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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1940)
PAGE TEN MEDFORmwTRISUNB fuit4 fey MCUruMU fHINTINO C1 tt-l'-lt North Kf (. PMM II KBj,KI W HI HI. It lot as, RNK.iT R UII4TKAP. Uinir. Satrd cecoeiti - inciter ( M ef fort, Oro. under Act r ft rh . lilt MtcHlfllUN HA IK By Mftll ( eV.wc; Oaliy t4 undir u rar ... Daily and uti'ijf n moathi. . lit Daily aod Sun-lair thraa moutha I Dany au Auitly n moot Is.. T y rrrir In A4ot Urui4. Aato- UilL Riaua Rlr. Phaanla. Taiaat. and) motor rouiotv Daily and auoday na Fvr . . . . . Daily ad eundy or month... .1 Ail ur cash ib advanca. OrrVlMl fipw al lb I Hy at Utdruvtj Offk-ial laur of JarkawB lauaty MfcMltbltitl- 1Mb Annul Ml I fHtM Karaltlng frnll LaoMi H'lra rlr. Tn AU'ciiifl frmmt it scluaiiy at l ta in ua tnt publication of all mi diapa(crta radnd ta It or lhr iaa r'!tid ta thia pa par, and iaa la tba taoai aaa pnbiiand haraio. All i if hta for purtiiuon it apaaiai dliapaiaK heroin ara aiao ratrv4 WCUHSfl UK UNTIED t-HaCtt UCU Hhrl ur AUUII bURKAU UV t!KCIll.ATIuN Ad vrtiaiiig Itap.aaaota ll vaa WEaVr-HOI i.lliAV COMPANY. INC Oftlcee la Nw York, t'hioago, Ixiiroit Ml franclaca baa Anftlt ftaUi, Portland, lit. Uoui. Atlanta, Vanouar ,Haawic t mii$4i''HsylT,M Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perrj. A letter-writer wants to know If the Democratic convention at Chicago adjourned "sine die." They should have, without men Honing "sine." August fur sales have started In the stores. This Is a gentle reminder, winter is coming, and time to start tracking down woodpile. I "MT. VIEW FAMILY BACK I HOME AFTER 3.568 MILE! TRIP TO MIDDLE WEST WHERE ALL LOOKED WELL." (Hdine Corvallis Gai-ette-Tlmes). Wherein, the edi tor flatters both the country, and the womenfolks. . FLIPS A MEAN ASH (Albuquerque, N. M., Times) "For smartness an A.A.U. W. crowd can't be beat . . . these women are on their toes In all the feminine depart ments, and don't lag In style, mental activities, etc. . . . and refreshing It was to note the matter-of-fact way In which their national president han dled her cigarette at the luncheon table ... no awk wardness there, Just a know ing acceptance . . . and dean of woman's college!" i A defender of H. Bridges, the alien hell-raiser who has been dormant for some time, reports his Inability "to reconcile their move to deport Mr. Bridges with constitutional govern ment." It Is further alleged the gent "Is more sincere In his convictions concerning Demo cratic processes, than those who seek to deport him." What nice angel wings Mr. Bridges is flap ping these days? ... "Wllkie started off wild as March hatter, by walking one Beaver In the first, and then three more in the second . . ." says an Oregonian sport page account of a ball game. In many sections, It's the February hare that gets wild. A Swiss scientist has found the 92d element, that science has been looking for since 1789. Many a man never knew the 82d element was lost. John W. Kelly reports well wishing Republicans are fret ting because their presidential aspirant continues to wise-crack, and conducts himself like he was running for sheriff, instead of the high office of president. What the G O P. needs is a col orless candidate, talking through his nose, about the tariff. YE SCRIBE GETS FANCY "Would that our pen had been plucked from some bird of par adise and dipped In the eye of a rainbow, that we might fit tingly describe the marriage scene enacted at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. A. C Davis. Just as the dy god. clothed In majesty sublime, had started on his downward course toward the western sea, shedding his galaxy of quivering, golden beams o'er the rejoicing earth it was then thut cords of con fidence, hope and love, liinding the hearts of Eli Frederick Guernsey and Beatrice Davis were indelibly traced upon the scroll of life, and t lie sacred seal of matrimony placed there on." (From Oregon Writers WPA project). Sa Practical Zurich iA'i Gentlemen may prefer blondes, but they marry girls with jobs in Zurich. Sta tistics show that out of each 100 brides In 1939. only 1(1 were un employed. Dm Mall Tribune waul ada. Editorial Correspondence Bockford, 111., July 24. ft to old story, but it's true. Heat during; the day isn't to bad. Hut when it's hot ALL NIGHT too 24 boura a day without a break something baa to give. And it isn't the heat, or hasn't been in these parts now for five days. It's easy to understand why people in the tropics take siestas. The wonder is they can work ANYtime. Yet "out on the farm" they are binding up the oata and barley and not complaining, in bpite of it being over 100 in the shade. Guess when one i busy, NOTHING is ao bad ! Tomorrow, say the weather man, there will be relief for the wind Mill change, blowing off Lake Michigan instead of on. Well, we are glad for the sake of the inhabitants of the great state of Illinois, but it won't help the Oregon contingent