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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1942)
t - FAGS EIGHT CARRYING ON tie- AoeSfb MlCrii6A4 Ulis YAfii -&U-Td PLAY ie WoLveejAJss Cocky Eugene Club Held to 7-0 by Viks (Continued from Page 7) emphatically denied Salem any scoring ideas. In fact Ransom was thrown for a 12-yard loss trying to find a receiver on fourth down. And so ended Salem's only threat. It was on a fourth down, too, that Salem's secondary let Mc Kevitt get behind it in the third stanza for the lone score. The Viks had stymied three ground tries when Kramer laid his pitch into the arms of the fleeting Mc Kevitt. Injuries Hit Ranks The loss was a costly one to the Viks as numerous injuries were inflicted in their ranks. Right half Bruce Hamilton suf fered a torn lieament-in his left knee during third quarter' play and was taken to a hospital. It was later learned that he is through for the season. Minor hurts were suffered by Garland early in the third period and by end Jerry Langan later in the same frame. Although the game was an Ar . mistice day affair and was played . for the most part as if theboys were taking a holiday, it didn't lack the usual Salem-Eugene fla- vor. Axeman guard Don Jones . was ejected from the contest late - in the fourth quarter for flagrant slugging tactics, and on one other : occasion Eugene was taxed a 15 yard penalty for unsportsmanlike J ' x . - - CUI1UUCU Miller' Saves One In all Eugene ran up 187 yards . amassed 33 more in the air (the -touchdown pass), to Salem's 24. , In first downs the Axemen had - - - As aforementioned, the Eugene backs spent a lot of the afternoon in the open, but a Vik would even- tually come from somewhere in time . to avoid damage. 'One of ; those "in times' happened on the . opening kickoff of the second half -when -big Ernie Miller sDilled . Stewart Just as the latter shook f himself .through the . rest of the . Salem, tacklers and started in to , unprotected territory. - . Stewart was; the, chief ; Eugene - threat. carrying 16 times for net yardage of 68. Although sur prisingly fast Gordy McMorrijs . packed the mail ronly twice on . to lead the Viks in the statistics . department... - The contest was Salem's final home appearance .;- although two more games one-with Medford and the .other against Everett- remain on the slate. The Axemen iiave .two left also Marshfield and Albany. . i " Lineups J EUGENS SALEM D-rmer - .Callahan " Rvrt Werner tT MiUer Chamberlain Wilson Widdow Jones Bond Hicks Smith Biahoo Elwood - <rr 5Uausbaugh Stewart 'Kramer Kansorn Hamilton Garland Xugene .0 7 - 7 Scorin? Eufie. touchdown b McKivett (tub for Hicks), on , pass irom Kramer. .Point , after, Stewart (placekick). -n-- Suhxtitutiona Euren - McKivett. j echer, Spd , Callow y. --. Salem Brandle and Barlow, ends; Tarlow, Bis bee and ' Tompkins, tack w fes; Binegar, ? ruardss: . Purcell and iTiem. quarteTbackir Warren, HoukH. McMorris at halves, sad. Auit at full back. Officials: Hunt Clark, referee: John Taylor, head linesman; Al Lifhtner, umpir. ' Southern Branch. Falls 1 COLORADO SPRINGS, Coloi, Nov. lL-i-The ; Colorado col lege Timers struck for three first I lt touchdowns Wednesday and t'cTc-ted previously unbeaten and untied University of Idaho, i outhern branch, 21 to 7. ! Fea. , BTI. r.t LTR LEU , 1 Q nut. XHR . . jr., -- . - By Sords MILLER. HALFBACK. Seattle Turns Thumbs Down on Boilermakers SEATTLE, Nov. 11. --Manager Jim Mandas said Wednesday night he was not interested in a proposed Seattle-Portland foot ball game Sunday as a substitute for the cancelled Vancouver-Seattle contest in the Northwest War Industries league. He said he was trying to line up a game with the San Franciscb Packers for November 22. Iowans After Gopher Scalp By L. E. SCELLEY IOWA CITY, la., Nov. ll-( Tossing Tom Farmer and his fel low ironmen, 1942 variety, not only will be seeking to' stay in the thick of the Big Ten football race against Minnesota Saturday They'll go after a 21-year-old Gopher jinx. Not since the championship days of 1921, when all-America Aubrey DeVine led the Hawks to a 41 