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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1932)
CIRCULATION ; .weather ; ,.t; : Fair today and Sanday, . mo change la teaaperatare; k ; Max. Temp. Friday 78, BXia. ; 5S, fiver -as feW partly : eloedy, Tarlable wiada. ' Average . .. Distribution- v -.7alY.(83- Net paid, daily, Sunday 682 EIGHTY-SECOND TEAR r Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, August 20, 1932 No. 125 7072 - : JilL'cv V ULW LUH 11 & 1? a e n i) m n n ii 4 RiVER TRAFFIC WILLCOgTlRUE Improvements In Channel Permit -i HaYlgation In " Low Vater Period ' Heavy Tonnage Going out, . Mostly Canned ; Goods, , Paper Products So Improved over last year i3 the Willamette river channel that tha Salem Navigation company this summer haa been able to keep, Ita 110-ton packet. Northwestern, In continuous operation. This la the first summer that this has been possible. The 500-horsepow-er. . oil-burning steamer departed from the local; dock, Portland bound, with a 100-ton cargo late yesterday, afternoon. ."The chanel Is better this year than ever before, Manager Arn old S. Johnson, said yesterday. "The engineers last year tried out a system of dumping the dredged gravel back from the water's edge. Instead of by the , banks." This scheme, he said has resulted in the channel's remaining clear. With a 100 - :ton -cargo, the Northwestern drawi SO Inches of water, about the llailtithe channel will permit with the river stand ing at the 2. 8 foot level. Last summer, when 'the river reached -I A feet, its lowest in history, the company was forced to lay up the Northwestern in May and use Its 166-ton boat, the Stranger. Canned Goods Going Out la Big Quantity Both - the, Stranger and the Northwestern were making the Portland - Salem run until the middle of July. In the last half month of their joint operation, they carried a total cargo of 3000 tons, the equivalent of 150 freight ear loads. Canned goods and. paper pro- , duets constltue 98 per cent of the ' down river shipments at present. The remainder is general merch andise. On the Salem - run, the boat brings ,caanery sugar and paper mill supplies." To date little farm produce has been shipped by water but Johnson expects to do a ' considerable business in hops in the fall, and possibly In wool. Be cause of the slackness In the wool market, not as much of this com Tnodlty has been handled as in, previous years. Two Points Along " Riveh Troublesome The only difficulties being en countered by the Northwestern are from the shallow swift water on Tomklns bar, below Wheatland, and at Candlana. Over these shal lows, the steamer is being snaked by cables attached to the river bank. A gasoline launch accom panies the Northwestern to make the cable connection. The steamer has sufficient pow er to buck the swift water, but If she attempted it, the huge paddle wheel : would"' virtually weep the water "from under her, .leaving her squatted on the gravel bar, according to Johnson. While the company's river ton- ' sage has been growing slowly each year, a still-water channel would boost it rapidly. If this type of , channel is obtained. through nse of wing dams and deepening, the packet boats would be abondoned In favor of barges. Johnson said. fin 1 CRASH . Francis McDermott rand Otis Daugherty. both fiftit-class fire men from the United ; States Steamship Dorsey, suffered seri nm inlnriea vesterd&v when an automobile In which they were riding, collided witn anotner ma chine on the Pacific highway near Jefferson. v-- .. . ' McDermott's conditio was re ported - aa serlaus. He suffered a shattered jaw, lacerations of the face and body bruises. Daugnerty was cut and bruised." The men were en out from Seattle to San Francisco at the time Of the accident. They were taken to a local hospital for treat ment. , City Sued After Woman Falls on FaultySidewalk Because of injuries claimed to have been suffered when the fell through a hole in the sidewalk on Bellevue street, between 15th and ICth streets, last Sunday, Mrs. Ida Bndlong, . 