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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1922)
13 THE 3IORXIX6 OREGOXIAX, TIIURSDAT. ArElX 2" 1922 TIGERS ABE VICTORS If. DRAG-OUT GAME Jakie threw his razzle-dazzle ball, Poole bounced it to Jake, who threw to .Hyatt,- and that was that. Score: Vernon Portland BBHOAI BRHOA Ch'ne.m 4 1 H. Hi'h.l 5 i Haw'es.r 2 Hyatt, 1 Five Pitchers Participate Gory Affair. in Sawer,2 3 French, c 3 Smith, 3 4 H'nn'h.c 3 Liove.p. 2 Doy'e.p 1 Sch er.r 2 FINAL SCORE IS 6 TO 5 Vernon Throws In Jakle May t " Stop Beaver Bombardment and Gets By by Skin of Teeth. Pacific Coast League Standing. W. L. Pet.i w. l.. ret. l'Cox.m.. 5 12 5 fl!C. High.r 4 14 2 0 0 a Thor'e.l 5 0 0 5 1 5 1 Hale. 3.. 5 13 0 1 0 2Pooie.l. . 4 0 U 8 0 4 lSarr't.2 3 O 1 4 4 1 0 Elliott. c 3 0 15 0 7 21McCann,c 3 1114 0 O.EIHs'n.p 2 0 0 0 2 1 JlWolfer.t 1 0 0 0 2 0 OlWal'rg.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 l Gress tt, 0 10 0 0 he slammed out a two-bagger and started the fireworks. Singles by Cueto and Schulte in the same in ning scored the winning runs. Score: Seattle B R H O A Oakland I B R H O A I (Tner.m. Wille.r.. 2 Brown.1. 4 Cather.3 4 Lafte.1. 3 Brub'r.a 4 K'bler.c 4 HoWd,2 4 Arlett,p. 4 1 1 OjLane.l. . -3 1 4 OiSchulte.r 4 0 2 OiCueto.3.. 3 2 0 2;E!dr,d,m 4 0 13 2;.M'rphy,l 4 0 2 O.ri.A'ms.2 4 0 0 ljstumpf.s 4 0 1 2!Sp"ncer.c 3 1 1 7;Gregg.p. 2 (Barney. 1 IConn'lyt 0 Totals.Sl 3 5 24 14, Totals. 32 4 12 27 16 Batted for Gregg in 9th. tRan tor Barney in 9th. Oakland 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 Seattle 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 i Errors. Wilie. Brubaker 2, Cueto, Stumpf. Stolen bases. Cather. Cooper. Two-base hits. Lane, Arlett, Wilie, Stumpf, Cueto, Schulte, Barney? Sacrifices, Wilie, Schulte, Cueto, Lafayette. Bases on balls. Arlett 4, Gregg 3. Struck out, Gregg 3. Runs re- ilay.p. 0 0 0 1 Total 32 6 8 27 91 Total 35 5 12 27 12 tHlt for Ellison in 6th. Hit for Walberg in 9th. , Vernon .1 a 2 0 2 0 0 1 0 6 Portland 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 1 5 Innings pitched, by Ellison 6. by Love 5 1-3. by Doyle 3. by Walberg 3. Credit victory to Love. Charge defeat to Ellison. At bat. off Ellison 21. off Love 23, off Doyle 10. off Walberg 11, off May 3. Hits batted, off Ellison 5. off Love 9. off Wal berg 3, off Doyle 3, off May 1. Runs sponsible for, Gregg 1, Arlett 3. scored, off Love 4, off Ellison 5, off Vial berg 1. off Doyle 1. Runs responsible for. Love 4. Ellison 5. Doyle 1, Walberg 1. Struck out, by Love 5, by Ellison 1. by. Walberg 2, by May 1. Bases on balls, off Love J. off Ellison 6, off Doyle 3. off Walberg 1, off Alav 1. Passed ball. Elliott. Stolen bases, French. Schneider. . Horns runs. Hawks, C. High. Two-base hits, H. High, Hyatt. Cox, Sargent, C. High. Elliott. Sacrifice hits. Sawyer, McCann, Hannah. Runs batted in, Hyatt, Hawks, C. High 3. McCann, Hannah. Hale. Caught 1 4 2 1 3 0 3 2 0 0 11 0 2 2 3 0 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 " Notes of the Game. JctJ w . 1. f CI. j iiis" . -sicann, raaunan. -rial:, uiiugai 6ti71SacrJmento 10 12 .455 stealing, Poole. Double plays. Hannah to a!t Lake TO Vernon... 12 7 .632, Portland . . 8 10.444 Kan Fran. 14 9 .609 Oakland . . 10 13 ,43d L. Angeles 30 12 .455iSeattle 8 14 .304 Yesterday's Results. At Portland 5, Vernon 6. At Seattle 4, Oakland 3. At San Francisco 8, Salt Lake 10. At Los Angeles 2, Sacramento 9. French, Chadbourne to Hannah. Time of game. 1 hour 55 minutes. Umpires, Mc Grew and Reardon. SACS WIX OXE-SIDED GAME Pearce.s 4 1 Kopp.m. 5 0 Sh'han.2 5 2 M'lwitz.l 6 1 Compel 4 1 Orr.3.. 4 1 Cook,c.. 3 0 H'pton.p 4 1 Schlck.m 5 Vitt.3. . . 4 SigUn.2. 