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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1943)
I . 3 -I t i V7agner-Ross Title Rematch Card Completed ' - Another gilt-edged slam ses don for vElare grappling- eos . tomers coming p Tuesday with the announcement by Match ' maker Don Owen that he hai completed the card. Owen yesterday, signed eat like and clean Tex Hager to ' mash and bath with Jack "Bash Tm" Lipscomb in ' the .seinl ' wtndnp. Owen claims Rarer has - been a consistent winner in oth- er northwest rings and deserves 1 a date with Lipscomb, still try- Ing to ; regain the prestige he J- had in these , parts over a year i are. Owen said nothing about . Barer deservinr the ronrh time J he's rare to hare, in waltsing i witn.tne sapcr-mcaujc, 1 er. Small bat lightning fast Ha- g-er Is said to nave made no hes- , f Itation in slgnlnr to meet Llps- i comb. ,' ; One of those always welcome -scientific affairs hsa been lined '; In for the 8:30 pan. enrtain' rsis- er. Frencby LaBelle, who trap s' pled former world's .lightweight I champ Billy Goels to a draw I last week, tackles Milton Adol ' phna Olson,' who held Jack -' "Pin-up Boy". Klser en even Sharpshooting Medics Quint Outhoops Navycats, 43 to 32 ppBBBsBBssnsesjBSssnBsssssusssssn Personal quickies: Mrs. Geo, E. Waters, most comely of I the Western International league franchise holders and gener alissimess of the 25th and Turner road plant, is en route to Hotel - New Yorker. New York City, to sit in on the annual minor ; league meeting there December 1-2. And we've got a buck ; which sez one baseball czar- namely, Je'ge W. G. Bramham has at least one part of the riot act read to him before she -comes home . . . Speaking of f:; ' the WIL and things pertaining t?: to. League President Bob Abel jj -" believes the loop can function 1 in '44 and recently asked Mrs. L' ' W if she was prepared to field U v . a team next Summer. Might just v as well have asked if she had - 10 or 20 thousand dollars she wanted to loss away. Abel also t mmeu in ouier wur wuuau y 2 stocked league cities might go . on without her if she couldn't ' come along. Nice trick If it can be done, but don't bet that it - can V. . And Tacoma andSpo- kane can save their , breath in i arguing over which will get the , Sacramento Coast league fran- ' chise, for Scan Brecrion, lx?ss of the. parent St Louis Cardinals '. & Co. says Bcdd Jixnchise will not.be moved until the war is i over. Even after the duration Breadon sees difficulties'". . . The Duration league football title won by-Woodburri's Bulldogs was Jiggs Burnett's first championship cts a coach since graduating ': from, Willamette. Of fee Bulldogs Jiggs says: -''CTOperative, hard workers and spirit in abundance made coaching them a. pleas i ure'and accounts for their very good record." Very good is ', right Woodbum scored 145 points and allowed nary a one " in seven Duration tests ... Sleeps Right Next to Great Bertelli Terrific Teddy OgdahL .Willamette's little All-Coast fallback before doing such a bang-up Job for Amos Alonzo Stage's College of the Pacific Tigers thia iaD, writes from Partis Ialcmd marine) baao, where he's now in second phase - J becoming a leatherneck officer. ; "This is quite a place." pens Ted. "It doesn't seem possible to accomplish so much during the hours of daylight ' The boys from College of the Pacific were split up and . put with other schools. I was put in a but with 12 Notre Dams fellows and now sleep right next to the great Angello BertelH. He's really a regular fellow. If there's a