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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1940)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14. 1940. MDF0ROt2TSIBUNI VMiit law Mll rrltai IMI Itieese aatartfaF. HIBItmHU PHINTINO OU 36-3729 North Fir 8t. Phone 3141 HilUKKi W HUH I CJltOl A OIUSTHAP. U(MIT. Caieretf ae mii"l -imam aiattaf el M4 Urt. Oragoe. antlar Act ! ft arc S. Ill UttacHlKllUN RATSt Dally and uurtai' u rr ...! Daily and tuoiiirti tnoaihe... lit Oftliy and utntjr thr mouths. I Daily au ui.'Uv -Otis month... ? Br Crnr In A-lvaaco Mtwiroirl -laud. Cntrl Pox I, Jack mm mis. Qoie Hill. im ftivar. Paaaals, Taleat aa4 M moioc rowteei Diliy and man4r ne foe It.es Dally ami lumtir n annt1t . All terms aah la tvWaaoe- Otrk-iNl Vwt-t at ibe tlly ml MwJfet-4 Ulfkf-Ml VmpM mt 4mrkmum Uewaly UIMMhHII lllk AHMM IAI Kll PHbM tovolvla taa Hire fterlv. rha -cil erM la Blaaliy atttlad I ina aaa fot pualieatlea af all aawa diapaictaa re1He1 la II af other im sreduoe la Uus pier. and aiaa ta the laaai a aaaiiafta nereis. All riania for punltcalloa 41 opals ho fterois ere aiaa raaara4 MBUBSH Or UNITED fHKM HIUHKH U AUDI I BUREAU OF CIKUULATION A d vertisi uf Raai aaaa tat I aa WEtfT-UULUDAf OOMPANf. INC. Oftlooa la Now Tors. HMeate. Datroll Sa rranelaca, Lee Anal. oalUe. Portland. Ill Umii Atlanta. Vanaoavat R C. -E5 Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Ferry. Berlin report! 164 British plane have been shot down, and only 17 Nail planes destroyed In the air fighting the first two days of the long-heralded "blitz krieg." London reports corres ponding havoc for their aerial foes. Any day now woro. can come to America one of Hitler's armadas flew over England and returned to their base with three more planes than they started with. An upstate paper advocating more preparedness declares "the time to fix a leany rooi is De- fore It rains." This is sound logic, unless one holds to the belief it Is not going to rain any more YE ED STRIKES OUT "At the moment we can think of no entirely accept able excuse for an Appeal Democrat, headline which re ported to some readers on Thursday: 'Mrs. Sadie Peck, Hub Native, Dies.' The very fact that Mrs. Peck, popularly known as a long-time resident In the community, is very much alive and quite well, eliminates the element of fact and causes us to reach out for an explanation." Italy, who to date has suffered none of the terrors of war save an occasional speech by II Tin horn Mussolini, had dynamite dropped on three of its cities by the British. Such events take the Italian mass mind off the glory of stabbing a weaker na tion in the back, to keep up the war fever. Deke Buckingham, who Is handier with a wad of taffy than a New Deal Santa Claus, whisked by his 60th mile-post yes. Men's hats for fall will be pastel felts. No wearer has yet showed up with the word he felt like he had bce'i pasted. VOICE IN THE WILDERNESS (PUatanton News) "Voters Inform yourselves; read something besides the headlines and LI'l Abner. Fer ret out the real problem fac ing the United States and vote for the principles of your fore fathers; unless you do, it might be (mind you we say 'might') the last free vote you'll have." Messrs. Willkle and Landon in conference at Colorado Springs agreed a sharp eye should be kept peeled for "fraudulent voles" In the Novem ber election, and profess to have no faith In political bosses who engineered the Chicago conven lion. It is a rule also of the ilk the important thing In an elec tion, is not who casts the votes but who counts them. France plans to invoke Prohi bition, "but will not make the mistakes the United States did In its enforcement." They don't want 23 dry SKrnts to swoop down on a 64 year-old lady moonshiner with a grand flour ish and armed to the teeth. "Well, sir, since last we ad dressed ourselves to the prepa ration of one of these matter pieces, we've made the leap from the deep end, while our old Democratic friend. Oscar, watch ed us come up from our dive and climb on the Willkie life raft with some amazement, not to mention disappointment. Hel was disappointed because we came up." (Harold Haynes in the Astoria Astonan Budget) A noble Democrat commits self baptism. Americana in 1939 smoked nnnZ'ir.innn-- 000 pounds of inuiL "The American Way" ! WE are in receipt of a communication from a Mr. Sydney Hollaender of 148 East 28th, New York City, containing the following pronouncement: There's No War Like tha American War" Because: I can go to any church I please; I read, see and hear what I choose; I can express my opinions openly; My mall reaches me as It was sent . . . uncensored; My