5 BY L. H. GREGORY vernoii nosed out Portland in knock-down and drag-out ball game yesterday in which each team used 12 players and kept a parade of pitchers marching to the box and back to the bench again. rive hurlers participated in the gory af fair, two for Portland and three for Vtrnon. -The final score was 6 to 5 for the Tigers, but Bill Essick had to throw in Jakie May, his justly prized left-hander, to keep the Beavers from tying It in the ninth. Jakie' managed to get by but he did it just by the skin of his wisdom teeth. The Beavers had two hands on the paths and one run in with two out when Jakie fooled Poole Into hittirrg an easy tapper to himself and nailed him at first. Pitcher Start Battle. The early part of the engagement was a pitchers' battle in reverse order, between Slim Love for Vernon and Slim Ellison for Portland two human laths trying to see which could do the most damage. Being rather the slimmer of the two, Elli son squeezed himself into more tight holes than Love and won the contest, but not the game. But Love ran him a hard second. After the Tigers had poled over a score In the first on two hot doubles by Hugh High and Hyatt, Ellison spotted them a couple more in the third out of sheer kindness of heart. He filled the bases on a walk, a sin gle and another walk, then proceeded to walk two more after two were d6wn id forced in a pair of runs. In the fifth the Tigers got to him for another two, this time on hard swatting. Hawks opened with a homer over the right-field fence. Elli son walked Hyatt ana alter smitn had singled with two outs between, the lumbering Ham actually scored on a double-steal play in which Smith finally was run down off first,' but not until the run had counted. High Lifts Another Homer. All this time Siim Love was breezing along with his fast ball and a merry laugh at the Beavers' ludicrous ef forts to hit it. He had a five-run. lead and by all the traditions of base ball should have trotted home a cinch winner- But in the Beaver half of the fifth McCann singled after one was out. t Strand. r. 5 rnn- sAnt him to third with a Rirnirk to Lewis, 1.. 5 the fence. Ellison whiffing on three big little brother Charley calmly took two strikes and then duplicated his feat of Tuesday by lifting a curve ball over the right-field wall for a homer and three runs. That erased half of the grin from KTIm'a fftf.. and he lost the other half in the sixth when Hale led off with a resounding smash and went to third on Sargent's double. With Rowdy Elliott up and one out it was decided to walk him for the good of the cause. Sum threw one wide ball and it was so wide that it went half-way to the grandstand. That ended his tenure of office. Essick -wouldn't even let him finish walking Rowdy, but Hurried Doyle to the box to do the job right. Doyle Kills Basra. Doyle did it, and filled the bases. MeCamm laid down a beautiful squeeze bunt, on which Hale scored, but temporarily that ended the gun fire. Vernon 5, Portland 4. By this time the Beaver board of strategy had decided that if Essick couldn't endure Slim Love any longer, it would be positive discourtesy to leave Slim Ellison out there to ab sorb punishment. So he was yanked and replaced by George Walberg. a huge young southpaw who showed a lot of stuff and was able to get it across the plate. Doyle and Walberg fought along for a couple of innings. But in the eighth the Tigers made what became their winning score when French singled, stole second, took third on .Smith's long fly and scored on a nice squeeze bunt by Hannah. The scor ing might have continued indefi nitely, for Doyle hit a double to lett, but he neglected to touch first en route, so that ended -him. Grease t Gets Walk. Then came the lurid Beaver half of the ninth. Being two runs in ar rears, Walberg was lifted and Cresset sent to bat for him. He walked. Doyle made Cox line out to Hugh High, but something in the way he did it seemed to nettle Essick. He stopped the game, removed Doyle and inserted Jakie May as grenade flinger. Jakie was afraid of Charley High, who had already hit four times in four up, so walked him. But he bore down then and whiffed Jim Thorpe Two out and two on. Sam Hale ewung a ground ball direct at Sawyer, but it trickled through his legs for a hit and Gresset scored. High on third. Hale on second, Jimmy Poole ii p with his big bat, one run to go. I.os Angeles Defeated, 9 to 2; Sac ramento Takes Early Lead. LOS ANGELES, April 26. Sacra mento won from Los Angeles today, 9 to 2, in a game that was just as one-sided as the score sounds. The Solons went out in front early and were never headed. They hammered two pitchers out of the box and made headway with a third. In the third inning they scored five runs n six hits and an error. Two hits In the sixth brought in three more, one be ing tallied when Schang came home on a double steal. Score: Sacramento I B R H O A Schang. r 3 2 Los Angelei 1 n H U A 0 2 OlCarroll.l. 4 2 4 l.l'Auley,s 3 0 2 2 OIDeal.3... 