Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 27, 1935, Page 8, Image 8

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, irifPFORl). OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1935.
PAGE EIGHT
MDFORDvlTRIBUNE
"Everyone tm Bontb.nl Orea-aa
Beads In IUU Trtbone"
Dally Kscent aWtnrdaT.
Published by
meukord pr.;::T'NO co.
1I-I1.2S N. Fir St. Pbooe l
ROBERT W. RUHU Bailor.
AO Independent New.paper.
Enured aa eecond-nlaee "" ".l"
lord. Oreson. under Act of Msrcb I. !
afinnrrnlPTlON RATE!
Br Hall m Advinc.l
Dally, ona yaar
Dally, all monttaa
Dally, ona month
By Carrlar. In Advance Medford.
land. Jack.onvlllo. C" trail Point
Phoenu. Talent. Oold Hill and on
- ' blgbaraya.
Dally, ona yaar
Dally, all mobtha
Dally, ona month
All terms, caab ID advance.
Official Paper of tha City of Medfor.
Official rp of Jsckeoo Couty.
UEMHKR or TUB AOCIT''UJ HKtMl
Kecelvlns Full Leased Wlra ""'.
Tha Aaaoclatad Praia la eicluelvelr an
titled to tha uea lor publication of all
news dlepatcbee oredlted to It or other
wlie oredlted In thla paper, and alao to
the local oewa publlebed herein.
All rlshta tor publication of apeolai
dlapatohaa herein are aleo reserved.
MEMBER OP UNITED PRB88
MEM BBR OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Adv.rtliini ReprsMnlstlves
at. 0. MOOEN8BN a) COMPAN
Offlcee In New fork. Chlcaio Detroit
Ben Prenclaco. I.oe Ancelaa. Seattle.
Portland.
MEMBER.
Ye Smudge Pot
' I By Arthur Perry.
The special session of the leglsla
ture called for the sole and epeclflc
purpose of providing measures for
the construction of a new state
capltol, is making wonderful pro
gress, doing everything, tout what
they were assembled for. Nobody
knows for sure Just what alls the
hired men of the people, but fear
It will turn out to be a case of
legislative Infantile paralysis.
The- Wig Ashpole boy, 2, was
downtown Tues., full of business and
candy. .
Joe Marshall the printer protested
Frl. am. against the sameness of the
sameness, and the dullness thereof.
He stfttes he follows in his own
tracks, day after day. He wants more
variety, as long as It Is not a Re
publican administration.
Ben. Steiwor was here last week,
confabbing with constituents, and
shaking paws.
Local friends of Bert Bates of
Roseburg, pouglas Co. delegate to
the Old Age Pension meet In Chi
cago sent him a wire Thurs. night,
telling him to hold out for a 400
per month ante, or never dsrken
Oregon again. Bert has reached the
ripe old age of approximately 40. He
was warned not to stay out In the
cold and have his rheumatism come
back on him, .
Toungln's are all set for the an
nual wroaklng of the Hallowe'en
havoc on the nights of the 39, 30
and 81 Inst. ; v i
1 ,
Farmers voted last week on wheth
er they, wanted to continue to be
paid for hogs they did not raise, or
let Santa Claus transact his busi
ness exclusively around a Christmas
tree.
Carpenters will soon start the
work of removing the bay-window
from C. Strang, the pioneer pllllst.
This will even up the architectural
continuity of the Main Stem, and
prevent it getting knocked off, in
case a box -car Is ever shot down
the thoroughfare.
The news reel at the O. Hunt
magic lantern show last Frl. showed
a group of Swiss yodellers who went
to the top of a mt. to yodel. The
valley has no yodellers, and It
wouldn't be nice to ask a tenor to
climb Roxy Ann.
Del Oetchell, the banker-poet was
up all night with a Jury Tues. He
showed up the next day as sleepy
looking as the owner of a new world
wide radio.
The state P.-T. A. held a con
gress here last week, and many ot
the Older Girls were as excited over
It as their better H'a get over a
bowling match, or catching a fish.
t
Hunters of a.l ages continue to
flock to the heather. The menfoiks
blast the beautiful Chinese Pheas
ants, and the boys drill neat holes
through Indiscreet bluejays.
