PAGE FOUR THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Tilt &Inning TieratO HERALD Plii3LISIONO COMPANY, Publiphers FRANK .11CNK INS MALCOLM EMMY lima Editor Nianaging Editor Publiehed every of tertiOrat except Sunday by The Herald Publishing Company at Esplanade and Pine Streets, Klamath Fells, Oregon. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice of Klaniath Falls. Ore.. on August O. 1006 under act of Congress, March 3, 1379. MAIL RATES PAYABLE. IN ADVANCE By Stall In County Outside County Three Months 11.75 3.3b One Year . 5.00 6 00 Delivered by Carrier in City One Month One Year 8.50 Member of The Associnted Press The Associated Preen is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thin paper, anti also the local n ew. published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches hers ore also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF' CIRCULATION Represented Nationally by Wept -tioiliday-NliWgellson Co., Inc. San Franetheo, New York. Detroit, Seattle. Chicago, Portland. Los Angeles. Copies of The New. and Herald. together with complet Infor mation about the Klamath Falls market, inn y be obtained for the asking nt any of theso offices. ,L,!I S Weekend Roundup ANOTHER step may be taken this year in the direction of adequate traffic safety instruction at Klamath Union high school. Principal Lloyd B. Emery states that he plans to assign to one instructor the duty of properly presenting materials on driving practices sent here by the state department. Last year minor work of this kind was done with the seniors, but that was only a I start. What is contemplated this year is by no means adequate, but it shows that the idea is developing. Ultimately, a definite course should be worked out, with credit given those who devote the proper effort to this highly important work. The state health officer offers pertinent suggestions for the season of the year when infantile paralysis cases more often occur. In communities where cases have actually been reported, unnecessary gatherings should be omitted and children kept from congested districts. Regardless of whether there are near-at-hand cases, people generally should keep physically fit with proper attention to food, elimination, rest, fresh air and exercise. Cleanliness of person and environment should be con stantly enforced. Prophylactic treatment of the nose and throat should be carried out only by a physician. The usual pleadings are going out to motorists who expect to travel the roads on this holiday weekend. Per haps, in view of past experience, it would be better to vary the procedure, and urge that drivers hold 'er at so if possible, pass other cars on curves, drink heavily before taking the wheel, use the left side of the road, and otherwise break all the rules of common sense. Lakeview plays host this weekend to huge crowds at tending the annual round-up. Heavy visitation is ex pected from Klamath Falls. President Clause of the Lakeview round-up association assures us that a large block of seats has been set aside for sale-to Klamath visitors, so there will be no chance of disappointment after driving over to the neighboring city. Lake county presents a great show on this Labor day weekend, and here's wishing the folks over there the greatest success. News from China includes a little item to the effect that steel helmets are being sold in the "bargain base. ments" of downtown stores in Shanghai. It won't be long now, you may suppose, until devices of defense from air raids, gas attacks and bombardments will be as common to everyday life as a jacket for a chilly day or a new spring hat. A shopping tour will go something like this: "Have you those latest reinforced steel helmets with the attached neck protector? And you'd better put in a couple of gas masks for the baby. She chews the mouthpieces off as fast as I can buy them for her." Its funny. Or is it? Apparently present and