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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1923)
. v MPHT) Here, There unid. Everywhere' : r I; f ' 3! I 4i i! tl ! ISOUIRE EDGEGATE-F.ctrjn,nTO.mot ' , , " DECISION IN, -BOUT -OTHjOTl ARCHER ' - , . ! i '- Phil Bayes of Salem won a decisive victory over Soldier Archer of San Diego at the Company F boxing program last night. Archer, weighing 131 pounds, had a tour-pound ad vantage ilii weight and three inches in height over Bayes, and it was good fighting weight and height at that. He started in to intimidate the local boy in the first 10 seconds, and he certainly did come' in like a Wildcat to a canary bird conVention. It was as pretty an onslaught as ever happened. It would have been a howling success if Bayes had taken to his heels when he saw it coming. i But looks don t count. Archer RESERVATION FOR FISH IS PUBD - i - - .--1 - . 3t - . - . . . U. Si Bureau of Fisheries Grant Concessions to Packing Companies : Riley at Portland the last of this week, and unless the lathy Riley works pretty cautiously he is like ly to get an Archer fist practically through him: Bayes beat Riley by a wide margin recently. Hayes himsef to to meet Benny Dotson, one of the new Portland feather weight flashes, on the same pro gram. Bayes has been taking on bigger men than himself regutarly. He will not do this with Dotson. The largest crowd lot the season attended the program and the who!e show was good. Even the substitute match ended with the crowd in a comfortable frame of mind, and the . Bayes-Archer go was one of the best in the history of Salem boxing. SEATTLE, Wash., March 27. Modifications Ii the regulations made" and concessions granted by the United States bureau of fish eries under an executive order of President Harding forming a fish reservation in Southwestern Alas- ka' were reported here today by I. M. . Foster, head of the ; Alltak Packing company. Who, went to Washington with a protest. Mr. ' Foster said that his own company and other "small operators" were now satisfied with the restrictions. f Mr. Foster related that , after he and Otto Hafstad of the Kat maU Packing company had con ferred with Henry O'Malley, fish commissioner, a permit to the Robinson Fisheries company, one of the "small operators" had been cbaaged so that it could fish near the mouth of the Karluk river, the principal salmon1 stream of Kodiak Jslaad,. and the Katmai company had been authorized to buy fish in four bays that were closed to It. Part of the. protest was occas ioned by licenses empowering .the Alaska ' Packers' association and the 'i Northwestern Fisheries coin parry to build a weir . fecroMthe mouth of the Karluk and takeEO pertcent of the fish passing this barrier.' Mr. Foster said that this , privilege was cancelled and these companies restricted to beach seine fishing as In previous years.' , . v a vThe small packers feel tht any injustice which may have been done them when the licenses were Issued has been corrected,", de clared Mr. Foster. "In any ef l or to conserve the fishing re sottxces of Alaska it is inevitable that somebody should be hurt." .1 has a heavyweight left hook that' would win against anything that would stand and take it. Bayes didn't. He slipped inside and be gan his work. Archer is a good man with a good record, but Bayes beat him in every round, and had him down and all but out in the first, third and . sixth rounds Archer Lats Well . . Archer, with his long reach, was able to make the match last longer than some of them would. His heavy,- long range left artillery wasn't quite fast enough to con nect,' and with that failing, he hadn't a thing but disposition. He said after it was all over that Bayes is the hardest little hitter he ever met, and that he was beaten by a better man. . The crowd, and the referee agreed, so it's unanimous. - s Bill Hunt and ' Young Peter Jackson did not appear. - Jackson hurt his hand so badly that he had to go to a Portland hospital for a surgical operation, and he could not appear. .Their places were filled by Fred Nichols of Klamath Fal's. 130, and Frank Healy of Portland, .announced; at 134. al though both looked to weigh more than the announced figures. They were frightfully booed In the be ginning for their loving tactics. By the end of the sixth round both were so tired that a two-year-old might have . knocked thern both for a home run. They got a draw. The referee couldn't decide which was the poorest,' and he called it a 'dead. heat. ? . , BASEBALL CLEARWATER, Fla.. March 27 -r-( Exhibition.) R. H. E. Cleveland (A) . , 9 15 ,. 