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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1942)
SflDClDII'tlS TTlFSQfill ' By Whitney Martin "NEW YORK, Dec. 4--We've talked to Jim Thorpe, that burly, leather-faced hunk of man with the chicken tracks at the corners of his piercing dark eyes. s 1 ; We've asked this football play er to end f all j football players everything we could think of at ' te time, such l,as how- far he cfuld kick a ball, what he thought of the present-day game, and if he ever eot hurt playing. To the latter query he rubbed an ankle tenderly. "Once," he said, I twisted this ankle- a little." Itow' About AU-SUrsr But we never thought to ask him a most obvious question, to wit, his own personal nomina' tions for an all-time all-star foot ball team: Charles P. Ward of the Detroit Tree - Press wasn't so dumb. Charley asked him, and what's more, he got an answer, although it was accompanied by much hemming and hawing and maybes and perhapses. i After pointing out to Ward that he, Thorpe, had played foot ball 23 years and had seen any number' o'f players come and go, t4j Jim finally got around to naming his all-star team of. the moment Of the moment is used advisedly, as he admitted that if he were to pick a similar team ' five . minutes hence it might hot be the same team. Anyway, here's Thorpe's team: AiHrt F-KMidine. Car lisle, and Brick Mailer, Cali . ferula. Tackles Fats Henry, Wash ington and Jefferson, and Hec tor Cowen, Princeton. Guards Podge Heff elf inf er. Tale, and Cupid Black, Tale. Center Germany Sehulx, Michigan. Quarterback Walter Eck ersalL Chicago. - Halfbacks Eddie Ma ban, . Harvard, and Eed Grange, Illi Mb. Fallback Ted Coy, Tale. It will be noted that only two players Grange and Muller" come under what might be called the current era. That is, they are the only representatives of the players of the last 20-25 years. The others fade back as far as the turn of the century. Whether big Jim was letting'his memory, and the passage of time, magnify the exploits of these stars is problematical. A man naturally is inclined to rate high his con temporaries, and many of these athletes played when, or not long before, Thorpe was making his .own football history. It's the old j . ,1; . .1 iaea oi retauujjj ine House uii the, corner as the biggest house in all the world when you were a boy, even if it was just an eight-room duplex, lights and water furnished. Unanswered Questions - But there is no denying the qualifications of every, man named-by big Jim, and you can no more argue against his selections than you can argue that Jack Dempsey could lick Joe Louis, or vice versa. It's one of those tilings vmi never rrailri rtrrtv and a dog chasing its . tail is pretty smart compared with a couple of guys arguing the re spective merits of athletes of dif ferent generations. The pup might reach a conclusion. Big Jim thinks Exendine, his teammate at Carlisle, was the best end he ever saw, and he puts Mahan in that class among the backs. Gosh," he told us after his elections had been pried out of him, "I've left off a lot of good men." Which is true enough when any such team is named, and if Thorpe left out any of those he named he might be as open to criticism from partisans as he might be for leaving out some he didnt name. He probably could give you an argument to back up any se lection, however. All our infor mation is hearsay, but if we were naming such a team we'd make one slight change. We'd get a gent named Thorpe m there somewhere. - Track, Football All Same to Pettichord ; WASHINGTON " STATE COL LEGE, Pullman, Dec. 4 One , of i Washington State's great track ; performers of a few years ago has changed over to coaching football and he had just about the finest prep record in the state this year. Pat Pettichord, a Northern di vision champion runner at WSC, took his Battleground, Washl, high school team to an undefeated sea son to win the Tri-County league title, in southwest Washington. , Battleground won its first championship since 1938 by scor ing 110 points to 0 for the oppo sition, all of which is nice going for a track man. Army Quint Angling For Game With 'Cats :A - PENDLETON, Dec. 4-(V- The Pendleton army air field basket ball team, 54-42 victor over Whit man but 34-49 loser to eastern Washington College of Education, is negotiating for games with Wil lamette, WSC and the University cf . Washington. , -v""-' "'I The Fliers have games scheduled with Boise junior coll "?, Whit- rn. Tasco NRAB ni-s. Walla. Y.'illa air base, Lewision Normal Keeping the OP i St v : r 7 I . v-v-,:-:v .