Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 25, 1929, Page 5, Image 5

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, Ml'IDFOUD, ORKiiON. MONDAY. NOVKMI'.KU -J.1. W).
m. , aj . . . . . - - '-'
f
Stanford's Furious Attack Beat California
L
V SHARE
. " V - It- - -
ciocar smokers
1- -. . I SttY
I 1 1 ma mm
. i Must
A S IN
COAST. LOOP
California, Stanford, So.
Cal., Oregon and Wash
ington State Each De
feated Once Saturday's
Tilt Between So. Cal., and
Washington " State Will
Cut Field to Four.
IJy ISussoll J. Xewlnml
(Associated Press Sports Vrltr
SAX l-'KAXL'ISCO, Nov. 25. UP)
Over the peak of a great football
Kerixnn, Pacific coast conference
teams relaxeil today while far
western random back-tracked the
trail of a schedule cluttered with
many upsets, spectacular victories
and unusually largo crowds.
I'niinlsed outstanding treats for
their Thanksgiving day gridiron
menu next Thursday, the football
mob. to the last man, w-oman and
child, however, could scarce do
,:uu;lit else than hark hack to lust
jKiiuiday's hangup finish when
siiinlonl soundly trounced Califor
nlj, 21-C, to scatter all over the
Cardinal stadium the conference
championship hopes of the previ
ously undefeated Bears.
Primed for their first title since
103 and flushed with tho confi
dence that four previous confer
ence victories had built up, the
ltenrs met their Waterloo In tho
final clash of the year. . .
Five Claimants
Nov. S3. 1929, had been joted
down as a sad and eventful day
for California's Bears and the tens
of thousands who lend their hur
rahs to the cause of the Blue and
Cold. From riches to rags drop
ped California's Bears for the out
come of the game freed the con
ference championship of a poten
tial dictator and gave over Its rule
to the hands of five. California.
Stanford, Southern California, Ore
gon and Washington State each
have been defeated once. Kach
holds a fifth Interest In the title.
Alter next Saturday only four will
share the honors as Southern Cali
fornia and Washington Stnto meet
on that day. Southern California's
Trojans are strong favorites to
down the northern hoys.
Whllo Stanford was knocking
t'tfjifornin's hopes'. ' "galley west".
Jast week end, Southern California
ryc-loned over a weak Idaho team
to win by a 72-0 score. Washing
ton State and Oregon romped away
with ' non-conference rivals, the
former defeating Conzagay 27-0,
and Oregon nosing out a visiting
University of Hawaii eleven, 7-0,
Thanksgiving Tilts '
Thanksgiving day tilts will bring
tngvther the University of Califor
nia at Los Angeles Bruins and
.Montana';, (irizzlies In a confer
ence game at I.os Angeles while St.
Mary's will entertain Oregon 'at
San Francisco. A victory for eith
er Montana or U. C. L. A. should
bo the cause of much merrymaking
on the respective campuses s
neither team has won a conference
Biuno this season. The St. Mary's
Orogon encounter assumes the Im
portance of a big conference en
gagement because St. Mary's is
the only major team In tho country
that has not been scored upon. The
only blot on an otherwise perfect
record for St. Mary's Is a scoreless
tie with California' Bears and the
Bears were - fortunate, to "escape
unscathed on that day, Oct. 5 last.
The Bears were on the defensive
. . most of thnt game.
PHOENIX GIRL JOINS
0. S. C. ATHLETIC ASSN,
ORKOON STATE COLLKGK,
Cmvallis. (Special.) Barbara
Sims, Phoenix, a freshman In com
increo nt OroRon State colleije. has
heen Initialed into the Women's
Athletic association. Only those
' Rirls who have shown ouUdandinK
ability in Home branch of women's
nthletirH are eligible for the honor,
lemliershlp on class tennw In the
various sports or participation in
Mich individual forms of physical
training as hiking are necessary
qualifications.
Forest Grove Carnation Lum
ber company mill will start opera
tion .Tantwry 1.
Run-Down, Weak,
Nervous?
to ,To have plenty of firm flesh and
ability to do a big doy's work
ond feel "like a two-year old" at
night, you must eat three good
meals -a day, relish your food and
properly digest it It you can't ent,
can't sleep, can't work, just give
Tanlac the chance to do for you
what it has done for millions.
