rEDFOTCD MATL TRIBUNE. rEDFORD, OREGON". MONDAY, .SEPTEMBER 14, 1936. .
Hubka Hopes To Lift Cowboy's Grown In Armory Grapple Tonight
P 3E TWO'
EX-FOOTBALL ACE
FOR DEADLY SPIN
Supporting Card Pits Clever
Arab and Les Wolfe
Pat O'Brien and Black
smith Craig in Opener
Attendance at the weekly grunt
feat at the Armory, boosted steadily
through the paat tour wceka, la ex
pected to zoom again tonight with
Joe Hubka making a desperate bid to
life the crown from the head of Dude
Chick as southern Oregon's ace grap
pler, and with a powerful supporting
cast.
Hubka treked half way across the
continent for the chance at the big
cx-oowhand, and does not Intend to
LIVESTOCK
EXPOSITION
with
11
2 2
let the opportunity slip If he can
help himself. He has watched on
four succeftslve week - ends while
Chick splraled enemies Into a coma
with his airplane spin, and believes
he has the solution of the perlexlng
problem of thwarting centrifugal
force.
Prince Stllkl Mlhalakls, absent for
several months, returns to face the
task of putting the stinger on Les
Wolfe's Umber legs In the middle
event, If the Arabian succumbs to
Wolfe's flgure-4 hook scissors It wlLl
be his own fault, for he asked for the
assignment himself.
The opener sees Pat O'Brien, Irish
hot-head, pitted against Oeo. Craig,
the Tulsa Blacksmith, who last week
gave Chick a terrific rstuggle In the
main event. Chick aatd after the
battle that Craig was one of the
strongest men he ever met In the
ring.
The opening tussle goes on at 8:30,
with that match and the middle
main event under the Australian
ruins. The main go will be under
American law.
HORSE
SHOW
RODEO
d U. S. Army Hon a Show Team
PORTLAND, OREGON
October 3 fo 10
19 Shows In On 11 ocrst unasr oris
root txmolfe or ours orso Livestock,
Oofli, Poultry Per Slock. Wild Lite, land
Products Manufacture Products 4H
Cluo ana Smitn-Hugnss Vocational Edu
cation Worv alio Hons Snow indoor
RodeoanoU 3. Army Horse Show team.
LARGI PREMIUM LISTS
Lelivelt Through
As Angels Manager
LOS ANGELES, Sept. My (UP)
Jack Lelivelt, manager of the Los An
geles Pacific Coast league baseball
club for eight years, will not be at
the helm of the Angels next season
Robert A. Cronln, sports editor of the
Illustrated Dally News, will say today
According to Cronln, the AngeU'
manager's contract, which expired at
the close of the 1036 season this af
ternoon, will not be renewed and
Harry "Truck" Hannah, veteran catch
er, will succeed him as manager.
Lelivelt Is expected to head east for
the world series and try to get a Job
as a scout for one of the major league
clubs.
OWENS HOPES HEARING
WILL RESTORE STATUS
NEW YORK, Sept. M (AP) Jesse
Owens planned to return to Cleve
land today for a "hearing" which he
hoped would pave the way for the
restoration of his unimpaired ama
teur status and permit him to run
In the Caledonian games at the Yan
kee aUudlura next Thursday,
Indications were, however, thst the
Buckeye Bullet would have to re- I
main on the sidelines unless e lot of
other performers who are scheduled
to complete are willing to risk sus
TITLE CLINCHED
FOR BEAVERS BY
4 TO 3 THRILLER
Portland Outfit Divides
$2500 Pot Chance for
$7500 Share in Play
off Starting Tomorrow
(By the Associated Press)
Portland's hustling ball club was
92500 richer today and Its players
will battle for the lion's share of an
additional S7B00 ss flrst-dt vision clubs
tangle In the Shaughnessy plan play
off starting tomorrow.
The Beavers meet Seattle, which
finished fourth In the race, In Port
land tomorrow night, while Oakland
and San Diego, tied for second and
third, clash In Emeryville.
