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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1936)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDPOKD. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 22. 1936 MEDFORDI&wTRIBUKE "Erryoo 1b tioalfacro Oregon BU tbr Hall Trlhanv" Dally Kirapt Matardar Publlhd by UiSDKURD PRINT. NO CO. -ll-t?-X N Fir 8t- Phoo ti. ROBERT W RUHU Bailor. Ad lndpaotlanl NimpilXf. Boctrad a escotid-cUM mattar a! Med ford, Oracoo. undar Act of Marco t, Itt SUBSCRIPTION RATES My Mall In Advance: Dally, ona yaar Dally, all moolhi Pally. n month ' V, 'V . J By Carrlar. lo Adanca Madford. Aan- land. Jufeaonvlll. Central Pom. Phoanlx. Talaflt. Oold Hill Mid b , hlghwaya. Dally, ona yaar Dally, ill monlha 1 Dally, ona month C All terms, oaah in advance. Official Paper of the City of Mrdford. Official Paiiet of Jsrkftnn County. MKMI1EH O IHB AHHOOlATKU I'KfcB Rorelvlni Poll Urd Wlra Mervlra. " Tht Aaioclatad Praaa la eicluaively an 'titled to tht um for publication of all oawa dUpatchaa eradltad to It or other wise credited lo thle paper, and aleo to the local newe pubtlehed herein. -. All rights for publication of cpeelal dlapatchea herein are aleo reeerved. , - MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertising Repreeentetlvae ML a MOGKMSK.N COMPANY Office In New York. Chicago Detroit . San Pranciaco, Los Angalee. Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Th Stat Treaeurer report he Ess on bind, til, 600.000 of public fundi. The bank do not yesrn for this bug turn at two per oent interest, and It If begging lor an investment. Instead of a bloo beg ging for a chance to apend It. The efficient etate official Is unable to find a user at least one. inciinea to remember where ho got It. This la no mean pile of political pap. nof to be thrown at the birds, with a steam-shovel, in the care Jre spirit of tha times. It provea tba stats la not clinging by whis ker, to the brink of benkruptey as mournfully clslmed by the orator ical apostles of disaster. Tha etate treasury Y suits, like the bsnk Tsults. are pot-bellied1 with cash. The people can now march to ruin, with the comforting knowl edge, they will never make It. Tha Innocence of Bruno Haupt mann, convicted alayer and kidnaper of tha Lindbergh b'ibe, granted a SO-day reprieve by the Governor of New Jersey, Is no subject for fervid argument In these parts. Once upon a time, about nine yeara ago, three nice appearing murderera, were duly tried and convicted In Jsckson county. Their defendera flooded the editor, with lettera demanding a re-trlal, and denouncing the 'mis carriage of Justice," snd 'protesting the railroading of Innooent youths to ststs prison.' By a twist or cir ' eiimatjtnre. these letters were nub llahed on the editorial page. In the edition that printed their full and complete confessions on the front page. It waa a asd finish with no room, for an IF. "Plttsfteld, Mass., tells of a mouse and cat that play together 'so cun nlnsiv .... Soma day that cun ning mouse will go down tha wrong 1 Dole, snd It win m tne cat s tnroai. From "Today,' Arthur Brlabane'e Column) .4380,000 a year atuff. "Never mind. The mighty oak waa onoa a nut, Ilka you." (Blge bee. Aria.. Times). Niftiest wise crack In several weeks. , . Tha police are now in hot pur suit of a coterie of slot-machine eheatera to punish, not praise them. as Tha new flat-heel ifhoe for wo men, to the dim and untrained mala eye. appear to ba .35 of an Inch higher. No chickens aimlessly wsnderlng cross business snd residential streets have to dato been acrunched beneath the wheels of an auto. This spaaka well for tha humanl tarlanlsm of our speedsters, In their murderous haste, it also indicates a. pedestrian, crossing the street, ahould look as much ss possible. Ilka a rooster, for his own good A majority of last spring's babies are now smart enough to wink for visitors. American women are spending close to 11.000.000 per day to at tain beauty. A beautiful thing about this spending. It la their own. or husbands money not the govern ments. Tha same report estimates triers ara approximately loo.oou beauty doctors in tha land. They ought to get a higher percentage of eurea. It often seems. Thera are no homely women, according to popular legend. In these kind of times. It la assuring to aee tha fair sex flock to the beauty parlors They do not act Ilka the menfolki, who during tha height of tha de pression rut their own hair, and let their whlskera grow. WHOOPEEI IN KANSAS A young man who bora the ear- marks of on who had spent a great deal of time In tha rural district walked Into a Cherryvale gTooery ator the other day and asked for a 10-cent bottle of van illa. He