Mm. Fred Westin. of 387 E. 67th
St North, Portland, Ore., says:
"Tanlac cured my stomach trouble
completely after three years suf
fering. It built me up to perfect
health, with a gain of 27 lbs. That
was two years ago, and I still en
joy the best of health."
Tonhc 1 wonderful for Indiges
tion and constipation gas, pains,
nausea, dizziness and headache. It
brings back lost appetite, helps you
digest your food, and gain strength
and weight It contains no mineral
drurs; it is made of roots, barks
and herbs, nature's own medicines
Vfur the sick. The cost is le?s than 2
ceitta a dose. Get a bottle from your
druggist Your money back if it
doesn't help.
Hip iioan or llio uoKK'il llcar was limlu-n oil mis lay. l.om (20). California star litis tossed a
short forward pass which uis battered hack hy charging: ltrd Shirts who over-ran California's forward
wall to break up the play that promised anotlicr touchdown mid the virtual evening up or chances for
victory. The ball Is seen III mid-air over Stanford's 111 yard line.
flirrJiKFH.En's6oipBfte)
isy ?. it. nrcier.
Speaking of Rolflm; jinxes, some-
t.odv mention ih ne Mi-
recti fJn-ult seems to hold over
I hat exceedingly lirillianl
youncr
lady, Miss lUcn lli.kM, when
they get together in an important
competition.
Tho occuhIoh latest in mind, I
suppose, was the defeat of the re
doubtable "liilly" hy .Maureen in
the last ' national ohuNnplonshlp.
immediately after Hilly had won
the Canadian national, defeating
on her way no less a competitor
than GlennaV Oollelt herself, later
the brilliant victor In the United '
States national.
Miss Oreuit, it Is true, has do- !
feated Miss Hicks In a number)
of important competitions.' Hut !
did you ever stop to consider the
matches, notably in the metropoli
tan championships, and In the
1928 national at A'lrginia Hotj
Springs, in which Miss Orcuit
herself has been hen ten hy Mrs.
Dorothy Campbell Hurd?
Thtire Is one of the curious situ
ations in golf nnd one Mrs. Hurd
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 25.
iP) Victor M. Harding, Harvard
end, was in a dangerous condi
tion at the college hospital today
from Injuries received in the Yale
game Saturday.
His life saved hy an emergency
operation late Saturday night in
which n ruptured spleen was re
moved. It was said by physicians
that he would not he out of dan
ger for several days.
Harding, a junior of Hubbard
wood. 111., left the game In the
fourth quarter In great pain, after
an apparent kick In the hack.
Harding's scholastic record was
high nnd he could complete tho
full college course In three years.
FAMOUS ELI FENCE
E
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 25.-r
(P The HOKinent nf Yale's fuinnim
college campus fence, which was
taken from the Paeh MHuIio a week
ago Saturday and which turned up
at the Harvard La mi toon dinner fn
Cnmnridge Friday night, was deliv
ered at the studio today by the ex
press comany to which H was
turned over early Saturday in Hos
ton hy a groim of Harvard and Yale
men.
Captain f'Tlrpo") Greene of the
Yale football team probnhily will
he the first to he photographed
against the fence aa he had de
layed having his picture taken un
til the fence was recovered.
!ES
OUT FOR CREW STROKE
SEATTLE. Wash. fP) A blind
uiant ambitious to gain his vnndty
letter may some day stroke the Uni
versity of Washington crew In In
tercollegiate reijattns.
With a good record in Inter
scholastic x porta as a sprinter and
-wimmer, Howard "Wild I till"
I lent, six-foot freshman, came to
Wafhinteton In September.
He told Al I lbrickfon. varsity
crew coach, of his ambition to earn
his letter in some sport, I'lbrlck
nn's apprising eye took in the
muscular lines of the youth's 1 im
pound form nnd told him to lt,r
nut for tn rresnman crew.
Under U1brickon's tutince Dent
has niadf? fine progress and ha
held his own with his more for
tunate teammates. A great Wash
ington Mmke himcolf r few yenis
ago, Ulbrlckon hn taken a keen
interest In the youth.
r'.r.md linmlf ( ont motion of
t.k win. nt I'-nnAn IfDHfle 1
honpltal will he completed nhou.
tecember IhI.
