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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1928)
.2. 'MEIIFOKD Wgffi 'TKHlUfllOfTilWOTin, OTrEfiONT, TTTTnXY, TT7TTT5T 7,' TOW.' VTCIT, KF.YT.V BABY CLOTHES AND HOOVER EAGERLY MEN'S SHOES ARE AWAITING DAY NEEDED AT SHOP DF ACCEPTANCE I AVhat Is belioved to bp tbo only , thrift shop operated by u IIm1 i'rtx. chaptrr in Oregon is niuintiuneil , by th local orKUjiizutlon, upstairs tipxt to Ihe fivp-and-icu-ti'iit store in Main street. - ( KvtM-ythinu from soromlhaml cor sets to plush coats ami Bfhnnlbooks , may be found on On shtdvos in tlM shop, which in mamiKd by Mrs. H. A. Murray, who has linen In rhai'Ke of tho work for four 1 years. A man and woman came into ihe store last week and Informed the manager that they were here 1 for the fruit season. Friends of 1 theirs who had been here last year! bad tlod them a hunt the thrift shop and the bargains in worWnn clothe h. they said. Children's clothes are most in demand, but ! there nre few of them donated. .Inst now there is a short nc of scomlhandsboes for men. Proceeds from the sale of clothes 1 and other articles donated by poo- pie of Medford are only sufficient l to defray the expense of renting! the room and paying Mrs, Murray. ' Raps want pa at the Mail Trlb- ltn nffp Mit h olpnn (By James L. West, Associated Press Staff Writer) HTANPORl) IWlVKItSITY, Cal., Auk. 7. (!') Herbert Hoover is fattiiiK with a dt'firee of impatience his zein hour in the ureal national arena of politics. These days in terveniiiK before he makes his first bid to the American voters here next Satutilay are days of unrest even thoimtr they are more or less taken up with i omuls of political conferences and friendly visits with old ac(daintances who call at the rainblin.; stucco home of the republican presidential nominee on the side of San J nun hill. Kveu to a seasoned campaiRner, and by no stretch of the imagina tion x Mr, Hoover that, they would be ones of not int'renuent specula tion as to bow the keynote speech will be received by the nation: whether the farm relief declara tion will tend to quiet the turbu lent corn bell, and whether the true spirit in which the various parts of the message were com posed will get over to the people. Then there is another element which opens a wide vista to the practical, keen and quickly movins mind of the engineer and. admin istrator. Who tarries the hopes of 1 the grand old party. From his lonu administration of this means of purxeyiug the human message, I Mr. Hoover knows this field and , his thought is as to how many of : the millions within the radius of j the HO stations that will broadcast the acceptance speech will listen in and how loug they will sand by. Thoughts as to the ideal length of a radio speech differ, but some l surveys have placed it at a maxi mum of minutes. That maxi , mum will be nre than doubled I by Mr. Hoover next Saturday as , he could not comprefis a discus sion of the complex situations of the day iij so brief a space of time. With his insatiable thirst for all the facts on any given proposition ' which comes within the range of his study, the (i. O. P. standard bearer also is fairly well informed as to the kind of delivery that j goes best over the air. The spellbinding orator who de pends more upon the tricks of de livery than upon the substance of his address, does not do nearly so well as when faciiw; an audience in which he can stir the mob psy- chology. Shouting perorations are out on .the radio as the engineers simply 'tone down the sound to save the j wear and tear on receiving sets i and the ears of the listeners, and i those skilled In the art of appear ance before a microphone put their emphasis upon important parts of their speeches by speeding up their ! word flow. I There still is another reason ; why Mr. Hoover will be the better j satisfied, when he has officially ; launched himself upon his. cam- paign. Then he will he able to abandon tho policy of silence which he mapped ol't for himself imme- ! Mutely upon his nomination; a pol-' ! icy which his advisors hold has i been one of wisdom. i j He will he free to discuss any J questions as they nrise without waiting to deliver a set speech. Those who know Mr. Hoover are ; convinced that he is goln to prove anything but a loquacious candi date. His public addresses will be few and perhaps far