MEDFORD MAIL TRTBUXE. MEPF()KD,OT?ECiOy, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1936
Peck and Chick Tangle in Top Match of All-Star Card Tonight
PAOE TWO
SONNENBERG ACES
WILL COLLIDE IN
SEi-FINAL CLASH
Wilson And Long Expeoted
To Enliven Evening
Pettygrove-Christy Pitted
In All - Meanie Opener.
Medford wrestling tan will have
the oport unity of seeing one of tbe
beat wresUIng show of the iwion to-
slgbt when trie, x-oowpunchlng Dude
Chick returns to the local wan to
tangle with San Franclsoo's Praakle
Peck on the main event oar4 at the
Armory, ' two sonnenbeig artists
claah Whan George "Wildcat" Wllara
meet Wayne Long In the middle
event, end Duke Petty irrove and Ted
Chrlaty let Ily In the all meanie fray
for the ourtaln ralaer. The flrat bout
etarta at 8:80.
The main event will be tbe flrat
appearance here for Chick alnce he
loat a match to Ken Kollla aome weeka
ego. After that match, which Holll
won on a fluke after Chick had al
ready defeated htm eaelly, the big
rodeo a tar announced that he would
never wreatle here again, but be haa
reconsidered that atatement.
In an earlier match between the
two combatenta, Chick won In the
third frame when he revolved Peck
In bis famed lariat apln, after re
covering from Peck's hefty beedlooka,
with which the middle fall waa won.
Peak le leary of choee aplna and In-
tende giving Oblck no opening tor
them tonight, he haa aald.
Wilson haa the edge In the betting
In his bout with Long, simply be
oause bla aonnenberga are more tell
ing than are the "Hurricane" ones.
Both depend lergely on the man
killing body thrusts for moat of their
falls, with Wilson ualng hli as a
coupe de grace, and Long employing
hit as an offensive tootle designed
to make hie other grips more effec
tive, Wilson's long experience On tbe
gridiron at tbe University of Wash
ington taught blm the balance and
driving power which he puts Into his
taokles.
Ted Christy, finger devouring and
heir pulling olovra from Los Angeles,
will attempt to take his seoond
straight victory when he meets Petty
grove, The Oellfornlan waa consid
ered too rough for the California ath
letic commission and they barred him
for to days for unnecessary rough
ness. Pettygrove, who has had tough
luok with bis matches here to date,
will turn "tough guy" himself, he has
Intimated, and attempt to clean
Chrlaty at his own game.
The new low fares will remain In
effect,
mendenhaTlishigh
with 49 blue rocks
IN SUNDAY SHOOTING
I. O. Msndsnhall trashed 40 clay
targets out of 60 shot at for high
gun In the practice shooting Sunday
morning at the Medford Oun club
Three ahootera, Charlie Monaiihen,
Jack Porter and Oeo. Jantaer all broke
48 to tie for second place. In Hit
doublea event Geo. Jantaer broke as
out of 14 for high with John Tomlln
taking seoond position with a II. The
handicap event resulted In T. B. Dan
iels placing flrat with 14 breaks out
of 9ft. Oeo. Jantaer plaoed second
with a 91.
Nest Sunday, March 1, marks the
opening shoot In ths annual Ors
gonlsn Telegraphic tournament. Ths
tournament, thla year, will eatand
over a period of eight weeks, the ten
high clubs st ths end of the period
to shoot for the oovtted Oregonisn
trophy at ths Oregon state shoot at
La Grsnrte In June.
The scores!
Total
as
S. G. Mendenhall ....
Charlie Monaglian
Jack Porter ....
Oeo. Jentzer
John Tomlln
H. Crolsant
Ed Lamport ..
Chss. W. Lemery
Oeo. w. Porter
T. I. Daniels
Hsrold Brown
Ilolsnd Hubbard
Win. young
Oene Orr
Bert Orr
Oeo. Kada
Hanaa ...
94
94
14
. 14
19
11
.... 14
19
10
90
90
99
99
19
IS
19
11
94
4
94
13
14
II
11
II
91
11
It
11
19
11
00G LICENSE PENALTY
DUE AFTER MARCH 1ST
The Humane society today Isaued
the following reminder to dog own
erst "There remains but ons week to
secure dg Iloenses without having to
pay a penalty. This state tea waa
due January 1 and becomes delin
quent March I. The tax Is 11 on
male and spayed femalea and a 1.60
p female dogs, payable at the county
clerk-a office."
