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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1941)
Hubbs7inner Of Tourney AtSilvertonC SILVERTON George Hubbs won championship honors In Sil- verton's ' annual Country dub championship and handicap tour nament, according to announce ments made Tuesday by the club president, C. L. Bonney. LeRoy Aman of Mt. Angel was handicap winner. Hubbs. with a total , of 337 for .the 72 holes ef play, wins possession ef the Brown-Allen trophy. Wesley Williams was 1ft strokes behind the winner te fain second honors. Aman captured the handicap crown by defeating Peter Vorseth at the end of 32 holes of play, when Aman went 4-up. In the consolation bracket of the handi cap matches, L. F. Tucker played one of his best games of the tour nament to win, 1-up from Wes Williams. Vorseth and Aman. each with 283, will be awarded prises for low net scores. The award for the player taking the most strokes on any one 18 hole round of play and also for high gross score , for the 72 holes played will go to Bob Duncan with in 18-hole total of 103 and 397 strokes for the 72 holes. Eclectic honors for the best nine holes picked out of the four rounds played, go to Williams with a 33 total In the 15 and un der handicap bracket, and Pete Vorseth with a 35, won in the 16 and over handicap. ' The "prised" award ef the tournament will re te Al w.. w niui mm mm imc score ef 31ft strokes after deducting- his handicap. Presentation of trophies and wards is' planned in the near fu ture at a social and dinner to be held ai the clubhouse. Indians Sked Canby Friday CHEMAWA Two regulars will be on the sidelines when the undefeated Chernawa Chiefs take on Canby here at 2 p. m. Friday, Coach Doug Olds reported Wed nesday. j--' Clarence LaRoeqne, aee ball carrier, ; and Preston Davis, tackle, -are both oat with leg injuries- LaRoeqne w may -i. see some action bat is not Sched uled to start. Instead, Ed Salus- UB, who has been playing a tackle, will move back to the halfback spot vacated by La Rocque. The Indians top the Big Nine league, with three wins ond one tie, and are undefeated' In five starts for the year.-They; have rolled up 80 points to the oppo sitions' 13. The Football Type ot Brooklyn Dodgers " ft Mil Presenting the Brooklyn Dodgers, but not the National league champions. These are the pre grid Dodgers, whe hope to emulate their bssebau-playinjr "Boms' and win a learae title. The line, from left: Rucht ski, Merrill. Alfson, Svendsen, Sivell, Kmard and Schwartz. The backs, from left: Condit, Kish, Parker and Slanders. Beavers End - Drills for Cougar Gash : CORVALLIS, Oct 22-VOre- gon State completed its last foot ball scrimmage before the Wash ing-ton State game -Wednesday and Coach Lon Stiner said the players appeared tired. ; The Saturday encounter mt Pullman, Wash is expected tie find a number of sophomores in the lineup. John Yoshlhara. left end. . Portland . Japanese, was partiemiarly Impressive. 4 t Bob ' Leichardt, reserve right half, went to the inQrmary Wed nesday night with scrimmage in- uries ox undetermined serious ness. w I - Backs Juggled By Stanford; Huskies Hurt ! PALO ALTO, Calit, Oct 22-(Jf)- Injuries incurred by star members of the Stanford univer sity football team resulted in a lot' of juggling in the backfield Wednesday as the Indians prac ticed for their game with the University of Washington at Se attle Saturday. Coach Clark Shangiinessy has been forced te teach she fit members ef his squad ver satility. Experiments making use ef heretofore unknown members ef the squad as well as Interchange ef positions are showing satisfactory results, Shaughnessy said. - The practice found half a dozen Indian backs interchanging posi tions in