Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1931)
Saturday, April 11, 1931 T A nT XTriT7 T7TT?.TfK7n rTDcT7'T)1Tr-n T a rT ATT? IrAE6 XVO a-mmmmimmmmmMmmmmmimmm I Newest Silks Ne In patterns mm voloriim mid iiillo lowent ill history ot tlie fillk mnrkct. 59c to Conner's l,A tllUNIIK'H OWN RTOHK ' Cardinals And Athletics Arc mi i i ii'1 I'lCKOa 10 Hill llv I twirl llilllfv (Afcuirlntc'il Press Blunt Witter) 1 NEW YORK. Apr. 11 vll Til . l.olilfi Cnnlliitil nml til Phllnit lplilft Allilettfs will ls t'ic lemllilR inn In IrnRiie bBwUnll iini-nil" rum Ortnli' illness sonic uo nt'wupnjjer - rxppnR me xvronp. which, o( ruill-fle, Is ioc Bible. CREWS READY FOR ANNUAL VARSITY RACE OAKLAND KSI'IIAIIY. Oil., Apr. 11 YnifiHv, Jnyvpe nml fiCHhiimn rlrwn ut Hie Utllvi-TslllPH ur Wnnhllll! tou nml cnlilurnln wpio irmly Iwlny lor the iive-ntv-plKliHi nutiiiBl ipiipwiiI ot the Pm'llli? roust's It-mllng Intel--I'olleulnte ieir.Uii. A eiowit m mine thnti twenly tli-liiF-nuil wim pjppptptl lu eriiwil tlin ImnkR of tltt pnumrv HtHl Ijlpnphprn I vrpi'lpil iienr tlip llnlnli llnp, to bpo VuUim lit tlie tlflh iminlnl eollfeil- 111 Him- nml Hwky cipws bwppJ his ot thp Assnclntnl Piwi. 04 ex- lawn (lie three mile court-. Both uerts eollnboinled on the Amerlinli the vanity nml Jnyvpe rnrps will be lriunie nelivtlain voted 41 to 23 thnt I over thp tlnee mil illstmica, while the plnb thnt cnnnl Muck built i the Inwli will only row two miles Will win the Amei linn lemmie pen- Bolli the fnlllornln nml WnshliiK llmit Mr the thlnl snrcetmiv yenn ! ton vnmlttes nre the moil, powerMit while ml ejpens voting on the Nil-1 Hint, hnve n'pieseniptl the sobools tlonnl tenpup nnnt an unllotn to 31 In 'iwl yeoin, mm some ellt luminals thnt the Rt. I.ouls club nnln wuulil I w looking lorwe.nl to the estnb wln the line In the older i-tifjlt. llshment ot n new ionise recoiil. The niniulllK Ot tllp twrt pen-: ne preeni. icvuiu oi u, iiiniuitH, w BEAVERS TROUNCE SEAL TEAM AGAIN rbrtfeiirfTted With Holly vood and Los Angeles Foi- First Place, run btammScs v. roVtlnhd 3 Hollywood J ,m Anfrelea . J MlftMoiui 3 Oftvift'iva 1 a Ban Francisco 1 fiaernmenio 5 Beanie I nnnt winners, while not a great m those Riven the Athletics and the Chicago Cub Inst year in the con sensus. Mill were sutiiclenily large to leave no room for argument nn to the comhlnM opinion, :t y imif(il The '2S lht plnre vote In he AmeiUrtn irnmic not Riven thp Ath lethn vtM-e divlilPtl nminiK VfthlnK tiin. New York nml Ctevelnnd entiioti. With the Sonntor iTt'eivin 16, the YnnkfoB ix nid f'lpvpinnrf only one. It. wns the worst showlhp; or iho Ynikfon In the tuv yeni-n ot the eoiiennB. Bi-ooklyn nnd ('Mofltfo divWed the niftjor Jortlon ot the irdlnnl over llow, ihp liidK0i-R roi-elvln 12 lrt plnce votes to 13 Tor Rotors Horns bv'fi Cnh, while Now York received four, PlunVmifh one imrt- believe It or not Philntieljihlft one. the Boston Red Box. with ft new mantel' pittriicftlly ft new tenin. were Riven leftBt conilderntton ol the Ifl ohilw In the two lenues. No r-xpeit pteked them to finmh hlfthe than nlxth plnre nd only one voted that fipot for them. The t'lnctnnftM Hertn, who veie velRftted to the Niv tlonn! leftoe rellftr, (rot one vote for a Yfto 1 pi nre berth. The Red hd the 1SO0 ai'f i""m nTiviim i his nnwM, ftoo I voi en for lt plnre, however, being 'oftO ' pie)cHl by 47 of the ronsenMi.s 3ftrt (TOiinborntorn wnne omy e pirKen ret. .7fto .260 the Red Box to ftnfuh in the nether rnftlon of the Americftn leftRue. Thin nihy hftVe ljof,n flHTonnted for by the fty the Awm-lAfreA lm f t thftt MVpml M the HeiPCtor vot- enred tht end ot their fiwt . ft :b lo 1)fil toft)nR wrtri! todny with no tcftm flWfl to J bojjt U h,d cm thiKh nertn fiRnr,nR .n the eon- 1 . I fr,.nOP. tnebirted fill the mftor "wnr" Kollyw'sBlnvswhoesme tlivrtwh ; Pomlenls who covered the hlft the ni-st Hire Ksmes tinsenthed fell (,n ,or th(, m,tmpoln befo the Bnemwenlft Benstois t ; R eoiinli-y nhd other close Bnewimento yesterday ' " , observers or training (imp activities, the first victory fm- the Benstors H(ii,(,,s Jh j.J,. nd first defest for the f"- Hew Is this yenr's consensus of tenes wei-e Chester! leld snd ; how they will finish: s for Snrrnmento: ,1ohns, de Nntlonnl -Rt. IauIh. Ohles(?o, iw.ki Bltssler for HoHywood. ,yn Nfw york T,ltbii-Kh, Boston, fienvers W A(tn Phllndelphm end Olnclnnntl. Th6 T'ortlnnd Benvers wind 1t Amerlcnn Phllndelphls. Wnshlnlf thrc strnlKht over Bnn Francisco's ton, New York. Clevelnnd, lletroit, Reels vestcrdny, wlnnlnK to S. The j 'chicnKO, St. louls nnd Boston. Besvers (raihewd two runs m the . Tim mninn snd hud stretched the , mA)ority to six nt the end of the "T'M.irjM MfliP founn. rno rvnis iiscwib.