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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1940)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MED FORD. OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27. 1940. Sen. McNary's Acceptance Speech One of Typical Moderation NEW DEAL CHIDED FOR ITS 'STATU; Use of 'Fear for Hope Hit Self-Reliance Uraed for Nation Credit Given. Stale Fairground!, Salem, Ore.. Aug. 27. VP) Charles Llnra McNary accepted the Re publican vice-presidential nom ination today In a 30-minute ipeech In which with tvpical moderation he chidcd the Roosevelt administration for its doctrine of "statism" but re fused to "condemn the new deal In Its entirety." Oregon's beloved "Charley Mac" told 40,000 westerners who gathered for the acceptance ceremonies that "we must de cide whether America shall ad vance again along the path of her historic mission: or retreat Mill further Into the fields of futility." But In the next breath Wen dell L. Wlllkie'i running-mate Hid "I should be guilty of nar row partisanship . . wen I . . to condemn the new deal In Its entirety. Candor requires me to credit this administration with certain social gain which have made the lot of the aver age man more secure If not more fruitful and satisfying. I, for one, do not choose to re linquish these advances, where they are genuine . . ." He took sharp Issue, however, with the new deal's effort to "Inculcate reliance on the gov ernment in place of self-reliance and to supplant hope with fear of what lies ahead." Tha text of Senator McNary's address follows: "I accept the nomination for Vice President so generously be atowed upon me by the Repub lican nationnl convention last June. I endorse the platform and renew my loyalty to the candi date for President, the able, magnetic and forceful Wendell T. WlllkU 'This is no ordinary cam paign. The Impact of the wars raging beyona Dorn our wmn, together with our urgent con cern for the pence of this hemis phere, surround the political de cision we are about to make with a heightened gravitv. Do mestic Issues, linked as they are with preparedness and foreign relations, take on enlarged sig nificance In our present mood. "For more than seven years, we have lingered In a bark water, denying our destiny: ne glecting our defenses, both spir it...! rnnA mntorinl. The oreat energies of America have been hindered where noi aeiuauy mU1A fZnmm have Inst faith In .v.. iiihim. fnith in work, the source of well-being. No party Is solely responsible, we or inr minority have, perhaps, failed i. ..iniianr. Tint the over whelming responsibility rests upon me parry in puwci. nc have the mandate. Cnfllri si Phllosoohies This campaign is more than a mere contest between rival political parties. This campaign IB CTMlliii l uriwi to ... ........ .V.Ua nhtlnvnnhie of ffOVem- ment and of action. We must choose in November whether irnwlpi ahnU advance asnln along the path of her historic mission: or retreat, stm lunnn Into the fields of futility. T .Knulrl h vitiltv of a narrow partisanship unsuited to the great West were 1, nowover, 10 rnn.m 1h NfW Deal in ttS entirety. Candor requires me to credit this Administration with certain social gums, which have made the lot of the nvrrnRC man more secure if not more trim ful and satisfying. I "for one. do not choose to relinquish these advances, where they are gen uine; nor to detract from the humanitarian Impulses actua ting the President. In this cam naicn t ch.-all nnt spek to in- diet the New Oral's motives I shall, with all the force at my command, attack tha New Deal s capacity to qovern and tha poli tical and economic heresies which hare deflected ut from our courie. Govt. Versus Self Reliance Every ariministrntion since Washington has marie progress toward fulfilling the Amenean dream. The New Dual is excep tional in thnt it, alone, has sought to substitute new states of mind for old, to Inculcate re liance on the Government In place of self reliance and to sup riant hope with fear of what lies ahead. We may forgive the New Deal s lncomijctenco In dealing with economic forces- its inabil ity rr unwillingness to fur trier the emplnvrmnt of Idle ca pital and idle hands. We mighl overlook the confusion In theory and practice thnt have curbed initiative, stalled the engines of production and multiplied debt. We are still a rich country What we cannot forgive Is that the New Daal, rinding Ittalf un able to rettore national vitality fashioned Us plan upon tha the sis that America is finished, that our economy Is lasvllabir con tracting) that opportunity has bean extinguished and that, hereafter, we must look increas ingly to the government lor Jobs, for security and for the oversight of our private lives. That concept, old as human pessimism, germinates now from a Europe which has been trans formed by poverty, political immaturity and war into a dis mal despotism. That concept Is statism; the doctrine of the as cendancy of the State over the individual. I deny Its validity in terms of a youthful, vital America. I charge, moreover, that the