The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 10, 1933, Page 6, Image 6

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    . The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, May 10. 1933
m a Plays
S. C.
on
VAGE six
Thufiday
MID ill
DUEL FORECAST
Tweed Likely to Hurl Again
But Keene Uncertain;
Game is at 3:30
Ilopefully whistling that well
known refrain "It Isn't Going to
Rain any More" (grammar cor
rections due to his being a college
professor), "Spec" Keene, Wil
lamette university coach, Tuesday
hnstled around in the bright sun
shins and rescheduled for Imme
diate delirery, two of the biggest
baseball games of the season.
Today at 3:30 p. m. on Olinger
field the Bearcats will entertain
the Columbia CUffdwellers of
Portland, the outfit which defeat-1
ed Willamette early in the season
3 to 2 despite the fact that Ed
Tweed held the Irish to two hits
for the first eight Innings.
Tweed may start against Co
lumbia again, though Keene is
somewhat uncertain in view of the
equally tough game coming up the
following day, and may send eith
er Burch or Oravec to the mound
today. Mitchell,; whoiwas just as
effective as Tweed in the first
game oi me series, may pitcn
again for Columbia.
Thursday Oregon State will
come here and the game will be at
the same hour and also on Olin
ger field. The Staters defeated
Willamette 9 to 7 at Corvallis re
cently, but the Bearcats were un
usually weak In the field that day
and should have won on the basis
of hitting and pitching, the latter
duty having fallen to Oravec.
' The Oregon State team has on
Its roster a number of football
luminaries and at least one bas
ketball star, and the appearance
of these men who are much in the
public eye at other seasons of the
year, will be an added attraction.
Both of these games will count
In the unofficial state title race,
a program which has-been com
pletely "under the weather" for
more than a week, with no games
played.
Budget oi W. U.
Coming Up Soon
The 1933-1934 budget for Wil
lamette university will be con
sidered at a meeting of the exe
cutive committee of the trustees
here next Monday. A salary re
duction was discussed recently by
university leaders but has not
been definitely determined. Ame-
dee Smith, newly elected presi
dent of the Portland chamber of
commerce, is head of the Wil
lamette trustees and presides at
i no njrimuming meeting.
V 11 f xl
BARRS GKAXDPAREXTS
SILVERTON, May 9 Mr
and Mrs. G. I. Barr, who went to
Chico, California, several weeks
ago to be at the home of their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Barr, have returned
to Silverton. A daughter was
born to the younger Barrs dur
ing the visit of the elder Barrs
Robert Barr Is with an oil com
pany In California.
Cross - Word Puzzle
By EUGENE SHEFFER
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33
HORIZONTAL
1 infant's
napkin
4 wild buf
falo of
India
8 stream
12 constella
tion 15 food-flesh
of tht calf
14 sole
16 make m
certain
thread
work 18 computed
15 contrary
- 20 single thing
il requirt .
ment
22 native .
' " Btetala , '
- 23 inspire I
- revereneaV
2ft email i
land
23 Ughest
? male role
. SO placed at
intervals
S3 church, i .
official t- '-
- S4 hurry i .
85 wagon
36 large deer
S7 have fun
89 destroy
43 marine
mammal
44 Biblical
name
46 sat srtride
of
49 long space
of time
60 ancient na
tive name
of Ireland
61 English
title
62 shell-covered
fruit
izi
Herewith is the solution to yes
terday's puzzle.
LI
twIM HIS.
Silverton Ties up Diamond
Series With Salem High by
13-5 Victory Here Tuesday
Silverton high school's baseball
team tied up the series with Sa
lem high by defeating the red
and black 13 to 5 on Olinger field
Tuesday afternoon. Both at bat
and in the field, the Salem boys
showed plainly that they suffered
from a week's absence from the
diamond, but the Silverton play
ers who must have been equally
handicapped by recent weather
conditions, betrayed no sign of It
as they smacked out 15 hits,
bunching five of them in the third
inning for an equal number of
Frankhouse Has
Three-Hit Game
Credited to Him
BOSTON. May 9. (AP)
The Braves backed Fred Frank
house's three-hit pitching with a
15-hit attack and some flashy
fielding and defeated the Pitts
burgh Pirates, 7 to 0, today.
Pittsburgh 0 3 1
Boston 7 15 0
Hoyt, Smith, Chagnon and
Grace; Frankhouse and Spohrer.
St. Louis at New York postponed,-
cold.