any, for we are setting sail for Medford, via Canada, at noon. Incidentally we note in the Chicago Tribune that an old friend of ours who is racing a boat in the Chicago-Mackinae race bas become becalmed, about 150 miles north of Chicago. Tough luck, Joesey ! Can "Professor Piekum" explain the Chicago baseball teams? We saw the Cubs take a beating from Brooklyn the other day before a record-breaking crowd. The White Sox are even further down the line. WHY IS 1T1 there isn't a more enthusiastic baseball town in the world than Chicago, the support they give their teams is the envy of the sporting world, they have everything to make great tcama and yet never, or almost never, do they get much better than about half way to the bottom. Why is itt Everyone up and down Main Street asks "What did you think of the Democratic Convention!" , Our answer is "terrible," with various and sundry elabora tions. Whereupon they assume we have seen the light at last, and agree with them regarding that so-and-so and such-and-such, Franklin Delano. Of course we do not. Whereupon, unless we are smart enough to change the subject or retire, there is one of these tiresome arguments again, about whether or not President Roosevelt should be equipped with horns and a tail, or a halo. Our answer is neither. Hut because we don't regard him as the greatest enemy of democracy aud true Americanism in the universe today we are filed away as just another F.D.R. worshipper, who at some day, not far distant, expects a hand out from Santa Claus. Whew-w-w- it's too hot to talk politics. or anything elsel However, we might as well get this F.D.R. and the Chicago convention cleared up once and for all. Here goes: As previously noted Franklin Delano didn't force his third term nomination on the convention; the convention forced it on hira. And no one who attended the crazy symposium will deny that this was inevitable, for there was no other place to. go. . There is the long and the short one will, or place none, this fact Outside of r.D.R. there is Democratic rar,.v "d this was so even those who didn't run could see. Garner f . Tydingst Wheeler f Farlevt McNuttt . Not a President in a car load. We don't care what might have been the "build-up," not one of these candidates could have given Mr. Wendell Willkie even a mild work-out in the ensuing campaign. Judging them by their etiorts to secure recognition mey aia ana saia, or tiieir representatives for them, no sane and conscientious appraisal could have placed any of them in the same class with men like Willkie and Roosevelt, and any higher than second or third rate contenders in any effort toward the White House any timet Regardless of what their various potential abilities mav he as far as their capacities have been DEMONSTRATED, not one of them in three months' or six months' time could have been "sold," as in any way qualified for the Presidency, to the people of the United States. More than that it is our considered imlirment Vi. nnt f them, in such a contest, could carry more than three states north oi ine .Mason and Dixon line. So why argue over what the Chicago convention might or should have dunet N0 one who attended it will denv that from the first the nomination of President Roosevelt was inevitable, because there was no one else to go to! Emmens. fullback for Oreonn --- w,,.n.j iu lfc mo win uuriii west candidate with a chance to play in the all-star football gam.' in C hicago the last of August. In this atmosphere it is Im possible to imagine anyone desiring to plav football in this part of the country before Christina. A nephew is accompanying us on this trip, his first visit west of the Mississippi. He has been all packed up for THREE DAYS, and it took ten hours steady argument to pers' ade hira not to take his air-gun and a fishing pole that can't be dis jointed and folded up. He doesn't expect Indians to hold up the train EXACTLY, but be is convinced a Hoy Scout Howie knife will come in handy. We have tried to disillusion him, but lie is hard to convince. so guess he will just have to learn by experience and blame no one but himself when he finds the "Wild and Woolly West" not at all what, in his imagination, it has been cracked up to be. Oh you Canadian snowdrifts ME!-R.W.R. COM Each Day Hitler Delays Blow Adds to Strength of Britain By DeWltl MacKenile Every day that Herr Hitler withholds the blow by which he hopes to destroy England adds to the defensive strength of that tight little island, and to British chances in general again.