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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1931)
iEIGHT, TAX 10 BE AIRED ATMEETINGS presentatives All Counties Called for Wednesday Meet at Salem Ship pers to Gather Thursday Jalem, July o. w iwo rtant meetings are Bcneuu. the state capltoi lnla wee' to deal with county and local i.i nml the other on ppers' protest of the P r cent Increase In freight ion railroads. Other sessions, ding the regular monhly iri meeuiB. - - - - periling L'numpoeg , on the calendar for the Ri big "x meeting will be F r ... ...nn.0 chamber Wed- m in i K"i"v day at 11 a.m., when .0 lfcp r1 .' ,. .- nil an counties tnu,,M . . . . til assomiim nr iiiu the stale w ; 0( Governor ou..uo represenuitca . the irOYernoi - . ' r tax reduction In counties ana ' . . .........nAn h I H II A T R m over the state will meet to a definite campaign of pro- i against me ncmu ase as requested In a petition ore the interstate commerce mission. The state has already mally protested the rate ln jse. Commissioner Charles M. imas called the meeting. jurTtodevote TO niTinn nniMinMO Wi.11ijunmu.10 tircult Judge H. i). Norton heard ires and equity cases this nine and intends to devote this (moon and tomorrow to work- on a number of opinions pend- It Is the intention of the rt to use the major part of his tion period In writing opinions Irder that the Judicial work be red before the fall ' term of Jrt starts. : ' ' petit " Jury will assemble linesday morning and' a number civil actions are Vch'eduleu to ftieard by them.". ' 'here will be ho session of the d Jury, aocbrdlng to the dis attorney's '.office., ',; Most , of criminal cases pending have ii cleared nwiiy by the defend- walving grand Jury' hearings. he only grand Jury, case pend- is that of Elan Huls and wife, fged with shooting John Wa lks, Evans oreek miner, In the during a ..neighborhood dls a month ago. The Huls' are on J2500 bonds, and Wawlorlka returned to his mining. . ) wm ROUTE RATER r avp o ,, fage of 60,000 cubic yards of le and mntprini .ii- n (---..,. . ,UI I jiiiic Jo IV moved in the construction of six mile unit of new rim road Crater Lake National Park, "ui ior completion this sea wlth the exception of surfuc :'nd oillnsr In l,n .. n '"ling to figures from the 1'! rank, f .... -unsiruction company, " began activities three weeks pPite the comparatively short Ince the company began cou pon, 25 per cent of the work seen completed and several 1 Sited cuts thronirh hn ' are underway. An avenge -- tunic yards of materlul mg moved dully, but Is to be ed to 8.680 In another week, steam shnvai ... n , f"ter capacity each and two mra encn are kept busy shifts dally. A fleet of 11 J. 'rucks work with the lis. The company has five nlr lessors find u i - utl IIUIIIIIIL'IB IS Rrotlnrf .u- ... I, - me line or me I'" men In blasting. Over 150,. ' " "'" OI Powder will be used " me average of 1600 gul 01 gasoline will, be consumed Z i0? ot 90 men now em "I and DH.IUI . . .j, "iiiuiiui men, aircnoy s. will increase the crew to -"inner Week. t!!rw road Involves some s.i eering problems and will l.. curves than the old out Will fll . . kjt w.iuw ii to B certain s- Olnvln .1.. , " arge of active DFv"jSaed 20. ''vet fe Ambu L ?'"ne of the Swedish Red fcni.nj ",Pa immunities Inl w" brought out lof ?h 0(le'berg. head phy.l In Karrlon hospital at iin a. ,n northernmost J0ii.f.i ,c Karl- brother of lei Sif- 18 head ' the Swed- MEDFORS MSIL- TRIBUNE, MEDPORP, eRESOfy, Mpypl?, TULY 6, mi. .T 3XQB FIVE IWILL REQUEST SrKOPSIS! Tht childhood attec. lion o Harriet Noel onil Antonio r.a,Tr I'W ,ot', Orchard Hill villofferj, vleiclnii lier marked laleut or (lie ,taa at something tiniul. froum on the prospect of a marriage whloh would Interfere with Tontft eiiler (tl tht ministry. WAeit Horrlet, eenslno thlt conltct In their lile pattern,, rejectt Tony's marriage vropotal. In desperalioit e flees with the proceeds ol the benefit plan in which thev had appeared Alter he aatne a foothold on the Jveio York etaae. Tony meets ffnr riet. wnoss (otner's death has left her free to etudu dramatics there. Restrained by her deroflon to the stage from pleading Mt lnro, Tonv later Is inbllant -on learnlno that they are to appear together under ' Roy Donovan's management. Chapter 8 . . - TONY LOSES A STAR A GAIN he, Antonio Latour, and " Harriet Noel wera to plr opposite each other as they had played In their school days Ip the Orchard Hill Dramatic Club. : Antonio, considering his Cincin nati engagement, thought of the re hearsals, the Intimacies necessary to the plays and the Inevitable Inti macies outside their roles. He thought ot the memories which their professional relationship would arouse ot their theater at the foot of the hill ot their expe riences in the Orchard Hill Dra matic Club productions ot a tbou- he said, "Seems to me 1 heard that you and Miss Noel grew up togeth er. "We did," returned Tony. "Hum-m," mused young Marshal. "1 suppose you have heard the ru mors about our manager and our leading lady?" . Poor Tony did not answer. Ha felt smothered under a . terrible weight which had suddenly fallen , Upon him. He wanted, to cry out, but something kept -Mm, silent. Then be heard a voice which sound. ed taint and muffled. It was Bob Marshall saying: "I have It straight that Miss Noel and Donovan are engaged to be married, so I suppose we will have a pair ot newlyweds along with our other troubles this summer." Better than any one else In all the world Antonio Latour knew the purity and nobility of Harriet Noel's character. That such a woman should give herself to a creature such as he knew Roy Donovan to be was a thing too monstrous to be believed. -. But even as he was torn by that emotional turmoil the revelation had raised, Antonio understood how It had happened. He remembered how Donovan used to say that all a man needed to make a tortune In the theatrical business was a star and an angel and that It he could Tony attempted to kill the manager . . , sand Incidents In their young lives which they had experienced togeth er. ' At last In the Cincinnati Play house, Antonio and Bob Marshal, another member of the company, were chatting before the first re hearsal. "You have met Miss Noel, our leading lady, I suppose?" said Bob casually. - r "Oh, yes." Antonio tried to make hk reply as casual as Bob's inquiry, but something In bis voice caused his fellow-actor to glance at him curiously. : "Hum-m and do you know this fellow Donovan?" "I knew Roy Donovan several years ago," Antonio returned quiet- I But again Antonio's companion looked at him curiously and seemed to be searching ' his memory tor something bait-forgotten. He spoke with an indifferent air. "I hear that Miss Noel la very charming and that everybody predicts great things for ner." "Everybody is right," Antonio re turned. "Have yon not met her?" "No. - You see, she only arrived In town last night came on from New York with that boy of Dono van's. She'll be showing np here at the theater some time this tore noon, I suppose. Donovan proba bly met her train and will bring ber to rehearsal." He smiled knowing ly and asked, with another curious glance, "When did you get in?" Antonio answered shortly: "Six twenty-eight this morning from New York." He was thinking bit terly "So Harriet had been in New York and had not let him know. She had net answered bis last let ter. She had come to New York aud had not even telephoned him. They could so easily have come on to Cincinnati by the same train. Why was she traveling with the boy, Bruce Carey Donovan's boy? And Donovan, it was assumed, had met her at the train and would bring her to rehearsal." The expression on Bob Marshal's handsome features seemed to Indi cate that he had found that half forgotten thing for which he had been searching. Wll his eyes still ot Antonio's troubled countenance find the star she would eventually And the angel. K ; i . 