PAGE TWO
WTCDFOTID MAIL TRTBWE. MEDFORP OKEGON, TUESDAY, SEPTErBER 11, 1934.
HOST 0FJALENT
Main Problem for Coach Bill
Spaulding Lies in Ends
and Tackles for Forth
coming Gridiron Season
By PAI L ZIMMKRMAV
AnKfiriatrd Vren Bport Writer.
LOS ANGELES, Bept. 11. (AP)
Tht pacific cout conference which
fcaa Men the University of California
at t-oa Angclei football team grow
from obscurity nerd not be surprised
thu fall If Couch BUI Bpauldlnft leads
a rough, tough Bruin out of hiberna
tion Into a high place in the cham
pionship standings.
Should the genial Uclan mentor
find himself some ends and tackles
around the Wcstwood Hills campus
seven were lost by graduation and In
eligibility -then there would be no
telilng how far his team might go.
For the Bruins at least have back
fleld material, not of the number Bill
usually could count on one hand, but
a host of big, fast men. While 6
goodly share of It has not been tem
pered In the fire of big time compe
tition, the talent Is there.
Two Veterans Eyed.
Since much of the talent la too
new to classify. Coach SpAtildlng la
not decided upon a possible quartet
although he In considering two vete
rans, Capt. Ransom Llvesay and
Charles Cheshire for the halves; Ted
Key. a triple-threat newcomer from
Panhandle, Texas, at full and perhaps
BUI Murphy at quarter-buck. This
combination would average 180
pounds, 12 pounds more than the
heaviest bsckfleld U. C, L. A, could
put on the field a year ago.
Besides these there arc more than
a hslf dozen others of merit. Including
BID Spaulding, Jr., son of the coach
and one of the best pnssera tn local
high school ranks: Mike Frankovlch.
regular quarterback for the last two
years: Walter Schetl. one of the moat
sought after backs In local Junior
college ranks lat year: Bill Williams,
Prert Funk, and Wilton Wilton, a great
little punter.
Line Need Strength.
So for the first time since he came
here. Coach Spaulrilng Is worrying
about his line Instead of a bsckfleld,
In spite of the Inns of Cnpt. Lee Coats,
great center of a year ago, the Bruin
renter of the line Is pretty well fixed.
Spaulding never has fnllM to bob up
with a fine center, and Shermnn Cha
voor appears to be the man who will
flit Coats shoes,
He has good gunrds In Verdi Boyer
and Ed Austin, veterans; and two
capable ends, but no more. The tackle
pnsts must he filled with new hands.
Boh McChesney nnd Sinclair Lott are
back at the wing positions, but there
are no reserves.
If Coach Spanieling enn get some
strength on each side or guard, op
ponents are apt to find the Bruins
hard to stop this year.
The schedule Includes:
Sept, 20 Oregon at Portland.
Nov. 24 Oregon State at Los Angeles.
WINS CALIFORNIA'S GOLF CROWN
L , if
1H f 4
ij, iff '.-Wgc.
1 ...
Stuart Hawley, Jr., (center) of Oakland, Cal former Stanford uni
versity golfer, receives the atate golf trophy at Pebble Beach after
defeating Don Edwards (right) of San Jose, also a Stanford man, ons
up In the final 36 holes. C. M. Kellogg (left), president of the Califor
nia Golf Aeaoclatlon, It presenting the trophy to Hawley, (Associated
HOW THEY
STAND
Frrr llrrr Oniicr I NiicrMK.
The Oold Hill C. of C. sponsored
thHr first FTee Beer Dance Saturday
ntht snd packed the hoiwe. Guests
wre given their choice of dance tick
ets or combination dan.-e snd fres
beer ticket)!. There will be another
tola: free beer dnnce next Saturday.
(Ad.)
flt'NS Repaired and Cleaned. Ex
pert work. Medtord Cycle. J3 N. Nr.
CANADIAN K A
tXPOITlON
Travel hy rail fr Snfrly Speed
anil ComfoVl. Travel Canadian
Pacific al no etra coil, with lit
added tli rill of viewing llie world'a
fine I mountain eeiicry, the Can
adlan KocltieSs hlop-ovrr at tliosa
famous resorts at HaiilT and l.ab
l.oulsc. mahlng your Irlp a tom
ptrtcvaratlon and slltt seeing tour.