-t nazidom. At least that s what has been happening up to now. This be ing the case, the fuehrer s delay in striking with his victorious war-machine has become one of the wonders of the world. Had the Germans attempted their blit7rieg when they had smashed France, and British de fense was nuire or less at sixes and sevens, the war might have been over now. As It i. trut land has developed a strength which has been producing at tonishing results In the daily aerial dogfights over Britain and the channel, and in raids on Germany. Task Grows Harder Tba naii task certainly has of it. Place the blame where remains: . - no presidential timber in the demonstrated at the convention at the convention, and what! and glacier peaks, HERE WE piled up In the past few weeks. One reason for the German delay may be the conversations this week-end between Balkan omciais and jsazt Foreign Mln istcr Von Ribbentrop. Berlin claims these conferences are urgent because Britain is try ing to trick the Balkans into war tj that they won't be able to furnish the reich with f.wH . Personally I shouldn't be sur-J prised. It would be a smart move on England's part if she could build a bonfire on Hit ler's back door-step now. Equalling disturbing from the German stand point must be the growing power of the Brit-j ish air force. A sample of what! has been going forward was seen yesterday in the violent I fighting over England. The Lon-1 don authorities claimed that 28 . German warplanes were shot down by royal air force light .era and anti-aircraft guns, as Personal Health Service By William igne. kiitm pertaining u personal Milk an nrtlena. not ta iuhh diaf nocll or treatment, will a. lantrt4 by Dr. Brad? V a Mampca' rlf MrtMd nttkp Is tBelusnt. Letters should be brief end written In Ink Unini to the urto onmbers of letters rorelred only s le con be nnrrd No reple con be nude to naenes not conformlni to Instructions Iddme Or. fUUlsia Breny. tU tl Cemlno. Beterrr Hills. Calif TRICHIASIS FROM Trichinella spiralis, commonly called trichina, la a small round worm less than one-fourth inch long In the adult stage. It is a common Intestinal par asite in the rat The hog be comes infested by eating rats. Larvae of the worms pene trate the hog's stomach wall or i n testinal wall and so get Into the lym phatic channels and Into the blood stream and are carried to all parts of the body. The larvae In the hog's muscle or other tissues becomes encysted. Man eats' the pork, insufficiently cooked to kill the encysted lar vae. So the pork eater becomes infested. , The cyst Is dissolved in the stomach or intestine, the larvae set free, and it grows Into the adult worm in a week more or less. At this stage, the setting free of the larvae in the stomach or intestine of the pork eater, if the infestation la large, that is, with a great number of the lar vae, the victim suffers nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, pain in abdo men, sudden feverishness. In the course of a few days to a week the larvae develop into adults and begin migrating into the tis sues. With this stage the vic tim suffers characteristic mus cle pains and tenderness, with continued or Irregular fever, prostration, anemia, and in many instances a peculiar heaviness or edema around the eyes. Some pathologists believe the hog is the important host of trichina, and that the parasite would not survive in the rat if hogs were not fed the uncooked offal from slaughterhouses or the carcasses of dead hogs. Microscopic examination of pork is the only way to detect the presence of trichina. This is impossible in the routine federal inspection of meat. Thorough cooking destroys any trichina in any meat. This is the protection on which the public must rely. Probably many cases of tri chinosis have been mistaken for typhoid fever, acute Indigestion, mushroom poisoning, ptomaine poisoning and in the later stage for rheumatism. Diagnosis of trichinosis rests on the symptoms mentioned, with a rather characteristic in against a loss of five British machines. Perhaps more to the point is the British claim that by 1.000 heavy air raids against German positions they have made it very difficult for the enemy to organ ire mass raids against England from airdromes in Holland, Bel gium and France. This may easily account in part for some of Hitler's delay in making his big attack. Mass bombing of England is, of course, vital to the success of any invasion which the nazis 1 might attempt. I Plane Output Grows The British ability to carry out such extensive air opera tions is due to the great Increase i in their airplane "production.) This has more than doubled since the start of the war. Besides home manufacture there have been very consider able imports of planes from America, and a goodly number of French planes went to Eng land when France collapsed. Yesterday Washington said that this country would do all it could to meet a British request for 3,000 planes a month throughout 1941 and 1942. It is clear from this program that England is looking beyond mere defense, and Intends to try to carry the war to Germany in due course. In The s- News By Frank Jenkins CENATOR Norris. the only re maining member of the sen ate group that voted against American entry into World War No. 1. raises his voice against compulsory military training. "Conscription." he says, "will gradually transform the United States Into an international