. LA-GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE;
nionday, June 13, 1932
"Old Jimk" Tries Iron Man gtuiit Wilis Ones Game Sunday
Page IW"" .
WALTERS TRIMS
DUCKS IN FIRST
BUT LdSES 2ND'
Missions Take Two From
Sacramento Club; Port
land Still Established m
aecona-nace.
ii r illy t lie Associated nrai ,
Junk ..Walter., Seattle pltoher,
looked back today on tho leot of
pitching i two Sunday baseball game
aualtun) Portland the Aeam toat soia
him lor $1000 as ."Old. Junk.V - He
was only fifty per cent successful.
however, In hla private warfare, win
rung the first game 4 to a, but drop
ping the second 0 to 4. i,
Elated by the promise lie .would be
allowed W pitch . the , second game
If he won the first, Walters started
out well. He allowed seven hits, the
name number hla team mutes gather
ed, but Seattle, mado two'safe blown
! rWie.. fifth 'inning count (or three
runs, which cinched the game.
? Despite a Boorohlng sunj "Old
Junk", did, well In the second, game
Until the seventh, Inning,, when Port,
lend, touched .him, Xor,three runs. The
Indians. gathered only four nits, tie
utile . took the series four to .three.
, LennAngelea bout, iipUy wood a . to 4
In 'their Sunday afternoon game af
ter losing the first she games of the
series. The Stars won. the first half
of the double header, 8 to I. In the
first game the Stars got six safe
hita . off . Leroy Herrmann, three of
them bunched in the seventh In-
nlng.'Whlle Fred Ortman held the An
gels to four scattered hits. - Los An
geles won the last game by gath
ering five lilts from two pitchers in
the seventh and final Inning to tally
four runs,.
., Missions )Vln Two ,
..bo,. tail-end Missions, govo the
dewn-.trodden, Sacramento Senators
t,wa more .setbacks, 10 to, 0 and .11 to
J, 1 ,tie ppencr tne missions , ueu
the score at, 0. nil with (l JW In
tbo seventh, inning, and .pushed over
tie winning tally in Wie tenth. . w
ills seventh Inning nightcap tbe Reds
scored six runs In the sixth to put
thecoma Wt.4lcev ., .,
Oakland took the opener from the
Seals 2 to 1 when Bill Ludolph, Acorn
hurler, drove nut a single to score
the winning run. ip the twelfth In
ning. The, Seals, won the. second, game.,
3 to S when Hunt, right Holder, hit
a homer, with, one on in the final
.seventh) inning. -
Yesterday's results!
First game: Tt, H. E.
Seattle . 4 7 0
Portland .,u..r.........v..... . H 7 1
.Walter., and Gox; Bowman, McDon
ald. and Plttpatrlck, Falmlsano,
r Second game: . It. H, E.
Seattle. i.j, .;;,..'.'.'.,...,,.,!.!.,.,,,..,..- 0 -4 Q
PprtloncJ ,i4!.............(...... i4 11 3
Walters,,, KUeen and Cox; Fotorson
and Falmlsano. y ,
. .First game: H. H. E.
Los Angeles 14 0
Hollywood -i . .:. .....-.,..,. .3 0 , i
f Herrmann and Oronln; Ortman and
Boaaler, ,.,, . .. .
(.Second game: R. H. E.
Los. Angeles ,. S 11 1
Hollywood i .. 4 0 1
Stltzel, Baecht and. Campbell, Cro
llui jBhcehan, -Thomas, Johns, Turner
mid Mayer. (Seven Innings by agree
ment.) First game: R. H, E.
Seerainento 0 10 0
Missions ., 10 1 3
, Deshong, Vlnol and Woodall; T. Gil
lette;. Bowler, ,H. Fllletto and HJccl.
.. 8econd game: . It. H. E,
Sacramento ,. H B 1
Missions ,..ll 11 3
. Brians,' . Bowleri, .Castor and Hoff-
niiinni (Seven Innings.)
.- First game:. R. H. E.
