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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1921)
DID YOU KNOW That Salem Is Becoming a Live Stock and Packing House Center of Growing Importance'? - WRATIIEU mm The Statesman recelres tbm lNMd wire report j of i ft Associated Pre, ft greatest and most re liable press aesoclatloa ia taa Thursday fair; moderate south westerly winds. world, i SEVENTY-FIRST YEAR SALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 25, 1921 PPTm?. fttte rx?xrna t ' r t 1 ' 3 " t - v n ANTHER BILL IS Li ASIDE, Congress Now in Recess Un til September 21, No Ac tion Taken Regarding Beer for Invalids. PRESIDENT SIGNS DYE EMBARGO LEGISLATION House of Representatives to Enjoy Longer Vacation f i Than Senate WASHINGTON, Aug. 24. Con Tress, took a recess tonight until September 21. without a vote by the senate on a bill prohibiting the manufacture and sale of ber to the sick. The senate ended its Vork at 11:35 o'clock and the house at 11:58 o'clock. T I I Definitely Khrlred The! anti-beer bill was laid side tonight by the senate at the request of 8enator Sterling, tepuhlican. South Dakota, who announced" there was little possi bility of reaching a rote on it be ore midnight. j House Extends Itcccfw The senate Is expected to re sume work upon reconvening, but Representative Mondell, the Re publican leader, obtained " agree ment to have the house declare thre day recesses from September 21 to October SI. ! President Harding was at the Seapitol late tonight to sign a num ber of bills. The last to be put bo te re him was the dye ernbargo ex tension, and the last measure to be passed by the senate. PEACE TREATY IS NOT United States and Central Powers Fail to Complete ' .- i Arrangements BERLIN. Aug. 24. The peaee treaty ; between the United States and Germany was not signed to day us had been intended. v The delay in signing resulted from i an unexpected technical point raised In connection with I the formalities as arranged by Ellis Lorlng Dresel, the United States : commissioners and Dr. Friedrlch Rosen, the German for eign minister. Yesterday. The r ceremony of signing was to have occurred at noon today at the foreign office, but it was post poned at the request of , Mr. Dres el, who asked the privilege of querying the Washington govern ment on the mooted point, t At both the headquarters of the American commission and the German foreign office it was said that the technicality which in volved the delay did not affec: the contents or character of the treaty, as both governments had reached full accord on the official text some days ago. WASHINGTON, Aug. 24. The state, department received tonight a report from Commissioner Dresel at Berlin on the peace treaty negotiations and said the point which had been raised would be attended to at once. Officials 'did not discuss the situation, say ing that It was one of "minor technical Importance." OBJECT OF 5; Temporary organization ot the Scenic Preservation association of Oregon, which is ta become state wide, was effected at a conference in the office of Governor Olcott yesterday : afternoon. The object of the organization will be the , conservation of the state's scenic resources and the preservation of natural beauty along, the state's Juighways, primarily with a view to tourist attraction. Governor Ol cott was elected temporary presi dent and Harold C. Jones of Port land temporary secretary. I Clubrt Represented The following men attended the conference: ' Governor Olcott, Fred ; Riser, J. H. Rankin, L. A. Kelson. George Cecil, E. S. Col lins, Henry Fries, VYC..Culbert son and John B. Yeon, all of Portland; Herbert Nunn, state highway commlslsoner; F. A. El liott, state forester, and T. E. Mc Croskey, manager of the Salem Commercial club. SIGNED SCENIC PRESERVATION IDE ZR-2 CATASTROPHE SHOCKS AMERICA, YANKEE CREW LOST HULL, England, Aug. 24. (By The Associated Press) j Seventeen officers and men of the United States navy and1 twenty-seven officers and men of the British navy met death j today in the collapse of the great dirigible ZR-2 over the city ! of Hull. j Every one of the Americans on board the. ill-fated craft ! perished as far as could be ascertained at midnight tonight, j Only five men of the forty-nine who were making the! trial trip in the dirigible prior to the vessel being turned over I to the United States navy are known to have been saved. The American officers who started the trip included J Commander Louis H. Maxfield, Lieutenant-Commander Em-; ory Coil, Lieutenant Henry W. Hoyt, Lieutenant Marcus H. j Esterly. Lieutenant Commander Valentine N. Bieg and Lieu-' tenant Charles G. Little. j The American enlisted men who went up with the craft from Howden were C. I. Aller, Robert