4 1 2 8 2,Griggs.l. 3 0 S 9 8 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 M'Cabe.m 8 0 OjS'llivan.r 3 0 4L'dem e,2 4 0 HDaley.c. 2 0 2ICrand'l,p 2 0 iRigo.c 2 1 W'llace,p 1 0 IHaas.c 1 0 ICoffey.r. 1 0 V'bieros 1 0 -I 1 0 1 1 3 3 9 2 4 1 2 0 2 5 2 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals.37 9 14 27 lOi Totals.34 2 8 27 15 Battu for Wallace in 9th. Sacramento 0 0 5 0 0 3 1 0 0 9 Los Angeles 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 Errors, Cook, McCabe. Sullivan. Rigo. Three-base hit. Orr. Two-base hits. Deal. Sullivan. Stolen bases, Carroll 1, Schang 3, Pearco 1, K.opp 1. sacrifice mt, look. Struck out, by.Crandall 1, Douglas 1. Hamptcn 3. Bases on balls, off Douglas 3, Hampton 2. Innings pitched. Crandall 2-3. Douglas 3 1-3. Losing pitcher. Cran dall. BEES OVERCOME LEAD, WIN San Francisco Defeated In Hurri cane Finish, 10 to 8. SAN FRANCISCO. April 26. Salt Lake staged its second hurricane finish in as many days, overcame seven-run lead and beat San Fran cisco today, 10 to 8. The score was 8 to 1 for the Seals at the start of the eighth. Five hits, a sacrifice fly, two errors and two walks made the count 9to 8. Coumbe, who had held the Bees nicely until the eighth, re tired in favor of Geary after three runs had been scored. Score: Salt Lake I San Francisco BRHOA BRHOA Sand. s.. 4 1 S'tw ht.l 4 1 Byler.c. 4 1 Kallio.p. 0 0 Owen, p. 0 0 El'her.p 1 0 Wllhott 1 0 Gould.p.. 1 0 1 0 0 See.r 6 2 4 2 1 2 3lKilduff,2- 4 2 17 3 1 3Kamm,3.. 4 2 2 1 2 4 O'Elllson.l. 4 0 4 8 3 3 OO'C ell.m. 5 0 2 3 1 0 4: Valla.l. .. 5 110 1 13 0 Rhyne.s.. 5 111 1 4 3IAgnew.c. 5 0 2 5 0 0 ;Coumbe.p 3 0 2 0 0 0 OiGeary.p.. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mitc all.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0lFitzgTld,t 10 0 0 0 0 0 Totals.39 10 13 27 131 Totals. 42 8 19 27 17 Batted for Blaeholder in eighth. Batted for Mitchell in ninth. Salt Lake 10000008 1 10 San Francisco 50020 1 00 0 8 Errors Kilduff 3. Agnew. Innings pitched, Kallio 2-3, Owen 2 2-3, Blaeholder 3 1-3, Gould 2 1-3, Coumbe 7 1-3. Geary 2-3, Mitchell 1. Winning pitcher, Blaeholder. Losing pitcher, Geary. Runs responsible for. Kallio 5, Owen 2, Blaeholder 1, Coumbe 3, Geary 1. Struck out, by Coumbe 4. by Blaeholder 2. Bases on balls, off Kallio 1. off Blaeholder 1, off Coumbe 3. off Geary 2. Stolen bases, O'Connell, Kil duff. Two-base hits. Vitt, Rhyne, Ellison 2. Lewis 2, See 2, Schick. Agnew, Strand, .Sand. Sacrifice hits, Ellison, Coumbe, Kamm, Sand. Double plays. Kamm to Kilduff to Ellison, Rhyne to Kilduff to Ellison. SUDS KALLY AND BEAT OAKS Heroic Ninth-Inning Tactics Win for Seattle, 4 to -3. Charley High hit a homer Tuesday off Gilder, a right-handed pitcher, and came back yesterday and slammed another one oif Slim Love, a southpaw. Did it with two on bases, too. It was a whale of a drive, high over the fence. r High bats left-handed but at training camp this spring he told Duke Kenworthy not to worry about the southpaws' fooling him. "I'd rather bat a left-hander than a right-hander," said Charley, and it looked iike it yesterday. He had a per feet ay with four hits, one a homer and another a two-bagger, in four times up. Another time he drew a political base on balls from Jakie May. Jim, Thorpe was dazzled by Slim Love's smoke in tiie Iirst Inning ana never aia get his eye. Slim whiffed him twice, he pop-f lied a couple of times, then took three strikes again from Jakie May. Who ever heard of the 1921 Beavers scoring a run on a squeeze play? McCann did It yesterday when his perfect sacrifice bunt in the sixth brought in Hale from third. The Beavers came within an eye-winker of tying the score in the seventh, and if they had done it the game might have ended otherwise. Sargent raced in 'from third on McC&nn's fly to Chadbourne. He beat the throw but overslid the plate, and Truck Hannah blocked him off and tagged him when he tried to get back. It was a mighty close decision, at that. Pitcher Doyle of Vernon, lost a nice hit for his batting average by cutting first base in the eighth. It