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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1935)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORU. OREGON. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1935. PAGE THREE IS POLISHED BY BOWERMAN LADS Injuries Cut Strength of Locals Both Teams Ex pect to 'Shoot the Works' , Salem Sending Rooters r UU I BALL 11 THIS WEEK i (1834 Scores An UaWd In FsrantheiM) Eiut. Army (20) v. Yl (13).. Notre Dame (6) vs. Nsvy (10) . Dartmouth (10) vs. Harvard (0) ........ New Hampshire vs. Boston College.-. Michigan vs. Columbia... Princeton (45) vs. Cornell (0) Vermont (0) vs. Boston University (19).. Bowdoln (7) vs. Colby (12) Lebanon Valley ivs. Ford ham..- Colgate (20) vs. Holy Cross 7) North Carolina State va. Manhattan Georgetown (0) vs. New York University (0) Lafayette (CD vs. Penn (41) Penn State vs. Pit... : Brown (0) vs. Syracuse (33) Northwestern vs. Minnesota 1 Illinois vs. Iowa .'. ........ Wisconsin vs. Chicago Ohio State (33) vs. Indiana (0) Carnegie Tech (0) vs. Purdue (20) Oklahoma (0) vs. Nebraska (6) Washington vs. Michigan State Mississippi vs. Marquette . Missouri (0) vs. Iowa State (18) Creighton (12) vs. Grinnell (6) Mississippi State vs. Xavier, Kansas State (13) vs. Kansas (0) Southwest. Oklahoma A. is M. (0) vs. Tulsa (19) Ozarks (0) vs. Arkansas (13) Baylor (7) vs. Texas A. & M. (10) Rice (20) va. Texas ).. At two o'clerk tomorrow afternoon the curtain Koea ud on the hardest battle of the current season for the! Maine (12) vs. Bates (0) Medford Tigers when they meet the Salem aggregation, resuming an an nual warfare abandoned in 1930. The game is expected to be a test for the Inexperienced but clever Medford team which has plowed its way through Marshfield and Roseburg, running up 68 points while the op position was held scoreless. The Salem outfit has been unde feated this year, but Is considered out of the running for the state cham pionship because of a 13-13 tie with a strong Hlllsboro eleven a few weeks : ago. Equipped with two of the fastest : and best enda ever to play with Sa lem. ElHs and Carry, the capital city eleven is prepared to "shoot the works" and open a strong passing at tack against the locals. Injuries Dog Tigers The Medford team Is still dogged with Injuries, with Ray Offard. slat ed for a starting position at right tackle. In the hospital with & bad bone bruise on his shin. Lewis has a slipped hip, which will probably bother him, and Bob Ettlnger still Is having trouble with a sprained ankle received In the Marshfield game. Blair, big tackle, has a side and back injury to bother him, and may not get through the entire game. Coach Bill Bowerman, anticipating a hard game, held his men to dummy scrimmage for the past few nights In order to curb further Injuries. Lit tie Is known of the propensities of the Salem team here, other than that they are big and strong. As here, many of the Viking players are Inex perienced but the northern squad has more seasoned men to act as leavener. Interest High Interest at the High school Is In tense for the game, with a huge noise parade scheduled for 3 o'clock, which will wind through the downtown sec tor. Floats carrying all manner of weird nolse-maklng devices, the school band, and rooting sections will make up the parade, designed to arouse in terest of Medford fans. Warned of Salem's passing attack, the Tigers have been brushing up on their pass defense during the week. They have been given one new play which will be used, and Intend to open up with everything In the book In an attempt to get by Salem. Last week the locals passes failed to click against Marshfield, the only depart ment of the game In which Marsh field was more successful, so during the week their passes have been re vised and polished, and are expected to prove a much more lethal weapon tomorrow. A large crowd Is expected for the game, and a hardy bunch of Salem rooters have announced their lnten- ,.New Haven Baltimore ...Cambriage Boston New Tor Ithaca ....-..Boston unmswicjc New Yore ..Worcester ..New yore ..New Yore ..Phi lade ipnra -Piusourg ...Syracuse Lewis town Iowa City umcago ..Bioomington Lafayette Lincoln ...East Lansing .....MilwauKee M Ames Lawrence TUisa rayetteviue ..College Station Austin ;....Wlchlta Palls Southern Methodist vs. Hardin Simmons. South. Alabama (26) vs. Georgia (6) .................. Atnens Temple (28) vs. West Virginia (13) 1 , Morgantown Maryland (21) vs. Florida (0) . . Gainesville Georgia Tech (0) vs. North Carolina (26) - Chapel HiU Louisiana State (29) vs. Vanderbilt (0) , Nashville Sewanee (0) vs. Tulane (32): .. ......... New Orleans Centre (0) vs. Tennessee (32) ...Knoxvllie Virginia (17) vs. V. M. I. (13) ..Charlottesville FANDOM RANDOM By Dick