bul ly bent on the destruction of other nations." He adds: "If our young men are to be compelled to spend a goodly per- Brady. M. O. UNDERDONE PORK crease in the proportion of blood corpuscles which take an eosin stain in the blood examination, a positive, skin reaction to vacci nation with trichinella antigen, (a water extract) in some in stances discovery of the para sites embedded in bits of muscle obtained by puncture and exam ined under the microscope. Formerly it was assumed that trichinosis is rare in man in this country, perhaps five to eight per cent of the population being infested at one time or another. Recently recognition of mild cases, readily escaping recogni tion, has led physicians study ing the question to conclude that perhaps 25 per cent or more of the population may be In fested at one time or another. Pork, ham, bacon, sausage is excellent food, but for health's sake see that it is always thor oughly cooked and never take chances . on raw or underdone pork. Heavy infestation with tri china may prove fatal. In most instances the illness is only pain ful. Best remedy for the illness seems to be from one-half to one teaspoonful of teirachlore thylene followed in two hours by salts. QUESTIONS AND ANSHERS Allirty la eczema included among the condltlona caused by allergic aensl tlvlty to certain foods or other things? If eo. please give me some advice on how to dral with it. for I have frequent outbreaks of eczema, aa I call It, fvr which there seems no apparent cause. (C. P. J.) Answer In many instances eczema la of allergic character. Send stamped envelope bearing your addresa and ask for "Relief for Allergy." B Complex and Digitalis Recently you spoke of vitamin B complex. I think, aa preferable to digitalis In some cases aa a heart tonic. The Inclosed clipping of an article In South. Med. 6c Surg, seems to bear you out. Congratulations on your up-to-date column. (W. H.. M. D.I Answer Thank you. Doctor. The physician who contributed the arti cle to the medical Journal says vitamin B along with digitalis gave more strikingly beneficial results In many cases than dlgttalla or other medicines alone. I believe it will be found that aupplementlng the diet with an adequate amount of vitamin B complex dally improvea the heart action In a more luting way than any medicine can. In many cases. I Protected by John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note. Persons nUhlng to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. Ullllam Hradv, M. D.. IRS El Camlno. Beverly Hills Calif. tion of every year in a military training camp, it will have an effect on their natures. If such a program were carried on for 50 years, the rising generation would know no other ideal ex cept that of military force." "TRUE enough. Conscription is foreign to this country's ideals. Still, ideals WITHOUT PRO TECTION aren't much good. France has just proved that. THIS is the great pity: Three years ago the United States Ithrough its authorized spokesman, the President) be gan to butt into the affairs of the rest of the world, talking publicly of "quarantining" ag gressor nations whose aggies sions were not directed at us. If. instead, we had then served notice on all the world that we would STAY OUT of other people's quarrels but would Im mediately take steps to become so strong that NOBODY would dare to make a pasr at what Is OURS, we wouldn't need con scription now. IF FORESIGHT could only be as clear as hindsight, there would be fewer mistakes in this world. The trouble with hind sight is that usually it comes too late to do any good. Its like remembering after you've smashed your thumb that if you'd been more careful with the hammer it wouldn't have happened. JJINDSIGHT. however, should not be scoffed at as useless If properly appraised, it helps to make us more tolerant by show ing us how often the other fel low has been right and we have been wrong. Senator Norris. for example Back in 1917. he and his ",vil ful" senate associates who voted against American entry into the war were crucified by an Amer ican public opinion which was then so inflamed bv propaganda that it DEMANDED WAR. Hindsight has long since proved to us that World War No. 1 was no proper affair of ours and that our idealistic en thusiasm for "making the world safe for democracy" broiKl l us only burned fingers and disillus tonment Cm UiU mouut act da. THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNE" Released by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc. Washington. July 26. The experts hesitate to make exact predictions, but are inclined to expect the all-out attack on England within the next four days. For those watching the European conflict with the slightest sense of its import to the United States, time now passes slowly, hour piling upon hour. Every minute of every day is filled with, the unbear able suspense of the few in stants between the first thun dering roar of the mountain avalanche, and