was a clean double but never having reached first, he not only was out when tagged by Sargent, but also tost credit for making a hit. George Walberg looked pretty good In thre three innings he worked. His fast one had the Tigers swinging and he set down throe of them on strikes, including Chadbourne and Hugh High in succession in the ninth. With a little experience he will be a great flinger. Ellison got himself into trouble early in the game by lack of control. He Issued six passes in six innings, four of them being crowded into the awful third. PHILLIES SHUT OUT NEW YORK, 8 TO 4 Brace of Home Runs Enable Philadelphia to Win. RING IS HAMMERED HARD Pitcher Effective in Pinches De spite Circuit Clouts by Kelly and Young. - PHILADELPHIA, April 26. Home runs by Williams and Fletcher today gave Philadelphia Its first victory of the series, with New Tork, 6 to 4. The world's champions hammered Ring for 12 hits, including homers by Kelly and Young, but the local pitcher was effective In the pinches. Score New Tork BRHOA! Banc'ft.s 5 Rawl's.2 5 Groh.3.. 4 Young, r 5 Aleusel.l 4 Keliy.l. 5 Shin's.m 4 E.Sm'h.c 3 J.Ba's.p 1 Robe'nt 1 V.Ba's.p 0 Boonet. 1 Berry'.. 0 Causey.p 0 Philadelphia BRHOA 0. 2lLebou'u.I 4 1 4 4Rapp,3.. 4 2 2 l'Walker.r 4 1 2 0;WiIls.m 4 0 0 0!Park'n.2 2 2 10 OiFletch.r.s 3 3 1 0!Leslie.l. 3 13 2 0 18 1 0 01 0 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 Henl'e.c Ring, p.. 1 0 0 0 S 2 2 1 2 2 2. 3 1 13 1 6 0 0 Total. 30 6 12 27 14 Baseball Summary. National League Standings. W. L. Pet. New Tork.. 9 8 .750 Chicago... . 9 8 .750 Pittsburg. . 6 5 .545 SL Louis. .. 6 5 .545, W. L. Pet. Philadelph. 5 5 .600 Brooklyn... 5 7 .417 Boston 3 7 .300 Cincinnati. .. 2 10 .18 American League Standings. W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. New Tork. 10 8 .769!Chioago. . . 5 6 .455 St. Louis.. 8 4 .667iBoston 4 6 .400 Cleveland. 7 5 .5841 Washington 4 8 .333 Philadelph. 6 6 .455IDetroit 3 8 .273 American Association. Columbus 3, Minneapolis 1. Indianapolis 6. Milwaukee 2. Toledo 1, St. Paul 6.-- Louisville 3, Kansas City 2. Southern Association. Chattanooga at Little Rook; postponed, wet grounds. Nashville 2, Memphis 3. Mobile 5, Atlanta 2. Birmingham 3, New Orleans 4. Western League. Oklahoma City' 5, Des Moines 4. St. Joseph 5, Omaha 1. Denver at Tulsa, rain. Wichita 6, Sioux City 7. Where the Teams Play Next Week. Seattle at Portland. Salt Lake at Sacra mento, Los Angeles at Oakland, San Fran cisco at Vernon. Beaver Batting Averages. Ab. H. Av.l A.b. H. Av. Ross 1 1 lOOOIMiddleton. 14 3 .214 Hale 49 19 .387!ElIiott 68 13 .191 Thorpe 60 22 .366iLeverenz .. 11 2 .1S1 Kenw rthv 33 13 .joj .actann . . . Mil .11 i High 63 22 .349Gressett. .. 26 4 .153 Cox 71 20 .296iWolfer 9 1.111 Crumpler. 11 3 .272!Freeman. . 4 0 .000 Poole 71 18 .253!EUison 5 0 .000 Sutherln'd 12 3 .250jKing 1 0 .000 Sargent.. 61 14 .2291 IDAHO DEFEATS OREGON, 7-1 Errors at Critical Times Cost Game for Lemon-Yellow. MOSCOW, Idaho. April 2fi. (Spe cial.) Idaho started slugging in the third Inning against Oregon here this afternoon and continued it through two Innings, scoring seven runs. Ore gon made five errors and put over one run. Errors at critical times marred the Oregon playing. Had they played legitimate ball the score might have been much closer. One error in the wheat,! .5 2 Totals.88 4 12 23 13 Lebourceau out for interference. tBatted for J. Barnes in seventh. tBatted for V. Barnes in eighth. Ran for Boone in eighth. -New York 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 Philadelphia 0 2 0 00 3 0 1 6 Errors, J. Barnes, Leslie. Two-base hits. Shlnners, Robertson, Rawlings, Leslie. Walker. Home runs, Williams. Young, r letiiuer, -tt.euy. sacrifices, Leslie. Park inson. " Double plays. J. Barnes. Rawl ings and Keliy; Bancroft, Rawlings and Kelly. Bases on balls, off J. Barnes 1. Causey 1, Ring 4. Struck out, by Ring 6, J. Barnes 2, V. Barnes 1. Innings pitched; by J. Barnes 6. V. Barnes 1, Causey 1. Losing pitcher, J. Barnes. REDS BLANK CARDS, 3 TO 0 Rixey in Splendid Form and Is Backed by Good Support. CINCINNATI, O.. April 26. Rixey was in splendid form today and, backed by good support, shut out St. Louis 3 to 0. Walker retired for a pinch hitter in the seventh inning and Pfeffer, who succeeded him, was hit hard in the eighth. Score: St. Louis Sch'z.r.. 4 0 F'nier.l. 4 0 &tock.3. 