Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 01, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE TEN
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL I, 1935.
Medpord Mail Tribune
"trtfrtm M Southtrn OffM
ftudi Hit Mill Mhunt''
Dal If fciept Oatortlaj
Puftllihed W
MEDFOKO PBINTINO CO.
S-T-S9 N. Fir BL "
BUBKBT W. BUHL, Editor
Afl indtpMMKot Nmpap
Eotwed u food elts nutter it Uedtord.
Orison, under Act of Mir 8. I8Tg.
By Mill Id Adturt '
DaIIy, on er IJ.00
billy, 111 moMbi
Dailf. oi oontil J
Br Carrier In Ad-ance Mrtora, Ajb1w.
JtfkonrtHe, CentnJ Point, Ptoeclx, Tilwrt, Uold
Hill tnd oo iHgliway.
Dailj, on rw
Dully, ill Biuntm
Dlly. om ntoDtb
AU term. UD Id idfim
Official pup of tb. Cilf ot Medford.
Official papn of JackMD County.
ME.MBEH OK THE AHBUC.A1LD rHKl
BecelTltu Full Uiud Wlr. Unit
ft Aiwclited Preu U iclusliely ntllled W
lb in for publication of ail oeva dUpatehw
credited w tt t otherwltt credited In thW wper
tod alao to 'bt local mi publlttod twrvln.
All rlihU If puhllcatloB of pedal dlapaUtw
dvoId ar alio fMred.
ME.lhr,K OF UNITED PBESfl
HEM BR K OF AUDIT H II HEAD
OK CUMULATIONS
Adrertltlni Keitresentatltei
II a mo;kn8i;n coMCAia
Officea Id Nu Tnri. Cblciio, Dctrnlt, Its
prancieo u Angeles Bcaltl Portland.
itw mi Mill
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
This li All Fooled Day, and pros
pects sro bright for a successful
year of fooling, fiddling, nd folly,
t
The atata liquor commlulon has
ruled that beer and dancing ahall
be divorced outside of city limit.
Nothing waa done about the Incom
patibility of whiskey and ateerlng
wheels.
e
Two iBdlea report, Instead of keep
ing quiet about It, that they were
deserted by Raymond Hamilton, the
current No. 1 bandit. They were con
siderably put out at being Jilted by
tha desperado, before they could be
eau,rht or shot, In his company. In
best outlaw circles, it la considered
(Food form to change blondes every
third bank robbery,
a
Wl,at Mr. Bramble really said was,
"If the law supposes that, the law
ta a ass a Idiot," but an efficiency
expert, of course must correct the
;ri'"mmar of clssslo quotations or he
wouvin' be either expert, or effic
ient. (Balem Capital-Journal) Ker
rectl The Portland ball team Is making
Its usual thls-tlme-of-the-year threat
to amount to something.
.
A business leader aaya this country
needs men with the courage to apend
money. We hereby submit this 50-60
proposition: If anyone will put up
the money we'll put up the oourage.
(Jacksonville (Fla.) Journal) Thla
Is a rainbow, everybody but the put
uppera will endorse.
The Cycle club pedalled to the
summit of the Blsklyoua yesterday,
and did not run out of gasoline.
The warm and balmy days have
brought out from winter quarters
hordes of Industrials ante, unable
to find a picnic, or pante.
Many of the Older Olrla have com
pleted their first house-cleaning
spasm, and ara ready to do It all
over again.
The Governor baa come out against
pardons and paroles for cltlaens who
Insisted on getting Into the peni
tentiary, and, la definitely opposed
to turning them loose before they
get In. statistics show that a ma
jority of criminals given another
chance take It. and get back In.
KATfBE VS. MAN'S ORF.En.
A little over 30 years ago a Serb
Ian nut called Osvrlllo Prtnoeps ahot
an Austrian noblemsn In Sarajevo.
And pretty soon the price of wheat
touched two dollars. And western
Ksnaaa real estate prices blew sky
high. And the Mccormick people
brought out a new model that would
break up the firm prairie sod at the
rs(e of an acre a minute.
Now they have a monument In the
little town of Sarajevo to the Serhlan
nut. And Ford county and Oom
manche county and Scott county
and a couple of doren other western
Kansas eountled which never should
have been disturbed hy the plow
re waving around over our head.
darkening the sun. sifting under the
winnows, sliding down our necks.
