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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT READY MADE WIF .BY CORALIE STANTON BYS'OPSIS: Laurie Uaors. wUU owed when her husband dlaap pearetl while trying to fly the Facino. works tor Mark Albery. the London airplane manufacturer. AU fiery is interested in Laurie. Laurie it, returning from Liverpool, where she had gone to see her dancer sister open in a new show, when a strangely brusque stranger saves her from falling from the train. Us says he has been blind until re cently. Chapter Four REX MOORE "TTTE'RE nearly there," the ' ' stranger said. "Do you live In London?" "Yes. I work In London." Laurie spoke defiantly, and her blue eyes were brilliant, as she looked at him. They accused him of his uncouth rudeness, which seemed so delibe rate to her. Her little straight nose was In the air. Her red-brown waves of hair shone richly under thi lamps of the carriage, that were now lit Her vital face took on one of Its beautiful moments, framed In the high dark collar of sable-dyed fur on her black coat. The man's eyes blazed back his own strange deflance. "So you work?" he said. "Taking a man's Job. I suppose, like the rest of you girls!" Laurie sa"d at this deliberate Insult. She could nc i. answer It at the moment She was struck dumb. The train slowed down and en tered the station. "I don't suppose we shall meet again," the man said casually. "So t'U say good-bye." Laurie found her tongue) "Goodbye!" Her voice trembled. "I think you are abominably rude snd unfair. And I certainly hope we shall never meet again!" She took np her suitcase and marched indignantly down to the other end of the corridor. f ARK ALBERY was alone in his 1 library after dinner. Just a week later. . . When In London he occupied a spacious flat on the first floor of a building on the Chelsea Embank ment But the time when his pres- snce was not actually needed In London, and he was not abroad, be spent In the country. In an old. roomy house not far from his fac tory In Cambridgeshire. In spite of his sophistication and his eminently worldly tastes, he was happier In the country. He liked wide vistas and vast skyscapes. He was never tired of looking up at the sky, where the creations of his brain broke records and conquered distances, and wore rapidly making of the world a much smaller place. That wis why he lived In Chelsea, whore he could look out on the river and a stretch of sky. The slow move ment of the Thames barges and lighters, compared with the speed of his rod - winged birds that skimmed over them, that was the kind of sight that delighted his soul. On this evening In late April there had been a lovely rose-pink sunset, and now filmy lilac veils were streaming across the sky In the Wist Ho could see the river from his big windows, with the lighted street lamps shedding a taint radiance, and the trees of Battersea Park op posite, like lace work, silhouetted against the sky. But It was not of planes that he was thinking Just then. It was of young Mrs. Moore, whom he had seen only once since Easter, when she met him or the stairs of tho office building and thanked hlra again for her holiday. Miss Dixie was back at work. He was sorry for It That girl with the blue eyes and the chestnut bslr would stay In his thoughts. He could not upset the accustomed routine of the office. He hsd no fault to find with Miss Dixie. But Still. . . . His butler came Into the room. "A gentleman Is asking to see you, sir." "What name?" "He wouldn't give his name, sir." "What Is be like? Anybody you know?" "No. sir. A tall young gentle man." "Anything special about him, Dawson ?" "He looks as If he had had an Ill ness, sir, and ha has rather peculiar eyes." Dawson was used to these Questions. His master was apt to be pestered by all sorts of people who wonted something. "Go and ask him, please, why he won't giro his name." 'TPHE butler came back. - "The gentleman says he Is quite willing to give his name, but REGAINING SHE WASHINGTON. July (AP The National Lumber Munufartureni as sociation reported today that lum ber production and shipment dur ing the week ended June 30 were the highest In aeven week. New bimlneM, the report mM. re mained about the same aa during the previous three week. For the Ilrat an month of 1935. shipment a and new bualnea ex ceeded production by 14 per cent and 'JO per cent respectively. During the week 607 reporting hardwood and softwood mills pro duced 183.676.000 feet; shipped 107.