4 0 H'n'by,2 4 0 Ganier.m 3 0 McH'y.L 4 0 Lavan.s 3 0 Smith. 0 0 T'p'er,s. 0 0 Cle'ns,c. 3 0 W'ker.p 2 0 Ains'tht 1 0 Pf'tar.p 0 0 Totals.31 0 3 24 11 Totals. 27 3 8 27 9 Ran for Lavan in seventh. tBatted for Walker in seventh. SL Louis 00000000 00 Cincinnati 00010002 3 Errors, Hornsby, Caveney 2. Two-base hits, Wingo. Gainor. Three-base hit iwiue. itcrniue. jMjine. uouble plays, Lavan to Hornsby to Fournler; Hornsby to iavo-u i rouiaier; uaveney to Daubert. Bases on balls. Walker 2. Struck out, Walker 2. Innings pitched, Walker 6, Pfeffer 2. Losing pitcher. Walker. DODGERS DRUB BRAVES, 10-1 Brooklyn Starts Batting Rally in Seventh That Wins Game. BOSTON, April 26. Fillingim held Brooklyn runless today until the seventh inning, when the vistors fell on him and continued their hard hitting against Oeschger, winning, 10 to 1. Hungling drove in six runs and scored the winning run himself. Score: ; i Cincinnati H O A .BRHOA 0 1 OiBurns.m 4 0 0 2 0 0 5 lDaub't,l 2 2 2 9 1 0 1 2 Duncan,! 4 12 10 0 4 3Bohne,2. 3 0 113 2 4 0E.H'p'r,r 2 0 18 0 0 1 liC v'ney.s 3 0 0 4 8 1 1 3Pinelli,3. 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0) Wingo, c. 3 0 2 5 0 0 1 0Rixey,p.. 3 0 0 1 1 0 5 0 I 0 1 11 0 0 0 0 0 01 out, by Vance 4, Fillingim 1, Oeschger 2. f Innings pitched, by Fillingim 6 1-3. Oes- chger 2 2-3. Losing pitcher. Fillingim. j CUBS DEFEAT PIRATES, 4 TO S Timely Hitting by Grimes Puts Game on Ice in 'tenth. CHICAGO, April 26. Timely hit ting by Grimes today enabled Chi cago to defeat Pittsburg 4 to 3 in 10 innings. Grimes made three hits, driving in the first run and sending in two more in the fifth, which tied the score. Hollocher's single in the 10th paved the way for the final run, which came home on Grimes' third hit. Alexander settled down after the second inning and pitched a mas terly game. Score: j Pittsburg I Chicago I BB.HOA BRHOA Mar'lle.s 5 0 14 llStatz.m.. 5 1 2 6 1 Carey.m 5 12 9 OIHol'ner.a a 3 3 1 4 Bigbee.l 3 110 0,Kel'her,3 4 0 2 2 2 Tierey 3 0 0 1 53rimes,L 5 0 3 11 0 Tray-r.S 4 0 11 2iCal'han,r 4 0 0 0 0 Mokan.r. 3 0 10 OiMUler.l.. 4 0 13 0 Grimm.l 4.1 0 14 2Krug.2... 4 0 0 2 4 Gooch.c. 4 0 0 3 2 Haxt'et.c 4 0 15 0 Adams.p 3 0 11 4;Alex'r,p. 4 0 10 2 If Totals.34 3 729 161 Totals.39 4 13 30 13 Two out when winning run was scoied. Pittsburg 210000000 0 3 Chicago 100020000 1 Error. Krug. Two-base hits, Carey, Maranvllle, Adams, Mokan. Three-base hits, Bigbee, Hartnett. Sacrifice hits, Tlerney, Bigbee. Double plays. Adams, Gooch, Grimm, Grimes, Tierney. Bases on balls, off Alexander 2. Struck out, by Adams 2, by Alexander 1. WASHINGTON AMERICANS WIN Clean Sweep of Series Made With Boston Final Score 15-6. WASHINGTON, D. C, April 26. Washington made a ciean sweep of the series with Boston by taking the final game today, 15 to 6. The locals bunched hits off four of the visiting pitchers. Gleason, although hit hard, received good support. Score: Boston I Washington BRHOA BRHOA 0R're.B. J.H'riB,l. 5 Pratt,2. 3 E.Sm'h.r 4 uugan.d. a Burns,l. 5 Clins,m. Wal'rs,c. 4 Pen'ck.p 1 Karr.p . . 1 Dodge, p. 1 Men'ky, 1 0 fc-uron.p. o o Reul.t.. 1 0 0 2!Ea.Smi.,l 5 111 2 03.H'rris,:j 6 2 2 4 3 2Rice,m.. 6 13 1 1 0ludge,l. 8 2 210 2 lIBrwer.r. 5 2 2 1 9 0iPeck'h,s. 4 2 15 0 l!Ghar'y,c. 4 3 4 2 6 2lPic'ich.c. 10 0 1 1 0Bush,3... 4 12 1 0 2 0 1 0 01 0 0 0 o Gle'son.p 4 ipecial Announcement Featuring Two Prices ! I recently made a grand purchase of Men's Clothing at a sacrifice price. I am featur ing them at two prices. COME EARLY THE SIZES ARE LIMITED. Suits Men s and Young Men s Totals. 42 15 19 27 14 Totals. 41 6 16 24 11 "Batted for Dodge in eighth. tBatted for Fullerton in ninth. Boston 20001021 0 6 Washington 07040301 15 Errors. Collins. Walters 2. Rice. Two- base hits. Rice, Gharrity, O'Rourke, J. Har ris. Three-base hits. O'Rourke. Dugan, Judge. Home run, Elmer Smith'. Stolen bases. Rice 2, Double plays, Bush to Har ris to Judge. 