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The Capital Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 6

Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1935 PADES DEFEAT MCMINNVILLE 9 TO 4, FIRST ROUND 6 INDIANS' PLAY DETROIT MAKES BID FOR LOUIS MILWAUKIE TO PLAY ROTARY ETTER Callison to Introduce 'Double Cruncher' Play During Coming Season Elliott, 0 Gilmore, 3 TOTALS 35, MCMINNVILLE Barks, If 4 Robbins, rf 4 Jones, 2b 4 Strode, 3b 3 Peterson, .3 Hortenj ss .4 Cameron, lb 4 Renson, 3 Fletcher, cf 3 TOTALS 33 BAER IMBROGLIO BREAD SQUAD New York, Aug. 21 This Joe Louis-Max Baer fight must loom as By HOWARD J. BRICE Eugene, Aug. 21 (U.R) Prince G.

(Prink) Callison, University of Oregon's head football coach, pinned his 1935 gridiron hopes today on a green backfield sparked by a po WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8 p.m. Rotary Bread vs. MHwauJcle 9 p.m. Eugene vs. Oregon Ctty.

TUESDAY RESULTS Pades 9, McMinnvill? 3. 10, Toledo 0. Lebanon 2, Corvallis 3. a pretty piece of fisticuffs the way the different cities are bidding for it. Indications are that the bout will take place at the polo grounds in New York September 24, but De 10 11 0 Toledo 0 4 4 Berlant, Allard and Gette; Lowden tentially great fullback, a sturdy- line, adequate reserve strength and troit, the home town of the brown bomber, has made an offer that is and Post.

a mysterious new play. The fullback, Frank Michek, the Corvallis 3 5 Lebanon 2 3 only regular returning from last The third round of play In the Oregon softball tournament being Leslie Net Players Win Over Olinger Leslie playground tennis players won two matches over Ollnger opponents early this week. Ot net-matches are scheduled to take place before the end of the season. Barbara Howe of Leslie defeated Velma Banks of Ollnger, 6-4, 6-4, while Bud Roberts of Leslie beat Floyd Sandford of dinger 8-6, 6-3. Coach Sipprell has charge of tennis at dinger while Rachel Yokum directs the play at Leslie.

PARKSDEFEATS ERNIE PILUSO Ernie PHuso was defeated by Herb Parks in the main event of Tuesday night's wrestling card at the armory. Piluso was substituted for Pug Ryan who had been billed for the one hour event. The Portland grap-pier won the first fall only to have the former California champion come back to take the second and third. Dickie Trout of San Diego dropped the special event to Thor Jen-son of Elkton after the former had been Incapacitated as the result of the second round. Trout had won the opening engagement.

Jerry Marcs and Jack Clayborn went to a draw in the opening bout after each combatant had taken a fall. i Lee and VanValin; Larson and held under the ltgnts on esweeuana making Promoter Mike Jacobs sit back and take notice. Frederic H. Schader announced that a group of prominent Detroit citizens would bid $300,000 to bring the attraction to Detroit. The fight would be staged at Havin field with Reeves.

year's backfield, is the key man of the new play which Callison expects to produce touchdowns in Pacific coast conference meetings Held, will bring in one of the two teams which has not competed 60 far Oregon City. Albany, the other SALEM GRIDMEN this fall. club vet to demonstrate its prowess, accommodations arranged for 85, 000 persons. Callison calls the play a "double cruncher." He anticipates and STREET'S GANG DOWNS BEAVERS BY 9-2 SCORE (By United Press) Gabby Street was willing to be quoted today as saying that his Mission Reds are "in" so far as the pennant in the current Pacific Coast league race is concerned. Street based his confidence on the club's success against Oakland last week and the fine start they got last night in opening a ruclal series with the Portland Beavers.

