1 is . ; THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1920 I 1 i SALT LUKE'S BEES ARE COMING STRONG Portland Makes Good Show ing Against Oakland Team. VERNON DEFEATS SEATTLE nels Win Five Out of Seren dimes Played "With Sacra mento Club Last Week. racifie Coant Leacne Standing. W. 1-. PCI w. I.. P C. Suit Lake. 41 IS .Bl-.il Portland . . 3031 .432 San Fran. :1K :!! ..V7! Sacramento iS0.41S Vernon... 40 SI .MS' Oakland .. . 2S41.414 Los Anc'l 37 31 .544;seattle -5 40 .385 Hew the Series Ended. At San Francisco. Portland four Karnes. Oakland three games; at Salt Lake five game, ban Francisco two frames; at Los Angeles. Vernon five games, Seattle two ffRme; at Sacramento two lames, lxa Angeles five games. BT-ROSCOE FAWCETT. Portland won the series from Oak land last week four games to three and that is a mighty good showing away from home even against a be draggled club like the Oaks. Tne . teams that appear to be comlna? strong, however, are the Salt Lake Bees , the Vernon champions and the Los Angeles Seraphs. Last week the Bees defeated the ban Francisco club five games in seven; the Vernons walloped Seattle by the same margin, and the Angels bested the Sacramento club five to t wo. When the Seals bought "Slim" Love from Detroit for $6000 Manager Gra ham thought he was making up for the loss of Seaton and Smith, who were released for conniving with gamblers. But Love is carousing around and thus far hasn't done the Seals any good. As a result the Seals have slipped back out of first place, giving place to the Bees, and they are only the thickness of a thin dime ahead of Vernon this morning. Gambling in playing talent is great game of chance. Portland got Sam Ross from Vernon for a very nominal price of 1400 or J500. we presume, whereas the Seals paid $5000 for Love. Ross is pitching good ball and Love isn't pitching the interest on the investment. Salt Lake is going to be a hard team to beat because Ernie Johnson has a bevy of long-distance hitters who are murder in the little Salt Lake ball park. The Bees can afford to lose 60 per cent of their games away from home because they win about 75 per cent of those played at home. Sheely and Rumler find it as easy knocking home runs over the Salt lke fences as Dick Cox finds it easy to knock a high fly to left field. The Bees have been very weak in the outfield since Duke Reilly jumped and went back east to Oil City, where he grabbed S."00 advance money played a game or two, then rejoined Indianapolis with the $500 in his pocket. Sands has been filling in as a . gardener. The Bees have now secured Wallace Hood from Pittsburg and he should help some Just how much being problematical. Hood hit .316 for Moose Jaw last year and was '-purchased by Brooklyn. Brooklyn of . fercd him to McCredie a few weeks ago, but Mack spurned the offer, " Hood used to pitch in the Northwest- j ern league two or three years ago. Judge McCredie announced j ester- i day that double-headers would be played in Portland next week on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.. Seattle will be the attraction against the Beavers. There will be thousands of strangers in the city, owing to the Shrine convention and the Rose Fes tival and baseball ought to do well if the weather is auspicious. V. H. McCarthy, president of the Pacific Coast league, has about con cluded that he made a mistake in doing away with the old rule auto matically fining players a five-spot when put out of the game by the um pire. Some of the unruly players have been making it rather hard for the Indicator holders and McCarthy is thinking seriously of reverting to the old scheme. McCarthy seems to be much wor ried over the poor showing of the Oakland club. According to reports Pitcher Holling is not on speaking terms with the rest of the Oaks an! may be sold immediately to Cleve land with a couple of players in volved in the barter. There is also a story going the rounds that Cincinnati wants Hack