The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 24, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON
, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24, 1925
i FOR BIG COFITEST
Otegori Meets California and
Aggies Tangle With Stan
... V ford Team Today
'EUGENE, Or., Oct. 22. Coach
Dick. Smith's rejuvenated Univers
ity of Oregon football machine
ended practice at an early Boar
this afternoon in order .to embark
on the evening train for Portland
to meet the California Bears on
Multnomah field tomorrow atter
nopn. The team. Is ready to' bat
tle California to a standstill. Bald
the coaches this afternoon. ' The
line-plunging backfleld will be
used, in tomorrow's game. Lynn
Jones as fallback will be ready to
rash the opposing front walls. Vic
Wtell, conceded to.be the best
Vjnter in the conference, will play
at half backr Anderson will play
air quarter ana gire ibb isuti,
Hoagen, a new man piaying ailextended our ranees, no hirda will
nan.. niuu ana smuu win Smj
the ends; Sinclair and Kerna at
tackle; Shields and Bailey; 'at
guard and Johnson at center1
: -v - , . f
iSTANFORD UNIVERSITY, CaU
Oct. 25. (By Associated Press.)
The Oregsn Agricultural college
football sqnad arrived here today
and went through a light workout
in'the stadium preparatory to Its
. 1V l.V ao--
CVBiereum ciasu w uu ouutu u i
marrow. - - . -". - l
The visiting aggregation appear
ed to be in good condition except
for the stiffness resultant from
m - til- PMnK
me inp irom tonu. l-u"'-u
Panl Schissler . set; his charges
a 1 . . 11 iln In 1
niruuKu a . i
the afternoon in order to get; the
mn accustomed -to : the, soft,
sp'ringy turf Of the .stadium, j
, ' -r . , . .j. i -
t SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2 fc.-U
(gty Associated Press.) The; lid
on the Pacific coast season will
tonnle off completely tomorrow
when California wwings
into ! ac
tion against Oregon on a Portland
fild and the Oreron Aggies tackle-
Stanford at Palo Alto.- It will be
the first conference test this year
for the Bears and OAC.
"Another choice gridiron morsel
will be offered at Los Angeles
where Arizona pits its strength
agalnst southern California in an
Intersections! clash. I
- he powerful Washington eleven
wilt remain at borne this week-end
td entertain the lighter Whitman
collece team at Seattle. - i
ldaho will Invade uonzaaa
stamping ground
ta m at Snokane.
to meet that
r Ken rivals . meet at Missoula
hm Afontana and Montana
Mines are ready for their annual
hravl
i
Nevada and St, Mary's willjfur-
wVoh nianv ha v . district residents
rut, boir weeklv football dish
Willamette and Puget Sound! will
play at Taeoma. ; -1 "
'Trtaho. hv virtue of two victor
t.. anrf nn'Hefeats. sits at the! top
i; the conference race. Stanford
o.i Washington also show a clean
state In the standings with one
win and no defeats.
-The standings follow
i
. . w.
I..
0
0
o
t
0
0 1
1
2
I Pet
1.000
Idaho . .
Piahford ..
Washington
WSC .
California .
OAC ......
rsc ......
Oregon
Montana . .
1
i
i
o
0
ft
o
0
1.00ft
1.000
J.ooo
i.ooo
.000
Looo
i.ooo
j -
Ronnrtc Rtandinff Com-
. mittees Will Be Made ;Pub -
lie Wednesday Night
3
The annual' meeting of. the Sa-
Wm YMCA will be held Wednes
i.tr ovpnlne: October 2S.?i The
meetinz will be -started witlva din-
nr t be held at the YMCA rooms
nt 6 o'clock. Reports of all the
otai-nHn-r rommitteea will be read.
this year's future for me jl;mv,a
of the city will be dlscussea ana
directors will be elected. ;
V E. Goodwin, acting i siic
YMCAiecreUry, wni speak at tne
meeting. He has taken tne; piace
Of W. AV. Dillon.
. Six directors are to e e'
at the .meeting. tow
terms expire are i-aui ', ""
f Tod Ira T K- MCCrOSKey l. v,.
.u ttM i' M Nicholson and ; T. M.