told tha shop-keeper that toe needn't wrap It up, that he would take It Just as It waa. As soon as the purchase waa secured th youth took out of his pocket a carefully folded while handker chief, removed tha cork from tha bottle and poured a small amount of the liquid on the cloth. The clerk must have shown hit surprise, for the boy srilled pleasantly and xplslned. "There g.lng to be a sociable out our way tonight" (Cherryvale. Kan. Republi-anl. Da Mall Trlbuua want sUs. MEMBER i . vtn s i EJitorial Correspondence PORTLAND, Jan. 20 It'g all in the wood. If one is in a mood for excitement whoopee eolor-r-stimulation Portland is apt to be disappointing. Or if a newspaper man is looking for copy, the metropolis of the state of Oregon in likely, to be poor pickings. Portland men, somehow are not disposed to run around the streets biting dogs. But if one is in the mood for relaxation, rest, peace and quiet, there is no city on the coast that can surpass the soothing, soporific and salubrious village sprawling over the wooded hills, and nestling along the shores of the muddy and meandering Willamette. There isn t a shock in a carload. Portland is todny, so emphatically, what if always has been, and what it probably it has and of course it will but This has its Disadvantages of course, but it also has its advan tages. As before Btated it all depends upon what one is looking for upon the mood. Suffice newspaper convention it fitted and we are grateful. There is the Portland hotel for example. Our first visit to that comfortable and capacious refuge for the stranger, was made over a quarter of a century up the Morriion street entrance stances were strikingly difterent and your correspondent needless to say, had completelytfhanged but had the Portland hotel? NOT A BIT OP IT. There were the colored bell perhaps not the same ones but the desk we swear the same room cleric was standing there were the same paintings on the walls, the same writing room, the same telephone booths, yes and the same dining room, the same colored carpets, the same chandeliers and same light and attractive chairs, the only difference was that first visit, was just after the morning train arrived from the east and the place was crowded with breakfast being served, this visit, was at three in the afternoon and on a cally no one around. But that was the only difference, not a difference in setting, atmosphere or character, just a difference in time. Is there any city on the coast, or in the country, where one could enjoy such a delightful nostalgic experience as that, except in Portland t Boston, Massachusetts perhaps if one dropped into the old Parker House, but we don't believe any where else. And THAT is Portland I In this world which is changing so rapidly and at times harshly, it is reassuring, to find something that flatly refuses to change, and at the same time still eoes on it shows such stability and tenacity yes and charm I . Not much charm in a walk down Front street, but stability and tenacity there as well. It is like a journey into the past, in fact strolling from the Morrison to the Burnside bridge, in that deserted thoroughfare, we feK as if we had accidentally struck some abandoned movie set of the early 90's down in Hollywood. . Old office buildings, five and six stories high, empty except perhaps for a tin shop or a fish market on the first floor the old fashioned cornices, the stately but dilapidat ed mansard roofs, names of the buildings up high, cut in the dark 'gray-green weather beaten stone, (names of well known pioneers no doubt long Bince gone), no life at all, but like an old oak, dead at the heart but still standing externally at least defying the ravages of time. Had a Victoria with a bewhiskcrcd coachman on the box, or a young blade in a long frock coat and a lady in a poke bonnet, on his arm suddenly appeared, there would have been no sur prise as far as we were concerned. As before stated it's all in the mood. Perhaps for some reasoji, we were particularly im pressionable at the time, but we doubt it we think it was merely PORTLAND. s We did find some news, just, a little, The rain stopped ami it cleared, actual sunshine in a bit of blue sky. If that in Port land in the month of January isn't news, then what isf And to date it has continued, with no use for coat or rubbers. . Also news, to-wit: The Oregonian and Journal are agreed on a political question they both are fighting for the late primary date in the state of Oregon tooth and nail and rarticulai'lv the Journal. One doesn't often find the Journal opposing the state grange and organized labor. And less often do yon find the eminent Mail Tribune agreeing with Messrs. Gill, Zimmerman, et al