Portland clinched first place In the
season's standings Sunday by grab'
blng a 10-lnnlng 4-8 thriller from
Seattle, while the aroused San Fran
Cisco Seals dropped the Padres, 5-8.
San Diego's bid for first money
was lost when the Seals hammered
Howard Craghead opportunely, while
the Beavers were taking their fourth
win of the woek .from the Indians.
Oakland, with a chance to tie for
first If Portland lost, was deprived
of this opportunity when the Beavers
won, but the Oaks toppled Sacra
mento In a double header Just- the
same. The scores were 6-2, 12-4.
The second game In Portland was
called In the fourth because of rain,
but Its outcome means nothing In
the standings and will not be played.
The San Francisco Missions and Los
Angeles split their double header and
ended the season In a tie for fifth
and sixth places. The Seraphs won
the first, 7-4, end the Reds the
Ightcap, 4-3.
Winnera of four games In the first
round of the play-off will meet next
week to determine the official winner
of the Coast league pennant.
FOR PERSONAL LOANS OP ALL
KINDS W. B rhomas. 4A 8. Central
Crowned By Borah
GIANTS, CARDS DIVIDE
MIm Graves Fawcett was crowned
by Senator William E. Borah aa
queen of the Western Idaho fair
at Boiae. (Associated Press Photo)
THE GOLF TOURNEYS
PORTLAND, Sept. 14. ( API Golf
la filling an Important role In Port
land's sport calendar this week with
three major tournaments on top.
this morning 00 women divot-dlg-
gers teed off at Lake Oswego country
club In the Oregon Women's Golf as
sociation closed championship. Si
multaneously, play started at Tuala
tin Country club In the Oregon senior
men's tournament. The latter event
will lost through the week.
Tuesday, more than 20 northwest
professionals will battle for the north
west's three places In the Professional
Golfers" association national championship.
By Associated Press.
The Olants are breathing easier to
day. The worst Is over and they're
still 3 games In front of the Na
tional league pack.
In the "record breaking-eat" day of
tne season, if not of several years,
they met the challenge of their closest
rivals for the National league flag,
the St. Louis Cardinals, yesterday and
came through with an even split In
a doubleheader to maintain their
pace-setting margin.
The biggest crowd In National
league history, an overflow throng of
64,417, jammed the Polo Grounds to
the rafters to see the Giants and the
Cardinals.
The American league champion
New York Yankees walloped eight
homers in taking a doubleheader from
the Browns to bring their total for
the season to 175, setting a new major
league record for four-base blows and
for extra bases on long hits In one
season.
Young Bob Feller, the Cleveland
Indians' schoolboy sensation, fanned
17 Philadelphia athletic batters to
better Rube Waddell's American
league record for strikeouts In
game.
Portland Strike
Crisis Seen Near
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 14. (P
Several hundred foundry workers,
teamsters and mill workers remained
Idle today on three strike fronts In
Portland, but there were indications
at least one of the controversies
would reach a crisis soon.
Foundry orators advertised for men
to work. A. B. Bird, Iron workers
business agent, said picket lines
would be tightened. Adolph Fahnaeut.
secretary of the union, said he doubt
ed that sufficient skilled men to re
open many of the 13 closed plants
would be obtained.
No new development came In the
strike of teamsters and warehouse
men at the Blumauer-Frank whole
sale drug company. i
POPE PIUS CALLS
(Continued on Psge Ten.)
words themselves did not stumble.
The devout heard the plea for a
militant defense which, the pope ac
knowledged, would be "both difficult
and dangerous, for It Is only too easy
for the very -ardor and difficulty of
defense to go to an excess which Is
not wholly warranted."
' Lesson In Spain
Nevertheless, he said, the crisis in
Speln Is a "school in which the most
serious lesson Is being taught to Eu
rope and to the whole world to a
world now at last wholly stepped, en-
shared and threeatened by subversive
propaganda, and more especially to
a Europe battered and shaken to Its
very foundation.
