Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 14, 1935, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE. MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1933.
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I
fit.
10 LEAGUE TOP AS
SEALS TAKE
RETURN ! Party Planned for Soos j
i -y 1
ny the ANfUM-lntrd prriw
San Francisco' Missions were back
at the top ol the pacific coast league
again today as the circuit's delicately
Adjusted balance of power flopped out
of equilibrium once more.
The Missions cinched the top spot
Jn fast time yesterday, whipping the
Oakland Oaks, 2 to 1, in an hour and
15 minutes behind the five-hit pitch
ing of Otto Nichols. Bill Ludolph
hurled tight ball for the losers, but
successive safeties In the sixth by
Almada. Wright and Outen spelled
his downfall.
Meanwhile the Loi Angeles Angels
blasted the San Francisco Seals off
their narrow ledge at the top. driving
Sam Gibson from the mound with
a five-run barrage In the eighth. An-1
other tally in the ninth clinched a
6-3 victory. j
The Sacramento Senators continued
their current winning streak with the 1
Seattle Indians In the victim's role, j
Johnny Fredericks' two daubles and j
a slnle drove In four runs for the ,
victors, who added two more for a '
6-3 win.
The Hollywood Stars pulled a story- !
book finish to beat the Portland i
Ducks 7 to 6. With two out In the
ninth, the tyln run on third and
hard-hitting Oil English up. Archie
Campbell whs called to the Hollywood
mound. He promptly struck out Eng
T
LOS ANOF.LES, Autf. 14.;p prof.
Hugh C. Wlllett, faculty athletic
rh.ilrman of the Pacific Coast con
ference dropped coaching staff mem
bers a long letter today, reminding
them that they must avoid:
1 Starting grid practice until af
ter Sept. 13.
3 publicly criticizing football of
ficials. 3 Officiating In professional
games.
A number of other things were said
too, Including a word to Institutions
which are not members of recognized
athletic groups which play const con
ference teams, bringing to their at
tention the fact that they are ex
pected to comply with the rule which
lirohlblts practice until after Sept.
13.
Wlllett's letter was sent out as a
reminder, since the fall semester soon
opens In several Pacific coast confer
ence schools,
Parker Trims Mako
In Casino Tennis
NEWPORT. R. I., Aug. 11. (AP)
Frank le Parker of Spring Lake,
N. J., runner-up In last year's New
port tennis tournament, today be
came the first casino seml-flnallst
by overwhelming Oene Mako of Los
Angeles. U. 8. Davis cup rookie,
6-1. 6-1, 6-1.
Roderick Mtnzel, broad shouldered
Czechoslovak inn star, moved Into
ciunrter finals match against Bryan
"Bitsy" Grant of Atlnntn. by de
feating Sam Lee of Seattle, 6-3, 6-4,
In a fourth rounder.
Fights Last Night
My lllf Asortntcil Press
CHICAOO Billy Brloborn. H9,
llockford, 111., outxjlnte1 Ernie Klrch
ner, lflO'4, oernmnjr (10.)
MIAMI BEACH. Flu. J,y Spel
1. 147, PlttRbursh, outpointed
fTnnklo Hughes. Hdij, Clinton. Ind..
(15).
HOUSTON. Tux. Clydo Clinstnln.
170. Okliihomn city, knocked out Kid
Bnladen, 171. Miami. Fla., (3).
UNSIGHTLY ROAD SIGNS
TO COME DOWN IN STATE
SALEM. Ore. (UP) A drive to
weed out Oregon's unsightly, weoth
erbenten highway signs has been
lftunrhrri by the Oregon State Motor
association, according to Ray Con
way, mnnngpr.
The association planned to work
with the state highway department,
concent rating on highway markers
while the department touched up In
teraction signs In cities. j
J V
Jr
1
V
' 1 j1
t v - si.
It ts lilnted among (lie wrest ling wise that Johnny Hons (above) Is
to lie honor gnient at a "reception" ot the armory Thursday night, at
which Pete Uch astro, Al KnruMck. Sum Let hers and Joe llnlika will
"pour." The story goes that they will "pour It on Johnny" In a bntlle
royal for his meanle tactics In recent matches. A wild-eyed scramble
for tickets Indicates the greatest throng ever to witness an athletic event
In the armory.
HOW THEY
STAND.
