Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1922)
FRIDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 15, 1922 THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALE? OREGON TS) Here, There and Everywhere Mr (u. p. , LEWIS KEEPS TITLE AS CHAMPION WHEN SQUIRE EDGEGATE Miss Bard s Spelling is Not Getting Any Better BV LOUIS RICHARD rxt TR TO 7RfhH ta HER GUT Ri6Ht aov ON Z.EPT OF T ! "13" x'-o-"T you HAVE IT I " a-. 1 ZBYSZKO HE BEATS ST. LOUIS, Dec. 14. (By the Associated Press) Ed "StrangW Lewis retained his title as heavyweight wrest ling champion of the world by defeating Stanislaus Zbyszko. two out of three fj.lh here tonight. By the victory, Lewis won permanent ' possession of the Rickard belt, as he has been Victorious in three contests in which tha trophy was at f take. Zbyszko, former heavyweight wrestling champion, won the first fall. The challenger pinned the champion's shoul ders to the canvas with a flying mare after 41 minutes and and numerous other of Lewis' strategems. Zbyszko wore down his opponent with four toe holds, two flying mares and $1 seconds, in which time he wriggled out of 11 headlocks several head and wristlocks. Lewis gained the second faM with a headlock after 24 minutes and 20 seconds of wrestling. Just before the fall, Lewis i wore down Zbyszko with two toeholds of several min utes each. Lewi3 effected the fall after his opponent inef fectually used several wrist, body and armlocks. Zbyszko suffered a dislocation of the right shoulder in the tussle but his handlers anrj physicians snapped it back into place and he went back for tha next fall. i-lXZ. TH'S To SQ OUT Bearcat - Hoop! Squad to Make Trip Through Val ley Christmas Week LATE DEALS ARE HIT BY HATES Major League Baseball Men Hold Interesting Ses sion Yesterday ir v , . I 7 I "i . i I - s ff I M V"' ! -i . i i J Si 7 ' Y. ',.,,r - ' , ... ' ..-.. , - ,U 4 . SHK T KF S ULIKUItU lltllU CLASS ins Dope is Slightly Upset Willamette Interclass Hoop Contests The Bearcat hpou squad pectc to make a Darngtormlnx tou: ofctb valley the jweok of Christ mast. , Most .of tie boys will , go home5for the one big day, or at .least enjoy If aa a holiday here in Salem. , Then about ., Wednesday nlghrtRey will go out after prac tice gamca with atmort any kind of teams that want games. Some .of the American Legion and high rchooK teams already organized and going for the winter will be their .opponent. ( The squad Is ' not yet named, evea " a fler the ' Interolasa scries that brought out a fine array of talent. There- are not yet any world-beaters . developed in the class games. It will take a long tr series' than three games to do 1 'if 11 i ' liw vuv Have Your i V Clothes TO n n vaae Measure . ' Because you have a much greater selection of mater ial, you - have ;- the fabric right before you, where you rbetter examine it and spe . for yourself what it is made Of. - , , .... t You can have your clothes made In just the style that . suits YOU, not what some other follow has selected. The linings and trimmings are better and the clothes v&revmade to FIT YOU. Then the price is no I more, many times less than yon would pay for a ready ' made of inferior quality. - -t. vt1 Our prices $25.00 to $45.00 SCOTCH WOOLEN LS NEW YORK, Dec. 14. Major league baseball magnates in joint session today jammed the brakes on late season deals and thus checked for a time at1 least the outcry against the "buying of pennants." This was accomplish ed by the passing of a rule which prevents the transferring of play ers from one club to another in the major leaguer without waiver process after June 15. Hereto fore such deals were possible up to August 1. Under the ' new regulation the manager of team which by June 15 is not strong pennant contender cannot increase the playing strength of his club except by purchase of players from the, minor leagues. To offset the rule the clubs next season will be permitted to carry a roster of forty, players up to June 15 In place of May 15, and the additional month will en able them to experiment and as certain the value of younger play ers who heretofore have been shunted bark to the minors un less ther flashed from sterling j form during the first month of the pennant race. An effort to increase the maximum number of players permitted any one club previous td June 15 from forty to fifty, was lost after the Na tional league had voted In favor of it and the American against it, when Commissioner Landis voted in the negative. However, major league clubs hereafter will be permitted to have 15 players out under option in place of eight, but the proposal to permit a play er being held