dlffrAion of that con cept has Impaired the national spirit; and. ir persisted In. might well rob us In time of the will to be free. More, Not Less, Democracy What we need, in times like these, is more democracy not less. In an earlier period of doubt and dismay. Walt Whit man, the good, gray poet of dynamic America, thus admon ished his country; "Sail, sail they best, ship of democracy, "Of value Is they freight, 'tis not the present only, "The past is also stored in thee." The Philadelphia convention, meeting in the birthplace of our liberties, handed us our sailing orders; bidding us look to our vigorous past, reconstruct Amer ica and set her anew on her course. I accept those orders in full confidence that we shall triumphantly make port in November. Reading Lessons In The Oregon Trail This occasipn Is, In a sense, a personal dedication. I make no apology, therefore, for personal references. Lacking only four years, I have served my native State of Oregon in the United States Senate for a third of its existence. In that 23 years, my record has been open to the view of my countrymen. I have supported progressive measures. I nave sought to conserve and employ, for the benefit of all. our heritage of soil, water pow er and forest. I stand on that record. Not one uttered word can be expunged, not one vote recalled: nor would I wish It otherwise, considering the light that then guided me. I should be lacking In senti ment were 1 not gratified by the presence of the notification com mittee. Many of them crossed the continent to be with us. I hope they find compensation In the grandeur of our mountains and forests, and the enchant ment of the Willamette valley. I hope they may be recom pensed also by the opportunity of mingling with this assemb lage of free citizens of the old Oregon country: the Northwest ern empire, which once em braced all of Oregon. Washing ton and Idaho and parts of Mon tana and Wyoming. This is pio neer country still. We here are pioneers, and the sons and daughters of pioneers: of the stock that carried American sov ereignty from the Mississippi across the magnificent Rocky Mountain region to the Pacific. conquering and subduing this rich domain for the Union. Some of our visitors, flying here, crossed the old Oregon Trail In the air. Their passage across plains and mountains took only hours instead of months. Others motored here. They reckoned traveling time In mere days. Accustomed to the ease of modern transport, it Is hard to protect our imagina tions backward a century into the experience of the bearded men and the heroic mothers who rode uncomplainingly in covered wagons over the "Iron road" from the Great Bend of the Missouri to the banks of the Willamette. The Jefferson Concept The settlement of the Oregon country remains one of our proudest epics. At the time of the York town surrender, our frontier rested on the Alleghan- les. Sixty years later, the surg ing genius of our ancestors had pushed our borders to the Paci fic. The beginnings of Oregon lay in the imagination of Tho mas Jefferson, the apostle of democracy, who served only two terms In the Presidency, frowning upon contemplation of a third term. It was Jefferson who, after purchasing the Louis iana country, sent Lewis and i Clark to spy out the land be yond the Kockirs. Their Jour nals kindled the interest of I colonial America in the Far ! West. The explorer, the lur I trapper and trader broke the trail. Next came the missionary. and. close behind, the homeseek er. If we pause today, we may read In the old Oregon Trail lessons applicable to the prob lems besetting us now. Little Americans Thn and Now We can afford to smile at the timidity of the obstructionists who lived a century ago. In their day. thev thought Ameri ca finished. They belonged to the tribe, seeminiily numerous in each generation, which holds that the limit has been reached Little Americans they were; the type thnt advocated impeaching Jefferson for his purchase of Louisiana and derided Seward for buying Alaska. In like manner, the little American of ln-to maintains that our race is run. The throb he DIAL 4923 for quirk. Dependable Senli-e Unique Cleaners Hutel Allen Hldl Hud Lsrrni hears la not the hum of Ameri ca s dynamos, but the harden ing of America's arteries. It is his despondent outlook that de flates the hopes of youth; in sists that our industrial plant is over-built and that we must look forward only to a slippered senility. We, of the old Oregon coun try, reject the hypothesis of the little American. We are opti mists We say that America is not yet half built. The little American dates the decline of American enterprise from the time when the last free land was thrown open for settlement. We hold that the theory of the last frontier is only figurative. Land. If you had to work it, never was free. Men paid for it In sweat and blood and loneliness, if not in dollars. As long as great rivers run idly to the sea: as long as vast reaches of virgin soil await only life-giving water: as long as Americans prefer work to ease, and as long as well-being