Miller and is willing to pay cash and also give the Oaks title to Sam Crane, an infioldcr, for whom the Reds paid $7600 last year. Portland plays the Vernon club this week for the first time in 1920. Odd schedule, Isn't it? Seattle is at Oakland in a battle of the dubs; San Francisco at Sacramento and Los An geles at Salt Lake. DODGERS DISPLACE IDS GRIMES, IX EIGHTH, DASHES CHAMPIONS' HOPES. Cards Score at Will Off Giants, While Cuba and Pirates Salt A -way Wins. BROOKLYN. June 14. After losing rour straignt games. Brooklyn re gained the league leadership today by defeating Cincinnati, 9 to 7. Wheat's home run over the right field wall w-itn two on sent the Dodg ers ahead in the third, but the world's champions tied It in the fourth and went ahead in the fifth. Grimes, - who began pitching for uroomyn in tne eighth, drove in two runs with a single. The score: R- H. E. R. IT. E. Cincinnati.. 7 14 lBrooklyn.. .9 10 Batteries Kisher, Luque and 'Win go; Cadore, Grimes and Krueger. Xew Torlt 4, SL. Louis 7. NEW YORK, June 14. St. Loui. made it three straight from New York, winning a hard-hitting game by 7 to 4. St. Louis knocked Nehf out in five innings, home runs by Hornaby and Fournier accounting for riva - runs, scnupp, traded to St. Louis by New York last season, was also hit hard, but his big lead saved him. The score: R. H. E. R. H. E. St. Louis. . .7 - 12 lNewYork..4 10 2 Batteries . Schupp and Dilhoefer Nehf, Hubbell. v inters and Snyder. Boston 1, Chicago 7.. BOSTON, June 14. Carter let Bos '.ton down with four hits today, Chi - cago winning. 7 to 1. The visitors hit freely and played an air-tight game, catcher 0arrell of Chicago did not have a putout, assist or cr-! ror in the nine innings. The score: I R. H. E.) . R. 11. E. Chicago 7 12 0Boston. . . , .1 4 2 Batteries Carter and O'rarreu; Scott, Eayers and O'Neill. Philadelphia 1, Pittsburg . PHILADELPHIA, June 14. Bunch ing five hits off Gallia with two er rors in the first inning, FitUsburg defeated Philadelphia, 6 to 1. Raw lins' second double, following a base on balls, was responsible for the lone tally. The score: R. H. E. R. H. E. Pittsburg.. 6 10 OlPhila. 1 8 2 Batteries Cooper and Schmidt; Gallia, Betts and Tragesser. Braves Protest Cub Victory. BOSTON, June 14. Business Man ager W. Hapgood of the Boston Na tionals announced today that the club had forwarded to President Heydler of the national league a protest of today's game, which Chi cago won," 7 to 1. The protest is based on a decision of Umpire Har rison in the first inning when a ball hit the top of the dugout and bounded back and a runner was retired. INDIANS HOLD TOP BERTH COVELESK1E TIGHT, DRIVING IN" TRIO OF SCORES. Tigers Win Third Straight From Athletics and Boston Ameri cans Lose. CLEVELAND, June 14. Cleveland made it two out of three from New York today, winning 7 to 1, and re taining first place. Coveleskie pitched effectively, bar ring an occasional wild streak. He held New York to five hits, Thor- mahlen scoring the only run on his triple and an error by Chapman. Cleveland hit Thormahlen hard. Xun amaker batting in two and Coveleskie three runs. The score: R. H. E. R. H. E. New York.. 1 5 2jCleveland . . 7 15 1 Batteries Thormahlen, Whorten nd Hannah; Coveleskie and Nuna- maker. Detroit 5, Philadelphia 0. DETROIT, June 14. Excellent pitching by Ayres, who held the Ath letics to six scattered hits, enabled Detroit to win its third straight game from Philadelphia today, a ,to 0. Har ris, for the visitors, weakened in the eighth and allowed four safeties and four runs. Detroit scored its first shut-out victory of the season. Score: R. H. E. R. H. E. Phila 0 6 OiDetroit'.. . . .5 9 1 Batteries Harris and Perkins; Ayers and Ainemith. St. Louis 10, Boston 5. ST. LOUIS, June 14. St. Louis hit Russell hard and aided by errors de feated Boston today, 10 to 5, for the third successive time. It was the locals' fifth straight victory. Tobin in five trips to the plate sot a home run, triple, double and a walk and scored three runs. The score: R. H. E.l K. H. E. Boston 5 10 5St. Louis.. 