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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1935)
PAGE SZVUt The. OREGON" STATESMAN; Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, November 7, 1925 Webfoots : afiU Drang 0W MB Swanson, Last Cripple Ready Big Game Definitely Set For 2 pan. Saturday, Eugene Statement CORVALLIS. Orel, Not. -The probability tb.t Oregon State college will be able to throw its full strength into the' gridiron tilt with the UBirerstty of Ore gon Saturday was seen tonight In a physician's announcement that Tommy Swanson, first-string half back, will be able to enter the game. Swanson suffered a brain con cussion in the Washington State game ten days ago. Dr. R. L. Bos worth, team physician, said he has recovered sufficiently to play. He worked out with the team to day. . , Leg injuries incurred by. Ken Deming, center, and Bob Moun tain, left half, remain Coach Lon Stiner's major problems. Both are expected to start, howerer. Tbe Beavers this week have beea -stressing offensive tactics, particularly in the air. Word from the Web foot camp indicated Coach "Prink" Callison is hold ing practices along the same lines and a wide-open game is expected. EUGENE, Ore., Nov. 6.-JP) The University of Oregon's long est grid aorkout in several days was completed under the arc lights of Hayward field tonight. Not content with building uP a pasg offensive. Coach 'Prink" Callison spent considerable time ia.. Perfecting an aerial defense which he hopes will thwart what ever attempts Oregon State's Joe Gray may make to score via the overhead route here Saturday. An "Oregon State" squad heav ed passes' all over the lot today while the first - stringers drilled away at being in the right place at the right time. It appeared certain tonight that Vernon Moore, 19 S-pound sopho more, would get- the call at cen ter over the veteran Ed Farrar. Moore has developed rapidly since serving his "apprenticeship' on the 19 34 frofb squad. On the basis of the probable starting lineup, & .compilation of weights indicates the Webfoot back field will average 176 pounds, the line 198 and the en tire eleven 191. The game time has been defi nitely set at 2 p. m. Billy Sunday Dies Of Heart Trouble (Continued from Page 1) hawaka. Ind.. land wan elatod that "30 or 40" of iiis audience had come to tbe altar. He had beeh a compelling fig 'ure on American revlvaTrostrums since 1896; thunderous In voice, tangy in phraseology, vehement in gesture. Generally beginning his dis courses in quiet tone, he usually shed his coat and vest at the height of his plea, thundering his exhortations to sinners to repent. Words and terms rarely heard in revival meetings sjipped from his tongue at his perorations as he Impelled thousands to rise and "be saved." ? K Sunday, born in Ames, la., No vember 19, 1863, finished high school in Nevada, la., before con tinuing his education at North western university in Evanston, 111. . Played With Three Major league Teams His first career was in profes sional baseball, when he played with teams representing Chicago, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia in the National league between 1883 and IS 90. , Baseball fans knew: him as a topnotch outfielder, a speedy man on the bases, as a better than Tcriigg uuicr, mil la 1931, wane still capable TOf top; flight base ball, he retired to begin his ecclesiastical work. Funeral arrangements had not been completed late tonight. Ruling on Sewing Project Forecast Whether or not the "Marion county relief committee will be givea funds with which to spon sor .sewing; room projects at Wood burn and in Salem, for the benefit of woman heads of relief families, may be known today when Elmer R. Goudy, state re lief administrator, is expected to be in he city. There was some hope yesterday that Goudy would reverse his former declaration that there were no funds for nuch projects. f Announcemnet of the projects by the WPA Tuesday brought a large nmber of women to the na tional reemployment agency here to inquire about this work, and ask to bo pat on. The WPA pro poses to spend $42,413 for labor m nA material within thfl Tt Oft KIT months If I180C is raised locally to pay for rent, beat, light, water and small material purchases. Tourist Registrations Well Above 1934 Mark Non-resident motor vehicle reg istrations in Oregon for the first 10 months of 1935 aggregated 92, 888 as compared with 92.268 dar ing the entire year of 194, re ports Secretary of State SnelL The largest registration was in July when 20.993 cars were.registered. "Leggo My, Foot!" but Bear HerwigHeld Tight ,, '""TV"-' t'-.x 1 I" - r Vi i i h "' IV"." "v. U I . . jr. '. A Fred t'nnk, V. C.LA. halfback, wants Bob Herwig to let go of his foot here in the Bruin-Bear contest at the Lob Angeles Coliseum November 2, but Herwlg, of the Golden Bears, wouldn't oblige. The Bear center held on to keep-Punk from progressing goalward. Bob Hay, end (No. 18), Is ready to help Her wlg. The Bears won handily in the stellar contest between northern and