Attend ilirtel Meeting Mrs. Kilt O
Weeterlund, manager of the Hotel
Holland, and Mr. and Mra. J. F. Hern
olds snd Mrs. M. P. Clemenaon of the
Hotel Jarkenn, returned yesterday
from s meeting of the Southern Ore
gon Hotel Men's aesnrlstlon held Bat.
urdey at the Rase hotel In Roseburg
Former Grid Star Still Tackles Hard
J w ' il ' ' j&miuKtim
fll1ill3iie(rasi
FANDOM
RANDOM
By Dick Applegate
We've just recently found out what
slslom rasing Is. Ons sees It posted
on announcements of coming winter
sport events, and occasionally . sees
where some skier washed out a tree
while attempting ' to run a slalom
course, but It was all areek to us
We thought It was some sort of arose
oountry race on skis, including up
and down hill work. We admit we're
pretty backwarda on thla sort of stuff,
but have discovered several who knew
as little about It aa ws did.
glalomers get up on top of
some peak or ridge, on their skit.
The object Is to get to the bottom
of the course alive, and If possible
vis an extremely har.nnlnua route
marked out by poles with flags
on them. The poles are set up
In twos and tours, side by side,
with three or four-foot lane be
tween them. If that were all
there wss In It, It would ge fairly
almple stuff, but that's only lite
beginning.
After starting down hill and nego
tiating the first wlckst, the skier has
to leap up In the air, plunk hla skit
down st right angles, and room off
In another direction to go tearing
through the next barriers. If he'e
atlll alive after this maneuver, and
baan't hit any rocks or treea or by
standers, he then has only to ac
complish about six more such death
traps, Including a tig-sag ootirae
around a lot more atakea planted In
1 etrslghl row, and he's through. He's
gone down the slalom course, and ex
hibited ths fact that hs haa little
regard for life or Umb.
Walking down such course In the
middle of summer time, firmly moor
ed to trees soove by a length of rope,
would bs sxcli-
!ng enough for
ui, but lots it
people do It on
snow, when ths
mercury la
freeslng solid.
A few Intrepid
dare-devlla d o
It with trees aa
the obntaolea
Inatesd of light stakes, but thla la
too hslr-ralslng an experience, to
watch, for ua to talk alnut It calmly.
We once sinaoked Into a eturdy
looking oek tree at 1 o'clock In the
morning, while ootnlng down the Alice
Hanley hill on a aled at breakneck
epeed. We don't know yet how the
tree got there. It sort of leaped over
In front of ua.
We don't know why we're telllnf,
you all this, unleea It'e because Mile
morning's UgHt loam of snow slsttsa
us on enhonl boy reminiscences. And
than, tire ribs ws broke thst nlsht
oet to burning us every time It get!
cold.
Hank PrlngU yesterday stepped
alongside I. Raymond Driver aa one
of the two Medford golfers to turn
In a hoie-i n -one on the new Number
10 hole at the Potui Valley links.
Playing with Clorge Roberts. Oenrge
Phythlen, T. Slater Johnston and 0.
S. New ha II, Prlngle teed off 1m,
Hll trio of orm pun Ions all reached
the grn with their te? shots, and
ns Prlngle wound up for his wallnp.
Jnhnftton remarked rasusll that one
would bring him tn If he could ur
his drive closer to the pin than any
one of the others.
Possibly Incensed at this light
treatment of hla prowess, Prlngla let
fly a haymaker, the ball sailed true
and plunked Into the cup. Aa Pro
MacPherson aald afterward, "That
waa close enough."
The Mall Trlbune'a Informant didn't
say how much of the Slater Johnston
money prlngle took over by the un
usual feat,
Driver singled the hole lest sum
mer. Brownsboro
BROWNSBOBO. Fteb. 84 (Spl.)
Lcland Dyatnger has returned to Ap
plegate and will make his home with
hla father.
W. R. Swain and H. W. Wright
Joined O. 8. Meyerv and Bill Olbson
at Medford recently and all went to
Foote creek to look at a mine.
The Craig family have moved from
the Tucker house Into the house on
the HoMler place, recently purchased
by Mr. Craig.
Mr. and Mrs. William Barker and
ohtldren, of Merrill were viMting witn
old friends here Sunday. They were
overnight gxteats at the Blasa home
Saturday night. On Sunday Mr. and
Mrs. Louie Blase celebrated their 13th
wedding anniversary with a dinner,
their guest being Bill Swain, Rolf
BlHoerstedt and the Barker family.
Dave Brown is a guest at the Jesse
(llass home.
Mrs. Jenae Glass spent the week
end at the Chlldreth home, In En git
Point.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Marshall spent
several days In Medford hutt week
v 11 ting with friends.
Rev, D. D. Randall, missionary, vis
ited at Sunday school last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvln Barrows meet
with ua every Sunday afternoon and
an Interesting Bible study la enjoyed
We wish more of the Brownsboro
people would attend our Sunday
school.
