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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1936)
PXGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTTNE, TfEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, 'AUGUST 23, 1936 MDFORDtTEIBUNE Everyone i Southern Ore iron Reads tbs UaU Tribune" Daily Except Saturday. Publlihed by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. S67-?8 N. Fir St- Prions Tt. ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor. CRN EST R- QIL8TRAP. MlDU'r. Ad independent Nwppr. Entared econd-cUM matter at Mtd" ford, Oregon, undor Act ot March . SUBSCRIPTION RATES fey Mall In Advnc: Dally, one year , Dally, six monthi , niiiiv. on month ow By Carrier, in Advance Medford, Afn land, Jacksonville. Central Point, phoenix. Talent, Gold Hill and on highway. li00 Dally, one year " nllv' ilx montbe Dally, one month.... 1 All terme. eeeb In advanoe. Offlrlnl Paper of the City of Medford. Official Paper of Jnckeon County. UK.M11KK OF TIIK AH8O0IATEU PKHSt Hecelvlng Foil lenuM wire oamew. ; The Awocfated Pre le excloelvely en titled to the uae tor publication of all newt diipetchee credited to It or other wise credited In thlej paper, and alao to the local nwi publlahed herein. All right for publication of epeelal dlepatehee herein are aleo reeerved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representatives M. 0. MOO EN SEN A COMPANt Office In New York, Chicago Detroit San Franoleco, Loe Angeles, Seattle, Portland. JAB M BE ft eD tOfUl TV AS&DCI Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Thera not being enough annoy ances, one way and another, lummer colds now prevail. L. Ulrtch la among the prominent victims. t The safest auto driver In the tat hna been picked Irom 900 applica tions. It will he harder to pick the unanfest driver, as there U mora com petition. A number of lively and likely winners are loose In this vicin ity. e M. Alford, who made good as a tentaoie ot the oil octopus li tiilting his paw. He ueed to play a miulcal taw and elng baaa In a quartet here. . The Dubb WaUon boy la buay ahin Ing up to a cut little blonde. It la hi" first encounter with the aoclal whirl. Fishing la reported ao poor In Rogue river. It would take a G-man to catch a fish. e The mayor of K. Falle campaigned in the city lost Monday, and at a rally naked how many of those pres ent hsd seen his opponent, Sen. Mc Nary In the last 18 yenrs. Not a hand was raised. Many people have been In Jackson county for 30 yenrs and have not seen Mr. Mabonoy, The city Is getting ready to pave a couple of streets, and hop la expressed enough concrete la left over to patch up the Main Stem lamp post. e The Older Girls are appearing evngs In their new fall and winter coats. 63.4 percent of the men folks don't even know where last winter's overcoat la hanging. The El no Hemmlls. 8. Col ton, and Jean Orr Income tax exemptions are all coming along fine and never cry. their papa's testify. Conditions on the Pacific highway a couple of nlghte the past week were worse than the civil war In Spain. A motorist reported to the police he attempted to knock an Bspee awltch engine off the Jackson St. cionslng and failed, last Wed. evng. A lilac tree belonging to Leon HiAklns, the pllllst, that forgot to bloom last spring la now doing It. Such conduct by a lilac tree la re garded as a sure sign of rain. H. Flewher, the demon baker, whose shoulder waa thrown out of whack while wrestling with the oldest Dock Hayea boy, has regained the use of same and la once more ram ming screw-drivers Into the vital parts of machinery. People are now In the midst of the annual h eg Ira to the huckleberry patches. e J. Marshall, P. DeAouxa, and O. Nsrregan were noted In an alley Thm, with their coats off. No Re publican has been reported missing. C. Wig Ash pole la getting ready to winter in Arlnona, where the Gila monsters play. The country turkeys will soon be big enuuKh to stray onto the roads and get killed by pnasing autolsts. The Bates boys had the acreen dorr put up Thurs. in their tonsorlal parlor. Detter late than never, and It will kwp the snow out next winter. The Elks' cat la Itself again after an operation bark of the left ear. and Is renaming his native frlsklneaa. For a while the animal was sick member of the feline family. The move for flood control In Rogue river Is regarded In many quarters an major boondoggling. Residents of the R. Pt district feel stipf should aUo be taken to make Antelope creek behave itself. MEEK LITTLE HUSBAND HAS PLAN TO GET COIN CHICAGO. Aug. S3. (UP) A meek little man. nsme unknown, today of fered Police Sergeant Jamra Dale a share In a