10 12 1 Batteries Russell and Schang; Davis and Billings. At Chicago Washington-Chicago game postponed: rain. CURB URGED FOR BOYS COACHES REALIZE THAT MUCH TALENT IS WASTED. Early Forcing of Athletes Results in Stunted Development at Zenith of Career. Action to curb what has been ubbed as "almost reck less - compet itive desires of high school boys in track and field meets conducted un der the auspices of colleges through out the country." has been provided n a resolution adopted at the meeting of the College Track Coaches' asso ciation in Philadelphia after the re cent intercollegiate champions h i p meet. The resolution, which was unanimously adopted, provides against a youngster's competing in more than two events in a single meet. It is proposed by the enforce ment of the rule to preserve the ath letic ability of high school athletes until the time they shall enter col lege and receive the professional track and field education which will develop them as they mature. The need for such a restrictive measure as it is now planned to in stall has long been pointed out by the college coaches. Athletic ma terial which otherwise would have been at a higher standard of develop ment has been said invariably to be unreliable and often useless, after the free rein with regard to activities permitted the high and prep school athlete. For example, take Willard "Jess" Wells, the now famous Stanford uni versity athlete, and Portland boy. Wells didn't know what a track looked like when attending grammar school and even during his three years at Columbia prep school did very little running. It was not until he nad been in college two years that he began to show real form under expert coaching and last month reached the zenith of his career by winning the national intercollegiate low hurdles title In Philadelphia, Baseball Summary. National League Standing. W. L. P.C.I W. L. P.O. Cincinnati '-'8 21 ,SR3' Pittsburg.. 21 22 .4SS Brooklyn.. 28 20 .571 ! Boston ... . 21 24 .4B7 St. I-nuls.. 2S 23 .MH Nf w York. .21 29 .420 Chicago... 26 2.510l Phlladel'a. 19 28.404 . American League Standing). Cleveland. 24 1 7 .BR7 Washine'n. 22 20 .524 New York. .34 19 B42ISt. Louis.. 20 27.428 Boston 2S 20 ..:' Phllarielp'a 16 S3 .31 4 Chicago. .. 2B 22 .542! Detroit 17 34 .3o3 Southern Association Results. At Atlanta 15, Memphis 3. At New Orleans 9. Nashville 2. At Birmingham 14, Little Rock 5. At Mobile 16. Chattanooga 4. American Association Results. At Columbus 4, St. Paul 3. At Toledo 4, Milwaukee 15. At Indianapolis 2, Kansas City 3. At LouisviHe 2, Minneapolis S (13 In nings). Western League Results. At Tulsa 7. Sioux City 6. At Joplin 2, St. Joseph 8. At Oklahoma City 5, Des Moines 4 (10 Innings). At Wichita 11. Omaha 9. Pacific International league Standings. Spokane.. 21 14 .oo Victoria. . . 21)8.568 Yakima., 22 1.1 .."951 Vancouver. 18 18 .5O0 Tacoma... 2t 15 .5831 Seattle ... . 5 30.143 Where tbe Teams Play This Week. Portland at Vernon. Seattle at Oakland, San Francisco at Sacramento, Los Angeles at Salt Lake. Where the Teams Play Next Week. Seattle at Portland. San Francisco at Vernon. Los Angeles at Oakland, Salt Lake at Sacramento. - - . Beaver Batting Averages. B. H. Av.l B. H. Av. Sutherland 54 19 .352' Ross 23 5.2-8 Blue 236 77 .32fl: Klngdon.. 10.". 44 .-"6 Malsel 200 .I .325! Juney. . . . is 6 .,,4 Schaller.. 2.':" 69 .304 Ppranger. 120 25 -2on Koehler.. 1K3 55 .300' Jones 27 5.1S5 Cox 237 70 .2t7ISigltn 183 58 171 Wtsterxil 239 71 .297; Kalllo 18 m Raker.... 2 16 .259'Polson . . .. 29 3 1i:i Schroeder. 29 7 .242iMcMullen. 