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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1927)
8 a SFEEMDB 0;'SH(EB' ffil Thirty seven rcuada of torrid glove ', throwing, three bono-twls-ter wrestling macthes. and one top class fight, will be the athletic menu for Salem sport fans at toe Salem high school "smokerless smoker" to be staged in the gym nasium, Friday, December .i r Headlining the- - fistic affrays will be four round bout between Bobby Mclntyre and Tod Fox, two popular local professionals. The other bouts will " be ? for three rounds each with high school boys participating. The. class fight will consist of two men from each class, unbllndfolded ,in the ring at the same time. The class having a man standing at the end of a certain time wins the fight. - , - Ralph Mason - and Stanley Frye will be on . hand to. . referee . the matches. - . - The ticket sale sponsored - by the S1 club will be inaugurated to morrow, with canrassing of all business houses -gatting undcf way. The students are determined to wipe out the deficit created' by football and are out for a record crowd at the'athletic show.. ; Bouts signed up by Coach Louie Anderson, matchmaker,, follow: " Raymond Bedwell rs John Ev ans. , ' - George Belt rs Walter Woods. Richard Wilson rs Frank Dolby. Bill Backe rs Jack Harbison. Lawrence Marquis vi Harry Kelson. .' - - " George ' Beechler ts Creighton Jones.- c r : '''. Charles Claggett ts Carl Trick. Merlin Wheeler ts Edward Mc Reynolds. . . . , Howard Water ts Michael Fltzpa trick. , . Red Golden, weight 145 pounds. and Kenneth McKenzIe, weight 125, hare not yet been challenged. ' The wrestling card Includes the following matches: t. " -?-': ' Fred Smith ts Wayne Blaco. . Lee Tate ts Joe Dolby. ; Bernard Temple Red Lyons, VOLLEYBALL MEN TO PLAY TONIGHT . . Two Tolleyball teams made up from members of the Salem Bus! cess Men's league will journey to Corrallis tonight to play against the ' Oregon Agricultural college faculty. , The men making- the trip are as follows: First i team Nile HI1- born, - Paul Acton, Rot. C E. Ward, O. J. Hull. Ed Wenger; Hill, Lloyd Gregg, Clark Lee, and Doc tor ; Barrick. Second -X team Hewitt, Lane, Ritchie, Gleason, Marsters, T KennCi. Page Boise, Julien, Phillips, and Wood. were working out last night at 7:30 under Coach Keene's super- Tlslon, for the first time. Bill Ashby Ut . serving as assistant coach. The freshmen 'players prac tice in the afternoon. SELECT CAPTAIN AT U. OF O. SOON UNIVERSITY :, OF OREGON. Eugene. (Special). Although a captain for the 1928 Oregon foot ball team will not be selected un til the annual Order of the CT banquet, which as yet has not been dated, Webfoot players and fans have already - begu n' to consider thevarloo eligibles and wonder who will receive the honor of pilot ing the green-clad gridders through next season's race for Pa cif le coast conference .honors. ' Among those whom campus grid experts feel have a! good chance at election are Ira Woodie, quar terback. George jBurnell, v7. half back,. Frank Riggs,: end, Merill Hagan, guard, and George Stadel man. center. " : i Woodie, Bumell, Riggs and Ha gan wll all play their last year under Oregon colors' In 1928. All of these players will be eeniors except Stadelman. who was a soph omore this year, but -who had no difficulty - In making the . varsity He was considered by, sports writ ers who saw him in action to equal in ability to Beryl Hodgen. the Webfoot captain, who played beside him at guard. Stadelman was named on several - all-coaet second teams. NO NEW COACH SOUGHT AT YALE NEW HAVEN, Conn., Dec. 1. ( AP) . Selection of a ' football coach at Tale to succeed T. A", D Jones, whose i contract has ex pired, has not been considered by the Tale athletic j association In any. way, it was )' stated with authority , today in answer- to re ports that had come here thai Ed Leader, rowing coach, might be come football coach.r It was stated that many reports of prospective candidates for the coaching position have come here, 'most of them linked with names of coaches at other universities. The novelty about the Ed. Leader report is that he is ; already, at Yale. Despite this fact, there hae been no hesitancy on the part of those close to football in saying that it has become -almost a tra dition