dark plot. The man's wife held the family purse strings tightly sc he asked to be "Jailed." Dale was thpn to telephone the wife that her husband needed (2S ball 18 to go )o the little man. leaving 110 for Dale who -a sympathetic, but re Jectpd the plan. Editorial Correspondence SOMEWHERE IN WYOMING, August 20th, en route Chicago via U. P. Streamliner: Yes a very extraordinary campaign! On the Shasta to Portland the conductor said "No one is talking politics you just don't hear it the people don't seem interested." Here is the Streamliner with a full passenger list, and in the club-flar one hears everything BUT politics whether, crime, prohibition, war in Europe, Joe Louis, Jesse Owens, "Knock, knock", monopoly everything but the greatest game of all the quadrennial presidential contest. And it is now only about ten weeks before some 50,000,000 citizens will go to the voting booths and decide what has been called the most momontous decision since the Civil war! y How can one explain itf Is it too early in the game ! Appar ently the political wise men don't think so. Colonel Knox has been giving a pretty good imitation of perpetual motion oratori cally, for over a week, and Governor Landon with the greatest barn storming special in political history leaves for his eastern tour tonight. We see by the Salt Lake morning paper, Jim Farley gave a broadcast last night. The battle is on, as far as the big guns are concerned. Yet as far as your correspondent's observations go the people as a whole are indifferent and apathetic, if they are thinking politics they aren 't TALKING about it. , We have an idea that's the point. The people as a whole are interested in the campaign, but they are not interested in TALKING about it. Contrary to the general explanationhat the rank and file of the people have not yet made up their minds we believe the exact roverse is true. We doubt if ever before so many people, at this stage of the game, HAD made' up their minds. The country as a whole is now divided between those who are for Roosevelt and those who are against him. That is the only REAL issue ! Those who are against him, are never going to be for him ; and going to be against. The political leaders may rant and foam at the mouth, point with pride regimentation, the sncredness of this ism and that, but as far as the result is concerned, we doubt if the coming deluge of political propaganda, 'in the newspapers, over the radio and on the stump, will have the slightest effect on the ultimate outcome. ... And that is why there is so little talk. What profit is there in an argument between a pro Roosevelt and an anti Roosevelt voter! They get nowhere, it really isn't sport. For it is no longer a matter of thinking, it's a matter of emotion; it is no longer a matter of reason, it's a matter of feeling. If they don 't come to blows they do come to a stalemate so what's the use! The same applies to the pro and anti Rooseveltians among them selves. When this train passed Bonneville yesterday afternoon, two typical looking American business men opposite us in the club car, gazed mournfully at this impressive example of federal publio works, Said one of them: "There you are; how many millions dil that cost, and what use is it! They tell me Oregon can't ubc the eleotrio power that it now has, and look at it right out here in the desert, not a house Said the other: Yep, more boondoggling and we and our children's children will have to pay for it. They say Roosevelt is impractical ; I say he is just plain nuts I" . . Complete agreement 1 And there the political conversation stopped. One returned to his highball and the market page of the Portland Telegrnm, -the other to his oigitr, and copy of Liberty the next time we listened in they wero discussing mountain goat hunting in the Canadian Rockies or to be strictly accurate, the high-ball gentleman was recounting his adventures in that manly sport, two years ago this month. As far as politics is concerned everything is settled, why talk! . . Speaker Latourette is on the train, answering his first call to the Democratic national committee, on which he took Walter Pierce's place. He is accompanied by a wistful faced gentleman in a blue shirt, who has the demeanor and deportment of a very respeotfnl stooge. Before a couple of bottles of beer they started valiantly in on politics but it didn't last long." In half an hour they were talked out and before the train reached The Dalles, they had sought sanctuary in magazine reading also. Also perfect agreement! No suspense, no stimulus, might as well talk to one's self. So we repent as fur as this train is concerned politics