Coons, L. E. Crowel, J. T. Hancock, William Julius, M. Lay, A. L. Loftin, A. I. Pettit, VV. J. Steele, N. O. Walker and George Welsh. The British losses include the famous air veteran Briga dier General E. M. Maitland and all the other officers on board, except Lieutenant Wann, the commander of the ZR-2. Starting from Howden Tuesday morning on a test flight to Pulham, the big aircraft had been afloat for 34 hours, at times in bad weather, and was returning to the Pulham air drome at the time of the disaster, which constitutes the most terrible of its kind in peacetimes. The ZR-2, sister ship of the famous R-34, the first dirig ible to cross the Atlantic, was on her final test trip,' prior to being accepted by the United States navy and taken across the Atlantic by an American crew especially trained for that purpose. She was 695 feet long and was built to carry a crew of thirty. Her speed was estimated at 70 miles an hour. The American navy was to pay $2,000,000 for the craft. While flying at about 1,000 feet over Hull, spectators saw the ZR-2 seemingly buckle "amidships and plunge down ward over the city and into the Humber river. Bulletin: 11:23 p. m. HULL, England, Aug. 25. (By The Associated Press) Norman C. Walker, a rigger, was the only American to escape when the ZR-2 was destroyed here last evening. It was re ported early in the night that he had died, but inquiry has established the fact that he is still alive. His home is in Com merce, Tex. Weakness Rumored. One theory of the cause of the disaster, is that while the ship's rudders were being tested the giant craft took a sharp turn, which caused her framework to buckle and that the explosion of a gasoline tank - eompleted the tragedy of the air. The actual cause, .however, may never be FIFTY INJIED Rio Grande Passenger Train Crashes Through Bridge Near Gale, Colo, GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., Aug. 24. Two persons were killed and more than 50 injured today when Denver & Rio Grande western passenger train No. 1. westbound, plunged tlirough a bridge into a creek at Gale, Colo , near here. The dead are: .Douglas Armstrong, engineer. Grand Junction, apd William Red fern, 52, Lallavre, Cal., a passen ger. The wreck was due to a wash out which had damaged the bridge. It was said tonight that most of the 50 persona injured would be able to continue their journ eys or return to their homes by tomorrow, Although a tew were said to be in a serious condition, though not expected to die. Tire train wrecked left Denver at 8:30 o'clock yesterday morn ing, en route to Salt Lake ICty. Utah. STATE SOCIETY The following clubs or organi zations were, represented: Port land Kiw&nis club, Portland Ad club, Portland Chamber of Com merce, Portland Realty board, Salem Commercial club, state highway commission and United States forestry service. All Cities to Act. The Portland men who attended the. conference will constitute a temporary executive committee who will draw up a set of by-laws to be approved later. The meet, ing instructed Governor Olcott to issue a request for each civic or commercial body of the state to appoint a scenic preservation com mittee, the committee to assemble In their respective cities and each to select a representative who shal be recommended to the gov ernor for appointment as a vice president of the state association. The governor in the near future will call a meeting of these rep resentatives, f 1 E known. A rumor had been afloat for some days that ZR-2 was Structurally weak, but this wa Btoutly denied by all in author ity. Jump From Wreck. Tens of thousands of specta tors saw several men climb out- (Continued on page 5) T WILL COME HIE Funeral of Lieutenant Leslie Tooze to Be Held in Eug ene Next Month The body of Leslie O.- Tooze, who was killed in the Meuse-Ar-gonne campaign, September 2, 1918, has arrived in Iloboken, N. J., according to a telegram re ceived yesterday by Walter L. Tooze, his father. The telegram is as follows: "Body of your late son First Lieutenant Leslie O. Tooze ar rived in Hoboken to be shipped to you at Eugene, Or. Kindly wire immediately if you desire to escort body from Iloboken to Eu gene and advise date of your ar rival. Rody will be held at this port. Graves, registration ser vice. IT. S. pier, Hoboken." Mr. Tooze said that Lieutenant Lamar Tooze, who was in Salem yesterday from McMlnnville, will leave for Hoboken to escort the body of his brother back to Eu gene. It is probable that the fun eral services will be held at Eu gene about September 9, with military honors. Leslie O. Tooze was the son or Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Too,e. He wis pT3duafd from the ITniver sity of Oregcn and with his twin brother Lamar, was a student at the Harvard