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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1925)
TOE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 21.-1925 4 4 -. r.lATGIl IS PRDPQSED Middleweight, Champ May "Get Chance to Fight Jack . -fUi September, Said - "x CHICAGO; July 23. .(By Asso dated - Press.) Harry Greb, worwyj asWdlewelght . champion, nay be matched with jack Demp ey in a 10-round,. no decision bout in the open air arena at Mich, igan City.'Ind., on the afternoon of September 19 or 25. , Greb,, at a meeting of Chicago sports writers with ', Promoter Floyd. Fitzalmmongv tonight, was chosen as the best- arailable op ponent for Dempsey In yiew of the fact that the heavyweight cham pion' said he could not be ready for an ' engagement with Gene Tunney or. Harry Wills this year. Promoter Fitzslmmona said he ftad receired assures from Demp- ( ney -1y telephone "from Salt Lake City that the champion would box Greb and he would, post forfeits as soon as the match was closed, Greb' has jassuredT Fitzslmmona he M accept, the match. NowthefMen to Dzotvti ROSENBERG KNOCKS OUT EpblESHEA IN FOURTH 1USTAHWKJGIIX STILL HOLDS A CHAMPIOXSHIp LAURELS 1-7 1 ' N'EW'.tdftK, Inly 23. (By Av sedated Press.) Charley (Phil) Rosenberg' of N'ew York, world's bantamweight champirfn. knocked but Pddie Saea ef Chicago in the fourth round of.a 15 round title match at the Velodrome A. C. to-" night. ; .. ; The champion floored his chal lenger twice in the third round Uh stiff rights and. blows to fbc jaw. " Itfght after the start of the fourth "ronnd Shea caught another ai the jaw and took nine before he came !up. 5 Then Rosenberg stepped back, measured him for the. finishing touch and crashed through right to the jaw which knocked Shea oat. -The end camr 37 seconds after the start of the fourth round. ;,' r Twenty thousand persons were Present when the preliminaries started.,, , t ' -. t ,.' In i an'elsht round preliminary "MIkevDndfce,of Rbck.lsland III., Wni awarded a draw with Johnny Drew"o Worcester, Mara. ' , & f v.- ' : - - : PntwreMreer P, ACTON CLIMBS KMAU C . tkk;xuar mehama - fWtfi; people? go' hunting for eetTafldf tlierltare hunted. TJ'HAcion according to his wn "fctdry;: t -one of those that ets IUnted;f ' 1; r - v ? v 1 1f 4 states' that" last Sunday whil tishlng -ni ' the Santiam some six tailerf. feast ftfiMenama he saw a fcuck-: aTpjstoacning him leisurely. Mr.AeUn clapped his hands ex pecting Hoe buck to flee, but he w feftappolnte J. ; , - ; .v- The buck seemed to have boii nibsto ": transact" wilh; fr Acton, and "herflot eating to transact any basfoess with ibe animal while on the ground, sought refuge in a ftearby -sapling until the buck. In Apparent disgust, moved on. figU TOURNEY SUNPAY KXTRAXCK FKR At ILLIIIEE I J CtXU j.S.iOLF BALL" . 4' Much is written of the good .looking male lifeguards at the summer beaches. ; The. Goody ' koonti sisters, Axla" on Mary Elizabeth's shoulders, are life guard at Balboa. Calif. And the men folk are awfully care less about going- beyond their depth. for the- men. Each member . en tering will be requested to dress up in female attire, which must be worn throughout the entire match..."- Further information will J be publisued at a later date. suSSeiis Eagles Are Defeated 1 to 0 in Final Championship iSeries Last Night f By winning an almost error!es and airtight game from the Eagles last.-. night,, the Papermakers won the championship of the Sundown league. The acore for the game was; 1 to 0. The Papermakers won the first game of a three game series, and then dropped the second by poor base running. - - Both teams ; played good ball last night,' and it was not until the last ball had crossed the plate that the final outcome wa assur ed. Schackman for the Paper makers, brought In trie only tally of the game in the fourth inning. In the last inning the Papermak era threatened to score again but were stopped by the spectaculat catch of a- low hard fly to left field by Oretz. Eagle center. Lauderback, pitching ,for tht Papermakers. held the Eagles to four scattered hits, and strik out IS batters. Chapman for? iht Eagles did nearly as well with 9 strikeouts and only six hits. The Eagles acquired four errors dur ing the contest while the Paper makers squeezed thtough With c clean slate on that score. The lineup: . . 