PAGE SIX Th OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Satcrday Morning, December 16, 1933 to WeMooi Hoom&em W-eek SCHEDULES FOR m hum Salem to See Many Games - Next Football Season;. Conference Meets - Unirersitr of Oregon's basket ' ; ball, team will play Willamette un - Irersity this season for .the first v time In three years, according to . reports emanating from the Northwest conference .meeting In . Portland Friday. The. WeMoot " cagemen, a tall outfit this year in contrast to the undersized group t BUI Jteinhart has coached for the last sereral years, will come here next Friday and Willamette will . - go to Eugene January 3. Oregon State will play here December 27. Willamette's football schedule for next fall also includes an un usual number of home games, the only conference clash slated else : where being the one with Albany . college. College of Puget Sound. Whitman, Pacific and Linfield ' wilt all, play here and possibly College of Idaho. The schedule as - drawn to date leares openings for two more In non-c onference ' games in Norember. PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 15. 6P) -Basketball schedules for the ' : coming season and football sched-.- nles for next fall were drawn up by the seven schools of the north west conference here tonight at the opening of the annual two day meeting of coaches. and fac- . nlty representatives, i , While the coaches were consid- , ering the schedules the faculty members held a separate meeting to study affairs of the conference. TheCollege of Idaho, repre . sented by Loren H. Basler, had lined up only four football games . for next fall, three of them ten tative. .The cost of making the trip to Caldwell or of giving guar antees to the team on road trips was said to have been the princi pal obstacle to a heavier schedule ... for the school. Coaches here for the confer - ence include: Spec Keene, Wil ; lamette; Roy Sandberg. Puget . Sound: Henry W. Lever, Linfield; Anse Cornell. Pacific; R. Vincente Borleske, Whitman; Loren H. Basler, College of Idaho, and Joey Mack, Albany. Mack, an assistant last year to Slats Gill, basketball coach at Oregon State college, was - the only mentor attending a northwest conefrence meeting for - the first time. . Willamette's basketball sched t nle is: . Dec 22- Oregon at Salem. Dec.' 27 -Oregon State at Sa lem. Jan. Z Oregon at Eugene. v . " Jan. 19 Albany at Albany. Jan. 23 Pacific at Salem. --Jan. 27 Pacific at Forest Grove. " Feb.' 2 Alhany at Salem. X Feb.- Linfield at Salem. ' Feb. 10 College of Idaho at - Salem. . . . Feb. 15 and 1C College of Pu ' get Sound at Salem. : Feb. 20 Linfield at McMinn ", Tille. : Feb.' 23 Vnd, 24 Whitman at Walla Walla. Feb. 26 Eastern Oregon Nor " : mal at La Grande. Feb. -2 7 College of Idaho at Ontario. Ore. ' , ' 4,. lIAny , Home Games - On Grid Scbedales ; The Willamette fooball sched nl for next fall follows: Sept. 22 Oregon State at Cor Tallis. f v Sept. 29--Oregon Normal at - Salem. ' . Oct- College of Idaho at Sa lem (tentative). Oct 13 Albany at Albany. Oct" 20 Linfield at Salem. Oct 27 College of - Puget I - Sound at Salem.'- Nov. 8 Pacific University at J . Salem. . . - " ' Nov. 25 Whitman at Salemf m E HEAD TO S " s WOODBURN, Dec. 15 The an- j nnat meeting of the Willamette Valley Interscholastie league will be held In the , Woodburn high school building here Saturday af- ternoon, it has bee announced. ... The league has' as its members . Sllverton, West ; Linn. Molalla. Lebanon Newberg and Woodburn. . The delegates from the schools. ," ' wiU have noon lunch at tfce.Wood :, , burn hotel.; Jt is thought that: a i, .schedule for the league's baseball ' -teams will be drawn nn at the meeting.: v : .siCJ .