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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1930)
PAGE EIGHT Hm OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Satarday Morningy April 26. 1930 ' ' - " ' Hregoe, State Wins Relays Over ' University s Track Stars Portland Ball Club Actually Defeats Missions Nine by 17 to 1 Count ! I ) s i i i i- h 1 1 i t . 3 11 l 4 i i I - i 5 t . 1 I t !i ""COT Down at O. S. C. they're hold ing a grafting school. That's the first we had heard of conrses in grafting In the schools of higher education. Grafters used to be trained as apprentices. See where Merrill Hagan has resigned as coach at Medford high. It was predicted last fall that anybody who followed in Prink Calllson's footsteps would have tough sledding, but from the reports, nobody was after Hagan's scalp; he Just saw a chance to get up in the world more quickly. He plans to be an aviator. We have two more letters from wrestling fans. One writes anonymously ami the other spe cifies that his letter is not for publication. v ass The brave lad who falls to sign his name declares this match was "a milestone in creditable sports" and after inferring that the sport writers of this city who have unanimously condemned the "af fair are to be classed with "cake eaters, cream-puff hounds, soup-and-fish purveyors and gravy gut xlers, goes on as follows: "However, this was wrestling, and It WAS wrestling, such as had never before been seen In Sa lem. To begin with. McCann's courage! Imagine a welterweight Climbing In against a light heavy weight, a topnotcher in the class anrwhere In the world. Taking a kick over the kidneys at the be ginning of the bout which for several seconds practically para lyzed him! Coming back, and for forty more minutes fighting like a wildcat, having Karasick in close places at many times, and not going down for a fall until he was really out. How many of the critics of thia match have stuck It through such places? They would be elsewhere In this world's machine if they were made of such stuff, believe me." The other writer agreed with our own view in all essential details except that he made no mention of the "grandstand ing" to which he took excep tion. Sorry we're not permit ted to quote him. Anyway we're going to have another wrestling show next Wed nesday night with a couple of well matched principals and not, we are glad to say, the Police Gasette rules. We don't know how most of the fans feel about it, but we have a feeling we're going to like this match a lot better than the last one, unless something goes wrong. Bnt, Mr. "Close Student of Sports," we would like to assure you that there was absolutely no collusion between toe three sports writers and we note that our com petitor across the street dealt with the "match" less charitably than we did. You may call us "cake-eaters" from behind your barricade of anonymous author ship, but you miss the mark. We did not object to the match as too rough; that's up to the boys who took part. We won't flinch from watching It if they can stand do ing It. Our objection is three fold: The men were hopelessly mismatched,' one of them didn't give the fans his best (Karasick could have thrown McCann out the window any time he chose) and It wasn't wrestling nor any . other thing that we care to call sport. Yesterday We Saw A big, husky Willamette foot ball player and all-around athlete hiking for cover in a pair of soiled corduroy trousers cut off above the knees. We hear they were amputated by irate upper- classmen to enforce a tradition and that the "executioners" were forced to buy him a new pair. Wildcat McCann and Mervin Barrackxnan will be the principals In the