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i
PAGE SIX
The New OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Sunday Morning, April 21, 1929
SALM EOWUBJGTE4M LEADS NORTHWEST FIELD
.. . ... 1
University of Oregon Beaten. By Washington in Minor Sports Carnival
0
EACH TAKES 30
IH AFTEHN
if
ii
a
ft
J
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r
'4
O'Leary's Legionnaires
Out in Front at Congress
) Being Held in Vancouver
,
rE O'Learya Legionnaires bowling team of Salem
crashed mto the lead for the class A championship at
the Northwest Bowling congress, in progress at Vancouver,
B. C Saturday night according to word telephoned by Virgil
Stoliker, captain of the O'Leary team, to the Elsinore thea
tre here.
The local team Tolled up a score of 2782, surpassing by
-78 pins the previous high score for class A teams in the
tournament made by the Richfield company team of Port
land. The O'Leary team's game scores were 939, 929 and
914.
Members of the Legion
naires team at Vancouver
were C. Monson, Van Wieder,
C. Greenlaw, Bert Victor and
Stoliker.
The crowd at the La Salle al
leys, -where the howling congress
Is being held, "went wild" over
- the Salem teams when they began
piling ap big scores, Stoliker re
ported. Of the six Salem teams, the
Reo Firing Clouds, 1928 interme
diate champions, scored next to
the Legionnaires with a total of
2503 pins. Members of this team
were S- Steinbock, Fred Karr.
Henry Barr, Earl Newton and
Mert Hemenway.
Bias's Shop Third
With Score, of 2378 ;
The - Man's Shop ' came third
with 2378. Tie team included
Al Titos. Clem Kertson. J. Coe,
, L. L. Hall and Wayne Kantola.
: Among the class B teams, the
Elks Cubs scored high with 2282
pins. On this team were Ed
Pratt, F. Spears, J. Elliott, J
George and Don Tonng. The Sa
lem Sanitary -Dairy team, which
had as Us personnel C. Martin, E.
Ostrin, Rex Lyons, George Nelson
and E. Mailer, scored 21fl.
Weinstein's Army ft Nary Store
team, Ray Johnson, Don Ponlin.
Ray Nebergall, Art Allison and
Harry Stainbock, made a score of
2163.
Salem's 15 doubles teams and
30 singles entries will bowl today,
and results of their matches will
be reported to the Elsinore at 3
o'clock this afternoon and after
the last matches end tonight, ac
cording to plans.
. The Elsinore will be host to the
bowlers who are now at Vancon
Ter, next Friday, April 26, at the
evening show.
Motion pictures were taken of
the Salem bowlers in action last
night and are being rushed to Sa
lem with the highest possible
speed transportation facilities will
permit. ' The management of the
Elsinore theatre announced late
last night -that they would be
shown there the moment they ar
rired. - Some hope was bejd out
that the first showing might be
tonight.
M ITS GAME
WITH COUNT 2-flLL
- WOODBURN, April 20. The
Molalla-Woodburn game played
here Friday afternoon pro red to
be another "no-decision" affair,
when the game was called in the
eighth inning on account of rain,
with the score at two all.
Hunt scored Woodburn's first
run in the first inning on Lemcke's
hit to center. For five innings the
team held this advantage but in
the sixth Slyter. Molalla third
baseman, paved the way for a ral
ly which ended with Molalla In the
lead 2 to 1. In Woodburn's halt
of the innin. however. Cribble
slammed out the first homer of
the yejir. evening me scurc. f
Both pitchers. Rood of Molaihjt
and Owing of Woodburn. allowed
five hits.
FORMS BULL CLUB
VALSETZ. April 28. (SpL)
TV chMim & Mitchell Lumber Co
ir has orranised a baseball
'um inlii this rear, which fudg
ing fmm -resent Indications will
be an even faster aggregation than
iimt team.
v vit slaved .800 per cent
ball last season, losing only two
games, one to the Salem Knights
of Columbus and the other to To
ledo. .
