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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1937)
PAGE SIX frfEDFORP MAIL TRIBUNE. "M"EDFORD. OREGON. "WEDNESDAY. .TULT-21, 1937. MEDFORDDhJ'RIBUNE "ryotM l ontbr Or Hmd tb Mali rrlhua." Dally Biept CUrvrdaj. Hubiiaiiatf bj UHDrORD PRINTIMO CO. N. Mr St. Pbona fl ROBERT W ftUHU Bdltor. BBNC8T R- OIUJTRAP. U ana gar. Ao ladapaDtlaot Nawspapar. Kaira4 u aaeoDd-claaa matter t Ha4 tor, Oragoa, undar Aet of Mareb lilt. SUBSCRIPTION BATBS Ualttn A A vandal I Daily, epa raar II M Dallr. alt moo the S-11 Pll7, ona month . hf Carrlar. in Advanea Mart ford, Aab land. Jaekaonvtlla, Ciotril PotoL Pboaats, Talant, Ootd HUI and as btsbwara. DftUr, ona raar M-tO Oallr. ! mootha Pally, ona mootb All tarma, eaih la advaoca. Official raptr of tUa City of Uttor4 OfflalaJ Pair of Jatkftoo CoQfttj MEMRBB OVTBI AHHtM lAIKIi PKBM cTUi roil iaaaao nirr iWTwi Tba Aaaociatad Praaa la asetualvaly an tltlad to iha uaa for publication of all atwa dtapatchaa eradltad to It or otbar wlaa eraditad to thla pa par, and ataa to tko local nawa pnbllahad baralo. All right for publication of apoetai dlapatohai haralo ara alio raaarod. MBUBBR OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS Advartlalni Rapraaantatlvai O((lo. to New Tork. Ohlc.io. Detroit, t.a tVenolieo. Los Angolas, Beettla, r rtlsiM. St Uaula. Atlanta, Vsncoover. P. C. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. This It the season of the yr whan the long of the wheat binder to beard In the rural areai, and neath an ardent July eun, the caet-lron eat of the same slnzles. All good tillers know how to leaien Its tor ridlty, and try slower, by the use of a sheepskin, hairy side up. The state police report trsffle con ditions are Improving. There are a number of autoltts who don't let their hind wheels know what their front wheels are doing. The metropolis has barred lady wrestlers. As yet no move has been launched to launch a sympathy strike for the working girls. ... The trans-Polar flight of the Soviet filers, It hailed aa "bringing Rus sia nearer." This don't make sense to those who hold vehemently Rus sia Is much too near already, The deer sesson opens September M. after which editors will writ flawing descriptions about the spread af the horns, Instesd of Juiciness of the hams. . t The expense Incurred by the naval starch for Amelia Earhart continues to stir long absent notions of thrift In congressmen. All of a sudden spending haa become abhorrent to s group who have sanctified the spending of billions. In wayt that were gay and eeml-ldlotlc. The stnnd lacks alncertly, and smacks of the publicity they accuse the air hero ine of seeking. Next the august body anil be denouncing the phonograph, because of their own talking. J. Prank Wortman. the Phoenix fmsrmsr, called yesterday In his over alls. A year ago he was anises for Roosevelt and the New Deal, but bow he burnt only for William Jen Blngt Bryan. ... NOT MUCH THIS MATTER. (Woodland (Calif.) Democrat) "To many a busy aoul thtt eternal clatter of the radio Is enictflxlon. It diverts those who are trying to read. It makea the neighbors Jumpy who are trying to rest. It breaks Into sleep. It wakes the bsby. It de stroys pesce In msny a neigh bor's household. It Is a eursa and an abomination In the sight of ths Lord." . Disgust with ths Portlsnd Cham ber of Commerce wss expressed yes terday on the. street corner by a statesman. It being alleged the In stitution wss striving to deprive the spesker of electricity from Bonne ville dam. It's about 390 mtlea by blind bsesagfe, and a kind-hearted motorist's gasoline to the object of this wrath. It's something of a Job tor an abused eltlren to whet up bit hster, so It will carry that far. ... "The lull between haying Is on and every farmer Is scrambling to get his shsre of the wster, or more then his shsre." (Dixie (Ore.) Jot tlngt) The mesn afterthought. ... The outdoor addict, who Journeyed to the hills garbed only In a bath-Ing-suit has returned, ss brown as a nut, ... LOW OPINION (l!W! VINTAOr.) "But thla csndtdate, who you will notice learned his trade of sophistry in this hall, stuffs his hand Into his bresst pocket and proclaims himself the men of virtue whom the gods love for these opinions he holds. Oentlemen, when 1 was elect ed to this conitress I had htgh Ideas ef statesmanship and duty to my country, for I hud read of a certain Randolph, a Calhoun, a Clay and a Webster. But my reslgnstlon nss been