wrestling card main event at the armory next Wednesday . night, it was announced Friday by Harry Plant, matchmaker. These grapplers are almost ex actly matched as to weight, and both are well known to Salem fans. McCann is the tough lad who had the temerity to challenge Al Karasick, and the fans admire his nerve and gameness if not his Judgment. Barraekman is known as the trainer of the wrestling bear as weu as a grappier oi no mean ability himself. Whether or not the bear will have a place on the program has not yet been announ ced. Yamhill Golfers Planning Matches McMINNVILLE. April 25 A 20-man golf team of Che Yamhill Golf and Country elub will meet a team from Forest Hills on the dab . course near McMinnville Sunday. -y f - The elub has secured the ser vices of Anthony Roberts, profes sional assistant at the Colombia Country club Portland, to assist local golfers each Friday in im proving tneir game. D11CKH HI WIN OF EVENTS Orangemen Take Early Lead In Annual Event Held At Eugene EUGENE, Ore.. April 25 (AP) Winning 6ix of the eight events, Oregon State college de feated the University of Oregon here today in the annual dual re lay meet between the two institu tions. The University of Oregon won last year's contest. The Orangemen from Corvallis got off to an early lead, defeating the Webfeet in the first three events, the 440-yard relay, the two-mile relay and the 880-yard relay. The University of Oregon team returned to capture the fourth event, the spring medley, and the Staters boosted their points to four by winning the shuttle relay. The distance medley was the only other event in which the Webfeet were victorious. Ore gon State captured the four-mile and mile relays. The summary: 440 yard relay won by Oregon State (Peterson, Johnson, Kirk McKalfp, Martin). Time 34.6. Two-mile relay, won by Oregon State (Toung, Milton, Ronner, Mullin, Johnson.) Time 8:1.2. 880-yard relay, won by Oregon State (Oglesby, Kirk. Peterson, Johnson). Time 1:29.6. Sprint medley: won by Oregon (Lowry, Bale, Hollwage, McKen non.) Time 1:34.6. Shuttle relay, won by Oregon Stale (Martin, Disbrow, Prentiss, Dufrano). Time 1.4. Mile relay, won by Oregon State (Kirk, Oglesby, Phillips, Johnson.) Time 3:24.6. Four mile relay, won by Oregon State (Anson, Cantlne, Gilmore, Chapaon.) Time 18:28. Distance medley, won by Ore gon (Lowry, Keuey, Gerot, Rulr, Jennings, Moran.) Time 7:51.4. I1EIICS BEATEN WASHINGTON. April 25. (AP) The Senators triumphed again today, taking the world champion Athletics into camp 6 to 4. Besides pitching a winning game. Brown produced t h o game's only three base hit. R H E Philadelphia 4 13 Washington 6 11 Quinn, Rommell, and Cochrane: Brown, Marberry, and Ruel. Brown's Trim Chicago ST. LOUIS, April 25 (AP) Walter Stewart' south pawed the Browns to a 4 to 2 victory over tne Chicago White Sox today. EX' cept for the eighth inning, when Hams, batting for Riddle, hit home run scoring Clancy ahead of him, the White Sox could do noth ing with Stewart R H Chicago 2 a St. Louis 4 8 E Faber, McCain and Riddle, Aut ry; Stewart and Farrell. Yanks Shade Boston rEW YORK. April 25 (AP) Aided by Babe Ruth's first home run of the season. New York won its initial game of the year uiaay. aereating Boston 3 to 2 in ten innings. Doubles bv Lazzer and Chapman in the tenth broke up me- mound duel between Mil ton Gaston of Boston and Henry Johnson. R ...2 ...3 H 7 E 0 2 Boston New York (10 Innings.) Gaston and Berry; Johnson and Dickey. Cleveland Shades Detroit CLEVELAND, April 25 (AP) Scoring a. run in the tenth Inn ing to break a four to fonr tie. Cleveland defeated Detroit here today, 5 to 4. R TT V Detroit . 