Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 30, 1934, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
gJS"-'- i'-l!
Medford Mail Tribune
"Ewwm in Southern O'tgoe
fli4t thi Mall rribunt''
Otllf Empl satordif
I'uhlliiied rr
iiviiLfiitn niiivriK'ii rn
IK. St. 211 N VU U PhOM 16
HUHt HI tt. KUHL, fcOltof
Ao Independent NewspapM
Entered u eeeund eltu miter at Medford
Orccon, under Ad of March I. 1819.
K! IWCUIITIUN MATES
Ptlly. om rer
Pally, ill month 'D
Dallj, one amito 9W
By Carrier In Advance Medford, Aibliffi,
Jieksomllle, Central Pclot, I'hocnli, TaJetrt, Uold
Bill aod on Uiitrmaji.
one rear tjoo
Dally. ti montru -
Dailj. ooe month 0
All lermi. cash Id adiance.
Official paper or the City or Medord.
Offirlal paper of Jackson County.
MKMBKH OK THE AB89CIATEU PKIMS
itMitiM Kill I Leased Wire Berrien
Ibe AtHKMtii rresa U eieliiif entitled to
Uw use fur puhllratloo or all otn oupaicow
credited to tl ur otherwise credited to lhl papa
And ilt to Wit local nrn puhllibed herein.
All -liriu 'or putillcALlOD of apodal djepatebea
berelD are r tuned.
MKMBKH OF UNITED PHEM
ircMnKH or audit bureau
OF CUMULATIONS
Almttilnt KepreatnUtltee
H. C. MOUKNBEN COMPANY
Office In Nee Vork, Ctiieaiu, Detroit. Ian
KranrUcn Im Amelei Seattle Portland.
f i b i t o m-wmi .rryu1 j-
M"EDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", SUNDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1934.
Ye Smudge Pot
Hj Artbui Perrj.
Tomorrow Is the finish of 1934, anu
.it niHi have a New Year.
Very little Is known about it, except
that it ha Out one rrtuitj n
The late 1034 was marked by no com
motion and great speed In coming to
successful conclusion too soon.
m
Winter threatened all week, but
failed to materialize. Woodyard props,
report enow in the hills caused many
to audit their woodsheds. Many are
n.t.niH fni but the ma
jority still cling to the notion that
thee la no ruei line me via ".
New auto license are appearing on
motor vehicles, the same being col
ored as gayly as a Christmas neck
Rascals permanently located in the
cthse. have returned from upstate,
where they attended state convuu-
tlons of winners at the polls,
H. Walther, former local humdinger
and lighthouse keeper, was here dur
ing the Yuletide mingling with old
friends and vistas.
Corb Edgcll was noted downtown
Thurs. evng. In a hard-boiled shirt.
This Is the first reliable sign In
months that the social whirl was do
ing any whirling.
Beans and hind tires continue the
main objectives of the great grand
Jury despite) hopes for a re-distribution
of the wealth and government
fried chicken.
Patrons of the O. Hunt msglo lan
tern show wore enlivened the 1st of
the week by a performance devoted
largely lo shanks and songs.
Funny weather prevailed all week,
and on a couple of occasions it was
positively silly.
The grunts and growls at the
armory were resumed Thu.'S. evt.
They were listless, except for an in
cipient riot that was nipped before
the customers could break chairs
over the noggin of a grappler. sua-;
pested of hurting his foe. The wrest
lers were In a quandary. When they
performed scientifically the custom
ers yelled for rough M.uff. and when
dished out rough stuff, the con
gregation yelled for scientific grap
ping. Finally a gladiator sustained
an Injury in the lumbar region, and
the crowd went home in an orderly
manner.
e
Denlrena of the hills report they
have been forced to the dlra neces
sity of eating lean hear bacon with
their pancakes.
There la a threat to put In new
light post a mid fill up the shell holes
on the Main Stem.
Onion culture In th!ae parts Is be
ing urged by Peoria Bill dates. The
onions will have to be hoed about
the time the pear need picking, and
the womenfolks can't eat them and
go any plare after supper. The pro
genitor of the, onion Idea expects to
appear brfore eating elites and say a
few nood words fur the onion.
e
The week was marred by no acci
dent, o none of the speed Idiot
were marred.
e
J. Kort Hall, the cheerful fretter
and orchardlst. Is unable to do the
things in hta orchard he would not
do till spring, owing to the wetness
of the ground.