- kv. - ... x. " - . - couple In the first, but slopped there rmtll the eighth when they Kt one more. The Tistreripsr Tospfisl, "Bowmnn Serves Niaufoou NTtlAFtXtO, -iVinKS tslsnds IIP) Wi woortnil for T'ortlnnd: Kmn. : Nlunroou's chamm-i- -or commerce -. lloui-lns nnd fenebskv, Wilson for If It hsd one could miff nt the nnv enfl Francisco. 'ty of 'r mnil. The rtsklsnd Acorns took one 7 Niunroou possesses -'tln-cnn to S from the Mlwlons HI Emeryville '"" to pqunre off the series at two sn. Eddie Moore. Acorn short, polned one av.A-1. -v,, nn A.n.i1.. ins lisvk ..Pseine. five 'miles from bench to The bsses were cmnw nt the time. : bench, hns no hnrbor where mnil MnVps Miles In Bom-. Tlie bnirerles we Pciirson nnd Besd stenmers could nnchor ssfely. SPARTANBURO. s. o. Tilol for Onklnnd' llnrroilKh. Leiber, BlKK'S. I And liners tvould Mienly enre to- J. -8. ('.'hnrlcs. flyliiK on the repilnr Klnnev Nelson nnd Bien'el for the stop. If they could. -for, except for the'routo for En-stern Air Transport, fnc, Mi.-,rtn'- I weeks Inst tN-tober when li party oil bus set ft record for 1-lrne between .tohn schutte occonied 'the hero's I -the onlv service of Its kind lift the world. Tt Is Nlunfoou's version "phtp-to-shore" service. This dot -ftl sn (slnnd In the Roulh New Pilot and New Material May Surprise Portland With Teahi That Will Go Places Rabbit Abbott Succeeds' Larry Woodail as Boss of Beavers pKobdw, wn et by Vft"hln(ton The WttRhliitfton vniolty hoUlw both ft height nnd welpht mlvnnliipe over the. Ueflvn. And beA-nnnc of this hflve been tet up tAVortte to win. There Ir little to ehwwe between the: stroking v)f the two boBU. The nnnonnred llnenn of the vnr- nltlFB found the npnilng ns follows I WrtfthlnRton Rtmke, (tinner; 7. rnr mt; !, Howen; ft, Phillips; i, MoiiIh; 3, NJorud; 2, Willlninnon; bow, Srhmtdt-; nnd ooxwBln, HerrlR. Oftltfornia mroke, BnllRbury; 7. Woodward; 6, thiRvitd; 5, UunlAiK 4, frnsertm; 3, Oi-nnKerj 2, HudfMhs; bow. Pope, and toxpwftln, Ornlmin. Dempsey En Route To Nevada Today BALT LAKE CTTY, Apr. H iYrk lmpRey. former heavyweight !Chnmplo, war en route to Reno. Ne vBdn. today where he plnns to take A complete rest. The ex-ehflmploi visited with htR mother here yesterday left lent nlcht for the Nevndft city with the An nouncement he would remain in that vicinity for p(x weeks. He into mflted he would spend bin time cftmpino: but did not name his com panion. Aketl reprnrdlnR A posMhle divorre r.ult ARnlnst his wife. Kstelle TAylor, Uempney refviwed to eomment, Wliile reports have been euiTent rreently thftt Dempney intended to brniR a divorce net ton ARAlnst his wife in Reno, both hnve denied Any m.noufs mAfrimonini tronnies, r - y ik s i 1 kfhy $pf "I W I t4. "e. 1' "C i-ti Vi.'.Vt'i v.- IS M A few A- w . tet M 1 i FLAGS 7-4P 11 rilll Million ld.10. boiJf'K to puch this yenr, but (NEA ien-tce Wrlterl hp's on hand. In case. SAN ,IO.SE. t'nl. Well, the bovs ! Bill Hhlel, who came In major (tnlhercrt nt Sodality Park here this league swap last season, not only sprliiR to look over the mnkinjrs of ; played a great second .base but Portland's entry m the Pacific Coast ! clouted .350 for 10 games. George lcasue. And thev ususllv left saying: i Wuestllng, back to Portland from the And even thouch T don't think so. ' Tigers, is a polished shortstop, cov- 1 1 know the team might get. some- erlng a lot of land. His hitting Is He said Inst night he plans to , resume referoelng and promotion of There's polentiallv good material At third. Gene