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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1930)
PSQE SIX TWTCPFORP MATT TRTrjTNR, AfF.DFOTvD, QKE(iO, THURSDAY, .T1TXK U):in, Butcher Boy Edwards Wins When Thye Uppercutsto Chin PORTLAND MAT MATCH ENDS IN A FISTIC BRAWL Police, Spectators, Referee and Wrestlers in Free ' for-AII Coleman Downs Demetral. PORTLAND, Ore., June. B. (A) A right upporcut to tlio chin ended laut night's Ho-cullcd grudge wrestling match bctwoun Billy Ed wnrdH, Kansas City butcher and , Ted Thye, Portland, when Kcfereo Chet Wiles awarded tho decision to Edwards on a foul. Tho foul ended a match feat ured by rough tactics and which caused a near riot Just before Thye landed the blow that ended it.. Policemen In numbers, spec tators, referee and wrestlers all participated In the melee. The wrestlers went through tho ropes taking the rcferuo with them. Kdwards gained his feet first and jumped on Thyo, land ing on his body and face. . Ringslders thon jumped Into the ring and took pokes at lOdwurds, Mime landing. Police finally re stored order and cleared the rlnu. Edward won the first fall In 28 minutes, 46 seconds with his knuckle hcadlock. Thye took the second in 9 minutes 3 seconds with a whip wrlstlock. f. The boat wrostllng of tho eve ning was put on by Abe Cole man, Jewish light heavyweight from New York and Harry Dem etral, Chicago', Coleman winning two- straight falls with a head tackle similar to the one used by (Jus Honnenberg, In the fourth and fifth rounds. King Alfonso Is Crack Shot With Any Style of Gun . MADRID, June 4. fP) King Alfonso, many times crowned champion trap shoot- S cr of Spain, Is equally skill- ful with rifle, revolver or shotgun, at still or moving 4 marks. 4 4 The gallery always bets YOUNG GERMAN CONFIDENT OF DEFEATING GOB heavily un tho king, not 4 merely out of courtesy but because he is almost a sure ( winner in any company and 4 takers are hard to find fur 4 the same reason, fr Tmpshooliiig today Is a t very popular sport In Spain. 4 livory large city has Its lux 4 urious shooting club and 4 pigeon trap. Live birds aro 4 the targets. 4 Schmeling Prepares for Heavyweight Bout Calmly and Without Fear of Los ing to Sharkey. Hy Kduaril .1. .Nell, 4 Associated Press Sports Writer. KINDICOTT, N. V., June 5. OP) Max Hliefrli! Arinlph Otto Kchmel- inir Is an engaglim young man 4 i without a complex, inhibition or i sign of unruly temperament to his lenuthv name. As he sits in the living room of his well-guar-l- Two carrier pigeons were visit- W ors at Diamond Uike laHt Monday in. and went Into the resort store, i whero number ImndH on the birds' logs were discovered. A light colored bird had a nth- j ber band on the loft leg and an i aluminum banc on the light leg with (he number A-W-2X.A-:!71f. The rubber band was numbered tMUK. The dark colored bin! had tho mini- fistlntia has to bora iKItiK ami A-U-3i)-M-44. Uoorgo L. Howard, resort man ager, Is anxious to hear from the owner of the hlnlH and mtiy bo rnnhor At Tilnmnnd Lnkp. i Ho LUU .J.'