4 Brooklyn (N) 6 13 3 Coveleskife. Morton and O'Nell; Reuther, Grimes, Vance, Decatur and Deberry, Taylor. ; MONTGOMERY, Ala., March 27 Exhibition.) R. H. E. Mobile (Southern) . . 7 15 1 Philadelphia (A) ..... 7 11 2 James, Fulton, Long and Heav. fng; Schillings. Jones, Ozmer, Mc Millrfn, Heimach, O'Neal and Per kins, Bruggy. , i ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 27. (Exhibition.) R. H. E. St. Louis (N) ........ 3 9 0 Boston (N) .... 0 12 0 Doak and Mohney, North and A Jus mi th; Oeschger, McNamara, Braxton and Gowdy. "'. 1 V IJndley Batn, Bauks The Fox Midgets ;of Independ ence put on four rounds of clever boxing, which made a great hit. They are ,growjngupand some daycare going to be no more midg ets. . Chet ; Lindley won from Armin Banks In the first round. It was a hair raising time while it lasted with each scoring : three knock downs, but. Banks' .last one lasted the longest, and he was through Kid Kream. Indian champion. met the first defeat he has known Commission Not to Let Firpo Box Farmer Lodge v : ....I V . j . NEW YORK. March -7 Throw ing a bomb into p'.ans arranged for the heavyweight show at the Yankee stadium May 12. the New York state athletic commission to day barred Farmer Lodge, Minne apolis heavyweight, 'as an oppon ent fpr Luis Firpo, South Ameri can champion, in a match carded on ,the same program with the Je8 Willard-FIoyd Johnson en counter. Declaring that Lodge was not a spitable opponent for the Argen tinan pugilist, William Muldoon. chairman of the commission, or dered 'that either Jack Renault ot Canada. Jim Herman of Omaha or Jack McAuliffe II of Detroit be chosen as a substitute. Pugilists Must Take on Challengers, Says Board NEW YORK." March 27. Characterising Its action as a dec laration of war against ring cham pions who persist in ignoring challenges of logical contenders for their titles, the New York state athletic commission today adopted a drastic ruling compel ling pugilistic kings to go through with challenge matches before at the hands of Lefty O'Dell of ik,n prt ln any other bouts in tilts M; GOOD CIGARETTES GENUINE "BULIT DURHAM TOOACCO San Francisco. Kream put up a game fight; bat he wm op against a hard professional whose experi ence and ability was too much for the local boxer. .: There was no knockdown until the fifth, when Kream took the count of nine. Ap parently he was not in good train ing, and he needed the very best he could get for as tough an op ponent as O'Dell. The San Fran ciscan earned the decision. Again This Week Archer goes against. Kewpie RELIANCE AUTO PAINTING CO 7 219 State U Cor. Front St Phonr 937 Service ' When You Travel No matter when you go South or .East, you'll find four, high-class Shasta Route" trains at your serv ice daily. ! Convenient schedules, comfortable equipment and the assurance of safety, adds much to I the enjoy .ment of your;journey. ' Low round trip tickets to San Fran- cisco, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles and San Diego, on sale daily lim ited June 30th. i J Inquire of local ticket agent for detailed information and descriptive folders or write i-7 . X JOHN M. SCOTT. General Tassenger Agent Portland, Oregon r. The ruling came as a virtual ul timatum to a number of cham ions who have failed to recognize challenges for their honors. ; TO CONTINUE PROBE SAN FRANCISCO. March 27. A request by Oscar Reichow, bus iness manager of the Los Angeles club that he drop his investigation of the recent purchase of the Se attle club, was refused today by William H. McCarthy president of the Pacific Coast Baseball league. according to McCarthy. ALL TEACHERS