Applegate Another of those 30-odd scores against Salem tomorrow? It's very doubtful, for Salem has never been a eat-up for anyone, and will probably give the Black Tornado a tetTlflc struggle. That they will eventually be subdued and even defeated by two or three touchdowns Is a pretty safe bet, or at least la considered so by those prognostic tors who haw seen the two teams work. Those fans who didn't see the Marshfield or Roseburg games should turn out for this one, to see a really fine Medford team In action. It la true that the green Medford team hasn't defeated any really great ball clubs, but that Is only because they haven't played any, and the game to morrow should be a thriller of the first class. Nary, chief of the TJ. 8. Testing Com pany's laboratory In the Merchandise Mart here, explained, because linen absorbs water more rapidly than cot ton. Thus when water Is placed on p. mixture cotton threads running one way, linen crosswise it forms an obisng spot Instead of tha circular one characteristic of pure linen. In all cotton the spot will be cir cular, too, but the water will remain on the surface a long time before be ing absorbed. Today Is the last day of the deer season, and many are the weary buck hunters, unsuccessful all year, who are in the hills today to try and get their limit before the restriction Is placed on them for another year. About two weeks ago deer were plentiful along the Butte Falls-Lake o the Woods road, in the vicinity of Mt. Pitt, but yesterday none were found by a party of hunters from here searching In the district. The cold weather had driven them U lower, with ocastonal flurries of snow along the sides of the .mountain. Washington & Lee (13) vs. V. P. I. (7) Texas Christian (0) 'vs. Centenary (13)........ Went. Southern California (2) vs. California (7) Stanford (24) vs. Washington (0) . Oregon (26) vs. U. C. L. A. (3) - Washington State (31) vs. Oregon State (0).... Montana (6) vs. Idaho (13). ........ Portland (6) vs. Santa Clara (12).. Biacksburg .... . a n revepor t ....Berkeley Seattle ..Los Angeles portiana Moscow Pacific College (14) vs. Nevada (0) New Mexico Aggies (0) vs. Arizona (0) ..... Washburn (0) .vs. Gonzaga (2) Rocky Mountain. Colorado State (9) vs. Colorado (27) Colorado Mines (0) vs. Utah State (37). Denver (0) vs. Utah (7) ... Brigrjam Young (0) vs. Wyoming (7) Greeley State (40) vs. Western State (0 )...... ......, Montana State (14) vs. Montana Mines (0) (N Denotes Night Game) .......San Frtncigco Reno ...... Tucson () Spokane .-..Bouiaer Logan - Salt Lake City tiMMHif La rami Gunnison Butte FAITH, - 10 ASHLAND, Oct. 25. (Spl.) South ern Oregon Normal meets Its third Northwest conference opponent at Roseburg Saturday night under the lights, when the SONS battle the strong Lin fie Id college teanu Comparative scores give the up state school a slight edge. Ltnfleld held Pacific to a scoreless tie, while the Badgers downed the SONS, 6-0. AlWV T,infl1ri rWtv Whitman A -ft tlon of coming to the city. The Salem whloh un upset the Cout confer ence university of Idaho eleven, 7-0. With those fact in mind. Coach team will arrive tonight, and leave Saturday evening after the game. The Medford game is the first of three hard games away from home for the Viking eleven, they being scheduled to meet Astoria at Astoria next week and Eugene, the team that defeated the big and last Klamath Falls outfit 6-0. at Eugene Nov.. 11. Coach Bowerman this morning re fused to comment on the possibility of a win over the Vikings, having only this to say: "We may win, and we may take a licking, but this much Is sure. Those kids are going out and fight, and they're not going to hold anything back for fear that Klamath Falls scouts are in the stands. We'll take care of Klamath after we play Salem. Don't get the Idea that Salem Is any weak sister. They aren't. His starting lineup will be: Fraley, right end; Blair, right tack le; Dickinson, right guard; Wilson, center; Baker, left guard; Santo, left tackle; Kunrman. left end: Ettlnger, quarter; Smith, right half: Lewis, left half; Sakralda, full back. NEW STYLES IRE CHINESE LENDERS SHANGHAI (UP) Chinese pawn brokers don't like foreign-style wo men's dresses. In fact, they would like to see such garb prohibited. The latest style sensation from New York. Hollywood or Parts may be enthusiastically received by young China, but the Shanghai "uncles" re gard them as Immoral. The pawnshop keepers at a meet ing strongly denounced imported dresses as "indecent" and requested the Chinese Chamber of Commerce to petition trie municipal government to ban them. At the conclusion of their request they added a note saying that If the eovernment would take such action it would save the pawnshops from in curring heavy losses, since foreign style dresses go out of style so rapidly that they are hard to dinpose of one or two seasons later. The pawnshop keepers recommended the regular type of Chinese dress for women. ina much a Its style i svll after two or three year. Phone ft43 well haul e ay your feusra. City Sanitary Service. 