-.w ,"'-.'.-1 Referees who will have charge L of ; high - school , games In Marlon , ; county were' chosen here this week: by: a committee . of the Marlon County Athletic association. The committee is -made up of W. B. '" .. Dunn of Woodburn. Eugene Sllke t Hubbard and M. IL Beal of . -; Stay ton-.-Referees., for A. league games get $5 per game and mile s " age while B league officials get $3 and- mileage. Red Birds Score 7 Shutout Victory -. Tb 1 -. THii1 wirn an mi r; contest from the lue Birds by the scere of-S to- 0 in a JCoon league game pUyeArat;parrisa Friday noon.. -, . -.'.! Ilea BIrd ; ; f Blue Bird ' Sweigert. i . i ,F. . . . , Kenfield ' DUewart. .W ."i.F.. Vi . Quamme B riggs i ,V . O V". j . Lowe Jones.'. . i , , .'. ,.G . . . . :LIndstrom . Roland 2 . . . . . ..G. Sweigert Lively- Action Marks Bouts v: Staged by Blue Key Society As W. U. Loan Fund Benefit One clean knockout in the box ing division and worlds of action both In the boxing and wrestling bouts, featured the Blue Key "smokeless smoker" at the Wil lamette gymnasium Friday night It was a benefit for the university student loan fund. About 100 per sons sttended. Talbot Bennett, hitherto noted only as a tennis player, furnished the knockout when he floored BUI Jones for the count In .the second round. One of the most popular boxing bolts featured two husky gridmen, Jack Connors and Bob Vagt Connors won a close decision. There ought to be a Job somewhere for a fellow who ran wilk 50 miles .an easy forenoon's chore provided he gets op early enough. The CWA sorely needs some "walking bosses' and this fellow we have In mind is a champion. He is rani A. Smith of Gates, winner of several of the Salem-to-Portland walking races, a prominent contender in the C. C. Pyle coast-to-coast bunion derby, and otherwise notable as a inciter of distances. , Yet here is Paul, totally job less for the last two years and now "broke" as you might ex pect, the walking business not being what it used to be. Paul let the married men have the jobs, be having collected several hun dred dollars a year doing the thing he likes- best to do, back in the days when walking races were the rage. There aren't any Buch contests now and Paul's cash reserve is gone. He came to Salem yesterday walking most of the way of course to hunt up the re-employment office. It's interesting to contem plate the possible reasons why something over a thousand people paid out their good money for a glimpse of Jack Dempeey here Tuesday night. Of coarse the wrestling show was op to par, but less than half the crowd was made op of the faithful wrestling fans. In the mind of one editor, it's an evidence of widespread imbe cility aforesaid editor having devoted his best, efforts for 13 years to restoring his fellow man's vested right to pickle his brain in alcohol at considerably higher cost per capita. Offhand, one might think the average man's feeling with .re gard to Dempsey woold be one of envy, not adulation. Few will . mind his extraordinary earning capacity, hot here is an Individual who could stand op and trade punches on even -- terms, at least, with any man . who ever lived. To a generation of humans who prided them selves on their relative ability' along those lines perhaps more , than any other virtue, coming face to face with one who so obviously outshone them in that respect would be, one would think, a highly unpleas ant experience, one