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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1922)
FRIDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 1, 1922 THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON .There arad Everywhere fete MUED HITS m TRIM Extra Base Drives on Mo gridge Lead to Victory Bush Again Wins NEW YORK, Aug. 31 (Amer ican) The New York- Americans touched extra base hits on Mo gridge earlyin today's game and made it three straight from Wash. . lngton. Bush von h's 22nd game of the season. , ; " Score: : ; i '' . H. E. Washington V ........ 1 8 0 New York ..........3.41 MogTldgerand Gharrity; Bush and Schang. CleveUml 7, St. Louis fl Cleveland, Aug. 31 -(American) Cleveland rallied ' in the ninth Inning, scored five runs on ft base on ball, a wild throw and five hits, and defeated St. Lou's. Seven double play, cut down the scores. . I , Score:, v R. H. E. St. Louis ... ... .....6 15 2 Cleveland ... ... .....7 11 1 ; Davis. Vangltfer and Severeid; Winn, Edwards end O'Neill. Chicago 1 o, ; IV'troit 1 f DETROIT. Aug. 3 (Ameri can) Chicago wounded throe De troit pitchers lor 21 hits today and took the third straight game from the -Tigers. Schaik hit a -It's .toasted. - This ens DTfra nrnnatt '' Clves a ra remand "' delightful, quality ) rlmpostlbl to . duplicate Guaranteed by 4f YOU'LL BE , MONEY IN. POCKET If you have us make your . . new -..... FADL SUIT- 5 'because you will get , ' more wear out of it than i Is possible with the average ' suit, especially the made-ro-, flt-everybody kind. , MADE-TO-MEASURE r wear better because they are : made to fit perfectly the person they're measured 4 for. besides, our rult.i are made from pure wool fab-. ! rlcs, the only kind that Is , stylish-looking, shapo-retain-s Ing and long wearing. Hundreds of the newest weaves, patterns and1 eolor ; Ings to select from. i. The lowness of our prices , will please you. ' , $25- to $45 Scotch Woolen Mills ) 3UG mm-- I LEAGUE STANDINGS I FACOTC COAST LEAGUE W. I.. Pmm Franciaro '. 5 ST Vfcrnon . 59 lx Anrehsa . S8 4 Salt Laka - 72 79 Oakland ... 71 81 tjfettla' ........ .' 68 81 Portland ... ..... &9 WO Bavrameato .c.. 5 81 Pet. .625 .607 ST9 .477 ..467 .4i .396 .393 MATIONAIi LEAOTTE W. NVw York Chirago ...... Ht. l.ouia ' Pittsburg Cincinnati Brooklyn .... f'biiadttaa Boston ........ 74 48 69 SS 6S 55 eg 56 C 5T 61 6? 42 78 41 61 .607 .S57 .553 .549 .544 .492 .356 .336 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. V. ..-i.. 77 50 75 53 68 CO ... 64 6S 63 6S 6a 68 : i. si 7a 48 75 Pot. .606 .56 .531 .504 .500 .460 .415 .390 Kew York 8t. Loaia ltrlrwt ... Cleveland Chn-ago .. Wahineton PkiUdelpbia ... Boston ........... home run In the fifth Score: lanlng. ' R. II. E. .10 21 1 Chicago ... . Detroit .... . Faber and"' . ...... 1 6 1 Bchalk: Plllette, Cole, Moore and Woodall. ' Boston 3, Phildealphia O : PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 31. (American) George Burns' home run in the third with two on bas es, gave Boston a victory over Philadelphia today. The game was called while Boston was at bat In the sixth Inning when t heavy shower swept over Shibe park. It was the third game of the series won by a home run. Score: R. II. E. Boston . . . 3 6 0 Philadelphia ..... . ..0 3 .1 W. Collins and Ruel; B. Harris and Perkins. j Brooklyn Beats National League Leaders Second Straight Game BROOKLYN, N. Y., Aug. 31. Brooklyn mada it two . straight from the NationU league leaders todays winning a hard hitting game. The ; Dodgers knocked Jesse Barnes out of the box v in the third inning and, the Giants handed Sherry Smith" the same dose in the seventh. Score: R. II. E New York . . . 4 12 0 Brooklyn ...... ....7 13 1 J. Barnes, 'Ryan, Jonnard. V Barnes and Snyder; S. Smith. Mammaux and Miller. Boston 5-7, l'hilade'phla 4-2 BOSTON,3 Aug. 31 (National) Boston took Jboth games from Philadelphia today. Rose's single to left off Meadows in the e'ghtb inning of the first game scored two runs and la the ninth - he went back to the wall and pulled down pinch hitter Petes' terrific drive for a concluding out. Win ter was hard hit in ' the second game and was accorded wretched support. ' ' ' ' ' First game: - R. II.' K PhlladelDh'a ... ... ..410 3 Boston . ..... .......5 7 1 Meadows &nd Henline; Mar- quard and O'Neill. Second game: -: '. , R. H. E. Philadelphia' . ....2 7 6 Boston y. . : . .'. ....... 