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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 28, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1934. PAGE NINE Local and Personal Scwburs Return Mr. and Mrs. Gus Newbury returned by train today from a brief visit In San Francisco. At OrantH. Pass The Grants Pass Courier states that Lee P. Smith of Med ford was o business vlr'tor in the Cave City Thursday. VUitlnp Rosenbergs John R. Hoi'-nea of Seattle arrived by traia this morning to spend the New Year's vacation with the Rosenberg brothers. Toggery Bill to Cabin Wm, "Tog gery Bill" Isaacs and Clifford Gas are making a flying trip to the Isaacs cabin today on business. Trail Visitors. Visitors at Trail this week Include J. E. Shough of Albany, who arrived yesterday by train to spend several days at that place with his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. A Shough. DANCE with AND HIS ORCHESTRA AT Dreamland Saturday Night MEN 35d LADIES 10 CELEBRATE New Year'3 Eve with Dinty Moore at DREAMLAND DANCE Guests at Ashland Ernest Barnes of Medford was a business caller In Ashland Thursday, according to the Ashland Dally Tidings. Velt to Portland Leaving yester day by train for Portland was Bam Velt. who will be In the Rose City several days attending to business. " Ends VIM. Mrs. Helena Estudillo of Salem ended a visit yesterday In this city with Mrs. Clara Fisher, leav ing on the Shasta for her home. Short Trip North. Miss Janet Wil son left yesterday morning for Port land to spend a short visit with friends. To Los Gatos. Mrs. C. C. VanScoyoo and small granddaughter, Sally Lee Russell, left Wednesday evening to spend the winter In Los Gatos, Cal. From Ashland. Miss Carol Clark student at Southern Oregon Normal school at Ashland, was among Med ford visitors yesterday, having arrived on the Shasta. Expected From Roseburg. Mrs. Mae Rose of Roseburg was expected to ar rive In Medford this week to spend a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Wheat. Home for Vacation. Lowell Kuehnle arrived yesterday on the Shasta from Palo Alto, Cal., where he is attending school, to spend the vacation at his home In this city. Hop, King Here Bert Clut. the hop king of the Applegate, was In town yesterday to get supplies for his ranch. Olute reports a splendid hop market this year. Miss Mullln to Oakland Miss Ro berta Mullln of Gold Hill left on the Shasta this morning to spend the week-end with friends m Oakland, Ore. On Business Call George Hensel man of the Aetna Life Insurance Co. rras In Grants Pass attending to busi ness Thursday, according to the Grants Pass Courier. From Beverly Hills W. H. Burr of Beverly Hills, Cal., arrived yesterday morning on the Shasta to visit in Medford with his sisters. Mrs. D. W. Luke and Miss Elizabeth Burr. Snow at Union Creek Chet Hub bard of Hubbard Bros. Hardware was at the Diamond Lake Junction above Union Creek Sunday, and found 14 Inches of snow, affording fine skiing. Visiting In TrailMrs. P. L. Thomas of Los Angeles is here to spend the holidays with her brother, Harry Harding, of Trail. Miss Dorothy Hard ing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding Is spending the vacation In Seattle. "Fugitive Lady" in Rialto Film lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll! If You Do Not Hear Well, Ask for Earphones ENDS TONITE TRACY ! heuk TWELVETREES j AUCFAY1LU SATURDAY Continuous Shows 1 to 11 Thrills are combined w'.th romance and suspense In "Fugitive Lady," playing today and Saturday at the Rialto theater, with Florence Rice and Nell Hamilton in the romantic roles and Donald Cook heading the supporting cast of many well known players. Thrills derive from the high speed race between Cook and Miss Rice in a fast roadster with motor cops along the country roads of beautiful San Fernando valley. The second thrill comes with the sequence show- lng a passenger train, carrying Miss Rice, speeding down the rails in the night, to crash head-on with a slow frelgnt. The wreck, in which Miss Rice is seriously Injured and her police matron killed, results In her being Identified as the estranged wife of Hamilton. The latter woman died in the wreck, so Florence is sent to Hamil ton's home. First he treats her as an impostor, but her intelligence and sincerity arouses his Interest and sympathy, and aiding .er to convalesce develops the romance. Joan Bennett in Craterian Hit V v. 3S v 5 UV1 W 2 Roxy Western Sets Fast Pace To bundle or not to bundle I America of today may have Its liquor controversies. Its new deal but two hundred years ago "bundl ing" was the topic of the day In Colonial America. Bundling'' was the quaint Ameri can custom, practiced for the moat part in the bleak New England stntes, of permitting marriageable daughters to entertain their swains "bundled" up in the girl's feather-bed. To con serve fuel, "bundling" was a neces sity rather than a convenience but, until Its passing, it drew upon the heads of the colonists all of the fire and brim-stone sermons of which the early Puritans were notoriously capable. ' Bob Steele appears as the son of a famous sheriff in "Law of the West," i coming to the Roxy theater tomorrow. ; The boy, being kidnaped when an, Infant, Is brought up among a gang of cattle rustlers. ( The film Is filled with rapid-fire action, hard riding, gun battles and tense, exciting thrills. George