2. Bases on balls, off Glea son 4, off Pennock 2, off Karr 1. off Dodge orr f.Tanerton 3. struck out, by Pen nock 1, by Dodge 2, by Gleason 3, by Ful lerton 1. Innings pitched, Pennock 1 2-3, Karr 2 1-8, Dodge 3. Fullerton 1. Losing pitcner, pennock. ATHXETICS STOP YANKEES Winning Streak Broken When Philadelphia Wins, 4 to 2. NEW YORK, April 26. The Phila delphia Athletics broke New York's winning streak here today, taking the last game of the series, 4 to 2, by virtue of a ninth-inning rally. It was New York's first defeat on the home grounds this season. Score: PbiladelDhia I New Tork -BRHOA! BRHOA Toung.2 4 111 3Witt,r.... 2 0 2 1 0 John'n.l 2 1 0 15 0Few'ter,l 3 10 0 0 W'lk'r.m 4 12 1 0iBaker.3.. 3 0 10 3 Welch.r 4 110 OlM'Mi'n.m 4 0 0 1 0 Miller.l 3 0 0 1 0Pipp,l.. 4 0 0 11 0 P'rkins.c 4 0 15 2 Dykes,3 3 0 1 1 0 Gal'wy.s 3 0 0 3 7 Rom'l,p 4 0 10 6 Brooklyn: a K H O Al High,s.. 4 0 John'n,3 5 0 T.Gri'h.r 4 0 Xeis.r.. 0 1 SEATTLE, Wash., April 26. Heroic ninth-inning tactics again brought victory to the Seattle camp today, when Oakland was defeated, 4 to 3, after a thrilling last-minute rally. It was Barney's day again. Called to Idaho 7 6 OjOregon.... 14 5 the plate as a pinch hitter in the Batteries Marineaux and R. Fox; ninth, with Seattle one run behind, Gray and W. Johnson. ' fourth gave tbe Vandals three runs and paved-the way for the fourth. The comeback of the Idaho team after the double defeat by Washington State was remarkable. Behind Mari neau, the veteran left-hander, the Vandals played nine innings of per fect baseball. The teams meet again tomorrow. Score: R. H. E-I R. H. E. Myers,m 3 1 Schm't.l 5 2 Olson,2.. 4 2 Hung'g.c 5 2 Vance, p. 5 0 Boston BRHOA 2IPoweIl.m 3 2 2iBarb'a.l 5 0 OlSouth'h.r 4 0 OiCruise.I. 4 4 OiBoeck'1.3 3 2 OIKopf.s.. 2 9 0 Ford. 2. . 4 3 SIGowdy.c 4 5 1 0 3 Totals. 40-10 16 27 11 Filli'm.p 2 Oesch'r.p 1 4 0 6 1 5 0 2 0 1 2 0 4 5 3 3 0 0 1 1 1 Totals. 32 1 7 27 12 Brooklyn 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 2 10 Boston 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Errors, Olson, Kopr. Two-base hits. , Hug ling, Vance. Three-base hit, Hugllng. Sac rifices, 'iuingim, s.opi, -Myers z. uou-ble Ward, 2... 4 0 12 1 Scott.s.. 4 10 2 5 Schang, c 4 0-1 4 0 J ones, p.. 3 0 10 1 Totals 31 4 7 27 17 Totals 81 2 6 27 10 Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 4 New York 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 Error. Rommel. Two-base hits. Baker. Rykes. Witt. Three-base hit. Witt. Stolen base, Fewster. Sacrifices, Johnston, Miller, Galloway, Double play, young to Galloway to Johnston. Bases on balls. Jones 2, Rom mel 4. Struck out. Jones 4, Rommel 4. WHITE SOX BEAT INDIANS, 7-3 Bagby's Lack of Control and. Time ly Hitting Wins for Chicago. , CLEVELAND, O., April 25. Bagby's lack of control, with timely batting by Chicago and Cleveland's errors, allowed Chicago to defeat the locals today, ,7 to 3. Cleveland outbatted the W'hite Sox, but two double plays hurt the Indians' chances of scoring. Stephenson's batting was the feature. He made two dou-bles and a triple. Score: Cleveland BRHOA Also at $30 and $35 The finest examples of ready-to-wear clothing, produced in America at a clean cut saving of $5.00 to $10.00. This in cludes four-piece golf suits. Direct from the makers via my low-rent upstairs store from America's largest clothiers Come Up! where prices are down and get the greatest clothes values possible. V 571 111 : i is- u- S: til Hafeal p&m IfcLai ELal UPSTAIRS - Broadway r II- j . W i fcf II it W v i wtm i m it ! Hi hi J&it U M If I il. vu h IK' Cat-ty Cottier from Pantages -Chicago I 15 K n U Al Johns'n.s 5 0 1 2 2IJamie'n.l 5 0 2 7 McCl'n.3 5 0 1 0 llSteph'n,2 5 2 3 2 Co!l!ns,2. 5 0 1 4 21Spea.r,m. 3 0 12 Hooper. r 4 112 0'McIn'ls.l 4 0 0 5 Stru'k.m 2 4 2 2 OlSewell.s. 3 0 0 3 MostiU. 3 111 OIGardner.. 4 0 3 3 Shee'ly.l. 2 117 0 Wood.r. . 3 112 Schalk.c. 4 0 1 9 2 N'una'er.c 3 0 2 3 Robe'n.p 3 0 0 0 2lBagby,p. 3 0 0 0 IMorton.p 0 0 0 0 IGraney,. 