Robertson, who bouts after his rest. with the Beavers. Some of this at played most of last year, has com I times hps isded before dlscourace. petition from Sammy Kale, back to VtRKlllT TO ATTKMt I ment as the team went down in the Portland from the majors. Hale's the I'KAVCK'S TK1IH IE 1 nick A little front running, a few ! harder hitter. Robertson can play ; bre.'iks. and the Beavers mav sui-prtse j the other Infield positions, so he's PAU, France i.Ti - Oivllle Wrlcht Ve ti-iemelveK ' . certain to stAV with the club. will be the gitest of honor at the un- .,,. n tt.r. ntr. ' George Wine, oarried late last sea veiling or the monument commemo-1 rating the fn-st flight made lu the ured the problem might be man-, mf.eld prospects" ment or bis brother. Wilbur. The """' ' hanges ot p lots n d this "" L "ne monument is dedicated to both bro- 1 V' -spencer ,Rnbb,ll Abbolt from ! OM Ken TwluA , ihe Weslern league will try to keep Beaver outfield. And Tin nagstena. L.' ... the Beavers tlimbrng Instead of but- who sis.-, started his baseball m the The date of the unveiling hns been; . , Pacific Northwest, Is with Portland definitely fixed for July 23. j r,; hfls Xwn c,( olnM. ,-e-; after being made a free agent by the cost and Bellontn. who laid the m K Thc lllf,M Mlows switches, i majors. Both vets can hit hard. It's , .7 t i ii'r. ,' I and the outfield has several new a question of tne oio legs in me of France in November. Ifi3(i will s t- h with lrry Mission, in the Summa swap, and rend the ceremony as wl 1 F. H. , 1 1 h0M,lng the E Coleman. Inst year with the Seals. Pi- nee ot Boston .father of Norman 'f ,nm ,-e two younger outfielders of experl- Pr nce, one of the first American on,nk f- , , nflH, or,Ce. Laveroni. San Francisco busher. rsr??.. 's "T.Lc:v i jJ Ci 5iiii r ok- nd sen m mi it '"'"i1"" , -, . int of : ilImo arc on the Portland rosrer. land. Is expected to give The nvmnmi.nl will r.innUI ot marble column, to which w ill be Bf. siienRt-n ni "". fixed a bronze plnque depicting the 'change of lively rn-le-infil Wi-lfhl rtlane hno showint lrl" " ' ' 1-he profiles of the two Wrights. belter thntt fitcher v.-ho now that he hns a i Some ot the youngsters must, Fenton. when not ; come through, or Turner will have fields well, and bars to get reiniorcomeni ocion- .no v.... ftfin Ossie Orwnll. the be called an eirectivc piromug envered TH'st mnkt .If ' 1 eftv TntTOnn went to- Oakland for COLEMAN Fenton. So the lefthandlng Just now seems up to The Great waiter (Duster) Malls and Orwoll. Junk Walters and Cnrt Fullerton ai-e the remaining regular right handers from last year. Dick Pose del, a 1930 youngster, and Ray Heat ing, one of the surviving spitballers. may work regularly. Dirk Bonnelly Is another veteran the club picked up. Tho youngsters, in addition PosedeL include Herb lahtl, Greater Awaits Change . In Propellers i ns avgei.es 11 One of avia tion's fondest dreams, transport ships that wiU cruise at 250 miles an nour, u.tn h. .aniiMri when one of the simplest pieces of mechanism the propeller has been developed, Capt. Carl Squler, speed plane builder, be lieves. And the time, he adds, Is not far off.. The present speed of nlrple-nes, he says, has been reached by streamlin ing and the development u. y. motors. i "Right now we can go no further. We have built a ship so streamlined thnt at. a nnpwi of sllshtly more than 200 miles an hour the plane actually catches up with the motor and coasts through the atr. The motor Is turning at tremen dous speed, but It cannot get.away irom the snip ana pun When the propeller Is developed this ship wo have now 'will cruise at 250 miles an hour over long distances." The propeller that will accomplish this has been put through a limited number of experiments. The ultimate development of It will be. Squler believes: "in flight a nllot will be able to chnnge'the pitch of the propeller and make Ic revolve at. auiereni. ontjico, thereby cutting the air at the most advantageous angle after high speed has been reached. In tills way higher speed will be attained." By changing the pitch, the motor will not be forced