Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 15, 1935, Page 2, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKU. OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1935
KENNASTON WIN
with cn of ttw greatest extoVblUons
of cold,' but futile, oours aver ssen
In th Armory ring. Paul Boesch. the
Brooklyn Adonis, laat night went
down to defeat before the torturing
of the huge oerman wrestler, Hans
Schroeder, titer finishing the middle
end last bout with & torn shoulder
end a useless rlsht arm.
The match was clean and feet, with
both men breaking clear on lust a
word from Referee Friable, but It
the same old story wlth'Schroe
der Once he seized an advantage
nothing could make him loose It, and
when early In the second fall Boesch
missed drop-kick and fell on his
shoulder, the muscles crumpled and
Ma arm waa useless. Taking Imme
diate advantage, Schroedcr clamped
on a murderous hammertoe on the
rm. pinning It up to the back
Bocsch's neck, end grimly clamping
It there through thick and thin, re
gardless of what Boesch did to extri
cate himself.
Obviously suffering horribly, Boesch
lashed about for a quarter of an hour,
trying to break the hold, and oca
slonally he would tear himself loose,
only to have the powerful Teuton
clamp-It on again. Tle fall ended
with a perfect silence from the large
gallery as Boesch. refusing to give In.
finally fainted with the pain.
Referee Friable wanted to award
the match to Schroeder them, but
Boesch refused to quit, and returned
for the final fall, favoring tho limp
arm. and vainly trying to drop-kick
tils opponent Into Insensibility, the
same wsy In which he took the first
fall m 20 minutes. The effort waa
useless, however, as Schroeder con
tinually tied him up with an attack
on the useless arm. The exhibition
of heartbreaking courage put on by
Boesch waa beautiful but availed
nothing as Schroeder finally pinned
Mm with a body press. An hour
later Boesch' entire arm was still
paralysed.
In the first half of the main event,
the Mad Marine, Bob Kennaston, took
the first and last falls from Al Ka
raslok with hla gruelling "cruolflx"
hold, tying the old master up in his
home-designed reverse headlock crab,
leaving him entirely helpless. Ken
naston eurprlsed everyone at the Arm
ory with hla clever wrestling, wt times
looking as good as some of the really
fine wrestlers he haa , defeated by
fouling tactics.
The Mnd Marine took the first fall
with a tiring arm-spread, with Ka
raalck thraahing about like a trout
on a line trying to get out of It, and
then plnnlng the befuddled grappler
' with hla "Gold Hill crab." In the
middle frame Karaslck took the fall
with a Boston crab after worrying
' Kennaston with vicious headlocka.
body slams and arm-bars.
Kennaston com back for the final
fall apparently Buffering from the
crab hold, but Karaslck was over
anxious, and In attempting to apply
another, waa thrown over Kennaston's
feet by those powerful legs, hitting
the sailcloth with his skull, making
It a simple matter for Kennaaton to
ealn apply hla. specialty, the pe
culiar crab,
In the opening bout. Jim Barnes
of Oakland, after promising an ap
pearance here, failed to show, and
little Toy Aho, "little giant" from
Finland, pinch hit In his place against.
Chief Thunderblrd, large and aggres
tve Indian. The Chief had little
trouble In trussing up Aho, and put
Mm' out of commission In eight min
utes, taking the only fall with a body
press,
Ullaxd announced that he will hare
Barnes suspended from coast wres
tling for his failure to appear.
Rooks Point For
Go With Gonzaga
-CORVALLIS. Ore., Oct. 15. (AP)
The big. bruising OreRon State
rollege Hooka who meet the aon
raps freshman football team In
Portland game Saturday night, have
born working hnrd and allowing
great spirit In their practices.
In their opening gnmo the Rooks
downed Southern Oregon Normal by
a threo-tourhdown margin.
Eye Injury Puts
Alustiza Off Grid
STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Cel..
Oct. 15. (AP) Prank Alustlisa,
chunky Basque backftrd star of tna
No More Shaving
Until Sons List
G rid iron Victory
ASHLAND, Oct. IS. (Sp J.) The
House of David haa no A ah land
branch, but Ash land 'haa a -whiskered
cult that will exist until
Southern Oregon Normal school
wins a football game.
The Sons gridiron art lata have
bound themselves under oath to
avoid the razor until they beat
somebody at football, and they're
hoping to enjoy a legal shave next
Saturday afternoon and attend the
Homecoming dance.
They play Albany college, now
tied for the U. 8. championship for
losses, and If the visitors break
their losing streak at the expense
of the Sons, the Utter will retire
to the hills where beards are In
style.