In the civil war geography nooks
everything between Denver and
Hutchinson was listed as the Oreat
American desert They said nothing
would grow there but prairie pasture
for buffalo, and not too much of
that. But after the Serbian nut had
his brief moment In the sun we said
they were crsty. tlist man with his
wonders of science and dry farming
wouia snow m.
(ETmporls (Ksn ) Ossette)
Editorial Correspondence
AGUA CALIENTE, Mexico, March 30. When prohibition
was repealed everyone predicted this- splendiferous Mexican
spa would fold up, and join the other casualties of the Great
Depression.
But nothing of the sort happened.
Today Agua Calient is the most popular week-end resort in
California, and we can furnish first hand evidence of the fact,
after seeing a score of cars drive up to the entrance, and then
drive away, because the place was full up and Caesar's in
Tia Juana was having hard work to take care of the overflow.
How comet
The answer we take it is, that one Baron Long is a vera
smart hombre. The Baron isn't REALLY a baron, having been
born in Indiana and moved west to seek his fortune many years
ago. But he manages Agua now, as well as the Diltmore in
Los Angeles and the General Grant Hotel in San Diego, and
when it comes to running hotels or racing stables, mahogany
bars or swanky gambling clubs, the Baron knows his onions.
Yes indeedv. Our information is he is making a sensational
success of all three establishment and having been a guest at
two of them we see no reason to doubt it.
And we would say the Baron's recipe for beating the de
pression is essentially a very simple one giving the dear Amer
ican public more for their money than they can get anywhere
else.
There is no question about that at this extremely attractive
resort. Considering EVERYTHING, rooms, food, service, and
recreationiil facilities five dollars will go farther here than any
where else on the North American continent or at least after
a three day test that is OUR opinion. And the Baron has been
very smart about it.
The Agua Caliente hotel could very easily have been killed
bv prohibition repeal if it had catered solely to those who
wished to cross the lino and go on a prolonged week end bust,
after the fashion of the old hoop er up saloon days. Or it could
have been killed if it appealed solely to those with more money
than sense the gilded and flaming youth from Hollywood and
Los Angeles for example. In short in spite of its really delight
ful architecture, beautiful grounds, and many attractions, if
Agua Caliente had been allowed to degenerate into just another
tough joint ' it would have long since passed ont of the pic
ture. As it would if it had catered only to the idle rich, when
thanks to the depression this class in America practically
vanished.
But from the outset these dangers have been carefully
avoided. There is nothing sanctimonious or straight laced
about Agua Caliente. HARDLY! The hotel boasts one of the
largest and most gorgeous bars in the world, gambling of all
kinds goes on full swing in the Casino day and night, and
from 7 p. m. until daylight, dancing in the dining room to the
strains of a splendid Mexican orchestra, practically never
stops, but the salient note of the place nevertheless remains,
essentially respectable, entirely decent, particularly at lunch
eon time one might say touristy and middle class.
Luncheon costs a dollar, it not only includes a delicious three
course meal, perfectly served, but a bottlo of wine, and a musi
cal floor show that is typically Mexican and in every way first
class. Iot surprising that luncheon at Agua Caliente, is placed
on practically every tourist's program in southern California.
Another thing. The hotel proper, where one sleeps, and
may if one wishes have tray service, is entirely removed from
the whoopie portions of the establishment. Corks may be pop
ping or dice rattling in the Casino, the wedding party from
Anaheim may have reached the hula-hula stage m the ball room,
but in the hotel all is as quiet and peaceful as Happy Camp ut
midnight.
All in all quite an achievement, that is to sustain such a
balance go pretty far in all directions and not too far in any
it takes brains and executive skill of a high order. The
Baron or those he hires to do the job must have both.
There is also swimming in a warmed tiled pool, tennis and
horseback riding and an 18 holo golf course, .where the pros
hold their tournament in January and where a dub can battlo
over hill and dale all day for only one dollar. If you stay a
week, these things will cost you nothing! -
We hope this doesn't sound like a "reader ad" for the Agun
Caliente. That is eerlainly not our intention. But the place
has really interested us, as an example of clever and skillful
hotel management, during what have probably been the tough
est days in the hotel business in the history of this country. The
secret of this success as stated at the outset, appears to us to
be giving the people a little more for their money than they
can got anywhere else.