1 ; In Harriet Noel the manager bad found his star, by craftily appeal ing to those very elements of her nature which should have been ber protection. The nobility ot her own mind and her almost fanatical devo tion to her art and career had be trayed her. . . With ostentatious affection for bis motherless stepson, Bruce, the man had quieted the Instinctive fears and won the confidence ot the woman; while with praise of her art and promises to give her that place on the stage which was her only goal in life the manager had won the actress. When we consider Antonio La tour's ardent nature and his unfal tering devotion to Harriet Noel since that day when the boy first became conscious of his girl play mate; when we realize that hla whole life-course had been deter mined by his love tor this girl and the hope ot making her his wife and that his belief In ber love for him had never before b-ieo -shaken. It Is not difficult to appreciate that by the shock he was carried to the perilous verge of insanity. As to the details ot what hap pened next, Tony remembers noth ing. What was said between him. Harriet and Donovan Is lost In the fury ot the emotional storm which had so suddenly burst upon him. The old actor remembers, as In a dream, that he forced his way Into Harriet's dressing room and con fronted her with what he bad heard; that she confirmed the re port that she and Donovan were to be married; that tbere was a terri ble scene upon which Donovan en tered and that he attempted to kill the manager, but was prevented by stage hands who came to the res cue In answer to Harriet's screams. Old Tony recalls nothing o' the following days until one morning when he found himself back In (he little retreat, with Its flowers and grass, which he and Harriet hnd called their theater. He must nave arrived in Orchard Hill during the night and made his way there with the Instinct of a wounded animal. tCotvttlH WW. fir l Atptttf ed Ce.l On the rocks. So Monday does marriage no. and Tony rtthss to salvage Ms dreams. FUNERAL TUESDAY The remains of Melissa C. Tay lor will arrive In Mmlfonl Tuesday morning from Oakland, Cal.. where .i,a nauaori nwov nt the home of her son and daughter, whnre she had made her nome ior uie iui ic- years. Ch. a. IhA urtra fit Samuel TaV- lor. cld tlme pioneer of Jackson- ill. cvira. will ha held at the s-rnvei In Jacksonville cemetery, on Tuesday at i p. m. ... - , i A cc.Ywtunrl tamer was trapped by Arthur lccy, 1'arker, Ore. T L INCARCERATION SAN FRANCISCO (IP) Night baseball may or may not be re- IMjnslble, but three of the out standing pitching performances in the Pacific oast league this sea son have been made under the arc lights. All three were turned In within the space of a week. Willie Ludolph of Oakland twirl ed a no-hlt, no-run game; Elmer Jacobs of San Francisco tnmed In j a no-run, one-bit contest, and Mai- I col in Moss ot Los Angeles allowed r no hits and one run. , ' 1 Classified advertising guts result. OF ALBERT FALL Army Physicians Feel For mer Secretary Able to Appear for Jail Term Personal Doctors Differ WASHINGTON. July 6. (IP) Government counsel will appear be fore Justice Bnlley In the District ot Columbia supreme court tomor row morning and ask that Albert 11. Fall, former secretary of the In terior, be brought here at, once to begin his jail sentence. District Attorney Rovor said that on the basis of a report on Fall's physical condition made by army Physicians in Texas the govern ment felt the former cabinet offi cer was able to come here from El Paso to begin serving his sen tence of a year. Rover said the report would be presented to Justice Bailey tomor row morning. The report by the army physi cians at William Ueuumont hos pital in Texan made no recommen dation but simply summed up the results of their examination. Full's physicians have said that he could not stam the trip to Washington. Atlee l'omerene, spcciul prosecu tor in the oil scandals, conferred today with Hover and will probably ask that Fall begin his sentence as soon as possible. Globe Galloper Driven Onward By Ambition For Real Air Accomplishment , Oldest Agent in Service ' SALKM. .Mass. (l'l) J. Foster j bmith, SO. uncut for the l'equot Mills ol' the