The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 21, 1942, Page 15, Image 15

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    Th OBEGON STATESMAN, Salom. Oregon. Friday Morning. Sagnst SI. 13U
PAGE lUTUlt
Phelan Checks
On Grid Team
lith Movies
By WHITNEY MARTIN
Wld Work! S porta Columnist
NEW YORK, Aug. 20-Caught
short:
Jimmy Phelan. Is ; getting ac
quainted with his St Mary's foot
ball sauad through movin nlr-
tures, but he shouldn't kick about GOING k VP
that. In some schools that's the
only way the professors get to
know the players. The ; major
leagues should establish a bureau
of missing players in Buffalo.
First Buddy Rosar , of the Yanks
disappears and turns up J there.
- then Huck Geary, scheduled to
report to the Pirates, vanishes
ana snows up at isuxiaio witn a
stomach ache. We didn't know the
- prospect of Joining the Bucs
would affect a guy that way. He
must have hadthe club confused
with the Phils, r ---..
BySords
Johnny Rlsko, the "rubber
man", of the prize ring r several
years ago, has been taken into the
army. That scrap rubber drive
Isn't overlooking a thing, is It?
r - 1 mm
iviayoe you couia cau jonnny a
scrapped rubber scrapper. Noted
In the news: "Mike Jacobs de
nied he will bring pressure -on
the army to force a Louis-Conn
fight" Why don't they bay an ant
denies it is trying to push over a
mountain and be dope with it Or
Took who's pushing whom?"
Gridder Give Up
sH
&.v .-.- -
ta i. f - i& If
Hi a
T y f IaI P1P1H PUCE
Ensign Dick CassSano, former
Pitt and Brooklyn Dodger back
field star, has given up the Idea
of playing for Lieut Comm. Jim
Crowley's navy pre-flight eleven.
His knee is up to its old tricks,
It was Cassiano who had a Job
washing windows on Pitt's tower
ing cathedral of learning until
Jock Sutherland found 'out about
it Jock wanted to put together
II men &n a field, not one man
on a sidewalk. Meet A. A. "Wil
kle'? Wilinson. Duke's official
coach greeter. In' 1924, as sports
publicity man, he welcomed How
ard Jones to Trinity, which that
fall became Duke. In 1925 he wel
comed Pat Herron, and the next
year Jimmie De Hart In 1931
ne was tne zirst man on the cam- m o -
pus to greet Wallace Wade. Wil- Iftll HtOriftS
Kinson men dropped out of sports
puoucuy, dux mis year is DacK I SOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,
mi iune to welcome jwioie tam- Aa n -. - hanHian
won. Just a vicious circle, ain't it? mmrn!ind(;s ho lought at Dieppe
Thursday night told this story:
Ken Alyta of Waterbury in- Twelve French Canadian pris-
forms us that Ken Tuckey, former I oners taken by the Germans at
Union City, Conn., athlete, now Dieppe were lined up, given an
Canadians in
Dieppe.Raid
Is a sergeant in you guessed it
Kentucky. He also wants to know
If Boston's nickname of "Bean
Town" had anything to do with
the recent bean ball demonstra
tion there. Waddy Young, former
Oklahoma U end and Brooklyn
Dodger footballer, now' is an ob
servation group pilot of the first
ground air support cornmand, and
subs- trying to skirt his wing had
better watch out George S. May,
the biggest Tam guy in Tarn
O'Shanter, is planning to make
the 1942 "Tarn" open at least a
$20,000 tournament There's one
fellow who believes in the future
of our country.
iVota Quite a Dude
i -
j Ray Carlen's first promising
; heavyweight Lou Nova, got off
to a fine start and ended up a
bust His latest hopeful, Hal Fie
berling, got away to a bad start
m losing his first. 10-rounder to
Connie Norden, and will end up, ?.
Nova was a ringsider at the bout
and took quite a razzing from
Oakland fans who thought he was
carrying the Palm Beach-Holly
, wood what the well-dressed man
shouldn't wear get-up to ex
tretnes, if possible. If he could
; beat some of those sartorial night-
mares we've seen climb through
the ropes at Madison Square Gar
. den, though, ; he's a' champion.