Chicago at Brooklyn postpon
ed, cold.
Cincinnati a t Philadelphia,
dovbleheader postponed, wet
grounds.
Judge Lewelling
Is Reversed on
Contract Issue
"A purchaser does not desire
and is not compelled to purchase
a lawsuit" the state supreme
court held yesterda7 in uphold
ing the contention of Charles A.
Evans, appellant-defendant, and
In refusing to make him perform
on a contract to purchase real
property from the Security Sav
ings and Trust company, respon
dent-plaintiff.
The court reversed the deci
sion of Judge L. G. Lewelling.
The higher court held the title to
the property offered by the
plaintiff was not sufficiently free
from possible flaw to make it
conveyable. Evans had agreed to
buy real property from the local
company on February 7, 1933,
for a consideration of 35840.
FIGHTKR UNDESIRABLE
SAN YSIDRO, Cal., May 9.
Baby Arizmendi, popular Mexican
featherweight boxer, was denied
re-admlssion to the United States
today after an Immigration board
of inquiry had ruled he was an
undesirable alien.
CENTRAL HOWELL LOSES
CENTRAL HOWELL, May 9.-
The Central Howell baseball team
was defeated by the American Le
gion team, 8-4, at Silverton Sun
day. Donald and James Lichty are
pitcher and catcher, respectively,
for the Central Howell boys.
10
II
'A
17
20
2
2T
'A
33
33
3l
HO
HI
H2
A
M8
52
'A
55
63 duration
64 female
sheep (pi.)
65 mother of
the opera
character
Peer Gynt
VERTICAL
1 staff used
as mark of
office
S enraged
S wash
4 state
2 2 2
yzA
7A
6 the uni
verse 7 place in
row
8 levsl
6 piece of
land
10 individual
11 united
17 polite title
19 decree
2 ancient
3 insert
4 court
25 -eagle
27 leaked oat
29 special edi
tion 80 pronoun
81 companion
32 inquire
83 tefl
85 unfledged
88 dipper
. 40 scene of
combat
41 fruit-dot
42 growing
from
' within "
43 intelligent
44 sums up
46 place -40
combining
- forms
thriee
47 horder
48 before
AiN Kmc u rpmra
Easlttfma STaOttte. Tit
runt, and four in the ninth com
bined with three Salem errors to
score five times more.
Lovett, Silverton second Back
er, was a special thorn in the flesh
of the Salem pitchers, for they
never got him out. He smacked
three hits, walked twice and got
a lift on an error. Kuensl, Sil
verton pitcher, aiso got three hits.
Kuenzl hardly deserves credit
for holding Coach Hollis Hunt
ington's men to nine hits, for they
kept the center fielder, Shubert,
busy dragging down long flies; he
snagged six of them, Including
three hit by Salstrom and two by
Qulstad. The home boys bad no
difficulty landing on Kuenxi's of
ferings, but many of their drives
went straight Into a fielder's
hands.
One of the few redeeming fac
tors for Salem was a home run
lined out by Coburn Grabenhorst,
right fielder, with two runners
ahead of him in the sixth. Wetzel,
relieving Sherrill in the third,
pitched neat ball until the ninth,
getting seven strikeouts.
Salem will go to Canby Thurs
day and will play Albany high at
Albany next Tuesday. Chemawa
here a week from Saturday, Che
mawa there May 23. Molalla here
May 26 and there May 29.
The score:
Silverton AB
Lovett, 2b 4
Johnson, If 5
Orren, 3b 8
R
0
1
3
Shubert, cf . 8
Rudishauser, c ...4
Scott, lb 8
Reed, ss 5
Weisner, rf
...5
.5
Kuenzl, p
Totals
40 13
15
Salem
AB
4
5
1
R H
Salstrom, lb
Pickens, lb
1
0
0
1
)
1
0
0
0
0
0
Mason, ss
Nicholson, cf
DeJardin, c
Grabenhorst, rf
Pearson, If
Qulstad, 3b
Sherrill, p
Witzel, p
Faist
Totals 36 5
Batted for Witzel in ninth.
Umpire, Frank Brown.
MICKEY MOUSE
ORC6D
TO WALK
THE Pl-ANK
OfF THE
J1 QATE
DIRIGIBLE,
GPrrs wis
TEETH, WAVES
i GOOD-BYE
.AND MAKES
A PERFECT
( DIVE INTO
ten thousand
! FEET OF
.SPACE WITH
A BOMB
TIED TO .
