4
PA 013 TWO
MEDFORD MATL TRTBUNE, MEDFORD, QHEflON. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1937.
Bobby Chick and Jimmy.Lott Grapple Main Armory Event Tonight
MEAN SM0L1NSKI
MEETS STRELICH
IN MIDDLE MATCH
Polish Palooka Back to
Whet Hate of Mat Fans-
Big Ole Olson and Jarbo
Billed for Opening Setto
' Tt'i Jimmy Lott verstii Bobby
Chick In the main event of Promoter
Mack Llllard's weekly grapple pro
gram at the Med ford armory tonight,
but It scorns to be the middle brawl
between Joe SmoHnakl, Polish Pa
look, end big Steve Btrellch of
Hollywood that ha the rail bird al
reedy talking to themaelvee.
Admitting that the Lott-Chlck em
broifllo will undoubtedly prove of
main event calibre, the loortl phllberta
are ailll looking toward that Brno-llnnkt-Strellch
go to provide moat of
the (I reworka. A wording to the post
performance! of Bmollnekl, they have
something there.
Fnm llnte film
Smollniikl, guy with the dlepoal
tlon of a mad bulldog and who
sltKhtly reeemblei one, returna to the
loctil arena after eeveral months' ab
entice, in Joe'a lent stay here, he
made himself bo thoroughly ha tod
that many fans wondered whether
he would ever be allowed to return
However. Mack LI Hard, braving the
wrath of the local boxing commlah
'and plenty of ouatomera who like
their grappling on the up and up,
went out end algned Bmoltnakl, arm
here he la or will be, tonight.
Although the Pol In h Palooka la
one of the tougheat ouatomera to
ever appear In southern Oregon, be
la obvlouily up against Another tough
baby In Btrellch, who doei movie
bualneaa on the aide when he Isn't
whipping wreatlera with nla highly-
educated lega. In two appearance
hero, Btrollch hoa proved ho can take
care of btmaelf,
Chlrk'a Farewell
Tonight will probably be Bobby
Chlck'a final showing In Medford
this year. The ex-llght heavyweight
champion figures on traveling east
after hie Klamath Faua appearance
tomorrow evening. His opponent.
Jimmy Lott, returna to Medford after
over a year's absence, and reports
are to the effect that tha former
University of Alabama flash la even
better than he formerly was, which
was good enough. Lott la Inclined
to turn villainous when the going
sets torrid.
Opening the oard'wUl be Bailor Ole
Olaon and Bio Jarbo, the two who
taged a great match loat week. Ol
eon won that by turning dirty when
Jarbo applied too much grappling
pleasure.
SPOKANE PUCKSTERS
ENJOY LEAGUE LEAD
BPOKANB. Nov. lfl. (AP) A 1 to
0 vlotory laat night over the Seattle
Ba hawks in a fast game gave the
ftpokane Clippers a first pUce berth
In the Pacific coast hockey league
race today.
The Cllpera reglatered their second
victory In as many starts when Con-
In Farewell
i 1 )
)
T It ;
m
BEARS
CLASH
FOR BIG STAKES
Traditional Enemies Neck
and Neck Down Confer-,
ence Stretch Game Ex
pected Bring Bowl Prize
Malting hi. rurewell Mr (Hard in
prarnnra or the year tonight at the
Armory, nohhy Chirk (above), mar
ter of tha airplane spin, tanglea wltb
Jlniniy Lott, former University or
Aliiliunia roolliall etar, In the main
event. Chirk If uiHlrtaitrt to date.
and will brnit all hi. error! toward
krrpltif that record clear.
DEAD SHOT HULEN
Billy Hulen, Mall Tribune sports
writer, won the prtae turkey put up
for the newspaper and radio men
by the Medford Gun club at the
club's first turkey shoot of the ea
son, Bunday morning. Two other
Tribune newsmen took second end
third prises, fat hens, for their per
formance.
Despite unfavorable weather a
Urge number of shooters and spec
tators were on hand and no leu
than twenty turkeys beMde many
other prlaea wore won by the par
ticipants, in a special nkeet event
Ron DeVors won a tine turkey. Fol
lowing Is a list of turkey winners:
Harry Wilson, Ray Glascock, Bert
Til iy, Roland Hubbard (3), Mrs.
Harry Wilson, Clarence Eada (K),
Tom llodaon, Luclen Smith, Dr. J. O.
Coble, a rover Corum, Dr. O. W.
