The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, January 11, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    COLUMBIA NEWS
By Mrs. E d w ard Shaw
L adies'
W in te r
COATS
V alues to $25
$ 7 .9 8
Boys'
L adies'
4-B uckle
DRESSES
Overshoe*
V alu es to $4.50
$ 1 .4 9
$ 1 .9 8
M en’s
L e a th e r e tte
L ittle G irls’
COATS
SLACKS
F leece L ined
Sizes 36-38-40
Sizes 2-4-6-8
59c V alu e
$ 1 .9 8
37«
B oys’ S heepskin
L ined
L e a th e r e tte
Silk
PRINTS
COATS
V alue to
Sizes 12-14-16
39*
$ 1 .9 8
79c
Yd.
L ad ies’
B ro th erh o o d
H o rseh id e W ork
SHOES
GLOVES
Humps, D ress
Oxfords, etc.
PR IC E
98c value
i
69*
FOR THE SMASHING BIG
of BURNHAM & BURNHAM’S
M ig h ty J a n u a ry Clearance
Sak
in Hermiston, Oregon
SALE ENDS JAN. 15
Men’s Overshoes
4-B uckle - AU R u b ­
ber or clo th tops
Men’s Sweater*
$2.98 V alue
*2 29
»1 98
Men’s Pajama*
Ladies Dresses
$ |4 9
V alue $1.98
$j 39
Flannel Skirts
Baby Shoes
98c
Men’* Underwear
98c
Men’* Shirt*
,89c
Children’s Shoes
69c
Q0>
& <01
V al. to $2.98 - 10% wool
Reduced t o $1.59. 1,29
F o r Boys and G irls
H eavy w eig h t - val. $1.19*
S p o rt - v a lu e $3.15
Men’* Dre»* Shirt* 7 Or
Ladies’ Oxfords SJ 49
$1.49 v alu es
• ’ *
Men’* Oxford* A pnce
and 6 in. SHOES
*
Men’* Hi-top*
$2’98
18 & 16 in. - val. to
$5.00.
Men’* Hi-top*
50c val. - sizes 4 to 14
Z ipper & B utton necks.
S p o rt - v a lu e $2.50
Ladies’ Blouses
V alues to $1.95
4gc
OA.
& 071
Rayon Prints
F a st C olors
Y ard
F a st C olor
2 y ard s
Print Dresses
16 in. - val. to $10
Boy*’ Polo Shirt*
Ladies’ Oxfords $498
Mercerized Prints
$4-98
7Qr
Jrw
A. H. C able le ft by tr a in W ed n es­
day of la st week for S an Jose. Cal.,
on business. H e p lan n ed to be gone
tw o weeks.
Mrs. N ellie Ja c k so n , w ho h as
been v is itin g h e r cpusin, Mrs. E m ­
m a C h rlstley for som e tim e, le ft for
h er hom e in In d ia n a S a tu rd a y a f­
tern o o n .
Mr. a n d Mrs. Jam es R eid of H o n ­
o lu lu a re house g u ests of h is p a r­
en ts, M r. a n d Mrs. J. H. Reid.
D in n er g u ests o f M rs. E m m a
C h ristley an d son F rid a y ev e n in g
w ere Mr. an d M rs. J. H. R eid an d
Mr. an d Mrs. Jam es R eid, a n d Mrs.
W ier C asady a n d d a u g h te r M arian .
T he 4-H G irls’ S ew ing clu b w ill
m eet a t th e hom e of Its leader. Miss
A nne S om m erer, S a tu rd a y of th is
w eek.
F re d e ric k G rey re tu rn e d to Salem
J a n u a r y 7 th a f te r h a v in g s p e n t th e
h o lid ay s w ith h is p a re n ts, Mr. an d
Mrs. J o h n Grey.
T he 4-H B ach elo r S ew ing c lu b
m et w ith thelir lead er, Miss A nne
S om m erer, a t h e r
hom e T u esd ay
evening.
