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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1936)
PAGE TWO MTCDFORD IvT ATL TRIBUNK, MEDFORD OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1938. HUSKY TILT HIKES WEBFOOTS' HOPES BPGENB, Ore., Nov. 8. (AP) Ap nimntlv aiiRrMftfill In tha SeaSOD Inn, u.r.h fnr h1rf IftM nunfih. n Improved and conlldent Oregon tam nursed some well-founded hopes of tipping over win against O. O. L. A. at Portland Saturday and grabbing th first conference triumph of the schedule. The team that out-gained and out nttsH t.hn ennference-leodina Wash ington HuBklee returned to praotloe w new jcnowieoae ox us vwi One youngster, playing heretofore as a reserve, will go into tne varan feackfleld. He la Dave Gammon, the nnhnmarn trlole-threater. who re- nimii the veteran Dale Lesselle. No nthn "htnmi la llkelv In the back field unleas Coach "Prink" Calllaon decide the injured Tom Blackmail, fiiuhii" u rniuiv to work attain. Oregon'a defense ha been strong all year, but until the Huaky battle the Webfoots didn't know they could run, pass and punt with any degree of ef fectiveness. EARNS BEAVERS REST 0ORVALLI8. Ore., Nov. 8. (AP) finf-h f.nn nMnnl AimrPRSCri his ap preciation for the first major victory of the year oy giving nis uroguu state varsity a complete res. nri.il v,a VMcniiara snlnved a vaca tlon following the win over the aturdy Montana arsxiies, tn reserves om double duty. Coach fltlner said hts team would have a good ohanee to upset the undefeated Washington 6tat Cougars Saturday at Pullman If be can develop reinforcement!. When the first string returna to practice, It will work against Cougar plays brought back by Scout Jim Dlion. R. W. Gould, former well-known M1tord sportsman, now living in Brookings, telephoned to the Mall Tribune this noon to say the llihlnj in the Chctco river la now good and he wants hi fishermen ftlcnda In Medford to know It. "I flailed this morning with a group of friends," said he "end we got the limit. Tell the boys over there about It. Now la the time to eome over." INDIANS REVITALIZED BY DEFEAT OF UCLANS PALO ALTO, Calif, NOV. 3. (AP) With new hope through their 10 to 6 thumping of U. O. L. A, Stanford's Indiana pointed for th top today determined to knock the conference leading Washington Huskies from their high perch Saturday. Coach Claude Z. Tiny" Thorn alll. reporting all his players In good condition, promised the huskies "a rough afternoon." MAT RUFFIAN JACKSON DEFEATS WALTER ACHIU PORTLAND, Nov. 8 (AP) fin 11. dog-Jsckeon, ruffian of ths wrestling arena, gained two out of three falls from Walter Achlu, Chinese, In a main event match here. Whltey Wahlberg defeated Dark Be. eret In the wlndup. In the prelimi naries Jack Terry stopped Jack Lips comb and Bob Castle got a draw with Dick Trout. losing time (or Too Late to Clas. slf Ads la I SO p m I BOWLING Oeorge Eads continued to lead all Elks bowler last week, with an av erage of 187 for 12 games played, total of 2248 pins, Roy Pruitt was close behind with an average of 18S for Bine games played. Friday nlgbt the Knock Knockers knocked over the Bouth Paws 8-1, to assure themselves third place In team rating for the week. Individual scores for the week, team ratings, and Individual showings in Friday' gam are given: Name Games Total Average Points Eada Pruitt - Murray J. Gill Burroughs Lantls . L, Watson ..12 . 8 . 