future wars will have to be fought in the same prosaic wayon the ground. Much of war's romance went out with the flashing sabers of cavalry chargesChickamauga and San Juan Hill. There was an attempt to revive the romance in the air service, duels to the death five thousand feet up, "aces" and all that. But now the highest commanding officers of the U. S. army announce that any idea of fighting future wars in the air is just so much bunk. Planes, they say, cannot hold objectives, cannot clean out machine gun nests or snipers, cannot fly in bad weather and are harassed too greatly by anti-aircraft guns. They're most valuable for scouting, for bombing bridges and a little terrorizing ground strafing. It's too bad. There goes the last glorification, the final swagger, the end of spectacular individualism. War is just muddy trenches and barbed wire and death in a shell hole after all. 111 The Family Doctor By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine The famous pathologist War thin has said that, "Deferring of old age, the rejuvenating of the senescent individual is but Idle and foolish talk, and we have had much of this in the last decade. "What modern medicine h a s accomplished along the lines of hygiene and the prevention of dis ease has been only to increase the number of human individuals, both the fit and unfitunfortu nately too many of the latter kind who come to maturity and to the period of senescence. "More individuals will achieve their biologic life limit; and this means what?ultimately a much greater increase in the number of senile, more or less useless, hu man beings in the age decades of the eighties and nineties. "There will be some increase in the number who will reach the age of 100 years or even pass it due to their own family inheri tance, but this number will not be greatly increased in the pres ent period of evolution. 0. The question naturally arises as to just what use can be made of the internal secretion of the male sex gland. Important also is just how much of the glandular material is necessary each day to take the place of that which is lost In the one whose body fails to re calve this substance in the natural manner. It is known that tho body does not store up this mate rial and that failure to supply it to a human being who has lost the effects of his sex glands will re sult in the appearance of second ary changes which are indications that this power has been lost. It is known today that the male human being differentiates greatly from the female human being at the time when the sex glands begin to pour their secre tion into the body. A failure of this secretion to be supplied at the time when the boy becomes a man will result in a definite change in his appearance. Prof. Carl R. Moore, who has made an extensive investigation of this secretion, points out, that removal from a human being of the sex gland secretion does not shorten his life. Neither has it been shown to be detrimental to an animal, except in destroying his powers to breed. It has not been demonstrated that the internal secretions of the male sex gland in ally way sharp ens the mentality, prolongs life, aids digestion or improves sleep. Neither is there any evidence that the use of this secretion will stimulate the reproductive pow ers. Finally, it is so difficult to se cure this material for testing pur poses and for suitable study that many years may pass before its exact value in the human body Is definitely known, NEXT: The adrenal glands. SIDE GLANCES 44,Fw If.;r4 t- ' COP11.1157 IT Oit:;ERVCI INC T U. REC- LI 5 Oil. OF," Ten Years Ago In Klamath L 011ENA TrUCKEY. fatuous ro s-- deo favorite. W a a oliteed in jail in Lakeview today and is be ing held for investigation in con nection with the murder of her husband. "Slim" Harris. W 110 Was stabbed to death Friday night. She told officers after the riders death that an un known man had attacked him ns she and her