game of . touch ball or anything elee going on he has to be in 1L -. -Hs also studies bard and does pretty weE. - "Also with us is Andy Phillips. Notre Dame's basketball All-American. Joe Day and Lee Gustafson, from Oregon State (football) live just a fe,w hujs away and I get to see mem nearly every dayl In fact i.drew Gustafson as a boxing opponent the other ' day . and it was QUITE a battle. "Andy.'Hogers. our tackle at WTJ, Is up on the rifle . . . range here and I haven't seen him yet. But he promised to took me up as soon as be gets back. Pat White (former WU aH-coniorence center and also with Ted at Pacific) was put ' m another outfit and is doing fine. Steve Podesto (Stagg's paaaing-punting whiz this fall) lives right in back of us. They really bays a good bunch In this V-12 outfit here lust about the cream from all over the country. They're smart and learn things in .a hurry." Big Luke "Dpin' Fine" in Missouri J An Interested Portland miss, appreciative of the small bit we offered on Luke Crosswhite as a Coast league pitcher, writes to inform, that Big Luke is possibly too well settled back home In lieeAn4 4a . 1 . f . A.ocwbu ty oveu eu .inuaras give senous tnougnt to pro fessional Daseoauing. cays she: . ' -, :"He's aetfing along fine at home. This winter he's man , aging the apple storage plant for the company be worked for years ago. Since going home he pitched five games for : the company team and won them alL In the rest of the ' games he played first base and is quite proud of the .480 "batting average be made. (Note: Most pitchers are QUITE - proud even if they bit .230 And since he is getting on so well I doubt very much If he will return to the coast to play . with the Seattle team as I have been reading in the papers." Wrrrrfn Genrem Ale-rrmrJor J lince R? T i.U'. i t : for a few seasons "elnhomtpa eibility and sees the big righthander as being very well off right : wner1 n isra present. ; ;jAf - Says George: "Although X think Luke's still got, what It , takes to win. I don't think he'd be smart to come back out ; west Once those fellows are 'out and they start, making . a little money they begin getting pestered by the other boys. A dollar lent here, one there then first thing you know he'd be mixed up with the wrong crowd. He's too well known out here on the coast"- ,' " - .-- : - C rearer Boss. "Enlists MIX.TTAUXI2V. Nov.: 27 -JPy-i -T7illiam L. Veeck, 30-year-old pre ; sident and owner of the Milwau terms a week are, in the start er. Both are popular gents here abovte and adnero strictly to the clean stuff when perform inr. I Both prelims wfil be two-of-three-falls, St minnto affairs. ' The rasidlnr eommisaien or- JACK LIPSCOMB v.y ,-. .-'TV. -:?c;v k x' I.EE GUSTAFSOX " www mifcp o t ii n f i HH-ilfc;i m tVi r,rnc:rur-,;fcQ,Mi l. kee Brewer. American association baseball club, 'and one of the most colorful figures in the .sport, en-i usted as a private today in the United States' marines. . , . . dered rematch7 between Gor reons CSeorrlo Warner and Toogh Tony Rosa win bo donbt take rod eare of the usually wild and woolly main event spot Warner title. will be at stake araln as a result of a de cision rendered by the commis sion after alrinr the "fast count" proceedings of last week. . Just as Sots war getting his dander up aralnst the rorreous one then, Referee Billy McEa in counted the 4-Corners mus cleman down and out with add- inr machine speed. - , . . . Given a qualified and fair re feree Ross forecasts this as the, time' Warner will slink home a beaten man. And since Klser has been