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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1938)
PXGESTT MEPFOTOD WATL TRTBTTNE, MEDFOTtD, OREGON. SUNDAY. JTTLT SI. 1938 Medford. UNE "vet-rone Is tfoothm Oregos) BMda lb MaU TrlbaM." Dally forest tontoj. ' ' UttUFURD PRINTINO CO. I.-1TJ. N rit St. PhoM fl RUBER! W. RUHU Bdltor. RNE8T R OILBTRAP. Un.f. An lD1pB(lDt Newspaper. Bound moodA-iu matter at lled ford. Orcfoa. aartet Aflt nf tlareb I. (ill. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Mali In Arlvincat DsJlr. one r Dally, ill month! ITI Dally, on month . nirriir. id Art vanee Msrlford. Aan land. Jacksonville. Central Point, phoooix. Talent. Gold Bill ano" Dally, one roar... . . Dally. months. Dally, on month All ttrmi oah In ulruta OfflrJaJ Pane- ol the City ot Med ford. OfflflaJ Ppr of JarkwiB Ooontv- JKMHEK Of rHB AHAOnATBU PHKaS Rr1v1n mil iaim wir bwtic ' Th A'ocislf1 Prow IS I0lus1vsl) as tltlort 10 the no (or publication of all n dlsptichM crsHtsA to it or otbor wis oraflltafl to this oapor, and aloe to too local nwi publish art h train. All rights tor publication ot special dlapaiohaa haroln ara alao raaarvod. MEMBER OF UNITED PR BBS BtKMRBR or AUDI! BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Adrsrtlflnir rtsprsssnUtl wm Offlaaa la Nw rork. i.'hlo.so, Dttrolt, Ban VrtnolMO, Los Ansel... ScatHa, rortlaaa. t- Leals, Atlanta, Tiuoitw, B. C, . . Member OryqwspapeWbfe Ye Smudge Pot II? Arthut Perry. Th now fall hata for the fair ex have showed up, leaving an opening for feline comment by male critics. Rcsfdenta of O.hill will start rail ing whlekera Monday, for th North west Jackson county fair, Sept. 10. It will be a contest, and a few of the womenfolks are reported to have put In a kick. Constable Young, B. Orenbremer, 8. Brown, and B. Coleman suppered with Hermy Of fenbacher of the Appiegate Wednesday. They gnawed j the If stive roasting ear. I The coming week la Clean-TJp , FUiral Mall Boxes week. Nlon Tucker; of the Upper Rogue has a neat1 looking rural mall-box. The purpose of the week is to cause country . folk ft to take more pride In their . mall-boxes, even If they don't get letters with checks In them. The work of fixing Jackson street and Tenth street has started, and when finished gives promise of be ing among the leading speedways. The forest fire smoke that clung to the valley like a brother, or a December fog. was wafted away In mid-week. . The 'Guess Who contest closed Bat. night. Everybody who looked like he had ever been guilty of committing a mustache waa ac cused. Several local democrats have an nounced their conscience will never let them swallow, a couple of their own leading candidates for high of fice. School houses are being cleaned up for the opening of school In September, when the sprouting of young Ideas will start. The tomato crop la coming along fine, even If Peoria BUI dates, haa to date, made no speech about their vitamins, beauty .and edibility. The Baptist church flock Is get ting after the 'sidewalk parking, and plan to make It look better than their lawn, which waa once a mess of tares. P. Luy. the Antelope cow-hand, was In town 17 times lat week, and never wore the same necktie twice. On one trip he brought In a gunny sack full of cucumbers, and took bark a head of cabbage. t The heat, and the cussing thereof, has moderated. John Torn! In Is back from Port land, where he shot a 93, or some thing. About 1.500 people were out Thu rs. and Frt. eve. squealing for their fav orite team tn a soft ball game. V. Brophy. who waa under the wrather for a time, la on top of It again. Fletch Fish, of Phoenix, the boom day tJ-nor, is wearing a buckaroo shirt. This Is what happens when a cltirrn associate with equestrians such as n. Brown and R. Btephen aon. a The president and a number of local piscatorial enthusiasts caught a fish lent week. Coon .Mills Re-Open NORTH BEND, July 30. (MM Two mills of the Coos Bay Lowing Company at Empire and on Slinpsou Heights will be reopened Monday with 145 men. The company closed down six weeks ago because of falling lumber market A Slim Chance IT is to be hoped the missing Hawaii Clipper, is found, and its 15 passengers rescued. But the chances are slim. When a large flying boat is equipped as this one was, with both sending and receiving radio, and that radio suddenly stops as it reports a storm, and isn't heard thereafter, It's olose to a hundred to one shot, that the trouble is extremely serious. t For barring a wrecking crash the Clipper could operate its radio, on the surface of the oceanN as well as anywhere else, And if It had been forced down safely anywhere near Manila, radio contact with some part of the world could, undoubtedly, have been