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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1937)
. S i ?AOE FOUR Medford .Tribune "Evvrront Ib Soother. Orego ' KmA tbt Hall Trlbnaa." DtUly Except Satardar. Publtahtd by ucnmnn printino CO. K-ll-ll N. Fir St. Phea fl ROBERT W.RUHU Editor. EfcNEST R OIL8TRAP. Una.r. Aft Indapodot Nwppr. liiiMil at a avanA-cIau mat tar a. I Mad for. OrtgoB, undar Act af March . UTt. fUBtCRIPTION RATE! alaJl Id Advance) tll7. on raar.... DtUjr, its month. ..... 1 It e lit ID f-tllv An mnnth. mmTtrrUr in Advinca Uadford. Ab lmA Jaattaniivllla. ClDtril PolOt, rbeaals, TalaoU Gold Hill and ao aJsbwara, Daily, ont rr M o Dally, li montha in Daily, ona month Alt urwa, eaab la adanca. fltflclal Pa opt of I ha City of Hadford AiriolaJ Pa par of Jatkaoo Cntuty U RUB EH OF THE ASSOCIATED PKKBb calflBC mil ieaeo mrm aw.-. Aa.nniBiA Prm la iclutl ao title to tha uii tor publlcatloo of all naa dlapatehaa eradltad to It or othar wlaa eradltad to thla papar. and alao to tka local nawa published haraln. All rlfbta (or publlcatloo of apaoial dlatnat nartin an mm r.itr..u. MEMBER OF UNITED PRE8I HEUBER OF AUDIT BUREAU , . Or CIRCULATION Adrarttilog Raprawntatlyaa DAY Ofne.r t N.w Tork, Chios;;. D.trolt. San. FranclMJO, Los AnselM. Seattle, F rtland, SL Leuls. AtfsDte. V.ncou.T. a Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEPFORD, QftEGONT, TTEPyESDAY, .TULT 7, 1937. vrvthln happened on July 4th eieept skyrocket einng nr. w " whisker of citizen who rait them far the day. a matter of civic end petrlotlo duty. ... lUM.inr. &m now debating the a.valt sum-erne court peck plan Tnr hope to save the President's face, and their own political hides In , the next election. "A large new algn graces the west end of one of the A. J. Hill and company hardware buildings facing Uw Paclfle highway at the south end of the business district. It Is discern b e from me nignwny, (Halaty (Ore.) News) The last .nunci is a supposition, and not the regular order. Tha llmbi of some of the twee In the residential sections hang lower m the sidewalk than a business district awning. Tn grain and hay crop failure Is uw nnt bad aa feared, and, It looks like the agriculturists would be able to stack It all In the field n wnloh It was grown. . Th oollce renoit Hansen ' was eriglng down the highway at Ueely speed." (Blsklyous New Nearer right than Intended. AU the Older Olrl are recuperat ing from holiday auto trlpa to the wide open spaces, ny hw ena 01 week, husbands hold high hopes of Mttin something: harder to cook than ecrsmbled eggs. The feared and dreaded gooseberry pie ha broken out again In this Tlelnlty. A scientist now reveala, "the de pression gloom was heightened by the drab clothing worn by the men." At the time, the menfolks were lucky to hsve anything to wear, and In no mood to don yellow tights, while trying to remember under which henhouse they burled their money. : The road to the summit of Roxy Ana Is being used extensively by admirer of the view. It would have bees a great convenience In the I ok si fiery kross era. . ItetAdent of the Prospect district are busy planting bean and getting out wood. The Cost of Rescue IF Amelia Ear-hart it aliv, her plane must hare landed lorn where on a coral rf. Even if her land plane, could have kept afloat on the open ea all this time, thoie clinging to it, could hardly have survived four dayg and nighta, of suffering and exposure. So at the present writing there in only that one ray of hope. It's pretty slim, but a waiting and anxious world will keep on clinging to it, until sufficient time has elapsed, to shatter even that. MEANWHILE the search will go on, yes, as we have been informed at fiT3V A T lYPfVtf I TIT- ' it.. .: . u, j ut.ijAj i ;nu b KVb luv view point of those who are so conoerned with the cost of this effort! to rescue Miss Earhart and her navigator. After all this country is not at war, how could the coast guard and navy be better employed! Our warships are steaming about most of the time, our navy airplanes and carriers, are maneuvering and practicing here and there. Why not devote their energies to something as beneficent and useful as this! t . . . A ND whether or not the result of the search is successful, it will be USEFUL. A tremendous amount of information, will result from this tragedy whatever the final outcome, whioh will be extremely valuable to aviation, and therefore to human ity, for all time to come. But Miss Earhart is only one person out of a couple of billion swarming over the earth's surface. Why all this expense and trouble for