HARVARD PLAYER
FOR PH0T0SIPLAN GRANGE DANCE
f
I herself told me wn without a
nerseu loin me war wunout nnj
' explanation, so far as she knew.j
-Maureen jusi swms unani
I heat me,"
said Mrs. Jlurd. "And
die's :i very much het-
you know
ler g(lfer."
I think it Is Tour limes thai
tlie older player has triumphed.
Conceivably it is because Mau
reen is so very delightfully Irish.
Tho Celts, you know, are greatly
subject to nu pcrstitions and . fa n
cics and whimsical beliefs. Per
haps Maureen believes she can
beat Helen and doesn't heliove
she can heat Mrs. Hurd.
But Sir Walter Hagen. who Is
neither Celtic nor much given to
superstition, for n long time was
under the match-play domination
f Gene Sarazen. who was said,
as you mar recall, to "have Wal-
ter's number.
Jf there Is any one competitive
golfer I should select as being
without a number or n gont
it certainly Would have hoery Will
tei Hagen In the period between
1922 and 1925.
So you can't tell. At least 1
can't.
Hy the Associated Press.
His ciosest rival, Gene 'McISvort
of Tennessee, held, idle until
Thanksgiving day, Al Marstcrs re
mains nt the top of the heap in
the race for national football in
dividual scoring honors.
Although the Dartmouth star
has not played for three weeku
nnd will not play again this year,
the 108 points he scored in his
first Fix games remain as a goal
for others to shoot nt. Metever,
with 97 points now, may surpass
It when Tennessee meets Kenruckv
on Th u rsd a y . T h ese two h ca d
the list in the Associated l'ress
compilation of leading scorcm In
the Associated Press compilation
of lending' scorers In the eight
major groups of conferences In the
country. Worthy of mention, how
ever, is Kay Xovotny, Ashland
(O.) ' halfback,' who finished his
Keason a week ago .Friday . with a
grand total of 103 points. Schwartz
Washington Stato College, with
84. is well up in the list.
KAOLK POINT, Ore., Nov. 2Fi.--
(S)ecial) Preparations for the
fnvitaiional Thanksglvlng dance to
he given 'by the ' Lake Creek
(irnnge in the Orange hall at
Kagle Point November 2H, are well
under wny.
The Imperial flve-pleep orches
tra of Medford will furnish thu
music for the occasion,, The va
rious committees are working dili
gently to make the dance one
whltih Will oprn the holiday sea
son ' In a triumphant manner.
Chicken sandwichus and hot ta
males will he served for supper.
CAGE GAME DOMINATES
FOOTBALL FOR INDIANA
HIX)OMlN;riTO.V, Inil. (IP) Put
PnKe necms to ho fighting a loslnn
battle In Ills effort to erown foot
ball the king of collegiate Mrts In
Indiana.
Page's three year attempt lo win
the high schools to football found
him this year Willi the poorest
squad he has had since hn left
Duller university.
Hasketball has been leaping for
ward meanwhile. No city or ham
let Is without a basketball team;
the slate tournament plays to L'5,
ooi), with thousands clamoring for
admission.
AUTO MISHAP FATAL
SPRINGFIELD WOMAN
AIJlANV, Ore., Nov. 25.
Mrs. i;. W. Colllnn of prinnfleM
died yesterday from injurlc puf.
'ered when the nutomobilc In whlrh
the wa rifling clipped over n hank
and overturned. The tar was op
erated by Mrs. Cl.ira Hawyer,
dauehter-ln-law of Mr. Collin
It wan believed Mrs. Hawyer lod
rontrol of the car after Attempting
to pu another muchlne,
" '
EAGLE POINT NOV. 28
E
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 2r.iP)
Press association history was wrii
ten in Oregon Saturday when th
Associated Press broadcast a com
plete play-by-play report of the
Hawall-Orcaqn football game here
to the Honolulu Star-HuIIetln. This
newspaper operated an automatic
player board lrom the running
story of the game. The report, ac
counting for every movement of the
hall on the Multnomah club field
here, was carried acro.ss the islands
by Marker Radio & Telegraph
wireless.
A. K. Harris, Associated Press
staff writer, wrote the running
story from plays called to him by
Don Watson, sports editor of the
Honolulu Star-Hulletln. The radio
operator copied these plays from
Harris typewriter.
This was the first time such A
broadcast had ever been made
from the Pacific northwest, and the
first time on tho continent it, was
carried out without an intermedi
ate relay ..'. . -- ,
The radio operator in the Star
Bulletin office In Honolulu copied
the Portland station direct without
the use of relays.
