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Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
The President hu agreed to
Third Term, if he can get it,
which seems doubtful, the way
ven Democrats arc Joining tht
movement to wean him away
from the white House.
...
Len Carpenter of the rawnch
act, who has been conspicuous
by keeping out of sight of late.
went north Wed.
...
S. Morris, the T-Rk. tiller, was
In town so many times last week.
It was news when he went home.
...
J. Wesley Bates, the tonsorial-
1st, la whacking chins again, but
doesn't show up until all the
bankers have gone to work.
...
Herr Hitler of "Germany ad
vised England Fri. to surrender
or the world would be destroyed,
but the same kept on rotating.
He stated he was guided by his
conscience, which hss done a
poor Job of guiding up to now,
...
Woodpeckers have started
drilling cupboards for their win
ter's grub, and are busier than
Chamber of Commerce secre
tary with a vest-pocket full of
fountain pens and lead pencils.
...
Peoria Bill Gates is a Softball
addict, and was present at the
abdication of the umpires Tues.
ve.
...
The weeds are now so tall In
some of the vacant lots, a fire
In their midst would bring out
the forest service.
...
Some of the fair sex are rush
ing the season a bit, and wearing
fall coats.
...
Your corr. mentioned the
opening of school In Sept. last
week, and made both kids and
their Maws mad.
...
Mike DeVore was down to the
meathouse during the week, and
by his capers caused his Grand
paw to break his own record for
loud whooping.
...
A copious while It lasted show
er fell Fri. pm. causing horticul
turists to fear hail.
...
Fiduciary depositories report
there are more spondulicks on
their hands now than ever be
fore. This Is a sign people have
quit burying their wampum back
of the henhouse, and putting It
In a fruit Jar, and forgetting
where they hid the fruit Jar.
...
Atty. H. Skyrman, et ux, are
back from the beach where they
partook of crabs, clams and
other denizens of the deep. Ev.
Brayton and boy were also fan
ned and tanned by the Pacific
breeres.
...
The Elks tom-cat showed up
again last week, looking like a
horse swapped in the middle of
a stream.
C.I.O. Tactics Hit.
San Francisco, July 20 (Pi
Charging C.I.O. lorushoiemei.
with "slowdown" tactics at Cos
Angeles harbor, the Waterfront
Employers' association has usk
d an Investigation by Wiyne
L. Morse, Pacific cnt long
shore arbitrator.
Chlttl on McNary
Salem. Ore.. July 20. (U.P.
A corriplalnt thBt private parties
are "chiseling In" on party reve
nue sources by soliciting Salem
merchants to purchase for 23
cents a window card bearing a
likeness of Sen. Charles L. Mc
Nary of Oregon, Republican
vice-presidential nominee, was
made today by the Marion coun
ty Republican central commit
tee. Sen. McNary wired Gov.
Charles A. Sprague that he had
not authorized Issuance of the
card
Editorial Correspondence
Chicago, 111., July 13. So this it another morning after ths
night before 1
Rut what a headache.
The "morning after," a few weeks ago in Philadelphia, one
had at least a sense of victory after a hard fight. A vicarious
sense of vindication and triumph. There was an unpleasant
physical reaction, but no unpleasant spiritual ones.
Quite the reverse thja cloudy, muggy morning, rooming
that somehow reminds your correspondent of that aoiled, sordid
and degraded Chicago of forty odd years ago.
In ths first place the expected happened, which is neTer
thrilling, in the Quaker City that hot night the expected
DIDN'T.
Hut it was not what happened, but the way it happened that
has the present writer down, deeper than the bottom of Crater
Lake.
And w. NEVER EXPECTED TO PEE IT1
Oh, not the nomination of "Franklin Delano Roosevelt" for
a third term, that, since our
foregone conclusion.
But a Democratic convention BOOING A SOLEMN PRO
NOUNCEMENT OP-THOMAS JEFFERSON, and the grand
old man who presented that atatement. Senator Carter Glass!!
Yes we never expected to see a thing like THAT. And we
hope we never shall see it a train !
"We don't know how audible those boot were over the air.
W do know they were extremely audible in our section of the
press gallery, for we had a seat at the extreme right flank of
that gallery, and just across the aisle from a loud mouthed and
louder dressed female, who at frequent intervals expressed her
emotions, favorable and unfavorable, with the assistance of
cow bell.