between, and ; he has given no indication thus i far that he will give offhand opin ions on subjects political or otherwise. FOR U. S. SOLDIERS GOLUMNIST IS HA I. KM, Ore., Aug. 7. iff) -; the filing of a petition containing 10.703 names, more than the re quired number, the socialist party came into being yesterday. The petition was filed with the weere tary of state The stai central committee of the party will nom inate candidates for the November ballot. This committee is com posed of I'pton A. I'pton of Esta eada. ( V. Soderback, O. Stron quist and Alfred Hoglund, all of Portland. ' Frank T. Johns of Port bind, presidential candidate of the 1 party, who was drowned near Ltend ; several months ago while trying to save the life of a boy. was formerly I a m e m he r o f the executive com i niitLoe. .The partv in Oreuon wi'l I endorse Verne T. Reynolds of .Michigan fr president and Jere miah Crowley nf XeW York for vice-president. Christmas bas for Anurican snlili'rs in insular service and those f . . . . , A. I Itixliv, well-known "column- i on the sla ids are being made this . - ' vist ' on the Nebraska Stale Jour week t.y members of the Oiri Scmu , at ,im.t,. Neb., and the oldest tnmps of this city. Cretonne Is the Volumny ist" in point of service in material used and the contents will the I'nited States, is spending a in.lude toie( articles, bandker- dtt' valley as the' chiefs and other small non-perish- Ktest of his brother. A. U Hixby, able Hifts. The Red Cross furnishes family t Jacksonville. t.,llltpm).nt. Mr, Hixby visited Medford five; vears ao, inn since uuu v irnr nun met with a tragedy which has fun- Medford's branch e." wa nted at San Francisco. l,y mentally changed the tenor of , toher . Inspectors there remove " hi lUf. .fr hihUni.I ol rema.nlng All of the IT. bag quota, must be at ttv fie Or each article from the Ims in order tu see that they Include only the apprnvtfd gifts. A tint her phiuxe of the Red Cross production work for the year which is now in progress is knitting Mveuters for - disabled soldiers who are not drawing cpmpeusatiuif ain't ' are ton fined in hospitals. A Ito gether, the local chapter is requir- at his office at the State Journal: he spends nearly nil of his time ; traveling, speuding his daily con-, trihutions by mail. Two years a-io, while on a motor trip near Lincoln, the cur struck a ! wet spot on a graveled highway, ; skidded, and before Mr. Uixhy could regain control overturned and crashed down an lS-foot em-; bankment. Mrs. Btxby was in- .liss Lillian IJohertK, seeretar in charge of the work Aileen Stanley in "A Night in Spain ii i i i n i r.v. : JHW jDsses' and--;GfibEs : KBnwy:M k i k ' 1 New Fall Goods Arriving Now Makes It Necessary To Clear the Shelves of Summer Stocks Starting Wednesday Morning Our August Clearance Sale! RUSSELL'S Half-Price Sale Every summer dress and coat in stock is selling at "Just Half Price." Of course this is a tremendous sacrifice, but we must fol low our policy of always starting the season with an entire new stock and not carry over a garment. Street dresses, afternoon dresses, party and dance frocks, all go. Coats in both sports and dress, styles and a good range of sizes and models still left for your choosing. Dresses $10.00 to $49.75 and coats $12.75 to $85.00 all selling JUST HALF PRICE TO CLEAR RACKS. Many of these garments are in styles and colors of fall that you Will be able to cor rectly wear during the, coming season. Don't delay coming early. ' NEW FALL COATS AND DRESSES Coming in every day from New York's foremost designers. The most approved fall styles in women's smart wearing apparel, moderately priced. An especially smart line of $19.75 dresses to show you Wednesday. AUGUST SALE OF SUMMER WASH FABRICS Fabrics That Were 49c yard Now 29C Yard To $1.25 Rayon Dress Fabrics at 69C yard Absolutely fast, colors, jiov designs and suit able for wear now or later. Especially desir- able for school frocks for the mis or the college " girl. A real clean-up at a very low- price. $1.50 Celanese Voiles Priced at 89C yard Both plain and printed Oelnnose Voiles, abso lutely fast colors. A most, beautiful fabric for better wash dresses and then the, plain is now being used for draperies of the finer sort. Guaranteed fast colors in the best sell ing colors and patterns of summer. Fresh, crisp, washable flaxons, tissues, organdies, dimity