is OUT. It may or may not be typical of the country at large. (As before stated, many times, on our wanderings to and fro, we roport incidents and ovonts as they occur present them for what they are worth making no pretense of comprehensive survey, or anything approaching serious research. On some other transcontinental train in this country they may bo having a free-for-all fight, rolling in the aisles over politics for all we know. However we seriously doubt it.) . That much-discussed Brookings report by the way, em phasizing the depression was due not to overproduction but lack of purchasing power, stated that some 15,000,000 families in the country around 50,000,000 men, women and children have no radios in their homes. We wonder where they are! All the way from Medford on the train, we have been particu larly impressed by the fact that no matter how humble the dwelling from a clapboard shock to three-story residence, the radio spire or wire is invariably visible. Radioless homes are certainly not along the railroad right-of-way. They must be in the slums of the larger oities. ..... Beautiful weather here now, clear and warm but not hot. The local papers say there have been twelve electrical storms in as many days! "It's the climate!" ..... The U. P. Streamliner still arouses curiosity and interest in the towns and along the countryside, not as noticeable as on the former trip, but there arc many along tho right-of-way waving hats and hands as the "egg yolk" flash dashes by. Early this morning in Idaho raised the curtain to discover the time of day, and there on a sand bank was an entire family, including a baby in arms and the dog the dog barking excit edly, papa and mama looking on calmly, the four or five chil dren jumping up anil down and fairly waving their arms off. It whs just ti:0,t a. m. 15, W. K. PINE BUSINESS HITS FASTER PACE IN WEEK PORTliAND, Ore.. Aug. 33. (UP) New business totaling 7o.343.00O feet, or an increase of 11 percent ever the previous week, waa reported today by Western Pine association for wrfk ended Aiuat 1ft, based on tcpOTts of 113 mills. Shipments were Cl.470.0OO fret and production 76. 831.000 fet. The asm milts for the correspond ing wee yenr ago showed orders. 41.636.000 feet and production 73, 313.000 feet. From January l to date Ot Ihl vesr. nrdfru r OO inin! I above the urns period a jear ago. those who are for him are never and view with alarm, talk about of the constitution, the dangers in sight." IS CALLED BY DEATH MONTCliAIR, N. J., Aug. 33. (VT) - Df. Edward Weston. 86. interna ilonally known scientist and inven tor In the f.eld of electricity, died last night at hla home here following a cerebral hemorrhage. He was stricken on his yacht, the rorna Doone III, at New Bedford. Mass., Tuesday shortly after he had witnessed yacht ru.t off Newport. Weston established the Weston Elect rlcal Instrument company and was its president until 1P2.V Cue of his chief "ontrl buttons to yclenee w his perfection of the eltcUic dynamo. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and ayglena not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to tbe large number of letters received only a few can be Answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address ur. William Brady, tSS El Camlno. Beverly Bills, Cat, A FENCE AND A L A fabulous elty waa built on a high hill. One side of the hill waa a sheer cliff with a drop of hundred of feet. People unfamiliar with the situation fell over the cliff on dark night and were killed or badly Injured, The people of the elty didn't mind, aa most of the t 1 c 1 1 m a were atrangera a n y -way. They kept tally of the num ber of victim and the people were vain about It. But After the cliff had claimed a thouaand victims there waa little Interest going on with It, So a drive waa launched to raise funda and presently the people built a first claas hospital at the bottom of the cliff, with ambulance service and everything to take care of the victims as they tumbled over. They felt that this solved the problem. To be sure, some radicals had asked why not erect a strong fenoe at the top of the cliff and Install a few electric lights, and ao prevent any more care less or confused atrangera from fall ing over? This Idea waa frowned down by the people. A while ago the Health Commis sioner of a great Eastern State at tempted to put a. light out there on the cliff. But the broadcasting com pany, owners of the air, would not al low htm to mention syphilis In a health address he had been asked to give on the radio. Strange how prudish we are about this, when one out of every ten per sons In the country has or lias