the "T" formation with out apparent loss of effectiveness on offense or defense. Stackpool Hurt ! SEATTLE. Oct 22 -(&)- The cripple situation on the Univer sity of Washington football squad continued to improve Wednesday as the Huskies went through their hardest scrimmage of the week in preparation for the im portant Stanford game Saturday, Fullback Jack Stackpool don I ned a uniform for the first i time since suffering a leg tn i jury In the UCLA game, but he took it easy for the day- and Coach Jim Phelan still remain ed uncertain whether he would be able to start. A shorter body contact workout Thursday will wind up the Washington pre game buffeting. Gonzagans Set For Pilots SPOKANE, Oct. 22-W-The victory drought on the Gonzaga campus hasn't taken the fight out of Coach Puggy Hun ton. "Well be rougher and tougher than ever against Portland Sun day," said Puggy Wednesday. The backfield Is in the groove and all hands are victory hungry." Do Ei D R MLS Starts Tcday 6)PP awiwoftj,, W VveV- T""l S s3iOL P 1 St I At dmls... XCJT- r tddwWt f f fin ' .fUifatl IS' X f n9 '( M J "J ;f 1" 20c 1 25 C - - - - - - r ... ri ,r- ' tlatinea B NIghU Continuous from 1 P. If. 2ND SMASH HIT! cla2i;:g.clasti::g I S r im - - i d starriajCEORSE K0MTC8SE8Y Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, October 23, 1941 Page 13 Backs Return To Bolster Oregon Ducks EUGENE, Ore., Oct 22-(-Val Culwell, first string guard, re mained here Wednesday night nursing injuries as a 33-man Uni versity of Oregon football squad entrained for Los Angeles to meet UCLA Saturday, , Kenny OUphant and Frank Boyd, halfbacks injured earlier in the season, were reported by Coach Tex Oliver to be In shape, bolstering the Ducks' hopes for their fourth straight gridiron victory. The squad will work out at Sacramento Thursday afternoon and will arrive at Los Angeles Friday morning. Virginia's J)udley Leads Nation's Ground Gainers By GAIL FOWLER SEATTLE, Oct. 22 -(JPh The battle between Bill Dudley of Virginia and Johnny urigas of Holy Cross for rushing honors, and emergence of a new forward passing leader featured this week's American football statistical bureau compilations on the nation's gridiron performers. Dudley, third team Associated Press ail-American as junior last year, continued to top the country's ground gainers for the third straight week in total offense gains rushing and pass ing. He's amassed 825 yards in five games. In rushing alone, however, he dropped from first to second as Grigas moved far ahead with 482 yards in four games and 91 tries, while Dudley gained S78 ground yards in 74 tries. The new passing leader is Owen Price of Texas Mines, who last year was tne nation's leading punter. Price still ranks among the top 10 punters this year with a 41 yard average, but he put on an aerial display in Los Angeles against Loyola last week that was a whizzer, although his team lost. He attempted 55 passes and completed 30 of them for 284 yards. That brought his three game season total to 41 comple tions in 86 attempts for 417 yards, and made him undisputed leader in the number of attempts and completions. Punting and pass receiving: leaders hold ever from last week. Barnacle Bill Busik ef Navy heads the punters with a 43.37 average. Howard Keating ef Detroit is the top pass snagger with 17 caught for 212 yards. Notable in the .panting figures b the fact Barry Dun kle of North Carolina, whe as a sophomore, led the nation as a punter in 1939, has toed his way among the leaders again. Although they dont ' rank among the leaders in the number of completions, Jimmy Richardson of .Marquette and Angelo Bertelli, Wot re Dames sophomore sensa tion, boast the highest pass com' pletion percentages. Richardson has completed 