Penalty for pre-vlctcry shaving:
five minutes under a cold shower
with all clothes on, and a complete
head shave, to be administered by
the law-abiding or their elected
representatives.
IN
ASHLAND, (Spl.) The eyes of the
football nation will be focused on
Ashland next Saturday afternoon.
For It !a here that a world's record
may be broken the dubious record
of national champion loaer, carrying
with it the inmi.lt of the "worst team
In the world."
Next Saturday on the hl-?h school
field, It will be home-oomlng for
alttmnl of Southern Oregon -Normal
school and the "big" game for Jean
Eberhaxt'a SONS, but for poor little
Albany college. It wilt be only a final
desperate opportunity to escape the
gloomy title of America's "dub" team.
At present Albany Is In a triple tie
with Knox college of Gale shun-. 111.,
and Hobart college of Oeneva. N. T.
All three schools have lost 30 con
secutive football games, but It Is
only Albany which can crack that
dubious record. Knox's string of de-
feata was ended this year and Ho-
bart'a came to an end last season.
So It Is up to Albany whether foot
ball history will be made here next
Saturday, or whether the SONS of
Southern Oregon Normal will be sad
dened by the wo rat home-coming in
history which It certainly would be
If Albany should win the football
game. '
Albany Is coachod by Joey Mack,
former Oregon State baseball star.
STIFF DRILL
SATURDAY'S TILT
The Black Tornado of Medford
high school will meet the burly
Bonecrushers of Marahfleld at Van
Scoyoc field Saturday afternoon.
Coach Bowerman Is running his men
! through a stiff practice this week,
ironing out flaws that appeared In
the squad's crashing 32-0 victory
over Roseburg last week.
Although the coach was well
pleased with his men's showing, he
Is not entirely satisfied, and la pol
ishing both his offense and defense
to stop the hard charging v Marsh
field eleven. Particular stress was
being placed last night on stopping
end ru ns a nd reveses, the only
weapons that gained ,ny yardage
for Roseburg. Bowerman stated to
day that his team now has signals
for nearly all of the plays that
they will use during the entire year,
but that ' one play a week will be
given them for "emergency" use."
On the following week. on Octo
ber 26, The Tigers meet the strong
Salem high team here.
The complete schedule follows:
Oct. 10. Marahfleld, here.
Oct. 26" Salem, here.
Nov. a. Klamath Palls, there.
Nor. 11 Chemawa, here (Armis
tice day).
Nov. 16" Open.
Nov. 33 Grants Pass, there.
Nov. 28. Ashland, there (Thanks
giving day).
Saturday, November It), la still
open. Bowerman haa written to Eu-
gene In an effort to sign the pow
erful squad that last week defeated
Klamath Falls 60, but has had no
reply. He Is also negotiating for a
game with Corvallla or a Portland
school. Eureka and Chtco, both Cat- I
ifornla schools, have Indicated a de-
aire to play the Tornado on the j
toth.
Perry Packs Bags
For Foreign Play
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Oct. IB-
(AP) Fred Perry, the tennis king,
started packing his bags today to
sail for Australia and a temporary
separation from his bride, pretty
Helen Vinson of the screen.
Perry Is to play In the annual
Australian net championships and
Miss Vinson Is making a picture in
Hollywood, They plan a reunion in
London In February, where Mlsa
Vinson must return for work In an
English firm.
Stanford Cardinals for the last three
seasons, haa played his last foot
ball game, halted by a doctor's
warning that further playing might
cost him the sight of one eye.
Alustlea, whose home Is In Stock
ton, Cel., suffered an eye injury
during the Stanford-U. C. L. A.
game last Saturday.
LELIVELT WILL GUIDE
ANGELS EIGHTH YEAR
.LOS ANGELES, Oct. 15. (AP)
Jack LeltTclt will guide the destin
ies of Los Angeles' baseball Angels
for the eighth year next season.
Lellvelt has managed the Angels
to two Pacific coast league champ
ionships and saw his team into the
playoff this year.
FANDOM
AT
RANDOM
-By Dick Applegate
Next Saturday the SONS of Ash
land will send their football team
against Albany college in an effort
to run up Albany's record as co
champion losers of all time. Into
an Indisputable record of 28 straight
defeats. Two weeks ago Knox col
lege, also proudly boasting, a string
of 27 straight defeats, faltered and
won a game, stunning the entire
school and town of Galesburg., The
victory bell on the campus was
sadly tolled, after a new rope had
replaced the rotten one which broke
at the first tug, after years of In
activity., Saturday's game calls to mind the
sulphury comments on Knox's rec
ord, made last year by Henry Mc
Elmore, United Press staff Corres
pondent, The comment speaks for
Itself:
Knox plays Bradley at Galesburg
Saturday and Kncjf men throughout
the world await the outcome anx
iously. Not until the words "Knox blank
ed again" come In will the Knox
men who are tea-planters In Cey
lon, elephant trainers in Bombay
and vice presidents in New York,
b able to return to their tea
planting, elephant training and vlce
presidentlng with any degree of
aplomb.