She waa aided and abetted by a gang of muscular males,
who may not have been members of Mayor Kelly' bodyguard,
but looked it, and were extremely proficient with cowboy yips
and yells, in favor of President Roosevelt and a third terra.
Moreover, they all had no patience with any threat of delay in
attaining this devout consummation, and woe betide the indi
vidual who attempted it.
So THAT was all they could see in this white-haired, little
old man from Virginia, who got up from a sick bed at the age
of 82, and with a voice so husky even the magic loud-speaker
almost failed to make it audible, presented the name of James
Aloysius Farley (and made, in the name of the man who until
this convention, had been regarded as the founder and patron
saint of the "great Democratic
third term, and in favor of religious tolerance and freedom 1)
That man was Thomas Jefferson.
What did this gang care for
terra tradition, Thomas Jefferson, or any other irrelevant con
siderations! They had come to that hall for one thing and one
thing alone, namely:
To aecure the nomination of a
spend the rest of the morning hours in good, old-fashioned
Chicago souse, so TO HELL with anyone or anything that
dared to halt, or even delay the proceedings ! 'and to hell with
Thomas Jefferson, the Bill of Rights, Carter Glass and anything
tnat saweu-olf little runt might
On with the boos and the cowbells, gala and bovs. let's make
that little runt scram I
They didn't succeed!
Had Hitler himself been there with all his gangsters, that
little package of courage and grit and fearlessness would have
stood hia ground until he had had his say, regardless of what
might nave been done to prevent
Ves, they give Congressional
to young men, full of vim and
Dame, wno ny aiott to take
men, equipped about as they are,
war are lucky enough to shoot
SHOT I
But here was an old man,
two decades beyond his prime, not facing one foe equipped as
he, but facing twenty thousand of them, with every resource of
a powerful party and a powerful government behind them,
and there he stood before that microphone to have his say, and
there he had his say, ALONE,
He will get no medals or citations, but he should get some
thing more important and more immortal, if not in Heaven, in
the hearts and minds of his countrymen.
Yes, that's the picture we have of the convention last night
that ended with the nomination
by acclamation for a third term,
And it's fsr from a pleasant
It's one we would like to forget but fear we never shall.
And one reason for that fear is that this incident really is
typical of the entire convention, even though the cheers for the
courageous warrior from Virginia, finally drowned out the cow
bells and the boos.
There in the foreground is Franklin Delano Roosevelt, trulv
a great President, but the background of that same picture is
supplied by Boss Kelly of Chicago, and hia underworld gang,
with their boos and their cow bells, determined by fair means
or foul, chiefly the latter, to see that President Roosevelt is in
the White House for a third term.
We find ourselves wondering
Those who find an answer to
also find an answer to this: Why the Democratic party in the
convention, breaking for the first time the unwritten law against
the Third Term, should hear that convention boo the principles
of Thomas Jefferson and his namet
Yes, it was a depressing and degrading spectacle, there was
something about it almost obscene.
Most of the noise made at that convention was made by peo
ple who were merely obeying orders from the most corrupt
gang that ever robbed a great American municipality, the
minions of the Kelly-Nash machine, who not only knew nothing
about the principles of Thomas Jefferson, but never had
HEARD of the man.
And one of the great statesmen of thia countrv, regardless
of party, making what will in all
public speech of his lifetime, in a passionate appeal for his party
not to take action that the party was determined to take, was
only regarded by them as a half-baked old dotard, who was
wasting their time and delaying their opportunity for an all
night souse and gangster good time.
Small wonder that President Roosevelt, a thousand miles
away, shoned no exuberance at hia nomination, but observing,
that THAT was THAT, allowed his attendants to escort him
to bed. Ami with thst unerring anil unfailing political instinct
of his he hss decided not to visit the convention, as he did the
two preceding ones, but to give his acceptance by remote con
trol, and allow Eleanor to have the local limelight and the
honors.
Were he to come here tonight, what a trseie anti-climax fur
his well-wishers and his loval friends! R.W.R.
Discard Park Nam.
Portland. Julv 20 .41 He-1
cause state parks In Oreeon are
named only for donors, a strip I
. j j a . f , .1
of land adjacent to the Kbmatn i
Falls - Lakeview highway will!
not he designated
' l.jke Coun
ly World
vYar Veterans'
Me
morial."