had syphilis. Moat infections. with syphilis occur In young men and women from 15 to 30 years of age. Sixty out of each hundred persons with syphilis are men and forty are women. Ten of the hundred were Jm with the disease. Five out of a hundred persons with syphilis contracted It Innocently, thru ordinary contact, flyphllla Is found In all classes, people of wealth, aoclal standing, Intelligence and morale. Sons and daughters of the best fam ilies may contract syphilis or marry Into It. Syphilis can be cured by prompt and vigorous treatment. It can be arrested In nearly every case. Proper recognition and treatment of the disease la one of the most power ful weapona In protecting the public from syphilis. But what Is needed most Is a fence at the top of the cliff and sufficient light on the situation to save stran gers from stumbling over to their doom. Sex education and sex hygiene. Com m en i on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS GERMANY and Italy (both ruled by fascist dictators) are more or less openly barking tlisr fascist revo lutionist in Spain. France la half heartedly backing the Spanish com munist government. Great Britain, about the only re maining Island of sanity in Europe, la carefully keeping hands off the mm and wondering what will hap pen to her If the threitenjd war be tween opposing schools of dictator ship brenks out. NOTE, please, (In case you are In terested In what Is going on In Europe) this dispatch from Moscow: "Gregory Zlnovleff, accused maker of a bloody plot against the soviet regime of Josef Stalin, testified at his trial tot'jy that the terrorist conspiracy. It suc cessful, would have put Russia on the road to fascism." More proof, you see, of the strug gle between fascism and communism that la rising In Europe. This strug gle, If It comes, will drench Europe once more In blood. KEEP clearly In 'your mind this fact: for years and years In Europe class hatred has been fomented. The have nots have been stirred up sgslnst tbe haves. Sharing the wealth BY FORCE haa been preached unceasingly, and wild' J ri FLOWER NEWHOUSE in Two Lectures at t 8 TODAY "The Message of the Christ" MONDAY, AUGUST 24th "Life on Other Planets" A class In advanced subjects will be formed after the meetings This work is entirely sustained by FREE WILL OFFERINGS Brady, M.D. IOHT ON THE CLIFF Instruction by qualified teachers Instead of sex appeal and the sorry teaching to which we leave our chil dren today. . a representative state health de partment receives reports of about 0000 cases of gonorrhea In a year, and estimates that only about a quarter of the cases are reported. The great majority of women who have gonor rhea are the Innocent victims of disease acquired after marriage. Their husbands thought themselves to be cured before they married. This ac counts for a large number of opera tions for "pus tubes", "pelvic peri tonitis", etc., and explains a great deal of sterility or one-child sterility. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Induced Labor Expecting her fourth baby In six weeks. Doctor advises induction of labor two or three weeks in advance of full terms, because the first three babies were all larger than average and the mother haa alwaya gone about two weeks over her time. Is this dangerous, ... (A. A.) Answer No danger. In the circum stances It would seem to be the wise course. Building Vitality I owe It to you to tell you the change your booklet "Building Vital ity" has made In my condition. I have followed the advice therein for nearly a year. My digestion has never been better. My weight Increased until my husband says I am Just right. My health la completely re stored. Although I am 30 I feel six teen. When I sent for the booklet 1 was run down, anemic, nervous, irrit able, half alive. If you could see the change you'd know I do not exagger ate . . . (Mrs. R. J.) Answer I believe you, Madam, for a happy woman never lies. Look alive, half alive folks. Copy of the red book "Building Vitality" sets you back ten cents coin and 3-cent-a tamped envelope bearing your ad dress, Sprnln or Fracture? Five months ago I apparently sprained my ankle. I turned on It and It swelled and pained me. I bathed It, massaged and bound It but the awelllng has never completely gone away and it still pains when t am on my feet . . . (Mrs. E. K.) Answer Often what purports to be. "sprstn" is actually fracture. Better have medical care. X-ray examina tion at the time of the injury would have shown If there waa a fracture. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should aend letter direct to Ur. William Brady, M. 0 265 El Camlno. Beverly HHJa, Calif. on more than one occasion (aa In Rus sia) it has been practiced. The fruit of all this stirring of class hatreds la an Impending clash between opposing forms of DICTA TORSHIP, and If this clash actually cornea the common people will LOSE, no matter which side wins. THERE ar determined efforts to stir up clasa hatred In this country. We see the evidence ot thee efforts on every hand. If we are good Americana, we will DISCOURAGE these effort In every way at our command. We want no wars between commun ism and fascism In America. But ot the fomenters of class hatred are per mitted to succeed in their purpose, we will see the struggle between com munism and fascism right here In America. Not In this generation, probably, but sooner or later. DICTATORSHIP, with Its Inevitable destruction of hu man rights, Is the bitter fruit of class hatred. That fact Is being proved In Europe right now. SALT LAKE NOW TAME TIMID EASTERNER TOLD SALT LAKE CITT, Aug. 33. (UP) Th. old wild west was tamed years ago but to two eastern women Its traditional lawlessness apparently ".Ives On. A woman Irom Washington. D. O.. today inquired at the offices ot tha Utah State Automobile asso ciation, "la It safe lor two unattended women to walk through Salt Lake Clty'a downtown district at night?" . ane was assured it was. Party Specials. Tba Great, 330 S. Cent Use Mall Tribune wsnt ada. the Guild Hall o'clock liyW ar" ajr NEW YORK, Aug. 22. Adela Rog ers St. John has become one of the most vital, unpredictable and prolific writing ladles of the day. She tells friends her re cent marriage to the aviation offi cial, Patrick O'Toole, la the five-star final of her life. Never was she so buoy antly abeam with happiness. Miss St. John, daughter of a brilliant coast criminal lawyer, displays much of the brilliance In writing he displayed In cross-examination. Plus the vitality of an entire hockey team. Often she has three serials on the fire and does a Job of murder trial sob-slsterlng on the side. Tall, willowy and with a retrousse nose that marks her Irishry, she can enter a crowded room abuzz with conversation and suddenly, like twirling a radio dial to a new num ber, everything switches to her. With no effort, and to complete the simile, Adela Is on the air. Her menage at Great Neck includes two children by first marriage, one of whom Is the recently separated Mrs, Paul Galileo. And a son by her marriage to Dick Hyland. football player. And the other day she adopt ed two friends of a grown son . There's often 15 at dinner. "I love a lot of clucks." beams Adela, "for I'm a Biddy at heart I" Charlie MacArthur, who has in his Joust with Journalism dona some transom climbing and picture snatch ing, now knows how It feels to have his own ducky-wucky letters read to 12 perfect atrangera In a court room. The hardest boiled of a flinty guild, he. Just the same as the rest of ur had his soft moments of baby-talk. Every newspaperman will experience a tiny inward glow to learn that MacArthur, suddenly knocked off his high horse, Is no different from the run of the mine reporter Just a blp tough guy who tnlka of fuzzy-eyed love and things and signs himself Charllecums They still refer to Park Row on the screen, stage and In fiction as though it might be the newspaper man's generating ground as Is Fleet street In London. Yet Park Row Is newspaper! ess. There Is not the roar of a single press or shrill shout of "Copy boyl" The World building and Its scabrous gilt tower, once the hub of such maddening activity, Is fairly dripping gloom a faded, archaic structure with an almost haunted look. The Sun la gone, too. . The Sun of Dana, Boss Clarke and Frank O'Malley. The Tribune also has Joined the hcglra uptown. Not even Ham and Dolan'a with the long whiskered, psalm-singing Mr. Dolan slicing ham at the entrnnce is there to remind of those days when the scoop was triumph. And Doc Perry, of blessed memory, was always good for a hurry-up tide-over until the ghost walked again. Park Row waa shadowed and glori fied by the arch of Brooklyn Bridge that once so busy terminal now touched by the sweep of ravel. The Brooklyn Bridge newsboys were the most raucous perhaps In the world. They had to be to spume their voices above the din. And more newspapers were sold there at homegolng time than any other spot in the metrop olis. There was the leather-lunged newsle Butch, who ambuscaded an eyeless socket with a Raymond Hitchcock forelock in lieu of patch. An eye sacrificed In the circulation wars that once raged. He ruled the area. And was copy. For Russell Sage always walked over to him every noon for a paper on the way to the fruit stand