6 .. S .. fl ..12 ..12 2248 1078 1081 1530 1020 2028 3019 1044 1488 1022 1007 1804 1392 1841 1828 1364 482 1804 1702 882 1758 1753 1730 1302 1738 1281 1707 1281 1707 1898 1257 1642 1814 1596 1887 1186 1181 1183 1071 1431 187 188 177 171 170 ISO 168 162 162 160 180 168 Paake -..12 Kresse Orr - ..12 B. Sherwood . ,.12 j. V. Watson 12 Semon ,-. B 188 163 182 162 181 180 140 147 147 146 145 148 144 142 142 142 142 141 140 136 186 133 133 132 128 136 110 110 Points 10 10 8 a e Webster ..12 ..12 Rankin Btrang Martin . Sanderson Coleman Jerome Blorma Bowman Bullls ..12 ..12 6 ...12 ..12 -.12 9 -.12 Moffatt OlmscheUt Hall . a Alinderfer .12 12 12 12 a Ferguson Boon - Obye .. H. GUI York ...12 .12 ..J3 Fred et to Plche Wlnkie ... Klwood R. Duff . Janouch h. Duff . Holmes .....12 Rating Team Won Lost 10 11 W Wins 10 Knock Knockers ..10 Quack , a scrubs 0 Rangers 8 Klllowatts 8 Bouth Psws 0 10 0 Carbon Copies 8 11 6 Highest individual score for the weok goes to Pruitt with 808. Highest team score was chalked up by the Quacks with 2747. Friday gsmo: Knock Knockers L. Watson 187 188 Paake 1M 180 R. Webster ..180 140 204 164 158 80 110 168 630 477 476 881 801 604 2738 U Duff . Elwood .. Handicap ..190 .136 .188 132 146 166 831 TOTALS ......034 South Paws 118 147 High individual for the evening was L. Watson with 639 pin. The "Quacks" took all four points In their Slks club bowling match with the "We Wins" lsst night. Csptaln George Eada paced bis cohort with a total of 610 pins. The Raneer and Knock Knockers tangle tonight. Scores: TTe Wins." Holme Martin J.roms Boone Dummy score Handicap .. 117 04 105 124 158 116 184 149 173 147 130 95 184 , 137 167 . 155 87 184 Totals 837 781 677 3486 "Quarks." Eada 100 335 105 810 Dummy Score 117 04 130 341 Coleman 168 134 300 631 Kresse 105 103 . 138 816 R. Sherwood 87 116 85 308 137 898 Murray 166 173 177 605 Hemon '"a 136 105 500 Plche 126 138 184 3B0 Bowman 170 ' 151 147 488 Handicap ...153 163 153 460 TOTALS 60S 885 033 3711 H0THU9 DOES SO MUCK rOt? SO LITTLE , 143 143 143 420 . 820 008 000 2725 R08BBURO, Or., Nov. 8. (AP) Unusual weather conditions are giv ing umpqua river iports fishermen unprecedented (all fishing. Lack of rain, leaving th water clear, hat prolonged fly fishing, and fine catches of steel heads have been re ported from the North Umpqua dur ing the past few days. There Is a large run of salmon trout In the river and large catches era betnf made on bait, fly and spinner. Limit catches of sllverslde salmon are being reported from Tidewater, with a few stragglers being taken oy trollers as far upstream as Roseburg. The salmon, fishermen report, will not be caught tn any great numbers upstream until a rain brings fresh water to the stream and causes the run to start for the upper spawning beds. G. P. CLAIMANT OF GRANTS PASS, Nov. 8. (AP) O rant Pass high school today ap parently became a "left-twnded" football champion of the southern Oregon conference. Principal J. F. Bwlgart said he had been Informed by Med ford school of ficials that they were forfeiting all games so far played because a player had been found Ineligible. Medford two weeks ago crushed the local team 31 to 7. O runts Pans won both Its other conference games, from Klamath Pal!) which defeated Med ford Inst week and from Ashland which last wceK defeated Grants Pass la a non-conference game. WHITMAN PROVES POWER IN TRIMMING LINFIELD WALLA WALLA, Wash., Nov. 8 (Ap) If there has been any question of Whitman's championship bid in the northwest conference it was pretty definitely squelched with last night's 30 to 0 licking handed Llnfleld. The Missionaries, undefeated, nut held to a tie by College of Idaho, pushed over three touchdowns In a wild, fourth quarter scoring spurt. FLORIDA PAPERS WIN AD CONTRACT TAX TEST TALLAHASSEE, Pla., Nov. 8 (TV- Florida newspapers won a supreme court decision today exempting their advertising agreements from a state documentary excise tax. The court said the agreements were mere commercial conveniences' and did not fall within the limits of ths 1931 act which Imposed a tax of 10 cents from each 1100 Involved In the promissory notes, mortgages and other instruments. Cows Hravy Drinker SALEM. Ore (UP) A cow will drink 1 gallons of water dally during the five-month period from My un til September, according to th United 8tatoa department of agricul ture. At that consumption 200 cat tle would drink nearly an acre-foot 3 'J 6. 