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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1935)
PXGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD. OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1935. MEDFORDvrTRIBUNE Eweryooe la Mootbere UrflfM Ueada the Mall Mw" Dallr Bxecpt Saturday. Publtehed by MBDFUKD PRINTING CO. ii-ii-si n. irir St. pnoae ROBKRT W. HUHU editor. An lDd.p.nd.nt N.epap.r. Ent.r.d eecond-elaea ?,""' "Ai" lord. Oreioo. under Act ot alercb I, Ul BlIRHHRtPTION RATES By Hall lo Advmnc.: Dally, one year J -JJ Dally. ! month Dnllr. one month '.VrV ..h Br Carrier. In Ad.ence Modlorl eh . lend. Jaceeon.llle, Central Point, Phoenli, Talent, Jld Hill and on hlhweye. Dally, one year "' Daily, ell month Pally, one month All terma, oaib In advaaoe, OlflrJnl Paper of the Cltr ot Medtor. Official Paper of Jerkaon County. ef-KSIHKK OP THB ASSOCIATED fHt.BS Becelvlm mil leaned Wire Ser.lce. The Aaaoclated Preae le eicluel.ely en titled to the uie for publication of all newo dliptlchee oredlled to It or other wlae credited ID thle paper, and aleo to the local newa publlehod herein. All rlihie for publlcetlon of epeclai dlepatchee herein are aleo re.er.ed. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Repreeentetl.e, H, 0. MOO EN 8 BN COMPANY Office. In New York. Chlceco Detroit Sao Francleco, Lo. Angelea, Seattle. Portland. MEMBER. Ye Smudge Pot j By Arthur Ferry. Winter cama unexpectedly the first of the week and caught the fellow who filled up hU woodshed, when he should have been fishing, prepared and ready. Jno. Anderson the 0. Pt. farmer, puffed a cigar on the Main Stem Mon., Tues. to Wed. John told the court he was AS years and 28 days old, and the court told him he did not look It, and marveled at hts you tb fulness. The hs. grldmen went over the mt. Saturday and returned trium phant alter a close sqe&k. Owing to the rain Thurs. eve., the Hallowe'en depredation! were minor and did not leave the city looking like an Ethiopian village in the road of the Italian army. It Is now charged the special session of the legislature "Is act ing like any other group of men." They were called to pass lawa pro viding for the building of the new state capltol. Up to last Friday, they had only Introduced 00 bills having nothing to do with capitol con struction. If other men acted like the legislature they would mow the lawn, when their wives tell them to come to supper. The Abe Cunningham boy's saxo phone Is still for sale, and as special Inducement an axe may be given with the purchase. The county agent was out in the country Tues. showing rural resi dents how to render turkeys life less In a neat And scientific manner, Sen. McNary was here Wed. for a conference with the CofO. directors. Stockmen report there will not be enough hay for the cows this winter let alone the rest of us. There Is anow In the hills, and rugged Individualists of both sexes will be out skiing soon. H. Nakota, the Nipponese tiller, reported Thurs. he was losing money as fast as the native farmer, Secretaire de la Commerctale Ban well addressed the coming peda gogues at Ashland in mid-week on development of resources, etc., etc. Corb Edgell Is able to be out and about, with the aid of a young pear tree for a cane. Howdy I Corbl Hunters are now devoting their energies to going to Klamath county, to a hoot a duck. They could get Just a wet and cold at home, but won't. Tt la understood the Jackson coun ty solona want to get out of the legislature, and the sentiment Is strong to give them another chance. A large and enthusiastic audience assembled Frl. eve to see the bad minton contents. H. Flewher. the demon baker, was the orator of the evening, and should not drop his public speaking studies. He wore a brown ensemble which fit a bit too tight across the shouldera. The com bnlants were very polite to each other. Max Pierce perfn-med nobly. Two men and all the women com plimented him on the quickness oT his feet and eyes. The visiting ex pert also knew what they were doing. In no uncertain terms. Messrs. Morris. H. Deuel, M, Spate and the Rupert Henry boy sat at each corner of the field and looked wIm aa Judges which they were. t O. Von der Hellen. the Wellen country-Jake, shivered In town Set. Everybody has started yelling for the heat they were cussing last Au gust. J. Thorndyk. the tired bank clerk, la rusticating In Call, attending a bankers confab. The first rumors of Christmas have been heard In the valley. Only 40 odd days. t E. Rontel, the Crater Lake public ity artist, has left the scenic spot, to sojourn In town. Olteo Shlmode. and a "B." the school. II, got three "A'," first month of Merchants are