Ban Francisco 10 2
Oakland ........ 2 0 1
.' Davis and Whllgrcn; Ludolph and
Oastou. --(Twelve Innings.)
r Second game: R. H, &,
Bun Francisco 8 10 3
Oakland,,, r ,.- 3 , 3 0
i. Jlentleruom Stlne and . Wulnion;
l'ltbor. A. Walsh and Read. (Hoven
innings,)
: Baseball Standings
lly the AHwbtleri. I'rrss
NATIONAL I.IIACI i:
W. L. Tct.
Chlraao 31 33 .5115
Boston...- 30 24 .560
Pittsburgh 24 24 .6110
Brooklyn 27 2B .4111
St. Louis 26 2(1 .400
New York 34 36 .4110
Philadelphia 36 30 .4114
Cincinnati 36 33 .4111
AMI'.IIICAN I.KAtJI'K
W. I,. Pot.
Now York 00 10 .002
Washington. 32 23
Philadelphia 30 24
Detroit 23 23
Cleveland 30 36
Bt. Louis 27 20
Chicago 18 33
Boston
.10 41 .1110
COAST I.KAdl K
W. L. Pot.
(tqllywood 43 37 .026
Portland 42 30 .683
Ban Francisco 38 31 .661
ijtx Angeles . 35 34 .607
Oakland 33 3H .405
Seattle 83 30 .458
Sacramento 31 41 .431
Missions .37 44 .380
', VminnAra. (lAni:
. ..CiKi-st League
, Belittle 4-0, Portland 3-4..
Los Angeles 10, Hollywood 3-4.
Sacramento 0-8, Missions 10-11.
, San Francisco 1-3, Oakland 3-2.
, .. , Rational l.e'aeiie
pljiclnnatl 1, Philadelphia 0.
Boston 3, Chicago 6.
Other games .postponed, rain.
, s , , ,, Anirrlrau League
Cleveland . New York 13.
Detroit B, Philadelphia 0.
Chicago 4, Boston 1.
6t. Louis 0-4, Washington 3-0.
' Ar jjfh' CHURCHI1-'-
c ljARviNgNlfe iiS
Ken riiunJill of Mic rnlviTsMy tif Ciilirornla Iiiih hctU'ml '40 fret
,vUU Uiv Jiivclln, Itut Muttl JurvliH'ii of Fltilanil proiiiihex tu up
hold tnidillomit Sc4iii(llnavlitn Aiiprcinai'y In tills Olympk'ti event
ivltli throu niiif,'iiiK arounil 2:tll feet. -
SCANDINAVIANS
BEST IN JAVELIN
American,. Not Yet Listed
Among Olympic Winners
of the Speer Event.
g $
P OLYMPIC.. JAVUMN g
CHA.MI'IONH
P Year Wliiimr, (.'ountry Klst, j
1000 Lemming,
Sweden 175:00 $
P 1008 Lcnuning, .
p ... Sweden 178:07'
1012 Lemming,
E , , .. .Sweden 108:10.8
t 1020 Myyru, Finland 215:00 $
p 1034 Myyra, Finland 200:06
p 1028 LutUlxjUlst, $
p , , , Sweden x218:00'a 8
P .. xOlymplp - record., . Listed 3
P world record, 232,1601, 11 (P
P Inches, by Lundqulst, Sweden'
p loaa. AppUcatloii pending
p for mrk of 230 feet, 3
Inches, by M. Jurvlnen, Fin &
land, 1030.) ty
lly Alan (iould
(AHsocinted Vruna SporU Editor)
Nt)W YOHK. June 13 , (rti Barrlug
yonio pxtrnordlnary development in
the . Olympic demons irutiou of the
ancient art of spear-tosalng, there
nppcnrn scant likcliliood of the Jave
lin championship being extracted
from the firm grasp of the Scandi
navians.
Sinco this event, mnch nK'dn-sL the
personal preference of the Orceka
and . Amorlcniuj, W(U adlcd to. the
Olympic proKrum In 100(1 the Finns
BRUSHING UP SPORTS . . . , , .
jr sW un v.
and the Swedes have monopolized
the gold medals. Our clubs and
colleges showed no enthusiasm, for
the event: In fact, It was not until
1022, pare! it My In self-defense, that
the I. C. A. A. A. A. added the Jave
lin throw to 1U championship pro
gram, i , , , i j
. Tivo Kpnu-mrii fur t', fi.
Nevertheless the U. S. A. wilt. Jojn,
tho general scramble to out-toss the
mighty spearmen from the Scandl
nuvion fishing fjords.
Two Callfamia )erformerfii lariky
Ken Churchill or the University of
Cnllfprnia and Jlnimy DeMurB of
Los Angeles, have at least a jchnncc
to glorify the art for America.
Churchill, the beat Javelin thrower
ever developed In , college, has bet
tered 220 feet. DoMera holds the
present American record, of 222 feet,
0 inches, made in 1030.