at .Tale to select a coach who has been Identified- with the Yale development of. the sport by Yale men. j i Giauoui Willamette university will schedule a game of football against University of Oregon next fall on October , f it was an nounced t-;-,- yesterday v by ; Coach Keene, making two games against coa6t conference teams. The game with University of Washington has become an' annual event. Coach Keene will schedule . all f iye-of the northwest conference teams when the coaches meet at th conference meeting in Portland Dcember 10. A game with either Monmouth Normal school or; Al bany college will compete the grid program. Keene aleo indicated that he would protest some men who played on the Lin field squad this year, although they were ineligi ble. : Agee was "one of the men mentioned. The alleged summer practice held by Coach. Wolfe j at that school last season also will come Into the limelight. It was indicated. ; who scuttled out of these bushes?" ; "l t couldnt possibly say" re plied the witness. The prosecution withdrew him from the stand. Anothef state witness to be withdrawn was Jack Thorn borrow, a neighbor of Beach, who was ex pected to say that Beach had re quested him to "remember bar in7 seen him at home at the time of the killing. His testimony was eo filled with "don't recalls' that the prosecutor finally asked him if bis memory1 and hearing were normal. He replied that they were pretty good." - HUNT FOR LOST FLYERS Martin Jensen Departs for Hono- lulu to Seek -Aviators " ' ? SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 1. ( AP) Expressing belief that Gor don Scott and Jack Frost, two; of the lost fliers in the Dole Golder Gate-Honolulu - race, and their plane Golden "Eagle crashed j on Mauna Kea mountain after suc cessfully' reaching: the Hawaiian islands, Martin Jensen, pilot of the plane that won second place in the flight, arrived Wednesday i en route to Honolulu to organize a party to search the slopes of the lofty mountain. He based his theory, on the re port that a yellow, monoplane an swering to the description of, the Golden Eagle was seen by natives on Mauna Kea at about the time the fliers were due. Jensen , will sail for Honolulu on the steamer Malolo Saturday. r i HUM 1 ISSUE mm Mayor Thompson's Cam paign Continues Head- -. ' line Attraction CIIIIY GH-IIIT BV GEORGIA CO II TOUR LINED UP Five games on Willamette's hol iday barnstorming torfr Into Cali fornia hare beea definitely ar ranged, and .six more are on the tentative list!, according to Coach Roy "Spec" Keene. Those lined LINFIELD HOOP MEN TURN Ol vVlic and with four lettermen back;' prospects points to a. better team than last year. The Wild cats have arranged the", heaviest schedule they ha?e ever attempted wih games against Northwest conference teama; and Willamette valley conference teams. :.)" ; FERX ANDES ; DEFEATED "NEW YORK, Dec. 1. (AP). up.now are Klamath Falls AmerMTonT Cansonerl, challenger for can Legion. December 17; Young Men's Institute, San Francisco. Def-ember 21; LJvermore Cowboys. December' 23 ; Athens club, Oak land, December 28; and Ashland Nofmal, December 31. . ""Stanford, University of Califor nia,, Redlands, and College of the Pacific " are still on ; the tentative list. At least ten games will be featherweight laurels, whipped Ig nacio .Fernandes, rugged Filipino, in a savage ten round feature bout at Madison Square Garden tonight. Carizonerl weighed 1 2 5l -pounds, Fernandes 124 Vai :' !. MUBDER TRIAL CASE DRAWS TOWARD END k( Continued from pg 1) nled the motion for a directed verdict mother and ' eon gained control of themselves. The boy ran back to the spectators seat where he had been amusing him self durftig the trial by drawing pictures. ; ' ; Court then was adjourned for the day and the defendants were taken back to their cells for the night. " Beach, who was not fillet ed by the motloc '.iowed no 2lS3' oi TnMiiitrrffr if i - i , counsel for his co-defendant was pleading with the court. ; " hen court- opens McCarter will make his opening address to the Jury and begin to parade his witnesses through the stand, j He and counsel for Beach, together, expect to produce only 4 0 witness es, so that court-attendants pre dicted that, the trial, with the hefp of a Saturday session, probably-would reafch the- Jury