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Spokane Chronicle from Spokane, Washington • 2

Publication:
Spokane Chroniclei
Location:
Spokane, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Yank Offers Gum 2 Mon-, July 3, 1911. SPOKANE DAILY CIIIZOMCLE Nazis Expecting I HOLIDAY DEATH TOLL MOUNTING DANISH WORKERS' STRIKE SPREADS Italy Likely Needs Long Supervision NAZI GENERALS' VEVEY RATE IS CALAMITOUS Patton Offensive By the Associated Press. The Berlin radio, possibly fishing for information about Lieutenant General George S. Patton said today that German military circles expect "Patton'a American army group" to open an offensive in the near future." Patton, formerly commander of the Seventh army, has been in Britain but his exact status in the Invasion has not been defined by allied announcement. "Methodical ranging of a large number of new enemy batteries indicates that the allied high command is planning to reopen attempts at achieving a decisive breakthrough on the Normandy beachhead front shortly.

Possibly the allied command will postpone the date of the opening of this offensive until the beginning of the second phase of invasion until Patton's American army group has been brought up after southeast England. German military circles expect this army group to open an offensive in the very near ROME, July 1. (Delayed.) (43) Colonel Charles Poletti, regional commissioner for the Rome area, says he believes the allies must remain in Italy after the war, at least until the Italians select their own form of government, and that the country's reconstruction must be aided by allied loans and assistance. The former lieutenant governor of New York, who has had a year's experience in allied military governments, disclosed his convictions in an interview. Ile predicted reconstruction would take place much quicker than the Italians believe possible, and said one of the main problems is to educate the Italians to democracy after 20 years of Fascist corruption that spread throughout the land.

to Royal Princess A UNITED STATES CENERAL HOSPITAL IN SOUTIIWEST ENGLAND, July 3. (A'Even a royal princess doesn't say no when offered a package of gum in England these days. "Little Princess Alexandra WaS rather shy when I first talked to her," saki Captain Stuart A. Seidl of Cincinnati, Ohio. "But I gave her a packet of gum and that did the trick.

Now we are firm friends." Captain Safdi told of this after his return to the hospital with a party of American soldiers wounded in Normandy. They had been to visit Queen Mother Mary at the historic mansion where she is now living and where the 7-year-old daughter of the Duchess of Kent was visiting. "Groups were there from several hospitals and the queen mother chatted with each soldier," Safdi said. "The little princess was rather embarrassed at first. Many soldiers filing past didn't notice the little girl- standing beside the queen.

Later she made friends all around, laughing and talking with the soldiers." I3y the Associated Freels. The nation's accidental deaths for the Fourth of July holiday period reached 205 today. Despite waratime restrictions and appeals for reduced travel, at least 88 persons died in traffic mishapsmore than from any other cause. Drovvnings took 54 lives and miscellaneous accidents claimed 63. Illinois led all states with 20 deaths.

California was second with 17, of which 11 were attributed to traffic. Last year's toll for the holiday week-end was 298, including 127 deaths from traffic accidents, 84 from drownings and 87 from other causes. The National Safety council estimate that the normal number of deaths from traffic accidents for an average Saturday, Sunday. Monday and Tuesday in July was 250. wmonegommqvifweammommowliweimmommimmoitipww owt .1,..

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.4 .,1 ,..1 I I st .4, 4 I t. i 4,., g-, k. i :1, -7; '1 i sTocKnouq, July 3. CPIDanish workers' demonstrations and strikes against the Germans were reported spreading today to 20 towns, Including Helsingor and Kalunborg in Sjaelland and Aarhus In Jutland, the second largest city. At Helsingor, the Elsinore of "Hamlet" fame, gas, electricity and water were suddenly cut off, the Free Danish press service reported possibly a Nazi action to force the workers back to their jobs.