Hicks. The nominating commit
tee is composed of Col. Cane ad
rams. Dr. M. C Flndley and Jos.
tt Aihrt. Thev nave nominated
every man to succeed himself ex
stpt T. E.McCroskey, who is out
of town. - A,lan "ory
nnminai tA take his place;, Any
active member; of the YMCA, how
ever, has the privilege of making
other nominations If he bo desires.
i The meeting is an open one, and
every active member , of the or
ganization is entitled 1o one vote.
M0LALLA HIGH VICTOR
8ILVERTOX LOSF-S "BY SCORE
OF 1 TO O FKIIIAX ,
SILVERTONV Oct: 23.-f tSpe-
ilpfpateil Silverton in a game
tootiiall here today with a score
13 to 0 Molalla came down in
- .nri wth schools
. .r .....
were exceptionally wen rcptecu
ed- A feature of the game was
"N. hat yell leaders for both jschpols
were girls.
' t Klamath v Falls New i Critro
two story Main stree t building
will cost 150,000.
ToledoBond Issue proposed,
to complete " Toledo waldport
tislway, '
i II1LMETII
t
HI
IS M
Pheasants Wjll Be Held Until
After Hunting. Season in
' Future Years
Calling attention to . the state
game warden of the apparent futil
ity of liberating Chineee pheasants
in large numbers immediately pre
ceding the opening of the hunting
season, Bert W, Macy. Salem attor
ney, received a letter from E. F.
Arerill, warden, yesterday, 'Jin
which the official' expressed him
self as heartily in accord with Mr.
Macy's attitude.v Announcement
bad been - made previously of the
liberation of a large number of
birds.-; . ' , - ,v
"We were forced - to turn off
quite a number of pheasants at
tnIs time," Mr. Averill stated, "due
to tne Xact that our quarters, were
crowded. Hereafter, as we have
w 1 hamtpri in nn trriiArv in
any
which there would be an open sea
son, until the close of the hunting
season
Tb game warden announced he
has ((K)t) birds to set free as soon
as tne season closes., it waa
brought out in Mr. Macy's letter
that liberation a short time before
the hunting season does very little
I" " " .1 wi.
corned. 91 a br nnmW f tha
blrda via be killed during the
open reason. : This practice has
been current in Oregon for some
U!. it is said, although the Fiat
uf Wj-.hh.irtnn h. fM MJr. n,.t
liberated bird, h,W
. ......
- i - e si.uona hart lon lnaH h,.o,
eirinjc.tbe pheasants ttime tor nest
lag v.nd rearing broods.
LIONS HEAR OF POWER
ELECTRICAL EXPERT GIVES
ILLUSTRATE!) TALK
O. B. Coldwell. vice president
of the Portland Electric. Power
company, spoke to the Lions yes
terday at their regular weekly
luncheon. Mr. ColdweU's talk was.:
llustrated with stereopticon pic
tures wmch showed the .develop-
ment of the company's power plant
I on me tJiacitamas river, tie ex
l plained in detail the source of
j supply and the pictures showed
the dam at the Oakgrove project
I m tne various stages of construc-
tion and tne pipe line from the
dam to the power house, and the
powerMme leading from the plant
Mr. Coldwell stated that al
though the northwest contained
j. only 8 per cent of the area of the
United States that in this district
there was 38 per cent of the po
tential water power of the United
States. .
President Ross Miles presided 4
at the meeUn.flfC. Pf Giese of ;h4
mmierfhip committee introducea-
the Lions present who were ab
sent from the last meeting, and
Lion Tail Twister Prazer collected
the dimes from those not familiar
with the names of their fellow
Lions present.
FATE OF CONVICTS
GOING TO JURORS
(ContlnuM?- from oate 1.)
viot replied. It rf.uaed bad hea fl
ashes and other tilings." It made
me restlernj at night? I guess you
would call it semi-consciousness.
I 'imagined on several occasions
that I saw things that did not ex
ist." r - .j.-----.
Have you had those illusions
lately," counsel asked.
Yes." the defendant sam.
'Lately I have believed I saw Ore
gon Jones!"
"Oh. Mr. Kelley." tne aistrici
attorney cried suddenly, leaning
toward the witness, "in your vis
ionsthe visions yoo have had
. SJSat'ffii
Ter seen Milt
man with a gap
ing wound under, his right eye?
The defense counsel was on has
feet immediately, strenuously ob
jecting to the questioning. The
court sustained the objection.