E lm a D unham , w ho h as been v is­
itin g h er p a re n ts over th e w eek end,
re tu rn e d to U nion a week ag o S a t­
u rd ay to resu m e h e r te a c h in g in th e
p ublic school th ere.
V erne D unham m otored to P ilo t
Rock la s t week.
Mr. an d Mrs. L. K in g sb u ry an d
Mrs. Cecil W a rn e r w ere g u ests of
Mrs. E ilis an d M ary E llis S a tu rd a y .
Miss A rild a F o ste r a rriv e d S u n ­
day to v isit h e r p aren ts.
Mrs. B. E. G etch ell, w ho has been
q u ite ill for th e past w eek, is re p o r t­
ed a s g re a tly im proved.
Mrs. J o h n DeMoss re p o rts th a t
w hen th ey tu rn e d on th e ele c tric
lig h ts fo r th e b ro o d er house a t fo u r
o’clock M onday m o rn in g , one of th e
dogs th o u g h t th e r e w as a fire th e re
and ra n to one of th e m en ’s houses
and b ark ed till h e roused som eone to
come ta k e a look.
Mrs. B a rre tt, d a u g h te r of Mrs.
R y lan d , had an o p e ra tio n a t St. A n ­
th o n y ’s h o sp ital in P en d leto n .
Mr.
and Mrs. L ester C o lp itts of R eith
b ro u g h t Mrs. R y lan d hom e T h u rs ­
day of la s t w eek.
Mr. an d Mrs. Tom O’G rady, Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. T ay lo r. M r. an d Mrs.
W. B. F o ster. M rs. C asady a n d M ar­
ian, Mrs. C h ristley an d Dell and
Mrs. G eorgia H en d erso n w ere v is i­
to rs M onday ev en in g a t th e hom e of
Mr. an d Mrs. R eid. Jam es R eid
show ed 150 slides in color of scenes
in H aw aii.
Mrs. A. C. S w a rn e r re tu rn e d
hom e la s t week from a few days
v isit in P o rtla n d .
She v isited h e r
son L aw ren ce w ho is still in th e
h o sp ital, an d also v isited h e r d a u g h ­
te r and h er h u sb an d , Mr. an d Mrs.
R om ar S tein.
Mr. an d Mrs. Jam es R eid m otored
to P o rtla n d J a n u a r y 1, an d re tu rn e d
for a few d ay s v is it a t th e J. H.
R eid home.
Mr. an d Mrs. R. J. W ilb u r an d h is
m o th er, Mrs. Id a W ilb u r of Pendle-,
ton w ere T h u rsd a y d in n e r g u ests of
Mrs. M abel W eeks.
D ean S p rin k el of H ep p n er and
Mr. an d Mrs. H a rry
P e terso n of
Ione w ere over n ig h t g u ests of Mr.
an d Mrs. A dam B lahm Sunday.
Mr. an d Mrs. E lb e rt H u tch iso n ,
Miss W a g n e r and G ra n t C hapm an
sp en t F rid a y ev en in g v is itin g
Mr.
and Mrs. B ax ter H u tch iso n .
M iles B a ra g a r d ressed o u t 300
tu rk e y s M onday of th is w eek.
Mrs. Geo. M etteer, m o th er of Mrs.
Jo h n K nox, re tu rn e d to h er hom e in
Condon T u esd ay of la s t week.
Mrs. Gus L in d er, w ho h a s been
s u ffe rin g from a fall is so m ew h at
im proved. She h ad as S u n d ay v is i­
to rs Mrs. E m m a C h ristle y an d son
Dell, Mrs. W ier C asady and d a u g h ­
te r M arian , Mrs. A n n e tte B arh am
and C hilds B arh am an d M r. and
Mrs. W m. M ikesell.
S usan Knox, w ho h a s been ill a t
h e r hom e w ith blood p o iso n in g w as
able to re tu rn to school T uesday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. B a ra g a r and
Mr. P ro b st of S e a ttle w ere New
Y ear’s v isito rs a t th e hom e of Mr.
B a ra g a r's p a re n ts, M r. an d Mrs.