In this verdict we have left out entirely the horse racinc and
gambling features horse races over the week end, gambling all
he time.
That business of getting your money's worth assumes vou
DON'T try to pay your expenses by picking winners iu
EITHER department in short that either you cut. out the
gambling ENTIRELY, or are that rare specimen that can strict
ly confine gambling to entertainment only wager not only
what you can afford, but are perfectly willing to lose and then
lorgct it.
One frequently hears Agua Caliente can afford to eiva such
value to its patrons because it more than makes up on its gamb
ling revenues what it loses on its hotel. That mav be allliouixh
a hotel man in San Diego told us, Agua sometimes loses as much
as ifoOOO per day on rmilt'lte alone, that is when the breaks arc
against the house.
However, we wish it clearly understood what we say of
Agua Caliente, refers to it as a hotel and hotel ONLY NOT
as the American Monte Carlo, Getting your money's worth, it'
you are the type who can't hear the dice rattle, the little ball
spin, or the cry from the barrier "They're off" without turning
your pocket hook upside down, -and betting across the board
well as Kipling didn't say that is DECIDEDLY another storv !
R. W. R.
OAK GROVE PARENTS
CLASS MEET TONIGHT
Parent-education class meets In
the school building st Oak Grove st
7:30 tonlnht. Although there has
been s fine sttendsnce In this class,
there Is "slwsys room for ons more."
The subject the nrxt lesson will be
"How Children Differ." with s eon
slderstton of ths differences broutrht
sbout hv environment nnd heredity.
Attendance In thes- classes will
enrich a ruoUiei's boms 111.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, MD.
signed letters pertaining to personal health and bvglena not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady tf a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters sbould be brief snd written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William Brady. 203 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
NOTES ON RELAXATION.
In 1030 Dr. Edmund Jacobaon of
the Physiological Laboratory. Univer
sity of Chicago, gave to the profem-
Blon the results
of twenty years
of study of neu
romuscular ten
sion and relaxa
tion, in a vol
ume liuued from
the University of
Chicago Press,
entitled "Progrea
slV0 Relaxation."
On o c c a s I on X
have recommend
ed this book, tho
always with a
feeling that per
haps the reader would wonder, aa I
did on first reading, what It was
all about. But I believed Dr. Jacob
son had hold of an Important thera
peutic principle, a valuable remedial
measure which bad not been ade
quately developed In practice, and
with each new raasle with the pro
voking work I found more and more
meat in It.
Cluttering up this domicile of daw
dle Is a good vanload of books.
mostly medical. I keep them, not be
cause the bindings look beautiful on
the shelves, but because every time
I look at them I am freshly re
minded what a sucker I have always
been for medical books and what
suckers most doctors are. Among the
rows on rows of volumes which are
not worth shelf space as professional
Implements or reference works, it Is
comforting to find that In all the
extravagant years I've been grabbing
at medical publishers bait I have
collected a yard of books which con
tained fresh meat, not old stuff
warmed over. Osier's "Practice"
(often called the doctor's bible).
McKenzle's "Exercise," MacKenzie'a
"Heart." Rcsenau's "Hygiene," How
ell's "Physiology," Sherman's ''Nutri
tion," Duffle's "Diabetes," McNam
ara's "Hemorrhoid Injection," McCol
lum end Simmonds' "Food and
Henlth," Darwin's "Emotions," Can
non's "Pear." And I shouldn't wonder
If Jaccbson's "Relaxation" pushed Its
way In amenpst these honest books,
along with Alvarez's "Nervous Indi
gestion,' U. S. labor department
chlldien's bureau's "Infant Care,"
and Mosher's "Hygiene for Women."
Not the present edition, for it needs
simplification or clarification, so or
dinary doctors can get the hang of
it. But a new edition which will be
more in the vein of Dr. Jacobson's
excellent little book "You Must Re
lax," published by Whittlesey house.
New York, 1934.
Now I began to get the idea, on
reading this book which Dr. Jacob
son got out for the simple layman.