SPECIAL SEASON LIMIT
KOI 'M TRIP l ARI S
TO CTIICA(H)
Flrt VUn litlcrinrtllnle
Return llmtta as late as Oct. 31)
Transcontinental (rains Irav Van
touvrr. 11. C. dally, atrordlng fin
icrvttc lo all Eaitrrn tlesllitallons
I Summrr Lacurslon Fares. All
Information, literature, reserva
tions and lleltcU al our olTlers.
W, II. Ovacon. (en. AgtH Pasa'r
Dept., 2u S. W. Hroadway. Am.
Hank Hid,.. BR U037. Portland.
5 Hotel Figueroa
nff rlsuetna HL al
:'.f. mill to mirlra
r.Mf tin a, I mi
Ansrlrs' ne.l
llntrls.
..... ...
Uowntonn. (larate In Connection
Rslet frm
fl.50 per dat nlthinit hiih
(hj per rtiij nlih hfiih
H.oo per dat tain nrit and tnth
A t .MINI r.ff
l4
in
W Mi
9
By the A'nocluled rreas.
Coast.
W. L. PC.
Los Angeles 63 29 .846
Seattle 4S 3S .583
Hollywood 43 37 .63S
Mlaslons
San Francisco
Oakland -
Portland -
43 37 .638
44 38
40 4S
.637
.488
. 29 61 .363
Sacramento 37 65 .329
National.
W. L.
New fork 86 50
St. Louis 80 53
Chicago . 77 58
Boaton . 68 84
Pittsburg 68 65
Brooklyn . 67 76
Philadelphia 48 82
Cincinnati 48 84
Amerlrnn.
W. L.
Detroit 88 47
New York B4 53
Cleveland 73 83
Boston .. 88 68
Washington 61 73
St. Loula 60 78
Philadelphia 56 78
Chicapo 47 86
PC.
.830
.602
.579
.519
.504
.429
.869
.364
PC.
.652
.818
.541
.600
.465
.451
.424
.353
Scores Yesterday
f'ont League
Snn Pranelsro 4-1, Onkland 1-4.
Tos AnRelea 4-fl, Sarrnmento 2-7.
Brattle. 1-7. Hollywood 2-4.
Portland and Mlsalons Idle.
American League
At Detroit 2, Ilneton 1.
At C level nnd 0, Philadelphia 0.
At Chtratro 4. Washtnitton 7.
New York at St. Louis, postponed,
'sin.
NnMonnl I, en Rite
At New York 7, Pittsburgh 9.
At Phllndelphla I. Bt, Louis 4.
At Brooklyn fi. Cincinnati 0.
Only gnmes scheduled.
The U. S. Forest service ta operat
ing 010 radio sending stations, largely
In connection with fire prevention
nnd suppression work. In the national
forest of continental United States.
Use Mat! Tribune want ads
FENTON FLATTENS
PORTLAND. Bept. 11-AP) Rod
Fenton, Canadian middleweight
wrestler, took three fulls out of five
over Paacual Castillo. Spain, here last
night, Fenton won the first with a
series of dropklcks and a press; Fen
ton the third with a Boston crab;
Castillo evened the score on a foul,
only to lose the final fall on another
Boston crab.
Robin Reed. 167, and Ben Sherman,
ieo. went SO minutes to a draw, each
taking a fall.
Bulldog Jackson, 160, defeated
Mickey McOulre. 187, In one fall; Ma
rine Jacobs, 133, pinned Sparky
Walker, 1R6, In the curtain raiser.
35 CANDIDATES FOR
SALEM. Sept. 1 1 f AP ) Th Irty
flve gridiron prospects turned out
for Initial practice at the Willamette
unlvorslty athletic field Monday, the
largest number In years to be on
hand for the opening day.
Only 12 of the 38 were football let
termen. Coach Roy S. (Spec) Keens
stated, but sprinkled through the lot
were a number of promising fresh
men, as well aa second string men
from last year'a squad.
Willamette's first game Is with Ore
gon State College at Corvallls. Sep
tember 22.
Wind Furnishes LlRh.
To furnish his lofty fire lookout
station with electricity for three 21
candle power automobile lights used
for night reading and the oneratlon
of a battery type radio set. L. B. Salm,
forest service lookout observer on
Strawberry peak In the San Ber
nardino national forest, has Invented
a power plant consisting of an 8-foot
airplane propeller mounted on ball
bearings and connected to an auto
mobile generator through a "V" belt
with a 10 to 1 ratio. The output of
this plant, which Is stored In (J-rolt
butter leu to assure a constant supply
of electricity, is 2 ampheres with an
8-mlle wind, and 18 amperes with ft
30-mlle wind. The total cost of the
plant was $16.
