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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1937)
' ' ": '' PAGE EIGOT OltEGON STATESMAN Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, October 3, 1937 K It' ll ri FranldiriWilK Oppose Piluso Last "Week's Referee may ' Seek to ct Even for - Rough Treatment Wild Ernie Pllnso and tough, wiry Noel Franklin of Portland will meet in a. one-hour "hate" battla at the Salem armory Tues day night. Referee will be Bobby Barns. . ' The bout, surprising climax to - a day ot negotiations, was announ ced late last nisbt by Promoter - Herb Owen, who had sought for evera! hoars to persuade Rod -Venton to accept Piluso's "noth ing barred" ; challenge. Fenton flatly refused to meet Pllnso In a rematch, under any rules, and Pi- raso then asked for a chance at Franklin. "111 force Fenton into a match with me by giving Franklin each , a lacing that the fans will demand it." the Rose City Italian bellowed ver the long-distance telephone. Franklin was referee of the main event bout last week which Fenton won. Piluso, outraged by - what he considered an inexcusable decision, kayoed Franklin and started a free-for-all riot ' Harry Elliott, in jn red during T the melee, broke his contract with '.. Owen yesterday, "I'm through as referee here, he said. "I don't have to take that sort of thing f rom these guys, and I'm not hay .. tng any 'more Tor awhile." Owen Immediately signed -up Burns for the third man. " Promoter Owen hopes to have supporting matches lined up by Tuesday. Columbus Finally Loses to Newark COLUMBUS, O-, Oct. 2 Newark's Bears, champions of the international league, combined 11 biagles with five Columbus errors tonight to defeat the Red Birds, 8 to 1, in the fourth game of the little world series. It was Newark's first win in four starts, the Birds baring swept the three games played at Newark. "The Silyer Rood Mystery" . CHAPTER XVII I left the house and started down ihe path. I saw some sparks and .heard a tapping at the stile. It was, I guessed, one of the butlers, Da vison or Mason, knocking ashes from a pipe. They were still gos siping about the crime. Why not? They were as human and curious as any less dignified servants. .They stopped talking as I ap proached and stood respectfully aide. I stopped at the stile. r.1 dont suppose," I said, "that yea have any theories that might help UT" "I don't know many of the cir cumstances, sir. Mason said, "only what Mr. Davison has told me, and . what I couldn't help overhearing at the house," : "I haven't so very much to tell him. sir, said Davison,-"but yon know we are discreet. We wouldn't talk to the servants." Dignified birds, these butlers. They , never ignite consider them selves to be servants. At least, they rate themselves ten levels above the other servants. "That's all rieht. A man wouldn't be human if be didat want to dis cuss this mystery. What do you Una about it, DavwonT' "I scarcely know what to think sir. I realise that, being in the house, as Mr.. Mason just pointed but to me, puts me in a position of having the opportunity. "But no motive, remember, I said that, Mr. Davison,". Mason said. quickly. . "We know Davison is out of it." I declared. "I thought you might nave some tneones." , "That professor chap, sir it must have been. "It looks that way to me, sir," Mason agreed. "I am going to tell yon something In conscience, about Brauman " "Oh yes, his suicide, sir. "i Even so, I believe it had nothing to do - with tt. He had no raao for com mitUng the crime." - "Well, begging your pardon, sir, but how can any man know what reasons another man may have! ' Mason asked. - "A good point, but Brauman didn t commit suicide, be was mur : cored.". "What!"