The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 09, 1933, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Th OREGON STATESMAN, "Salem, A Oregon, Saturday Morninjr, December 9, 1933
t -
BmkeibMl League; Ready ;li6
City- Yo
: Parker's and Pade's Billed
Thursday, First Session ?
Of Major Circuit J
. Final details of the Clty-T.
basketball league r program for
this winter were completed In
meeting at the Y-M-OA. Friday
lht whea Clark Jackson was
elected president of the league
and Lestle Sparks vke-presldenL
Under -the constitution, Dwlght
Adams as physical director of the
T. Is ex-oftlclo secreUry.
Schedules were adopted but an
nouncement was made on)r of the
opening games. Complete sched
ules will be published later.
Next Tuesday flight, December
12. at the . Y.M.C.A., the Minor
league will launch Its season with
Teachers and -Payn Taklt play
ing at 1 o'clock, Square Deal
Hardware, the team organized by
Floyd Goode and previously -un-sponsored,
ts. Kay Mills second
team at 8 o'clock, Western Paper
ts. Oregon Paper at 9 o'clock.
Bill Lemmon will, for the pres
ent, be the Minor league referee.
The Major league will swing
Into acUon Thursday night, De
cember 14, In the Parrisn gym
nasium provided the school board
giVes final sanction to the hold
ing of the games there, when it
meets next week. The games that
night will be: '
7 o'clock Willamette Fresh
men ts. Valley Motor V-8.
8 o'clock Pade's ts. Parkers.
9 'clock Willamette Cardi
nals ts. Kay Mills.
The Valley Motor VS team Is
the outfit organised by Don Hen-
drie -and includes some mem
bers' of the Wranglers of past
eeaevns but will also hate Grif
fith, Willamette Tarsity player
last season, and some other new
men.
The meeting of Pade's and Par
ker's on the first night promises
"red-hot competition right from
the start Teams under the same
sponsorship dominated the kitball
program last summer and these
'quintets are tavorltes In tne Ma
jor league race.
- Harold Hauk will be referee
'In the Major league.
- The schedules of both leagues
call for two rounds of play, with
the two high teams at the close
of the second round meeting in
a championship playoff.
Admission charge In both lea-
;gueswill be 10. cents for adults
and 5 cents for grade school Cul-
:dren. .-:.'."' t- ;"
iHmneiES
MONMOCTH. Dec. 8, The
"opening basketball games of the
season at - Monmouth occurred
Thursday with a double - header
game featuring high school boys'
: f team and the alumni, and high
? school girls' team and alumni,
' High school boys triumpbed over1
' I their adversaries with a 19-19
! score. "v 1
1 t. first nnarter. euardinZ
i was so waccniui on duu nun mi
4 a score of 3-3 closed the quarter.
Early in the second quarter the
high school team began to click
more favorably and shots made by
R., Snider, guard, andA. Snider,
forward, ran the score" to 12-4 at
half. The same team-work was
"displayed in the third quarter with
Wilson, forward, contributing two
field goals, and continued close
checking on the alumni permitted
the latter only one point on a free
throw, while the high school an
nexed six counters. At this junc
ture Coach AI Cox. ushered in i
large group of substitute players
for a tryouL This ran the high
school's score up only one point;
' the ' alumni rated five more. R.
Snider was high - point man with
nine.. : ;,
Starting lineups: r- H
Alumni i High School
Rogers
Wilson
' Beckley
A. Snider
Santee
McKern
v Davis
R. Snider
Johnson .G Winegar
. Referee, Benjamin. . . -:-
In the girls game the Alumni
marshaled a walkaway score of
;13-1. ' V ,'"
Starting lineups: '
llumpt High School
Riley F.. Schweizer
- Good , V. . Bracken
Mason .....JC . Frlesen
B. Blodgett
. Bond : .
EC McEldowney
.G. Sacre
Oavia .
G--. B. Blodgett
Referee, L. Wilson.
II,
AT DALLAS SUNDAY
i DALLAS, Dee. 8. Alumni
teams from Dallas and Indepen
lence will tangje here Sunday af
ternoon in the second of a series
f charity football games. The
proceeds from this nine will m ta
lhe Dallas fire department Christ
mas tuna for the annual Christ
mas tree.
The first came between thA
teams this year was played last
-)unaay at independence and re-
: raited in a - seorVa nn.
