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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1929)
v:J.u I! 11 1 1 i : LOWLY HUSKIES! OUTPLAY BEARS BUT LOSE 6-0 California Wins By Lucky Break y- Hufford Out- , shines Lorn as Ground Gainer Air Full Of Passes As Bitter Battle Closes. MKMOIIIAf STADIUM. HKll kEIiKV, Calif.. Nov. 1G. W Buttered on the lino and outplfiy cd almowV nil tho way by n msh Intf, crushing "VanhlnKton teum California's Beam striked every thing on a Kwift aerial uttitck in tho Hecond period today to detent tho HuHhlen 7-0, nnd continue on nn undefeated way towards tho l'aelfio conferenre chiimpiuntOili'- One "break" brought tho vic tory to a Cnllfornia eleven that otherwise was swept off lta feot by tho terrific offensive produced by a team that rose to- Its greut OHt height in ita lust conference game. ' , . ., . - . Shortly before the close of the Hecond period some 40.000 pornons saw tleclinn chuIi, then futnblc a imh8 from hip teammate, Marsh. .That error was capitalized on for a touchdown. Had the Washing ton quarterback retained tho bait, the Huskies would have start oil with n first down on California': 37-yard line. Instead, mil, Bear fullback, fell on tho ball and the Item's opened n drive toward tho "Washington goal. KoUf plays tell the story of the only sr-ore and a California vic tory th.it was the hardest earned so fur, "this season. Gill gained M yard In going out of bounds. Loin tried, o pos, It was knocked down., lie1 winged another on its way. Norton vtea underneath when It came down. It was 1 5 4 -yard gain arid put the ball on Washington's 3 K -yard line. Iom paxfted again. Twenty yards nwuy little Je Klsnni Bear quarterback, snared the ovim and ruccd along tho sidelines o reneh scoring ground. Beckett converted to make tho scorw 7y). For tho re mainder of the 'few minutes In tho quarter, tho ball uoo-sawed up. and dowtt tho field. ' Fighting with nil the' reckless i abandon of a loam that has every thing to gain and nothing to lose, the Huskies outplayed the Bears In tho first half. , Led by the charging Hftffurd. the boys from tho north beat back their old time rivals to once knock at the touch down door from the two-yard mnrk. The last fifteen minutes of piny saw both teanuji throw passes with abandon, most of which fell in complete. Nut-uaUl tho, final gun cracked Its message? through the reaches of tho b!g bowl did Bear ( rooters relax r . y On the short , end of the- score, tho Huskies went down to defeat fighting every Inch of tho .way, their great and unlooked-for charge was built n round mi voting halfback. Merle; Hurford. whoso brilliant bull lugging offorts form ed a football treat in themselves Tho speedy sophomore star Tmelc. ed the ball 31 times for a- total yarduge gain of D.1 yards ; from scrimmage which gives somo Idea of Jlufford's prowess. Tho Hus kies made eight first downs from fHcrlmmago and gained a total of I 1:18 yards from onslaughts at the line. California made threo first i downs from scrimmage, one from 1 penalties' nnd one from puhkoh. .The Beats had tho edge In yards , from ' passes, gaining iG t ' I ;for their opiionents. ( Might passes were comttleted by California nnd six by Vashing lon. Benny lom was tho biggest ground gainer for the Bears with 20 yards In ten tries. Marsh, left fouled hooter for tho Huskies, punted for nn average of 39.7 yards to 38.3 yards for Lorn, : MOSCOW, Ma.. Nov. 10.--UrV-iMntty Mathew's tricky ' flonzngans trounerd a heavier University of - Idaho football team by 20 to 1 t i here today. In a colorful home- eomlng game. STAlt MIST OltKtlOX WINS, 1IMI tlnniil Kainn next HiiltiVduy with Inn Knlvendty of Detroit. The line-ups and summary ; OroRon State Oregon ! Young " I,T ClirlateniMMi 1 Oox 3,( HhloIdH ! Uert.li'B o Komtn . Ifomnipr 1t( lMUv Miller ltT ColluTt ) 1 Strlft 1US Arrhor 1 Ituorko o lvltinlllpr . Bhorwuod I.H Drtnvno HuehM 11 II Mimon 1 . Gllmoro V Jliitlon ! , Hcoro ! period: I Oregon BUto 0 On-con .Oregon peorlng: . 