tfor great speed anil the propeller will continue to pull the ship through the air Instead of coasting along with it. ' Changes In the propeller, he says, liave increased airplane speed as much as 20 miles an hour. Fielding Easier Now, Tetter Says PITTSBURGH Ml If your favor ite baseball player snares a hot grounder or catches a terrific liner his glove has more to do witn it man his adeptness so says jonn is., i ener, who played the game In the bare handed davs. "When a player stops a hard hit ball tlie cry goes up, Marvelous, mar velous!' " said the former National league president. "There's really nothing marvelous i about the play, tne glove manes eas who dif llcult chances. The moment the Al.l.OlIN MIVEHS i:i:ut PITS 1'OR OPI KATK' RlH r-iRIISSEI m When jengene ! He flew ! Ysave's first ooera. '-pel-er the Miner." w in. nn i J three photograph the eclipse of t he sun. , the distance ot 171 miles In one hour , S pinved in Paris in July, there will t"vs at los Alleles Vcsterdsy. He thw are but four people on the l-tflat mnking one stop of ten minutes, be relil miners singing in the csst. mini wii" fin- ".-"- -hi v.rceiiviii. o. , For Tr.r(i" is written m i:ne wsi- - hvm language and can only be ren- thnR.u4 nmmi idle in lfiso. Aiidv l ball cracks against the glove soakea House, obtained in the Cascarella with a sticky substance It is much trade, and Wayne House and Mike more easily held than. If only the bare Salonisen, bushers. Perhaps thei hands were used." brightest rookie prospect is Joe Bow- -in the 80's the fielders didn't have man. tall Missourlan who performed ! cloves and it took real skill to make creditably In the Western league m Sunning one-handed catches," rem 1930. Iinisced the former major league Ex -Manager Heads f 'atchers I pitcher. "The catcher's mlt came Into l,a,-ry Woodalt, manager of Port- , ffmor of Penn iand last year, seems resigned to stay I believes baseball is the as catcher, no deal being made lor rjcanKit prnfrssjonni sport, although, his trade. Portland needs his heavy ( m hj Jplniorl olheT professional hitting and his wise old head in nan- rt comme aione In fine style. dllng what pitching talent it owns n . r it is to win. Johnny Fltzpatrick was, bought from Oklahoma city as an assistant. The thtrd stringer will be Ed Llpanovich, a Pacific Northwest semi -pro. The club's greatest need right now rt the Associated Press appears to be pitching. Given this, Boston Ray Steele, 215. Glendale. and with Spencer Abbott's bruited cal threw George Hagen. 212. reputation ns a hustling manager, the g-! Sergi Kalminoff. club may get going and be tiara to 0 San FrimclSi..0 (is:ooi. Hans hend off this summer. stclnkc. 240, Germany, defeated Rudy - -- j Dusek. 215, Omaha, decision (30 mln-' Bandits Along Yangtze ipE.""! 1 Oklahoma (45:431. Keep American Gunners On Alert jtFHUs WRESTLING night before Cornell's great rowing victories last June, wnen aiium uc- , fled-his weakened under-ptnnliig to Illustrate laughingly his "double spinner"; at Miami, 'barely a month ago. as we chatted about the coming season and he Joked about "losing three or four games." Rockne seasoned his every, outlook on life with humor. It helped him to keen his balance, to ease tne strain of a high-powered career. He could step into any Kind oi company- ana dominate It. He could talk intelll cenllv. not only on any sport but on such technical subjects as chemistry. In which he held a proiessorsnip at Notre Dame. . ' He was keenly alive to every turn or sport. He was proud of his ability to write nis own stun im mc news papers or magazines. His sidelines Included automobile promotion sales talks, radio speaking and after-dinner talking. He aided innumerable "caus;s," often at his own expense. LEFT HIPP OKI' Rockne regarded George Gipp as the perfect football player but It was a shock when. In naming his all time All-America .bnckfield, Knute listed Morley Drury. Elmer Oliphant, Jim Thorpe and Ernie Neyers. Perhnps it wtu because Hock put Gipp in a class by himself as a super All-American, for I know he re garded "the Gipper" as the finest natural