For the Knox eleven Is In the
middle of a sensational losing streak.
Not since Princeton and Rutgers
played the first game of football
In 1869 has any team compiled such
an amazing record ' of invincible
futility. Last week the men of Knox !
Juggernauted their way to their i
25th consecutive defeat. The last:
spot on Knox's rocord was placed
there In- October of 1931 when the j
team fell into an unexplalnable !
slump and defeated Belolt T to 0.
Since then Knox has not won, tied
or even scored a point. s
Naturally there haa been a great
deal of talk concerning the Knox
"system," but, according to my
Mid-Western operative, there is no
Knox system. The team's brilliant ;
record la entirely dependent on man-j
power.
"Give our team the wrong sort
of players,' a Knox alumni here
told me. "and we won't lose a game
in 1A years. Zf Knox has any system
at all. It la the stress laid on the'
I center and guards. At Knox the
guards ana center must oe exireme-
ly fast on defense In order to pull
t out of the line and open a hole
. for the opposition's ball-carrier and
! interference, and alow and sluggish
on attack so as to clutter up any
wBBicssir-eueas on the part of bur
own backfleld men.
"I will admit," the old Knox man
continued, "that deception plays a
rather Important part with u. I
would say that much of our suc
cess in failing to get past our own
10-yard line In three games this
season waa due to the clever way
in which our backs handled triple
fumbles and our refusal to allow
the linemen to know which back
was carrying the ball or which way
he planned to run."
It la no secret, the old grad told
me, that the seven points scored
against Belolt In 1931 almost brought
about a sweeping coaching change.
"We were all pretty sore about
that victory," he said, "but calmed
down a btt when convinced it waa
a mistake." ,
It seems that the plsy which
scored the touchdown waa "No. 39,"
for many years Knox' most depend
able ground-loaer. Rival coaches haJ
seen it a hundred times, but never
could seem to devise a defense that
would prevent it 'costing Knox any
where from five to 60 yards. In the
Belolt game, as X got it, the quar
terback found himself In a tight
spot. With two more downs, he had
but 60 yards to go for a first down.
So he called old "No. 39," confident
It would save the situation.
Something went wrong. Some say
the left half stumbled and acci
dentally blocked an opponent; others
Insist the center forgot and made
a decent .pass from center. Whatever
the cause, the right half, who was
carrying the ball, suddenly found
himseu past the line of scrimmage
out in the open, a territory en
tirely strange to him. For the first
time during his playing days he was
loose, with no tacklcrs 'round his
neck. He grew panicky, and before
friendly hands could stop him had
run madly up the field for a touchdown.
Rumor has it that, shamed by the
thing he had done, the halfback
left school in a few days and is now
digging for peat In Ireland in an i
effort to forget.
SPECIAL DELIVERY SERVICE
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We are equipped to make quick delivery on
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Try our 'service on your next order for
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DRY WOOD
BODY FIR and OAK
? i.25 for
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ROYAL COAL
HOT and CLEAN
$14.00 per ton
DfllTsred within city limits.
E. F. SAMSON CO.
Phone 833.
229 N. Riverside
" tOCallON I
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At the corner of MUt Avenue and 'A
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Woodworkers everywhere recognize "Delta" Quality Motor
Driven Tools as the leaders in the field. There are definite
reasons for this. For years "Delta' has pioneered numerous
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curacy so neceswry for good
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Ai a result, although
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f!it!i to be used in real
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New 8-inch Circular Siw jive eon.
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TALiANS OCCUPY
TOWN, ETHIOPIANS
GETWARSUPPLIES
(Continued from Page Ona.)
It waa thought likely in London
that trade between England and Italy
would be at a standstill by the end of
the week.
Ethiopians said Halle Selsasle would
condemn hla aon-ln-law. Hall Selaa-
sle Ougsa, to death aa a, traitor If
reports that he had deserted to Mus
solini aa a possible puppet emperor
were true.
Ethiopians asserted that Mussolini
waa spending minions of lire In ef
forts to buy native overlords and gen
erals. A report that natives had revolted
at Go J Jam was denied by the Ethiop
ian government and it also was as
serted that many members of the
Jewish Pa las ha tribe were flocking to i
the Ethiopian colors. Tift tribe is i
averse to war, !