-y T -:- f JOHNNT MIZE (left). New Terk Giants slagging first baseman, and SI Johnson, Philadelphia Phillies pitcher, shaw respective wives a few pheasants they shot during a hunting trip in Illinois. Most ballplayers do moch haating In the off season to keep In physical condition as well: as keep the bat- . -ting -eye sharp. . Kennedy, Jay Stoves Lead Coast Gainers PULLMAN, Dec. 4-(yF-The two leading ground-gainers of the Pa cific coast are in the Washington State college football team's back field, and Fullback Bob Kennedy isn't both, of them. The college reported Friday Kennedy was first in total yard age for the coast's major teams with 1018 yards and Jay Stoves, left halfback, was second with 711. In third place, the report said, was Santa Clara's Jess Freitas, with 699 yards. Kennedy Nears Record Kennedy is just 20 yards away from the coast conference indi vidual rushing record of 812 yards set in 1939 by Kenn Washington of UCLA. He needs to carry the ball only seven times against Texas A. and M. Saturday to set a new national "work horse" rec ord. 1 n"- The college reported the team ranked eighth nationally in total defense and ninth in passing de fense, and added the once-beaten Staters were the only coast out fit to show in the first 15, except for UCLA's rating of 14th for team punting. Church Teams Wait Jamboree The City Church bosketball league held a well-attended meet ing at the YMCA Friday night and drew up full plans for the open ing night jamboree 'Wednesday, December 9, starting at 7:00 p. m. Twelve teams will participate in the jamboree which will of ficially open seasons for both . A and B league ieams. Director Irving Hale announced that A league competition would start oh December 12, and B league to start on December 16. He said that respective schedules would be drawn up soon. The jamboree tilts line up as follows: ' 7 Presbyterian vs. Jason Lee Pioneers (B league); 7:39 United Brethren vs. West Sa-' lean . Methodists (A league); ': Evangelical vs. Jason Lee Aees (B league) ; 8:30 First Bap tist vs. Presbyterian (A league); t:0S American Lutheran vs. First Christian (B league); 9:30 First Methodist vs. Dallas EBM (A league). TlsfT PORTLAND, Dec 4-!p-Unless streams fall rapidly, week end steelhead fishing in western Oregon will be poor, the game commission's weekly bulletin indicated Friday. In almost all counties, water was too high for good fishing." What Cardinals Started War Is Finishing Finally Breaking Up Ydnkee Ball Bombers NEW YORK, Dec. 4-ff)-What the St. Louis . Cardinals started the war seems about to finish, and if this disintegration of the New York Yankees continues these win be as much truth as noise in the yap of the boys at the sta dium next summer: "Buy a pro gram. Buy a program. You can't ten the players without a pro gram. p" - . ' In fact, ' even Skipper Joe Mc Carthy is liable to need a program to teU Just who is on his team. There will be quite a few strange faces. i .-.-fcC ; ; The Cardinals cracked the ven eer of invincibility .coating . the New York club, and now Uncle Sam is methodically completing the breaking up of the : team by taking its players, 'one ' by one. Only Three Certainties ;-- Right now it seems only three of the players, exclusive of pitch ers, who might have been classed as regulars last season appear, cer tain to be back. They are Joe Gordon, Joe Di Maggio and Char ley Keller. , Eye Sharpened.UpDuring:7inter r 5 . This Golfer Can Eat His Birdies SAN DIEGO, Calif, Dee, 4 (AVGolfer Don Goldsmith was after birdies, all right, hot he didn't expeet the two he get would be quail. On successive days at the municipal course his drives en the 13th and 11th holes bagged the dinner deli cacy. UCLA-Grizzly, Idaho-Trojans In Twin. Bill LOS ANGELES, Dec. 4 -VPh Iraho and Montana are playing football in the 103,000-capacity memorial coliseum Saturday. UCLA will 3 oppose Idaho and Southern California will toy with Montana. If a football doubleheader- is an inducement there will be a fairly large crowd. Then, too, the prices are $1.10, the lowest ever here for a Pacific coast conference game. But the crowd probably will be small and the football minded are biding their time for another day; next Saturday, in fact, when Southern California and UCLA will play again, and against each other, with the con ference title and the Rose Bowl bid against Georgia at stake. Idaho plays the Bruins, start ing at 12:30 p. m., and as soon as this game is over the Trojans will take the field against Montana. Huskies Honor Walt Harrison SEATTLE, Dec. 4&-;ip)-Uni-versity of Washington football players Friday elected Center Walt Harrison as their honorary captain for the 1942 season and voted the