staging an old fashioned dollar day. The dollar Is becoming more plentiful, but Is still nmething of a god, and all that matteit I Memorial to Will Rogers k T the request of the Will Rogers Memorial Commission, the Mail Tribune has consented to act as a depository for con tributions to the memorial fund. - The national drive will start tomorrow, November 4th, the 56th anniversary of "Will Rogers' birth, and will end on Thanks giving, November 27th. Needless to say this will be entirely a free will offering. Thr.re will be no solicitation. No one will be URGED to give. But we feel sure there will be many people in Mcdford ami southern Oregon who will WANT to give something, and thus be identified with this country-wide movement to put up some lasting and fitting memorial to one of the greatest Americans of this generation. THE exact nature of the memorial has not been decided upon. But it will certainly be no "cold shaft of marble" for this warm, friendly man. It will be helpful nature very likely a of those who need help, who have little sunshine and gayety in their lives, for that we are sure would have approved. NOR will any of the money contributed be used for incidental expenses, overhead, clerical work, etc., or diverted to any uses but to the memorial itself. Organization costs will be defrayed by the aviation industry, and the various committees will all serve without pay. That this purpose will be carried out to the letter, can be depended upon by the nature of the personnel, the type of. men and women who are at the head of the organization. Here are some of them : Henry Ford; former President Herbert Hoover; Al Smith; Owen D. Young; Vice-President Garner; Alice Roosevelt Long worth; Amelia Earhart Putnam; Eddie Rickenbacker; Mary Pickford; Charley Curtis; Fred Stone and Senator Joseph Robinson. ARGE donations are not solicited. Small sums from many, rather than large sums from the few, is the idea and the right idea behind the Receipts' from every donation from ten cents up to as many dollars will be returned to every contributor, and the name of each and every one will be permanently enscrolled in the records of the memorial commission. During this period of the campaign the Mail Tribune will publish facts regarding the progress of the drive from day to day and blanks will be printed which can be filled out and sent to this office with the contributions. TPIIE people of Medfortl and vicinity liave always had a soft spot in their hearts for Will Rogers. Not only was he a daily contributor to this paper, a provider of laughs and smiles anct salty good sense for many years, but one rainy night three years ago he paid an unexpected visit to this city when his plane was forced down at the local airport by a storm. An informal and entirely impromptu reception for him was held in this office and we are sure the men and women and children who came in that night to shake hands with him, will never forgot the genuine human kindliness of the man it is something we believe no one had That of course is the best memorial that any man could have, the love and affection in the knew him. But the generation that knew proper and fitting that a permanent memorial should be erected, by them, to preserve for future generations, the memory of one of the greatest humorists, and one of the greatest influences for good cheer and sane thinking, For a Poachers' Paradise AMONG the "emergency" bills introduced in the special ses sion nf lomulnfnra ia Cn (? Kt. tintialjM. fl, :.,.,nnl n.,J n- to permit the sale in Josephine county of salmon taken or caught in the Rogue river by hook and necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety an emergency is declared to exist" and the act will take effect upon its passage. which was evidently convinced stale for fish peddlers. The Rogue river was closed instance of the anglers to make a "sportsman's paradise", as it was considered a greater recreational than commercial value. Senator Chin.