HER! After all she took the trip "just for fun' on her own responsibility, what right had she to demand that the entire world holt, and devote its energies to finding her, if she happened to get into trouble! fy? course she had no right and she didn t demand it. She demanded nothing. And there is no responsibility on the part of any government or any person, to do anything for her now. But that's not the way thank the Lord, most people feel about it. Livingston was just one man out of many millions so was Greely; and so have been explorers and adventurers since the world began. But when any of them were lost, and hope of rescuing them alive existed, there have been both indi viduals and governments ready to spend time, money and risk lives in an effort to save them. A ND that is the prevailing spirit now. We fear our vocabu lary is a bit deficient, when called upon to classify those who would count the cost of saving human life, Miss Earhart's or some other one life, two or many when the opportunity is presented. Such an attitude just doesn't conform to our idea of what a human being should think, or feel, or bsl A Correspondent Answered A SUBSCRIBER explains why Max Schineling has been given the double-cross. It has nothing to do with high finance. It's politics. Herr Mnxie is a Nazi, And if he were matched with Louis, Braddock or anyone else in New Tork, organized labor and the Commun ists would boycott the match, and gate receipts would be a wash-out. So Maxie is put on the shelf, until the auti-Nazi agitHtion blows over. Very interesting, but hardly convincing. A TEAR ago Maxie was a Nazi, and with a presidential elec tion in the offing, political feeling was running stronger than it is today. Tel. there was no anti-Nazi uprising when Schmeling met Louis, and if memory serves, every member of the Caucasian race in Greater Manhattan, was yelling for the German to knook the colored boy's block off. Maxie had a match with the British fistic champun Tommy Farr, and Hitler is no more popular with the Communists and workers of England than over here. But there was no talk of boycott. Whatever may be said against Tommy Atkins, no one can ever question his sportsmanship. "May the best man win," is not only the sporting creed he preaches, but practices. Tct Mnxie was given the double cross by the prize fighting mpvesarios over there, and is once more on the outside looking in. Instead ot meeting Schmeling m London, Farr will meet Louis in New York. Does our informant seriously maintain, that mone,. had nothing to do with this last minute switch! Personal Health Servia By William Brady, M. 0. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and tyglene. not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answeitu by Ut. Brady U stamped self addressed .metope la enclosed Letters should be brief and written la Ink Owing to the large number ot letters received only few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not ronfurmlng to Instruction. Address Or. William Urady, 25 el Caouou Beverly. Calif. CLOTHING A ND BATHINO "RUNAWAY TEA THIUIJJs HOL IDAY THRONG" (Lakevlew Em Iner) Time backs upl . The National Spelling Reform as aoelatlon plans a full campaign With all the things that need fix ing. It will be a great advance to get after the way pneumonia Is spelled The local drift of dog fanciers Is now towards setter docs that will 'not remain sea' ?d. . An automobile that looked like It hsd seen hit by a locomotive, missed another one late yesterday. ... The ftneneial state of Prance seems to be terrible, from all press ac counts, They must dig up Sl,800.000, 000 Ui save their own government or faee- a crisis. This, they do not want to do, any more than pay the American war debt. AN"D. PRtV, WHAT SIIAIlEf "VUhJalmar etefansson. explorer. eaye we must change our conception of weather at the North Pole, for according to the United States Wea ther Bureau the Arctic has known temperaturea of 100 degrees In the shade. We have never been very close to the North Pole, but Just for the aka of curiosity, we would like to Inquire, In the shsde of what?" (Chrlstlsn Science Monitor.) A GERMAN K'azi won the Vandorbilt cup Tork on Monday. According to press P. O, Snfe Cracked. THE DALLES, Or,. July 7. IFl Sheriff and state police officers weie Investigating today the burglary of the Msupln postofflce. where yeggs cracked a safe, taking 1150. Bummer Storage tupert eare and sdcouat insurance ART18TA rUR SHOP W. Ita, fhon rac in New Tork g to press reports no winner ever received a greater popular ovation. Where was the anti demonstration