maintained. Complete silence, for 36 hours, and the discovery of large quantities of oil on the water, near the spot where the Clipper was last reported is about as conclusive evidence of tragedy, as one could wish. Of course as was the case about a year ago with Amelia Earhart, there is no point in abandoning hope or giving up the search, But those who had friends on the Clipper would no doubt be wise to prepare themselves for the worst. Is F. D. Ra "Liar?" rHE Republican National Committee is preparing a pamphlet which will entitle President Boosevelt, to membership in his distant cousin's famous Ananias club. Well, all is fair in love and politics. And when it comes to self-contradiction, there has probably been no President in recent years who has a more damaging record to face than the present occupant of the White House. There are several reasons for this: President Roosevelt has talked more than any President in history; he has been more impulsive than any of his predecessors; and couditions have changed more dramatically and unexpectedly in his administra tion, than in any administration in recent history. As a result the record, properly prepared for the maximum political effect will undoubtedly look like the graph of the famous chameleon on the Scotch plaid, and result in much enthusiastic ribaldry in G. 0. P. ranks. We are not bo sure, however, about the political effect from an actus! vote-getting standpoint. IT was Ralph Waldo Emerson, a very wise gentleman, who said that "consistency is the hob-goblin of little minds." And we shall not be surprised if this is the popular reaction to this effort to make Franklin D. out a liar. It can be shown Mr. Roosevelt, at least by implication. promised to balance the budget and didn't do it. It can be shown he condemned large federal expenditures and high tuxes, when Hoover wa3 in the White House and then surpassed all records in both directions, when he took Mr. Hoover's place. It can also be Bliown he took credit for prosperity he "planned it thnt way" but when the Roosevelt depression came along, he accepted no responsibility and blamed Big Business. And much more evidence of like character can be adduced. BUT wo fear the reaction of the people of the country as a whole, to .all these charges will come tinder the goneral heading of "SO whatf " No doubt the President's views have changed, as conditions have changed, but whose hasn't I And no doubt President Roosevelt, has played polities, and placed the best possible construction upon what he and his party have done but what President WOULDN'T! From a literal standpoint the record may be a damaging one, but unless there is a decided change in the public psychol ogy, it is likely to accomplish little in impairing confidence in the President, or in destroying the conviction among the RANK AND FILE, that with all his faults, the President has their welfare at heart, and has never swerved in his determina tion to mnke this country a better place in which to live, for them and for their children. AND that is what counts. Not with history, perhaps, but contemporary judgment. It is the President's aims, rather than his actual accomplishments, his goal, rather than the precise route by which be chooses to reach it, that determines the immediate attitude of his constituents. In short as far as the verdict of mankind is concerned, he alone is untrue who is untrue to himself; he alone is false who is false in the SPIRIT. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. Hlrned letter, pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dlieae diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a .tamped aell addreswd envelope I. enclosed. Letter, should be brief sad written In ink. Owing to the large number of letter, received onljr a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, addres. Or. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Uererly Hills, Calif. POUKDINO THR PAVEMENT A reader who recommend, rubber tile floor covering for offices and home, asks whether I have discussed the subject of concrete, tile or cement floors with people who work In offices, factories or other buildings having concrete or ce ment tile floors. In a bank having some such com position flooring. He says every one In the bank complains about the fatigue from standing and walking on such a floor. There la a widespread popular be lief. X Infer from numerous Inquiries, that It Is a greater strain on the feet and legs to stand or walk on concrete or cement or composition tile floors than It Is to stand or walk on wood floors. Not only that, but many seem to think concrete-, cement or composition floors predis pose to "rheumatism" because they are "colder" than wood floors. It