Old Hollis Thurston hurled his eighth straight victory in lifting the Missions to the top of the league, breaking a tie with the San Francisco Seals and cheating Portland of a chance to climb Into the control seat. Thurston set down Moose Cla-baugh, Gil English and the other Beaver sluggers with seven hits and gave them single runs in the second and eighth innings to win 0-2, while 7000 fans begged the Beavers to come on. Slugging Ossie Eckhardt, Roy Mort and Fred Berger of the winnersrouted and Schulz and bruised Spurgeon Chandler. The walloping dropped Portland to a game and a half behind the pacesetters. The San Francisco Seals slid beak a game out of first piace by losing to Sacramento 2-1 in a hurling duel between Tom Flynn and young Kenny Sheehan.

Flynn triumphed when the Senators scored two runs for him in the seventh. Seattle and Los Angeles remained deadlocked in fourth place by winning their games last night. Dick Barrett, Seattle ace right-hander, held Hollywood helpless while his mates pounded out a 9-1 victory. Timely batting by Gene Lillard and Jim Oglesby gave Los Angeles a 9-4 win over Oakland. will not make Its formal bow until Thursday night when it takes on Pades of Salem.

Both teams drew ARRANGE GAMES Schader said the decision to underwrite the bout for this amount, with a third to each of the fighters and a third to Jacobs, was reached bvcs in the pairings. HOW THEY Nine football games have been scheduled by Salem high school for at a meeting of Detroit business men at the Detroit Athletic club. STAND, the 1935 season which wilt open September 27 or 28 against the alumni. A tenth contest to take Rotary Bread, one of the chief contenders in the tournament, but which was hard to get a line on early in the week because of the poor showing made by Astoria, will face stiffer competition tonight in Milwaukie. The second and final game of the night's session will bring together Eugene and Oregon City.

Both contests bear the earmarks of Jacobs was in a huddle with the New York state athletic commission yesterday, at the latter's request He asked to consider the matter more and said that after going further Into the details today he probably place on an open date October 11 or 12 will probably be arranged. UNDER O'NEILL The Cleveland Indians are playing a better brand of baseball since Steve O'Neill, their former coach, took over the managerial reins. Prior to Steve's accession, their win percentage was less than .500, but since then they have been galloping along at a .667 clip, winning 12, losing six and tying one. They have won six of their last seven. They are about a half game behind the Chicago White Sox and Boston Red Sox, whicn are in a vir- tual tie for third place.

The Indiana capitalized on two fumbles and a wild throw in the opening stanza to defeat the Washington Senators 4-3 yesterday. The Yankees made up In a measure for indignities they have suffered at the hands of Schoolboy Rowe by belting the big fc-llow off th mound in the third inning to defeat the Detroit Tigers 6-5. The Tigers now lead the Yanks by six games. Ben Chapman got a homer for th Yanks In a first inning rally and Hank Greenberg got hfs 32nd of the season off Johnny Al'n as the Tigers counted four times In the sixth. The Browns poked teir heads out of the cellar long enough to take the first game of a doubleheader from the Red Sox 8-5, then they lost the second 7-3 as three hurlers allowed 14 hits.

Tuesday's results: National: Boston 5. St. Louis Brooklyn 0, Pittsburgh New York 6, Cincinnati Philadelphia-Chicago, postponed. American: Chicago 13-11, Philadelphia 4-4; St. Louis 8-3, Boston 5-7; Detroit 5, New York Cleveland 4, Washington 2.

WRITES FROM ISLANDS Monmouth Raymond Sheeon, who is a private in thr army writes his mother here from Fort Mills, Philippine Island, giving his official standing and address He Is with Battery 60th coast artillery (antiaircraft.) Fort Mills Is located on Corregidor island at the entrance of Manilla Bay and 25 miles west of Manila. hopes for even more success with It than he had with the original "cruncher," a midified delayed buck Inside either guard. "Iron Mike" Mikulak, Oregon's great star of several seasons past, made the "cruncher" famous. Callison expects an even better performance from Michek as an exponent of the "double cruncher." While not as hard-hitting as Mikulak on defense, Michek is regarded a better offensive player. Strategy of the "double cruncher" probably will remain unrevealed until Oregon swings into ac tion against the University of California in their 1935 conference debut at Portland on October 12.