-iock for many sessions has been the chief advocate of its closure. The bill is therefore an admission that tho river s more valuable for commercial is reversing his stand, and letting A sportsman is one who fishes for pleasure and recreation, not for profits. If this bill passes it merely menus that commer cial fishermen will infest the upper Rogue all the time. There is no means of checking up how fish are caught and as long as there is a market for their catch and profit in catching them, there is a class that will take them because it is an easier anil lazier way of making a living, and take them illegally when possible to increase their profits. Experience has amply proved this, especially on the Rogue. Instead of becoming a "sportsman's paradise ", this bill will iigain make it a poachers' paradise, as it was for many years. Salem Capital-Journal. nrmmm (Continued rrom Page One.) not have an American flag up to cele brate another of the president's arri vals. Whatever may be said against the community at large, the postmaster Is a democrat Such an invitation made his BXK. n HeM hlnrarl tmra Heavy local puSUcHj iu aUxred something of a living, practical, permanent fund, for the benefit is the sort of thing Will Rogers movement. really FELT, ever could forget. hearts and minds of those who Will Rogers will pass. So it is this country has ever known, line, asserting as "this net is The bill has passed the senato of the necessity of saving the lo commercial interests at the fishing than for angling, for he down the bars. about this Incident also. It WSS Sii IlUt Ml flnftll hn that postmaster took the writer oit and ! showed htm the flag. It seem that it nanus behind cupola and la not visible from the sidewalk. There Is a legend In the community j that the Republican ex-secretary of j the treasury. Ogden MUU. never got j ionu w.m president Roosevelt as a boy. The Mills estate Is a few miles down the roed. The two bo are supposed to have ! iwru m ir w iBitrv hifiki nrno m tT leach other whenever the opportunity orrered. The only difference now Is that the? use politics! brickbats. India Shaken i CALCUTTA. India. Nov. 3 (AP) An earthquake of great Intensity was ; recorded by the winmoftraphs of AH ' pore university t D-ftA p. nr, yes- i texdajr. it mas announced todaj. I Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letter, pertaining to perKinil oealth. and hygiene not lo dlaeaie dlagnotU of treatment "111 be infteered nj Or. Brady If tumped eelf-aa-dressed envelupe I, enclosed. Letter, ebould be brlet and written Id ink Owing to the large number 01 letter, received only a few can be anewereo No reply can be made to qnertee not conforming to Inatructlona. Addrer or. William Brady. 6s El Uamlno, Beverly Hint. cat WHAT, NO WET WASH Peculiar thing I've noticed. Many people who are Immaculate externally and on the other hand many who are not at all wholesome thru end thru. It was my cus tom In the good old days when a doctor could still tell the truth and keep on telling It, to refer c usually from time to time to my own repugnance to the Yankee habit of macerating In a vat every Saturday night or oftener, and my queer notion that dry cleaning answers all the re quirements of good hygiene. But the snobbish minority of American people who boast and do they boast? a bathroom on the premise made life miserable with their expressions of horror and disgust, so I had to lay off. Here comes a message Informing me that there Is another queer or fella In the world who seems to harbor the same singular notion about the week ly wallow. Dear Dr. Brady: - My brother of Edlnborough, Scotland, visited with me this summer and told me he hasn't taken a bath In years. He told me that baths are unnecessary to health and that frequent bath ing Is a craze or a fad. He anoints himself with olive oil every other day. I was much shocked at what he said, an he should know better, for he graduated from the Royal Col lege of Surgeons in Edlnborough and has lectured there and was a surgeon in the British Navy for twenty-five years. Please tell me whether he was right. Yours truly Mrs Just what I have always contended. Bathing Is a question of comfort, not of health. It has nothing to do with health. I am ashamed to confess that I do sometimes get under a shower and I even enjoy it, after an afternoon of active work or play. But this Is only to save time It takes more time to Communications "It's the Climate" To the Editor: As a consistent reader of the Tri bune, for the past twenty-five years, and as a rosldent of San Diego, at the present tlmo, I wish to take ex ception to your "And Humpty Dump Ly" , . . editorial which appeared In your 'Wednesday, October 2flth num ber. It is true that southern Califor nia, for a period of the pasv 1A years, has been inviting tourists to this sec tion. It Is truo also that many have Inteipreted this to be a general Invi tation to everyone to come and settle in this section nature has favored. It la not true, as you in for, that .Cali fornia hai ever broadca.it a more the merrier" invHatlon luU.scrlmlmitoIy to all people, nor Is It true that southern California Is the only sec tion which hna invited tourists and visitors. It Is true southern California has been notoriously active In stimulating an influx of tourist dollars, epprec lut ing the vast millions which nre spent by those