Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 07, 1936, Page 10, Image 10

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRTBUXE. MEDKOKD, OREGON. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1936.
Indian Cagemen Here to Seek Revenge for Fall Football Defeat
PAOE TEN
TWO-GAME SERIES
OPENS TONIGHT ON
HI. SCHOOL FLOOR
Intra -mural Quints in Pre
liminary at 7 o'Clock
Main Contest Saturday
Will Start at 8:30 o'Clock
A Chemawa Indian chool bosket
bill squail. made up amioat entirely
of football players who participated
In the 33-0 football rout handed tnem
last year by the Medford nigh echotf.
arrived In the city lat night primed
to avenge that defeat.
The aquad la made up of nine men.
and Coaoh Julian L. Smith. They
arrived by bus last night and held
a light workout on the hlsh achool
J
Lhia very popular low-priced
Kentucky straight whiskey now
on sale at all State Liquor Stores
at these surprising prices. Order
by code number: '
rint .. i: c .m
llfllu '. 178 u si.oo
Oallom 178 ... 4 no
0WENSB0R0
A.
May Be Hit by Hurricane
Km Hollis (above), the Horrible Hoodlum from Little Rock, Arkansas,
will hnve some or the horrlbleness ground out of him Monday night at
the Armory wrestling arena If Wayne Long lives up to his reputation.
Long, who has gained H he title of "Kansas Hurricane," has blown through
his matches In southern California and has RHlned the reputation of hav
ing a splendid appetite for tough guys. It will be the first appearance
here for Long, the seventh for Holll.
floor this morning In preparation for
the first of a two-game series against
the Tifjera here tonight. The second
ganvi will be held Saturday night.
', To date the Indians have dropped
about half their games, losing to the
powerful Astoria squad and to Sa
lem, but taking decisive win over
Molalla and Woodburn. The players
themselves feel that they have a good
chance of dumping the Tigers Lf they
are "on," but admit that they hive
fallen Into some pretty deep slumps
this season.
Coach Bower man of Medford Indi
cated today that he will start his var
sity squad agalnat the warriors, shift
ing to bis Sophomore Shocks aa soon
an the opportunity present Itself. If
the score la fairly even, or If the
Shocks can more than hold their
own, they will remain most of the
game in order to gain experience.
Two Shocks players have shown rapid
Improvements. Grow and Wilson.
Wllaon, center on the football squad.
has Just entered the basketball wars
after convalescing from a broken col
lar bone received In football practice
Dickey, another football reserve from
the sophomore class, has also
strengthened the sophomore lineup,
Bo we rm an said, snd may play to
night. The main game tonight will start
at 8 o'clock, with a preliminary be
tween the two leading lntra-mural
teams to stsrt an hfcur earlier. The
Lowry Lavender Lollypops will play
the Harlem Truckers in this encounter.
-Tomorrow night the main game
will start at 8.30, with the prelim
inary to be furnished by Ray Hen
derson's Toy Bulldogs from Junior
high achool sgatnat an 8th grade
team from Prospect. Last year the
two teams split a two-game aeries.
The lineups, as announced, today,
are:
Med ford Cbemawa
Lewis F.. Kalama
VanDyke ...P... Archambeau
Hayes ....... C-.... Sandarvlile
Baker O Chrlstlnn
Lindley
, Roy Track
I
J'VILLE, 57-39
The Blue Raiders of Medford last
CLght swamped the Jacksonville
Townlea on the Jacksonville high
school floor, 67-39, running their Im
pressive string of vie to lie to 13, aa
compared to one defeat. The lone
set-back waa administered by the
Crescent City All-Stars several weeks
ago.
Hammack, Raider leap man, ran up
eight points in the first five min
utes, and extended his record on up
to 10 before the end of the game,
high point for both aquada. Ayera,
Jacksonville forward, and Tunnell,
oenter on the same squad, grabbed
12 points each.
The Raiders tangle with the CCC
Headquarters company tomorrow
afternoon at 3 o clock, at the Senior
high achool. They are maneuvering
for a game with the strong Grants
Pass Alt-Stars for next week.