is in equitably distributed, then we say that America Is not finished. Our job Is to work for an Integ rated self confidant country, ready to undergo the discipline of the pioneer lo the end thai we may not only survive In a threatening world but distribute our blessings more abundantly. The call is for a disciplined pop ulation. I prefer the self-discipline of the pioneer to the Im posed discipline of the Europe an autocracies. The pioneer tra dition is strong in our blood. All of us, whether our ances tors crossed the Atlantic in the 17th century or whether we our selves came in the 20th, are pi oneers, or the descendants of pioneers. The virtues of work, thrift, and self-denial for the common good are part of our tradition. We have the tools. What are some of the specifi cations for the reconstruction of America? Among the first is the preservation of fuller em ployment of the natural re sources of soil, forest and water power. Prudence dictntes that we. at least, conserve those leg acies for this and future gener ations. Restoring Agricultural Empire The prosperity of agriculture should be the first charge on the attention of any administration. Not for sentimental reasons, al though society owes a real debt to those who, year in, year out. supply It with its first es sentials, food and raw materials. No, the reason for our preoccu pation with the farm problem is social and economic betterment. The farm stands somewhere near the center of our economy. For 75 years, the farms of America balanced our foreign trade and, through exportable surpluses, provided the foreign exchange that assisted in build ing our factories, mines and railroads. The first World war disrupted that profitable trade and, for 20 years, we have strug gled with recurring, unmarket able surpluses. The farm problem Is by no means the exclusive worry of the farmer. In a true and real istic sense, the problem Is as na tional as the problem of na tional defense. Permit me to cite an example: statisticians find an uncanny correspondence be tween gross farm income and in dtistrial payrolls in a given year. When, as in 1h2!i, farm income rose to 12 billion dollars, fac tory payrolls also were 12 bil lions; and when, in 1932. farm income dropped to five billions, industrial payrolls fell off simil arly. The New Desl has administer ed the farm problem for more than seven years. What is the present state of the American farmer, who. with his denend ants, makes up a quarter of our populition? In the vear 1939 his share of the national income was the lowest since statistics have been kept. Moreover, his income during the seven New Deal, or lean, years has aver aged only seven billion dollars: whereas, during the preceding seven years, under Republican administrations, it averaged nine billions. Hear in mind if you will, thnt the New Deal to tals included all the benefit pay ments from the Treasury of tlie Unltcvl Stntes Bnd that 'the sev en prosperous Republican years include the black year 1932. which marked the depth of the depression. Throughout this new deal cycle, we have been con fronted with the relnted pheno mena of depressed (arm prices and industrial unemployment. Vtith the farmer producing without profit, the city worker was Idle, his consuming power diminished. I have long felt that these phenomena could not be separated: that a sound policy would work toward relieving both of these disorders Principle of Parity Endorsed I shall discuss the farm sit uation in detail later in the cam paign. It is a subject near my heart. For 20 years. I have sought means and measures to better the lot of the agrarian producer. For the moment, let me pv that the Republican plat I Want To Rent A THREE BEDROOM HOUSE Furnished or Partly Furnished BOX A TRIBUNE t, -Kmmmmm form recommends hopeful and affirmative farm program. It endorses the principle of parity. It advocates and this if a de parture incentive payments to farmers willing to experiment with tillage of crops we now import. We stand pledged to continue soil conservation pay ments, commodity surplus loans; to encourage acquisition of farms by tenants and for re search aimed at developing in dustrial uses for products of the soil. We favor continuing the food stamp program, which serves the double purpose of as sisting the needy and helping the farmer by reducing surplus crops. The platform offers no magic formula. The problem is far too complex for any all embracing cure. It does consti tute a promise that the Republi can party genuinely seeks solu tions. Question of Markets A substantial solution of the farm problem may be resolved Into a question of markets. Any rational plan must assign the American market to the Ameri can farmer. Beside being far and away the greatest market it is the only one we may hope to control. The farmer is, at least, entitled to that and no treasury benefits can compen sate him for its loss. Yet the new deal, which, in seven years, has failed to map out a long-range plan for reconstituting the agri cultural emnire, pile confusion upon confusion by following two contradictory