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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1929)
MEDFORP MATL TRTBTTTfE, "NfBDFOTID, OKECiON, FRTDAY, .TUNE 28, 1929. PAGE SIX SARAZEN AND ESPINOZA GRAB JTOURNEY LEAD -'"winged foot ci.un. mama- , HONKt'K, N. V.. June 28 IluylnK most of his round in torrential rnln, Hobby Jones lout tho lead an well as a dramatic battle with the elements today. 1 He took tt 75, three, ovtir mr tor his second round in the national open Kolf championship and drop- 1 peel bnck Into n tie for third place with m, two strokes behind tho leaders. Gene Saraeen and Al Es plnosa. J'DEAU N. J., June 28. (P( Tom Aycock, Yule star from Jack oonvllle, Kin., won the national In tercolleKlate golf champloiiHhip on the Hollywood course today, de feating the Kll captain, Marshall I forrest. in the iG-hole final, 5 up and 4 to play. 'WINOKD FOOT CO U NT 11 Y Cl.rU, .MA.VIAHONKCK, N. Y., June 28. oV) The national open golf championship will be played at the Inlerlachen club, .Minne apolis, next year, the United Ktates Golf association announced today. WINGED FOOT C'I,UU, MAMA RONKC'K, N. Y., Juno 28. P) Blitzing the way. through o gusty Wind for the big field, two Hturdy Italian prnfoHHlonulH, (lene 8a ra Kon of New York, and Al Eapl noa or t'hlcngo, went into an early tie for the lead today with 14 2, two under par, for tho 3li holo nr .half i way mark of tho national open golf chauipionHhip. Hnruzen duplicated hln brilliant 71 of yesterday, chiefly because he needud only 11 pultn on thu last nine holex, while clone behind him KapinoHa came home with a par It to add to hln fine 70 on the first round. Three putlM and a OUR SWAN SONG The Song Is Almost Ended but the Prices Linger On 7 t t : Just a nice selection left in dresses, coats and shoe. All to be had at your own prices. Get in before it is too late! Now or never! It won't be long now!!! 14 dresses;' values to $8.50;'. d?Q AO closing out price .' !. tJ 67 new Summer Dresses, sizes 13 to 50; regular $14.95 value. Closing n O C out price vtOO 39 Ensembles, flat crepes, transparent velvets, sport or dress types. Values to 1?Q QO $59.50. Closing out price u u All novelty spike heel shoes, blonde or black pumps, straps or ties, priced to A QQ 9.1)0; Hosing out prico pt.;70 -New summer Cuban heel pumps, sandals, ox fords, straps or ties ; A AO priced to $7.50 tP'.tO Summer Sweaters, $4.95 values; (1 OO closing out price P y OO Novelty j e welry ; values to $6.50 ; any Q O piece in the store, closing out at ;.. rV MULLIN FISHERMEN ATTENTION!! Fish are biting better now than at any time this ; season. We are In a position to give you the latest infor mation on where to fish and we have the best tackle to use. Hubbard Bros., Inc. Ksplnosu a golden chuuee to takej cn ,euu- i neve iwu iieriorinunceii ien wie Llh. Ihu nil fill Uil tlm In,. I.lt In Till. Atlanta umuteur knew what ho' hud to beat uh he prepared or his Hfcond round after lunch. Walter Hagen went to piece) with an 81, for a two-duy total of j 107. Thu Uritixh upon chain)'1"" '. Joined tho tlefendiiiK American' open tit Id holder, Johnny Kurrell, I anion the favorite to fall by the J ways! do. t I'OItTLANI), Ore., June 28. (P (ieorge (lutbrod, US, Sheridan, Ore., today wan charged with ex treme brutality by Mrs. KHa H. JoncH, the woman he Ih Ha id to have Htruek with an automobile and then Hpeeded away. The car flopped with the front wheeli on Mrs. Jonen' arm. I'olUro Interviewed Mih. Jonen at a hospital where hIio Ih recover ing, (iulbrod was arn-Hled nar Sheridan and pleaded ignorance of the law requiring him to Ht and give aid. Ho was released on 500 ball. HALTS BOOTLEG AUTO I'ENIM.ETO.V, Ore., June 28. (P) Jimmy Weir was In a hospital here today with glass ill Ills eye-1, facial lacerations surfcred lust nlnlit when tie and Jesse J-'lynn were fired on by Chief tit I'oIIch lemons. ltllllets shattered the windshield of their auto. Two Jugs of liquor, ore, de clared to have been broken by the pair, who are held In $r,no ball. 5o Cash Discount s DAWES CALLS ON KING GEORGE , -j v -. f - A ' J Asaoctnlctl i't.oto Astounding the Crltish with his celerity In completing formali ties, Ambassador Charles