L
E
The Medford high school foot
hall team will close the most dis
astrous season in many a moon
next Thursday, when they play
Ashland high school in the nnmfal
Thanksgiving day game nt that
city. The locals were defeated
Saturday by Klamath Falls, 7 to 0.
Undaunted hy the defeats, t:ie
squad this afternoon started prac
ticing for the Ashland game, ajid
they will be supported at the game
by a large delegation of rooters
and students, who have adopted as
their huttlecry: "We'll win
Thanksgiving day."
The locals came .out of the Kla
math game in good shape.
With football over, the high
school athletes will start hasket
ball practicing Monday, December
9, nnd the playing of class games.
Tho flr.U games are scheduled for
mid-January.
'THE MASK' WILL BE
Tho Co pro pin y em will presort
thn littrMt IIoImi NoitIh play. "Tho
AliiMk," ovrr KAflilU TuoKday niht
from 0 to 10 p. in., written cipe
cliilly for Co pro hour radio fun 8.
Thurmlay tiriiiff ThankuBivlns:.
"The MiiHk" 1h entirely riropoi.
MfKH NorrfH hn written the play
on n hackRrounrt of tho world war,
the firtinn takcrt hwo today, or
I I yni H a ft or tho MlriiKfflo. The
fan have n treat in Htore, fir there
Im notion, tUKH on the heart 1rlrK"
and human Inh'ioHt throtiKhoul
the perfornmnre.
The rant will Inolndo ,Io Murniy
FtoHtol, Miiiido CoddiiiK. Flotehor
Ki.h nnd Karle Imvm,
His Glorious Night
at Craterian Tonight
Inner secrets of Kuropoan rouit
intrirue nf the present rtny. and
Bladder Irritation
If functional Pladtlrr Irritation
disturbs your sleep, causes burn
ins or itt hiiiK nnwatlon. backache
or lear pains, muktwr you feel tired,
.depressed rnd ilisriiuraK'kd, whv net
try the Hystex 4H Hour Test? Don't
rive op. ;et ( ystex today at any
dru jitore, I'm it to the test. S-v
for youiself what U does. Monv
ick If tt doesn't bring quir-ic im
fn ovemont, and saHMfv yon com
pleteiy. Try l.'ystei today. .Only
60c. Alv,
How often have you bcrn disguslcd with the filthy, germ
hrcctling pluces xhcresouic cigars arc made . . tlurk, sluiFy
factories warm, dingy shops and windows . . where cigars
arc rolled by careless, dirty lips and fingers and spit on the
ends! What a fur cry this is from the modern method
of manufacture used by Certified Cremo.
The superiority of Certified Cremo starts with the choicest
and tendercst leaves, ripe and mellow, and continues in
goodness through a slow, expensive inaltiriug and mellowing
process . . . and topped off with a wrapper -that is really line.
Ct'i'li'i"l Cremo contains no scrap no floor sweepings all
' llmg filler ill 'fresh, tender leaves. Over $7,000,000 was
spent in perfecting the method of manufacture used hy
Certified Cremo that insures uniformly fine, clean cigars.
Foil-wrapped . . . sanitary . . . crush-proof . . . the kind of
ciirar that the laic Vice-President Marshall must have had in
mind when he said: "What this country needs most is a good
5-cenl cigar. "Copyright 1S29 American Cigar Co."
It
IP) 1929 Amarlcin Cigar Co.
d:iz.lfiif? ftllmpHOH of the "Itinlrte
of tho nOi-ial.Hidc of ' Hot-ret 'diplo
mjiry" formit tho uninoial plot fr
Inhn fjllherffl latest Meiro-(JoM -
wyn-Mayrr starring vehicle, "'Mih
(IloilnitH NlKht." a dlfil((j,'iie fea
ture whleh will oien today at th"
Craterlan Ihentro.