The team here has a few open
- dates for Sunday games, and any
Willamette valley team wishing
'gome good stiff competition is ad-
rlsed to get in touch with Walt
Raymond, manager of the team
.here.
Baseball Skeds
Will Be Drawn
Monday Evening
Tnrntatlves v of' baseball
LUMBER
com ran
Steams sponsored by tte T. M. C.
A. will meet Monday night with
' Boh Boardman .to dtecnss series
schedules. , The- teams hare been
getting tn some practice handling
: the ball but not much fielding ex
t perience. ' - "I ' .
PROFITABLE ADVICE
. Don't be too sore about farm
' relief being all bunk; a farm
board with $500,000,000 should
be able to offer "advice" that
' means something. Pendleton
East Oregonian. - .
Classified ' advertising in the
Oregon Statesman brings results.
BUM Ml
BV PHILADELPHUl
PHILADELPHIA, 'April
(AP) Lester Sweetland pitched
pie Phillies to a 5 to 2 victory
over Brooklyn in the first game
of the series here today, the home
team found Watson Clark and
Ray Moss fairly easy.
R H E
Brooklyn 2 12
Philadelphia S 11 0
Clark, Moss and Deberry;
Sweetland and Davis, Leron. .
Pirates Beat Reds ' 1
CINCINNATI. April 20 (AP)
Cincinnati fielded raggedly be
hind Rixey's lneffectlre pitching
and gave the Pirates a 5 to 4 vic
tory orer the Reds today.
R H . E
Pittsburgh 5 11 4
Cincinnati 4 2
Grimes and Hargreaves; Rixey,
Johnson and Dixon, MeMullen.
New
rain.
Tork-Boston postponed.
Chicago-St.
rain.
Louis postponed,
.S RIVER IS
BEST FISHING SPOT
Pudding river is the most fav
orable trout fishing resort within
reasonable distance of Salem at
present, a number of good catches
being reported by anglers who
have been there, according to Ben
Claggett, deputy state game war
den.
Mill creek above Aumsrille Is
expected to reach a level today at
which good fishing will be pos
sible. Most of the other streams
are still high and muddy, and no
catches of the trout planted this
year have yet been reported, Clag
gett said.
A number of anglers will go to
Valsetx lake today. There is to be
an "anglers' special" train from
Hoskins to Valsetz, leaving Hos
kins at 5 o'clock this morning
and returning at night. Prospects
at Valsetz are especially encour
aging, v
The fishing at Rickreall Is bet
ter than it has ever been at thsl
time of year, and should be better
today than lthas been In the past
week.
STJHT-flOMES DO
WELL AT
While some of Salem's crack
bowlers were doing big things at
Vancouver, B. C, Saturday night,
the "stay at homes" were like
wise performing unusual feats. T.
M. Barr. on the Winter Garden
alleys that night, picked np the
"big four" split. 4-7-6-10, some
thing that had never been accom
plished on these aleys before.
Pearl McVey won the women's
sweep tares with a score of 503.
Other schools were: Esther Tib-
bets, 36S. Josephine Barr 412, El
len Hemenway 427, Maude Pool
in 425, Lora Hemenway 466, Mrs.
Schas 418.
In . mixed doubles, E. Roth and
Ellen Hemenway scored high with
972. Other scores were: Lyons
and Pearl McVey 895, Fields and
Maude Poulin, 972, L. Barr and
Lora Hemenway 889.
STANFORD DEFEATS
BEAR TRICK TEAM
STANFORD STADIUM, Palo
Alto. Cal, April 20. (AP) Rac
ing to onesided victories in most
of the track' events and dominat
ing the field trials In iron clad fa
shion, Stanford's Cardinals smash
ed their way today to the greatest
track and field victory in 36 years
of competition with the University
of California Bears, their oldest
athletic rivals. The score of 94 2-3
to 36 1-3, wiped out in one im
pressive stroke, the former "big
meet" record set by California In
1893.
