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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1935)
PACE ELEVEN GIFT TAX CAUSED Gripping Drama on Rialto Bill Coming Sunday Hitter Visits Ranger Hith Rltter, who has been in Medford for tha past two day attending to offlc;il business, left today for his district headquarters at Lake o' Tho Woods. Local and Personal HE w n v.. Auvlllarv Danre Tha In To Klamath rails .W. W. Walter left by auto for Klamath Ffclle where Lawn - - he will be until tomorrow on bual- n MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON. FRIDAY. AUGUST 30, 1935. dira ot the P. O. S. are giving a dance tonight at the "Oaks" pav'.Ucn. There will be a free lunch. Has Major operation Mrs. Joe fill Ta of route 4 1 a patient today at the Community hoapltal. where hs underwent a major operation. Drunken BPRsar Arrested John Tenlmore Berry. 72. wua arrested by olty police last night for being drunk, and begging on the etreeM. At Community Hospital Rosalie Roberts Is receiving medical care at the Community hospital, where she underwent a tonsilectomy. , . Receiving Medical Cute Among those receiving medical care today at the Community hospital !s George Martin. . . Club to Dance Members of the Ktl-Kare Klub and their invited guesta will hold a dance this evening at the home of Frank Hi. Anderson. " Slightly Improied Word recelMd today from Bt. Vincent's hospital, Portland, reported that Virginia kind ley, who Is a patient there, Is slight ly Improved. Fur Buyer Here Mrs. L. W. Gam age, fur buyer :-"r Fred Benloff com pany In San Francisco, enrouto to San Francisoo from New York to day on business. Back from Leave Lieut Harry Mae. Jr., ot the Medford CCC district head quarters staff, haa returned from a leave of absence spent in San Fran cisco. .... Visiting at Vincent llmne Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harden of Berkeley. Cal., are visiting at the home of Alice Vin cent of Jacksonville highway. Mrs. Harden was formerly Miss Frankle Adams, a high school teacher.- , ... Fishing Better at Lake Fishing Is improving at Lake o' The Woods, with perch biting exceptionally well, and trolling conditions splendid, accord ing to a bulletin released today by Rogue River national forest. Huckle berry picking, while not as gocdas usual due to blight at tlw time of ripening, Is also attracting many to the Lake o" The Woods district. Other lakes and streams In the Cascades are improving, but conditions in the Applegate are poor at this time due to the muddying effects of recent storms, the forest service bulletla aald. NO "BOTTU-BOTHIR" NO DEPOSIT NO RETURNS There's n 3 -day week. end ahead. . Yo.ril want to entertain , . . Clirquot'i extra ounces will save you money before the holiday'! over! For every two of Clicquot's full pints or full quarts give you 8 extra ounces enough to make an extra drink! If you like ginger ale reaTTy dry, you'U like Clicquot Club. The wa ter comes cold and clean from deep rock sources. It's natural and pure, not purified! Aged taste-heighten-en are blended with Jamaica's primest (tin per. And then, refriger ated rarbonntinn gives Clicquot all its lating, brilliant sparkle! Order a case for Labor Day . . , now. A FULL PINT IS 16 OUNCES 'And a full quart is 32 ounces. All ftnrer ale makers niu?t print net bottle-contents on the label. Look before yoa buy. and get yonr money's worth! PAIE DRY FULL PINTS FULL QUARTS neAs. Roes to K la in nth K. D. Roaa U among the Medeford bualruiia men In Klamath Pall today. He will return Saturday. t Plan Blue Lake Trip Harvey Rob ertson and Ohaxle Bar lies are plan ning a. vacation trip to Blue lake over the week end. Clerks to Take Vacation H. 6. Walker and jLawrenoe P. Crocker, clerks at the pas toff Ice. will be on vacations during the ensuing week, To Take Vacation Hans Rammln and John C, Crocker, carrlem for the Medford postofflce, are both sched uled to start vacations Saturday af ternoon. tt Takes .Mrs. Walker's Place Mice Marjorie Rlngoen has taken the plaee In the offices of Dr. Bert Lageson formerly occupied by Mr. Jack Walker, nee Adra Edwards. Cooking Bolls Over The fire de partment was called at 6 p. m. yes terday to the residence of H. M. Kent at 714 West nth street, where cook ing that boiled over on the stove caused the family to turn In a, fire j alarm, although there va no prop- erty damage In the mishap. 