1 0 .000 STATE GOLF BODY WANTED OREGON Many New Clubs Emphasize Spread of Game. TOURNEY CHANGE LIKELY Rosenblatt to Enter Pacific Xorth west Event Portland Club to Stage Stag Banquet. Although it had been planned to start the ball rolling for the organ ization of an Oregon state golf asso ciation during the state tournament at Waverley last week, the matter was deferred for later action. California has three separate or ganizations the California, the North ern California and the Southern Cali fornia. Each association holus a' tour nament of its own. Here in the north west neither Washington nor Oregon has a state association. N-t Clubs Spring I p. In the past there has been no real necessity for an Oregon state asso ciation because of a centralization at the Waverley Country club. With the organization of new clubs in Portland and elsewhere in the state and the birth of municipal links, a state asso ciation could function very nicely. It will be only a question of time before the Portland Golf club or the Tualatin Country club will want to play host to the state tournament. The only time the state tourney has been held anywhere except at Wa verley was In 1917, when the state chamionships were played at Gear-hart-by-the-Sea and the northwest at Waverley. There should be some permanent organization with whom deeds of gift, such as that which accompanied the new interstate trophy donated by J. G. Clemson, might be filed. Tourney Change Probable. Walter Pearson, chairman of the Waverley tournament committee. which staged the successful state tournament last week, is won over to a new plan for holding the qualify ing rounds of the next state tourney. Mr. Pearson thinks that many players were prevented from entering because of lack of time, and he thinks this obstacle might be surmounted by spreading the 36 holes of qualifying over two days instead of one. This would permit Mr. Business Man to motor out to the links late in the afternoon Monday for 18 holes and on Tuesday for the other 18 holes. Only the 16 players of the champion ship flight would have to go 36 holes on Wednesday and only eight would be left for Thursday, and four on Friday. Millard Rosenblatt of the Tualatin Country club will be among the Port land entries at the Pacific northwest tourney at Vancouver July 5-12. Mil lard will be through with his studies at Stanford within a few days. Re cently he jumped into prominence in California by defeating State Cham pion Neville in the finals of the Beres- ford club tourney. The Portland Golf club is arrang ing a stag banquet as host for the two teams that played in the finals for the interstate trophy. It will be held on Wednesday night at the Port land golf club near Raleigh. Bob Gardner's defeat in the finals of the British golf tournament was a hitter disappointment to the golf clan in this country, but it was no dis credit to lose on the 37th green to birdie two. Gardner's second shot was lying dead to the pin for a par three when his opponent, Tolley, sunk four-foot tee shot for a two. Cards for the rounds follow: F'irst round Tolley Out . S .-.".-. 4 4 4 4- 5 5 4 4 4 4 6 5 4- 4 4 5 4 R 3 3 5 S- ....4565343 44- In Gardner Out In Second round Tolley Out 45455485 4 30 In : 4 4 5 6 3 6 6 4 5 43 Gardner Out 4 6 4 5 5 3 5 a 13 In 4 4 5 6 4 5 5 4 4 il Extra hole Tolley, 2; Gainer. 8. For the last ten years Gardner has been considered one of the greatest golfers In the United States. Twice he has won brackets in the amateur championship, defeating. Chandler Egan in 1909 and John G. Anderson In 1915. He has also been runner-up in the western. Northwest Golf Champion ship Programme. FOLLOWING is the schedule of play agreed upon by the chairmen of the various tournament committees for the Pacific northwest golf cham pionships which will be held in Van couver, B. C, the week of July 5 un der the auspices of the Vancouver (B. C.) Golf and Country club: July 5 Open championship, first 36 holes. Burnaby course. Women's qualifying- round, 18 holes, Burnaby course. Sixteen to Qualify. July 8 Open championship, second 38 noles, Burnaby course. Second 36 holes will constitute qualifying round for ama teurs In open. Men's qualifying round, first 18 holes.. Burnaby course; second 18 holes Shaugh nessy Heights course: 32 to qualify. July 7 First round, men's champion ship. IS hole, and four or five flights. 