In where 15,000 Danes are reported to have clashed with 3000 Germans, appeals by prominent Danes to the workers and a tlerman offer to restore public utilities service appeared to have failed to halt the general strike, now in its fourth day. The Danish Free press, on the basis of fragmentary information, said the strike continued and said underground newspapers were distributing leaflets calling upon all workers to continue away from their jobs. Throughout the day the Danish radio broadcast appeals at half-hour Intervals for the people to return to work, assuring them that a military ring thrown around Copenhagen had been lifted. The Stockholm newspaper Aftontidningen reported with reservations that two ships had arrived at Copenhagen harbor, possibly to transport the Danish Nazi Schalburg corps outside the country. Removal of the Danish Nazis has been one of the demands of the strikers.

Withdraw Troops. STOCKHOLM, July 3. (i)The Swedish-Norwegian Press Service said today that the Germans have withdrawn troops from two training centers in Norway, presumably sending them outside Norway. Two German airports were reported to have been evacuated. NEW LIFE STIRS PACIFIC SECTOR DEMOCRATS GIVE WOMEN TOP SPOT BOX CARS PILING UP AT TERMINALS CHICAGO, July 3.

(AP)---There is Insufficient labor to unload cars of wheat as fast as they arrive at southwestern terminals and the congestion is contributing to the already acute shortage of box cars, J. J. Mahoney, superintendent of transportation for the Santa re railway, reported today. Mahoney said government agencies were attempting to obtain soldier help at the crowded terminals and that permission already had been granted for an increase in wage rates for elevator and mill workers unloading the grain. SELL TRAINING MANES.

KANSAS CITY, July 3. (A) Surplus training planes of the Defense Plant corporation and of the army are to be sold at the rate of 470 a week, beginning this week, W. E. Kline, civil aeronautics regional manager, has announced. Sales agencies will be set up in Kansas City, St.

Louis, Wichita, Omaha, Des Moines, Denver and IIuron, S. D. Enjoy Real COMFORT Relax at the Galax SLEEPS THROUGH SHOOTING ter nonchalant as the daughter of a famous marine fighter pilot should be, 2-week-old Cheryl June Foss sleeps through her first photographic shooting in the arms of her mother at Cottage hospital, Santa Barbara, Calif. Major Joseph Foss has returned to the south Pacific. (AP wirephoto.) Quiet, Comfortable eonvententir located within three blocks of the shoneing and theater diatriet.

Free 111111110 liDACO STRAUB RESIGNS RATIONING POST WASHINGTON, July 3. (4) Resignation of Walter F. Straub as director of the food rationing division of the office of price administration was announced today by Charles F. Phillips, deputy CPA administrator for rationing. Straub, president of W.

F. Straub Chicago, will continue in OPA service as a consultant but will return actively to his own business. WASHINGTON, July 3. OM Democratic national committee officials announced today that women have been given top speaking spots on the program of the party's national convention, opening July 19 in Chicagothe first time women have been so prominently recognized. Listed to address sessions are Helen Gahagan Douglas, actress and wife of movie star Melvyn Douglas, and Mrs.

Gladys Til lett, head of the women's division of the national committee. Mrs. Douglas was nominated for congress in the California primary. Committee officials said that women had made seconding speeches at Democratic conventions in the past but never were listed for major addresseswith the exception of Mrs. Franklin D.

Roosevelt who turned up and made an extemporaneous speech at the 1940 meeting. At the Republican convention ended last week, Representative Clare Booth Luce of Connecticut made one of the principal addresses. Approximately 500 women are expected to serve as delegates and alternates to the Democratic LONDON, July 3. (W)Three more German generals have met sudden death in the battle for White Ilussia, the Nazi communique said today, raising to 19 the number of general officers killed or captured in less than a month. The calamitous mortality rate in the enemy command dramatically high-lighted the hopeless German man-power situation projected by the outbreak of three-front war.

fare in The "Black June" for Germany, to say nothing of a fourth front in the air and a fifth front in occupied countries where patriots have become increasingly active. By official allied estimates, Ger, man casualties since the inception of the three-front offensive beginning with Italy have reached around 394,000 to date. The Russians have announced the death or capture of 219,000. German casualties in Normandy have been estimated at 75,000 and those in Italy were set at 80,000 to 100,000 about 10 days ago. Artillery Chiefs Killed.