.WIS BACK !
:
THIMBLE THEATRE Starring Popcye
LET ME GO. X , I I BETTER -L" 8Lf5T THE-Vl! 1 Zi I ll , LOOK - HE S GOOD TWHCi X
VOU BRUTE, J 0OMP I JiN LUCK! I YAM ljl I J 11 . . A ' ( COOlDNT TNE VT ) I LrXNOED OK fE. .
'.A ( OH,U)rYf, DOESNfT rSK TRV V?ji GorNWMlSJ.V i.f, CL I ' cm; OM ACCOUNT V
LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY
Fhomestg
EOR.GE.VrTH"
COAT AW BLANKETS I
FINE ITS MICE WEATHER, AW
WITH ZERO,I AIMT VERYASUCH
AFRAID - HONEST I AfrJT
TOOTS AND CASPER
G07H12!
DtOWT I TELL.
6000 SOMEDAY?
TT COME MY WAY AT
gVt MY DAY HA ARRIVED! rfV
SAP THIS LETTER!
MY DAY HAS ARRIVED!
READ TIIIS
STARS TROUNGE
11-2
A. Jacobs Bumped in First;
Monroe's Homer Only
Threat of Ducks
COAST LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
Sacramento 21 13 .618
Hollywood 20 14 .588
Los Angeles 19 14 .576
Portland 18 14 .563
Oakland 18 15 .545
Missions 16 19 .457
Seattle 10 20 .333
San Francisco 11 34 .314
LOS ANGELES, May 9. (AP)
Hollywood's Stars stepped into
second place in the Pacific Coast
league standing today with an 11-to-2
victory over the Portland
Ducks.
A. Jacobs, who had won three
straight for Portland, was ham
mered off the mound In the first
inning, and his successor, Koupai,
was touched for nine hits, one of
them Ray Jacobs' 14th home run
of the season.
Monroe, first man up in the
first inning, hit the first ball
pitched by Archie Campbell for a
home run, but thereafter the
Ducks were docile.
Portland 2 7 2
Hollywood 11 13 1
A. Jacobs, Koupai and Sheely;
Campbell and Sommers.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.
(AP) Seattle's Indians nosed out
San Francisco's Missions 6-4 to
day in a 10-inning game. The con
test was broken up on a squeeze
play by Manager George Burns in
which Ellsworth, who had tripled,
scored.
Seattle 5 8 1
Missions 4 8 4
Hald and Cox; Pillette, John
son and Fitzpatrick.
OAKLAND, May 9. (AP)
Behind the stellar pitching of Le
Roy Hermann, Los Angeles' An
gels defeated Oakland's Oaks, 4-1,
here today. The teams were dead
locked 1-1 until the seventh when
Orv Mohler, shortstop, hit a home
run over the left field fence.
Los Anpeles 4 9 1
Oakland 1 4 1
Hermann and McMullen; Walsh
and Veltman.
TODAY
THAT
HARD
DA
YOU I'D MAKE
OPPORTUNTTY HAS
PORTLAND
lZ"N1 (thb last time iV -.-v-I I ? JT)
. V P IGUESS SAWHER.IWAS I, ' ; CVlST FT .7 OH. BOV! OK B0V ' ' ,
I M T (tHIS ITthe OUST L.EAVIN' FO ) I ,V Rr fLf AN AN..- AN..? OH. BOV! DlD 7 V
LyjMi?0?ME! MY RRST AIR-MAIL. J "f HPgf fclPT GOOD 1 ' GET OUT (V, 'A ,
1 fl IP ONLYl FUCHTI AN' r-fJ " . 8 ' L SHE GAVE AT MESS ? V J'j&nM A '
111) COULD HAVE ) SHE GAVE En t Z. jJjLr- k . a B ( ME A SILK WHOOPEE AMMfi
; yrrrrr g.,.. ' "ffi vc? (Dmtjse
THE RAIN -I H
BEEN 7 -
OH. I CAN HARDLY
BELIEVE MY
LAST
i
YOURETO B5THE
HARA4CI AT
LETTER!
SALARY OP
PER
.YEAR
W
COM
EMTS
CURTIS
Insofar a the experts and
the record keepers have bee
able to discover, mobody has
ever played IS holes of perfect
golf; that article being defined
mm play la which the ball Is sev
er off fairway or green, and all
hole are played la par or m
der. Now you duffers, paste that In
your hats and take great comfort
therefrom. If even the great make
mistakes In every round, why
should you rant and cuss and get
red in the face once or more on
every hole?