Nuumkeug Steam Cot ton Co., is believed to be the oldest agent in point of service In (he American textile industry. Start ing as a bobbin boy. he worked his I way up to his present position and Ferries Free to Stranded UKNDKUSON, Ky. WP Laws legulating operation of ferries re quire that stranded motorists be curried free of churge when they can show that they are without money. J Average costs for educating a recently complutd his 5ind year I student nt the University of Idaho with the company. i m-o sr,:i5 n year. OF SCENIC DRIVE TAKEN BY DEATH Marlanna R. Lull died at her borne on the Scenic Drive highway, West Medford, July 4 from heart trouble. Her illness dated from last February. She was born at An dover, Vt., November 5, 1868. The family has resided, in Cen tral Point district for the past 12 years. She was a member of the Women of Woodcraft of Lents, Ore. Mrs. Hull leaves her husband, Wilburt L., and five children, four sons and one daughter: A. L., Bel den, Cal.; E. R. and C. H., Med ford; L. L. Lull, Central Point; one daughter, MrsjW. O. .Smyth of Hildorbrant, Ore., and 13 grand children.' - Remains at the Perl Funeral Home, where funeral arrangements will he announced later. PLAN REBUILDING Word was received from Rogue River this morning that R. M. Train, Marion Train and W. D. Zentiior, owners of the sawmill which burned at Rogue River about 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, plan to rebuild. Machinery, which be longed to the Portland Machine company, was covered by Insurance although .the building and 15.0 DO feet of cedar were total losses. The mill and lumber value was estimated at $7000. A pile of 75,000 feet was saved from the flames, as was a part of a grain field owned by Dick Richmond which caught fire from the mill. Between 35 and 40 men were employed by the company. 4 . ' By Iahiii II. Durst, , (Copyright, 1931, by the Associated Ires.) i PART IV. "He always wui.UhI to do big. thlngB." J Perhaps this Bhort 8i?i.tonee um! up well as any other the motive, j the driving power, which urged Wlloy Part, farm,, boy-mechanic. I toward realising his boyhood dreams. Once Wlloy had acquired his own plane, he set out to learn all he could about flying, lie never miss ed an opportunity to got Into the air. He tried everything he beard of for a plane to do, and apparently when he was sailing through the clouds he thought out the half formed Ideaii which h"hd taken root back In the day when he first read of the Wright brothers' ex periments at Kitty Hawk. Wiley never . kept a log. book until about six months ago. Ho can only estimate the hours of flying he has to his credit, but on long summer days when he was barnstorming he recalls that many a time he flew from shortly after stiuup to rundown, carrying pas sengers off 1 tn pro vised landing fields In southwestern pastures. When Wiley had' been flying a few years he heard that If. C. Hall, an oil man and an associate of Powell Briscoe . whom he had known In Chlckasha, warf Interest ed in flying. He went to Halt and aiaked for a Job as pilot. "1 gave him a job," Hall said. ''I even helped him with his li cense. Before he went to work for me he never flew a real good ship. But the Winnie Macs all my planes have been Winnie Ma en -were Just to his liking." Wiley had an added Incentive to go after the Job with Mr. Hall. On June 27, 1127, he had eloped in his airplane with Mae Luine. pretty 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Laine of Sweet water, Tex. They had grown up together near. Grand Saline. Tex. For a while his wife barnstormed around the southwest with Wiley, but a steady job with a steady sal ary was much more preferable to a married man. . Wiley served as personal pilot for Mr. Hall for some time. Once, down In Texas In 1029, near Lub bock, their plane nosed over and wnrf Imdly damaged. . "I was kind of scared," Hall said, "but-nobody was badly hurt." The oil man sold his plane, how ever, and Wiley was without a job. There was" another' place waiting for him on the Pacific const. Wiley