STATESMAN PAGE OF LIVE iSPORT NEWS! FROM EVERYWHEi J) FRISCO SUED BKttERECE n Three Seattlei Again Wit and One-Half Game? of r ; i. eamift Leaders SEATTLE. Oct. 7. Yean Gregg, the Pacific coast league's leading pitcher; blanked ' San: Francisco. tne league' leaders, today, 3 to 0, an4 palled Seattle to within three and one-halt games of the Seals in the first contest of al seven-game scries here thie week. ; Because of rain in Portland. Los Angeles was forced to idle and lost a half game to Seattle, a 'full contest separat- ingthe two teams for" second a third places. . " ' i ' , The game was a pitchers battte between Bob Geary land Greg Elmer Bowman smashed a home run Into the left ield bleachers with one man on base for the first runs- Emmer scored the thjrd run in the seventh and Riggs' sac rifice fly. Hal Rhine and Sam Agnew were chased, from the game in the last half of the seventh when they disagreed with Umpire Reardon'a decision on a close play at second. - , ,- Score- .v--. ! , San Francisco .. . . . ; . Seattle, . ...... .;. 4 . , , fceary and " Agnew, Grfrgg and E., Baldwin. R. H. E. 0-8 2 3 8 1 Ritchie; I H Oakland 7, Sacramento 3. . OAKLAND, pet. Oakland defeated Sacramento here today 7 to 3 and gained a half game on the Idle Los Angeles cluk. Vinci blew up in the eighth inning, al lowing four jhits and two walks. TheOaks scored five runs in this frawi, I Sacramento! scored three rung in the third inning but after thaX.5Vs unable to hit Krause in the pinches. -!."';; i '; Score .-- ! R H K Sacramento . . ... . . . . 3 11 2 Oakland ......... fj. . 7; 7 1 Vine) and Koehier; Krauee and Reii - 1 j TEAM THAT DEFEATED THE GIANTS YESTERDAYf i BRINGING SCORE INS WORLD'S SERIES UP TO 2-2 - . : :.f-..v.. a-4 :, A.-1. " n m , ,n m u,.i,.L j . ,i i, , JM. xiii in lji iiii.inimiiiiiiiiiiy"i ii iii iiiii-iiT-ii-rir-r ; , jr If L & Wt ' Ill " v ' X - " - , .i.ii.jWotww " ' 1 "" mi MBCTMtteMBmwam ,,jmc,T ' Trr i -urn -i r -- iriir-iiii MiiT-ini 1-nmrnHnnti inii.ii - EMll&ffiS& '"''""'-'w.'wwiiMi;rwgspww .. i..........iiriwwilrtl' .- (n--.MilMili , i.M-.MM.ri. v- n ,i-i .iw., , '4v- ,-v'-'W-i r j . " " . ---- i , - .. . . ; - i j. - : , - . i l I n i 1 The Washington Senators , - here today. Clay Carson, rookie Tiger southpaw held the Bees at bay while his mates slammed four Salt Lake pitchers at will. The Tigere featured the pulling a triple play in the ninth. , "j Score , R. II. E. Salt Lake . .. . I ..... . 483 Vernon ". i . ... 1.1. ... ..11 9 4 Coumbe," Kallio. Mulcahy, Pon der and Petersj Carson' and Mur phy. ; 'J PORTLAND,! Ore., Oct. 7. Los Angeles-Portland, baseball game postponed, rain. M fVernon II, Salt Lake 4. ; LQS, ANGELES. Oct. 7. Ver non -took the opening game of the series from Salt Lake, 11 to 4, if Tfllainctte Valley rA 4Transfcrf Co. Fast Through Freight to All .Valley Point! Daily. Speed-Efficiency-Serric0 8alem-Portland-Voodburn Corvallla- -Eugene - Jefferson Dallas - Albany Monmouth Independence Monroe . Springfield V SHIP BY TRUCK KICK-OFF IN DRIVE FOR YMCA TONIGHT (Continued from pago 1) - -- i i i campaign is for about $9 for each person in the city, which is mod erate compared with other jcities. It is urged that no one begin to feel that it's alllover but the; shouting. : It isn't; i the work is all ahead,' instead of; in the bank. It is the devout faitti of the gov erning committee, however, that the campaign can be carried through to the very last dollar, within the time set. r 1 1 ' It should be . easily possible to have the newj Y ready for next summer's use, a monument to the courage and generosity and good judgment of the people of Salem. I CLUB PERCENTAGES I PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE -1 j Woo lAnt Vrt. San Francisco ...