telephone is untapped; . I can Join any political party I wish; I can vote for what and whom I please; I have a constitutional right to trial by Jury; I am protected against unlawful search and seizure; Neither my life nor my property can be forfeited without due process of law. Styling himself just a "New York Business man" the writer concludes: "The above will appear on the back of the New York Telephone Red Book (classified telephone directory) in New York and Brooklyn and will be seen by some 20,000,000 people during the next six months . . . This Is sent to you to do as you pleas in a worthy dissemination of the worthiest causes." We suspect Mr. Hollaender is suffering slightly from an exhibitionist complex, but his doctrine is a good one, and we are glad to push it along by leading today's editorial with it. The Great Disillusion SPEAKING of communications, we are in receipt of one from our next door neighbor at the Chicago convention,- a newspaperman from Florida, which start out as follows: "That convention was the most disillusioning experience of my life. I doubt if, politically speaking, I ever get over it" That statement interested us extremely, for it was precisely our experience, so much so that we had be gun to fear that our reactions were not normal, iiroi-o tho i-oaiilt norhana nnt an mnrh nf what han- . pened at the convention, terriDie LiaKe ivncnigan ui terrible Chicago climate. DUT here is confirmation for our next-door neighbor was a man in his early seventies, a life-long and uncompromising Democrat, who has always supported and voted for the Demo cratic party candidate, and we suspect will do the same this year, although when he left the conven tion hall after the nomination of Secretary Wallace, he swore by all that was holy he WOULDN'T. DUT it's hard to break the XJ ticularlv when the three has been passed. And we note there is no repetition of that profane declaration in this letter. There is so much resentment and bitterness, how ever, regarding the convention, its methods and its results, our euess is Mr. X will follow Al Smith and take a walk. Not support the Republican ticket (where he lives in Florida that is practically a capital offense) but also not support Roosevelt and Wal lace. (It was the latter that in this particular case broke the camei's back.) DUT if this life-long Southern Democrat could have been so disillusioned and' embittered by the Chi cago convention, the methods there displayed, the atmosphere and the results, nuAUiNt; wnat tne ei fect upon the northern Democrats must have been! As for the Roosovelt REPUBLICANS, well, we had dinner with one of them during the convention, who complained frequently of loss of appetite and have since learned he is taking the stump for Willkie and McNary on September 1st! Making Hay IT was not only the soiled, sordid, sorry atmosphere of that Chicago convention that forever destroyed the illusion of political idealism in the. Democratic party, as it is now controlled, but it was what one heard on all sides in the press gallery, particularly from the Washington correspondents. They didn't deal in prejudices, they dealt in facts. And we recall particularly what one of them re marked about a point recently raised by the Republi can nominee. how the Roosevelt family have com mercialized their seven years in the White House. e IT may seem a trivial matter, why shouldn't the Roosevelts make money out of their good fortune in every legitimate way? , i p according to our lmormam, mrir w ay hcimi u-u legitimate and here, in brief, is his indictment: "Have you any Idea how much the Roosevelt family has made In cash money from the fact the head of it was elected President? Now these are facts; they have all been pub lished, and never denied. In seven years Mrs. Roosvelt has made $1,200,000 Jimmy Roosevelt 350.000 Elliott Roosevelt 150 000 Mrs. Dahl 100.000 Total $1,800,000 "1 estimate the total earnings of the entire family in the eight years, due almost entirely to the prestige and power Involved in the Presidency at $2.00.000, it may even he more than that. Now I make no charnes against the women I have no illusions regarding either of them, but Just cross their part off. but I DO regarding Jimmy and Elliott and this is the charge: That they deliberately and with malice aforethought, particularly the former, cashed in on their membership in the presidential family, were paid money, hundreds of thousands of dollars, not for any ser vices rendered, any abilities possessed, but solely on the fact they were sons of the President of the United States. Do you like that sort of thing? Well, 1 don't!" Under the circumstances, this department wasn't ' surnrispd whpn Mr. Willkio annoiiru'prl that in the; event of his election no member of his family would 'directly or indirectly financially profit by it! r-K5ot; as a combination of that ! timing waiei, anu uic uiuic from an excellent source habit of a lifetime, par- - score and ten milestone But the answer to that is, . a i ....... 