The German communique told of the deaths of Artillery Generals Pfeiffer and Iidartinek and of Lieutenant General Schenemann. Thus from June 6, no less than 11 enemy generals have been killed and eight captured. Others on the German death list were these: Colonel General Friedrich Doll. mann, commander of the German Seventh army in France, an artillery specialist and defender of the middle of the Atlantic wall. He possibly was a victim of R.

A. F. rockets and bombs. Colonel General Eduard Dietl, commander of seven divisions in northern Finland. His death in an airplane accident set the motif for a Hitler oration, his first utterance In months.

General Erich Marks, killed in Lieutenant Generals Hellmich and Richter, and Major Generals Steegmann, Fallay and Witt, all killed in Normandy. Taken Prisoner. taken included: General Gollwitzer, commander of the 53d army corps, Russia. Lieutenant General Carl Wilhelm von Schlieben, Cherbourg garrison commander. Major General Satler and Rear Admiral Walter Hennecke, Cherbourg.

Major Generals Erdmannsdorff, Beaumler, Heine and Hamman in Russia. Moreover, the allied command in Rome said "it appears that Colo-re General von Mackensen has been removed from the command of the 14th army (in Italy), which Is not unreasonable, in view of the heavy defeat inflicted on him in which his army was practically destroyed," General Schuenemann was a member of a prominent publishing family which owned the Bremen Nachrichten Weser Zeitung. Hamman (the Russians spelled his name Gaman because there is no in the Russian language) commanded the Bobruisk garrison and was on the Russian atrocity list for alleged excesses while commanding at Orel. RATES $1 to $2.50 French Count in Normandy Down to Last Pair of Shoes Main and Barnard 04, 7 Bernard Ati0 1 By the Associated Press. General MacArthur's sector of the Pacific war stirred to new life and significance today with a three-ply blow against Noemfoor island, possibly indicative of a new allied jump toward the Philippines.

While the still-undecided battles for Saipan and Hengyang mounted in bitterness, the 15-by-12-mile island lying in New Guinea's Geelvink bay caught two week-end bombings and a P-T boat shelling. MacArthur's headquarters reported the second raid brought 150 aircraft with a 230-ton bomb load over Noemloor's three airdromes Saturday. The unusual weight of the attack suggested MacArthur could be preparing to leap 50 miles from Biak island to Noemloor. Or he could be clearing the way for a jump farther west to New Guinea's northwest tip. Noemloor is 800 miles from the Philippines, 600 from Palau.

Saipan' Pocket Narrowed. Elements of two marine and one Infantry division narrowed to approximately 25 square miles the pocket into which Japanese on Saipan are being pushed. The Americans advanced from 500 yards to a mile along the front. On the east coast they were five and a half miles from the island's northern tip, which may become a Japanese Bataan. The bitter fighting in the forests and cave-pocked mountains already has cost the Japanese at least 6015 killed and much cached war material.

The town of Garapan, scene of hard street fighting, came under heavy fire from artillery, naval guns and mortars. One correspondent pictured it as a mass of flame. The Americans apparently were ready to wipe it off the map to get at the Japanese who had made it a fortress. In Burma, Japanese attempting a thrust at allied-held Myitkyina airfield were wiped out by American forces. ADVERTISING.

RETIRED GENERAL KILLED BY ROBOT Wife Wins Relief From Neuritis Pain "Real Civil War." LONDON, July 3. OP German troops were reported today to be pressing a large-scale drive in southwestern France in an effort to smash underground resistance, described by one French collaborationist source as "a real civil war directed from abroad." A new and disturbing situation, meanwhile, was rising to plague the Germans at home whereaccording to dispatches from Madrid some 50,000 foreign prisoners have escaped since the allied invasion of France and are causing deep concern by their activities. Reports from the Spanish-French frontier, relayed here by way of Madrid, said the Germans had thrown tanks and bombers as well as infantry into their drive against French patriots in the Dordogne region of southwestern France. After two days of fighting, the Nazis were said to have recaptured Bergerac and advanced to St. Cyprien, where they freed 150 collaborationists who have been held as prisoners in that town.