la true wood Is not a good con ductor of heat and concrete, cement, composition or real tile Is a fairly good conductor of heat, and so la linoleum or oil cloth. That Is why a wood floor feels warmer to the bare feet than these other floors or floor coverings do. Wood, paper, cloth hair, felt, leather, straw, cork and even rubber are good insulators, tending to prevent or retard transfer of hear. If the floor under the feet Is covered with one ol these Insulators tho effect la the same as tho the enttre floor were so covered. One need only wear Insoles of cork, felt or paper, or use a pnd or mat of any of these materials under the feet, to gnln the advantage of such Insulation. So far as fatigue Is concerned a wood floor haa no advantage over a tile, concrete or composition floor. People who complain that standing or walking on concrete tile or com position pavement or floor tires the feet and lega and back more thnn standing or walking on wood floors does are generally suffering with pro nated or weak feet, varicose veins or some constitutional weakness which 1 makes them mora susceptible to fatigue. In many Instances of weak or pro nated feet, the early stage of flat feet, the underlying constitutional weakness is a nutritional deficiency and to correct this a high calcium diet and an optimal ration of vita mins D, B and O should be taken. For Instructions, send a stamped en velope bearing your address and ask for pamphlet on High Calcium Diet, This reader work. "'j nd The v't"mln otciuuuy nccua. wuin Kmc sun shine vitamin D should be taken In one form or another In any condi tion where there la a fault In the assimilation of caiclum or with cal cium whenever calcium la taken to supplement the diet. Vitamin D is essential for the absorption and utili zation of calcium and phosphorus in the body. People with varicose veins suffer from aching feet and legs when they have to stand for Hours at work They should practice the hygienic measures described in the free monograph on Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcers send a three-cent-stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for It. They should try to He on the back with the legs elevated to or near the vertical for a few momenta many times a day. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS - Varicose Veins and Ulcers Can you suggest any help for a woman who Is practically disabled by enlarged veins and an ulcer on the leg? (Mrs. C. A.) ' Answer Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on Varicose Veins and Ulcer. Keep Hair On and DandrurT Off I am 32 years old and beginning to lose my hair. I fear. I have had thick greasy dandruff for several years and lately my hair Is falling a lot. (B. R.) Answer Send a three -cent -stamped envelope bearing your address, for monograph on Care of Hair and Con trol of Dandruff. (Copyright 1938, ohn T. DUle Co.) Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS WHEN a radio crooner, campaign ing with a hillbilly band and using the Ten Commandment, for a platform, swept Texa. like a prairie fire the other day, getting more votes for the Democratic nomination for governor than hi. -- opponents com bined, this WTlter was Interested. Either (be reasoned) the state of Texas has gone screwy, or this fellow O 'Daniel has more to him than meets the eye at a distance. LATER developments (Including pictures of CDejilel and his family and a candid dispatch written from Texaa a few daya before the pri mary by Erwln D. Canham, chief of the Washington bureau of the Chris tian Science Monitor) Indicate that the latter deduction may not be so far from the truth. O'Oanlel look, good in hi. pictures, and the Interview he gave to Can ham sounds as If he has business sense. in im ID 111 COST OF LUG CHICAGO, July 80. (P) Parallel ing a mild upturn of general food costs, prices of some meat cuta have risen slightly from near four-year low levels of earlier thla year, a market survey disclosed today. Gains for a few meats, ranging upward to as much as 18 per cent In the wholesale market during Ju.. appeared mostly In best beef, veal and pork quotations. Most poorer grade cuts and all lamb prices have declined. Livestock market experts said the trend In meat reflected a general stiffening of food costs. This spring the cost of feeding the family waa the lowest In almost four years, hav ing dropped sharply since September. 1937, when It waa the highest in six years. Pood costs- touched the low point In March. f Flight o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of tha Mall Tribune 10 and 10 year. aro. TEN YEARS AGO TODAT July 81. 