Flaherty inspirational award to Tackle Thron Riggs of Buckley. ' Both players are seniors. Harri son a Seattle bay, was the recip ient of the Flaherty award last year. He was one of the few jun iors ever so honored. During the football season, Coach Ralph "Pest" Welch named an acting captain for each game. Victory Ship Named After Columbia Lou ALBANY, NY, Dec. 4-(P)- The Liberty ship representing New York in the nation's victory fleet will carry the name of the late Lou Gehrig, the state's school children have decided. . v Now you might say that poor Ed Barrow and Joe McCarthy are down to their last three yachts, and if you were to pick three players you would want to keep they would . be Joe Gordon, Joe Di Maggio and Charley Keller. Those three men make a pretty fair baU club themselves J ? But the rules call for eight play ers in addition to a pitcher, and McCarthy must have somebody to fin the gaps .which loom for the other, positions. j ' . . Need Everything Else ' He must have a new third base man. Red, Rolf e is just an old Yale now, giving up the diamond for a coaching job. I He must have a new shortstop. Phil Rizzuto "has entered the ser- Hell probably need a new. first baseman, as Buddy Hassett has indicated he was going to" ; join up, if he hasn't already. He has Roy Cullenbine for right field, but he isn't Tommy Hen rich. .And Twink Selkirk, handy - C ,o A&M Picked To Whip WSC Cougars Tackle Tough Texas Eleven Today; SAN ANTONIO, Tex, Dec. 4 (P)-The Texas Aggies, for the first time in four years are not using a December game to polish up for a bowl engagement. Washington State meets the Ca dets here Saturday, still enter taining faint hopes of represent ing the Pacific coast in the Rose Bowl, having lost only one game. Aggies Tough Outfit While the Aggies have their most unimpressive record since 1938 they jwere given thee edge in this battle, mostly because Washing ton State is making a long trip and because the Cadets, while winning only three games this season, were as tough as they came. Last year the Aggies beat Wash ington State 7-0 in Tacoma. Only one southwest conference team played a Pacific coast elev en this season, Texas Christian beating UCLA 7-6. TCU defeated the Aggies 7-2. Washington State did not play UCLA. Kennedy Against Passes Fullback Bob Kennedy tops the Washington State offense and the Aggie point - making centers around a passing attack that has been tops in the southwest this year Leo Daniels to CuUen Ro gers. A crowd of 18,000 is forecast for the game. The kick-off is 2:30 p. m. Badger Quint Meets Bombers FOREST GROVE, Ore, Dec. 4 (iTJ-Pacific university will open the basketball season here Satur day night in a game against the Fort Lewis Warriors. The Pacific team, sophomores and a flock of freshmen, has lost Coach Pete Miller to ,the navy. Football Coach Roger Folgate has taken over. Folgattf himself leaves soon. , , The Fort Lewis team is com posed of former college players, including George risk, formerly of Pacific. Famous Trainer Bob Smith Dies NEW YORK, Dec 4-(ff)-Whis- Uui Bob Smith, the pleasant, round little man who trained championship race - horses and prize fighters for half a century, died Friday. He was 73. Best-known for his work with the mighty cavalcade, the 1934 Kentucky winner, and his job of managing Frank Erne, the world lightweight champion at the start of the century, Whistlin' Bob suc cumbed at the Yonkers (NY) home of his sister after a long ill ness. man outfielder, has just joined the navy. Bfll Dickey has bought an air plane, and Is reported consider ing giving up baseball. Under : ordinary circumstances changes might be expected, in the Yank lineup. The club won the pennant handily,' but it didn't win the world series, c which " means, to bosses accustomed to perfection, that something was wrong. To them losing the world series was as disgraceful as finishing in the second division. . - . Teh. Teh, Too Bad - They are going to start building from scratch again next year. Or building from Gordon, Di Maggio and Keller, who represent plently of scratch any" way you look at It. They stfll have the edge "on most of their ' league rivals "be cause of the presence of these three athletes, in addition to good pitching. ' But the Yankees of 1943 wont be the Yankees of 1942. . , Making the -obvious Cardinal comment: "Ain't that too bad?" '-Armstrong (BUmbs N other M umg With TKO Win Over Jenkins. Ball Conclave Winds Up With Single Trade Braves Swap Miller -. To Reds for Joosi, Andrews and Cash ' By JUDSON BAILEY CHICAGO. Dec. 4-UP-The win ter baseball meetings floudered to a finish Friday with the major leagues finally