southern California's hereto fore only undefeated coast conference teams. The final score: U. C, 14; U. C. I A., 2. International Illustrated News Photo. . Husky's Goal Line Found Only Twice No Running Play Reached it This Season; Bears Face Tough Defense; SEATTLE, Nov. 6-(,!P)-.The California Bears will have to 'kick field goals or run back kicks for touchdowns to conquer Washing ton at Berkeley Saturday if ipast performances by Husky rivals are any criterion. Only two touchdowns have been scored against the' Huskies this season, one by Santa Clara in running back a kickoff, ! and the other by Montana on a long forward pass. Stanford, the only team to de feat Washington, gained its points on two field goals kicked by Monk Moscript, its great end. Challenge to Bears This- impressive defensive; re cord challenges the undefeated California team which is charging pell-mell toward the Pacific coast championship. , The Huskies, at the same time, have much respect for the power ful forward lin? of California,' and have laid plans to shoot for vic tory through the air. The Washington squad,'! 33 strong, and every man in excel lent condition, left by train for the south last night. :l Will Amend City Bonding Proposal Continued from Page 1) tlon to the people, provided; the state would acquire a substantial tract for future acquisition, jj Billa approved on third read ing in the senate were the follow ing: S. B. 70, by Bynon Providing that legacies and gifts to munici pal corporations shall not be credited to the general fund.jj S. B. 62, by Wallace Relating to the state board of aeronautics and outlining their qualifications. S. B. 52. by judiciary commit tee To validate and ratify pro ceedings heretofore taken In con nection with the issuance of i wa ter district bonds. H. B. 10. by Angell Providing for a supplement to the Oregon code. ! The following new bill was In troduced: "A S. B. la. by Aitkin Providing that milk Shall be provided!, for school children under , 14 years of age. ' Budget Meeting Is Slated (Continued rvom Page 11 that it is to use the same tax as last year, 1137.068.33, for the state quota in drawing Its tenta tive budget. Unless the "present special session of the legislature upsets the tax picture in its clos ing days, the county court': will have no new or Increased revenue to raise for state purposes.; Ad vance indications were that the budget committee will be able to cnt about $11,000 from the ele mentary school sum included in the 1935 budget. This fund will run about $85,213 this year, com pared to 196,000 last year. Or Cban Chinese Medicine Co. Without operation -most ailments of stomach, liver, glands, skin and nr.. lnary system of men nd women can be removed by nsing oar remedies 4 in ! business. Licensed Naturo nathlc Physicians. i 303 H uonrx street, ! ioim, f Jhertv of. -- flee open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 10 A. ftl. to 1 P. 0 t. M. to 7. f! Consultation, Blood OalOs Cksa" --- --- vTi Testa free of charge. Today Jj . a. Li. U ' - ; . i r r , jSf Independence Defeats Amity Football Team On Single Touchdoicn INDEPENDENCE. Nov. 6. In dependence high school defeated Amity high school 7 to 0 in the football game played Tuesday aft ernoon. The touchdown was made in the second quarter o( the ball game, when the local squad made two unsuccessful attempts near the goal line. Finally Junior Hart man made a long reverse run to the 3-yard line. Raymond Corbett took the ball over by a line smash. H a r t m a n converted the extra point. Monmouth Beats Sheridan, 13 to 6 MONMOUTH, Nov. 6 Mon mouth high school's grid squad defeated Sheridan high 13-6 Mon day afternoon in the most stub bornly contested game of their season. Receiving the kickoff Monmouth started a steady march for the goal line. End runs, one completed forward pass, and line smashes with Riney a full doing most of the ball packing, punched the goal line, and added one point by kicking goal. : Beginning the second half the Sheridan boys were not to be de nied a touchdown. End runs and off tackle line drives put the ball over, but they were unable ijto convert the extra point. In the. fourth period Sheridan was forced to punt after trying desperately to gain ground on straight football. The locals took the ball on their own 25 yard line and began backing their oppon ents down the field, gaining on end runs and line plunges. Then Warrick, Monmouth's right tackle took the ball on an off signal play, advancing to Sheridan's 12 yard line. With one minute left to play. Quarterback Riddell grabbed the ball for a wide sweeping left end run and scored. Riney failed to convert. Aumsville will play here Fri day afternoon and is expected ijto furnish one of the most spectacu lar games of 'the home team's schedule. Last of Marble Board Cases is Disposed Qf The last of the marble board cases ( which arose the day after the city council banned these de vises from -the city early last month was cleared from the mu nicipal court docket yesterday. A representative of the Northwest Amusement company took a plea of guilty in place of R. M. Tay lor, confectionery pro'prietor, and paid a 110 tine. The board, which police tookr from Taylor's place was returned to the company, jits owner. I) f- " 4 SPECIAL WINTER EXCURSION FARES EAST in Air-Conditioned Coaches and in Tourist Sleeping Cars Effective daily NovmbT II, 1935, to May 14. 