ball-carrier he ever coached. XO SKt'llET . ; "There Isn't any secret about it." Rock once told me as we talked about the marvelous performances of his unbeaten 1929-30 teams. "We teach plain, every-day football out there. The boys get a lot of fun out of It, ven though they have to drill, drill and drill. The fundamentals are the thing blocking and tackling. The -est isn't so hard and. as I say. it Isn't mysterious. We go In for speed and auick-thinking. but In the final analysis It's teamwork. The boys have the spirit and are willing to work hard. Of course we work a little psy chology on 'em. It helps." - Peacock Coal A Fine Fuel For Poor Flues. Van Petten Lumber Co. Phone Slain 732 "Good Service Quick" enabling the Angels to tie Seal tie. nt priest, a nnd l two trtirlern so these four devised their own BAVTn Ai'TifOKs ofm:t'T I'O AMl.-RIf'.W fOMPKTITIrtV -Amerlcnn i will -11 In . La (nntlt t lip AnL'clN put over Ihe wlrmtriR tarty to best, way of pit turn; mull Aboard Hteftmer B to 4 Tinl terleN- MoFi And Pcnulte pni iK iimun.-u. imivin t i vnrnun i n.,Hfftn in lurtre cracker tins, sealed hftninHl C'OPKVH ACrKX fff' ultM. ' water, and Ht.mpned to the back oi h , seller'" are fvlnK "dtimnevl At Mt. ifi-ntifitwrt1 Ti Tt K native swimmer. ! Onnfh literary market, say native . , ml "It'll V linn niln in tV'lil'Vi tf flnftt.i Kniinllurti San Pranciwo " ' ! ''. H in i When tired, the native breMs the) Even hnlnh authors of the lilph- WierA. POSedel. TlOWman and WOOlnll:. nenvy sess to rrm-i. fiM-n.nr .. rs. r.iimi' t-..iiM...n lfM.t i.-t... tnn. nouir-Jnn and Penebskv. Wiltton. av -shore, and evehsnfre outoiuK j IKhen; At TnWi Angeles: ' R. 14. K, tor tneomlnt; mail In Nimllar tins. fhttl 4 lp f) Tourist, on the mnil arcMmers fre- Ton -Angeles ... . .... fi 11 I (piently send a letter nshore to he re- (10 InnlngaV. rrnallefl via the "lin-can-mml" on the Newman, WojuHlan and Onston: ''next steamer. MoiK sfirt Pk'tniire. i 1 Tt. H. v.. f l'-:i( M Tti i.fiM(t nr.i-ijir. . h D 1 ! VASHfNOtTON (fl1' MitniMobilr . 11 ft ; exports from the United State were Obey tor- ! valued at MfH,14,fWfi lu man. a de cline from the previous- year but an Tt R. V.. (9 per ceni Increase over the yearlv .. H H ft aveniire for the nlne-yeai- perlo! end- v I" n . Hut in tfiM dered hv "home talent.' R Rodney Ruteher (V,A Nervle Writer) WASHINGTON There's something doing on the Yangtze which tn all probability would mean j lthe loss of a gunboat and perhaps always I of all on board. After the Purls presentation the , rlvrr 'inr rest of the American navy best ! P'rft wltI tVM,r rtm Walloon cit-tes.,, Kifl(tR for y(,Krfi wit-hout fiphttnp any- (iii'mihi-, nui.rni nrt encucea in ixuuMeitiit At, Pacraim'nto; 1ll IXTlVKXl Baerainento Johni. Yde and BasMler; field and Koehler. At Oakland: Mflotm Oakland l,elhep. TUwi'M. Klnntiy. Nelson, Imr tov.' and BrertPel; Pearson and Rend. reftiMp ro buy v-heir nianu- intjt. nreferrinc the wafer game of miulrlni: the lianlah rights to Amer iean and Prltlwh sitccessea. Thece rir-hrs are sold at low prices, the American authors or their airont falling: t realise that many book nre wold in Denmark in larger Hum bert; than In much bler countries. A Cleveland Judke has been named h football referee. Whereas he form erly heard both Hides and then rave a decision, now he'll pive a decision 0d then hear both i((ei and l")innnt Himi; by Walloon comer ' p0t.snot warfare with armed Chinese i "who attack it from the river's banks. . ; T ..f, jMt vptti not one ol the LONDON Y Ts CKROTs elkht gunboats lias made a trip up HV TON A COLO CI ftv, tnr rjwr without being fired upon ICVlVtN (fi l-oncon has d-; Hnd R7 nitacks have been reported oeniv wi'iimr carroi roiwiouH. itu since July. Bit even greater thrills, accord- ftme reason not. c:etriy Mppareni-. tnble lm !' lumned from 1H0 000 to n. form-r stio.ono pounds a day The sudden popular! Cy Is believed partlv due to a tnhremeni by the committee ol medical research tlial eiitin cnrroHi helps prevent colds. No. Dorottiy. n hoax ts not a garden frm uen fov chonni'ig puronies