-wlOJ 86 .543 S-t!i ; ....j .., 9t S9 .524 Im Anzeles j.... ... 97 90 .519 Oakiiind .4 . . 9g 1 , .319 Mult lke ... j 94 94 .500 Vernon v... .r.i-i.-, . 9 4 94 .500 Portland ...f;.. .. 87 9 ,48 Srrmeno 80 1(17 .42 v Clark'a 5 th Cruiae, Jan. 20 from New York Feb. 4 from Los Angeles ROUND i THE WORLD 51250 ? ! 122 Day, including Hotel. Driraa, Guides. Faaa. te. BrapManrcWtered p A T Tl?fkPTT A Nw 1 7X)0 ton A fiotluy pake for the trip. Roate New York. Havana. Panama Canal. Loa Anrelea. Hono lulu. U days in Japan and China. Manila. Java. Singapore. Bunnah : option of 18 day la India. Ceylon. S days in Cairo. Jerusalem. Athena. Naples. Monte Carte, Cherbourg (atop over), and Canard flyers 'Aqaitania." Mauretania or "Berenxaria" back to New York. CLARK'S 21st BIEDITERRANEAN CRUISE 600 Jan. St 1925 by specially chartered new Cnnarder "LACONI A." 20.000 ton oil-barner . C2 dan, with X7 days in ypt and Palestine: Spain. Italy, Greece, etc j j r 4 Mid-Sara ner Cruise to the Western Mediterranean and Notwtf, Jury 1 53 days, $550 up, by ipecUIly chartered Conarder MLaacastria.n I7XX) tool. F2ANK C. CLASK Tbnea Bnildino;. New York; Established 1894 SALEM HIGH MAY PHY HILLSBOIO Tentative Plans are Made By Huntington for Game ! Next Week Tentative plans for a game with Hillsboro high school a week from Friday are under way, i Coach Hollis Huntington said last night. Hillsboro has an open date at that time, but wants the game to be played on its home gridiron as they will have had two - games away from home by that time. In asmuch as the local school authori ties will not permit the team playing away from school on Fri day, it is hoped that Hllleboro can be brought here. j...- - . At a special meeting of the as sociated student body , yesterday Dennis Heenan was elected athle tic manager to take the place of Louis Girod, who resigned about a week ago. Heenan will endeavor to get in touch with some other schools by telephone today in the expectation of finding a game for this week-end. The red and black backfield Is going strong, but shows a lack of familiarity with handling the ball and fumbles are frequent. Con sequently Coach Huntington Is de voting considerable time toward remedying the situation. Tb?e line is showing up fine. So far a kick er has not been developed, bu Gould place. is i being groomed for the 1 SPECIAL FOR SHORT TIME ONLY Goodrich Hot Water Bottles Values Up to $2.25 Schaefer's Drug "' The Pcnslar Store 133 North Commercial f Phone 197 Three Football Games In Row Will Be Played Beginning October 18 football fans will be given ample oppor tunity to see the Bearcats In ac tion, as the Willamette university aggregation has three games slat ed In a row. Lin field colloge will send its eleven here October 18, with the College of Puget Sound to meet the Bearcats in the annual Home coming football game. The fol lowing week the College of Idaho will play here. : .? ; ' Two contests are being consid ered for Thanksgiving day, with either the Whitman college team of Spokane or the College of the Pacific, from California to be tbe opponents. ; - ; : Veteran Files Discharge , Edward O. Price, of the 138th Infantry, national guard, yesterday filed his discharge with the county clerk. The 138th regiment of In fantry saw some of the heaviest fighting on the AEF, being a unit of the 3Sth division, which, was on several fronts and two drives, including the Argonne where, dur ing its six days of fighting it suf fered heavier