I hope the popularity of the little
volume will inspire him to have an
other go at It and this time try to
talk down to us ordinary doctors,
too.
Moat of the stuff published In
books, magazines and "course" on
"nerve control" and how to relax"
seems nutty to me. But then, you
neurotics know what a crude. Igno
rant, sarcastic one I am about ner
vous imposition, so we need not dwell
longer on that. Suffice that tt la not
so plausible aa the bunk merchants
make It sound, to lift oneself with
one's own bootstraps.
- It ts physically impossible to be
nervous In any part of your body if
In that part you are completely re
laxed, observes Dr. Jacobson, and he
undertakes to teach progressive re
laxation tn this excellent little book,
as a direct and specific treatment
for what ta frequently called "ner
vousness" or "nerve tension" Is ex
cessive muscular contraction or mus
cular rigidity, according to Dr. Jacob
son's view, and whether this Is the
whole story or not, it will pay
such Individuals to learn how to
economize In their useless muscle
work.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Vacuum Bottle.
Is It all right to put milk that
has syrup and water mixed In It In
a vacuum bottle, for feeding the
baby, when I have to be away all
day? Mrs. P. B. W.
Answer Better first bring the milk
to a boll for only a moment, and
then let It cool a bit before you
put it In the vacuum bottle. Be
sure to give the baby some fresh
fruit Juice daily. Detailed Instruc
tions In "Brady Baby Book'' for a
copy send dime and stamped enve
lope bearing your address.
Fish Oil.
I have been taking hallver oil cap
sules every day for four months and
find I have not had so many colds
this winter. Would you advise me
to continue taking them, and tf so
fo how many more months?
Mrs. P. W. B.
Answer No. You can get adequate
vitamin D from metabolized vita
min D milk, and plenty of A from
eggs, liver, kidney, butter, raw car
rot, en carole, cream cheese, spinach.
Who Can Drink When Not Thirsty?
Borne doctors say drink B or 10
glasses of water a day. In his book
on diet Dr. Hay says to drink water
onlv when thirsty. Who 1b right?
T. F.
Answer I think It would be a
pretty severe punishment to drink
when not thirsty. Yet some elderly,
feeble persons drink a glass or even
a whole pint of water first thing
each morning, and what's more they
take it warm, and believe It or not,
some of 'em stir a little salt tn it
which I think would be bad hygiene
even if It were good to drink.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
ho,ilrt send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D.. 265 E
Tamlno. Beverly Hills. Cal.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, April 1. Diary: Abed
late, the morning mizzling, and to
breakfast with Bob Brinkerhoff back
from a safari to see the Hopl Indians
tn New Mexico
and bull f Ight tn
Juarez. And
home to find a
v t n t n e r's raro
blend Gilbert
White sent from
Provence and a
gay letter from
Mark Kelly, the
sports gazetteer.
So fashioning
my essay, pack
ing 300 books to
send to Ohio and
with my wife for
a saunter up the aventce. And saw
John Charles Thomas, spruce In double-breasted
stripes, in one block and
hatless Prof Einstein In another. Al
so Earl Carroll. And I put up for two
frozen cream drinks at the Bt. Mor-
Dinner at the Vol sin as beautiful
a young girl as ever I saw, not more
than 19. at the next table with no
awareness of her freshness and
charm. But everybody fluttory about
John Barrymore across the room. So
to Steve and Buff Cobb Brody's
spread for Claudette Colbert of the
cinemas.
George Jessel, to relieve the tedium
of a movie house tour that keeps him
In hJs dressing room much of the day
and night for his five appearances.
Is dashing off his memoirs. They will
reveal a vivid stage life that began
at the age of 8 when he was a Grand
Street boy and Includes Intimacies
with celebrities from the Crown
Prince to Max Boer. It will be titled:
"Twenty Five Cents tlll Two O'clock"
the afflche so usual in front of the
picture theaters.
Personal nomination for the most
don't-carlsh of the radio performers
Ramona of the Whlteman crew.
Rnmona, Incidentally, has been the
collegiate choice for several seasons.
When the lads are down from New
Haven or over from Princeton woop
tng It up they always try to round tn
for a broadcast. Ramona Is a tall
thin, brunette, not beautiful but In
teresting looking in a sort of gawky
Zasu Pitts way. She cares little about
the boys but Instead Is a determined
careerist. No one sings songs so ef
fortlessly, so casually. But she Is I
marvelous pianist and can put over
a song as few in her time.