Summary of last night's game:
- Raider Jacksonville
Ltunsn (ft) ,...F (..Hoffman (4)
Curtla (10) T Avers (13)
Hammack (19) ....C.-.M.Tmnell (13)
Swanson (8) G ....Arghave (1)
Sears (10).. G Card
E
PLAYER IS CLAIM
Wisconsin Trainer Says In
jured Man Doped Before
Game Coffee Spiked Be
tween Halves in Two Tilts
A RICH WHISKY
.'BONiEISJ
NEW LOW PRICE AND
25 LONGER IN WOOD
HERE'S a big break for whisky
buyers riper, smootherBot
toms Up! Famous Kentucky straight
sour-mash whisky now older, 2i
longer in wood, aged a minimum of
15 months, remarkably richer, yet
priced tocost you less! Enjoyit today I
K3
Vz PINT PC
Cod. No. .1 L
PINT 80c
Codi No. USO
QUART SliO
Codi No. 1SSA
Ut3
KENTUCKY STRAICHT WHISKY
BROWN-FORMANDcrCOMPANY
Write Tlie VmLandlnjham Company tor Illustrated nedpe
Booklet, Bfdeli Bld , Portland, Oregon
LOSE, 58-47
TO
MONMOUTH, Ore., Teb. 7. (API
The Southern Oregon Normal quin
tet from Aahland lost the first of
Ita two-game eerlea with the Oregon
normal quintet last night, fig to
47. The home five led at half-time,
38 to 34.
Hardy. Bona center, waa hlgn
acorer with 17 point. The team,
will meet, at Independence tonlcht.
By WINTHRUP LYMAV
United Press Htaff Corresiwndent
MADISON, Wis., Feb. 7. (UP)'
The fate of Clarence W. Bpeara a
Unlveralty of Wlaconaln football
,nvh .ii.talned another tolt to-
day when he waa accused of order
ing novocalne for an Injured player
and liquor for exhausted ones even
before repeal.
nllllim Fnllnn. rhllhbv. caUtlOUS.
good-natured trainer for all Wlacon
aln athletic teams, teatuiea oeioro
a regenta' Inveatlgatlon committee
that he was ordered by Bpeara to
admlnlater a pain killing narcotic,
novocalne, to George Deanovlch, 10
mlnutea before the game with Iowa
tn 1034.
Coffee Spiked.
Coffee "spiked" with liquor waa
given the Wisconsin team between
halves of the Minnesota game In
1932, and again In 1638 at Bpeara'
directions, Fallon testified.
v.iinn nv.r . man to talk for
the newspapers or the public, brought
an attcrney to tne Hearing j
m him from maklns a public
declaration. He preferred to submit
secretly an affidavit containing the
charges which he admitted were
"damaging to tne ewie ana
verelty." But the resents Insisted
on a complete revelation.
c- ..uonttno. Rat before the
stern faced regents anil talked quiet
ly with frequent reierencco -
affldavlt.
"I never drank liquor or smoked
in my lite." he announced. "I don't
,i.inlf mi man should have to be
doped to take part In a game."
Win on orange ,ui
. n-no- intne and
sugar was tried on the Badgers be
tween halvea of tne rwuuo
,.n D-niion aald. He did not
mention 'that the Purdue game was
the only conterence conrcoi, .
conaln won last year.
tv... nu n, weeicena. juot UD
fore the Northweatern game. Spears
..ii. niinn .nrt directed that the
team be given brandy and coffee
between naives.
hiv. anv more of this
orange Juice and eugar." quoted
Spears aa saying, ' ana aoo . ieb
fellow In the front omce unow
It."
Fallon said he did not know who
,t.,. o'aiifttn In fh front Office"
might e. but the regents deduced
It was Dr. Walter K. ueanweu, in
letlc director and eager 8pcars critic.
SAN J
AID .MHLE1ES
SAN JOSE, Caly Feb. 7. (AP)
Pressure brought to 1war by other
California schools will result In San
Jose Stat college abandoning Its pol
icy of providing free room and board
for "deserving athletes," Dr. T. W.
McQuarrle, president, said today.
Some California colleges severed
athletic relations with the Spartans
after they Inaugurated straightfor
ward "help the athlete" plan last
slimmer, Stanford recently announced
Ita severance with San Jose.
"To Viuch outside pressure snd the
effect on minor sports." waa respon
sible for abandoning the plan, Dr. Mc
Quarrle said.