850 gallons of water In that time. Use Mall rrlbune wunt ids Handicap UMPQUA Weight 0740 lbs. (60 In. gauge). Pow. ered by "Caterpillar" 4-cyllnder val vein-head engine. Bore and stroke 4Vx 6jj" 1400 R.P.M. The ''Caterpillar" Diesel KD4 was designed to meet the demands for a modern up-to-the-minute tractor for use on farm and ranch, for logging or industry, for the lighter construction Jobs or road work. With its proven economy of operation, its well-known dependability, Its simplicity and versatility, this tractor brings "Caterpillar" per formance to a widor field of uses. HUBBARD-WRAY CO. New CCC Truck Signal Arm En u. r ' A 4 t 4 tf I I 1 i t ' f V " ? f 111 . r. n n, .. 'J-- A If jf -n AH Med ford district CCC trucks are being equipped with rear end signal devices to leaser, the hazard of rear-end collisions. Joe Manus, chief mechanic, designed the signal arm. In the group above are, left to right, Stanley Itamer, Warrant Officer Charles Jem beck, Halter Smith and Man us. SLIGHT MARGIN If! STATE OF (Continued from Page One.) polls were heard across the nation up to mid-afternoon. In one of the few Instances, an election officer was shot and critically wounded at Mc Roberts, in the eastern Kentucky mountains. From the metropolitan centers of New York, Chicago and elsewhere oame reports that heavy voting prom ised to shatter all records. The pres idential and vice-presidential nomi nees of both major parties all had voted well before noon, and even the weatherman held out an en- cournglng hand. Late reports told of snow and rain In some sections abnormal cold west of the Mississippi but mild weather In the east and led to a weather bureau statement that voters staying away from the polls would have to find some other excuse. Final Will Be Late. Although the voting started short ly after midnight, the fact that many polls will remain open until 11 p. m., eastorn standard, time, dimmed hops of anything conclusive until long after nightfall. In tiny Minefield, N. H.. where the polls were opened at 13.01 a. m., ths vote was: Alf M. Landon D. Franklin D. Roosevolt 3. Within ft few hours three other New England village pre cincts came In to make the first to tal of the 1030 election, Landon 82. Roosevelt 42. Quickly, however, five small Hous ton. Texas, precincts were reported giving Roosevelt 128 and Landon 21. Thus, before part of the nation wan awake, and hardly any part of it settled down for the day, the battle was on In earnest. The first fragments from New Eng land showed that President Roose velt had made tiny gains over the early bird votes cast for him In 1932. In New Ash ford, Mass., the count was 25 to 10 for Landon today, as against 24 to 8 for Herbert Hoover In 1032. In Tolland, Mass., however, Landon led 44 to ai. as against 39 to 22 for Hoover In 1032. With the Roosevelt forces elnlmln1? an unbroken front in the solid south these claims were not shaken by the first tiny community In that section to complete its count. Martin Sta tion, Ala., gave Roosevelt 11, Lan don 0. Campaign Whets Interest, But with 09,427,000 votere regis tered and the nation's interest whip ped up by a tenss, months-long cam paign that ended only last night with eleventh-hour appeals by President Roosevelt and Governor Landon, the experts warned that conclusive re turns may be much later than usual. They cited the mountainous stacks of ballots In prospect, and the fact that New York, which usually goes as the country goes and formerly has c leaned up its tally early, has ex tended the poll-closing time three hours, from 0 to 0 p. m., E. 8. T. Led by the presidential nominees, who arranged to cast their ballots early, the voters repaired to 122.000 polling places to aay whether the Roosevelt New Deal Is to have an other four years at the capital, or whether Governor Alf M. Landon and hla followers shall supplant It. But this was not all the sovereign citizens had to decide. At stake were the vice -presidency, the governorships In 33 states. 