in .ear;h of pleasure and nre willing to spend It for that purpose. The same foresight which prompted Callfornlans to ndverttse for business Is now prompting the same Callfor n'nns to um paid space to caitlon tt.ose without ample vesources to avoid moving Into this section which Is sharing with other sections thruout t;?e United States the results of a national depression. This applies not only to southern California, but to Mcdford and t'.ie Rogue River valley as well. It would tj poor business If you didn't believe in ,heae principles yourself. Southern California has always car ried Ua mevage to the public through pamphlets nnd paid space since the Inauguration of its community adver tising campaigns which have contin ued uninterruptedly through the period of the depression. In conclusion, might mention that U takes exactly four days, from the time your Msll Tribune leaves your oirice, to be delivered to the writer, hence the lateness In malting this nply. Whereas, by auto fram Med ford to San Dlega has been made many times In Just 13 hours running. S. A. KROSCHFL. San Diego, Nov. 1. Ed. Note: That's too fast. Sam. (900 miles In 18 hours) for any ex-Webfoot to travel 1 regulator v. Ay1nms, To the Editor: The refrain of an old song: "1 may be crary but I ain't no fool" occurred to us when we read in the October 31 Issue of the Oregon Jour nal, page 4, column S, what our Jackson county representatives and Senator Duncan bit proponing in , 30-pnge bill. We wondered If they were crary, or thought all the rest of Oregon people are Just fools. uon isii 10 reso aooui mat asmina , An(1 tnP ,,.hlte rpi,rt(l wlnrtlng Dt. plan by which all power for certain j uxlivt: would be vested In a 'bosrd 'iThe lltt.e grey flock is content to and make the cltlrens powerless to, protest. I At tre mountain top. W note in the Nov. 1 Medford And wa hare need ss tireat as thev News that some one in the legisia- To lose our panic and despair, ture proposed that the capltol build. To Uke our grief and leave It there. tig be built on seme of the large l ares of already stated-owned land which Is near the asylum and peni tentiary, but that the idea "met with Immediate oppfwirron on the grounds that It would b too diffi cult to tell which were inmates and which legisiAtors." U -enn quite unNMevhle that ! Gorge B McQutnn. 30. from drown either of our eteemM reprevnta- ; inc. and attempting to save Robert uvea from Jacasoa countj comd, t IN THE ROYAL NAVYf dry clean yourself. Dry cleaning mean, jutt a brisk: rub I with your own hand, and with a dry towel, during your air bath. An air squeamish about bath la cleansing. Nudity la cleansing, their gro o m 1 n g The oxygen of fresh air dispose, of and personal ap- whatever component of sweat or se pearance a r e bum there may be to remove. But ; that takes time. A shower bath take, a minute. Soap and water will quickly remove grime or foreign matter which aolls the skin, where an air bath or dry cleaning will make little Impression on It. Therefore oh, shucks, I am not a crank. In fact I believe I smell no worse than the average white man.' My colleague's frugal practice of anointing himself with oil reminds me that anybody with an Irritable, harsh. Itchy skin should go easy with sop and water, and um oil or fresh cold cream or similar bland unguent Instead. Especially following a hot wallow, for that removea what little natural oil or sebum the poor old akin secretes, and leaves it In a sensitive state. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Stage Fright , I think you recommended taking small doses of quinine as a means of preventing stage fright when one must face a large audience . , . (Miss B. B.) Answer Or when one must try an examination. One grain of quinine blsulphate three times a day after meals for two weeks before the occa sion. Change of Environment Is tt advisable for a person with the grip to change bedrooms, also to have windows raised for a while In cold weather? (Mrs. C. L. V.) Answer So far as the patient is concerned. It is perfectly safe to change rooms if desired. Yes, I think It Is beneficial to such a patient to have a vicarious outing for an hour or so dally put on sufficient clothing or covers to keep the patient comfort able and let the wind sweep the room. Adolescence My daughter Is fifteen and has not yet had a sign of . . . (Mrs. J. A.) Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for monograph on menstruation. Ed. Note: Person, wishing to communicate with Dr. itrarty should lend letter direct to Dr. William llrariy. M I).. 