1. n K .i. Personal Health Service By William Ili4 tollers pertalnlnl to personal dlatnoala of treatment, mil be altered ddrewed rntrlopa la enclosed. Letlera ahould be Drier and written la Ink. Owlnf ta the lares nambera of letters rerelred only a few raw be answered. No reply ran be made ta aoerlea not conforming to Initractloas. address Dr. William Brady, t$ El Camlno. Beterly Hills. Calif. THE CALCIUM The diet of most Americans, even the "well nourished class" or those whose food is restricted only by their own whims or h a b i t s, is more often de ficient in cal cium than in any other ele ment. A fundamen tal reason for this c a 1 e 1 um shortage is our low per capita consumption of milk which is the best of all sources of food calcium and phosphorus. An other reason Is that most people are unaware of the importance of salads, leafy vegetaoles, rel ishes, greens, raw vegetables in the diet these are second only to milk (and cheese) as food sources of calcium and phos phorus and besides they are ex cellent sources of vitamins A and C, both of which favor cal-l cium storage ana retention in the body. Vitamin D, of which milk, cream and butter are the richest natural food sources, is essential rather for the assimila tion of calcium, whether from food or from medicinal prepara tions. Normally not more than one half of the calcium ingested in food or medicine is assimilated. Thus even if the regular diet "self or the diet supplemented with medicinal calcium m some form provides the amount of cal cium the body requires daily, there may still be a calcium shortage due to failure to assimi late all of the calcium. Hence the maintenance of optimal nu trition requires that each indi vidual must ingest at least as much again as the estimated daily requirement of calcium for the individual under the particu lar circumstances. On the other hand there may be a calcium shortage, with its various manifestations which will be described later, in spite of the intake of twice as much calcium as the body needs daily owing to insufficient daily in take of vitamin D, which is in dispensable for the absorption and utilization of calcium. It is practically Impossible for an in fant or young child to get enough Portland, Ore.. Aug. 14. While there Is a substantial sen timent for the Willkie-McNary ticket from Washington, D. C, to the Columbia river, there are several factors which are un known quantities. Cue of these is labor. At this time labor, In the main, can be regarded as supporting Mr. Roosevelt, not withstanding the position taken by John L. Lewis, chief of the CIO. But labor is susceptible to campaign arguments as well as any other group. Mr. Lewis cannot dolivcr the CI O. vote In any direction he desires to take it. The underprtvlleRed are also pre sumably In the Rooaevelt camp, but net aa strong aa heretofore aa there la an Increase in employment and the Increase In Joba will be largo in the coming months aa eome ten billion dollars are placed In circulation tor the nstlonal defense program. Ir la vl(Vnt in brtrwilne around iskitift quotums thit the Wtllkt? MVNnry ticket nhould not ctrr to the Hoover and landon roten but that the rampaltsn of the pub lic nt should be to truer, out for the voter who have no vine for thoee former Republican leaders, such M the workiw men. When Mr. Hoover mvs he "is for Willkie' he hM delivered all the Mrength he has. TTi same with respect to Landon. L-Vur years ago landon received no more votes than anyone else on the ttvket could have received. As a Tote tetter Landon wait a wa.hout. Mr. Hoover is still regarded a drug and not an auet. and with the miw of people his name U enoiwn to handicap a rsuae. Til is nM fair to Hoover, but It U sn unvarnihed fact. Te maiiftfirment of the Repub lican rampautn should not permit Mtlifr Hoor or latnrton to ro on ! the sir. for they will lone more votes for Willkie and McNary than they can win over. Thla ts one trtaon th mat.Aafera nuiM recotznire. W" rilll I It is stranne that so few Roosevelt advocates could be ! uncovered In a tranacont mental sur 1 vev. the smsrtneM. personality and eourcefulr.esa of Mr Roosevelt must I k. nn.r.tlm.tMl Ha la a naat muter m mskm an arwei to the .'''."l"' lw.'n.