Among the vanlshi'd sanities filter
ing back into an upset world is the
abolishment of the cut-In dances at
Junior events, especially the college
prom iuid Biltmorr tea dances. They
are now becoming strictly propram
affairs with the graceful waltz in as
cendency. In many Instances th cut
in resulted In brawls.
I belong to the Nora Bayes school
of song delivery. My musical tastes
have advanced little beyond the pop-
ular song and to my notion no one
topped Miss Bayes. Her greatest peak
was reached In vaudeville with her
then husband, Jack Norwortli. during
the era they were exploiting his mel
ody. "Shine on Harvest Moon." I re
member a night at Proctor's Fifth
Avenue, which was quaintly enough
on Broadway, they received IS en
cores. They were gracious but ex
ha used and Miss Bayes almost whis
pered: "We love you but cannot sing
another note. So the audience flash
ed to its feet snd cheered. Never have
I seen such demonstration in the
theater. Next day they were married
Hammersteln'a baruy old Victoria
was the most eagerly sought coliseum
for launching the newest Tin Pan
WRITING YOUR SAlfS
RCPORT JOHN ? MINO IF I
LOOK 7... GREAT SCOTT,
wmatS This? autter
TO LUCY LANf, LOVE
PROBLEM EDITOR !
GO AHED, UUSH BUT
I'M OESPtRATE ! I'M
CRAZY ABOUT A 61RI.
sue won't say'yes;
I NEED ADVICE.. BADLY.
Will YOU TAKE
SOME F90M ME ..
ABOUT A VEY
PERSONAL MATTER
.."B0...
4
thanks for the tip.
never creamed i
was 0ffendin& i
Sure will play safe
and use lifebuoy
m
B0'G0NE fit pets his pirl!
HERE SHE IS THJ
GlRLl WE'RE TO BE
MARRIED SOON
CONGRATULATIONS,
JOHN, YOU CERTAINLY
DESERVE TO WIN HER!
SO tU USE
UFE9U0X
YI$,THT$ WHY
I HAVE TMl KINO
1.V rtt ubi rvirtw
' J' vnu nxf i
WHEN millions tay'lifebuoyigrees
with mjr ikin," there mint be s rci
ion. Tbtrt is Scientific tests mide on the
kins of hundreds of women show chat
lifebuoy ii more thin Jo per cent milder
thin mtny so called "betury toipi "Y
how penetrating snd pore-cletniing
thil gentle lather Ul It deodorizes, too
stops "B. O." (Wr !fffV Lifebuoy Uthers
freely in rurdest water. Its own fresh,
hygienic scent Tinnhes ts you tin.
ApprttJ by GU HjuMkuping BtrtM,
Alley tlntlnnsbulstlon. To hsva a
song first Hung thera was considered
a sweet break (or ths composer. For
song pluggers It wss paradise. The
song putter-overers Included Elisa
beth Brlce. BUly Fisher, Lois Jose
phine, Mabel Hlte, Grace Larue. Stel
la Maybew. Artie Mehllnger, Ernest
Ball, Eddls Leonard, ths Courtney
sisters, Van and Sehenck and Flo
Adler. When one ot these yodeled
your tune, It was mads.
Bagatelles: Zlegf eld's vsJet Sidney
Is now valeting William Anthony
MacQuIre In Hollywood . . . Milt
Oross was once an office boy for Tad
. Elsa Maxwell, who never took a
lesson, says she can play any Instru
ment , . . coblna Wright recently
sang her songs creditably on the ra
dio with a fever of 103 . . . Philip
Wylla thinks the horse la the ugliest
and dumbest of animals . . . Broad
way columnist Ed Sullivan Is algned
for a (3,000 a week movlehouse tour.
Trick of fate note: Maria Dressier
waa planning to Invest her last $3,
300 In a pension for Americans In
Paris when someone persusded her
to try Hollywood agsln.
My wife asked Irvln Cobb for his
autographed picture to hang In a
house we are building. "I'm always
pleased," he replied, "to do something
for the Home Beautiful Movement In
Amerlcs." with that map!