G. Dawes, accompanied by Mrs. Dawes, presented his credentials to King George a few hours after he reached London. He is shown with his wife before going to Windsor. Abdut .... By Ithliard (1, M:isMxk. XKW VollK. Hack in the ISCO'h a iialr of llieatrleal impres- ; arios named Jarrett ami J'almor;0f uutnmiitic te!e;rauh - typewrit i.r.niL'hi in NVw Yirk a "marvel mis" Kuropean ballet corps, one of the first to whirl scanty skirts on tho American slaw. From the (;lnni orous and naugh tier stages of the old world they came, from Lon don, I'arls. Mer lin and Milan, ivhn the lmll.t V L palmiest days, or nlKlits. Tho-eight ! of theso Huniptu- j niCMAAp G.MAba0CX mis belles, tiieie fore, was a rare I real Indeed when they first ap peared In "The Itlack Crook," that I scandalous cxtravuuanza written j especially for them. Since that premiere performance the toe-trippers have had their tips land downs In America while their art Went . through Iho various 1 phases thai brought it to the pres I ent 'slate of speed and tlijdress. ; Today, thanks t(t "The Itlack 1 Crook's" revival In lloboken and , the devotion of I.. ( Itoxy) ICoth- afel to the haltet. students of that form of danclnir may review Its 1 progress down the past century. , Movie- Speclacli'. j lioxy mluhl be called the present patron of the ballet In the Tnlted I States. The n'i'alious of the Ho i boken troupe were created and tH I reeled by Miss Amies PeMille, w ho used to dance In his theater. The I ordinal nfru rotation of buxom beauties In "The Itlack Crook" was I foreign trained, the master belnn I one SiKtior David Costa. Ittit, while 1 the members of the present corps i wear the billowliuj: skirts of white tulle ImiK assneiated with the hai j let. and follow-the tVaillllonal dance i forms, I heir mentor is American, I beinir none other than the danli 1 ter of AYilliam He Mi lie, the movie I director. j Miss DcMille, who Is In her early , twenties, came from California I three years ano with her toother. Ami where else but In a movie theater should she havo pono for experience ? I 'esplte the A titer lea 11 Inflneuce, however, Kurnpe still supplies the 1 lilted States with ballet masters, lioxy Just recent ly Imported 1. co llide M a s s I n e, "Internationally known choreographer." to take chariye - of his corps of steppers. Masslue is a ltuslan and first vis ited this country In li'lit as prin cipal dancer with the niahlleff balb't. Itoxy's avowed purpose Is to AmericanlKc the ballet, and to that end he Is ha vim: Massine study (he native tin nee forms. The uirls themselves need no furl her mod erni'.allon, nor do their costumcA, lioth are oxceedlnuly tlemler ami ! w ttr j abbreviated In comparison with ! cerur. production will those of the old days. t Influent- n,,t heuiu until the completion of ally, the Amazon' eoHtuinef in the pl.iy's stai;e run the numer "The Itlack Crook" hnvo been iiftd-' 'ensorshli battles of ih,' past iled, to create, it possible, an iiiu - slon. The modern ballet has risen from the past. Just as ballerinos. like Koxys l'.-vear-o,t Patricia How man, riM- from the ranks. Into Obi I v hm. tWVg?l!ein Oregon Slate hospital, resigned And peaKinn. at we were, of "Is position. It became known to . ostun.crf the stage apparel of Nora ''' successor will be Ir. Paves has been dispersed at pub-1 N,,k,,! r lrtland. Ir. Plamondon lie miction, attended bv onlv a revved ' npHnl 10 yean. of her liroadw.iy friends, The gar ments, most ly outmoded, and her J w e I r y brought approximately iL'l.auo, which wilt be used In the education of her 1 hi eo adopted children In n private school on Went End avenue. Mull Tribune ail. ara read by tO.VVV peopl .very day. U V.;ti Scree Jje Hollywood lty Kohhiii (.'nous, HOLLWtK.il. The furtntiri HtrUirig vif madly pnunded tyie Wrltor keys, the In nt Staccato ers bringing In the news of the world, and all the other hectic souikIh common to the busy nowK pa per office j of t oday are vicing with uouh a n d dances of Broad way niKhln for the attention of talkie mlero phont'H. , Not so numer ous an thu stiu-icft of J'W , Yol k's t h' a trical " tind v a h a ret ' life, which Rive dlifc- toi-M opportunity Howard HuKliesvto promote