university law school at the time the war broke out. Both of the Tooze boys volun teered for service. Leslie ertering the training camp at the Presidio. Calif. He came out of that camp with the commission of second 1'eutenTt find was stationed at Camp Lewisi Shortly after his arrival in camo. he was commissioned first lieutenant of Company K. 364th Infantry of the 91st division. He left for France June 27. and was k'.lled in battle 91 days after his arrival In that country, while fighting in the Meufe-Ar-gonne campaign. September 28. at the bead of his battalion. His bodv was brought from . No Man'3 land at night by four comrades, all of whom received distinguish ed service medals for the!r heroic action. He was first buried at the shell -torn village of Eclisfontaine and was given a military funeral, his twin brother Lamar being present and helping to construct the rude rn n wh'ch be was burled. Later the body was taken to the Romange cemetery, the largest HfcTS (Continued on page 8) LAST SPOONFUL CONCRETE POT New Pacific Highway to Be Finally Opened for Traffic in Four Weeks Rapid Work is Done. TROUBLESOME GAPMN THOROUGHFARE CLOSED Construction South of Salem Considered Model of Modern Improvement At 1 o'clock, yesterday, the last spoonful of concrete was laid com pleting the south-of-Salem wection ot the Pacific highway leading to wards Jefferson. A lot of material has been laid on that road. It is 8.57 miles long, 1G feet wide, seven inches deep, solid concrete. There are 105,000 sucks of cement, 8,000 cubic yards of sand. 13,000 cubic yards of gravel. The superficial area is almost 91t.oOO square yards. The trucks traveled close to 100,000 miles in hauling the Material to place. Wator System Iluilt. The contractors had to build their own water works system, to j carry water to the building site, j At times they were pumping wa ter three miles to use in the con creffe mixing and road finishing operations. The road stops at the south end, six miles this side of Jefferson. That, however Interests the pub lic far less than the fact that at the north end it dldn'fsiop until it had established a connection with paved Commercial street, Sa lem. Now it's a straight shoot from here clear to the tother end cj the 8.57 miles of this new sec on. City Council Helpless. Travelers and natives and even callous-footed- and souled yellow dogs have jeered, wept, prayed, swore despairingly over the Soutfi Commercial street road leading in to Salem. They have charged it up to the city, with the violent' as sertion that "it's always the cities that have the worst roads." This road, however, was outside the Sa lem incorporation, and even if the city council had had a treasury full of gold it couldn't have spent a cent. It was a state sin and shame, that humiliated Salem but offered no way of escape. But now the Pacific highway has settled the whole cat-hop. by building rrom the south city limits to the junction with' the Liberty road with Jefferson way. and thus closing the yawning gap that has tried men's souls. Development Interesting. A concrete road is an interest ing development. This new Pa cific highway is the very best thing in permanent road building. First the grade is made, leveled, rolled. Then the water pipe line is laid alongside, to have water ready for both the mixing and the sprinkling after the material is laid in place. Then the trucks set to work on their interminable hauling job. The s&ven trucks on this one job have traveled close to 200 miles a day for 79 days, the drivers working in relays, eight hours at a time," and covering a to tal of almost 100,000 miles. The average haul for the 21.000 cubic yards of sand and gravel, and the 105.000 sacks of cement was a lit tle more than five miles; all the gravel wus from the Salem Sand & Gravel plant, in Salem. The ce ment tco is an Oregon product, from the Oregon Portland Cement Company at Oswego. Mixer Works Itapidly. The gravel is dumped where it can be handled by the big Koeh ring mixer that nandles five cubic yards at a charge. The mixed concrete Is run out to place on a crane-arm extension that can place it anywhere on the 16-foot roadway. After the required depth? is placed in one section, the mixer moves back a few feet, to take up another batch of materials, while the leveling gang goes over the material already dumped and fin ishes it ready for surfacing. The roadway is marked by heavy stringers, carefully laid to the required grade. These form the ways on which the leveler is operated a huge scraper, resting on the two sides of the 16-foot-wide mould walls, and which is drawn over and over the plastic concrete ! give it the proper slope. The finished road is given j a crown of one and a half incfies. ! to make it shed water. After it is 'properly formed, the fast-harden-iing concrete is rolled with heavy. ROAD long-handled hand rollers. Pavement Protected. When the proper surface Is ob tained, the new road is covered with a sheet of canvas or burlap and left to settle for a day. It takes almost 1000 feet of canvas. 