- 643.000 feet; and booked orders or 169.981,000 feeu he would rather give It to you, sir. And he says you know him." "Rather cool," commented At bery, "but all right, show him in, Dawson." A tall thin youngish man, with a rugged face and rather startling pale grey eyes, walked Into the room. Albery stared at him for a few moments without recognition. Then a look came Into his face as It he saw a ghost He started to his feet, exclaim ing: "Moore! Rex Moore! It's Rex Moore, Isn't It? You're alive!" "The tearch went on for weeks." "I'm alive all right," said the man "Sorry to give you a shock." 'You've changed, Moorel I should hardly have known you, It's not only that you've shaved your moustache; you look so much older." And, Indeed, this man of thirty did look much older than his years; almost as old at this moment as the elegant, olive-skinned, sleek haired man of forty-flve. "I've had a bit of a bad time," he said. Mark Alhery was recovering him self and grasping his visitor's hand. "I can't tell you how glad I am, Moore. This Is a great day for me for all of us. Two years a bit more, isn't It? But we've never forgotten you; , we've always regretted you. Why didn't you let us know? Why did you leave us to think you were lost? It was unkind, my boy. The search for you went on for weeks." "I couldn't help myself at first," the airman said. He spoke to the rich manufacturer, who had dona so much for him In the past, in the same curt way aa he had spoken to the girl In the train from Liver pool to London. He had always been a rebel, a young man who was a law unto hlmnelf. "I was blind for more than a year after the crash." "Blind!" AJbery gazed wonder- Ingly at the strange, light eyes. 'I'm cured all right. But I suppose 1 look queer to people. It was some' nervous disease can't explain It to you. Don't understand it myself. It comes from shock. A specialist In California cured me. (Copyright, t9SS, CoraUt Stanton) Moor, Monday, li atoniahed at one of Albery" quest Ion. HONOR GRADE IN NAVY Word was received today at the TJ. 8. army recruiting station here that Kenneth O. Moore, son of Mr and Mrs. Harry O. Moore of 82fl Dakota svfnue, who enllated In the U. S. navy Inst April 16. hao been selected a honor man for his company for the pat week berate of hts excellent ability, aptitude and influence on hie shipmates. Moore is attached to Company at the naval training station at 5an Dlgo. Cal The local recruiting offl cer alao reported that Moore has been selected for the machinist mate' school, which la operted by the navy for training machinist mates, at the naval training station at Hampton Roads, V a. Cat Mali Iriourt want ada. MEDFORD MAIL IS TO RETURN MAN TO Speaking Sunday night from the topic "Man Formed, Framed, Found and Fixed," from the Church of the Nazarene pulpit, Fred M. Weather ford, pastor-evangelist, said In part aa follows: My text you will find In Palms 8:4 'What is Man?' and In James 4:14 'What Is Your Life?' 'What Is life? From the early his tory of man the scientist has tried to fathom It. The sculptor has tried to fashion It. The artist ha tried to paint It, but only Qod could create tt. In Gen. 3:7 we have the words And the Lord God formed man. breathed Into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. In Isa. 43rd and 7th verse God af firms three times that he created man. He Is the only creation of God of whom It was said 'was made a liv ing soul. 'Of the time of man's innocency we have the record that he was made In the Image of God, a holy being. Of man's transgression we do itot need to be Instructed. That he was framed by an enemy and dragged from the pinnacle as the hand of creation left him. no one questions. "The object of the atonement Is to bring man back Into fellowship with God. It Is a revelation of the feel ings of God for a sinner. Love like His haa never been rivaled. But the S-MATTER POP BEN WEBSTER'S CAREER THE NEBBS 'Twas Ever Thus T jVte WORLD IS ONE BIG BOWL or cwenmes ron uucrv now as ue DREAMS OF A GREAT FORTUNE COMING TO MIM THROUGH THE MINING STOCK UE BOudUT FROM EMMA IF" I ON 7-8 TAILSPIN TOMMY Jose Is Shot Down NOU MEAN DA. AKl' 1 A,M'T WANTIN" 0lAl HAVE ) TO(BEN, AM' AAAV8E IT WONT L TO LEAVE Lfc, k. FOR L0Kle' "fll'l THE BUNGLE FAMILY Deductions Twirlind his dinky little mustache. 