1 Jean Eberhart has sent his SONS through a lusty practice week, with pass defense coming In for most of the attention. Mighty Mite Max OiUnsky Is In fine shape and aching to po. Gil Insky waited through three tough football games for the chance to get a clear shot st pay dirt, and last week against Albany he did Just that. His 70-yard return of an Albany punt was one of the prettlent pieces of broken field running ever seen in Ashland, and his 38-yard canter In the fourth quarter proved that he can still carry the mall. So It will be GIllriAky again, Just as It has all year, who will carry the big offensive load for the SONS, and Eberhart is banking on the former Medford high flash to revenge the Llnfleld defeat of last year. The entire team is in good condl- TALENT APPROVES furious. Three, and possibly bands wilt appear. One of the outstanding dance bands of the Pacific coast will furnish music for by far the largest and most elab orate Armistice dance tn many years, which will be staged at the Oriental Gardens. The deer In that sector seem to be biological freaks, apparently being a bross between the muletall and the Columbia black tall. According to the best authorities, there aint no such animal. It supposedly being invpoa-1 slbel to cross breed the two varieties. But they have the main character istics of both, having the long Ro man nose of the muletall and the muletail's size. Only they don't have mule tails. The tails are block, as in the smaller variety. . . There Is a deer along the coast, In Curry county and the ocean counties in northern California, which la great ly similar to the Mt. Pitt oddities. The coast deer are called Pacific deer, and present the same characteristics. Whether they are a cross between the mules and the blacktatla none of the authorities are ready to admit, but neither will they admit that the Mt. Pitt specimens belong to the Pa cific flavor. It's all very confusing. We hasten to add that the freaks are Just as hard to hit as any,, and are Just as good to eat, once they are hit. TALENT, Oct 28. (Spl.) By an overwhelming majority, the voters of Talent this week authorised the city council to proceed with the construction of a modern sewer sys tem and disposal plant. Sixty-nve votes were cast. 60 for and 5 against the proposition. While the vote was somewhat light. , because the election hours found many citizens at work and unable to reach the polls, however, the vote Is cited as representing the opinion of the citizens as a whole. Interest In this matter has been keen ever since the council first considered It. Plans and spec! flea ttona are well under way and are being prepared by Engineer Hill of Medford and Frank Walker of Ash land. LEGIOlfPOSTPLANS BIG ARMISTICE' DAY FIRE IN HILLSIDE THE DALLES. Ore., Oct. 25. (AP) A subterranean trxu, probably started last July, burned today on a promontory hillside of the Columbia River gorge four miles west of here. Oolfers at The Dalles Country club perceived an odor like burning gar bage and Investigated. They discov ered smoke pouring from fissures in the basalt and lava rock. The underground fire, eating Its way through a stratum of coal-like substance, was believed to have four. : started In July when a brush fire swept 3.000 acres of land near the golf course. Nearly 60 years ago pioneers pros pecting for coal bored several tun nels into the hillside. Their efforts, however, were not rowarded by dis covery of a deposit suitable for fuel. IE SALES $466,866 SALEM. Oct. 25. (AP) From the high point reached In August of $508,571.45, liquor sales tn Septem ber dropped to $466,666.21, a report Issued today by the Oregon liquor control commission revealed. Despite the decrease September was third In volume of monthly sales for 1935. Total net earnings In September were 8168.338.98 bringing the total profit for the first nine months of 1035 to 1.287.B33.13. Liquor stores last month netted $93,128.98 and the license and revenue division $75,210. THE GRANGE Live Oak Grange. Live Oak Grange met October 31 with a record attendance. We were pleasantly surprised to have past worthy lecturer, Mrs. Olive Kleroey, with us again, and enjoyed hearing of her activities since leaving Rogue River. At the Grange conference held in Central Point, October 17, our Grange held record attendance there, theft being 24 members present, which con stituted 45 per cent of our member ship. We also placed third In tha officers seating drill held, all