1tnl)nion (nub for o o n o S : 0 7 16 Touchdown", llrowne) ; J I field kouI, Kluntlller: points for 5 try nfor tonrhdown. Ixndnhl ub for Kltimlllcr). ' . , ., , ! ' i Two gentlemen of tho wiunred 1 elrele nre on the Tulnne. tenm thtH ; yenr. They nre Jiuk 'lno, CP j Uiiln of tho thlverdlty boxln enm, ' and Ited Han, aoiithern confer - enco middleweight champ. Btn(ienl' in thpl nlvrn'ty "of MiMourl ropreaont 25 rolleu- iHltlU. mm 13-7 BY SANTA GLARAATTACK Underdogs Spring .Surprise By Victory With, Odds Against Them Fight ing Squad Topples Proud Foe By Grit and Skill. STANFORD UNIVKHSITY, Cal., Nov. 10. (P) SutiUt Clara, look ed upon by the Stanford Card inals as a "third-string" job, forc ed tho football regulars onto the gridiron today and still .smashed through to a 13 to 7 victory. Tho Bronchos were determined to win as a memorial to their teammate, Hank Luomo, who died this week following an operation and that determination carried them to the greatest . football heights they had attained this year. Tho Stanford second string start ed the contest, but after Santa Clara had scored in tho first six minutes of play on a 15-yard pass from Mf 'tiler to IlaakliiKon und Meltler had converted, tho Card inal regulars were sent in. But they did not win, although once they marched deep into- S:iita Clara territory, only to bo stopped hi the shadow of the goal posts by a seemingly inspired Bronco defense. Finally, in the third period, the Cardinals broke through for a touchdown with Klelsluicker's pass to Moffett, who ran 16 yards for tho score. Moffett added the ex tra point with a place kick to tic up tho game at seven-all. The Broncos won the battle In tho final quarter when after hav ing driven to the Stanford three yard line only to bo stopped, they scored from thd 35-yard line mark on another pass, this time from Mettler to Slmoni across the goal lino. Mettler failed to convert. - Stanford threatened once more before tho game ended taking tho following klckoff on their own 37 yard line and going, on. a sim- -tainedi march down. tor tho Santa Cluui six , yard, lln$, t whore th?y failed by Inches to make first down. 10 SEE FISTICUFFS Ti IGHT Atteiitlnnce at tomorrow nlghl' hattlo between K. O. White. Chi cago negro, nnd Tom Corbett, San l''rnnclflcu alugger, ia expected to equal tho big crowd that . aa.v Cone lrady, southern Oregon'a farmer boy fighter, knock out Kid Dentil. Denver negro, hero last week. In the mind of Promoter Tex lllckerHtaff. It la expected to lio 'better In thut In all probablll tloa. It la apt to Inat longer. lllckcrataft la well pleased with he tnanner In which ho haa been ecelvod In Medford nnd pinna to Vivo the beat in the fighting pro gram ho can aecure. "Thla la tho best country I have located In n. long time,'1 ho aald nat night, "and 1 have boon In Klamath Kails for tho past thirty month. Mora- of n. floating pop ulation exlata thoro than in Slqd- ford. I waa told at flrat that Med ford fans would not support my carda, nnd In tho first two, 1 had only n fair aitpport In prelimin aries, but at this t ! mo 1 wouldn't tnkn a back seat to any promoter on the coast. "Thero'a K. (V, While. Mm big t'hluugu negro, who liaa fought be- foro liugo Clik'ugo crowds and pleaaea Ilium. Jloll moot Tom I'orbett In what I think will bo I ono of tho toughest buttles aoen , hero In it long tlmo. Corbett is; tho samo typo of alugger na M hltej and you aeo there is something bound to happen when they meet," ho concluded. Corbett la tho flrat mnn to have ever won over O'Orady nnd la in tho Pink of condition. Whlto worked out last night beforo a well pleased crowd lit tho armory nnd showed tho fans how hard ho can lilt. 