2119 El Rftmlnn. tleverlv Hills. Cal. In his right mind and of his own I volition, father a measure so ap palling. Or can it be that some vicious, master-minded one escaped from the other state building near j tne asyium and hypnotized our trusted friends Into the loathsome and crime-abetting scheme. Then, as we found no reference to the matter In either of Medford's papers on October 31 or November I, we began to think that the whole mat ter must have been a mistake as printed In the Journal.-or else the Medford newshawks had learned that the thing was a frame-up by In mates of those houses for question able characters. Why do we have to learn through a Portland paper about measures proposed by our own representatives, which vitally effect every tax-payer and citizen of Ore gon? One of the sponsors of this bill Is editor of the Medford News. Is he ashamed or afraid to have this matter printed in his paper? JOHN E. GRIBBLE, A. H. THOMPSON. Medford, Nov. 1. Duck Limit Bagged On Little Butte Crk. You can go on over to Klamath county to hunt ducks If you want to. providing you have your llcenso and don't mind chilblains, for all W. J. Roberta of Medford cares. But while you're atandlng up to your ears In wet tules, beating your breast In an effort to keep warm, Roberts will take a Jnunt out to Little Butte creek and blast over his limit of 10 durks, Just the same ns he did yesterday. 9 He reported his system not oniy produces fine ducks, but leaves most of the day in which to sit around In slippered comfort. He was out only a few hours Saturday. Ye Poet's Cornet Little irav Flock. The little grey flock Is content to stay At the mountain top, Like steps with carpets of green, And where below the valley Is seen Hsr.y.and dream like and strangely fair. City blocks seem far away At the mountain top, But the horizon la ours In gold and grey. While the smoke from the city curls up and Is cone; Like a plain we build our hopes upon. At our feet breaks living spring. Kindly near ;s seems to be i At the mountain top. The sky in Its bhie Immensity; Erect on the slope the fir trees stand An army puardlng the valley land And know life miracle each new day, Hare) A. Sloneker. PlTrSBl'RH. Pa.. Nov. 2 AP A Carnegie hero medal had been awarded today to Arley Kelsey. 36. s salesin of IH05 Southwest Third avenue. Portland. Ore., for avng H. Ro&J, i ft fttudeak NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By t). O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Nov. 2. This seat I kicker In the row back doesn't seem to be putting much enthusiasm Into his work. Just a slight tap now and ; then. Probably i things went wrong at the of- j flee. Maybe 1 better turn j if around and give him a little pep talk. He's posi tively droopy. After all, 1 came In on a pass. He doesn't have to consider me. If he la Just not Interested In kicking this eve ning I can hike up my coat collar so he can cough down my neck at in tervals. I don't want him to feel I've spoiled his movie. There, that's better two kicks In a row. No, he's gone back to the old ltst lcssness. I can hear him when he gets home telling the folks how he seems to have lost his knack. No heart, no fire, Just a desultory kick now and then and he becomes absolutely absorbed by what Is going on on the screen. How minds will wander. Who knows, In his day he might have been a foremost seat kicker. ; Then to find himself slowing up. I But that's life, etlll he has his mem ories. He may have annoyed some ; famous people In his time. Perhaps ! that's the trouble. He doesn't think J I'm Important. j It makes a fellow feel pretty low to realize he's not worth the at tention of a seat kicker. He should have seen me that time I bowed on Fifth avenue to Ina Claire and hadn't gone more than a block until I waved across the street to Joan Crawford. Still and all X remain democratic and easy to meet. There was that time, too, I walked up the gang-plank with Greta Garbo. Well, not exactly side by side, but we were on the same plank. Idea for a magazine piece: Walking the plank with Garbo! He's so long between kicks I'm like tho fellow waiting for the other shoe to drop. When I alt In fmnt nt a Hot 1r4rlra T want , f, HI to know he's around. None of thehollday merchandise. teentsle-ween tale aissy stuff. A four year-old could do as well as he's doing. It may be his off night. That would be my luck drawing a seat kicker on his off night. Don't look now but he seems to be worming up. That was a smart kick a beauty. And can I take it I Not even suggestion of a flinch. Glance at me right through here. Note the calm. Sometimes I think I was built for the big emotional crises. Where many would squirm and shift I sit straight and immo bile like an Indian In a Remington painting. See. there's another kick. A