The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 20, 1953, Page 8, Image 8

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S (Sec IV StatMznaa, Salem, Ore. Sunday Sept 23,1953 i t .
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BOSIZONTAX, VCKTICAl.
X Fail 62 Bright 95 Silont 1 Staff of 4ft Fish 9 Thing,
to hit .colored 99 In this office delicacy inlaw
ft Silent flgh place J Wild SO Walker W Order-
10 Confer 65 Sprinkle 97 Toughen goat 51 Thin out lineal
ment with 99 Floating 3 Dry . mining) 94 Refuse
15 Thin flour box for 4 Raging 54 Light from
19 Sane 97 Celtic fish 5 Diffident careK grape
tion lan 100 Bleak. 6 Occurred 55 Of a dean pressing.
20 Turkish guage rocky 7 Situa- 50 Pikelike 99 Unit of
decree 58 Jot -hill tion fish quanti
21 Sounder 59 Warmth 14V1 Pigment 8 Mountain 59 Courage tative
22 Saxhorn 60 Shelter 103 Licit range CO Boundary meter
23 Food 1 Glut 104 Face (Asia setter 90 Rashest
fish 3 Mien value Minor) 2 Moon's 9S Fish
' 24 Man- 4 Forget- 105 More 9 Most age at pickle
hater fulness reliable strained begin- 100 Under-
20 Herb 06 Local 107 Supply 10 Very pale ning of ground
of Him- 69 Put new 108 Tissue n Conflict year passages
v alayas - filling 110 Garden 12 Soon 05 Of that 102 Religious
27 Use in brick. plant 13 Recur girl image
29 Solicit work 112 Without 14 Fancy 67 Game of 104 Chatter
. SO Prox- 71 Enlarge feet 15 Tin cards 105 Point
imity hole 114 Cutoff pyrites 68 Etruscan of deer's
22 Manner 73 Moham- ' 118 Pale 16 Cement god antler
'. 33 Feather medan 119 Concert 17 Wading 70 Undi- ' 106 Dried
. 35 Prayer month perform- bird vided grape
ending "75 Pealed ers 18 Large 72 Edible 109 Lariat
, 26 Owmk 76 -Bird of 123 Cord quantity mush- 111 Bearded
like finch 124 Unfamfl- 25 Melody ' room 113 Faded
animal family Urity 28 -Heart 9-t-Char 114 fiU?
22 Loop T9 Inor- JTZ Settle- 21 Plexus ader 3La
41 Admit. gani neatte 33 Bah 76 fiaaabflf tig Fin I If
63 Head- 63 U.SL; Greca- 34 Drags Cab- Tm TiasaC
67 That 64 Skill t2S Alack 36 AlT 77 Disposed U 3l) av
widen 5 Journey 129 Fishing 37 Quickly 78 Attain Pesav
oacJoses 67 Coal net 3S Plercsng 80 Buddhist ajffanan
" 69 Plant distillate 130--Asiatic 40 Enoquent column 10 rViaHn
disease SO Add lemur speaker 82 Inferior fairy
60 Meas- 90 Euro- " 131 Alone 42 Finishes tinplate 120 Portion
ureof pean 132 Muddle 44 Indict- 83 Pledge 121 High
capacity sea-gull 1?3 Moun- ment before 122 Foot
m 11 Sea- 91 Cut of tain 45 Vegetable God covering
bird 1 - meat nymph exuda- 86 Semi- 125 Miscel-
62 Sharp 93 -Vitreous 134 Hogs tion nocturnal lany
flavor material 135 Story 48 Watchful rodent 126 Present
Real Pop-Off Guy .
Answer to This Purrle Appaar on Pago 11, Soction 1.
Britain. France Open Wider
Bank Vaults to Businessmen
LONDON I Britain and
France opened bank vaults a bit
wider to their businessmen this
week to arm them in the fight for
world markets.
In a move brimming with con
fidence in Britain's present finan
cial , state. Chancellor of the Ex
chequer Richard A. Butler slashed
the bank rate from 4 to 34 per
cent.
I;. Across' the channel the national
ized Bank of France, 'which sets
stbe pace of French financial ac
i'tivity and insures most loans made
."by other French banks, followed
" With a similar cut from 4 to 34
per cent.
' "This means:
' L Money that is the British
pound sterling and the French franc
is cheaper and easier to get at
X 2. Manufacturers who want to
; borrow cash from banks to expand
their plants, buy new machinery
and make other investments will
now pay a lower interest rate,
which will permit them to sell
their products at lower prices.
The cut means cheaper goods
both at home and in the export
markets, where every penny on
the price tag is important.