' '
BIRTHS
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Bond of 307 Bratty street, a girl
weighing eight pounds and eleven
mtncea at the Snored Heart hos
pital Sunday. Both mother and
riau alitor are dnlng nicely,
?4A
SAN FRANCISCO or PORTLAND
SAN rRANOISCOt one way $8.42; roundtrip $16.00
Travel while veu eleen. On this overnight run the 8HASTA brlnma
yoi Into San fTanrlero next mornlnn at Above fares txxxl In
roomy, steam-warmed coaches: also In Tourist Pullmans from
Ashland south, pine amsll berth charge.
PORTLAND: one way J9.B8; roundtrip $13.06
This orernlsht trip brines you Into Portland brliht and early nest
morning. 9:00 A M frre tood In Standard Pullmans, plus
berth charge Or rids In ccechea at atlll lower fare.
Nut time. It; the train!
Southern Pacific
4. C. (AHI.K. Aleut. Tel. II
Ed Klrtley, high school teacher anil
assistant football coach, wlM be at
the ringside at the Armory arena to
night, carrjlng a memento of George
"Wildcat" Wilson (above), flashy ex
Unlverslty of Washington all-America
n footballer. Back In the days
when Klrtley was prowling the grid
iron for Old Oregon, he played in a
game agirinst Wilson. On one oc
casion when Wilson came howling
orer tackle, Klrtley stepped In to stop
him, and the two met with a terrific
Impact. Klrtley stopped the goal
ward rush, but did so at the expense
of a broken shoulder, which still
bothers him. It Is this shocking,
tearing drive that is expected to give
Wilson the edge over Wayne Long
"Kansas Hurricane," when the two
tacklers tangle tonight.
OF GENERAL
AT WPA SPENDING
E
(Continued from page One.)
Malln Craig, army chle'f of staff,
by order ol the secretary of war.
When asked the reason for the
unexpected order, Craig ssld he nad
"no comment" on what he deacrlbed
aa a routine administrative proced
ure. The chief of staff aald -he had
no Immediate new assignment In
mind for Hngood. '
Vast Flow of Silver
In his testimony on the war de
partment appropriation bill, Hagood
urged that 6160.OOO.0OO be used
for army huualhg.
"At the present time," he ssld.
"there la a vast flow of allvcr
I won't say gold spreading out all
over the country like mud.
"It. will eoon dry up without
anything permanent to allow for It
I shall not be accused of profanity
when I say, 'For God's sake, put
some of It Into stone and steel'."
Hsgood said ha wss "not familiar
with the various pockets In whlcB
Uncle Bam keeps his money" but
understood that "there Is budget
money, which Is very hard to get',
there Is PWA money which Is not
ao hard to get: and then there 1
a vast quantity of WPA money
which la very easy to get for trifling
projecta but almost Impossible to
get for anything worth while."
Only Passes Around
The general said he celled WPA
funds 'stage money" because "you
can pase It around but you can
not uct anything out of It In the
end."
"It la harder for me to got five
cents to buy a lend pencil than to
get a thousand dollars to teach hob
bles to CCC boys." he testified. "Un
der WPA I can get 1200 to build
a gravel walk to the garden house
but I cannot get eio to repair s
'busted' steam pipe."
A native of Orangeburg. S. 0..
Hngood, who holds one of the most
distinguished service records In the
army, had been In command of the
elRhth corps area alnce October 4.
10.16.
DESPITE LOSS OF
VETERAN TALENT
(By the Associated Press.)
A formidable trio of basketball
teams blossomed this season at Ore
gon's three normal schools.
Eastern Oregon Normal won 10 of
lie first 16 games; Southern Oregon
Normal won 11 of 31, and Monmouth
Normal won 16 out of 28, and set a
mark of 13 consecutive wins In the
bargain.
Much better than expected was the
showing of Ooaoh Oene Eberhart's
SONS, despite the wholesale exodus
of transfers to University of Oregon.
The SONS took on the toughest teams
they could find, playing Oregon four
times, yet better bhan held their own
over the season.
They dropped all the Oregon games,
but split with Mount Angel and Wil
lamette, took one of four from Mon
mouth Normal, defeated Fresno State
twice and coursed victoriously over
a number of Independent.
Coach Bob Qulnn's Eastern Oregon
Normal team split games with the re
doubtable Whitman Missionaries, won
four from Godding college, lost to
Willamette, won two from Albany col
lege, took one of the four from Lewla- ,
ton Normal, and won two from North
west Nazarene.
The caliber of the opponents play
ed made Monmouth Normal's record
IS consecutive wins even more Im
pressive than similar records set In
1D29 and 1934. Coach Al Cox's men
defeated Fresno State, Willamette
Mount Angel college. Southern Ore
gon Normal and a number of strong
independents) before the winning
streak halted on the tall end of an
arduous road trip.
The season haa been a success for
each of the teams regardless of the
outcome of the few remaining games.
PICTURES REVEAL
LOS ANOE3LB8, Feo. 24. p) Mo
tion pictures showed today that Top
How, winner of 6104,600 In the Santa
Anita handicap, interfered with Time
Supply, Rosemont, Azucar and Whop
per, hie contenders In the furious
stretch drive for the richest priee of
the American turf.