24 feet wide, to cover the road way that w ill be laid in a day. The contractors have as much canvas on the job. as a three-ring circus. It is sprinkled heavily all day. (Continued on page 6) LAKE LAB1SH LANDS AND EFFORTS TO QUENCH BLAZE UNAVAILING; RAIN MONEY COMES TO BE PAID GUARD BOYS Treasury Checks Aggregating $21,000 to be Distributed in Willamette Vallev T'nited States treasury checks aggregating more than ' $24.uoo wtre received at the offices of tilt-J-djutant Kneral yesterday fur distribution among Oregon citi zen soldiers in pavmenf for arm ory drills. . Most of these checks will be distributed in Salem. McMinnville. s?ilverton. Med ford and Portland. Checks for national guardsmen in other sections of the state are overdue, A total or $115,000 of federal fuiids has been distributed in Ore gon since the first of the year. Adjutant General White- said." The largest payroll resulted from the encampments held at Camp Vewis and Fort Stevens. More than 2400 Oregonians are on the fed eral military payroll, and receive regular compensation for services under the national defense act. Funds under this act are prorated among the states according to the strength of the national guard. Oregon has the largest national guard, based on population, of all western states, and the second largest in the-United States. REFUND OF TUXES Minora Action May Be Filed Against Sheriff Orr of Polk County Today DALLAS. Ore., Aug. 24. (Spe cial to The Statesman) A suit willin all probability be filed with County Clerk Moore tomorrow by Robert S. Kreason. attorney, to enjoin Sheriff John W. Orr from paying the refund ordered paid back to the taxpayers of Polk county by the state tax commis sion out ot the general fund. The attention of the state tax commission was called to the tax situation, in Polk county several weeks ago by the Southern Paci fic railway company in settling up a portion of its taxes. The rail road attorneys found that Polk county had gone over its 6 per cent limitation something over $10,000 and the commission or dered the sheriff immediately to begin preparations for refunding this amount to the taxpayers. Mr. Kreason, after an exhaustive search of the records, has found that the excess taxes have all been drawn on the fund raised by the special high school levy and the refund should not be made out of the general fund as the sheriff proposes to do. The sheriff's clerical force has been making preparations this week for refunding the money due those taxpayers who have paid their taxes in full and was going to begin the work in a few days. The suit, which will be held before Judge Harry H. Belt as soh as he returns from a trip to southern Oregon will delay the matter somewhat and it is the opinion of persons interested that the case will bring out some points of the iw mn lie i ri urzk imv; uiitu? ci c Vi . Man, Long Dead, Found Near Columbia Highway PORTLAND. Ore.. Auc. 24. The body of a man whose last name, the police believe, was Ol son, was found lying under a tree about 100 yards off the lower Co lumbia River highway about two miles north of Linnton. Appar ently the man had been dead three months or more. The body was lying on a pair of blankets which had been carefully spread on the ground. There were no evidences of a murder havins been commit ted, officers said. Charles Chaplin Will Re-visit Native Land LOS ANGELES. Cal.. Aug. 24. Charles Chaplin, film comedian, left Los Angeles today for New York ity from whence he plans to sail for England, his native land for his first visit there u. several years. He said he ex pected to be abroad about three i months. BISHOP LEWIS DEAD. SIOUX CITY. Ia., Aug. - 24. Bishop W'. S. Lewis of the Metho dist Episcopal church, died at a hospital here today after a Ions illness. QUINABY, Or., Aug. 24. Travelers along the Pacific highway east of Chemawa are astonished to ee the earth on fire in the fields adjoining the road, where the celebrated Lake Labish vegetable loam has become ignited from burn ing brush. All efforts to ex tinguish it with Kwse dirt have proved unavailing, as the application of soil of the same nature is merely adding fuel to the flames. Nothing but rain in generous quantities can subdue the blaze. This land is valued at $1000 an acre on account of its vege table composition and serious injury would result if the fire should spread over any con siderable areas as the porous nature of the soil permits the fire to burn deep into the