1547 Oak street, yes terday filed a claim for 1125 with City Recorder Poulsen. She re-. celred a badly bruised - elbow wrist and hand, which will pre vent her from picking hops and .prunes, she says. Mrs. Budlong's claim includes wages the avers she will lose, as well as doctor bills. The claim will be referred to UGH the city council. . , . v . Illness Reunites Estranged? Family j , .... V';-V;:' - 1 ! ; . s- ' ' ' ' i ? i ewtk . : t ' , . ... y jLZ1: -f . , , : : r.,1 r ; ; ' . ' '- - - ! ' j - , - . ':-s.i- " ? ... . -xj , . . " . , 5 J v'- ' ' ' .... . ' :'- i, -v. - - Lying on her bed in a Chicago hotel, suffering front an illness which oiagnosea aa prooaoiy iauu, Mrs. tnitn Kocfeef el Ier MoUormick, daughter of John D. Rockefeller, received with evident pleasure the new that her children, from all of whom she had been estranged for long periods of time, were hastening to her bedside Mrs. McCormick, daughter of John D. Rockefeller,- had for many years been considered the richest woman In the world, fihe engaged in the real estate business en m gigantic scale. Her assets, estimated in the scores of millions, became "frozen a few weeks before her critical illness began. Her brother, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., stepped into the breach and provided his sister with a cash allowance of 910OO a day. Nevertheless she closed her stone mansion and moved to a betel to save expenses. Then came her illness and the healing of family breaches. Her former husband, Harold Fowler McCormick, from whom she was divorced In 1921, started for her bedside from the west coast. Her daughter Mathilde, who incurred maternal dis pleasure of an unrelenting kind in 1923 by her marriage to Max Oser, Swiss riding master, started for her mother's sickroom from Cherbourg, France. Mrs. McCormick's son, Harold Fowler McCor mick, Jr.. who was the recipient of cool maternal disapproval when he married Fifl Still man, moth er of his college chum and divorced wife of the New York banker, sent word that he would be at the bedside soon. Daughter Muriel, who failed to pie ase her mother when she married Major Elisha Dyer Hubbard of Connecticut last year, journeyed to Caicago and found maternal forgiveness. Before her illness set in, Mrs. McCormick -had planned to g east to visit her father, the 93-year-old oil king, from whom she had been estranged for many years. PICKETiriG HALTED I HIW CHIEF 103 Facing Arrest due to Disorder and Damage To Mine Property TAYLORVILLE. HL. Aug. 1J (AP) The occupation of Taylor- vtlle by 10,000 striking miners ended tonight after a decision of their policy committee ordering the men to return to their homes. The evacuation began after Ar- mand D. Rossi of Gillespie, chief of the committee, declared no of fensive would be started on southern Illinois fields operating under the $5 dally wage scale at this time. Previously the men had stopped all mining operations in Christian county. ' Officials of the Peabody Coal company, large operators nere, swore out warrants for 103 mem bers of the miners' group, charg ing them with inciting to riot. The warrants resulted from al leged disorders last night In which Peabody company property was destroyed. Rossi told the men a march on the southern fields would be un dertaken only if the diggers there persisted in working under the wage agreement. He informed his fellow strikers , that , miners . of Christian county had decided to strike in sympathy with the In vaders, preventing a resumption of work in this vicinity. - G. A. R. MAN WEDS WAREHAM. Mass.. Aug. 1 (AP) James B. Johnson. 10, of North Arlington, Civil war vet eran and a member of President Lincoln's bodyguard, was married here today to Mrs. Susan T. PLAIT THREE CREWS CORVALLISr Ore, Aug. 19 (AP) Leslie M. Scott, state highway commission chairman, said today that three shifts will be put . to work, constructing " a temporary span over Mary's river in an effort to make possible re sumption, of traffic over the route by Tuesday. : - - r"? .- The temporary span was made necessary when the old - steel bridge over the river on., the West Side highway at the entrance of Corvallls collapsed , last Tuesday night. . . . - - . -- CONVENE AT ASTORIA ASTORIA, Ore., An. 1J IAP) The, annual : meeting of the Oregon state council of car neuters opened here tods y for. a two-day session. F. H. ; Allen, Portland, Is president, and : Da vid Duff. Portland, secretary. Addresses were siven at the opening business session this morning y Peter Dollar, repre Farmers Win Victory, End Milk Strike SIOUX CITY, la., Aug. II. (AP) A milk war between producers and distributors of this territory which had flared along side a farmers' strike for higher prices for all produce, termin ated tonight. An agreement granting dairy farmers an increase of 65 cents per 100 pounds of milk of S.05 per cent butterfat content, was concluded late today. It opened the h 1 g h w a ys block aded by the joint picketing ' of milk producers and farmers to milk trucks, officers of the Sioux City Milk Producers association said. The new scale gives the dairy farmers 1 1.80 per hundredweight of milk, and will become operative Sunday. The milk strike Independ ent effort of the producers to ob tain higher prjees, started August 10, two days after the Farmers' Holiday association proclaimed a "no selling" campaign to compel higher prices for ' all farm pro ducts. - Infant Crushed - Fatally by Car KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Aug. 1 (AP) Clifford Molen. two- year-old son of a Klamath Falls truck driver, died tonight from injuries received when he was caught beneath the wheels of his father's delivery wagon. The baby climbed on the run ning board, unseen, then slipped off and was crushed under a rear wheel. , v .