Jim dandy and what am I doing? Turning slightly and murmuring something casual to my wife. You might think we were Just lolling around the reading lamp at home on one of those quiet evenings. I was fooled In this bird. He has a practiced swing, nice rhythm and plenty of speed. I like a kicker of that school. Not giving everything in one burst. Takes his time, here a little, there a little until he gets into stride. He will go far. I alwoys say a poor stnrt makes a good fin ish. It's really one of my favorite axioms. That and: "Every man to his taste." In fact, I have an axiom for almost everything. Say something and I'll reply with an axiom. Look, I can even do It holding one foot off the floor. I've kept an entire room on chair edges for hours Just one axiom after1 another until you'd wonder how In the world I do it. But I suppose I came by it natu rally. All the Mclntyres have been more or less axiomatic. That Is. nil but Uncle Ned. He was more of a" phrase moker. Where the rest of us quoted axioms, he'd cut loose with a phrase. Does It seem warm to you In here? I feel kind of floaty like. He's going to town now. Giving the old aeat the works with both feet. What su perb timing! What effortless grace! It shows how things turn out If one hna faith. A half hour ago I would have bet this fellow was nothing more than a mere foot shifter. One of those who In twist ing about accidentally klcka your seat. Shows how wrong one may be. How genius Is so often misjudged Here's no tondam quicker, I mean condam ticker. (You'd think he hsd my gont). What I meant, of course, was he Is no quondam kicker. It's difficult to imagine he has only two feet. You feel almost certain he's a human centipede. That's the sort of an artist he Is. He h the arm rest loose on the aisle side and we are only half through the feature picture. You couldn't ask more of a man armed with an axe. (Copyright, 1935. McNaught Syndi cate) Latest War Developments (By 1 lilted pre) GENEVA. League votes full pen alties hit a Inn Italy: eommlwtons Oreat Britain and France to enforce1 thfrn and to try to effect settle ments. ROMK Italian advances toward Makate set for dawn Sunday. APDIS ABABA. Ethiopians claim military success In guerilla attack on Italian forces In north. Emperor says Fthiopijj. will fight lo the end; hopes for effective aid from leasue. LONDON. Britain will enforce peace through the league, Neville Chamberlain, chancellor of the ex checquer, says In speech. Whale Grounded RFEDSPORT. Ore., Nov 2. ( AP) A whale deposited on the beach ; tir Three Mile by rtie waves, at trarted a number of sightseers W- i School Head Faces Death Charges For Hallowe'en Slaying KANSAS CITY, Nov. 3. (AP) Glenn Aldridge, 10-year-old La Tour, Mo., high school student, was fatally wounded Thursday night during a Hallowe'en outing and Wallace Cooper, Johnson county prosecutor, said he would file charges against Chas. P. Mc Clure, La Tour superintendent 01 schools. McClure said he fired a shot into the p.lr when a group of boys and girls attempted to carry an outbuilding from his premises. Then, he said, a boy ran Into him, causing his shotgun to 8e discharged accidentally. I OVER LID SEEN (By Assollated Press) With major signals flashing full speed ahead, business and industry last week turned Into the winter season of trade. Automobile manufacturers still were the pace makers with pro duction facflltlea tuned to an out put substantially higher than the previous week In anticipation ot public demand which motor makers feel confident will emanate from the auto show now Introducing new models. General Industrial activity as measured by the Associated Press weekly index reached a new high level for this year at 80.4 per cent of file 1929-30 average compared with 78.3 per cent during the previous week. Retail and wholesale trade labored under adverse weather conditions last week throughout several im portant sections of the country. With the exception of a few cities, however, the general average was higher than for the same period of lost year. There was increasing evidence ot advance buying In good valume of TALE OF BREMERTON. Wash., Nov. 2. f AP) Sheriff Rush Blankenshlp announc ed a further point of Mra. Peggy Pau lo,' account of events preceding the Erland's Point "masa murders,' a fire drill aboard a ferry on the way here, had ben conflrmd today. Mrs. Pantos, whose confession as an unwilling accomplice of Leo Hal)s. led to his arrest, recalled a boat and fire drill on the afternoon of March 28, 1934, as she and Hall came here from Seattle, she said. She set the time as near 3 p. m. Today CRpt. W. E. Mitchell con sulted the logs of the ferry comman der, and found