and a fine line of voiles, all in the best fast color printed designs. There's still a long time of summer left to wear these pretty fab rics that are selling now at such a sav ing. , ed in .mnpleu at h-ast inn urtlritw Kuintlv killed mid lnr 'liuslmml so i during u sppcifled Ipnuth nf tim badly injuri'd Hint he still Buffers irmn a rrippiiMi snouiner. i Mr. Hixby nuiintuliiH his uprightly! column, us before, us wll us bis cheery outward demeanor, prul.setl t the beuuties of .Medford uml the1 ItoKiip Hiver valley, and said he ; would settle down nere pernaps " I (he hiiiI didn't insist upou "rising 1 : .In the. south und seltiiiK in tho Most folks like to be cutined north." Kike many travelers tho j even once." Alteon Stanley has ! filncolu uewspalier man hna diffi-, uiulernne the operuilon ' moreiulty in netting the points or the, times i bun t lie tomato crop for com pans- ' a whole, deeade. What Ik morn : Hut the ral problem of his life she likes it hem use It has made i ut pt'PHPiit In undouht edly contained ht'i" a ri.'h woman and endeared tho- touchlliK verses ho penned, her to amusement lovers from I while in tho south many months' I'lMH-r Sandusky lo Hallaral. nW y ri,m, nMl, Ik doubtful whether that other .AWAY FKOM IIOMK iiutstaoduB personality of the ma- I'hin.. flir,. ll..ni'v ' lu tiwirn Wid.'lv killiU'll 1Ii:mi Stilll-i '-V 'iil'V ley. j I'vo wandered like it lmletl thief, She In well entitled to the ell r mm i ii in of an ecstntie eonimen-l tainr, "(joei-u of the Wax Dises," j i Where thousands have seen and 1 heard her mi the siano, millions have enjoyed her delightful reper toire throuKb the medium of the phonoRiaph. Her voue, both as t a reeordinK artiste and footliKbt 'Ntar, Is at its zenith. I -Miss Stanley chooses her own Koiijrs. Those, she sinus In "A I.VItfht In ypaih," whleh.eomes tt Hunt's ('mterian4 theatre on Mon- day niKht, -August 'A. are no ex jception. sho feols that she best knows what are suited to her I talents and customers. ! The "a. Nlyht Jn Spain" star is a Chicago girl, whose early ca i reer was devoted to vaudeville. With the exception of one appear ance in musical comedy, her cur- rent eiiKUKemeiU Is the first out side ,thp varieties.' Before Joining the Shuherf ve vue Rho enjoy(li-a' protracted tour In lOnglaml wbero her records had made her as well known and popular as she Is on this side of t bo hip pond. , - . When itskvd in Chicago recently how she accounts for tho fnot that her offering, the epitome of propriety, meets ' with such ap probation from witnesses io a raffish exhibition like "A Nlht In Spain." she replied. . "I'oslbly I am leading them out of sin." , Order Police Shakeup NKW OIU.KANS, I.n., Aim. 7. (A1) On tho 'heels of a special Kinml jury quiz on tho KfimhlhiK situation in Now Orleans and a caustic criticism of the city police orKaul.allon by Paul Iltthans, com mlssloner of public safety, the po lice deportment -was ordered reor gnnlzed today by Thomas A. Iloaly, superintendent nf police. li'U!1.".11 1 . J..lLHJI""L?.""iJl. 1 ". '-'WB" It May Be I thnunl't lo kIiiiI uwuy from Bi-lcf, My Mary. Nmw faciH uml ni'W Hroni'H Hiitnr On overy tiuiid liiHtiuil nf i'Iihit, Ht'iiitntlliiK urn you urn mil hirt My Mary; SeiMiuM lu llio Koulh urn now uml HtranKO. My Alary; I hopcl lo prol'll by llm chuiiKu, My Mary; Hill every ninrnlim'H ilnnip uml (low, Ami every hrlllianl Hiuiset. view Cull up Had miMiioi'leH of you, Nfy Mary. Tlio Irons Unit nod lo meet tlio day. M'y Mnry; Tile llowei'H thai lilonm ulnng Ihe way. My Mary; All ii r Ihe IIiIiikx In evIileni'H, 'I' luil once uppouleil lo nltlht uml HOllHO, Now seem of little eoiiHoqiiemi, ' My Mary.1 Tim awnelenl gift llial. earlli, he- HlllWH, ..' My Mary, Von I'adeil, lovn, iih fuilea tho rone, My Mary, I do not know what Ifi to bo lleyoml I ho vale no eye ean nee Hut. you wei'o ull or life to mo, Mjf.Mury. . .