What the British treasury did
in banking language is to cut
by half of 1 'per cent the minimum
rate at which the Bank of England
will discount approved bills of ex
change. The British industrialist or
private householder will have to
pay less interest on the money he
borrows. All money deals in Bri
tain are ultimately pegged to the
bank rate.
Bank loans for newlyweds to set
up housekeeping, deposit rates,
mortgages, building finance com-
Journals of Yank
In Algeria Shown
WASHINGTON. D.C. CVJour
nals and letters of James Leander
Cathcart, an American who spent
some eleven years as a captive in
Algeria in the late Eighteenth
Century, has been placed on ex
hibit in the Library of Congress.
While he was a captive, Cath
cart served as chief Christian
secretary to the Dey, the ruler
of Algeria.
After his release Cathcart held
several United States diplomatic
posts in North Africa.
pany rates are all expected to be
cut. in line with the treasury move.
A spokesman for the British Na
tional Union of Manufacturers wel
comed the move, saying:
"It will facilitate additional in
vestment for the expansion of in
dustry. It should increase Britain's
productive power in foreign mar
kets and make for cheaper goods
at home."
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Sarviny Salem ard V:iniry
as Funeral Directors
for 24 Years
JonvediDt location, S Commercial
street; bus line; direct rout'- to ce
meteries no cross traffic New
modern building seating ; up to
300. Service within your means.
L M
Virgil T. Geldea
b 7
Graea & CMdea
VJRGIL GOLDEN. CO.
603 S. Commercial St. FUNEXAl SQtVlCI
Phone 4-2257
LaSterza Says He Wil
last Uodiy tor
Me
By MURRAY ROSE
NEW YORK-(A If Roland La
Starza's fists are as explosive as
his -words, heavyweight champion
Rocky Marciano is going to be in
for the toughest battle of his fistic
career come Thursday night.
Or it coula be that the supremely
confident challenger might wind up
on the deck quicker than Jersey
Joe Walcott did in Chicago last
May 15. If you're memory is short.
Rocky required only 2:25 of the
first round to send the antique glad
iator into oblivion.
Handsome Roland has been
throwing one verbal bomb after
another at the Brockton blaster.
It wasn't just press agent oratory,
either. It came directly from La
Starza.
Whether the 26-year-old .New
York challenger is just, whistling
in the dark to bolster his own
spirits or is trying to nettle the
29-year-old champ is difficult' to tell
right now. '
But Rollie's popoffs. including his
unsocial remark that Rocky is "go-
Union Leader
Calls Meet of
TV Workers
A move to " unionize Salem's
radio and television technicians,
servicemen and antenna installers
will get underway with an organi
zational meeting Tuesday night at
7 o'clock in Hall 3 at the Salem
Labor Temple, 445 Center St
At that time organization of a
Salem local of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Work
ers, AF of L, will take place. W.
A. Smith of San Francisco, Calif.,
brotherhood representative, will
conduct the meeting.
Purpose of the meeting. Smith
said, is to discuss current condi
tions in the trade and standards
for wages, hours and working
conditions in the radio and tele
vision industries.
Approximately 75 technicians,
servicemen and installers are
working in the Salem area, it was
estimated. A similar local union
was established in Portland sev
eral years ago, it was reported. .
ing to get soft In the head" from
taking too many punches, has got
ten under the thick skin of the
usually, placid Marciano. ;
So much so that Rocky, who sel
dom makes any outright predictions
on the outcome of his own fights,
said that he is going to knock out
Roland "within seven rounds.
LaStarza, who dropped a con
troversial ten round decision! to
Rocky 3 years ago when both
were unbeaten prospects; hasn't
minced words as to what he thinks
is going to happen. . j
' "I'm going to win,- he said, I
can outbox him and I can outsmart
him. He can be hit by a jab, a hook,
a right and practically any kind of
a punch. I may stop him or even
knock him out Probably stop him
because he cuts badly and his eyes
close up." . , 1
That's the way they feel about
things and it hasn't hurt the gate
either. The odds favor the cham
pion 34-1. They will have it r out
over the 15-round route in the Polo
Grounds. Starting time is 8:30 p m.
Pacific Standard Time.
This fight will be seen immediate
ly only by the customers inrthe
Polo Grounds and viewers in thea
ters from coast to coast. There
will be no home television or radio
broadcast of the scrap. !
- A closed circuit will telecast, the
fight to subscribing theaters from
New York to California, the first
time theaters will be linked up
coast to coast for a fight j
President, Jim Norris of the pro
moting International Boxing Club
predicts there will be $300,000 in
his till the morning of the fight
and that the fight will grass $400,000
or better.