The retreating maquis were reported to have transferred their activities 50 miles south of Bergerac, taking over the rail junction at Armande and cutting the important CahorsBordeaux railroad line. BLUE SEED 50cPer Pound nun lo for Postage No SP frfr l' 4 E1100 Bengalis Ave. Lake. 6381. Thousands of sufferers from the torturing pains due to rheumatism, sciatica.

lumbago, neuralgia and neurit isare mighty happy over their discovery of NORITO. Now they have found a quick-acting formula which speedily relieves those estimating muscular aches and pains. NORITO is trustworthy and dependable really works fast. It you want to feet again the joy of relief from painso you can wntk in peace and sleep in comfortbe we and try NORITO under this ironclad guarantee. If the very first three doses do not relieve that cruel pain to your satisfactirmyour money wilt be refunded.

I ron't suffer. See your draws( today and get NORLTO on this guaraMet. 1,115,0110 JEWS LONDON, July 3. bombs have killed Major General' Sir Arthur Scott, retired; his Aimee Byng, a novelist, and Sir' Percy Alden, for years prominent in the campaign against slums, it was disclosed today as the Germans resumed rocket bomb attacks on southern England after a brief post-midnight lull. General Scott, 82, began his army career in 1881, and retired in MO.

He became a major general in the first World war, commanding the royal artillery of the Third army and later serving as general officer commanding the 12th (eastern) division. He had served in South Africa, and commanded the Lucknow division in India from 1918-1920. Sir Percy, 79, was secretary and treasurer of the Sulgrave manor board, and had lectured in the United States on labor and social problems. One flying bomb hit a house, killing a mother and five of her nine children. THEY LAUGHED WHEN I RESCUED THIS NEW YORK, July 3.

Geneva dispatch to the New York Times today said 1,715,000 Jews had been put to death by the Germans in upper Silesian "extermination camps' at Auschwitz and Birkenau in two years ended April 15, 1944. The report was attributed to information reaching the international church movement ecumenical refugee commission of Geneva and the fluchtlingshilfe of Zurich. 1 '4 6. 0. 4,4401 it Mauls Capture Nazi Chief.

PORT BOU, Spain, July 3. UM General Georges Nadal, chief of Vichy's pro-German militia in western France, has been captured by the maquis, according to reports reaching here today. Recess May Last Until September 4 1 I Ay 41 lit 11 '''4'4? ATIIC RELIC se, '17' Iil "'ii 0' i'f'14 .1 4,,,,, i 11; SOMEWHERE IN NORMANDY, June 30. (Delayed.) (P)---Monsieur Le Comte, who is a millionaire with only one pair of shoes to his name, spoke for all of the French in Normandy when he said, "we are very rich and yet very poor." Rich in tradition and national pride, in fertile land and sturdy Norman buildings, but so poor that M. Le Comte walks about in skiing shoes he used to reserve for holidays at Saint Moritz.

"They are all I have left," he said. The count, who is in his 70s, rode with us to Cherbourg in a jeep yesterday and was as excited as a child. He told us it was his first automobile ride in four years. The count owns 'a chateau in Normandy and yet he is no better off than one of his tenant farmers. Here was no collaborator.

He was a great friend of the captain who was driving us to Cherbourg on official business, and as we rode he told us something of what it was like to live four years under German domination. "Living in the richest part of France, we never lacked for meat or bread," he said in English, which ran fluidly into French when he became excited. Lacked Little Things. "It is the little things like shirts. I was unable to buy a shirt for four years and now I have only five.

If the war lasts another year, I'll have no shirts." Some things are obtainable in the black market hut at outrageous prices-3000 francs for a pair of shoes, 140 francs for a package of cigarettes. (A franc was worth 212 cents before the German occupation.) "That's why patriotic French people resorted to barter," he explained. "You have some cheese; I have some nails; we exchange." His chateau first was occupied by the Germans and now is used by the Americans, but the count waits patiently for the war to pass him by. He said he had no complaint to make about the Germans. "They were very correct," he said, "but of course they were Germans and w'e do not want them." At the captured fort we inspected, the count found a stout shovel and a rusty crosscut saw.

He gathered them up and asked permission to take them home with him in the hack of the jeep. "For my garden," he said. "You laugh?" We certainly did not. INCREASES SHOWN IN WAR PENDING WASHINGTON, July 3. CAAlthough congress officially is in recess until August 1, its leaders were reported today by House Majority Whip Ramspeck Ga.) to have decided that major legislative work would not be resumed until after Labor day, September 4.