.More Steam Needed
Good as are these performances,
t both beyond the Olympic record set
by L. H. Lundqulst of Sweden In the
Amsterdam games, the fact is that
Churchill or De Mers probably will
have to excel them to top the Olym
pic list.
The Finns and the Swedes have
shoved things up a few notches
since VJ2H, Perhaps they heard of
theso straugo Yankee threats, or of
the menace of one Bute of Esthonla,
who hurled the spear 228 feet, 2
inches last year.
Nell i iik New Marks
At any rate Elno Peuttlla and
Mailtl Jarvlnun, brother of Akllles,
tho all-around star, have been heav
ing tho Javelin upwards of 230 feet
around isolated parts of Finland.
Jarvinen. In i ferocious mood, hurled
the spear four times to distances be
tween 234 and 230 feet. .
These have been filed for inspec-1
tlon as world records to displace the
mark now credited to Lundqulst at
232 feet 11 Inches. Last year
IiUiKlqulst'fl best effort was a mere
toss
PITCHED FIVE
STRAIGHT
tZiAi fTrii fT
To THREE
BClo'EENl GMES.
WttffeRMlASJrlllJfi
s
tfoSE ON BMAS.
NElU
bPRlMa
srt n
V0 BATTIVM
-. (In tvvr I
r
210, feet, Penttila's was 220 feet, 1
inch. t-
The only Americans who ever
.scored Jn the Olympic Javelin throw
were Oene Oberst of Notre Dame
and Lee Priester of the Mississippi
Aggies, both in 1024 at Paris, Oberst
finished . third and Prlestec fifth. t
fi- It was an , off year for the Scan
djuavlftry. and Jonnl Myyra,:of Ftn
lond won his second Olympic title
with a throw of only 200 feet.
ptytytytytytytytytyptyptyty4
lt Alan J. (Joiilil
(Associated Press Sports Editor)
Jimmle Foxx, the cherubfaced far
mer boy from, Maryland's eastern
shore, already has offered as one
reason for his phenomenal hitting
this summer an eagerness to get his
bat on any pitch close to the plate,
He has quit waiting for good, balls
and has found he can hit those "a
little bad" Just as well and as far.
But there's something else behind
the .400 batting average and the
nome runs connie Muck's . power
house has accumulated. Jimmle has
changed the weight of his bats and
the new sticks probably have- more
to. do with his steady mauling than
his eagerness to take anything with
in reach. K
X I.lfiHTKH WAT , ,
, Talking it over. Foxx .. pondered
several minutes before he decided
to tell.
"Everyone thought," he said final
ly, "that because I was big and had
plenty of power I should .swing a
heavy !tlck. They gave me bats
about the heft Babe Ruth uses, 40
to . 41 ounces, and . didn't do so
well last year.
"This spring,, without aavlria any
thing to anyone I ordered a half
dozen sticks myself and the only
requirement I made was that they
scale under, 37 ounces. A couple of
them are only 30 ounces.
Well, they've made all the dif
ference In the world In my hitting.
I use a thinner grip anyway than
the Babe does, with more weleht
out around the end of the bat.
That gives mo more wood on the
ball. So I found that these new
clubs, oven though they were lighter,
drove balls farther than the heavier
ones I'd been using.
"I've been trying to figure It out
and Jn my mind it gets down1 to
two things.
"Tho lighter the stick . Js ' the
faster you can swing it. It's fnov
ing Just a little more briskly, than
a, heavy club when It meets' the
ball. That sends the ball away
faster. Faster away means farther.
"Then, with , lighter sticks, X seem
to be able to wait a tiny fraction of
a second longer before .1 have to
start my swing. That's because the
lighter club gets there faster, too.
But, more important, it gives me
that extra time to Judge a ball as it
comes up to the plated "
"If it's a curve I get an' ' ejfira
glimpse at the way it's breaking 'be
fore I let go. Mnybe in that .time
I can see it's going to break outside
anyway and I save hitting at a bad
ball or missing entirely. If it's a
last ball I get that extra chance to
juugc just how fast (t Is. Sometimes
that's good. Sometimes there's noth
ing can help you if the guy throw
ing is fast enough. ' I
iiotv Vast t fast? -
Speaking of speed, It seems re
markable sometimes that a batter
ever hits at all the kind of fast
balls George Earns haw. or the
lefties Grove, Gomez and Wat berg
throw.
Scientists at West Point one day
tested the throwing arm or Mark
Koenlg when he Was shorta top
ping for the Yankees, and by meas
uring tiie speed of a thrown ball,
By Laufer
AAV rADCW
OR MoR f5laj!5 Si.