completing a player trade Eddie Miller of the Boston Braves to ' Cincinnati for Eddie Joost, Nate Andrews and cash and the minor leagues making plans for 1943 in a stormy con vention session. Miner Good Shortstop , Miller has been the outstand ing shortstop of the national league for about three years and has been with the Braves since 1939. Beth he and Joost are 28 years old, are married and have chil dren, and had similar records last ear. Miller batted .244 in 142 games, made 130 hits including 28 doubles, twd triples and six hom ers, and batted in 44 runs. Joost batted .244 in 142 games, made 126 . hits including 30 doubles, three triples and six homers, and batted in 41 runs. Price Rumored 25 Grand ; Joost became the Reds' regular shortstop in 1941, but Manages Casey Stengel of the Braves said he intended to use him at second base. Andrews, 29 years old, had been with the St Louis Cardinals and Cleveland Indians in the past but served at Syracuse in the inter national league last year. He pitched in 31 games, won 17 and lost 12. He was in 214 innings, struck out 114 and walked 79. The, amount of cash was not disclosed, but it was estimated that the Reds put up $25,000. . Suds Sell Jo Jo To Athletics SEATTLE, Dec 4-(yP)-The Se attle Baseball club management announced Friday the sale of Out fielder JoJo White to Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics. Jt, wffl mean a return to the American league from which White came to Seattle in 1939. He came as part payment by Detroit for Freddie Hutchinson, the high ly rated rookie pitcher, and through four seasons has been a spark plug of the Seattle team that won three straight pennants. Manager BUI Skiff announced from Chicago that White was sold for an outfielder, Dilson D. Miles, and an unannounced cash sum. Miles was purchased from Chatta nooga for $25,000 several years ago. Merchant Marine Casualties Listed WASHINGTON, Dec. 4-W) Merchant marine casualties total ed 317, Including five Oregonians, from October 2 to November 21, the navy reported Friday, releas ing casualty list number three. Because 12 casualties have next of kin residing in foreign coun tries, only 305 names appeared on the list 17 dead and 288 missing. the navy said. Friday's list brought the total merchant marine casualties from September 27, 1941, to November l'of this year to 2901, including 463 dead and 2438 missing. ' No residents of Marion Polk, Linn or Yamhill counties are named in the new ' casualty list. Florence Farmer Killed, Dispute ; ' EUGENE, Dec A-iPh Frank Fisk, 45, Florence farmer, is dead. His neighbor, William F. Turner, 77, Florence, was in the Cane coun ty j an Friday as result of a dis pute over a farm boundary. State Policeman George Al bright, who; arrested Turner, said a bullet from a small calibre pis tol entered Fisk's bead, inflicting fatal injuries. , - Mosconi; Nears Title t DETROIT, Dec 4 Youth ful WiUie Mosconi of Jackson, Mich all but grabbed a strangle hold . on at least 'a tie : for the world pocket billiards champion ship . Friday night by defeating veteran Ralph Greenleaf of New York, 125 to 97, In 19 innings. ' Basketball Scores University of California at Los Angeles 38, Loyola 17. Alpine . Dairy (Seattle) 41, WWCE 30. Idaho 44, Whitman 31. ' Gonzaga 42, Whitworth 25. Washington State 43, Eastern Washington 40. University of Southern Califor nia 34, Whittier 23. Salem. Oregon Saturday Waning Grid Season Lists Few Tussles Great lakes vs. Notre Dame Tops Saturday's Scattered Sessions NEW j YORK, Dec. 4-()-Scattered games throughout the south, midwest, southwest and Pacific coast kept the football season alive Saturday with little at stake except the honor of winning. . Revolta Leads By JOHN WILDS MIAMI, Fhw Dec 4-flVJohn-ny Revolta of Evanston, DL, the 1933 winner, sanjp a 40-foot chip shot on the 18th hole Friday to complete a brilliant five-under-par 65 and take the half-way lead with 135 in the $5000 Miami open golf tournament. I had a hunch I was going . to make that one," he said as he walked off the green 'with a twe-streke edge over Harold MeSpadea of Philadelphia. Starting the day in fifth place after his first-round 70, Revolta came through with seven birdies against a pair of bogeys to end up with his 135. . The first day pace-setter', tiny Ben Loving of Springfield, Mass, lost control of his driver, hooked three tee shots to criti cal holes and finally added a 72 , to his opening 6C for a tie in third place at . 