-, Mason aaid it with .such force, and ia such a high-pitched voice, that It startled me. Absolutely. He was murdered. Ilia skuQ was fractured with some . blunt object, a rock, perhaps. The doctors say he was dead before he was hanged." ' "Murdered, air? Peter Brauman murdered I" i . Davison was aghast, plainly. "But who would want to murder av sample gardener, Mr. Stevenson?' "Year guess Is as good as ours, Mason., I said, cheerfully. "He eouldnt have had any con nection with the erune with Mr. if entieth's murder, do you think?" ; Uasoa asked. : "W dont know what to think. What do you think?" "I dont know, air it gets more muddled all the time," Davison re plied. - "Hew are we to know that this - gardener didn't havt soma enemy? ; He might have wronged someone , a girl, perhaps, and her brother or fatherI suppose It's just all guess work, Mr. btevenson, but what am trying to get at is that it doesn't necessarily follow that because this gardener was murdered, he had anything to do with, or any knowl edge about the ItUlxng of Mr. Mon- tieth." "It doesnt taecessarilv folio Mason, true, but the chances are a thousand to one that whoever Grid (By The Associated Press) .. Far West Oregon State 6; California 24. Stanford ; Oregon T. Idaho 0; WSC li. Southern Oregon Normal t; Al bany v -Washington 7; USC b. Linfield 7; St. Martin's 0. U of Wyoming 7; U of Nevada t. i Pacific V 0; U of Portland SC. San Francisco 31; Daniel Ba ker (Tex.) 0. San Diego State 3; Occidental 0. Idaho (Southern branch) 45; Ricks 0. Pomona 18; Whittier 7 Kauris Albright 20; Gtmera. 0. Army 21; Clemtton 6. Boston college 21; Kansas State 7. Boston U 33; Lehigh 8. .Brown 13; Rhode Island 6. New York U 18; Carnegie Tech 14. Columbia 40; Williams . Cornell 40; Colgate 7. Dartmouth 31 r Amherst 7. Catholic TJ 14; Loyola (New Or leans) 0. Fordham Franklin Mar shall 0. City college of New York 24; Brooiilyn college 0. Georgetown 38; Shenandoah 0. Harvard 64; Springfield 0. Holy Cross 7; Providence 0. Lafayette 33; Upsala 0. Texas A & M 14; Manhattan 7. Bowdoin 12; Massachusetts State 0. . New Hampshire 21; Bates 12. Penn State 32; Gettysburg 6. Pennsylvania 23; Maryland 21. Princeton 26; Virginia 0. Vermont 7 ; Renssalaer Poly 6. Rutgers 20; Hampden-Sydney 0. Randolph-Macon 26; St. John's (Annapolis) 7. Tufts 20; Colby 7. Union 9; Hobart 0. Navy 32: The Citadel 0. Ursinus 11; Delaware 6. Villanova 42; Penn Military 0. Wesleyan 17; Connecticut State . Pittsburgh 20; West Virginia 0. Yale 26 Maine 0. Muhlenberg 18; St. Lawrence 6. Buffalo 13; Allegheny 7. .Trinity 25; Hamilton 0. By LEWIS ALLEN BROWNE killed Mr. Montieth had reasons for wanting Brauman silenced." It will be solved, sirdon't yon think?" Davison asked, with appar ent concern. "I have high hopes," I said, and went through the stile and on to the house, leaving them with their pipes and gossip. They were excellent butlers, but no help at all witH the ories. X got the ear and drove to Great- port. I had several reasons for this. wanted to find out what Foxeroft had learned about Griswold at Meadowville, and to see if Sergeant Harper was back from Kingsbury. xhen, again, I wanted to stroll about and sea if Nola Morin did buy a few things and go to see a picture, as she told us she intend ed to do,, or if she went there to meet someone. : Wallace Foxeroft was in his of fice. I have plenty of work, aside from this case," he said, half apol ogetically. "What about Griswold?" "He took a plane to Newark. I sent a man by another plane on to Newark to try and find out where he went from there, but we've lost him. "Your man or Griswold?" "Griswold. Dont worry about my detectives. Harley, they are clever. My man finally found the taxi driv er who took the passenger from Meadowville to the Grand Central. Of course there is no means of find ing out what train he took or where he went" "Or whether it was a ruse, and he walked through the station and is hiding in New York." "That's so, Harley", I told him about the note I found ia Miss Morin's suit case, and he read the copy, making a copy for himself. It might mean anything. Now if Griswold hadn't run away like this, and thereby practically proved his guilt I would say this might have some bearing on the ease, but i it ia, it might mean anything." "But look here, Wally. dont you think she lied about , going to ask Mr. Montieth for a raise? Wasn't she going to obey this MW" and go down and tell him what was what?" Foxeroft pulled some papers to ward him, with a show of irritation. What the devil makes too so determined to try and clear Gris wold 2" he demanded. - "I only want to