35 seats In the sensto. the control of the house of repre sentatives; thousands of lesser state office holders, and a large number or questions of state policy, submitted to the electorate In referenda. GUARDS AT POLLS LAS VBOAS. N. M.. Not. 9. (AP) Nearly 300 Nsttonal Guardsmen want cm duty today In normsll; Re publican San Miguel county, sailed out by orders of Democratic Ojtt nor Clyde Tlngley. The mllltU bore orders from Ad jutant Oeneral R. C. Charlton to maintain strict order and preserve pese at the polls." They were sta tioned at all but two polling places In the county. There was no report of violence. Soeclal deputy aherlffa wer warn ed to surrender their nns to the guardsmen. Roport from out.ylng precinct and In the city nd town of Las Veeas said that this wa done without disturbance. DIESEL RD4 TRACTOR FOR OPERATING ON DIESEL FUELS EARLY POLLS RUSH N RECORD BALLOT (Contlnuea from tage One.) line or mark ballots on walls or open tables. It was estimated around 25 per cent of Marlon county registrant indicated their preference before 11 a. m. Marshfleld reported the heaviest vote on record. Ten per cent of the registration voted the first hour and a half. More ballots were cast In the first hour at Klamath Falls than usually were turned In by noon. One thou sand voted in the first two hours and in some quarters a 75 per cent vote was predicted, compared with 45 per cent In 1033, and 26 per cent last spring. Twenty per cent of the registration appeared at the Grants Pass polls by 11 a. m. Local and county contests in Josephine county lent added im petus to the turn-out. At Rsseburg it was Indicated around 80 per cent of the Douglas county registration would vote. Vot ing at noon was far ahead of the corresponding time in previous elec tlon. "Polls were crowded at Eugene. Around 28,000 of Lane county's 32.873 registrants were expected to appear. Baker Officials Swamped. Baker and Pendleton In eastern Oregon also reported probably unpre cedented morning voting. Election ornclals at Baker were swamped. A 70 par cent vote was predicted. Pen dleton reported 10,000 out of 13,003 registrants probably would cast their ballots. The story was almost the same In scattered information from other parts of the state. About 20 per cent had voted In Burns by ll a. m., and forecasts ran as high as a 95 per cent vote. At least 6000 votes were expeated In Deachutes county, for the largest turn-out In history. Morning voting was heavy at Bend. . Oregon City reported an 80 per cent vote anticipated. Balloting -n. Union county reached approximately 33 per cent of the voter In some nrrclncts at noan. Lai Swing Frocks IN DULL CREPE 5 Swing Is the theme with full akirta flnrlng out to definite slim waist, sizes 13-30. Other Styles asst. . LITTLE HATS Are hit fash ions. As excit ing si any hats you have ever worn. Felts, Veliets. mi H feAV JTVS' JlwF ?K rih$M& - kW fc awrd &,iyn : mi I 6 - r'MS''''''"'wwy'ww''i! Grande reported an unusually neavy j morning sign-up and forecasts were for an 80 per cent county total. 4, Tn . mfnjvi r.itv at Oevlon there still exists a sacred Bo tree, over 2,- 000 years old. Delaware has only one company publishing dally newspapers. OLD AMERICAN BRAND STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY 18 Months Old OLD PINT nmonilis old m TO STRAIGHT 5 90 PROOF The American Ft KIN, ULINOI9 glP TA5Tg r Za vatn-JZ' sw The American Distilling Co Main Pacific Coast Offices. e Warm and Comfortable Faultlessly Tailored Tweeds and warm fleeces in swing-bach swaggers o? sleel;. bsltcd types. Sport- plaids. ch:cl:3 and Herringbones, i to 44. lv ll, i rfcr' vt a tot I YJ p -' V - n 3 Med ford's Only Auto Paint W Shop Giving SA'H Oreon Stamps El Daily's Auto Painting 32 South Bartletl A Real Good Whiskey at a low Price e 90 PROOF DismuMft Co 369 Pine St., San Pranclsc i.'. U'.v'. -.-S. .Vi.rt . c.-.- ' vT-' I, f t it r H.Jk.l'il TEST U "J 9 7 THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Weit Oth. Phone S 0 N. Riverside Phone 202 117 BOUTH CENTRAL TELEPHONE 888