' -. ." t ."--",' ,UiV..',J.tJ;; ' -Cri'AGC'TWO .The OHEGON STATESMAN, Calen. Oresori, Fridar Ilornia November 23, 1935 r JlEiings At lUiiii rr I "'. .... ; , j J ; ' - " j . Deepest 1 of. Trick .PLaya Employed by Haukmen; & Tinal Score 7.7-"' ;k i (Continued from Pas 1) ' Iho ball back to Smith, close on to the line. , Smith, shored the tall back to ilaers and that was the forward pasa, though It probably -traveled , six . laches. .Than 8mlth started out. with ln ierference ahead of him, toward the opposite end ' and Medford, thinking o( tht two . previous plays, swept that war to set him. Afaers, waiting Just a second, then straightening p ran until downed on the Medford fire yard line. . Such a pass is legal la the high school rules which approTs .passes from anywhere behind the Jlne of scrimmage. . Chapman dashed through left Jackie to score on the following play and Jerry, Cottew backed over for the extra point. -Medford Is Right ; ?ck With Drive k Medford came right, back to wren It up. Returning a poor Salem .kick-oft to the Medford 48-yard ktripe Sakralda, Tiger fallback, iand Lewis, halfback, started off in a parade that ended nine plays Vter with Sakralda plunging the tnal foot on fourth down. Medford really turned on the iteam In that drive, Sakralda and Lewis each getting away for 14- ifrard gains. fi Lewis went around right end for the extra point.' t Salem threatened with passes In the flnalminutes of the game jbut. with seconds left, fumbled ion the Medford 19-yard line after iMaers had Intercepted Sakraida's -pass and Chapman had tossed leaves of9and IS yards to Hof--ert and 'Litwiller. V fi Both teams had scoring chances In the first half but lost the ball jon downs. Salem reached the 'Med ford 12-yard line in the. first Quarter after a drive from its own (40-yard stripe but failed to make Another first down by Inches. i Salem held on the three-yard Hoe just before the close of the . frst half after Medford had driv en, with scrimmage .plays and . passes, from its own 31-yard line :to the Salem 12, been? repulsed br sj 16-yard holding penalty and theq come back with a 22-yard leasa from Sakralda to Wilson , jThef pass failed to give Medford ia first down, however, and Cbap ;a batted to earth a 'last down jlittempt to score via air. n Medford gained 174 yards from ipcrimmage to Salem's 15 8. Med ford! attempted '10 passes, com pleted five for a gain of 71 yards. ;iour were incomplete and on intercepted. Salem tried seven passes, completing two for a gain ef 25 yards. One was intercepted. , Carl Chapman's ability to Jani his way t through heavy - traffic made him: the Vikings best ground-gainer while Sakralda and Louis were Med ford's best yard age makers. .., Linen n and iiimmtrr- Sfcdfortl Salem Litwiller Spencer . . King Maers Hansell wai usou . L.E. . JEhrbert ...... LT Henry ....... LG.. Stevens ......tC. j.., .Crow ........RO.... Offerd ...... .RT... . . Gottfried ayliss Re Jones Bar Q Chapman Ettlnger J....LH. Smitl, Morris ,.RH. , Nelson Sakralda, . ... .FB Cottew ;? Score by periods: Medford j . ... a A a t t ,w w m m 9 9 m W V 1 Salem... .......o o 7 0 7 f ii Scoring: Touchdown for Med 'Xord. Sakralda: point after tourta. down. Lewis. Touchdown for Sa f4m Chapman; point after touch-down. Cottew. '" Officials: Referee. Stritmater. Lebanon; umpire, Robbing, Leb- Muva; ncau linesman, Fatton, Sa lem a) Municipal' Milk I Supplied Oakland j . OAKLAND. Calif., Nov. lS-i-TP Resident of this city and of Berkeley, a college eity to the .north, drank municipal milk to BighL " U ' Most or the milk distributed In the two communities mas handled fn processing plants taken over by ilie cities through special powers toted by the councils 4 Emergency action was taken In response to a tleup In the milk dis tributing systems which followed fabor disputes. ! "v V STATE TodayEastern circuit ran- deville". on Jthe screen Jane Withers in "Pepper.