signed as jref ft nal lfled and fair third man will be calllnr enu i Both Boss and Warner blood and thundered ' fat ' ft terrifle match two. weeks are. causing the armory to bulce at the seams last week.' Since everything roes in general and there is no lore lost between the two, scads of the faithful will probably be on hand to see the titanic again this time. WU Outclassed In Fast Test Dumping in no less than five field goals in exactly six tries to get started on, and then ruling the backboards like so many ball hungry octopuses, the University of Oregon Medics caged out a comparatively easy 43-32 win over Willamette's Navycats last night in another touch-and-go scrum in WU hoop hall. Before the 'Cats could get the motor in their own fire enrine perklnr the smooth Port landers romped off to an t-e lead. They kept the pace throurhont, bat had to battle off one 'Cat surre early in the rame which cut their martin to 16-15. Dead-eye bucketing by. Don Brown, former College of Puget Sounder, dusky Walt Reynolds, ex-Oregon Webfooter, and Jim Zimmerman, once of Washington State's Cougars, shot the Meds off to their quick lead. Zimmerman, one of the best centers seen here-1 abouts in quite s spell, incident-! ally, and Reynolds kept up the Med scoring which offset the too late surge by Bill Stroud, George Lund, Paul Folquet, Ben Director and Clark Brown of the Trotter- men. , Then with Lowell Kaiser and Dan Vaughn, pitching in to help Zimmerman and ..Reynolds, the Medics pulled sway to lead 32-17 at half time. r .. , Unlike the night before when the 'Cats damped Fsdfie Paek ards, 42-34, last nlrht they were missing badly, althonrh eft times closely with shots. The tall and experienced Meds were perplexing the V-lers with the first aone defense the latter have looked at this season, and which was forclnr the 'Cats to -east off with long tries. When they did. Mr. Zimmerman dt Co. generally had the say on most all backboard rebounds. The time-taught Meds, ' using fancy pivots and feints mostly af ter fast breaks, took a total of 68 shots in all. Their sparkling first half percentage fell off badly and they wound up .with but 16 field goals. On the other side Willam ette, still using- its hit-and-run system, had the high total of 74 shots buf hit only "13 times. The night before they connected for 17 in 71 pitches. Persistency by the ball-hawking 'Cats turned the ' tflt te rather a roorh fray' the second half , and when they did manage to ret the ball for shots they ; were still on the' cold side. Zimmerman's 12 points, gained mostly after eleven pivots around WU guards for easy , lay-ins, led the scoring. Director, who swished 15 the night before, canned 11 more ' last night and was really the only Navy cat near shooting form. Reynolds, . who played s sparkling floor game, tossed in nie for the Meds. i v or o mxdici ) s rcrt Tp Reynold, f , , . ' ; T 4 1 Sloan, f S 3 4 Zimmerman, c 15 - 4 4 12 Henry. t 4 Brown, g 13 S S ; S Kaiser. I ., , , 1. lf"e 1 Jensen, t 6 3 3 Vausban. g , . . , . S S 0 -4 ; Totals r , .,,,68 IS 11 43 WIIXAMZTTK (32) Kins, t - . Brown. -s e : i t . t - e.- a s-u 1 v-5 -13 - S 1 11 Lund. X Director, t Adams, e ; Copen haver, e Stroud. r Warner, r . Runyan. g , Folauet. t i ere e 11 ,", .-.e - i i- e- 3 -i 1 13 e S3 Mazwen. g Brownie, g Personal foubrt Kinr, Brown 3. Ltmd. Director 3. Adaxr.s. CopennsTer. Run ysn. Warner. Maxwell. Brownless, Reynolda. Sloan, fcimmermaa 2, Henry, Kaiser. Vaughan 3. - : - rre throw missed; -King,- Director, Stroud. Reynolds 3. ' ZUmmerman a, Kaiser, Brown. r,-'- Shooting percentages:- Ifeds J3S: .WU J73. ; - . . ., Officials: , Tom Dryaan an4 Al XJghtaer. ; r . Ureal ::lLa I ' . - JSdvv Sweens. Ov&r A rmv- 13-0 w,-Service; (Elassic e Brings 5th Straight : Hamburg, Hume Star 7 Ini. Bruising Qassic, ' By WHITNEY MARTIN : WEST POINT, NY,' Nov. ?7 (flVNavys .'