21 of 26, with no interceptions, for a percentage of .808. Bertelli completed 26 of 4L with two intercepted, for a .634 percentage. . . . Dairy Trophy Awarded at Stayton STAYTON Presentation of the dairy progress trophy to Ray Cates, district representative of the department of agriculture for Marion county, by J. D. Mickle, state director, was the feature of the Lions club luncheon here Wednesday. The award is made quarterly to the district, man whose dairy- men show the greatest improve ment in milk quality. Both Mickle and Cates stressed that such a reward could not be learned with out the cooperation of local dairy' men. fLUS Dfc.rENE TAX XL Betty . Don Grmble Ameche x "llzzi Over Time: 2:50 - 5:55 - 855 - . 2nd Hit Marjorie - John Weaver Hubbard : "Ilcrdcr Lnzz j Friend" Time: 120-45-75-10.-25 Cartoon Ucla Plans Upset LOS ANGELES, Oct 22-JP)- Talk of scoring an upset and an upset it would be went around the UCLA football practice field Wednesday as the Bruins prepared to meet Oregon's ponderous eleven here Saturday. Given a dry, fast field, the Cclans might give Tex Oliver's Webfoots a merry afternoon and they promise to be at top strength for the game. They went through a snappy workout, although the Westwood field was still a little soggy from rains. Bowling Scores MAJOB LEAGUE Coelaa Tare Handicap Thrush Foreeman Patterson Kertsoa Haman , , 4S 191 199 lit 190 205 40 213 220 159 214 19 147 15S 562 226 17 480 202 606 103 588 Total 1 Us Handicap Olinger' C. Foreman Perry Adolph Young Total 79 1031 10173027 27 171 175 157 224 215 27 182 203 161 193 17 111 172 525 193 571 157 475 146 563 202 596 9S0 955 07 2842 CUatea CffM Shop Handicap , , , 28 28 HartweU 152 192 Cline. sr. 244 211 Sullivan , 167 190 Cline. Jr. 303 197 Poulin 185 14S 202 546 201 656 194551 177 877 214 548 Total Anu Alto Wrackera Handicap-. , i 1 19 Co ISO . 193 Top 181 164 Murdock ;,. 195 170 Master ,. 181 193 Steinbock .... 13 157 979 9TT 1018-2962 1 87 336 CIS 168 813 199564 153 835 158 464 Total 919 80S 8352751 Karrs Handicap Kay Barr Miller Kellofg Page 1 191 176 191 212 200 51 180 158 170 las 182 SI 153 178541 17 508 161 522 190 54 180 572 Total Frli i Handicap Frieaen Nuler .., Evans . J 021 923 9522898 7 148 179 139 79 168 167 310 79 237 ISO 499 144 481 170 SIS O) Always Big Hits Last Times Today , Maurice Chevalier in f Break the News" Plus ' WSC Likes Role - PULLMAN, Wash- Oct 22-iPl -Back in the role of underdog Wednesday after two consecutive weeks of rating ruinously as the favorite was the Washington State college football team, and Coach Babe HoUingbery was harm- again. "We like it," grinned the Babe, as he pushed his Staters through a tough practice ses sion in preparation for the Sat day Ult here with Oregon State college. His Cougars, he recalled, were favored to beat Washington and Southern California and lost both arguments. Oldtimer Dies PORTLAND, Oct. 12-)-WiU Gleason, 49, one-time baseball player, died here Wednesday of heart attack while at work at the Oregon Shipbuilding corpora tion plant. About 25 years ago Gleason played with the Oakland team in the Pacific Coast league and later had try-out with Pittsburgh. Kerr . Grant 227 211 201 173 152 590 135 519 Total 974 995 8782843 LADIES' LEAGUE Hnkbard Motor CritcheU 178 130 124 430 Putnani 131 169 143 463 Hubbard 108 134 113 355 Peterson 142 158 126 426 Meyer 135 133 132 400 Total McKay Cherrolet Handicap Mathews Doerfler LeValley Ficklin McElbaney Total 712 724 638 2274 68 172 .15 102 125 113 66 143 108 106 151 134 198 136 453 176 397 97 305 114 300 158 405 693 70S 747 2148 Capitol Bei-g Handicap Poulia Clark Horner . , Welty Barnica , 16 178 , 170 . 173 . 132 . 