husband were driv ing toward Lakeview. VAN DEVANTER SAYS COURT FLURRY TO BE FORGOTTEN CANYON ROTEL, Yellowstone Park, Wyo., Sept. 4 (LT)--The foundations which underlie the U. S. supreme court have not been disturbed and the recent flurry will soon be forgotten, former Su preme Court Justice Willis Van Devanter told members of the Montana and Wyoming Bar asso ciation at their joint tonvention here today. Without directly mentioning President Roosevelt's supreme court reform bill, the white-haired pioneer Wyoming attorney com plimented the court on its person nel and on its action. "You jtst marvel at the under standing that the justices have of the cases before them, he said. "The work is thoughtfully and carefully done as well as it cou;d be done by the men who do it. These men are drawn front the four corner of the United States. "Make the court the corner stone, the foundation stone of our government." Referring indirectly to one of the major criticisms against the high tribunal, the former justice declared: "It is true that there are divisions, hut in no more than 5 per cent of the cases do as many as three justices dissent. Five to four decisions are hut very few. But it is likely to be that class of case that is heralded and sent out through every news channel. It is Impossible to avoid dissension." 2292 PREDATORY ANIMALS BAGGED BY U. S. TRAPPER BIEBER, Calif. Twenty-two hundred and ninety-two preda tory animals, mostly coyotes, but Including a considerable number of bobcats, have been killed in the last nine years by Milton J. Thompson of Bieber, government trapper operating in northwestern Lassen county,. Thompeon figured up the total from his records after destroying 90 coyotes and 3 bobcats last month. He ran up a score of 1204 predatora killed in the 38 MOnt118 since July 1, 1934, during which period he was employed as trap per the year round by LAIRS Pr) county and the United States bio logical survey. "And that does not include porcupines," says Thompson. ''l kill a lot of those and I have to report them, but they don't count." For the first six years his but ployment watt intermittent, as cat tle and sheep owners' demands for protection against coyotes' depredations became loud enough and public funds were made avail able. There was a period of 12 months in 1932-33 when he did not have work as a trapper. Thompson's territory is about 40 miles square of mountains, canyons, valleys, ranches, timber, sagebrush and melte extending from Eagle lake north to the Mo by George Clark t;0 '7-;LA'. :;:litik'l '1!,,:, ' ';i1 I i eon. 11)7 rf Oitk WIWI. INC. T. M. AEC tt. S. Ott e gq' Of course father is helping us some. We have to pay our butler more than my husband makes." 'A !dog county line and from the west edge of ii valley east to the Madeline plain. lie drives from 1000 to 3000 miles per month; much of the distance cross-country vhere there is no road; placing. baiting and visiting his long line or traps. lie has to get around ' to them regularly, for a caught ovote. Veil dint., may gnaw orf ! coyote. given time, may gnaw oil the trapped root and get itwa!-- , and then that coyote doesn't count. ' in winter. NI hen deep snows make it impossible to get around : in an automobile. ThOinpsoll takes ! to horseback riding. The coyote pelts in cold weather are valuanle as fur.. They are, gold at inter ' vale and the money received for , them goes into the public treasury. MEIIIIILL IIBIll CLUB PLANS ME Quite a question to at.swer. MEDD II I nun hut Bob Coyne yesterday said lie: would give Il00 to the proiliest 1 H ILL lady taking part in the rodeo. Then, while the rodeo holm! wits cujo pums viollK wondering how to get ont of judging the event, Bob offered another $50 to the best looking : lady attending the show Monitiy night, mEn 1.1brarv club members opened toe fall program A man who taught school here Of meeting Thursday afternoon at 20 years ago will be pritieteil the home