Lemery, Ron DeVore, H. U. Mitchell,
Jim Moore (3), S. B. Brayton, Oeorge
Porter, Jack Porter.
Several more turkey shoots are
planned for .the holiday season, neat
one being scheduled for December o
By RtShEIX A. NKVVLANO
BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. lft. (AP)
Far-western pigskin preview and re
view:
Forty-five years sgo two college
football teams, their players finger
ing mustaches and strutting In Isced
Jackets, lined up on a Ban Francisco
gridiron for a game. It opened tne
athletic rivalry between University
of California and Stanford..
They called it "the big game" lor
no other reason than that It was
the most Important clash of
otherwise skimpy playing season,
Pigskin classics, many heavily
steeped In tradition, have sprung up
In the far west since that memor
able day In 1893. To Callfornlans and
(Stanford, however, the yearly strug
gle always wltl remain as "the Dig
game." Zt has long since moved to
the csmpuses of the two trunitu
tione.
Rent Title Rare.
They meet next Saturday at Palo
Alto. This season It will be the big
game In fact as well aa fancy. 1'ho
quirks of a schedule filled with up
sets brings the two teama down the
home stretoh In a real championship
run.
It will either decide the coast con
ference title or knot It Into a per
fect deadlock. From the engagement
will emerge the western Rose Bowl
nominee for the New Year's day bat
tl at Pasadena. The 1937 encounter
la for big stakes, a slice of Import
ant money and a chance to further
national prestige against the best
available non-far western opponent
January 1.
California's Boarn, piecing togotner
their moat lmprtMslve season In many
a year, round Into , the conference
chert u le finale winner of five games,
undefeated and tied once.
Ht an ford In and Out
Stanford, ragged In earlier play,
unpredictable performer from week
to week and beaten In and out of
the conference, checks In with four
league victories, one loss and one
tie.
Lucky to get a scoreless tie wltn
Washington the week before Cali
fornia found Its punch again last
Saturday to whip Oregon, 36 to 0.
Stanford, meanwhile, clung to the
contender's role by crushing Wash
ington State, 33 to 0. four points
less than California chalked up
against the same team six weeks ago.
Facts and figures point to a Call
form victory over Its oldest col
legiate rival. The Dears, on their
record, rightfully rank as favorites.
Stanford could provide the greatest
upset of the year by winning.
Washington and Oregon meet at
Seattle and Oregon State and Wash
ington State come together at Cor
vallls In other conference games Sat
urday. Other Important contests pit
the University pf California at Cos
Angeles Bruins against Southern
Methodist, at Los Angeles and Mon
tana against Idaho at Moscow.
Coast conference standings:
Op
W. L. T. Pta Pta.
California 5 0 1 134 at
Stanford 4 1 1 81 37
Oregon State 3 1 ft 40 40
Washington 9 3 3 50 36
Oregon 3 4 0 44 1U
Bo. California 1 S 3 AS (JO
Wash State 1 3 3 10 07
U. C. L. A. w 14 1 54 m
BOWLING
Sport
Graphs
Billy Hnlen Bayi:
Tigers Started
With Discovery
Fowler Stoppable-
City league bowling action at the
Smokehouse yeaterday saw Provost or
Aehland and Plche each take two
polnta and Economy win rrom the
8tnndarda, 3-1. Scores rollow:
llrhr
Holllweg 143
Al Plche la
Newland 103
Slma 148
Stewart .... 181
147
133
117
138
169
463
457
440
415
403
FT7
i t i
lllr Rnlea.
Totala 780 704 703 3266
Provost
Fortmlller ... 1S7 117 163 416
O'Connell 116 130 146 303
Sherman 08 117 143 366
Erwln 140 185 160 485
Handicap 84 84 84 252
Totals .'. 671 757 818 3344
Bconniny
Ovenneyer 167 163
Oreen - - 88 208
Carley 133 161
Mccormick 160 134
Da vies 306 303
Handicap 16 16
Totala 760 874
Rtanilard
Marshall 116 131
Denchler
Reltsma .
Clark
Walsh ..
Totals .
