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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1931)
VM1E SEVEN and the DeAutremont trio, In theiri conreasions, reviewed their life from the cradle to the crime. In an effurt to arouse sympathy. FAST III FROM EAST SEABOARD FORMAL TRIAL ARTISTS FAVORED WHO What Is Gum-Dipping? BE MEDFORD MAIL TRTEUNE, MEDFORD, Ol.'KCOX, KIM DAY. .I.Wl'.U.'Y :":n. MM. o LAW DEMANDS 1 Slayer of Prescott Must Have Lawyer and Court Chance if First Degree Penalty Exacted. James E. KitiK-sley, alius J. C. Adams, confessed Hlnyor of Sam IMoseott, Ashland lioliee officer last Saturday morning to avoid arrest, if indiotod on a first degree murder charge by the grand jury culled to meet next Monday, must face trial, under the Oregon law. It is also mandatory for the court to appoint counsel. Kingsley has declared that he does not wish an attorney, intending to throw himself on the mercy of the court. The Oregon law requires in first degree murdfr cases that a jury he called to hear the .evidence and return a verdict. A verdict of guilty without recommendations, leaves the court no alternative hut to inflict the death penalty. Like wise, If the jury recommends life imprisonment, the court has no other course. PcAuti't'tnoiitK riled In the sentencing in l!27 of the DeAutremont brothers, for the Siskiyou tunnel attempted train robbery and .quadruple murders, the above was the procedure, the hastily Impanelled jury returning a direct tl verdict recommending life imprisonment. The Kinsley c:ise has been likened to the PeAutremont ease liy the public, but it differs funda mentally. In the DeAutremont eases all the evidence was highly circumstantial and if the three brothers hail not confessed com pletely, the whole truth might never have been known. The De Autrcmont .confessions came after Hugh had been found guilty with a . recommendation of life im prisonment. Jlingsley Crime Seen -. In the case of Kingsley all the testimony is direct, with three, and possibly more actual eye-witnesses to the shooting, buttressed by a signed statement of Kingsley ad mitting his guilt. , The only similarity between the two crimes is that both Kinpstey LOS ANGELES () The best radio technicians are those who t know little about music, believes! .Muslin, engineer 01 tr i- ! K Et'A. j He has found that technicians 1 with musical training have opin ions, and that they are ' better off I without them.' Musicians with technical knowledge were placed in the same category. Mason's opinion of an Ideal com bination would be artists with a fundamental knowledge of radio transmission and technicians aware of the musician's intentions. CHIC-KASHA, Ok la. () L I k e the threshing outfits that harvest wheat in other communities, farm ers of this neighborhood are using an ensilage cutter to fill their silos. Trading work, members of the crew travel from farm to farm storing the winter feed. The system evolved as a result of the success of E. Daniels 'and his two sons with trench silos J on the three farms they manage. i'oeasset farmers built their silos eight feet deep, eight feet wide at the bottom, and 2 feet wide at the top. Another local Illustration of how; fast tho air mail varvlco expedites delivery of mail over the regular mail service came to light this; week when a letter sent by air : mail from ltrooklyn, N. Y., to a well known Bedford business man. mailed at 8 a.m. on Janu ary 1' ti, reached t h is city at 7 : -1 " a.m. on January iS, and was in the hands of the addressee by the regular local delivery service just 4t hours after it was mailed i" Brooklyn. i Alter being placed in the post pt'flco at Brooklyn It was trans ported to the air field and then came across the country on a transcontinental plane to San Eranctsen, where it was trans ferred to a l'aclfic Transport plane for Medford. Of course the let'er in question was nblo to make this record breaking trip in so short a limo due to mak ing timely plane connections. Not only the postmarks on the letter tell of tho fast flight and delivery, but the man to whom the letter was addressed, had con firmation otherwise as he had called up the writer of the mis sive at Brooklyn by long distance phone after the letter was mailed to Medford and was told the ex act lime It was mailed In Brook lyn. The sending of business and so cial letters by air mail from .Med ford to various parts of the Bailed States Is fast increasing. Postmas ter Warner reports, as .more and more citizens are realizing that the great gain in time made over the ordinary mail service justifies the small increased charge of an air mail stamp. Through an error in compilation, the scholastic record made by Ar ietta Tyrell, a freshman at Med ford high school, was given incor rectly hi the honor roll published yesterday. She made four A's and one B, the highest record in the freshman class. Jean Whitman, a senior, was also omitted. Her rec ord was three A's and a 11. 