bv the aroused Communists, labor zealots, etc., etc.! So with Baron von Crsmm, Nazi tennis star, one of the most popular players at the Wimbledon tournament, who was finally put out. by Budge, in the finals. There was no issue made of the titled gentleman's politics. No that explanation doesn't wash. piUZK fighting as a sport is a pretty sordid mess, but as a whole, it has to date kept free from partisan politics. When the boys on the inside have cashed in on the Farr Louis side show then Maxie will undoubtedly be called in, for financially speaking, ho will then be the best bet, perhaps another million dollnr gnte. Love may make the world go 'round, but the clink clink of the cash register supplies the motive power for the prize fight game, and determines its direction, nothing else. how frequently must one take a bath In order to be both physically and msntally clean, aak a corre spondent, equivocally enough to per mit a tactful re ply. Cleanliness la physical. Phys ical cleanliness, freedom from filth, contamina tion, pollution, dirt, stsln, blem ish, grime, dust or foreign matter of any kind; neatness of per son, dress and en vlro'nment; asepsis or med ical, eurgtcsl or sanitary cleanliness or sterility, absence of dlsease-oroduc- Ing germs; such cleanliness Is always normal, wholesome, physiological, de- sirsDie, neaithful, hygienic. When the concept of cleanliness I carrlud beyond actual physical cleanliness Into the realm of Imagination, as suggested by the correspondent's ue of the term "mentally clean," It borders on morbid psychology, obses sion. Insanity. People who bathe several times a day, Indeed many who bathe dally when there 1 no physical necessity for suoh frequent bathing, are generally abnormal If not definitely unbalanced. They har bor obses-ions about contamination, dirt, odor or germs. After aU, so far as hygiene, heslth. sanitation or medical or eurelcsl asepsis Is concerned, cleanliness is not determined by the frequency with which one bathes nor by the noise one makes about one's bathing. uxygen in the air Is as effectual cleansing agent as Is water. Sun- "gni is a powerful antiseptic, dis infectant deodorant. Persons who take dally air bath or sunbath. that la. go without clothing or with the least possible clothing, require less frequent sosp and water bathing to remove decomposition products of sebum (akin oil) or- sweat from the skin. The more unnecessary cloth ing or covering worn the more Is decomposition of these excretions or secretions favored. Younger skins stand scrubbing with soap and water, In fact the regular application of plain, pure (undoetored) soap and water Is ex- cellent treatment for the complexion of the young person. Older sklna do not tolerate soap and water so well, because the natural skin oil or sebum secretion la less copious In the older skin cleansing with plain. pure (undoetored) olive oil, sesame oil or Pharmacopoeia cold cream (ointment of rose water, eold -cream made up freshly after the formula given In the U. 8. or the Britten Pharmacopoeia) I generally better for the older skin. A young skin 1 naturally soft, smooth, clear, oily, pernsp too oily at time An old akin la harsh, rough, sallow or dull, abnormally dry, Irritable, itchy. The physician feels not only the artery but also the state of the skin when he Judges the patient's anatomical or physlologlcsl age. If your skin Is prematurely old perhaps you need an lodln ration or a more liberal ra tlon of vitamin or something how do I knew without a brief letter In dicating your plight and Inclosing a 3-cer.c-stamped envelope bearing your address? Comment on the Dau s News QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mobile Home. Galvanised Iron tank In trailer for water supply. This hss been, drained and flushed a few times. I it all right for drinking water, or what precaution should we tske to make water carried In auch a tank aate for drinking? (W. J, w.) Answer The tank Is all right as a container for drinking water. Un lesa you have assurance from the health authorities that the water 1 safe for drinking, you ahould either boll the water or disinfect each quart drawn for drinking purposes. For emergencies a drop or two of commou tincture of lodln In the quart of water, allowed to stand half an hour, win make the water safe to drink. Preparing for Maternity. I am young expectant mother. Read of woman having twins that were not twins . . . can't help worrying. (Mrs. E. D.) Answer Yes, you can help worry ing. Education wm save you all that. Send ten cent coin and stamped en velope bearing your