K. Kamawawa. tha Nipponese laun
dryman. has his picture on display.
It was taken when he and Magglrura
were young.
e
J. Wesley Bates, our favorite cut
throat, ha returned to his chin
whacking after a rest everybody
needed.
0. Gay and T. Waterman had an
argument Thurs. on what time the
sun rises. Neither knew, though both
claim to get up before It does.
J. D. Rockefeller of Cleveland. O..
and Florida la going to fix up a
couple of his local gas silos, so they
will be modernistic.
Carl Flchtner became a Orandpaw
last Tuns. It made him feel l)k a
new hind tire.
Editorial Correspondence
1000 DEER TAKEN FROM
0CH0C0 DURING SEASON
BEND Ore. Oct. 3d (AP) More
than 1000 deer were taken from the
Ochoco national form by (ooa
huntrv during the season that ended
today, federal forest officer! esti
mated. With the wood dampened by re
cent rln. hunting In central Ore
gon forest thla psst week ha been
excellent.
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 23. A large band of Eagle headed
by a Scotch kilty bag pipe Rquad boarded the Shasta at Salem.
They poured into three Pullmans tacked on the train at Eugene.
Debouching here at the Union station they were met by various
and sundry Portland. Eagles, including a snappy drum, corps, in
gay uniforms, and the entire army marched around the waiting
room several times, making such a racket one had to yell at
the Pullman agent to get a sleeping car ticket for Seattle.
The taxi driver who finally puKlwd his way through the mob
and got us in his car, was much impressed. ,
Said he: I am going to nom the Eagles one of these days,
it's the best of them all. They have more fun, and do more
for their members and for the poor, than any other lodge.
They're more for the common run of people like me."
No doubt about the fun feature, as far as the Salem delega
tion was concerned. They certainly made whoopee all the way
to Portland, joining the bag pipers who never stopped blowing
Highland airs, with their own variations of "Sweet Adeline",
"Working On the Railroad" and "My Own Kentucky Home."
As the Shasta reached here at 7:35 p. m. it seemed rather early
in the evening to reach the swipe harmony stage, but one of
the members informed us, Eagles can sing all day and all night
and never droop a tail feather. Coming up town we passed the
line of march on Broadway, and could observe no signs of
weakening. Later no doubt the Eagle will be true to tradition
and scream! v ' .
eee.ee
What is so rare as a clear sunny day in October, gliding
through the Cow Creek canyon with an S. P. engineer acting as
chauffeur. An Easterner who took the train trip up the coast
a year ago this month told us last summer in New York, just
to be clubby, that he found the Pacific coast very disappointing
in the fall. There was none of the color so vivid and thrilling
in the wooded sections of Now York und New England., As he
expressed it, "it was all rusty brown, dirty yellow and cold gray
stretches of sand out there! Wc were not surprised to learn
he passed through Oregon at night, on the Cascade, and never
saw Cow Creek canyon. The colors the Shasta passed through
today from Grants Pass to Roseburg molten gold, sumac red,
vivid green, deep purple and flame, would compare favorably
with anything one could see cast of the Hudson, or anywhere
else in North America.
e . .
We like to curse out the old S. P., but wait a minute I , . .
We paid nine dollars for a ticket that will take us from Hertford
to Seattle, and adding one dollar and two-bits, give us a bed to
sleep in en route, with all the comforts of home thrown in.
Where, how and when could that transportation tfe supplied in
any other medium 1 And on a round trip ticket one could knock
off four or five dollars. Figure it out, that is less th'an gns
and oil if you drive your own car. In fact it's about half.
Moreover you can rest and read, cat and sleep en route, resell
ing Seattle in less than a clay's running time, and be about as
suro as you can be of anything, you will end up at your destina
tion safe and sound instead of in a hospital. (There's your
quid pro quo, Roscy, and many thanks for the dinner.)
At Roseburg we learned the prune crop has been a flop, the
price being so low it won't pay the farmers to pay for their
drying. Broccoli won't be so bad. A small crop of prunes in
the Umpqua valley, but a big crop elsewhere too big the old
story of supply and demand. Of courHO the AAA is terrible
and fruit oodes Worse, but what doth it profit a farmer to
raise a crop he CAN'T sell. Isn't it better to raise less and
make something, than, to raiso more and make nothing at all?