. football ' rnachine, stymied completely by an alert, aggressive army team for two periods, turned on its pow loaay m ine secona nail oz bruising, bitter contest to steam-; roller the Cadets, 13 to 0, in the semi - privacy of Michie stadium. The defeat marked the fifth consecutive year the Middies have turned the trick. An estimated 15,000 spectators, residing: within the 10-mile limit, saw a football ' show ' which kept them in various stages of hysteria throughout most of the afternoon. For. two violent periods ' ft was the kind of ball game that was a masterpiece of midfleld offensives, featured by savage bloc kinr, violent tacklinr and dorred all - aroand play which kept either team from present tnr a robust threat. A break was bound to come, and It came midway in the third per iod. Hal Hamberg, a stocky chunk of rubber, and not synthetic, who bounced off and on all afternoon, sent a punt to Glen Davis on the army six, and Davis stepped out side as he caught it Davis was caught back on the three a mo ment later, and Max Maxon's punt was runback by Hamberg 10 yards to the army 43. . Here the long-throttled navy power began to function, and, with a Hamberr - Hillis Home lateral pass rood for 25 yards, the big factor, the Middies ad vanced to the six. Three more plays found the ball still two yards away from the roaL On the final down Bob Jenkins crashed over with army defend ers draped on him like confetti. Vic Finos place kicked the point. It was obvious the steady stream of replacements, a half dozen at a time, going into the Middie line up slowly was pulverizing the (Continued on page 15) Army Beavers Defeat Civies CORVALLIS, .Nov; 27-)-Lon Stiner couldn't lose - but he couldnt win either. -- His army Beavers dawned, his civilian Bea vers, 7-0, today in -the Oregon State college - campus football league. The army trainees tallied tn the final period after inter eeptinr s pass en the Civies 40-yard marker. Two aerial heaves by John Verbitski, ex Butger rridder, put the pigskin - on the 10-yard line, and Wayne Petaja passed to Bob Proctor ever the roaL - In the doubleheader's nightcap, the Rainbows beat the Wolves, 7-0, to lead the league with three victories and no .defeats. Warren Hart, former Iowa State star, re covered a Wolf. fumble on the 30 and packed 11 to the 12. Then he took a pass on the six, from where Maynard Thoren went across. Grant Places Three ' On All-Gty Eleven j PORTLAND, Nov., 27 -(Th, tirant nign, western Oregon prep football champion which meets. Klamath Falls for, the state title here next Saturday, placed 'three' men on the '. Oregonlan's all-city team tonight. ; ; ' ' Art Mime and Sheldon Jones, the general's brilliant ends, won the two wing positions and Glen Carnine took a guard berth. l New Phil Boss I ' TrYimin tai f 'n ! nut . 1 football star, has been named - ; presiaeni ei ute i auonai league i Phillies U succeed William ' D. Cox, , ousted by Judge K. M. Landls for betting on baseball (AP wlrephoto.) . 