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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1924)
FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1924. AMERICAN NATIONAL PASTIME ENJOYED BY PARIS CHILD! THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON GliTS LOSER; SCORE 8 TO 1 Clubs Sail! For New York . . Nov. 25, After Trip to - Italy and Gerrnany PARIS. Nov. 13. (By the AP.) ' It remained, for the children of Paris to appreciate the American national game of baseball when their elders had failed miserably to do so. Lusty lunged crowds of French war orphans boya and Rlrls today 'cheered the 'New York Giants and the Chicago White Sox as they played their final game in Paris, and many of them were even keen enough to : see the fine" points of the play. There, wag whistling and ap plause from the youngsters is the Honey Back IF It Doesn't 8dp tvefaSaUm will te II jrmi tha big probtant with wemlp ailments im to rt th popi to form a cowhitwtt bMbit of tak lT ewof tiwtr hair. 'Va Kmm Uquid Scalp I 'iufnm in ptu uted bottla jtth m pa cial rubber applicator aUachwLTba method of xpi)catioaiaaay and cleanly. Tba aaadicamant M fad through rubber nippies directly to tba roots of ha hair white tba scalp ia motly massaged. On roinata a day with Van Eaa top failing hair, raliaraa itch in I aealp and crows naw hair. Aak ' about W-day traaUnaut plan. w S3V roa a peatova suatantaa. C. Perry Drugs, 115 South Com mercial adv. . o - n f If This is PLAY-TIME in Sun-swept CALIFORNIA GO THERE this season. Enjoythemost delightful winter you ever experienced. Warm, sunny beaches comfortable, flower decked hotels welcoming cities- healthful outdoor recreation these invite you. ' ' , j 'Four 1 1 ,fine trains . i:. daily over V the scenic Shasta Route :" And low winter excursion fares make .this attractive winter vacation easily available, i ' ; i For full information communicate with i 2 1 I 'i i U, Darling, Agent, Salem, or A. A. Mirkel, I. F. & P. AM . ,r t - ' . ; 184 Liberty Street ' ? r :: Stock Reduicing Sale At this time we find we are overstocked, hence decided to hold a stock-reducing sale Every Item of our Large Stock Reduced "V. Except Shelby Mazda Lamps Buy Yoiir Xmas Presents Now , ' Big Reduction in All Merchandise Including 1 Cutlery Firearms 1 "Gun Cases, Gun Imp. Sportsmen's Clothing Golf Goods Ammunition Shot Shells : Boxing Gloves Twinplex Stroppers Alarm Clocks Leather Puttees Heavy Wool Socks 1 v Athletic Equipment Athletes, Coaches, ; Teachers: Our entire stork of basketball, football, gym nasium and playground equipment on sale at startling reductions. The most com plete stock of athletic goods we have ever carried on our ithelves, fresh from the factories. Take advantage of this sacrifice of seasonal merchandise. CIA CJQER CDRQTMERQ Salcniy second inning when the Giants tallied four runs, and still more of the same kind of bedlam when the White Sox. durin their time at bat, made seven tallies. Again pandemonium broke out in the seventh when the Giants, who had scored a run in the fifth,, brought in two more runs and tied up the game, 7-7, and when the- Sox im mediately afterwards scored again with what proved to be the win ning run. making the score 8-7. The orphans attended the game by invitation of Managers McGraw and 'omiskey, who had been dis appointed by the failure of the grown-ups to show any interest in the sport. ! The astounding progress In com prehension of the American na tional game was hailed gleefully by all the French, speaking Ameri can fans nearby Today's game evens the overseas series, each club having six wins to its credit. The players will leave here Saturday for Rome, after which their trip will be purely a sight-seeing one. Most of the men, except Heinie Groh and Frankie Frisch. who are planning to go to Germany, intend to sail on the Leviathan from Cherbourg for New York Novem ber 25. ' Score - White Sox R. H E. 8 8 0 7 13 2 Giants Jonnard, Hunzinger and Gowdy; Robertson, Lyons and Plelnich. i Indians Will Play Fast - Linfield Eeven Today Presenting a better . team this year than last the Cbemawa In dians expect to secure the victory in today's football contest from Linfield. The Indians have only one more game after the one with Linfield and it is with Monmouth normal school. ' Following the last grid game Coach Down ie plans to start off with basketball funda mentals and to turn out a win ning quintet. ; . ', Marriage is the foundation of the foose bricks in the foundation. Shoe Oil f j Herman's U. S; and Shoes 1 High Top Shoes Roller Skates Thermos Bottles Camp Equipment Athletic Equipment Basket Ball Clothing Footballs Razor Blades ; Morgan Razor Strops Purses I 372 State St. I. U ' ' m LEAGUE PRACTICE TO BETTER TEAMS Old High School Gymnasium Will Be Used Three Nights Each Week The Commercial Basketball league players will attend the big Marion County Corn snow ana industrial exhibit next week In stead of Dlayine basketball games on November 20, 21 and 22. How ever, they will have a game on November 18, when the Jiauser Bros, and the Lesion will compete and the Union Oil and the Central pharmacy will play. : ,' : A practice schedule for the Commercial league at the Salem hieh school gymnasium (old gym) is announced. Monday, Wednes day and Friday are the days se lected. Practice will start at and 8:15 o'clock. Monday, the Anderson & Brown and Hauser Bros. j Wednesday, the Central phar macy and the US Bank. Friday, the Uniou Oil and the American Legion. Pres. Turner and Lewis Leave To Attend Meeting PORTLAND. Ore., Nov. 13.