stage by Monday night or Tuesday. ! . CHICAGO, Dec. 7 1.' (AP) The exposition of what Mayor Wil liam Hale Thompson's administra tion calls : British: propaganda in Chicago schools continued at the William Mc Andrew school trial here but the suspended superin tendent was not there to hear it. A new object of attack, Rupert Hughes, the writer, was Introduc ed by Charles Grant Miller, New York head of the Patriotic League for the Preservation of American History. f'.''r: ;V Miller found In Hughes' recent history of George . Washington a pro-British learning, and explain ed this by ; mentioning that the writer was an official of the Sul- grave Institute, 'the ' purpose of which Is to establish Sul grave Manoy In England as the true Washington shrine." Hughes was described by Mill er .as "one of the new method school of " literary smart alecs whose little bag of tricks Is lim ited to drinking, cursing and Illi cit lovings, "who could not - com prehend the "real Washington if diagramed to him." - McAndrew withdrew from the trial last week, labeling it "bur lesque" and "vaudeville." LOS ANGELES, Dec 1. (AP). Publishers cf the five Los Ange les newspaper who ace sponsoring the charity football game Christ mas day between all-star teams representing the south, and the west, today Issued a statement ex pressing surprise . at the attack maj upon the game by Herman Stageman, director of physical ed ucation, at the University of Geor gia. After reviewing Stageman s dec laration that the southern confer ence should not sanction. the game and recalling the fact that ;the conference In previous years has approved of post-season trips to the coast by the University of Ala bama team, the i statement con tinued. - "It is-inconceivable that special legislation should be enacted by the southern . conference permit ting one of its members to twice come to Pasadena to play a foot ball game, and object to a charity Christmas game in which only seniors would be permitted " to play.' This game will be handled by; three representatire coaches from the sections In which the two elevens were selected. ; It will be come an annual classic and will In no way lnerf ere with . the Rose Bowl game held annually at Pas adena on New Year's day. The dif ference between the two la that proceeds of the Christmas day game will go to well known chari ties, while the receipts from the Rose Bowl game go to the Rose Bowl and the Institutions compet- ing." " Administration Leaders Fear Too Much Tax Cut STRANGLER TO APPEAL Earlo Nelson Hopes to Get Free and Study Religion WINNIPEG, Man., Dec. 1. fAPl R-irln H1ann -tit "Pain Attn Cal., the r . ed "dark r,m"lVM JiZ. V? woo wa VN- icfAdTere threeSP1' J weeaa agovr: Land Department Turns I Over $203,562 To State The state land department turned over to the state treasurer during the month of November a toUl.ot 1203.662.53, According to a report prepared here Wednes day by George Q., Brown, ciera- oi th atate land board: The items Included. In1 the trans fer follow: Common school fund, principal, payments on loans $128,439.64; common school fund principal, in come sources $15,911.39; com mon school fund interest $46,765. 28, agricultural college fund prin cipal, payments on loans $1075; agricultural college fund interest WASHINGTON. Dec. 1.- ( AP Brakes were clamped down bv administration leaders today In anTeffort to prevent con gress from overrunning what the treasury regards as the safety line In the" question of tax reduction. At the tapltol. Representative Tilson.' the republican house lead er, backed on the treasury recom mendation for a cut not in excess of $225,000,000 and at the de partment itself. Secretary Mellon reiterated that : the treasury fig ure represented the maximum slice that could be effected with safety. -. ' While Tilson and the secretary withheld specific reference to the announcemnet by the chmaber of commerce of the United States reiterating Its belief that reduc tion of $400,000,000 should be authorized; both contended that it would he dangerous if congress exceeded , the limit proposed by the treasury and favored by Pres ident Coolidge. . " Secretary Mellon said that he believed . the corporation tax, now 13 1-2 per cent, was too high and should be reduced as soon as pos sible, even below the 11 1-2 per