So few people seem to rcnlizo when they are talking against the
theory of scarcity and clamor for tho theory of abundance,
they aro rcally putting the Bkids under the entire profit system.
r
There are undoubtedly plonty of turkeys in the Roseburg
area as there are in the valley of the Rogue, but from a car
window you can't sco them. In the Willamette valley north of
Eugene however the Shasta passed fauns where acres and acres
were literally black with turkeys, great big follows, packed
together in expectation of the evening feeding hour. Some far
mers will have something to bo thankful for Thanksgiving day
maybe!
.What a land of peace and plenty the .Willamette valley
appears, farm after farm, mile sftor mile of fertile acres, stretch
ing flat as a pan cako to the distant mist shrouded lulls. The
nows butcher comes through selling early evening Portland
papers. A banner about the Italian war -100 Italians ambushed
and killed dispatch comes from Addis Ababa, but is not con
firmed. Probably not true but no one knows. One looks out
the window again, what would become of Oregon if 45,000,000
men, women and children, were crowded within its borders and
had to make a living from the land! Well, all Italy hasn't the
fertility, productivity and area of the state of Oregon. At least
that is what he professor who boarded the train at Eugene
informs us from across the aisle. A professor ought to know.
Ho adds "People in this country don't realize what Italy is up
against." IIowabout realizing what Ethiopia is up agninst,
and the world also if this war goes on !
e e e e e
The S. P. has speeded up sinoe our last trip this way. No
more 15 and 20 minute stops en route, only three or four. At
Salem in spite of all tho Eagles milling around, we ran into a
man we knew who raises hops on his ranch, or used to. Asked
him how.hops were and he said terrible, but wo didn't have time
to find out why. A station truck rumbled by, transporting five
kegs of beer to the Pullmans in the rear, which suggested it
couldn't be due to absence of consumption, or decline in the
beer demand.
During the past year or two nothing has changed more than
the railroad day coach. . Think what they wore 25 years ago, or
only eight or ten. Now they are clean, comfortable, warm in
winter, cool in summer, the one we rode in today bad no
reclining chairs but most of them have, and you can have all
the pillows you wish for ten cents per. Also hot coffee and
sandwiches, cookies or pie, served by the news butcher whenever
you wish. Sandwiches at ten cents very good ones too, and
coffee for five. Talk about service, even the conductor doubles
to assist the brakic as nursemaid, porter, and roustabout. A
young mother in front of us who boarded the train at Medford
had an infant son about six months old or perhaps 16 wc never
can be sure at any rate it was still on a bottle, which may
mean something to our woman readers, was about 30 inches long
and could walk several steps even on a moving train without
falling down. The brakic tended this infant for at least ten
minutes while mother took a vacation, and let it hang on the
finger of one hand ami paw and jump up and down, without
giving the slightest indication this was at all out of line with
his regular duties or not imposed by the union rules. Men
always liko to do that, let a baby crab a finger so firmly in one
list, it snows tne nionkev m them. tlie HA Hi we mean!
R. W. R.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady. M. D. r
Signed leftert peruinlng to pertooal health end Hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment mil be enawered oy Dr. Brady If a stamped eelf-ad-dressed
envelope Is enclosed Letters should be rtrlel and written In Ink
owing to the large numhei of letters received only a l( can be answered
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, address Dr
William Brady, lies lil Csmlno. Beverly Bills. Cat.
A MONOTONOUS UCCESSION OP BOII.S.
One boll or two or three In suc
cession is furunculus. but when it
becomes habit we call It furuncu-
losis. in the good
old days when
doctors had only
to p r o n o u nee
t h 1 n g a It was
sufficient to ex
plain furunculo
sis as a matter
of run down
condition, 1 o w
ered resistance
or bad blood.
Today we have
to spell things
and It Is not ao
easy to account
for successions of bolls. But we are
still resourceful and If It comes to
a pinch we can always subdue curi
osity by Introducing the word meta
bolism. Generally that quiets them,
all right.
It seems that bolls are more likely
to occur when there Is a deficiency
of carbohydrate metabolism, no fool
ing. That means Inability to burn
sugar well. If the sugar Is not read IT?
oxidized or burned to furnish energy
In the body, an excess of sugar ac-
cumulatea In blood and tissues. This
is frequently found in cases of re
curring bolls. It may be a temporary
condition. Again In some Instances
It Is the beginning ot diabetes.