- " Rush Corrallia Bridge f . ; Want Roosevelt Visit , f ; Carpenters Open' Meet; . Firebug Charges Filed sentative of the International Un ion of Carpenters, .and . B. W. Sleeman, business agent of the Portland - district - council of car penters. About 2 S 'delegates were present today and more are ex pected tomorrow -? -r. -, JACKSON INVITES MEDFORD. Ore., Aug. It (AP) Jackson eounty democrats today mailed a request to state democratic chairman, Carl ' Don- augh, Portland, that Franklin D. Roosevelt. -- democratic nominee for president, be urged to Include Medford in his Itinerary when he rislta this .state. " FAIR BOUND OVER- .MEDFORD. Ore.. Aug. 11 (AP) Robert Rose and Jack Rice, ranchers of the Round Top district, were bound over to the Jackson county grand Jury today on a charge of setting fires ' on state forest land. Ball was set at 11500 each., . c .. . physicians only hours before had Found at Bottom of Weil at Lyie; Fellow Worker Is Being Sought HOOD RIVER. Ore., Aug. II. (AP) Donaslano Gamboa, about 35, a section worker, died in a hospital here today from a skull fracture after having been found In the bottom of a concrete well at Lyl. Wash., last night. About $200 in currency and a watch which ho is known to have had a few hours before; was missing. A fellow Mexican worker to whom he Is said to have shown the money, was missing today and railroad agents and Washington police started a search tor him. Gamboa was found when a boy called aV the bunk house and heard someone breathing heavily. He investigated, removed boards from the floor of the room and found the Mexican at the bottom of the concrete pit. The man died in the hospital here without re gaining consciousness. He suffer ed two skull fractures and a frac tured neck. A barrel of a 22-callb- er rifle was found near the door of the house. - . Night Watchman Struck by nobo He Denied Smoke Angered because he was re fused a cigarette, an unidentified transient last night struck Albert F. Jalrl, flight watchman at the Spaulding mill, then fled down the railroad track. F . "I Just1 threw away my pack age," Jain told police he an swered the man, ; who requested the cigarette.- : Ton're a. liar, growled the tramp, as he hit the watchman. With a meager . description to guide them, city : police .were, on the lookout for Jain's assailant. So Many Picking No Huckleberry Profit Possible THE DALLES. Ore.. Aug. 19 - (AP) Local .residents who have returned from the huckle berry harvest in the Columbia Na tional forest, ; around , Mount Adams, Washington, report that pickers are too numerous to per mit any great profits for Individ uals this seaon. .... . ; - ' At a single eamp, Cnltus camp, north-of Trout lake, the huckle berry pickers number 150. Ber ries have been selling for 50 cents a gallon at the camp. The price at mid-Columbia cities Is 75 cents. - SALMON RUN HEAVY - THE DALLES, Ore., Aug. (AP) Local salmon fishers re port an increase In chlnook, and steelhead runs. Chlnooks of large size are now being taken, where until now the run has been char acterised by small fish. ,. n won IS SHI ROBBED J KNITTER FLYING RECORD Mrs. Marsalis, Mrs. Thaden Pass 123 Hour Mark, - Then Reach 131 No ..Sign of Alighting;, big Crowd Cheers, Fliers ': : Wave in Response :. CURTIS FIELD, , N. Y., Aug. IS (AP) A couple of grimy but grinning young , matrons smashed the women's endurance record today and kept right on flying to make sure they'll hold the new one for a while. Mrs. . Frances Marsalis and Mrs. Louise Thaden bettered the old mark of i2$.hours by the.o u w v wig , va, 4Vi sm s w vav at 6 p.m., (eastern standard time) and at midnight they had been up in their "flying boudoir" continuously for 131 hours with no sign they might come down soon. , . As the hour' struck when they set the new record cheering crowds eraned necks and waved. The plane dropped ' down from its high crossing altitude, and one of the filers leaned out of the cabin window, waving in re turn. Then the plane mounted and shrank into the distance