address, for book let "Preparing for Maternity." Or try your luck writing to your con gressman or the u. S. Labor Depart ment. Washington, D. (J., Children's Bureau, and asking for the bulletin "Pre natal Care." Green Potatoes. I ate green potatoes all last season' snd would like to tell o. F. s who thinks they are "poisonous" that I have experienced no bad resulta to date. (D. L. D.) Answer of course there I no truth In the legend. (Copyright, 1037, John F. DUIe Co ) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady thould send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. JSS. El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. ' By PRANK JENKINS "THE three-day holiday la over, and a in the nation as a whole it ap peara is nave claimed a total of around So live. . In Oregon. Washington and Idaho. tne death toll 1 Si a these word are written early Tuesday morning. T-hebt; deaths, remember, are SCATTERED. Hence they are not so allocking, if 804 people had been killed In one place, we would 'be all atlrred up and agog with plans to prevent, the repetition of such a horror, A It 1. those of us who r not directly concerned shrug our shoul der, and pay little attention to It. IN OREGON, ten died from acci dent over the holiday. Five of these met their deaths in automobile accident, snd three were drowned. One man fell down a stairway. A negro got drunk, attacked his wife with an ax, and she strangled him with her nightgown. W WASHINGTON, U died elltht by automobile accident and three by drowning. In Idaho, one waa killed In an automobile accident and three met death by drowning. One miscellaneous death brought Idaho total to five. California's record was not avail able as these word were written. motereyele cavalcade was ready to tart it lren to make way for the secretary' car, the commissioner was informed that Mr. Roper hadnt been scheduled to appear. . But you can't atop a motorcycle cavalcade, or a determined district commissioner. The secretary arrived, delivered hla piece and mad the hit of the program. Two actons of a former member of the New Deii turned up missing, too, much to the regret of their scout master. Tney were the lS-year-old twin of the one-time chief advisor st the White House, Raymond Moley. The boy stayed in Santa Barbara because their dad waa making a fly ing trip home and they didn't want to mis him. They are known a expert taxider mist and, according to their scout master, their wildcat heads would have stopped the show. Veterans of the A. E. F. who visited the Scout camp had audden memorlea of "Sunny France." They knew that not the weeping skies or the gfcod earth make mud, but human feet. To some of the boys from the des ert states, this atrange and gummy aubstance was as unique as a horned toad to a Vermonter. Flight 'o Time aledford and Jackson County history from the fUes of the Mail Tribune 10 and 10 year go. TEN VEARS AQO TODAY July 7, 1927. (It was Thursdsy.) Sixth street crossing paving to he completed soon. Grass fire destroy barn on Mo Andrews road. No county fair likely this coming fall, due to defeat of special tax levy at peclal election. Potter Pslmer estate to build pack lng plant on South Fir atreet. Georgia church leader la Identified by woman as one of masked men who branded her. "TTfE pity of it la that these deaths 1 resulted lsrgely from careless ness. Sometimes It. was the careless ness of the one who was killed. At others, It was somebody else's carelessness. But In nearly every case, SOME BODY'S carelessness was at fault i t O.O.Mcinfyre' NEW YORK, July 7. One of America's most Interesting Journal istic callings Is slowly reaching the anlshlng point. Aside from a dozen or ao dramatic critic In New York, there are no review era, ave In the large cities such as Chlcsgo, Boston. Phllsdelphla and a few others. Movie critics have absorbed the Jobs. New York had fewer shows the past season than In 3ft years. The usual summer re vue Zlepfeld'.s Carroll's and White's which proved the most pectscular openlnRS for celebrity audiences of the year and offered the best talent, are no more. Gone forever. There are predictions that next sesson the how- list will shrink further. Perhsps three premieres a eck at top. The theatre Is not dy ing completely. There Is still much fe. But It has settled down more then ever before to the survival of the fittest. chioa. These are giant vegetables suggesting the onion In shape, but having a aweetlsh candy-like taste At one of the tables I saw a mus tachoed Konrad Bercovlcl-looklng fel low who Jotted down stray thoughts on a pad