hud taken a plane to Bur hank, where tho Lockheed aircraft SA.... t. ln.,iA.l II., ihtp around California until hoi sold It for the company. The air craft company offlolafs like the quiet, competent pilot, and t told nun ii ne ever neeueu a jon, une nuuiu uc Hiuiij lur mm ill ui- bank. For a little more than a year Wiley was' chief teat pilot at the Lockheed factory, ull.tho time car rying on the training that has made him not only one of the best pilots but a .skilled mechanic, thoroughly versed in the type of plane used in the 'round-the-world flight. A friend in Washington, D. C said that Wiley knows more about that type of phne than any other inoivKiuai now. A test pilot's job calls for com-1 petence In many punned. of flying. It Is admittedly one of the most difficult jolts In aviation, but Wiley took it in his Htride as he took the other steps In his career. It was hus job and ho did It. . Itussell Peoht, superintendent of the aircraft factory at Burbank. credits the preparations and ability to fur&jee circumstances of the world fliers with the succesn of the project. Pecht said Post was ns silent on the coast as he is 'credited with being In Oklahoma. Once when the pilot made a record flight from Seattle to Los Angeles, with four passenger n board. Pecht recalled that while the pn.v;cngers were elated over the trip, Post "didn't seem to think much about It, and only said, lt was n nice trip." Evidently Post had much the same feeling about his world Jnunt. He wanted to go from New York back to New York via Berlin, Mob cow and certain other points. He knew he must make cnreful prep arations. He realized he . would need gasoline, oil. majw and weath er In formation. Once he had thwe and the other neecvwary equipment, all he had to do was fly around. It was Just n Job, and he did It. "That fellow Post was the most unworrled man that ever flew across the Atlantic,' Is the way Al Bird, superintendent of the ttcrvlee department at Koosevelt field, sizes up the Oklahoma farm boy who streaked around the world to a place In future school bookr-t. (Tomorrow: There is moro than gasoline, ft ml oil In a world encir cling record flight. Wiley Pom! lays Homo groundwork.) i : l "N. . .tilDllHTi w:s J B each First-Aid Stations Find NOXZEMA Best Remedy ...greaseless, too, doesn't stain clothes! "XTTB'VR tried just about every known V V remedy for sunburn at Coney Island First-Aid Stations and we've found that the only sure way to relieve sunburn is to use Noxsxma Cream," says John McMon igle, Chief of Coney Island Life-Quards. '' Mr.McMonlgle mows what Is best for unburn he and his staff have tried all '. the well known remediestreating thou . sands of cases every year, Noxxema was carefully tested it has been used for five years steadily as the only sunburn rem edy at Coney Island First-Aid Stations. It is also used at most other bit, beaches. Don't take chances with a painful sun burnget an inexpensive jar of Noxzema. It is not greasy. It's a snow-white stain less vanishing cream which sinks deep into your burned skin. Notice how soft, cool and soothing it feels on your hot, aching shoulders how it takes out the "fire" . ends all pain instantly. There's only one thoroughly tested sun . burn remedy that's Noxzema. Get ajar now at any drug or department store. JOHN McMONIOLB In Charge of Lifeguards and Fir - Aid Station! at , Coney Itland. Noswmm ha aao bean used for yemra at Firt Aid Stmtion mt AtUntio City, Atbury Park, Long Beach and athar Atlantio and Pacific Coatt Baaoha NOXZEMA CREAM 8,000,000 Jars Sold Last Year . uli I-"' THE SMOOTHNESS OF AN EIGHT THE ECONOMY OF A FOUR Brisbane's Today (Continued from Page One) iiift at tlic college from which the two ymuiK men were re tiiriiini; homo when shot dead, tins ordered his sons to leave the United States and; take up thoir studies in Canada, which shows intelligence. You would hardly want your sons to study in a country where they mi(,'ht be killed because' someone did not like their complexion. Mexico, It Is said, will bring suit aRulnst