of Mrs. H. O. Cox with speakei--.at the Teacherb 'Mrs. Ray Merrill. Mrs. William tute session tomorrow, in the I Walker and Mrs. Max Hartierodc person of C. A. llowa,d. b!rite as a4sisting hostesses. superintendent of schools. Tentative plans for the annual fall dance, to be held the latter part of October came before the VAN DEVANTER SAYS membership, the date to he de cided upon later. Supper for the COURT FLURRY TO annual Klamath Basin Potato fes tival, scheduled for October 8-0 BE FORGOTTEN will also be served by the grottn Mri. Ray Merrill, reporting on CANYON HOTEL, Yellowstone the re-decoration of the Merrill Park, Wyo., Sept. 1 (UP)--The library building, stated that 21 foundations which underlie the new folding chairs to be used by U. S. supreme court have not been the members and at the library disturbed and the recent flurry are now on hand and Venetian will soon be forgotten, former Su- blinds have been ordered. preme Court Justice Willis Van Members answering roll call Devanter told members of the were Mesdames Annice Ander Montana and 'Wyoming Bar asso- , son, It. H. Anderson, W. C elation at their joint tonvention Bailey, L. Bowman, M. Bowman here today. Margaret Brown, R. L. Dalton, V. Without directly mentioning J. Grove, Max Hartlerode, H. J. President Roosevelt's supreme Ilendrickton, O. J. Harris, A. C. court reform bill, the white-baireJ Iverson, W. F. Jinnette, E. R. Mer pioneer Wyoming attorney cons- rill, Earl McNeeley, A. V. Reeves, plimented the court on its person- f It. Steele, R. W. Steele, Wil nel and on its action. lard Smith, E. C. Spike), L. A. "You Jt.st marvel at the under- Taber, William Walker. standing that the Justices have of Guests for the afternoon were the cases before them, he said. Mesdames Bradbury, A. C. Ney "The work is thoughtfully and man and Claire Duncan. carefully done as well as it couid The next meeting will he Octo be done by the men who do it. her 7 at the home of Mrs, R. W. These men are drawn front the Steele. NLRB DIRECTOR GETS SUPPORT IN COAST SQUABBLE SEATTLE, Wash., Sept. 4 (UP) Charles W. Hope, regional di rector of the national labor rela tions board for whose scalp both the Portland and Seattle Central Labor councils have been clamor ing, today exhibited a telegram Irma Warren :t.ladden, chairman of the board in Wamhington, D. C.. supporting him in his conduct. The telegram read: "Neither intimidations, bribea nor personal bias ham nor will In fluence the national labor rela tions board, either in Washing ton, D. C., or the 10th region, no matter from what course they may originate." "We do not indulge In person alties. The split in labor ranks ham made our work infinitely more difficult. It is not our func tion nor our desire to judge on the merits of that controversy or to connive with any Individual grout". "Because the Wagner act is fair. just and economically sound, in the Interest of all Americans, it lute had obstacles Innumerable placed in the path of its functon in4. Anyone who criticizes the Portland lumber settlement either does not even remotely under stand the Wagner act or sets him self above the necessity of obey ing it. Seven mills reopened with 2500 employee willingly return ing to their Jobe, all in accord tine with the law recently sus tained by the United States su preme court," CARD OP THANKS We witih to thank our many friends for their kindnette duriok our bereavement, the loam of our beloved mother, Louise Reeder. Adeline ;loud), Mr. and We. Earl Strickland, William Dunne, Mr. and Mre. (Maiden Himel wright, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reeder. Where Do We Go From Here? (Editor's Note: While It 'Miley Dutcher IR on vacation I h r o pro- and three ant imihninist ra lion loaders of congress dismiss the iut tiro o Anterien'a tadit teal and econ oink, systems. Senntor Alban V. Barkley of Kentucky, recently elvetoil majorit y loader by a otte-voto margin over Sena tor Pat