By the Associated Press
American
W
Detroit
New York
Chicago
Boston
Cleveland
Philadelphia
Washington .
St. Lotus
60
57
..... 85
63
44
45
34
Ctm.t
Missions
IXos Angeles .....
San Francisco
Portland .
OAkland
Seattle
Sacramento .
Hollywood
Pet.
.OM
.588
.543
.529
.505
.449
An
.337
Pet.
.599
.554
.654
ill
.500
.500
.307
.370
(No National games yejitordny).
Jmmw
TONIGHT
Radio Station KMED
7:30 P. M.
You will hear the heart tlr
rliiK real lllc ilrnnm of n litis
tmnit who 11111st chnoM ln-twn'ti
hit child's life and the lovt of
liU love!
Truly if is . . .
"The Great Decision"
The di'ct-lon Hill he Irft In vow.
IiiiihIh. rait viiu solve this hu
man prottlem?
WHAT WOULD YOU DO?
Phone
1300
for Towing or
Wrecker Service
Anywhere Anytime
Lewis Super Service
r 1 WL III lim HHIiP
1 iw vi 1 milsiiitr .
WE
II
BATTLE ROYAL
MEDFORD ARMORY
Pete Belcastro
Al Karasick
Sam Lethers
Johnny Soos
Joe Hubka
T1
4?
Seats on sale st IIHnHN S. I'hon nil : mini, m miom ky a
t ITI.V CO.. flume ? V4ti:TIM S ru t. Phone ?: i
Scc.es Yesterday
('oust League
Missions 3, Oakland 1.
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 2.
Sacramento fl, Seattle 3.
Hollywood 7, Porttland. 6.
American League
At Chicago fl, Boston 9.
At St. Louis l. Philadelphia 14.
At Detroit 3, Washington 4; 10 in
nings. At Cleveland 2.Vew York 8.
No National games scheduled.
Marlon O'Ncale pulls bodies out of
Charleston, S. C, waters as an avo
cation. Possessing the best grappling
outfit In town, he has recovered
bodies of nine white persons and
three negroes.
E
S. 0. S.
ill
Coach Bill Bowerman of the Med
ford high school Is giving his men
an early season Work-out In the
high school gym, deciding that the
rocky expanse In the rear of the
school, under process of conversion
Into a practice field, is too difficult
a place In which to cavort.
The players will hold their last
practice this week, most of them
having Job In the fruit harvest
which will force them to drop out.
In the mean time, before practice
starts In earnest In September, Bow
erman will be busy contacting play
ers and giving them a synopsis ot
his system so that they will be fa
miliar with the rules before the
real work starts.
In keeping with his previously
announced policy of keeping his eye
on the younger players In the lower
grades, he Is anxious to get In touch
with Junior high footballers as soon
as possible. He announced a list ot
those lads today. Including George
Gates, Don Houson, Bob Verblck.
Bob Wilson, Russel Warner, John
Prentice, Glen Howard and Bud Zam
erslaugh. These young men and an
other Junior high aspirants, he asks
to ct in touch with him at the
senior high school gym any after
noon between 3 and 4 :15 o'clock.
The side door on the south la open
at that time, he said.
At the practice sessions now, the
recruits are trying the Notre Dame
shift, double shifts, signals, short
and long pass technique, punting
and blocking, and other funda
mentals. ORGANIZED LABOR JOINS
SALES TAX OPPOSITION
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. Aug. 14.
(AP) Opponents of the sales tax had
orgnnlzed labor on their side today.
The executive council of the Amer
ican federation of Labor Instructed
President William Oreen of the fed
eration yesterday to urge affiliated
state federations to work for repeal
of the sales tax In any states which
have It.
Sport
SLANTS
h v Pan
Come-backs In sports seem to be
very much In order this year with
almost every branch boasting a top
notcher or two who has climbed the
hard road back to the heights.
To the Helen Wills Moodya. the
Braddocks, the Groves, the Dlscov
erys add the name of Ralph Flana
gan. Flanagan, the 17-year old hlh
school swlrrimer from Miami, Fla.,
took the mile and "880" champion
ships, at the national A. A. U. swim
ming meet In Detroit. He dethroned
Jack Medlca of Seattle In both events
to splash right back Into the Olym
pic picture.