MEDFORD MAIL
visit to Washington had been a !
party," an appeal against the
religious tolerance, the third
man named ROOSEVELT and
have on his senile mind!
it.
Medals and Victoria Crosses
vigor, si-red by the thrill of
their chauces with other young
and who by the fortunes of
them down, instead of beinir
and a little one, far from well,
of Franklin Delano Roosevelt
picture.
WHY I Just WHTI!
thst, we are quite sure, will
likelihood prove to be the last
I Church Governor.
Woodburn. Julv 10 ,41
The committeemen to govern
the Church of God in Oregon
, , . . . . . . .
were selected rnday at tht; n-
null convention here. They
include: Ordination Rev. J. J
Gillespie. Sa'.em;
iLawson, Sslem.
rttv.
r..v
TRIBUNE, MEDFORD.
Personal Health Service
By William
igne Itttm pertaining te pmonsl kealtk ana kifl.ni, not to disease
lagnoelt a treatment, kill k answer ky Dr. Brad; If a stamp telf
addreete antelope Is enclose. Letters .hernia be krtef an written la ink
Owing In the Urge numbers of letters receive only a few can ka immrfS.
Ha reply ran ke nuclei to queries not conforming te Interactions. A4drea
Or. William Kraut, MS El Online. Beverly Mill. Calif.
PRACTICE Of
My great secret ambition, to
engage in privite practice as
prophylactor, that is, to limit
my p r c tice
to preventive
m e d icine ex
clusively, bav
I n g been
thwarted b y
the quaint at
titude of the
medical pro
fesslon which
does not even
now recognize
such field of
practice as a
legitimate spe
cialty.
Every year or so soma reader
writes to thank me fore some
thing I said In this column
which warned or alarmed him
or her, with the result that
he or she sought proper med
ical examination or treatment
and caught some serious mal
ady In time. On the other
hand, Just as often I am penal
ized for having scared some
body into hurrying to his or
her doctor for examination,
only to discover that the trou
ble is not serious after all.
Now people who express ap
preciation or thanks for instruc
tion or advice I have given
through this service sometimes
intimate that they wish they
might consult me re?ular!y in
private. That is flattering, but
from what I know of human
nature I doubt there are enough
people of that mind to support
a specialist who might elect to
limit his practice to that field.
People In general need a
good deal more education be
fore private practice ct pro
phyxasis or preventive medi
cine will become feasible. As
yet, far too large a portion of
the population, even the more
Intelligent class, prefer to gam
ble with health, trying this or
that remedy or treatment on
the suggestion of friend or
stranger who "had the same
trouble."
A formidable obstacle to the
private practice of preventive
medicine Is the traditional rev
erence of the medical profes
sion for pathological anatomy,
organic disease, the suns of
gross structural change produc
ed by disease; and the corre
sponding contempt for and neg
lect of pathological phyriology,
functional disease and the sub
jective symptoms produced
thereby. Necessarily the pri
vate prophylactor would con
cern himself or herself almost
wholly with functional disturb
ances or irregularitler, with
symptoms
How many persons who are
now subject to pre-atabetes will
discover their condition in time
Alsop-Kintner
At Chicago
Campaign Start
Seen On Low
Politic Level
Chicago, July 20. The proof
that something very saddening
happened hen In Chicego Is
not to be found in the crows
of triumph of the men who
hate the President so blindly
they would sacrifice anything
to his destruction. It i ta be
found, rather. In the deep dis
tress of many of thoje who
have followed him mort devot
edly , and still look most ex
pectantly for great things from
him.
Precisely what did happen,
one of the men of good-will
toward Roosevelt summed up
simply:
"At the mol critical time our
country has known since the
Civil war. In defiance of en
ancient tradition, the President
was nominated for a third term
by a worse than ordinary, pure
ly political convention, with all
that Implies In meanness, shuf
fling and cheap compromise.
"You can argue it was all
right to re nominate him. but it
wasn't all right to do it tht
way." What might have hap
pened? The answer to this
second question Is to be found
In the progrsm which a lew of
the men of good will dc-p. raie-
ly pressed upon the President
while the convention ws in
progress.
SPECIFICALLY, as they discovered
what the Hopklntra. Kellts et al
I " up '" m'n OI wa-wui
"V- . T.
pose of a.oofncsa and disinterest.
tll(.T ,,,,, put
. d,-. ,,,, .imri-.t ,ot,. vet
! MorM ,u:reeve of the s.-c-:-
"oour.trt ( -it?:-.
dieutewl th 4tM'rouft ttnt'affT of
....
ri,g 1
OREGON. SUNDAY, JULY 21. 1940.