7 ,1 1 Winters anl, Peters; , McNama ra, Oeschger aud Gowdy. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 31. (Nation al) Pittsburgh - St? Louis post poned; wet grounds. WESTERN LEAGUE At Denver i-1; Wichita 13-2. At, Sioux City 8-13; Oklahoma City 3-8. - At Omaha 9: St. Joseph 5. At De Mones 10; Tulsa 19. rales" CIGARS . Note the 4 A'a ' : " Meaning Appealing Aroma Attractive Appearance MASOW KHKMAX A CO, Distributor of .. . ! KstlM'i Fhaaa . PORTL A N I. K K ATTL.E. 1 S 1 T II lUV lR CiMPLEB FAILS AGIST FRISCO Portland Pitcher Wild and Ineffective, Forcing in Tallies for Enemy SAN FRANCISCO, Axis. 31. San Francisco had an easy t'jne today winning from Port land. 7 to 4. Crumpler was wild and ineffective, in the third In ning with the bases full he hit Walsh with a pitched ball, forc ing in a tally. McWeeny hurled shutout ball for seven ' lnning but weakened in the eighth and Portland scored three runs on a walk and three hits. In the seventh inning mgh smashed a home run. . ' Score R. If. E. Portland 4 6 1 San Francisco 7 11 2 Crumpler and Fuhriian; Mc Weeney and Agnew. Vernon 7; Sacramento 1 SACRAMENTO. Aug. 31. -Vernon won a rather uninteresting .conflict from the Solonn today. 7 to 1, putting the south ahead in the series,- 2 games to 1. Pete Schneider poled tow out of the park, over the left field barrier. one in the 'first and another in the fonrth with bases empty. Score R. H. E. Vernon 7 9 0 Sacramento . . . , 1 7 3 Doyle and Hannah; Canfleld, Praster and Cook, Sc hang. An?els 5; Seattle O LOS ANGELES, Aug. 31. Air tight patching by George Lyons and timelyhitting by hig team- miSjtea fare to Los Angeles its third straight -.Yictory Wver Se attle today 7 to 0. It was a spot less score board until the sixth, when a walk, a sacrifice, a double and a single netted two. runs for the Angels.' Score R. H. E. ... 0 5 2 ...5 7 0 and Adams, Seattle ... Los Angelee .... Schcupp, Berger Tobln; Lyons and Rego. Oaklnnd 6-7; Salt Lake 1-12 OAKLAND, Aug. 31. Oakland and Salt Lake divided a double- header today, tbe Oaks taking the first with. ease, 6 to 1, and the Bees winning' the second, a slugfest, 12 to 7. The first game was the Oaks' from the tart. Every player in the Bee lineup was up to bat in the second in ning of the second game when seven hits and a base on balls off Krause gavtei Fait Lake half a dozen run?. Six more Bees cross ed the home plate in the sixth before the aide was retired. First game R. H. E. Oakland 6 11 0 Salt Laker ... . B 2 . ArleU and Koehler; Blaeholder, Relger and Anfin,on. Second game R. H. E. Oakland ........ 7 15 2 Salt Lake .,...'.12 14 1 Krause, Brenton, Miller and MJUe; Gould, McCabe and Byler PERSONALS Judge and Mrs. Henry J. Bean returned last night following a month's , vacation in eastern Ore gon. Dr. W. H. Lytle Is in southern Oregon on business. F. F. Smith of McMlnnvllle was a business visitor in Salem yester day. Anew acfival at the Edwin Norene home is a girl weighing 6 1-4 pounds. She has not been named as yet. Mr. Norene was graduated from Willamette this spring and will be the principal of the Elmira, Or., high school for the coming year. Mrs. Norene also atended Willamette for some time. . P. B. Keaney, the former man ager ot the Portland Cloak & Suit company which was recently sold to the People's Cash Store, expects to leave soon for California on a vacation trip. : Although Mr. Keaney has disposed of his busi ness interests iiere, he still likes Salem and may return here in the near future to ; engage in some other business. Sister Anna, j who for the past two months has been visiting friends and relatives in Oklahoma and Montana,, returned to the Deaconess hospital yesterday. Sis ter Justina who accompanied her on the trip : remained for a few days in Montana but is expected home Saturday. Little Eddie Held is Public Golf Champion ; TOLEDO, (Ohio, Aug. 31. (By the Associated Press.) -4- Eddie Held, little 19-year-old former caddy at the Fores Park course .'n St. Louis' and not much taller than . the .driver : with which he sends the' hall an average of 275 yardji straight down the fairway, today became the , pjiblitf links golf champion of the United States by defeating Richard Walsh of New York. 6 and 5, in the first United States golf association tournament for- players not- menv bers of private clubs. "SQUIRE EDGEGATE-Tht xit Gt of Uwing - MfttKaAka ; IAioe' Gut AyjKJZZJ f -'A Ta 14 COiTT FE.E: Or (JPrii?" c V 1 1 JivL "irs j v-r- alG.