'Papermakers Gross, cf; Wil kerson, bs; Mooti-y, If; Schack man, lb; Versteeg.'c; Lauterback p; B. Gross, rf; Blankenshlp, 2b; Simpkins 3b. y ' .' Eat.s HoTton, 3b; Schultz!. c; Chapman, p; Snilly, 2b; De Sart, 8s; Anderson, lb; Hagedorn, If; Tretz, cf; Wlllett, rf. RICH BEQUESTS GIVEN ESTATE OP LORD CURZOX IS ADMITTED TO PROBATE SAILOR, 20, CONFESSES KILLING DRIVER OF. CAR (ContiAord front page t.) -. he h,ad. somethingabout my wifo. But I dl4n't' find it. s I went up to,' inyMent;. pdt -thy guiirsway lit my bed? "and t'came "1" back ; down t9wn;; ;:f .v-;: . . T; Police saXd.r they believed rob bery 'was the'jaotlve of the shoot ing, 'pointing: , out .'that Anabel'a watcft and i;fena1h; ' were " missing hen 'the body .wa? found although a small" sum .of "trforiey was found although a" small .sum' of money was found .inT the pocketsv ; Hudfson protab'y will be tried in a military J court as the shooting took 'place da' the army reserva tion. li -'-'.-"i-";; : c - . j; Sunday, July 2C. the tourna ineat committee of the, Illihee Country club ihaa arranged a han dicap -tournament. This is open ,ti all members of the club. The entrance fee is one golf ball, an a the prises' will be awarded according- to the ndmber of entries, with a first, second, -third and fourth Writer' "This is ooen to both men and women and it is hoped that tnere win be a large entry.' Graham Sharliey. elab rrofes sjjpnaL will hare charge of the nanaicaps wmcn , will be posted on; the" .bulletin board and all en tries are to be made to- him.; . The tournament committee? Is planning o . having a match! of "xuo Kuiq every ; sunaay, either local or; with some outside team. On AuiUSt 4, the ftnh. ntini n Hare a team match between mem- Ders, each, tean to be picked by their respective losing team will, furnish a dinner ior noth themselves, their oppon enta and the wives of ech : 1 Another tournament t Un k. ln planned j for j the near future Road Improvement Program Is Now Beirio, Carried Out BELLE HOR1ZOXTE? Brazil A ; boom has struck the develop ment of state highways in the state or Minaa Geraes. The, head of the highway commission, reports, that public expenditures for good toads during 1924 totalled $350,000 and that Improvements- planned for 1925 will require an additional $ 5 0 0,0 6 0. : 1 1 completed aceordin g to present "plahs, the state high way system : Will include 8.&00 miles of good roads. - The state- has a population of 6,000,000. : ' So few . are the ' good roads in Minas Geraes that'll-has been im possible to motor from Belief Hor iionte, the capital; to any neigh boring stato. .Three roads are be ing worked at present; one headed towards the cocoa' district of Bra zil and the other two t,ow"ards Rio de Janeiro. .- " - ; . - LONDON, July 23 The will of the late Marquis Curt'on of Ked- bstone, which was probated yea- leraay, places a gross value on his estate apart from previous settle ments, of 354,894 pounds sterlins about $1,775,000, with a net value of approximately fifty .thousand pounds sterling less. Important bequests to the Brit ish nation indicate that in death as in life, the first thoughts of the distinguished statesman were of the empire. The document which ia very long and remarkable in its detail. Is in Curzon'a penciled hand writing, and was revised and sgned the day before the opera tion that preceded "his death last winter. - - . . . . : - ; It was .needless Lord Cnrzon wrote, to make - pecuniary provi sions for the children of his first wife, Mary Letter, of Chicago, be cause that -was done by the 'wills of their grandparents, "Mr. and Mrs. L. Z. Letter. - . Similarly, the three children of his second wife by her former husband, are fortunately provided for from their father's estate. Lord Curzon'a - widow Is the daughter of the late J. Monroe Hinds, United States minister' to Brazil. She, receives an Interest in the CuKUnftownhouse in Carl ton House; terrace with its con tents, five thousand pounds annu ally and the residue of his .per sonal property. . LOQ" RATES PROBED - SEATTLE, July 23. (By Asso ciated Press). Representatives of railroads , and , log? shippers who met here - today for a -conference over intra-state log rates announc ed tonight that ncr-agreement had been reached. The conference ia to continue tomorrow. PORTLJLHD. obegou Mm tcMkcrn. ataall vlaua. 