given In. I have also read of Ansnlss and Judas lacarlot. As 1 look about me, Mr. Speaker, upon yourself and this house full of liv ing lungs and palsied consciences and fraudulent designs on the con gressional Record, I am filled with glsdness that I go before 1 myself get Into the green-goods wsy. When I am fsr away I shsll think of you. and the more I 'think of you, the better I shall like Jess James." (Cong, Record.) Did Bill White liriLLIAM ALLEN WHITE of Emporia, Kansas, guggesta Mayor La Guardia of New Tork be the Republican candi date for President in 1940. To which the Oregonian, stepping on jtt new verbal super charger, deposes in its moat sprightly fashion: Phooeyl for Mr. White's 1936 selection. Phoney I for his selection for 1840. slay It not be suggested respectfully that Mr. Whits stand back and let somebody else tee off for the Republican party In 1M0 There) are only a few of us left. There were, aa was mad manifest In November, and Just prior to the Ides thereof, only a comparative few of us Isst year. But at this time last year w were all spraining our necks and bursting our galluses In a concerted effort to convince ourselves and othr folks that In Mr. Lsndon w had the one man belt qualified to confuse the nemy, confute th persusslons of th fsls prophet and finally to tit In the Whit House and bless this people of ours with an administration of wisdom and benignity. Mr. Whit had told us that th man of hit choosing oould do all that and we were trying to make ourselves a enthusiastic aa he was. If tvsr th Repubncsn party engaged In a campaign of utter futility; if ever it labored to fit a square peg Into a round hol. It wss In 1836 whsn It rallied behind the campaign of Mr. Lsndon for president th Mr. Landon who waa Mr. Whit' gift to hi party, Mr, Lsndon lacksd Just about everything that a presidential candidate ought to hav except rumpled clothes and a nice family. K had those. He could not make a speech. His psrsonallty was a rspllca of that of a Caspsr Mllquetosst. He had some sound and progressiva Ideas, but, for th most part, hs 1st bis kitchen cabinet talk him out of giving them utter ance except very feebly and Infrequently. He let our president, who was, and la, th very prima donna of political "It" demon strators. Inveigle htm Into a public meeting with him, and Mr. Landon wis shown up Ilk a last year's bonnet at a spring millinery opening. When h took to radio the air Itself wilted like a cornstalk la a duatbowl drouth. Well confession is good for Mimes observing the strange heartily commend the Oregonian Republican campaign of 1936 and its candidate. It adds materi ally to the fund of humor, that the goofey game of politics provides. A ND it Mr. White DID choose Qovernor Landon as the " Q.O.P. standard-bearer and DID tell the Oregonian, or any one else, that "Alfy" was tbe one man best qualified to knock F.D.R. for a loop and a goal ; then the official spokesman for that party in Oregon is entirely justified, in giving Bill's second choice the well known guished Emporia editor to jump DUT, unless the present writer did neither of these things. Like the Oregonian the Emporia Gazette supported the Republican party and its candi date, and did the best it could for both during the campaign. But from the time the Republican convention opened, until the last day of the campaign, "W. A. W." displayed no REAL enthusiasm for either. He couldn't. He knew too much about both. DILL WHITE was devoted to Governor Laudon, he had known him since he waa a boy. He respected him, he had a deep fatherly affection for him. Moreover the entire Landon family had been staunch supporters of the Emporia editor, in every political reform he had advocated, in Kansas, for many years, and with one of them a presidential candidate of his own party, he oould do no less than aid and support him, in every way. BUT if Alf Landon was ever Mr. White's personal choice for president: if he ever thought him the "white haired boy" that could defeat Roosevelt, and successfully lead this country to higher and better things, he certainly never intimated as muoh at the Cleveland convention. No, quite the reversol It was John D. M. Hamilton, and the hurrah boys from Topeka, who strutted their stuff for their favorite son, at the Republican convention. Bill White when not engaged in writ ing the platform, sat somewhat wearily on the side lines, and rather like a Gettysburg veteran watching some school children play soldier, observed