Quite a number of citizens are go
tng to Cnllf. on buMurM and pless
ure and Just to be going some piste
Mi' II May Killer
ST. I.OU1M. Mo. (UFM The Wash,
lngtnn university faculty is going to
permit men to entr the mured pre
clude of the wnmrn'j building, but
thre will be restrictions aplenty. No
No date may be entertained, visits
bring restricted to study or mixed
commit t re- meetings.
Health and Winter Sports
TIIERK is a great deal of sickness in Southern Oregon at the
present time. According to statistics of the state board of
health this is true every winter.
AVe have a pious idea one of the chief causes rests in our
radical change in habits from summer to winter.
In summer we live largely out of doors. We play tennis,
baseball, we picnic and fish, we golf and hike. When winter
conies, we (or most of us) abandon outdoor sports entirely, and
park near the radiator or sit before the fire. When we do ven
ture forth it is usually in a closed car or bundled to the chin,
with as short a departure from artificial heat, as circumstances
allow. Rural life is similarly changed. There is little outdoor
work to do, so a large part of the day is spent indoors, close to
the fireplace and stove. When homo sapiens does venture forth,
his circulation is sluggish, his resistance reduced, and nine times
out of ten some germ gets in its deadly work.
A GREAT improvement in community health would be
noticed, we believe, if more people took pains to exercise
out of doors in winter as well as summer. There is scarcely a
day that golf can't be played. Baseball, tennis and fishing arc
out of the picture, but hiking, skiing, and snow shoeing aren't.
In fact only a few miles from Medford, there are natural win
ter playgrounds which to date are utilized only by a handful of
people. If the people participated as generally in winter as in
summer sports, we feel sure, a steady decline in winter ailments
as well as fatalities would follow as a mnttcr of course.
Maligning Oregon
THE recent conviction of Dirk De Jonge, confessed communist,
is the inspiration for an article in the current "Nation" by
Harry L. Gross entitled "Vigilante Justice in Oregon."
The De Jongc conviction is held up as an example of capi
talistic tyranny and brutal terrorism, the betrayal of American
liberty, and pitiless oppression of the working class.
The Gross indiclmcnt is a typical example of unscrupulous
radical propaganda and deliberate misrepresentation of the
facts.
'T'lIERE was no "vigilante" action in the conviction of
DeJongc. The man was given a perfectly fair trial, before
a jury of his peers, and his conviction under the state law as
it exists, was justified in every way. In fact the defendant con
victed himself' by his own testimony and admissions, taking
pride in the assertion that his first loyalty was to the cause of
Russian communism, rather than to the government under
which he lives.
As one of DcJongc's attorneys, Gross would have been just
ified in criticism of the criminal syndicalism law, which resulted
in his client's conviction. The wisdom and proprictoy of that
statute, may well be open to debate. To work for ts modi lien t ion
or repeal is the right of any citizen.
But with that law on the statute books, there can be no
valid criticism of its enforcement. The law is the law and as
long as it IS the law it. should bo upheld.
To try to twist this entirely LEGAL enforcement, into a
"miscarriage of justice" and a resort to tyranny and terror
ism, is simply nonsense, a willful violation of the truth, ami
works a great injustice against the courts and the people of
this state.
Such tactics instead of advancing the cause of "liberalism"
in which the author professes to believe, will go far toward
making the people of Oregon more determined than ever, to
stamp out communism in this state, wherever or whenever it
tries to raise its head.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letters pertnlnlne; to personal health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnoitU or treatment Hill be ansuerrtl by Dr. Brady if a stamped
stlf-addreswd eineinpe Is enclosed, letter should be brief and written In
Ink. Onlng to the laige number of letters rerelwd only a few can be an
swered. No reply tun be made to queries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El (.'amino, Beverly Hills, Cal.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
DO SOMETHING, V OU NERVOUS ONE.
"I didn't know I married Scotland
Vardl" .
Comment
on the
Day's News
Ihife Oriince tlrmr.
V1SAMA. Cal ( UP) A Washlrw
ton naiTl crtwe welshing 34 pound
and 19 hKhr in cucum!e;f n e. .
exlilbiied here tv J.i.-on Burton, Three
tUara ClUus gio-er.
