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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1937)
PAGE ETGHT MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1937 Medford2ITribuni Bead tta Mail frttm Pally Biwpt atiJ. HttUVURU P&1MTINO OO. ll-JT 9 N Nil CL faOD ft KUBWB'l W.HUUU Bdltof RNE81 R aiLaTRA. yanacw. to (n1pDUrt Nawi Batarad aaooDd-elaw nattai at Ma4 for. Oratoo, uutmt tot af Marob I. till uu b8:kj ptiun ratm Rf Uali.ln AiltiMt Dally, ooa vaar MM Dally, mootba ' Dally, oaa month B C&rrur. In AdDM lladford. iM land. Jukaonrllla. Claim PolnL pboaoit. Talanu Oold Bill iM hlarharavaL Dally, oaa yaar t 91 Dally, als mootna Dally, on moDtb 10 All tarma, oaah id advano. - Officii! fapei ol tbm Ott Madford OfflrtaJ fa par ol Jacltftoo Uoualy MJCHHUH Oft lUH AKHUCIAIUU VtUUtb BeJtn trull Wlrr ttarvte. Tha Aaaooiatad Prtu aielgilly u tltlad to tha oaa (or publication ot all dwi tlpatoha oraditad to it or sttaar wlaa oradltad to thia pa oar, aod alao m Cha looal nowt publish tarals. All right tor poblloatlon of ipaolat dlBpatoha haraln ara alao raaarvod. UBMBBB UF UNITED PRM UBMBBH Of AUDIT 8URBAD OF CIROULATION8 Advartlalot RapraaaoUtlvaa Offices In New Vera. CMeato, Detroit. Ban PraoolMO. Lot Anfetsa, S t t Portland. t Louie. Atlanta. Vanoiwver B. 0. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arttom Pen?. ' The plnballi turned up their toea Thuri. It is etui legal to throw nickels at the bird. K. Shtmoda, sang a. Japanese war ong Frl. and no wonder the Chinese now unexpected and terrific resis tance along the Whsngpool. Mr fihlmoda states if the Mikado cables him to come home to fight, be will tell the Mikado to do It himself he's closer. a a The C. Wig Ashpole boy towned Wed. and was full of squeals, and coltish antics. Orantland Rice, -the noted sports authority was here last Sun. follow ine our snorts editor around the lynx. a a Quite a few claim there baa been no summer. June 80, when tha mer cury bopped to 101 did not mist tt much. a a a Repentance continues among those who thought they were democrats last November. J. Wesley Bates, the chlnwhscker Is going at a lively clip in a new car. a The brawn and bravery of tha com munity are away playing war games. a Tuesday eve, a speed edlot negoti ated Main At Cent, on fwo wheels. before he realised tt wasn't Saturday night. sea P. Calllson. tha TJafO. coach was here Wed. cutting his way through his usual late August gloom about the gridiron prospects at Old Oregon this year. a a Fall hats for the womenfolks have arrived, and make tha wearer look smart, the wearera claim. . Some new wrestlers will appear on the open-air imbroglio tomorrow sight. The things they can do to the human leg, without- breaking same, Is astounding. a a Peoria BUI Oat has returned from Portland, where ha put in few good licks for the pear and the tomato. at The T. flUt Johnston dog la still as lost, as a Russian flier. a a Kkis bsve only a week to watt for the opening of school, and gosh! how they dread It I a a a The nippy morns have brought many cltiMna face to face with the emptiness of their woodsheds. a Stats records show 87 convictions for auto traffic violations In this county during July. Several violators were not caught, it la believed. a Optimists say the devastation in the roof of tha CofC. will be fixed by Oct. 1. There is also some talk that the edifice will be moved, and supplanted by a more modern struc ture, or another service station that is bsdly needed. a a a ' The Jno. Wilkinson coy Don was alx years old Friday, snd quits happy about It. a a a Hermy Offenbacher of tha Apple gate baa finished msklng his bsrn bulge with hay, and towned Sat. In hla blsck suit. as V. Brophy, the Lake Crk. cowmen, is now busy with pears, cows and hay. a a a Linemen of the hs. grid squsd have been out learning to buck and duck, and hit low, hard, tast, straight, and often. a Followers of pugilism hereabouts give Fa it no chanoe against Joe Louis tomorrow night In NY. This wss the wsy they felt about Schmellng about t year ago. Clueina Urn loi roo Lata to Claa iff Ad at lag p. m. Editorial Correspondence NEW YORK CITY, Aug. at the Rivoli. It waa our first experience at a movie "first night" and it reminded us of grand opera. The place was crowded with people who didn't go there so much