again, a blue and yellow streak in the late afternoon sunlight. William Mar salis and Herbert Von Thaden, husbands of the women and pi lots themselves, proudly watched it disappear into the distance. Wont Try to Beat Men's Long Grind The pair will "keep right on flying," Charles S. (Casey) Jones, manager of the airport said. But he added they "bad no such ambition" as to better the men's record of almost 27 days aloft made two years ago by For rest O'Brine and the late Dale Jackson. The women's record was made by Miss Evelyn (Bobsy) Trout and Miss Edna May Cooper in Los Angeles, Jan. I, 1131. The young women have been up since 1 p.m. Sunday, and were on their sixth day tonight. The refueling plane went up with its evening quota of gaso line, a special "dinner" In the food bucket, a huge bouq.net of roses and a packet of congra tulatory messages and telegrams. Since Wednesday, flight back ers and friends have been anxious about the condition of Mrs. Mar salis. who became HI with pains la her side. She appeared In high. spirits tonight. CHICAGO, Aug. II (AP) ja earners or me imnois manuiac-1 I MOT public conn RESTORED. FINDING turers association reponea maim the parish .house. survey today tney oenevea puone confidence had returned. Im provement In many lines of man ufacturing and retailing was re ported. WASHINGTON,""" Aug. II (AP) A 113 per cent gain in ex ports of cotton cloth from the United States, In the first half of 1132, compared with the same period last year, was recorded by the department of commerce. ALTON, HI., Aug. If (AP) The Western Cartridge company's plant, shqt. down near a month. announeea it would resume oper- ations next Monday with 800 for mer employes. NEW YORK, Aug. fl (AP) A gain of 141,000.000 in gold tor the .United States, the largest amount of any week since June, was regarded as one of the favor able business indications In the statements - of federal reserve bands for the week ended August 17. . . - : . Wheat Dealers f ina rroaucers u Fail to; Agree PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. II (AP) State director of agricuH ture. Max Gehlbar said that ef - forts to bring wheat producers and grain dealers to an agree - ment concerning discount and! smutting charges have proved un - successfuL . .. Producers and dealers met in an effort to smooth out their differences, but after practically an au-day. session the growers still said the charges are all fair. Until he determines the aath - orlty of the department of agrl - eulture, Gehlhar said he will not open a formal Investigation into the controversy. CARXERA PUSHES ONE TIVERTON. XL L, Aug. IS TAP) Prime Camera, giant Ital ian heavyweight, scored a one round knockout over Jack Gag- son of Boston tonight after only one minute and IS seconds of fighting. Camera weighed ZCltt and Gagnon 313, Moll i son Way Through Fog to Goal; Fuel is Gone : i v - , ; . : - ' Otherwise Would Have Solo Atlantic. Flier Admits . He is LucWyr; Will go Back. Again - ST. JOHN. N.B., Aug. 19 (AP)-TCaptain J. A. MoBLson, a sturdy, curly-hatred Scotsman, . 'completed the first westward solo crossing of the ly4 well all in,?, came here to get a nighfs sleep before press ing jon tomorrow for New York. r - ' Jie brought hisTlying gasoline can" down at Pennf ield ;-' ' ; ' ' ." . oR,,et miles from here, at BRUTAL ATTACK Oil na Ross, 8. Left for Dead But Survives; Albany Student Arrested ALBANY, Ore., Aug. II (AP) Struggling tree from, a mass of driftwood and debris where she had been left for dead. Ina Ross, 9, daughter of Mrs. R. A. Ross. Albany, late today told police of a brutal attack. Her story led to the arrest of Dean Welch, 17, Al bany high school student. Police - said Welch admitted planning a criminal assault on the young girl and that when she screamed as he tried to choke her he struck her over the head with a club, stabbed her with a pocket knife, then dragged her uncon scious to a slough where he hid her body in the driftwood. Ina and her sister Anna, 11, had been swimming at Bryant park and were on their way to a sandbar when they met Welch, whom they both knew. Ina told police Welch asked her to help him find a purse, and then at tacked her when they were alone. A physician called to examine the girl said she was suffering from bruises about the head and a deep gash over the heart, Snt her condition' was not critical. FOUL PLAT SENSED NEW HAVEN, Conn.. Aug. 11 (AP) The Rev. J. P. Cour- noyer. pastor of St. Louis Roman Catholic ehurch of New Haven for many years, and his house keeper, Miss Elvina Moran. were found dead tonight under cir cumstances which prompted an