policies at once. With one hand, the New Deal pays farmers not to sow and reap: with the other, it lowers tariff barriers so that foreign crops undersell our own in our market. Opposes Reciprocal Treaties Secretary Wallace, a high minded and sympathetic Secre tary of Agriculture, may not be blamed for this second policy. Any secretary of agriculture would be hampered by the re ciprocal trade system, which, in the last two years, has admitted competitive farm products to the value of 337 million dollars a year. That sum. It is Interest ing to note, approximates what the government has paid farm ers to reduce acreage and pro duction. Experts estimate that the 3S million acres withdrawn through government- payments from production correspond closely to the acreage displaced by competitive imports. I have always opposed reciprocal trade treaties, as formulated by the New Deal. When I spoke against their renewal last Spring in the senate I charged that the treat ies had failed to "dissipate, al leviate or liquidate the uneco nomic conditions" affecting ag riculture. I hold to that opinion still. Moreover, as the war spreads the areas of closed trade I gravely fear that the effects on agriculture may grow worse and we have no assurance that peace will restore foreign mark ets for our surpluses. After seven years we need a realistic reappraisal of the whole problem and. whichever party assumes the responsibility next January, we should de mand and have the formulation of a long-range policy looking to the restoration of our agricul tural empire. The farmers do not wish to rely perpetually on subsidies which stop short of economic Justice. They wish to re-enter the economy as inde pendent producers. Thev are en titled to the fulfillment of that wish. Renewing Our Forests I come to a problem that pro foundly touches my emotions. We stand today in the heart of the last considerable area of vir gin forest left in the United States; the majestic remnants of nearly a billion acres of timber that clothed this country when the first Europeans saw it. I was born within sight of the great trees that characteristic ally dominate the Western scene from the Rockies to the Pacific. In my lifetime. I have witnessed the growth of the lumber in dustry to its present huge pro portions and the expansion of the sooial and recreational value of our forests It is but natural, therefore, that during my years In the Senate I have made legis lation affecting the forests my special province. Everyone knows that Ameri can timber resources are being swiftly depleted. We take assur ance for the future, however, from the knowledge that they may. with care and wise govern mental policies, be restored. Happily a substantial portion of our forest lands are being man aged and utilised in ways that best safeguard social values, provide maximum employment, guarantee future supplies, stab ilize streams and soils and con serve our rich endowments of natural beauty and wild life Power A National Heritage Power Is the prime requisite of modern Industrial existence. A measure of America's indus trial magnitude may be found in the fact that one half the instal- led horse power in the world is ur t-miM-,i wiimn our oorncrs. Steam power made England the Industrial colossus of the 19th century; steam plus electrical power has made the United States the industrial giant of the 20th. Yet America's water pow er resources are still largely un developed. In the mountainous parts of the Pacific West, where strong rivers run unimpeded to the sea, a major portion of the country's potential hydroelec tric power still waits to be har nessed. Fortunately, the prin ciple on which this power may be made available has long been recognized. The Federal government accepts the obliga tion to control floods and assure navigation. Out of these services flows te by-product of power. Unfalte ngly. the congress has granted to the public prefer ential rights to power genera ted from navigable streams. Such power should be a com mon heritage. The government, having made this power avail able, should have undisputable right to control its utilization and distribution. Maximum ben efits for domestic consumers, farmers and small users of pow er should be the yardstick by which we measure the useful ness and serviceability of every federal develonment. Moreover, rates should be maintained at the lowest level consistent with sound amortization. Where ir reconcilable conflicts arise be tween public and private inter ests in the development and dis tribution of power, private hold ings should not be confiscated and we now have a working precedent for such fair treat ment in the recent acquisition by purchase of private com panies by the Tennessee Valley Authority. From the standpoint of the treasury, the records of the great public power projects at Boulder canyon on the Colo rado and at Bonneville on the Columbia are reassuring. Both are liquidating their commit ments to the government, as, no doubt, the mighty power and reclamation development at the Coulee dam on the upper reach es of the