ilarrison of Ntississinal, opens the argument It II II II vig rout; ilgti1M, of the new &al R U it PrOttiCt t011s of Its future achievements). I. SENATott A1,111.:N w. litAillaKV Where do Ivo go from here? There can be only one answer to thi8 question. The demo cratic party which still. I am sure, rei MUIR 1110 etlitlitio'110, of the American electorate, will move StoadilY forward towards the progressive realization of Its pledgee to the Ainerican people. Enemies of.. ... , ,, t h e democratio party who have 116,,-,, persistently o p 1 . ,,,i.. posed the real- ization of it 11 ' 4.at.... OPN :, 1 popular program , ,'llegtf es. are making; much of the al-i ,,,i...,!' leged failur lk e of the last BeSSiOn N ot the congress , .,, to advance the -' ne deal legis- ' -.;-----.. it s, tat lye program. This is a very .11: superficial view. The first task Barkle7 that confronted President itoos, volt and the democratic party at the beginning of the session as sup'e't7ici7ti'v.i;:wl'. IF IS 41;44 hulhaill and 11,11.1..11de hind of i from Madam iurte'$ radium twol wAR IN cHINA The first task Barkle7 a world ill 111,11 ICI 11011,'St Illitt ! IMO III Park. !MVO told It,. that confronted President Roos,- tl'hrant Mamie want to itve I itishop she IN 11 011 IIIII,IIIIIIntelo MAY FORCE COAST vett and the democratic party at ra" ,'Ir',Ice "I' II"' I'Iw tit.til 1 millittns 'rhe 011, assaYti I gram the beginning or tho oomston wto., has not 1..,11 hatt.d. There :hay , of radium to S tons. A gram ot MILLS TO CLOSE to obtain I Iln COOln,F;II IOU a the I," ,,,11,e ,htt h,, ha th...,,tir. ra,11, is um.th $72.0no. The,.. Judictut ttratt,h a the gI,V1.11 '" "IC III"II ?All II It ItolltNt , illi, uncountable ton, of pod. SEATTLE. Vadt,, S. Id. 4 tun) 1 ment in a liberal construction of i 'Ill'f'n'n'''' "I. "1"td"" " to I tte hil'ude. radium-hearing 1111t'i i'11, The mei. i lot ed war in China I., the constitution. That was att I tn.", 'f'.,,,i,e ,,YN Mid 111,31In i III.. chilli. The mini, is not a : tiny , , , , it e.t.i.to., to el,,,,,, l'il.iite essential first step heron, IIIIY I,'I "I'Plkhill, "'a deal oh " vein. it'n n "nionout." i nott It ,A 1Nt 1111111,11' 1111111 Ninelnlit progressive legislative program i''''''' mll"' tt ho tilkialnell ! Seven of tho 11,011W1, InNI lulu- could be undertaken. tor tilip.e;it ion to new dll 1111144,110K e,1,,,,,,,, nr ,,,, II, 1,1,,,,,,, Mg in exportn to the in lent. t Ito live$. Th.. .,11Wat'll march a ',horn. mitt. IIINII(111 tin.1 Iloro y "'''' I'"''''' LIM"1"1 I-I ' a".') IlvW il,it I 41onwerao will mit he lett hero last night with four clilf14.n ,,,,I,I, There Was No Failure That first step W iln attempleol, ..',111,q;11,11:1 111t.1111'h7,...', c.',1:..1,1,...!!! 1 more. , with .01 te r .,tit of the off- and ,vhen the shouting ItIld III- thinisi,,K. ' ' I'"I"1 "I' v,; gni 7N ,,litm r ty ".-.0., 61,,i,.,, r,, (),,,,,,it !III.. mutt dies away it h:women tint- . 1 Ale NUM. "They MII V I'Vt, got the (Copyright, 1937. NEA Service,1 world's hugest !Odium sapid "."'llimg1"11 it'll''llY d'"""'"I !"I- dent that there, Wan no failure. Inc. The president did obtain a more ) down ther I. e too. And the or runs , the "11'w. "mt "Oh ..... . liberal interpretation of the con. 31;5 ounces of silver to the ton. , m..111, now vil tually at a stand. stitution. The supreme e court did t ("AT: ''luilli 1:linali Il MaYito i sun Di- rich woman est In !still, priedi.,'s for heavY lits,es tnke not e of the national will. ',11Else rhin'isa li io who the ellrritt wort,. could cry Iiii , i were repotted. During the past session the sii "r"it'l tilliaeaal the atintilds- , ,attse I 4 , to help all the preme court gave a new deal to 1,""" """ IPI"" "Jul"' of I" 1 'motile ,tom,,tt to nt. I : VI ashington anti oti-Kiin mills the due process clettfie, to the ...l.t. "f a Perill'ull'ill snit! Iii W,Illt,I -It I haven't any I i eA.torted an nu et,,,,,e r commerce claliSe and to the sell- $ 11". '11"""T"'I' 1"ItlY hill" "41" "1"1"')' 1 beard feet monthly in Mau-. June prat elfare CIRIIIW. Nont.h. ott or ! told net ivitt or sin on Atinerica'n 1 Tao storetariett have Iltiraily Mid 1111Y !Mint et it vitt in lingo w the spurious constitutional oh- (utniv) I bottled peon!, who , ,1.1 I., ,.... N,IIInl'o,N rm wht.ii I hell. IN not t$II,I' trIleti011n to th -- 1 ,.I I rs. ilislitip. Iter ma , il ham 'ail.. 1 titorkii, I lee.. intik t.,111,110.