earth. Falls City Man Killed By Backfire of Motor W. O Wilson of Falls City died at a local hospital yesterday as the result of injuries received when he was thrown through the side of a garaee bv the back fire of a Ford lumber truck which he was attempting to crank. Rushed i'rom the Foster lum ber camp on the Big Lucitiamute near Hoskins where the accident occurred, Wilson died before lJr. Butler of Independence could reach his bedside. Concussion of the brain was given as the cause of death. Little is known of the condi tions surrounding the accident. He is survived by a wife and child in Falls City and by par ents who live near Salem. The body Is at the Rigdon undertak ing establishment. GREAT INCREASE IS SHOWN BY ASSESSOR IN GROWING ACRES There is 52,64 more acres devoted to farming in Marion county than there was one year ago, according to the annual report of Oscar A. Steelhammer, assessor, in his horticultural and agricultural report of Marion county. The farming acre age at present in Marion county is 382,301, while one year ago it was 329,667. The number of farms has also increased during the past year, according to the same annual report. One year ago there were 4,615 farma in the county, while today there are 4,721. Spring Wheal Increases There is also a slight-increase in the acreage of non-bearing prunes, as tlt report of one year ago estimated 1,794 acres, while for this year it is 1,873, an In crease of 79 acres. In the acreage of spring wheat, there has been a gain of 2, "!; acres covering the report of this year with that of a year aso. The . spring wheat of last year was 11. 204, while for this year the Mar ion county acreage is 13,799, ac cording to Mr. Steelhammer's re port. The acreage of winter wheat has fallen off, forhila it was X2.r90 one year agoTfRti- year's report shows only 22.0.'2fi-cres. Hop Industry Spurts The hop industry has taken . a sudden spurt when it comes to Denial was made at the state penitentiary last night by James La France that Dr. It. M. Brum field, accused of murder at Rose burg, visited him in a jail at Co quille several years atro and in quired as to how La France had disposed of a dead body in Clack amas county. La France, now doing time for forgery, served a previous term in the state prison for defrauding an insurance company by the use of a corpse which, when found, was beleieved to be that of La France. He was arrested at Co quille and a report emanating from Roseburg yesterday was to the effect that while he was in jail there he was visited by Dr. Brum field who inquired closely as to the maner in which he had used the body of the dead man. This ...... nA.nii.l. .Honrl hr 1 .9 i France last night, and he declares PENITENTIARY I T . HE NEVER ON FIRE IS NEEDED FILMMAKERS ACCUSED OF BAD POLITICS Defeat of Candidates Who Fa vor Control is Said to Have Heen Threatened WttSHIXGTON, Aug. 24. In vestigation of the "political ac tivities" of the motion picture in dustry was proposed in a resolu tion introduced tonight by Sena tor Myers. Democrat, Mont. . The resolution charged that the in dustry, in an effort to repeal mo tion pcture censorship and con trol laws had promised the pub licity of the screen to "elect all who agree to vote for its repeal, and, to defeat all candidates who refused." The picture industry by its own announcement, the resolution, said.' had "entered politics to be come a factor in the election of every candidate, from alderman to president., from assemblyman to l;n ted States senators.'.' Montana Woman Is Hunting Her Son Here Hrs. A. DeLong, Mont., -rho ar rived in this city yesterday lit eearch of her son. Earl Hinote, who was said to be in a local hos pital has asked the aid of: the po-. lice in locating him, for she has been unable to find whre he has been at any one of the Salem hos pitals. Several days ago she received a telegram from her son's wire saying that he bad been injured and that he was at "a Salem hos pital and asking that the mother come to his bedside. Mrs. De Long is also unable to find the wife. Hinote'g home Is in Marsh field. 1 acreage, comparing this year with the assessor';- report of-Ia.-t year. Today, there ar 4.0S'J acres ot bearing hops in Marion county, while the report a year ago gave 2.2 2 9 acres. The non-bearing acreage, however, is smaller, as there is only 4s j acreH of non bearing hops - in .Marion county compared to 1,232 acrea a year ago. Oats Most Popular The heaviest acreage of all crops in the county is that of oats, amounting to 42.K61 acres th.s year. This Is 7,026 acre3 more than the combined winter and spring wheat acreage of he coun ty. Clover is also a heavy crop in the county, with a total this year (Continued on page 6.) SAYS KNEW HELD that he has nver met Brumfield. who- is accused' of the murder of Dennis Russell, whose body the slayer had mutilated apparently to make it appear to be that of Brumfield. 