"Ills Clorlous Nlht" Im from thn
pn of Kereno Molnnr, tho fainoim
autiuir of "The Swan," "Tho
l vil" and other celebrated stane
pi nil tiet Ions. I'ndr-r the title of
"f tlympla" it was preyenied on
the Contlnenlal and New York
jM.-iues nnil rrenterl a furor in Kv
roK hoeiitiw of Mm frank dls
clnti'ire of many-hitch iale wtcin
' for oiiIIIiik im mny iuIno nt nlRht oh woll n
iliirlnR tho ilny, nnil for thin rpiwnn wo hnvo
iniiilo II n policy to romnln nvnilnlilo twonly-
- four lionrH of Iho ilny.
i " lH . Dny or nlRht,. r tolpliotm onll prnron tills or- Wj ' CHAPEL l V'i.
Ilny or night,, n toUjphono full prnron tills nr
Kiinizallon Httorly nnil llmlnnUy nt iiiio'k hitv-Iro.
CONGER
FUNERAL PARLORS
W.MAIN AT NEWTOWN ST,
tfhonp,2Ql
THE
. . . THAT AMERICA NEEDED
On StH Htilmenufnt pnxlm'tlon at
the! Kmi.iro llicHtrp In New York
city It iH'ciune mi t'ntitblitOiC'rt
liroiulwny hit;
Tho pnuliH-lion In wilil t" linvn
provril ciinrluMlvi'ly thnt i:llhorl.'n
vulcn Ih nni' iff tho ln'ft In llo
tur- nil thnt Kitthorlno lJiih
ifwiMi. the Nun- Ynik nImro Bft-j
row, who hnH tho roinlnlno lonil,
Ih tho uronloHt illso-ovory of tho
M-li-l lot '
!
Archbishop Target
,,,,... , .. .
VATIC'AN C 1 1 Y. Nov. 2o. 1)
A SweillHh woinnn nnmoil Mihikuc-
, , ,, , ,
rliito Ciiilimi lUlomptoil n nliiinl
MKr. miiiii, iiiinnr iirriiiimiiiii m
"'" r.l.:t$CT
,i:ri.'tW!KiSW.i;r.w
1 1:
1
"Any man ivho smokes
a Cremo is safe . . . I
cert ify C retno'as
sanitary" .
11.
noted pure food expert, long active In
crusudea for uure foods and sanitary factories.
"When you put a Cremo between your lips,, you
are protecting yourself from any possible infection
from unsanitary tobaccos you're playing safe. '" X".
"Every tobacco leaf entering the Cremo factory;
is scientifically treated, by U. S., Government
approved methods. And .every sanitary precau
tion known to science, is taken 'to' safeguard its:
. purity along every step of the .way." ,.' , ...
"Each Cremo is folded, wrapped and lipped by
amazing inventions! In 11 factories that are models
of cleanliness . . . uirfloodcd, sun-lathed, scien
, tifically clean. ."' 1 '
j . , . u." - . -.'
'And to protect its purity until it reaches youf
mouth, each Cremo is" sealed in, a separate foil
wrapper. , ,. .,.,.,., .
"So when you smoke a Cremo, you get the, same
scientific health protection that conies .with
ccruueu iiiiih:
Certified
WM)
GOOD 5 CIGAR
Pnrulo nnd former ApoHtHr. vlcnrj
of Norway, In St. Peter's cathedral i
yeBterday. !
Pile Sufferers
.1
Von run only got niiiolt. wifo nnil
fnHtliiK roliof hy romoviiiK tho i-iumo
cinKi-.stlmi of hloo( In tho Inwor
! howcl. Nnthlii? hut im Inlornnl
i lonioily cun iln Ih In thnt'H why
!.iiitiiit jiml mHvos full- l'- ln-
hiirill .s lloin-Knlil. n hiii'inlonH tah-
.,, B iinlni(.i.,i t .mii kly nnil
wfoly ImiilHh uny form r I'llo niln-
ory or nionoy Imok. .Iiirmln
Wnol,M ,ln(, ,i,.,mKMll, ovorywhoio
'hi - h 11 wlih ihln kuh i-nni
' t. m
Says . : ...'."r-t :.
1.iU.,A.B.,I.L.D.,
. .
, , INSURANCE
First Insurance
Agency
A. L. HILL. Mintgcr
Phon 10S 80 N. Central
Medford. Oregon
I Women's Hose
$1.00 Pair K
H Bilk from top to toe witli
: "French Heel ",
WE DEVELOP
: ; Films Free
rWEST SIDE PHARMACY
1 YOUR REXALL 8T0BB ?
Open Sundayg and Evenlni
i 'AU th Tim
... . -t l":' .' '. '(
Ir
(I Qtm