4 ifl i Cleveland 5 12 4 (10 innings.) TJhle and Hayworth. Hare-rea- Hudlin. Ferrell and Mvatt. AGGIE BALL TEAM OREGON STATE COLLEGE. Corvallis, April 25. Hubert Ash- by of Salem is playing shortstop ior me uregon state collere var- sity baseball team. abbot is a gooa iieiaer ana a strong hitter. He has been play ing second base part ot the thne ana is held in reserve for either the shortstop or second base posi tions, xiis nitting is far better than the regulars at either of mesa positions. Last season Ashby played short stop on the freshman team. Nine games , were played with various large high schools and prep schools in this section of th state and with the University ot Oregon freshmen. Six of these games were won by a good mar gin. With a little more experi ence Ashby will develop into good varsity material. The Orangemen have won all ot six non-conference games played so far this season in preparation for the hard 16 game scheduled in the northern division of the conference with' the Universities of Oregon, Idaho, Washington and Washington state college. BY WASH HbTON B-4 WHIM HERE SUNDAY I ' oo.- I The one and only Willie Honoe. who will shop his Muff here Sunday. M AGAIN SUNDAY CASCADE LEAGUE Northern Division W. L. Pet. 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 Scotts Mills l o SI. Paul 1 0 Donald 0 1 Mt. Angel 0 1 Southern Division W. L Pet Mill City 1 Lebanon 1 1.000 1.000 1.000 Stayton 1 Turner 0 Jefferson 0 Aumsville 0 .000 .000 .000 The Cascade baseball league will play its second series of games Sunday, with Mt. Angel playing at St. Paul and Donald at Scotts Mills in the northern divi slon. In the southern division, the games will be Turner at Mill City, Aumsville at Stayton and Jeffer son at Lebanon. n LEAGUE 10 French Supremacy 0MAJMj LOTT. DOEG AMP THE 1L II gfljpl REST WttUr BH" EVEW o I I HAVE ZEE IpSSP11 5 s &U&. FlEEUMG ' fetSV: - , M iZAT " W lit TROUBLE ' Jjjp 15 GOlhJG Sg . iStf TO COM- ' jJjl IB H 60&OTRA 49 IMS, Kit fasfwa 8yte , It, CwH SHtaia tic ww D ONT be too startled by thenave no stellar youthful zeplaee-fJohn above headline, which re fers only - to world tennis championships and not p any one of many other fields in which "fifty million Frenchmen cant be wrong." Ever since that glitter ing Gallic combination of, Jean Rene LaCoste, Henri Cochet and Jean Borotra, aided by Jnles Brugnon, squeezed through a 3-2 international victory over Bill rUdea & , Co., in 1927 and re peated 4 1 in 1928, France symbolized by its national rooster has ruled the world' s tennis roost.'-- - : '.v;-- The French veterans may tri umph again this year, bnt and this Is significant- they seem to BEAVER SNIP BUT OF IT Walter Mails Dishes Up Air Tight Pitching Game in One-Sided Affair PORTLAND. Ore.. April 25 (AP) Behind the airtight pitch ing ot Walter Mails, the lowly Beaver-Dueks snapped out of their lethargy today to overwhelm the San Francisco Missions 17 to 1. Portland banged out 15 hits, one a homer by Hillis In the fourth with two on. Sixteen runs of Portland's total and 13 of the hits were off Duncan MacKay, one of Wade Killefer's young pitch ers. The Mission's lone run was made in the sixth. R H E Missions i 17 3 Portland 17 15 0 MacKay, Green and Hoffman; Mails and Wtfodall. Sacs Win Another LOS ANGELES. April 26 (AP) Sacramento with a violent sixth Inning rally that scored six runs made it four straight over the Los Angeles Angeles by tak ing today's game, 8 to 4. Ed Baecht, pitcher, was the vic tim of the rally. Dolph Camhilli hit a double with the bases full, Osborne next hit for two and then Rohwer clouted for the circuit. The Angel twirler went to the showers. In the seventh Camllll hit a homer with one on to make it tight runs. Louie Vinci, left handed