.Miles B arag ar.
L u cille W eeks w en t to w o rk In
P en d leto n Sunday.
R e g u la r school w ork has been re ­
sum ed an d a rtic le s of w oodw ork a re
being com pleted d u rin g a c tiv ity p e r­
iods. T he h o t lu n ch es w ill be served
on M onday, W ednesday an d F rid a y
of each week.
T he sev en th and
e ig h th
g rad e
p upils w ill p re se n t a p ia y le tte "Too
M uch X m as’’ and m usic a t th e re g ­
u la r assem bly p ro g ram J a n u a r y 17.
T he a d u lt lib ra ry has a new set of
books a t C olum bia sectio n , a v a ilab le
u n til A p ril 1st.
P a rk e r W ild e r - P op­
u la r sty les
F an cy zip p er sty les, etc.
W h ite and beige color
O uting P ajam as
PAOB
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON. OREGON.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1940.
C h ild re n 's - v alu es to 69c
Ladies’ Silk Hose
3 6 4 t h r ’d - val. to 1.15
19c
29c
49c
79c
OF
THE
YEAR
1939
COMPILED BY
JO HN
D. G R A N T
(C o n tin u ed on n e x t colum n from
laat w eek’s issue o f T h e H e ra ld )
JO—Yankee Clipper flies from Long Island
to Europe, opening trans-Atlantic air
mall service.
22— Boss Pendergast of Kansas City given
15 months In federal prison for Income
tax evasion.
23— House approves farm appropriation bill
as passed by senate
25— Fritz Kuhn. Nazi bund leader, indicted
in New York on theft charges.
Draft Dodger Bergdoil returns to the
United States from Germany and Is
made m ilitary prisoner.
27— Yankee Clipper returns from Europe.
JUNE
1— Senate passes bill lifting long term bond*
ed national debt lim it above $30.000,-
000,000.
2— Contract for 24 warships costing $350.-
000.000 awarded by navy department.
¿—Former Judge Manton found guilty of
bribery.
8—House rejects plan to make Hyde Park
home a memorial to President Roose­
velt.
7—King George and Queen Elizabeth of
Great Britain enter United States at
Niagara Falls; officially welcomed by
Secretary of State Hull.
3— King and queen of Great Britain wel­
comed to Washington by President
Roosevelt; attend state dinner at White
House.
10— House votes big slash in payroll taxes:
benefits are increased.
11— King and queen end U. S. visit.
12— Senate votes $225,000 to department of
commerce to employ experts.
U. S. monetary gold stock passes 16
billion mark.
13— House votes drastic limitations on future
operations of TVA.
15—King and queen sail for home.
19— House passes tax bill of 1,844 millions:
retains nuisance taxes, but revises lev­
ies on corporations.
20— Senate committee boosts pork barrel bill
from $83,848,100, as passed by the house,
to 1407,855,600.
21— Widespread WPA graft charged In Lou­
isiana; Governor Leche resigns.
F. Ryan Duffy nominated for federal
bench in Milwaukee.
25— Fraud bared at Louisiana university.
26— Governor Leche steps down and Lieu­
tenant Governor Long is sworn in In
Louisiana.
$600,000 fraud laid to President Smith
of the Louisiana university.
28— Senate adds 73 million to relief bill and
passes it.
29— House hands administration defeat of
neutrality bill; endorses embargo on
arms shipments.
30— Senate lets Roosevelt’s money rule die
by preventing legislation to extend.
House passes neutrality bill barring
arms shipments.
JULY
5— Senate adopts conference report on re­
viving President’s money powers.
6— W. P. Buckner given two years in prison
on Philippine railway bond charges.
10—President gives Paul V. McNutt of Indi­
ana job as head of the newly created
Federal Security administration.
13— Senate votes to fix payroll tax at 1 per
cent until 1943.
14— President signs bill giving war depart­
ment power to hide secret new equip­
ment from spies.
20—House passes bill to curb bureaucrats
in politics.
24— House committee shelves President’s
$800,000.000 housing program.