During the morning session. Mr.
and. Mrs. Kelley. tne defendants
parents, were called to the witness
box by the defense. William K.ei
ley, his father, the first witness,
testified that after an Injury dur-
jg hls yOUtn, the.defendant s dis-
pitjon changed. -He .sUrted
rovine around. All the neighbors
nJcknamad him. "Overland Kel-
. .. - t .
i Mr8 steila Kelley said that her
kon had beenhome until the last
Uix years. He had met with, acci
dent Bhe reiated. referring to the
automobile and bicycle crash. Af
ter that, she said, he changed and
would sit for period of half an
hour at a time, looking into space.
'He 'was very musical," she said.
He-would listen to a classic and
then come home and reproduce it
oa the piano. He was. of ten mel
ancholy." - - V P
Wiiham Johnson,; a cotK'ct t
the Creeon prio4i." and for a time
a cellmate of Kelley'a, testified
that the defendant often lay In
hi bunk, talkinc ta himself. H-
imagined hf-wa 4oet.. He was
writing poetry" ali the time. There
wasn't cp sense to It," Joan.n
Jtmes wnioa also toolf the wn.
ness stand again resterday, anl
jtold about an accident that hap-
ipeuea to mm. ;ur ii-aumuiij uM-
iciosea inai seveiairyeurs bu o
ua oeen renoerea
01 ano'.uer conviw a-.m omww um
. m
of occupied the same cell with U II.cw
!ia.iiii-uiiii:iy uewis iu? uim, onm
1 that Willos Acted peculiar. "He
i -I- . .-!..-
On-
- j3 4 mun
night be woke up and said eoiu.-
one was shootiu; at him. It took
me a long time ' t,o calm him
down." : ' ;
During the morning session the
defense called Dr. H. D. Redmond,
a Salem chiropractor. He testi
fied that both convicts had'spiual
jtne brain or brain nerves." Willos.
J Dr Redmond ctated, had three
f lecca displacements, while Kelley
had two. It was admitted, how
ever, that many persons were aim-
Larry constituted, and that the
displacement did not. necessarily
mean that the convicts were in
sane, ;
HARTLEY NOT ALARMED
AO i HORSK-PLAY" WANTED
AT LEGISLATIVE MEET
OLYMPIA, Oct. 2 3. By Asso
iated Press.) Declaring that h
did ; not "care a whoop bow tne
legislature organizes, so long as
11 organizes for work and not for
norse-play.V Governor Hartley
issued a statement today in which
ne expressed "great confidence"
in the legislature and stated that
ne was neitner alarmed nor wor
ried'' by the persistent rumors of
what the legislature is "going to
ao to Hartley."
; These are great days for the
pomicai aopesters and rumor
spreaders." Governor Hartley said.
"f.ach day brings its fresh quota
of rumors as to what the legisla
ture is going to do to Hartley at
tne forthcoming- session. I am
neither alarmed nor worried by
the present persistent rumors. The
legislature can't do anything to
Hartley, because Hartley doesn't
want anything."
The governor pointed out that
when the regular session adjourn
ed it was understood that he was
to study the state's affairs and re
port his findings to the special ses
sion in .November. This will be
done, be said, adding that the re
commendations to be made "will
not be what Hartley wants, but
what In the governor's opinion the
people of the state of Washington
needs."
STATE CONTROL SOUGHT
SUPERVISION' OF TAX MAT
TERS MY STATE IS URGED
WASHINGTON. Oct. 23. (By
Associated i'ress. ) Retirement
from the Held of inheritance tax
ation by the federal government in
favor of the states wa3 asked to
day by the governors of six states
and representatives of eleven other
state executives before the house
ways and means committee.
The federal estate tax which is
one of the main fighting points in
the proposed revision of the rev
enue law also was assailed today
by the American Bankers asso
ciation and the national commit
tee on inheritance. z
Various schemes were outlined
for the government's withdrawal
from this field of taxation. The
national committee on inheritance
taxation proposed that the tax be
retained for six years, but that
the rates be modified at once,
while the bankers' association
asked immediate repeal, as recom
mended -by Secretary Mellon.
i Under questioning by democra
tic committee members, the six
governors gave approval to the
plan of Chairman Green to have
the federal tax retained, with a
credit of 100 per cent allowed for
paylnents inadeTo states. They la
vored.this in the interest of forc
ing uniformity by states in their
inheritance levies and to prevent
escape of the tax by persons re
ading in one of the two states now
imposing no such tax Florida
and Alabama. , .