between eating and looking soulful. The waiter confirmed my obvious suspicion that he was a poet oi una neignoornood who goes to various foreign cafes nightly to ex press himself In this fashion. WE hear a lot about the merits ot lelaure. Throughout the world, tne noura of labor are being cut down and the hours of free time are being extended. But when we ana lyze the ways In .which people of to day SPEND THEIR LEISURE, ve wonder sometime If there can't be too much of It. ' If work hour are cut down more and more (as undoubtedly they will be) and leisure hours are extended greatly, the time will come when we're going to have to learn better way of spending our leisure time. Already, leisure hours are the DAN GER hours. ONTARIO, hity 7. (TV Or)ton' tourlnn air flft took off thl morn ing tor IVndlfton after staging ahow here yftfrdny tha attracted practically tha entire population of Ontario, buslneiu hovtaea bctnf cloaed for th occasion. Perfect weather aided the atunt pilot and parachute Jumper to to through their routine to the beat dvinuge. I George ArmUtead of Brentwood, Cal took ft rut plaoe In the nftvlpn tlon contest for enortMnen pilots nn the trip here from Baker; Dr. Paul Sharp of Klamath Fall, who had been leading the field, allpptng to third place. Ethel sheeny of rontana, Cal., took flrat for the lap. Kaiiaaa fattens more than 300.000 Mm-hwfMern ranch and range cat tle on lta blueatem paaturea each rer. It la advanced that there are no great atag ahowmen any more, such aa Zlcgftld, Rrlanger, Dillingham. tVInuco. But the fact Is there are Oeorge -Abbott, for Instance but many have been drawn to the surer rewards and the greater financial security of the Hollywood Itudloa. Easier hours, easier living. Oeorgea Oarpentler. one time Eur opean heavywsight boxing champion, is now barman at hotel tn Cannes, Apartment buildings In New York that have had difficulty In being refilled since the depression are those with many guest rooms. The new Idea la exprrswd by the Ralph PulKnera, who had their 60-room mansion turned into small apart ment and rented s small apartment for their own use. The vogue for small apartments la frankly due to the guest pest. Rich folk were help leas with so much room when friends from othr cities dropped In. Many large restderce became almost like hotels. There Is a record of one home on Fifth avenue having H guests at one time, and was onlv ended when the owners fled precipitately to Europe afler notify ing all they were closing their estab- Hf-hment next day. Mary Brown War- burtons new palarxlo In Palm Beach will have no guest room, and neither Hi Doris Duke's Hawaiian hacienda Washington street hsa an Alban ian restaurant patrontred mostly by Albanians and a few uptown Mum mers. It la a replica of the native cafe and the food la displayed In steaming kettles In the dining room. There are some 30 varieties snd the customer selects as many as ha desires. Albanian bread Is fluffy and gray and is broken Into chunks to be sopped in th various stews, Al narry Kicnman sends me a copy u me uonaon Hign Hatter with double page drawing of himself sur rounded by such Mayfairltes as the Hon. Mrs. Cunningham Reld, Miss Mala Brand, Lady Incheape fluttering about In an adorable huddle while their husbands and beaux stand tn the background biting their nails In chagrin. Thus the marcelled singer Joins the handf-il of American enter tainers who have cracked the British shell of reserve. A list that includes Tallulah Bankhcad. Elsie Janls, So phie Tucker. Will Mahoney and Belle Bsker. Rich man has had more rebounds from Broadway's assignments to ob livion than any other performer of his time. A doaen times I have heard the street's dictum: "Rlchman is tnrough all washed up." Yet In al most every Instance he hss comt back stronger than ever. For some unaccountable reason his airplane flight to Europe put him crosswise with the favoring Broadway winds. He was gently booed several times at one of the floor shows. Then he went to London to compete with the crack artlits drawn by the corona tion furore. And rlready the cabled report of his Sucre have resulted in a build-up that puts him out front again. He can have hit choice of Joba when he returna. The maid who attends my mani cure wsnts In a mid-town hotel broke out In a routing laugh In the midst of her ministrations today In such outburst I always have a feeling I have put my vest on out aide my coat or Indulged some other absent mlndrdnpa. "Anything the matter with me?"I asked quickly, reddening to the, gills. She replied enigmatically wtth a chuckle: "You'll never know." And I didn't mias sneaking s peek In every window mirror all the way home. Sometime.. I think I'll put on an old wrapper, find an abandoned haymow and Just sit there and sulk. (Copyright. I' 7, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) f (Oontinueo uom Page One.) It seems funny,'' said a led from Los Angeles, "to have It rain In the summer." There are plenty of lessons for the rsce-conscious in tent-lsnd. 