- In that first meeting more than
three decades ago, the Bears post
ed 91 points tb 25 and that grand
total withstood all onslaughts un
til today's disastrous ending.
PURCHASE SAWMILL
? DeArmond Brothers, well
known : sawmill operators of
Klamath Falls and Bend, have
purchased the sawmill formerly
operated by Campbell, Archer ft
Davis oit Paisley , mountain ' in
Lake county.
UD
Looking for More Glory
, , j&ZS 54A TU'"7 J TH' MTO1 MANAGER., SEBOiSiV
'Wf) r p "f MoriVMH- CAN T , - '
'3
-to htpb Ht& uGfmourxc:
A
Br OUIN HALL
WITH the opening of the
1929 season booked for to
morrow. Miller Huggins,
mite manager of the mighty New
York Yankees, will be spending the
next few months in the meadows
looking for additional Baseball
glory.
The fact that the world's cham
pions didn't look as capable as they
might while doing their Spring
conditioning at St. Petersburg,
Fla.,'has caused no wrinkles to fur
row the Hoggins' brow. The Tanks
usually look somewhat terrible in
the Spring, tra-la, but with the
opening of the regular season ah!
With the addition of such fel
lows as Dickey and Jorgens, the
Miller will have a snappier catch
ing staff than he had in 1928.
Both these youngsters are likely to
stick and, as both rapped the apple
for over .300 in the minors last
season, the Tanks may bo bolstered
np with a heavy clouting backstop,
something which Hoggins has been
lacking.
The only radical change In the
Tankees lineup is centered around
the difficult corner. Joe Dugan
is no longer with the dob. To
fill the gap Mark Koenig has bees
New Tax Commission Will
Be Named Early in June;
Eleven Men are Available
Eleven names have been sub
mitted to the state board of con
trol for consideration in the se
lection of three members of the
paid tax commission created un
der an act of the 1929 legislature.
Members of the board said the
tax commissioners probably wonld
not be announced before early in
Jnne
Guy R. Harper and Frederick
W. Skiff, both of Portland, prob
ably haver received the largest
number, of indorsements, accord
ing to letters on file with, the
secretary of the board of controL
Mr. Harper was said to be an
income tax expert. Ho served as
a member of the board of exam
iners of the American Institute of
Accountants, and has held other
similar offices. Several members
of the 1929 legislature have in
dorsed Mr. Harper as one mem
ber of the paid tax commission.
Skiff Is Declared
Experienced Expert -
Mr. Skiff also has enjoyed ex
perience in income tax matters,
and for a number of years was
employed as 'accountant by Olds,
WoTtmafe and King in Portland.
Friends of Mr. Skiff said he was
well Qualified to serve as a mem
ber of the commission. i
A large number of . letters also
hare been received indorsing Her
bert E. Walker of feu gene. Mr.
Walker served for four years as
recorder and police Judge of
Springfield, and later served.' as
assessor of Lane county. He re
signed the latter office to accept
th position of secifctary of the
lane County Tax Conservation
commission.
John Carldn Urged By
Central Committee ,
! The Jackson County Republican
Central committee has sent in an
indorsement for John Carkin of
Medf ord. Mr. Carkin is a member
of the lower house of the state
legislature, and was chairman of
the tax. relief commission appoint
ed at the 1927 session. He as
sisted In drafting all of the im
portant tax laws, enacted at the
1921 legislative assembly. Mr.
JMCSTUMBUM
shifted over from short field. Hefand outfield. Naturally Lou Geh-
seems to be masterinr the new Job
and Mark's likely to make the fans
all but forget Dugan in 1929.
At short, Hoggins has tried ex
pensive Lyn Lary. This youth hit
for well over .300 in the Coast
League last year and Hoggins feels
confident that Lary will stride
along with the other Tankees in
hitting power once be gets accli
mated to the big top.