Michek at fullback is expected to be the spark-plug for the Webfoot offense, deprived of Bob Parke, Maurle van Vliet and Ralph 'Cer-jeson from last year's regulars. Other members of the backfield probably will be Johnny Reisch-mann, versatile blocker from the 1934 team, at quarterback; Walter Back, Palo Alto, triple-threat Ietterman, at left halfback, and Bud Goodin, Hopland, Calif, sparkling broken field runner who played with the freshmen last season but was out most of the time due to injuries. The line probably will equal, if doesn't surpass, that of the 1934 eleven. It will average about 190 pounds. Twelve lettermen are returning.

A bright spot is prospect of adequate reserves something the Webfeet have lacked. Pet. Four of the scheduled games are home engagements. For the first time in a number of would make a final decision to morrow. years Medford high school has i place on the local schedule, the con being real ball games.

Pades, Salem and state champions, Asked if Chicago was still being successfully negotiated their first considered as a site, Jacobs said: "Chicago still is a possible site, test to take place at Medford October 26. Coach Hollis Huntington will con hurdle Wednesday night by whang .585 371 363 324 .524 .484 .400 .354 Pet. .637 ing out a 9 to 3 victory over Andy duct his first practice session th! Peterson's McMinnville aggregation, along with Detroit. Both have made attractive offers and will be given full consideration, although there are strong reasons to influence afternoon of September 16, the opening date of school. holding the fight right here in New York." Woodworkers of Portland, with Mickey Berlant on the mound during the early innings, blanked Toledo 10 to 0, while Corvallis nosed out Lebanon 3 to 2 in one of the .613 .602 342 Coast Missions 38 San Francisco 36 Portland 36 Los Angeles 33 Seattle 33 Oakland 31 Sacramento 26 Hollywood 23 National TV New York 12 St.

Louis 68 Chicago 71 Pittsburgh 64 Brooklyn 53 Philadelphia 50 Cincinnati 49 Boston 32 American Detroit 70 New York 63 Chicago 57 Boston 59 Cleveland 58 Philadelphia 48 Washington 47 tightest games of the season. Mon day night's crowd of more than a The schedule: Sept. 27 or 28 Alumni. Oct. 5 Chemawa here.

Oct. 18 Albany here. Oct. 26 Medford there. Nov.

2 Astoria there. Nov. 11 Eugene there. Nov. 16 McMinnville here.

Nov. 22 The Dalles there. Nov. 28 Corvallis here. FEATHER CHAMPION DEFEATS BERNARD HOGAN AND GIVAN QUALIFY, TOURNEY Seattle, Aug.

21 (IP Two ace golfers of the Pacific northwest, Eddie Hogan of Portland Harry Givan of Seattle, were qualified today for the national amateur tournament at Cleveland. With scores of 147 and 150 respectively, they won ever all competition at Seattle Goif club in a 36 hole qualifying round. A third northwest entry in the national will be Albert "Scotty" Campbell, youthful Seattle star, who qualified In New YorK with a score of 141. .469 .439 .419 thousand paid admissions was ex ceeded last night by at least two or 381 Pet. .631 Cincinnati, Aug.

21 iffy Freddie Miller, recognized by the National Boxing association as featherweight NICHOLS TURNS IN 378 323 5.22 .518 .449 champion of the world, rocked Roger Bernard of Flint, through Day Family Plans Labor Day Meeting Stayton Mrs. J. W. Day has gone to Estacada to be witti her son and family, Floyd Day. Plans have been made for a family reunion to be held Labor day after which Mrs.

Day will go to eastern Oregon tc 10 rounds last night to show 6000 MEDALIST HONORS VISIT OLD HOME Scotts Mills Mrs. John Nelson and daughter Lilly left recently for South Dakota where they will visit Mrs. Nelson's old home, relatives and friends. They are driving through and plan on being gone only a few weeks. .416 .364 St.

Louis 40 Gearhart by the Sea, Aug. 21 Wj Stayton Dr. A. M. Dozler spent hist week in eastern Oregon.

howling fans just how he did it through a year of fight campaigning in Europe. It was his first appearance in an American ring since his return three weeks ago, his title not being at stake. spond the winter. L. J.