-ss -tin of Will!. Tl.ra '.oma mticinn thai wiiikis a-louid AT THE . Brady. M. D. health and h.iiKne. Bat ta dlarasa Or. Brad if a (tamped atll- SHORTAGE vitamin D from natural food sources alone (hence it is the universal custom to supplement the diet of infant or young child with some special vitamin D preparation if not with fish liver oil). Children In the teens and young adults suffer various nu tritional disorders or deficiencies due to inadequate intake of vita min D, and secondarily to faulty calcium and phosphorus meta bolism. The relation between calcium and phosphorus will be described later. Calcium constitutes a larger proportion of the body weight (2 per cent) than does any other inorganic element. Phosphorus constitutes 1 per cent. Sulphur, one-fourth of one per cent. Oxy gen, 85 per cent. Carbon, 18 per cent hydrogen, 10 per cent. Nit rogen 3 per cent. (Most of the hydrogen and oxygen in the body are combined in the form of water, of which there is 93 pounds in the body of a man weighing 150 pounds.) Ql'KSTIOSS AND ANSWERS PotaMlum and Calcium Can you tell me whether there Is sound baals (or the idea that calcium and potassium counterbalance one another In metabolism, that Is, whether the one has any particular 1 effects that the other checks or ' counterbalances? (P. W., M. D.) Answer In one respect they coun- terbalance each other calcium is a coronary Tasodllstor. while potassium la a coronary vasoconstrictor, in creased calcium Intake seems to pre vent or overcome allergic sensitivity In many cases; Increased potassium ' Intake merely affords symptomatic j relief for allergic manifestations. ' IManterer Plasterer, and my hands are con stantly rough and sore end split ' from contact with the plaster, 1 suppose. (T. D.) Answer Avoid e;rlt soaps or hand cleaners- use Instead a sawdust or veKtable fibre hand cleaner. Before beginning work clean and dry hands well, and rub on some lanolin and castor oil half and half. Wipe off the excess and go to work. After finishing work repeat the application of the lanolin -castor oil mixture, and wipe off only the excess. (Protected by John P. Dill Co.) Ed. Note. Persons wlihlng to communlealo with nr. Brady hould send letter direct to Dr. MINUm Brady, M. p.. 163 El Camlno. Bererl; Hills Calif. not wisecrack because he la running for a dignified office, but the same criticism can be applied to the squire of Hyde Park, who la no alouch at cracking wise himself, and he doea not regard the high office of presi dent a deterrent In thla respect. Mr. Roosevelt la held up aa a master politician, but In view of his record thla can be questioned. He haa made some eery bad mlstakea which cast renectlon on his ability to play clever politics. He has lashed at former frtenda, he haa alienated Influential and politically powerful Democrats In almost every state In the union, In moat Instances un necessarily. He has an alliance with the most notorious political machines In the country the Kelly-Ksh gang In Chicago, the Hague gang In New Jersey. Ed Plynn. the political bosa of New York, and the airtight polltl cal machine In Tennessee. The aenate la full of Democrats who should be battling to re-elect Mr. Roosevelt yet these party men are ffchtlnn him either cmenlv under cover for the alights. Insults or reprisals which the president haa put upon them. A smart politician should bo expected to aolldlfy and consolidate hta forcea: instead. Mr. Roosevelt haa scattered Democratic leaders like the appearance of a hawk in a chlckenyard. N what kind of a campaign he csn and will make. He is not a politi cian; he ts a rank amsttur, which may not be against htm for If he make a mlstaks It can be said that he is "Just one of us. a plain man. not trained In the Intrigues of a politico." Anyway. It U a bsttle between an untried. Inexperienced seeker for office and an opponent who knows alt the tricks and has the advantage of being in and the potent power of a chief executive For the first time in more than 30 years the Republicans have a perfectly balanced ticket wtth a can dldate for president who has the faculty of appealing to people and not a stuffed shirt. What Oregon's Charley McNary can do for the ticket Is reconnieed through the mtd-west and the far west, but what Wendell Winkle can do remains to be demon strated and. after all. It is Willkle who must carry the eastern states where the bulk of the electoral votes are located. It violate no confidence to state that Insider in the new deal admin latratton are actually concerned over the outlook. Thev admit that the WIltkie-McWarr ticket is no puMvuer and they would glee their shirt If Jim Parley could hare been Induced to overcome' his scruples against a third