By FRANK Jr'.NKINS
"Vn. FREDERICK P. WO ELL NEB.
of the i acuity of the University
of California at Los Angeles, address
ing a Southern Oregon chamber of
commerce forum on the subject of
the communist menace in this coun
try, tald a number of things that
everybody should have heard.
HERB Is one of them:
"There are TWICE as many
communists In this country NOW as
there were In Russia when the com
rrunlst revolution was accomplished."
Does that surprise you?
IF IT doesn't, It Should.
It doesn't mean that a communist
revolution la Impending in this coun
try, for the conditions that led to
revolution in Russia are lacking here.
But it DOES maen that a lot of
our people wr.o ought to know better
art being misled.
MOST of the communist activity In
this country, Dr. Woellner said,
Is directed from Moscow. Much of
It Is financed from there.
Why?
Because, he said, the bolsheviks be
lieve the world must be ALL RED II
communism Is to succeed.
A CANCER, you know, that Is kept
LOCAL to some part of the body
can be overcome by the healthy In
fluences ol the rest of the body. It
la only when It SPREADS that It be
comes fatal.
Communum Is a orld cancer, ana
the bolnhrvlks aim to keep It spreading.
1 seek to discredit and ridicule and
DESTROY, If possible, everything that
la tplcally American.
A communist agitator, a woman,
holding a mf'tln In a public hall,
chanted : 4 St.nirt up. stand Up fol
J u- Ihcii: "For Christ' take. si.
dov.ni"
That waa to ridicule religion, which
Is a fundamental Influence in Ameri
can life.
Theii she held up an American
flag and spat upon it and trampled
it underfoot, as a symbol of the capi
talist state.
OHE was arTested, tried under the
O syndicalism law, convicted and
sentenced to prison. But her case was
appealed and a higher court TURNED
HER LOOSE on a technicality.
That particular court waa long on
learning and SHORT on common
sense. One fears, at times, that too
many of our courts are that ws f.
ANOTHER significant statement by
Dr. Woellner:
"The communist leaden in Russia
say openly that what they are aiming
at la a Russian standard of living
EQUAL to America's where, for ex
ample, we have about one automobile
for every family, and other comfors
In proportion."
That Is to say, we HAVE ALREADY.
In this country, all that th com
munlsta seek for Russia.
THE communists. In their campaign
of deception and misrepresenta
tion In this country, have on tre
mendous advantage.
They talk tommyrot In uuh sim
ple, understandablt terms, so well
adapted to the Intelligence of their
hearers, as to make It SEEM truth,
whereas most of the writers and talk
era on the other side present the
truth so abstrusely, In language so
far over the heads of their average
hearers, as to make It sound like
tommyrot.
Dr. Woellner Isn't that way He
talks simply, plainly and understand
ably, so that ALL of his hearers m-iy
know exactly what ha Is talking
about.
rVr that reason, he Is excerdinlj
effective,
The fear-rage-fliiht-fllght-offenslve.
defensive emotion is primitive. In-
stlnctlve and common to animals
anvages and civ
cir" - 4 illzcd men. xts
physiological ei
feet 1b an Imme
diate Increase in
the secretion of
adrenin from the
adrenal glands
Into the blood.
This adrenin lib
erates g 1 y c.ogen
(animal star ch,
blood sugar) from
the liver and the
muscles, where
glycogen Is stored
Into the blood. Glycogen la fuel, for
aulck converAion into energy. Tiie
adrenin promotes oxidation or com
bustion of this fuel.
Now if there Is Insufficient ac
tivity to use this suddenly aug
mented output of energy well, the
effect on the body Is comparable to
to the etfect of racing your automo
bile engine or throwing the belt or!
from the fly-wheel of a powerful machine.
It la well recognized now that
fear, anxiety, worry, fright all tne
same emotlcns essentially, and envy.
Jealousy, anger, hatred, resentment,
contempt these too. are Just dif
ferent degrees of the same emo
tion Is a common cause of diabetes.
glycosuria 6ugar In excess excreted
In the urine.
A wild animal neither struggles to
escape whatever frightens it or at
tacks and fights whatever enrages
it. That's the natural way to react
to emotion.