18 holes, on Burnaby course, two rounds being scheduled. First round women's championship and first flight, in holes. Burnaby course. Other flights Jericho Country club. July 8 Second round men's champion ship, 18 holes, and all other flights. Burn abv course. Second round women's championship and first flight. 18 holes, and semi-finals, all other flights. Finals C. H. Davis Jr. team trophy, match play, 18 holes. Aggregate scores of players representing various clubs In quali fying round to determine contenders for nonors. Mixed foursomes. 18 holes. July 9 Semi-finals men's championship. 36 holer, and first flight, 36 holes, other flights 18 holes. Seml-rinal round women's championship 18 holes, finals in all other flights. Scotch foursome for men. 18 holes. Professional foursome between IB low in nDen chamDionshin. July 10 Klntl ronno, men s cntmpmn. ship, and first flight 36 holes, and finals in all other flights, 18 holes. Final round, women s champlonanip, ana first flight 18 holes. TROEH IS ZONE VICTOR NATIONAL CHAMPION" TAKES INTRODUCTORY EVENT. C. C. Hcdtrer of Oroville Gives Hard Battle for Lead Honors and Loses in Shoot-Off. WALLA WALLA, Wash., June 14. (Special.) Frank M. Troeh of Port land. Or., national amateur champion won the Walla Walla introductory in the Pacific coast zone handicap tournament today, but he had to do it In the shoot-orf with C. C. Hedger of Oroville. Wash., who tied with him with 197 out of the 200 registered targets. In the shoot-off, Troeh broke 50 straight and Hedger 47. Hedger made high run of 152 and Troeh 150. The men tied on the! first string with 97 each and also on the second string with 100 each J. L. D. Morrison of Salt Lake was third with 193. and E. V. Kalk o Modesto, Cal., was fourth, winning in the shoot-off from C L. Templeton o Seattle. They had 192 each. Good shooting marked the day' programme, a large number of me crowding the winners. Rain in th afternoon -held up the tourney fo over an hour . SOCRBIER TAKES PARIS RACE W. K. Vanderbilfs Enlry Takes Fourth Place. PARIS, June 14. The Prix du Jockey club at one mile and a half, was won Sunday by J. Hennessy'B Sourbier. W. K. Vanderbilfs Battersea. with O'Neill up, ran fourth. J. Childs had the mount on Sourbier which came in handily in front by three lengths. The Pari mutuels paid 9 to 6 to 1 on the winner. WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A FRIEND. IS HERE, BUT BOUT IS 1 AIR English Champion Ready to Meet Benjamin. O'DOWD BOUT OF INTEREST Oakland Fans PIjmi Special to At tend Bout and See Their Favorite in Action.' BY DICK SHARP. Johnny Sheppards, lightweight champion of England, accompanied by his manager, Joe Woodman, ar rived in Portland last night from New York, Shepparrls figuring that he was to meet Benny Leonard here June 23, and was informed at once by Matchmaker Bobby Evans of the Portland commission that the cham pion had called the proposed match off. owing to a badly injured leg. Plans for the staging of a boxing card at the Vaughn-street ball park June 22 have been put aside and at a meeting of the Portland commission nd the Shrine boxing committee yesterday it was decided to advise Matchmaker Evans to arrange an all-star bill to be held at the armory Monday night, June 21. with Shep pards boxing in . the main event if such an arrangement could be satis factorily arranged. Sheppards Willing: to Fight Joe Woodman, the veteran fight manager, who has piloted many of the greatest boxers in the game, in cluding Sam Langford, Mel Coogan, Frankie Daly, Jimmy Walsh, former bantamweight champion of the world, and others, had the following to say last night: "I brought Sheppards here to fight and the fans can depend upon him starting against the man who is selected'by the Portland box ing commission. I am very sorry that Leonard was unable to fill his en gagement with Sheppards, as