Raft has the role of a mata dor In ''The Trumpet Blows, lng at the Roxy Sunday. Gedllclt to Portland Erich Gedllch of route 4 left today by train for Portland, where he will visit with friends for several days. John Ged llch of this city also left today for Portland, to spend several days with his brother Gus, In that city. . RATTLING BOB STEELE IN A ROUN0 UP OF HIS OWN -BOB HEADS THE VIGILANTES, HITS HARD WITH MITS AND SHOOTS STRAIGHT WITH THE HARDWARE AND HE BRANDS THE RUSTLERS AS WELL AS CATTLE Topic of the Day. That topic of Revolutionary War America is the subject today of a new film comedy. "The Pursuit of Happiness," with Francis Lederer in the title role. It Is adapted from the New York stage play of last season, and comes Sunday to the Craterian theater. The picture tells the story of Max Christian, a Hessian soldier, shang haied into British service. Once in this land, he deserts, comes over to the side of the rebels and falls in love with the daughter of a colonist. His experiences with the quaint cus toms of the new nation form the film's comedy moments. Joan Bennett Is the girl, and Charles Ruggles and Mary Boland play her parents. Reports Stcclliend Run Bruce Bauer of Timber Products Co. has returned from a visit to the Ten Mile country, and states that the steel he ad run is expected to start there in about two weeks. Bauer re ported that he caught a one end half pound steelhead there last week. A few of these fish are now being caught In the Rogue. Edurat'.-'s Brother Here D. E. Weidman, district educational co ordinator of the OCC, has as a visitor at his apartment In the Hotel Hol land, his brother. John P. Weidman of Wilder, Idaho. Mr. Weldman'a brother brought some choice apples with him from his large fruit ranch in the northern state. Ailultn 25c1 KIdillM 10ii I TODAY and SATURDAY! THE LAW SAID: SysalhiefJ JHE MAN SAID: iSkettttfWifeJ Both were WRONG! Tricked by one man Trailed by another Trapped by the law She found herself a "Fugitive Lady" . . . until a headlong orash between two speeding trains opened for her a chance at happiness I " Scrappy 's Relay Race" MUSICAL, "Big Business" mm FpTTo oe11 THE JUGGERNAUT "THl Sunday TRUMPET GEGliGE RAFT MOWS In ft mwt nptihrui leve ttwy tint "IM " ADOLPHE MENJOU I FRMCES DRAKE 1 ComingT: cs "AGirl of the Limberlost" -i jya' u I II fill .v.V3 ri',, llllllllllllllllllli., IAs KM 11 1 Itln raT j 20? ! r"l -art T" ffi ! TODAY and SATURDAY j ,3 ! of the Heart! Made to Thrill the World Anew! I J). HIS WEARY HANDS GREW A5 CALLOUSED hCipg 1 sS HIS WIFE'S HEART! P5? 'V' 1 wi r;a K7taf: t ' -V A mmy Florence WJi M AHAMiirori .,. (J ! a lSUM I DONALD COOK.f i J. VJJ Scrappy Cnrtoon jLl fXjkr f0 J ' VsvOi PREVUE TjQ- ka "JLJY Ji Wayne - aB..UJnRNER m IJ .B,est.er ! Peter Penrose Hugh Williams rAf ? W hmhbbhm WaUy Patch Hope Diyy V . ?!! AI1I1KI): CLANK A.M' MrCl l.l.OI (.11 In I Si 1 . At'' 'NTfc T' " "IN THE DEVIL DOG HOUSE" Cartoon "SULTAN PEPPER" .ffTV..lSffiwgr rrmm PATHE NEWS EVENTS 1 LZZi SUN-MON fl mTmE STh?GLeTsur I""" ' 1 to "HENRY VIII" ' JT dme t frt I r.,n r Kill .. B I Sorrell and Son 8, C. HOflxen Here 8. O. Hodgen of Hodgon-lire water Centennial Mill ing Co.. Portland, was xperted. to arrive on the Oregontan this morn ing to confer In this city today and tomorrow with L. T. Robinson and P. O. Noble, Held men In southern OrcKon for Hodgen-Brewster. i '(1 The '-talkie-' version of "Sorrell and Son," Warwick Deep)na celebrated atory of father love, which Is now allowing at the Studio theater, cornea In answer to the wishes of the mil lions of men and women who cherish fond memories of the novel and the silent film. In this new version. H. B. Warner again plays the role of Stephen Sor rell, and the present characterization la even more effective than the or iginal since to It this splendid actor brnga not only the magic of his apeaklng voice, but also the thousand little touches. The marriage of the Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst, later Catherine II, to the half-mad grand duke Peter of Russia offered the producers an op portunity to create what Is undoubt edly one of the most spectacular scenes ever flashed upon a screen In the historical romance, "Catherine the Great," which opens at the Studio Sunday. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Eliza beth Bergncr have the leading roles. ma PATRICIA ELLIS HUSKY THROATS Overtaxed by r-"-'TjCo 1 speaklng.sing- N"1' no,0?J lng, smoking (j3HSj' EAGLES SOCIAL DANCE TONIGHT Eagles Hall 9 P. M. rOU'LL LIKE IT in 'Bottles Clean and well mid n aromitic "hoppy tani" j rouu thoroughly enjoy! I WW DA Follow the Crowds to DANCE ORIENTAL GARDENS BOTH HALLS SAT.NITE Gents 35o Ladies 10c POSTIVELY ENDS TOMORROW! The screen's first military musical staged against the pulse tingling background of WEST POINT I MUSICA l KUtsY KLtLtll ICK POWELL PAT O'BRIEN PREVUE SATURDAY NIGHT "THE FIREBIRD" a . . thrill, of nifHtrrlniiD vongfitui- mith RiCAitnn cortez VKREK TEA9DAI.H SUNDAY MONDAY ptBUNDLING . . .to our A 7 forefathers Necking 9 vN 1 UDEREK i n ira in n mi ra ra ta ii VlLuJLPlrlUNlS&l THE BUNDLING HIT with JOAN BENNETT CHARLIE RUGGLES & MARY BOLAND Our forefather did If, jet It'i new Holly wood rracet An old American cuntom that marie ero neat her a pleasure? Mow do on bundle? Not In a porch wliif . not tn parked cor not mi the. ttalr ten! Vnirii rirer jiien!