1028 (It was Tuesday) Balmy weather Is promised fof state Legion meet opening Thursday. Terrible Turk throws Bull Mon tana In grudge battle at the Arm- A down small forest fires am raging In Jackson county. State prohibition agents arrive to catch violators during Legion convention. Jack Dempsey. former heavy king, may try a come-back. ASKED by the correspondent a what he regarded as most Im portant In his campaign, he refrained from striking an attitude and ans wered simply: "To a 10-year radio build-up, try ing to sell flour." In those ten years, he must have learned ti-.e first principle of sound advertising and good business, which Is that you can't CHEAT YOUR CUS TOMERS and continue to get their trade. A lot of the politicians 'haven't learned that yet. They still think the thing to do Is to kid the public along. Ed Note: Per-ons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady ahoiild send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. I).. 265 El Camlno, Beverlv Hills, Calif. Man About Manhattan By OtOKUE TUCKEB Lets Have the Facts THIS column seconds the motion for a conyresMounl probe of federal relief, by a non-partisan committee. Moreover we would like to see the chairman of that commit tee, Senator Horah of Idaho. In the expenditure of any such astronomical sums, as federal relief has handled, a certain amount of waste is unavoidable. But outright corruption and graft are NOT. Nor should the use of relief funds for political purposes be tolerated. We would like to see a thorough investigation of the entire matter, without fear or favor, and all the cards available placed on the table. Our own opinion is there has heen deplorable waste and ineffieiencr, but little if any actual graft. We may be mistaken in this, but in lieu of evidence to the contrary this is our strong conviction. Under an able, impartial and fearless investigator like Sena tor Borah the truth could be found. To determine the truth, as far as it is humanly possible, and thus put an end to the charges and counter-charges, the suspicions, innuendoes and insinuations, being bandied about from pillar to post, would be good for the administration of relief, for the people who need relief aud for everyone concerned. Penn nets Road Coin WASHINGTON. July 30. (API The public works administration and the reconstruction finance corDora- Wtnrla Iteer Curfew tion inlntlv aDDroved todav S5S 000.- ASTORIA. July SO. (AP)-Astor:a's: ooo of federal loans and srant. for beer drlnkera shut down last nleht j Ule ,n construction of Pennsylvania's at 10 p. m. as a newly-en.cted city I nfW all-weather hVhw.v. ordinance went into effect suttlr f the closing hour of beer parlor, from Cluain. time (oi roo Lata to Clas t 1. m. to 10 p. m. I airy Ada u 1 .30 p m. Probe Subway Plea WASHINOTON. luly 30. (AP) Administrator Harold L Irkea appointed a special board of engineers today to Investigate and report with in 80 daya on the leaslblllty ot Chi cago's proposed 131.840.000 PWA sub way project. I'Uwiug ttm. (oi roo Lata to Clas sify Ads la 1 JO p to. town of 1200 people belongs In a novel, but I am not the man to put It there. To do that proper ly your grand father would have had to come from there Tor It Is an old town, with old trees, "trees that remember your gran d f a t h e r's name." It haa a manner and a way of thinking all Ita own. and while one might really come to It from constant association long time, you would never GEORGE TUCKER know after get It from asking hurried questions or from rending books, not it you read them a hundred years. Prom where I am writing this. which Is on the patio of Garden side, part of Boxwood Mnnor. you see people strolling the quiet paths. Others are on their way to the golf course, a mllo or so away. Still others are hurrying off to the bench, where they are sure of a fine swim and where they hope for one of those healthy suntans. It's a ninny thing about tans. Some people brown like Aztecs, but I only succeed In becoming red as a parboiled lobster. And then I pcol. problem for modern engineering. But this one was moved without harming the house In any way. And Its fireplace Is large enough to barbecue a -steer. I spent an hour going through those old rooms, listening to Its history, and an hour Isn't nearly enough. That's the way It Is with nearly everything up here. To a visitor Time is the greatest enemy. There Just Isn't enough of It to find out the things you want to know. A LITTLE later, OTJanlel said to his Interviewer: "Well, I may be licked at tho polls, but running for office sure !n good for the flour bus iness." Tl-at 1. a frank, honest statement. The aversge politician would hare contended that hla campaign was bankrupting him. but that he was bearing up under It bravely for the sake of the dear people. Thompson Creek This Boxwood Manor la an old