their vociferous charges and counter marches, with smiling compassion. No doubt to this day, John D. M. believea he put Landon over, but for him and his high powered salesmanship, it would never have been done. But like many other go-getters, "intoxi cated by the exuberance of their own verbosity" John was mistaken. GOVERNOR LANDON was nominated, not because of the Kansas delegation's aggressiveness and enthusiasm, but simply because no better and stronger candidate could be found. Outside of Kansas no one wanted Landon. But they decided to take him not because he was so good, but no one was better. In fact from Hoover through Vandenburg to Knox, all of them, at the time of the convention looked worse. So from the start it was Landon. No Bill White was needed to put him over. No Bill White or combination of them could have stopped him. He was a "natural" not due to his own eminence but the flatness of the surrounding country. No presidential candidate in recent history in fact has ever been more clearly the deliberate choice of the delegates asscm. bled, than was the case of Governor Landon a year ago in Cleveland. TT is easy to as it is unf see the mistake to do with it than Jim Farley not as much perhaps, for Jim's unfortunate phrase about the "typical prairie state" was quite factor in it. (The delegates believed they had to have a liberal from the corn belt to win, it is plain now if they had chosen a militant conservative, and not attempted to straddle the fence, they would have done better they couldn't have done worse.) Therefore and to-wit: The Oregonian, in condemning Mr. White's second choice, because of his first, is guilty of what our lawyer friends might term an error in fart and a non acquit or. Bill White didn't elioosc Governor Landon, as a friend, a fellow Kansan, and a loyal Republican, he merely accepted him. And we can think of nothing more effective in clinching that point than the fact that he now chooses Mayor Guardia of New York, who will be about as acceptable to the true Landon supporter, aa two barrels of buckshot to a rabbit 1 SAI.KM. July 91. (41 Russell Hngv, Hfrgusrd, saved Winifred Mann. 1J, from drowning Tuesday after she Choose London? the soul, as well as for the Comic antics going on below, so we for its frankness regarding the razzberry, and telling the distin in the lake, and keep still. is greatly mistaken, Mr. White made now. But it is as foolish had sunk twice In the Wlllsmelte riv er. A flrct eld car squsd administered oxygen treatments. Personal Health Service By William signed Utter pertaining to peraaoaj Health and Hygiene, not to disrate diagnosis or treatment, will b answered by Dr. Beady if stamped sell addressed envelope is enclosed. Latter should be brief and written In ink Owing to th Isrg number of letter receive only a few caa be answer! No reply can be msds lo q aeries not conforming to Instructions Address Dr. William Brady. fU El Caaaloo, Utterly. Calif. WHERE DID YOU GET THOSE (nam your color) EYES? It used to perplex me to hear peo ple say a person had blue. gray, brown or black eyes, before X learned that all eyes are brown. I am not color blind. 1 know now that when you look Into certain eyes you 1 o con sciousness for a moment and be- you begin multl-; plying 31 mesls a week by 63 meaU a year, stc thess ara what th auto license bureau calls brown eyes. And so It goes; with a little observation and application one can learn in time to recognize three or four dlf- ferent "colors" of eyes, although ac tually all eyes are brown unless they are colorless albino. Take my eyes, for example. I hav brown eyes, Ilk everybody els whose eyes are any color at all. But I go all to plecea when I am required to state under oath what color my eyes are. It was even worse when I had to testify about the color of my hair, but that Isn't of much mo ment now. Just to show how little alleged eye color means, I have- d scribed my eyes from year to year ea brown, blue, gray, black, greeu, hazel and I believe I might get by If I called them red, orange, yellow, Indigo or violet. You pays your li cense fee snd takes your choloe. The so-called "color" of eyes de pends upon the amount and distri bution of the brown pigment In the Iris. I say brown pigment because It la Invariably and essentlaUy browu and no other shade or color. If there happens to be but little pigment, the IrU fcppesrs blue like a clear, deep lake. If there la more pigment It looks gray; If still more It