the moment when the fate of the peaceful valley town is finally decided. There Is no use trying to estimate the odds. German air superiority Is stm Immense. British naval power, already hampered by having to guard the long line of communications through the Mediterranean, wtll be at a disadvantage In the narrow wafers of the channel. Those who think that the brute power of ma chines la now all that counte give England almost no chance at a'l. Those who still place soma value on morale believe that England la an even net. What courage wtll be shown by the English, the days of Dunkerque have alreaav proved. A lone woman who left her bouse on the channel, crossed to Dunkerque In an open boat, fished two eoldtera out of the Inferno of the harbor and brought tbem safely borne. She may be taken aa a symbol of the spirit with which the English people are meeting their great test. Aa for the horrors ahead, they too have been foreshadowed. Two flights of German bombers. 400 eacn. in 13 minutes levelled a square mile of aurrendered Rotterdam and killed many Innocent people. A single night of bombers utterly wiped out the prosperous French town of Glen. klir.g over a third of the nopu'atlon. and leaving all but a handful of the rest wounded and maimed. These bombers are symbols of what the English must I expect. In this tiny moment In time before the horrors have materialized, the Inexplicable puzzle la the attitude of the men here In Washington who fully grasp the situation. The presi dent and his entourage, the leading officials of the etate department, the government economists, the chief men of the war and navy depart mints all these are In substantial agreement on the meaning to this country of England's fate. If England goea under, the war dfpartment antlclpatea outbreaks of really serious trouble In South Amer ica In a few weeks. The navy depart ment frankly lives In acute fear of the day when the remalna of the British navy and the great British shipyards may be In German handa. The state department shudders at the mere thought of the diplomatic problems German victory will raise. And the leading government econo mists openly prophesy thst with Hit ler rullnr all Eiirope and a vast colonial empire as the greatest slave state In world history, the American economy will not long survive In Its present shape. The picture Is dark Indeed. To brighten It there are only a few hopeful expedlenta such aa the etate departments hemispheric cooperstlve plan now being discussed at Havana, which even lta sponsors admit is too grandiose and difficult of execu tion to be a sure reliance. Yet. all thla being known to every moderately well-informed man. no one seems to be surprised thst nothing more la being done to help England. There are many thlnge which England now desperately needs. So serious Is her sltuaUon. ao close may be the struggle, that a mere handful of destroyers, a few hundred pilots or a couple of hundred long range bombing planea may perhaps decide the outcome In England's favor. And there can be no doubt thst from the president down, the great majority of Important men In the executive branch of the govern ment would like to supply England's needs with everything In tbelr power to give. The president makes no bones about his Inclinations In his private talk. Neither do any of the men around him. They take It for granted that the only question to be properly consid ered in supplying England la how far It la wtee to weaken our national defense In a gamble on England's survival. They assume without dlr cusslna the matter that unneutral I acta against Germany are of no Importance, since a victorious Ger many will deal with the Unttd States In accord with ber crude interesta. and not In obedience to the rules of International law. Tet nothing la done, either to give the people some sense of the acute nees of the situation, or to offer England such practical aid aa within our poaer. Men like Senators B irton K Wheeler. Bennett Champ Clark and David I. Wslsh seem to have paralyzed the administration. ot only haa the president immensely restricted hts former ald-the-alllee poli.-y. as being too difficult under the present law; he haa also firmly resisted several men around him who want him to demand a change In the law. If he told the country the situation exactly aa he sees It. such a change might be procured despite all the objections of the Walshes Wheelers and Clarke And aa ona man close to him remarked. "T.en if w cant get the thlnge dona we asnt the cane of Winston Church!!! trove there's a certain value In .svlre been right." Cm Vieui mount rut 4tv Champion 7 Y7 Edward Smithwick, of Detroit, proclaimed by the National Safety Council as Champion Safe Driver of the United States in interstate transportation, photo graphed with the new 1 H-ton Dodge Job-Rated cab-over-engine truck he now drives between Detroit and Kansas City, Missouri. During his 16 years as a truck driver, in which he haa driven a