Top Row interfered, to be sure,
but A. A. Baront's marvelous little
horse is the 1B36 champion of the
urf, with a little more than 10
months to go.
In one of the wildest races In hla-
tory, he won by a half length from
Time Supply, with Roeemont another
half length behind In third place.
Azucar, winner of the 9100,000 handi
cap In 1935, was still another half
length back In fourth position.
Jockey Tommy Luther on Time
Supply claimed a foul, but the stew
ards threw it out, poslbly because
there was so much bumping around
from the very start.
Stanford Golfer
Wins Coast Title
DEL MONTE. Calif., Ft-b. 24.
(UP) Bob Thompson, Stanford uni
versity, Sunday defeated curly hair
ed Mat Palaclo of the University of
San Francisco, one up on the 87th
bole, to win the Pacific coast inter
collegiate golfing :hampionshlp
It was a bitterly contested match
In which the lead cha)?ed hands fre
quently. Frank Drew Wins
Crater Ski Race
KLAMATH FALLS, Feb. 84. ifft
Frank Drew, University of Oregon
student, won the five mile feature
race at the Annie Creek Bkt meet Jn
Crater lake park Sunday. Drew rep
resented the Klamath Klansmen.
The Jump event was taken by Dick
Varnum of the Crater Lake club.
Editor Here Frank Jenkins, editor
of the Klamath Falls Evening News.
Mrs. Jenkins and their eon William
visited yesterday at the home of Mr
and Mrs. Ernest B. Oil trap at 86
Geneva street. They were en route
to Klamath Falls by motor oar from
Roseburg, where Mr. Jenkins engaged
in a business conference. They left
here for home last night.
Come in and see the
' New Shenandoah
Wood Burning
Brooder Stove
(Described In March Farm Journal)
Any kind of wood can be used in this brooder and one
filling will last for 24 hours. It is thermostatically con
trolled and maintains just the right temperature at all
times.
A BIG MONEY SAVER FOB YOU
VALLEY
26 W. Main.
For rent
ONE GLO
suitable for skeletons
IT'S THE ONE where you used to keep your family
skeletons. Not the kind referred to as "Uncle Will's un
fortunate weakness." The kind that haunted you with
reminders of unfortunate purchases . . .
Appliances bought on snap judgment. Gadgets that
didn't run. Dresses you snatched at the last moment
and never wore after the first. AH things that cost too
much and gave too little. Merchandise from question
able sources hastily, inconsiderately secured
"You have fewer of these sad mistakes to put away
than you used to. You are spending your money more
carefully nowadays. Hard times experience have
contributed their lessons. But above all others, one
factor has stood your constant guard.
The advertising in this newspaper protects you
against wasteful, unsatisfactory expenditures. Adver
tised products live up to their specifications and yours.
By reading the advertising not sometimes but
always carefully and critically you provide yourself
with a knowledge of values, prices and names that's
yours when you need it. Dispense with that upstairs
closel. Buy by name in 1936. You'll collect no buying
blunders that way!
W. S. C. LAST HOPE
TO HALT HUSKIES
MARCH TO TITLE
(By Associated Press.)
To a pair of sbarpshootlng Wash
ington State forwards will fall the
defensive task tonight of stopping
the northern division basketball
championship rush of the Washing
ton Huskies.
Defeated only once In 13 contests,
the Huskies open a two-game series
with the Cougars at Pullman. Vic
tory In both games will cinch the title
for Washington.
The Huskies went over from Mos
cow, where they dropped their first
game of the season to Idaho, 40-33,
but came back Saturday night for a
52-88 vletory.
Oregon State kept within mathe
matical reach of the Huskies in the
conference race by defeating Oregon
Saturday night, 28-26. Oregon State
and the Huskies will end their sea
son In two games at Seattle. A Wash
ington State victory tonight or to
morrow would make a championship
series out of the Oregon State-Washington
games If O. S. C. can hurdle
Oregon again Friday night.
The standings:
Pts.
Pts. Agst
484 368
431 360
374 413
374 413
283 625
W.
Pet.
.917
.602
.363
.363
.154
Washington 11
Ore. State 9
Oregon .. 4
W. S. C 4
Idaho 2
FUEL CO.
Tel. 76
SET
KEEPING YOU
AWAKE
NIGHTS
9
"Bill-ltis" is that serious men
lal trouble most oi us develop
when we're struggling to pay
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Are you paying a dollar or
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we lend money for getting
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ly and courteously at rea
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for security the things that
nearly every person or fam
ily possesses.
It doesn't cost a cent to talk
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for free information.
Oregon-Washington
Mortgage Company
eS S. Central License No. 8-157
W. E. Thomas, Mgr.