term and remain In command of the national organisation. a:o from Inside sources It Is known that Mr Roosevelt Is as confident of being re-elected aa be la of anything in the world. Hen Industrious Boston 'V fC Massachusetts hens have produced more than JJ4 000 000 eggs durin the first half of 1040, th state ricul i tur department reports. TOWER OF CRAVE IAfter nine-mile trip by con. Teyor belt from Redding. Cal., gravel needed for the Shasta dam U stocked here; another belt will take It to the dam mixing plant. Shasta to part of California's Central Valley project. THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNER (Continued from Pago On ) that because of the numerous other calls on him, he could not grant the president's re quest. Although he had already sug gested one of his subordinates as a substitute, asserting that the proposed subordinate would do a better job than he could, the president let the matter drop for the time being. THE story of the publisher Is being repeated by high officials of the administration close to the president The fact that the publisher ts known as a close adviser of Wendell L. Willkle naturally does not tend to soften the comments on the Incident In administration circles. The pub Usher, who Is understood to be out of the country, has not yet given his version of the incident, which may be quite different from the ad ministration's. The sudden revival of the Inci dent, and the widespread anticipa tion that the president will soon make some mention of It himself, are chiefly significant as straws In the wind. Along with several other straws, they point in the general direction of a grand presidential as sault on the American press. The president's extreme bitterness toward the press la a pretty open secret. He beizan to feel that the press was unfair to him shortly after the new deal honeymoon ended. His feetlng wns greatly Intensified by the 1938 cam pawn, when a huge propor tion of the press opposed him. It was further strengthened by the court fight. And now. with over 00 percent of the newspapers and virt ually all the mamazlnes In the coun try working asalnst his reelection, this feeling of the president's Is. quite understandably, more violent than ever. Anyone who follows hit public utterances will remember that few of his recent pertinent statements ha-e omitted some sort of direct or indirect attack on the newspaper business. Thus the time for a full dress presidential attack is obviously ripe. SO far as known, the actual project of such an attack has not yet been dlcued by the president. At a recent cabinet meeting, however, he gave a number of the men preeent the impression that something bin was in the wind. Much of the meet In was devoted to a president 1st denunciation of the press' behavior, with illustrations tending to prove that newspapers and mac urines had Joined to suppress material favorable I tha rfmlnlitpatlnn mrsi In diva sr-iai mr.min.no. to ii.ms.in. ... sna articira. I otviousij. ih prltkTit must t are being built with WPA labor. j ltchtna; to tell tha country what hr j 4 j thinks about the pra in th. rirar- j piiOM painting school build 1 nt possible vrrna. Nor la this th-. r jngs and constructing ide- first time that he has been in surh a beliijrrent mood Rather detailed plans were mad 1 a year or so aeo. for a stern dressing down of publishers and their bust ! nss. The plans were a rerKMiM to j the pree treatment of the purre ( campaigns In the spring snd J'Wm-r of tPi At thst time, "something ha got to be done to the newpp. ! ra." was the alocan of the new deal j era who were tnanafjintf the purge ! If such plans were considered otue , beTi-re. it -veins not unlikely that ! they may be revived nw. ahz-n the provocation ta considered Infinitely greater. I Regarding the origin of the i name Alaska, the "Geographic ' Dictionary of Alaska'' says' "This word is the corruption of some native word or phrae. i the moaning of which is un 'certain." In The DayV News : By Frank Jenkins. THERE are indications in the news that the German attack on Britain is starting, but none as yet as to HOW IT WILL END. This much can be said: For the first time Germany is tackling a nation whose stub born will to win is equal to her own. In England there will be no crumbling from within. INTERESTING note In today's news: Russia is backing Bul garia in her claims for terri torial expansion at Rumania's expense. What does it mean? This writer doesn't know. But it certainly looks as if real and effective Russian backing for Germany would be directed to ward CALMING THE BAL KANS DOWN not stirring them up. ILLKIE scores his first