total of 1.222.000 miles without an accident, Smithwick haa never driven anything but Dodge trucks. AT THE National Capitol WITH John W. Kelly COKTINCID PROM PAGE ONE inum industry prefers drawing on the latter supply first. Baux ite deposits in Oregon are low grade, but might be used in a pinch. Twenty-five armed nazis could capture Dutch Guiana. Native troops are so poorly equipped that when one detail is relieved it hands over its belt of ammunition to Wie new squad. Guards employed at the bauxite mine are armed with clubs. Adjoining Dutch Guiana is French Guiana and on the other side British Guiana. Con gress last month announced the policy that the United States will not permit seizure of these colonies by Germany. Such is the background for the new industrial plant on the Columbia river, showing how it can be touched by war abroad. Oallery visitors saw Vice-President Garner leave the rostrum, go to the desk of the Republican leader. Sena tor MrNary. Republican nominee for vice-president, throw an arm affec tionately around Charley Mac, whis per earnestly and then make what may have been hie final exit from the senate chamber and 60 yeara of political life. Perhaps the Texan was wishing the Oregonian luck In the campal(?n or telling him to stsrt using the official car of the vice president. OPPOSITION to compulsory mili tary training will be beaten to a custard. Brass hate of the army have been holding conferencea be hind closed and guarded doors with the senate committee on military affaire and the view of high com mand will be embodied In the legis lation. Anything proposed by the chief of staff, chief of the air corps or commander of the fleet la promptly approved by congressional eommlt teea these days. Por several years the army had lta plans drawn on bow to raise men and in what claasea. High pomta of thla confidential report were printed In thla space last year and the bill the senate committee farora embraces those provisions, which are different from the Burke bill. Within a year ,the army wishes to cull 1.500 000 draftees: the first 400.000 to be called for the coming October. Once the legislation la en acted the machinery for selecting the men will be put In operation It bas slready been worked out. Pay wtll be sal a month and length of service probsbly a year and a half. There will be no ahortage of uni forms at least. The quartermaster Is placing orders which must be filled In three months. Tailor shops all over the country are being given part of this work; as much aa they can turn out In so days and no more. LORD LOTHIAN. British ambassa dor, has been aseured that the Duke of Windsor wtll not replace htm. although Wallle prefers Wash ington to the Bshsmas. (She was bom to Baltimore 30 mllea away). When the temperature reachea 04 degrees, government workers are re leased for the day. Temperature has been In the 0's for the past week The president works In an air con ditioned office, but he haa the cool ing system turned off. There are about 875 passen ger vrains in the United States which bear names, many of them world-famous. Your Last Chance To Get a NEW ZENITH America's Most Usable Refrigerator during this Final Clearance Sale LIMITED NUMBER GREATLY REDUCED FICK HARDWARE Safe Driver .Mts v f : k ---- r T'sM ' " '.'V v. - . . . ' .. "t; Flight (T Time Medlort) and Jackson County History from the files of tbs SUM Tribune 10 and 20 eara ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 26, 1930 (It was Saturday) Allied Industries, Inc.. form ed to develop Roxy Ann coal beds. Phil Mctschan of Portland, hotelman, named as Republican candidate for governor. Ned Sparks, glum film com edian, here to fish in Rogue. Pestilence adds to woe In quake stricken sections of Italy. American sends help. Julius Meier, irked by refusal of GOP committee to endorse Joseph platform, writes letter to state chairman. Rain comes to end heat wave in mid-west. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 26, 1S20 (It was Monday) Eads storage warehouse Is de srtoyed by fire and loss is placed at $100,000. Calvin Coolidge, Republican vice presidential nominee, in ac ceptance speech, declares "The chief task is to return the gov ernment to the people, and do away with individual autocracy, and the trend to substitute pri vate will for public will." Voices opposition to League of Nations. Crater Lake rim road is thrown open to the public. Difficult to sisn up rural teachers for $100 month. Chamber of Commerce urges paved highway to Crater lake. Small World Findlay, O (Pi Mary Neil ing of Toledo stopped in Jo watch the police radio in action. The first broadcast she heard told of an accident in which her brother figured. The longest continuous rail in service is 7,700 feet, and is in the track of the Delaware & Hudson railroad near Schen ectady, N. V. OLD inns mm. KETVC.KY STRAIGHT "AD BOLRBOS 1TIll?K;Y ; i "VAMOtS j I IT.AK OLD IS1 Ihis trhuk- is 4 rwj oUi 0 "ra. JimpKri & Co, Ine, IS w Proof : 9