cent; Figure 'approved by the house ways and means committee for incorporation In the new tax bill that It has drafted. The treasury favors an Imme diate cut in the corporation rate to 12 per cent, but Mr. Mellon In dicated that his department did not -regard the forthcoming-. tax reduction as the last to be recom mended and that this levy probab ly would come in for more consid eration In a future tax bill. Mr. Tilson declared that with a presidential election only a year off and with every prisible induce ment before the party - In power to curry popular favor. It amazed him that the republicans were charged with-an unwillingness to reduce taxes as much.; ; ; 7 .'Tax ' reduction is . always the most popular policy any one can advocate," - he said, "and If the president, the secretary " of the treasury and the house ways, and means committee place a conserva tive limit, on the reduction which can safely be made at this lime, we may properly conclude that their decision Is based on sound business judgment rather than po litical expediency, ANOTHER INFANT DEATH PORTLAND, Nov. 30. (AP) Another death from Infantile pa ralysis was reported to the city health office today, together with the report of an additional new case. Mario Galliganl, IS, died to day. Eight others are 111 here with the disease. : JOHNNY PRESTON WINS .-"V (AP) Johnny Preston, 147 1-2, of Honolulu, knocked out Billy Adams, 147 1-2, of New Orleans, in the sixth round of their sche dule 10-round bout at National hall last night. - o orderine Mrs. Em- HTj ?JXerBon, has not given t up s -. . , . j . t uope ol etcuping iae ueaiu sen tence Imposed upon him by the trial judge. " :; Nelson, declared by Winnipeg police to be the strangler sought In connection with the unsolved slayihgs of a dozen women in the United States, said In his cell here today that if he escaped the death $3.18 penalty ' would devote his lifei to a stut.. of religion. I HANDBALL SCHEDULED , A handball match with O. A. C has been arranged I for . the Salem 'required to make the tour flnan-jY. M. C. A. team. -It" wlir be c:a,lly possible. played sometime next week at Cor- Fifteen varsity hoop candidates vallls. ' ; I ; T. I'. i i - - J r " , " . :- :- -:. .-yyv -v-v .:.:.,v.v.-.x-: : tThls baby bas never had a day's sickness and never a cross or fret ful spell that lasted an hour. And hat do you suppose is responsi ble for this healthy, happy condi tion? Not diet.-for he baa eaten just ."about anything and every thing a child : could "eat. Not drugs, for he has not been dosed with opiates; he ha neyer had a drop of paregoric Nor has .his senBible mother ever made him taste castor oiL Tet his. nerves are sound and Us Uttia bowela are strong, and when he does seem the least restless or' wakeful, or out of sorts or likely to be his mother has him. all serene agafa in ten or fifteen minutes! The secret of this complete free Com from the many Ills and up sets so common to infants? Plain : 1-fasb.Ioned Castoria. A million f I more mothers swear 'by Cas tcria, and no wonder! - A few ( ' ; j a 1 an iipjroachlng fever, diarrhoea or constijatlon i :i to vanish ia tfcia air. Caa t 1$ purely veseiafcle; that Li why physicians tell Tarenta they may use it freely with children of any age the youngest infant.-And how they love the taste! ... One word of warning; get the pure, real . Castorla. - Fletcher's Castoria is the original.; It is the kind doctor specify. And with every bottle comes, a' book on "Care and Feeding of Babies" that Is worth its weight in gold to any mother or prospective mother. So, remember; tell your druggist you wish Fletchtr'a Castoria. Rural . credits loan f una princi pal $6162.63, university fund in terest $510, rural credits reserve fund Interest $2179.26, A. R. Bur bank trust fund interest $96; Ap person principal, loans, $392.20", ApperBon Interest, loans, $21.13; Apperson principal, loans, $1000; Apperson interest loans, $300.67, and ThuTBton Monument, interest, 1 1 Here Are Real Val oes SWANSDOWN, the real cake flour, with a heavy 8 by: 8 cake tine free . with a purchase of 2 packages, priced; OQp TUjrkatre ' - UU - 4 lb. package of fresh Market Day Raisins 10 lbs. Pure Fruit Cane S'ug'ar . - - 3 pkgs. Royal Fruit or Jello Gelatine 1 very good House Broom ..J 1100 lbs. of good ; Potatoes 15 