"The tragic happenings In Spain
speak to Europe and the whole world
and proclaim once more to what ex
tent the very foundations of all or
der, all culture and all civilization
are being menaced."
A curious festu'e of the speech,
which was delivered In tlallan and
translated In English, Oerman, French
and Spanish, was the fact that the
holy father not once used the word
'communism," although Vatican
sources said the major portion of It
was directed against It.
He spoke of "forces" "forces of
subversion" and the like.
Once, It was believed the pontiff
had In mind his own gradually weak
ening physical forces when he said:
"We, ouraelf, are now ao near our day
of final reckoning."
The holy father said the Catholic
religion Is the "one real obstacle In
the way of those forces which have
already given a sample and measure
of themselves In subversive attacks of
every kind and order from Russia
to China, from Mexico to South
America."
74 DIE AS SLIDE
E
(Continued from page One.)
disaster In 1808 In , which 60 were
killed, waa swept another 800 feet
higher by the Immense wave.
The water pushed a mile Inland at
some points, destroying an eletrlclty
plant, sawmills, roads and bridges.
Most of the 'survivors In Bodal and
Nesdal only about 20 were saved,
and 13 of them were In serious con
dition lost all their possessions.
"The avalanche made a noise like
thunder," said one of those rescued.
"Nothing la left of my family or my
home everything is gone."
Hattle Reames White, teacher of
piano. High school credits given
Studio 320 Laurel. Phone 449-M.
Ose Mall Trtoune want ads
lakes' Foster Son
Again In S mas hup
BOSTON, Sept. 14. (UP) Police
said tonight that Robert H. Ickes, 21,
foster son of Secretary of Interior
Harold L- Ickes, was Involved in his
second automobile mishap within a
month Saturday night and that five
persons claimed to have been Injured
On August 25 young Ickes was ac
quitted In Winchester on a drunken
driving charge.
Last night's accident was said to
have occurred at a street Intersection
in Boston's south end. John F. Pter
ins, 21, of Rozbury, driver of the other
car, filed a report of the accident,
according to police.
HOW THEY?
CT4 V
(By tlie Associated Press)
National League
W. L.
New York 83 66
St. Louis 80 80
Chicago 80 63
Pittsburgh - ... 78 68
Cincinnati . 70 71
Boston .... 88 75
Brooklyn 59 81
.850
Philadelphia 40 01
Yesterday's Results
At New York. 8-3; St. Louis. -.
At Philadelphia, 3-4; Pittsburgh,
5-3.
At Brooklyn, 6-7; Chicago, 3-0.
At Boston, 1-6; Cincinnati, 2-1,
New York .,
Chicago -
Washington
Cleveland .
Detroit ...
Boston ...
American League
W.
. OS
. 76
, 74
74
. 74
72
, 61
, 40
Pet.
.660
.631
.525
.526
.531
.521
.367
.345
St. Louis
Phllidelphla 40 03
Yesterday's Results
At St. Louis, 7-1: New York, 10-18.
At Cleveland, 5-6; Philadelphia, 3-4.
At Detroit, 4; Boston, 7.
Chicago at Washington, two game,
postponed; rain.
Coast League
Portland ....
San Diego -Oaklnnd
..
Seattle -.
Mi5cln". ...
Los Angelea ..
San - Francisco
Sacramento .....
W.
. 96
. 95'
. 95
. 94
. 88
. 83 93
Pet.
.549
.540
540
.537
.500
.500
.473
369
65 111
Yesterday's Results
At Portland, 4, Seattle. 3; (second
game called fourth inning, rain).
At Sacramento, 3-4; Oakland. 6-12.
At San Francisco, 6-0; San Diego.
3-4.
At Los Angeles, 7-2; Missions, 4-4.
YOU'LL
The
change
You'll sore V
by Smoking
Dominos. And
you'll enjoy
the change to
real cigarette
mildness. Why
not make this
change TODAY?
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