In 1033 Flanagan scaled the
heights by winning the mile and
medley at the national champion
ships In Ohlesgo; plsxilnj second by
Inches In the "440" and "880 "
Some little difficulty arose be
tween Flanagan and his coach, Steve
Forsyth, following which the young
ster temporarily dropped out of the
swimming picture for 1934.
Last fall their differences vere
patched up and they celebrated the
reunion with a flock of new records.
Flanagan's showing at the indoor
championships In New York last win
ter was rather disappointing al
though at the time Forsyth declared
that his protege would not be at his
best until the outdoor meeting at De
troit. The mentor certainly called the
turn for Flanagan was at his peak
when he beat Medlca.
Going On Forever?
The Detroit meet produced a flock
of records in accordance with the
usual procedure when a few swim
ming stars are tossed Into a pool of
clear water.
nice clear water.
Mlaml-BUtmore pool, lasting only
three days. 27 American and world's
records were broken by a compara
tively small group of stars. Forty
three world's records were broken
last year by male swimmers In this
country alone; women accounted for
33 more.
It doesn't seem humanly possible
that swimmers can go on Improving
on their best previous efforts Indef
initely there must be so.:ie limit to
hurran endurance. What's the answer?
technique and more efficient strokes
being employed by our swimmers and
coaches. Secondly, the training
methods now being used put the
swimmers In more perfect physical
condition. Third, there Is a more
equal distribution of the energy that
has been gained by the Improved
technique, making possible perfect
breathing and relaxation and almost
entirely eliminating all lost motion
where so much energy is wasted.
It's The Teiiilijue
There are no super human beings
of today any more than there were In
the past. Therefore It la a certainty
that the swimmers of today must get
more efficiency our of their bodies
than did our former champions In or
der to top their records.
It Is very true that competition is
getting keener each year and that
makes It necessary for the swimmer
and the coach who hop to compote
in national and International circles
to strive for greater perfection.
Until the 1932 Olympic games tn
Los Angeles we In America looked on
the so-called American crawl stroke
as the fastest known means of pro
pelling a human body through the
water. It was a revelation to us when
we saw swimming strokes that dif
fered from our accepted Ideal yet
were good enough to beat our best
swimmers.
Those Olympic games awakened
American coaches to the realization
that there was much to be learned
by experimenting with their own
Ideas and many dlsoverles have re
sulted. There has been considerable
progress tn the past three years the
batch of new records bears that out
well enough. 1 1
AT
Bennett of Medford was elected presi
dent of the association and Mrs. R.
W. Roberts of Grants Pass secretary.
Mr. Bennett's resignation at the
close of the picnic automatically left
C. H. Demaray of Grants Pass as
president.
Several musical numbers were giv
en and all Joined In singing the Iowa
Corn Song.
Medford was represented by fifl peo
ple and several were present from Los
Angeles, Long Beach, Berkeley and
Pasadena.
Six people directly from Iowa were
Included In the group: Miss Gertrude
Marx, from Marshalltown; Mrs. Ches
ter Brown, Webster City: W. H. Mil
leson and daughter, Miss Helen, Wtn
terset, all being visitors In Grants
Pass, and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Chil
dress of Des Moines, who were stop
ping over Sunday while on a western
tour and sought a welcome among
home state people.
The picnic will be held in Grants
Pass again next year and the other
300 or more Iowans tn southern Ore
gon should be loyal and enjoy the
reunion also. Let us plan for a larger
crowd next year.
Grants Pass has an "Iowa club"
composed of 50 former Iowa ladiea.
who meet once each month lor a
social time, and these ladies had an .
active part In the plans for the day. j
Stentor was one of the Greeks be
fore Troy, whose "stentorian" voice
was as loud as that of 50 men.
Negro Executed
HUNTS VI LLE, Tex., Aug. 14. (AP)
John Trapper, Uvalde negro, was
executed today for slaying J. W. Hay
good, who sought with other officers
to arrest the killer in connection with
the slaying last February or the
negro's wife.
A bantam hen drove a quail hen
off her neat near Kinston, N. C, and
Is now mothering five baby quail.
A STRAIGHT
WHISKEY
Fifth $1.00
I Pint .65
No. 178-B
No. 178-0
AT
Contributed
On Sunday. August It, . former
Iowans of southern Oregon met Jn
Rlberside park. Grants Pass, for their
annual picnic.