to see the performance, as to see the notables who were there. In this direction the show was a flop as far as the Medford delegation was concerned. ' ; According to the papers, many notables were to be on hand including Sylvia Sydney, the star of Dead End, Harpo Marx, Jack Denipsey, George Jean Nathan, Sally Eilcrs, Leslie Howard, Fannie Hurst and many others. But Sally Eilers was the only one detected in the darkness that prevailed, and there was some doubt of her identity. The main trouble appeared to be we had seats down stairs among the notables, we there fore couldn't see the forest because of the trees. In fact the entire lower floor seats were given away. Those who paid their way sat in the balcony and gallery. Judging by the craning necks and peering eyes from above, and occasional bursts of applause those who paid for the privilege of celebrity hunting were rewarded. We weren't. And it was a veritable bum's rush, to get out of the place and find an empty taxi. ..... We never did think much of the movie premiere racket, and think nothing at all of it now. Those who pay two or three prices for a ticket the average is about $5, are easy marks. Those who crowd the entrance when the stars go in and come out, are the smart ones they get what they want and don't pay a dime! Having seen the stage play, of action, the other day, "Dead End" was disappointing. It's a good enough movie as movies go, but the whole thing has been sugar-coated, romanticized, and therefore the real force of the drama, as a realistic and forceful social document, has been weakened, devitalized and denatured. The salty and vulgar jargon of the waterfront "kids" for example has been eliminated; the unforgettable and shocking dressing-down of Baby Face Martin bv his mother, has also been "REFINED" to meet the demands of Mr. Will Hays; while Dave instead of being a cripple and a squealer on one of his old time pals is the typical cincnui hero, Joel McCrca, who defies the villain, count. The coaltar substitute tever and finally does him in with a well directed shot after a chase reducer, are cheap compared with ,. th rnnfu nH fir. .annno. r,P rh river front ! jqulnlne. and that explains everything It's a good show as "movie - has been destroyed. Dead End meant just that, DEAD END the squalor and suffering and degradation of poverty the futility of it all. It ended on lost the girl ho loved, and went love but who loved him, -but from the standpoint of romance, he Inst, she lost, and everyone lost, because in such an environ ment there could be no romance and no victory. But in the movie Joel and Sylvia, go off hand in hand, true love triumphs again, and the water front gang presumably continuing to steer clear of anything that would shock the sensibilities of a T. M. C. A. secretary, sings "If I Had the Wings of an Angel" as there is a final fade-out of the waterfront and tenement districts of the Upper East Side. ..... In short the movio "Dead End", demonstrates, why the legitimate theatre- is practically eliminated in this country except in New York City, and why as an art form, it is so far ahead of the American cinema. "Dead End", as spoken dramn, is still being played here, and will probably continue, princi pally because of "the strong renlistic qualities, that Hollywood eliminated. The movie "Dead End" appealing more to popular taste and box office demand, will make money for a year perhaps and then be forgotten, and laid aside never to be revived. New York will support true dramatio art, the pro vinces won't, at least until New York places its stamp of approval upon some box office ' success. Consequently, the legitimate theatre lives here only, and the movies, which place profits first, succeed in that direction, approximately as they fail in the other. No one can stav in New York for any length of time without being impressed by the authenticity of Dead End. The striking contrasts in that play, poverty living shoulder to shoulder with luxury, squalor and suffering next to ease and wealth it s apparent here nil the time. Not only at the end of East 53d street, but Park Avonue is only two blocks from Third Avenue. Sherry's a stone's throw, from Gus the Greek's! R. W .R. WOTSaaw NEW YORK. Aug. 38. As the years crowd down most of us bpgln to day dream of the