-T J Th)t fre. pc-J, vtJA?s kHiT " I 5tc T OE t v . C I J ri -f . m - 1 ' RICHARDSON STILL LEAK Margin Over Stephens Re duced But Still is Com fortably Large SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 31. Belated returns from remote pre cincts and several revisions op erated late today to reduce the margin of Friend W. Richardson over Governor William D. Steph ens for the Republican nomina tion for governor in Tuesday's primary, ! but left it, like those of the othr candidates previously leading, comfortably large. The figures: For Senator: Republican nom ination, 6049 precincts: Hiram W. Johnson 291,629; Charles C. Moore 221.314. Johnson's lead 70,315. Governor, Republican nomina tion, 5,981 precincts: Friend W. Richardson 258.254; William D. Stephens 246,370. Richardson's lead 11.884. Governor, Democratic nomina tion, 4,784 precincts: Thomas Lee Woolwine 51,274; Mattison B. Jones 29,724. Woolwine's lead 21,550. Chief justice supreme court, 5224 precincts: Curtis D. Wilbur, 249,041; William P. Lawler, 217.292. Wilbur's lead 31.749. Lieutenant governor. Republi can nomination, 5134 precincts-.' C. C.j Young 212,868; Joseph A. Romlnger, 125,431. Young's lead 87,437. . State treasurer. Republican nomination, 5134 precincts: Charles G. Johnson 148,679. John T. Millan. 110.306; Walter Brinkop, 81,313. Johnson's lead 38.373. The state has 6695 precincts, hut in many counties the semi official count stopped entirely to day and complete returns from thm must wait until the official count. In the senatorial fight, today's returns showed one more county to have gone into the Moore col umn, giving him a lead in- five counties in all. This county was Inyo, but its Moore majority was only 15 out of about one-third of the pre cincts. Los Angeles today re ported a margin of 12,847 for Moore. ! while in San Diego , he was 401 . ahead of Johnson Moore's lead in Santa Clara was 109, in Kings 531. The rest of today's returns showed little proportionate change in . Johnson's majority . , i . Johnson's opponents in Novem ber will be W. J. Pearson of Los Angeles, Democrat; Upton Sin clair of Pasadena, Socialist and H. Clay Needham of NewhaB. Prohibitionist. They had no op position at the primaries. Thomas Lee Woolwine main tained his big lead over Mattison B.. Jones today for the Democrat ic nomination. Richardson, Wool wine and Alexander' Horr of San Francisco, the Socialist nominee, will be the three to contest for the governorship in November. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Columbus 5-8; Toledo, 4-3. At Louisville 4-1; Indianapolis, 6-5. At Minneapolis 1; St Paul 5. At Kansas City-Milwaukee, not scheduled. I NEW CORPORATIONS 1 'The following new Oregon con cerns filed articles of incorpora tion here yesterday: Catching Vacuum Brake com pany, ; Roseburg; incorporators, Roy W. Catching. J. T; Taber, George K. Qulne; capitalization, $100,000. ; West Washington Lumber com pany, Portland; incorporators, J. G. Arnold, Nelle- Reese, M. L. Gra ham; capitalization, $25,000. City;L Warehouse company, Portland;-j incorporators, .LeRoy R. Fields, D. S. DuBois, Robert B. Knykendall; capitalization, $5000. "I told him he mustn't see me any more." "Tern. And what d'd he "do?" "Turned out the light!" f - - CALIFORNIA'S TWO NOTABLE TENNIS STARS. i . 'It f . " s i I'd ivy r Vf ! l I V f ' 'irxV: .-3 . izht' th III ? h IK&h fX,mmmJ , ' rffii-Vft V I P II H 4 A it. &1IJL On the left, Mrs. May B. Suttcn Bundy, who was nati ml cham pion back in 1904 and is still making ail the top u etchers hustle to keep up with hei when she gets a racquet In her hand. With her. Mis3 Helen Willis, 16 years old. who experts predict will leaj them all before long. MB IS Fannie Rodgers Gets $600 McGilchrist and Ferguson $300 Each , Fannie May Rodgers of Albany was yesterday awarded $600 and Wm. McGilchrist, jr. of Salem and . C. Ferguson of Albany $300 each from the reward of $1200 posted In Salem for information leading to the arrest and conviction of.thf? person who attacked two small girls in Salem on March In last, ultimately G. A. -Stoat, a school teacher of Linn county, was con victed and sentenced to a life term in the state penitentiary. Much difficulty was found in awarding the money and there were many claimants. Finally a disinterested committee was named to decide who should have the money. This was composed of John H. McNary, president of the Rotary club; Mrs. LaMoine R. Clark, president of the Salem Woman's club; J. C. Perry, pres ident of the Commercial club; HIGH IN AIR ON WAY Ah nnusual view of any airship, It la the Sampaio Correla. taken as start on the flight to SrarU, The TH t X V-' : P L .