. 304
163
183
148
187
130
130
168
308
134
115
148
170
16
183
136
150
106
151
What waa the turning point In that
Medtord-Aahland Armistice day foot
ball battle, the one most Important
occurrence or combination of occur
r n o a a that
obanged the
B 1 a e k Tornado
from Just anottv
er ball team Into
a raging unit
that swept all
before It7
we had our
own private ideaa
but, desiring to
get a little col
laboratlon on the
matter, several
"downtown
quarter backs"
were queried, aa
wh Coach Bill
Bowerman, Strangely, wo seemed to
be correct. That Is. our so-called mind
seemed to run along the same chan
nels aa did' the clty'a "grandstand ex.
pert" and even Med lord's head men
tor.
It Is therefore unanimously agreed
that the Tlgera found themselves
when they found out they could stop
pig aieve rowier, Ashland's battering
thlrple-threat fullback. Steve, a truly
tine football player, had been built
ro me skies as almost unstop-
paoie. wnen tna Tornado, especially
the linemen, discovered that Fowler
could be halted, that waa all that was
necessary. Immediately afterwards
the Tigers started to roll. They were
comment or their own power at laat
where before they had been rather
doubtful.
be 14-0, and we dont believe Medford
could have come back from behind
tnat advantage.
However, the Ashland, didn't
score. Fowler hit the center of the
line and in atopped cold. Fow
ler tried again at Medford', right
tackle, aaw no 'bole, and attempt
ed to skirt the end. Montleth
slashed through to drop him for
a one-yard loss. Twice more Steve
took the pigskin and tried iharp
passes, the last of which Bed
Boot batted down In the and
zone, and Medrord took the hall
on downs on their own SO. That
was the turning point. From then
on. the Tigers were the hall club
tney had potentially but not ac
tually been all year.
Admirers Mob Montague
In Wild Golf Exhibition
By G.4YLE TALBOT
NEW YORK, Nov. 18. (AP) Having observed with expert eye tha
formal debut of John Montague In big league golf. It la possible to re
veal for tha flrat time eeveral glaring weaknesses In tha game of tha big
muscle man from California.
In the first place, Montague la
. 803 735 716 3353
Weather.
Northern California: Oene rally
cloudy tonight and Tuesday, becom
ing unsettled north, probably with
rain extreme north portion; mode
rate temperature; modorate south
erly wind off coast.
Oregon: Bain weat and rain or
snow east portion tonight and Tues
day; little change In temperature.
Increasing southerly wind off coast.
Exact moment that confidence was
born waa In the Aecond quarter, with
the Grizzlies parked on the Tiger 3
yard line with four downs left to ram
it over. Ashland had scored early In
the first period as Fowler ran and
passed hla way down the field, living
up to hla build-up. with a 7-0 lead.
Ashland again started a touchdown
drive, with Fowler providing the
spark. Following a 16-yard penalty on
the Tlgera for roughing the paaser.
the Ashland fullback tossed a for
ward pass to Charlie Warren on the
Medford 3-yard stripe, and there Ash
land waa again. There la no doubt In
our mind regarding the aftermath
had the Qrlrxlles battered over that
score. It would have been 13 Or may
In preparing for the Or ant Paaa
game next Friday night at Oranta
Paaa, tha Tlgera will spend plenty of
time handling the ball, Boweman
aays. It seems the Tornado la affected
with a bad case of fumbtlltla during
the early atage of games, tha coach
pointed out, end because of that the
backa and ends will get heavy work.
out. In polishing reverse playa and
hocua-poeua behind the line of acronv
mage.
It was Jack Hill fumbling In the
flrat quarter that set the Grizzlies
up for their touchdown, and in au
other batttea thia season, the Tigers
have been exceptionally butter-ring-
ered in the opening minutes. Bower
man said that Medford might start
klcktng-otf rrom now on Instead of
receiving unless the team learna how
to hang onto the apple.
Jerry Jerome. Dick Green and sev
eral other local football philberta
have called our attention to a glaring
mistake we made the other day In
thla pillar, and we are more than
glod to make the correction. (Being
that It waa so obvious we couldn't
lay it onto a typographical error.)
Anyway, wa retract the etatement
that Jimmy Phelan, University or
Washington football coach, came from
Northwestern University to Seattle.
Ho waa hired from Purdue, where he
had Just won a Big Ten title.
prona to allce badly off the tea If.
at the time of his awing, some ad'
mlrer at hla elbow hollers: "Whack
It Monty, old boy!"