Incidentally,' we have learned in
the past two or three years that an
adequate supply of vitamins la es
aentlal to maintain normal corbo
hydrate metabolism or to restore the
body's power to burn and utilize
sugar when this vital function is
Impaired. Mind, this Is Incidental; 1
am not suggesting that vitamins
cure boils, altho .good authorities
havo observed undue frequency ot
bolls In the history of patlenta suf
fering from lack of vitamins A. U
and B and G.
Careless or unskilled handling 01
Boll No. 1, and transplantation ot
pus-germs from this to a new site ot
operation Is probably the common
cause of Boll No. 2 and ao on aa
flnltum.
One, excellent first aid treatment
for anything that threatens to be
come a boll Is the Immediate sp
pllcatlon of a thin disc of ordinary
toilet soap the size of the thumb
nail to the young pimple, and then
a Btrip of adhesiy'e plaster to hold
this in place. 8oap Is an excellent
antiseptic. Reminds me of the good
old soap and brown sugar treatment
grandma used for stone bruises when
we were kids in Canadalgua. I don't
know whether the sugar added any
thing to tho remedial value of We
poultice, but I've never found any
thing better in materia medlca with
the possible exception of Old Doc
Salve, which some of you old-timers
may remember.
Flight 'o Time
Med ford and Jackson Count.
history from the file of the
Mall Tribune M) and 20 Year
Aro.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
October 37, 1923.
, (It was Tuesdny)
Babe Ruth, baseball Idol and home
run king, admit he squandered
$500,000, In .being "the sappiest oi
saps."
President CoolldRo refuses to ac
cept apple pie made by University of
Vermont glrla to "boost apple week."
Mr. Elmer Chlldera recovera from
a major operation, and, leaves the
hospital for, her home.
Mra. Glen Pabrlck reads a paper
on P.-T. A. work at annual conven
tion of P.-T. A. in Portland.
Owen -Oregon company
$60,000 offlce-buildtng.
to erect
Football squad starts aeeret prac
tlce for name Saturday with Marsh
field high.
TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY
October 87, 1915.
(It was Wednesday)
"The HogRlah Metropolis" subject
of an editorial In The Mall Tribune
Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo
predicts, "real pronperlty will come
to America In 10 years."
Statistics of Espee show "one out
of every 40 resident of the Rogue
River valley have attended the San
Francisco fair."
Armory la dedicated by Gov. Withy-combe.
British loasrs in the world war
now total 493.393.
Speaking of soap, which perhaps
I should do. In view of my deplor
able attitude toward bath tubs, 1
wish to go on record aa of the opin
ion that not nearly enough soap la
used In this country today, first by
the young people for cleansing and
beautifying their faces, and secona
by everybody for washing their
hands, In well regulated households
there la a rigid rule requiring .that
the children carefully wash their
hands before they come to the table
to eat. There Is greater need for such
a rule for grownups who eat in
hotel dining rooms, restaurants, or
lunch rooms. It la not so much the
visible dirt as It la the Invisible
pollution of the hands that matters.
and the best way to remove that
la by a thorough washing with plain
soap and water sanitary essentials
which some health authorities too
readily waive. ,
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O, O. Mclntyre
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Shooting Tongue.
Elderly man has snooting tongue.
That Is, when he la talking his
tongue shoots out, In & way which
makes strangera want to laugh . , .
E. h. M.
Answer Probably a tic or habit
spasm. If he wishes to correct the
habit he might try wearing a well
scrubbed twenty-five cent coin under
his tongue while talking.
Of Cures for Foot Itch No End
My wife and I have found the use
of ( a ten per cent tannic
acid paste that cornea In collapsible
tube) a cure for that prevalent foot
condition where tiny blisters form
and cause such persistent Itching
and Irritation . . . S. B. T.
Answer-7-Thank you. There are
many cures for ringworm of the foot.
Recipes for making one or two are
given ln monograph on Foot Itch,
which any reader may have If he
sends stamped envelope bearing his
address. Additional advice about this
and other forma of parasitic Infesta
tion In the booklet "Unbidden
Guests" Inclose ten cents coin for
copy.