- , ' HOLLTWOOO P Today T wo features, Speed.- with James Stew- art, Una Merkel and Ralph Morgan and Col. Tim Me- Cor tn -Lightning Bill Car- ''. Bon". : -- CRASD Today Double bill, James Dunn in "Come Closer Folks" and Ralph Bellamy In "The. Man Who Lived Twice. r - - -I ELSIXORB Today Double bill, Sinclair Lewis's "Dodsworth- with , Walter , Huston apd Jack Haley In "Mr. Cinderella. . Saturday "Cain and Mable with Clark Gable and Mar lon Davles. 1 CAPITOL Today, one day only stage Major .Bowes Transcontin ental revue and Sybil Jason In "The Captain's Kid." Saturday only, double bill Dick Foran In "California Mail" and "Calling AU Cars." The Call Board . :: : i- r IteaYy seas wMcb baltered the & 8. Leonard & MUXer white the" ?reat Lakes freighter was en route from Detroit to Duhith almost - VtMlftti tut A a .. . . lit.. . . . Alorgenthau Asks RFC Be Retained Hooverl Administration's t Recovery Asencv Still Needed, Declaration WASHINGTON, Nov. 1MPr-A statement today by Secretary Mor geajthau favoring extension of the Reconstruction Finance .coroora- flop's lending powers blasted re ports that be and Jesse H. Jones, chaitrman of the agency, were at odds over (he future of the big lending corporation. Telling his press conference the time has net come yet when we can dispense withr the RFC," the treasury chief; added that should a congressional committee request his opinion he would rec ommend a year's extension of its lending powers. s Unless ! this authority t is con tinued by congress, the pioneer re covery agency must start liquida tion Jan. 31. tl certainly feel, Morgenthau said, "that It should be extended as la ledingj agency." hairmah Jones said recently a gri dual reduction of RFC activ ities was being effected but that some provision should be made foil continuing commodity and rail road loans. These have accounted tot a major part of thecorpora tiojn'a lendiog-in recent months. Organizefd in February,- 1932, under the Hoover administration. the corporation has made 16,292, 000,000 in bans to industry and $41241.000,000 has been repaid. When . Its ; lending powers termin ate finally!, the law provides it mst be j liquidated within ten years. Green Hurls New W- ' . w U narges at Lewis ' (Continued, from Page 1) which have arisen by our actions. you have shown that whom the gdds would destroy they first make mad. "Our responsibilities as lead- era j of men call for the exercise of tolerance, moderation and con structive thinking. "Regardless of any attempt which you may make: to secure personal revenge, I shall follow a policy of patience and self-control supported by a willingness to meet and settle differences in man- fashion at the conference table," Green also sent a' telegram to Charles P. Howard; accusing. the president : of the International Typographical union of blocking efforts to end the Lewis revolt amicably. Howard is. secretary of Lewis rebel committee. Convention developments: By an i overwhelming vote the delegates! denounced current sea men's strikes on the Atlantic coast as the work of communists. j Spencer Miller, director of the workers education bureau coun seled the convention to make peace With Leu-is rebels to present a United front to threats of fascism. j Max Zaritsky, president of the United Hatters, tap and millinery Workers, and. the only rebel leader ait the' convention; likewise urged reunion to combat "the barons of industry. . s J Geen denied all the allegations before the miner's executive board. Extensive Strike In Mexico Feared MEXICO CITT. Not. 19-4JP- Ihdustrialists! expressed fear to night lest a scheduled strike in the oSl fields, coupled with new -leg islation i authorising distribution ojf private wealth, might end In the confiscation of property to be Terated by labor groups. The oil strike was set for Nor. 2!9 after - employers refused de mands for labor reform, including wage Increases