DIPLOMATE ARE FLAYED
El'ItOPKAXS TKYIXfi
TO
"IRI1ITATK" CXK)LlIXiE
CHICAGO, Oct. 23. (By Asso
ciated Press.) European diplo
nats who participated in the Lo-
arno confereren which resulted
in the signing of the Rhine pact
and other agreements wore accus
ed today by Senator Ceorge W.
Pepper of Pennsylvania of trying
to "irritate President Coclidse and
force the hand of th-3 United
Stales."
The senator prefaced a speech
df-voted to the permanent court of
international justice with several
remarks concerning the Locarno
meeting. He spoke t.i the Wom
en's Roosevelt Republican club, j
The Locarno agreement had
ruerely put into the form of a
treaty the things which would in-j-evUably
happen if there were no
treaty, he said. It would certainly
telp to quiet "the nerves of over
strained France."
Classified Ads Bring Results
Drive With Safety
and Economy.
McCLAREN CORD
Terfcct Saletx,'! . .
ViroT "BUT
Smith & Wntldna
Snappy Service ,
PHO.VC 41 -
t, 1 ! S 1
.V-l.l 1 M
W II 'vJ'
- w . 2 I I -
'4 ' y
PLAYS HSTI1S
Game Called for Sweetland
Field at 2:30 O'Clock;
Vaccination Hits
The Salem high school team is
the sincerity and loyalty of the
today against Astoria high school
because of the recent vaccination
that all of the members of the
team were required to undergo
But in spite of this fact. Coach
Hollis Huntington says the local
-
boys are .keen for the game, and
expect to win. The game ia called
for 2:30 o'clock and will be played
on Sweetland field. .
The team will still be in a some
what crippled condition. Phillips
will not be eligible at all,' and
Leng. regular full back, will be
out for some time and probably
for the season. The tip of his,
finger was cut recently, and as yet
has not healed. But the biggest
blow to the team might be the ill
ness of B. Drager, quarter. He was
Bfofe yesterday, and may not be
able to get into the lineup for the
game, if this should happen, the
team would be in a quandry, as
there is not even a prospect for
another quarter.
Coach Huntington says that if
Drager is unable to play, he will
have to take some man out of the
line end give him instructions be
Winter - A
-
' , ; - ' A
Associated
. -11' ' iiA' ' A"v ';;
11 rot.
ASSOCIATED IO.IL
fore the game for calling the sig
nals, r; 4 I . :- ,;.7V
Tne team from Astoria is report
ed to 1e a formidable aggregation,
and past experienced has taught
Salem; high thaf the Astoria boys
can always be counted upon to put
up a terrific fight. v j
Every man op the! Salem team
has been affectied the vaccin
ation, and a,j a rcult the coach
has ihK been aible tia call scrim
mage this week, j Incidentally,
there l'as .been-ao opportunity to
learn new playaj. Most of ( the week
o:ily K or 15 ien have been able
t report for pjractiqc at all. But
the local boys mill all be out on
the field to play If they are need
ed, and they are thinking of notii
ing but taking the game. j
The lineup that Coach Hunting
ton wi..l start for Salem inj tho
game will be ppmething like this:
l A
--'.-A' ' "
Uniform power
fine aUdru 7
bcker and Temple,- ends; Blako
and J. Drager, quarter: Noeske
and Kelly, halves; R. Lyons, full.
Jackson, tackle," will not be able
to participate in the game at ail
because of the condition of his arm
as a result of vaccination.
FLOWERS W1XS MATCH
ST PAUL. Minn.., Oct. 23. (By
Associated' .Press.) Tiger Flow
crs, Atlanta negro middleweight.
outpointed Jock Malone of St.
Paul here tonight, newspapermen
decided, after Maione twice refn3-
ed to accept the decision on foals.
The bounding, el'usive negro threw
punches from every angle and in
the second round, oiie uncontrol
ed. landed low.: Maloae, however.
declined the referees proffer of
the decision and alter a brief rest.
continued.
COMPANY
At Albany: Chemawa 17; Al
bany 3.
At Corvallis : The i Dalles High
0;' CwrvalHs high 0. -
At Hood River: Goldendale
high 6; Hood River high 10.
Castle Rock high 27; Longriew
high 7. .
Centralia high 27; Vancouver
high 26.
Colville high 22; Gonzaga high
6. .
Illinois Wesleyan 20; Depauw 0.
Haskell Indians 29; Midland
College 0.
:Ja m'? . 9J
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