- President M. L. Turner of the Portland, club' of the Pacific coast baseball "league, has left for the east and Manager Duffy Lewis for California., f Lewis , plans to leave for the east about November 23 and will stop at Phoenix, Ariz., on the way, looking over the city as a pros pective training site for next spring. : ! He-will Join President Turner in the east and they will attend the national . association meeting which is scheduled for the first Tuesday in December. Oregon Frosh Team Goes I To Seattle For Last Game EUGENE, Nov. 13.- The Uni versity of Oregon freshman foot ball team accompanied by Baz Williams, coach, will leave Eugene tonight for Seattle where the Uni versity of Washington babes will be met Saturday. It will be the last game of the year on the Ore gon frosh schedule. Firpo's Star Setting; : Career Appears Finished NEW YORK, Nor. 13. The pugilistic star of Luis Angel FIrpo appears to be setting with the sort of meteoric rapidity which mark ed its rise. On top of bis decisive defeat in September at the hands of Harry Wills, the decisive setback given Firpo last night at Newark by Charley Weinert has put the fam ous Argentine's fistic stock at the lowest ebb it has been since he made bis sensational debut here in 1922, ';: ' ; ; . ; . Firpo's future plans are uncer tain. He has several more fights in prospect In the Metropolitan district and elsewhere during the winter. Including offers from Tex Rickard for matches with Quin tin Romero, and George Godfrey at Madison Square Garden. CHINA LEADER LEAVES HONG KONG, Nov. 14. Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, the south - China leader; left here today for Shanghai. Sweaters ArmyLeather Vests Baseball Goods Game Traps Flashlights Fishing Tackle Martin Automatic Fish ing Reels .Tackle Specials . ' Rubber Boots Slickers Enameled Fishing Lines Spinner Special Oregon HARDY ENGLISH FISHERMAN OF SUSSEX COAST TRAIN THEIR BOYS IN SKILLFUL HANDLING OF SMALL CRAFT fin f - jp f --X:- - ii If! 1 - -' 1 ' -:- ' ft- - ;4 $.xr J i i ' Sussex ilshcrmpn are renonnel i ror ineir skiii m nianaeinjr i lleve that the Iruiiitnj, of their Ituys EXTREME PRICES Large Proportion of Tourists Have Been Driven Away By Charges HAMBURG, Nov. 13. Eu-hotel- ropean tourist agencies. keepers, railway and steamship officials are now busy trying to make an estimate of next year's possible tourist business from tbe United States. , 1 1 The season now coming to a close has been a record-breaker, especially for England, France and Italy. Switzerland bad a good year, and Austria and Czech oslovakia did well. Belgium and Holland also prospered and, to gether with, Switzerland, won the approval of visitors through their waiving of passport regulations and general courtesy to -travelers. Germany-had a poor year, and German ; hotelkeepers are much disappointed that the visitors from America who flocked C to the Wembley Exposition andhe Olympic Games did not extend their trip into Germany. This was due in part to the upset condition of the transportation systems of Germany, and also to high prices, the municipal ' taxes Imposed on foreign hotel guests, and the dif ficulties which foreigners ' under went last year at the hands of German police officials, when an effort was made to free the coun try of "objectionable forelgners.'V : Americans who , have visited Germany this . year have been mostly persons of German extrac tion, and business men. News of the high prices undoubtedly sent many people to Italy or southern France who might otherwise have come to Germany. ; ' On the whole Americans who visited Europe this season prob ably did not have as comfortable a time-as they anticipated. London hotels 'were crowded throughout the season, and their prices were so high that even wealthy tourists found much fault. The same was true of Paris. The Olympic Games and the conventions of lawyers and advertising men in London filled both Paris and London to overflowing with Americans. Many of the visitors were disgruntled, and declared most emphatically that they would give Europe a wide berth for some time to come, and travel in , their own country. Americans who visited Italy and southern