to 7 victory, has an Iowa team whipped the Gophers on Minne sota soil. This Saturday, the iron men believe",' will afford a fine chance to lick "thrice-beaten Min nesota at home. Resemble Kinnick Days Iowa, up in the thick of- the title fight with three conference victories in four starts, more and more is becoming comparable to Nile Kinnick and his 1939 mates who bothered little with time out or substitutions. Six Hawks went the route in the 6 to 0 victory over Wiscon sin last week. Farmer, expected to be the lead er in IowaV effort to halt Minne sota, is fast approaching the "iron man" record of Kinnick, triple threat ace who played full time in five straight Big Ten games be fore missing 18 minutes of the finale ' against ' Northwestern be cause of an injured shoulder. Injuns Hustle . In Workouts - AIjO ALTO, Calif Nov. 11 MVThere was a revenge motif Wednesday in Stanford's" furious football practice, for the Satur day coast conference 'came here against Oregon State college. Last year OSC stopped Stanford in the mud at Corvallis. the In dians' first defeat in 16 games. Wednesday's drill featured pass aerense, and all hands went at it lull speed. - . " , Coach Marchie Schwartz said Art Shipkey would start at full back Saturday, '- although " Buck Fawcett filled the position in the workout. - Huskies Ready 1 or. Iyer 11 SEATTLE. Nov. U(JP-rnar Ralph 1 'Pest"j Welch r exnrc Satisfaction with the mental edge on his Washington football after Wednesday's hard scrim mage in preparation for. Satur day's game here .with the unde feated SL Mary's Pre-flight team. The regulars ran ud a 38-0 score over the reserves and Welch, com mented: "More important than the score was the way, the men. tore into each other. They've forgotten all .' about that Stanford :! setback and they'll be ready for the Fly ers." .". Bonds to Replace Parade of Roses ' ... PASADENA, Calif., f Nov. 11.- (flVA "parade oi war bonds' will supplant the usual rose pa rade New-Year's day in connec tion with the Rose Bowl football game, the Tournament of Rosea """StJi- Sports Scribe Looks Back to Last Armistice r By WHITNEY MARTIN ot.w YORK. Nov- lWyin-Thi has little to do with sports. The onijr reuiuie cmunxuuui we cau i i i iL.i -i.-. a: in ite is uie uupe ui i suuie ixuic ... "t . . ana may u De soon a similar day, again win mars me launcn- inr of another golden era in ath- letics as did the day 24 years aJTT7 "a O" Wednesday when a tired world put down its guns, i It doesn't take much mental hark-trarkinsr to recall th da v. It seems as yesterday, as the cirrlilai H fnmina urill imih lib-a yesterday to our millions of sol - diers and sailors and ! marines scattered over the world when they look back on it 24 years later. Guns Give Hint i it aawnea iuie countless otner ujrs ucvm uicie uicus. ana ana "Orchard Spraying Prac chill and drizzlv and dark. There tixx" had been vague rumors; the day Deiore uiai someuung wps in uie wind, but everyone was skeptical. uespite uie iau uii udiierjr w xo-incn railway guns aooui iw yards astern of our position had 6ivcii us uuiu rri i j it. J l i a l K.b-: n i iiicac uukc ueaui ueaicia uau . i . ' , ing that such guns can fire only ... , cn mnnv rnnnHs refnvt thuv hauo to be shipped away to nave their valves ground and one thing and nnthpr it HiH that ihn using up their quota of shots pretty rapidly. Before that they had fired only periodic salvos, just enough to uiivc uvu vdiicijr uuisct gianuia in an open field crazy. The roar of the guns would send! the' poor nags galloping wildly away from there, and when they reached the other end of the vast acreage the Germans would dump' over a shell there to send them tearing back Boom Boom All Nirht But that night the guhs barked all night, and anyone who has tried to sleep, in wet tlothes in a saturated pup tent 100 yards in front of active 16-mch euns has an idea what it was like. Each shot would lift you up three feet and spin you around five times, vaaw .vAivn )tiVA nMIVUU m TV CU3 exaggerating. Two feet and three Anyway, the rumors began to have more of a concrete back- ground as the morning progress ed, but