Lary is undoubtedly a speed
merchant and in the exhibition
games staged at St. Pete, he
covered wide territory and was
constantly np on his toes. Hug
gins is apparently well satisfied
with the manner in which the coast
marvel is workinz the noaition but
he will keep him in reserve until
he becomes more seasoneo. w
roeher will be the regular a, &
Hoggins has been taking Lax
xeri along slowly. He indicates
that Tony's arm is in as good eon
dittioR as it ever was, but in the
St. Pete games he was using
Dnroeher quite often at the key
stone bag. When playing, how
ever, Tony rifled the ball about
the infield as of old.
The Tankees will depend
largely on their last year's pitchers
Carkin is now serving as city at
torney of Med ford. He was speak
er of the house during the 1927
session of legislature. The ques
tion of Mr. Carkln's eligibility to
serve as a member of the paid
tax commission has. been referred
to the attorney general for legal
opinion.
Astoria Kan Backed
By His Community
Charles Henrys of Astoria, has
the Indorsement of & num
ber of prominent persons in
the lower Columbia river district.
He has served as assessor of Clat
sop county and was said to be
well qualified. Mr. Henrys e
peclally is well equipped to handle
timber assessfents, according to
his supporters.
Ray H. Wlsecarver of Portland
also would like to servo on the
commission. He nas been em
ployed in the income tax bureau
of the internal revenue offices in
Portland and has held other im
portant positions.
Another candidate is Lewis W
Elliott of Salem. Elliott was em
ployed In the offices of the state
tax commission here while the
stato income tax law was opera
tive. His friends said he was
well versed in income tax matters.
Ben West of Salem
Also Is Candidate
Other candidates are Ben. F.
West of Salem, August Anderson
of Bend, and Tom Wilson of Port
land. West once served as as
sessor of Marion county. : He has
been prominent In Republican cir
cles here for a number of years.
Anderson is assessor of Deschutes
county.
Although Earl Fisher, present
state tax commissioner, has not
filed any formal application with
the board of control, officials. in
dicated that he would be retained
on the commission. Fisher has
served as state tax commissioner
for several years and previously
was assessor of Linn county.
Two members of the board of
control were reported to favor
Charles V. Galloway of Portland,
for a place on the commission,
ft
BLOCKS THAW VBEZX&E
rig, at first, is just as capable as
ever. Kuth wasn t rapping out
four-ply wallops at St. Pete, but
he seldom does in practice skir-
misnes.
The New York dab will have to
meet keener opposition than they
encountered last year. Personally,
we look for this opposition to come
from the St. Louis Browns rather
than the Athletics. Connie Mack's
crowd was up there last year, but
they couldn't stand the gaff, and
the A's of this year will probably
be much as the A's of 1928. Their
jjttching may not be Quite as bril-
Howley, at St. Louis, on the
other hand, looks to have a better
team than last year. As Dan's
contract expires with the close of
this season, hell be fighting to
keep his club busy winning games.
The Browns are fond of Howley,
and they'll be in there trying to
help their pilot make good.
However, the Tankees still are
functioning with what ol' Mur
derer's Row of heavy hitters. Tet
every club in the American
League, with the possible exception
of Philadelphia, seems stronger.
So the Tanks may have their
troubles.
Galloway served as state' tax com
missioner here at one time, and
is familiar with tax matters. He
Is now connected with the bond
department of a Portland bank.
He has not filed an application
with the board of control, and
some doubt was expressed as to
whether he would accept the of
fice even if it was offered to him.
The law fixes the salaries of
the three state tax commissioners
at 14,800 a year.
HER NONE
TO
Approval of the entire market
road program of the county made
Friday by the state highway com
mission at its meeting in Portland
means that weather conditions
alone can affect the commence
ment of work for this season on
the first of the new roads to be
constructed by the court.
Frank Johnson, assistant coun
ty roadmaster. said Saturday af
ternoon that the Salem-Indenem
once market road will be one of
the first of the new roads to be
worked on. ;
A four and one-half mile stretch
leading from Hall's Ferry to In
dependence is to be built.
J. N. Chambers, manager of the
J. C. Penney Co. hero Is expected
home Monday from a week's meet
ing of managers held in Portland.