where he bought his 5 cent luncheon apple, Another stocfc Visit Our Newly Enlarged Appliance Store IT'S A V EFFICIENT! ECONOMICAL! CLEAN! TOO! AMERICAN flame OIL HEATER Of course, it's a beauty to look at . , . there is nothing else to equal it . . . for it was styled by Walter Dorwin Teague, America's foremost industrial designer. But still better, it's "tops" when it comes to heating your home. Its giant size heating surfaces, its utter freedom from dirt, smoke and mess, its steady, healthful heat ... all combine to make it the heater you have been looking for. We have a size and style to suit you . . . and at a price that will please you. Come in and see them BUY NOW 1 FIRST PAYMENT OCT. 1ST C. D. 229 East Main story on Park Row when the news founts bubbled low. There's ever a tug for me In those middle-aged couples drifting to park benches at sundown. He Is freshly washed and changed from his work clothes. She is pin neat in her laundered dress. He reads, puffs hi pipe. She knits. Between them sits a proud poodle, freshly bathed, too. and seemingly saying: "These, folks, are my master and mistress and this world wouldn't be half so fine with out them." And Indeed the shine of serenity that cannot be found on Park avenue or Fifth Is there. I had a snigger today thinking of the day Grandma came home from church meeting with the giggles. It was the era of Jet bonnets and two of the good ladles In getting up to greet each other bobbed their Jet fandangos into a clinch so that the hats had to be removed for extrica tion. Grandpa the old harum-scarum, looked up from his wood box chair to chuckle: "Must have been almost as good as a cow hookln'." Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 22, 1936 (It Was Sunday) Public schools of city to open Tuesday, September 7. Mr. and Mrs. Jap Andrews are va cationing in Seattle, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Gub Newbury return from a trip,, to the seashore. Mrs. Porter J, Neff will return next week from a trip to the middle west Mrs. John A. Westerlund Is back from a vacation trip to Bandon-by-t he-Sea. i . ... Rudolph Valentino, original "sheik of films", who rose from tango dan cer to heights of stardom, dies In New York, following operation com plications. Juvenile delinquency Is blamed on parents, in report of American Child association. Statistics show "more youths go wrong now than In the good old days." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 22, 1916 (It Was Tuesday) Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Miles return from a vacation trip to Portland, and the seashore. Robert E. Strahorn, famed railroad builder of the northwest, spends day In valley on auto trip to Klamath Falls. Llthia park In Ashland proves popular picnic spot for valley people. Visitors to Crntcr'Lake so far this season total 0450 people, travelling cAutomokde REDUCE PAY MENTS on YOUR CAR or OTHER PURCHASE W r (inane auloi and other Inst allm tol pur chai on a plan thai givu you tubatantial reduction! llt to Vfe) in your month ly payment. Prion, writ or call lor particulars. IlKGON-WASHINGTON MORTGAGE CO., INC. W B. Thomas, Msr. Phone 139 Ground Floor Crnterlnn Bldg. '1 BEAN, Inc. In 1411 autos. This la a decrease of 1249 persons over last year on Aug. u RanH to Iav latest popular song "Put On Your Old Gray Bonnet" at concert Friday night. ii .3. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 22. (UP) Authorization for admission to tha United States of Mary Olivia, 17, and Ruth Elizabeth, 11, daughters of de ported Rev. Duncan P. Cameron, waa received today by Immigration offic ials. The girls will live In Eugene. Tmmim-Ation offlclala Interested themselves' In the case, after the glrla lather, a former cottage Grove min ister, now unfrocked for forgery, waa deported as an undesirable alien a year ago. The girls, of Canadian birth, had not been registered prpperly at tha time of Cameron's entry, and offtf4f lets took up negotiation to permlv them to reside In this country. Be correctly eorseted tn sn Artist Model by Ethelwyn B Hoffmann. Let Us Save You Money With Our GUARANTEED PLOW POINTS MERRIMAN SHOP, INC. 20 So. Riverside. Phone 210 IF IT'S METAL Think of Merriman's Lost River BUTTSR Insist On Delicious CAMERON'S DAUGHTERS 2hether or not your cor Is paid for. you can borrow on H here. No other security, no endorsers required. You get the money promptly and repay in convenient monthly installments. You got the full amount of the loan no advance deductions, fees, or other charges. We also make loans on household goods or other personal property and your own signature. 3 Ml VslUi Wlil IV. 7l) Phone 497