Oklahoma for one million dollars for the double killing, al leging that justice was lacking at the trial of the deputy sheriff. If Oklahoma does not pay the nation al government ought to pay. It may be impossible for us to give up our national crime habits. Hut we should be willing to pay for our pluamire, when Innocent foreigners are victims. -M . Striking news of the week end Is the pope's strong attack on Musso lini. He Is npt mentioned, by name, but thero :s no mistaking the mean ing of the encyclical. Mussolini Is referred to by the pope as "the one who not only represents all, but who can do all and who confirms it In official or quasi-offfclal publi cations dedicated to the young." New Way to Hold False Teeth in Place Do falw teeth annoy you hy dropping or flipping? Jut nprin kl a little Fasteeth on your plat ft. Thl new fine powder holds teeth firm and comfort able. No gummy, pa My tate or feeling. Hweeten breath. Uet Kaftteeth from Jarmln St WooU or your Uruggiat. . WALTER P. CHRYSLER ANNOUNCES new PLYMOUTH FLOATING POWER . . and FREE WHEELING To produce In 1931 an achievement In motor car design, engineering and pricing so revolutionary that it transcends every previous standard of quality, performance and value in -the field of lowest price is to chal-' lenge the world. That is precisely what the New ' Plymouth does. For years, while designing fine , Sixes and Eights for Chrysler, Dodge . and DeSoto, Chrysler Motors engi neers have worked unceasingly for the perfected Four. Now they give you the results of their labors and discoveries The New Plymouth, a quality car of lowest price with the Smoothness of an Eight and the Economy of a ' Four due to Plymouth's exclusive Floating Power. Here is power unshackled, yet, power as smooth as satin, es soft as velvet. Here is power without vibra tionliterally delating; power so silk en that even experts could not name the number of cylinders under the Plymouth hood, and many guessed the New Plymouth to be an Eight. NOW SPECIAL DISPLAY 'rr NsS W WATCH FOR THE Plymouth now also gives you Free Wheeling which makes it possible to shift gears between all forward speeds without declutching. Besides Free Wheeling Plymouth offers a new Easy-Shift transmission which makes it possible to shift nut only from second to high at spcedsi of 35 or 45 miles an hour but back into second at these speeds, when yuu need sudden acceleration, without clashing or grinding. . .' ; , The new Plymouthenginedevelops 56 brake -test horsepower with actual stop-watch speed of 65 to 70 miles per hour; pick-up from 0 to 40 miles in 9.7 seconds. Among all cars in the lowest-price field, only Plymouth has weather proof hydraulic brakes simplest and unexcelled for safety and smoothness. Chrysler Motors engineers have given Plymouth a double-drop frame. Plymouth has, a still lower center of gravity, still greater safety, still greater riding ease, stilt finer style. V.'e believe the new Plymouth establishes in the field of lowest price a new degree cf artistic advancement PLYMOUTH AT ALL CHRYSLER. with new ey e-compeUhrg beauty oi line and color. Plymouth challenges with full-size Safety-Steel body, with wire wheels 'Standard, with hydraulic shock ubsorbeis. No feature of comfort, of , icliubility, ol economy has been left out ol the New Plymouth. . . I uui happy to extend to the entire motoring world a cordial welcome to , kcc, to drive and to ride in' the New Plymouth, and to invite comparison between this exceptional product of Chrysler Motors engineering and any cur in the world at or near its price. NEW LOW PRICES Roadster $535, Spurt Roadnteir (595, Sport PhaetontS9S, Coupe $565, Coupe (with rumble teat) $6 W, Convertible Coupe $645, Sedan (3-door) $575, Sedan (4-door3-window) $635, f.o.b. factory. Wire wheals stand ardatnoextracott.Lowdeliveredpricet, Convenient time-pay mentt. Non , thatterable plate tints is available on all models at small extra coat. 2 19 DODGE & DESOTO SHOWROOMS NEW PLYMOUTH FLAME CARS ON THE STREETS i i 1 p 1 j. ... ( .j-.i HI -i ; ".I l!