lbs. Potatoes 29 c 65c 25c 1 pkg. Citrus Washing OQ Powder . . : : 39c .S1.19 25c Lipton High Grade Coffee l lb. 49c 2 lbs. 96c 3 lbs. $1.42 Well cured lean streaked bacon, lb. 1 29c 1 sk. Snowfall Hardwheat Blend ' .7. $1.79 Lower Prices on New Stock Gum Boots S3.95 ltoreys tit the condemned! SINGS WITH NEW THROAT Oiildrcii Cry fps n i MATS LANDING N. ; J., Dec. 1- (AP) A frightened little boy with a quivering chin was -one of the most important witnesses at Wednesdays session of the XJl Iiendahl murder trial a session otherwise filled with surprises and disappointments for the prosecu tion. : ' J :, . ' ; . I The boy was Lewis Behlerj 12 year old playmate of I Alfred Lfl- Hendahl, son t of Mrs. Margaret Lilliendahl and the aged x doctor with whose murder she and Willis Beach are jointly charged; He was called to the stand to estab lish that an intimacy existed ' be tween the doctor's wife and Beach which caused a rift in the home life of the LilHendahls and thus furnished a possible - motive 1 for the killing. - Exhibits Frtght i He took the stand timidly, nothing but his frightened face showing- above the wood, and his answers were so indistinct - that they had to be repeated every time for counsel and Jury.- ' , i ' Next to this boy the star wit ness'of the day, from the state'a point of view, was Ileroert Lloyd, a swarthy plowman, whose test!-' mony was directed at showing that the. defendants were Illicit lovers. He told of going to his home one evening ' last spring, "crows lots' and stumbling on Beach and Mrs. Lilliendahl ; keeping a. tryst. He struck a match t light;, hi cigar, thus getting light enough to identify the couple as Beach' and Mrs. Lilliendahl. Beach, be testi fied, threatened " him with bodily harm If he ever mentioned the en counter. . '' -- " ' Def endaats Scornful J j During tbe testimony the widow and -her alleged " lover listened seornfully and . occasionally; ex changed smiles Indicating- amuse ment.. ; " " , . Several gave the. state such". surprise by their f orgetf ulness and the . unexpectedness ; of their " re plies " that y the prosecutor - an nounced to reporters that he was considering instituting legal ac tion against them. 5 I. - ' came to the state during the tei-j thnony of Harry Sanderson.; aj salesman from Sidney, Ohio, who j strove past the' scene of: the crime on the day of the killing. He had been expected to testify that ht had seen a man run out ef the bushee near the place where Dr. Lilliendahl was shot and to iden tify that man as Beach, - Witness Very Forgetful j lie kc;t to his expected atory until the prosecutor pointetl to licAcii &X.J, s.sk-l: Is that the man man have appealed to the dotn : ion minister of justice at Otta: for commutation of the senteu.-e to life Imprisonment. . CASE REPORTED-DALLES Artificial Larynx Given Aylctt C. Mahon of Richmond Find First Infantile Taralysis Ul ness Sherman County THE DALLES, Ore., Dec. 1. (AP) The- first i Infantile par alysis case in Sherman county has been reported at .Wasco, where the 10 year , old son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lucas of Lexington, Ore., is 111 with a severe attack of the disease. ' Read the Classified Ads NEW YORK. Dec. 1. ( AP) . -A' voice so rich and resonant that it had been used successfully over the radio-was the result of the in stallation of an artificial larynx in the throat of Aylett'C. Hahon of Richmond, Va., the . Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat hospital an nounced today, U;"r. t Mr. Mahon wrote to the hospital that he had been able to resume hts duties as a traveling salesman since his operation. . Dr. Reuben O'Brien, superinten dent of the hospital, said there now are about fifty artificial larnyxes in use in this country. Bad Cold Left Her Daring Sermon! To awa to ith a cold and be rid of it by would yon like, to knojr bow to do it? Yotf don't have to dose yourself with strong drugs. Just take a plain white, pleasant-tasting tablet. rape's Cold Compound is such a simple thine to use. it doesn't seem possible that it can knock a ld out completely in a few hours nut it does! And there Isn't a single after-effect on heart, head or stomach. It is sold by every druggist for only 35c. COLD COMPOUND Knee Boots, U. S. 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