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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1926)
THE OREGON STATESMAN,. SAUftJ, OnEQOM : ms-m t-TOVnDAY MORNING, tAHCH-25; 1&G I FASCISTS. Wlfl . VICTORY. '-' s - 1 . : ... , H ATTKOTTl'S 1 SLAYERS ' -ARK ' VIRTU A1X.Y ACQUITTED CIIIETA. Italy, March 24. (By Associated Press.) The fascist regime, championed, by Roberto Farinaccl, secretary of the fascist party, won a crashing yictory to alght over Us opponents when Ave mep accused of having kidnapped and -, slain :Premler Mussolini's arch-enemy, the socialist deputy , Giacomo Matteottl, virtually es caped punishment at the end of the trial before a Jury in the court! 01 assises. , The' Jury acquitted two of the meo.'Mal&crla-and Viola,' outright, while the confessed ringleader, Amerlga Dumlni, and Albino Yolpl and Ameleto Poveromo. were sen tenced -to imprisonment - for fire years,' llf months' and 20 dayt each. - The -sentences will be re duced as to actual f nrtheri jail ser vice to: less , than three i months, since Judge -Dana deducted from the sentence four years on account of the. king's .amnesty last year and .the . period already v served Eiace - the .men .were . arrested In 1924." l i i ' f i : . J Dumlni, -Volpl and Poveromo, the jary found, had' "committed homicide, but unintentionally : for cause, with "relative complicity and with extenuated .circumstan ces.: 5 ; U4. TWO JAILED AFTER RAID -.a t.f'. . i I KRXEfcT f LATE FIGHT? KEWS 0 j - SAN FRANCISCO-, March 24ir fAP.)---Fred Hoppe.r San Fran cisco welterweight, won I on a technical knockout ; over Johnny Sacco, Kansas City, fin the fourth round of , a scheduled "10-round main event of a boxing card at national hall here tonight. Hoppe led' all: the tray and : after Sacco went down In th.., fourth 'round the referee stopped the tight. EVERETT. Wash., March 24. (AP.) Tim Callahan, St. Paul 140-pounder, won teehnl I knockout over.Muu, Brcnson A Portlaiia in the second r -und of a scheduled ' six .round . inaln event of a smoker here tonight. : :, STRIBLING TO FIGHT BATTLER TO MEET 6 LATTERY IX MATCH TOX1GHT NEW YORK. Marchl2;4.--(By Associated Press.) -Young Strip ling, Georgia's light heavyweight challenger, and Jimmy' Slattery of Buffalo, N. Y meet :f or the second time tomorrow night In a 10-round match at Madison Square Garden. Slattery ; is expected to have a slight weight advantage, but Strib- ling rules a favorite as a result ot tne uunaio Doy s anocaoui ae- feats last year at the hands of Dave Shade and Paul Berlenbach. "LYNN HELD FOR JIARIOX GRAND. JURY ST AyTON; Oregon,' March 24. Ernest Lynn,' arrtsted with Lloyd ; Hendricks, on a charge' of possession . of a still, : was bound orertto jtwait action t by the Mar ionrL county grand Jury whes he appeared in court here today." and was taken. to fialem ,w here he is being held In the county JalL ! . Hendricks will be given a heat ing on the same charge on Friday, and" Is now held ; in the city jail 1 f: PORTLANTi TEAM WINS , w v' -: r i . EW YORK... Mareh 24. (AP A last period rally,, that netted them three - goals . gave the Portland- Rosebuds hockey f team a four to. two victory overfthe New York Americans here tonight and the "lion's share" of the $20,000 purse for which they played their ? three game Inter-sectional series, -The Buds . got . 6 0 "per cent and the losers 40 " per cent of the purse. - w m ! YAmeri ca M Mail :10c 4br'cop of : T. .Qh Henry! recipe : tbook shewing SIXTY : ZTZ new-recfpe Write -S - Wfflltnoa Pn3V'CbJ . .? f. . . Chicago. IB. Vv I fit7 ALMA RUBENS ; ; and ' ' yv " BERT LYTELL . , IVrtilAM fOJC rsj yoTE-fake a date with your-iU-ir or next Fridayrs Vande y I ! lr, Absol ptely , tle best yet. Pitcher&Tdlie Their Own Poison i'..;it i5 ? r vv ' if. , ,:m o 'j i i ii ' ' 4 rr l '"""1 mm L BALL CLUBS ADMITTED ; Uixrte . Wjlbert Bobinsoir wsnta his pitchers to hit " So. in the .. Dodger training camp they taie tbeir turn a hat. Jesse Petty, who proved a bust after being brought up from the American Association last season. Is seen trying to lean on one. 