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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1937)
PAGE EIGHT The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, November 14, 1937 Unbeaten List I ; ' 1 .. . M .1 T C Tilf -t i looses z More While Pitt, Alabama Still Ride High i by HERBERT W. BARKER (A8socated Press Sports Writer) j Football's exclusive undefeated club has lost a couple of caarter members, Duke and Nebraska, but the boys stil are' looking for .the combination that will stop Pitt and Alabama, twin power houses of the east and south. Nebraska, tied twice I bat pre viously undefeated, led Pitt as late as the fourth period yester day, but .ultimately fell victim to the customary Panther i late fin ish. 13-7. in a came that left a crowd of 71,000 limp with excite ment. . i 1 Duke, with only a tie with Ten lessee to mar its record, found Itself badly outplayed by North Carolina's Tarheels and not only lost the decision, 14-6, but its irhance of retaining the Southern Lnr..M aura M , j. Meanwhile Alabama, rated, with Pitt and Ford bam as outstanding Rose -Bowl contenders, withstood Georgia Tech's early assaults and then pushed over a fourth quar ter touchdown to win 7-0,. and remain undefeated and untied. Ford bam was idle. J , ' f J Clint Frank, Yale's great j)ack. Scored four touchdowns as the Elis spilled Princeton 26 to 0, and remained undefeated. Yale's Chief Ivy league rival, Dartmouth, likewise remained unbeaten, but had to come up with a late rally o tie Cornell's big red array, 6-6. j Lafayette Perfect Lafayette surprising Leopards tripped Washington and Jeffer son 6-0 to remain the east's only major undefeated and untied eleven. Holy Crpss protected its aabeaten record with a ,10-7 con -quest of Brown. Columbia' sur prised by holding Syracuse to a f-6 draw while Temple played its fourth scoreless tie of the season, this time with Bucknell. j i There was no change in the Big Ten picture where - Minnesota pushed over Northwestern j 7-0, and remained the only team un beaten within the conference. Kansas State tossed a major surprise into Big Six rank! by beating Kansas 7-0, thus leaving Nebraska holding a clear lead for th crown. Oklahoma won over Missouri 7-0, and still has an out side chance to figure in the cham pionship award. j Daughter Is Born EVENS VALLEY Mr. and Mrs. Amand Holland, are : an- SYNOPSIS ! Don Ames, publicity agent for i Bloora-oi-Youth Cosmetics, goes to Carterton, Louisiana, to" tell Lucy Lee Carter that her photo .graph has won first prizt of one thousand dollars in the nationwide ocauiy conicsi sponsored Dy ms ' firm.' He also meets Pearl Carter, ; ambitious and comparatively young second wife of ineffectual Wake field Carter. Finding Lucy Lee as : lovely as her picture, Ames pro poses entering her as Bloom-of- Youth's entrant in the International Beautyqnest soon to be held in At ; lantic City. Lucy Lee shrinks from : leaving Rosemead, her home, and Clyde Dixon, her sweetheart. But she consents in order to help her father and to send her young brother, Juddy, to school.' On boarding the ship at New Orleans Lacy Lee gets her first taste of the taring crowds and flashing cam eras that are to mark her career as beauty queen. At the New' York pier Don Ames meets the party with mora news ohotorraDhera and the usual publicity' ballyhoo recep tion, That afternoon, they go on to Atlantic City. The following morn ing Ames meets bis old friend Ne ville Preston, stage and screen IdoL Preston tells him of a thrilling ad venture he has bad the night before, when a beautiful young girl, enter Ing bis room by mistake from the balcony, fainted in bis arms. Ames, realizing the girl is Lucy Lee, telle Preston, who is sow a Hollywood director, that his protege is afiont to be crowned "the most beautiful girl in th world." Preston, prom ises she shall have a small part In his next picture and Don rashes to break the news to Lncy Lee. K CHAPTER XI A contract for six months, at three hundred dollars. At first she thought be meant three hundred dol lars a month, -and that seemed per fectly wonderful. Daddy Carter signed the paper after a few weak protests; and though he would never ; admit it, she was certain he too had thought three hundred dollars meant a month's salary. : How Mr. Ames laughed at her. "It's three hundred smackers a week, Lncy Lee," he explained. "Three centuries each and every