GAINS ONLY FALL
IN HECTIC MATCH
With Ma famous drop-kick all tied
up In the merciless grip of the rub
ber legs of Bad Bam Let hers, 310
pound tall Texas grappler, "Jumping
Joe" Savoldt, 200, si-champlon
heavyweight matman, "took It" for
the last 19 minutes of the main event
at the armory last night to win the
bout, after gaining the first and
only fall with one of his flying leg
punches. The former Notre Dame
grid star battered the Texan's Um
ber frame for 41 minutes In the
first stanza, but with Uie sound
of the second gong Lathers came
back with a gleam In bis eye, grind
ing the ex -all-American into a gasp
ing pulp with his rolling scissors.
Fireman Ray Rrlsblt, referee,
waited for Savoldl to recuperate and
awarded htm the match.
Promoter Mack Llllard'a forecast
that the card would be & sellout was
fulfilled, when the largest crowd of
the year Jammed the armory, filling
the seats, and overflowing Into
standing room both downstairs and
up.
Except for the one successful
punch that flattened Sad Sam for
the first fall, jumping Jos failed to
make his drop-kicks connect. He at
tempted one series In the first 10
minutes of the bout, but stretched
himself flat when Lathers melted out
of the way. Shortly after the start
of the second fall, the grldster -again
unleashed one of his powerful leg
thrusts, and sgaln kicked only
empty air.
Savoldl kept his adversary worried
with shifty footwork and sudden,
powerful flying mares, but was kept
busy himself by the uncanny mat-
work, of the southerner's educated
legs. Jumping Joe punctuated each
of his holds with careful flstwork
in Letbers midriff. It was still any
body's match when an exchange of
flying headlocks ci.ded with Sav
oldl's short, quick leg Jab to the
Texan's chest, and s body press to
pin Let hers for the count.
Althouga the two battled evenly
during the first period, Savoldl kept
on the offensive, weaving In and
out from the crunching embrace of
the southerner almost at will, and
striding about the arena shaking his
head, as though Lethers was a new
kind of wrestler who had to be given
a lesson. Sad Bam spent the first
part of the bout mainly breaking
out of the powerful holds of his
chunky opponent with spurts of bat
fling strategy. Each tried variety,
with the limber limbs of the agile
Texan furnishing most of the enter
tainment. The grapplers settled down to ser
ious work In the final minute of
the contest, but Sad Sam'a usually
devaatatlng rolling scissors spent
Itself on Savoldl'a mountainous
frame.
George "Wildcat" Wilson's sensa
tional flying tackles were shut out
of the semi-final match when "Gen
tleman Al" Karailck, 101, the Rus
sian Lion, crippled the 303-pound
former all-American halfback with a
toe hold, to win two straight falls.
The first came In 21 minutes, after
a colorful but slow period of mat
work In which Wilson only on:e
turned lose his post -breaking grid.
Iron tactics, but failed to connect.
It was only a matter of seven min
utes In the second fall before the
Russian found Wilson's crippled leg
snd re-applied the winning hold.
STATE FAIR HAS
8ALEM, Ore., Sept. 11. (AP) Suc
cess of a Labor Day opening and a
lower admission price for the Oregon
state fair waa demonstrated this
year, as between 160,000 and 188,000
had been admitted to the grounds
when the 3rd annual exposition elos
ed st 0 o'clock Sundsy evening.
This figure was 75.000 greater than
laat year, and greatly exceeded the
goal of 150.000 set by Director Max
Gehlhar.
Books will be kept open for some
time, but profits from the fair this
year were estimated by Gehlhar at
near $25,000, or 910,000 more then
In 1033. Gate receipts were estimated
a S35.000.
The free afternoon vaudeville pro
gram Sunday attracted 7,600 persons
to the grandstand, with more than
10,000 paying admission to the
grounds.
S
Walk upstairs and save 910. Bank
er's 'gray suiting, 921.60, made to
measure. Klein the Tailor.
McLeod
Use Mall Tribune want ads
McLEOD, Sept. 11. (6pL) Miss
Elisabeth Netherland of San Fran
cisco Is visiting her slater, Mrs. R. H.
Allworth.