on ANYTHING. But we do oppose the change of the primary date because it destroys the presidential primary entirely, and puts political power back again into the hands of party bosses. There was a time, we admit, when we would have favored that, but with recent developments in this countrv and the world, we have a renewed faith in Democracy, and a new deter mination to see it not only retained but strengthened. Fascism, Nazism, Communism let other countries experi ment in those directions if they wish, but let this countrv stick to democracy and put the power where it belongs in the' hands of he rank and file the PEOPLE. The people will make mistakes of course, but they will correct them too and throuch the exercise of power through the years, they will by EXPERI ENCE learn more and more wisdom in the use of it." So we don't agree with the Oregonian or Journal, which will be a great DISAPPOINTMENT to them when thev learn of it I R. W. R. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By 0. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Jan. 33 A gag of the hell-roaring si loons in the mining town te now on of the dlvertlase menta of the flossy New York bars. When desert rats and htrd-pan-nera cams to camp for a binge, they r c I V a, when they had reached the eleeptng t s g e, the "hot foot." Among the snoring boosets sround ths big bellied stoves in the grogs of Clip pie Creek during the gold rush, it Inspired revenal shootings. The "hot foot" Is an old-fashioned match s'.ucs in the ho sol snd set afire. wv-n It burna to the end. there I a screim and epileptic Jig. Heat i,rslnst lesther creates a s'..ra lika suddenly stepping on red-h:t Iron Jtuch nltifth. ti.nM,,.,. . fltork club, Bt Morocco, etc., hare a hot footing almost every dawn. The baby-faced Donshu boy In his che rubic Innocence mav aoolv it tn ai. fred Vanderhilt and so on. Not long ago they tossed a dinner for Aba uyman. He had Just reached a misty-eved Interlude In hia apeech of thanks ln-n his lace frose In sud den horror. Then he let go an Indian i always will be. It mav crow- one feels it will never CHANGE. it to say, after three days of a our mood like an old shoe, ago. Yesterday we wandered strolled, within the circum boys sitting on the bench, they looked the same behind Sunday, with no one or practi ahrlak and leaped high. Jack Demp sey crawled under the tab! and be stowed the 'hot foot." Sherman BilUngsry seem to have. uetaium tn srter-midnlght popu larity of hla Ptork club for a atrlctly Broadway dlntel. longer than sny other of th current crop. A runner up snd strln; th sun type of pat ronag la tha dawn oaals. in Morocco. Each la a sort of melting pot for Broadway and a pinch of Park ave nue "elummers" snd a bonansa for the chatter wrltera. Texas Oulnsn causht the same crowd when ah was hllo-suckering th. multitude. Ou of th mullloned memorial wlndowa In Th utile Church Around oath Wilson "Sometime Doorkeepers th Cornr Is to Oeorge and Silas In this House of th Lord.' Oeorge, born In slsvery was on of th for lunst negroes to find refuge In th edlflo. A conscientious worker, he remained thera until th nd of nis long 111 bowing hundred of com municant to their pewa. Hla wife waa th Janltrese and kept th church pin-neat and shining. Until his passing few of th thou sands he mad laugh knew Clarence Day was a helpless Invalid. His hilarious drawings for hla equally hi larloua lusaya wer executed with a pencil attached to a contrivance he moved alowly and painfully with the upper part of hla arm. th lower part being untotent from arthrltla. Hla "Lit with Father" has been a best seller many months and on of his most comleal skits waa wrl:tn threw weeks before th end. Ring Urdner. toward th last, toll ed in th same strontring fashion snd crtd imil laugh. A nurs in a Personal Health Service By William Brady, M D. Signed lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelop Is enclosed- Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to tbe large number of letters received only v few can be answered. No reply can o made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 363 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, tal. ALL THE THEORIES OF LONGEVITY . In the prayer of Moses (Psalm 00) the average age of man was three score and ten years, only by reason of exceptional vt tallty did aomfc men live to bo eighty years of age. Moses him self was 120 years old when he died. Lulgl Cornaro. about the time of Columbus, managed to at tain the age of 103 years and wrote a book about the Art of Living Long. Cornaro's Ideas were mostly sound, as we view the mat ter today he counselled moderation In eating and temperance In every thing. Metchnlkoff conceived