Pravda, official organ of the com
munist party at Moscow, announced
a program of "proletarian sanctions," i
strikes of port workers, sailors, train
men and factory workers all over the
world, to prevent any shipment to I
Italy for military use. j
Hull Hits War '
Secretary of State Hull In a radio i
forum called war an Moholete and I
bloodstained instrument" which can- ;
not cure economic His. Sir Samuel j
Ho are, British foreign secretary, in
the same forum, called for the lower- j
Ing of barriers to International tride ,
as necessary to the cause, of peace. j
Italy's ambafador to the United
States defended his country's cam-1
paign in Ethiopia as necessary to 8
needed economic expsnslon and "to
prevent the restless forces of anarchy '
and bolshevism exploiting the hard
ships of an economic life which only
the sound discipline of fascism has j
been able to make endurable."
Italy prepared to launch a mimic
war air attack on her iii Naples, the
port from which she dispatched most
of her troops to Africa.
An Ethiopian representative estab
lished headquarters at Liego. Belgium,
the center of that .country's arms
manufacturers, to take advantage of
the lifting of the arms embargo
against Ethiopia.
Bomb Ethiopian Railway
Dispatches to the Egyptian press re
ported concentrated bombing of
Ethiopia's only railway. One Egyptian
correspondent expected momentarily
a big attack by the Italian army along
the southern front.
A concentration of 180,000 Ethiop
ian warriors still was hurrying for
ward for what' may be the first great
battle of the undeclared war.
Italian reconnaissanc planes
swooped down on Harar, "Garden of
Ethiopia," and the populace fled to
the hills for safety. An official com
munique issued aHome said planes
bombed and dispersed Ethiopian
1 troops in camps south of MakaJe, tt
miles southeast of Aksum.
Italian correspondents reported at
Rome that planes surprised and broke
up an Ethiopian column of troops
marching under General Dedjazmatch
Nasalbu to Geriogubi. The reports
said the planes went on to bomb aa
ammunition dump near Garracher.
Stated Convocation of Cra
ter Lake Chapter No. 82, R.
A..M., Tuesday, Oct. 18 at
7:30 p. m. Work in P. M.
and M. E. M. degree. Vis
itors invited. O. O. HORNER, H. P.
GEO. ALDEN, Secy.
w Malta Commandery No, 4,
sJ- , K. T.. Masonic Temple,
Stated conclave, .Wednes
day evening, Oct. 18. Reu-
tine business and Rod Cross
degree. All Sir Knights courteously
invited. E- L. LENOX, Commander.
W. H. DAY, Recorder.
NOT1CB:
NEWTOWN GROWERS
We are filling large Export order on small Newtowns,
and we can use a few more at Satisfactory prices.
If there are any growers who have not as yet sold or
contracted their Newtowns to dealers here, please get
in touch with us immediately at our General Office,
North Central.
American Fruit Growers. Inc.
HERE'S THE
WJLKENS FAMILY
ALL BUT HARRY, JR.
Here I am showing the boys Mon
day's orders, Harry Jr. was over
to theatiU room when they took
this picture, but they got my son
WtUiam aU right, and the boy on
the steps is my son-in-law Tom.
I've been making whiskey 43
years and I'm passing on tome
boys all the teaching my own dad
gave me about distilling.
Harry E. Wilken, Sr.
Orders piling in! Looks like
folks are finding our family's
whiskey to their taste!
I usad to any to the boys wnlt till everybody
gots a taste of the Wilken Family Whiskey
won't their eyes Just pop when they find
how mild nd smooth a good whiskey can
be. And the boys would say yes, and won't
it be swell If it's sold at a real neighborly
price. Well, as maybe you've heard, it's all
fixed so as our family that is t sy, me
and the boys are puttinx up the Wilken
Family Whiskey in bottles with regular
labels and att. We bad a pretty good idea
folks were bound to go for it, being smooth
and extra tasty like it is but I givo you
my word there wasn't one of us thought
It was going to be like this. Why last
Monday's orders toted up to more cases
than I thought we'd be putting out in a
whole month. If any of those orders came
from you, I want . . ,
to thank you. pA-njAlfacKxffr,
gg
'
FJMiBf
BLENDED AND BOTTLED BY JOS. S. FINCH S CO., INC.,
SCHENLEY, PA.- DIVISION OF SCNENLEY PRODUCTS CO., INC.
PHONE 231
lxi a. a. ai a b ai2 l zt j : i n am ru m 'mi
EAST MAIN AND N. RIVERSIDE