Brady. M. D.
PROPHYLAXIS
to take the necessary steps to
prevent development of the dis
ease? Very few, for the rea
son already indicated people
prefer to gamble with their
own health; they consult a phy
sician only when they are con
vinced they have some serious
ailment.
Only three or four years age
physicians generally assumed
that deficiency disease, such
as beri-beri, scurvy and pellagra
were rare among the general
population, and the fully de
veloped diseases are rare, but
competent investigators mid
clinicians have found tnat a
large portion of the population,
even the middle .nd presum
ably well nourished classes, suf
fer various health Impairments
or functional ailments which
are due to moderate deficiencies
of the essential vitamins in their
diet.
QltSTIONS AND ANSWERS
Hodgkln't Dlieaae
Can anything be done for Hodg
kin', disease? where Is then a good
specialist who can tell certainly
whether that Is the trouble or not?
(Mrs. O. E. R.)
Answer X-ray treatment appears
to be the best treatment known.
I do not know of a specialist diag
nosis Is a question of the doctor's
opinion.
"White Iodine' It Not Iodine
Is It all right to use white or
colorless Iodine Instead of the regular
brown Iodine for the Iodine ration
you recommend? (Mrs. J. B.)
Aniwer Colorless "Iodine" It not
Iodine at all. but a solution of
Iodide of potasalum and Iodide of
ammonium. For the lodln Ration
I recommend only standard Tincture
of Iodine, the brown liquid com
monly used at first aid application
to wounds, etc. Send tumped en
velope bearing your address, and ask
for Imtructlont for Taking the lodln
Ration.
Pyorrhea
You had an article about pyorrhea
aomo time ago and we hoped fee
further dltcuaetons of the subject
your suggestion! are generally sound
and of practical value. Please con
tinue. (E. P. D.I
Antwer I hesitate to run the risk
of typographical errort In reference
to some eubjecti. tt It Included In
booklet "Sate Your Teeth" for copy
send 35c coin and stamped envelope
bearing your address.
Kther and the Permanent
Doea It take the permanent out
of one't hair if one takes ether at
childbirth? It It better to wait a
month after ether to have a perma
nent? I Mr., w. K. J.)
Antwer Taking ether hat nothing
to do with the hair or the hair
dressing. Por monograph on Care of
the Htlr and Control of Dandruff
tend ttamped envelope bearing your
add rest.
(Protected by John P. Dills Co.)
Ed. Note. Pertona wUhtng te
communicate with Dr. Brady
thnuld tend letter direct to Dr.
William Hrady. M. D., 263 El
Camlno, Reterly Hills Calif.
i the supreme court bill. It would
' be far better, they argued, for the
j president to be boldly frank with
the people.
If they had had their way. the
president would have Issued a state
ment at early aa possible In the
convention proceedings, or, better
; ttlll, m-ould have made a brief radio
address to the first meeting of the
delrgatee. He would have Ignored hia
enemies. Instead or attacking them
aa ha did In hit speech Thursday
night. He would have let hia record
talk for Itself. Instead or defending
tt. And he would have asid some
' thing like thia:
"In the memory of living man.
our republic hat never faced dangers
to great to all that we hold dear.
Within a few weeks, perhaps. England
win go under, and England's navy
will fall into enemy hands While
there it ttlll time, we mutt do all
that we can to help our brothers in
freedom. Within two months, per
hapa. win come a threat to our own
hemisphere. When that time cornea,
we must attempt to make the pro
tecting aeglt of the Monroe doctrine
a thing or deedt. not words. Every
American. In tuch timet, mutt give
til thst is In him to hit country.
'I do not want to aerve another
term in the great olflce which I
now hold. I aha)! not accept re
ncmlnatlon sscept on the clear
understanding that my pant will
support me In all the difficult
measures, calling tor the utmost
seir-denlal, courage and sacrifice,
which we In America must take If
we are not to succumb meekly to
the dark menace or a world tyranny.
But ir my party wlshea to give me
the nomination on that understand
ing. I shall accept."