Nation-wide lottery swindle using name
of Will Rogers exposed.
25— One killed, seven shot, in battle over
nonunion labor at Boonville. Ind.
26— United States scraps trade treaty with
Japan.
Francis B. Sayre nominated for high
commissioner to the Philippines.
31— Senate lops $1,615,000,000 from spending
bill and passes it.
AUGUST
1—A rm y’s flying fortress flies coast to
coast in 9U hours.
House kills President’s lending-spending
bill.
4— Senate passes third deficiency bill of
189 millions.
Agreement reached on social security
amendment cutting pay roll tax $900.-
000,000 in next three years.
5— Congress adjourns after appropriating
more than $13.000.000,000.
7— Former Governor Leche of Louisiana
and two others indicted in hot oil quiz.
14— President advances Thanksgiving day
one week, naming November 23.
15— WPA raises pay of 2,000,000 workers
$5,000,000 a month. New York fair asks
bondholders for $4.820,000 to meet debts.
16— -M
Mayor
among 20
ayo r of Waterbury.
Waterbury, Conn.,
com
uilty in $1.000,000 graft.
18—U. . S. and Canada sign r new pact for
air service.
20—Louisiana oil czar. Dr. J. A. Shaw, w it­
ness against ex-Gov. R. W. Leche, kills
self.
24— President pleads for peace; cables H it­
ler, Poles, and king of Italy.
29—German lineA Bremen held up at New
York for search.
B
SEPTEMBER
2—Liner Bremen allowed to depart from
New York.
6—Roosevelt establishes naval patrol along
Atlantic coast.
11—President lifts quota on sugar to curb
rices.
teel plants and railroads call back their
workers.
13—Congress called for September 21.
14—Borah opposes repeal of arms embargo
as likely to put America into war.
18— Soviet purchasing agent tells of pay­
ments to persons connected with Demo­
cratic national committee.
20—At a conference of Republican and Dem­
ocratic leaders Roosevelt urges repeal
of neutrality act.
21—Congress convenes in special session;
Roosevelt urges early repeal of arms
embargo provision of neutrality act.
25—American Legion convenes in annual
session in Chicago.
27—Sudden dissolution of war resources
board causes surprise.
28—Administration’s neutrality repealer bill
sent to the senate.
29—Powerful naval fleet ordered to Hawaii.
S
OCTOBER
2—Debate on repeal of neutrality act begins
in senate.
4—Arm y places an order for 329 high­
speed. light tanks.
5—Grover C. Bergdoil, draft dodger, sen­
tenced to 7 l,'a years in prison.
7—Bishop Ablewhite sent to prison for fund
shortage.
10_W ar department orders 65,000 semi-auto­
matic rifles.
12—W illiam Green elected president of A.
F. of L. for sixteenth time.
17—Brazil orders $5.870.000 rail equipment
from America.
18—President closes American ports to sub­
marines of warring nations.
19—New house bill bans financial aid to
warring nations.
20—Roosevelt sets thr*e-m ile lim it for sub­
marines.
23— Indiana endurance flyers descend after
535 hours: new record.
24—Senate adopts cash ana carry amend­
ments to neutrality bill.
25—Government sues 236 railroads under
Sherman antitrust act.
27—Senate votes, 63 to 30, to repeal arms
embargo provision of neutrality act. Bill
goes to house.
28—Carl Bevins, Missouri flyer, kidnaped
and slain in his own plane by Ernest
Pletch, arrested.
29—California flyers land after 726 hours in
air—new record.
30—U. S. assesses Germany 50 millions for
Black Tom and Kingsland blasts during
World war.
31—United Mine Workers raise 63.000.000 for
litical fight in 1940.
poll
Pre esident asks 276 million for added
defense.
NOVEMBER
2—House votes against embargo on arms;
bill goes to conference.
3—Congress passes neutrality repeal bill
and adjourns.
4—President signs repeal bill and bars war
zones to American shipping.
6—Supreme court rules state cannot tax
HOLC mortgages.