France, especially in the spring and early summer, found hotels and pensions crowd ed with German visitors. This cre ated bad feeling, as a. movement for German relief was on in the United States at the time, and many Americans were puzzled by the apparent prosperity of Ger mans living in comfort abroad, when many of thefr fellow coun trymen were reported to be in dire want. , . Travel in Germany should be more normal next year, provided there be no hitch in the execution of the Dawe3 plan. High prices in Germany, especially In the larger 1 cities, still handicap the tourist i ii sin no a J (ha.. ff tn 1 Ia. tlon of a change in this respect. Berlin has finally eliminated the tax which was imposed on the rooms occupied by foreign guests, but visitors complain that tbe lo cal hotels still charge above world prices. . ; ,; . : ; On tbe whole, while Europo had a bonanza tourist season this year, but it is doubtful whether next year will be as good. Many of the visitors went home with the feeling that London and Paris did not take proper precautions to Insure the comfort of their.vlsit ors, and protect them against ex tortionate prices. : , to take thlr places cannot Ue bo1 i ?un 100 -arty ai liasunrs, an oil l tlally for .natruciion. The pnoto- OREGON TO MEET WASHINGTON STATE Saturday's Game To Only Conference Meet In Northwest ; Be V ...V ..: v;, EUGENE, Ore., Novl 13 When University of Oregon meets Wash ngton State college on Multno mah field in Portland Saturday he Cougar's will face j a fighting 3leven still smarting from its de feat by Idaho. Following a vic tory over the University of 'Wash ington, Oregon lost to the Gem Staters at Moscow. The game in Portland will be the only big league squabble in the north as the Oregon Aggies are idle Saturday and the Univer sity of Washington will have a workout against the College of Puget Sound, a non-conference team. Idaho is idle and Montana travels to Palo Alto for a game with the Cardinals. Big plans are being made for the student inva sipn"ot"Portland. A special train is being chartered to leave ? Eu gene Friday afternoon. 1 It will arrive in Portland , in . time for a monster serpentine and a rally at the. Multnomah club. . L Lehglen Begins Training -; To Recover Tennis. Honors . . . i . NICE, France. Oct. 22 (AP) Suzanne. Lenglen, completely re cdvered from the illness which caused her to withdraw from the Wimbledon tennis tournament and Temain away from the Olympic competition, has started . in light training on the courts of the Nice Tennis club, of which her father Is J the manager, with a view to resuming In the tennis world the position which Ehe decupled in 1923. . , , ; ; . , Whether she- is successful or not, it Is her present Intention to retire at the end of 1925. But "women vary," said old King ; Francis the First of France, and among her friends and acquaint ances Suzanne's emphatic expres sion of her determination to aban don tennis is 'received with some pessimism. i 'I Suzanne is about 15 pounds over her best playing weight and she intends to take things. easy, gradually rounding Into form dur ing the Riviera tournaments, playing double's and mixed dou bles. She may not play singles until the spring tournament of the Nice Tennis club next March, f Meanwhile, I Mile. Emillenne Vlasto, French 1 9 2 4 champion, finalist' against Miss Helen Wills In the Olympic Games and Su zanne's most ; dangerous oppon ent in France, recently was mar ried and probably, will play no more tennis, f ; i i TODAY AND TOMORROW Matinee and Evening ifflip 1 It': IV V S Am BLIGH THEATRE -I erraph shows the boya wlndlnir th. j .apstan undr th watchful ere i of cne of lixt old saita- E DEMOS CHANGES Wants Mobolization of Na j val Forces Held Else where Than Hawaii 1 BUFFALO, Nov. i 3 . -Resolutions urging that" the proposed mobilization of naval forces next spring be held elsewhere than in the Hawaiian islands, and ex pressing the hope that immigra tion legislation be revised and legislation to the extent of ad mitting ultimately the Japanese to the quota provisions of the law, so that the irritation and resent ment held against the United States by the Japanese may not be increased, were adopted at th closing session today of the ninth annual meeting of the American council of the World alliance for international friendship through the churches. ' ' Other resolutions were approv ed advocating entrance of the United - States into the - world court . of. International justice, a thorough and sympathetic study of the Geneva protocol, creation of a federal commission for the pro motion of world peace and partici pation of the United States in a disarmament conference if one is called - in Geneva or otherwise to invite the other nations for such a purpose. . Mexican Labor Leader is Shot During Story Debate .MEXICO CITY, Nov. 13. (By the Associated Press ) . . Deputy Louis