and a - ten-week vacation with pay. j The wealth distribution legisla tion was passed last night by the Mexican legislature and Is sim ilar to the already effective Agar tan reform laws, under which large ranches have been broken into small farms and alloted to work ers. . : ry'i r . One executive i of a large - on company pointed to the Agrarian reform to support his contention 0 o Amusement Ads May Be Found Today on Page 18 Great Lakes Freighter Nearly the government might give a "rer olutionary" interpretation to the new wealth distribution law and turn over oil properties to work ers to be operated "for the. com mon good If a strike in the in dustry lasted over a long period. China Aroused at Invasion in North Continued from Page 1) Tl, provincial governor of Suiyu an, today termed the reported in vasion of his territory by Japan ese "a bluff." ; . The , Japanese, j he predicted, "are really not desirous of preci pitating a serious Invasion of Sulyuan." i He declared "the NipponeseMn tent was to Influence discussions In Nanking "as a .threat there -is worse coming if the negotiations are not satisfactory to Japan 4h TOKYO. Nov. 19-;p)-Japanese newspapers asserted today "ner vousness" j in Shanghai over re cently reported north China dis turbances "was accentuated by ad vices that Major Samuel V. Con stant, United States assistant mili tary attache at Peiplng, had reach ed headquarters of Suiyuan pro vincial forces at Pingtichuan. He also Inspected eastern dis tricts of Suiyuan province, it. was reported here, and received a re port of conditions from. Gov. Gen. Fn Tso-YI. Britain Questions Fascist Blockade LONDON, Nov. 19.-P)-The British government tonight in-i structed Sir Henry G. Chilton,! ambassador to Spain, teTask the Insurgent .'government for an ex planation of its reported .warninr it would blockade Barcelona. Chilton, was in Hendaye, France, Just across the' border from Spain. Informed sources Interpreted the order as another,. British humanitarian effort In the Span ish civil war. The note was believed to con tain an appeal to the Burgos gov ernment to respect the status of Barcelona's non-combatant as well as an effort to gain further information on General-Francisco Franco's ; intentions ' In the Medi terranean. ". 1 Social Security Explanations to f Be Spread Afar WASHINGTON. Nov. 1 S.-JPU. The social security board today, with John G. Wlnanfr back at the helm, began a national campaign to familiarise approximately 2Si 000,0001 Industrial employes with the old-age pension plan for which they will receive application blanks on November 24. Chairman WInant announced he would make a' coast-to-coast broadcast from 7:15 to 730 p. nt (eastern, standard time) Monday, explaining the program. Tomor row a flood of posters and news-reel movies will be released.' I A special group has been as signed by the department of pub lications to prepare material for foreign language newspapers. It follows closely the questions-and- answera explanation of the social security act now appearing many papers. .. . In Violation Charged R. W. Schneider,! 4SS , Jeffer son street.-was booked by city police last night on a charge of falling to heed a stop sign. ; ( Ccri't dec? Uita N Css Fressss Curt Tf r stvmaea la mpmtt. If TM aat Hi r Bd BWfal U kUwttn mmu (tM ( Adtvrika. Adlariks ridm m of mmm til tlwu fowl ilm at mt BOTH msmt mm lower Wwcla. AAMrlkk et Tmj'mDng turn. USB CHINESE HERBS Wbes Others Fall CHARLIE CHAN 'Chinese Herb REMEDIES Healiae vtrtoe has been tested haadreds years, for "chronic all meats, nose, tbroat. Kinanltis. catarrh, ears, -1 longs, asthma, chronic cough, stomach, gaU stones, colitis, constipation, diabctia, kidneys bladder, heart, blood nerves, nenralgla, rheumatism, ; high blood press are, gland, skia sores, male, female and chil dren, disorders, - ; ; ; S. B. Pong, 8 years . practice la China, Herb SpecUIlst. 