The affair is a semi-annual gath
ering at which managers from all
parts of the northwest are tn at
tendance. Buying for the fall sea
son is carried on at the meeting
as well as discussion of managers',
problems. Many of the executives
of the company attended the meet
ing from the New York office.
While formal announcement has
not yet been made it is understood
that the J. c. Penney Co. is. con
sidering the erection of
a larre
warehouse In Portland. A nnmber
of new stores are to be opened on
the Pacific coast this summer. ;
BAR
WORK
CHAMBERS BACK OR
IflW FROM MEET
IT S STRAIGHT
Portland Aggregation Ends
Week With Clear Record
of Defeats
PORTLAND, Ore., April 20.
The Missions made it five straight
from the Beavers today, winning
bekin Bert Cole's fine pitching.
4 to 1. Knight also was. in good
form, but in two innings bunched
hits drove in two runs each time.
Doubles by Finn and Hufft ac
counted for the two in the visitors'
third, and in the seventh two sin
gles and another double sent in
the other two. Successive doubles
in the Portland seventh by Keesey
and Jahn saved Portland from a
shutout.
R H E
Missions 4 7 1
Portland 1 '6 0
Cole and Hoffman; Knight and
Rego, Bates.
Seals Wallop Oaks
SAN FRANCISCO, April 20.
(AP) In a fast ball game featur.
ed by numerous double plays, San
Francisco defeated Oakland here
today by a score of 8 to 3. settl
ing the game in the second inning
by a rally In Which four runs were
scored.
R H E
Oakland 3 10 1
San Francisco 8 9 2
Craghead, Hurst, Boehler and
Angel Shade Senators
LOS ANGELES. April 20.
(AP) -Successive singles by Earl
Webb. Walter Berger and "Slug"
Tolson in the tenth Inning broke
up an exciting pitching duel and
gave Los Angeles a 3 to win over
the Sacramento Senators here to
day. R H E
Sacramento ." . . 2 3 3
Los Angeles 3 19 0
(10 innings).
Gould and Koehler; Roberts.
Peters and Hannah, Sand berg.
Double header Seattle-Hollywood
postponed, rain.
L
Theft of wool and mohair val
ued at 335 from the warehouse of
the Oregon Wool & Mohair com
pany was admitted in circuit court
Saturday by Herman Bauman
who waived indictment on the
charge of larceny and plead guil
ty before Judge Percy R. Kelly.
Bauman was sentenced to one
year in the state penitentiary.
Marion Cornelius, arraigned be
fore Judge Kelly Saturday, plead
guilty to larceny and was sen
tenced to 30 days in the county
jail. He admitted the theft of a
gas olow torch, a raincoat and
a pair of pliers.
While Leo Leonard did not seek
charge of issuing checks without
funds in the bank, Judge Percy
Kelly did noJudge his intent suf
ficiently wrong to Justify Leon
ard's retention in jail. After sen
tencing him to one year in the
county "bastile" the judge par
oled him to O. D. Bower, sheriff.
SOCIAL HOUR CLUB
Mrs. Mary Leo Butler and Mrs.
Leighton Smith entertained the
Social Hour club delightfuly Wed
nesday afternoon. The program
feature was a recital of the his
tory of the Oregon Normal school
as an institution of learning, from
the time at its inception as Mon
mouth university by pioneer set
tlers, until the present. Miss Mag
gie Butler and Miss Cassle Stump
both able historians and daugh
ters of pioneers, presented the un-
usuaiy interesting incidents in a
most entertaining manner. As
both of these ladles attended the
original school their rendition was
replete with actual facts and hap
penings which they had witnessed
Spring flowers decorated the
rooms tastefully and the refresh
ments carried out a similar color
scheme. Mrs. Mary Fluk of In
dependence and Mrs. A. M. Arant
were guests of the club.
Mrs. Mary Lee Builer departed
Thursday for Ventura. Calif,
where she will make an indefinite
visit with relatives.