the theory that tbe ripe old age which many natives of the Balkans attained was due to their fondness for soured or fermented milk. He popularized the practice of drinking skim milk (milk from which the cream has been re moved) which is first boiled five minutes, then cooled to body tem perature or thereabouts, then sowed with a culture or "starter" of lactlo bacilli, of the Bulgarian strain and allowed to sour or ferment for a while Metchnlkoff advised a pint a day of this beverage, and he believed It would maintain a vigorous growth of lactic bacilli in the colon, which Is a normal and desirable state, for when there la vigorous lactlo bacillus fermentation In the colon the field la unfavorable for the activities of less desirable or possibly harmful germs' whose growth and multtpllca tlon constitutes putrefaction. Met chnlkoff himself died from heart dis ease short of the scriptural three score and ten years. Later a different strain of lactlo bacilli, called Acido philus bacilli, was Introduced and milk beverages containing these Acldophllls bacilli became popular. However, It Is probable that plain buttermilk or ordinary sour milk Is as efficacious as any such artificial lactlo bacillus medium, both as a prophylactic and as a remedy, though these natural foods or beverages do not come with all the Impressive hooey the wiseacres like. Still later the ductless eland theory of longevity or prolongation of youth or rejuvenation captured the popu lar Imagination, thanXs to the skill ful play given this Idea by numerous charlatans. Even I cannot attempt to discuss In & paragraph a subject that fills books. But 1 can say that the sensational miracles promised by yarns in the Sunday supplements have failed to materialize. Apparent ly the best that can be expected in any circumstance from ductle&s gland treatment or operation of any kind Is a temporary stimulation which, after all, Is far short of act ual icjuvunatton. The well advertised Stein ach operation (vasectomy. hospital whither he had gone In life's twilight for a brief change of scene, tells of the -lectric low In his room all ni(?ht while he crouched on the bedside at hla typewriter, sometimes tapping out no more than a half down words an hour. It so happened the last piece he wrote was a bur- leaque of this column a side-splitting j travesty of exquisite ridicule but j without malice. Such a kindly fel- I low was Lardner that he asked Har old Ross to ask If I minded. X was. of course, flattered. The newspaper crowd after several weeks Is still in a glow over the clean beat of the unasumlng Times report er. "Deac" Lyman. In th Lindbergh exile. Hla victory waa the tr'umnh of a re por tonal trust. A memorable and needed lesson in ethios. H bad won Lindbergh 'a confidence and never lost th aens of It precious rarity. When th ausplcloua moment came for htm to score th scoop of his gen eration. It waa accomplished with all tn serenity oo th fin friendship that Inspired It. A mechanical age has made the scoop, or as Park Row terms It, beat, little noticed outside newspaper elr cfes unless It hss tha Importance of th Lindbergh tory. I recall a mur der confesalon w bottled up on a mid-weat paper to release with an srly a. m. extra. Afterward a rival reporter discovered the "murderer" wsa a nut who would confess any murder mentioned 0o w oouldn't crow. On th avenu lat Z wandered to a ftsks window where a trimmer waa adjusting a mink creation on a dummy. He flicked tha fur, twitched th collar and tilted hit Lead, robin- like. In appraisal. Finally his gtanc 1 caught mine and h backed sheepish ly Into th store. And I felt sillier than usual myself, somehow. (Copyright. 1939. McNaught ejyndtoa t.) Thief Steals Clothing FRESNO. Cal., Jan. 22 (AP) While Oall Michael of Klamath Falls was recuperating In a hospital her from Illness, a thief stole his cloth ing at his hotel. Friends aided Michael In obtaining clothing to start tor his home today. Aandahl Heads Architects PORTLAND. Ore.. Jan. 22. (API Fred Aandahl of Portland again heada the Oregon chapter of th American Instltut of Architect, aa a result of last night'a election. Carl F. Oould. Seattle, architectural adviser for tha slat capltol. waa an honor guest. "KICKERN1CK" Ondergarmenta that fit at Ethelwvn B Huffmann ECZEMA and Burning ... -l aiihriiian ana neo na of the nqry ikin aided ujith Rwinol tree He vrtji uiw. 'sV''y readily done under local anesthesia, seems to be a comparatively harm less experiment which does retara the progress of premature senility in many men. And skillful application of X-rays, by a physician who la a master of that field of practice, does unquestionably retard the progress of premature senility in many womeu. And finally, certain hormones, ob tained from the Internal secretions of ductless glsnds, are of great value In the relief of certain disturbance Incidental to premature decline, but nothing of the sort msy be fairly regarded as the essense of youth. After all, people who live fast- should expect to die young. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Low Sugar Tolerance Examination by (a corporation practicing medicine without a li cense) showed 0.3 per cent sugar n urine and advised me to have my teeth X-rayed . . . (H. O. L.) Answer Unless you have more faith In far-away "specialists" whom you can't see, would It not be more sensible to consult a physician at home and be guided by bis advice? A moderate deficiency of vltamlnB may account for your low sugar tol erance. A normal person should be able to eat (or drink a solution of) at least six ounces of sugar or glu cose on an empty stomach without excreting any - sugar tn the urine within the next two or three hours, as determined by tests at half -hourly Intervals. If sugar appears In the urine within an hour or two after ingesting less than that quantity 4 carbohydrate In any form, that means the sugar tolerance Is low, the sys tem Is unable to metabolize or utilize sugar as well as It should. It doe not necessarily mean diabetes, how ever, unless the proportion of sugar In the blood rises above the normal limit and remains constantly too high. For detailed Information about vitamins and their function in meta bolism send ten cents coin and stamped addressed envelope for booklet "Building Vitality." Even .n frank diabetes, an optimal vitamin ration to aupplement the diet seems to produce an effect like that of In sulin, make the insulin dosage smaller. Get Fit It Is hard to find any place around here where a person can walk In safety. What other form of exercise would you suggest to keep a seden tary adult In condition? (M. K.) Answer Send ten cents coin and three-cent stamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "The Last Brady Symphony,' which outlines room exercises. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Mr. HI I Ham Brady. M. D., 2 A3 E Cum Inn. Beverly Hills. Calif. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Q RESIDENT Roosevelt, speaking In A New Jersey, says: "If we can boondoggle our way out of the depression, that word (boondoggling) la going to be en shrined in the hearts of the Amer lean people for a long time." . (Please note the use of the word IP which, although It contains only two letters, Is one of the most Important words In the language) - ilHAT la "boondoggling," anyway? Tf Well, of course nobody knows exactly, , except that It Is a term of ridicule applied to the useless fiddling around and monkey busi ness that have characterized o much of the new deal. Hauling a pile of dirt from one side of the road to the other, tor example, and then hauling It back again Just to provide work, whether useful or not Is boondog- HIRING hundreds of thousands of government employees to do things that DON'T NEED to be done, that we can get along Just as well WITHOUT as we can get along WITH, Is boondoggling. These needless government em ployees, whose wages must be pala out of taxation, create nothing use ful, and so the burden of their wages Is just a hindrance and handicap on those who are LABOR ING USEFULLY. Boondoggling, you see. Is Just that a hindrance and a handicap JUST how do people get out oi depressions? By way of answering that ques tion, let's ask another: If you fell into a hole in the ground, such as an old gravel pit, bow would you go about getting out? f-f IF boondoggling would get you out, , you might sit down at the bot tom of the pit and smoke a clg-, arette and build a few play houses! out of the larger pieces of gravel and after that you might trot around from one side of the pit to the other In order to make your self thing you were busy. All this money business wouia keep your time occupied, but lt wouldn't keep you from getting hungry or cold, and It wouldn't get you OUT OF THE PIT. Only hard climbing will do that. Boondoggling won't get us out ot the depression. Keep AHEAD of the JONESES THERE'S just one way to be "better off" than the other people on your street. ... In order to keep ahead, you must think and act first. And that can be done by any one who decides to do it. whatever the family income. For instance, some people are smart enough to buy things when prices are down. Right now, of course, you can find sheets and towels and other supplies for the house at lowest-this-year prices. And that isn't all . . . Some time this winter you will find underwear for the children, gloves for yourself, pajamas