138 with E. J. "Dutch" Harrison ef Little Rock, Ark. ;'; Harrison, far back Thursday with a 72, got into the running by scoring a 31 the best nine hole score of the tournament coming' home , Friday and taking a 66. Scrambling from start to fin ish, McSpaden managed a par 70 to go along with his starting 67 and finished the day just Where he started it as runnerup. Chief Specialist Willie Tur nesa, the 1938 national amateur champion who new is assigned to a .navy gunnery school at Hollywood, Fla, started the sec ond round In .third place, but slipped aver par with a 71 and finished in a tie for fifth at 139. Even at that, he held a five stroke margin ever the' ether amateurs. Disaster overtook Leonard Dodr son, the happy-go-lucky pro from Kansas City, on the 18th hole. Needing only a par four on the 385-yard hole to tie McSpaden, Dodson smacked a long tee shot down the middle But he put his second into a trap, came out short, missed the, green and holed out in seven for 71 and two-day total of 140. UO Examinations Slated Next Week EUGENE, Dec 4-(VUniversity of Oregon students next week face four crowded days of final ex aminations, then a shortened Christmas vacation and a return to school December 28 for the winter term. ; rr";. rrl - " - Final examinations are sched uled for December 9-12. The examination period was cut short and moved up so that stu dents going home for Christmas may comply with' railroad travel regulations. A two-week Christ mas vacation begins December 12. Frank Now Athletic Boss at Camp "White i CAMP WHITE, Ore, Dec 4-iM Appointment , of Lieut. Leo J. Frank,' former College of Puget Sound athletic director as athletic and recreation officer here : was announced Friday. - 4 . Lieutenant Frank, . who held down the CPS post five" terms, re ported for duty as a reservist a month ago. - He was a field artil lery, lieutenant in World war.L" Portland Prep, Champs Meet All-Stars Today . PORTLAND, Dee. 4-(A3)-Port-land's interscholastie champion ship football team, Franklin high school, will play an all-star elev en picked from among . the other seven teams, in the annual "Milk Bowlw game here Saturday. Re ceipts go to the fire department's charity milk fund. Miami Open at HaliwayJMark AL LIGIITNER EUtumu Sports Editor Morning, December 5 1942' Great Lakes naval training sta tion and the Iowa Seahawks, the country's top. service elevens in a nationwide poll this week,' close out successful . seasons against highly regarded middle west col lege outfits.. Great . Lakes, un scored on in winning its last six games, . tackles Notre Dame and the Seahawks take, on Missouri's Big Six champions at Kansas City. Cougars vs. Aggies The - southwest schedule pits Washington State against the Texas Aggies; once-beaten, one-j tied William and Mary against Oklahoma in an intersectional tilt and Rice against Southern Meth odist in the last southwest con ference game of the year. The south's lone garde also is an intersectional affair with San Francisco tangling with . Missis sippi State's well-rated club. Out on the west coast there will be a unique doubleheader at Los An geles with Montana meeting Southern California and Idaho clashing with UCLA. The games figure , to be little more than a warmup for Southern California and UCLA, which meet December 12 with Rose Bowl representation probably hinging on the outcome. Bears Play Airdevils T . Two '.Sunday games also are scheduled on the west coast with St Mary's Pre-Flight eleven meet ing California and St. Mary's play ing host to Detroit. . Cal Underdogs Against Navy C7 BERKELEY, CaliL, Dec 4-P) Five times beaten University of California winds up 'its most dis appointing football season -in years tomorrow in a game Saturday with the SL Mary's navy preflight elev en. ." ' ' Although the Bears are 1 to 1 shortenders to post another defeat Into their record, a crowd of 25,000 fans Is expected to turn ..out for the encounter. The pro ceeds will be devoted to the army and navy relief funds and the preflight school will help lend color by parading its 1200 cadets during ceremonies. Three former California stars, All America Halfback Vic Bottari and Tackles Larry Lutz, and Bob Carlton, will line up against their alma mater as preflighters. Bot tari, best of the navy ball toters, will match performances with California's ace left half, Jim Jurkovich. Huge Christmas Party Being Planned by Legion Monday If everything goes according to plans made Thursday by a ten-man Legion committee headed by Chairman Rex Kimmell and completed late Friday, Capital Post No. 9 will stage on Mon day evening at Fraternal temple the largest Christmas party in local American Legion history. ' The program, designed to en- terfaln members ef Salem's army, navy and marine recruit ing staffs and members of the Marion : county selective service boards, will