7—Old age pension plans defeated In Ohio
and California.
AAA w ill make loans to cotton growers
on new crop.
6—Navy sends marines to Hawaii to
strengthen Pacific defense.
Fifteen U. S. oil tankers transferred to
Panamanian registry.
9— Roosevelt demands Lewis, head of C I.
O., resume peace negotiations with A
F of L.
12—Dr. Smith, former president of L S. U.,
given 8 to 24 years for university scan­
dals
14—Louis Levy. New York lawyer, disbarred
in Manton scandal
16—A1 Capone, gang leader, released from
federal prison: enters Baltimore hospi­
tal.
21 —Proportion of civil service employees
reduced under President Roosevelt.
22—U. S court upholds wage-hour law In
Montgomery Ward case.
Supreme court voids cities’ ban on hand-
Suprr
bills
27-Morgenthau declare« next congress must
Lift legal debt lim it.
28—Chrysler
irysler company a d C. I. O. agree on
basis of f peace arte er auio plants are tied
lays.
up 53 days
ids <
German-American
29— J u r y finds
_________________ bund lead­
er F ritz Kuhn guilty on forgery and
theft charges.
30— Roosevelt sends sharp note to Russia
asking that bombing of cities stop.
23—Davy Day, welterweight, stopped Pedro
Montanez in the eighth round.
25—Henry Armstrong, welterweight, defeats
Ernie Roderick. British champion., in 13
rounds.
30—Shaw wins Indianapolis auto race, av­
eraging 115.035 miles per our. Roberts
killed.
DECEMBER
JUNE
2— Curtiss plants speed building of war
planes.
3— Winnie Ruth Judd. Insane slayer, again
escapes from prison in Arizona.
5— F ritz Kuhn, bund leader, sentenced to
prison for two and a half yaars.
7—Upward trend seen in several lines of
business.
6— Secretary Hull protests British blockade.
9—Roosevelt orders a special naval dis­
trict In Caribbean.
11— RFC grants $10.000.000 loan to Finland.
U. S. Supreme court bars evidence
gained by wire tapping.
13— Twelve naval captains promoted to be
rear admirals.
14— ICC approves trainload ra il rate re­
duction.
18—Garner announces candidacy far Demo­
cratic presidential nomination.
6—Giants make five home runs in one In­
ning for record: rout Reds.
12—Centennial birthday of baseball cele­
brated at Cooperstown, N. Y ., where it
originated
21—Lou Gehrig. Mayo clinic physicians an­
nounce after check-up. has infantile pa­
ralysis: playing career ended.
23—Joe Louis stops Tony Galento in the
fourth round.
Yankees break record with 13 home runs
in two games on same day.
DISASTERS
22—Lou Ambers regains lightweight title
in 15-round
13-ro u n d b bout
out w
ith A
rm stro n g .
with
Armstrong.
30—New
New y
York - Giants, professional football
champ
champions,
defeated the All-Stars, 9 to
0.
0, before 81.000 people In Chicago.
JULY
6— Alice Marble wins British tennis cham­
pionship at Wimbledon.
11—American league wins all-star baaebaU
game. 3 to 1.
30—Df
_ ick
■ —
Metz
• wins St. Paul open golf __
plonship with record score of 276.,
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
6— Roscoe Turner wins Thompson trophy
air race third time.
15— Tony Galento stops Nova In 14 rounds.
16— Bobby Riggs. Alice Marble win U. 9.
not titles.
17— Yankees cinch American league pen­
nant.
20—Joe Louis knocks out Bob Pastor In 11
rounds.
25—B illy Conn, light heavyweight champion,
defended his title against Mello Bettlna
In 15 rounds.
28— Cincinnati Reds win National league pen­
nant.
30—Frankie Frisch appointed manager Of
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
OCTOBER
SQUALUS SINKS—U. S. navy’s
diving bell gets first real test rescu­
ing 33 survivors from sunken sub­
marine. Twenty-six others die.