12 N. Commercial .61 Salens, Ore. Office hoars 0 to a p. m. Sunday and Wed. 9 to 10 a.m. 1 V (JUJJ Loses Cargo in Heavy Seas Icy decks, but the ship managed to make port, above, wrttb a number of the tnachlnesi .rnnnmny dangling f rom the decks. shewn to this photo., 7" Ta 1 DomDs piriKe in Heart of Madrid Postoffice Ripped Apart; - Streetcars j Jerked in c Air by Explosion MADRID, Nor. lJ.-iVFas-cist aerial bombs struck in the heart of Madrid . again today, partly wrecking the postoffice, the central bank and an ornate palace, once the home of fthe Marquis of Linares. , Crowds in the postoffice were sliced down by shrapnel from the exploding bomba, and unestlmat ed numbers were filled. I The front of the building was ripped apart, and "windows shat tered. There was: an unconfirm ed, report that one of the bombs crashed through the main floor of the building. : Two street cars . were Jerked into the air by the force of . the tearful explosions In Cibeles square, near the postoffice. The crowded strap-hangers in the cars were ! cut down by the shrapnel. Most of them were believed killed; Diagonally across from the postoffice, the palace of the Mar quis, more recently used as a government barracks, was parti ally torn down by another bomb, A third bomb, apparently aim ed at the nearby war ministry. . 4 -3-" S . t -- Mil .-.,.'----JTai goring P1C - in refinlng-n of Wgh compression rem Ute model cm. And gasoline in any car-new muIiv. fBiiaxtu It ST a u crashed through several floors ot the Central "bank, ( formerly the Banco De Sit De La, Plata, (Fascist leaders outside Mad rid : reported ' their forces had wheeled artillery within the city limits! of Madrid to reply at closer range j to government shel ling.) Roosevelt Facing Neptune's Pranks ' t v. , ABOARD ju. S. 8. CHESTER. At Sea, Nori l.-iffy-MKIng Nep- tune". sent his emissaries tonlghtJ to the U. 81 S. Chester and the Cruiser Indianapolis bearing President Roosevelt to the Inter American peace conference In Buenos Aires. . - The presidential party was giv en formal notice that Neptune demanded - his "loyal sujbects" lay plans to purge the "pusil lanimous pollywogs" of dockyard barnacles - before entering his kingdom atithe equator. Whether f the president, who never jcrossed the equator, .. ould be subjected to the same practical Jokes as the other mem bers of the party, was a matter ot conjecture tonight. The vessels were some 420 miles' east' of Miami, steaming along at 2( knots In a calm sea beneath a cloudy sky. Heavy vinter clothing was doffed for isummer attire as the weather became steadily warmer. ' U "A :.,--i- ..... S ? - 1 f: I i ' -f i, ombtc m i Ft ( c J Seek to Solve ". tabor Trouble Progress . Toward Peace t Reported in Some of r Numerous Strikes . (Continued from Page 1) to ' end a six months walkout. Strikers at Dion, N. Y., and Mld dleton, Conn plants also rejected the company offer on grounds It did . not guarantee union r recog nition. i;i ; ; ' ..-, l At Cincinnati, O., a machinists union rejected a company offer to reopen a . Remington Rand plant im Norwood, closed more . than three months ago because of vio lence which accompanied the strike which began last May. A i"alt-down" Protest of work era at the Goodyear Tire tt Rub ber Co.. in Akron, 0 over rate and stock conditions was ; settled after a conference with company executives and 4000 men went back to their posts. , Another "sit-down strike of 500 men in the Atlanta, Ga., as sembly plant of the Fisher Body corporation ended in a promised amicable settlement. Musicians Demand Larger Orchestras Musicians of the Philadelphia orchestra Joined pickets In front of five downtown moving picture theatres as a protest against the decrease in the number of musi cians employed. At Tulsa, Okla., leaders of oil field, gas well and refinery work ers called their men into a meet ing to decide whether . to strike because, they said, they were not satisfied with a fire per cent wage increase annbunced by the Mid Continent' Petroleum company. 