knockout. On Monday he asserts thut if elected, one of his first acts will be to prosecute all persons who bought or sold advertising In the Democratic national com mittee's campaign book. On Tuesday, Attorney-General Jack son announces that the justice department will not permit sa,es of the books by state or local party organizations and Chair man Flynn of the Democratic national committee (who is also Boss Flynn of the Bronx) sass there was never any intention to put the books on sale that they will be given away as cam paign documents for party workers. That's getting action quickly. QUESTION: What would have been done about it if Will kie hadn't started the ruckus? (The point is that sale of "ad vertising in party campaign books and sole of the books nuill.-rntB die a ULWle JPl around the lw governing csm paign contributions.) SOMETHING to think about: In Portland the school board proposes to have the school buildings printed by WPA la bor. When objections are rais ed, the board says it han't money enough to have the ou.ld painted in the regular way In southern Oregon, sidewalks walks with WPA labor, because I it is cheaper, it is only a step to paintin-; all buiidines and CONSTRUCTING ALL BUILD INC.S with UFA labor because 1 l cheaper. How do you feel about that? DIABETES TRC- :if If job are In ln.iir.1.. no maun' how rlou.. e,rn In raw ahrra all n.i ha. horn (Urn up r t hlurw hub Irratm.ut mill H. p.HI. rrlM-lh, ,. , our rainh,,,,, 0ur . B(( rrllr. lumtM.ro knl alv) .re rwimiwn,l,d ir f,,,r , ' C"llrr. Influ.nu. Uiln .Ufa v.. iandlr. throat, h-art. IHrr alon.?' .ion.a.h. pllr. a.lhma. chro,, ,uh. ron.tlpatlm. nraralcla nlrrmr... nrrma. hradarbr. rhrgmall-m. arthritis. nrPr turn.' arlnari. dr...?. ammnrv, prostate, rrmalr complaints children f monies. . HENRY LEE HERB CO. Pall? 10 a. m p. m. nr.pt sunoar. ja v r.mral. Boom, a.it Flight (V Tune Mrdlord and Juktoa Count; HIMort from th tlnn of tho KMall Irlbunt 10 ind to ars Bio. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 14. 1930. Ot was Thursday.) New Grange is organized In the Bell view district. Dr. Charles P. Johnson ot Portland, a dtntist, locates here. Mr. and Mrs. Al Hagen win the first flight of the peeve golf tourney. Lightning storms In the moun tains start 15 forest fires. Congress plans aid for middle west drouth victims. Fruit experts to travel east on pear train to study refriger ation. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 14, H20. (It was Saturday.) Nominee Cox In speech de clares he "is a victim of Re publican trickery," and "Wall street is raising millions to de feat me." Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover of Palo Alto, Cal., are Crater Lake visitors and spend a few hours in Mcdford. Poles and Russians still bat tling for possession of Warsaw. Vice-Presidential Nomine Roosevelt, in speech at Fargo. N. D., says he will "solve the problems of the consumers if elected, and Democratic theories are carried out." America wins opening point In Olympic games at Antwerp. Communications How About lha Savage Dam? To the Editor: The fish and game commis sion seems to be quite upset about the itsh getting up the river past the canal recently constructed by the Beaver-Portland Cement company. It i the belief of a big majority of the local fishermen that, if the fish are lucky enough to get past the Savage Ripids dam, that they would be smart enough and acrobats enough to cope with any object that may obstruct their passage on up the river. If the fish and game commis sion is so interested In the fish getting up the river, why don't it do something about the handi cap placed upon the fish at the Savage Rapids dam? Or is it a different story? H. G. HILL, Rogue River, Ore. August 14, 1940. Ye Poets Cornei Mad Captain. (Russell Mitchell.) How gallant and brave; how weathered and torn: How grandly he fought for man kind forlorn: How strong In the gales: how meekly he preached; How humbly he prayed when land had been reached! How utterly changed to pageant and pride! How fearless he brushed hi first ma'e aside! With reckless decision, grabbing the sail. He dares ship again alone thru the gale! 4 We weep 011 shore; we dare not to go. His strength cannot last the cer tain, wild blow. We love him, dear God. Protect him, we pray. Lord, teach him to yield the honorable way! COLORADO POPULATION UP EIGHT PER CENT Washington. Aug. 14. (TV Colorado's population, on pre liminary figure, was fixed by the census bureau todav at 1.118 820. an increase of 8 per cent in the past 10 years. DANCE At the Townscnd Dance DREAMLAND HALL TO - KITE ALL INVITED Ladies wllh Escort Free. Extra Ladies 10c. Man 3Jc