1 Returns to Marysvllle Mr. Ida Miller returned to her home tn Marys.-1 vllle, California, last night, after vis iting with Mrs. Ruby Shuita, of Beag le, and Mrs. MAthllda Ytunsw and son, John. Mrs. Herman Prlem, with whom she drove north, will remain with Mrs. Shultz at Beagle for an other week. Visit Relatives Here Miss Rita An drews, Mrs. Emerson Miller and daughter, Jean, who are here from Santa Cruz, California, visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Andrews, visited relatives in Medford Thurs day afternoon. Miss Andrews leaves the latter part of the week for Santa Cruz where she U employed aa a teacher. t - Fast Trains Through-t-Several crack passenger trains from the Cascade route through Klamath Falls have put In an appearance here In the past two days. One train, southbound, had 25 cars, 13 In the first section and 12 In the second, end passed a north bound one her with 14 cars. The change In route was necessitated by a washout on the Cascade line. Leaves for Seattle Mrs. Ruth Ka bele Allen left Friday morning for her home In Seattle after she had been the guest for nearly two weeks of her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. Geo. P. Kabele of Medford. The Rev, and Mrs. David R. Kabele of Wll mette. 111., a son of Or. and Mrs. Ka bele, left for their home via Califor nia on last Monday morning after be ing guests of his parents for a week. Radio Enslneer Visits A. O. Sim son, radio engineer from the U.S.P.S radio experiment station at Portland la In southern Oregon today checking on the radio equipment in use with in Rogue River national forest. He accompanied K. P. McReynolds, ad ministrative assistant, on an inspec tion tour of the Applegate district today. The equipment that Is being Inspected Is that used on fire com munication work. Two Llghtnlns Fires officials of Rogue River national forest reported today that two small lightning fires, both started by the storm which struck southern Oregon Wednesday, are the only ones still burning of a score of small blaze reported yes terday. Both were reported under con trol today. One was near Buckneck mountain In the Umpqua divide, be tween Hershberger and Mount Bailey, and the other near Deadwcod, on the Deed Indian road 10 miles from Lake o' The Woods. The first was one half acre, and the second one-quarter acre in extent. Western Thriller On Roxy's Program Tim McCoy won't disappoint his fans In "Law Beyond the Range," playing at the Roxy theatre Satur day only. McCoy dashes through the picture providing every kind of ex citement from the first to the last. The tenth episode of the - aerial "Law of the Wild," wilt be shown on the same bill. Loan Sought on Chain Letter QUENSBAL, B. C (UP The ulti mate In optimism was expressed by a man who appeared at the Quensal bank. He presented a dime chain letter.of which he had mailed five copies, and requested a $200 loan against the $1,562.50 he expected to receive. KEEP COOL and VNJOY meals and tountaiD service at the What Not New air .conditioner. BIG DANCES DREAMLAND COMPLETELY REDECORATED SAT. Aug. 31 also LABOR DAY GEORGE DAYTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA Men Dancine Ladies Every Wednesday and Saturday 40c John D., Jr. Heads List of Big Givers With 28 Mil lionsLaw Becomes Ef fective January 1. WASHINGTON. Aug. ' SO (AP) Gifts of some 40. 000,000 in securities by corporation directors and large stockholders, most of which were made when the program for new and high gift taxes was announced, were disclosed today by reports to the securities commission. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.. with .dona tions of (28.000,000 In two months, wa the biggest giver. The bulk of the other large ones ranged In the hundreds of thousands with a few over a million. Total gift taxes to be paid under existing legl&latlon on rough though official estimates assuming market values to be accurate appraisals and that gifts were made to tndlvldunls would approximate -$12,300,000 against 14.500,000 under the new bill, which Is effective Jan. 1. 