inns sical numbers In tln-lr talkies, tales of newspaper folk are yet suffic iently plentiful amotiK present and fort hco in inn productions to indi cate that things Journalistic wll:be thoroughly revealed to eyes ..and ears of plcture-ifoeis. Newsy. "Telling the World" and "What a Night!" are immediate forerun ners of the present apparent run on journalistic plots. "The Office Scandal," wit h Phyllis Haver In l he role uf ;i sob sister, now has In -en released by I 'a the. Metro-(ioblwyn-.Mayer is contributing "Copy," and at Parammint's Long Island studios, "(Jen I le men of tho Press" Is being filmed and re corded, "Headlines," to be offered by Warners, was written by a I.oh Angeles newspaper man and will have (irant Withers, 11 newschnser before he became an actor. In a lending role. Then (here is "The Front Page" which may start something. language ami All, Eor 1 toward Hughes, the '"hoy" producer -director of 1 1 oily wood. stilt in his early twenties and so 1 immensely wealthy that the -mak- i lug of pictures might seem only a hobby were he not so serious about , it, owns the screen rluhts to the explosive stage melodrama in which the characters frequently speak their minds expressively. ! And Hughes, be It known. Is a ; champion of the "freedom of the; screen." What is not censored on: the stage, he believes, should not be subject to censorship on the screen. When "The Front Pnge", goes into production as a talkie, therefore, the highly volatile dia log that features the stage version will not be gulsed In tamer rhet oric. The play will be "adapted" for talking screen purposes, he says, but alterations made will be only those demanded by the differing techniques of the shue and screen. I'nlcss Hughes changes his mind and there is plenty of time fori ,m, - v insikMiiticance ny comparison. Dr. Plamondon Quits 1 PKXDl.KTON. Ore.. June 2S. j (fTV-l'r. .1. D. Plnmoiiihm, first as sistant superintendent of the Fast- 666 I. a Pretcription for Colds, Grippe. Flu, Dengno, Bilious Fever nnd Malaria It l the moat apeedy rtm.dy known t I II '.SB VMf (Pl llaliih hester Otl, Jr., nn heir to the; Otis Klevmor millions, has liten made defendant in a divorce ac tion In which .Mrs. Catherine Cre. Clllf.'AfiO. Juno 28- rar Otis, to whom he was married I "K" "ear 1- ronteras. Sonora of I I.. January. m. charge, cruelty.!""1""- '' K us, cousin of Gov. : The weddiriK of Otis to the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John i -(! nan unc ui lilt- liinilMMltl rlf affairs of the early season. Mrs. Otla' hill, filed yesterday, sets forth , that Otis struck her in,! that they separated June 7. ! It declares. Otis receives $200 a month salary from a brokeraKe firm and has a larger inrome I from his parents. SECRET CONSISTORY VATCA. PITY, Juhe 28. -(P) The pope will hulil a hwhi' con-.s-lslnry for tho crention' uf now cardinals on July IB ami a puhllc lonsh-tory on July IS, It was lonrnod today. Tho only olcvatlon known dofl- TO NAME CARDINALS! MliuorUKU oil I II nltoly In advance Is that of Mon- rived here toduy in their plane, the slKnor Schuster, of (lerman-Hwiss ! Southern Cross, from Derby, Vest IiiirontaKo, to he cardinal arch- em Australia, ou route to Kaland. Wshop of Milan, succcedinis theThey covered a distance of about late Cardinal Tosi. I'opo Pius' 16B0 miles. lilmsolf was formerly cardinal oti Tim fliers set out from Sydney, Milan. MonslKnor Schuster is at ! N. S. W., Tuesday morning in au present arch priest of St. Paul's ' effort to break the 15-day record outside the walls of rtome. between England and Australia, of l lie newspaper Trihuna says thnt the pontiff already has ele vated MonslKnor Schuster to the cardlnalate by a brief of the papal secretary of state's office. PASSENGER STEALS I'OltTLAXD, Ore.. June 28. (&) A taxicab with an exterior dec oratinn 1 eseniblinjf a large check- ''hiard, stolen last night after u iiiiam rravts, driver, was bound, gauged and robbed if $3 by his fare, was sought by police today. Travis told authorities the pas senger called for the cab and after riding about town seized bound hi in with rope, rifled his hound hi niwith rope, rifled his pockets and niado off with the cab. YSAYE