Trails End. Tbat haven we hope to find when we call It a dny, and take life In easier strides. Imifth at the alarm clock, catch up with our porch rock ing snd meditate on tha blessed promises. Every city man hns his fleeting moments when he wants to bolt. When his window panorama reveals nothing but cold asphalt, aloof towers of spun steel and the maddening swirl of s precip itate humanity. And he aighs for an Arcadia without the shattering honk of a motor horn. He longs for the enchanting vista of a brook -wittered pasture, sunny meadowlsnd and sloping hill nicies Hidden gurgles of spring, circled by moss and such. He wants to feel soli under his feet Instead of the dsMlosttng tread of cement walked hardnesa. Pink blossomed mooning, of course. Utopia never achieved. A kindly French curate over the checker board In his garden of a little Provenos village once told me tha tragedy of most men of sucrens waa they lacked courane to quit. To follow Jsson and the Golden Pleeoe. and he was right. I wss musing bv the Hudson In the glow of s marvelous sundown this evening how nice It won Id he to renounce the banality of high pressure living snd drift with the pleasant currents. To trsde the topsy-turvy of the crowded artifice lor the serenity of the natural calm civilisation seems to have muffed It Is trite but true that the success ful men 1 know express the tautness of a fiddle string. And one dav nst- urslly they snap and for what? No successful man seems immune from the hypnotism of the mrxiern hurrah. Ha will tell you he wunt to get swav from It. a pen king trem ulously of tha fantasy ha conjures 26. Were lucky to be given and visited the original scene theatre", but its CHARACTER that note, in the play, Uave away to help the girl he didn't between dlrectora meetings. The borne set in maples far back from the rosd, ths selected library, hunt Ing dogs, the wild bird life and the stable of horses. Yet In his heart be knows It's fabrication. He would be In a dither If the morning paper were not at his pleteslde at break fast. He would champ st missing the highball or cigar at his favorite club after market closes. For me the world's alarms grow more frightening with each fresh hoocfl I ne. No reasonable person Is not conscious many things are wrong. There Is, too, something terrorising In the Ineecapablllty of a gathering avalanche, hell bent on destruction. I have the good fortune to be In con tact with both city, village and Isola tion of the farm, and I say the more remote- people are from mass popula tion the happier. The most con tentful letters corns from lost places often 60 miles from a depot and without civilising Influences of the movies .telephone or telegraph. I have been too long of th city now perhaps to forsake it. But I had a background of the rustic simplici ties and in my Journey from the coal oil lamp to the Neon's I know people of the smsller communities acquire more of happiness, health and men tal peace than we of cities. in this connection 1 quote from a city lady now of a tiny town in remote Idaho who sums up the city vs. country -with gusto snd sanity. She writes: "Our radio broadcasts 'Slumming on Park Avenue, a tune which should make me quite blue. 1 was born on that Illustrious street S3 years ago. And I danced the merry dance that went with prosper ous years. Then the old story. Wall Street and my husband'a physical and financial crackup We came out here to a scrubby ranch the creditors somehow overlooked. Four miles from even a general store. In three years my husband's health la restored to a rugKodueas he never knew. 1 haven't had a professional manicure or expert hair dressing since we arrived. We eat three meals a day like starving wolves. And we have 1198 in the bank and prospects of a crop suf ficient for needs. Are we happy I'll say. Oh. yea, and Important we dis cover we are really In love. Our af fections used to rise and fall with ths number of cooktalls we con-nm-d. And we find it more fun to go to bed dead tired at I o'clock Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and bygtene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large o umber of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady. Z6o El Camlno, Beverly. Calif. QUININE Quinine sulphste Is a poulsr rem edy for grip, la