Hla approach ahota, while sound In
soma respects, are Inclined to wander
off the line If there are over 3000
persona between him and the flag, all
of them shouting: "Down In front
before I bust you one I"
His putting, too, la nothing to rave
about when ha cant aee the hole,
and ha la Inclined to quit like a
dog and concede a hole when hla ball
geta atolen off the green. The latter
hazard, of oourse, la somewhat un
usual and possibly should not be
put down a a congenital Montague
weaknesa until It haa happened a
few more times.
All this new data on golf'e "mya
tery man." waa dug up during an hl
larloua three hours yesterday at Fresh
Meadow Country club, whose direc
tors now, no doubt, know better than
ever again to throw thlr manicured
pasture open to the general public
at a dollar a throw, Ita members
for the next few months are going
to be putting out ot high-heel prlnta.
Two months hence they will be dig-
glng discarded picnic baskets out of
sand trapa.
The simple facta are that Mon
tague and a comely partner. Mrs.
Sylva Annenberg, tried to play an
18-hole exhibition matcb against the
world's foremost "Babes". Ruth and
Dldrikson. They managed to do
eight and a fraction holea without
being killed, and they were lucky, at
that.
The two Bdbes won, seml-offiolally,
two-up. The 10,000 spectators, un
hampered by any gallery police, ear
Tied off the real honors when they
finally converged on the ninth green
and pocketed the balls,
Montague, a etolld man, came out
or It comparatively calm. He hadnt
shot any golf to speak of, but neither
had he been aerlously hurt. Babe
Ruth, the sleeves of hla while shirt
torn and tattered, reach the club,
house brandishing a niblick defi
antly and yelling: "Well. 1 still got
one atlck, anyhow." They found his
caddie later, bruised but safe.
There elmply wasn't enough room
to accommodate the mob. Practical
ly everf shot hit somebody before it
finally subsided, and the putting
was a sort of family circle, the near
est spectators leaning overt to watch
the ball drop.
Pheasants' Released.
PORTLAND, Nov. 15. (AP) Lew
Wallace, state game commission, re
leased 700 ChlneBe pheasant In
eastern Multnomah county Saturday.
I. Plckem really went to the village
wltb hla master football prognostl
cations over the week-end. Out of
13 ahota at the nation's major squab
bles, Plckem swatted d right on tha
old kisser, missed a measly two. and
aaw one end In a tie. Adding that
Medford-Ashland Armlatlce day en
counter to the average (yea, plckem
picked Medrord to win), the Hgures
to date are as rollows:
Picked Won Lost Tied Pet.
96 54 38 14 .658
Plckem's ace prognostication waa
calling Yale to beat Princeton by tour
touchdowns, whioh It did. others
named correctly were Oregon-Califor
nia . Stanford - W8C, Washlngton
UCLA. Idaho-Gonzaga. Mlnneaota
Northweatem. Alabama-OeorRla Tech.
Army-Notre Dame. USC and Oregon
State tied instead of the Beavera cop
ping, and Pitt failed to be upset by
Nebraska and Duke waa upset by
North Carolina, which Plckem didn't
pick.
T
TURKEY RAISERS
Starting Monday, Nov. 15th
We Will Receive All Your Turkeys
and either pay highest CASH PRICES on delivery or
ship your turkeys on CONSIGNMENT to one of the
biggest turkey markets in San Francisco, and guarantee
the account that you will receive the highest cash
prices.
MEDFORD POULTRY & EGG CO.
4th and Fir Streets.
Phone 16
nla King, canter, scored a goal after
mlnutea and 0 seconds of tha first
period. Lou Holmes, Clipper wing
was credited with an asalat.
Newsmen Riddle Clouds
In Clay Pigeon Premiere
Thre act nhoti of the Mul Tritveach
ttn ti0wt ftUtt bluahtngly charged
today thai tha Mertlorct Quo club
gav them bktnk ahalla to fire tn
yraterdAy'a apeclai newapnper and ra
dio eon teat on the club'a trapa.
Their riltinlty wa greatly wounded,
avrn tf the clay pigeona were not.
Tha apectal event m put down In
the club'a annala by Bd Pease, aecre
tnry, aa the grrnteat exhibition of
blank firing In the club'a glorious
history.
The aciibea won a turkey and two
chtrkena but that waa only because
there were three awards and only
the same number of competitor
Radio and other newspaper eon
trwtanta failed to ehow up.
The prlnea turned out to be actual
It i ft, presented out of the goodneas
of the club'a generous heart aa a
mark of appreciation of the aoribea'
rrportJnR of trap ahoottng vent.