"pO anyone not completely unable
a t
to see the forest politics for the
trees of special Interest and tpecltl
prewure. the effect auch a message
would have produced must be im
meliatelt clear. The president would
r,1 done a great thing In a great
! y' Th ' have re.
j 'f ndwl- dwn' m"n nd "pm'n
lv ui rvppond to coursiijtj and
forthrltjhtnM.
Thfr wju nothing to b frartd
firm couriwt and forth rUhtn?iv
Th Burton K. Wheelers and Bennett
POISON OAK?
Try a bottle et ZEMACOL
ton mail ke wt.-r d or tu- in.i,c,
ehe.rf.tlli rHim.i ' net s Ssrfllr
ioti st wuitk.N mailt.
Champ CUrks might hav foamed
i at the mouth at such a meetace. kut
, the could hat obtained only a
amaU proteet vote from k contention
determined the president was the
only man who could win. The antt
third termers might hate earned brief
courage, but there would hate been
Uttle strength to the anti-third term
motement If Hopkins had had the
sense to tell Jim Parley at the start
of the contention: "Jim. we know
this le hard on you. We know what
great aertlce you have done the
party. We want you to get your full
vote on the first ballot, as a demon
stration of the party's gratitude."
The president would have been
rc-nomlnated by k tote almost aa
great at he got. and In an atmoe
phere wholly different from the
sordid atmosphere that prevailed In
Chicago stadium.
Unfortunately, the men of good
will failed In their main effort,
although eome of the leas displeasing
etenta at the convention may be
laid at their door aa a result. In
this desperately critical time, the
campaign begins on the loir level
of undiluted party politics. And that
la not a good augury, either for the
presl&ent'a success, or for the welfare
of toe country.
By Frank Jenkins
AT CHICAGO, the shouting
and the tumult die, the cap
tains and the kings depart.
America awakens to sober re
alization that after more than
a century and a half, with many
crises met and successfully
passed, the time has finally ar
rived when she must decide
whether among all her millions
ONLY ONE MAN is capable of
leading her through a crisis.
tF THIS situation. Thomas
v Jefferson, founder of the
Democratic party and third
President of the United States,
said:
"If the principle of rotation
(of the office of President) be a
sound one, as I conscientously
believe it to be, with respect to
this office (the office of Presi
dent) NO PRETEXT should
EVER BE PERMITTED to dis
pense with it. because there nev
er will be a time when real dif
ficulties will not exist and fur
nish a plausible pretext for the
dispensation."
IIHAT Jefferson meant was
" this:
The time will never come
when some ambitious President,
unwilling to give up the power
conferred upon him, will not be
able to find an excuse for break
ing the precedent (set by Wash
ington) that no President of the
United States should be per
mitted to serve more than two
terms.
TWELVE years after expres
sing the opinion already quo
ted, Jefferson made his mean
ing unmistakable by writing:
"Should a President consent
to be a candidate for third
election. I trust he would BE
REJECTED ON THIS DEMON
STRATION OF AMBITIOUS
VIEWS."
THESE words were written by
1 Jefferson in 1821.
At that time, the deliberations
of the convention that adopted
the constitution of the United
States were still recent. Among
these deliberations the MOST
SERIOUS concerned the fear
that the young republic that had
just been launched would drift
into ONE-MAN rule, as had hap
pened almost without exception
(sooner or later) in the old
world.
Jefferson, in 1821. still held
this fear, and in his writings
was advising his countrymen, as
strongly as he knew how, to
avoid the danger he feared.
IN 1940, 119 years after Jef
1 ferson's expressed hope that
any effort to break the third
term precedent would be re
jected, it will be argued that
lot of water has gone under the
dam since then which is true.
But it is equally true that the
fundamentals of our government
(including the third-term tradi
tion) have been GOOD FUNDA
MENTALS and that we should
think carefully before under
mining them.
Mrs. E. N. Noble of Minneap
olis. Mii.n., was named U. S.
chochet champion in 1939.
Closing time tor Too Late to Clas
sify Ada Is I JO p a.
U OF SALES
Start. TOMORROW
Hedurtlont for rverr
Member of the lamll
BUSTER BROWN
3H0E STORE
r- Lar-
X
AT THE
National Capitol
WITH
John W. Kelly
CONTINUED PROM PAOE OWE
BY a Joker tllpped Into the new
war risk act, the Pederal Mart
time Commission mty be reinsuring
Oerman, Japanese. Italian. British
and all other vessels. The trick In
the law la at present known only
to a few and these are British, who
have already taken advantage of the
statute. Of course. It meant that
the American taxpayer la underwri
ting the risk even though he doesn't
know It.