San Jose will follow coast confer
ence rules In the future, he said. The
Spartans withdrew from the far-western
conference n year aim.
MoM THE PRICE
Made In America by an ago old
distiller with a splendid repu
tation for skill which conies
only from experience.
Many Orrnonlana
rhmwe It a I he
hi. key thrt pre
fer o all olhrr
hramlv
Look for the Red "6" on the Label
FANDOM
RANDOM
By Dick Applegate
ROSE BOWL PAYOFF GYP
TOLD BY OLD GRID STAR
The beat the Chemawa Indiana
could summon In the way of pic
turesque names this year, waa Red
Elk. Gone -are the Shoulder Blade
boys who cavorted on the courta for
so long against Medford. Gone also
la Running dog. There Isn't a single
man on the equad named Youiig-Man-Airaid-of-Hls-Horses.
or Heap-Blg-Buck
-Bltting-on-Horse-Wlth-Hla-Handa
- In - Hia -Pockets - In - a-Raln-Storm.
These peculiar names were a def
inite asset to the team. As long aa
they are Indians they shoulo have
Indian name and capitalize on them.
For Instance, It should be more In
teresting to watch a game In which
the Indian Combatants sounded like
Indiana, than lf the members are Juat
Jones, or Smith or Brown. Even if
the names were just assumed, aa
Joseph "Galloping Cayuse" Smith,
they would help.
Dude Chick, great wrestler who has
appeared here for several weeka
straight and waa one of the most
popular of favorites, packed up and
left the territory after hia last ap
pearance here, against Ken Holla.
Chick had already licked Hollis once,
getting him In his unmerciful lariat
spin and dumping him to the canvas
In Just six minutes. Five mlnutea
lbter Hollla waa still too woozy to
return, and Chick refused to grant
htm extra time. But the crowd, the
seconds, and Promoter Mack Llllard
asked him to relent and let Hollis
take a breathing spell. Chick finally
consented, with the result that he
lost the match. Disgruntled, he re
fused to appear here again.
That, of course, la hia own bu&l
ness. So waa his concession to re
turn for another round against Hollla
his own business. He didn't have to
lf he didn't want to, but hia willing
nesa to do so didn't hurt him any
with Medford fans, who feel, aa do
we, that he lost the fall on a fluke,
Hollis Jumping on him when he was
completely off balance. We hope to
see him revise hia earlier resolve to
stay away.
OAKLAND, Calif.. Feb. 7. ( AP)
The allegatlona of a "payoff" de
scribed aa "the. customary amount"
to University of Washington foot
ball players after the 1926 Rose
Bowl game , were made today by
George Wilson, one-time all-Amerr-can
halfback of the northern Insti
tution, f
At the same time, the star ball
carrier of more than a decade ago
reiterated charges made yesterday
that be had not been paid a prom
ised sum of more than 410,000 for
not turning professional Immediately
after the 1925 season.,
In a story copyrighted by the Oak-!
land Tribune, Wilson declared he '
and hn team mates were given sums
of money by Washington officials
after the 1926 New Tear'a day game
at Pasadena with Alabama.
"They gave us each 1125 and our
railroad tickets," he said. "That was
the customary amount. We were
given the cash and the tickets and
turned loose to go back to Seattle
by ourselves."
Wilson broke a silence of more
than ten years yesterday with a
statement he had been promised
remuneration for not accepting an
offer of $3500 per game for three
games aa a professional. He aald the
offer was contingent on his turning
pro after the 1925 season ended and
with this In mind had voted in the
player poll against Washington ac
cepting the Rcse Bowl Invitation.
Frankie Peck, San Franciscan now
wrestling In Los Angeles, has become
so attached to Medford that he Is
now wrestling as Frankie Peck of
Medford, Oregon. While he waa here,
he was continually whistling or sing-
Goes Round and
Ing "The Music
Round." Hia
voice wasn't so
hot, and very
likely Isn't yet.
but we can see
him going
around Los An
geles bawling
"Home sweet
Home." with
one eye fixed on ' f
the northbound
planes flying overhead.' His last let-to-
to Llllard, saying that he was
heading this way as soon aa poslble,
almost had tears In lt so thick wtlh
lonesomene.ss It was. That's not bal
lyhoo. The man actually loves the
place.