Columbia likewise will do. The subject of hydro-electric power deserves fuller treatment, which I expect to give it in a later speech. Prepare For Defense The resources we have been considering bear pertinently on a subject uppermost in our minds as we look across the At lantic. I refer to preparedness for defense. The last war dis closed deficits in power and farm and forest products. A shortage of power in certain Eastern Industrial districts de prived domestic consumers of service. Food deficiencies caused meatless, wheatless days and the plowing up of the short grass prairies In what is now the dust bowl. In common with what 1 be lieve to be the overwhelming majority of my countrymen I oppose involvement in foreign military adventures. America, as always, prefers peace. Hut America does not prefer the peace of appeasement: nor the surrender of our national dig nity, our independence of action, or political freedom or the civil ized values that we cherish. The existence of aggressive despots in Europe is not new to our experience. We adminis tered a lesson to George III. Na poleon inconvenienced our com merce. Monroe and John Quin cy Adams effectually warned the Holy Alliance to keep its arbitrary hands off this hemis phere. We helped bring Max milian's imperial adventure In Mexico to an inglorious end. Nor have we failed to exer cise our guardianship over coun tries within the scope of the Monroe Doctrine. Unless I mis take our temper, we are no less firm and positive today. We are not a docile people and we pro pose to work out our destiny on our terms. In the present world situation, we still have a choice. We shall be strong, in which case we shall deter our enemies at home and abroad: or, we may remain weak and thus invite their agression. For my part, I prefer the part of strength That has been the American choice. America To Co Forward In conclusion may I remind you that the Republican party this year lifts the standard of hope; a standard to which all men and women of courage and clearsighted faith in our mighty traditions may repair. Every where we hear that our country faces greater perils than at any (S!MSmQw(m t aaal T.VI aaaa 1 1 I jBsssn IfircTton 1515 FIRESTONE AUTO SUPPLY AND SERVICE STORES TH AND RIVF.RS1DF PHONF. AW time since the Republican par ty preserved the Union under Abraham Lincoln. In another hour of crisis, the Republican party, cradled In a great tradi tion and seasoned in govern ment, offers to lead America out of doubt, negation and dis unity. Problems change, new dangers arise yet remain the ancient virtues, self-reliance, faith, hope and courage which animated and sustained the pi oneer in his quest for a greater, ever greater, America. With your cooperation, we shall renew that quest; setting our country again on the path of high adventure toward her true destiny. With jour help, we shall not fail. TEXT OF MARTIN'S OF . H. E. State Fairgrounds, Salem, Ore., Aug. 27. The fol lowing is the text of a speech by Rep. Joseph Martin (R-Mass), chairman of the Republican na tional committee, introducing Governor Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota at ceremonies notify ing Senator Charles L. McNary of the Republican vice-presidential nomination. I am happy to come to Sal em, Ore., which Is closely tied in sentimental bond with Salem of my own state of Massachus etts, and to Join with the good people of the West in paying tribute to a great statesman, an able legislative leader, and a splendid citizen. In my long ex perience in congress, I can say I know of no one, who has won more completely the respect and confidence of his associates and the American people than has your own native son, Charles L. McNary. That appreciation of his splen did qualities and the high es teem In which he is held in the country brought to him, un sought, the nomination for vice president on the ticket with one of the most vigorous, able and patriotic Americans of today Wendell Willkie. Through the years, Senator McNary has fought the battles of the people and has made life a little easier and a little bet ter for his countrymen. No one recognizes more clearly than he that if the country Is to go forward it must be through the advancement of the masses. My part in the program is a simple one. It is to present to you another distinguished lead er and a great American I am proud to claim him as a warm personal friend. When the Republican nation al committee sought a man to keynote the issue of this Im portant campaign. Its task was easy. There was but one man considered and he became the unanimous choice of the large committee. It chose Governor Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota. He is the youngest of a group of Repub lican governors, who. through wise leadership and able admin istration, have contributed largely to the rebuilding of the Republican party. He is a real representative of the progressive and forward looking West. He reflects the new type of leadership which during recent years has revi talized the Republican party and rededicatcd it to the genu ine service of the nation. Today there is a new Republi can party; a sound, sensible, forward looking party to which the people of this country are turning for leadership. The distinguished and able governor of Minnesota is ma terially contributing to that leadership. I am delighted to present lo the people of Oregon, to the people of the Far West, yes to the people of all the United States a great governor a great American Harold E. Stassen. c convoy J 6!