0.UI3 V0AvS!fet "b CUT IXAt'tJ HlS
S3.Vr WVIE pan t'P
Dn-klF. .tMJS rtlU . iS WE HPS!
NtoPS tmam .HOD SO HEMS
Iff. Tm.T AS Avl EXCUSE ...
ill To LtTbO 00 PeAL SCOE FiOINNtr
cutting It up into the 60 fest that
stretch between the batter and the
hurler, they found out that a fast
hall hits a catcher's mitt less than
1-5 of a second after leaving the
pitcher s hand.
Girls', Baseball,
Sqiiad Will Be
Here July. 25
Thatjthe Jamous Southern Ksnssf
StaK. Lines, girls' ...bsseball oll)b of
wiunua. nan., woulu clellnltely ap
pear here In a, contest aealrut the
La,Orande Eagles baseball; team, on
Monday,' July as, was made known
this morning by D. W. Hall, manager
of the Eagles sqitd, when . Jie, re
cctved a confirmation message from
irvan van-uiarcom. girls' manager.
Mr. Van Blarcom's .letter stated
that the 10.000-mlle tour which the
girls will take this summer will go
mrougn ia uranoe and that . the
feminine club would be In top con
dition for' their game here.
This, announcement means. that La
Grande? will get to watch one of the
greatest athletic attractions ever to
tour the west. The girls are all-star
athletes from . the . Mlddlewestern
states and. are experienced and skill
ed In playing baseball.
The Sj K. 8. L. team, toured the
west last, year, playing, in 13 states
against only the strongest men's clubs
and Its record was unusual all iho
way.. . , ., . .,.,! ,-. .'
Stars such as Corene Jaax, nation
ally known basketball and baseball
player. Myrtle Brockert. all-Amcrl-can
In basketball and one of the
fastest fielding second baseman ever
to don a girl uniform; Lavon Harrod.
Who toured with the olub, last year:
Ellen Cuamplaln. outfielder of lost
year's earn and Mary Harris, new
player and versatile In all sports, will
be. with the. club. ... .... ,, ,
The Wichita team never has had
any competition from girls' clubs ovor
the country so it .will encounter, no
nines but semi-pro masculine teams.
Tho girls have won numerous games
over men's teams and lost some by
narrow , margins. , but they have yet
to receive a bad beating from any
club. .. .
Lays Eggs in Profusion
The female alligator, after milk
ing a nest of ieaveg, slicks unci rub
bish near. Hie mler, Inys about ten
PKfs, covers them vlih mud anil
rubbish, and cots on depositing In
layers until GO eggs or even more,
are laid.
Federal Supreme ourt
An act of the first congress that
Is still In force organized the Su
preme court. It was drawn up by
Oliver Ellsworth, who afterward be
came the second chief Justice. The
first Supreme court was composed
of a chief Justice and five assistants.
Theilirst. chief Justice was John Jay.
Uncle Eben . ... . V ,
"A man kin be too polite nn'
ohllgln'," said Uncle Ebon. "I know
a man dut stood wifout klckln'
while his wife dressed hi in up In
a fancy loungln' coat an' a gor
geous necktie an' a smokla' cap.
Deri she Inspected him an' decided
dut she couldn't live wlf such a
looUIn' man nohow." Washington
Star.
Why Diners Suffer
The business of after-dinner
speaking Is complex, because If a
mail finds he Is doing well, lie feels
there Is no good reason why he
should stop; If he finds he Is not
doing well, he goes on In the des
perate hope that he may do better.
. "Cardinal"-, and "Ordinal"
Cardinal numbers are those that
directly express how many digits
ore considered, as one, two, three,
etc., and ordinal numbers are first,
second, third, etc.
. . And How? ' ,
"Common, Colds Demand Common
Sense Treu latent." Headline, It has
taken the world, a long, long time
to discover this kind of treatment.
Now, what Is It? And can you
prove It?
Michigan Led
The state having the first pure
fund law was Michigan. It was
passed In. 180$.
DON'T FORGET -TO
PHONE THAT
WANT-AD
YOU enn quickly raise extra
Cftsh. by selling some, of
tnose things you no longer
need. A Want-Ad will find an
answer to any of your wants.
PHONE MAIN 600
Browns Subdue
Soions, Sunday
In Double Bill
' ' My Herbert W. Barker . -f
(Associated Press Sports Writer).