under option for three years in place of two was defeated. j Thase were the (outstanding ' changes in the code governing the ; regulation of tho National and ' American leagues from the stand point of the fan. Several other chances were made but 'they per tained to the technical and legis lative side of the game. At the joint meeting of the major baseball leagues here this afternoon, it was decided that no club of either league would be permitted to trade or buy players above the waiver prlco in the major league after June 1. The same date was fixed for the reduc tion of rosters to 25 playors. in place of May 15, as in past seasons. The major l?gnes afso raised the maximum number 01 players who will be placed fn minor leagues under options from eight to 1 5. The motion to permit a player tofce held under option for thre years in place of the prt-sent two-year j-ule, was defeated. Maybe it wasn't fair for the seniors to run in "Fat" Zeller and "Beartie" Bain as two of their basketball squad. These two have been sticking to football so closely that nobody knew they could play anything else, even tidd!edy-winks or one-old-cat. let alone a fast, juggly game like bas ketball. But they, and Dave El lis, who was nothing but a com mon ba'seballer, and Papa Bill Vinson, who was a pole-vaulter. and Kinch who is a preacher. athletes and hopes of the three other clas00- They made the) mowed down the whole line pt score three games straight, and they chalk up '23 as the over whelmine winner of the class series. The freshmen, by beating both the juniors and the sophomores are second in the class honors The Juniors, with one win over the frosh are third and the sophs are nowhere. Yesterday's game between the seniors and the JuniorB was the the most exciting of the whole series. The junior let 10 to 6 at the end of the first half. In the second half the eeniors soon gain ed a lead of one point. They had it 15 to 14 with only three min utes to go. Then the juniors shot two points and led. The seniors made one more goal Just .before the whistle blew, giving them the winning point 17 -to 16. The freshmen made It a runa way race against' the sophomores, taking the game 9 to 2. er." Xo wonder everybody is wild about it, and I predict an a y f i (mi . . on nnficii f rTT r n T fT I ut.ipg lira it in mj ki don. I only hope countries in Europe get to see it, too. It will convince them better than any thing else how far you have ad vanced over here in :Jhe cinema art." "I see now that 1 am going to hove plenty of competition here in America, but perhaps if I try awfully hard I can enlarge the place I now hold in the great American heart. There ?eems to be room for everybody, and a welcome on the mat." HERRIN RIOT TOLD OF BY WITNESSES (Continued from page 1) Beare, a Herrin truck driver. po.ntfxJ out from the stand Joe Carnaghi, a defendant as a mem ber of the mob whom he had seen carrying a gui. R. L. Poole, a resident of Her rin, testi fied he had sn Leva Mann, another defendant and Perry Hall, a resident of Herrin who is not among the defend ants in the present case among the armed members. Mr. Poole said that the crowd of marches was made up of be tween 200 and 500 persons and declared tnat the prisoners, T t . j . A A WW , Ulll! Oflll t 1 a U UU IT At! GUAM GOING KAST EUGENE. Ore., Dec. 14. Har lan ("'Dutch") Gram star back field man on the University of Oregon football team this year, today announced that he will quit school at the end of the winter term and that he will enter an eastern college. -V- Gambling in Ball Parks Is Hit by Ban Johnson NEW Yuttiv, uec. 14. Ban j sh rt and trousers" were driven ; ahead of the marches in the di i rection of the cemetery. Police Motionless Tho witness said h had seen among the spectators who had watched the procession Robert Herron, the chiet of police of Braves field, the Nationals' Herrin. After tho marchers had ground, than in any other. He passed, he testified he had walk asked Commissioner Landis and ed several blocks from his house all club owners to join him In 'and on his return had heard the warring on the gamblers. distant sound of firing. can leaue, launched an attack on gambling in the major league ball parks in the joint major league meeting today. The gambling evil still flourished in many parks, he said, particularly in Boston, where investigators had found more open gambling in tt 420 STATE ST. 11 MIS Miss Delia Lofgren is Head of Nurses School SILVEttTON. Or.. Dec. 12. (Special to The Statesman.) Miss Delia Lofgren who was tor several years, superintendent of tho Silverton hospital and who has been during the past- year -tperintendent h of