Primitive man did so. still dees so
If In a savage state. But the more
cultured' or educated and refined
man becomes the more he strives to
conceal, repress or avoid what he
deems a confession of weakness, that
is, the impulse to do something. He
endeavors to keep calm, nonchalant
even under circumstances that
strongly call for fight or flight. And
"nervousness' Increases in direct
proportion with culture and educa
tion. The nervous excitability of
Americans If Americans are more
"nervous" than other people Is a sad
reflection on the eC-.:.iaUon and cul
ture we have.
No matter how "strong" a man may
be. it Is against nature for him to re
main calm and unruffled In tense
situations. No normal man can re
main Impcrturbed when the belt Is
off the flywheel. Mark you, whoever
nttempta to preserve such a "gentle"
demeanor nt all times will find pres
ently that his unnatural conduct is
taking something out of him. Unfor- ,
tunatcly, when his machine begins to
show the bad effects of such ill-usage
the Individual's first Inclination la to
resort to aome substitute for action,
motion or doing something, and to
bacco or alcohol Is urged upon him or
her from all sides, with aaeutancs
that these drugs will meet the Indi
cation. Sometimes the poor goof,
finding that tobacco or drink falls to
give the relief desired, takes to using
more potent drugs to subdue that In
sistent inner demand to DO SOME
THING. Again, too often the Individual
whose belt is off the flywheel, de
ceives himself or herself thet a vwt
to the movie, or attending a ball
game or football game or other thril
ling spectacle will be the right medi
cine. Worse still, he tries to find di
version In a "gay" night club or some
similar dismal dispensary of fake
pleasure.
QUESTIONS ANI ANSWERS
Tannic Acid for Burns
In reply to numerous correspon
dents who have Inquired about the
tannic nrld tr frmnt. fdr hnmc
which, If you believe the yarns In the
magazines, was discovered " by a doc
tor In a hospital recently. The doctor
"discovered" it In one nr nnnrhnr
medical Journal, for it has been in
use in mis country Tor years and re
ports havo anrjeared in various A rrmr-
ican medical publications. Had an
article about it In this column Nov.
29, 1933 "Tan for Burns" in which
we outlined tne method aa employed
by Dr. Ronald B. Well nt HnrrrnrI
Conn. Pittsburgh Medical Review,
way back In 1890 gave thla treatment
for extensive burns:
"A fl per cent solution of tannic
acid in water is squeezed from a
sponge over the denuded (raw)
surface, which is then dressed
with soft ointment tsay plain
sterile petrolatum). Pain imme
diately abates, and the healing
process is wonderfully rapid. Of
course the tannin solution must:
be freshly applied ac often as the
dressing is renewed. ' (Do not
disturb or renew dressing as long
as there Is no particular reason
to do so. Any burn or wound,
once clean and in condition to
heal, Is best let alone for days or
weeks.)
Home Made Cough Medicine
Please repeat directions for malting
and taking your "fool nroof rmit?h
medicine." (T. C. A.)
Answer Send dime and stamped
envelope bearlnz vour ndrirAsx. nr
copy of booklet ((Call it Crl."
fcd. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to l)r
W lllliim liriidy, M. ., :i;5 El
Ciimluo. Beverly Hills, Cal.
w ?r
NEW YORK, Dec. 29. The tragedy
of a lost manuscript spangles the
horizon of every writer and is a hor
ror few escape.
Pannle Hurst's
experience wu
singularly poign
ant. She had
jrlven the first
and only draft
of a Just com
pleted tome to a
plodding, highly
commended typ
ist of the tene
ments. A few days
v later she dropped
, 'i around to see
JF 1 how the work
was coming on. Tne fia. was empty
and there was no trace of the occu
pant. After the first wave of panic,
she settled down to a grim fine
combing of the neighborhood the
janitor, the neighbors, the grocer, the
corner cop.
An expressman remembered taking
some things to Simpson street In the
Bronx, the number he forgot. The
novelist began a house to house
search of Simpson street, lasting
many days. In one apartment house
she learned a woman had moved in
and the next day they had taken her
away a raving maniac. A return at
tack. Miss Hurst forced her way into the
apartment. In trie Jlnkle-Jumble of
an old wash-tub he found a few
scattered pages. Plunging deeper,
she found the. rest, badly torn, smear
ed. She salvaged them and fled. The
rescued pages were probably her most
important work, the novel the world
knows as "Lummox."