.k4 , play a n d ed cottage ing over over German records, ho does n't oven talk u good fight. Yet one week from tomorrow night In the Yankee stadium, this 24-year-old Teuton who has scaled the heavyweight height in two short years will battle Jack Kharkiiy for tho 1 highest p r 1 v. v offer. - lie Will sen s still leads li&g before him. Max may lose to a better man. J-Iol frankly admits that may happen, but he doesn't think that man is Kharkoy. Coloredan Indian brown by the sun in his outdoor workouts, thOj young German Is a picture of su-, perb condition us he lolls In his easy chair, happy to talk of fights I in his hatting English, literally sprinkled with German phrases when tho subject gets complicated and thoughts come too fast. His high cheek bones, shaggy black eyebrows, deep color and animation leave an Indelible impression of Jack Dempscy when the old man mauler weighed 1S7 pounds and was eger to tear the world apart with his iron fists. "I hope I beat Sharkey," he said with a mile and a wave of both hands, "I do not know. No one knows. If I get my chance, I win. If not, I lose." To Schmeling, almost a fatalist In his attlludo-toward the coming contest for rlngdom's highest stakes, this statement covers the entire situation. Uy "chance," which he pninounces "shenks." Sehmejing meant the opening or filiation that will give him the upper hand and pave tho way to victory. Tho breaks may come his way or they may go to Sharkey. "If Sharkey wins, I congratulate him. The same way I would con gratulate myself if win. But why should I lose?" he asked. . "Sharkey is a good .boxer, yes. I le hits, punches good with left hand, no. Well, maybe I make him discouraged if he can't hit me.' New Contenders Unlikely To Flee From "Onus" of Heavyweight Title DUCKS DEFEA I SOLONS 6 TO 4 SOLD HALF MILLION CHANCE FOR $13,000 fight tile very best he knows how. cannlly, carefully, evenly hut at a terrific pace, atul If his best is not good enough well, lie in still 24 viith old and life even In a fistic CO VI3NT11Y, Kngland. June 5. (IV Two machinists employed In a local motor works drew one of the three iilenholm tickets in tho Calcutta sweepstakes. It is worth half a million dollars, but they sold half their share In the ticket tmfnrf tho met for SI 3.00ft. In an executive il's Leadership n ( - - rt , . 4 ? " If I a. n--'ifw jpU''Wiwm4iw.-v Gene AFTERJAYOFF Ortman Handles Mound Duty in Masterly Style Angels Eclipse Stars 4-3 Despite Rally. Sha.rk.ey The ambitions of Max Sclimellnir (left) and .lack Sharkey (right) who arc to box for tins heavyweight crown vaciKcd by Gviw Tiiimcy (center) liMllcale Hint neither Intends to abdicate later In favor of other "pursuits." years old and the creator of one fortune in tho ring, has definite -Whatever elm am8 'toward a lot more money the Yankee Stad-jtimn ne t.(in gather outside the Hy Kdwanl J. Nell (Awsoclaled Press Sports Write v) N1CW VOHK (P) may happen in ium lato In 'the evening of JunejfiKnt racket. T 12', there will be no announce- For Tunney, the darling of so- meutsi tiat a new heavyweiglit ciety, connoisseur of literature, the champion bus retired to rest on; path to glory started In the ring his laurels. but finished in the clouds far above Kor Jack Sharkey, the nostonjthe roped square. Tunney, with i German with tie. Twice he has been In line for a title shot and twice he "'blew" the opportunity once ngainst Jack Dempscy and again In the elim ination tournament to deckle Clone Tummy's final opponent. lie ca rles tho flag of experience. Schmeling. the fighting Image of Dempsey, in the phlegmatic, stolid Sailorman, and Max Schmellm? most formidable hoavywoignt threat ever to come out of Kur ope, the battle pit offers the heights of thylr respective ambi tions. Schmeling has his fortune yet o mako and at the ago of 24 should the millions gained by his fisu, believes his career Is just starting. Schmeling and Sharkeys are fight ers born, trained and bred to the ring. The three form the most Inter esting triangle in all fight history. Sharkey 1b the home man, the torn rule tho roost for years to como