JXGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1932.
SUICIDE THREATS
VOICED OFTEN BY
(Continued trunj Page one)
Reynolds, It held as ft material wit-
new while Mrs. Reynolds 1 under
guard at Reynold, the Reynold
estate, a few mils from here.
' Meanwhile all occupant of the
house were fingerprinted for compar
ison with marks found on a bath
room door of the house.
Authorities delved today Into Miss
Hoi man's romance with Reynold! and
his history for the past several years
searching for some clue to the mys
tery surrounding his death.
' One story was that Reynolds had a
narrow escape from death by shooting
on a Long Island outing almost a
year to the day before the young heir
to tobacco mUHcn was found shot
through the head at Reynolds, the
manorial Reynolds estate here, last
Wednesday.
Mullet rierced fihlrt
' Sheriff Scott eald he was Informed
'a bullet pierced Reynolds' shirt on
that occasion.
' Out of the Inquiry Into the ro
mance of the 30-year-old Reynolds
and Miss Holman. a Broadway blues
singer who was six years his senior,
earns for the first time the details of
their romance.
They ere married at Monroe, Mich.,
November 29, 103i, by a Justice of,
the peace. They announced their;
marriage In New Tort last May and I
It wss reported then they were mar
ried In Hawaii as Reynolds, an avia
tion enthusiast, was returning from
a trip by plane and boat around the
world.
The date of the marriage was just
six days after Reynolds' first wife,
Anne Cannon, secured a divorce In
Reno.
Careworn but Fit, Hoover Faces Campaign
Doctor Finds His Health Improved In Recent Months
iBYWETHCHISM
. NEW YORK, July 11 (AP) Mrl.
Charlss A. Sabln, national chairman
or the vomen'a organisation for na
tional prohibition reform, could "find
no comfort" today In the petition
of Mra. August Belmont and 01
other member, dlaeentlng from the
executive committee's resolution urg
ing support of Franklin - R, Roose
velt for president.
1 Mrs. Bablu added that comfort
probably could be found In-it by
the women's OhriJtlan Tamperanoe
Union, the Anti-Saloon league, the
Methodist Board of Prohibition, Tem
perance and Publlo Morals, and
Bishop Cannon,
The 02 dissenting women Issued
a statement yesterday In which they
said that "to make the attitude of
trie candidate toward oontroi of the
liquor t;ifIto the sole test of his
witness for the preeldency would
be negation of our responsibilities
as citizens."
By Herbert Plummer.
WASHINGTON. fly-Two months
before the Republican national con
vention. Senator Copeland, self-appointed
gusrdlsn of the health of
Presidents, made what be termed his
semi-annual diagnosis of the condi
tion of Herbert Hoover.
"I find," reported the doctor, "that
President Hoover Is In good condi
tion for the coming campaign. He Is
In better shape than he was six
months ago."
It hardly can be denied, however,
that the President begins his cam
paign for re-election a vastly differ
ent man physically thsn he was four
years ago.
Perhaps there Is no better way of
determining this change than to
compare photographs of him ss Nom
inee Hoover In 1038 and as President
Hoover In 1933.
Today there. are lines etched deep
ly In his face. His hair Is thinning
and showing white at the temples.
His physique, while neither portly
nor spare, Is leas bulky than It was
lour years ago.
When he became President he was
smiling almost constantly. Today
his expression has changed. There
Is less smiling, more grlmneas arid
determination on his countenance,
His choice of the fishing camp on
the Rapldan now seems almost pro
phetic. For only there has he found
opportunity for a few fleeting mo-
menu from the cares of the White
House.
His personal habits have changed
little since 1828. H still arises be
tween 0 and 0 a. m.
First comes a workout with his
"medicine ball csblnet." Then It's
back to the White House for orange
Juice, coffee and the reading of a
naif dozen-papers.
After breakfast proper and one of
his long clgara at 8, he goes to the
executive offices. At luncheon and
dinner he nearly always has guests
lor he likes to have people around
After the day's work. If It Isn't
too late, the President takes a nap,
followed by dinner at 8. Then It's
Into bed by 11 a regular thing.
As a result of his persistent exer
cise and rigid restraints on his diet,
President Hoover faces the oampalgn
for re-election probably as good a
man physically, If a little more care
worn, than the smiling, bulky man
who wss elected President In 1928.
JUDGE ORDERS TRIAL
In the long-standing suit of Pearl
and L. M. Wilson against the Rogue
River company for 20,000 alleged
damages, Judge II. D. Norton has
handed down a decision, directing
that the Issues Involved come to
trial. The aotlon hinges around
purchase of land by the Wilsons In
this county, and the reservation In
the bill of sale of the oil, coal and
mineral rights. The action has been
pending since 1928.
111 vl 1 ti I 1 X j i
' ) ' t:-J ". '4 lit V'X'l
' ill t 1 '
The strain of serving as President tells on Herbert Hoover, but he Is In good condition physically for
the pre-election campaign. The Hoover of 1932 Is thinner than the Hoover of 1928, and a grim, determined
look has replaced his grin. In the center he Is shown as he waged his campaign In 1928.
SAFETY RAZOR
LOS ANGELES, July ll (AP)
King O. Gillette, who amassed a for
tune by Inventing a razor blade
clwap enough to allow It to be dis
carded once It became dull, -died
with his greatest ambition a plan
to Incorporate the' world as a busi
ness corporation as a cure for eco
nomic Ills unrealized.
The 77-year-old inventor, In fall
ing health for the past two years.
died Saturday night at his Calabasas
ranch home, but almost to the end
of his life he had maintained an
active Interest In social problems.