10 0 0 Totals.33 7 9 27 91 Totals.34 3 12 27 8 Batted for Bagby in 8th. Chicago 0 1.0 2 2 0 0 2 0 7 Cleveland 00111000 0 3 Errors, tjpeaiter, ceweii, CNunamaKer z Strunk. Sacrifices. Sheejy, Mostil, Mc Innis, Nunamaker. Double play. Gardner to Stephenson to Mclnnis. Johnson to Sheely, McClellan to Collins to Sheely. Bases on halls. Robertson 4. Bagby 6 Mor ton 1. Struck out, , Robertson 5. Innings pitched, Bagby 8, Morton 1. Losing pitch er, Bagby. - RECRUIT SHUTS OUT BROWNS Winning Streak of St. Louis Broken by 2-to-0 Defeat. ST. LOtflS, April 26. Burt Cole, a recruit southpaw of the Detroit club, broke the St. Louis club's winning streak here today, shutting out the Browns, 2 to 0. Kenneth Williams' home run streak also was shattered. The best he could get was two singles in four trips to the plate. Score: ington State college team comes to Salem to play. The schedule follows: April 29 University of Oregon at Eu gene. May 6 Washington State college at Salem. for'vli1,3-reS011 Arlcultural " With th. pitcher, wttlln, to th-ir wrV m.v 17 He.H , niif,.H . TnT.. i there wexe hwivy drop. In .vernve. In th. nrt 1 past week. . On the other hand, several batsmen have tvtri getting better .nl bsae hit.; Kamm, Griggs and Poo!., eight two-baggers each; Ellison, O'Connell, Ke. each thre. triples: EUlnon leading home run clouter, with six to date. .McAui.y I. the leading sacrifice hitter with . total of eight, while O'l'onnell and Mollwttx .h.r. the honor, in pilfering baso. with .lx each. Detroit- BRHOA St Louis BRHOA Haney,3 5 0 0 3 lTobln,r .50130 Cuta'w.2 6 0 3 5 4lEllerbe,3 5 0 1 0 2 Veach.l 5 0 0 3 OlSisler.l.. 3 0 18 0 Heil'n.r 2 0 0 1 OiJa'b'n.m 4 0 12 Blue.l t.i 1 1 10 lSever'd,c 2 0 0 6 Foth'l.m 4 0 2 1 0WiH'ms.l 4 0 2 2 Rigney.s 3 112 5Gerber,s 3 0 0 4 BasTr.c 3 0 0 1 0M'M'ns.2 2 0 0 2 Cole.p -.4 0 1 1 3Bayne,p. 2 0 0 0 Itlenry.p 0 0 0 0 IPruett.p 0 0 0 0 I'Collins.. 10 0 0 iBilliniSt 0 0 0 0 I Austin S .10 0 0 Tilnvs Olson to Hieh to Schmandt. Konf Two-base hits. Wood. Stephenson 2. to Ford to Barbara 2. Bases on balls, off Three-base hits, Mostil, Collins, Stephen Vance 5, Fillingim 1, Oeschger 1. Struck son. Home run, Hooper. Stolen base. 1 cArcher THE NEW Arrow Collar Cloett,Peabody Co. Inc. THERE'S AT LEAST ONE IN EVERY OFFICE. ( 1MAC - I'VE Got J The cutest kd up At The House - - I'M J A PPA (MAC - vuhy DOM'T WoO ficT IWTO SX FWch - Ths Baby Got anJother Tooth - aiwt TH.A-T RerAARKr6LE f WHAT Do VfaJ Thimk SHe 3md This J MM ED You 00SHT To 6E6. M.Y KiO - WHCT DO ' You Ti-KlOK SHE. UJEIGH S EH i EIGHT PoOiOCiS ! UrtAT f? yo tcxj I mrsir. or i in i . HEH HSU HH . r t Ta-k OLD ROV OUR KiCi HA Trie croup '. Jack You dom't KiOOvaJ wJhat "That KiD MEAkI S To - -if we Lose HER. it IjuOOI-D BREAK ME ALL CP Jack t uTiOeuJ Yoo-is ouets- STak)E TrtAT'-S WHY I CAmE To You ?D SOY- VAcLL. .STArJ TM KID'S GoT a Tooth - iD You EWER iSetr a. kid That Ase- 5eTT-rJ3 TeeTH ! ? They .say ri ljwUoal. Totals34 2 8 27 14 Totals 32 .0 6 27 10 Batted for Bayne in 6th. tBatted for Henry in 8th. SBatted for Pruett in 9th. Detroit : 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 St. Louis 0 0 o o o o o u u o Errors. Rigney. Cole, Jacobson. Two- base hit, CutsUaw. Three-base hit, Ellerbe. Stolen bases, Williams 2. Double plays, Rigney to Cutshaw to Blue. Bases on balls, off Bayne 3, Cole 6, Henry 2. Struck out, by Bayne 3, Cole 1, Henry 1, Pruett 1. In nings pitched, Bayne 6, Henry 2, Pruett 1. Losing pitcher, Bayne. WASHINGTON DRUBS AGGIES Decisive Victory Won, 18 to 0, in Ball Game at Seattle. SEATTLE, Wash., April 26. Uni versity of Washington baseball players duplicated their performance of yesterday here today when they de cisively defeated the Oregon Agri cultural college nine, 18 to 0. To day's game brought the series with Oregon Agricultural college here to a close. Washington gathered 16 hits from Mendenhall, ' Taggert and Kasberger. The score: land. May 18 University of Idaho at Moscow. May 19 Washington State college Pullman. May 20 Spokane Amateur Athletic club at Spokane. May 27 Oregon Agricultural college at saiem. O. . B R H O Al Rlppey.r 2 0 1 Holm t.I 2 1 M'Ke'a.s 4 0 0 "Washington BRHOA Perry, m 3 Duffy.o. 8 Palf'y.l 8 Ka'h.p-2 3 Tasto.3. 2 Tagg't.p 0 Mend'l.p 0 Park'n.l 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 o 0 O 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 1 O'Lewis.r.. 3 2 0:Torr'ce.s 4 3 2!Welts.2.. 3 2 OlM'M'n.m 4 8 3iGardner.l 5 5 HBarrett.l 4 1 l:Bakke.8. 3 1 llMalon'y.c 4 0 0:Harper.p 5 0 O Merritt.r 8 1 0 Zamb'n.r 2 Galli'n.l 1 Miles.c. 0 Totals. 22 O 5 24 8 0 1 2 0 1 1 1 2 1 2 11 2 2 2 6 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 Totals. 