Two hundred and twenty-nine reg
istered, representing 61 of Iowa's 99
counties. The largest number pres
ent from any one county was 17 from
Boone, with Marshall following sec-
The major factors that contribute !ond with 13.
to record-breaking performances are I A short business session followed
simple enough. First Is the Improved I the picnic dinner, during which N. S.
A f .Ml
1 nl M" ,n i find 1 .--nuir-r 1
i.'.- S ."vis
h 4 vTt ,
l ' ,17 M
"I Bought a DODGE Truck
ecause I Want
HYDRAULIC BRAKES
and Dodge zs the Only One of the
3 lowest-Priced Trucks That Has Them
.s.l,W , 1 ' i
dmlraittirs
Suppltes-
6 fl
UTS
SET3
Dodfr I la ton with 12 Stk body, 16 J' w. fc.. $740
isjir
P
p-.'-l
ii
ft
In order to prepare for the most thrilling men's
wear sale we have ever attempted, this store will
be closed all day Wednesday
Dunns' tne hours closed we will be busy displaying
merchandise, packing tables, racks and counters
high with bargains and putting a big sale tag on
everything in the place.
WATCH THIS PAPER THURS
DAY NIGHT For DOUBLE-PAGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THIS
MONEY-SAVING EVENT
IF you want real cconomv in Tour next low-priced truck,
buy ii on m pasis 01 Known, recogntzeo, nign-priceo
truck features you know will savt you money on gis oil
tires and upkeep. That is what Mr. Gerry did. Thou
sands havt done tt and that is why these asms thousands
ate switching to Dodge trucks. Priced down with the very
lowest, Dodgo trucks alone in the lowest price field give
such coMly ffutuiM as hydraulic brakes ... factory-installed
oil tiller ... 4 main bearings ... 4 piston tings,
instead of 3 . . . and roller -bearing universal joints. 18
hifih-priced features make Dodge the outstanding value
in the low-priced truck field today. Let your Dodge
dealer show them all to you . . . now!
DODQF DIVISION CHRYSLER MOTORS
"AND I ALSO GET AMAZING ECONOMY WITH
DODGE MORE -F0R-THE -MONEY FEATURES'
illiii
tm ' W 1 V - ' -.XT' . . sssss W I I -r' &s I
$595
Hydraulic Brakes Save
Ttraa DJte grnuinc
hrdrtull; hrmkes flif
rqukllird. thy tavc you
mony on Krre, on ad
Jiiatmcntt Evr truok
driver knows) hydriu
lie brcke work ler,
tmoother check SKiddlnf
and twerving.
Exhaust Valva Seat In
sert Save Caa Pio
neered b DoJge In the
lrw prieed iruek llrld'
Make vlvt neat tight;
haldcomprcivlon: save
resist pUtlnf and
hurntnc and rostpone
vfllre Tiniin thoutacde
of citra miles.
Roller-Bearing; Univer
sal loints -Only Dclce
among the three lowest
priced trucks givea ycu
roller-bearlPR unfversnls
fnnteu1 i(bnh(naB Roller
bearings require leas lu
bricstion ...miT tight. ,
check backlash . .prolong
truck Uie . . . save mooty.
Fullr1ostlnr Rear Axle
Savas Upkeep Dodge
rirncerd the lull-floating
axle tn lowrriced trucks
to live you rroney A Jull
flestlng rear sale IS more
efficient, safer . . , saves
repairs, eaves on upkeep
etpense. ads jrcaratolife
o your truck.
Cancelall engagements for Thursday night! Don't
let anything keep you away from the opening of
The Toggery's $25,000 Quick Disposal Sale.
Come down at twilight and go home by moonlight!
There will be bargains galore for all those who are
here when the doors open at seven, Thursday night.
A TOGGERY SALE is recognized by shrewd shop
pers as a real money saving event.
WANTED Fifteen experienced Clothing, Furn
ishings and Shoe Salesmen. Apply immediately
at The Toggery.
fig
m
i-4
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AIR-COOLED HOTEL
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Klmmlnf. Tfnnl.. (loll. Kinm. fr MovlM.
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Write L O. Rlchnnlmn RUhsrdon prtil(r.
Built Co. rallf.
nil in 11 imimIsIji
awMitr