Nichols of Lake Oswego bet Frank Miller Case tered par by two strokes as he To Juvenile Court Both men entered the ring over turned in a 70 for men's medalist honors in the qualifying round of the Oregon coast midsummer cham the 126 pound weight limit of the Silverton The case oi Frank Mil pionship tournament here featherweight division. Miller scaled 128H, Bernard 129'A. ler, minor, who pleaded not guilty to a charge of cutting in too soon The bout almost ended In the sec with his truck after passing the car Art Ulmer, Gearhart youngster. ond round, when Miller rifled a driven by Anna Larson, causing straight left to Bernard's chin. Ber You are entitled to ALL THESE FEATURES when you buy a low-priced car bad wreck August 12 was assigned from Justice Frank Alfred's court led the young men's division for those under 32 years of age with a par beating 71.

Right on Ulmer's heels came Bill Cline of Salem, nard fell to the canvas, took a count of nine and staggered to his feet. Saturday to the juvenile department at Salem. Marty Leptick and Wes Berner of His eyes stared glasslly and his guard was down, but he kept moving. Four young women riding in the Portland and Morton Vines of Tu three hundred. When Pades checked in with four runs in the opening frame, it appeared that a repetition of the 22-0 victory of Rotary Bread over Astoria waa in the offing.

However, McMinnville tightened and held the state champions fairly close thereafter. Gilmore, evidently working under somewhat of a strain, had difficulty with his control and frequently worked the count up to three and two. When McMinnville scored once in the fourth and twice in the fifth to bring the count to 6 to 3 against them, it appeared the locals might have a little difficulty. However, they went out and added three more in the fifth and sixth to give them a safe margin. Kitchen, with three Fife hits, and Adolph and Schneu-11c with two each were the heavy hitters.

McMinnville earned but one of their runs while Pades worked for six of theirs. Berlant struck out 11 batters before he retired in favor of Allard at the end of the seventh. The former did not yield a hit until the seventh when Toledo batters connected safely twice. The Lebanon-Corvallls mix was the closest of the series to date. Lee, Chinese moundsman, held Lebanon to three hits, two of them resulting In a run In the second.

Larson for Lebanon was almost as effective. Corvallis bunched two hits off him in the third, to score three times. Two errors assisted materially in the run gathering. Funs will probably dc given an opportunity to look over the slants of Georgcson, ace Rotary Bread chuck-cr, tonight, although it is possible he mny be saved for the semi-final Thursday night. From the fifth rour.c to the fin Larson car were slightly injured and alatin, all tied for par 72's.

the car was a complete wreck. A col Cecil W. Rodgers of Eastmore- ish, Bernard rallied enough to make a creditable showing but he was ob viously outclassed. lision resulted after Miller had passed the car on the Scotts Mills-Sil-verton road. Two men received suspended fines Zimmerman's Grove land, Stoddard of Oswego, Bill Crosbie and H.

Dehan of Portland were next with 73's. Six of the youngsters' sections were grouped at 74. They were W. Wilcox, Dick Hedges, F. R.

Donne, George In-glis and Bob Hofer, all of Portland, and Ed Palmrose of Seaside. of $10 each on a charge of having a Chosen for Picnic dog on the farm that was unlicensed. They were Kenneth Warnock and R. Wallace. Silverton Forty-nine members of the families of the Modern Wood men and Royal Neignbors lodges of Warren Grant Whiaden was assessed $3 when it was ascertained that he did not have the proper li Silverton spent Sunday at Zimmer Women's Class Has man's Grove in their annual picnic.

A ball game tn which both men and Park Session Today Silverton The members of the cense for operating a motor vehicle. Leona Terhaar was fined the same for a similar offense. women took part was termed the Skunks vs. Polecats with the score 29-12 in favor of the Skunks. Loyal Woman's class of the First Christian Sunday school met The general committee included Wednesday in the ciLv park with S.

M. McClung, Clyde Ramsby, F. M. Powell and Greer Moffett. the program starting at 2 o'clock, and a supper to be served late in the afternoon.