aeven days, with commissions de ducted, of course. Not bad for a l.'ul. : m . m - . i . iimo girt iresn irom me country, huh? And by the end of the six months, you Just watch me boost the figure. Why, Inside of a year IH have yon in the thousand-dollar-a -week class and Poppa here will be thinking op new ways to dodge the Income tax 1" Beneath her rouge Pearl was ac tually paW with excitement. It . , r l . , a . i eemeq iron wnai wr. Ames saia they were going to be very rich, and all because Lecy Lee was beautiful. Upstairs fa the room again, after promising Mr. Ames te be at the BlooK-ef-Ycwtb booth by two o'clock and sot be late The hotel lobby , was filled with men and women - wearing red and gold badges: Fifth Annual Convention of the Beaa ticians and Coeme tjcia.ua ef Amer ica. People frera all ever the United States who - ewsed beauty shops. Other people who manufactured face ereanta and hair tonics, rouge and powder, here te advertise their wares. . - That was why Lucy Lee had te be at the booth this afternoon.. Mr. Ames said aha mnstj smile at people and be alee te them, to they would "BEAUTY ; - - i ..... t Vikings Navigate Mud to Defeat fefV.f If A MGasayn McLean of Eugene has the with three Tnore of the Salem high warriors moving in to help, bat only thefclbest friends will be able to recognise then. The picture affords as Idea of the mucky condition of the fairgrounds gridiron on Armistice day when Salem high defeated Eugene 13 to 0 to keep Its unbroken record of victories in tact. Cut courtesy The Register-Guard. j . . J . : " nouncing the birth of a daughter, Dorothy Ann, Nov. 4, at their borne here. 1 This is their sixth child. They have three boys and bow Lave three girls also. The Hollands came here a short time ago from Fertile, Minn., ana purchased the old L. A.' Toft farm; .- Stream Pollution To Be Club Topic Fish life and river pollution will be discussed by Senator By ron Carney of Clackamas county at the Hollywood community club's first fall meeting Tuesday night, P, M. Gregory, president, announced? yesterday. The meet ing, a dinner affair, will start at p.m. at the Black and White restaurant on North Capitol street. The club, Gregory said, is con templating espousing a program of promoting purification of the Willamette river and beatifica tion of its banks along the Salem waterfront. To Visit in East SILVERTON Mrs. William Jones and her mother, Mrs. If. Schafer, left this week for a visit to eastern states. Mrs. Jones has been in charge of the E3stman Bros, office for the past several years and during her absence Mrs. Norman Eastman will have charge. S A CHARM by HARRIET HINSDALE want to buy Bloom-of -Youth Cos metics. It was all very exciting and con fusing. She would have liked to write Clyde about it but there simply wasn't time. "Three hundred dollars a week! And if it hadn't been for me, it would never have happened." Pearl's voice rose shrilly, as it always did when she got excited. "Hollywood! Just think of it. We're going to Hollywood. Well. I always did be lieve if you kept your mind on a thing long enough and hard enough you were bound to get it. Lacy Lee had never before known "Well have ears and chauffeurs and a big house in Beverly Hills with a swimming pool and whoOpee room, just like all the stars I've read about. And a cottage at Malibu Beach, there on the Pacific Ocean. Isnt it lucky I've kept np with all the screen magazines the way J have? Yon always called them trash, Wakefield Carter, but now you seel" She paused in triumph, then added the magic words: "Three hundred dollars a week!" : "I must confess I do not quite understand how this has all come about so suddenly," Carter re marked. "There were questions I wished to ask Mr. Ames, but he ap peared to be in such a great hurry I ref rained." X suppose yon doat even know who Neville Preston is?" safd Pearl with aa air ef conscious superiority. "Well, as, I can't say I do, my dear. However, I gathered from what Ames told as that he had some thing te de with the xaetioa pictare business.' ' . ir, ; y- : : Pearl rolled her eyes heavenward sad heads went op ia a aceempaay ing gesture. "Listen t the men. Anyone would think yon had lived ia the heart of darkest Africa. But even there they probably know whs Neville Prestoa is. Why, I've sees hia ia dozens ef pktares. And jest imagine, he's right here ia this - 0 m r . - ball and la betas pulled down