Another great aid to variety
la golf Is playing around with
a conple of brilliant conversa
tionalists. We recommend Bill
Bnsick and Bill Phillip.
The nice weather Tuesday
caught everybody unprepared. But
the ball teams which couldn't
start rushing through their be
lated schedules Tuesday, will start
today. Willamette plays Columbia
and Parrlsh and Sacred Heart
will clash. The latter nm. we
expect, will be on' the Willamette
diamond about 3:45, though It
wasn't definite late Tuesdav aft
ernoon as the younger ball play
ers have to accommodate them
selves, somewhat, to the bigger
teams' plans In the matter of ball
parks.
FIGHTIER DIES
NEW ORLEANS, May 9
(AP) Collapsing at the end of
a six round professional fight
here last night In which he lost a
decision to Tony Marullo, local
boxer, Rhule Jack Holland, 24,
Tulane student who carved out a
brilliant athletic career before
turning to the money ranks a
few months ago, died in a hos
pital today of a cerebral hemorr
hage.
SACRAMENTO, May 9. (AP)
Night game:
San Francisco 4 11 1
Sacramento 3 6 0
Henderson and Mclsaac; Salvo,
House, Gilllck and Woodall.
"Saved for
Now Showing
"Under the
F
ITS LUCKY YtXI WERE. HIDING OUT
MRS. MEANVS DETECTIVES
CAME WITH A SEARCH WARRANT
ANO RANSACKED EVERY NOOK AND
CORNER, OF THE 6A3 STATION
MRS. MEANY tS SURE A
- BOILED OLD DAME,
'Excitement and ThriUs"-
til
I ALMSlSVvVJTED
?
TQ BE A MANAGER,
SOPHIE, ANO FT
4rOES TO PROVE
't MY
EYES!
THAT IF YOU WISH
FOR ANYTHSNi
LON6 EN0U4H
ITILCOME
A
MT.lffi BEATS
II TOSSESS
MT. ANGEL, May 9 In Its
first home game of the season the
Mt. Angel baseball nine defeated
Monitor, Sunday, 7 to 5. Although
outhit by their opponents the lo
cals converted eight hits into sev
en runs. Four of the hits were
doubles.
Manager White had a perfect
day at bat with a double, two sin
gles and a sacrifice hit. Reillng,
eenter fielder, also came through
with two timely doubles in four
trips to the plate. McKallip and
Van Cleave hit well for Monitor.
Mt. Angel will meet Aurora here
next Sunday.
R H E
Monitor :5 9 3
Mt. Angel 7 8 4
Cooper and Ross; Wolf and
White.
JEFFERSON, May 9 Taking a
five-run lead In the first inning,
Stayton's Mid-Willamette league
ball team defeated Jefferson here
Sunday 9 to 0. Meyers, Stayton
nurier, allowed but five hits.
Stayton . 9 12 1
Jefferson 0 5 4
Meyers and Lulay; Hampton
and Pate.
LONE ELDER, May 9 Lone
Elder won a Mid-Willamette lea
gue baseball game by default Sun
day when the Brooks team failed
to appear.
Boken Hero for
Senators Again;
They Win 7 to 5
ST. LOUIS. May 9. (AP)
Washington's substitute second
baseman. Bob Baker, repeated his
performance of yesterday, hatting
in two runs In the final inning to
enable the Senators to win from
St. Louis today, 7 to 8.
Washington 7 16 1
St. Louis I 9 1
Llnke, Burke, Russell, Crow
der and Sewell; Wells, Knott and
Ferrell.
New York at Chicago postpon
ed, cold.
Philadelphia at Detroit post
poned, wet grounds.
Boston at Cleveland postponed,
wet grounds.
a Rainy Day"
"Happy Landing"
Cloak of Night"
YEAH, WW ARTFUL MEAN- f
AW TrA SCARED TO THINK
WHAT SHE'LL DO IF SHE rV
FINDS OUT YOU WERE
THE uOCTOK THAT
HELPED MC ESCAPE
.5 ;
- '1 W
WATT UNTIL CASPER. HEARS OP"
aOOD LUCXlTHAT SHRIMP WtLL.
v. TURN At?TFVJ vjrrw PHWI tui. ii
FINE OFFER AND I OONTT KNOW WHETHER
TO BE tLAD OR SAD, BUT I CrUESS
NOTWNCx 1 PERFECT 1 THERE'S
SOME DDAW- Riftt "m
EYEXTTHITUj!
lURPH,
Reed Drops
Strong Foe
2 Straight
Jack Kennedy from Boise, in
troduced himself to Salem wrestl
ing fansas a "strong boy" with
plently of ability and ambition.