'I'ho first .preliminary beliia it 8:4'i and bouta will bo put on In rapid order. SI. t'lil.lSI'U'M. Los AllKi'les, Nov. 10. et. Mary's college, lindc fnnind nnd unneored upon, kept lt record unmarked hero today by heating off a' brilliant passing ni tark III the final quarter and de feated tho I'nlverslly of California nt lis Angeles 24 lo 0. t'oaeh Edwards "Klip" MadlKim'g seeoiid eleven played most of the game, but his regulars wore railed to half the t.'i-yard thrust of the llrulnn which carried them deep In tluel territory an the inni wan ed. .. - onilmiti Jolitiimn WASIIINOTON. Nov. I (4 Tho nomination of Nelson T. John son, uI Oklahoma., at present . wis. Itutt iiecrelui-y of Hlule. In be niln Ister lo I'hlnn, was sent to the aenalo today by I'rcsldent Jloovor. MEDFORD MATL TRTBUNTC MEDPORD, NOTRE DAME STARS CONQUER TRO JANS Nobrv Dame, k'J i A PASS IN DUSK. PHI IS JIANOVKIt, N. IT., Nov. 1C P) A bitter, surging Cornell team, fishing with all the brilliance of the great lied waves of the past, led Dartmouth by two points with less than a minute of tense play remaining late this afternoon. Through the dusk "Marv' Stevens, tho Cornell hero of the day, threw ono more pr.ss, fighting to add to his tight margin. Another hero, IMU McCall in the green of Dartmouth livery, leaped into the nir, snatched the ball on Cornell's 41-yard line, and In less than a dozen plays Dartmouth smashed down the field, over the Cornell goal, to one of tho great est conquests In all Dartmouth's history. The score was 18 to 11. PITTSltVKGH, Nov. 1C (P) Tho University of Pittsburgh's de ception and speed prooved too much for a heavier Carnegie Tech team hero today and tho 54,00) fans who anticipated a" close serAp! went away stunned by, the unde feated Panther's 34 to 13 rout of tho Tartan plaid. NEW YOI1K. Nov. 1C (yP) Pennsylvania crushed Columbia by 20 to 0 beforo k crowd of 35,000 at Raker field today. The Hed and lUue had four real scoring oppor tunities nnd canned three of them for touehdons. I I STATE 1'OMjEUE. ln.. Nov. lfi. tO Tha hvtllinnr ItttnWnoll ' eleven won its most impressive tri umph of the season today by smothering Prnn State 2? to 6. It marked tho Jiisons' third straight victory over the Nittany Lions. WEST POINT, N. V.. Nov. 111. (P) Army's football team had a field day at the expense of Dirking son today. Wining as it pleased by a seoro of NO to 7. CAMIiUintlK, .Mass.. Nov. 10. (P) Harvard was forced to use nlnioHt nil of Its fomball strength to subdue the llnht nnd scrappy Holly rrtiwi eleven by a lli to 1 srnro here today when the Crim son and I'urpln played in thi'ir tenth eoiiHecutlvo kiuiio before Bo, mill MiM-rlatiirM. . , . Comfort and Sutoty for Eyes Dr. D. A. Chambers EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 404 Medford Bldg, DON'T PUT IT OFF! Open a Bank -. Account NOW Don't wait to iturt bank ac count. Don't put It off, but (tart today; and then you'll hv tome-thlng to look forward to lomethlng to depend upon omethlng working for you. "Par triors in Conirauuity ' IVvrtopTfir-rit"-" " " ;UPSETSi;KUiVIATH MAULED LAST HALF RALLY KVANSTOX. 111., Nov. 16. (P) The Dattlin' Hoosiers from Indi ana, led by a winged-foot, 155 pound halfback named George lions, emerged from football's wild erness dramatically and suddenly today .to defeat Northwestern, 19 to 14, In gne of the most stun ning upsets of the Big Ten cam paign, i Trailing by an ominous margin of eight points with only ten min utes of the battle left to pi fry. I toss turned defeat Into victory with as brilliant a performance as any! football crowd ever witnessed, rac-j Ing 13 and 89 yards, respectively.! for touchdowns, and adding -onnj point from". placement for good! measure,' a total of .14, points or better than a point a minute.,' ( IA FAYETTE, Intl., Nov. 16. (Jp) long forward pass that sailed through the air, straight. as a shot, 'behind Iowa'B goal 11 ho,' flfuveold.' Purdue, the.'oh-ty unde featod eleven In the Western con ference, a brilliant 7 to 01 victory over the Hawkeyes today. I Purdue, undefeated In six gamVs, I four of them In conference com-!1 petition, conquered tMe Hawkeyes! with two amazing ' aerial shots' afterthe powerful Iowa lino ha1 refused to yield. I Mall Trlbuno ndsare -,iead by 2f.oon peoplf every dhr.