by a Harmony Prevails At AAU Conclave Colleges9 Insistence Upon Share in Planning to Get Recognition BOSTON, Nov. 13-(jP)-A spirit of compromise and harmony far stronger even than had been an ticipated prevailed tonight as the already weary delegates to the 49th annual convention of the amateur athletic ' union brought to a close tire Involved but large ly routine business before their 31 committees. j A number of major develop ments, however, "did emerge from the cumbersome mass .of routine. They were: ' . ' 1. The national executive com mittee's decision to work for a compromise with the! Collegiate Athletic association on the mat ter of representation on Olympic games committees. ' 2. The track and field com mittee's recommendations .that (a) the metric system now in ef fect for national championships be retained, and (b) that start ing blocks be used, subject to the approval of the International Am ateur Athletic federation's meet ing at London in March. 3. The legislative committee's recommendation for a more lib eral attitude toward amateur ath hotel ! I can hardly believe it even yet. I'm simply crazy to meet him." ; She walked to the full-length mir ror set in the door of the bathroom and surveyed herself with uncon cealed satisfaction. - Smoothing the palms of her hands over her slim hips, she smiled. "Maybe he will give mi a part in the picture. I'm going to ask him. Fve always had the feeling that I was intended to be an actress!" ; Neville Preston was indeed a new experience to Lucy Lee.- She had never before known anyone like anyone like Neville Preston. him. He was so handsome, he wore Such wonderful clothes, be said such charming things. He had been to every interesting place in the world, knew almost everyone worth while. At first he had seemed; rather old to her, but that impression soon faded away. It was only that she herself felt so inexperienced, so ig norant of the big world. ' She thought it very kind of him to have arranged that' marvelous contract : with the motion picture company and she said so, very seri ously, and with, her velvety .dark eyes raised to bis. It was en the afternoon of the last day of the Con vention and they were sitting oa the beach together, under a giant umbrella. It was a rather secluded spot, with few people neat. Before them stretched the matchless jade blue of the qnkt sea, waves continu ously breaking softly la lacy foam on the golden sand. j i Lacy Lee was wearing a bathing suit bought at one of the smart Boardwalk shops. It consisted ef nothing-except a pair of blue flannel shorts and a white bandeaa, leav ing most of her slender body ex posed. ; She felt terribly naked fa the thing, but all the other girls oa the beach were wearing similar swim togs ao it most be all right (To be continued) events Swrtt Bffcle. , MrKMta tt Kias tmmu IfaaM a $ - " Axemen 13 to 6 i t VI Viking after a seven-yard gain, letes announcing an intention to turn professional, 4. Thej recommendations by the individual sports committees on sites for the 1938 champion ships, among which the more im portant were: Senior boxing, to Boston Ijj February or-March; men's senior .indoor swimming championships, to the Ohio as sociation! and outdoor, to Indiana-Kent mcky; men's senior in door traek and field champion ships, to Madison Square-garden, New York, in February. Independent Union Has Large Enrollment With Worker Opposing AFL BAKER, Nov. 13.-(JP)-A charge the AFLjf sought power and not benefits for workers was made yesterday! by Floyd Herring, chair man of tike Brotherhood of Labor Cooperative association, which 200 workers and employers joined "for theiij own protection and mu tual benefit." Action followed a Wednesday demonstration in; which one AFL organizer was escorted from town and two fathers departed. POLLY AND HER PALS I MICKEY MOUSE &E.T HE. : 1 HMP WMTlNG PCTtilRE. Of INFdRlKTES THVHKS VT, V5 tyCrNE.V. KNt NOW rr reaches 6 OliKF IMS A ( RM-M-M-) . II LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY MA CiMTt it wayrr a noriu . HEISHTDf'tWE CREAtJRJL STOCM. MBS-WAJTbT HEARD EXHAUSTED- ALMOST (?EADV TO TOOTS AND CASPER ; UO. CASPER. IT AIMT THB CARDS FOR ME AND 11 AIM SHE AINT ZjONfsJA M mm' " r-m f a.r-ei w FOR A NO- S -ACCOUNT I U1ICE ME., TUBIBLE THEATRE BEGINNING a XSm : int. Bulldog Again Meets Elliott Old Feud Revived Tuesday Night ; Three Previous Bouts Lively) Ones Bulldog Square Deal