nobody actually believed them until at 11 a. mi., wonder ' Delieved L them until at 11 a. mi., wonder of wonders, all noise faded to an of wonders, all noise faded to an eerie silence that was almost frightening. i Foilus Celebrate Before long the road leading from the front began j to be a speedway for careening trucks loaded with grimy, bearded, grin - ' ' ning poilus, waving bottles and canteens and shouting joyously. Finee la guerre." Those poilus always seemed to have the ma terial at hand for a celebration under any circumstances. The early darkness found the Yanks still somewhat unbeliev ing. but gradually working them selves into the carnival jspirit. The road now presented the strange picture of trucks and i cars and motorcycles rolling along, lit ud like Broadway before the dimout. it marked the first time the sol wvti i.c-vi VCU1UC9 WJkU I lights in months and months. It stUl is a mystery to ahvone ex- ceDt the drivM-s thmo1vM hnw . - they ever negotiated those boeev. shell-pocked roads in inky black h.n--rwirH rH. in lnv w , ' ness.. . . ' Couldn't Fathom Future Twenty four years ago. yet it seems like yesterday. - We had no idea then what was in store. That uie zaoujLous era oi xne golden and dizzy 20s with its Ruths and TUdens and Jones and Helen Willses and Dempseys ! and Tun- neys and flag-pole sitters and bunion derbiests was-just around the corner. - .. ,1 ' That. the market-crash would 1u,fam leave the country poorer but san-l . ne GaJe was named after the er. That even, sports would settle down to a more sedate tempo, j . .. . ' ana mar 24 vmm aft- f nns i ceased, firing would ' be coin on again on acale dwarfing that of the first world war.; ; . Armistice day. Mayj the next peace last more than 24 .years. Whitman? Stops J ot 1, 12-0 WALLA WALLA. Nov. 11WJ -Whitman . college scored twice in the second quarter! to defeat - - ."5 : 1 vouege 01 jaano,- 12 to 0, in a northwest conference football game here .Wednesday lafternooik J roan; freshman ace; scored the i5i mutuuown ' on tne oneninri play of r the second; pieriod and uippea a. six- yard pass to Half- back Les Taylor 'for the second score near f the end nt h half I The Invading Idaho eleven failed uuwiqi wiw .uiet waning I -jr u 1 cvuic -company em march boggedi down j on Whit- ploye and Oregon State .ti uuuis irvv - ji ina ine 1 - , game tended r as . Whitman - took 4 wvci uu uuwiii, . t - i . . - i association 'announced Monday! night. . : r 1 i , . ': : All nasi narticinants In tK S2-I - - - - t year-old annual floral, parade w w iuyiKu w uuw pan inine ;cnarge oi contributing - to the bond "parade" from Nov. . 23 to delinquency of a minor by Jus Dec 23, i and to choose a naval tice of the Peace Felton early this vesaci, uuuiutr, pursuii piane or 1 vuje uuicr u-uiary symooi as lis 1 enuT' m . I Price Ceilings Not For Prepared Foods WASHINGTON. No v." 11-iJPt The office of price administration declared . ' Tuesday thaJi ' tempor-. ry price- ceinngs- on butter. eses. poultry and citrus fruits do not appiy to sales by restaurants, ho-j teis, or other establishments where food is nrecared for aal nf win- sumption on the premises. Prices of these commodities were i , - j ? uuu. I an rrfw ixsiipri Drfnh 9 i ; . -- . -v j-mj 1 ' ' " iNllt GrOWerfi iSett I f T cSlclTl ' OCSSIOLl -mr AX ivlClTillinVllle I . ) . a one-day meeting of the I WPStPrrV" Nut nrnuuni ;uiitia 1 will be held December 8 in Mc- I Minnville. The sessions will be I held in the chamber off commerce I and... R. A. Ward of; Portland, ' president, will preside. "Rationing " Farm TWa I the annual banquet which will close the day long session. Earl Price, agricultural engineer from mregon State college, will have' the farm machinery talk -and O t. McWhorter will talk on sprayil i m W1th the aid of mntinn 1 . t-it-e I ! I e warren xamnill countv , . ' , t - iyy I agent, is banquet chairman. The I man. xuc. "J" momm 'oUowing the ad- dress. of welcome and committee The banquet is scheduled for 6:30 following the election of officers.! The program in full Is: "Wartime Short Cuts for Nut . u Orchardists," C. E. Schuster, horti culturist, USDA. I "Walnut Blight Control Under wartime Conditions," ! Paul W, Miller, plant pathologist, USDA Sprays for Filbert Worms, 1943," B. G. Thompson entomolo- gist, OSC. What to Expect From Orchard Soils," Art Kinf, OSC extension service. Where Will Our Nut Industrv se in 13527" Joe Gerber, Gerber Aavertising agency. Portland.. "Outlook for Walnuts and Fil herts," N. A. Jacobsori, manager, I worm .Pacific Nut Growers. "Outlook tnr Wain,. 