include food, fun and entertainment. - An automo bile, said to have at least good retreads, is to be given away. Fifty-two local merchants. Post Commander Ira Pilcher an nouneed. have contributed to the program's support. A crowd estimated at possibly 500 members of Marion' and Polk county. Legion posts and invited guests, including ' a number of World War I veterans now in ser vice uniforms, is expected. ; The preparation of food, to be served at 6:30 p. m will begin under the direction of Jess George short ly after noon Monday with the lighting of a fire under a 10-gallon pot of sauerkraut in the Fraternal temple kitchen. The temple's auditorium will be prepared by a crew of Legion . member volun teers Sunday afternoon and eve ning. ::::.v- . ,.: ;v - Among the guests will be a member of the armed services, - whose name was not announced, Just returned from the Pacific battlefront on Guadalcanal. The ''"'Hi:-:;i:i '"'.v.r-' : Haninn Hank yiciui in oiii: : Proctor Wins Ex-Triple Champion Shows Fine Form . PORTLAND, Dec 4-(,F)f-Hami merin' Henry Armstrong took an-, other long and Important stride up the comeback trail here Friday night by scoring a technical knock out over former lightweight cham- . pion Lew Jenkins In the. eighth round of a scheduled ten-round boxing headliner staged by Port- , land's new National Boxing club. "Perpetual Motiont Hank weigh- . ed 144 and Jenkins 143. , The former triple-crown hold- , er, fighting tn his famous crouch, had It all the way and cut Jenk- -ras eyebrow and cheek with sizzling Jabs early la the flrhl and dropped the Sweetwater, Tex, battler to the floor eight times before Referee Tom Lout-1 tit called a halt to the proceed ings. , ;;. : ' -It was a left jab ' to the head and a punishing right cross to the t body that finished Jenkins. 1 The ' same blows had sent him to the floor three times in - the seventh round for counts of nine, the bell saving. him'from the ultimate re sult. J- ; -i-. ' But Jenkins, although- out punched from the opening round, rallied gamely at the dose of the seventh after "playing pos sum." So near did he appear being put away for the night that many of the capacity crowd were heading for the exits.1 But up he came to throw punches from all angles at the Los An geles Negro, former holder of the feather, light and welter-' weight titles all at one time. It proved to be his last rally, however,' and. when he weakly slipped to the floor after Arm strong tagged him with the right cross in the eighth, Louttit step ped, in and . raised Armstrong's hand. . . , j , It was an' important' win for Armstrong, who now goes to New York for a date with undefeated "Sugar" Ray Robinson in Madison Square Garden next month. ' In the semi-final Powder Proctor, 162,. Portland' Negro, returned to the ring after a long layout, to score a technical knockout over Lefty Abbott, 162, Bellfngham, In the fourth round of a scheduled six-round bout, Abbott hit the floor for a count of nine in the' fourth and did not answer the bell for the fifth, much to the crowd's dislike. In two other six-round prelimi naries Joe Keyes, 152, Houston, Tex., used a sharp left hook to drop John Cobell, 161, Salem, twice to win by a technical knockout in the second round, and Joe Kahut, 167, Woodburn, scored a technical knockout over Pvt. Dick Bird,, 162 Fort Canby, in the third. ; . Pvt. Orv Teeter, 149, and Sgt. Leo McCormick, 147, both Port land, fought a four-round draw in the opener. v Fito Results DETROIT, Dec 4 -(P)- Charley Hayes, 1 60 Vi, undefeated Detroit ' middleweight, scored his eleventh successive victory Friday night by decisively ' ; outpointing . Johnny Lawer, 159, of Cleveland, O, in 10 rounds. Lawer twice was down for one count. - f entertainment, headlining Gay Reed nationally known dancer whe will arrive- from Seattle Monday afternoon, will include, the Singing Sentinels,-' a male' 'quartet from the Kaiser com- ' pany, Portland. . m.. it I im s i . ". for Oregon, Commander Pilcher announced, the program is being staged in response to a suggestion that legionnaires throughout the nation entertain local selective ser vice draft board members and re cruiting officers. Invitations have i a -it ' ' . oecn hmuicu w u ex -service men in the Salem vicinity whose ad dresses ! were known. Try m f Chines rrmcdirt I Amazing SUCCESS for. S(HH years la' CHINA. N matter wHb wha ailment yea are AFri.ICT ED disorder. aaaslUa, heart. Iob,- liver, kidneys, stomach, (as. : eoaitlpaUon, ulcers. . dia betis. fevar. skin, female com plaint Chinese Herb Co. Office Bears Only Tnes. and Sat, a.m. ta p.m. and 8 an. and Wed- to 1SS 121 N. Com! EL, fi'rn, CreJ