if) peramental, bombastic, capable but he once gets by Sharkey. Tlio uig umtepenuanie ngnter-noxer, pro New Mnglander, although thirty I duct of years of struggle and bat- Tbj in a cigarette it's Taste -that's Knowing WHAT TO DO and doing it- what carries a man up . . . and a cigarette, too. PUTTING FIRST THINGS FIRST good taste, uniform quality, aroma, flavor Chesterfield's popu larity is built on knowing what smokers want . . . and giving it unfailingly. TASTE THAT'S THE ANSWER and that's what smokers get in Chesterfield in fullest measure tho flavor and aroma of mellow tobaccos, exactly blended and cross-blended, all to a single, satisfying end . . . "TASTE above everything". Mi state it M our hottest belief (hit the tobiccosujcj in Chesterfield cigttettes tte of finer quility and hence of better taste than in any other cigarette at the ptice. Liuurrr a hters tobacco co, hestenield 1930, Linr.RTT ft Myitis Tobacco Ca RFllx MANAPPR IILUU llllllltlULIl cccio DCMrnv FOR TEAMWORK dropped an 8 to 7 dcciulon to the I CIiIchro White Sox. I Kd .Morris of the Ronton Hed I limn W illis 1 1 iid Hi) uf Cleveland ! urn! Rave Jjoxton a i to 4 victory j In another ten Inning duel. deadening amimh In either fist, unimaginative, un punished, the hest business man among the heavyweights since Luis Angel Firpo. Mo is at his best over the fifteen round route. In tho background rests tho shadow of Tunney, lolling in a beach ehtilr retired to society at the penlc of his physical prowess, one of tlio greatest machine fight ers of tile modern age tho man no one fully understood. By tlio Associated Press The Portland Beavers, having having showed awakening signs in tho the Oakland scries, con tinued to worry the coast leaders yesterday by downing Sacramento, 6 to 4, in the first game the wea ther man has allowed tho Sacs to play in four days. Ortman, one of the Beavers' most success ful hurlers, had the Senators well In hand except for a homer knock ed Ray Kohwer In the second with two men on bases, and the Bea vers were never headed, Smith and Bryan worked on the mound for Sacramento without avail. Los Angeles made its hold on second place more sure by win ning Its second successive game from Hollywood, 4 to 3. The Stars almost broke their eight game losing streak by a throe run rally in the first of the ninth that tied the count at 3 all, but got their ninth straight defeat when -Sovereid allowed two hits which were good for an Angel run. Oaks Bent Seattle. Carl Zamloch's Oaks got tired of being buffeted around by sec ond division clubs yesterday, and broke up a pitcher's deul In the eighth to down Seattle, 12 to 3. San Francisco lost to tho Mis sions in a hnrd fought affair.. 7 to 8. After watching the Ilcds roll up a 7 to 2 lead in tho first six Innings, the Seals knocked Bert Cole out of the box to score four In the seventh, and got another oft Ted Pillctte. In tho eighth to tic the core. They were disappointed, however, in the last period when Monroe and Rosenberg clouted two doubles for the winning tally. Mission winning. 