NEAR DEATH AFTER OPERATION MUTSSRLS, June 28. (p) Eu gene Vsaye, famous Helgian vio linist, whose right log was ampu tated yesterday, was considered in a precarious condition today. Ysnye, who is 70 years old, has been suffering from diabetes. nOISti, Idaho, June 28. (P Vernon Smith, liil, major in the quartermaster corps, Idaho national guard, xvwi found last night in the hushes bordering Hnise barracks, n suicide. A bullet hole was In his head, nn army pistol in his hand, add in his Hweater pocket a note tn hfs young wife, calling himself a failure and asking her forgiveness. HOME, Italy, June 28. p So many tourists have been avoiding Adriatic coast beaches because of censorship on buttling suits that the government has amended regulations. ECONOMY Meat Market Why Spend Time Cooking for the Sunday Picnic When You Can Get Any Variety of Lunch Meat Here Our Large Meat Supply Includes Rhode Island Red Fryers, Hens Best Quality Beef Spring Lamb Corn Fed Pork w Choice Veal NICHOLS & ASHPOLE Phone 46 206 E. Main GATTLE RUSHERS . DIE AT ROPE END PHOENIX, Vriz.."Juna 88. (P Reports have reuched. hdre of the "T ' a """ of "eBed cuttle rustlers accused of the slaying three days iFranclHCo Kllas of Sonora, Young KlhiH killed one of hla jaHHallants before he himself was i , , ... . !Bh.ul tioW"' . Hu.rnleM veriok five others of the band, and are re ported to have left three bullet fi,.l,Ued J""" the roadHlde be itween Aua lJrleta, on the Mexico- United HlateK bonier near Uouk las, Ariz., anil Fronteras. which Is 35 miles southwest. Two ctthers were hai ed to trees alonK the right of way of the Agua i'rleta X a coza r I ra 1 1 ro ail . t SIN'C.APORE, Straits Settlement, June 28. (P) Caiitaln Chan. Kings- ford uml Ii!h three conipunioiiH ar i-ert ulllKler. REEDSPORT COUPLE MAKE OP IN COURT KOSEBUKG, Ore.. June 28. (A) Following a bitterly contested divorce action in circuit court here this week. Dr. H. E. Eastland and his wife, Mrs. Annie Eastland, lieedsport residents, effected a reconciliation today for the sake of their three children. Uoth charged cruel and inhu man treatment. Judge Hamilton interrupted tho trial procedure and plead with the Eastlands to patch up differences. In confer ence with attorneys the couple decided to ask tho case dismissed. ' -4 WASHINGTON, Juno 28. (flV A "no parking" sign In front of the home of Representative de Priest, negro Republican member of tho house from Illinois, has been ordered removed by Henry (i. Pratt, superintendent of police. Pratt acted after receiving an official report that the sign had been placed by precinct police without authority. He said re quests from members of congress, supreme court justices and others for Hiich privileges had always been rejected. Klml Hotly PORTLAND, Ore., June 28. (P) The body of a young man, be lieved to be that of Fulton Dixon, school student, who lost his life in the Sandy river two weeks ago when a canoe upset, was found by city workmen today In the Sandy! The coroner took possession of the body. Oswego Boy Lost PORTLAND, Ore., Juno 2S. Thei whereabouts of Fred Kodolf, 13, Oswego, Ore., was a bit of n mystery today when parents told police the youth may have gone fishing or fatten into Oswego lake, or have gone to California. Au thorities were asked to search for him. He disappeared Thursday. iiu nnrnnn on it mi i i imn nnininnnr DEMAND FOR SARGON RAPIDLY SMASHING ALL WORLD'S RECORDS . fSnnfitV Bjg Dayton Laboratories Forced to Increase capacuy To Keep Pace With Ever -Growing uemana Although Working At Top Speed Often More Than Two Weeks Behind With Orders. BRANCH PLANT TO IN CANADA WITHIN S1X1Y UAia Plans Now Being Made and Perfected To Place Sargon On Sale In Many Foreign Countries Sales Phencmenal and Unprecedented California Druggists Alone Order Ten Carloads in Only Sixty Days. . ; NEVER before, perhaps, in all history has the demand for a proprietary medicine ever approached the marvelous records now being made by Sargon. The amazing success achieved by this new scientific formula in only one year's time simply staggers the imagination. As a matter of fact, if it were not for the actual facts and figures given cut by some of the greatest wholesale and