grippe or "colds" of the influenza type. Physicians and research workers In Germany. Japan and Austria have given this more study and the quinine treat ment of such common ailments la therefore more popular In these countries than It is In America. In America various nostrums are ex- plotted as cures tor these ail ments and the American people are great for trying everything. It is preferable to take quinine In capsules, two-grain capsules. Pills or tablets are not so certain, for they are less soluble. In my booklet "Call It Crl." I point out the dangers Involved In taking nostrums purporting to be good for "colds' 'and containing acet anllld, phenacetln, antlpyrln or other coal-tar derivative aa the main In gredient. Many such "cold" tablets contain one of these painkillers in sufficient dose to produce ringing In me ears, buzzing, fullness. In the head, headache, sweating, etc., and the gullible victim Imagines these effects are due to the quinine in the tablet, when there Is in fact no qui nine In It or so little that It doesn't In Yankeeland. These paln-ktller. never-deadener, fever.reducer drugs hernia has been healed by injections, produce their effects at a hazard in j They sleep better, gain weight and every instance they tend to break are not so nervous. I believe their down red corpuscles, damage the In- ' nervous symptoms were due to trrl tegrlty of the heart and interfere tatlon of the peritoneum by pinch wlth the oxygen-carrying function of 1 lng by the truss through the open the blood. Quinine has no such harm- ful effect. On the contrary It Is tonic and In small doses tends to Increase the number of red blood corpuscles. A great many physicians have pre- scribed successfully for many years and still use as favorite treatment for grip from one to three grains of quinine every three or four hours for a day or two. Sometimes other things are combined in the dose, such laxative or an intestinal antl- septlc or a few grains of some alkali or a sedative, but the quinine is the essential remedy. Smalt doses of quinine are given by many good physicians In the early stage of pneumonia, especially in dally ration of vitamin D to supple children. The treatment of whooping ment your diet. cough with full doses of quinine Is routine practice here the effective dose Is from a grain to a grain and a half of quinine for eacb year of the I child's age. to be given at 6 a.m., 3 p.m. and 10 p.m. dally. I Finally, quinine has been found than to drag from night club to night club until sunup.' Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937, by The North American News paper Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) energetic young man with a heritage of service should Join the colors. , On his return home when the war was over, Captain Hull was appointed judge of the fifth judicial district. Later, popular vote continued him In the office. He resigned from the bench to be ccme a candidate for congress. He wss elected, snd served, with only one Interruption the year of the Hnrdtng landslide In every congress from the sixtieth to ths seventy-first. Almost as soon as Representative Hull reached Washington, his obser vation ot men and methods brought him to a conclusion that crystallized his career. He found that the mem bers of congress who were not spe clallsts had little assurance of con tluued value or Importance to their country. Therefore, he chose finance as his metier. He was the author of the Income tax system as presented In 1913. of the revised set of 1910 and of the feedral estate (Inheritance) tax of 1918. When tha senatorial campaign of 1930 began, much to the surprise and against the counsel of many of his friends who fesred the loss of an able member of the house, Cordell Hull announced his candidacy for the senate. The vote was almost three to one In his favor. President -elect Roosevelt called In Senator Hull to talk of taxstlon. He remained to discuss the thorny topic o' war debts. He emerged from these discussions President Roosevelt's choice for the post which ranks first In his political family. Mr Roosevelt has never had a rea son to regret his choice. Now that the nation faces a dsngeroua crisis in the Far East, the confidence which the president reposes in his number one cabinet officer has msde his burden lighter. There will be no Impulsive act while Secretary Hull la in chsrge And "If you can keep your hesd while all around you are loMng theirs. ' vou make a pretty good secretary of stats. Brady, M D. FOR GRIP highly serviceable by leading author ities as a remedy in many dlaordera of atonic character, such as neural gia, dyspepsia, night-sweats, general debility, neurasthenia, chorea (St. Vltus'a dance), and we may fairly Judge from these many uses that there la a good margin of safety In the use of quinine as a grip remedy. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Dog Oone. For over two weeka I have been able to take nothing but liquid food, as my throat seems to close down and I can't swallow anything solid. I suppose this is due to grief over the death of my pet dog. (Mrs. L. M. C.) We have enjoyed your articles for a long time and have been Impressed by the amount of research reading you must do . . . When wire-haired Tony came to live with us we were Intensely interested In your allusions to your wlre-balred Tony, and griev ed when he could no longer make ,he grade. (B. B. O.) Answer Mrs. L. M. C. will find she can add custards, cereal gruels. banana pulp, meat Jelllea or gravies, etc., to her liquid diet and have no difficulty swallowing. Gradually she I can get back on regular solid food. 'Tony was an eternal nuisance, fight- tng everything on four feet, but we still sigh when we think of that last feeble wag as we turned him over to the kindly vet who assured us a shot of strychnine Into the heart is the easiest way. - Hernia Cured. Almost universally patients men- tlon how much better they feel after hernia. (O. S M.D.) i Answer Thank you, Doctor. We , may hear what some patients think ; about It patients who have received ambulant treatment for hernia, j Pneumonia. ! Had severe attack of pneumonia last November. Recovered sfter a few weeks, with no apparent compuca tlons. Doctor said Z msde excellent ' come-back. But friends tell me am more liable to have another at- tack now. (B. J. H.) Answer Under eucb circumstances ' isn't your doctor your best friend? Only suggestion I can offer Is that you take pains to get an optimal (Copyright. 1937, John P. Dllle Co.) Ld. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D Z69 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. BLOODIEST FRAY OF SPANISH If IN BISCAY AREA H END A YE. Franco-Spanish Fron tier. Aug. 38. (fP) Some of the blood' lest fighting of the Spanish war raged today on the widely separated Bay of. I Biscay and Aragon fronts, Communi ques of both sides reported thousands of casualties. Oen Francisco Franco diverted more thousands of his Insurgent troops from their recent victories at Santan- der to the Aragon front to meet a dangerous government offensive. An insurgent communique declar ed Franco's soldiers had thrown back a fierce attack by government Infan try, aviation and artillery on Zara goza, one of his Important bases and nearby Zuera. It asserted the re treating troops left 12.000 desd in Zuera alone. Government dispatches, however, reported government troops had fought their way through the moun tainous terrain and taken Zuera in spite of desperate resistance. Air and artillery bombardments took a ter rible toll in Insurgent ranks, they said. Opening his drive to tske Cijon. Bay of Biscay seaport in the small strip of government territory remain ing in northern Spain, Franco's atr force rained bombs on the city, gov ernment spokesmen announced. They declared many civilians were killed and wounded. Bbombardment followed a government rejection of an Insurgent ultimatum to surren der. Four British freighters were struck In the attack on the Biscay an port. PLAINT' OF MATE SAN FRANCISCO. Apg. (TJP( Mrs. Knute Hovden, wife of a prom inent Pavlflc coast Industrialist, to day filed suit for divorce, cha tying her husband "continually nagged me and my sons." Her husband, Knute Hovden, Is president of the Hovden Food Pro ducts company of San Francisco, and the principal stockholder of the Pa cific Last Food Products Co, and North Bend. Ore, and the American Natural Air Dryer Co . of Chicago. Mrs. Horden asks asoo a month. and the custody of their two sons. Allan. 