looks brown, like a river at flood. If the Iris Is heavily pigmented the eyes are "black," actually dark brown. In various shades of so-cslled "blue" eyes the pigment In the Iris Is confined to the deep or rear sur face, and light la reflected from the pigment cells through the translu cent tissue of the cornea and sclerotic coverings of eyeball. In "gray" or "hazel" or "brown" eyes the pigment la more thickly distributed through the front of the Iris. The Iris Is the colored ring sur rounding the black central dot or disk cnlled the pupil of the eye. The UQMcintvre NEW TORK, July 31. More find more am established writers In New York MektntT adventure In serenity elsewhere. Greenwich Village, once a haven (or the a e r 1 b biers, hss few Illustrious left on Its roster. Gramerey Park, another rendez vous Is almost desolate of liter ati. All a o r t a ' of writing colonies are burgeoning along the Con necticut country aide, where so many are finding residential escape from the extraordinarily burdensome state Income tax laws of New York. Recently Frederic F. Van de Water, long city-bound, burst from his co coon. He. like Faith Baldwin and hun dreds of othen, went back to the land, bought an old Colonial house to refurbish, and thrilled to fixing It up. He happened to like a strip of land near Brsttleboro, Vermont, snd In taking It over struck "pa.r dlrt" with the first swing of the pick That la, he found material for a magazine piece on the feud between Rudyard Klpltng and hts brother-in-law that made a big first payment on the house. And then sat down and wrote an excellent book on hut experience In finding a home In the country, Newspapermen who Journey to Washington, as well as those sta tioned there, hare a genuine affec tion for Vice-President John Garner. He Is a rare combination of garrul ity and tact. He will talk on any subject at length, but afterward the reporters find thst on Important questions he has told them nothing He likes a good story, even a ribald one, and has plenty on tap himself of the sort that crackle with the drawling wit of the Texas pampas. Wltl Rogers, who should know, used to say that one of the keenest wlta In America waa Harnett Blakely of Horn ton. a rancher. Blakely. wiry. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- mtbnl Gftttl-Ari T 1 hm Oil W M h Ifct Mwmf Kan' to & Ti Vtr wild iwir mj twa ytmnAt l Hqutri Mr Into u" boUdtlr. If ihUbit t nt rtowtnt f rK. rur food don t ijtrt II )ut dvv IB th? bowvlt. MM UC ymir totnarh. Yoo T fnttiptd. .out whoU iMtw ta fMln. and na i link and th worM Vook ruok. ltitWM ar ontjr makwhlfta. A .Sow', fnortrtTit didn't tt at h H mVM th- pd, eld CifW'i tHita I'lIU to tt thw two round! of nil? fttnc f fe-ly and mikf von t "up and 'ii". Harm finti. t amaiift In makmi V r-lv. Ak for Cartor't L.ttl Llr Pi" tama. Stubborn!? ttfuH an) thinf alia, i4 hi. I. Brady, M. D. Iris la chiefly muscle, aom of tho muscl fibres being circular and con tracting or narrowing the pupil when they contract; other fibres being ra dial, like the spokes of a wheel, and when these contract th pupil Is wid ened or dilated. Th Irla responds to various stim uli, contracts and makes the pupil smaller In bright light: relaxes or di lates and makes the pupil larger In fore you come to ; dim light or dsrkness; relsxes and you may loss al-j makes th pupil larger (to admit most anything more light) when the eye regards people call them J anything at a distance: contracts blue eyes. 1 1 when the eye regsrds anything a few know, too, that Inches away. Various amotions af when you look feet the size of the pupils fear dl into other eyes late them, for instance. Various drugs may dilate or contract th pu pil. Finally, th general state of health or nutrition determines the size of th pupils. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Silver and Smoking.. Tears ago you told of painting the throat with a silver solution aa an aid in breaking the smoking habit. -(J. L.) Answer Send atamnerf nvlnn bearing your address, for Instructions for breaking the tobacco habit. Dally use of a very weak sliver nitrate solu tion helps In some esses. Why, be a sissy in tne xiret place? Thirst. Pleas give your advice about drinking water In very hot weather whether Ice water or warmer water la better, how much one may drink wnen very thirsty, whether It Is wise to drink near mealtime, and whether other beverages are better than water. (W. F.) Answer Water cool enough to be agreeable I best, and