retail drug firms of the country, the story of the success of Sargon would be hard to believe. . Tlie i'irst bottle of Sargon rt'iieheil tin; public just u little more than twelve mouths at;o, or to be exact, on April 17th of last year. Its success was immediate and people every where it has been introduced have been quick to recognize it as a new and epoch-making product. In the State of California alone where it was introduced on April Ititli of this year, it lias required the astonishing total of nine solid carloads, ap proximately IHI,(I(K) unities of Sargon and Sargon Soft .Mass Pills, to supply the tremen dous demands during the first lit) days after it was placed on the market. On Ala.v Hist, or in only seven weeks' time. dealers were reporting that stocks were exhausted and an order was received for the tenth carload, making a grand total of L'4.1,0110 bottles or dered for this one state in li'l days' time. The demand in many other stales lias been correspondingly large, popula tion considered. Ah on illustration, approximately 300.0(10 bottles have been sold uml distributed by Kansas ('lty wliole stilfi nnd retail firms in only eleven months, or an average of almost one lKtlle for every luiuily la the whole state of Kansas. Texas dealers required nine ear loads within four months after its introduction to supply the demands In tho I.one Star State. In the Northwest tho demand has been so overwhelming that the Twin Cities. Minneapolis and St. Paul, are sell inn Sai-Kon at the rate of $150.0U0 per year at retail, to say nothing of the immense wholesale distribution. These are only a few of the new Rales records established in widely separated sections of the country in the twenty stutes where Sarson has been introduced and the busi ness is belnt? expanded as rapidly as possible to make the distribution of Sargon nation-wide in its scope. The fame of Sargon, how ever, haa already gone far beyond the limits of Interna tional boundry lines and many -foreign countries are clamor ing for it. So insistent has become this demand that plans State Board of MERRICK'S THE NAT. T Rex Cafe THE PLACE TO EAT Good Food Good Service CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING GETS RESULT! BE ESTABLISHED have already been made to es tablish a branch plant in Can ada within the next sixty days. Plans are also being perfected and trade marks have been copyrighted in ail leading countries so that it is easily within the realm of possibility ' that Sargon will become a household word throughout the entire civilized world, with an annual sales volume of from 25.000.COO to 50.0CO.0O0 bottles. This requires no vivid stretch of the imagination, for the rea son that this new scientific formula is now generally con ceded to be unquestionably the one great outstanding, health giving remedy of the age, with an unsurpassed scientific back ground, bridging the gap be tween old-fashioned, moss grown beliefs and modern scientific tiuths. Why tills phenomenal success? Why has Sargon become the sen sation of lite drug trade and a household word In every slate and section wherever it is known?. The answer is simple. Sar gon is a new kind of medicine. It. is unlike any other medicine ever placed on the American market, representing,, as it does, the very latest, knowl edge "of ' medical seieiice-'-ou modem' therapy. Hack of Saigon's triumph In the drug stores Is Sargoa'fl triumph in t.he homes for it is restoring health to untold thousands by methods undreamed of only a few yearH ago. Nut only has it restored count less thousunds to renewed health, strength anil vigor, hut It lias l!l't,.,1 l.ll.tt,. t I, I.,..'.. ...I.. I.t' ,ln,...n.....,.l discouraged, half-sick men 'and women out of the throes of -despondency and has given them 1 new lease on life and a renewed zest for living; Sargon may he obtained in Bed ford from the Maglll Urns Co. Paid adv. 2 Health! TELLS THE TRUTH Our every water test from our Swimming pool is "Condition A" "Safe for drinking pur poses." . 1; It is the only Gas Chlo rinated Swimming pool in Southern Oregon and has no equal. Life Guard and swim ming lessons by Mr. nnd Mrs. P. A. Mc Donald from Honolulu Phone 1000 1 ' ;