The Mali Tribune "a ace ahota were
HiKhtly out of form and hit very
little save a stray airplane flying
low end a few banka of clouda living
tlan.
The club provided funa, ammuni
tion and cVay pigeon. The plgeone
were mostly unnecessary, It turned
out.
The club also provided coacbea.
The Mnll Tribune ace ahota, who
ahteldrd thetr true tfenllUea today
behind desiitnatJons of Mr. A. Mr. B
and Mr. O, Were extremely well
eoarhed,
Mr. A. who wi anchor man, waa
coached by former Mayor Oeorte
W, rorter and O. O. Alenderfer; Mr.
B by Ed Lamport and Mr. O oy Jerry
Jerome. The coaching waa pretty
good. j
Each contestant waa given on
hel for a practice shot but that
clidnt help matter much Then I
given ten shells for actual
competition. The scribe thought
aome of them must bar been blank.
They asked for another ten but the
club management thought enough
ammunition and clay disc had al
ready been wasted.
The coache were extremely helpful
In telling the ahooter where the
ahota were going. Moat of the time
they were going too high or too low
or too wide. Anyone could aee tli:-t
Aa the coaches conched, T
CDaa") Daniels, club prevtdetit .
chief Instigator of the pec in m
paper event, stood behind the r.
lines to keep score, it was qui)
chore keeping track of the ' I
pigeon. It waa much simpler ;
count the hlta.
Well, the hit totaled nine Mr
B. coached by Bd Lamport, hit four
pigeons: Mr. C, cached by Jerry Je.
rome, hit three, and Mr. A, coached
by the two former mayor, hit two.
Mr. A thought ha had too many
coache.
The cheering section we marvel-
ou. It wa so noisy that at times
the boy in the trap house could not
hear the ehooters' order "Pull. So
at time the ace shot were shooting
only at the air with no clay pigeon
In it. That didn't make much dif
ference either.
"Two hit out of ten ahots the ftret
time out la remarkable." ld Mr,
Porter to Mr. A In cotutolaMon.
Well, whM about Mr. B and ht
lour hitar" asked Mr. A. not to be
consoled.
"That la cole! replied Mr. Por
ter, not to be stumped for an answer.
A a tha acribe ecumed buck to
town Mr. Daniels told them to be sure
to come to the gun club annual
dinner. Apparently he thouM they
could do better with cooei bird
"" Cblneae rterba will ll w rso relief sw matter jha too
f U an afflicted auti ynm aw it to roarwii to cm this
' t Ol tUiPOHUnltf to nMlR MM hMltkt l-hi., Kara.
restored eealtb to l noun nil. ol people tth. owl root
lo io nan Ita. ron.np.iion. atom.ro Trnuhl. an
malum. Ha; rm rraatatt Trouble, tlcere. ChlMrea
Ord netting. Ilaus Trouble, asthma. Inllu.nia ramale
rrmioh). file, rnranie Oeugh, High Mood rr-Mara, artnmu. Cain at
N.rtau.rtrea, Appradlcltla. Toa.llllla K rami a. Heart. Um. (lladdet
Ki.lnria. Langs, mood. I'rtnan piaordera. herhe "ill lire re relifl
when other, rail rree eonsullatloa
lnli IB to , r M rH.aN a) CfUN Ml till f. M
rue. Thiir. in. it rioard Son CMnew Med O HII Main
IT'S
WEEK AT
Reinhart & Barker's
Mm,
mn - f fmn rr --'
WW "
W in A 1 A D 1
1 TURKEY
Suit or
with the purchase
of any
Overcoat
or $20 In Merchandise
Store-wide Values During
Our
Week
Anniversary
Reinhart & Barker
'Medford' Arrow Shirt Stow"
SPEAKS THE
Prophet of Profit
THE crystal is clearing. I see a dark man. A very
dark man. You are paying him some money, and he
is giving you something. No, I can't see what it is.
Sometimes it looks like a thimble. Sometimes it looks
like an automobile. I see by your smile that you think
you have a bargain. I know by his smile that you
have not.
Now he is leaving his store. He is going to dinner
and the theater. Then he will go to the club. He is
doing himself well on your money. The article you
bought? Too bad. A blind bargain.
But the scene changes. The dark man is gone,
are reading the advertisements in this paper.
know the honest price, the quality brands. You
finding where to buy. You are getting your money's
worth . . . and more. You have discovered that adver
tisements are your true prophets of profit!
You
You
are