to be avoid ed in the interest of self-esteem. Evidently that theory is wrong; Dempsey seemed to be the Idol of those who gazed at him. He wasn't nearly so popular . while champion; neither was Tunney, though public criticism of the two was based on widely differ ent premises. Maybe the fall of such an envied person reverses the general feeling toward him. Having failed to explain hero worship adequatelr, we still have a conviction that each of the "imbeciles" who visited the arm ory Tuesday nigh had some per sonal justification for - going there and spending the money. ' MONMOUTH, Dec 15. Mon- mouth .high school's basketeers defeated, the. Antioch club team here Tuesday night, 20 to 10. The nrst quartet ended 5-1 in Mon mouth's favor. At the second quarter's opening, Kleever, An- tioch forward, sank two baskets tying the score.: Monmouth then ran up three, points, bringing the eoant to S-2 at half. . . In the third quarter Kleever got another field real. : and a fr throw by Beckley, Antioch's teen ier, iiea the score again. The high school squad got a second start and McKern. center, rot two field goals and a free throw; R.' Snider ana winegar each a field Kleever anneied.one more counter xor ms team which ended the scoring. SUrtlng lineup: Monmouth A. Snider 1 Wilson 5 V AaUoch ; F Swearingen - .F: fl Kleerer MCJCernr n 1 Beckley R. Snider 5 .-...0 LeFever winegar 2 G i Teates iinus. Kereree, eBnjamln, p. N, S. The wresUing bout between Max Blgby of Willamette . and Don Hendrie of the T. M. C. A. was one of the liveliest Blgby lifting his lighter opponent for a couple of body slams and Hendrie com ing back with a punishing son nenberg, but it terminated In sv draw. ' ':. The superiority of a wrestler over a boxer In a mixed bout was demonstrated anew when-Blgby hustled Os Morley, boxer, to the mat in short order and proceeded to take a fall Summary: Wrestling Alderin, Salem high, decision over Dunkin, T. M. C. A. Blgby, W. U., and Hendrie, Y. M. C. A., draw. Hogue, Y. M. C. A. decision over Smith, W. U. Combination wrestling and box ing, Blgby, wrestler, took fall over Morley, boxer. v Tada, Salem high, fall over Newhouse, W. U. Boxing Connors, W. V., decision over Vagt, W. U. Petteys, W. U. and Noel, W. U., draw. Scott, W. C, and Ferris, W. TJ., draw. Bennett, W. U., knockout over Jones, W. U. Hastings, Salem high, decision over Welch, W. tj. POLLY-AND HER PALS DCMTI MAKE AN iadorable: DEUCtA? MICKEY MOUSE ICKEY AND DIPPV SEARCHING FOR THE HA!P-P0885$ HEAR A PIANO PLAVINS. NOT KNOWING JT IS ONiy : A CAT HIOIMG amokksthh strings! THIMBLE THlTRElarring Popeye EW.ITSA) -n hOUQVU PfVMfT6 fiATrtf A OrWUTTLE COBSfrVaLE () ( VOO KEEP THE OOOR SrtOT- closet i J i vam DJSCrtJSTrrr at the eho of the. haw. fs J 4 v y v V -r wkt Vrf KehThH 1TH006HT ppT ' I i " '.j ' PPATE BfXTrt-rMT ' , , -7 rXlrAT W VBw ffi' jjj P p j vv LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY vORMtU', ZO?),AM X WAPPy 1 HAD THE. 5WEUEST DREAM OU EVER SAW UNCLE. GEORGE GtVSsPA SWELL AN MRS. kEEAL. WAS TMECE AKF VWOOy JOFLYNM AN- E.VEK.VOJE. X I T-TWERE ITT WAS miST : r- TOOTS AND CASPER r S-SOPHIE, t'Vet A CONFESSION 1 TO MAKE... I WAS'HaVBR OPFERED 400aS? A WEEK Z fti THE MOVIES, t WAS OKLV FOOLING! MY SALARY WAS - -REALLY TO BE 4aV A WEEK FOR TEN WEEKS IN ifii wr i-n. i men ' -. - . i LOUbHRAH WILL FIGHT GARNERA Alp Meets Tommy and Then Max Baer In June; Says - He'll Defeat Both By EDWARD J. NEIL NEW YORK, Dec. 15. () Prlmo Camera and Tommy Loughran have been matched to fight In Miami February 22 for the heavyweight