- JV IU
teams are expected ta in m..
iard for a win and a real battle
: inouiaresuit. --
The teams ar M'itat
ihe outstanding players at thi two
ichoola durinr tha
Dallas won both games of last
years series and la anxious to
keen ; no the "i undefeated .
Admission for the game will be 25
cents and the ' opening kick-off
Is scheduled for 2 o'clock.
y
in
LL PLAY
FiLU I
il If
Rocky Mountain! Conference
Broken Up; Bigger Schools
Pick Up Marbles and Leave
DENVER. Dec. 8. (Defeat
ed in two . earlier attempts to of
ficially; effect a revision of - the
Rocky mountain conference, the
eight larger schools of the circuit
tonight Toted to secede.
s The eight schools which agreed
to withdraw from the conference
are the University of Utah. Colo
rado College, Brlgham Young,
Colorado Aggies, the University
of Colorado, Utah Aggies, Denver
university and the University of
Wyoming. -
' Explaining their action in a
formal statement representatives
of the eight institutions said op
eration of a 12 school conference
has become so cumbersome it is
necessary to reduce numbers and
fast to prove that excellent
golf performances arc entirely
possible under present weather
conditions, Millard Groves went
out and .shot a hole-in-one on
the eighth hole at the Salem
Golf club yesterday. He lofted
a perfect shot which boonced.
once on the green and rolled
in. Millard was playing in a
foursome so -he gets the ' var-
ions rewards.
On top of that Millard turned in
a 35 on tnat tour oi tee urst nine
after missing five reasonable
putts; if he had made them he
would have had a course record.
O
The fact is that most golfers
blame their slightly rising
scores just now on the wetness
underfoot and in the atmos
phere, whereas the real reason
is that they don't play as often
as they do in the summer.
' Our reputation-as a non-poetic
individual having been complete
ly restored, the incident appears
to be closed. However, we re
ceived yesterday a couple of cou
plets contributed to the bathtub
singing ode by H. G. Damon, and
it would be a shame to deprive
our public of them:
When Curt and Sips sing in the
tub
We'd like to know who wins
the rub.
So if the key is lost at the end of
the week
We're coming, up to take a
peek.
o
That, we think, should also
clear Mr. Damon of any suspi
cions that he has a poetic na
ture. KLEIN ALSO HOLDS.
0
,i!W v An v rw a inn tf
there was anv doubt that the Chi.
cago Cubs got their money's
worth when they bought 'Chuck
Klein from the Phillies, the "mis
cellaneous" records of the nation
al league for 1933, featuring the
slugging marks, should reassure
them.
Klein not onlv was the leaarue's
leadinjr batter last vear but the
official slugging percentages, re
leased today show him on top for
the- third straight rear with a
mark of .02. In his 152 games.
Chuck had 608 times at bat and
hit for a total of 265 bases. He
batted in 120 runs' more than hit
other player in the league. He
nit into only three double plays
to take to? nlace in this record.
compiled this year for, the first
tune.
Klein's .02 slnrtliir nninf.
age followed a .848 mark for
193Z and .584. for 1931. In two
rears before that he was uonmi
trailing Hack Wilson in 1930 and
Rogers Hornsby in 1929 and 'in
those years he compiled marks
of .887 and .867. In 1928, his first
year in the league. Chuck made a
.677 slugging percentage for his
84 games, standinr fifth In i
league. His composite mark for
six seasons Is .632.
TO OPPOSE BAELS
SAN FRAXCTSm rw t
Football'i noted pigskin jug
glers, the : gridiron troupers of
oouinern juetnodist university.
Will match their aerial tn
erlng against the stone wall line
nu crusumg ground offense of
St. Mary's Gaels - here tomorrow
In the season's outstanding in-
Krsecuonai. ciasn in this sector.
; After acknowledging the tity'a
greeting from Police Chief Wil
liam Qafnn ant Fir a Chief intm
Brenuaa, Coach Ray Morrison of
oouinern aietnodist said, "Well,
we're here.1 25 nlavers nA twi
as many passes.. The San Fran-
cisoo, ians s e e m e a to like oar
passes two years ago and if that's
what they want, we aim to nleanA
But that doesn't mean we haven't
a'gTOUhd attackJ Tt mav h' nM.
slble we can cross up St. Mary's
by Starine on the rrnnna . .