our officers were present. After regular order of business. In place of lecture hour a Hallowe'en party was held by the losers of tha attendance con teat. An enjoyable evening waa spent with recreational games and contests. Refreshments were served at a table tastefully dee orated In true Hallowe'en style. Next meeting, November 4, election of officers will be held for the en suing year. November 18 will be In itiation in first and second decrees for five new candidates. o WITH KLAMATH LADS ASHLAND. Oct. 33. (Spl.) Ash land high's first crucial game of the year will be played at the high school field Saturday when Les Avrit brings his huge Klamath' Falls aggregation here for a Southern Oregon confer ence battle. Defeated by Dunsmulr and tied by Grants Pass, whloh teams Klamath Falls handed decisive defeats. Coach Don Faber's Orizaslies will enter the game decided underdogs. Dunsmulr won from the Grizzlies. 13-12. while the Pelican defeated the same team, 19-0. And, while Ashland and O rants Pass battled to a scoreless tie, Klam ath Falls beat Grants Pass, 18-0. With the Pelicans rated about two touchdowns better, by comparative scores than the Grizzlies, Coach Don Faber has gambled on weakening his line to add more power to his back field. From left end he has Jerked the two-year veteran. Ken Shilling, and shoved him Into a halfback posi tion. And, in Shilling's old wing post he has stationed Don Oettllng, a sophomore tasting his first varsity competition. Medford eyes will be foeeuaed on the game, as the winner will be in dicated as the team the Red and Black must beat. tlon, and Eberhart and probably the whole squad will leave Ashland Sat urday morning for Roseburg. The badminton exhibition to be presented at the Senior high school gym on Friday, November 1, is to be a really momentous occasion for southern Oregon badminton enthusi asts, and presents a chance for every one to see the world's best players In action. Los Angeles or Seattle, the two strongholds of the sport on the coast, might well be proud of the af fair. The appearance of ess Willard, world champion, would make It out standing, but the fact that Mrs. Del Bark huff of Seattle, ranking coast player, will also be there, adds a lit tle to the Importance of the meet. The Medford Badminton club has as yet received no answer from Do reen Swayne of Victoria, B. C, on the proposal that she also appear, and It was announced today that if word Is not heard Immediately they will wire to southern California and ask Twllea Heath, one ot California's most promising stars, to appear In Miss Swayne'a place. Apparently they mean business In their attempt to make the exhibition the most striking one on the coast this year. Chairman Ca&s Wymore of the American Legion Armistice day com mittee reports great progress In the plans for a real old-fashioned Armis tice day celebration here. Col. W. H. Paine, In charge of the parade, has assurance that almost every patriotic and fraternal organization will be In the line of march. A large number of street stunts are being prepared so that the fun should be fast and The favored beer of A working man knows that his eye may be fooled, bnt his TASTE never! Unerringly he selects the hoppy tang not bitter, not sweet flavor of Blitz-Wcinhard as his standard for beer comparison. He knows that it's a natural beer with all the elements that make for robust health jind strength, blended so correctly and carefully, that there are never any "mornings after." From the working man came the Blitz-Weinhard slogan i "It kits that thirsty spot.l For Home Usa PINTS, QUARTS, BOTTLID V.-OAllON tonus Vfc-OAILON JUO Slil BLITZ-WEI N HARD BEER AT YOUR DEALER TN THIS IS 1 "XM 1 -"cr mB . f I a v ; f j 1 PIT FOR. A f- I I ' f 1 -1 KING BUT 1 f , ' -1 f real event ! J ::M J reasonable Avijs! Is ' I 60 J UN PRICE ! L ffAf Tn y vC?. there's a ff ' TH1 r - h back of VvVf J! Slf?f FLAVOR. V VP" WHIKY!i l ' jhN7wHERE!) ! x u SWi THE OLD J -v TIME 1 gqp I TEST FOR LINEN CHICAOO (UP) Grandma knewl When she wet her index finger, thrust it Into a fabric, and peered anxiously at the result, she wasn't Just being pertnlcklty. She was uti lizing what Is still even In this age of complex testing devices one of the most effective ways for determ ining whether material Is cotton or linen. The finger test Is effective. J. A. LYOfis QiujUtal fAuited BAtodtj TRY IT IN A HIGHBALL ...TRY IT STRAIGHT . 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If you've never enjoyed it, a drink will tell you why millions are celebrating. KD M(Ld eft fietitticku S KENTUCKY ' STRAIGHT WHISKY ' Omm.M BROWN-FORM AN Distillery COMPANY, f LOUISVILLE in KENTUCKY Since 1870 WriU Tht V&oL&ndingham Comsany lor Illiutrated Eecioe Booklet. Bedell Bid.. Portland. Oreaoa 7