'Otto Miller is behind the - .Now no one of brains sees the ttrdaVatiliHjvjhae 4pgkiU;ii Bat many do appreciate that the game has been reduced to an or derly.; well conducted affalr--per-haps at the expense of a bit- o the old spirit.' - . ; i: i .And I'm - wondering . how, far Cese business alliances will go to- - ward further -Tfnclng thf "fight." 'Can .these tuslness auJ social friends put their friendship ni mutual 'nterests away for a couple ot iiours a day and enter Into a cold-blooded battle to better their ba'seball. reputations at ' the "ex pense of these' partners?' '' " , There is f--f for thought .he" Cprrifht. 1 .'. Central Prn ' iH4jiimtiinmHmM'Mif?Mii I.-y 11 ITEDi" STATES' u i nm it u iti u i AT:TOE,7THEATfiES'-,M'""-"-'i,-"'i'"""'"is criticized ln4'"Jnst Sjuppose." ; Ifeiligr "The Gilded ButterHyr with, Alma Unbens and Bert Ly teil. .-;rf ? ' f WALTER HAGEN : WINS Business Taking the "Fight". Out - " :'t -of Baseball, Fostering Menace ST PETERSBURG, Fla.. March 2 4? - ( By Associated Press. ) Walter Hagen ' won the Florida ooen golf championship here to day over - his home course, the Pasada country club with a score of 70, 73, 69, 71 283. Bobby Jones of Atlanta, national ama teur champion, came second, two strokes behind Hagen, with rounds of 75. 69. 71. .'70-285. BEND. Ore- March. 24. -(AP.) Bend . : and Condon baseball teams have been admitted to the mid-Columbia league, according to word received in Band today. The two newly admitted clubs will open the. season with a game against, each other. In Bend,, May Other clubs' in the league are The Dalles. White 'Salmon Gold endale, Wasco. Hood' River and Dufur. - :, - FOWLS DENOMINATIONAL ONLY i METHOD 1ST CLERGY GET CONFISCATED BIRDS WHARTON. Texas, March 24. -(By Associated Press,) -It .now appears that only - Methodist preachers in Wharton are to get the chickens found running at large here in violation of a city ordinance which ' demands tha't chickens be penned. lt-: was' explained here-, today that Charles E. Poe, a member of the First Baptist church who first gave the story to the world. In advertently omitted to .name the denomination, thus making it ap pear that all preachers here had equal rights in any - confiscated chickens.."; .vj- '.;..: ': It appears. Rev. R. .B. Carter, pastor of the First Methodist church.- Is; an amateur gardener. Vagrant chickens divested It. He went to: Editor hannohvaWAto a, candidate foit-TnayoT, ana. iota him b cootd'ot-sppwi'-ftim'e'i cept on a chicaen-tlgnt!.- fence platform. 'r t -jttt I - -r He was invited to wrfte an oral- nance which he did and embraced In the mandate that, all chickens found outside of pens after the ordinance went into effect should become- the property of -ftlethodlst preachers. It-was-passed as wrlt- MARSHALL FOUND GUILTY CHIROPRACTOR VXCE&. t t td v, t 20 YEAR SEXTEXCTB 1 t : . ' ! '- ' - '&: Ki .-4 i PHILADELPHIA, March 24. By Associated 'Press. avid Li Marshill, convicted today -of sec ond degree murder for the7 killing of Anna May Dietrich, faces a sen tence of 10. to 24 years.. If he is not granted a new trial.. , The. un registered chiropractor, who . ad mitted dismembering the. woman's body after she died in . his of flcei heard the jury verdict-with little Outward emotion. ; r - On 'the -witness stand he- had said Miss Dietrich whowas, Jibi patient, died 'from. selft ad mlnlaterj ed pojsen and . rather , thahthave the notorlety pfherj dyingln his of rice, he dsmenibered ;jthV body audi distributed the parts 4nr woods In :the:buburbS. 1jJ ir 'Kp'-Z r The - common wealth,. i "1-iCjweverJ siubmKted a con foiwlbn . In. WHf h he said; he chokebr;d;eath fij a quarrel? beckuse She threatebed to expose thelf "VeTatlons to his wife.;; 3 A t:;- v;. oiH-AAvt " The jury reached Its verdict in less thap, five hours, tut,a .U.ha.4 been" locked up for.the,,nlghtit could nofteake its decision known until court opened "today. There; are 'people, who don't .like good lkeratufre,f but ' that, --ot course;- Is nothing ' against ;'g6od literature. " ' ? i By NOR M AN "'L. BROWN ' ; - Ceatraj Ttfiu ftirtt Editor. ' . '' ST. PETERSBVRG. Fla... March 16. Whiles-major league: manag ers and'tneir aides are. laboring at 10 camps -in this state and at other points in1 the sunny climes of the U. S. with the usual prob lems confronting