'We've got a whole troop of Japan ese boys here," said a young Callfor nlan, "and they're nice," We thought we'd discovered some provincialism when one young east erner remarked: The foreigners are what gets me. Talking funny languages (we were wrong). "But they're all right." he added quickly. "You ought to see the Mexicans throwing hatchets In the air and others catching them." Strangely enough, the Washington, D. C, boys hsve some of the most valued souvenirs for trading, And they aren't branches from George Washington's cherry tree, either. They're sharks' teeth, long burled in a little-known mound on Chesapeake bay. The sharks left long before the politicians arrived. A prized media of exchange have been milk bottles from Elmlra. N. Y. Two hundred of them. Like the treasured colonial flasks, they bear a distinguished msrk a glider. (EH mlra la the glider city, you know.) Road to Diamond lake open and In good ahape, says George Howard. John Drew, death. famous actor, near TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 1. 1917. (It was Saturday.) Twenty German airships raid Lon don in greatest air attack of the war. Bombs kill 37. Senate votes for withdrawal of li quor suppllea and purchase by Uncle Sam, as a war measure. All Germans suspected of . being spies are ordered to leave America. People ordered to mow the grata on vacant lots and cut off overhang ing umba of tree. C. M. Kldd buys Dunlap-Bltter building on Main atreet. Country Club to give Informal dances Saturday evening during the hot season. Hobbles of Clarence Mulford. au thor of the Hopalong Cassldy ator- les, Include firearms, pistols marks manship, building ship models, and short wave radio broadcaatlng. Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis. baseball's high commissioner, is named for the mountain near Mar ietta, where his father, a Union soldier, whs fatally wounded. Cummlngs, who reed his message of greeting. Later "Uncle" Dsn Roper, secretary of commerce, addressed the boys. Mr. Roper Is noted rather for the polysyllabic rhetoric of the 'nineties than for campflre atorles, but he made a speech that aurprlsed his elder listeners snd set the boys cheering. He praised scoutdom as the bulwark of democracy. It Isn't generally known, however, thst Secretory Roper almost didnl appear. Wouldn't have, perhaps, if a district commissioner hadn't Insisted It wasn't that he wasn't wanted. It was a slip tomewhere.' Just as the 1 Just 'phone 108 and we will gladly call at your home or office and dis cuss your building and financing problem with rau. EVERYTHING You Need For Building I ncluding Planning Advice YES sir I We offer QUALITY lumber and building supplies at consistently low prices, secure contractors and work men we know to be dependable. If you are planning: to build, all we ask is a brief in terview ... we KNOW that you'll like our service I WOODS LUMBER CO. EAST JACKSON AT GENESEE. PHONE 108 Phone 44j. Well hsul away juui i banian are th g.-.-ateat ol all dunk flu. City anltry tarrloa I ere. One of th dellcacie I tlno COUNTERFEIT MOLDS LEFT IN AUTO CAMP HOOD RIVER. July 7. (AP) Po lice searched today for the owners of a art of counterfeit dollar molds discovered by Mrs. A. Johnson while cleaning a cabin In her auto camp her. They connected th find with th circulation of spurtou coins heir and In other eastern Oregon cities recently. To achieve the Perfect silhouette wear ARTIST MODEL FOUNDATIONS Elhelwyn B. Hoffmann. LAWN MOWERS sharpened We call md del Sim ros ret l jj N pit Ut alsil mouse want ao. UNLOADING! All Spring and Summer Ready-to- Wear Coats and Suits V2 Price 100 DRESSES Including Prints and Pastels. 522.75 val ues for $500 25 Better Summer Dresses Values to Many with jackets, in sheers and chiffons vitf.D. special $1495 50 DRESSES Including Sports, Afternoon, Dinner and Formal. Values to ft"? en $29.75 .... $f ,9U One Lot BLOUSES Satins. Crepes, Broadcloth and organ die. Values to $5.95. a A Special ,UU One Lot Knitted Dresses & Suits l2 Price 45 Hats, values to $1 0.95 Cortecelli Hose .... Swim Suits . . ... . . . $1.00 .... 79c 10 Discount JACQUE LENOX E. Main at Bartlett. Phone 468