the Corrallis hospital, ; has been . selected as d'recto- of the new -school of nursing which is being .establish ed there by the : Corrallis citizens with the cooperation o the col csb. The school is to too an accred'ted school where at . the end, of. three years or training the students will receive the de gree of registered nurse. All the necessary 7 hospttal work! will be given at Portland or other hos pitals in the state,- - is rem era Pola Negri, famous European -creen star who recently arrived in this country, declares that Marion Davies Is her ideal of Am erican beauty. Madame Negri is a striking brunette, orientally beautiful, with lazy gray-green eyes. Vhen asked her opinion of American girls she immediately launched Into enthusiastic praise of Miss Davies. whose blonde beauty I diametrically opposite her own. "Miss Davies is my ideal of the typical golden blonde American beauty," said the vivacious little foreigner. "I have always ad mired her and awter seeing her as Princess Mary Tudor in that wonderful picture, 'When Knight hood Was in Flower.' oh! I'm just simply more in iove with her than ever. One of the very firrt things I did when I arrived in New York was to see this creat picture so that I might see my favorite Am erican star at close range. She is so lovely as the Princess Mary, and the way she acts! Why. you forget yon are In a theater and believe you are with the real princess, undergoing her same trials to win the man she loves." Strange as it may Beem. Ma dame Negri prefers hlondes to brunettes. That is for Americans, at least. "I love golden blondes with soulful blue eyes, milk white skins, with just a tinge of the kind of nature's own rough which does not come with war tax," she rays. "The kind that is backeu with a striking American person ality. I say the American per sonality because the Americans stand for so much that is person a ity. The secret of the charm of the American woman seems to be her ability to be beautiful and brainy and busy in equal proportions. I love America and I am anxious to get into the studio and become one of you. America haa a great photoplay world and it is progressing all the time. Of that ,1 am convinced, after seeing that superb picture, "When Knighthood Was in Flow- Taste a aty tobacco f 'Zal? BIG TIMBER DEAL MADE ' (Continued from page 1) Portland through Mollalla or through Silverton. Uumor has it that they are fig uring on hauling the logs to Sil verton over the Silver Falls Tim ber company roads to the South ern Pacific and then on to Port land. Tract is I-avgp There is a larse tract of timber in back of these holdings which assures logging In this district for a great many years to come. A feature of interest In connec tion with the purchase is that it shows that the Eastern & Western Timber company's timber along the Columbia river must be run ning low. Sa StIiZ. trANCHO VILLA DEFEATS GOLDSTEIN. 1 v . i - in a fifteen round star bout at Madison! Square Garden, New York city, Pancho Villa of Manilla, the American flyweight cham pion, gained the decision over Abe Goldstein of New York city, who not so long ago won a popular award over Pancho the Puncher in New Jersey. The contest was a fast one and hard fought. Lnorrr & Mters Tobacco Co. A GIFT OPPORTUNITY For Friday and Saturday For Womei Choos ing: Gifts for Men, A SALE OF GIFT NECKWEAR VALUES Some Were $1 Some Were $1.50 Regularly 85c 3 for $2.50 i - - Over 2000 Tie in This SALE i At One Price An event that wiil cause lrisk sfllinin t!u NVckurar section Friday and Satur day. Women choosing gifts for men will welcome this opportunity of securing tic ? of this quality at such a nominal price. j Cut silks of brilliant and soniluf lines (many imported). Also knitted tics ill the open grenadine and close weaves. Large and small shapes, to suit every fancy and the colorings are of the sort men like. j I Early Selection is Advised 85c 3 for $2.50 Make "The Boy" Happy Christmas Morn With Useful Gifts of things to wear. The Boys section is ready with an abundance of useful gifts that will bring gladness to his heart on Christmas morn. Shirts, Blouses, Over coats. Suits, Golf Hose. Shoes, Neckties, Sweat ers, Knit Coats, Flannel Shirts, Mackinaws, Pa jamas, Jazz Caps, Knitt ed Caps, Underwear, Stockings, Gauntlet Gloves, Dress Gloves, Handkerchiefs, etc. etc. MAKE "HIM" HAPPY GIVE GIFTS TO WEAR -Bahrob $4..V) to $22.50 Gift Sox to l-"0 -Girt Shirt 91.50 to $f -Pajamas to $ Silk Muffler 2 to $7.50 Belt nd Buckles 50- to 94 i Glovs I ft to $3 i Sweater t'oMtn to JftJt Specially purchased for this event To be sold at 1 ONE PRICE ! If the Boy wears It- w . have' it -v.e m 4