Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, November 04, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T W IT
Copco Projects
MORTO AZORES,
— The German Helal
- • Are Explained 01220 a rriv e d h e ro
at 1:1» p. in.
1*^
i
I
'
H H H I > ifornia
It becomes Increasingly evident th a t m u ch of the football claaa
■ of 1927 la concentrated in the middle west',
I
Offhand it might be said that this section leads all othera in the
I possession of promising and aeere-prodnclng«gridiron m aterial.
*
np Ms. ta c t last
«naw last aeavy wontout in pre-
p a ^ tlo n fb r fee fe m e B a ta rtfe
Aftes the workout he pronounced
Ws meg in ’good oondttlen fey
the Pffstee,
< .
J' •
Last night's work
consisted
largely of signal practice and
kicking. Some time was spent in
perfecting paaaes and end runs
whtch w ill undoubtedly he need no
. the m ajor attack In ‘the
game
Saturday. Forward .fees ' defense
cam« in fbr attention aba
and
raiuK
í i i . i ‘¡ í
tfcm
a C fcus »v.<ns
ctxTo»
I Local shareholders o f The Cal­
fate,'*
■
’ ? -
Kyr’ ‘
'1
David L a U - U u
Chet Smith, who writes a u th o rita tiv e ly a n d entertainingly of
I “ Big Ten" football affairs, has thia to say of the midwestern sitúa-1
tion: t .
1
’
.
>-
'
•
- j T '*
<
L* M
V*
“The beet hackfleld In the Western Conference is at Northwest­
ern., I i is about the nearest thing to the ‘Four Horsemen* I have
seen and for aheer power I think it is better.
"The players are Yata Levison, quarter; George Holmer and
Captain Vie Gustafson, halfbacks; Tiny Lewis, fullback.
"Lewis, 190 pounds. Is a line plunger, fast In an open flelX
f ’A y
V«
and averaged 00 yarda against Ohio State in his punting. LevisoR,
178, la the lightest. Gustafson and Holm er weigh around 180.
"Every one of them can run. pass, kick1, and do It better than
»the average back. They w ill bear watching.
.
"Ohio has. A rt Huston, a sophomore, who Is a beautiful sun-
ner and passer. Elmer Marek and Byron Eby are other good
• halves. Aside from them. Ohio's backfield material Is mediocre.
"Michigan has Louie Gilbert, halfback, and a good one. Herb
Joostlng, of eourse. is Minnesota's strong back.
Jud Timm Is
playing well for Illinois.
Chester Wilcox and Ralph Welch are
¡best for Purdue, but the fortmer was hurt and may be out of Sat­
the backs were Intercepting and j
knocking down passes all dVer the
fie ld . The eoach seamed well sat­
isfied with the squad, although he
made so statement as to
b«*
opinion on the outcome of the
first Jntareoitegiate gases to be
rlayed In Southern Oregon.
Last night's firs t string lineup
contilned the* following. Center,
Hobson; le ft guard Johnson; left I
Oregon Power . company
have received ah - Interesting re­
port of the progress made by
thia company during the last
three months.
e
T^ie letter accompanied ’the
regular quarterly dividend on
Cedco preferred stock, the twen­
ty-fifth
consecutive
dividend
paid on this Investment.
The progress of the Prospect
No. 2 project, which w ill be the
1 • r i e s t hydro-electric power
plant In the state of Oregon,
and other major construction
Spears; fu ll Mercer; rig h t h a l f !
Prouse; quarter GoSnell. Shields
was calling sigadTs and directing I
dreadful hoarse eroupy cough the
/e r y first night he took It and it
was a great relfef to see him drop
into a quiet sleep. Since than, we
have many times proven its reli­
ability for coughs and colds.*'
Good Also for whooping cough.—
For sale by all druggists— No. I
Roseburfc— Douglas c o u n t y
Today the three most important plans 1200,000 Jail.
parts of the costume are the hat.
the shoes and the bag. They are
no longer accessoriea that “ top
•off" And outfit, but are rather
th e articles that are the founda­
tion of the successful enstume.
u rd a y ’s game.
'
\ ,
RBAD TIDINGS CLASSIFIED
"Chicago has no outstanding back, 4>ut has four or five who
are steady and dependable, which accounts for the team’s early
season success. Toad Crofoot is a triple threat man at Wisconsin.
Others probably w ill be heard from later and I w ill let you know
about them.
"As to ends, „Beanie Oosterbaan of Michigan, ef course, is theI
best so far. In addition to being the best , pass receiver, he h as '
»been developed into a passer and is doing well at it. In a d d itio n ,'.
he s a peach, n it the defense, big enough to break down most any- j
thing that comes his way.
• ’
“ Fisher o f Northwestern is another good end, but wingmen
are somewhat scarce out here so far.
■'
“ Leo Raakowski of Ohio State is perhaps the
the Conference. He Is a Junior, weighs 220 pounds,
6 ft. X, and is a bear for work. Emerson Nelson, low
All-America on sbme selections last fall, is handicap!
team, but he’s plenty good. Stakler, Northwestern, i
as does Harrigan of Michigan.
"Bher of Michigan Is a good guard and D art of Northwestern
is a wow.
• • ,
'
. •
.,
i z
•
“ Van Brangsn of Wisconsin .w ill be worth watching.
“ Bob Reitsch, Illinois captain. Is T H E center. Others may de-
tackle Rice; left end May; right
guard Ball*, right tackle H effner;
right end Shields; le ft h a ) f I
SHORT TA Lh M by
T H O V O H T F t t M OTHERS
A California (Long Beach)
Mother speaks; "Only a ’ mother
who has passed through anxious
hours of fear of croup can appre­
ciate our feeling of gratitude ta*
ward Foley’s Honey and T ar Com­
pound.* I t
stopped
Junior's
ALBANY COLLEGE
the team on the field last night
and was appointed acting captain ]
by th e coach fo r the com in g I
game. It Is thought the
above I
lineup w ill be on the field when
the kickoff takes place Saturday I
afternoon.