- A crowd of 20,000 la expected
'COT
H
SOUTHElELtHI
thereby provide for more work
able units.; ,, - .
Furthermore, the statement
said, thfc demand for intercolleg
iate contests between institutions
of nearer equality and natural ri
valry makes "some adjustment,
necessary. .? , ' , (t 4 '
. The statement added the orig
inal objectives of the conference
have been accomplished "proper
standards and control of inter
collegiate progress. Now,- the
statement explains, developments
have introduced factors and prob-t
lems which "the present organis
ation cannot meet to the best in
terests of all concerned."
The eight who joined In the
session added that "college athlet
ic conference cannot be expected
to Include all institutions in a
given region. - -r . T..
The action was taken after the
faculty representatives of the 12
member schools this morning had
tabled a motion to divide the con
ference into a big six and a little
six, and a few minutes later ta
bled another motion to create a
big eight and little four.
The four schools remaining
what has been the Rocky Moun
tain conference were Western
State College of Gunnison, Colo.,
Colorado Teachers of Greeley,
Col., Colorado School of Mines of
Golden, Colo., and Montana State
College of Boieman, Mont.
POLLY AND HER PALS
JWHTWILL L JSWBYER I IpHOOE.' WrWS AN ISNORAMjS k lfTA'BCrTlCHcOrlTAGICXjSTJ K PLAIN
I DO? ALLS ( DOUGH, DEARIE. UKE Vt)U KNOW ABOUT OBSCUR&) (CONTAGIOUS.) ( GOOD HEAvWSw (SAr4TOAUSlTlSt; xs
.THE DOCTORS ) V Iti. PRESCRIBE INFANT AILMENTS (WrW IS IT?r VAT-c 1 S
SS y
MICKEY MOUSE
"S.N THE
LAIR OF
THE HAIR
ROBBERS, MICKEY
FOLLOWS
TWO OT
THE GANG
DOWN A
DARK
HALLWAY!
THIMBLE THEATRElarriag Popeye
MR uvrtiKS rs a c.wocfinV
WftlNW MAN-AND IV Hfe
BtCAOe ITTs NO
Vooo,
LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY
us
OUT VOU MUSTN'T
vORK SO HARO.OeAJRr-
VOURe ONLV A CHILD
vou musTHAve.Rcsrr
S Sk.
lJ V jn J T3 LS V HURT
TOOTS AND CASPER
f I HAD A POST-CARD FDftM SQPMir I IMAGINE THAT FOUR-FLUSHER TELUNA I f7
H TO DAY, CASPER! SHE SAYS COLONEL,
R HOOFER IS .NEARLY AS FAT AS EVER
V AND THAT THEY'LL RETURN HOME ' iV
TO DAY, CASPER! SHE
MUWtH l? .IMLAKLY
AND THAT THEYLL
MONDAY!
UDENTOBE
IRISH)
Fiery "Horseman" Fullback
Has Good Record From
V":
Duquesne Regime
SOUTH BEND, Ind.. Dec, S. VP)
Elmer Lay den, fullback of the
famous "Four Horsemen of Notre
Dame. of a decade ago, will at
tempt to haul Notre Dame , back
to lt football crest.
v Heartly "Hunk" Anderson, who
succeeded Knute Rockne as head
football coach after Rockne's
tragic death in the air three years
ago, has resigned, along with
Jesse Harper, director of athletics.
Layden will he appointed foot
ball coach, also director of athle
tics, probably tomorrow upon the
return of the Rer. Charles O'Don
nell, who has been ill for a month
after a throat operation and waa
scheduled to leave a hospital In
Rochester, Minn., tonight for
South Bend. "
In a ' drastic shakeup of the
Notre Dame coaching staff Lay
den will return to' his alma mater
as a successor to Anderson follow
ing the most dlsasterous season
for the "fighting Irish" in modern
football. No one at the university
would make a definite statement
regarding the appointment of
Layden. Father O'Hara said that
any statement relative to Notre
Dame's athletic policy would have
mo aITOuC a. Lrvsn it
ir. v"-vr' vvvv W "
WF", CJMt M TM "Cd mfM FCh
HOWCfST. T AJNri
vvorkin' veRy
HARO" 3TJST
CLCAM1N&UP A
I
8 IT aint GONNA
no owe.