them. I am won dering. if they are aware of a new problem,- now in the . making, which will have to be met' some way. in the future, present condi tions indicate. " This- is -the problem of keeping alive the earnest competitive spirit in' the sport. Baseball seems fated to meet some crises ever so often. Back in the early days, just aft er the game had assumed nationwide- stability and popularity came' the first big scandal, which threatened for' a time to disrupt men in the big show are either col lege men; or men whoi have had ex perience in Some angle of .business before reaching the top.'; It has been natural then that many 'of these players should findv them selves becoming Interested fvlth other players in business ventures. I know of several such players .Who are' either employed by or In business with the owners of their clubs.' , : "' ' Quite obviously their business Interests make them 'close associ ates In the off months. Now it so happens that frequent tradings and sales of recent seasons and off seasons, have separated many of these business partners and com bines. They meet as members of rival clubs. -.1 , For several years the older players have been decrying the lack of "fighting spirit" shown the sport. The banishment pub- by the younger generation of ball licly Of the men involved was the only thing that saved the sport. I wouldn't list the formation of the American. League, back in 1901 as such as crisis. That was a natural event in the develop ment ot the sport. Then along came the Federal League wr a group of powerful interests outside the game, boring deliberately to sink the baseball ship as formed. The game weathered that storm, only J because ' the major leagues compromised. - Then came the world'a series scandal of 1919 which ended In the banishment of. the black Sox. Now comes this new menace.- It is not et-kind similar to- any of those "named. It is an Innocent condition in 'which players and club - owners and managers and"i i brother 'players are involved. : This new . menace might be labelled "private business." ' , It Is .coming to a head after be ing in the irritating state for three or four years. ; - It is- generally agreed that the type of major league 'player has changed of late years. Most of the players. They point to the days of Pat Tebeau, the days ot the old Orioles, and . that now glamorous period In baseball when it was war. to the blood and beyond - when teams met. Arguments started on the field ended behind the club house if the umpire Intervened.-:!' VL'J A r.i ft Mf!T;1 i- 'I STARTS SUNDAY BLIGH THEATRE JOE STECHER WINS CLEVELAND; Maid- 2 (AP.) Joe Stecher won fn Renato Gardini two out t thre falls here tonight in a Witling match advertised as for, the i. ?uvy weight championship. - DOCTORS TO MEET PORTLAND, Ore., March 24. (AP.) Two hundred physicians of the state are expected to gath er here on March 3 1 for the an nual conference of the city and county health officers and the an nual convention of the state medi cal society. The meetings will continue for three days.' isllgh'Va'nihn - Orchestra and 3 ale Sedgwl. 1 In "Daring Days." EAfTSHCCKS AREf ELT MOXTTAXA 111 rORTS NO DAM AGE FROM SLIGHT QUAKES her ' intention of collecting from her -continental allies only suffic ient sums to pay her indebtedness to America, ! ."-.-" vS- Mr. Chunchill described ile un dertaking to pay 100,000 sterling daily" for more than three genera tions of the nation as onr ,f the most stupendous - tasks ' rtd bur- dens "eVer assumed by any conn-, fr'y kf h'eroie' Worid !hlsVory The chancellor declared that an extIaofiinary,ke8slon which wouUi! nob paisfott ..t the minds of any;! responsible persons either In the '' United States or Europe would en- , suo when most of Germany's -r reparatlww were "drawn from the -devastated and var stricken j cot, ries of Europe in an unbrok en 1 stream "across the Atlantic to that wsa:;hy, prosp-aous and great republic. fIIELENAi-Mont., March 24. (fey Associated Press). Two slight rbut "distinct, earthquake shocks, f lasting' rveralv seconds each, weffelt b-we late today. Although-;iey -were quite pro nounced l-i Kc-iwood, a suburb, no damarr. was reported. joins.