- If I mlKlit know Mini you are near, My Mury, ' Thai you Hi III know and lovn mo, ilenr, My Mary, My vIhIoii for (lie eoinlni? yearn Would not 1)0 (Illumed by fulliiiK learn: I'm coiKtii'(Hl now by iloiibtH ami rcarn. My Mary. lint BWoet thn monioiloH that Rrlp, 1vry Mary, Thoao yeara of bleHt companion -. ahlp, ' My Mary; IoiiK yenrH that now aeem all .ton few If Ihoio hp natiKbt beyond th(i hinn, In Hllent duHt I'll rent by yon, My Mary. Affi. Hlxby. WHO IS GOING TO PAY POOR S. P FOR THOSE WIRE WHEELS lli Children Ciy for It f'milnria n a comfort when Baby i fretful. No iooticr taken thnu the. little one ii at cane. If jestles,- fr.w flrojs noon hrtiiK conteiitineiit. No harm done, for (,'Htttoria i a hahy remedy, meant for MhienV IVrfectly : safe tu give fin; younent infant; 'you have the dortorV word for thtfW It in a vietuble product and yu i could ne it every day. Jiut It'a in an emerffeiey that Caatoria meuna mmt. Some nilit when cniistipatlon ''mimt l relieved or colic p.iirn or i other tufTrrinjf. Never 1 wnliwit il; bo me mothers keep an extra bottle, , unopened, to make mire there will always he ('astorift in the house. It in etrertive fof older cltildren, too; rend the book that romc with it. The wire wlieelH, ordered eight years ago hy Keeley V. llnll for Halph (l. Hard well, and which were received Mn'y 13, last, con tinue to ho a thorn .In the fleh this lime to the Houthern Pa cific railroad, MessrH Hnrftwoll and Hall refuse to pay the freight on tho wire wheels, and same repofle In the freight house. They not ulone refuse to pay. tho freight, they refuse to accepv delivery of same. Tho ftill amounts to something like $108. -Messrs Uardwll -und llnll . nlleffo that elht years in entirely too lone for the delivery of n. set of wire wheels, ;ftnfl while they hod nome UsQ for them lu Jfllii, they have none whatsoever now. The wheelh were orlnlnntly or dered fot the Itnrdwell 'handler anKvt which was sold tolH. Von I'loevenbuifr, and Its en (fine Is now,, in A .wood tru. 'end .the i 'ni km In gone to the junk heap. Now Messrs Hardwell and Hall nre convulsed .with mirth at the hi en of the fiouthern Pacific de siring their freight chares, nnd have had many a good laugh about It. The situation Is now stalemated, and neither the conslKnors, the consignee, nor the railroad want tho wire wheels on their hands. No ( lianirn In Wcntlior. Oregon: Fair tonight and Wed nesday, Fog near th coast. Not ; much change In temperature or j humidity. Oenltn north to wMt winds on the count. 0 o IThis is tbe only t coffee tjitit says "Moneybaclc it" you don't like it" and dares to put it on the pack age - - to show that it means exactly what it says. m A Back she came . . . millionaire's wife -and BROKEN-HEARTED AS far back as Cherry Could remember, poverty mid , squalor,' toil and hunger, were the only life she had ever known. Many a lonely, aching night, through hot tears of self-pity, she had gazed with wistful, longing eyes into a dream-world of her own making a world of love, tenderness, compassion, radiant beauty a world that seemed forever beyond her reach. But as the years went by, and Cherry blossomed into young womanhood, her determination to conquer life brought its reward. Brought .freedom, friends, opportunity, success. Then romance came ro mance as marvelous as it was beautiful, As the wife of Dick lierringer-young, rich, boyishly handsome Cherry's measure of happiness seemed complete. One brief year of ecstatic bliss, then catastrophel A merciless fate decreed that she. go back tu the gutter whence she came. With bleeding heart she saw i snatched from her all the love and tenderness, the comfort and happi ness, he had fought for so bravely ) and so long. " What strange circumstances conspired to crush her under thi:; frightful load of miser) ? Why must she exchange an honored name for the bitterness of shame and degradation? Because she mar ried above her class, must she pay the penalty of disillusionment and black despair? You will want to read the whole heart-breaking story, exactly aa Cherry tells It. It is entitled "Shat tered Dreams," and appears com plete in the September issue of True Story nfagazine. CONTENT S Strange Bondage I Wus a Doctor s Wife Doer Love ExcUse All? , Flyers' Wives Her Supreme Sacrifice Restless Wings Love in the Wilderness Was Love Worth This Price? Three Loves ' And several other stories 15 , lltrillinq Stories 'SEPTEMBER True 1 Story Consult Your Pafitrfor Bxacr Ttmt now on sale til nil newsstands TUB LARGEST NEWSSTAND SALE IN TUB WOlUD-TWO MILLION MONTHLY ! Tune in on the True Story flour Iroadcait tvtry Friday night over VUK ana tbe jolunwia chain. FOR YOUR WINTER FIRE Green Pine Slab Wood , ' 12-inch or 16 inch $2 75 Per Load 2 Loads $5.00 MEDFORD FUEL CO. llieHorfh Central Keichatein ! Tel. 631 Deuel CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING GETS BESULTI n