for the head of the house and many, many more things offered at 'way-down prices. All sorts of special buys will keep bobbing up, if you watch the advertisements in this newspaper and keep thinking ahead, and buying ahead. Where will go get all the money, you ask? . . . Well, it doesn't take MORE money to be better off, this way. Actually it takes LESS. The pennies you save by time ly buying add up to dollars in the end. BOONDOGGLING CosU money. It costs more than we can raiw by taxation, so 1U cost has to be added to WHAT WE OWE. It is useless, and we get nothing out of it. It Is Just like borrowing money at the bank to buy your self a pink elephant to keep in your back yard. When It came time to pay back the loan at the bank, the pUk elephant in your back yard would not be much help. Neither will the boondoggling. (Continued From Page One.) year. Three cruisers and a couple of destroyer squadrons. Perfectly harm leas except It disclosed the main body of the fleet would remain in the Pacific this year. The anno;ucement came the same day that the Japs were putting on their high hats at London. Of course, it was interpreted abroad as the an swer of the U S. to the Japanese disarmament refusals. Since 'hen. Mr. Swanson has clip ped his telepnone wires and gone Into complete retirement. An outstanding new deal official was philosophizing among friends the other day about the personnel weak ness of Mr Roosevelt's administra tion and the burden It has put on the president personally. Said he: "The jrlgl&al basic purposes of NRA and AAA could have been written constitutionally. The grouping of the larger Industries to stagger employ ment? ano eliminate such things as child labor and oppressive hours would have been constitutional, if composed by men of the legal cali ber of Chief Justice Hughes or John W. Davis Also, they could have writ, ten a const ltnt tonal AAA In the first place. "The jxtra failure of the NRA waa bad administration. General Joba son is one ot the best writers In the country nd one of the worst ad ministrators The original NR Id? a rever Included anything llice the Blue Eagle. "Think of what would have hap pened If that bureau ould have been administered by Al Smith, Ches ter Davis, Mr. Hoover; or even Mr. Roosevelt himself In depression d'.-pths, the then President Hoover once mourned that what the nation needed was a song. He suggested It to George M. Cohan, who wrote om. Somehow. It never caught on. If that wfj what was wrong with the country. It has now been cured. New dealers, however contend they oannot be blamed for "The Music Goes 'Round and Around." They they bive enough to answer for. with out that. Flight 'o Time Med lord and Jackson Count) history from tbe flies of the Mall Tribune 10 and Jo rear, ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January 22. 126. (It waa Friday.) Spanish aviators reach Canary urt anda in flight across the Atlantic to Rto Jsnlro. Charleston dan craze and cross word purale fad sweep city and valley. Pussywillows reported bloomlnj along Roese creek. Eight eew residences built past year In Jacksonville. Phoenix Foreign Mission society to aew garments for poor of China. C<fornt bootlegger who tries to sell moonshine to local police Is nab. bed. ' TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January 22. 1B16. (It wo Saturday.) High wind aweeps city and valley, doing some damage to telegraph wires. B. M. Wilson Is elected secretary of the Taxpayers league. ' B. . Noalon has taken the asrecy for the Mall Tribune on rout Nu. 2 and the district north of the rlvjr. and will collect on aubscrlptlons. take In renewals and transact any other business connected with the pap;r, thus saving the patrons the Incon venience of a trip to Medford. Mary Plckford In "Rags" at tha Page; "'His Girl Ran Away With a Drummer." at the star. Charles Evans Hughes looms probable rtepuoltcan presidential nom inee: Democrats plan to re-nominata Woodrow Wilson, with 'Thank God! He kept Us Out of War" ss main plank. PORTLAND. Ore.. Jan. 22. (API The eleven persons arrested for carry ing banners near a dock here during a reception for the German cruiser Emdr.n will have a hearing Janunry 29 before Municipal Judge D. E. Long. They were released on their own rec ognizance. ANCHORAGE. Alaska. Jan. 22. (AP) Anchorage's new dog pound charges strays 2.S0 a night a rate slightly higher thsn thst for a room snd bsth st the best hotel here.. - Don't Forget . . . You can get Safety Deposit Boxes at LAWRENCE . Open from 8:00 to 0'30. SPENCER CORSETIBKE Tel 1534-L., HELPS AVOID MANY COLDS Especially designed aid for nose and upper throat, where most colds start. Used in time, helps prevent many colds, VicksVatronol