165 IS 167 173 118 84 160 16 48 199 544 144 487 115 406 100 316 126451 Total Coca Cola MeCarroU . Garbarino . Foreman . Kennedy . Total 834 718 7002252 144 144 134 137 151 127 166 116 125 155 173 444 106 386 -177 427 168430 134 440 680 689 7582127 Ke.lettes Bowlsby Weisgerber Mills Ryer Anderson 157 122 120 155 130 150 114 109 172 156 123 420 106 342 114 343 473 434 Total Royal Desserts Handicap DeMaraia - Lindley reuen - Frick Makanaon 674 701 637-2012 Total 29 123 132 111 128 103 29 153 143 102 149 121 29 87 108 386 '122 397 113 326 96 371 107 331 624 699 5791898 Monmouth Gets Dial Phones MONMOUTH, Oct 22 This city cut In dial telephones Wednes day night and discarded the sys tem in use for about SO years. R. B. Swenson, editor of the Herald, made the second call un der the new setup and told The Oregon Statesman o( the installation. H. V. Collins of Salem, district manager of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company, was present for the occasion and said all employes displaced by the new system would be put in other posi tions. Two hundred eighty five tele phones Ju-e in the system. Pickets Three Years and Likes It h ' v . -:y ' ... ., I V ' ... . ! 'X a : , ' " - -1 -.-nT-tSi' iiiii i, v. rt l i - -'r- n , Baymoad L. Carter , Unco 1933 lira. Carol Harris, pro fessional picket, hasn't missed a day picketing the jewelry, shop owned by Raymond L. Carter In Kansas City, Mo. Now Carter is fearful that his picket may be fired and threatens to picket the headquarters of the Jewelers' union If that bonus to pass. Car ter says business has Increased during the three-year period. He's afraid business will fall off if Mrs. Karris quits, j Mrs. Harris says she enjoys her daily walk and has lost 60 pounds. The picketing be gan when Carter withdrew from the union. ' o t ' V; i'h-t siiaiMii-iiiM-M-Mf-iri TSsstfs i-Hii muni iitsia notebook., fnspecto- dashed , JkX witn urawn guns. -, - The reporter bad put bis foot n - f v uu mu. ui uvuui su turn uu gratton office.- - . . i . : MEMPHIS, Tenn. -iflV & ? Lee, legal advisor of a draft board, wax helping a negro fill out his draft questionnaire. c - . "Now we come . to the last , question," he said. "Do you care , to state what classification you think you should be in, or art you wiJLllng to" leave that to the -board?" "Naw, suh," declared the ne- 1 gro. "I rather say put me down ' for a lieutenant or sergeant" : AKRON, O. -flV- Practicing; one trick, Robert Benson, 18, un mtenuonayy performed another. He was flipping a half dollar into the air and catching it in his teeth. , ; Presto, and Robert was surpris ed to note that the coin had an Jshed. - It cost him more than the coin was worth to visit a hospital and have a physician retrieve it from his stomach. AUSTIN, Teat. -() City Man ager Guiton Morgan revealed Austin high school students want to change the name of Lamar boulevard to Hedy Lamar boulevard. "Why?" asked a city council man. "Because It hhas so many curves," Morgan replied. Stxs. Carol Harris College of Music Buuding on WU Campus Nears Completion Newest improvement of the Willamette university campus is rapidly nearing completion, and Dean Melvin H. Geist said the new college of music building will probably be occupied early in November. Masonite is being placed on all the floors, while the entire c d ing has been painted. Wall. have, wainscoting to a height of five feet, and fibre board is used above that and on the ceilings. An auditorium occupies half the main floor, and most of the re mainder of the structure has been remodeled. Nearly all new furnishings are slated for the building, in-, eluding an auditorium grand pi ano, six Knabe practice pianos bought from a Salem firm and all new chairs in auditoriums and classrooms. An open house is planned when the hall is completed. The structure, at the extreme northwest comer of the campus, was built in 1905 for the college of medicine, which occupied it for about ten years, then by the de partment of science, which moved last spring into the new Collins hall. I The college of music' has occu pied Kimball hall for several years since the Kimball school of theology was discontinued. Pres ent plans call for razing' of the hall. 0 d d 1 1 1 o o ..in th New CINCINNATUS, NY.