solve this thing, WaHy," I replied and turned to ro. "Ill have tn smrk half ti on other business," he told me, "but dont think I'm not moving heaven and earth to get my hands on Gris wold. I'm having his whole life his tory looked up. See you tomorrow." I went out and over to the office of the State Police. . Sergeant Harper was expected oacK very soon, 1 was told. Greatport has a large-sounding name but it's not much of a town. There were more residents In South Cove, ia summer, than in Great port. I went into the best picture house. There were two there. I thought, when my eyes got accus- tomefl to UM semi -darkness, I could see the handsome blonde head of Nola Mora. . I eouldnt locate her there er In the ether picture house. Sergeant Harper was back when I returned. :.. "The little I learned about Gris wold," he said, as soon as I came in, and without waiting for ma to ask, "teems to help him rather than incriminate him. His reputation is of the best there. The woman where he boards said that he had received a telephone call early In the morn ing. She called him and went about her work. She didnt hear a word said she never listened. The next thing she knew, Griswold had a suit case and was getting out his ear."' '.- - Scores Muskingum T; Washington A Jefferson 6. r Booth Georgia, 13; South Carolina 7. Tennessee 27; Virginia Poly 0. Georgia Tech 28; Mercer 9. Duke 34; Davidson . North Carolina 20; North Caro lina State 0. Washington A Le f; Rich mond 0. Vanderbllt 18; Chicago 0. Florida 18; Stetson 0. Virginia Military 20; William & Mary f. Centre 19; Oglethorpe 0. Auburn-Tulane, postponed un til Monday, rain. Alabama 65; Sewanee 0. Mississippi State 38; Howard 0. East Tennessee Teachers 12; West Carolina Teachers 0. Illinois Wesleyan 2 ; Louisiana Tech 0. Biidweet Washington U (St. Louis) 45; William Jewell 0. Hanover 14; Wabash 12. Toledo 19; Georgetown (Ky.) 0. Knox 20; Principla (III.)' . Cornell (la.) college 20; Law rence 0. Coe 20; Central (la.) . Earlham 19; Holbrook (Ohio) 0. St. Benedict's (Kan.) 20; Em poria Teachers 20 (tie). Nebraska 14; Minnesota I. Michigan State 19; Michigai 14. Ohio State 13; Purdne 0. Wisconsin 12; Marquette 0. Northwestern 33; Iowa State 0. Illinois 0; De Paul 0 (tie). Notre Dame 21; Drake 0. Kentucky 6; Xaxier (Cincin nati) 0. Wayne 19; Akron 13. Heidelberg 13; Kent State 7. Miami (Ohio) 75; Marietta 6. Mount Vernon 7; Hiram 7 (tie). Oberlin 2; Rochester 0. De Pauw 20; Rose Poly 0. Southwest Texas Christian 7; Arkansas 7 (tie). Centenary 7; Southern Metho dist C. Oklahoma 6; Rice 0., Tulsa 42; Central (Okla.) Teachers 6. Rocky Mountain Montana State 6; Utah State (tie). "What about the telephone? Did you trace it?" Tned to. The operator was rather dumb said she didn't know and made no record." "That's a shame, Sergeant. I'd give a great deal to know if that call came from say, yon can find out if anyone at South Cove ' put through a call to Kingsbury this morning!" Not this morning. I hope yon dont think I missed that bet. But a call was put through this after noon from the Montieth house what do yon make of that I" He was a trifle excited 9vtr this until I explained about having Mary put in a call for Griswold and learning that he had gone. "Well, we're back where we start ed, Mr. Stevenson. What little I did learn indicates that Griswold left in a hurry because of a tele phonecall and that it didnt come from South Cove." He started to tell me what Fox- croft had learned. I told him I had just seen Foxeroft. I went out and strolled around town some more, looking into such shops as I thought Nola Monn might patronize, candy shops, drug stores, magazine places and. the like. No sign of her. She was a woman easy to find because she was rather tall and unusually attract ive. No one would ever take her for an np-stairs maid. I gave it up and started to drive home. Luck was with me, in the form of an almost empty gas tank. I stopped at a filling station to get gas and noticed that the South Cove bus was parked just ahead of me. But I probably would never have noticed the bus if I hadn t seen Nola Morin heading for it. A rather good looking chap was with her. He didn't