Hud&on, Essex, Durant,- Star, . Hupmobile, Nash. Austin. Whippett, Overlaid. Willys Kmght have Auto-Lite Electric Generators and Starters. Officio Service Suitlon BURGESS BATTERY & ELECTRIC STATION Opposite La Ornnde Grocery Tritt Speaker To Try Broadcasting SPRINGTIME MEANS TORNADO TIME AS WARM AND COLD AIR WRESTLE CKTCAOO, Apr, U M)Trls Hpenk rr, one of baseball! j'reateii out fielder, will be a sports radtn au nouneer this Httmine'r. Speaker, fatn-otis with Cleveland, Ttoatnn and Philndelphl. ot the American leairno. haw been aecured by the NTtO to broadcast reports ot bnfehnn games In Chleaco Tie will mnke his debtn nevt Tuetdnv when the Cubs meet the Pfttwburgh 1M rntei In the openlnc. game oi the National league season. Ira Dcrn Defeats Freherf? In Vtah HALT I.AKK CITY. Apr 11 Trn lr(i. Bait l.rke Citv hehwu-oicht wrestler, tlefentett .lohn T'rcbere, Ore iron grsppler. in thefr main event here last nti'ht when VrelwrK w intnrwi by n toe hohi which gnve Hern n fall. Vreberg won the first fall In 1 1 mlmttw. with a toe hold pod Pern rettiltnted WMh the ssme hnld to entl The match tli tninntes Inter. Harney Oh"taooth. Mli'hb'n. won ever .Tackle Kinmimuel. Australia on n foul. Hy Sharman. Salt .ntt city wel terweight, atid Hob Bmpon. Vtt gene, Ore . wrotied to a draw, neithei VI'IV VAHK, lit T NO Ki't'OHn CI T VKI ANO Anr 1 1 ' V Tlelene Mftdlm hns hattirefl another wom en's swimming record, but it won't be recoiti!ret phe f-wiitti the ton meter fee stvle in l'P'Ll. three and five-tenths aec otdi filter than the murk made bv 1'fhel LncVie, Ht tilcht. but the fret will eo without officii! reco--nitlon lee:aie It was done In a U.! foot, pool. townmi vh wivi IOK. AVOT.KS Apr. 11 . W -Another knockout graced the record of the tawny Vnne.u'er fbrhter. IMIIy Towiir,Pd, tottsv as the result of the fout'd licking be mve Mickey O'Neill of Clevelnnd Irc ntht. Wtckev went "out" on hi feet In tho fifth 'round. fter lour knock down and Peferee Inrrv McOmM dectdd the eaterner had enough punlnhmem, halting the Ihhu K V, It. t'olfott j (Associated Press clence Wrlterl WAHHlNCtTON in -Oentlr apring j gets rough at times. Whe brings, le- struetive tornadoes along with the. first errs us and the first robin. f Tht- whirling funnels of wind that fei roofs from houses, trees from the ; ear'h ami even feathers from chick- : ! ens nre due ttlmoMi any day now su , i the United States weathei bureau. t I Tornadoes are tnot freoueni In the j iprhn: been use thev are ealh formed s when streams oi air oi widely-varying j tempertirure come In contact Cold t ; all from the north unti warm air ; from the outh tire mru ltkiIv to j tneei When warm sprlncflme wen t her , moves up f rotn the luli oi Wevtco itnlat!is Or, W .1 Ttntunhev-v meteo; ;oliglcai phvlcW( of the bureeu. When n "(ream of soufh-bnund enhi 'air puves cloe to tt stresm o: norfb. j bound warm air. like fwo freich' i Train. p'Kipn; on a doublc-traek line ; (-oeMIMoM', t.-i ripe foi a torivxlo. i Vartn af: her ween the 'wo n"cni!i. ; teuil;. to rt"e Cold ah m-.y et mi -! d(M-nc!t; U iOMt t!rt puhlH',. which ; ml;fs (: rt- faster. Thiv n!r, rWIm- ' ibt'twee! the (o stream, temls t 1 d'-i iv. at; fron. both s ream- hi i-. : l-"ntite--elot'kwic tltreii:m. This b beeaue ' lie port hv rd -novln. warm j nl! current ahvnv. Is on tin e i-tfwmti j ddi. and the iouth -bound coUt wIim; on tht v.'fi! 'i'hf elo-es 'he ni: I ilmvn In. the ftvder the whirl The vhlrlhic it I: iTN'Mev coltlei eoictenes the moUtiv wifhln h. n!Mi h funoe'-ii'd. tlMHi Is Jormed. The tornado ! boiu A tcrnadi- l- ottX oi i; laii't: storm lieu as mi edd ! part o: a rr.y p, ilumphre-- v.vs ft follew- tho late--, storm's pfh. A houe mn ex)l(Vlr v, htu-, n tir - 1 mi do it'les h I'o; the nnv ;, soi: that an tuttoinehil. tuN- e'Xplode. when It Is pnnipiMi to fnl: e! eh Thr preMire t!llde the (UN- o; I'iMiv is greater th-m the presmre outute The whlrlluw p-irt ot the tornado wliieer the atmmph-'Me pre?iure about 10 per cent below norm; our ttde the bone Tntde the bouve U, nli vlndoMX and dcM-s pre e!oeo. the ,.,, i pre-iur.