Which Is the only way bell win
title, at that. When the fight
ers take their bows it's Just like
a rainbow assuming its natural
curve. -i .
"about turn" order and then shot
in cold blood by their nazi captors.
Another big French-Canadian
told this story:
41 A dozen of us were captured,
herded into a courtyard and
stripped of all clothes except our
underpants. A single nazi was left
to guard us,
'How about a glass of water,'
I asked the nazi over my shoul
der. The guard lowered his rifle
for one moment. That was enough.
We were all over him. One of the
boys found a handy piece of pipe
and that ended that
"And then the track meet be
gan. We raced through the town's
streets. Piles of dead Germans
were lying there. But for every
dead one there were ten live ones,
The bullets were whistling all
around, but we made It in our
short pants.'
Derailment Hurts
Roseburg Man
GRANTS PASS, Aug. 20 JF)
Engineer Joe Eifert, Roseburg,
was bruised in the derailment of
a Southern Pacific locomotive in
the rail yards here. It was the
second derailment in the past few
days. Several gondola cars loaded
with limestone left 'the rails just
south of the city recently. The
accident was blamed on heat
which spread th rails
Service Grid
Team Schedule
Is Abandoned
No Football for Air
Corps Technicians;
Move May Spread .
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.-(P)-
A possible first step toward even
tual elimination of most "specta
tor sports' activities on the part
of service athletes was seen
Thursday in the - cancellation of
all competitive football schedules
at schools of the air corps techni
cal training command.
The cancellation order came
fromMaJ. Gen. Walter B. Wea
ver, commanding general, whe
wrote the various commanding ,
officers that competitive foot
ball would Interfere serioasly
with the argent program of
training mechanics and other
technicians for the air forces.
Disclosure of the order followed
Undersecretary of War Robert P.
a statement earlier in the day by
Patterson that constant study was
being given to the cutting down
of "spectator sports" which draw
upon athletes in military training.
Patterson was repaying to press
conference questions about a re
cent statement by Commander
Gene Tunney. navy director of
physical training. The ex-heavy
weight boxing champion had said
that "you can't train a man to be
a fighter by having him play foot
ball and baseball."
Although there was no of
ficial connection between the
undersecretary's statement and
Weaver's order, speculation Im
mediately arose as to whether
the grid cancellations might be
the forerunner of a widespread
movement affecting service
sports.
There was no ban on intra
mural football or other sports.
2 ft E
- V in ths Netc$
CHICAGO-;p-Chicago victory
gardeners tend their crops with
the assurance that the police will
see them through to harvest
The police commissioner sent all
precincts copies of an ordnance
providing a fine, up - to $50 for
trespassing on a victory garden
and up to $200 for pilfering vege
tables or -flowers, and instructed
captains to see it was enforced.
Not every backyard garden is
covered by the ordnance, though
Gardens must be marked with the
official office of civilian defense
emblem. - - . -
WASHINGTON ' Senator
Brown' (D-Mich) thought there
was something familiar about
Clifton Kolb of Cleveland when
the latter ' appeared before the
senate xuiance . committee as a
witness on taxes.
' Comparing notes later. Brown
and Kolb found : they had last
met when they played on oppos
ing teams in a college baseball
game 31 years ago.
Brown played for. Albion col
lege and Kolb for Detroit college
of - law. They recalled ttuf. they
got together after the game to
take a mutual girl friend for a
walk. '
IDAHO . FALLS, Idaho (AV Of
65 babies born last month at LDS
hospital only 19 were girls.
Supt J. H. Trayner said the
differences in sexes never before
had been more than five or six
but he had no explanation to
offer. "
OKLAHOMA CITY-US
Commissioner Paul F. Showalter,
seeking an attorney to defend a
man . accused' of forgery, . tele
phoned one lawyer only to be
asked in turn: ' ' '
"Is the defendant's oame
"Yes," Showalter replied.,
WeU," ."said the lawyer, "I
cant act in this case because this
person , once forged a check on
me." . ' ' -
RARITAN TOWNSHIP, NJ.-(ff)
"Whoa," said. George Ulrich, Jr,
as he dismounted and tramped in
to the municipal building. -
! want to apply for- an ' extra
gas ration,', he told the clerk.