1936. Return UmH tlx months. Stopover priv0ogm$. EXAMPLES! ROUND-TUP TO CHICAGO rtOMrorriAKO ,N A10 p wIMTOUWST $"f"725 COACHES OU SLEEPING CARS U.tOW PRICED MEALS t yV H" CoaciM and Tourist SlMplng Car : tml I Breakfast 2Sc Luncheon 30c : DI LUXE COACHESNEW TYPE TOURIST SLEEPERS as, corortoU, pv'mt, raitful! Air ragwlatarf to proper toaiporohtro and Mikity. ToorUt Sloojpors borth iighta, convenient drawing room. Coewfceo reclining eoat free pOJewv porter service. The Perrlemd 1 end PecHU lho.be d. Fine, fad, daily Mrvtce . te Salt Lake dty, Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Lewis, Okooo. . For All Travel Information and Reservations Ticket Office and Travel Berean Broadway and Washington, Portland, Oregon - t t . '- . ft --. 1 - ; 1 Irish and Rears, Madigan's Guess Thinks They'll Clash in Rose Bowl Although Huskies May Win NEW YORK, Nov. 6-JP)-lt Is "Slip" Madigan's guess that No ttre Dame and California will line up against each other in the next Rose Bowl football classic, Janu ary 1. 1 Madigan, head coach at St, Mary's in California, reached New York today with the latest grid iron gossip from the far west. His Gaels meet Fordham here Satur day. "I feel sure California will be thft western team and if it is, it will invite Notre Dame. California has been trying to play Notre Dame for a long time," he said. The Golden Bears are the only undefeated major eleven on the coast. Madigan doesn't believe California will go through with out a reverse, but he says it has the best chance of any of the big ger teams to finish with only one defeat. Picks Washington "California has a fine club. I wouldn't call it a great team and personally I believe Washington will beat it. But California keeps on winning and that's what counts." "Slip" thinks Jimmy Phelan's Washington team, although de feated by Stanford, is the coast's strongest eleven. "There is a famine of outstand ing linemen on the coast this sea son, but there are plenty of good backs. I'd like to see a better center than Jorgensen, though," he declared. No Snooper, Says Methodist Coach DALLAS, Nov. 6. - (JP) - Coach Madison Bell of Southern Meth odist university today wired Los Angeles sports editors areitera tion of his statement that S.M.U. did not protest the eligibility of Ted Key, mystery fullback of the U.C.L.A. Bruins. The Mustangs of S.M.U. play the Califomians in Los Angeles Monday. " , The telegram said: "I want to make clear the fact that Southern Methodist univer sity at no' time protested the use of Key at U.C.L.A. "Our only communication with them was for the purpose of giv ing them information for their own protection. "We are perfectly willing for them to handle the- matter as they see fit and we . expect to have nothing to do with tbe matter." Dinner 35c Klamath Game Under Dispute . - ! t Medford Given Score f by Medford Umpire jSay Pelican Rooters KLAMATH FALLS. Ore, Nov. 8-CPr-Charges, counter charges and denials relative to Med ford's 19 to 14 victory over the Klamath Falls grid team here Saturday filled the air today and in some Quarters talk of severing athletic relations between the two rivals developed. The dispute Involved the win ning touchdown, resulting; from a pass, in the final moments! of the game. !'; Klamath Falls was leading 14 to 13 with less than a minute to go. A pass. Smith to Kuntiman, was ruled completed and six points were added to give Med ford the victory by decision of Umpire Howard Scheffel of Med ford. Scheffel had consented to umpire after Al Hopkins of Caves was delayed. Coach Les Avrit of Klamath Falls said. ; Linn Roycroft, head linesman, and Dr. George Wright, one of the timekeepers, both of Klamath Falls; said they believed the ball had not gone over the goal line but had been- downed 18 inches short of a touchdown. Jerry Je rome of Medford, previously quo ted as having agreed with the Klamath Falls' version, denied he had "said any such thing." Would Play Over 1 Bill Bowerman, Medford coach, today said " a fine way to settle it would be for Klamath' Falls to come to Medford on No. 16 or any other date and replay the game. I will guarantee them a 50 to 0 defeat. Medford will pay all expenses." ; ' Coach Avrit of Klamath said he planned no fermal -protest. Principal L. B. Emery of Klamath said he was willing to offer the whole situation to the State High School Athletic association for in vestigation. Excursion For Eugene Game Monday Proposed Talk of running an excursion to enable a large number of Salem high school students to attend the Armistice day football game at Eugene Monday was going the rounds at the building yesterday but Principal Fred D. Wolf said no decision had been made on the matter. A preliminary surve in dicated comparatively few stu dents were interested in an excur sion. ;; Grayson May Not j Play Against U.SJC. Eleven STAXFORD UNIV EflSITT, Calif., Nov. 6-(P)-Unless Bobby Grayson's frequently-strained an kle shows definite signs of im provement in the next few days the Ail-American fullback and mainstay of the Stanford offense will see no action against C S. C. Saturday. Coach "Tiny; rbornhtlI said last night aftter practice. Feldman Wins Bout NEW YORK, Nov. 6.