50,000 Pounds Junk ' Tires and Tubes J VSo Pay Cash cr if you need ;new tires, brirj your old ones in and ' trade them In - 0: G:;itcl Tiro - v r::njfccti:ri:j II. Etienbock,' Prop. - 22. Center Street ?ttlmui R$it Ftt$il, Jmmt ; Roundtrip Excursion Fares tv'ry day throughout the summer I : , :- -. season. St opover wherever and as long. , ; i as you please within final return limit October 31st?. - J ?Nowplanyourvacationjourneysto the east. Let our agents assist in fixing ' Vour itinerary. And include . ?; ' CALIFORNIA either going or returning,or both ways, ; if you choose. See it's manifold won ?. deraUittle, if any, additional expense. ' f : . "?; s Ask any Agent , V . V If . . . m m T Kj. ii. i n rung, ent, oaiem, or & A. : j Xllckei, D.: F. & V. A, 184 Liberty St. Wliat la IJfe'a Meaning Another Answer : - .. j -"Man who aspire to a happy, a brilliant and a long life instead of a virtuous one, are like foolish actors who want to be always hav ing great parts. the parts that are marked by splendour "and 'tri umph, they fail to see thatjthe important thing is not WHAT or HOW MUCH, but HOW they act." So it seemed to Sehopenhouer, pes simist, j - . " j We are told by one school of philosophers that a man does! not alter,-and his moral character re mains absolutely the same throughout bis life; . . j . - That he must play the part he has received, without the leasi de-. viation from the character; That neither experience nor phil osophy, nor even religion can ef Xect any improvement in. him. . If all this is true, then what is the meaning of life? To what purpose is it played, this drama In which everything that is essen tial Is irrevocably fixed and determined?- A thousand answers have j been gUren" to the- question. Here is ope: "It Is played that a j man may come to understand himself, that he may see what it is that he eeks and has sought to be; jwhat he wants, and what, therefore, be is.. :l ' '-: . ft . "This Is a? knowledge wheih must be imparted to him Ifrom without." Ride 7m Cowboy! J Aw frA A: V v yw 'I' i: j7 v I - y I if I .,; ..J . Violet Berry, one time cham pion cowgirl, is raising her boy to be a rider and roper. The boy, Glenn Hornbrook, now three, is already taking lessons from' Rose Herlin, famed rider, as' yon see. The photo was taken at Luna Park, N. Y. V? According to this definition, life Is "to man? in other, words, to will, what chemical re-agents are to the body; it is only by life that a man reveals" what he Is, and it is only in-aa far as he reveals him self that he exists at all. ! Then life is the manifestation of character, of the something that we understand by that word. And it is not In life, but outside 3f it, and outside time, that char acter undergoes alteration, as a result of. the self-knowledge which life gives. . This argutnent, which becomes clearer with a second reading, is supported by. Schopenhauer In this manner: ( ;?''''' "Life is ,only the mirror into which a man gazes not in' order that he may get a reflection of himself, but that he.may come' to understand himself by that re flection; that he may see WHAT it is tha't the mirror shows. "Life Is the proofsheet. In which the compositors' errors are brought to light. ' ? gS ? ! i . ' ' ... V"2 iake no Phance when.yott buy a used M Ford car from an Authorized Ford Dealer. You get. the same square deal as on a new Ford car, and it carries a thirty day guarantee V'"" ?: - . I ; M .:. . ?,:Mr;;::;;; (?? ? . VALLEY MOTOR COMPANY 260 North HighPhone 1993 -"i mmw mmwm mmmn mm mm mm mm mkmm bmm DAY'S SUITS FIT ... ROSOJTHIXO tKW IX MEN'S WORK SUITS Day's New "Tug of War ClothM Work Suit ' . WILL WEAR LIKE IRON Coat and Pants Suits $7.50 EXTRA PAXTS TO MATCH $3.00 Day's Grey Moleskin Suits .ld nd Quality moleskin that has been Imitated but seldom equaled as to material or workmanship Coat and Pants Suite SI 1.50 ? EXTRA PAXTS TO MATCH $1.50 Also sizes 44 to 54 waist, only $3.00 pslr Day's Single Tie Riding Pants ' Sii k68 Tlilng pants made ,ook8 1,ke button leg. and till by lacing one eyelet it is done no button boles to DOUBLE SEAT AND KNEES ' In Heavy OD Khaki doth, price $3.75 pair In Heavy grey Moleskin cloth, price.: $5.00 pair In Heavy Corduroy cloth, price fgQ pair ': Just received " ' : Day's Big 5 Waist Overalls ? for Roys age O to 10 years ' Price S1.25 ROStSij&GBDMf ff240 N.. COMMERCIAL STREET. Exclusive agenu In Kalem for Day's Tailoml Trousers i and Work Clothes Spirit of Ages Permeates Youths; , ; Differences Settled in Modern Way Archie Elliott Vanulslm Bobby Hernial I in Thlnl Canto of Fight Schdull to "Go to the ,inLhM . - Times sure do change. .A comparatively few years ago here in the west if two men had personal differences they would "ahoot it out" upon sight; prior to this time challenges would be Issued, seconds arranged for and the combatants would meet in mortal duel . with either swords or pistols.