Investigation by the coroner. Pending an autopsy officials declined to- express an opinion as to whether any evidence of violence had been found on the bodies. Father Cournoyer. missing since Tuesday, was found dead in his rarase several hour a aftur the bodv of his honsekeeoer. b- neved to be a relative, was found Officials said Father Cournoyer was last seen Tuesday night when he went for an automobile ride after conducting services at his church. The keys to the auto mobile were in his hands when :hls body was found. Wind Fans Grass Fire and Homes Are Endangered With a strong wind blowing, grass fire sUrtlnr in the va- iant lots in the vicinity of 214S University street late yesterday afternoon for a time threatened two houses.' Firemen from South and Central stations ' succeeded in beating back the flames before they did any damage. Early la the evening firemen were called to the rear of Salem Laundry, where a pile 'of old saexs . and pieces of wood was afire. The tile wall of the laun dry protected . the , plant from catching fire. . . 3 HIM EST DEAD School Improvements in County Reach Low Maik : Marion county's 1X0 school dis- 1 tricta ended . the fiscal year of 11133 with the smallest outlay for 1 building Improvements made ' la the eounty la fully a decade, the 1 consolidated annual report of the school clerks released yesterday shows. The-total oitlsy tor new I building for the year was 38331 I most of which was Incurred in i the construction of a new school I at . West Stayton. The districts 1 maintained . a steady . payment 1 pisjt on bonded Indebtedness, re- I duels g the principal on outstand I ing bonds SSI.03S ' during the , year. , ' - r -'.- f. - Mrs. Mary L. Fulk arson, school superintendent, . commented yes terday in releasing the - report that depressed times had retarded imost schools la carry on g out any building plana they may have had. "As a .whole the .school plants of the county are la ex cell eat shape." she added. - Mrs. Fulxerson does not ' think large Feels His Gone on to New York; North Atlantic todav and. "Jol 11:45 a. m. eastern standard time. He had taken SO hours and 20 minutes to fly from Portmar nock, Irish Free State, and there were only 10 gallons of gasoline left in his tiny Puss Moth sports model plane. By trans-Atlantic telephone he talked to his bride of three weeks. Amy Johnson, a notable distance flier, and she told him she was sailing tomorrow to meet him in New York. He will wait for her there and then will take off without his wife to fly. back home and complete the first round-trip air crossing of the ocean. I was lucky." Mollisom said. "For hours at a stretch last night (Turn to Page 2, CoL 1) Political Move to Throw Suspicion on Federal Treasury Claimed AMESBURY. Mass., Aug. 19 (AP) Speaking at an Essex eounty republican campaign meet ing tonight Representative A. Pi att Andrew (R.. Mass.), assailed the house leadership under Speaker John N. Garner, assert ing Garner, in the closing days of congress, "stood ready to pour further oil on the flames of fear and distrust by easting suspicion upon the honest management, of the national treasury and the fed eral reserve banks." . "He demanded that they be in vestigated by a special congres sional committee during the course of the political campaign," said Andrews. "What his par-pose-was can be easily imagined." Speaking of the president, An drew said: "When greenbacklsm threaten ed the country through the bonus bill, everyone knew that Mr. Hoover stood ready if necessary to veto it. "When the proposal to waste a billion dollars on useless build lngs menaced, he fought it with every agency under his control. When it was proposed to bank rupt the government by lending its funds to everybody, he quash ed it with his veto. "He has given every bit of his energy, every resource of his va 4V .i v i . BITTED ACCUSATION n n uwiviiiv Mi fl""l,. f-nm HjOilnfll n iP?1 f0re that clashed around it." Chief of Police At Woodbum is Asked to Resign WOOD BURN, Aug. II (Spec ial) Rumors that a change in the police department was emin ent were confirmed today when Mayor W. H. Broylea asked' Louis Ruslcka, present chief -of police, for his resignation. - Supposedly he had not turned tn the resignation up to tonight since he was still on duty. No in formation 'concerning his success or was divulged, but several, men are known to be after the position. FITZGERALD FUSED ; McMINNVILLE. Ore., Aug. l (AP) Jack Fitsgerald. 