(Copyright, 1935, McNaught Syndi
cate)
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
HERE'S an Interesting headline, If
you look at It right:
HOPKINS PONDERS BELIEF
PROBLEMS."
The Hopkins referred to Is Harry
L. Hopkins, federal emergency relief
administrator, and the problem he
la pondering la how to spend
000.000 without wasting TOO MUCH
of It.
pOl
UR billion eight hundred and
eighty million dollars ts a lot of
money too much for most of u
even to understand.
To you and me, aioo la a sum of
money whose spending If It were
ours would call for a vast amount
of 'thought and planning on our part.
We would go over and over our plans,
considering which was wisest and
best.
We'd have many a headache before
the Job waa through.
IMAGINE, now, & thousand silver
dollars piled up on a table sil
ver coin being the most familiar form
of the dollar out here In the west.
Then TRY to Imagine, If you can,
four MILLION eight hundred and
eighty thousand other piles Just like
It. A million, remember, ts a thous
and thousands. Recall, if tt will help
any by way of comparison, that there
are less than a million people In all
of Oregon.
Mr. Hopkins, you see, has quite a
Job. No wonder he ponders Its prob
lems.
YOU may have noted, tn a casual
sort of wsy, that he Is doing bla
pondering down In Florida, surround
ed by every winter luxury; and tt
may have occurred to you that you'd
like to He on the sun-drenched Flor
ida sands and do little pondering
on your own account.
Don't begrudge Hopkins his few
days of sunshine snd palms. In the
back of his mind ss he ponders Is
this thought: "No matter how bard
and loyally I . work, no matter how
good a Job I do, I'll get little credit
for It, for NOBODV gets much credit
for working for the public"
That Is sbsolutely true. So let's not
envy him his stay In Florida. Hell
pay for It later.
SENATOR POPE, of Idaho, tells
congress Idsho's potatoes are In
danger of being chowded off the
Eastern markets by foreign competi
tion. It's like this:
Holland has a 'surplus of pots toes
and wants to keep up the price at
horns, so she's dumping the surplus
at a low price here. Senator Pope
urges that Immediate action be tak
en by the state department to "stop
such Imports and, if necessary, RE
TALIATE." That Is to say, stop Holland from
dumping cheap potatoes here and at
the same time turn around and
dump cheap potatoes In Holland, who
will Immediately take steps to Btop
us from doing what we stopped her
from doing.
Really, It sounds like s pup chas
ing Its tall, doesn't It?
Home portraits of family groups
and children at Special Prices
Shangle Studio. Phone 130S.
1
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
ALL TEACHERS REMAIN
AT WILLIAMS CREEK
WILLIAMS CREEK. April Iv-(6pl.)
All of the present teschers were
retained for next year through ac
tion at the last meeting of the Wil
liams school board. The staff Includes
A. B. . Collett. principal: Miss Mel
Carter, assistant high school teach
er; Miss Boussum, upper grades, and
Miss Suvs, primary grades.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
Starts TODAY
FULLER
Paint SALE
Special Reduced
Prices for 2 Weeks
Only
Cherk up on your paint needs
NOW while you can buy . the
very highest quality paints at
"sale" prices!
Pure
PREPARED
PAINT
Reduced to
89c qt.
Regular Price, $1.10
Gal, $2.89 - Pint B3o
Beg. (3.8S Beg. esc
Woods Lumber Co.
Jackson at Genesee
Phone 108
FORD DEALERS
GIVE YOU
EXCEPTIONAL
VALUE IN
USED CARS
Many make of USED CARS, taken in
trade for the fast-selling New Ford V-8.
Honest value for every dollar. Liberal
guarantee. Small down payment and easy
terms through Universal Credit Company.
See the nearest Ford dealer for latest list
of USED CAR bargains.
HONEST VALUE FAIR PRICES
Mjj
Pistil
&taftaf il f jssfrirt'is 1 1 1
A 1
Aarienne s
Spectacular Spring
Wednesday 9:00 P. M.
20 Models Will Show
Vou Intriguing Styles
for All Occasions
There will be a colorful stage setting and
feature dancing by Eve Benson ' students
On the Screen:
David Copperfield"
.r-:..5H
sp5il!ppi
o