Tuesday night at the armory, but
Koom Reea was too smart for
him and won In straight falls.
taking the first In 22 minutes
with an arm bar and head scis
sors, and the second In the same
length of time with a stepover
toe hold.
Reed was sufficiently Impress
ed by Kennedy's rugged appear
ance and power, that he started
no rough stuff, and neither did
the Irishman, so it was one of the
cleanest bouts seen here in many
weeks. The fans, strange to re
late, didn't seem to object.
Sailor Frants made up for
some of that lack of "dirt" in his
bout with Chet Wiles, but Wiles
finally won by lofting Frants
back into the ring from outside
with a flying mare in 4:05.
Frants had won the first fall In
15 minutes with a hammerlock,
and Wiles the second In 2 with
a combination leg split and toe
hold.
Glenn Stone won on a foul In
the initial bout after 4 V4 minutes,
when Herman Olson was adjudg
ed to blame for a real old-fashioned
fist fight that broke out.
Wiles was referee of the first
bout and Stone of the last two,
Vern Harrington being laid up
with an Injury.
Weather Crimps
School Sports
At Independence
INDEPENDENCE, May 9.
Weather of the past week has
proven to be quite a bugbear to
sports at the Independence high
school. Besides making baseball
practice impossible, it was respon
sible for the postponing of the
Dallas vs. Independence baseball
game, the triangular track meet
which Independence was to par
ticipate in at Albany, the boys'
and girls' tennis matches with
Perrydale, and the girls' tennis
match with Bethel.
Arrangements have not yet
been made for the re-scheduling of
these sports. There was to be a
By
DONT WORRY SHELL
NEVER RNU OUT-
SCOM AS
oHE CAM KEEP MY
LEAVE -YOU
FALSE WHISKERS FOR
LIVE WITH
.SOUVENIR.
BE. AS HAPPVAS lRKS
CUIOCTOOTS!
IS CASPER
Hortz?
I MUST SEE .
HIM AT
a
OHCK!
baseball game Tuesday with Phil
omath which will have to be post
poned, and a track meet Wednes
day that It weather does not im
prove will hare to go Into the can
celed list also.
Salem High's
Netmen Take
Valley Title
Salem high school's tennis team
gained undisputed title to the Wil
lamette valley championship Tues
day when it defeated Corvallis
high at Corvallis, sweeping all of
the seven matches. The local boys.
coached by Wesley Boeder, had
previously defeated all other ri
vals who could be dated up for
matches.
It Is the plan of the Salem team
to play the Portland champion
squad, when the title in that city
is determined, for the state cham
pionship. Scores at Corvallis Tuesday
were:
Corey beat Esson 6-3, 6-3; Har
old Beall beat Hocken 6-2. 6-1;
Bahlburg beat Howsils 6-3, 4-6,
7-5; WIntermute beat Burns 6-2,
2-6, 6-2; Fronk beat Beck 6-4.
6-3.
Corey and Beall beat Eson and
Hocken 6-3, 6-3; Bahlbnrg and
WIntermute beat Ruzells and
Burns 6-3, 6-0.
Albany College
Co-ed? Defeat
W. U. Net Team
The co-ed tennis team of Albacy
college defeated the Willamette
university women two matches to
one, in competition on the Wil
lamette courts Tuesday. The Wil
lamette team will go to Portland
Thursday, to play Reed college.
Five or six matches will be played.
Ruth Ronald, Albany, beat An
na Calaba 6-2, 6-1; Ruth Becker,
Albany, beat Janet Weil 8-6. 8-3:
Anna Calaba and Isobel More
house. Willamette, beat Ruth
Ronald and Jean Shaw 6-1, 7-5.
For EJEEEu
By the Bottle or Case
Call 7849
By WALT DISNEY
By SEGAR
DARRELL McCLURE
ALL THE DETECTIVES
CAN COME BACK TO
US - AND WELL ALL
By JIMMY MURPHY
WHY. COLONEL
HOOFER I
WHAT ARE
YOU SO
TO-
MORROW
THERE
WILL
. BE
FUmTKZR
CITAILS
OF
CCLCT.XL
Hit
Bncw pftan