championship, first title bout in that class in Florida since Jim Corbett knock ed out Charlie Mitchell at Jack sonville 39 years ago. Loughran has agreed to the bout and today Camera roared approval of Madison Square Gar den's arrangements before he sail ed back for Italy after a stay of less than two days, spent chiefly In bankruptcy court All that is needed now ls .the approval of Louis SoresI, co-manager of the champion, in Italy. That, Camera said, will be easy to get inasmuch as he wants the fight and BiU Duffy, his Amer ican manager, approves. "I want to fight everyone," the huge Italian declaimed aboard the Conte de Savoia. "I want to fight Loughran, then in June Max Baer. I lick Baer, too. He's too .con ceited." Camera, said he would return ) A PREOUS.RTLlV--T I I "IT-:.. Fx ( DOIT GTT SO 171 I ( VoiiVc rftV ArtT ati I I 1 ,gTe amOnjctta l1 think rrsvvECT KTTc'T familiar 11 1 stripe an' ive Hcome do somthu. . .1 UNOECSTAND I "EU. XAll rr! Vw -rP'sJ " i ' l- " ' ' r tmliu t i TCIm rrzxyAy UCCV LIKE Vja.0 6I2ANO "THAT Blllt TRUTH. SOPHIE i I my I ) CAN Iter M?Srirt3LfU. NEVER SPEAK A MOV ."ST.! It iriArM. a HI In January. " - The verbal agreements .of. both Loughran and Camera are for the usual percentage of challenger and champion 27 for Prlmo lt for Loughran, The Garden estimated It will spend approxi mately $30,000 reconstructing the Miami bowl which was built for Jack Sharkey's fiasco with Phil Scott In 1930. The Garden's first Florida ven ture, la 1929, was staged In Mi ami Beach following the death of Tex Rieard. That first "battle of the palms' brought' together Sharkey' and Young Strlbling and netted the Garden a fine profit on a 1400.000 gate. Reports of better times In Flor ida, and Loughran's rehabilitation as a ehallenger by his defeat of Sharkey and Ray Impelllttlere, led the Garden to revive the cus tom Richard planned as an annual winter feature. Camera's title defense, if Sor esI agrees, will be his second since winning the championship from Sharkey last summer on a knock out in six rounds last summer. It will be the first heavyweight title match staged In the winter months since Jack Dempsey's knockout of Bill Brennan" in the eld Garden more than a decade ago. SEATTLE DEFEATED SEATTLE, Dec. 15. (JP) The Vancouver Lions defeated Seattle 2 to 1 here Thursday in a fast moving hockey game. Scores were tallied by Clint Smith for Van couver and Gilhooley tor the Sea hawks. A Call A Bug "Standing Rich Little Poor Girl wsre.9nnchf waft lauauiu' aaa ' SilG)M&-.AM 1 WAS EATIW TMC BI6GE5T CHOCOLATC. CAKE VCU EVER SAWwrTWAS AS&tGAS A WASH TUB-AM' X CT IT ALA, COURSE. X COaOMT t)0 A MV PLACE. 'CEPT M A BREAM X Jast a tr irSlTHE aSPEL SHOW YOU TKE DID I ONLY CAUSE YOU TO LOSE TEN WEEKS' WORK AT $402? A WEEK ? CJJT IT COMINZs -m Mts Oregon Man Is National Rifle Champ ' WASHINGTON, D. C. Dec. 15. Oregon' produced one cham pionship - winner and five repre sentatives amon the "President's Hundred," the select circle of high-powered rifle marksmen. In the national title matches of the National Rifle association, the fi nal tabulation of results in 13 state and regional meets shows. Corporal Edward V. Seeser, TJ. S. M. C, whose home is near Molalla, Ore., captured the 200 yard rapid-fire championship and, with it, the Camp Perry Instruct ors' trophy, a statue of Alexander Hamilton, which, was presented to the National Rifle association in 1918 by the Camp Perry Instruct ors' association for annual com petition. . ' The Oregon Marine shot his scores for the championships ' In the regional meet held in Mas saehusetts. To. win the 200-yard rapid-fire event, - he fired three consecutive scores of 50x50 and then, on his fourth string, he got a 47. His showing was easily suf ficient to outclass the score fired for this title In all the other re gional meets. The Oregon marksmen who won places for themselves in the "President's Hundred" on the basis of their scores in the pres ident's match were: Harvey Ide, Company B, 186 th to Arms in the Rug: Room Only" BUT TMCy ARE SWELL -r!25 QJf UOOK, MICKEY1 VS SrTr. I o.,TV HrW ( S a ghost f.