- I. . imii i -w- '.--.-.-v.Aw; Sit 4 1 '.VL Charles Brant, president of the" Salem Central Trades and Labor council, and Roy V. Schields. president of the KJwania club. It was, held that Fannie May Rodgers gave the first information that resulted in Sloat's arrest and pointed him out to officers as the perpetrator of a crime there fol lowing the Salem offense, and that McGilchrist ana Ferguson caused his arrest for tbe Salem, offense. Better Accomodation for Traffic is Announced Announcement was made by the state highway department yester day that for the next few weeks traffic will be held up only 30 minutes instead of two hours, as has been done heretofore, on ac count of paving operations on the Pacific highway between Canyon ville and Galesville, in Douglas county. The department announces the award of contract for the broken stone surfacing on the Hood River-Forest i boundary section of Mount Hood loop highway. Unit No. 1, a stretch of 9.17 miles and Unit No. 2. which is 7.87 miles. were awarded to the Albert An derson company of Independence This companys bid was $50,320 on the first unit and $47,816.25 on the second. On Unit No. 3, TO RIO DE JANEIRO. and In this case of double Interest she" soared aloft when about to picture was taken from ."mother FRUIE DRYER IS RUSHING SEASON r nnurn ia lweek that have crown fully six One Plant Reported in Oper ation South of Salem Rain Beneficial Word has come to town that one prune dryer" is already in opera tion, south of Salem. So far as known, this is the first to start and it is rushing the season far ahead of the average evaporating plant. One of the prominent prune handlers of the valley said Thurs day Right that tbe rain of this week is worth an immense sum to the prune crop. The fruit need ed rain to fill out and mature the crop. Where the orchards have been well tilled, preferably with a good plow -under cover crop to add humus to the soil, and then a good dust mulch kept for the summer, tbe trees are dark green and exceedingly thrifty. The cul tivation for the past two years shows positively in the color of the foliage and the strength of the growing crop. Some wonderful growth has been recorded in many young or chards that were well cared for. Single shoots were measured this which is 6.8 mi ics long the con tract was awarded to Root & Jos- lin of Spokane at $36,931. Hood- River county is cooperat ing with the state to the extent of 50 per cent on this work. The work will fee started this fall and completed about the middle of next summer. LADD & BUSH, BANKER Established 1863 ! General Banking Business Office Hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. 11 Pm I Price : 1 175 $1751 The WESTERN FURNACE is made of cast iron (not sheet iron) ' h . ' . ' ' -r As a heating machine it is superior to the lighter con structed furnaces just the same a3 is true in regard to heating stoves. Nobody expects to get the same service from a sheet iron heater that they -can get from a good cast iron heater. . ; The Western cast iron furnace heats ouicklv atA rarrlA the heat evenly. It is easy amoum, 01 iuei. ine large oblong lire box appeals to all who 3ee it. If you want a pipe furnace let us figure with you as the number of registers makes some differ ence in the price. . We install both pipe and isuaiuiucc tu oansiacioniy neat your home. We have replaced other furnaces with the western and made a big saving on fuel used in the other iurnaces. .... i , ' :'-!' "v G. S. HAMILTON Good Furniture -340-om-t-Srreet week that have crown fully six feet In the one season. They have grow almost as , rapidly as the English walnuts, which are them selves almost ai'Htpid In growth as a poplar. The young trees, ot which there are many hundreds ot acres in the hills south ot ton, are almost without exception thrifty and of wonderful promise. . Fill The Empty Light Sockets With ' NEW GLOBES We have all kinds and sizes . A-: "- V". i-V- v FLEENER'S Electric Store 414 Court St Read the Classified- Ads to regulate and takes a small j and pipeless furnaces under J t.r. --.-SalcmOrejca V, t a v I) I1 It v' v; Vs. i i I f t . v 19 1 c : t s 4