4 The ancestral home of France Willard. famous women's leajlor. at Janesville. WU., Is now a poul 1iv ranch. SALE SATURDAY ONLY Dresses, Coats, and other articles greatly re duced to make room for new Spring apparel. Don't miss this opportunity to save! Dresses balance of Fall and Winter frocks in Velvet, Crepe. Chiffon and Satin. V a 1 u e s" up t c .$39.9:j. Saturday only $1000 COATS E very . Fall and "Winter coat, including smart fur-lrinnned models, on sale tomorrow. $179 values $75 $125 values $55 $98 values $45 $85 values $39.95 $79 values $25 GLOVES One group kid and suede gloves in small sies onlv. $1.00 Shorties & Stepins One group of satin and silk crepe models in values to .fl.OO. Satur dav S2.95 Purses Yi Price ADRIENNE'S New Spring Numbers Arriving Dailyl The reason five' or sfic young Medford men are wearing blaek eyes or scratches today, or both, is because a tormented newly married couple was exasperated to the point of putting up n fight when a party of young folks went tn far in charivariing them. Shortly after the wedding last nitfht the merrymakers kidnaped the bride and groom, rode them around town with much noise and conspicuousness, anil performed o t h e r time honored charivari stunts. All went welt until about 3 a. m. when the kidnapers tried to duck the newlyweds in the water of' the AIcAndrews ford " in the. Berrydale vicinity. The latter then turned on their tormenters fiercely ami lining up side by side fought them off. "The Silver Horde" Pleases at Holly To most readers of Tlex Ueach's novels, rherry Mulotte is a char acter of fiction. She was not merely a product of lleaeh's imaglnatlnn, however. She was a character taken from real life, . the hardy and rough life of Alaska in its most color ful days. This fact was verified recently to the satisfaction of Kvelyn lirent featured in Hadio l'ictures' all talking version of "The Silver Horde" at the Holly theatre. Miss Hrent was aboard a ship bound for Alaska with Joel Me- (Yea. Iouis Wolheim. Ituymnnd 1 Ilatton and several hundred others to film the Heach epic. Occupy inc the next cabin to the actress was a pioneer of the north. II knows the entire country and all its famous character lie told Miss Hrent the life story of t'herrv Malotte, her character istics and many things that aided the actress- in portraying C'hcrr; on tho screen. A special morning matinee to morrow at 10:a will feature the film, the ''Ciold Ilonders" and pro lom on the stage with the (iold Hond kiddies. ..Jm.A "I d r Jif.. r.. at State Saturday Is I Mnny screen players of repu tation and 'popularity -appear in i Pathe's new and novel western ro j den comedy, "Pardon My fJun," which comes to the Stale Theatre ; on Saturday next. The list in j eludes, among the more notable, I George- Uuryea, Sally Starr, Hob I ert KdHon, Mona Hay, Ieo M 1 ran and Ida May Chadwick. The scenes of the comedy are ' pirated In the wtd open spaces of the west. There is a charming love romance in which Miss Starr and .Mr. Uuryea are the central f Ik ores. Buck Jones Stars in Rialto Thriller Gum-Dipping is the Firestone trade name for that patented, basic process w hich makes Fire stone Tires fundamentally different from all other tires. It is one of the reasons why Firestone, through many years, has easily been able to make good the statement: "Most miles per dollar." It is not some thing done to a tire after it is made. It is something very vital done before the tire is made. To grasp the full significance of Gum-Dipping, it is necessary to know something about how a tire is made and what goes on within a tire on the road. The body of the tire bears the principal strains in service. To it is attached the tread which provides trac tion and takes the wear of the road. The usual tire body is built up of layers or plies of cot ton cords between which rubber has been forced. Rubber is incompressible. Hence the tire body practically does not expand or contract to meet road shocks. It flexes that is, it changes form. The strain of the flexing tends to pull the plies apart and also to pull the cords themselves apart. A tire flexes about seven hundred times in a mile which gives some idea of the strains and the friction which a tire must endure. The great enemy to tire life is internal friction. Years ago the fabric was square-woven and the cotton cords sawed, One across another. If cotton rubs against cotton, the tire soon heats up and collapses. That is why the square-woven fabric tires were so short-lived. Then came the tires with parallel cords that could not saw each other. The best square woven fabric tire would go scarcely four thousand miles. A poor cord tire willrfve Eight pounds ofQtMlily at least twice that mileage. Making the cords parallel was a great advance but it was only part of the battle against internal friction. It was realized" that if the fibers of cotton in a cord could be insulated one from another, then a step-up in tire life could be had compa rable to that made by shifting from square woven fabric to parallel cords. That is what all tire makers have been striving for. That is what Firestone has achieved. Every cord used in Firestone Tires has been treated with a rubber