Ramspeck said leaders of both houses would return to the capital August 1, and arrange either for another adjournment or for a series of three-day recesses, if no need develops for emergency legislation in the meantime. The Georgian added that House Majority leader McCormack Mass.) had obtained Republican agreement to such a program. The recess plan may be adopted because it would allow committees to function, Ramspeck I COFFIN SEALED OF POPE PIUS X. VATICAN CITY, July 3. (A-- The first phase of the ceremonies leading to beatification of Pope Pius X.

has been completed with the sealing of his coffin and replacing of his body in its resting place in a crypt of St. Peter's. The body was placed in a wooden coffin with silken purses containing medals struck during his reign from 1903 to 1914, along with a parchment describing the recognition ceremonies of the past 46 days in which the coffin was opened and the body examined. 610 4's Itt I or Sale i 1 1 4: 1 4 0 (le, 47. 4 I tt Ito I VA Ar.4 31 1 i 4, All Hands Are Busy in Kansas Harvest KANSAS CITY, July 3.

(A')The Stafford county commissioners could hardly be seen for their yawns today in their meeting in St. John, Kan. They struggled into their gathering at 3 a. m.so that by 6 a. m.

they could be in the fields harvesting wheat. All over Kansas similar stories could be toldof barbers allowing whiskers to sprout unmolested; ot jewelers forsaking their gems, ot preachers leaving their congregationsor, rather, of going with them to the fields. For Kansas is harvesting a golden wheat crop estimated by the United States department of agriculture at 174,640,000 bushels. For comparison, last year's crop was 144,201,000 bushels, and the 10-year average was 125,965,000: Labor, of course, is the chief problem. In other years, transients have wandered in to help.

But this year it's mostly up to the Kansans themselves. WASHINGTON, July 3. ()The nation spent nearly $90,000,000,000 in the fiscal year ended last Saturday, the treasury reported today. War spending by the treasury, the Reconstruction Finance corporation, and RFC subsidiaries increased about $15,000,000,000 over the preceding year. These expenditures, plus interest on the war debt, accounted for 90 per cent of total expenditures during the year.

Expenditures for war purposes increased all along the line. Some of these outlays, compared with the previous year: War department, $49,301,807,558 and navy department. 633,877 and maritime commission, $3,811,704,050 and RFC and subsidiaries, $2,681,633,023 and 248,130, BUT NOW AiY FAMILY CALLS ME THE 'bUC011MAGICIAN BUT NOW MY FAMILY to, It ,,,1,,, IIIE .0,4.. ti DCO MAGICIAN 4 1: 1 I tit, vo, 1 13,1.. 76, .1.

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0 .1 i 4, 00 4 1 The Washington Merry-Go-Round I By Drew Pearson. The cleanest, safest, soundest Crade 3 tires in town everyone carefully looked over inside and out, cleaned up, repaired wherever necessary to give )7ou a GOOD, low-cost used tire. Ering in your Grade 3 certif. $1" icate today. up RUPTURED? Admiral Land Promoted WASHINGTON, July 3.

(A Emory S. Land, chairman of the maritime commission and chief of the ar shipping administration, was promoted from rear admiral to vice admiral under legislation signed today by President Pearson Writes to Sister. Tells About Convention. (Editor's note: Returning from the Chicago eon vention, Drew Pearson, from his farm in Maryland. wrote the following letter to his sister, Mrs.

Gordon Lang. of Swarthmore, PiLi GAITHERSBURG, July 3. Dear Sister: I have just come back from Chicago, where I saw the Grand Old Party go through its quadrennial birthpangs of nomjnating a presidential candidate. And, more important from your viewpoint, I saw your husband for the first time in the uniform of a Pearson Writes to Sister. Tells About Convention.

(Editor's note: Returning from the Chicago convention, Drew Pearson, from his farm in Maryland. wrote the following letter to his sister, Mrs. Gordon Lang. of Swarthmore, Pa.) GAITHERSBURG, July 3. Dear Sister: I have just come, back from Chicago, where I saw the Grand Old Party go through its quadrennial birthpangs of nom- mating a presidential And, more important from your viewpoint, I saw your husband for! the first time in the uniform of The Honest John Truss GO ODATAKI G.