Something should be done about
hash in New York. Something to lift
it out of its lunch wagon, dirty spoon
restaurant decadence to top the em
bossed menus of exclusive cafes. Siz
zling hot hash in a russet crusty
mound illuminated by a sunset glow
of shlmmery poached egs is the most
genuinely American and tasty dUh
we have. Cold out of the Ice box
on a hungry midnight, with a pinch
from an elbow of yellow cheese and
a tankard of dog's nose. Is a chink of
heaven. The panacea lor what poets
call bulimia!
That saucy peek Into a harum-
scarum theatrical boarding house in
the 40's that "Ladles' Money" in its
brief run gave, was a perfect cameo
for those of us who dwelt in the
lujh brownstone gloom. The lay-oif
vaudeville team, the petite poupec of
the pavements, the truck tout and
hiding gangster parade in twisty shuf
rie. Also the optimist or the ever
losing dice game, tied to the blonde
and shrewdish virago, who matans:
In our theatrical boarding house
In 51st street, a fellow whose sudden
evanishments excited alt, was known
as "Toots." We learned he was an
ocean greyhound, a card shark of the
liners. Thus his absences were pro
fessional. Years later as I stood at
the rail at Cherbourg he sauntered
up the gang-plank and out the side
of the mouth as he passed clipped:
"To you, I'm Mr. Jeffreys!" He wan
the only man I ever know who lived
entirely by his wits. Something per
verse perhaps In my makeup but I
know of no one I admired so secret
ly. One wonders what, in the world
shake up, happened to these trans
Atlantic gamblers. They lived so ut
terly Nletzschean. -hard and danger
ously. In a world of many cowards.
Prom those dim days. too. another
nebulous figure blows across the lati
tudes. He was a lightning calculator
who lived next door but one down
the gas Jetted hall. At night he went
forth .with hia valise to dtsplay his
wizardry under the flare of a banjo
torch in Columbus Circle. All a p-e-lude
to hawking tracts on the art of
getting on. To each purchaser he pre
sented a "gen-wine" Brazilian dlo
mond. One night I Joined the crowd
around. Without appearing to notice
me, he Interpolated his spiel with
running fire remarks about the peo
ple of our bearding house with es
pecial barbs for the frowzy gossip
who was our landlady. I felt the puff
of the divine affaults a flapper might
receiving a special bow over the fot
llghts from John Barrymore.
George Gershwin, among my earli
est New York acquaintances, is on
the la; few bars of his American on-
era, the magnum opus of his extra
ordinary talents, at which he has
Deen wonting nignt and day for 11
months. He was honed thin by the
long travail when I saw him with
Rube Goldberg the other evening.
His opera is built around the play
"Porgy" with Catfish Row and the
undying glamour of old Charleston.
(Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
VI DYKE WILL OPEN
OWN ASHLAND OFFICE
ASHLAND. Dec. 39. (8pD Frank
J. Van Dyke, an Ashland lawyer
since November. 11)33, and city at
torney for the past year, announced
today that he will open his own
offices In the First National Bank
building on Wednesday, January 3.
A native of southern Oregon and
a graduate of Willamette university
law school in 1931. Van Dyke has
been associated with the law firm
of Brlggs A: BrlgR since his arrival
here In 1033. For a year prior to
that time, he was In the law office
of Porter J. Neff in Medford.
Van Dyke la a member of a fam
ily that flrt came to southern
Oregon In 1852. His father. B. F.
Van Dyke, is a Medford JMryman.
Communications
Enfclrs Appreciate AM.
To the Editor:
The Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Crater Lake Aerie 3003. wishes to ex
tend to you their deepest apprecia
tion of the wonderful publicity and
co-operation given to them In behalf
of the recent public relief Christmas
dance.
Due to the wonderful advertising
received, the dance went over big;
thus enabling us to distribute a larc
quantity of Christinas baskets to the ,
needy or Medford and vicinity. i
Wishing you and your organization
a happy and prosperous New Year, !
we are sincerely yours. j
FRATERNAL ORDF.R OF RAGLES.
Medford, Oregon.
V. A. Gillette. Secretary. i
Tliank Elk and Un.