-:- p fj YTji rj If THEV KIEVET? REALLV HAPPM-w IT MAKES VOJ FEEL MICE AM1 GLAD INStDE OP YOU UUST LIKE I-V- VOU HAD EATEN SOME. J t rl I V LHAPPIMESS J Ji I Trifling Loss THAT'S, ALL," SOPHIE1. AMTVOU MAD AT ME FOR VOU? Inf., O. N. .. G.,'. Portland, who placed 62nd with ft score ot 139x 150. -, H. L. Riches. O. N. G., Silver ton, who placed 63 rd with a score of 139x150. William Stevely, O. N. G., of Portland, who placed. 81st with a score of. 138x150., Corporal Seeser, who placed 82nd with a score of 138x150. Wy.J. Andrews. O. N. G., of Portland, who placed 99 th with a score of 137x150. The four Oregon N a tJ o n a 1 Guard riflemen fired their scores In the regional meet held at Fort Lewis, Wash. ' Kipke in Huddle With Lou Little; Discuss Defense NEW YORK, Dec. 15 () the aid of Harry Kipke, Michigan coach, Columbia continues Its de fensive work against Stanford plays today in preparation for the Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, Cal., New Year's day. Kipke dropped in at the armory to lend Lou Little, Columbia men tor, a hand at analyzing the Stan ford style of attack for. a team to use against the varsity in prac tice and to help figure out a de fense as well. The Columbia coaches have very little first hand information about the Stanford of fense and the Michigan coach was able to add what "dope" his scouts had gleaned while watching Nortwestera play the Cardinals. o' l ftv lTfcTOvs - X-AA a I "X. - ATI I 6 3 jasmisinT1""1 rswsi AM THE, BEST THM46 BOUT AkF EVEM BREAMS ?3 ii YCU OOMfT HAPTA BE RICH MOMEST-v A PAUPER KUM HAVE "I M KIGH IT'S TOUAH ENOUGH " ALL'S TO LOSE ANXTHIN6, AND I 600D BE A DAN, BUT I FEEL SO REUSVED TO KNOW 1 DIDN'T CAUSE YOU TO V FROM MORE LOSE AS MUCH AS I THOUGHT I DREAMS TJUSTASGRAMDAS Dallas Humbles Willamina Quint By 40 -10 Score. DALLAS,' Dec: 15. r Scoring 19 points before the opponents found the hoop, Dallas hlfH school's basketball team rolled eg a 40 to 10 victory over Willamina; high here tonight. The score was 17 to 0 after the first period and) Willamina made only two points in the first half. Which closed 2 to 2 i Dallas ' . WillaminaJ Petrel.. ..F . Young Pleasant S , Morrlsonl Webb ii n n 1 Wooden Hamilton 8 G 6 Frauenbeueil Kliever 2 SumteA Fisher 4 8 WertB Lay her 4 The Dallas defeated Willamina "B," 32 to 9. Airlie Boys Win From Rickreall ; Girls Defeated . AIRLIE, Dec. 15. Three bas ketball games were played oa Airlie court Tuesday night one a league game. Rickreall hoys and girls played, also the Salem Sena tors. Airlie boys won, 29-3; Rick reall girls won by as large a mar gin, and Salem Senators won, 25 to 13. Airlie lineup for B league Is: Alfred Bose, center; Alvin Herron, forward; Arthur Abercromble, forward; Arthur Bose, guard, ana Lyle McKlbbens, guard. By CLIFF STERETT By WALT DISNEY By SEOAR B" team By DARREL McCLURE l i i A II AMyBOOy KIM HAVEEAA MJUUOHURE.T By JIMMY MURPHY VVELL THAT. ENDS WELL, MUST TELL CASPER THE NEWS! THIS IS 60NNA LCSSOH TOME NOW ON t M 60NNA DO USTENtNZ. AND LESS U" I' ti- -J J I 4.1 WW 2rlb. - f