SAYS COLONEL, f
As fAI A tVtK
RETUM IHOME :
040.
ftf W. THESEUS NO. TIME to-I 7B I f krws ncHl " I 1 PWbOY ITS DARKl F " '""S, '
4' . f waste! rrs nearly L h -'V.JJ i 'M twat hall' JwellA y-. ,
V. MIDNIGHT, AN UNLESS I , C' J J ) &11t' I 7" ft) JL ,
p, FIND DIPPY BEFORE ) -. : aSo iSSI V t A AN I MUSTN'T . I ...THEY'RE fAwC
ft ( THEN. THEY SAY THEYU i Y& A"5SmP4 T ' ' & LOSE TRACK J -GONE ! hMlJI ? ,
to come from Father ODonnell,
It was learned tonight from an
authoritative source, however,
that the official announcement of
Notre Dame's new athletic policy
would be made by Father O'Don
nell at S o'clock tomorrow night
Layden, - who functioned with
Harry stuhldrehr, the quarter
back,' Don Miller and Jimmy
Crowley, halfbacks, aa the Quar
tet known as the "Four Horse
nlen" in Notre Dame's national
championship drive in' 192 4, made
a spectacular success as football
eoach at ' Duquesne university,
Pittsburgh, this year, losing only
one game out of nine, dropping a
7 to 0 contest to the University
of Pittsburgh. Before . going to
Duquesne he. coached .with, re
markable success at Columbia col
lege; Dubuque, la; '
Kitts to Coach
Rice Institute
HOUSTON, Tex., Dec 8. (ff)
Jlmmy Kltts today was named
head football coach of Rice insti
tute, with Jack Meagher released,
effective at once. -
Announcement was made today
by J. T. McCants. chairman of the
Rice committee on outdoor sports.
Mr. McCants said' Kltts would
continue as head basketball coach.
GILL GRANGE SPEAKER
SILVERTON, Ore., Dec. 8
Ray W. Gill, master of the state
grange, Is to be the speaker at
the Silvefton grange meeting Fri
day night Dec. 15. A short busi
ness session and a Christmas pro
gram for the children will be add
ed features of the evening.
A Speeding
The Wallflower
Tour Hundred to One"
THEY
kVT THEV ALL
UXSULONTT
Buy 'em TrtE grjpeR Beause
ONABLc TO cvtRbOUv LS
READ r "O Think they
EM
Got book J
It'n All Come
M
GeB, 3 THINK WRN&IMC
CLOTHES 15 FUN" ITO UU5T
LIKE. PLAYIN TUNE.T3 ON AM
K. UKWKN MM' TMI5 IO OWELLI
VWU1NGE,R-- IT. TURN'S AWFUU yl
Bringing it Home to the Colonel
IMAGINE THAT FOUR-FLUSHER TEUJN&j
HIS WIFE AND EVEPrBOOY-THAT HE I
MUFFED A 400a?-A-VVEEK JOB
WHEN HE WAS REALLY ONLY TO 6ET
A WEEK!
DUNDEE KEEPS
BOXING HI
Methodical Battle. Waged
To Thwart Title Hope.
Of Aridy Callahan
BOSTON, Dec t. ( Ttace
Dundee, crafty 29-year-old mid
dleweight champion, fought a
nicely paced battle In Boston Gar
den tonight to gain a divided de
cision over his first challenger,
Stubby Andy Callahan, the Law
rence bulldog, and retain his fis
tic e r o w n he won from Lou
Bronlllard in the same ring only
five weeks ago.
With his stablemate Jack Shar
key directing his attack, Calla
han rushed, the champion against
the . ropes and into corners, rip
ped hard Tights and harder lefts
to the head and body to pile up
a wide lead before tiring in the
ninth round. . - .
Dundee calmly Ignored Calla
han's early success and waited
until his smaller and lighter rival
shot his bolt Then he brought all
of his sound ring skill Into play
to sweep every one of the last
five rounds which, added to his
fifth and sixth sessions, gave him
a total of seven. Callahan was
credited with six and the third
and seventh appeared even.