board the bus, merely said something and turned away. "Fill her up and park her here, IH be back right away," I told the station man. I got out of the car and followed the Morin woman's companion. It was no trick at all. He never looked back but walked down to River street and on to the river landing. He got is a small launch and left. I asked the attend ant at the landing if he knew the man. I saw him talking to the chap. - 'Used to live round here. Name a Fellows he's stayin over at Pine dale," he informed me. Pmedale was a strip of shore across the river, filled with cheap bungalows. I hurried back to Foxeroffa of fice, told him what I bad seen and asked him if he knew anyone named Fellows who used to live here. "Fellows? Tall, reddish hair?" "Couldn't see his hair, he was tall." - "There was a Wilbur Fellows, whose mother was once Montieth's housekeeper. He forged a check on Montieth, but managed to settle it without going up.f "Zowie! Wfflrar, eh? And that note of Morin's was signed 'W. This looks like something WaUyl" ; "Whatis that?" Foxeroft instantly forgot bis oth er office duties and picked up the copy of the note I had made. "Well," he smiled a rather wry smile, "W might mean anything, a last name or a first name. In fact my initial is W." Poor WaHy. Deeply in love with Mary Montieth, despite the knowl edge that she loved Howard Gris wold, he was still convinced that Griswold was guilty. It was a case, I believed, of the wish being father to the. thought, although I had to admit that there were many reasons for believing Griswold guilty. He had both opportunity and motive for the crime. - (To be continued) MMMt4 kf Kins rUBW 8aalct faa Real Irish Shine In Beating Drake McCarty and Such Achieve Most of Plaudits in Notre Dame Win SOUTH BEND, lad., Oct. t-Jfy-The Irish the real McCoy Irish swept Notre Dame to a 21 to 0 opening game triumph today over the Bulldogs ot Drake university. There was no one in the battle front named McCoy, but the Irish attack was powered by young men wiin me unmistakable old aod. names ot Nevin Francis McCor mick. Ja.ck Gregory McCarthy, Patrick Francis McCarty and Charles William O'Reilly There was a lot ot help contributed by Capt. Joe Zwers, Joe Juharlcb, Joe Ruetx, Andy Pupils and Mario Toneni. but the boys with the Irish handles won most of the ac claim of the 41.000 spectators. J ust before the end of the open ing period, an 18-yard pass from McCarthy to Zwers and a 14-yard gallop by McCormick, put the ball on Drake's five. From there McCarthy flipped a neat pass to McCormick for a touchdown. Pupils placekicked the point - McCarthy unreeled the thrillers of the day early In the third, rac ing 85 yards for a touchdown af ter Kuharlch had intercepted Pur Manders' pass on Notre Dame's 15. Brigham Young TJ 0; Utah 14. Colorado Mines 7; Colorado State 0. Western State 7; Colorado col lege 3. Montana State 6; Utah State 6 (tie). Colorado 14: Missouri S. Texas School of Mines 19; New Mexico Military institute 3. High School Camas 12, Salem 7. Grants Pass 0; Ashland 12. Hood River 14; Medford 13. Union 0; Baker 27. McLaughlin 6; La Grande 12. Lebanon 20; Roseburg l8. University high 12; Albany 34. Gresham 14; Parkrose 0. Klamath Falls 6; The Dalles 7. Franklin 6; Grant 0. Milwaukie 13, Corrallis 0. St. Helen's 20; Canby 0. West Linn 7; Newberg 0. Eugene 6; McMinnville 6. POLLY AND HER PALS MICKEY MOUSE USP NOVt Wktw 4. wr ICKE.V VNOUUJ UKE KNO KNa MlCHKTiU "US'. EXPLMN. r.ta.SE; VMA EMERGE. FROM THEIR fcfXlTLP HEARTS RESPECT FOR. EJSCH OTHER'S FIGHTING iSBlUTtV a LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY 1 KMOW VOtfRE. AWFUL COLD AW "Ttt?EO, ZERO BUT OONT VOU MIND- PPETTYSOON WETlCOME TO A HOUSe OR A TOWN AM' "THEM HICK AM WARM AAA1M TOOTS AND CASPER 100. A MONTH ALIMONY IS A LOT OF MONEY FOR YOU TO PAtf MR. SKIDDER DID TOU xJVE YOUR WFE ANY MONb i WHEN 5M& LEFT ? ' THIMBLE THEATRE THIS HEN)UN 6E2- -LOHISKERY OKS-ViED OLD MAN POSHES WnMAN. 