that Is gener ally around 60 degrees or a little less. Drink aa much as you want whan you are thlraty. Water Is generally better than any other beverage to rellev thirst. If you are sweating much, It I advlssbl to take a good pinch of salt with every drink of water you will find this more re freshing than water alone. . Ask Father, He Knows. My father claims soda pop Is harm ful. I claim It isn't. Please tell me which la right. (R. p.) Answer In my Judgment, fresh fruit Juice beverage, sweetened as you like, are mora healthful than carbonated drinks. (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D.. 266. EI Camluo, Beverly Hills, Calif. leather tanned, saddle - bowed and with a prairie squint, has a sense of humor as dry as the native alkali, and his stories always convulsed Irvln Cobb and Paul Wh item an on their visits to Houston. A college man snd a sharp trader, he professed to be unable to read or write and talked In the Idiom of the ranch house. But when necessary he could discuss any toplo Intelligently, A group of the Palace Sunday night vaudeville fans eddied Into the back waters of one of those boring teat the other afternoon and to stifle the ennui began to formulate the ideal two-a-day program out of the haloed past. Finished, It ran something like this: Opening March, "Caesar's Tri umphal." Overture: Victor Herbert's "Al Fresco." Act 1: Lonjr Tack Sam and company. Chinese acrobats. Act 4S H6N MS 24 'MtlSS GAllON ON NORM A I M6HW4YS" -Soyi RALPH D. SARVER Billings, Montana "To say that wi srf glad wechangcd to Chry sler would be puttingit mildly ! The Chrysler Royal it the finest automobile 1 ever owned or drove! "In the Rockjr Mountain region where grades tre long, with innumerable switchbacks the Gold Seal engine gives us 1 8 miles per gal lon. Under more favorable conditions, I have obtained as high as 14 miles per gallon. I never have to add oil between changes. "Our big, roomy Roytl takes curves as if they were ttraight-aways . , . glides along without sound or effort . . . gives 1 grand feeling of sta bility and safety. For economy of operation, road tbilitv and comfort, it it simply unsurpassed!" BnsBaeeQaeBaBasssefi 38 NORTH RIVERSIDE 3: Bert Pitsglbbona. th original daf fodil. Act a: Harry Pox and Yand DoUy. Act 4: Herb Williams, "Hark, bark, hark!" Act. 6: Pat Rooney and Marlon Bent. Act 6: Melville and Hlgglna, Rube comedy duo. Act 7: Sarah Padden In The Clod." Act 8: George Writing and Badle Burt. Act S: James Barton. And -for the dot ing. Th Zonelll Indian club swing ers. Yet In skimming over the llneuc we nave left out many favorltea. For Instance: Sam Chip and Mary Mar ble. Nat Wills, the tramp comedian. Julius Tannen, th chatterbox mono log 1st. Sophie Tucker, Mabel Kite, Collins and Hart, comedy acrobats. Eddie Leonard, the minstrel. Blossom Seeley and Benny Field, and. Oh. yes, almost forgot, Marshall p. Wilder and Marahal Montgomery. Many interior decoratora took lu depression slack by decorating bars. In the new order of decor every bar must be distinctive to attract trade. II Morocco hit a high not with Its ae bra atrlped divans and - the Stork Club with It pink and black tones The artist who has decorated most of the fancy ban la Vernon MacFar lane. A survey shows that lighting effect which have been moat flat. terlng to women have resulted In the greatest success. Bars used to strive for appeal solely to masculinity but things chsnge. Mercy Sakes Alive, how they change 1 (Copyright. 1937. McNaught Syndicate. Inc.) (Continued uom Page One.) ed for doing what's perfectly legal today participating In labor activi ties. Now he considers his Job stop ping strikes, not prolonging them, and he has by no means lost the confidence of the workers, either. He's solved the problem of serving two masters he can often get a better bargain for both employer and employe than either could get alone. Uncle Sam as a demon rum dis tiller, la seeing things on the walls. Not pink elephants, say the folks with their eye to the bunghole of the Virgin Islands' rum barrels, but handwriting In red Ink. Not that government house rum Isn't good. But It Isn't smart, ssy the epicures. And it Isn't the sins of the spirit, either, but the body. The body ol the rum. It's too heavy for the ef fete American taste, is the criticism of the critical. Apparently, the dis tillers followed an old proverb and went wrong. They thought It wasn't wise to try to teach an old rum hound new . tricks, so they made