41 18 16 27 11 O. A. C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Washington 8 3 1 00 4 0 2 J8 Errors, Torrance, Bakke, Duffy, Kas bergh, Taggert, Mendenhall. Two-base hits. Rippey, Uardner McMahon. Maloney. Home runs. Harper, Zamberlin. Bakke. Struck out. by Harper 3. Mendenhall 1. Kasbergh 1. Bases on balls, off Harper 3. Mendenhall 2. Taggert 1, Kasbergh 3. Hit by pitched ball, Mendenhall. Umpire, Engle. TEKXIS SCHEDULE IS HEAVY Willamette Racquet Wielders to Open Season This Week. "WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY, Sa lem, Or., April 26. (Special.) Wil lamette this year faces the heaviest tennis schedule in the history of the school. Eight tournaments will be played during t)ie season, including a trip to Washington and Idaho, the first of its kind ever undertaken. Moodhe, last year captain and three-year letter man, and Doney, two-year letter man, are almost certain to make the team, while a third man will be chosen this week. The season opens this week - end, when they journey to Eugene. to meet the Lemon - Yellow racquet franklin to Vie With Freshmen. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eu gene, April 26. (Special.) Franklin high school of Portland will send 12 men to Eugene Saturday to partlci pate in a dual meet against the Ore gon freshmen squad. The Franklin squad is coached by Colton Meek, a former student of the university, and it was through him that the meet was arranged. The programme of events and names of the entries have not yet been decided upon. Lewis Again Defeats Zbyszko. KANSAS CITY, April 26. - Ed (Strangler)' Lewis, champion heavy weight wrestler of the world, success fully defended his championship last night by defeating Stanislaus Zzys zko in the first and third of three falls. Lewis won the championship from Zbyszko in Wichita, Kan., a short time ago. Sport News in Brief. Though Ellison of Sim Francisco dropped 20 points in his batting last week he still leads Coast league batsmen. He wound up the first three series with an average of .450, having played in 21 games, gone SO times at bat, and made 36 hits. ... Arlett of Oakland again stands out as tha leading pitcher. He won two game In the last series and now ha. a total of five victories without a defeat, and 1. charged with only 11 runs responsible for To date 11 moundsmen have won all taelr gamea ... The men at present leading In the vari ous departments are: Cooper, Oaks, ' 87 times at bat; Kamm. 2? rnn; FIHnn. 8 their averages show an Increase. Deal of Los Angeles Jumped from .373 to .400. and Indian Jim Thorp, of Portland added 37 points, coming from S4H to .311. Safe or Out. BY CHARLES D. WHITE. Q. While A is at hat with on. strike and three- balls It is discovered h I. the wronf; batter. What should the umpiro do? A. The right batter Is sent to take hl place and ha. one strike and thr-e balls against him. 4. Batter runs forward toward pltehr and strikes at ball, but mis..... I. he out? A. Batter Is not out If he fulls to bat ball, even though he runs forward. Q. With two out a runner going from first to second Is hit by batted ball. Does the batter get a ba.a hit? A. Although side is retired batter I. credited with a base hit here. Q. If baserunner throws up sn irm to interfere with thrown ball, what I. pen alty? A. Runner Is called out for Interference. Q. Kight-handr-d hatter with one .Irik. called on him steps to left-handed batter's box. Is this Ifgal? A. Batter may do so while hall 1. b.lng returned from catcher to pitcher. BaMball Records. April 28, 1887 Most bs. hits In gam., both clubs, 53 hits. Metropolitan, v.. Phil adelphia, (A. A ). April 80, 1-Sh7. April 26. 1902 Most double plays started by outfielders. In a game, 8; J. McCarthy. Chicago (N. L ). April 2, 1916 Most times player cauKht stealing bases in a game. 3; K. C Mattel New York vs. Boston (A. L.) Also held by 5 American and 6 National league players. April 26. 1920 Most uslsts In game by second baseman, 11: D. B. Pratt, New York (A. L. . equalling American league record of J. Gideon. St. Loul. (A. I..). 1UI8. The record Is 12. held by F. Dunlsp, Cleve land (N. L. ), 1S2, and H. Ford, Boston (N. L. ), 1921. April 26, 1921 Most players ued In game, one. club, 23; Cleveland vs. Detroit (A. Li.). Read The Oresronlan rl.slfl..rl nil". 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