Drink Hiiblt.
Very fond of (popular soda foun
tain beverage) and drink quite a
few of them. Have been told they
are very fattening, also Injurious
to health . . . Miss M. A.
Answer Effect of a glass of the
beverage practically same as effect
of a cup of sweetened tea. Much
sugar is fattening, of course. But an
occasional indulgence In such a bev
erage Is harmless. Habitual use la
Injurious to health. , '
(Copyright, 1935, John F. Dllle Co.)
NEW YORK, Oct. 28, Purely per
sonal plffje: I like the htll-bliry
greeting: "Hidy!" Best Job of straight
away reporting
In my time: For
tune's article
about W. R.
Hearst. My hon
eymoon trip was
a street car ride
to a summer
park. Whenever
I see Einstein l
itch for mental
can opener.
Not many ever
left Broadway
flatter than Sail
ing Baruch. Every
October I go for oysters on the halt
shell. Once and no more. Something
that puzzles you after 40: Why you
thought it fun to alt up with the
gang until 6 a.m. listening to Sneeze
sing "Room 202."
Every once lit awhile I drag m
a mention of Port Said to show 1
know how to pronounce It. But I'm
uncertain about definition of win
some and I've never met anyone
who knew the precise meaning bt
lurid. Another tricky word: Ful
some. Favorite animated cartoon
character: Donald Duck.
A tale worth rehearing: Isaac Mar
cosson'a of becoming lost on the
streets of Moscow after midnight
with all lights out and without a
passport. Kathleen Norrla la on her
way around the world again for a
reunion In Vienna with Charlea G
in December. A pleasantly remem
bered depot: The rickety Santa Fe
In Chicago.'
Of modern Inventions, the tele
phone has my scantiest blessing.
Journalistic Illusion : Crack special
writers Invariably come to New York.
My choice scent Is a low-priced
American cologne and I always be
lieve a "Forced to Vacate" sale sign.
Add worldly blushers: Milton Bron
ner, Harry Sllvey and Karl Kitchen.
Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas Is the
biggest Republican bet. My grand
father gave me a dun-colored pony
with the heaves for my tenth birthday.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Ilrady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. IK, iHS E)
Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal.
For three years Flo Zlegfeld phoned
me at precisely 6 a. m., usually to
complain ho was not getting his
share of Page 1. Every once in a,
while I get a notion I would look
swagger with the hat brim down
fore and aft. Snappy nickname:
Duke. Edna Ferber's dialogue sounds
the truest. Any time they begin
throwing bread crumbs In a restau
rant I wind up the sole target. Per.
sonallty Als: Smith, Woods and Joi
son. I know four Carl. Helms: All
grand fellows. The most charming
people I havo met were usually
worthless. Extraordinary vocabulary :
that of the late Karl Harrlman. Con
trast: Flyweight Billy Rose produc
ing that mnstodonlc monstrosity,
"Jumbo."
When a roller skater is behind
me, ha get the right of way, don't
ba lidic. For a midnight feast: A
butter-ltke spread of cold goose Juice
on bread. For oblivion: The Pulitzer
prizes. Fascinating fragrances: A har
ness room and train smoke. Politi
cal letters from the west bulge
with cheers for Borah. Unforgettable
dinner (Inside) at the Cafe de la
Palx one of the three finest eating
spots l Paris, by the way: Pea
soup, ham boiled In Maderla, spin
ach souffle, potatoes souffle, wilted
lettuce mixed in a huge wooden
bow, creme caramel and a pint or
Chablls. Then a thimble of Coin
treaux outside while the world drifts
by. Paree, Pareel
Talented lady: Kay Swift. All my
life I've iongM for three chins. And
the beat I get is hollow cheeks. Most
highly publicized of the current
beauties: Clare Boo the Brokaw. For
a weekend, I'll still vote for Atlantic
City In April. Frank Buck, animal
catch'er, has the most amazing) mem
ory of my acquaintances. No billing
so apt as "The Perfect Fool" for Ed
Wynn. Delightful tingle: A gaunt
hall clock booming In the dead ot
a stormy night. Ogden Nash, one
of the best lipt versifiers, looks
,. uov vuu pni a,. j. jjrrif.jjirc oiiia-n
through my clothes at wrestling
bouts.