JANUARY
21—The airliner Cavalier wrecked at sea off
Cape May, N. J. three lost. 10 saved.
23—Bomber crashes on test hop at Los
Angeles; pilot killed.
25—Thirty thousand killed. 50.COO injured by
earthquake in Chile; towns wiped out In
disaster.
FEBRUARY
2—Japanese submarine sunk In collision.
crashes after
11— Arm y mystery plane crash»
coast-to-coast flight at 3e0-mile
MARCH
2— Two hundred killed In explosion of mu­
nitions dump in Japan; 800 houses de­
stroyed.
18—Ten killed In airplane crash near T a ­
coma. Wash.
25—Airliner crashes In Oklahoma killing
eight.
6— Yankees win world’s baseball series In
four straight games.
17—Bucky Walters. Cincinnati pitcher, voted
most valuable player in National league.
19—Chicago White Sox defeat Cubs in city
baseball series.
24—Joe DiMaggio wins American league
most valuable player award.
29— H arry Thomas, heavyweight fighter, re­
veals fixed fights.
NOVEMBER
1—A1 Davis stops Tony Canzonerl in third
round.
17—Billy Conn, light heavyweight cham-
lon, successfully defends title against
esnevitch In 15 rounds.
E
DECEMBER
9—Eddie Anderson awarded plaque as
football coach of year.
10—Green Bay Packers whip New Y ork
Giants to win professional football title.
11—Nile Kinnick, Iowa football star, named
No. 1 athlete of all sports In annual
poll.
13—New York Yankees voted best team in
any sport.
NECROLOGY
APRIL
4— Four navy fliers killed when planes col­
lide in maneuvers.
13— Twenty-eight killed. 50 injured in train
wreck in Mexico.
16—Tornadoes in Arkansas. Texas and Lou­
isiana cause 53 deaths and injuries to
300.
MAY
23— Fifty-nine trapped in sunken submarine
Squalus.
24— Thirty-three rescued alive from Squalus.
26 dead.
JUNE
1—Missing British submarine found mired
in mud: 99 lost.
4— Twenty-two persons killed in Mexican
theater Are.
16— Seventy-one lives lost in wreck of French
submarine.
18—Ten dead. 63 injured in Minnesota tor­
nado.
JULY
5— Fifty-three drowned, 47 missing, in flood
in mountains of eastern Kentucky.
12— Mystery explosion and Are damage navy
aircraft carrier Ranger.
14— Twenty-eight perish in mine blast at
Providence, Ky.
17— Five killed as train hits auto in Chicago
suburb.
23—Avalanche on Mount Baker Wash., kills
two, four missing.
AUGUST
11—Nine U. S. army fliers and two navy
fliers killed as two bombers crash.
13— Fourteen killed as M iam i to Rio de Ja­
neiro plane crashes in Rio harbor. Twen­
ty-three killed. 80 Injured, when stream­
liner Is wrecked in Nevada.
SEPTEMBER
25— Storm in California kills 100: damage.
*1,000.000.
28—Munitions plant blast in Britain kills 15.
OCTOBER
11—Wreck of school bus at W ar, W. Va.,
kills six; 71 injured.
NOVEMBER
14— Five hundred killed and injured when
fire engulfs Venezuelan oil port.
DECEMBER
3— Typhoon ravages five Islands In the Phil­
ippines.
POPE SUCCUMBS—The devout
kneel in prayer before casket con­
taining the body of Pope Pius XI.
JANUARY
11—Prof. Herman Oliphant, treasury de-
partm tnt counsel, in Washington.
13—Col. Jacob Ruppert, owner of the Naw
York Yankees.
28— Former Sen. Joseph I. France of Mary»
land, in Baltimore.
29— William B. Yeats, Irish poet and play­
wright, In France.
FEBRUARY
9— Pope Plus X I.
13— Rt. Rev. J. M. Francis, Episcopalian
bishop of Indianapolis.
15— Charles R. Crane, former diplomat.
16— Dr. Clarence True Wilson, prohibition
leader.
MARCH
2—Howard Carter, who found King T u t’a
tomb, in London.