Ulrich, who lives nine miles
front the center of town, roda a
horse to conserve the preciotu
gasoline coupons he still had. '
MORRISTOWN, . NJ-flP)-Michael
Naughtpn -had a nest of bees 'in
his house, and the pesky Insects
were giving him' no end of
trouble. So he. decided to "burn
them out" -
You guessed it
Firemen confined the blaze to
clapboards and a nearby window
casing. - " ' ,v : -
EDWARDSVTLLE, HL W)When
70 employes of an oil refinery at
Roxana, nine miles west of here,
found transportation a problem,
they contributed $15 apiece and
purchased, a second hand bus.
Workers will take turns driv
ing. Since they work in three
shifts, the fact that the bus ac
commodates only 20 passengers
doesn't worry them.
PARSONS, Kan.-flPj-There
Isn't a cab to be had in this town
of more than 14,000 population.
Miss Lillian Sawyer, operator of
the only remaining taxi service In
Parsons, said she was quitting be
cause of difficulty In obtaining
tires and auto parts.
No-Axis-Aid
Spirit Cuts
Forest Fires
Determination of Oregonians to
give no aid to the axis, together
with the work of his organization
and a favorable season have re
duced considerably the number
of fires in Oregon forests this
year, Eugene McNulty, executive
secretary of the Keep Oregon
Green committee, declared Thurs
day as he addressed the Salem
Lions club.
Every person In the state should
be vitally Interested In the pro
gram of the committee he repre
sents since its success would
make available to production of
war materials a great store- of
manpower otherwise required to
fight fires, he maintained.
The Oregon state green guard,
comprised by more than 5000 boys
and girls who have pledged to
watch for fires and to expend el
forts in eliminating fire hazards,
was explained by McNulty.
Reports from the International
convention at. Toronto, Can, were
presented by Monroe Cheek,
president and Harry Scott sec
retary of the Salem Lions club.
Germans See
New Weapon
BERN, Switzerland, Aug. 20.-(JP)-A
Berlin dispatch to Die Tat
Thursday said Americans in the
commando raid on Dieppe tried
out for the first time a special
weapon described as a one-man
tank "containing high explosives
in five separate compartments."
It said the tanks were directed
toward important fortifications
and advanced alone with explo
sives set off by an electrical timer.
This was taken to mean that the
operator left the tank before the
explosion although the dispatch
did not specify.
The Berlin report claimed many
of the tanks were exploded pre
maturely by German gunfire.
Elevator Splits,
Grain on Rails
DAYTON, Wash, Aug. 20.-
An entire side of a Columbia
county grain growers elevator
gave way Thursday under the
pressure of 73,000 bushels of
bulked wheat spilling about 40,
000 bushels onto the Union Pa
cific tracks and causing $4,000 to
$5,000 damage to the elevator, ac
cording to Maurice Roe, grain
growers manager. He said virtu
ally all the grain can be salvaged
but where to put it now was the
big problem.
TO I I
NATIONAL FITNESS
it ir DEMANDS ENERGY
BREAD IS ONE OF p
M THE BEST SOURCES I
OF FOOD ENERGY
Our enriched bread supplies two important
B VITAMINS Oncludlna VITAMIN B 1) and IRON.
Ask far this superior bread TODAY at your fa
Yorite grocer's).
EAT SCHOEN'S BREAD
SCHGEN'S
SALEM BAKING CO. '
44S COURT STREET PHONE 7810
Y
"Y V " mm
K ' H v
A- . w r
- y I
L k:
y r -
CnOTHER, 17.1 ONE, TOO!
1UL
IS BxntxsHcra Pilsner your favorite, too? Then put
your tips to delicious, crystal-clear Brown Derby
the Pilsner old-timers say is th vpul of "Imported."
Try tk "Party Pitcher Test"
Bay and slightly cHU two quarts of Brown Derby
Pilsner. Invite several friends ever, serve u Ira
grant brew from "pitchmr . . the way ld
time Pilsner was served . and pan around
sandwiches or potato chips.