4C. Carlton logger, was fined $400 by Justice of the Peace P. P. Olds when ha pleaded guilty , here to day to a charge of killing deer out of season. . capital outlay tor schools will be needed lor some time to come. s The report of the clerks shows warrant . indebtedness totals of $340,003 la the districts of the county June 20. 1133. This fig ure is considerably higher than ia t former years and ; Is due to (1) delinquency la tax payments, (2) tlelag ap of school. funds la closed banks and (3) to Inability of schools to collect tuition and transportatloa ; charges due: but not ; because of litigation over the high school transportatloa act. Mrs. Falkersoa said '$121,000 was now due to c various high school ' districts for tuition and transportatloa services "the schools have been compelled to Issue warrants. - - - The fixed Investment la " the school plants of the eounty totals $1,112,321. the report shows. Of this $1,311,123 is invested, la (Turn to Peg 1, CoL 2), . mm THREATS f.DE Woman who saw Defender; ' Near Scene of Crime . " Feared "on Spot" Previous Intimidation Ij '; Recalled; Death Case Making Progress :8AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 11. (AP) Police guards for Mm, Elizabeth P., Thompson, who ap peared as si prosecution witness as the murder trial of Frank X Egan, deposed public defender, and her son-in-law. Gordon Doug- ' las. were ordered here tonigit . after Douglas reported recetrlsc a telephone threat; Douglas informed police he was warned: "You and yours have been passing out a lot of weight about the Egan case. You're en' the spot, right now. Better watch'1 yourself." The alleged threat waj made a -fajr hours after Mrs. Thorn psoa. a neighbor of 'Mrs. Jessie Scett Hughes, the widowed client Egan " Is charged with murdering, testi fied at-hfs trial. Saw Egan at Scene ; Of Crime, Testifies Mrs. Thompson testified tie saw Egan pacing up and down bs front of her home the afternosa before Mrs. Hughes was killed. Police authorities immediately threw a guard armed with sawed off shotguns around Mrs. Thomp son's home and a special body-' guard was assigned to' Douglas, a member of the Underwriters- fire patrol. It is the second time guards have been ordered out to protect a witness in the case. Shortly after . Mrs. Hughes death, police stood guard over E. L. Calvin, who had identified Verne Do ran. . yoaag burglar, as the man who had ad up a garage. Doran has since si- -legedly confessed to partielpatlom in the slaying and from toe wit ness stand at the trial he said be and Albert Tinnin, Egan's ex-eea-vict co-defendant, killed Mrs. Hughes at Egan's instigation. . r . . TOOTH Oil BICYCLE Charles Bransky, about 11, ef Salem route 7, was brought ta the Deaconess hospital yesterday afternoon, suffering from head and shoulder injuries, -received when his bicycle collided head-em with a ear driven by Alfred Via tor Berg of San Diego, at the In tersection of the Pacific high way and ML Angel roaa near Woodbum. Hospital attendants . said last night that ne rest ing easily and his condition wan not serious. , i According to witnesses" re ports to state police, Bransky track. turned T ento the ML Angel read and struck the oncoming Berg car. braking Its windshield. State officers called a Saiesa physician and ambulanee. 1 Witnesses were Harley Hughes. Kelly Stanard, Russel Staaard and Elinor Klamp. all of Weed- burn. CHARGE INTOXICATION Jim Boles, who gave his ad dress as Albany, was Jailed fey city police last night on a charge) of being drunk. Several mights ago. Boles slept at Hotel de Mlnte. Late Sports SEATTLE. Aug. II (AP) Jack Gorman. Dallas welterweight wrestler, defeated Des Anderson. Seattle, two out of three falls here tonight la the final bout ef a wrestling tournament hew aerw during the past two months, the winner ef which was promised change to meet Jaek Reynolds tltleholder. Anderson scored the first fan la sensational style at the start of the second round, slapping flying head scissors on Gorman and having him- down la seven seconds flat. Id the third fifth rounds, Gorman tied ft u and won, ..using four sdssere holds. i HOLLYWOOD. CaL. Aug. It (AP) Aftsr- being soundly lick ed. Baby Sol Sorlo. um Angeies Mexican, lost tonight on a reu u the eighth round to Ted Morgan, former Junior lightweight bextag champion, ia a carded ten-round. tight. lamar! CoIO Aug. if AP) Everett Marshall. La Junta, Colo., wrestler.- defeated unci Heffner of Sherman, Tex, -her tonight with two out of three tails ta 17 minutes. ' y. - STOCKTON. CaL. Aag. II (AP) Drawing a storm of pre tests from the fans. Referee Eddy Bums awarded young Corbett. HI. rnma welterweight, a technical I knockont victory 0Tr- yl.tX csrrrs. mbjok,. round of their scheduled .w- round fight nere iongni f CRASHES NT CI