1038. Thece figures are probably high, of ficials said, because many of the gift are broken up. Rockefeller, for ex ample, reported 27,OOO.00Q in June to Individuals and charitable organiza tions. Figured as one gift the present tax would be $10,000,000 against $12, 345,000 under the new bill, but since there actually were several gifts the tax would be lower. The high rates start on the larger glfte. Gifts in July were more than $6,000,000' on the basis of early re ports received by the commission, but this total probably will be augmented later. The total for June, aside from the Rockefeller gift, wsb about $5, 000.000, and for the previous three months about $5,000,000. Other large July gift included $1,380,000 by Andrew W. Mellon, for mer secretary of the treasury; $1,470, 000 by Kate Hanna Harvey of Cleve land; $700,000 by Henry J. Fisher, New York; $600,000 by Charles S. Woolworth, 8cranton, Pa., and $727, 000 by Edward Cornell, New York.' These figures do not disclose all the gifts. They Include gifts of securities by officers and directors of corpora tlons and Individuals holding 10 per cent or more of a corporation's stock LONDON. Eng.. Aug. SO. -(AP) The British admiralty, confirming to. night the report from Dover that the battleship Ramllles and the German steamer El sen bach had collided, said no details had been received. Boats put out from Dover to the assistance of the ships, following a report one of them was damaged. It was not learned which vessel was meant or whether anyone was In jured. The Elsenbach, a North German Lloyd freighter, carried no passengers. Warships, led by the Ramllles. passed Deal this afternoon. Weather in the channel was very rough. There was a strong southedly gale, big seas, rain was falling heavily and visibility was poor. . District News Off press The Med ford District News, official newspa per for the headquarters company of the Civilian Conservation Corps, is now off the press, and is being dis tributed tfchrough the camps of the Medford district. ANOTHER BIG DANCE Oriental Gardens Sat. Night Always a Crowd 20c RRITKrl WARQHIP urn frfirhtfr! Dance Hi U llLIUIIIL.lt I PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 30. ;P- Detective Lieutenant Tip Schulplua announced that Willi Billtngaam confessed today that he fired the shot which critically wounded Alfred Ert man, non-union wood&awyer, at his home Tuesday night. A number of others arreted have been Identified as members of beat up and gun-shooting terrorists gangs active In cudgeling non-union wood sawyers since the start of the Wood sawyers union strike activities, here Schulplua said. Ertman, shot through the lung, is in a hospital where he Is given an even chance of recovery. Schulplus said he would await developments In Ertman 's condition before filing charges. Detective Sergeant Jay Flemmln said scientific tests made by Dr. Frank Menne of the University of Oregon medical school revealed powder signs on the right hand of Willis Blllinx httm had even stronger signs on the hand of hi brother. Curt, who aUo was taken Into custody for qxiestion lng. The morning preceding the shoot ing of Ertman he was fired upon seven times by three gunmen who sped past in $ sedan as he was work ing. Nw acid tests reveal whether a person ha fired a revolver within the past 72 hours, Sergeant Flam ming said. Other questioned by police were Jeral Murphy, pugilist, Joe Bush, ex convict. Mrs. Willis BUllnglmm, and Jal Lowell, taxi driver who Schulplus said admitted throwing the used guns Into the Willamette river. Thrills Feature Dramatic Picture Craterian Screen Dramatic details of the government secret service In Its war on organized crime; the heroism of the federal men In their perilous work, and the trailing of a public enemy in a story based op actual facts and cases, are the thrills of "Public Hero Number One," the newest and best of the current vogue of G-men pictures, which opened yesterday at the Crat erian theatre. Chester Morris as the adventurous Jeff Crane, and Joseph Callela a the fugitive crime overlord, are the centers about which the amazing Jacksonville Grange Hall Sat., Aug. 31st Admission: Men 25c Ladies 10c iTiimirm nun SATURDAY ONLY! Coiitlniiuus Showft 1 to 11 into fir.'