Mrs. Elizabeth Harris returned to
Portland Saturday after spending a
month or so with her sister, Mrs. I
D. Hoag.
Sterling Dltsworth fell and cut his
head Friday, snd was taken to a Med.
ford doctor, who took several stitches.
E. D. Hoag and Mr. Rlno of McLeod
campground ware In Grants Pass Sat
urday. Miss Alice Mai In, acting home dem
onstration agent, met with the Mc
Leod extension unit Thursday after
noon at the McLeod dlnln groom. The
year'a program waa pltfhned and lead
era were selected to go -to Med ford for
training. A community fair was also
planned to be held at Mrs. E. L. Glass.
September 22. The next meeting will
be at Mrs. J. E. Peyton's, Thursday,
September 27. Locsl leaders will dem
onstrate buymanshlp.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Carpenter and
family were fishing in the Rogue and
Butte creek last week, and made fine
catches of cut-throat and trout.
. Billy Edmondson has been helping
Frank Netherland haul shingle bolts
to the mill this week.
Mrs. Jim Casey expects to leave
September 12 for Yschats, Ore., where
she will visit her sister. Mr. snd Mrs.
Lee Colllngwood will run their store
snd dining-room this winter.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Vincent. Mrs.
Ted Smith and children spent Sunday
with Clara Gordon.
Mrs. Fred Morgan Is taking care
of his mother's place In Med ford dur
ing the lstter's absence.
The Laurelhurst school board has
installed a new drinking fountain in
the school house.
The following were In Medford Sat
urday: Mrs. Colllngwood. Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Smith and children. W. D.
Coburn and children. Jim Rodgera
snd son Kenneth and Danny Ohrt.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L Olass and daugh
ter Lois snd Mr. McFarland were In
Medford Friday.
Bill Cadwalleder left for Washing
ton Wednesday,, where he will pick
apples for a few weeks.
MASSACHUSETTS CLAM
BEDS ARE RESEEDED
BOSTON (UP) Ra-aeedtng; of th
clam flats In most of tSie 64 commu
nities along tba Massachusetts coast
has Just been completed by the ma
rine bureau of the state division of
fisheries and game.
A crop of bivalves worth hundreda
of thousands of dollars ts expected to
result from the work.
PLAN NOW TO ATTEND THE GREATEST
CELEBRATION EVER. HELD IN
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
YREKA MINERS
GOLD RUSH
Friday Saturday Sunday
SEPT. 14-15-16
Au -ctnnujHMAj nnyioa AM Tfmo rtamnl.ncr Hall. Athletic
Field Meet, '49 Parade, Indian Attack on Pioneer Settle- fc
i tt t..:. onj Ti,ii.lrinr flnntAsts. Grand Mod- s,
mem, jiuise jvaviiig v......B , . ... T
em Ball, TrSp Shoot, Baseball Game California All fc
n . . r All fitami Vaimn Rtrant. p
stars vs. ssouinern uieguu , wu -
Stunts. Golf Course Open to All Visitors
, COME AND HELP US CELEBRATE 1
.. zi 1
F.W.Bartlett
Medford Furrier and
Taxidermist
IN NEW SHOP
20 South Central Avenue
Thank You!
The Mail Tribune is deeply appreciative of the gen
erous rosponse to 1934 's BARGAIN DAY campaign
. . . Old readers and many new ones availed them
selves of substantial savings during this event and
this paper wishes to thank them all!
Bargain Days Are Over!
The fact that Bargain Day subscription rates would
close Monday was emphasized throughout this cam
paign. Because of complications arising from
granting extension of time on Bargain Day rates,
the Mail Tribune finds it impossible to make excep.
tions this year. For this reason, regular subscription
rates are now in effect.
The Regular Yearly Rate Affords a Substantial
Saving Over the Monthly Rate of 60c in the
Course of a Year
By Carrier to Your Door
For One Year
Delivered By Mail
For One Year
Fall Season
clea:
RANGE
OF-
Ranges
Electric
USED and DEMONSTRATORS
Up to S90.00 Values, Priced for
Immediate Sale. Your Choice
of Several Sizes and Models.
$35.
Special Terms!
gop
DOWN . $ 1 so A Month
Every one of these ranges has been thoroughly
rebuilt and is guaranteed to be in excellent condi
tion. This special price and terms are only effective
for Uvs limited stock in this sale . . . FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED.
FREE WIRING SERVICE
.See These Ranges at Our Office
THE CALIFORNIA OREGON
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