as when you
buy. It Is a dollar that wi.l be worth
as much when you take It out oi
the bank as when you put It In.
NOW let's talk for a moment about
this "major offensive aealnst de
pression In the durable goods In
dustries." What is a durable goods
industry?
Well, the building Industry Is one.
The machinery Industry Is another.
DUrSuiG gOOd 5 ST6 gOOda that lo5v
a long time after you buy them
such as a house, or a cowbarn, or a
potato digger, or a grain binder, or
a printing press.
during the coming year following
the announcement of a program to
congress by President Roosevelt in
January.
Under the circumstances. It seems
to me that our state officials, aa well
as all public bodies such as county
commissioners, mayors, school boards,
schoot districts, irrigation distr:cts
and power districts should be look
ing over the nua;ion as to whether
they need schools, sewers, water sup
plies, roads, paving, hospitals, libra
ries or any public works which comet
under their various Jurisdiction.
If they do find that they have or
will need these public improvements
in the near future It would seem to
me proper they should be preparing
their plans and specifications, as well
as arranging their finances in order
to take care of the situation whether
or not they are to have federal help
or whether It will bz r.eceary to do
this through taxation or local funds.
I am Intensely Interested In the
progress of this atate and regardless
of whether our office can contribute
to the program, it seems to me that
this preparation should be under
taken at once.
If you feel that the above state
ment Is a proper 'one, I would ap
preciate It if you would give the
idea as much publicity as possible.
Appreciating your assistance, I am,
Yours Very Truly
C. C. HOCKLEY,
State Engineer for Oregon Public
Works Administration.
Portland, December 22.
. It's the Bald Truth.
To the Editor:
If It were proposed that every bald
headed man should be paid $1000
a month out of the public funds,
and If, thereupon, the millions of
bald headed men In our country .were
to be organized Into a solid voting
phalanx, does anybody doubt that the
measure would go through congress
with a whoop?
As a bald hearted man, myself, I
should like to know about thfs.
RAMSEY BENSON.
Ashland, Oregon. December 20.
Phone 542. We'll naut away your
refuse. City Sanitary Service.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Counts
History from the riles ol rue
Mall Tribune ol 2U and 10 Veai.
Aeo).
TEN YEARS AtiO TODAY
December 33, 1924
(It Waa Tuesday)
Oold Hill citizens plan fight agalnat
bill In next legislative eeaalon. that
would talte away from Oold Hill the
right to enforce traffic laws and as
sess fines.,
n... .A.nrM of old fashioned
Christmas aa cold wave continues
throughout entire state.
The fire department Is kept on the
Jump by half a dozen flu flrea In aa
many homes.
40 miles per hour (tale eweeps over
valley, and the weather continues
clear and cold.
Dick McElhose Is elected comman
der of the American Legion.
A.ttn tnari nf moonshine destined to
give Christmas cheer la seized on Pa
cific highway.
City buys Davis lot so Sixth areet
an be extended to Main etreet.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 23, 1914
(It Waa Wednesday)
Both Allies and Germans claim vic
tory on the western front; Russians
straighten lines near Warsaw; Aus
trlans routed by Serbians In fierce
fighting In Montenegro.
J. C. Barnes ia nominated for mayor
on the socialist ticket.
Wig Ashpolo haB on exhibition In
the Economy market, a monster hog
and beef. Weights are being guessed
by the public, and the one coming
the closest will be given a roast, aa
Christmas greetings. Both the ani
mals were raised and fattened In the
Rogue River valley, and have attract
ed considerable attention.
Transient forger stings local storea
for email amounts.
Adults
IJHY are the durable
TT 1
goods de
pressed?
The answer la aa plain as the nose
on your face because consumers
aren't buying durable goods; that
la, goods that last a long time after
you buy them.
Why not?
Because they haven't confidence
enough In the future to put their
money Into things that last so long.
They will buy Jood, which they can
eat next week, or clothes, which they
can wear out next month, but they
are afraid to buy houses and ma
chinery and other things which may
normally be expected to last far Into
the coming years.
HY are they afraid?
Because they fear that the ex
periments that are being tried on
the nation WON'T WORK, and also
that the wild men who were elected
on wild platforms to the Incoming
congress will try even WILDER ex
periments. That Is about the long and the
short of It.
WH
Communications
Prepare for New Venr.
To the Editor:
It seems of first Importance that
our state should prepare Itself to
take advantage of any offers of as
sistance from the Iederal govern
ment. It Is true that we have had no
official announcement of the forth
coming PWA program, but we have
seen In the dally papora statements
by the headf be administration
Indicating that such would be made
A man who might be called a for
mer capitalist obaervtd caustically
the other day that his alocan for la
bor now was "let us keep the wolf
away from the garage door."
That one reminded an eminent
British tt of the story about the
wife of the millionaire who was look
ing at a house for sale and asked the
th chauffeur's
Characters parade across the hare.
Characters cushioned In a cheerful
ness those In life's pluMied corners
never achieve. Jimmy Widmyer, the
Cincinnati, and "Memphis" the Los
Angeles newsboys. Chicago's blind
fiddler and his dog now gore. Slim.
the lanky Houston waiter. Shorty,
the dwarf oell-i.op in Mexico City.
Two-Miner Fd, the nisht-hawk cab
driver of Reno. And Butch, the pop
seller at People's burlesque, with ht
slng-aont cry: "You can't get It after
Pwip!- There
waa a whoop to tliftr Uviiitr. No com
plexes. No problems of culture. Thev
were of the sidewalks, honed sharp by
the flagstones.
And last n!ht I heard that ffem. '
the Parts cartoonist, had gone over.
He was piercing with hi lomrriuitimi
hW intonation, hi drawings. One 1
limning caused the outraged Fanny
Ward to flap him publicly. Every I
morning he would swsecer impudent- '
It down the leafy Avenue rtu Bo: ,
with Ms iste friend. Sa nut IVim.Mv 1
itampiuf the giound aud uppiug his j
SANTA CLAUS
WILL B E
THERE
Anytime
mm i?.
Anytime
4 TODAY and MONDAY 0
Continuous Shows Toiiay 1:45 p. m. to 11:00 p. m.
WHY IS IT
Nature makes
men slaves oj
women
bo
bleed them white!
you have wondered
hy the best of men
II for the worst of
women ... see thii
heart searching drama!
IO W. Mil k,
V
- ' .U,L lVt
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ALSO
COMEDY REVIEW NEWS
'Si r
THE MERRY FRINKS" are Coming
DREAMLAND
CHRISTMAS EVE AND
CHRISTMAS NIGHT
DINTY MOORE
AND HIS
. ORCHESTRA
Men 35c Ladies 10c
American
Legion
Annual
CHRISTMAS DANCE
CHRISTMAS NIGHT
TUESDAY, DEC. 25
Oriental Gardens
Christmas Decorations