The students at the high school,
those who haven't been able to
make the regular basketball
squad, have started a league of
their own, supervised by the var
sity coaches, who drop over to
take a peek at the men In action,
In the hope that eventually there
will turn up a real star.
After a series of first-round con
tests, the second half of the tourney
got under way last night, with the
Senior Skunks playing the Pump and
Shovel five. The Happy Rabbits and
the Harlem Truckers were also mix
ing it.
The Sophomore Hot Shots domin
ated the Sh If less Skonks In the first
round, the Senior Skunks downed the
Senior Pop Outs, and the Pump and
Shovel gang thumped the Pop Eyes,
the Kooty Kubs cleaned the Sopho
more Cuba, and the Harlem Truckers
took the measure of the Happy Rab
bit. These elimination contests, lf they
can be called that, often engender a
lot of Interest, and It la not unusual
to uncover a
I WANNA
PLAY
TOO
brilliant bas
ket ball player
whom no one
has ever before
a u s p e cted of
being able to
move fast
enough to come
In out of a
monsoon. Bas
ketball players come In all shapes
and sizes, some tall and skinny and
some short and fat. If they want to
play, that's enough, and eventually
the system la going to give Medford
some goM men.
Si ffif
GARMISCH - PAR TBNKIROHEN,
Germany, Feb. 7. yp) Norway made
a clean sweep of both the men's and
women's Olympic downhill skiing
titles today, the final placings Indi
cated. Burger Ruud, crack all-around Norse
skier, topped the men's division while
the women were paced by Ntlsen Lalla
Schou, also of Norway.
Ruud, who soon will defend his
Olympic ski Jumping crown, covered
the hazardous 3,000-meter course in
4 mlnutea 47.4 seconds and took first
place in the unofficial figures by a
margin of more than four seconds
over Johann Pfnuer of Germany.
Pfnuer waa clocked in 4:51.8.
Dick Durrance of Dartmouth led
the American contingent as had been
expected, but did not place among
the leaders. Hia time was $:16.2.
BOWLING
The Mall Tribune bowlers, led by
Moore - with a criAhlng 5S4, last
night mowed down .the Brill Metal
five by a 4-0 score. Tonight the
Golden Glow team and Al Plche'e
outfit roll, while the Forest Sen-Ice
five la taking on the Studebaker
Champions.
Individual scores last night:
Mall Tribune.
Prultt 169 170 143 482
Murray 170 180 202 552
Moore 141 233 210 584
Saylor 219 159 170 648
Eads 210 146 169 825
Total - 909 888 894 3691
Brill Metal Works.
Hohlweg 143 193 160 496
W. Brill 154 116 159 429
Campbell 125 169 116 410
Harrison 95 100 131 326
Hoey ' 126 148 161 438
Handicap 117 117 117 851
Total 760 . R4.1 844 2447
SNOWMENTOTRY
Plans for a day of ski practice at
Crater Lake national park Sunday
will be announced at the weekly
meeting of the Rogue Snowmen to
be held In the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce at 7:30 tonight. 8am
Jennings, president, announced today.
Mr. Jennings emphasized that Sun
day will be given over only to the
practice of the various events that
usually comprise a winter carnival
program. Kenneth G. Denman will
be In charge of the practice events.
The practice. Mr. Jennings said, u
In preparation for a tournament to
be staged t the la'se resort t at
three weeka hence by the Rogue
Snowmen, the Sky Liners of Bcn4
and the Snow Clan of Klamath Falls.
Non-members .will be welcome to
Join the Snowmen In the practlc
events, Mr. Jennings said. The sports,
men will meet at the government
camp headquarters In the park at 11
o'clock Sunday morning, he stated.
Order Extradition
SALEM, Feb. 7. (JPi Governor
Martin authorized the ertradltlon to
day of Arthur James Bryant, wanted
at Los Anireles on a charge of fall.
Ing to provide for his children. He la
under arrest In Portland.
Use Mall Tribune ant ad.
iOIB
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Try a bottle you'll be delighted.
foH SO proof
AVAILABLE IN OREGON
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ffi VoL264 Nc4t 32 Pages" "TVT "mSI
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