1NTA RWPD- w n w w - w rw j By RON GEHMELL "With Mentor Bradshaw's most effective weapons somewhat dull ed . . ." was the way we expressed it Friday morn ing. We were talking about the i Fresno overhead attack that was supposed to be plenty high pow ered, 'member? It our statistics are correct, Fres no State complet ed two flips for some 16 yards which Isn't any thing to get up in the night and Boa OomH writ home about But the way that boy Glea son "dulled" our enthusiasm for forecasting football games is en ough to scribble reams about. Didnt someone Inform us that he was "definitely out?" And even if we weren't so gullible, how did we know that the Bulldog full back was a whole plgakin pack in one basket? To make it more laughable, Gleason didn't roll up his 169 yards from scrimmage on any razzle-dazzle array of grid trickery. No sir, he merely poked the pigskin beneath the win and scrammed right through the mid dle on delayed bucks for the most of that distance. Good Flip. It wass't the yardage made from scratch, though, that did the damage. Both Willamette and Freeno piled up enough ot Ahat, 101 and 243 respectively, to win a couple ball games. It was that 42-yard ranter by Gleason after snagging Beard's pass tt f t made the score board rattle. There wasn't anything wrong witli that cast either it was right at Its target and looked like a certain comple tion until the '"injured"' Gleason came from nowhere to snatch it right out of MrBride's paws. Gee, we'd like to see that guy play when he felt well. O Small, but Mighty. While "Spec's" outfit took a beating, they took it looking like I WEARS VUM TOLD THAT Bk& BULLY BILL BROOZER WHERE T err of1 AX TO BUSINESS. lOU WKFI rwT- rrxrsi ita. WEXL GCT NO, TOOTS. JULIE DIDNT HORN IN ON MY NEST- Eljli llii . SAY THAT FOR HER! Starring Popeye SON . vl 1 KlNKOT S r r. ''4J If XT 1A VfUV 1 I f.f.'.. r,3L Nrura tiw -j-. i r YOU 00 4 TELL ft UE 1 a ball club. They were up against as hard a charging line as you are likely to see this season. Not ko large, that Fresno forward wall, but mighty quick on the surge. Soma ot the gaps they opened for Gleason to plow through were plenty large enough. If you stop to think about it the Fresno line is about the only one that has been consistently able to atop Weis gerber'g thrtuts during the past three years. It was Beard who was the shining light offensively for the Bearcats Friday night. He re peatedly drove Inside or around the ends, with the assistance of some good Interference from Weisgerber, Burnett, Stone, et al. to reel off 14, 17, and as high as 21 yafds at a clip. Defense Poor, The Willamette team can ctand a lot of attention on its defensive work. No one probably knowsthat better than Coarh Keene, , so the Bearcats are probably la for plenty of de (easlTe drill before they trek to Portland next Saturday to take on "Matty Mathews Portland university aggregation ia Mult nomah stadium. Most of the practice sessions to date have, 'necessarily, been taken up with offensive strategy. With so few let term en and so many green freshmen it takes a lot of offen sive drill to accustom them to the system. Offensive football is what makes the turnstiles click anyway, and outside of the score, Friday night's game met with the approval of nearly every one we've talked to. Graybeal Patent, Ahoy, mates! Maybe we got "Spec" off to a bad start by call ing his boys to trim the Califor nians, but by gum we finally got Oregon on the victory side. That Is. us and 20 or so huskies Coach Prink Callison used against the Stanford Indians yesterday aft. Of course we didn't call the right score by umteen point, but we were the only nitwit in the north west to call the Webfoots to win. And let us tell you right here and now that this little "jackrabbit." Jay Graybeal, is even a little bet ter than he has been publicized. A few Detours on Ashur's Map Planning: a Royal Good Time! TO HNFP FUN, K MNH MUST B FREENOT HNHDICNPPED B"V DUTIES, KESPONSBUTES UNO CONXENTVONS. An Optimistic View Z fm. SAY ) I lAN" WUZ HE4 SURPRISED.1? BCr.' I T ---VUM SHOULDA I DID I J 111 WHEN I CALLED MM A BK3 I I ( SEEN HS FACE.' IA ) ' A I V . : . I vyj n I li J,Jj'-fcN c- l if- J 1 I CMS GOT A LITTLE MONO 3 I JESS THE &ST TWIN6 TO DO IS WALK Hj3 LEtT BUT LOTS A FOLKS AttT J AWFUL FAST-CAUSE THAT WILL MAKE uS Fi eor mo AAOKirr at all.