1a France w-as never accused of mvrder, but with the body of a dead man he succeeded in de frauding an insurance company to the extent that the money was ac tually paid by the company to his beneficiary. "If Brumfield was trying to de fraud an Insurance company." said La France last night, "he made a mistake. He tried to work too fast. If he had taken several months for it he might have gotten away with it" The body used by La France was a cadaver, that was past the stage of recognition. - La France was arrested at Co quille and taken to Portland tor trial, ! HOBOKEN PIERS BURNED; SAVE BODIES flFDEAD iner, Leviathan and Transport Saved After Struggle Which Calls Out Fire Fighters. - TWO PIERS, WAREHOUSE AND BARRACKS LOST Bodies of 400 Soldier Dead Rescued by Volunteers, 5 Guards and Laborers HOBOKEN. N. Aug. M. Fivi hundred, bodies of American soldier deaJ,j awaiting shipment to the homes ot relatives, were removed In rafety late today when tire ot unknown origin a wept over the army; waterfront reservation here, destroying piers five and tlx and an Adjoining army store house and barracks. VeftelH Threatened V" Pier four. ! at "which the riant liner Leviathan and the transport Wheaton I were docked, was saved with difficulty The flames lick ed the sides of the Leviathan,' damaging a small section ot the woodwork cn the bow and the forward maet but a tire boat wedged its way between the liner and the burninf pier and success- fully fought off the names. Bodies Arc Removed v ' 1$hen the fire broke out,- Cap tain H. $. VUbur, officer ot the day, called out the entire army personnel!, about 150 men, who Btarted removing fhe bodies. Fcfnr hundred 'longshoremen; on 1 duty at nearby piers assisted. i One thoufand s , tuner bodiei were lined up on tler four, but were not, disturbed. The trans port Wbeaton, which reoently ar. rived here with 5,000 bodies still had 2,000 aboard but the tire was on the opposite side ot her pier. i j i ii Man Found Beaten to ' I beathfrP6lice."Activj PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. li. i The bod ofj-R. F. McNeil, a la borer, ws found today in th brush near the railroad at Trout dale. He had been beaten to, death. The police are looking for two men who were seen : near a camp where McNeil had been liv ing in the woods near Trout dale. Huge Expense Sum i Apprbved by Congress .1 ' ' 'L -WASHINGTON; Aur 24.The bill carrying $48,500,000 for ex penses of the shipping board until . January 1 next, and 1200,000 tor expenses of the disarmament con ference was sent to the president tonight when! the senate and the house adopted a conference re port on the measure. , FIGHT IS DRAW, ' PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 24. Lew Tendler of Philadelphia and Sailor Friedman ot Chicago, light- ' weights,: fought to a draw In an eight-round bbut at the Philadel phia National leage baseball park tonight. I I COAST BASEBALL FRISCO 5. SACXtMEVTO 0 ' 8At KAilKNTO. Cal., Aug. 24. fUa Frinriiwo bit I'dnnrr bard at th right time ai4 gave iO'Doul good aaporl to ahut oot Hafamrnt S U O today. O'lJnul helped win hia own can by tending h ball tt tb right flald ffnre with on n ia tha third inning. I R. H. . Ran Franciaro .1 - - 5 6 Sacramento f 0 ft 2 llaturira O IHoul and Yalla; Pcaatr, Canfield and Cock. V. VE&NON 10, SEATTLE S I.OS ANUEI.EH, Aug. 24.- Rd" Smith knockfd the ball 6vr lb left fx-ld frno- lor a home raa with tho baara filled In the ttifhth inaing today, oad Vernon defeated Seattle 1U to . r. h. r. RfOttle Vernon . 10 13 1 Btterie SrhOrr. Jaeoba, Deuaree and Spencer; Faeth, Mitchell and Marshy. ASOELS , SALT LAKE 7 SALT LAKE fTIf, Aug. S4. toe Angeles won todar'e game to 1. Batt ing ralliea on both aidea in the second and third produced ail the nag of the game tare on, j Kallio and Hughe had a atiff battle aer they were tnaerted. IS? 11 II K Jjou Angelea .-.. t IS 1 Salt Lake 7 II 1 Batteries Keiabart, Hughes and Bald win ; folaon, Kail to and deokina. POETLAX IS, OAXLAjrO S BAN KANCWO, Aog. 24 Portland nd Oakland rtverd their mual itleg of playing today and Portland won IS to H. The Beaeera knocked Arlelt out of the box in the third inning, and alio hammered hia stteeeaaor, wins, - hard. Knight put tha ball ever the fence ta the ninth inning for a homo ran, Bear ing one; man ahead of him. K. H. E. is to t Portland Oakland I II I Batteries Pillette and Fisher; Arlett, nmn ana MitteL sTASDnra 07 THE CLTJBS W. L. I San Francisco ftaerarnento Seattle I , Lea Angelea Oakland Vernon Pet. .604 .57S .5ST .55 87 67 82 61 T 62 i T7 61 uiant l 77 64 ..546 74 60 IH 55 S .390 84 104 ' .244 Palt Lake Portland