resort that sprawls and rambles over acrra of ground. Its wt flower gardens and vegetable gardens are famous, and Sam. Its chef, has be come an Important personage to those who prefer their steaks Just so, and their lobster dinners with Just the right amount of "umpl" A block or so down the street Is a two story house, painted white with green shutters, which Is own ed by Mrs. Bertha Dougherty. It was built In 1710. One hundred and four veara later, that Is. In 1814. Ita ownera gave U away, "because It Is so old It isn't any good any more." Now. 134 years later. It is one of the loveliest examples of early Connecticut architecture found anywhere. There is a secret hide away in It used as one of the sta tions along the "underground" rail way for escaping slaves during the Civil war. Ita beams are hand-hewn from the trunks of oaks. It Is built with home-made nails, and ita raft ers are pegged together with stout wooden pln. THOMPSON CREEK. July 30. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy are building a house on their property, which Is known aa the Jim Men place. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mee are enter taining Mrs. Mee's cousins from Se attle. Te visitors are taking in some of the scenic spots of southern Ore gon, such as Crater lake and the Oregon Caves. Wiley Turnbaugh who has been 111. died at the dome of his daughter Mrs. Clint Vroman, July 32, and was burled In the Phoenix cemotery July 35. Mr. Turnbaugh waa formerly of Thompson Creek. Mrs. Ada Teske has been visiting at the home of friends In Medford the post week. Herbert Elmore visited hla mothei and sisters In Cottage Grove the past week. Mr. end Mrs. Tom Mee with family and relatives spent the week-end at Crescent City. Mr. and Mrs. Kurts and family Have moved to their place, which Is known as the Dr. Paulnetx place. Those attending Pomona at the Upper Applegate Grange. July 33, from Thompson Creek, were Mr. and Mrs. 8, L. Johnston, Eva and Albert D. Johnston and Jane Mason. Mrs, Clarence Gusaway entertain ed aa guests, July 38, Lydla and Eva Johnston. The Andy Mee house Is again oc cupied, this time by Mrs. Mee's nephew.- Tears ago they moved this house from Its original site, and to ac complish this they had to wait until winter, and put it on log rollers, and have oxen drag It over the ice. They dragged It for miles, and then the Ice went out. and the oxen had to hurry away to drag the felled timber out of the for ests. So the houfe Just sat there in the center of the road for a year, until the Ice came again, with the family living in It. And when the winter grew so sever that the oxen couldn't work in the forest any longer they came back and com pleted the tak of transporting the house. How t'ev d'd thi no one really qure knows, for moving a house ith a chimney Intact la still a The Grange Talent Grange Talent Orange met In regular ses sion with Master w. W. Roblson In the chair. Following ouslnesa session, a program was heard Miss Dorthea Borg was presented with a handker chief shower, prior to her leaving for aehool In California. As leader of our drill team and an active participant In other activities Miss Borg win b grestly missed by the Talent Orange, and all best wishes will follow her to California. After refreshments were oerred. dancing was enjoyed. Home Economics club entertained the Jacksonville H E C. recently. In the city hall at an afternoon con sisting of games and visiting Sher bert and cake were served following the meeting. In spite of the hot weather about 70 ladles were present and enjoyed the affair. AND His use of the Ten Command ments for a platform doesn't shock this writer ss much ss It might. If we had more of the Ten Commandments and less of tf-.e three-ring circus In our politics, It might be better for us. O'Donlel. of course, combined the two, but at least he stressed the Ten, Commadments, one of which Is: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." Most of the politicians, here ol late, have been teaching us to HATE our neighbor If he has a couple ol dollars more thsn we have. Let'e watch thla fellow from Texas. He may have something. 1 y COAST ROAD PLAN PORT ORFORD, July 80. (API Gilbert E. Gable, president of the Gold Coast Railroad corporation, de clared today his proposed road Is not dead. The projected Una would be from the coast to Grants Pass. He declared recent ICC decisions, which apparently were unfavorable to his rosd. actually "cleared the air" and expedited the project. "After the proposal to build from the coast to Granta Pass waa made, powerful Interests behind the Cres cent City route stepped In to threat en competition. Whereas, our road involved expenditure of between S4.000.000 and S5.000.000 thelra would have required twice aa much and would ha Invaded the territory we propose to serve. I feel thst dis missal of the Crescent City road for the first time opens the way for us." he said. Only seven states, Callfornls. Colo rado. Oelware, Indiana. Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania fl. thm beginning salary of teachers with iour years oi proressionai training at 1.000 a year or more. A plan which originated at Pro vidence college. R. L. of Insuring stu dents against falling examinations. Is to be adopted by students at Boston college. Prairie View college. Columbia. Princeton and University of California. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads Is 1:80 p m FALLING TREE CRUSHES BUILDINGS IN PROSPECT PROSPECT. Julv 30 (Spl Dur tng the rev-ent wind storm a tree broke off In the rear of Rube Moore". house and d"troyed his garage and woodshed. The crashing timber punched a hole In the top of his car. i Science says: "It's More Nutritious" .rlrntlflc experiments continue to ield a large quantity of fart on the superiority of Golden Guern sey milk. High In energy value, due to the extra butterfat, liolden (Suernsey has rich treasures below the cream line of minerals neces ant Is the body. More recent discoveries show Increased quan tities nf Vitamins A and C. The rich yellow rotor denote, carotene, the precursor of Vitamin A. Wing'i Cloverhill Golden Guernsey Dairy rhone S21-R-4 AMARILLO. Texas, July 30. Wl- A strip of paving extending from the Great Lakes across the range country, where Will Rogers forked a horse aa a kid cowpuncher, to the Pacific coast will be dedicated to the memory of the late humorist August 15, 16 and 17. For years a section across the Texaa panhandle divided the paved ends of U. S. highway 66. That was paved thl8 summer. The road has been of ficially designated as the Will Rogers highway, and a celebration, centering In Amarlllo but extending from Chi cago to Los Angeles, will honor the memory of the namesake. CLI.0. OFFERS PLAN PORTLAND. Ore., July 30. JP After a meeting In the office of City Commissioner Bennett today the C. I. O. Sawmill Workers' union of fered to remove their picket line from I the West Oregon sawmill If the j A. P. of L. would tear up Its union- shop contract with the mill. I The picket line has prevented load ing 3.500.000 feet of lumber on the schooner Chamberlln for tho las-t two weeks. Neither the mill manneement nor the A. P. of L. was represented at the conference. The proposal will be i transmitted to them tomorrow. i Wilson Democrats reported flock ing to Hoover banner In Texas and, other southern states. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAT July 31, 1018 (It was Wednesday) Germans hurled back on a ten mile front by British In Flanders. "Showers and1 cooler weather" pre dicted for valley. July was an u. ually cool month, reports show. Nine motorists who Ignored warn ing to fix their tall lights nabbed and fined $1. Harry Rosenberg leaves for Eu gene to enter an officers' training school. "My! My Myl" at the Rlalto; "Har Great Error" at the Page. GOVERNOR FLAYS SALEM, July 30. (AP) Governor Charles H. Martin today denounced action of tho Multnomah county Democratic central committee la sending out forms to certain state, employes "urging" they contribute) part of their salaries from July 1, 193B to January 1, 1039, otenslbly for campaign funds. I do not approve of this sort of thing unless the contributions ar voluntary.' he said. The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One ) tlon will raise. The answers will de termine how two more fundamental questions are to be answered should the Insurance business be federally j regulated? And should the business j be government-owned, at least In i part? In fact, the New Dealers plan to cell the biggest business men In the United States to the stand, there to defend business bigness. And, it the defense Is not to their liking, the New Dealers hope to act more dras tically than the American Govern ment has ever acted before. - "'"u Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted All ray life I've been a fish ing nut too But wouldn't take a Cruiser and all its crew. I'll sneak up on my fish in a modest way, Take MY chances in some secluded bayl Just give me my trusty Chevrolet car . . . And I'll find out where the big ones are! If I land any whoppers, you'll hear me shout . . . But if I get "skunked" you'll never find out Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Alain and Riverside Service Dept. 32 No Riverside Oert Cat Lot Riverside at 4th U3 LOMBARD -MacNIURR AY JOHN BARRYMORE lar -a. il A WISUV HUOOltS MODUCtlOM WITH Una Merkel-Lynne Overman Porter Hall-Edgar Kennedy in - ifiifitnii