their product well, but not so wisely. They recreated the beverage of the type that gave old Admiral Grog his reputation, put the punch In rum punches and made rum sauces saucy In the bad old days before prohi bition. But tastes, it seems, have changed. Palates have become frivolous and lighter minds and morals of the post war era demand a lighter body. These are the sober facts. As usual, figures conceal the story. And the official distillers don't ad mit It openly. (Imports of the G. H. rum for May were only a little over $5000 less than April, and welt above the prevloua months.) Nevertheless, say the eye-to-the-bungholers, the government Is in a rather tough spot. It must either put on an Intensive advertising campaign to sell the ancient virtues of the fluid that made Ten Nights "SMARTEST LOOKING . . . EASIEST TO DRIVE!" ... tI . Chrysler Royal for its smtrt distinction in appear ance and its remarkable qualities of riding comlort and easy handling. It is the most effortless car to drive I have ever seen ... so quick and re sponsive ... to easy to steer ... so easy to park ... so eay to stop." MISS MARY AllCC FOIIft, lerthaieM. N. Y. LANGE MOTOR CAR In a Barroom possible (and profit able) and probably draw down an other volley from th W. C. T. 0 or face expensive alternation. Th latter would mean switching to the frivolous Might bodied" stuff thst eoes with hors d'oeuvrea and olives on toothpicks, Instesd of the kind that floated a thousand anipa, . 4 Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from th files of tbe Mali Tribune Id and to years sru- TEN YEAR AGO 50DAY July II, 1927. (It waa Tuesday.) Mr. and Mrs. Allison Moulton re turn from a camping trip on the Illi nois river. Rattlesnakes plentiful In the rura: districts. - Tourist travel In city and to Crater lake shows steady Increase. Traffic offlcera stsrt campaign against speeding on Crater Lake high way. Betting odds two to one that Jack Sharkey wilt beat Dempsey in title battle Thursday night. Marines In Nicaragua report more fighting expected with bandits. Mid-west farmers continue drive for farm aid bill before congress. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 21, 1917. (It wss Friday.) German relchstag adopta paaee res olution. , John.Perl arrested for having noz zleless hose on lawn. He declares he wilt go to jail before he will pay a fine. Mutiny In Russian army on Oah clan front reported. A heavy pall of smoke hangs over the valley due to numerous forent f DOWN-TOWN K HOTEL DflflKE-UJILTSHIRE STOCKTON STREET AT UNION SQUARE CofiucHieHf to Every Point ojjntertst 250 newly decorated rooms with bath and shower and many with panoramic view EXCELLENT COFFEE SHOP Rates from $3.00 Single $3.00 Double CEORCB T. THOMPSON Mansgini Director NVAVtS THS LOW-PHtaj FFlp row-see voueiNS lu... ma, shoal souirMtNv axvaa EASY TO BUY! t. M, cmi., a.i m, It tom-erint can. Win ta amttt.r Colt SnI nr... it cm rn? Unit f Hr ne.nlrat m ite Ac official CoamirlaieiMtt Coeip... tin, Mriam rlao. OCHSYSLt ROYAL . . . eve.. sie. ru TmH,t im.a. tors. r.rM Mr mn. chstsuh iMrraisi. .. . c,.. sioio. r,,.ooo,w.! w.. .nM. Mk., M CH.YSlr. CUSTOM IKPF IL . . . t I tp tVn. Srf,. lw ,JM CH.YM ri Ain.ow. . . t.r.w s.. cmt,. t.io. .;, r , Mtnnt .r. la VmM. wlrt Irtml a.. harm, n. ,m t j,ilr MM A., -o-Mna.). T. ,m:. trt i, top,T M MW . . . W tt t nra ,1 u... IW rrr. ! it .rt. k- H lk ,, t, (, ea Mater trn CstiBaeta Wwt two rSwasar. Its ! at.tsitera DavUfM V,t. niininiiii...TT . fires. Blazes In th Prospect district brought under control. Copeo power lines across Siskiyou ara crippled by unknown vandals. Road to Crater lake la now free of snow. CRUISE itte lot a thrilling set vacation tail to Australia and New Zeiiind. ..where winter is turn. mer...where strange animals, and primitive bushmen auk their last stand next doot to great modern citici. Co by tie Gnu tan-Australasian lint, with visits to f HONOLUUl. AUCKLAND (A SYDNEY. MELBOURNE snd V x You'll enjoy ever moment aboard the newly refined "Airanp' or go on tbe "NiagtM" both ships are built for cruising tropical waters. Regular sailings from Vancouver snd Victoria B. G, with lurfrisinilj hw nund-trip snf... 1st Oasst Cabin Class snd 3rd Ctais. Ask YOUR OWN TRAVEL AGENT tot details, sod Information about all-inclusive toun...cr at our local offices-W. H. DEACON, Gen'l Agent Pass'r Dept., 626 S.W. Broadway (American Bank Bldg.) BR. 0637, Portland. . CO. PHONE 18 bwhu mmc ruvtutn caiotia uoo raTffHuiovr Baaw