1 Inirdtfucih&W Navy cat Fireladdies Every one of 'em a V-12'er, pictured above are the Willamette university Navy cat basketeers whe In three games thus far have proven to be strictly of the "run 'em ragged" species. Front row (left to light): John Copenhaver, Kenny. King, Gordy.Kunke,' Ron 'Rnnysn, Clark Brown Carl Plass and Ben Director. Second row: JimFrank, Ray Oberst, George Russell, George Lund, Wally Brownlee, Dick Maxwell and Bob Warner. Third row: Jack Sias, Paul Folauet, Dick Adams, Bill Stroud, Norm Willard, Mel Samuelson and Bob Donovan. Back row: Head Coach Duke Trotter, Mgr. Stan Boyd, Dave Clevenger and Assistant Coach Bob MeGulre. (Statesman sports photo.) j Del Monte 11 Mashes Bears By RUSS NEWLAND BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 21-(JP) Del Monte's great - star-powered Navy Pre-Flight team crushed the University of California's Colle gians 47 to 8 today in a one-sided game closing out the 1943 football season for both sides. ;. - It was a case of former college luminaries, ex-prof essional - play ers and mass reinforcement . in the way of Cadets experienced in gridiron ways, knocking over a bunch of willing but younger riv als. -i- The California boys turned, m a respectable showmr . despite the lopsldedness of the score. ; Coach Lt. Bill Kern, Del Monte coach, started his famed "officer team," composed of such football notables as Backfielders Leonard Echmont, FcdhamjlParter.alL Mississippi: . V James McDonald, Ohio State and. Paul .-Questman; Missouri. In front of .them charged the big former Tennessee ends', Ed Cifers and Bowden Wyatt;t Ray Bray. 225 pound former "Western Michigan college and Chicago Bears tackle, and others. In three and one-half minutes after the openmr klckoif these worthies , scored s touchdown, traveUnr 61 yards. Just V4 mhv utes after that they barred 04 yards for another score en a pass play, and before the quar ter was over they had marched another 01 yards," this time en - two passes. Coach. Kern pulled out ;his. big ' ' (Continued on page 15) -. . Albina Oregon Again " EUGENE, . Ore., Nov.. 27 .riffP Led by Urgel "Slim" Wintermute, towerlnr center on the University of Oregon's-193 NCAA champion ship hoop squad,- the Albms; neu ships of ; Portland defeated., the Webfoots,' fa-tortv; t . Wintermute, whose club also trimmed the, varsity last nighty tallied 21 points to share tndl vMual scoring honors with' For-. ward Lu Baecelerl of Oregvu. Baccalerl rang ;sp XIT bef ere leavinr the rame on fouls nine ; minutes' before - the end. -X . Oregon trailing ' 18-28 at half time, knotted the, count at 41-41 with seven minutes to go. Newberg Trips Franklin, 20-7 , PORTLAND, Ore Nov. 27 little Newberg bowled over the Giant Franklin Quakers, 20-7, In the: Firemen's annual milk bowl benefit football game today for one of the - state mterscholastic season's major upsets. ::J ; Dick Twenge, 190 pounds of rynamite, -1 pulverized Franklin's defense for two touchdowha and fared s pass, to End Bob Tiewton for s third. He also niade a; point after touchdown. " ' jrriCiit?noPcp? Varrt Hew Via rid VKsStyf Thump El . t IFn)d2)itIbsiIin EAST Navy 13, Army 0. . Brooklyn 12, Rutgers 6. Lafayette 58, LeHigh 0. MID-WEST Great Lakes 19, Notre Dame 14. , Iowa Pre-fught 32, Minnesota 0. I Oklahoma 26, Nebraska 7. . - SOUTH : , - ; , ' N. Carolina 54, Virginia 7. Camp : . LeJeune Marines Jacksonville Jiavy 6. - . v Georgia Tech 48, Georgia 0. SOUTHWEST; 13, .. Southern Methodist. 20, Texas Christian 0V V Southwestern, (Tex.), 21, Rice 7. FAE WEST ' . Del Monte Preflight 47, Califor nia" 8. ' .- ,:; -.;.- ; : Southern CaJL 26, UCLA 13 .HIGH SCHOOL - -.',3 r Newberg 20, Franklin.; (Port land). 