ARE REELECTED BY BOARD . (Continued from page 1) Paden, Hazel. V Panunzio, Lenore. Parr. Lulu. Philpott, June. . ; X Purvlne, Margaret. Robertson; Mabel. Ross, Ada. Sayles, Mary B. Seeley, Hazel, i ' Small, Constance. Smith, Gertrude. Snook, Grace A. Tartar. Lena Belle. V Washington. Junior High Aldrich, Frederic. Bear, Hazel. Bollier. May. - Creech. Eula S. i r T4 CZOfiSTfiBLK ys you 4c . il lL-r tat finally lone uui . . ; - ,f' , (ic?rE ) (T 1 ( Wu. THE&ILS. CfZjjT I' H O To v -you vou I &oRoriMG " I tJJeee Dduglas. Fannie. Fowle, Teresa. Hulsey, Homer. Humphreys. Gladys. Herd, Conifred. Isherwood, S. H. .Kennedy, Ruby- Lewis, Minnie R. Linn, Marion C. Luthy, D. K. Pohle, Alma. , Reed, Lois A. Sparks, Lestle J. Grafit Junior High Sc1hk1 Barker. E. S. Boentje, Anna Johnson, Lelia Lippold. Elsie R. Mercer. Harriet R. Pomeroy. Clara C Rauch, May L. Thompson, Mrs. Alice McKJnley Junior High Doege, Nell M. Foster, P. A. , Hale, May A. Hamilton, Helen B. Kreamer, Gretchen McKinlay, Muriel Miles, Anna Minton, Mar jorie White. Elta P. Reed. Lela Englewood . Hchool Callison, Clara C. Hammer, Bennie Jenkins, Ruth Palmer, Mary S. Scverson, Mildred Garfield School Brown, Ocie K. Burdick. Alma M. Duncan. Minnie ; Ellis, Georgia Ives. Ruth E r lliatt-Phillips. Greta McCaffrey. L. M. Sterner, Ru,th , Shields, Ruth , GrantElcnientary ReYoe, Ella Forkner, Maude Gamer, Bertha High land School Allen, Bertha Allen, Mabel Bartlett, Isabel Currin.Ellen Dann, Mae Lake, Florence J. Steinberg, Fannie N Unroln Scliool Curry, Mabel Davenport, Merle H. Fawk, Ermine B. Rotzien, Violet Taylor, Dorothy Temple, Mabel Wilson, Mary F. Williams, Jennie Park School Allen. Grace Lick, Grace Martin, Amy E. Martin, Jessie Moore, Maude Mustoe. Eava . Sheridan. La Binla Trlndle. Mildred Richmond School Bodayla, Rose Burch, Maybelle Chapler, Adella 1". Cochrane, Adona DeWItt, Gertrude "r ) McAdams, Phoebe . Zosel, Grace WarshJ n gtoii Klementary Bell. Orpha ( Martin, Carrie Jury in Confidence Ring Case Deadlocked DENVER, Colo., March 27. Additional instructions probably will be given the jury deadlocked over a verdict In the trial of 20 alleged members of a nation-wide confidence ring. Judge George Dunklee today informed the juror who have been out more than 80 hours that he expected them to reach a verdict and urged the mi nority to consider carefully wheth er the majority In the Jury room; was not right. Unconfirmed reports tonight were that the prosecution tomor row would" ask the court to in struct the Jury to return a verdict of guilty and bolster their demand with citations of authority for such action. . . Suspenders are again said to be coming in fashion, perhaps for the reason that the world is pretty much in a state of suspense all the time nowadays. ' ' ROBIN HOOD Read the Classified Ads, Dress the Boy up fpr 1 Easfcei? The EASTER SALE of BOYS' SUI is the i . . . i Opportunity Better Values Bigger Stocks Another Reason Why We Sell So Many Used Cars t We Sell For Less 1920 Chevrolet, spot light, shock absorbers. $250. license free. 1921 Ford Touring. $90 worth of accessor- ies, cord tires. This is a dandy for $375. - 4.- 1920 Dort. See this one. A bargain for $335. Every Day is Bargain Day at . ' The Marion Anto Co. We give terms See Ackerman Marion Automobile Co. Phone 362 235 S. Commercial St. Open all the time That you place your order now for tbat new Ford wanted for spring de livery, as a shortage already exists. Ask about our easy paymentplan. ; ..,-.' 'i. - . Salem Genuine Ford Parts and Service FREE 1 - With every Boy's Suit purchased-begin-ing this morning ( Wednesday) ' "Champion" Baseball '. U ' i . J . : " and Bat Summer and Kail time is coming boys. Jlcrc's a chance to get a good ball and bat along with a mighty good suit. Come in to day and see about it. SEEOUR WINDOWS Two-Pants if you Wish PRICED AT $10 H2-s $l-50 The style, the quality is all tbat you could desire to make the boy proud of his appearance. Easter Morn let the boy "step out" to Sunday School attired, in one of these suits just like older brothers. All Wool Fabrics of course and careful taijoring. 4 r