Mr. Gillette first outlined hie
"world corporation" In 1010, a plan
to Incorporate the world as a busi
ness concern with the late Theodore
Roosevelt as president at a salary
of $360,000 annually. The purpose
of the corporation would be to do
away with political government, war,
poverty and waste resulting from in
dividual competition.
GOODRICH, TIRE
YORK, Me., July 11 (AP) Charles
O. Goodrich, wealthy tire magnate
and a member of the Maine house
of representatives, Is dead In his 01st
year. ,
A stomach ailment caused his
desth at his home yesterday. A sis
ter, Mrs. John C. Breckenrldge of
New York, waa with him when he
died.
He waa born In Akron, Ohio,
where his father, p. F. Goodrich,
founded the Goodrich Rubber com
pany, but he had lived In York for
many years.
Goodrich became associated with
the rubber company after his gradua
tion from Harvard In 1893.
Auto glass installed while you wait
Prices right. Brill ihsst Metal Works.
CENTRAL PT. LAD
HELD IN THEFT
Glenn F. Jones, 20, of Central
Point, was arrested by the state po
lice late Saturday, charged with the
theft of a tire, from an auto stand
ing m the streets of Gold Hill.
Jones Is alleged to have removed the
tire, and placed It upon his own
Ford, which bore a Washington li
cense. He was arrested on the Pa
cific Highway a mile south of Gold
Hill. The case Is scheduled to be
heard today before Justice of trie
Peace H. D. Reed of Gold Hill.
George J. Mitchell, 24, New York
City, was also arrested late Saturday,
and Is held on a charge of stealing
an auto at Pasco, Wash., 10 days
ago.
1
Real Estate or Insurance Leave. It
to Jones, Phone 790.
Broken windows glazed by Trow
bridge Cabinet Works.
IRON DAVE' FACES
(Continued ft-om Page One)
staying to recuperate from recent
ailments. However, the evangelist
took note of the reported revolt
among her followers by Issuing
brief statement, which read:
To Atand by Dave. e
"I certainly am going to stand by
my husband."
The fact that all was not harmony
In the Angelus Temple came to light
during the concluding days of the
trial of Miss St. Pierre's suit when
on leaving the courthouse, she was
presented with large baskets of flow
ers by members of Mrs. Hutton's con
gregation.
"We are from Angelus Temple, M!ss
St. Pierre, and we give these flowers
to you with our best wishes because
we oeueve your story and do not be
lleve Dave's," a member of the group
told Miss St. Pierre In presenting
the flowers.
Hutton said today that he has
heard talk against him In the tem
ple for some time.
Hutton Defiant.
"I know there Is such talk, but I
defy them to put me out," he said
"After all, Almee Is boss down there.
She Is president and pastor and
tnat s something.
1 Hutton, following the Jury's ver
dict In favor of the nurse Saturdav
evening, told his attorneys he wanted
them to appeal the case. He declar
ed he was-"broke" and that Miss St.
Pierre may need more than human
help to collect the $5,000 the Jury
awarded her.
"At present my greatest concern Is
for my wife." Hutton said. "To see
her suffering Is the most difficult
thing to bear In this entire affair.
Brisbane's Today
(Continued from Page Pour)
ty cents per hundred weight, and
cattle have Improved also.
Two dollars a hundred more for
hogs means to many farmers the dif
ference between reasonable prosperity
with payment of mortgage and losing
the farm.
Fancy heavy steers are selling at
nine dollars a hundred, and more
Important, the farmer feeding corn
to hogs at present prices, gets forty
to fifty cents a bushel for com that
he has been selling as grain for
eighteen to twenty-four cents.
Always keep good, sound tires on
your front wheels. If you value your
life.
Also, never drive at a speed that
means loss of control, in case of a
blow-out.
Also, keep a firm hold on your
steering wheel, at all times, remem
bering that even the best tire may
go, unexpectedly.
Major E. M. Skinner was driving
near Warrentown, Vs.; with a friend,
a front tire blew out, the car left the
road, hit a tree. Both men were
killed.
Had the car been going only thirty
five to forty-five miles an hour,
which Is fast enough, the car In all
probability would not have left the
road. Fast driving means betting
your life on the quality of a tire.
Blow-outs are rare, now, with tires
marvellously Improved and mileage
Increased, but why bet your life on
anything.
Professor Georges Claude, Inventor
of the Neon light, which you see In
signs, everywhere, announces an Im
portant new discovery.
He believes that his new "cold"
light, produced by running an elec
tric current through a tube filled
with a mixture of rare gases, will
greatly reduce the cost of house
lighting.
fighting companies, also General
Electrlo and Westlnghouse, will wel
come the Invention. Whatever makes
a product cheaper increases the pros
perity of the producer, in the long
ran.
The government supplies money to
send home by rail, veterans gathered
In Washington, and many of them,
wisely, are accepting transportation
and going home.
There is no hope whatever of any
bonus legislation this year, and vet
erans that feel they have been badly
treated should return to their homes,
to tell their neighbors what they
have seen and learned about the
gratitude of the world's "richest
country."
The so-called Vulcide of Smith
Reynolds, twenty-year-old youth
worth twenty millions may develop
Into a celebrated case. Since he was
supposed to have shot himself , to
death, as he lay on a couch In the
house of a friend, finger prints and
blood stains have been found on the
door of a bath room, adjoining the
room In which the body was found.
Even In death twenty millions may
exert influence, and newspaper re
porters were excluded from the offi
cial Investigation, which diminishes
the probability of the truth being
revealed. But there Is at least a
chance.
Save
Mappily
CLAUDIA DELL
poptilnr jaang
crn Hot
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