- ' tfl ' Winter Underwear "i .-.' - W1 ' - -' . " . ' u . s t -. .-I ne Latetti OftEfiOX. SUNDAY, XO So. CaM - A AttoctaleA Press Phot BY ASHLAND 26-6 The Ashland high school foot ball team yesterday afternoon de feated, the Klamath Falls high by a score 'of. 26 to ,6 before 6,'falr sized crowd. The Ashland players were In good form and their play ing was' featured by long runs by Clydo Dunham a ?subsytvti j. fol lowing the comp(otioii of thcfgme, plajicVs' of both ;teamsHveo? glvfen a banquet at the high school. A large number (Jf local foot ball fans nnd graduates ofy.tho Univordlty of Oregon and the Oregon .State .' college listened in on the play-by-play broadcast of the- annual 'state gridiron classic yesterday 'afternoon , over station KM ED. - i . ; Tho game which was broadcast through the courtesy of The Cali fornia Oregon Power, with Earle Davis :at the "mike" was full of action and kept thS' local fans in terested from start to finish. Re turns of the U. S. C. -Notre Dame and California-Washington games were also announced during the Copco program. - - ; i BILL & ;; LOCAL FANS ENJOY COPCO BROADCAST Priced Down . . i -.-.'.,; 1 1. - i ' - - All nais rr a,i 'GREATEST THRONG IN GRID ANilALS SEE ROME IN . : SOUiERS FIBU5. , Clileago, Nov. 6, (P)- In a dramitlo, spec tacular passing nAd scoring of play Notra Dame'A'anqtiliihbd Southern California, 13 to V, aiid swept n uniiatfen toward -the- I-Joonler gp.tl Qf a . national gridiron cHam'ptAnV aiup. v -,. . In. (h llghtnlng-llke surge . of one of. the greatest Jntorsoctipnal games - of the : year, . betprfe (he greatest-crowd in - the history ,Iof American foolball, 124,000 looked on in frenzied excitement. The actual . paid -adnvi$)tons exceeded lUCOOff officials staled. Vi, From ..a hd start tho.. Hooxlors rallied to slveep the .powerful Trojans i ' off meir feet..v. ; i-. . . Pillowed .on. his .movable bed. just behind the Kotre Same bench, wnere he could pull the strings of team plly personally for the flrat' time in weeks, Knute Kockne for got his ailing leg as his charges scored, .a triumph, that Was more convincing than -the one point mar gin Indicated. - -- . Kotre Damo seized and held the upper hand as Kockno rushed Car idco into the game to direct the first string attack. Tho HooslerB. after missing tho,chanco to score on . the pass rthat. bounded - from Conley- to Curldeo to bo declared illegal, agaiii took' to the air .'inU. tied the count on a single ;pla engineered y 'Jack Rider from his own 44-yard line. Carldeo'i fail ure to make the extra point on u place hick left the - teams dead? locked .at the .close of the half. -. 61ashing Jine plunging by Sav oldi and iSrlll kept southern Cal ifornia .tin the defonslve in .the third period. Tt was a 25-ynrd run back off a short punt by Caridco that Jed to the decisive scoring. The .Notre Dame -quarter twisted his way to the enemy 13-yard mark and Eider, on nn end sweep mado' it first down on tho 3-yard line. Savoldi inado the remaining . dis tance in two lunges At the .Trojun right tackle. Caridco then kicked tho goal for extra point .that prov ed .so vital just, a few minutes later. At this juncture it loufced like a rout for the invading forces but Knttndom. tnklnv fnrtrlpn'a klnlc (iff in a corner on his five-yard line, came roaring out into the open,? shedding tacklers like a duck sheds: water and being aided by fine ln- terference as he gathered headway.. At,, midficld,' Saunders, cut over sharply, eluded the last would-be tackier and sped across rtho goal in a. pandomonlunt of -cheers. Muslck missed the soal.f ' - -' -. - 'NEW Ji A. YEN, Cbmn.j . Nov.