Jackson, whose Hollywood adventures have taken away none of J his original Yukon fire, will meet Harry Elli ott, the wrestling) reteree, In the main event of Tuesday night's mat card at the armory. The Jackson-Elliott feud, flar ing again after a! year's quiet, is one of middleweight wrestling's famed private wars. The two grapplers have met ' three times in the past, and In each of their previous battles one or the other has been Injured.! . Elliott admittedly! has so in tense a distaste for the Yukon's pride that he is I unable to deal fairly with him Sin his referee's role, while Jackson has on more than one occasion "chosen" Elli ot without apparent j provocation. Promoter Herb Owen signed the two tentatively, with the priv ilege of cancelling it if he is un able to secure a; referee willing to take one of wrestling's tough est assignments. Supporting bonis ! will be an nounced by Promoter Owen Tues day. Seasonal Freak Noted in Oregon r " LJ PORTLAND, Nov. 13. --Seasonal freaks came Into full flow er today. j A gallon of strawberries picked by Henry Kernart. Lakeview, yes terday when the thermometer was 14 above zero was not "unusual," "In fact," Henry said, "the willows are in buid right now." At Heppner lilac shrubs and horse chestnut trees budded, lo ganberry bushes bloomed and vol unteer lettuce was big enough for table use. i BEE.N . FOR; ruiiiT at tut L- IV-. r excellentt- J J 1 WRmN' x Vxj ' excellent, i 13 i i mi t I 1 YES -1 KTMCmBFJ? A NICE LAOV COM WTOTHE BOOR 5HE HUGGED ME AM KISSED ME -AM CALLED ME MARY SHE SAID I WAS HER UTTLE TXOPU GIRL BUT MY ilie fM its Gracious of jJOUR highness FOR IU ASSOCIATE? WITH X b y POOR VvOM. Copr 19 IT. Sjh Mtum SydicMB. lot. VorM Slarring Popey? KO . woonev K - . MY FftttMOjYEArt.VrAPV. DO YOU tME POPP ft w FEEL Jl P5HG Ck ft WC IDtft-VJOULO VOLi I IMF BLOE?X V PSCCOOHT OF wtuu COMMENTS .CURTIS "Thing We Never Knew Be fore a la WinchelL, Include the actual facta about a match vd set of golf clubs, and why. They've been making "matched seta" tor a number of years and every self-respecting golfer has one and after acquiring it he usually continues to wonder wby his No. 1 shots,. loft unerringly toward , the vicinity of the cup and his No. 6, played so far as he can tell with exactly the same motion, sends the ball approx imately anywhere. Don't get us wrong. Clubs aren't everything, as the re nowned Mr. Montague proved by using a hoe, rake and base ball bat to beat Ring Crutby, ao we're advised In the public prints. Millard Groves, one of Salem's Ukellest I young golfers at II he moved away some months ago, used to bum up the home coarse' and others with a nondescript collection of clubs, none of which had any relation to the others. He perfected a different swing for each of them. But a perfectly matched set of clubs, we learned by hanging around the caddy house one re cent rainy afternoon. Is one that has exactly uniform "swinging weight." That means that each club, a trifle shorter than its next door neighbor, is made also a trifle heavier in compensation; and now they've perfected a set of scales which snow what that difference in weight ought to be rand whether you've got it. On this set of scales, the end of the handle pushes upward and a point about 14 inches down the shaft pulls down ward ; and If your clubs are perfectly matched, the "swing ing weight" shows just the same for all the clubs in the set. Next time we get a chance, we're go ins to weigh up our 1 JKi." model hickory shafts and see if we can't manufacture an alibi. Easy Mark 'I See by the Paper ( 'RrmMETicV'7r V EXCELLENT-) l ( SPELLIN' Y KMKZM&l NNEETH HIM IN MEDiOKA, CAPTURE. MCHNt, TUT THEE MMH TE THRONE. What's in a Name? TMAT5 WMV I CAME TO WAf?N VOU - AASS VJAfTE MAS LOST HER MEMORy YE Af?5 BEFORE YOU WET?E BOt?M. HER HfJSBAND AND LITTLE GIRL. MARy; tiSMftc Losrrrscx ' hen she MAMff IS ANNIC -ANNIE if i"Lirx Puts all Her Eggs in one Basket VtXJ WILL I cant ZrivE you i MONEY--THAT WOULD L OJ, MVl NOT BE PROOER I BUT 1 WILL RUKI I YOUR 1500.J INTO Wtt I i WILL RUM YOUR UTTLE BANK ACCOUNT INTO 7 ORTUNIE.VsrVia- A FORTUNE TWPfll MOT INVE5TNEN tifln rarod A Professional Mourner K vee. popeye, Hi LOT TO LWE FOK-i EVRYTWGS ALL WCttT- Tf Ujr OU SHOULD a f . m a a. rkm. . . HrtPPY rwK7jT Vandal Grid Team Pefeats Gonzaga Tnuskowski Plunges for Lone Score; Zag Star ! Cannot Get Loose SPOKANE. Wash., Nov. U-;P -Big Dick "Truck" Trzuskowski capitalized On his 2 15 pounds of plugging power today to lead the University of Idaho Vandals to. a 6 to 0 football vljrtory over Gon zaga in rain and mud. The ponderous fallback from Milwaukee. Vis., plunged over for j the only scone of the game from the two-yard line after nine minutes of play. ! Halfback Har old j Rouse's placekick try for th extra point with a slippery ball was wide. j Neither team ever ' threatened seriously to score jagain. although Idaho piled up an overwhelm ing; yardage advantage in regis tering eight first idowns to Gon- xaa's two. I Rain throughout the morning left! the Gonzaga field a marsh 3 0-yard lines. land between the Straight power plays down the middle 'Of the river were what carried the Vandals fo victory as they completed only . two passes for a total of 18 j yards. On the ground they gained 182 yards, with Trzuskowski! accounting for 77 of them. j fieoige Karamatic, Gonzaga's IS 36 all-coast fullback, was checked by Vandals and he slip pery turf so that he ran back punts only twice Jfor a total of 22 ;yards and never could get away on running plays. donzaga's net yardage total wasi only 4o. Despite the rains, there's been considerable play j on the Salem Golt club conrsef recently, partic ularly on Armistice day. The coujse hasn't beeb really soggy except right after j a heavy show er. The third and (sixth tees have" leen moved to winter position. Where there was an ill-fated dam alongside the fence on the ninth lastf winter, there's a new device which isn't so ambitious about keeping out the possible floods, hut the boys thinik it will stay therie. j EVEN SUSPECT VTl VNEETH MCHNEU OUT OP- TE. -THEES MHATON KNQ COULt ME COULD OH BE KlLED NCCIOENTWJJV arr HEARD THE Ttt?PlDLt NEWS SHE. rAINTfcU APTtl AAPNTH& HOVEWN5 BETWEEN LIFE AMD DEATH -Mlo WAITC KCCOvtKtP HER HEALTH- 1 HAVE THE MONEY HERE FOR YOU, COUNT KARONT 1tU yoo Hwe Y THAS TWO THOUSft . NCJClPENTM-LV-' I rm I VT.ffl LUTE AMO numMK karrr I -i v s : - - - - - - - B hfu (.jieL. " v ft WOHU5 -HMH- OJOULO NOO LRE BE HAMBURGER'S WOFCTH OF CONSOLrVrtOlH f Tools Donated to F 4H Builders Club WEST SALEM Work of u,,. West Salem 4H Builders club iiU been greatly assisted by the ajil of a number of individuals aevi firms toward purchase of at;, tional tools, it was announced Sat urday by O. G. Hughson, sponsor of the club. Tom Dalke is now ,e club leader. Mr. Hughson acknowledged do nations by Gabriel Powder atd Supply company, W. W. Ro. braugh company, Columbia Brik Works, Portland General Elect companyregon Gravel com pain The Maple Tree, Beutler-Quist.i i Lumber company, J. W. CopeMd yards. Max Gehlhar, Bum, k Ts Kingwood store, J. H. Lauteniun Pittsburgh Paint company and Captain Walter Lansing of tR state police. Kellaher Case to Receive Attention Dan Kellaher. former state par ole officer, will either be brought to trial in the near future on an indictment charging orfering to accept a bribe or the case will b dismissed, officials indicated hett yesterday. The charge grew out of a con tract officials alleged KeHahfr made with L. A. Banks to obt.r a parole in exchange for a suli-' stantial sum of money. Banks is serving a life term in the sta; penitentiary for the shooting of a peace officer in Jackson counii following the ballot theft there. The circuit court overruled a demurrer to the complaint againk Kellaher. Mrs. Scolt Improving After Major Operation SILVERTON Mrs. Charity Scott is recovering satisfactorily at the local hospital from a ma jor operation she underwent a week ago. Mrs. S c o t t's . daughter, Mrs. Paul Noullet of Vancouver, Win. came to Silverton to assist while her mother is ill. Mrs. Scott Is manager of the Cottage hotel at Silverton. By CtlFF STERRETT WAL,I SEE AMGEL'S GOT HER TEAtHER SCARED O' HER AGIN, PER USUA1. By WAIT DISNEY UIW 4. sn(M.u OEi. KlN Or MEDIOKNI KNG VKRLOTT. E BY BRANDON WALSO THE SHOCK IMPA1P?ED hermemorJ FOR MER.TTME STOPPED I SHE IS AivVVS EXPECTING HER LOST LOVED ONES TO RETURN ALIVE AND WELL - SOMETHING ABOUT WU MUST HAVE RECALLED MEMORIES OP" HEP OWN LITTLE Glf?L- SQ, FOR HER SAKE, VOU VU13I S-'KblK.MLP YOUR NAME 15 MARY By JliiDIY MIJRPHY1 By SEGAR 1 PLtrXt- PICKLt.OWVOT fND LETTUCE. BOTH Ot THE UNDERSDE PrAD f SUtt OF tomwto vBose HERE YOU YOU DON T HAVE ARE-6i50O.. I TO PUT UP ANY ALL THE MONEY J MONET, MY DEAR' I HAVE IN THE I'D RATHER USE WORLD' y MY MONEY AND f3rwr- V -BRIN YOU