The IBC figures to get another
$100,000 or so from the theaters
and another chunk from moving
pictures later.
Norris figures on 40.00C or so Polo
Grounds customers. Reserved
seats go for $5, $10, $15, $20 and
$30.
Marciano will get the heavy cut
as champion, 424' per cent of the
gate, theater money and movies.
LaStarza's share is 174 per cent
The challenger will receive the
biggest purse of his career, his best
to date was the $15,000 he received
on March 24, 1950 when he lost to
Rocky.
Yanks Favored
In Big Series
; o . ' '
. - (Continued from Page 7)
Yogi Bern both as a receiver and
as a hitter even though the Yankee
backstop is the best in the Ameri
can League. ' '
Hodges has it over Joe Collins
at first base and Snider has a slight
edge over crippled Mickey Mantle
in center. '
The Yankees, however, shape up
very favorably against the Dodgers
in all other positions.
Scrappy Billy Martin should dom
inate Junior Gilliam at second on
experience alone,1 Pihl Rizzuto gets
the vote over Pee Wee Reese at
shortstop, and Gil McDougald is a
harder hitter than Billy Cox al
though the Dodger third baseman
is much the better fielder.
Furillo, currently sidelined Dodg
er rightflelder, is the key in the
outfield comparison. If he is suffi
ciently recovered from the broken
bone in his left hand, the Dodgers
would have a slight edge.
' But Woodling is better defensive
ly, than Robinson in left and Hank
Bauer is no slouch in right
An important factor is the bench
where the Yankees hold a com
manding edge simply because of
the presence of Johnny Mize, pinch
hitter de luxe. Remember the '52
World Series?
In a World Series pitching Is
more important than hitting, and
in most cases, is the deciding fac
tor. The Yankees were able to beat
Brooklyn in seven games last year
largely because their Allie Reynolds
was superb and the Dodgers' Joe
Black was tired.
Reynolds is back this year and
so are Vic Raschi and Lopat. All
are case-hardened in World Series
competition and all have beaten
the Brooks before.
The Yankees also have southpaw
Whitey Ford, their biggest winner,
on hand for this one. He is almost
certain to start the second game,
at vast Yankee Stadium with Casey
Stengel holding righthanders Rey
nolds and Raschi in readiness for
Brooklyn's righthanded sluggers in
the narrow confines of Ebbets'
Field.
The Yankees have good second
line pitching strength in Johnny
Sain, Jim McDonald and left Bob
Kuzava.
Manager Charlie Dressen must
count on young Carl Erskine and
aged Preacher Roe. Russ Meyer,
Moore Firm Plans Fifth Party
More than' 100 persons will
attend a fifth anniversary dinner
dance to be sponsored in the
Capital Room of the Senator
Hotel next Saturday night by
Moore's Business Forms, Inc.,
which began business in Salem in
1948. ? .
C A- Miller, general manager
of the Salem plant since its in
ception, will act as master of
ceremonies. Special guests will
include company officials from
the Oakland, Calif., headquarters
Walter F. Eggert, vice-president
and general manager; F. C
Bob Milliken and Johnny Podres
rate as question marks.
Erskine, who turned in a magni
ficent victory last October, figures
to start at least twice. Roe, twice
conqueror of the Yankees, cannot
be expected to pitch more than
once.
Maybe Black, the almost forgot
ten man, or Billy Loes, or Clem
Labine, can do it But they must
be 'listed as doubtful right now.
The winner? This corner thinks It
will be the Yankees in seven
games.
Merner, general production man
ager; G. R. Oliver, general sales
manager; L. Pickler, assistant
general sales manager, and II. W.
Bass, manager of industrial rela
tions. From one machine and less
than 20 employes, the Moore firm
in Salem has grown to include six
larger machines and more than
50 employes, and its floor spaco
at its plant on South 16th Street
is being doubled under a three
year expansion program.
FISTULA-FISSURI
Stsmach and Cslon DUsrasrs .
DR. IL REYNOLDS
CLINIC
Prsctolsflltt-Naturopath
RECTAL SPECIALIST
SUm,Ore. Ph. 3-9440
Uaf
"You'd better stay out ef Daddy's way for awhile.
He had to go to General Finance Corp. today for
money to pay your drugstore bill:"
This friendly loan service helps people through
all kinds of awkward financial moments. Just call
Mel Bowcnt and stop by for the money.
GGncnnL FinnncG conp.
Uaas Nas. S-l it M-33S
1 36 SO. COM&I&CIAL ST. PHONE 3-91 6T
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DOUGLAS McKAY CHEVROLET CO.
510 N. Commercial Street
Salem, Oregon