-!. UKE DIES ' BOIsr Ida.;., .".'trch 24v. (By Ant-. :late& Pro!-John j". Blake foriaor law i .."rer of United Stat. - Senator v illar" E. Borah, died P." e- today iVhowine an oper ation tr in tesz'.ru. troui. e. Mr. Blake ame .ii-... In .1 '? I from Vermoi. t . Da ? !' c u'n t . Wiscon sin. ' irz Tv-lt - "l " pro bat Jut. . i SAD : l..'- .KPS . : r fTLt "KMUL-SIS 0la farch 1. " ' Py " -Asit'-n-.afed 'i s). ".-. I Santi reta..:ii he 1 lit heavy weight-. wresk In ti v a ! here to . 'ht , hen j-' fussi fully do- feb 'ed .ts t li - znir at . Rudy Dns.t, L-tll. i.rck. -:r.ning two out Ot. hrn tai. Great a. . re r! hat come to all who pet; e ; good run for their mon 3 Its a real pleasure I to travel by stage ! Speed with safety, combined with scenic beauty, comfortable stages and frequency. . of service, stage travel; is enjoyable at -- rany season of the year.; - . 1 . We fake the work out of travel and put pleasure in. Ask your ticket ofiice.for a , list of the beautiful trips on; or in con nection with, our lines. : ' OREGON STAGES 185 VQRTH PT.i'1 imiwmi n nrnn St ' PHONE! C9tt . 'A '-4 :! i i . f t I t UlU -t i- . mid our. a t oc Ic i& Vi . . w - T" " ..-.( :l?j:z$t than over.:; Un-'chepkin..ov(er. your ! . z . - est : Uf J" .V ' ' i m ;n,-jcoepiay ov.er your f tu y: jfrrlng n$ed3 don't , forget . j r VtV ? -. " r 7jtl;t9. have a. bi stock" V. ' - - : ' ' 1 ,' r- ' ' t remand second hand, ":;rr;- fiirruture;tstdve3f' Jiardyare,; famr implefnent3, tna'chin ' pry,- b'ertinff acks;: tents, tarps and-caraping eq'uipm&ntf tat prices that are right. v; ' . ? -- : Capital Bargain House THE HOUSE OP. A MILLION AND ONE BARGAINS - 2 iZ Center Street, ' j : . ' - Telephone ; pi2 rough to eaes -this speedy, comfortable journey for winter travelers to summer4and. , . ' Now it'i oot-door time m GJifocniji. Warm, . tmaaf diji jur right tor golf, for hikes on .. . 'i 1- bctghc-hocd woodland trail, foe fithing. for - - - vrf bcachporu. v." , ; . . .: v loux Your frifn! tbre thk winter. Relax aiwl , reC Play at row favorite ccrcatioo 6acr ' ' thert than you have ecr known it to be. , ) -' The- trip ia eaart aurpriaingfy coovenienc Fast; 'through service, to Los Angeles daily ti - J;;Scitheni California Eipress : ATrarm.cozrrik.with tiKCOove&icnceand : oom'brts of strictly first-class service. And deli- ckms, tasty meals in oathcra Pacific dining " 1 - i. r-'l-r '.'!.":'''.. - This train carries through sleeper to San Ira . cisco. O go direct aboard the popular Stttts, 0inum, or m Fnmdie Exfrtu, each making -. connoctkms at Saa Fraociaco with soothbotaM v trains. ? -. - i s . - - ' :t And SoBtkitra Pacific Agent will a-ldlr ' 4 in planning your anp and arrmnr r for aJ3 reaervationa, IneludinK atsamhbip ;? aecommodaUcaa wkn DMunr;, . . A 570.25 t Houn4trip to E "'IjOS ANGELES N '.i Round trip to " SAN FRANCISCO ? '. - Long limits; stopovers. R:.iTv w .". ' ' - ' I! .... .-. ...... ; r;TJXlickel, Liberty .A A fit.-,.;.,.- . ... "T- - -v SsSCfp rfci,.i,.i, ...a 1 1 ,, .. x. , , . j..-x-'.. ; : s&r ' --Mi m..x "sft-- -s'' j-- . i three V a .. f ! .) II The 1-2-3 of gasoline performance , Sums up the results obtained by every motorist who regularly uses Associated Gasoline: 1 satisfactory ' quick starting, 21 full stride of power; 13 mileage " 999 out of every 1000 motorists want a perfect coordination of these results Users of Associated Gas . oline get it without the sacrifice of any one of the three essentials, The reason: Associated's distinctive ranee of boiling" points. Associated fis always associated with "more miles to the ""gallon" ' ; (: ASS OCIATED OILtCOMPAN Y . 1 r TV -.' ' -- - -,-.') - - , ' K . i f - -.V- : 1 -- 'K.- ' ''T - ' B 3 MOTCnMATLvS m Va ; 1 1 - i . ; CYC O L M OTO ROIL for thor . ough lubrication at low cove It cuah , ion the moving parta of your motor. ; Comes only ia one qualify in. grades w w your motor neeua. , 7 j! if'. f - ?. J , j: . v '- -- --.-,..- . i . ' , ;5 H s T"Aif N E ii r .iu a L I -tYh vP-- il o d xj.c V 5 V S V 0 f I- He no v 34 Xal no v of ab m; sa tb It W! ba tr! Bi rx wi er a ' & Pi ar M FS M cl: A Di L le: Cc !co In As 1 U ali Jfru Pc en da IX . i no no ' top N. A Pfc Ca fcai J. in t,e, Ti. L. i assiaaswaw