-I
' The probable lineup for the P i- I
rates w ill be; Daugherty, R. B ,H
Fate« R. T .; 6 . Shear«?, R. O.; W . I
Shearer, C: Kauppi, L. G.,; Tolv-1
stead, L. T .; Campbell, L .
B.; J
Cos, F .; Long. R.' H .; Goodmpa, I
L. H .; Elder, Q. #
»
I
Officials for the game w ill* be (
SO. OREGON NORMAL
\
*
Saturday, November 5
K ranier, Grants Paas, referee; I
P itt. Grants
Pass, 3 Umpire; J
Schwnrs, Corvallis, head lines ]
man.
4 ' *
I
The outstanding back of the East is Bruce Caldwell of Yale.
A fter Caldwell comes the deluge, the choice of partisans,
critics and fanatics, the halfbacks and fullbacks of everyman’a
t2am-
DAY! AT
BIG CARNIVAL
Football!
The young man from Yale stands head and shoulders above
ii:
Wortham S h o w Have Spec­
ial Attraction for Sat-
> wrda y Show» .04 t
i
Tomorrow w ill be Ktds Day
at 'th e Wortham' carnival at the
Fairgrounds near R edford and
under special arrangements with
the-m anagem ent all shows and
rides have been reduced in price
so that all children may enjoy
them. '
Special programs w ill he given
’ at dach show tomorrow afternoon
from 1 to 6 p. m. JThe manage­
ment said they remembered theirJ
kid days and in ordnr to bring]
happiness to a ll children, had re-1
dOced the prices and arranged
special programs f«y tomorrow
afternoon.
There w ill he a special show
by Shirley Francis and’ her w ater]
circus, Boso w ill do special stunts I
2:30 P. M.
11 you can duck the line, skirt tackle, run the ends, fling long,
accurate passes, kick goals from 80 yards away, get off« your punts
o f 60 and TO yards through a charging wave of opposing forwards
and do most of the tackling for your team’s secondary defense­
men you’re a Bruce Caldwell.
Klam ath 'Falls — 8.
and'
eat Northern bay Sixth street d„
jperty for station use.
‘ #r,
*
• •
*
Rainier to have new newspaper *
not yet named, F. J. Robertssn 4a
fe lto r.
.
Ashland H. à Field
*
•
. • >
Adults—76c
*
GENSflAEr
ADMISSION
*'
-dt»
V
Grandstand—26c
31
and the d o n k e y s w ill perform
all kinds o f tricks and races, I
and -the eight big rides on the
grounds w ill be ready for the
kiddies too.
Every precaution w ill be taken
by the management to avoid ac­
cidents and they stated it would
he perfectly safe to the kiddies
com e and enjoy themselves.
smokers
DEATH TOLL
REACHES«)
L n Bo-
W li h the demonstration did some fine work ou the Ash­
, jj!
I passing e ff In lin e shape there land high squad is doing good
should he no lack o t enthusiasm work on the backfield position.
¿V.
te r the game tomorrow. Cheer ( “ Blond'' H effner, who jiggles
ov, 4 x - J le<“k r s w ill be on th« Job to lend
the scales at 2«0 pounds, h Pssa-.
is o t the 1n
aaa ««heol »ongs.
A deha youth, tackles w ith a. deadly
ilch was
Aa, the final v . practice
ap result.
Kenneth Hobson, p are
i harbqr proaches, Coach Mac McNeal has green m aterial is showing up re­
steamer I worries and fears, bat is certain
markably w ell th oenter position.
id.
] of one thifeg t h it the untried local H arry .May has. displayed of­
at least W in d w ill put up the beet fight fensive and defensive ability a t
vessel's 1 b them.
end. Rice, ez-Jacksonvtlle star
correct
W ith "Connie” Conrad o f Jfed- plays the position of tackle. Ho­
nt least A>rd, the elusive fnU baek, 'In ­ m er Dickson from "Dunsmuir, al­
jured add out b f the game» Ooach
has worried a M t «boat his baek-
f w i d / " / V’. ;
R ALLY
d e lu d e d on the squad a r a
' ° * at f Rutterfield . whe haa proved
o«e)
worthy of a backfield pb-
------------ M K He Is aa ex-Ashland high
“ r , ¡ ■ ^ » J i c k Burleson can kick,
1«. sn d M
K d run Jay Jo h n so n la a
though hie experience has been a
negative quality is showing
up
fine. “ Dutch” Shield, form er Un-i
iversity o t Oregon frhshman and
football s u r is playing sad and
calling slgJ/Us
Roland Parks is
fonad oa the lino.
Bogs, Med-|
fdrd, also, shown a dogged
de­
term ination lfi lino position. Pel
Pettonger and Clyde Beeson are
also in dntform doing good wprk.
Other membon of the squad hove
shown some coal stuff in their
workonts.
Navy C. P. 0. Blue Flannel Shirts.
A great value a t .............. .. . $4.00
B » « e *,
,t a r nbld to play oa etth-
qrer t h e ' er Une or in the. backfield and la
N o rm a l, a real asset to the team. W ith an
o'clock ja b fity to klek, pane and eaipy the
W«I b e -b a ll equally well Chuck JPrenee,
M cN ea l* who btared the South Faandqna
—A1 Jordan’s Army Goods Store—
(Biggest Little Store te Town, Open-Brentoff».)
Come in
«ee what we have to offer before
but watch haw other smokers m e changing to
,
' . ' .
Students—26c