4. oJ T.-l I iitMUUhl C-i.ll C IX berts," J. Trunk, manager, Oregon Nut Growers. Annual business meeting, com niittee reports. 3 taSSPll Prfflirte -- ; ; JYlOFe War Speed -M ST. LOUIS. Nov. ll-JP-r!o- Harold E. Stassen of j Minnesota, speaiung at an informal repub lican amner Tuesdav inieht nr. dicteH the rpnnhliVan rml. i f owing ill the general election would result m more speedy prosecution of the war. ; The 35 - year - old Minnesntan I reelected for a third i term, said voters had not cast their ballots along party lines but had ex pressed a wish the war.be tirnsp- cuted more speedily. As a result. ne aeciared, there will be con ferences between leaders of both parties which will achieve that type of prosecution. 95th Liberty Ship F'll Hinliol Klc- -"Cliea, IVaiSCF I ' : i I PflRTT AWn .Kr. . - "-trj-ine osePn i, Oregon Shipbuild- mg s. 95 th Liberty freighter, . was launched Wednesday and the mar- j itime commission's merit fla with J. live stars was awaMoH The company was compliment- . r , ZT Xo mulating shipbuUding H11011'1?0" the nation by John P. f. ' "Jtemauonal president of , Trades council, V? attended the launching. He said it had set the pace for all P,oneer; who bunt the original j "z- of ' 0re0". launched from ! Swan f clan4 n IliA il - . ! 1 -xv. AFL Unionists Buy !arii , ' i -T ft," . IU1II1011 in JJoiids PORTLAND. Nnir 1 1 umonisis in foruand bought $1,- uuauu worth of war bonds through the Labor tewinl n- in ! 58 days, State Bond Sales Admin istrator .Ray Conway reported I Wednesday. ; ; : t ; . ., i e aid e, ocal Retailing, of , Dy- iaDOf union brganiza- firm nra m 4 V. A fiuA tis' - . " r . c ixiea .oy xne treasury aepartment n -: wwayj; pointed but. that the '6se made a . result of regular " utouvuwu. - V Uoolev Kites Held 'ALfiAwv w ' services were, held here Tuesdav woon i. .uooiey, 25. Portland Krauuaie. ne va 9 h-ntK - . - ,fru MA. AJ Dooley. Oreronisn' e mea Saturday. ' " 1 . ' V: Ubservation Set: Charlm "ft: Smith hitj l- I wu. w 1 jswer. to the county grand jury on I wmk, was teni w tne state hos- pitai oy judge t. M. Page on Tuesday for observation. W. U P ::;Dls llNd .La A ) V - ! - , .x ' ' - J- - x r - , i"" ' " 5 f -s -1 - ' ; f . ' 1 j i ' va ' ? ' X ' J . ' j. It " t 3 y " " T v " :. . - - 'it;:f f v. " ; . - . , - ! : ? - - 11'" c i i I - ' - 1 ; ii- I I? t- , 1 ( ; - r : r - ? ' f - - - 1 , i s ' " SWIFT. FICHTER IN 1941, It carries 12 fiveincli deal purpose gnus ana is capable oi auauung a speed oi more wan . v. : " . I; A A -SC ! 5 : -i TH EBRITISHARE CO Ml N C British paratreeps make i somewhere la England. They are being formed Into an army vttf r 2 1. I' i ,; II U fJG&Y teo and Leeni, six-wecks-oli Hon cabs at a Los Anreles soo dldnf like posing for 4 picture smttl refresh meats were offered. Ann Mor ley acts as hostess for the oecaalOB to hel9 the camera man. ASSOCIATED PRESS U. S. NAVY The MOt-ion WW!- . V ft it " ' -T 1 ., y . - , , - - ; - ; ' t" . endser Atlanta lwifes throngli the . mass descent daring tt-laing ef shock troops, j i - i II UKR ELL X I RL-Ceorre VLmW VlJely knsvn tztUj rhotcrrarhs of EonyweoJ beauties, U now La the amy. A ecn. n-4ee cheee this phot ef Actress Leslie Crechs as tla "il --rrtU Ctrl" fer the deration. . water. Commissioned bec.tf. as una xaues an now. MOVIE BOUND.Gti. Bobbins above), vocalist with an orchestra, was spotted by i saovie scents and has left-New York City- for HUyweOd to eater the turns. i, ' - - - ...........a...)..,. . .vV-onfS- ' -. . v.- S $ I 7 " -..-"V':' r - t i 1 1 I I' "j : , ,. - ' ' : , , i i ' v ' 1 f ! t v v 1 , 1 ! ' , " " i '. ;.:: : . -. s ' 5, '.:.' ..;' f v ... ,. ,. ,. . ; .: .". ' ", " - -- V i .' f