Morones, the most promi nent labor leader in Mexico, who was shot ' through the stomach last night after a stormy debate in the chamber, was much im proved . today. Physicians report ed he had a fair chance for recov ery. President-elect Calles re mained at the wounded deputy's side until one o'clock this morn ing. The chances of Peopoldo Guerrero, age,d deputy from Zaca- tecas, who was wounded twice in the chest during the affray, are declared to be slim., Eye witnesses to the shooting state that Guerrero was shoi while sitting motionless behind his desk. Willamette Valley Transfer Co. ; Fast Through Freight to All Valley Points Daily Speed-Ef ficiency-Service Saiein-Portland-Woodburn CorvalliM - KuRene - Jefferson Dallas - Albany Monmouth Independence - Monroe Springfield SHIP BY TRUCK 7? WORLD Davis Resumes Practice With Former Law Firm NEW YORK, Nov. 13. John W. Davis, recent democratic nom inee for president announced to day he had resumed the practice of law in New York City with bin former associates and that Ire would , 'leave soon for a holiday abroad. . . Mr. Davis, soon after his nom ination withdrew from the law firm of Stetson, eJnning.. Uusaol and Davis, which he joined in March, 1921, upon finishing his service as American embassador to Great Hritain. . . ; New Plots Are Discovered According to Rome Rumors ROME, Nov. 13 Reports have been current In some quarters that a plot has been in preparation for the overthrow of fascism. . It is seml-officially stated however, that such reports of the discovery of an anti-government plot are ab- J It is explained that the police arrested four, communists after a recent meeting of subversire ele ments here but, -it1 is added, this meeting cannot be described as having . the character of aj con spiracy. V ; s ' - , CHRISTIAN PASTOR RESIGNS. Last Sunday morning Rev. C. F. Trimble, who for nearly three j years has been Bastor of. the Dallas Christian church tendered his Teslgnation, the same to be effective within two weeks, when Mr. Trimble expects to leave for Heppner to- accept the pastorate of the Christian cburchi of . that city. The departure of this good man and his estimable family will be. greatly regreted both inside and outside his church, as 'they have made many friends.- Item izes ' : ' '. " ' Marriage begins to be a failure when married people begin act ing like married people. HI ' COUPON WEBSTER'S femCTI0Ni4M 'contains complete radio section MORE THAN A DICTIONARY THE OREGON STATESMAN 215 S. Commercial, Salem, Oregon ROSTEIfJ & GREEfJGAOLI RELIA B LE MERC H ANDISE Linen Lunch Cloths 1 Blue or gold squares 36x36 S1.25 45x45 $2,00 ; Fine . Linen Toweling ' yd. 85c and 75c Guest Towels, Fine Linen, $1.45, $1.25, $1.15 : 36-in. Outing Flannel, Yd. 23c ; BEDSPREADS Bed Spreads, all 82x94 Satin finish bedspread V 5.00 80x90 Bedspread, a grade - ! 2.95 fair Satin finish bedspreads, 72x94, scalloped and cut corners "- 1 ' 6.00 . Bates colored Bedspreads pink, blue and yellow 5.00 MILLINERY DEPARTMENT ' h " . Reduced Prices on All Hats " I Two Big Assortments 3.50 and 2.50 240 AND 246 N. COMMERCIAL; ST. IACK MOST FRUIT SKATTL.E. Nov. 23. Washing ton, Oregon and California packed half of the canned foodr of the United States according to a circu lar of tbe Manufacturers' associa tion of Washington published here today, . IX)S ANGELES, Nov. 13. A drink of water charged with 2200 volta of electricity killed L. A. Daughey, truck driver, here to day. , Daughey was electrocuted when he tried to quench bis thirst at the nozzle of a garden hose at tached to a water pipe, which in iome way had come into contact with a high power line. FIIAXCK BITS U. S. CARS PARIS, Oct. 6 (AP) Statistics for the first six months of 1924 show that during that time France bought 6,327. automobile from the United States, and sold 144 French cars to Americans. No other country approaches the United States in automobiles 1m- ,nto France, Italy being second with. 611. Before you insistthat he has a fine disposition, ask his creditors. n J COMING . SUNDAY 4J AMERICAN OPERA QUINTETTE A n d FOUR OTHER ACTS Rfi nr U2J U VU UU THEATRE How to Get It For the mere nominal cost of Manufacture and Distribution Q coupon. . Secure : this NEW. authentic Webster's Dictionary, bound in -genuine seal grain Fabrikoid, illustrated in full color and black halftone. Do It Today! MAIL tm p,rt In this city and ORDERS up to 150 mi. 7c WILL BE St'-t. for grtttfr Qiitt&cf, f7TI I t?n FOtmtrr rat Linen Guest Towels Pretty Small Checks 59c Fine Huck , . Colored Borders 89c . t Fine Linen Tablelinens 71 inches wide yd. 32.50 All First Quality 79x86 f satin finish bed- 3.95 spread 72x94 Bedspread. A f air grade 2.65 Bedspreads. Our grade, scalloped and corners, 82x94 7.00 best cut Bedspreads, our largest size, 84x96, special 4.00 imps. i t t I i ; t t i c i K i t . 4. 4 i - tr 4 i 1 f Y K 4 I t 4 4. . 4- 4 i