I. GOES TO G. O. P. What I really started to write 1 you about, however, was Gordon.

He was able to leave camp only one day, Sunday, therefore never I got a chance to see the convention in session. Despite that, I think: he got a greater kick out of it than Mr. Dewey himselfand out of sleeping in a soft bed! Ile went out to the convention hall the day before it opened and watched all the preparations that go into the staging of the greatest I show on earththe myriad of tele-I phone and telegraph wires to carry' the story to the country, the loud. speakers which the Republicans were terribly afraid might fall into private in Uncle Sam's army. the hands of Mayor Kelly's sewer' The convention, from a news- commissioner, and even the sawing paperman's viewpoint, was dull.

off of the state flagpoles after the! Chicago Sun photographer corn-i lained that he couldn't shoot The ticket scalpel's lost 'Even Republican leaders COM- plained about the dullness, be- through the Michigan state flag- pole moaned the fact that they couldn't it was too high. I I get a crowd out on the first day every one took their politics to hear Governor Warren's key- las seriously and as enthusiastically would have 'ote speech. However, from a po- as your husband, BUY YOUR GENUINE IMPORTED hnids your ttligliret with comfort and security when all others fail. Orthopedic Braces and Appliances SPOKANE LOCATION Corner 2nd and Monroe Phone Riverside 8061 APPLE WAY MOTORS, DISHMAN East $IVI Sprague Ave. Phone Walnut 1535 Try this easy DUCO "Transformagic" way' IA A Wig III Wilt "7' trft eye adt1 ORIENTAL RUGS P.

F. RIESSEN RESEARCH; 407A itiverilde Ave. Main MO. Saw of legs of old radio. Remove front panel and door.

Paint with pleasing MO colors. Rebokfl irs charmingbook case table for soy room. run to make Tr formagic e-L1-ku from a nierchant who deals in Oriental flocs flits- fords. tikliti! Kirishian Bros. il IT- 1 Howard argil Piral VI 1 Howard and First DAY AND NIGHT SPOKANE'S MOST COMPLETE SERVICE I GIGLI REPORTED KILLED IN ITALY LONDON, July 3.

(P)Naomi Jacobs, the novelist, said today she had received a message by secret means saying that I3eniarnino Gig former Metropolitan opera had died in Italy. Miss Jacobs, a friend Of said "I do not think he died a natural death. I think it is something else." There was no confirmation of the report, Only last June 22 Gig li was barred from singing in an army concert in Rome. He had been accused by Romans of having Fascist sympathies. Gig II, defending himself, said he had sung for the Germans and for the Fascists, "but I am an artist and I never had interest in politics," and that he wanted to sing for the American and British troops in Rome.

KAUFFMAN BUICK 11101100---" Phone 119 in tio133 FREE BOOK GIVES FAYROKUL IINIUGN DI DR EE AD SS For Every Make tor very Flake lake litical viewpoint, this dullness mav a better-run country. There are others like him, however. Sunday have been a good thing, Vaal night, before he caught the train makes far a good newspaper story doesn't necessarily make for suc back to camp, he brought some of cess on election day. his buddies up to my hotel room others like him, however. Sunday It night, before he caught the train :1 back to camp, he brought some of his buddies up to my hotel room, and they too are doing a lot of 1, thinking.

They are thinking about ts. what's going to happen after the I thinking'. They are thinking about what's going to happen after the t. I ft1 v. il 1- I tilld 0111S fr1P (0 ,0 vit I 0 i7di 1 to 4, i i 11 This new book makes it easy for you to breathe new life into old furniture.

Full of ideas from Peter Hunt, famous artist. Shows smart new uses for old things. 64 pages, pack-jammed with examples, many in full color. Tells "how to do it." All you need is your own imagination and DUCO. It's "one-coat magic" for furniture, walls, woodwork.

Anyone can get good DUCO results quickly, economically. Easy to use. Exceptional hiding in one coat. Resists hard wear. Washable.