8. . " . : . r . , NEW YORK,' Nov, 27H3-;Able Angelo Bertelli, the "Springfield Rifle of Notre Dame's mighty gridiron power until ' Uncle Sam put the finger on him in mid-sea son,-today, won the Heisman tro phy as - the .outstanding college player of 1943 by, a vote of. sports writers and broadcasters .through out the 'country.' : ." The quarterba eking brain' and pass-pitching ace of the Irish for six all-victorious games before being -ordered to the US marine base at Parris Island, SC, won. in walk, polling ,848 points-more than the combined total of the next five'-candidates in the ballot ing held annually by the Dowh tpwn AC ee.t, Nearest to ;hfra Were - Bob Gdell; Pennsylvania's crack defense back, with 177, and Ottd , -Graham f ; of Northwestern, with 140.-- - 1 . -i ,:- t-- : : r .: ' Sugar Bdwlers r-N!; ORLEANS, Nov. 27-P) Georgia Tech ' and ' Tulsa' will meet Inr the tenth annual Surer Bowl football classic, President Joe David of the New Orleans MId-wtnter . - Sports ; association announced late today. . . Appling Inducted -CHICAGO, rN-'.TiAVLuke' Applnig, veteran shortstop "w,i t h the Chicago :WJiite Sox, and 1943 American -league batting cham pion, was inducted into the army today. He is 34 and the father, of two daughters. ..-.T ' - -I Try - ass f CIiumso ' rsaei. AJsastes - SCCCesa far, SOM years la CHINA. - Ns, auKtrr wttli rteat 'aluncBtvaa v'ar -AfTUCT EJ - lsor4r, -.- snasiua, V aean, tamgv,. Kver,-...-ktdaeys..-" stoaaaeh. caa, eoastipaUaa, .. mken, ia U. " fever. skia, .f ceaalo ss plaints y. ' . . r Ctsrlb Chan Chinese' Herb Co OTtiee"' -Ior t-OalJr, Toes. aaS :Sat'--e a, Xtm m.--aaO Son.' ass .wee.,. Ml. to u se p. O) 122 : N. ComT. EL, Ealem, Bertelli Gets Award LJI Ore. I Fumbling USG Downs Uclans By FRANK FRAWLEY j LOS ANGELES, Nov. 27HJF) No football team can out-furible the Trojans of the. University of joutnern California. - , j . UCLA's Bruins tried it today and failed,' and they also failed to stop the Rose ; Bowl-bound men to Troy, who came but on ! the long end of a 26 to 13 score in1 one of . the. weirdest games ever play ed in Memorial coliseum. V . l Forty -five thousand pecta ; tors howled as ' Trojans and ; Bruins pulled one miscae after another 14 of them altogether I and then went away convinced ! that Southern California would i be "a" pretty: fair ball elub. IF It 1 could only hold on to the batti Just:van.; niustraUonl of how cock-eyed the-; game was, hote this: inMi'fourtt'ciuarter f the Trojans registered. a first down on CLA!s fceveVTwo tries at the line took the oval to within a 'few inches of . the : oaL There, -Qnar-terback Jim hardly 'tried a. quar terback sneak, fumbled and? re covered. Undaunted, he tried it again. That's right, he DID fumble again. ... ;,---..k. -. ,,.. . In Justice ; to Jeff , Cravath'g boys It must be said that they atoned for some ' mlseues in a hurry. When UCLA kicked, out from behind Its goal Halfback' Eddie Saens gathered In the ' ball on the Bruin 40 and darted In and out for a touchdown. -Oh, it was .a wild one. all! the way. Two touchdowns were scor ed on blocked pimts and another came on an :87-yard run from an intercepted lateral pass. j' - .-, LCLA.. beaten In the season' opener by the Trojans, 20 to 0, ' (Continued on page 15) j , Turiiei-TKO'lr .. - -- . . ' i . - ' l. i f lerumi PORTLAND, Ore- Nov. '274iW Leo "the Lion" Turner," Portland negro, won a 'technical knockout over Pedro . HermosiUo Friday night, but not ' until ' after the Mexican middleweight had frac tured his right hand. h - Hermosillo, 159, punched Tur ner, 158, full of holes until late in the third when Turner ducked ra right which" Janded on the top of his head. The, Mexican dropped his right hand and didn't use it again. But he came out for; the fourth and went down, for a nine count from two left hooks to. the chin. The fight was stopped in the fifth. . " . i. y- AMERICAN LEGION ' UBESTLKIG . . i' . O . j. - . . . ,1 - - .