P3.GK TEW 5IEDFOB15 IfSIL TRTBTJST5, MEDFORD, OHESON, MOND'AY, NOVEMBER 7, 1932. Many From Medford in I Football Classic Crowd : Watch Prink and Boys ' (By Emeat Roatel) . Th Oregon unlveralty squad, eoaohed by Prink Callleon, defeated Oregon State, 13 to 0, Saturday, play tag In a veritable aaa of mud and in a rainstorm which persisted through- out the afternoon. . ThB Bell field atadlum included ao many Medford root re there were In dications of a "Medford day" in Cor- vallla. They came to watch former Medford high olool stars In action. They came to watch Prinks boys In action, remembering bis outstanding success as coach here several years ago. Others were former O. 8. O. grads, coming back to support their eld alma mater. Most of the several thousand spec tators expected the gams to be won en lucky breaks brought about by slippery conditions, but were not en tirely right. Oregon State's lone touchdown Is attributed to a break In the second quarter when Mark Temple fumbled the ball behind his own goal Una In attempting a punt. Ha dropped It. One Oregon State man dived for It but missed. A seo ond covered It Just a yard from the goal line. Twice the Oregon men held O. S. 0. for no gain, but on the third attempt, husky Hal Moe put It over for the first score. Goal kick was missed. Oregon State rooters were wild with Joy. Coach Paul Schlssler wss elated over the alx-polnt lead, still good at the end of the half. Both teams, decked out In. clean uniforms, started the third quarter In gusto, but Oregon had the greatest power. They made a successful drive for a touchdown from the 83-yard Una, with Mike Mlkulak the ground gain er. Goal kick was missed. It appeared the traditional game would end In a hopeless tie. Teams battered each other viciously In line plunging and substitutions were fre quent. In the fourth quarter Ore gon State punted, the ball soaring to Oregon's 89-yard line, where Temple scooped It In near the east side line and plunged toward the goal line for 8s yards and a touchdown. Goal kick was missed. , The battle of mud was resumed, with Oregon playing cautiously to protect Its lead until the end of Vie game. When the final gun was beard Schlssler wss one of the first to oongratulate Oalllson on the way to the dressing rooms, B1U Morgan, Medford'e former high Softool star, fought hard and did much to nolo. Oregon State down, despite a heavily bandaged band. Be was In the line almost to the end of the fourth quarter. Bernle Hughes, center, never missed a minute and played wltnuut the use of shoulder or hip pads, He waa always In the thick of the battle. Dependable BUI Bowerman, another Medford boy, played the entire game. Fred ("Red") McDonald, another former looal stsr, came In for Oregon State In the last quarter, but did not have much op portunity to reveal his ability. : It la easy to learn around Eugene that a coach could not be more pop lar than Prink Callleon. There Is every Indication he can coaQh Oregon as long ss he desires. By winning the always difficult game with Ore gon State his stock waa boosted higher and In his next game his team Is expected to give university of Southern California a surprise, as well as Its most difficult battle of the season. Then follows the clash with the poweriul St. Mary's eleven, after which the Oregon squad Jour neys to the south to play the Uni versity of Louisiana, bringing to a close Calllson's first year as Oregon coach. IS SALEM, Nor. 7. (AP) George Stair, halfback of The Dallas blgh football team, was disqualified until December 33, according to a decision reached at the end of a 12-hour ses sion of the Oregon State High School Athlatlo association board of control at Oorvallla Saturday, The announcement of the disquali fication and the awarding of the game between The Dalles and Hood River, which ended In a scoreless tie, to the Hood River squsd waa made by John L. Gary, secretary of the board. In brief, a statement issued fol lowing the meeting stated that the board had decided that Starr had taken articles of an intrinsic value of approximately 113 for engaging In boxing bouts at The Dalles, the acts violating an association ruling. It also atlpulted that The Dalles should forfeit all games played to date. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 7, (AP) Goncaga's Bulldogs went back to Spo kane today with a 8-0 vlotory over the University of Ssn Francisco to their credit In yesterday's clash here. Max Kruse, fullback star, won the game for the northerners by running 38 yards to a touchdown In the third quarter, after catching a lateral pass and fighting his way through moat or the U. S. F. team. Tony Donadlo, flashy little left halt of the Dons, provided another thrill by running a klckoff back 81 yards In the third period. MTOTLB POINT Safeway organis ation contracted for entire remaining output of peas from looal cannery. PRESIDENT WITH WAR VETERAN K lit ' Roscoe Pelfrey, a war veteran of Chllllcothe, Ohio, It shown pin ning a forget-me-not on President Hoover'a lapel aa the chief execu tlve'a train stopped In Chllllcothe enroute to Indianapolis. (Associated Press Photo LAST MINUTE APPEAL A FLOP (Continued from Page One) Pipes wm honored by beng elected mayor of Medford, and Pop Gates was the one man mho made his elec tion certain endorsing him and working for him throughout up to the very close of the campaign. Am one prominent Gates supporter expressed It today, "To have a former mayor of this ctly. for the sake of his own political preferment, oppose the candidate of that city, on the sole ground that he Is "MED FORD'S CANDIDATE," . certainly surpasses anything In the line of civic dis loyalty and personal Ingratitude, that has ever come to my attention. There Is only one way to answer this sort of challenge. For every voter, old or young, man or woman, who has any pride In Medford, any loyalty toward It, to accept that challenge and give Pop Gates such an overwhelming majority here In Medford that no antl-Medford vote In Ashland or the rural districts can by any chance overcome It. And tftat In my opin ion Is Just what the people of Med ford will do." KM ED 5:30 TONIGHT "School Consolidation Bill " For BETTER EDUCATION and REDUCED TAXATION VOTE 316X YES Paid Adv. by Henry Zorn Ohampoeg, Ore. POISON CAUSING DEATH OF B. M. Hussong, biology Instructor at the Senior high school, after spending several hours examining a group of little birds which he picked up on sixth street from among the many found dead there Friday, made the following report: "The birds are young Rusty Song Spsrrows or a near relative thereof. Of the three I examined, one had eaten eight grains of wheat; another had three grains of wheat and what seemed to be masses of bread or cake; the contents of these stom achs showed traces of strychnine. The third bird hsd eaten bits of meat, two small beetles and one grain of scorched popcorn. This bird's crop and Intestines showed trace, of ar senic not positive of this and the muscles hsd the knotty contraction characteristic of strychnine poison ing. "Several other birds which I han dled showed bruises on bresst and wings, as If a flock of them had struck a stretch of many parallel wires. "The sparrows and finches closely lntergrade and from printed descrip tions snd uncolored plct'jrea no one can identify them with certainty. Museum skins and mounts are need ed for this. These sparrows are not Infested with mites and bedbugs, as the English and othera of our native sparrows are. "Birds are sometimes Infected with bacterial and protoeoan dlsesses which cause the death of many "of them at one time, particularly of those which flock closely In the win ter time. J did not find any trou bles of this sort in those I examined." Franklin Oeorge of Val J. Fischer service station, aald Saturday that he had counted BS of the amall birds dead, between Front and Fir streets on Sixth. Oregon Weather Increasing cloudiness followed by rain late tonight or Tuesday in north and west portions; rising tempera- Adr. Mid SCHOOL TAX-8AVTWO ASB1Y. 018 Fftcifio Bmldin Portland, Oregon We Urge You to VOTE FOR J. o. (SEEY For City Treasurer Mr. Grey's five and one-half years aa a member of the city council with untiring efforts for economy plus his experi ence and ability as an account ant make him qualified for this Important job. VOTE FOR J. O. GREY Paid Adr. GREY FOR TREASURER CLUB. E. C. Ferguson, Secretary. ture: lncreselng southeast winds offshore. LA GRANDE Bids were opened November 3 for construction of hlgh wsy departmental shop. SEASIDE Electrlo dairy steriliser recently Instslled on Nohn Ostman dairy near here. ' WINCHESTER BAY Engineers setting .staxea for south jetty con struction project here. , R06EBURO Cinderella Shop mov ed to former Vogue Hat shop build-lng. Klamath Falls Frank Nugent pur chased service ;tstlon at corner of South Sixth and East Main streets. A. W. PIPES ilk Independent Candidate for County Judge Will speak over KMED 7:45 to 8:00 Tonight! Paid Adv. THIRD WARD VOTERS For Your Own Interests Vote for SAM L el i ' tie t 4 ? for Councilman As owner of the Jackson Coun ty Creamery (Now the Gold Seal Creamery) Mr. Kroschel waa Identified with business and clvlo activities of this city for over 18 years. He and his family have lived In this city for the pant 20 years, and will continue to reside In Medford. Mr. Kroschel Is a substantial property owner and vitally in terested In the welfare of third ward people! ORE GON NEEDS HO We call your attention to tha agitation now being enrried on In foreign countries for lowering the American tariff. They want to share our Ninety Billion dollar market for American products, the richest market