-WV Cincinnatus Central school staged a pet 'show which Included a hen. Said the school's weekly news paper, reporting the show: "The hen was generous and laid an egg for us in schooL" PHILADELPHIA - (JP) - Gwen Shoch, an agent for professional models, filed suit for divorce, say- Plus Defense ix - LartPay r; James Stewart Paidette ) Goddard in Fet e' Geld" Taster Ball" with , s Wilfrid Lawsoa ing that aha and her husband hadn t spoken for 12 years al though they shared the same house. Business reasons also enter into it, she added. "A married woman in business doesn't have the same prestige as a single girl who stands on her own two feet." LOUISVILLE, Ky.-(flVhe dry weather was one of two reasons cited by United States District Attorney Eli H. Brown III for a reduction in the manufacture of Kentucky moonshine in recent months. f "It has been too all-fired dry this summer to make moonshine," Brown said. "You can't make moonshine without water." .The second reason? Stricter law enforcement, the district attorney explained. Call Board ELSINOKE Today Gary Cooper. Joan LasUe, Wal ter Brennan in "Sergeant York." Friday Bob Hop. Pauletto Goddard -Nouung But torn Trutn.- Dennis O'Keefe. Judith Anderson is "Lady Scarface." Saturday Humphrey Bogart, Mary asxot in -HUUN Taicon. AOoipa Menjou. Gloria Swanson in "Father Ttakes a Wife." GRAND Today Tom Harmon, Anita Louise in Harmon of Michigan. George Montgomery, Lynn Roberts In "Last of th Duanea. CAPITOL. Today Bine Crosby. Louis Camp bell In "The Starmaker." GerakUne Fitzgerald, James Stephansoa In "Shininc Victor." - Saturday Constancy Bennett. Jeffrey -ynn in "ibw or ui Tropics." wu. liam Gargan, Peggy Moran in "Fly ing Cadets." STATK Today Betty Grable. Don Ameche in "Moon Over Miami." John Hub bard, Marjorie Weaver In "Murder Among Friends." Saturday midnight Gary Cooper. Bar- stanwycK in bars Stanwyck HOLHSWOOD Today James Ooddard in "Meet John Doe.? Stewart. "Pot o' Gold." Paulett Lawson in "Pastor Hall." W: etto llfred Friday Brian Aherne. Kay Francis la "The Man Who Lost Himself." Roy Rogers. Marjorie Reynolds in "Robin Hood ot the Pecos. LIBERTY Today Maurice Chevalier In "Break the News." Tom Keene in "Wander ers of the West." Friday Gene Autry in "Back in the Saddle." Frankio Darro in "You're in Luck." DUNN, NC-KiV-Judge Duncan C. Wilson ordered police to break up illegal parking. Among the first victims of the ticket drive were Judge Wilson and Traffic Officer O. R. Pearce. Both paid $1 fines. JACKSONVILLE, FlaHtfVDia trict Director W. W. Eyster of the US immigration service usual ly is a very calm fellow and his office normally is quiet. But when a reporter strolled in and casually put his feet here and there while talking to Eyster, things began to happen. Secre taries appeared with pencils and Today A Friday t Hits BING CROSBY in "STAR MAKER" - Pins -Shining: Victory" James Stephenson Geraldine Fitzgerald Donald Crisp Barbara O'Neill Continuous Today front 1 P. M. -SWIiH:l Hurry! Hurry! Last Two Days! us? ffi r iOTMBiMnsnsncrn v i i ii j Ml 4oc "-fveT S5e i Next Attraction: "LTDIA" Tt. rv-2l-1 Vn- W n-n mi) rand. IIIC UII.UHI ICUUn r'VUl viu( fuiu vnuu Special Store in Salem your phescriptioii STORE 135 N. Commercial Street . 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