solution which penetrates every cord and coats every fiber; and thus not only the cords, but also the very fibers within them are insulated. of fine, pure rubber are, by the patented Cain-Dipping process, integrated into every one hundred pounds of cotton cords. This means three extra pounds of pure rubber added to an average set of tires and added where it means most to the strength and the life of the tire. This extra rubber all goes into the cords of the tire where you never see it. Why does Firestone put in this extra value? And what does it mean to you? It means just this. The performance the extra valuehas been shown for years on the road and in the laboratory. It has been proved that Gum-Dipping: increases the flexing life of a cotton cord by 58. increases tire life by from 25 to ouer 40, according to the sever ity of the service the more severe the service, -the higher the percentage. Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires are not just tires. They are thirty years of organized ex perience. They are sold only through Fire stone Service Dealers and Service Stores and only as Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires bearing the Firestone name and bear ing the Firestone emblem that appears on this page. Wherever you live city or country a fresh and complete stock of Firestone products is near-by. "ll, Copyright, 1911. The Kiiniuue Tire & iUbhci Cu .00L0 H AS NEW LIE BY JACQUE j spouse to Paris' latest ultimatum I are affecting Jackets. Thoso which I are not provided with separate ! one carry a Mini of I lie same which f is very convincing. Sleeves demand far moro. atten tion than they have in past sea soiih. Kach has added somothttiK new in cut. lucks, gathering anil decoration. The Russian influence,! which has been invading fashions for the past year, finds plenty of room fin- expression in sleeves. Prints, solid colors, plaids and all other spring tendencies in pat terns are to bo found In tho Indi vidual Hues offered by Mrs. I-.cn- Observatories In Arctic. I.KMXfinAI) A I'our new Kco:hyical obscrvatorUm are . to be established heyoud the Arctic circle by the Central (Jenphysleal Institute here. They will be in Novaya Kcmlyu, Vridtjcf W'anwen Land, ' Kamchatka Mnml and In , Verkhoyansk, Siberia. Many Fading Slurs. ' MT. M'H-sox. Cel. (Pj In tho spiral nebula of . Audropieda it Is estimated at Alt. Wilson observa tory that ;io novae appear yearly. Theso are stars which fluro sud denly and slowly fade. The ennso of their explosive outbreaks of 1 bright nens b' imt known. Itldtnff. shooting, bull-dofiglng and other typical thinn of the west hold sway In "lesert Ven geiittcP,M the latest big Western featuring I tuck Jones, now play ing at the Kox Ilialto theater. Hm k Jones as the idoli'fd bandit riding fill tilt to face death, and to conquer the women be ideal ized, will win mnny new follow ers with his acting and feats of horemnnshiit In this i. it Hire Then ther is the burno "Sil ver." one f th most beautiful and Intelligent animals to grace Colorful baskets of flowers, quaint corsages and a lovely array of spring frocks and bonnets greet ed appreciative members of Med ford's femininity who attended the I owning today at Jaenjie Lenox's shop on Kusi Main Htreet. The opening, featured I h e celebration of tho addition of dresses to Ihe snop ol Jactpie l-en- ox, who has for Ihe past seven years catered oniy to the hat needs of southern Oregon shoppers, will continue through tomorrow. teach shopper who purchases hat or froek at the shop today or to morrow will receive a lovely cot tage of spring blossoms. Mrs, Lenox is Including in her showing frocks lor each hour of the day und leading perhaps In Interest are the lovely creations known to the fashion world us Sunday supper gowns. A complete range of Bl7.es from Ill's upward will he curried. And many of th dresses in p- Ni-xiirm-miKrM.vnsM CASKV'N t.'OMPol'XI) it efle. tlve. lasting relief for rheumatism, neu ritis, sciatica, lumbago, gout and swelling of the limbs. Improve the blood and Its circulation- Stim ulate the stomach, liver and kid neys to function naturally, supply ing every Internal organ with na ture's own tonic. Mr. W. T. Kord, a Itaptist prea- It er, 3':i K. 3fith St., phone Krut l!i;."i4, Portland, Oregon, who, after being In the hospital fi month with rheurnfii ism and a bad heart was went home t' die, report heart trouble reliever! and rh'iimnntn Sli'tie Hi nee t a king rasiey'H Com - pound. "Cn n't recommend It too highly,' itt his t a lenient. S I I per bottle at Jarmin & Wools Jiug Campbell Clothing Co. On Main Street Near Front Special Values For Saturday 24 Suits Mostly $35 values $19.50 10 Overcoats Up to $25 values $14.50 We give S. & H. Green Stamps Milk Butter lWELLf HEALTHIEST BO X FRESH AIR A I ' ' IN THE COUNTY, EH? HOW f pLENTy OF SLEEP ) .DID HE DO IT. MRS. BR0WN?1(aNP MILK SEVERAL ON YOUR MENU That famous Swiss Creamery C0TTTAGE CHEESE don't forget ' ' AT ALL THE BETTER GROCERIES Save This Scrinl No. 10 GRADE A ?Sluf&s(xeaiiierd QUALITY- Save This Serial No. 10 the kllvcr ouct n. Mure.