in all the world. With a democratic administration the tariff wall will be lowered. Americana will be idle. Local factories will be olosed to American labor. Foreign factories will be opened. Think it over, Voters. a Oregon's Workers, Farmers 'arid Busi ness Men Should Carry On With Hoover Stock Raising 1. The Tariff The republican party believes In a high tariff, so that the American market may be preserved to the American producer, which in turn gives employment to the Amer ican workingman, and he is thereby a supporter of the corner grocery. The republican tariff is an America-for-Amerlcan'a polioy. The democratic party advocates a competitive tariff. That kind of a tariff was translated by Mr. Bert B. Ilaney, leading Oregon democrat in a speech at Portland, when he said he was talking for Roosevelt and the party to be A LOW TARIFF. He said we could get along on no tariff, or at least BO percent of the present tariff. 2. Lumber Republican Oregon Senators and Republican Congress men secured the tariff of M a thousand on lumber that is now opening up our mills and putting men to work. Under democratio rule, they will olose again. In the countries to the north and south of the United States there are hundreds of thousands of cattle looking' over a tariff wall that keeps them out of the United States. Lower the tariff wall by voting the democratio party into power and those cattle will take the American market. 4. Wool Australian growers are holding their wool clip to see if Roosevolt is elected President and the democratio party returned to power. In that case they expect the tariff to be taken off wool and they can come in here to undersell the American growef. 5. Agriculture Horticulture The Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the North west Grain Growers Corporation are arranging the sale of 15,000,000 bushels of wheat to China. It will be con summated as soon as possible, possibly by election day. Chinese eggs are now excluded from the American mar ket by the tariff. Japanese and Italinn cherries are barred from competition for the American market by the' tariff. For the first time in years, the growers of cherries In the Willamette Valley this season shipped barrelled cherries at a profit. 6. The Fisheries Last week the President spoke to the people connected with the fisheries of Oregon, and he told them he had asked the Tariff Commission to raise the rate on the Importation of Japanese salmon, which is laid down here for one-half the cost of salmon at the American canneries. IT WILL BE DONE. 7. Reconstruction Finance Corporation The Reconstruction Finance Corporation loaned the Hibernian Bank of Portland $500,000, which enabled that bank to open its doors and released the deposits of 15,000 Portland citizens. 1400 individual farmers in Oregon have received loans of from $20 to $400 each. The wool growers of Oregon have borrowed $1,425,000 from the R. F. 0. Dairymen of Oregon were loaned $28S,000. Grain growers cooperatives of Oregon borrowed $1,745, 000. More than a million has been loaned to cattlemen ' associations. Vegetable growers borrowed $72,000 and turkey growers $60,000. The Reconstruction Finance Corporation has aided a total of 4S09 banks, trust com panies, insurance companies, agricultural credit corpora tions and livestock corporations, having 30,900,177 indi vidual members. Three, thousand, two hundred and ninety-one of those institutions were located in towns of less than 5000 population. When Hoover put the credit of the U. S. treasury back of the R. F. C. he saved the banks, the depositors and the business of the entire nation, Hoover Policies Have Sought to Help Every Citizen There Has Been No "Forgotten Man." Democratic Policies Would Put Oregon Labor and Oregon Farmers ON THE SPOT The Democrats tariff program would force American labor to fight the subsistence level labor of Europe, the peon labor of Mexico, the coolie labor of Asia, slave labor of Africa, and convict labor of Communist Hu!a In our home market. Republican Party-Candidates FOB PRESIDENT Herbert Hooter FOR VICE-PRESIDENT Charles Ciutli FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS Mrs. r b. III. hop. Marlon County Charles H. Carey, Multnomah Coiintr 12 Ellrnheth E. Pfttlnrer, Claokaman County l.loyrt R. Smith, Multnomah County Parld S. Slenrns, Multnomah County FOR t'MTED STATES SENATOR 21 Frederick stelwer FOR REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS 23 James w. Mott FOR SECRETARY OF STATU 29 Hal E. Ilosa FOR STATE TREASURER 32 Rufus C. Ilolman FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL y 391. II. Van Winkle Hold on to HOOVER! Give Him a Republican Congress! Elect the State Ticket! Paid advertlaemeat by Republican State Central Committee, T. 0. Elliott, Chairman, 840 Morpin Building, Portland, Oregon. Hoover-Curtis Club.