solon twirler, kept Los Angeles hits well scattered except In the first and seventh Innings when the An gels bunched hits for the runs. R H E Sacramento 8 11 0 Los Angeles 4 9 0 Vinci and White; Baecht, Bar- foot and Hannah, Warren. Seals Trim Oakland SAN FRANCISCO, April 25 (AP) San Francisco's Seals evened up the series with Oakland by defeating the Oaks, 11-8 to day In a slug-fest that accounted for 26 hits, altogether. The Oaks tied the count by putting over two runs in the eighth but the Seals came back in their half of the same frame with three more tal lies. Of the five home runs made -By HARDIN BURNLEY- menta as has the United States in conspicuous abundance. Just as the gradual fading of the Ions; in vincible Tflden coincided with the victorious rise of LaCoste. Cochet Jk Co we now find another gen eration coming to the fore in in ternational tennis. And the Ameri can comers are far more numerous and - promising than those of France, according to all reliable reports. v--;--Tv .. Uncle Sam still has Tflden, who flashes stretches of his once ex traordinary, form. And the dur able Francis T. Hunter, too. But, better ' rtQL we have some con stantly improving; young stars George Lott, Jr., Wibner Allison, "Fritz' Mercur. Johnny Van Ryn. the Oaks accounted for four. R H E Oakland 8 12 1 San Francisco r..ll 14 1 Craghead and Read; Davis and Gaston. Tribe Wins 5-2 SEATTLE, April 25 (AP) In one of the shortest baseball gmes of Pacific baseball leaguo history" Seattle Indians Hollywood to 2 today, to make it four straight wins over the Stars. The contest lasted only one hour and 15 minutes. The victory cinched the week's series for Seattle. Sev ereid clouted a home run in the ninth inning for Hollywood but it did little good as the bases were empty. R H Hollywood 2 10 2 Seattle 5 9 1 Johns and Severeid; Ruether and Borreani. HUSKIES HI BATTLE T SAN FRANCISCO, April 25 (AP) Washington's H u s k I es, most powerful track and field per formers of the northwest, will try conclusions with Stanford's Car dinals at Palo Alto tomorrow in a dual meet which should see two world's records seriously threat ened, if not broken. The fact that Washington has sufficient strength to give Stan ford a fairly stiff argument in the scramble for points has not caught the fancy of followers of the sport so much as the promis ed duel between three giants whose specialties are the shot put and discus throw. For Washington Paul Jessup, 6 foot 7 inch weight star who has a shot put mark of 51 feet 9 3-8 inches and a discus toss of 159 feet to his credit. Stanford's end of the weighty affair will be taken care of by Er ic Krenz, world's, record holder in the discus, and Harlow Rothert, whose efforts with the shot are out around 62 feet. The recognized world's record for the shot put is 52 feet 11-16 inch, made by John Kuck In the last Olympic games while Krenz's discus mark is 163 feet 8 inches. Either of these records will be in danger when such stalwarts as Krenz, Rothert and Jessup get to gether. Job printing phone 500. of all kinds; Waning? Doeg, Frank X. Shields and Julius Sehgson, just to mention a few of our definitely rising court stars. And the Sport Bog also hears that a certain Harvard sophomore, William Barry Wood of football, baseball, hockey and other athletic fame will be ripe In a year or two for Davis Cup stardom. "If he decides to spe cialize in tennis, Barry Wood will be Tilden's real successor" is the tip spreading concerning that re markable Harvard youngster. Thus Unde Sam's youngsters are surging; towards tennis heights which will be desperately defended by the French veterans. Youth may not be served in that respect this year, but by 1931 France