7 Milk wagon' drivers struck in Oakland and Berkeley, Calif., and the bag Industry In San Francisco found Itself tied up by a walkout. Mexico expressed fears that a strike In the oil field scheduled fot,November 29 might bring con fiscation of property In Its wake. Second 'Victim Dies PORTLAND, Nov. 19-(ff)-Mrs. J. D. McCann, 45; died tonight of Injuries received in an accident that brought instant death to Mrs. Dollie Ryder. Mrs. Ryder was kill ed Tuesday. Chimney Fire Occurs A chimney fire occurred at 1570 North 18th street early last night. Firemen reported no loss. "" m 1 c 7histle Heralds Strike Armistice But All SKstake SEATTLE, N o r. 19 w-0P)-A ferry- whiaUe. "stuck here to day and its long and blatant bellowing ' started s - rumor away down"; on Gray 'Harbor the Maritime atrike had been : settled f . f ; . .4 - - v r Not only that, but In the ex change! of excited "telephone calls, , the confusion, became worse I confounded - until Se attle shippers heard that whis tles , were blowing at Aberdeen . ' in celebration of a strike trace -and Aberdeen rwhipper8"" heard " thera was merrymaking on Se attle's waterfront because ot S similar armlsUce. 1 - Investigation disclosed there was 1 no armistice, no celebra tion, only: a ferryboat whistle laaeed I repairs. .u.-. s To Be Rraudiated Hope For Accomplishment ; at -Americas' : Parley -f Voiced by Hull RIO DE ' JAKERIO, Not. 19 (ff) i-TJn it ed States Secretary of State Cornell Hull declared to night 211 American republics will meet at the, Inter-American Peace Conference : in Buenos Aires to repudiate Uthe philosophy which sends men! Into the battlefields. - Secreary Hull, who reached Rio De Janerio today at the head of the United States delegation en route to I the parley opening . De cember 1, spoke at a dinner in ris honor at the Brazilian foreign mlnlstryj 'j ' i He said the people of' America and of the whole world soon will insist oni peace. . "I f we American republics show a willingness to ratify the pledges of peace among us," Hull said, "the. people outside this hemisphere will not- be heedless to our example. ,:'a Results Expected ? The Inter-American conference, shows that American nations are determined to . remain af -peace while being strong, to; Impede wars fori the self-advancement of others and; to promote trade. Jose Carlos Macedo Soares, Bra zilian foreign ; minister, voiced disapproval of ; any attempt by the conference to create an Amer ican league of nations or an Inter American tribunal. . 1 - VT Ehilosopliy .tat 88$ mm rtf s - v .-THI'xs.TN X v. Ji Ji He asserted the Pan-American union, which has headquarters in Washington baa. been highly useful and said . there was "no reason to reduce Its efficiency" by creating an . unnecessary new nrrnn tnt Inn Emphasizing ' bis objection to any movo to establsh an Inter American court, . Macedo Soares asserted: - HIRE'S TRAVEL ' ECONOMY la mHWam t wkM Uw Md trip srw dslly Is MWy M-Ulaa MdBs . sfferstfeiidoOTlewpriesd MMli.high pead scHsdwIas, mtfn squIpiMst, Ir-condlllAMd CMafert, kilM se Rvm ntt-a StoiMlanl Hckett 30 days, lssnBdlate (rullsMM-TevrW) nd Coeck Mckets e-mentks, cmr or ioitrvAMO NmKxtrmrmrm fivs MiOngi Menrhly m 1,7,13. If, 25. 39 hsvri rortl and -Chicago. Air omTC Wowd Cesdi.Stondard Pvllman,D!nr levng famom CentiMntol DiMiS PORTLAND RO 51 -Daily Coaches, rullntan.Tovrist and Standard " Slsapart, ObiwvoWaw iewnga, Plaer. All aiMonditfoaad. ' PA C I Fl C LI M I T E D - Dally ' Alr-condittanad Coach and Standard Slaeoars. Also Co fa Obtarvation Car. Maals at Coffaa Shea Prlca. LOW PRICED MEALS rarlar Imln and Proa ruiawa In Caeai B trains. For details, consalt Southern la ciflc Agent or" write J. C Cam ming. Asst. 3.1 P. " P. Agt. Plttock Block, Portland I 4.1 Jik ... 1 ivn K . ( P 1 V 1 5) lit : v-, r -1 . J v; ? -