-K)-Ale Feldman, 182, of New ; York, a leading contender for ijb,e light heavyweight championship now held by John Henry Lewis, stop ped Johnny Krieger, 169', of Jersey City in the fourth round of a ten-round feature match at Mec ca Temple tonight. U NOW GOING ON Hot Watbr Bottles cnCo)s& gTy i . SSor Buy Your Drug Xecc" s - 2 for the Price of 1 - All This Week Voolpcrt & Legg, Drugs Corner Liberty and Court Phone 3444 Would you like to know more about telephone service or some special application of it to your home and your particular need? Just call us or drop us a line with your address we are. at your? aenrice. The Pacific Telepho:e .740 State Street Profusion of "Keys" To Unlock Mystery; "Ox" Declai Ted of Ucla His Brother, Eligible AMARILLO, Texas, Nov. 6 -fP) The investigation into the eligi bility of R. F. "Honest I'm Ted" Key, University of California at Los Angeles' bruising fullback, bogged down tonight into , a me thodical - study of the fax-flung Key family. . Dean E. F. Miller of the U. C. L. A. faculty- searched high and low here for persons who could tell him whether the full back is R. F. "Ted" Key, as he Notre Dame May Be Upset Victim Takes Imagination to See Northwestern But It's in Excellent Spot By ALAN GOULD NEW YORK, Nov. 6.-iirVNotrej Dame, the people's choice for pig skin pre-eminence as well as the Rose Bowl and the laurel wreath, may need a fresh supply of punts prayers and passes this Saturday; No doubt Head Coach Elmer Layden has advised his young men. to discard the clippings they have been collecting this week and concentrate on the job of beating Northwestern. Tbe loss of Andy Pilney, Notre Dame's All-America candidate for backfield honors, makes the task no easier. It seems Pilney will return to the football wars by the time, the Irish play Army but this will not be so im portant if Northwestern is not dis posed of in the meantime. 1 Irish Should Win It requires imagination, rath er than statistics, to suggest Northwestern has a chance to up set Notre Dame this Saturday at South Bend. The Irish should win, any way you figure it, but the Wildcats are in a fine spot to spring one of the year's 'biggest reversals. Northwestern, under Lynn Waldorf's coaching has been getting better each Saturday. The team threw a scare into Minne sota and licked Illinois in its last two starts. The rush to nominate Notre Dame and California for the Rose Bowl may prove to be premature elsewhere. California's unbeaten Bears also are on the spot in their game against Washington's Hus kies. Washington was picked early this fall to top the Pacific coast list, only to be knocked off by Stanford, 6 to 0. The Huskies are not only eager but well equipped to retaliate, at California's ex pense. Injuries Cause Changes In Silverton's Lineup "For McMinnville Battle SILVERTON, Nov. 0 Silverton will enter the game with-McMinnville here Friday with a patched lineup due to injuries received in the Lebanon garner Wart., left half, received a clipped ankle bone and will be out for the! .season. Busch, quarterback, suffered a wrenched thumb. Arbuckle, left ends, received a wrist sprain and Art Canou, left tackle came out with a badly bruised arm. ' The lineup will be patched np and is rather problematical as to starting out. McMinnville has a speedy lineup and a very heavy line. f - o o -7"ou ARE performing, in this X picture, many of the im portant items of home man agement. Yon are performing them without going to the ex pense of making visits to sep arated place about the city. You are conserving your strength. You will have useful hours lct for other things. and Telegraph Company Telephone 3101 ' Fails So Far 5S registered at the coast school, or Clois "Shorty" Key. a brotierwho played for three seasons with the Texas School of Mines at El Paso. HI "It looks like we have! lost a good fullback if we can't locate some of the missing witnesses,. Dean Miller said. ' II He conferred with R.! FY "Ted" Key of Amarillo, a salesman, a"hd Earl "Ox" Key, former Southern Methodist grid idol, but declined to reveal his findings. Earl insist ed the U. C. L. A. fullback js his brother and eligible to play at any college, r As for the mysterious CJois "Shorty" Key. he said: . j lj "The last time I heard of him he was playing professional base ball in Mexico."' If Earl said "the R. P. Key living at Amarillo is my cousin, and is the son of R. I. Key, who was at Vernon. Texas, the last time I knew. J. D. Key la my father and the father of the Ted at U. C. li. 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