-! 6!-il,aiO DEBATE REQUEST IN 'LOOK' ARTICLE! Says FDR. Should Not Shield Himself Behind Dignity of Office. New York. Aug. 27. Sp Wendell WUlkie declared today that a presidential candidate should not be "shielded by the dignity of office," when he again proposed public debates with President Roosevelt in an article published in Look mag azine. Willkie's article, entitled "I Challenge Roosevelt On I These Issues," contained what 'appeared to be a thrust at the i "fireside chat" technique. The Republican candidate's article j for Look said in part: "Voters are entitled to see the man for whom they are asked to vote and to find out for themselves what kind of fellow he Is in the free exchange of ideas. Never was there a time when the dem ocratic principle of free and open discussion of all the issues was more essential. Political campaigns have fallen too much into the stereotyped reading of essays Into the radio." Other high spots from Wen dell Willkie's Look article: "A Democratic Unity party I am not naming it, but that might be a good name is being proposed so the Democrats of the south may cast their vote for the Republican candidate withbut losing their Democratic identity. Nothing has been more gratifying than to see the splen did type of Democrats who are rallying to this cause." "There may be a business man, big or small, who has con fidence in the present adminis tration. If there is, I do not know him." "The English and French fell for a candystick philosophy of government. To them, society was an infirmary of crying babies to be quieted with sooth ing syrup. The thought never oc curred to them that well babies, if fed and left alone, stop crying and learn how to live." "We must have more candor and less provocative statements about national affairs. What good does it do to attempt a colossal bluff about producing SO.OOO airplanes annually when the nation we try to impress is the greatest producer of air planes in the world? "Talk about going back to the days of Harding and Coolidge is just plain nonsense, because we are not going back to anything." "America today la divided into discordant units. Mutual re spect and confidence are gone and we invite disaster to the only completely free society left in the world." New Power Line Portland, Ore., Aug. 27. ,V) Construction of a 69.000-volt transmission line from Walla Walla, Wash., to Pendleton, Ore will be completed within a year, the Bonneville power adminis tration said today. Cm Mall Tribune want ad. ONLY 4 DAYS LEFT A Cord of Select Body Fir WITH EVERY CIRCULATOR BOUGHT DURING AUGUST ityv .r;"' .y .. ff a VVW .'VW'.'". 1 ' 1-1 l5vM:oVir 1 1 A y - f I;J5t ii'tJ" ' a- t Hansen Hardware SIXTH AND BARTLETT ON ECONOMY BLOC FACED BY VOTERS San Francisco, Aug. 27. P) Nearly two million Californi- ans were expected to vote today in a state primary election cli maxing a campaign marked by Senator Hiram W. Johnson's bid for re-election, and Governor Culbert L. Olson's effort to end an anti-administration "econo my bloc's control of the state legislature. A prediction that 5S per cent of the registered total of 3,782. 702 persons would vote was made by Charles Hagerty. dep uty secretary of state. A total of 690 names appeared on the official state ballot, In cluding candidates for senator, 20 congressional places. 20 state senators' seats, and 80 state as sembly places. These races, along with Judgeship and other local contests made the major party ballots lengthy. Although the selection of par ty nominees is the purpose of the primary election, Califor nia's election law allows candi dates to file on more than one ticket, and this circumstance contributed to the Interest in the re-election campaign of Senator Johnson. The veteran senator fighting his hardest battle since 191 6 sought nomination on the Re publican, Democratic and Pro gressive party tickets. He was opposed by three on the Repub lican ballot, five on the Demo cratic, and one on the Progres sive. Home Tragedy Stayton, Aug. 27. ifl- Tha body of Waunita Minten. 14-month-old daughter of Henry Minten, was found last night in an irrigation ditch near the Min ten home. She wandered away from the home yesterday after noon. Closing time for Too Lata to Clas sify Ads U 1 SO p. m. in 105 flllGELES JTS I louintouin 5' 5 5 comfortable, quiet rooms all with baths.' Prora 13 so. Double from 13 50. New inner-spring mattreg (a I a p-compeUng beds! New aoft-oell hand tele phone LOWEST RATES OP ANY FIRST CLASS HOTEL IN THE CITY I S mlnutee from Union R R. Terrntnal15 mln uatea Irom HOLLYWOOD. P.G.B. Motrlaa, Swpr H.H IM Hill Hill Umilil WOOD Circulator S4500 and Up PHONE 2370 Mm,