- win tlLLtl SEWARD Addrd AttrnrtlonsI Musical "Hail Brothers" CAKTOON S Episode No. 10 "Law Of The Wild" BUN MON A UIOJO. UUCHSU B WARMER AXTEEt MYRMA LOY II 1 1 FffV JflAXYTlME? I t.a! 1 ,1 ckidoiii J ENDS TONIOlIt 5 to 5 p I . h If you can picture the monster of i "Frankenstein" and the vnmptre of "Dracula" vlelng with each othei' f;;r horror honors, you can antiolpate the chills and thrills that are packed Into "The Raven." playing at the Rinltu theatre today and -Saturday, Karlolf heads the cast, with Bela Lugosl and Irene Ware. The plut of the story Is purely Imaginative, of course, with the sym bol of tho raven supplying the motif plot revolves. Lionel Barrymore adds both comedy and pathos in the prin cipal character role, as the strange old physician, tool of the underworld, and blonde Jean Arthur, with Mor ris, provides the romantic interest. The excellent cast also features Paul Kelly, Lewis Stone, Paul Hurst and George E. Stone. The sensational prison break, the stampede of a thousand convicts, the breath-tnklng operation sequence, where the doctor performs a trans fusion In a crook's hide-out, the raid on the gangster stronghold, running battles between fast automobiles, and other exciting details embellish the story as the audience follows, the federal men In their dangerous taFk. One of the amazing details Is the resort of tho crook to plastic surgery as a disguise, that, however, falls to elude the vigilance of Uncle Sam's watchdogs. TODAY and Leon Errol, In 'i.t-. . . fc !! JUHMJ )UBI),ll IIU.)..HIMIWIWI4J JPUIII II)HI1HIW Ml I(WI IIIIIHIIIl I EXTRA ADDKII a?i; ...i-i.V.' I 9 ,? IN THAI V i I u . . jl of the narrative, A mad doctor Vol- lln, is suffering from a torture com plex and sets out to demonstrate his theories. His principal victim la an escaped criminal who comes to him to have his face changed. The doa tor distorts the man's features and mnkes a slave of him, then he casts a spell over a beautiful girl and when her father tries to save her he is himself caught In the delirious ma chinations of the mentally unbalano- ed doctor. BEND, Ore., Aug. 30. (AP) Pilot Butte, lofty volcanic cone near the eastern city limits of Bend and a DANCE AT JACKSONVILLE Marble Corner Eats find good thing! tn eat. KfBtil Ainher on top! SATURDAYS Tragedy ! . . stalks the foot steps of a luscious beauty marked for death in a tor ture chamber that on'" a fiend could devise 1 . . Cold chills run up and "down ypur spinel ATTRACTIONS! 'Hit and Rum" .... .......... M1AOII LAND NEWS EVENTS o - - - I mmM i t is-: , i )W.C. FIELDS . JB.V-. bhuuld a tnau 40 years or older fall In love with a air half his age? This age-old problem has been given a unique twUt in "Accent on Youth," which comes Sunday to the Craterian theatro with Sylvia Sidney and Herbert Marshall co-starred. But Sylvia Sidney .his secretary, feels differently about the matter. She loves hlni, wants none of the silly romancing of boys her own aga, and does not hesitate to tf?u him so. Through a series of witty and amusing situations this delightful pair are brought together. Herbert Marshall Is almost won by Astrici Allwyn, and Miss Sidney Is nearly lost to Phillip Reed, but the con clusion of the picture sees Marshall and Sylvia Sidney happily united. prominent landmark which guided immigrants to the Deschutes river In pioneer days, was the wedding placti at sunset Wednesday of Laurence T. Carroll and Vlvanne Oantter, both of Portland, the Rev, a. V. Faille, Meth odist minister, reported today. Til Three Bisters were the wit nesses," the Rev. Pallia said. Then ha added that the lugat witnesses were Klna Carroll and J. M. Carroll. Examiner Here Net Week Ward MoHeynolds, examiner of operators and chauffeurs, win be In Medford Friday and Saturday, s?pt. 6 and 0, according to word received today fram Sari flnell, secretary of state. Hurry! It Ends Prevue Sal. Night. CMWW !l'.MM jMII iMm I W mil I .l.,).H.HII Ml Wiw 1 !ff!BSHI!ll----i ' I MANHATTAN moardo cortez i i " DOROTHY PACE IVIOON Hoillo' Slnelnj Benitl iff" t rAr it y':.-f r'.W,-.jffSt-.l j ) h. i 1 t ''umu .J....!WIIL1I ll ' ' ; HERBERT I I t : fMSHALL mmm fjr .- M , jffaMsamntMntaama The intriguing story of a, play, wright who wrote the love scene for his only rival . . . and darned near rang down the cur- tain on- his own romance 1 J -3 Fifth $1.00 No. 178B Pint 05c No. 1780 Sat., Aug. 31 11 Lake Creek Grange Hall Rhythm Makers DANCE KVKIIV NATIHDAY XIOJIT on the Oasis Spring Floor Tomorrow Night! Thrills pile on thrills at machine gun speed In this greatest of 6-Men pictures! STARTING SUNDAY Tlie Stage Sensa. tion of Blase Broad, way . . . Now ths Season's Most Sparkling Screen RomantlcHltl 1.1 ffrki i'iVv. RnflrffffSSRHMaciZ t,r rZllsi' lb ihMHaflsaai