Low In camouflage: Hiding tooth
pick work behind a napkin. Top in
drawing room clowning: Gertrude
Lawrence and Noel Coward In "Prl
vato Lives." No one of his genera-tion-ind
I wince to admit it has
touched -John Barrymore in the roM
of Hamlet. Harry Salslnger, expert
Detroit sports writer, and I were
once fellow reporters at $9 a week.
And worth all of ten. American ca
lamity: When Charles Evans Hughee
missed the presidency by an eyelash.
My aunt was tne urst noaic-w
our town to serve sherbet.
Vivid horror recollection: A schol
arly Jellow in a Prlscilla-ltke tea
room In The Village, heating a spoon
over the table candle, giving hlm
wir a "bust in the arm" and going
on with his reading. I always expect
ladles named Birdie . to iwicier nu
I met one who had a deep bass
voice, for goodness sakel
(Copyright, 1935, McNaught Syndicate)
Tropical Rain Toll
PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti. Oct. 3.
(AP) Reports reached here today
that hundreds of persons were
drowned In the Jeremle and Jacmel
regions' of the island last week-end
in torrential rains which accompan
ied the Caribbean hurricane. The re
ports said 98 bodies have been re
covered at Jacmel. where the death
toll may reach 1.000.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
BIG PINES LUMBER. CO.
I I II
- -i k. l-J vttuc,. w
( i'mx,1t 1 io'-h: 1
o IIAirS .LlVlNC.."!
PHONE
1
FREE
and
Planning
Assistance
A Perfect Report
Card
The child who has been
given toxin-antitoxin as a
preventative for diphtheria
will not he absent from
school because of this dread
ed disease. See that your
child Is frequently examined
by your physician, so that
she may have perfect health
as well as a perfect report
card. :
A Prescription! Fills
Rxs Carefully at
HEATH DRUG
STORE
Medford Building
Phone 884
King George of England, while re
viewing troops in France, falls on
his horse and sutalns severe bruises.
The horse reared when the soldiers
cheered.
UNDEFENDED COAST
Nntlo
Hrmstltchlnf. Mrs. Cuooh St 32)
flo. Orng.
Port Vellitlljr lp
SALEM. Oct. 38. (AP) Til, etat
supmns court will hear arguments
of attorneys nut Friday In connec
tion with two cases Involving the
constitutionality and validity of pro
eeedlngs creating the port of rhe
Dalles. The rlBht to Iwue bonds also
It Involved in tha proceeding.
Heller Aid Ruling
SALEM, Oct. 3 (AP) Attorney
Ocncral 1. H. VanWtukle ruled today
that the stste relief committee hss
no authority to use Its funds for the
purchase of publlo liability ln.ursnce
coverlnn Its employes. The opinion
j ws s.ed by rimer Cloudy, state
telle! sdminlsttstor.
PORTLAND Oct. 3rt (API Repre
sentative Melvln J. Mass. Republican,
of Minnesota, here last n!ht on an
Individual survey of defenses, s,ld he
was "slavmed snd ustonlshed" st the
"Insdequste military defe:ise on the
rclflc const.
A member of the house naval af
fairs committee and a lieutenant
colonel of marine corps air reservea.
Representative Mass described as es
sential bA.e In the Aleutian IsUnds
for warwhlps and aircraft, and two
aircraft bases In the Pacific north-
west, one on the. coast and the other
j east ol the Cascades.
I nuNSMlTH Rep.irs for s!l mai.es
of guiu. Slnu Bro... it M. fj.
EVER since the watch was invented it
has been the symbol of the ultimate in
accuracy. Every part is constructed
with the utmost care and precision. Only the
best workmanship is used in building the time
pieces of the world.
Accuracy is the creed of every watch manu
facturer. The same accuracy that is required in the man
ufacture of a watch, is used in the production
of the news report of the UNITED PRESS.
Just as the watch manufacturer uses only skilled
artisans, so does the UNITED PRESS.
army of writers, located in practically every
part of the two hemispheres, are highly trained
and competent newspapermen of long expe
rience. Accuracy is their creed.
These accurate, yet colorful and latest news
reports, can be found in the columns of
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