-. rm aw besioesthe taste? we Jsa WOT EVEN A NICKEL. TO VAi- WAlK.IHC OUtCKCR f Q WHATS SHE CASPER, I DON'T KNOW, BUT ITS MtirHTY DECENT OP HER NOT TO USlbWr'FOR MONEY WHlLTs 5HETS OUT IN NEVADA ETTlNZy.A A BEWRITINIt ME FOR ! I -- 3. ,f?WMONEY O00") Ta& HTv&A Harriers to Open Practice Monday Cross-country-, under the direc tion of Vera CUmore. wiy swing Into stride at senior high tomor row with nbout 60 boyi expected to participate. Duo to the prox imity of the field, many more youngsters will have an oppor tunity to' try for the team than in years previous, said Gilmore. Regular physical .education pe riods can be utflised for those boys who have bus schedules to meet after school and are unable to turn ont at that tithe. The squad, according to Gil more, will be headed by Amos Jahn, two-year letterman. and Bob Swing and Warren Bonney, both one-stripers. .While the team will point for the cross-country championships at Hill Military academy in Portland, November 24, there will also be four dual or three-way ' meets as well , as interclass competition. Budge Drops Set To Frank Kovacs But Wins Match BERKELEY, Calif.. Oct. 2-(JP)-Donald Budge moved today tow ard a likely fifth meeting this year with Baron Gottfried Von Cranim of Germany, by downing youthful Frank Kovacs in a semi-final match of the Pacific coast tennis championships. Kovacs, Junior star from Berk eley, gave Budge a tough workout and the Oakland redhead dropped the second set before taking the match, 6-4, 5-7, 7-5, 6-2. That goes for Fullback Paul Row? also. But what took our fancy was that not only did Graybeal flash with hi3 running game but also ran the team with finesse and good judgment. Cool as a pickled herring, he mixed 'em up and opened the offensive wide open. Pellmell: California lacked nine points of walloping OSC as badly as we predicted ... Washington beat USC 7 to 0 . . . we called it 14 to 7 . . . not bad . . . they just reversed the score on us up at Pullman . . . made us 26 points worth of monkey. ' mn plkh ss fok -ku N TO TfcKE fv rCPCTlON UtKNE MEOIOKK TJKVEV. UWER KN KSSUMEO NKME--NMVTH PLENTf OF MONETt, PJENTT PLEMTV OF- FR.EEDOMI AW U3HV ? OJHY ? I L IV irvM 1 1 V PUEMTV OF- HON iss m. I - l.XV J it C J r- m 4V POSH f tOOMAH INTO THE iJCW. tWtT.,. fat . ' 1 Seems as though football inter fered somewhat with the golf schedule Saturday. In most of the Salem Golf club championship tournament matches that might have been played, it seemed thxt one or both of the contestants were down at Eugene. The only match recorded was McCrary'a 4 and 3 win over Pekar in the sec ond flight which, by the way, puts McCrary in the finals. Three rhampfonshfp flight matches are on the slate for today: Taylor vs. Lynch, Eyre vs. Olmger, Victor vs. Bone steele. An event which we have failed to give due notice up to now on account of being out of town last weekend was the hole-in-one bae ged by Phil Jaskoski on the eighth recently. He was playing with Dr. J. E. Albrich and Mr. Koch of Salem and Clarence Brown of Eugene. Golf is always in season for the high school boys. Aspirants for places on the Kalem high team qualified Saturday and the fall matches may get under way this next weekend. Jnd Coin stock was low qualifier with a 73, Ray Farmer took 75, Mack Maison 80 and Al Currey 81 to place on the team for the pres ent. Rar Woods made the al ternate position by posting an 82. Others who turned in scores were Craig Randall. Carl Mc Leod, Bill Sncll. Ted Sherman, Max IJphart and Tom Pickett. Sons and Pirates Scrap to 6-6 Tie MEDFORD. Oct. 2 - I &i - The Southern Oregon Normal school of Ashland and Albany battled to a 6-6 tie here this afternoon,1n a football game transferred from Ashland. Both teams scored in the final quarter on forward passes, and neither was able to convert. By CUFF STERRETT By WAI T DISNEY BECKUSE. UN-HC -iOU RET UPJH, MCKEN MOUSE, COUUO TKKE. VOU PLACE. ON .SAVTE THWDNE t 1D1FFEF .ENCEl BY BRANDON WALSH VOL! KNOW A5TONA A MRS. MEAMy DOMT KETCH US ritRtt' SAVIM WE'RE. TKKKIBUh LUCtCyU. NO AAATTER what , HAPPENS.' By JIMMY BIURPHY 0MI40SH!.' I JUST THOUA-HT OF SOMETHING 1 WONDER IF? EAT SCOTT By SEGAR j V MWArtAUEK WHAT . r52J "jHAPPENS J - 8rCAU5E V she eeetA 3JC V -ir