For the information of American
league pitchers, the one sure way of
stopping the Washington Senators is
to put on a St. Louis Browns uni
form. Tho Senators can hold their own
with the rest of the league but as
Boon as . tliey see one of Bill relie
fer's el bowers take the mound they
roll over and play dead. So far
they've, played ,the Browns seven
times and the Browns have, won six
games, three of thera by shutouts.
ilrowiiK Win Two
Ktjlefer's outfit won , both games
of a , double header yesterday. 6-3
and 4-0, and boosted their average
above the .500 inark " for the first ;
time, this season,, The first game
waa a disconcerting affair,. what, with
Carl Fischer, former Brown, pitching
foe the Senators. Fischer had all'
the better of the argument as he j
held Washington to seven hits. Coff- i
man gave way to a pinch hitter in j
the fifth after allowing six hits and I
five .runs.- Walton Stewart pitched
his second shutout over the Sena
tors in the nightcap, allowing only
three hits.
1 George Herman. , Ruth .personally
conducted the Now York YankeeB to
a 13-5 victory over Cleveland, hit
ting his 19th and 20th homers and
a double to drive in six runs. The
Detroit Tigers did some high-powered
batting lu trie fifth and - seventh
frames to , tumble the Philadelphia
Athletics, 8-0, despite Jlmmie Foxx's
22nd homer. Pete Jnblonowskl, for
mer Cleveland hurl or, made nis first
start for tho Boston Red Sox and
was the victim of his teammates er
rors, bowing 4-1 to the Chicago
White Sox. (
Culls. Add to Lead
Jn fthe National league, the Chi
cago-Cubs st re to hod their lead to a
game and a half ,by winning a wild
13 -inning battle from the Boston
Braves, a-3. , The Cubs won out on
doubles by Jurges and Herman and
g single by Moore,, Quy Bush went
the route for. the landers and allowed
only -ten hits. Art Shires homer
in- the seventh sont the game into
extra Innings.
One of a large group of St. Louis
Cardinal graduates, Flint Rhem,,
pitched the Phillies to an easy 6-1
victory, over -the Cincinnati: Reds.
Making his first start in Phllly re
galia,,, Rhem allowed only . six-hits
and never was. in danger, after his;
teammates presented mm witn a
three-run lead In the fifth.
The other two National league '
games were rained out. J ... '
Philanthropic Contributions .
Dr. A. J. Todd of Northwestern '
university estimates the amount of ,
.money given for philanthropic pur- j
poses lu America . yearly, at J2.500,- j
000. About half 0 the amount goes I
for religious purposes, 8 per cent for
education, 0.2 per cent for health,
personal gifts to Individuals, 11.8
per cent, and foreign relief, 0.7 per
cent.
..Bird Peculiarities
Brown creepers and nuthatches
secure food from the bark of trees.
The nuthatch stands on his head
and hops down, the creeper stands
on his tail and hops up.
Shadows
The greater shndows fall from the
lofty mountains. Vergil.
On Nationally
(These Low
mm -fi
rauiixi i mini
Ecery ont of Iheie paint, varniih and enamel
product) art the very highctt quality poible
to obtain at any pftce. Ntvtr, wt trier a btlttr
NOW $
ft.89 now
ONLY GAL ONLY
rJOW
ONLY
$1.23
PT. 69c
NOW
OfeLY
Sive Monty By
PITTSBURG PAINT
J. A. RURG Mgr.
Japanese Dares
Volcano To Get
Bodies of Two
HILO. Hawaii, June 13 OTj Man
descended into the fuming crater of
Halelmaiimau "House of Everlasting
Fire" and reclaimed from Pele, the
fire goddess, the bodies of a despair
ing lover and the sweetheart he slew
before leaping Into the volcano
clasping her body.
; A daring Japanese contractor. Ri
fe an Kunlshi, gambled with death
yesterday as he was lowered into the
firepit of Ktlauea volcano, returning
eight hours later with the bodies of
Sylvester Nunes, 20, and Margaret
Enos, 17.
The descent was made in a tiny
cage si pended perilously from a
cable stretched across the gaping pit
into which Kunlshi would have
plunged to a boiling death In the
lava 1200 feet below had the cuble
broken. , ti ( ,
Shortly after he reached the ledge
900 feet below the brink on which
thu bodies lay, he signalled with a
white flag that his trip would be
successful. He returned with the
bodies strapped tot his cage, to claim
the 81000 fee for which- he con
tracted to do the Job.