may l ave to yield its chief tennis lau rels to the United States. Tl 1 RACK CHIEFS DEFEAT M TO 4 Indian School Gets Long End Of Score in Game Played In Record Time CHEMAWA, April 25 (Spe cial) The Chemawa Indian school baseball team defeated Gervais high in a county league game here this afternoon, 6 to '4. A feature of the game was the snappy manner in which it was played, requiring only an hour and 20 minutes. Alexander, who started on the mound for Chemawa, struck out six batsmen and Vivette, who re lieved him in the fourth, fanned eight. Schwab of Gervais retired only four Indian batsmen on strikes. Alexander also covered himself with glory at bat, pound ing out a home run in the second inning. Chemawa had previously beat en Gervais at Gervais, 7 to 1. The Indians' next major game is with Salem high here next Friday, May 2. R H E Gervais . 4 4 2 Chemawa 9 3 Schwab and Oddie; Alexander, Vivette and Meachem. Umpire, Graber. SE OUT CINCIUTI H CHICAGO, April 25 (AP) The Cubs scored two Tuns In their half of the twelfth inning today to take the opening game of the series from Cincinnati, 8 to 5. The Redascored one in their half of the round. R H E Cincinnati 5 13 1 Chicago 6 15 2 (12 Innings). Lucas, Johnson and Gooch, Sukeforth; Malone and Hartnett. Robins Trim Braves BOSTON, April 25 (AP) Dazzy Vance held the Braves to SUMMONS No. 21164 In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Marion. Dept. No. 2 John F. Miller, Plaintiff, . vs. Floyd R. Hamel and Marguerite Hamel, his wife, Defendants. To: Floyd R. Hamel and Marguer ite Hamel, The Defendants Above named In the Name of the State of Oregon, You and each of you are hereby required to appear and an swer the complaint on file herein against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before four weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, and If you fail so to answer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in his complaint namely, that he have Judgment against you and each of you for the sum ot $2000.00 with interest thereon from April 1, 1929, at the rate of seven per cent per annum until paid, and the further sum ot $118.57 together with interest thereon from August 26, 1929, at the rate of seven per cent per an num until paid, and the further sum of $52.83, with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per annum from November 1929, and the further sum of $200.00 special attorney's, fees and for plaintiff's costs and dis bursements incurred in this suit; that plaintiff's mortgage described in said complaint be decreed to be a first mortgage lien upon the following described premises, to- wlt: Beginning at the Northwest corner of the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Sec tion 20 Township 8 South Range 3 West of the Willamette Merid ian in Marion County, Oregon, and . running thence East 30 chains to a stone: thence North 6.66 2-3 chains thence West 15.00 chains; thence South 10 feet; thence West 15 chains, to the West line of the Northeast Quar ter of the Northwest Quarter ot Section 20; thence South 6.52 chains to the place of beginning, and containing 20 acres of land, more or less. That the usual decree may be made for the sale of said premises by the Sheriff of Marlon County, Oregon, according to law and the practice of the above entitled court; that the proceeds of said sale may be applied toward the payment ot the amounts due plaintiff and that the above named defendants, and each of them, and all persons claiming nnder or through them, or any or either of them subsequent to the execution of plaintiff's said mort gage may be barred and fore closed of all right, claim or canity of redemption in or to said mort gaged premises, and everv nart thereof, and that plaintiff have sucn further ' relief as may be eqaiianie. Tnis summons . is served noon you by publication In the Oregon statesman ny order of Hon. L. H McMahan, Judge of the above en titled Court, bearing date April 4, 1930.