Section S3J (a) says the commis
sion may reinsure any company
authorised to do an Insurance busi
ness In any atate of the United
Statea on account of marine and
marine war risks. Including protec
tion and Indemnity risks, assumed
by any auch company. Thia la the
section which does the business. It
wts not In the original draft of the
bill and It wat advocated by a lawyer
representing British companies, who
had Important connection "on the
hill."
rbe announced ahortly la a
ttatement that ths department
of agriculture wants 13.000 acres of
fits cultivated in the Willamette
valley nest year. Recently It was
estimated that (.000 acres might be
planned, but the announcement will
call for 12.000. or twice the present
acreage. The farmers will be assured
of a specified federal bonut. The
Wllltmetw valley is the only section
In the United Statei where the type
of flax required In the defense pro
gram can be raised.
Another Industry employing about
150 men will be launched In Port
land within a rew weeks. Thlt It a
chemical factory tpscltllzlng In weed
destroying producta and which can
alto manufacture one or the elementt
used In explosives. Salt, principal
base or the product, will be shipped
from the Sacramento valley. The
blessing or the National Defense Ad
visory Commission wat given the
enterprise this week when the head
of tht company waa In the national
capital for conference.
...
WASKINOTON Scene Paul V. Mc
Nutt haa a St. Bernard dog
which consumea lour pounds of liver
dally. At Chicago Mrs. McNutt regis
tered at a hotel under an assumeo.
name to avoid newshawks. When
reporters heard McNutt ask for the
key to hit wife's room they thought
they htd something. E. R. Stet
tlnlut Jr. wanted to be a minister
but John Pratt, then head of Oeneral
Motors, gave him a Job which led to
hit S10O.0OO a year position with
U. S. Steel. As tteelman Stattlnlua
observed one dsy that ST00 000.000
was being expended In Improving the
numerous subsidiaries and that the
new machinery would release 150.000
men. He wondered, he said, what
When Lead... and Legs Ruled
the Sin City of the Old West!
0 Thrill to a magnetic Marians you'v. never
seen befora . . . dancin', singin', fightin'
siren of th wildest Westl . . .
0 Thrill to a dynamic Jimmy Stewart ... a
lanky man-ot-the-law, who hid his heart
behind a sheriff's badgsl ...
0 Thrill io th most colorful characters th
screen hss ever shownl . . ,
1 Lv
E . 1
rene
PLUS
kid of
'
TirTRV at
I no. 4 V
C-ln.M
ROXY
! would become of them. But hia
! Interest In the men did not pre
vent the machinery being Installed.
Congressman Walter M. Pierce was
one of the 65 house members who
signed a peutlon urging Mr. Boons
re It to run for a third term.
Flight (T Time
Medfur an Jackson County
History from tht filet of ths
Mall tribune 10 an to years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 21. 1930
(It was Monday)
Mail Tribune directory count
shows Medford has a population
of 15.168 13.373 within city
limits, 1.99S just outside.
Azaza Agha. Turk, who claim
to be 156 years old. arrives at
New York to get set of falsa
teeth.
Record heat continue in th
east.
Darrell Huson returns from
vacation trip to Seattle.
Copco workers hold picnle on
the banks of Elk creek.
London naval treaty approved
by senate.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 21, 1920
(It was Wednesday)
Third party seeks release of
Eugene Debs, socialist leader,
from federal prison.
J. A. Perry returns from Port
land, where he underwent treat
ment for an infected hand,
caused by getting cut with a
clam shell while at the Coast.
National Guards return from
Camp Lewis encampment.
John C. Mann is named new
president of the school board.
Irvin S. Cobb, noted humorist,
to visit Crater lake in August.
French open tea rooms for
tourists in "No Man's Land."
The SALE of SALES
Starts MONDAY
With Reduction! for T.rry
Member of the Faintly
Buster Brown Shoe Store
Bldg.
IS Ho. Central
WW
Charles Mischa Brian
WINNINGER AUER-DONLEVY
HERVEY . Una MERKEL
... the grand story of
70 . . . and a man of 711
I DICKS0K
" :.:
"M mhir t-
at I u
1 ot-e r.