he would have been in for a real battle. But, seeing that it could not be helped, we will go through against the best man obtainable, who. 1 am informed, will be Joe Benjamin, who is very well thought of in the east and rates among the best of them." Matchmaker Bobby Evans had a long talk with Woodman last night and all of the wrinkles that devel oped when Billy Gibson telegraphed north that the champion could not appear here were ironed out as far as Woodman and sheppards were con cerned. . Evans has set on Benjamin as-Shep pards' opponent, and has only to re ceive Gibson's word that it will be O. K. to bill the match, as the latter Is Benjamin's manager as well as Leonard's. Joe is willing to fight but did not like to sign the papers last night until he heard from Gibson Matchmaker Frank Kendall of the Milwaukie boxing commission re ceived a telegram from Faddy Mullins, Mike O'Dowd's manager, that he and the ex-champion would arrive in Portland Saturday morning. OTlovrd'a "Rep" Yet Hold. The battling St. Paul mittman, who fought his way to the middleweight titje of the world and defended the colors of his country in France, is a mighty busy campaigner and expected to -leave for Portland earlier, but couldn't make connections. When O'Dowd was "Hector McGinnised" out of the title in Boston several weeks ago his manager had 10 or 12 bouts booked ahead for him against the most prominent men in the country, the June 24 bout at the Milwaukie arena against Battling Ortega being one of them, and most of them were t'j be decision matches. To show what a card Mike has always been and is now. not a one of these matches was conceled by the promoters when Mike's crown reverted to Southpaw Johnny Wilson. After he lost to the unknown on a questionable decision Mike fought such men as Jackie Clark. A. E. F. middleweight cham- SHEPPARDS No skill necessary To renew the fine; keen edge of the AutoStrop Razor blade, jnst slip the strop through the razor head and pass the razor back and forth. You don't have to take the razor apart, nor even remove tbe blade. i4uto-Strop Razor sharpens itself pion; Knockout Brown and Jack Brit ton, welterweight champion of the world, and beat every one of them. He put Brown away in three rounds week after he lost to Wilson, and that is a trick that not a boxer in the world can boast oft Brown was the only American boy in the frame who ever staved the late Les arcy off for 20 rounds. - In meeting Ortega O'Dowd will be stacking up against one of the best mlddleweights in the ring. Accord ing to word from Oakland, Ortega's home, the fans of that city are going to charter a special train, to make the trip north to view the battle as they are certain that the Battler is the coming champion. Young Brown and Johnny"o.ve will box ten rounds In the scmi-windup of the Milwaukie bill. $10,000 FIGHT POLICY IX) ST Portland Commission Out When Leonard Meets Injury. If Benny Leonard, lightweight champion of the, world, had been in-j jured one day later the Portland box ing commission would have been pre sented with a crisp check to the amount of $10,000 signed by Lloyd's of I London. Frank E. W'atkins, chairman of. the Portland boxing commission, notified Matchmaker Kvans Thursday afternoon that he had applied for $10,000 insurance each on Benny Leonard and Johnny Sheppards. The I application was reported o. k. but when the time arrived Friday for the policy to be called for by Watkins it was too late, as word had already been received that Leonard had been I hurt while completing a moving pic- Iture before the policy was dated to go into effect. HOLLAND IX DAVIS FINALS South Africa Defeated While Can ada Defaults Match. AMSTERDAM, June 1 4. In the pre liminaries for the Davis cup, Holland defeated South Africa. In the matches Must concluded at Arnheim, Dutch rep resentatives beat the South African players three matches to two. They thereby qualified for the final round for the Davis cup. In the drawings