'Fmdo4' that Count's r- irapers behind a chair I that I positively j in the last frxh TRTBUXE, MEDFQRD, Cross reveals the feelings of God to wards aln, which Is so terrible that the penalty for It la death. To turn away from the merciful reaching hand of God to put man back on his feet Is man's blackest sin. "Man Is a three-fold being; he Is physical, mental and spiritual, or spiritually capacitated. To deny that man was pure and heny as he came from the hand of God, Is the reason ing of a sophist. Is It not strange reasoning that a man should be ad judged abnormal and unnatural when he returns to Him In whose Image he was created, to be repossessed In holi ness? "Turning to the physical, I ask, la one stricken with TB a normal man physically? Again, turning to the mental phase of man, Is he who bears marked traces of Insanity, a normal man mentally? Viewing the spiritual nature of man, la he who bears the guilt of sin, and the lnbelng of sin In his nature, normal spiritually? To be free from physical disease Is to be normal physically. To be free from mental disability la to be normal mentally. To be free spiritually from the dominion of sin and cleansed from pollution Is to be normal spirit ually. "If the ravages of sin have marked and marred man in certain degrees physically and mentally, he can yet be made normal spiritually. The thing that makes Christ the hero of the ages Is the fact that He dipped His stainless hand In the waters of human corruption to lift man from his peril of destruction." One responded to the evangelistic appeal at the conclusion of the mes sage. Oregon Weather Partly cloudy tonight and Wednes day, becoming unsettled in northwest portion, with showers on coast Wed nesday; little changet In temperature; moderate west wind off the coast. Parting of the Ways Zee. i'll be N. ""jfl "N. " v. ooret-ciM, v - "nMljJ T . I , . 5ooto.um.' JT V f" A s ' I MAKt -HIM ou go! and x will BRIAR - V!E OWE AN AWf 0L LOT TO, VOL), L J AT n IV QAACCI UOI M COME MEPeV. SDEMDINCj ALU OOvJ3H, AISID OF'ffEQ EMMA thOusaimo rucks mo heo THE06 WASM'T GOLD IN CAN HEAR THE PRESIDENT THE HHONt, oc.NL) Uo AN(M Htw TRUCK OF GOLD THt L.A5T WAS SATISFACTOUy Vi'J.LAi I isten .la.I I SAW personalia r (saw him pick Mother. J I t.K .-if ;V OREGON, TUESDAY. JULY 9, 1935., NOW IN LINE FOR LONDON, July 0. (AF) Geoffrey Russell, 14 years old, for whom his mother waged a sensational four-y:r fight to establish his legitimacy, be came the direct heir to a barony by the death of hts grandfather, Lord Ampthlll. 66, yesterday. The new lord Is John Hugo Russell, who Initiated In July 1022, the pro ceedings which developed into what became known as the "Russell baby case," by seeking to divorce his wife, the former Chrlstabel Hulme Hart. Russell, the son of the late Lord Ampthlll. went to court after the birth of Geoffrey, asserted he never had had martial relations with his wife, and asked lor divorce. -The biby was taken Into court and shown to the Jury in an effort to prove wheth er he resembled Russell. The Jury disagreed. In a retrial In March. 1023, Russell was granted a decree Nisi. Mrs. Russell appealed the decision, lost the appeal, then took the case to the house of lords where the p peaj was allowed In May, 1024. Two years later the boy. through his mother as guardian, brought ac tion to obtain the formal declaration of his legitimacy, establishing the Tight of his succession to the barony. The court declared Geoffrey "the law ful child of his parents." Use Mall Tribune want ads. ?ORtN To rM'X DEAD WISE THAT A stock THAT MINE. CALLING BECAUSE I K. LUAD. BUSINESS BUT v WATER BUSINESS. ion ('"MflnS linn HCi kPAn oSwrvore also saw that he was holdind. .;, somethiri under his coat wnen ne saunterea UP IN THE AIR Wrfri HOME OUT AND THE . IKlMTDrnTaV WHrf?lS bases fuu , -reus tfam mv -Throws 10 firsi; 16 S1"ADV POWN AMP 1fcV.ri6 fO CAfCH RUN- MOf 60 UP IN ikE AtR NER OFF frfcSf SCREWS IbbX OOf, HE'S sitw.iH6 -Chirp, hurry up, -Chrow rr 1b "Third RtWS -fovftRD BASE UrtE, Bai6WlW6-ft THROW if 1o HiW, H CAd A6 HIM Oltf (Copyright, 1835, ty The Ml Syndicate, Inc.) IfAW, BEM.VOL) 0ONTOWE AAE- m WHV, IF IT WA6NT FOR VOU, ALU i BUILAR0?. WOULD VE KEPT ON COW'S HORNS WW DOPE.VIOLATIN THE LAW r' TUE LAND. AN' (SlTTlN1 UVi - l'n ENCLOSINS A Tt LEGQAM RECEIVED VUILE IN NORTMVILLC SAVINS THE MINE IS FULL OF WATER. I ONLY OFFERED THAT GRUNTLEy 3AL 1,000 FOR HER STOCK NEW YOU D ncET THt HICfc. VOO THOUGHT VOU WERE IN THE (SOLD YOU ABE .STILL IN THE you ns. BEN BOOSEL (in other words Jo, R'Tis that it was Q , (mirrors. That 1 rn nyA rLh.H , .-uiiin. vi iuu 1: JUMPS Uf AN$ D6WH 5HDlMiJ6 10 FiRSt 6ttSE MAY, 1b PICK 1tt BftlL UP props -Throw, ptoe bsu up WD SEEIN6 WMNER UEKDitii TbR HOME, HUR1S tf, BR1L 601K& over back si&p, NOTUIN' THEM 5TUFFIN M 1 your theory all done with I old Hartford uiui o UWUI LH "STOPPED EM M HELP, LUU- V ill ill I . I N:' IP 1 CAN KEEP , rmml V MY FACE FROM I 1 I LOOKING SAO NO ONE) I I WILL EVER KNOW II I as easy to conceal Us arguments .at a family reunion, J LJcar V IH tte Papers! By CLUYA5 WILLIAMS SHRIEKS 1b SEttMD-BSSE MftW 1b HOLT) fHE BALL, RUtf HIM DCWH, N&.lflRW IT, "inROW IT ! feus few roR. PrfV'S SAKE YostoVI D6WN WOW AND NOT & RMiUD By C. M. Payne By Hal Forrest Bv Edwin Alger don't forget Bv Sol HesJ -x 1 By Harry J. aujj And I heard it drnn nn tho floor just before he "found" l it,too. And while both of I uou stood with uour J k. waved it in the t7?f air and c.xA fere re