6—Former U. S. Attorney General John O.
Sargent.
6—Frank W. Stearns, close adviser to Pres­
ident Coolidge.
29—Gerardo Machado, former dictator of
Cuba.
APRIL
2— George
F. Harding. Republican national
committeeman for Illinois.
6—Prem ier Joseph Lyons of Australia.
9—James Hamilton Lewis. U. S. senator
from Illinois.
11—S. S. Van Dine, mystery-story writer,
real name W illard H. Wright.
MAY
26— Dr. Charles Mayo, famous surgeon.
SPORTS
JUNE
6— George Peabody Gardner, financier. In
Boston.
•
1&—Miss Grace Abbott, noted welfare work­
er and University of Chicago professor.
26— Ford Maddox Ford. British author.
JULY
7— Claude A. Swanson, secretary of the
navy.
8— Havelock Ellis, scientist and philoso­
pher.
11—Rep. Sam D. McReynolds of Tennessee.
18—J. Louis Comiskey, owner of Chicago
White Sox baseball team.
28—Dr. W illiam J. Mayo, co-founder with
his brother of the Mayo clinic.
31—Former Federal Judge F. A. Geiger of
Milwaukee.
AUGUST
IRON MAN STRIKES O U T -
Lou Gehrig, “iron man of base­
ball,” retires from New York Yan­
kees with paralysis infection after
hanging up all-time record for
games played.
JANUARY
2— Southern California
football team de­
feat, Duke In Rose Bowl.
3— Budge defeat, V ine, In pro tennis debut.
17— Edward G Barrow elected president of
the New York Yankee,.
25—Joe
Louis.
heavyweight champion,
stopped John Henry Lewis In first round
In New York
FEBRUARY
3—Ken Bartholomew wins national skating
title.
9—National Professional Football league
re-elects Joseph Carr president for 10
years.
23—Tony Galento scores technical knock
out over Abe Feldman.
MARCH
20—Charles Bowser
coach at Pitt.
named
head football
APRIL
I — Ralph Guldahl wins M aster, golf title at
Atlanta. Ga.
15—Boston w in , Stanley cup. defeating To­
ronto in hockey playoffs
17— Joe
Louis.
heavyweight champion,
knock, out Jack Roper In first round.
18— Joey Archibald wins featherweight title
from Leo Rodak In 13 rounds.
MAY
8— Johnstown won Kentucky derby.
' T.
Joseph
f Carr. National rootball league
Präsiden t. dies.
14— T. E. Powers, famed cartoonist.
SEPTEMBER
*—Charles Donnelly, president of Northern
Pacific railway.
18—Charles M Schwab, steel magnet*.
23— Sigmund Freud, originator of payoho-
analysis.
24— Floyd Gibbons, war correspondent.
Carl Laemmle. pioneer movie producer.
OCTOBER
* —George Cardinal Mundelein, archbishop
of Chicago
Sen M M lx>gan of Kentucky.
3— Fay Templeton, actress.
8—Count Von Hernstorf. German envoy to
U S In 1917
13—Ford Sterling, movie comedian.
23—Zane Grey, noted writer of western
stories
*9—Alice Brady, stage and screen star.
NOVEMBER
3—Ople Read, famous author.
8— Dr. Livingston Farrand. president em er­
itus of Cornell university.
18—Pierce Butler. U. S. Supreme court
justice
28—James Simpson.Chicago business leader
27— Dr J. A. Nalamlth, Inventor of basket­
ball.
DECEMBER
3— Alfred Grangei. prominent architect
Prince»« Louise, duchess of Argyle, old-
eat living child of Queen Victoria
3— Marshal Wu P eitu. poet-soldier of Re-
bllcan China
Butler Wright. American ambassa­
dor to Cuba
• —Co' John S Hammond, spor’sman and
r
soldier.
11—Dotu.a* Fairbanks Sr . stage and screen
star
Charles R Walgreen, chain drug st<»re
head
18— Hey wood Broun, columnist
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)