--"" Tuesday, November 30' 8:30 P. M. j " . . . .. . ... - t. -i a Salen Arccry Ordered , by Wrestling Commission 1 br. - 2 oat of t falls.! - ReJIatch Coast Light-Heavy Title GccxTjswcrjzcr Eugene 8emi-TVindap, SO llln. ; . ,r 2, or 3 falls. ; ' l. Jack Lipscomb I - V -vs.- - ' ' i , v. Tex Hajfer ' V.j: Admission:. ILH RliursiJe,.Gen. :Ata. 7Jc Tax.' lac 1 ursts BubbL Steve Lach's Payoff j Heav0 Comes in iiist, 1 30 Seconds of Tilt I By CIIAELES CIIAJIlJESLAi ! - GREAT LAKES, 111., fifr&1 (JPhThb Great Lakes Bluejack ets carne ln jon an arm end; a prayer fodayj t make a myth of Notf : Dame's invincibity. jaiiS .oteve !Lacn, ine iormer Duke university and " Chfcaca Cardinals, looped a ' fantastic dMperaiibn pass f - 46 yards into the arras of Paul; Anderson loft a touchdown in ;the last 30 seconds of ; playj j which gave the; silors a 19-14 1 triumph before a sciam. tog crowd of i 23,000 traines.ljlt was .the first defeat this yeafr for Notre fiame and ruined the Urlsh chance j for their first unbeaten, untied Reason j since 1930.- M Anderson, ex western resen e gridder hugged the spiraHn4 ball jon the jgoal line and stepped into the endjzone without an opponent within yards of him. i, -The i dramatic finish was of the variety which will be talked about as i long as footbal) :is played I For the Fighting Irish had Just ended Inr march in a ' "5-yard scoJf duel w ith j the clock to go ahead 14 to 12 with a minute rrmaininr in the rime. Notrej Dam's kickoff went put ion the; I Bluejacket 39. . Lach ittien pitched! 5 yards to CeciJ Plrkey to reach the Irish 48. On the next play Lach faded back and iwilh End Paul Lunont virtually hang ing around his shoulders like a ' !.!L!l i It . ' i . j VI necKjacp ne sqook iree ana raia pulted.fhe ball to Anderson J Who was hoif-ering ground the goaJ line with his: motor running. 1 1 Si Anderson's perf ect catch J and s subsequent place a bitter anti-cfirnax Steve Juzwik' kick provided lor tne most brilliant Notre Dame season) in 13 jjrears. j "" p. - The: Sailors stardv line ited the Terrors of the f to 181 yards by rnshlng.f Their poorest; - shoeing! of the -season. Meantime, Great Lakes powered Dame . I .. !! .; s t DETROIT, Nov. 27. PH Tho Detroit! jTigers announced foday , me' signing-of Manager Steve O' Neill td a new one-year coaifract, thus ending'speculatioh bverJwhe ther '.' the rotund " former major league catcher would be bac)c for a second term Salary figures wisre undisclosed. ; i r ' gT n it ! -i- wti Canadians Win t 3 r-;. i I- MONTREAL, .Nov.! Montreal's high flying Canadians chalked, up their 11th game with out .loss ; in the National) hockey league ;ace tonight, whipping fjie cellar-dwelling New York gang ers, 8-3,! before a crowd of 1,160. It was lithe Hth straight loss for the Rangers, ir I I 1 ' teafi Outskate Boston, 7 to 4 1 I TOR0NTO,!Nov: 27-Bi-elk-ing a -ltl fM period tie by scor ing inree-goals In the second frame i the Toronto Maple Leafs went on tonight to beat the Bos ton Bruins; 7 j to 4. in a National hockey league game.' ' !h li : ; n - j ; Quality WINTER SUITS! rS N Clothiers 58 Stste '.- Salem J 1 1 r-i ' ' if'''. 4;ica7:)E::3 TS. Ealem -,! i t Opener, 29 Jlln. : j 2 of 3 falls. ft L P -VS.- - ;; If:; Flint loisenf Grid by EmU Sitko, Notre i - ji 'j - ;j j i Tigei's Reliirt; StefiD'Neiil ,: Straigli V 4 .3 ft- - X .1 n M T j