- If yo and your guests dant agree it equals
the finest Pilsner yon ever tasted, return the
empties to where you bought the beer and
your full purchase price wd be gladly re
fendod. Try it . . be Brown Derby Slant
at SAFEWAY
ml
limdt XUm Mmumj far Xjrfevocj
n
i . - - i
AAJ
'"M Mi.i J1......I.U..J,,
r v s , I it " I r , ' ' i
Wi I
Aa Aaerieaa sir faster Saaskef at
M ever Ike Facific
em tavapt r Ike JLfaioa feed -saj
aewifiaiaeitoflaewipsif(srtf
Tkt jUsocutei hm atwisaparj -wHlk
Ckt wenoV Re. 1 faucet see sUH
ittsd aiftory ptay fcy aby. tt' -
frestest (sverase af wetU sews avsf
f:r fdl 21P zzi XTdi Ucrli zz7zzz? xzzi
A nc:r ci ThD ilr:::!J:i Prca
Featured
TODAY and
SATURDAY
W.
FULtFASinOIIED HOSE
Finest rayon yarn in the newest shades.
Stock up -"for weeks to come: at Real
Savings now! Sizes from 8 to 10.
Keguiar price si.oo. ;
Mala Fleer ;: ,--:.
V Af V asv
OKI)
7
IIEH'S DI1ESS HOSE
Here's a real opportunity to stock up at
reduced prices! New, fancy patterns In ,
long or short type. Full range of sizes
and colors. Regular price 15c, now
7 pair ior
(w(ote
(2X2?
Main Fleer
7
FRESH COOKIES
Just received large shipment direct
from the manufacturers' ovens! Good
assortment of delicious flavors. A bag
Main Floor
w
CIIILDnEII'S SLACKS
Complete assortment of all the wanted
styles and fabrics. Built sturdy for long
wear. Assorted colors. Sizes 7-16. Regu
lar price S1.U0.
Mala Fleer :
(o)(o)0
(5)(5)
7
UOIIEII'S SLIPS
Doens to select from, " in tearose and
white lace or tailored styles, bias or
four gore. Friday and Saturday only.
Reg. $1.00.
Main Floor
OIIBLEACIIED IIDSLm
Closely woven, ,88" wide. Don't pass
up this value, stock up on this Friday
and Saturday value. Reg. 12c yard.
10 .YARDS FOR
Second Fleer
ZL
7
DQESS LEIIGTQS
Save Over 10 on this new assortment
Ideal for School Sewing! From '3 to
4 yards in each piece. Reg. $1.69.
Second Fleer
SHEET BLAiniETS
In assorted plaids, size 68x76. Firm,
staple "cotton for repeated laundering.
Regular 69c, for Friday and Saturday
only
Second Fleer
ATTfl ACTIVE PAIIELS
In good grade Marquisette, 44 inches
wide, full 2Vi yards long; in pastels or
white. Regular 69c.
Second Fleer' v-
GIQLS' SHOES -
For school at drastic savings. Loafer
style in beige color with leather soles
and low heels. Lots of wear in these.
Regular 82.98. ...
. : Main Floor .
mi
z:
7
LuncninTS
Children's size In attractive green fin
ish. Complete with sturdy vacuum bot
tle; get yours early! Now.. ,,...
Basement Store
7'
PABTS CABIIIET
Ideal for home owner and mechanic.
Full metal construction with four slid
ing divided drawers. Regular 98c Fri
day and Saturday-
Basement Store
SX2)
7
SAVE Oil JABS
Stock up now for the big canning season at hand! Genuine
Maaoos in both types. Quart size.
Wide Ilszlli
Beg. IIczlH
cB(S dcz.
7
II
. , Basement Store
From finest Western crudes, refined to
give maximum service at minimum'
cost limit 5 gallons to a customer. In
your container, per quart, including
federal, - -
Sc "ELSE? lis Eii:r C: :
Bring the Chfldresi Free Sample ef gSO U AKT
3 U Y V A a 5T A M PS I OH SAL 0
I Use yew- credit. Any seerchandise ki eer sfere slocks end In
er cefaless may be bevsht r monthly peysnenf plan.
A-