For the social hour guests from Scotts MilLs Christian ATTORNEY ON VACATION Silverton Attorney and Mrs. Alf church and from the Court Street O. Nelson. Ruth, Bob and Jimmy, are spending a week's vacation at Christian church in Salem were present. tending the annual met of the Sun 3 0 set Home association at Eugene, of which Nelson a member, and a COMPANY COMES Men am a Sunday guests at the visit to the Oregon caves They plan to return home Saturday evening.

Moe home were Anna, Ben and Oscar Anderson of Battleground, TAPES AB Kitchen. 2b 4 Foreman, ss 3 Bone, cf 5 Scales. 5 Hill, rl 4 Ollnner, 4 Gribble, 3b 0 Adolph, lb 4 Schnuolle, 3 Mehama Mrs. val1o Zimmerman Mrs. Estenhart and Henry is making an lndefiniif visit at the home of her son-in-law and daugh Kormman of Vancouver.

Mr. and Mrs. Slg Moe and daughter, Merlyn, Mr. and Mrs Ed Woare and daughter Evelyn of Silverton. I ter, Mr.

and Mrs. Ward at Los Joe Iverson Buys Inn On Pacific Highway Woodburn A deal was closed Monday whereby Joe tverson took over Ed's Inn on the Pacific highway operated by Ed Lindeken, in a trade for a house and four acres of land on the Pacific highway, formerly occupied by R. LuU. Iver son, in turn, leased the inn to Mr. and Mrs.

George Foster of Broad-acres who will operate it. Mrs. Foster was formerly Fern Wadsworth. The Lindeken family has moved to Alzar Courts where they will reside temporarily. Lindeken plans to remodel the Lutz house and will also build a group of new.

modern inexpensive homes on acre tracts. ON VACATION Turner Among the inmierous people of this community who have been enjoying vacations at beach resorts are Mr. and Mrs. Ulvin E. Denyer, Mr.

and Mrs. M. A. Hill and Glenn Titus of the Crawford district, son of Mr, and Mrs. Raymond Titus, Hard rains were had over the week-nd at the roast Huckleberries are beginning to turn and there will be numerous parties going to the mountains for the fruit to can.

and you get them only in CHEVROLET COWBOYS READY FOR STATE FAIR RODEO Winn i i w'wwimiiiiwimmiiiIi niii.i'u. -w The most finely balanced low-priced car ever built WEEK AT TOLEDO Falls City Mrs. Chuuncey Ferguson and son Milton if turned home Saturday from spending a week In Toledo with Mr. Ferguson. Jim Russell came back with them atfer making two week's visit with his sister.

Mrs. Kenneth Hulse In THE new Master De Luxe Chevrolet is the only cor in its price range that brings von all of the fine car features pictured here! It is the only car of its price with a Solid Sted Turret-Top Fisher Body the smartest and safest built. The only car of its price that gives the famous gliding Knee-Action Ride. The only car of its price with Blue-Flame Valve-in-Head Engine-Stabilised Front-End Construction and Weatherproof Cable-Controlled Brakes. See and drive the Master De Luxe Chevrolet and learn by actual test how much these features mean in terms of added motoring enjoyment.

Do this and you will agree that the Master De Luxe is exactly what its owners say it is the most finely balanced low-priced car ever built. Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer and drive this car today! CnEVBOUT HOTOB COMPATfT. DETROIT, MICH. CHEVROLET These hi -powered wild hones and championship rnN Iber cowboys are all art for the night rodeo which will ba hrld following the horse show at the Oregon stale fair In Salrm, 3I-Srptf mbrr 1. The rod ro and hone show will be held In the horse show stadium bulldlnf rarh nlM starting Monday, Srplfinber 2.

5 iBJP US CmrOwrM. to. fcGW prim mdmrC. M. A.

A Omrnt Sf, Vrfn. Douglas McESay Chevrolet Co. 430 North Commercial Street Telephone 3189 Sth 17S 11.40-PlnU 178-C KM.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1888-1980