- The first publication ot this summons is April 5. 1930. and the date of the last publica tion win D8 May s, 1930. JASv G. HELT2EL, ' ' Attorney for Plaintiff Postoffice Address and Place ot tiesioence: Salem. Oregon, Aprtl-6-L2-19-2f-M-J CHICAGO CUBS NO three scattered hits in their de layed home opener today and Brooklyn defeated Boston. S to 1. The Robins nicked Cantwell and Bob Smith for 11 blows. R H E Brooklyn 5 11 1 Boston ..1 3 0 Vance and Piclnich. Cantwell and Spohrer. PITTSBURGH. April 25 (AP) -Re my Kremer kept hits well scattered today and the Pitts burgh Pirates won their sixth game in seven starts, defeating the St. Louis Cardinals 6 to 1 in a belated- home opener. The only Cardinal run was a homer by Chick Haley. R H E 3 0 St. Louis 1 8 Pittsburgh 6 10 Sherdel, Hald and Wilson; Kre mer and Hemsley, New York at .Philadelphia post poned cold. COAST LEAGUE W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Sae'to 12 5 .706! Seattle 8 10 .444 Oakland 12 6 .6671 Mission 7 S .438 Ban F. 11 7 .llHollr. S 12 .594 Lot A. 9 7 .5631 Portland 4 12 .250 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. w. 2 4 2 2 Pet. .400 .400 .286 .250 !f. T. Pitta. Chicago Philad. 4 O 1.000 ! Boston 1 .8571 St. L. 6 5 .545! Brook!. 3 8 .500iCinrin. AMXEICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. W. 6 3 .750iCleel 4 4 2 ,667 Boston S 5 S .625! Detroit 8 S 2 .600' N. T. 1 Pet. S .571 5 .375 7 .300 3 .167 Walk. Philad. St. L. Chicago COAST LEAGUE At Portland 17; Missions 1. At I -on Anreles 4; Sacramento t. At San Francisco 11; Oakland 8. At Seattle 5; Hollywood 2. NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago 6; Cincinnati 5. At Boston 1; Brooklyn 5. At Pittsburgh 6; St. T-ouis 1. No other game played. AMEEXCAN LEAGUE At Wsthinton 6; Philadelphia 4. At St. Lonis 4; Chicago 2. At. New York 3; Boston 2. At Cleveland 6; Detroit 4. O I Business AUCTIONEERS F. N. Woodry It Yrs. Salem's leading Auctioneer and Furniture Dealer Residence and Store 1610 N. Summer St. Phone, all BATHS Turkish baths and maanaRe. 8. IT. Logan. Phone 2214, New Bank. BATTERY ELECTRICIAN R. D. Barton National Batteries starter ana generator wora. 202 Srotth Hleh BICYCLE REPAIRING IXOTD E. RAMSDEN Columbia Blevoles and rormlrlmg. 387 Court ' CHIROPRACTORS Dr. O. U SCOTT. PSC. Chiropractor. tit N. High. Tel. 7. Rea. 2104-J. DRS. SCOFIELD, palmer Chiro practors. X-Ray and N. C 11 New Bank Bid. CLEANING SERVICE Center St. Valeterta, teL 2227. SUITS cleaned and Dressed SI. TAR- LET CLEANERS. 193 N. Com'L over Buslefcs. ELECTRICIANS HALIK ELECTRIC CO. tl North Front St.. Tel. No. 2. FLORISTS FLOWERS FOR ALL oecaalons- Olsen'a Court Hi Eh St, TeL 801. CUT Flowers, weddinc bouaueta funeral wreaths, decorations. C F. ! Breithaupt. florist. (12 Stat Street Te. 380. GARBAGE Salem Scavenger. Tel. 1C7 or 2299. INSURANCE WARREN F. POWERS Ufa and Centra i In.iran TeL 07. 