- Back, a few centuries it was "draw and have at ye." While times do change the re sults seldom vary. " ? ; Perhaps it was a reylTal of these ancient customs or again perhaps it was owing to the fact that the city council failed to provide for a boxing commission, and encoun ters placed under the ban that led two young men" to settle their differences in the way that has been peculiar to man down through! history. I For spme reason Archie Elliott and Bobby Kendall, whose official nickname is "Goof." 'failed to agree find each demanded the other's blood. Nothing, apparent ly, would satisfy the pair but a personal encounter, and such was arranged. Prorjded with six-ounce regif lation boxing gloves the combat ants, accompanied by a crowd of from 2r to 40," proceeded to the J vicinity of the open air dance pa- v'liuu. across me river in Polk countyj and settled their differ ences. 0 ' -j Elliott has had considerable ring experience. Whether Ken dall knew this or not prior to the battle is not known. But he dis- t covered It In the third round. of a fight that was slated to "go to the finish." Rales of the game were observed and a competent referee saw that the fight was on the square. Elliott was awarded the victory with a knockout in the third canto when Kendall was left listening to Ihe mosquitoes butt. "i ; BASEBALL T AMERICAN New York 11; Washington ; Cleveland 10; St. Louis 1, Philadelphia 5; Boston 4.' , Chicago 8; Detroit 4. XATIOXAL Pittsburgh 3; St. Louis 2. New York 3-5; Boston C-S. Only two games scheduled. PACIFIC " Portland 4-6; Oakland 6-2. Vernon 2; Seattle 1. San Francisco 2-4; Sacramento 1-8.. ; ios Angeles 1-9; Salt Lake 2-8. j - m . ' I ' TO TIME IPdJlSLEO : i : .... s. ; ' j .. - : - Continuing today, Overland and Willys-Knight demons strating cars will leave our salesroom every thirty min utes We ask everyone to take this opportunity to ride in these wonderful cars. Special demonstratipo;, (illustrated lecture by Mr. Lee R. Bryant, factory expert,o night-at 8 o'clock ", i ? ! I . ' ' High Street at fTrade j Quauty Cars Telephone 1841 i CULLOUl LOAFE THE R HEN Don't Kill the Layers, Market the Culls, and Save 'Feed Nearly fifty .per cent of the hens in every flock do not lay a sufficient SISfASl etS J? PSy- f0F the COst of their feed alone- Nelrbr fifty 1 fnrl i!S J??fc ftli" ifery e ?ot worth breeding from. There ihl Vhe I)Pultry ?ned by the average poultryman consumes the profits that he makes on the other half of his flock. . ' The most imDortant t hin or a n - i i , , Aiiuwii tu every pouiiryinan ?J3 leilh.,07lClf,eJect hl? Jaefs.- to pick the birds thlt consume' i4y, anu now io pick Dtrtls that should be. held over as food but do not breeders. loaW TpnfwofCT t0 cul1 out thesc Vv SSi?Sf H have ceased to lay eggs should be disposed of at once, by culling out these hens now you will not only save feed but you will get lefi!narket S f0? the culled out hens- The longer you keep thf.se -hens, the lower pe market price will be and the more feed they will eat. Kpprfthi w?UViaKlell.tlim as soon s they cease egi production. h.6118.1! lay late m the summer and into the fall months. It is SHL ? P to te 1 thpse hens if you have the JW methods and secret iitven in ' . ..?-. ..;'!... - ' ' .v aTh Call of the Hen" ' nt uZITed i0n 0f,t,h.is hy T- E.-Quisenberry, gives ail the latest information; on culling out the non-layers, selecting for heavy Sftinrf' UlniE' etcV Huidd of thousands of copies of earlier wnwh Ii?Jb00k been sold and gave entire satisfaction. It is worth $100.00 to any poultry raiser. , l7!SJw!S edilicn is stricty down-to-the-minute 'in selection by SSStlSSn i17 CKnes.'. Plantation, head points, changes in T-11 J6.1 aath0tative information is worked out by state investigators and leading poultrymen. Endorsed by leading authorities government and 1-atate county iv8' S"1! bureaus, poultry clubs, and experienced poultrymen everj- R.i?f5i4fclathe VSJHO this is the bt known method. WiU positively tell the good from the bad. Contains many illustrations showing. . w i Si ? l0f rs h?w t0 teU K00 Producers without trapnests, how to select the breeders to keep over, etc 7 Vile Hn timea what you ly for it iji a single season. Even - ZZa T?iSe eZ ens f 5 back dty Iot 'ou need this book. The method is so simple that a child can. apply it. GuItnteed bs0101 to please y6u or your Tnoney refunded. Hun- rt tnu?and3 have been sold with this positive money back guarantee A.t SCnd "00 fr a CPy' NoFiSJiwest P I 215 Sooth Commercial, Salem, Oregon A 1 Si r h V l ; 1 : 1 m'