Referee Jack Dekker of Spring
field, and Judge Jim Carrig, Bel
mont, voted for Dundee and the
Epidemic
UJHrXT'5
CE'SSEE-mVEAHJ
THE sue
THEY i ft HUNDERD
OTr
fN TooeNv-Tuuo
SOJQJ. CNHABTTiNKS
V
&.a aw
CITY UhlKVI
r
Out in the Wash
r. z 7 w t
vr C LBLAMLy o AS5l5TANTJf NO, MA'AM I 1 V'T
-WHY, CHILD, VOU OONTA JU ST DELIVER tME
MEAN A 8A8V LIKE. VOU BUT HONEST" -J
.WASHES CLOTHES?! ilM LOTJ Dl GGER
TMATS TWOR HOMELAND I'LL BE -WAITIN6
ON THE DOORSTEP WHEN THEY
ARRIVE! , THAT OLD BOY lUAC MAP: fcyirr
UafpTA8LE MANY, times AND THIS
IS MY CHANCE.
Husky Gomes
Late, Trojan
Camp
Jittery
LOS ANGELES, "Dec. 8. (t
Coach . Jimmy Phelan and bis
Washington football squad put in
a . delayed appearance here today
to fill their Southern California
opponents of the closing game of
the season here tomorrow with
apprehension, w..' -
. Stanford's ' belated, I arrival . on
November 11. was followed by a
,11 to 7 defeat the only Joss writ
ten on Troy's grid scrajl this fall,
and Trojan followers Immediate
ly . began asking themselves if
Washington's Huskies would re
peat the performance.
Deferred train -schedules
brought about by the sinking of
tracks in the case of Stanford, and
a landslide in the case , of Wash
ington brought about the delays
but superior football for 80 min
utes 'gave the Indians their tri
umph and there were none here
willing to say the Huskies were
not capable of demonstrating the
same brand. .
Coach Phelan's squad, however,
was not too late for luncheon and
a light workout at the Memorial
Coliseum while the game takes
place tomorrow. The Huskies
coach said he will have "about 17
other official, Eddie McDonald of
Brooklyn, who was inside the
ring during the preliminaries, sid
ed with Callahan.
R16W HERE
lb U3HERE
ONE
CONSULTATIOM
PUDDLE BURG
IS.JTS THE
8lG&EVCrt7
(DOOLD BE IF.
IT UUAS ON
JH MAP
AX MILES r
t 7
UNCLE.
TO VYCnHT HIM
men available" to play football,
although the squad was twice the
size. . .- - 1 1
COACHES C0II1EH .
CBES VI RULES
CHICAGO, Dec 1. (ff)Bristl
Ing with new ideas and voting for
them almost to the man, the big
ten football coaches today asked
for the return of the training ta
ble on a modified, basis . within
their own conference and 'recom
mended three 'drastic changes in '
the playing rules, to the national
football rules committee. .
The recommendations of rule
changes to the national committee
were:' ' ' ' '
Adoption of the rule in use in
the national ''professional football
league, whereby forward passes
may. be thrown from any point
behind the line of scrimmage.
Removal of the present colleg
iate rule whereby a ball is de
clared "dead" when any part of
the ball earriera body except his
feet or hands touch the ground.
Re-instatement of an old "windy
day" rule, used 25 years ago.
providing that on an extremely
windy day upon agreement of,
coaches and officials, the offen
sive team could exercise an op
tion of surrendering the ball to its
opponent at a spot 25 yards, down
the field. Instead of 'punting. The
rule would apply-only when the
offensive tearn was within - 20
yards of its own goal.
By CLIFF STERRETT
By WALT DISNEi
By SEGAR
VslHAT yJTS TO AST YA 16 -
frx UjiLL vA p. Mfe bOCItKY
DON'T LAU6U-THETUeS
QOOD SOUU FOLKS -'
ALTS OF THE tART
ivHAT
OETOR?
By DARREL McCLURE
THERE'S NO NEWS FROM
V
GEAQers ur rv-wv l
SOMEWHBCE. WEAR. THE. SOUTH
Pole. - but whcni he. comes
OACKANQ FfNOS UrTTLE. ANNIE.
GOMEWt D BETTER. HUNT A
By JIMMY MURPHY
I DONT KNOW WHETHER I'LL TELL
SOPHIE THE TRUTH ABOUT
HIS JOB OR NOT. BUT I'LL LET
HIM THINK, I'M AOIM. tti
CH.MYIican,
FOR MONDAY! rGJS&c T J I
tOOKS AS THOUGH COLONEL
1
i
r
!
4
i f
i .
f
V"'
. ;
: ;
f -M
'.
me game.
HOOFER IS IN. HOT A&AIN!
Si 4 .
..... . .