that such a drill was held on the 3:6 p. m. trip. Mrs. Paulos. who faces first degree murder charges along with Hall, will be arraigned at Port Orchard on Mon day. Hall will appear In court a week later. Late Comers Barred Frisco Opera Opener SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2. (fP)A downpour and high winds failed to dampen the gaiety of the opening of San Francisco's thirteenth opera sea son. Before a brilliant house of 4.000 at the muntclpally-owned opera house, the opera association presented "Daa Rheirwold." prelude to Richard Wagner's tragic saga of the legendary Nlbelungen gold. - Doors were shut on late comers aa Conductor Artur Bodanzky began the opera promptly at 8:30 with only one concession to ceremony an Intermis sion between four consecutive scenes. Car Fall Kills BELL IN OH AM, Wash.. Nov. 2. JF, Mrs. Etta Knol. 45, farm wife was killed today when she fell out of a roadster rumble seat and wsa twuck by another car. Destroyers Depart SAIOON. FRENCH INHO CHINA. Nov. 2. vT) Twelve United States destroyers and a supply ship sailed at dawn today for the Philippine Islands. Tragedy In Home LEBANON. Ore.. Nov. 2. ( AP) Straying too close to a fireplace, three-year old John Shimanek of Lebanon was fatally burned when his clothes caught fire yesterday. Phone M2. We'll haul away your feusre. City Sanitary 8ervice. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history rrom tbe file of the Mali Tribune 10 and 2u Veari Also). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 3, 1925. '(It was Tuesday) Ninety-five hundredths of an Inch of rain fell In downpour last night. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Brayton re turn from a two months' visit la Cleveland, Ohio. Foot of enow reported In Lake park. Crater H. M. Byllesby Co. of Chicago and California Oregon Power company merge. Prance near financial collapse. Lottery Is favored to restore budget. Coach Callison of the high school football squad lectures team "for thinking Ashland will be easy. I am getting a swell bunch of prima donnas, who make their longest runs and do their best playing if a lady Is listening." Twenty bootleggers now held in county jail awaiting trial. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 3, 1915. (It was Wednesday) Peggy, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Miller undergoes an operation at Sacred Heart hospital. More than a fifth of an Inch ot rain fell last night In the city and valley. Equal suffrage for women loses la eight eastern states. Car of Boscs gross $1607 In New York City. Dryest autumn of record of wea ther bureau noted for this section. President Wilson's auto small boy; injury Is slight. William Jennings Bryan differ with president over national de fenses. E NEAR END. BELIEF NEW YORK, NOV. 2. (AP) De spite mild "after shocks" of yes terday's earthquake recorded this morning, seismologists expressed the belief tonight that the tremors were over for the time being on the 17 state area originally affected. Occurring at the epicenter of the quake. In the Lake Nlplssing dis trict of the Province of Ontario, today's disturbances were felt In parts of upper New York state aa well as In Canada. Today's movements were especially noted at Rochester and Buffalo, N. Y., and at Ottawa, Kitchener, Owen Sound and North Bay, Ont. Bnker Pioneer Killed BAKER. Ore., Nov. 2. (AP) Roy R. Sparks. 70, a Baker resident SO years, was killed Thursday when his head was crushed between an elevotor platform and the sidewalk of a hotel here where he was word ing. YOU CAN BE RID OF DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR and an ITCHY SCALP use Tyloses Scalp Invigorator Discovered by an Oregon Phar macist this new futmula for the treatment of scalp disorders has already amazed hundreds of users by Immediate results. Da n d r u f f clogs pores and stops the growth of hair the hslr be comes dry and the scalp is Itchy. Tyloses Scalp Invigor ator Is a sooth ing ointment that p e n e- trates the pores of the scalp, cleansing them and bringing out the natutal oil In the hair. We ' Guarantee satisfaction or your money back. Oet a Jar today it costs only 91 for a generous size. MATH'S DRUG STORE JARMIN FOR DRUGS WOODS DRUG STORE (MetUnnl. Oregon) INGLE DRUG STORE (Ahland, Oregon) Tylnp l.nltnriitnrlc Tort land in Fleeting Hours The golden hours go by v gaily . , under the pell of light nnd laughter nne for get the latene of the hour that there I a tnmnrmiv! To AltlMnnd (he strain nf this dazllng life nf onr. we mnt Intaln a near ph fral pi-i,ertnn a polhle by proper medical lntrurtJnn. A rrerrlpllnn1t fill R Careful!) nt HEATH DRUG STORE Medford Building Phone 884