- 10, WV-Vale's 'football loam 'today stood up in. itn famous bowl, with 73,000 or more persons looking on. to deny that it is a one-man"tcam, using the hapless -Princeton Tiger as a victim and illustrating : the tale with a 13 Aa 0 victory over tho men from Old Nassau. , -- ; " SAXEM, Ore.. NOV. IKH-'W Governor.' Patterson's annual Thanksgiving proclamation was is sued Friday, setting apart Thurs day, November 28, for the celebra tlon throughout Oregon. - SAYSrEyerything as Ad versed We ifFipilcJ! You Before! WfeellvtoAaih! -,Et ARE GIVING YOU THE (jrreatesf Uvercoat values ,iv. v.: cr'n. ; TO BE ( FOUND ANYWHERE 7' Wool! 1 if Always in Earnest f. ' ..i - - a ' Brisbane's Today (Continued from PM Of) ' New York City,, a thousand mil lions of gold credit. And, incidentally, while Ameri can biLsluesB men were laying seven nnd eight and nine per cent tor loans; and stock . speculators were paying fifteen and twenty per. cent recently, . Frenchmen, in their own country, were borrow ing inoney for SVi to per cent . Settlement of J. Ogden Armour's estate - shows that he died worth $3,000,000 less than nothjng. ; -Xh8 deficit has been adjusted, With; family creditors, chiefly. ' Shortly before ho died, Mv. Ar mour, said ,to- this writer, "Bris bane, don't get into the bands of creditors . They took away J50, 000,000 .from mo and hud mo on my- way; to the cleaners, bofore I knew where , I was." , i' Ajniour' was once worth $200,; 000,000.: The war rand some other things ruined . him, .and his ruin killed him.- , . . .-A tragic end for. ono who hud worked hard, all of his life, from boyhood. . . . . . , Sir Ronald Lindsay, soon to suc ceed Sir Esme Howard as British ambassador at Washington, is ex pected "to make the -embassy wet again. Sir Esme had mado it dry. j- Perhaps , the now ambassador ; thinks Hint if It is all right for American congressmen -that passed Ithe prohibition law to drink whisky 30i-ROUNDS--30 ? Monday Evening, Nov i8 ; "" : ; " ' 8:45 P. M. Sharp ' j L JOE 13ICKERSTAFF; Matelniiaker, B-cseuis MAIN EVENT 10 Rounds Lightheavies, Iayo White ys-Tom Corbett I Great Colored Only Boxer to Win : Fighter--A Terrific Over Gene 0 'Grady Hitter Game - . , . , , , ',: ; SEMI -WINDttP 6 Rounds 135 Lbs: . . . . ; .A. Main Event Attraction! - i ' Billie Breedlove vs: Joe Martinez 'A Pleasing 'Ybungfetcr A Eeal'. Audience Fast "' : picasor " : - . . i. - -i i - - ' .ul. i '";.!!'. .' .v . Admispign Ringside- .$2.50; Reserved,, ..$L5Q;.,. rr - General, $1.00; Children, 50c v ; ,. - - ALSO 3 RED-HOT PRELIMINARIES . ' . - . t v-i' To Beautiful Patterns! ' JSrtiart, lii' silver rtnsks, there'll it cajou why .n Hi'itiBli .a!niiu3).ador,. .wbniL had nothing lo do with the pro- kibition law. shouldn't drink wine in French bottles. The law lets them lmiiort It. President Hoover suggests that vJnr should be mado more humane, that , the blockade, whfaih uses starvation' as a weapon in war, striking at women and children, should be stopped. ' The League of Nations dislikes the idea. . it ssys tlint if. yon stop blockading and starving you take away the league's most valuable weapons. . .'The big idea was to boycott and blockado any nation that went to war wltlfiut permission. In a comic opera, after it had been decided to shoot a certain party, a little lady sings:. "Shpet him gently, i oh, ,so gently." - tV Europe: Bays- that humanity- nndj war don't go togetlier, there: is no snch thing as shooting and starving anybody gently. - '.'."'' Irish All. WASHINGTON,- Nov. 10. That the' nneestors. of tho lata Woodro wWllson, Andrew Mellon and Alfred K. lilllll came from the same county in Ireland ' and that they probably wore roiated. is the comclnslon of Iiss. Jean Kte phenson, - a Washington genealo gist. ' '- - ' i-'iank Whitney,- star lUilitwcight publican candidate for' sheriff jf Linn . coujity. Iow:a... fiext June. Whitncyi who. fousht at 133 ' pounds, now scale's ht 255. :jc W, -:A Always $17.95 Warm Scarfs eather Hosiery Y