Holland and South Africa were paired; France and the United States were paired and the British Isles and Canada each drew byes. The winner of the South Africa- Holland preliminaries was drawn to play Canada, but as Canada has de faulted through lack of players Hol land reaches the final round. The American team w!U meet the French team at Eastbourne, England, July 8, 9 and 10. The winner of this play will meet the British team and the victor will contest against Holland. SHERWOOD BEATS HILLSIiORO I Onion City Lads Are .Strong Con tenders for League Lead. The slugging Sherwood Inter-citv league team took another hitch in its I championship belt Sunday by defeat ing the fast Hillsboro American Le gion club on the latter's grounds to the tune of 5 to 3. It was a great I gam. anil attracted a large crowd despite the inclement weather. Johnny Brant, who will be remem bered as the lad who wore a Beaver uniform the year McCredie made his memorable training jaunt to Hono lulu, was in the points for the Onion I City team and Carl tirey. Forest Grove banker, twirled for Hillsboro. Brant received better support than that given tirey and seemed to be in great form. He whiffed ten bats men in eight innings; Tom Baker, veteran busher, relieving him in the ninth. Tom struck out one man and pitched his usual heady game. Grey- struck out tnree men. His team mates bungled up three chances that were disastrous to the home crew. In the previous contest staged on the Sherwood diamond Hillsboro was 'defeated 11 to 4. This win puts Shei The annoying pull of shaving how to avoid it ONLY a dull, or dulling razor edge pulls. You can eliminate the discomfort of a pulling razor blade if you use the AutoStrop Razor " the razor and stropping device combined in one. ., , Because of its unique, patented design, the AutoStrop Razor can be stropped without removing the blade. Just slip the strop through the razor head. Give the razor a dozen quick passes over the strop. In ten seconds you have a "new," sharp shaving , edge ! 500 cool shaves are guaranreecf from each dozen blades. Get an AutoStrop know the joy of a every morning! Ask the free trial plan. wood up near the top of the percent age column with five wins and two defeats. The Kirks and Honeyman are tied for first place with four wins and one loss each. Sunday's score: R. H. li. R. H. K. Sherwood.. 5 6 ljrlillsboro. .. 3 6 3 Batteries Brant, Baker and Baker; Grey and Baker. Umpire, Tom Jack, son. FLEISCHXER ON U.U1E BOARD State Commission Choose New Member for Vacancy. I. N. Fleischner was elected chair man of the game commission, suc ceeding C K. Stone, who resigned, by SILK SHIRT SALE Heavy pure silk Jersey, finest satin striped Broadcloth, heavy-weight pure silk Crepes a great variety of rich patterns. Regular $10 to $15 Values MMggSg5 5c MATTERS. V 286 Washington You Can RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long line-cut tobacco L Razor today and "new" sharp edge your dealer about the members of the body at. their regular monthly meeting yesterday in the Oregon building. Resolutions closing the upper end of Elk lake and Horse creek and its tributaries to angling were passed. Spawning conditions for fish are ideal In both places and. as a result, the place is a Mecca for fishermen in that section of the country. Other members of the body are K. C. Sim mons, Marion Jack and Charles H. Driscoll. The latter Is the new mem ber from Klamath Falls and attended his first meeting yesterday. E. V. Carter was called away by the serious illness of his brother. Fhone your want ads to The Orcgo nian. Main 7070. Automatic 1S60-9.';. 7o4-S Street Bank on It" says the Good Judge You will save, money by using the Real Tobacco Chew. The full; rich tobacco taste lasts so long, you don't need a fresh chew nearly so often. Smaller chews, too, and more genuine satisfac tion. ' - Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. ' Put up in two styles 3 St .' .. . - I-.': A t: I