Nunes kidnaped and shot the girl
Juno 2 because' she refused to marry
him and tlien leaped into Pele's tra
ditional home slasplng his sweet
heart's body, a brazen rebuke to the
fire goddess .who, tradition says, wits
used to having her subjects offer a
secriflce of ohelo berries before approaching-
her abode.
Workmen-spont days in arranging
tho cables and preparing the cags In
which Kunlshi made his perilous des
cent Into tho sulphurous atmosphere
of the firepit,
A coroner's Jury awaited his re
turn from the pit with tho bodies be
foro returning a verdict in this wierd
est of deaths.
Elderly Wives of tho Great
Among well-known men whose
wives were older Umn tliey were
these nilslit bo mimed: Josephine
was qlder than Napoleon ; Catherine
of AriigoD.wns older than Henry
VIHj Mary Stuart was older than
Francis II ot France; Jenny Llnd
was older than Otto Goldschmidt;
Dlsraeli's. wlfe was his elder.
SPECIAL REDUCTIONS
on all
OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
values from $6.75 to $22.50
Now $2.45 to $15.50 -
BOHNENKAMPS
WE DELIVER TIIE GOODS
llitlATIlST
ol
Known PITTSBURGH
Prices Offered for a Limited
timt tor you to dtcids lo do that long-needed
painting or rafiniihing than during thii ipecial,
itockrduc!ng lata.
'PIASCOI
JoVlCHTSToJjy
.29
SAL.
NOW
ONLY
$3 -1
Z.
feAL
$1.49
?T.
PT. 83c
NOW
ONLY
9T. 97e
$1.08
?T.
PT. 63c
Orderin3 Your Requirement) Durin3 This Big Salel
GOLFERS DEFEAT . v
-PENDLETON CLUB
(Continued From Page One)
Thompson, SO', . ; r(.
O. L. Larlson. 84, 3. Patterson, 02,
t: P. LampKln, 91, 0, W. laing. til, a'
N. W. Frees, 06, 'A, S. Williams, 82,'
0; Byers, 05, 14, 8. Carter, 85, 3.
Art Hodge, 92, 3. Fred Spaeth. 06,
2'i: A. E. Anderson, 204 , 0. Smith
100, J4. , '
Paul Meyers, 89, ,. Chet Thomp
son, 100. 3; Art Anderson, 88, 31,
McAtee, 100, 0. , . ,
P. L. Meyers. 100, 3, A. W. Kelson,
80, 3; J. J. Hamley, 107, 0, Duncan,
84, 0.
K. 0. Stephenson, 08, 0, W. O. W.
Hams, 94, i'il H. Wissler, 03, 3, J,
Bnuer, 04, 114.., . ,, '
John Thelsen, 07, 2, Dr. A. M.
Moore. 05, 2',; J. M. ' Hamley, 80, 't.
Rose, -94, (4. .
L. Wissler, 112, !4, R. W. Moore, 103,
1!4: Zuiderduln, 108. 214, M. Bluer,
102, U.
Dr. James J. D. Haun, 91, 214; Dr.
W. K. Ross. 04, 2; Brown, 07, 14, with- I
era!!, 95. 1. .. . . ..
J. McNamee. 103, 1, Pete Russell,
101, 2"4; Jcrard, 100, 2, MUlllgnn,
104, 14. ',
M. L. Nelson, 07, 1, William Dolan,
02. 3: Mollner, 92, 2, Les. Rogers,
97. 0. ....... .
3. a. Ormond, 109, 3, Dr. J. E.
Woodell, 97. 3; Flnson, 113, 0, E.
Olsen, 105, 0. . . . .
E. Barron. 108, 2, 0. W..C00I1, 100,
0; Rlchey, 100. 1, Smrbuck, 104, 3.
Allegran, 00, 0, Stone, 08, 214; D.
ti.minv oa a. u Allpn. inn l 1
j , Total points: La Grande, 70; Pen
dleton. 47. -. --. .,.,
NATIONAL IJATTI5UIES
4H.I1.T AND UP
National Guarantees 100
Satisfaction to the Customer
MlIlON.ll.l) KI.EC'TltIC CO.
Phone Mala 7.13 142X Adams
re
Time Only)
FINISH
9 now $o.89
UNLT Mm SAL
OT. 19c
Wa carry compUt
lint of colon In
WALLHIDE
iht new Vitotiied Oil
Paint that bringt you
ONE-DAY
PAINTING
STORE
flsta (Wirt);
BYPRODUCTS