-11 to Se new deal Pro- t ed norinons proportion,. sh, hat, rut tint). that INT" limit, gram have been removed. MRS. BISHOP TURNS written few letters ituring the 21,1 h11,1' to giti,e entirdn. tho win,' If these obatructions had not been removed there is not 1 h" DOVVN 10 MILLION yes, to', tottott. t h it,,,,,rt tot it i elation reported, folding that one tirontitietor. t; rens Harbor mill ha.I al t eetin, slightest doubt that the demo- cratic fAtrty would have taken FOR RADIUM CLAIM In the Ind), pre-itlentA or min- 1.1"'""I 1""1 oill" "P"'"'"'"' "II' the necessary legislative steps ing companies and iti,1 plain , -;.1,1,1,1f';'',Kt'il.'tfit.12,11',;:, li,",;tm 1'1" to remove them. If further oh- S '.'.: FRANCIS(O. Sept. 4 ti.l.P.) It',"".t.1,''' ''Ihrm'4:1 l'arh tlth"r T1,1 Ti . , . , . ' .,.. , structions appear in lb.. next or 'Air Joh. s. s Itidotp, w lit) titi;itt le. '.ut" nut III" In ,4111," t., 1111 , . . II 'Il I"' ' ' ''' ,1"1" h," c",,' 4 succeeding sessione of the court, een II e. .,., ., t..,..,.. ".... ".. In it... loom with their checkintok, open 1111 or III,. loti, may lie inantit.te there Is little question that the werhi.,,,htiiel,L1 '''' .,dae"tlyli' t ttn "n Judge Dorsey wouldn't ee b vn .t "I'd with In PII''."1 I. mist,. likhon g iv, h or ft , g r1,1,. 1101111,-111). III I 11 ot holt mot Imo country, with ail km III'W tinder- modernktic chair in a hotel sit - mil pill III:II I,fhfl III,1,.. TI, a,,,,I- Ntanding of the realities of III, IIIILT ....... it here today anti wot Judicial process, will Ilot lightly dt.reil ir she had nimbi a mistake. CAW) III.' T11.1N104 ! ,lai loll eNlitained that w lien it lot! ! largo enough to mei, a t Meal condone judicial usurpation of Mrs. itidoip had refused more We wish to than - k our I mt. A I ; .,ti tiara Is sawn Into heat .I,. in n the legislative function. than $ 1 n,ittiti,Itoo in ei,1, tho into ftitentl,s ,and neightiors..for. their 1 w est roast .toill the tivoi1net in As for the rest of the new deal program it la not accurate to say that this session of tile congress has hcen a failure. The housing legislation and the tax loophole legislation have been passed. Furthermore, the con gress haa the rest of the pro gram in well-advanced mtagoi and would have been able to I' HS it at this sesalon except for the abnormal absorption of time an 'I attention by the supreme court issue. Curb Party Split The written and hours bill has been paRRed by the anate and has been delayed in the house only through a usurpation of au thority that is generally deplored and cannot poaRibly be persisted in when the congrean reconvenes. The reorganization plait has been reported Out of commit tee in both houses. The farm prograin and t h e regional development program have undergone discuu slon . that will vastly simplify next mension's work by the com mittees to which they have been referred. But over and above these Hee cific measures the democratic party has nucceeded In the even broader tack of heating off at tempt?! to divide the party against Reel? by those Who Nvent down to defeat in 1936 and hope by thin means to regain their old powers and their old privilege; Any party with the enormous majorities of the tiemocratie party in both the Renate and the house has to expect that kind of attack. It la alwayR subject to an attempt to turn the farnin against the cities, the north against the Routh and the Routh against the north. No one can better understand these attempts than a man f r o in