4. Hollywood Notó« F o it REÍFB—-7-room h o u s e WANTED— Ambitious people, rewm tower flat, -with . toKffar furnished or unfurnished, doable 1« toCO, ‘prepare for, of flea posi> plane, well fam ished, a|ae 2 - garage, hen. house,, wood house, tloas; resident or home stuffy. rotoa flat and aabln, 171 Granite garden. >7 5th St. 11-1 Medford Business College. 8L Phone M W . . 42-2 ' 806-1-afoi FOR RKMY-^-Furnlshed house, koi » «maT— Four room house­ near ' school, five vodma, sun- keeping apt. with bath. Inquire por^h, gas furnace, hot and cold U I Fork kt, ’ h < water in bqd rooms, garage. 271 high street. TO TRADE — Fine Klamath FOR RENT i f Odern «-room Falls hopse to trade for home .and mse, unfurnished, except for email acreage In or near Ashland. nge and linoleum. Close In, Writs Charles Stlrber, 1545 Sarg­ 11-3* nt reasonable to desirable ent Ave. Klamath Falls.' rty. 93 Bush st. 9-tf TO EXCHANGE-for Ashland. FOB SALE—MMGKLLAXEOL'B FOR RENT—Small furnished A good oeutrally located home«* in Bunion fer one in Ashland. BOUGHT and SOLD— C o w e house, 120 monthly. 128 Laurel , 9-« * 7-7* See Ashland Realty Co. bought qad sold. G. B. Barnett. 8t. Phone 4F2. 18-1 mo.* FOR RENT: Furnished bouse near Normal. Inquire 451 Palm aoreoge and businesses ta tiade POULTRY PEAT FERTILIZER 2-10* for Ashland and vicinity. Tell us — Marvelous fer flowers, lawns or «venue. what you have and what you want gardens- Retains 10 times Its FOB RENT— Two room fur­ and we do the rest. Kinney in ­ CEDARCREST C O U N T R Y havo the slightest Idea. weight in moisture. Mixed fine nished house, near Normal, 1243 Certainly Tunney stripped a. vest ment Co., Eugène, Ora., : CLUB, Lakeview, 111.— Sept. 16 and dry. Delivered in Ashland, Iowa. 297-tf 304-1 mo.* — North Main. Phone 41«, ; heavy punches; merely tbat Jackie] with mild boror in his tones, 91.60 rick. 4-foot cord wood, ' had n habit e f stopping practically | ” why, thq young man haB b e e n 99.00 cord. Delivered. Phone 6«. ANY GIRL IN TROUBLE—May j all of them with a none too sturdy most badly advised, most badly. "And, moreover,” be continued, •< f . chin. eotomunlcate vHih Ensign Lee after some rAental arithmetic, “as PIANO SACRIPÌCE near Ashland. i Then Chuck Wiggins.' t n e a doctor, he won't possibly make eC the Salvation Army at the d o w n of the camp, whose cauli- more than 915.000 a year. White Shield Home, 666 May- High grade reliable make piano J flower ears waggle resentfully ns' datr Rve., Portland. Oregon. to be sold at bargain .to eave “Now. as a champion, he could he dons his plus fours during the further shipping expense. Terms' make tbat much in a month. Of ceres hours, came prancing into course,” Gene added reflectively, of 910 month arranged fer good the ring for a couple of rounds o f : heme. For particulars address *’he wasn’t the heavyweight comedy with the king of t h e champion.” Cline Piano CÓ.» 95 Frant St., heavyweights. , Portland. . 5-10 It was very bad comedy, a«d BOOK REVIEWS Tunney called for Billy Vidabeak. TOKIO, Sept. 16,.— BUT DWT ÌT - «3OUP UNSS BC A MILE OVCB VONOBE L IH ts ,»s M Y Chtuch Directory Methodist Episcopal Oiurrh N. Maia and Laurel streets. H. F. Pemberton, Pastor, 117 Laurel stroet. Phone «7. j Breshyterian Ohurch N. M«ln and Helmaa Street* Hugh T. Mftchelmore, Pastor. 19« N. Main St. Phone 491-L. Lutheran Church ' Services In Odd Fellows Hall H. H. Young, Pastor. 58« Boulevard. Service* 4th and 4th Bundays. First Church of Christ Christian Church and Second Streets, n. V, Barney, Pastor Igh Bi. Phone 382-R i Dr. Charts« A. M M PhyvUM M JM j O ffm e h N e tfe l P ftn e ftm a U i OFFICE BOOM 1 10 to 18 a, ss^-ff to ■ ff. m. (Continued From Page One) OREGON CITY, Sept. 1«.— (IP) — R. Tietgens, 45, Burlingame, California, committed suicide north of here today by leaning over a rifle and pulling the trig­ ger. His head was shattered. He left u note saying “years of, worry have gotten the best of, me.” ' He drove from Portland in a big sedan. By Taylor Mom and Pop THE EIGHTH H<%C MUST OVER THIS WAY - (Written for United Prose) Prom Forty-8eeonfi Street to Fiftieth on Broadway, where the bright lights at« brightest an« the theatrical adasoh ia having its tall awahening, motion pictures are represented nt some of the afoat Important cantage points- ”Th« Garden of Allah," at «he tiny Em baas y Theatre near Forty Sixth, ta the latest important con­ tribution to the list of productions which premise to have good runs. A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayjsr Produc- tien bearing the stamp of Rex In­ gram, has crowded the lavishly decorated little movie house ever claoe the opening. For photog­ raphy and thrilling effects “The Carden of Allah“ registered an immediate success. Its desert landstcrm aloqe was well worth dovetion of an evening to the pie- lure. Ivan Petrovich, who playa the role of the monk turped word- ly drew the sighs of the feminine 'action of the audience although Alice Terry, as his lending lady, was conaidtred hardly enthusias­ tic enough to waramt his ardent love making. Broadway will pay more than passing notice to removal of the nreat electric sign atop the Astor Theatre which has advertised to the milling throngs for the past ”2 months the run of “The Big Parade,” Lawrence Stallings’ pic­ ture ■produced by Metro-Gofdwyn- Mayer. “The Big Parade” has .been shown to more than 1,800,- 00« parsons, has yielded more than «2,000,000 and has almost doubled the run of fhe best ’ pre­ vious Broadway movie produc­ tion. it yielded the Akter Thea­ tre to "The Studnef Prlijce,” an­ other M.-G.-M. production, Sept. on Broadway win We w,th film itself *» ft« imtoRAM« of this new movie entertainment. Premier Mussolini will make hl* debut in the film*, a* tar as Broadway ia concerned, sometime this month, when he appear* in a talking film 'to be released by William Fox at the Tinsee Square Theatre. The addreaea* he will make by mean* of the talklng- fllm consists of an outline of his political purposes, hopes . and achievements, made for t h e American people- C h veb lfowtl P. G. t «------ ir--.—