DON'T
Waste Tour
JUNK
We will be glad to go to
your place and pay the
full value. We want
SACKS
Bass, Paper, Metal, Ete.
Salem Junk
Co.
SSO If. Commercial St.
Phone 403
Saffron A Kline
BAUMI IS GUILTY
0 10
ARCEHi
GUEST HESDAl
Wet Mound
Halts First
Tiltof
"No game wet grounds."
- And probaWy rain too. accord
ing to the weather bureau, so the
Oregon-Washington league will
not open Its season today unless,
perhaps the Kelso-Longview game
is played. Since that wonld dis
rupt the schedule or give those
teams an idle Sunday later, they
may play an exhibition gam if
play is feasible In sourthern
Washington.
Monta villa was schedued to
play at Salem and Mt. Scott at
Albany. Both of these games were
caled oft Saturday after telephone
conversation between managers.
BOSTlWlTS
FIRST W OF 1929
WASHINGTON, April 20
(AP) Boston won It, first game
of the season today, defeating
Washington, 6 to 5, in a ninth
inning rally.
Pinch hitter Standeart broke a
tie In the ninth with two out, his
double sending two runs across.
Both of the starting pitchers, Sam
Jones for Washington, and Rus
sell for Boston were relieved.
R H E
Boston 6 8 2
Washington - 5 5 1
Russell, Bayne and Asbgorson;
Jones, Burke and Tate.
Browns Whip Detroit
ST. LOUIS, April 20 (AP)
The St, Louis Browns scored five
runs In an eighth Inning rally
and took the first game of the
series with Detroit today, 9 to 4.
R H E
Detroit
St. Louis
.4
.9
10
11
Stoner, Vangilder and Ahea;
Gray and Schang.
Cleveland - Chicago postponed,
rain.
Philadelphia at New York, post
poned, rain.
Insurance Rates
Claimed As High
In Radio Goods
Complaint of radio dealers that
their fire Insurance rates had
been greatly increased caused the
inquiry being made by the radio
industrial associations. Fire un
derwriters advised them that in
surance rates on radio products
were Increased because they are
more subject to damage from fire
and water than electrical pro
ducts. This also raises, the ques
tion of whether radio apparatus is
an electrical product or not an
other burning question within the
radio and electrical Industries.
Insurance rates fairly adjusted
on radio products as compared
with electrical and other similar
products are being sought by the
Federated Radio Trades Associa
tion and the Radio Manufacturers
association.
OBSERVE HTMA.VK WEEK
Humane week is to be observed
throughout the nation. Some
Good Samaritan should invent a
bomb for use in Chicago that
would work so fast that the vic
tim will never know what struck
him. That might be less painful
than some of the methods that
hare been used In the past. Ash
land Tidings.
NURSING BRUISES
Those diplomats who decided
that Mrs. Gann is entitled to pre
ferential, seating over their wives
may be sitting pretty with the
state department, but they're
probably nursing a few rollingpin
bruises. The Dalles Chronicle.
Prescription He Wrote
in 1892 is the World's
Most Popular Laxative
When Dr. Caldwell started to
practice medicine, back in 1875
the needs for a laxative were not
as great as they are today. People
lived normal, quiet lives, ate
plain, wholesome food, and got
plenty of fresh air and sunshine.
But even that early there were
drastic physics and purges tor the
relief of constipation which Dr.
Caldwell did not believe were good
for human beings to put tnto their
system. So he wrote a prescrip
tion fro a laxative to be used by
his patients.
The prescription tor constipa
tion for a laxative to beBsed by
practice, and which he put In drug
stores in 1S92 nnder the name
of Dr. Caldwell's Syrun Pepsin.
is a liquid vegetable remedy. In
tended tor women, children and
elderly people, and they need Just
sucn a mua, sale, gentle bowel
stimulant .as Syrup Pepsin.
unaer successful manarement
this prescription has proven Its
worth ana is now the largest sell
ing liquid laxative in the world.