- tt- not rwinrw. ne prevurr miuv i m x s v V 4 Toewfcoo ftroociTs ' pUTSlft TO Oniy 1 i tl C MOllMRS TD IWCM J J -1 -I "s f -1 v., - , I -v. . -4 - - 4. i i i v. - ., t j , . iKJ-t- - i. ( - . .;. .,.' f - " -': .... -v. k:.,-1" lorn:idoe-- like the nne nt left, phobv-mpheu tit Hiiniriier, Kn.. Iltroilb "explode' h"ees which lhv tmtt'li. with results like tlnxe Jhowp In the devtitttti Hreet rie (rllin. Sketoh howv bnn dll-ffr-Mtre In h' prrttn. ln(de limi ontute houo. n(ue- them lo burt. stationed here, are expwinnced tn navigating the perilous rapids of the upper river whore rooks are uncharted and the current tn steep gorges some time squirts through at 16 knote an ; hour. Prnteet Americans. The patrol Is on duty to protect American lives and American com - I cerce on and Rlnng the river. Moat of the commerce is In oil. including the mre tugs nil used by our var nish and oilcloth Industries. Some times naval authorltlea convoy Am orieivn vessels up nnd down the rlvor and sometimes tliey station armed guards with maohlne-guns aboard them. One American concern operates a shipping line of about a doann boats on the river. About !40O mllps of river is pacroled and fwimcthlng like 400 miles of It runs through mountains and gorges where there is sometimes 300 feet difornnce be tween high water and low water. The Chinese shoot at our gunboats partly bec-aum thev hate foreigners but often )ust for "fun. according to imval officers. The attackers are known as bandits, whose nuiks arc nhvavs being augmented bv exsold ters "and oi whom one officer ettti- imt4s t-hene aro more than jmmmki idonc the Yang tee. There is nothing to be gained from firing on gunbotits except satisf(w.tinn. so appanrntly It's nuch like on:wil?in(; a privau1 shoot ing party after big game. 'Chinese Are Poor Shots. Cosunltle are rare because the niiiMn-M. n-ri. nonr murkumnii and he- lenttac the Amerlcnn puuboats are wvll protected, but a French gunboat oner i enhie in with some aou ounci nine. l ln her hull. The bandits nre often 'smart enough to conceal themwliep it whip especially tough snot along the river whim csmntander and crew nnch give nmirlv ali their attention to navigating. They can rarely be een. as thev htde behind bushes awe rocks Itloh UD on Ute banks. No t gunboat ever vet failed to return, the : lire and silence It. but It is hard ' to hit any bandlta or determine the xtent ot casualties. The gunbont ire armed with anti-aircraft guns bv--1 cause. In the por,zt. it is sumetimef ! necesarv to shoot alnuwt, traijiht up i into the air. -It was proving so difli 'ult to penetrate the high bandit 'nests a few rears ago thai someone 1 thought ol nhooting up the tops of f the bills above iheni. causing nva . tanchM which often haw proved ef ! ('tlvr as they rolleci riowu on the t concealed attackers.. By the Associated Piess Detroit Jack (Kid) Berg. Junior nnntK Hnve Hiiire Kiidders. i w-eiterweicht champion, outpomtea About 300 officers and sailors man Billy Wallace, Cleveland (10). I T.yi. American cunboats. Normally i St. Louis Billy PetrTiIle, Fargo. N. j there arc six of the craft, each named C outpointed t Lope Tenorio, Phil- aft-r one of our island possessions in Ippines U0). the Pacific Luson. Mindanao. t-uain. wow aors sen jeuy. rw lors. , Oahu Panay and Tutuila. the two knocked out Laddie Lee. Boston (5t; newest of which have a speed of 18 Harry SmJth. New York. Knocked j knots But the Monocacy and the out Fred Lenhart., Spokane, Wash.. Pulos which had beisn out of com-'(6i: Willard Dix. San Francisco, mission, were recently put back lntn stopped Willie Ftsldman, New York J service with the increase of banditry' i2. j The Palos figured In the most spec- Chicago Danny Delmont. Chicago, i tatuilar of recent gunboat oxplo4ts a ' outpointed Jimmy Lundy. Cahlornia vear ago last July when, as Ohiaigsha (fi- j was looted it made possible the ; Omaha. Neb. Mickey Walker, world ; evacuation of all Americans and most ; middleweight champion, outpointedl other foreigners there. Stalin Chooses Journalist As Cabinet Chief Bv Victor Liilumk MOSCOW iff"' Vlacheslav M. Molo- toff. right-hand man to Joseph Stalin in the affairs of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, is a news paper man. His friends- any he would rnthor write "pieces lor the paper" than manage the complex affairs of tlie government of this vast country. Molotoff's official post is "presi dent of the Council of People's Com missars." 