8 to 7. South America led as a buyer of American agricultural machlncrs last year, chiefly due to heavy pur chases by Argentina. - North Carolina lost its first cinnl track and field meet Blnce 191 when Princeton walloped tho Tar Heels. Coast League Yesterday , . i (liy tile Associated Press) ! At Portland: It. II. K. Cincinnati Getting Plenty of j sa,-ra..,eto 4 s 0 Portland Oil) (I Hits and Good Pitching,;. Thomas. .m-yam nd Koci.ier, 1 H i.:; i lllll Tl HIHl I mill. But Lacks Winning Punch j Lncup Changed.. Hy IIhkIi S. I iiIIci'Kiii. .Ir. ( A.iifliittMl I'rusM Sports Wiilrr) Dun how toy. mumiKiM- of the (.MiK'lniiatl Krrls. lias become one of tlio leiuliiiK expei-iinenters of the .National league as well as one of its loading trailers anil he has prospects of kooi! result! if he can mold tho material ho now has i At Los Angles: It. II. 15. j I lolly wood a 'J I I I .os A nnrles - H I Khel Ion hark and ItaHsler, 100 1, 1 Sovereid ; Hallou, Utirfuot and I llanuah. At Seattle: Oakland , Seattle Andrews and and Jioireani. n. Lombardi; 11. K. 17 1 7 2 I llHIMO Baseball Standings t j Omsl I,rnKiic W. j Sacramento 33 ! los AdkoIos ,. 32 I San Kranelsco 3U Oakland w 31! I M issltHlH 3 1 I Hollywood 25 Seattle 2 3 Portland 22 At San Franetwco: 11. II. K. Missions K 14 l Into u co-ordlnnted baseball team. I San Kianelseo 7 14 0 The Hods, as they aro now, seem 1 Cole, l'illette and Hoffmann; to htivo everything but the ability J zinti and (iaslon. to make their hits count. They I Bet plenty of blows, 84 of them in their last seven frames, and fro iltiontly have pood pitching to no with them, but still they lose tho close decisions and names In which they havo the best of the hitting. How ley shook up his lineup analn yesterday. puttiiiK I'at Craw ford In the llnoup and making Itob M ousel load off. The result was ood rnoiiKh to produce 14 solid hits but not a victory. Their op ponents, tho Now York (Hants, got but 1 li blows, but won 8 to 5. The hit totals made by the Hods mid ( iiants, big as they wore, ap peared small when tho Chicago Cubs got Into action and trounced the Post on llraves, IS to 10. The Cuba hit 2tt times for 34 Itobins Toss ;ame 1 no t ui nnisnou oniy two j ,vV York games behind Hrooklyn as the j n,lftnn Itobins literally thi'tw away a ' Cincinnati gamo to the Pittsburgh Pirates I Philadelphia by a IS to 6 score. This result 1 1 Ilrooklyn ! Chicago bases. t st. Louis i Pittsburgh .... 2i 2 7 2 7 33 a: 35 National lxiigiKi W. L. 27 2 1!4 21 21 IS IK 14 Pet. .i!M) .571 .ft 4;! .U42 .534 .431 .3'J7 . 3 S U Pet. I .U2H .f.7M I .533 j .G 1 J ; .4 XX I .4 5a I .411 I .3tiS 1 loft tho Pirates only game behind ! Aniorltnii iKNiguo tho St. Ijouls Cardinals, who lost v, L the day s only mound duel in tho i Philadelphia 30 H ! ashington 2! j Cleveland 25 New York 23 ! Chicago 1 7 j UetroR 1 s ' St. 1-ouis 17 i Huston 14 Pet. J .Iiu9 ' I .4SH ' .415 I .41111 1 .3D!i : .3l6 ; National leaKue to Philadelphia. 1 to 1. The Atnericun league reversed the procedure of its elder rival completely and produced four ttKnt battles, three or them Rotng St. Louis 17 26 ten inning apiece, and left the positions of the leaders unaltered. The lending PhlladelphH Athletics beat out the St. ltuis lirowns, 4 to i. Washington, in second place. ! scored three runs In the tenth to i LONDON lPi John Arthur beat out the Detroit Tigers. It I Hewar Is to continue on the Job. 10 though he has Inherited $5,000.1)00 Tho Cleveland Indians and New from his father. "You might as York Yankees remained In third well he dead a to stop work " he and fourth places respectively, the explained. "It Is work that makes victims of upsets. The Yankee I,;,, worth living" I INHERITS FIVE MILLIONS, BUT CONTINUES WORK r "THE STORE FOP EVERYBODY -"y PHONE-'l 86-487 MdOFOKQOOECWN . MIDDISHADE The Specialized Blue Suit The men who select the . MIDDISHADE BLUE are sure of an extra measure of satisfaction. - MIDDISHADE SIUTS come to you in all the very new est styles; hand-tailored, from the finest all-wool blue fabrics. Single and double breasted models. $3750 Mann's The Store for Men