Kentucky where the farm and the city, the north and the south, the old cant and the new west all meet. New Deal NlarcheR On But the democratic party of today has had ton much experi ence with these attempts of its enemies to divide and rule, to fall victim to them. It huts learned from a half century of experience that no aectional early can demand the confidence of the American people. Under the leadership of President Roone velt, therefore, it has insisted upon the paramount importance of thin general welfare. The democratic party realizes that politically and economically the welfare of north and mouth, east and west, city and country are inettricably hound together, are inter-dependent, each upon all. And its supporters anti lend ers are both aware that. today the democratic party expresses the essential unity everywhere of the plain people, willing to live and to let live, as they use government to fight off the ex ploiters who would destroy the - WEI,C OM1, :E'.13N.4,1k TO 8C,II00t, VW hi" sighoil, sat down on n modernktir chair in n bolo sit t big hrt today find vitt &rod ir she hail mail n Mrs. Itihon had orosint mon. tun n11,11110,1100 in rash tho tow days. SI: o hail TS vints It hor purso. "Woll, rot going to do ,hitt tho Judo, sas, sho tht. Wo're not. signing zinything notti wo know how intich wii'vo got." ...,,....,1Z6...1M ;27)!,. , Sop twilber 1937 1,84.1 o 4,4t) Ns) . ..... 1 xiiih Y,,. ..... , 11'4 hAJ 1,6 o . :: , srriuRrys:); c14.001-, -.,..;,... pri.' . . ,v ,,, . . 1 -- ' c1141.'i:ti''' -) t::.::::::!-',4 .. . ...,..--,...., WAR IN CHINA MAY FORCE COAST MILLS TO CLOSE - - - notnleally in the mig.nt ;111,1 tho IrH IIINhon give her autograph. orittOtt 111:111,hd Thp, III I' tl !tint ,11,11 I lot.! CAW) 111.1NliS larp. 1.tio1101 to IWO, It 1) plen; Wo 01 to thank our knot !,,litart, Is stlxvit Into !maids ii n friends and neighbors for their nest roast mill the nvoouet in 11,04 or In anti nYlnitallty during 1.0111Mon Ittinher alrewly II stir the recent 10101 of lir 1110111,1 itid j ii thin eolititry awl selling ut also extend grateful thanks for low 1.11..N, the beautiful floral tributes to ottrl 101,41 one. tinlatill Import.' $1o,olott,0(1) Mr. and '.Is. IL IlerrIngton. voth of vegetalties nnnually. Josh. iti,hop viti4 talking About radium mini. down In the! Midas,. and Om inilgio wam prnni j""IEN" "BAR Z BADMFNII JOHN MACK ini,nt I TONIGHT BROWN Dorm,y. proudwilt Ilai;erhfi,111 ni-1 umt-vh I 'Jr. ,- LJ 1- 1.11111 LI N BROWN (ortwy. Whi$ IN handling all of ' : t - Mrs. !Wimp's al lairs. '01,,,ral a 4sa!a. tliidIiig u IrAmontrinrou AND ntITINIIC)119 FITA arxTta ri,&Wii MIDNIGHT OWL SHOW TONIGHT! Doors Open 1 1 :30 FEATURING THAT GRAND HIT OF YESTERSEASON! ?EtaNECb. ' ' --- TO THRILL rt :,ceng YOU AGAIN! 't. ROARING MANCE 4 "4' "Nli: .. d 10 " O H DARE . 4. 12 1 WITH OF A.- , t I ; 4,, ( THE U.S.A.! , T, Iti Aft SRL': ' Ir "(''ELL- Da Viar 254 A, ,! TOMORROW ffn altit AND MONDAY CONTINUOUS BOTH DAYS Utz: ire 0 0 0 TO THRILL YOU AGAIN! ROARING ROMANCE i WITH DARE- DEVILS OF THE U.S.A.! , NNEi A arrvi CST' with JEAN PARKER Marjorie Rambeau A MOM Picture ALSO OSWALD"NIGHT LIFE OF THE BUGS" "ACE DRUMMOND" NEWS Ell& Is ri i k lv-'0- :";, I A A k .............................. e D o ..... , .. . ... -..-:..... -- ::,--;,-,,,..,.-17.: - G 0 -... - - .- . . -.. -.. . - . . . . ...- ... - . .. ..... - - . - . . ... -.-:. . '7 . ri s., 4, 7...:,:,:,,:,...:..f.....,: .. d e re ? .....::-.-;- - ...... . .. ...... s. , lr ............ : NV Mitt It t itt r i twy :7::::::.::: EW I,Com,' :10,1:1,:,3)1, i,,::::::::::::: 0. 0, ::: .: RCM JOU I i o o -:::::::-::::-: :.! anti a (hit tit ittt ra- ..... ............. Bpink ,...20 8 moot, ,I, 4'17K, , tt, ....:....2,.,....: 001110.. tti.t tiss 'torten:a 1.011 lent -::-.:---..---.....--- 0 ... - ..: ::: : : .. , taPlitS SVIIII .... IIII. ...........: LIZ i a . )- T. :A- :" -4-1 . 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