The tact that millions of bottles
are used a year proves that it has
won the confidence of people who
aeeoea it .to get relief from head
aches; biliousness, flatulence, in
digestion, loss of appetite and
sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds
and fevers
Webfoots Eliminated in Eve
ning Events by North
ern Aggregation
SEATTLE, April 20 (AD
Washington easily won the first
minor sports carnival ever held in
the Pacific northwest here toniuht
Washington scored 7S point. Ore
gon 25 and Washington State col
lege 20.
Washington took first In hand
ball, tumbling, wrestling, and box
lag and second tn fencing. Oregon
finished first in fencing and oc.
ond in tumbling and handball, w.
S. C. took secod place In wrestlice
and boxing. The Huskies lost i-jt
one boxing bout. That was to Dave
Brannon, W. S. C, 123 poun j. r.
who also eliminated the onlv Ore
gon fighter, A. Carroll.
SEATTLE, Wash.. April ;n
(AP) The University of Wa-V-ington
and Oregon tied with .V'
points each, and two wrest line
championships apiece were v.-,.:.
by Washington State and th
Huskies in afternoon events hr
today of the first minor s;.ort;
carnival ever held In the r.. :fir
northwest.
Forty-nine athletes from tie
three schools competed in th- c.ir
nival which consisted of han.i
ball, boxing, wrestling, fenchin.
and tumbling. Twenty points wer-
awarded to the winner of earh
sport, and tea for second place.
Oregon Men Do Well
In Fencing Tourney
y- In. the fencing preliminaries
Warren Powell, Winchester Hei
cher and '-Red Radke of Oregon
scored 20 points by elimiuatti,
six -W. S. C. and Washingtoa
swordsmen, and cinched the
championship in that event for
the Webfeet. The trio meets to
night for individual honors. The
Huskies defeated the Cougars to
carry off 10 points in that event.
The Huskies came back in the
handball tourney to take two
straight games from Oregon an 4
even the score; Don Hall. Wash
ington beat Lawrence Wagiu-r
Oregon. 21-1. 21-15, while hit
partner, Dick Levy, donned Frid
DueU, Oregon, 15-21, 21-13,
10.
Cougars Lead In
Afternoon's Wrestling
In the afternoon wrestline
matches W. S. C. copped t!.e 11
and 135 pound titles, wi.il'
Washington garnered the liht
heavy and heavyweight champion
ships. Three other bouts v.-r-
fought this afternoon in the semi
finals. Title results were: Wal
lace Pease, W. S. C, defeated H.
Konda, Japanese of Washington
115 pounder, in two extra it r
iods; Harold Davis, defeated
George Douglas, Washington.-!"."'.
Howard Olson, Washington, con
quered Paul Davis, W. S. C, lieV.t
heavy; Les Lex, Washington, won
the heavyweight title by default.
Semi final bouts were:
' Lloyd Webster, Washington,
defeated F. Bowers, Oregon 14":
Cliff Bloom, Washington, defeat
ed K. Hall. W. S. C 125: am!
Ken Drlskell, W. S. C. beat H.
Elliot. Washington, 15S.
Bearcat-Oregon
Tilt Called OH
EUGENE. Ore.. April 10
(AP) The baseball double head
er between the University of Or -gon
and Willamette university
here today was postponed because
of wet grounds. The next gam
on the Oregon slate will be Tues
day with the Meijl university.
Tayko, Japan.
GREAT STATE
Oregon Is a great state. Sh3
has to be, to pungle up that $50 -000,000
a year In taxes of all
kinds and still continue to func
tion, Baker. Democrat Herald.
AT AGS es
Millions ot families are now
never without Dr. Caldwell's Syr
up Pepsin, and if you will once
start nslng It you will also al
ways hate a bottle handy for
emergencies.
It is particularly pleasing to.
know that the most of it Is bought
by mothers for themselves and the
children, though Syrup Pepsin Is
ust as valuable for elderly people
All dreg stores have the generous
bottles. . . i