3n other European coun tries he probably would be called "nremtot ." since tlie council ovor which be presides is maiie up of the heads oi the various federal depart ments. in RussIr his post mr.kes Molo toff second In command to Suiltn. who is secretary -general of the com munist party and the real power in the country. The new Russia Is a country of comparatively young men. Molntnff is 41. He has a conspicuous bald snot nnd a somewhat aldermanic from. Hts mustache Is quite black, and contrasts with a rather pale luce Like moat other leaders of the communist! regime. Wolotoff has had hts share of cairist Jails und exiieK. Hts record shows six terms in prisons and two bunlslunout to A-slii In lflUO Molotoff was ecretnr- of the communist party of the Uknilnt Then he met Sudin. and his next pat was secretary of the all-unionist communist party and member of Its central cnmmUtee. In other wonts, he went on the staff of the big leaders. When the recent premier. Rykoff. had to go became of his "right" views, Bud in picked MoloiofI to succeed him. Bnarnat Wright, Omaha, ( 10 ) noiv title. Eau Claire. Wis. .prince Saunders. Chicago, knocked out Spud Murphy, Mnorhead, Minn., ("li. Pittsburgh Ray Kiser. Tulsa, Okla., outpointed Eddie Brannon, Pitts burgh (10). Hollywood, Cal. Billy Townsend. British Columbia, stopned Mickev O'Neli, Cleveland (5). Sport Slants By Alan .1. ftnuld ( Assnnlnted Pres Sports Editor) Nothing in Knute Rocknr's life was so characteristic of the man and his ability as his boundless energy, hts willingness to do the things thnt would be helpful to his friends, no matter what the sacrifice, personally. "I have never heard anyhow v saV anything but a good word Kbout Rock." Clark Shaughnessey, Loyola's able coach, told me a short time ago. "He would go to any length to do something for a friend, often at the risk of personal inconvenience-." It was confidential then, but a tribute now that Shauphnessrv went on to reveal: "You know how tough it Is nt times for college to get the big gnme it wants. That's the situation at Lovola Rock knew tt and vou know "how great the demands are on Notre name from all rorntnn of the country But Rock told nte he would rnmr down to New Orleans to plav Loyoin in iftsa and I know he agreed to tin it m together unselfishly." TWO SAFE WAYS OUT OF ANY FIREf - Insure with O W WAR NOCK MGR ItOI'KSl: vkkkatii.i: I hnvr tiUkstl win, niv-ni- uiitir-r u dTih vwncrr n! clri-uniMi.nri.-r,n nis siokhert m ciucnco m man ttlt ! lilpllt utter Ills ifnni hnnt Snvth"-n ' Oallfnrnia. With Rock in uhrfU lwit i or ;hr alillin- ni Toiirhl:ffnT rl.r i! W Pnrant Trnek . M-"1 lM?n ( herolet Truck 4:s IffJfi Chex-rolel Cotipe lv?n rord Trnri. 4Sf tARISOV CHEVROLET CO. 1414 Adams Phone Main 2 Italian vtmi.r. rtsi'P TRTEST. iuilv .Exporting natnt tnjti bv olo musters without permi minAion of the government is a stsn ous offeiw m Jtaly. Count Fran- Uitely the bandtt have eomc into crsco Cwtsalh of Undine has been JnoftseAsion oi snme Iietdpteces and lined SU.0tX for having tried to ex- , not loiy; ait" the punhoat TutniU port & pautinc by Ttepolo. Ient one of them flying into the ntr Kvttb a bfc;h-exnlos)Te shU on the President Hoover may be cechntcai- puhlnc nufwartl I about 14 to U cnlv .iWmu yj 6 noumi The nmaurr ! ftri mw from her aft three-poundev. ly a citizen of Swttxeriand. rith an .. .. inside )- tion.'M vMuethln lw-v u- None of tho fleUt-pieces nave v attornev. He'd be in u terrible lix runos to tne square . wv. -mi o the mttc liwrain scored Wl. nut navrn omcers tea hou. . procure ouutric uitublut; lltwaul b etnlode. y he hati dewnrteri on the Kv.ts nuT jonc is bo una to do to sooner o:- later, , to transport him to Porto Rico. Better Merchandise Always at Lmrcr Prices One Lot First Step Shoes 79c Pair or 2 Pair for $1.50 NORTON'S KIDDY SHOP i