19. and Norman, 17. Clea n um toi loo Late to Clas sify Ads is 1:30 p, at, Comment on the. Day s News By FBANK JENKINS IF YOU are a farmer (or are inter ested in farming) here are some figures that should Interest you: In tha fiscal year ending June 30, our agricultural exports ( meaning sales to other countries) amounted to 732,839,000. In the same period, our agrlcul tural IMPORTS (meaning PUR CHASES from other countries) amounted to 1, 539,239,000. THAT la to ssy. in the year ending June 30 we bought from other countries EIGHT HUNDRED MIL LION DOLLARS more in the way of agricultural products than we sold. In the year before last, we bought from abroad four hundred million dollars more of agricultural products than we sold. In the two years, our foreign PURCHASES have exceeded our for eign SALES by nearly a billion and a quarter. IJOW come? a A Well, we NEEDED these pro ducts, so we bought them. Not hav ing as much of them as we re quired, we bought wherever we could find them. That is the way business Is done. IlHY didn't we have them? TT Some of them, of course, such bananas and coffee, we don't produce, because of climatic condi tions. Others, such as corn and pork and beef, we were SHORT OF be cause we had hired our own farmers not to produce them. In some cases, we had actually DESTROYED our previous Burplus. liyiAYBE it is all right to hire our 1T1 own farmers not to produce, paying . them- with money taken from consumers in the form of tax on food or other taxes that unavoidably are added to the cost of what people buy. Maybe it Is all right to destroy surpluses such as killing pigs and plowing under crops to get rid of them. The politicians who did It before tell us It Is going to be necessary to DO IT AGAIN in order to prevent American agriculture from collap sing. They insist that we must have another AAA. OUT this In many ways old-fash LJ loned writer can't get away from the notion that we'd be better oft in the long run If we had PAID OURSELVES that billion and a quar ter that In the past couple of years we've paid to SOMEBODY ELSE. SEARCH KEEPS OP ARCTIC ICE LOST FLIERS FAIRBANKS, Alaska. Aug. 28. (yp; Carrying equipment to aid in push ing the search for the lost Soviet polar fliers. Pilot Harold GUlam. vet eran Alaska flying ace. took off In overcast weather today for Barrow. 500 miles to the northwest on the Arctic ocean. S. A. Smtrnov. Russian radio engi neer, and Al R. Bech, a U. 8. signal corps employe assigned to aid the Barrow station, accompanied him. Oil lam's plane was chartered by the Russian government for the flight. Pilot GUlam said that If the weath er was threatening he would set down for the night at Alatna, on the Ko yukuk river. JUNEAU. Alaska. Aug. 28 iPH- Pilot Jlmmle Mat tern said tonight he planned to make several airplane flights at an altitude of 35.000 feet here next week In an effort to pick up radio signals from the lost Soviet transpolar plane. Mat tern said Pilot Leva neff sky. leader of the lost plane and Its crew of five, said before be left Moscow that he would broadcast every hour for ten minutes In case he became lost. Mat tern ssld bis radio equipment was capable of picking up such sig nals at a high altitude. DETROIT FACING IT DETROIT. Aug. 38. (UP) Threat I of a gas strike hung over 400.000 De troit homea and 700 industrial plant tonight aa union leadera announced that "a definite date haa been set.'' Officials of the Oaa and By-Prod-ucta Coke Workers union Committee for Industrial Organiratlon affiliate conferred at a downtown hotel and Informed C. W. Bennett, manager of the Detroit City Oaa company, tbat plana for the strike "are being made. ' The strike, which would compel pay raises for gas workera over and above the 1600.000 aggregate raises an nounced by the company this week, would affect directly nearly 400.000 Detroit homea. gaa company aubacrlb- i ers. and more than TOO Industrial planu In the eity. Including all auto mobile manufacturers eacept the Pord Motor company. U Uau rrtDun cant adj. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson Connty history from tha files ot the Mali Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN VEARS AGO TODAY August 29, 1927 (It was Saturday) Seeley Hall returns from trip to Sen Francisco, and says airport will remain here. Don Newbury stalled in mid-air when carnival ferrts wheel refuses to work. Every mayor In state invited to attend "Jubilee of Dreams Realized". Light drizzle falls over city and valley. Drye oppose plan to bring about return of beer and wine. Rum and gin netted in raid at Ashland. Lane county forest fires endanger many homes. Tourist travel on Pacific highway drops. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 29. 1917 (It was Wednesday) Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Heath receiv ed a cablegram of Just one word Sunday morning from their son Frederick, a member of the 18th engineer corps, which arrived in France early last week. That one word was "safe," and there was no date or postscript. Chaos reigns in Russia, and there whereabouts of the exiled czar a mystery. W. H. Gore nabbed for failure to dim his auto headlights. Hunting season is closed in state, to prevent forest fires. Allies reject peace offers of kaiser "Ahl Girlie 1", at the Star; "The Barrier" at the Page. iYSTlYlFER L SYRACUSE, N. , Aug. 38. (UP) Laverne Moore conspired with his family tonight to escape the pub licity spotlight which has glared on him dally since he left California to face a seven-year old robbery charge. Telephone calls to the home of hla ailing mother. Mrs. Matthew Moore, brought the reply that "Verne Is sleeping and asked not to be disturbed." One of his sisters volunteered that he would "be around for quite a spell." But later another sister said he had left the house and that the family had no knowledge of his plana for tonight or how long he would remain In Syracuse. It was learned, however, that In the seclusion of his mother's home he renewed boyhood friendships with residents who knew him as Tlpper- ary Hill's best golfer before he be came famous aa Hollywood's mys terious John Montague. Moore came here from Elizabeth- town where he was arralged on a charge of complicity In a .700 tav ern holdup at Jay, N. Y. He was released on 25,0OO ball. Reports that he would return to Hollywood on business before hie trial could not be confirmed. HOLLYWOOD, Cal.. Aug. 38. (UP) Wallace Beery, whose adopted daughter. Carol Ann, 6, waa the object of Hollywood's latest ' kidnap mreai, returned to Kanab, In the wilds of Utah today when given as surance that every possible protec tion was being provided his little girl. He had started for home. Inform ed that a letter had been inter cepted In the mall, demanding that ne pay .io.ooo on pain of deatn or worse for hla daughter. Beery, who was working on location In Utah, boarded his own plane and started to fly back to Hollywood Metro-Ooldwyn-Mayer studio of ficials aald, however, that he atop ped off to telephone his wife, who toia mm he was not needed at home. o he turned back. BEERY'S DAUGHTER CLOSELY GUARDED IT COSTS LESS And In addition you have the automatie features and advantages of new, improved heating when you have a SAWDUST BURNER Timber Products Company Chom; j Blch Man Kills Self. SAN JOSE, Cal.. Aug. 28. Wr The body of Arthur P. Estabrook. 68, wealthy retired San Francisco and Los Angeles ship builder, was found on the lawn at hi Los Altos ranch home today and Deputy Coroner Louis Provengano said he Had committed suicide. Closing tune for Too Lata to Clas sify Ads la 1:80 p. m. IMMUNIZE HOW AGAINST COLDS In a large proportion of cases res piratory vaccines have been very beneficial In preventing colds and Infections of the chest and lungs. However It requires several weeks to develop the highest immunity. If you Intend to Immunize your self against coldB and respiratory In fections It is advisable that you con sult your doctor at once because now la the proper time to start treat menta so that the highest of protec tion Is present during the start of 4 the cold season. Consult your family physician at once. Insulin 10 c.c C 40 Is .1.13. We give 8. ill. Green stamps. Heath's Drug Store, phone 884. As Full of Pep as the Highland Fling PRITVTZESS Shetland Shaggics Coats built for action . . in the smartest sports tradition. Feathery fleeces as strong as they are light. Gay and bright in lilting Highland colors. With distinctive fashion touches that make Printzess coats so easy to wear . . so be coming. These are the coats in which you'll want to do your dash-ing-about this fall. Ex clusive with us. $29-?5 Burelson 's Medford Bldg. Phone 28 tn or N. CENTUM,