To the Editor'
Via the kindness of the B P. O. E. t
and the Lions Club, we, amount I
many, had a lovely Christmas dinner
and tne children enyoy their toys
each day. We are hoping to be able
to gtve next year Itutead of recelv- ;
lug. With the knowledge that some- ;
one care. It glvvi hope and etUNV.ir
agement to go ahead and try ags'n
and I know many feel the ame as
we. ,
Sincerely. ,
GRATEFUL MOTHER
(Name on file.)
lard or Thank
We take this opportunity of ex
prevMn our deep feeling of appre-
e-iKMn and thanks to all those I
nelKhbom and friends who so kindly j
rendered assistance during our re
cent bereavement In ttie death of our i
brother. J. H. Devlin. Mrs. Miles Can
trail. Mrs, i'hnrlea Hinev
Use UftiTrtUiUlM ui adj. '
Badminton liitrlKue t -!:!
BURLINGTON. Vt. il'P) Badmin
ton has become a fatorne sport with
University of Vermont co-eds. The
Badminton club. Just oranled, al
ready has 0 members. j
It Ttiit of ' Olr-o" Burn
CAMURllXiF O -(ip Only a
ttrraive spot remained h?re aftpr II
tons of Pleomare ulne were Mrs' Nrd
on a htchwav when a lr;e truck and
trailer caught tire.
It r to look w.-P, .w iiaircut tor
J5c Hotel Mem oid lUrbcr fehup.
MillllllllilllllllllllllllllW
I STARTS
S TODAY
sf !jF Continuous shows
u-V-x- M-JyS'A i
OSH .M.II CARTOON f3 WmSX I
ThrU Columhu, Jr " i(rWvPi '
Srrccn Soiivcnlr. IVF'lMVV'
A NEW ROXY SERVICE " at
EARPHONES $VJiSOH
FOR TIIE HARD OF IIEARIM! ' jiiN
"mint
mei New Year's Day
.3
4 Ibjjj
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of the
.Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 Years
Aco).
TEV YEARS AGO TOKAY
December 30, 1924
Floods threaten southern Oregon,
as thaw melts snow In hills.
Phoenix to watch Old Year out and
New Veej in with o?lebratlon at
Clyde halt.
High school bahkatball Ream to
open season this week with game
with alumni.
Chauncey Florey is appointed dep
uty United States commissioner.
Kiwanls club holds last meeting of
year with reading of "comedy resolutions."
Autoists warned they must procure
new license plates by January 1.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
December 30, 1914
As a result of auto bus competi
tion over the Pacific highway, the
Espce withdraws Its motor car serv
ice between Grants Pass and Ash
land. Tax levy in Jackson county shows
a decrease, except for schools.
Medford woman Is arrested at
Grants Pass parading streets In male
attire.
Japanese of valley send J29 to
starving Belgians. The money was
collected by R. Maru.
Land owners of valley slow to sign
up for sugar beets.
Autoist. arrested for driving with
out lights, announces in letter to
editor "I will fight against this In
justice and for my constitutional
rights until I am broke, and dead."
German and Russian forces still
(gripped In titanic battle in Poland.
Adults
20c
Anytime
Kiddies
wmrmi
UJLLUaJiJJJ IOC
Anytime
W
W
X
xn
O
5!
w
o
H
in
1
o
w
i-3
O
TODAY and MONDAY
Continuous Shows Today 1:4.1 P.M. lo 11:00 P.M.
HERE IS THE GREATEST
SONG THAT WE HAVE
EVER SUNG!
Considered the Finest Picture That Has
Yet Come Out of a British Studio!
The Great Successor to
"HENRY VIII!"
Superior to its Predecessor!
Historical Drama!
Gorgeous Mountings!
Superb Photography!
Brilliant Acting!
Powerful Entertainment!
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR.
Turning in the Best Performance
of His Life!
There are, In addition, the settings representing
all the glamor or the dissolute. Kuvl;in Impci-lul
Court, which combine with the Intriguing nature
of a story centered on the ambitious wife of
a lunatic Czar.
The pliotnsniphy, too. emhntlze the picture's
ninny beautiful nets, with effective shots from
surprisi; angles.
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A STILL GREATER TRIUMPH FOR
iHfc CREATOR OF HENRY THE VIII
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S4 WITH 'I
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WITH
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR.
a the Mad Crar Peter. .trancet of all hner
ELIZABETH BERGNER
a "l.lttle Catherine" hr Imed of a rejlment