219 U. & Bank Bids. WILLAMETTE INSURANCE AGENCY 211 Uasonte Bide Phona No. 922. KECKE A HENDRICKS 1 N. Hlrh Tel. Hi. KODAK DEVELOPING Develnninr. films, nromnt service. HELTON HUNT. Court and Liberty. LAUNDRIES THE NEW SALEM LAUNDRY THE WSIDER LAUNDRY Telaphona 25 2i a. High CAPITAL CITY LAUNDRY Tha Laundry of Pure Materials" MATTRESSES 'New anrins-.finitA 9 knatr TecvJJ tresses retailed directly from facto you. . Capital vuy tfeaains; Co 9. S020 North MUSIC STt Stiff Furniture Com pa; GEO. C WUX P graphs, sewing machine and piano studies. Rf graphs aad sewinc mar treat Salem. - . Phono- V nrasic "Dhorio- VI State BEARCATS TAKE JOURIiTIi Willamette Baseball Squad Leaves For First Con ference Game The Willamette university base ball squad departed early Friday morning for Tacoma. where this afternoon It will play Us first Northwest conference game ot the season against College of Ptiget Sound. Players taken on the trip by Coach "Spec" Keene were ScaUs. Deetz, Hauk, Erickson, Trachsel. Gibson, Cardinal, Adams, Moore, Gill, Wilson, Peterson and Grant. How strong Puget Sound will prove to be, is difficult to judpe as little information about :he northern Methodist outfit lias reached Salem. However, Gilli han, who was Puget Sound's lead ing pitcher a year ago, is still on the job and his presence guaran tees that the Bearcats . will not have things all their own way. Willamette beat Puget Sound here 15 to C a year ago, but that was after the Washington team had used up its pitchers on earlier games of a barnstorming trip. Even so, Gillihan held the locaf team to three runs after he got warmed up. He went in cold ?n the third and was touched heavily for the remainder of that innii g. Advertising For Salem Reported By Local Group Further advertising is in store for Salem through a quantity of literature on the city and county sent out yesterday from the cham ber "of commerce in response to requests received for material on this section. O. H. Heine, representing the Rlv-U-Let Fruit company of Eu gene, wrote for pamphlets fcnd material which he could distrib ute while working out from Lari niore, N. D., from where be will sell northwest products. The other request was from T. J. Alsip of Monmouth who was in the city to gather advertising literature before he leaves for, Brookings, S. D., to sell Willamette valley products, and especially prunes. Directory i -o OPTOMETRISTS DR. I. R. BURDETTK. optometrist, 40S First Nut'!. Bank Bide. T-.i lia PAINTING Kalsomlne $3 to 85. per room. alM interior painting reasonable pricm TeL 1TC3J. Faye Thompson, Commercial and Industrial air and Power Painting CAPrTAL PAIXTTXa 460 North IS. SERV1CK MTelTUJj 1 PAPER HANGING PHONE GLENN Adams for houna decorating, paperhanghig. tinting, etc. Reliable workman. PLUMBING PLUMBING and reneral rraahr work. Graber Bros- ICC So. Libert t. Tel. BR ft. PRINTING FOR STATIONERY, tarda, ua. phleta, programs books or any kind of printing, call at The Statesman Printing Department 215 8. Commer- rlnl-Tel. BOO. RADIO FOR every nuroose. for tverv ours All standard , sixes of Radio Tubes. EOFF ELECTRICAL SHOP. 33S Court rr.. ret. x. ROOFING SOLVE your rooflna difficulties with Pioneer Tosemite rock surfaced shingles. Carlton Pioneer Roofins Co. ii" n. rmir. lei. sy. STOVES Cook with Rockgas Paciac Rocksas Co. TeLlT2LT . STOVES and stova renal Hn im for sale, rebuilt and repaired. All kinds of woven wire fence, fancy and piaiu, nop oasKeia ana ROOKS, lofraa hooka. Salem Fenca and Stova TOorba. TAILORS D. H. If OS HER Tailor for men and women. 474 Court Ft. TRANSFER CAPITAL- Cfrr Transfer- Vt 9a State St TeL 922, Distributing, for. warding and atoraca ovr snecialtv. 3e our rates. . . ,. WATCH REPAIRING -fr . GUAHANTRVI Wltrm nvoara 1NG or money back... TUB JEWEL) oua. 17 jw.. u&erty. Baiem. Real Estate Directory --O HENDRICKS '- Tel. 1L i 129 N. High JOSEPH RARRTTR Bltit.TT on Grey Bid. , Peon 199 221 N. High St ' TeL 2242. HOMER D. FOSTER REALTY CO. 17H Stat St - -vr TeL 242. 124 & Liberty ft . . . TeL 111. GERTRUDB JL ,1 Winn - M N. Cottage. - ' TeL lit. ROT!T.rvirir-r a. cow 204-S First -KaL- Bk. BJdg. TeL 910. : J v TTT.wrm . 129 N. Commercial . TeL lilt - P. T wrvin Si -i :4 A 441 8UU SU v . - TeL T94.