I IMP IT STARTED A NATIONAL .0, HOBBY Sloittit (l toicp 0.44 4,0 ..11 Get your copy today of the amazing new by Peter Hunt. Wm PREF. with purchase of only one pint otpuca I 7 I I :4 IT; I el 1. 1A 1 -1 i if, 1:: i i 4 NEW kind of ASPIRIN tablet Motor Up Radiator Repair Brake Relining BodyFender Work Wheel Alignment Electrical Check Lubricating Motor Tunet Radiator Rep Brake Relinir DU PONT PAINT SERVICE STORE PHONE RIVERSIDE MI N209 WALL doesn't upset stomach "QUITTING TIME" comes for one car in every five seconds today in America. Keep up your car to keep it from coming to the end of the road.

War-time wear and tear call for better and better care. Kauffman is Spokane's largest automotive establishment and is open more hours every day and night. But what some people resented, especially the Bricker boys, was too much steam-roller tactics and Nivar too much of the greased Dewey The Republican platform had not machine. It looked a little like the i been finally drafted then, but al. early steam-rolier days of the New ready word had leaked out that the Deal.

Chicago Tribune and its isolation'. Out here In Maryland, where it's ist friends were working for iv clean and green and where the weasel-worded compromise on farmers are cutting their hay and world cooperation for cultivating their corn without lar to that of President Harding's worrying much about keynote day. And believe me, if the Repub. speakers or keyhole politics, I look limns or any other party let down back at Chicago and the whole po- the men who come back from this litical broil seems rather tawdry war in regard to preventing an-and out of place. other warthen it's going to be But when you think about it just too bad for whoever is respon: carefully, It isn't Chicago was sible.

part of the machinery of political The in this war are doing opposition. And political opposi- more thinking than our brother tion is what makes this country and I did in the last war. We were strongable to weather wars and younger than your husband, were deprosions and internal turmoil. without families, and war was a The Roosevelt administration glorious adventure that we hoped would have profited from more would continue long enough so we political opposition in the early could he in the thick of it. days.

'rhey're going to get a good But in this war, not only are the dose of it his fall. And as long youngsters doing more thinking as it doesn't hit below the belt but there are thousands of niPn and bring the war into politics, it like your husband, with three chit-will be a healthy thing. dren or even more, who have only And I hope that whoever is one ideathat their kids shall not elected President will have plenty have to go through the same thing of fair, honest political opposition. that they are going through. 1 will keep lilni On Ills toes.

(Copyright, 1911.) dren or even more, who have Only one ideathat their kids shall not have to go through the same thing that Ihey are going through. (Copyright, 1911.) et fair, honest political oppositia It will keep 11rn on Ills toes. oupuoT I' 42)0 4- tk 41 AND ALL OTHER REPAIRS not irritate or upset stomacheven after repeated doses. Tsar this out to remind you to get Superin today, so you can have it on hand when headaches, colds, strike. See how quickly it relieves painhow fine you feel after talc.

ettaTunita to ing. At your druggist's, iir 15t and 39s. relieves painbow ovonci4, fine you feel after tak ing. At your druggives ro, 15t and 39c WHEN you need quick relief from pain, do you hesitate to take aspirin because it leaves you with an upset stomach If so, this new medical dis covcry, SUPER1N, is "just what the doctor ordered" for you. Suporin Is aspirin pluscontains the same pure, safe aspirin you have long knownbut compounded by medical men in a epecial way tor those upset by aspirin in its ordinary form.

SPOKANE DEALERS i Ths Palace w. Ili mos Garland Aye Paint Store W. 007 Garland LW() fl f4f 4.4 Maxwell Franks W. 010 Eirst Avenue Manito Hardware Co. 11.

3011 Grand Modern Cabinet Works 25 11prague 11. 1 This new kind of aspirin tablet dissolves more quickly, lets the aspirin get right at the job of relieving pain, reduces the acidity of ordinary sspirini and does Stan Dnsow N. 5101I Market ALALW 4,410 csV.I,VAWMTOly, Al" er.t-,frArmitTrIriiiiompompip mirommitoonomenrompoweimasiletweroillW 97:401 oirmwmair t. I.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1890-1992