losses than any other division of the American forces. Mr. Price is now living in Salem. - FOOTBALL l i O. A. C. . Whitman 14 0 ; NEXT ' "Go get 'em Beavers Multnomah Field, Portland Oct. 18 High Students Adopt Anti-Hazing Resolution h J" r The student cofncil of the Sa lem high school mt yesterday and adopted a resolution 'against haz ing. The resolution Was not writ ten, but will be wfitten some time during today. It takes a firm stand and has ie approval of all the students inj the high school. The student cpuncil has had some undeserved criticism, but so far as anyone knows it hasn't been hurt. The principle is ever lastingly right afd the students of the school arefnol going back wards. I f . The recent incident that caused all the rumpus wiks merely manu factured for sensational purposes and the student body feels that it has been misrepresented and con fronted with unTaJr criticism. Sa lem high school has one of the highest , standard ih the United States ' and the istudent council functions as auceessf ully here as anywhere. I f i Republican Club, at i Univer sity to Make Study of Foremost Issues : SHANGHAI AGAIN TEWED ISTHREA Chinese City Declared to Be Op verge of Collapse for Second Time SHANGHAI, Oct. 8. (By the AP. The ; Chekiang province armes today were threatened with loss j of the; city of Shanghai for the :Becond time within a month and .'were rushing reinforcements southward to check the latest ag gressions of. their Kiangsu ene mies Although Red Cross units who had been following up the fighting near Sungklang, 28 miles to the southwest on the Shanghai Hangchow railway line, were brought back to Shanghai to day!) ' defense headquarters at -Lunrgwha, south of the city, de nied there had been any Chekiang retrjeat in the Sungklang sector, j AK official 'statement from Lungwha declared that the Klan gsu. troops around Sungkiang were handicapped I by lack of ammuni tion because Wu Pej Fu, military commander in chief lor the cen tra government at; Peking, to whjch the three provinces of Ki angsu,' Anhwei ' and. Fukien owe allegiance, had ordered the mu nitions stream from Hanyang (Hupeh province), arsenal divert ed io the north, where -he is fighting-! General Chang Tso-Lin of Manchuria. ; ' . j Paul Wootston, Actuary In Insurance, Passes Paul L. Woolston, an Insurance actuary who was widely known in the insurance field, died in Seattle last Saturday morning after an illness with pneumonia. At the time he became ill Mr. Woolston was employed by Will Moore, Ore gon" insurance commissioner, in making an examination in Seattle of the Northern Life Insurance company. He also was consulting actuary for the Oregon Life In surance company and other companies. Get Them At "Jim" "Bill" oiiuui 06 n aiiuiia Genuine Parts AXLE SHAFTS, GASKETS, BEARINGS, ! BRAKE LINING, DIFF. GEARS. SILENT TIMING GEARS. Ill BUSINESS FIFTY f EARS Career of C. P. Bishoo Rec ord of Achievement on Pacific! Coast r Fifty years of a! business life have been completed by C. P. Bishop, pioneer merchant, who has been engaged in jbusinesa in Salem for the last 351 years. From a small beginning Mr. Bishop has risen to a position of being one of the most influential business men in the state and! is the founder of long string df woolen mills along the coast, y air. uisnop entered tne dusi- ness world at the Kirk & Hume store near Brownsville on Octo- ber 1, 1874, where, he received S 25 a month and board. After work ing there two lyears he, entered th,e employ oft the Brownsville Woolen Mills sorei where he re mained for a similar period. In partnership : with Robert Glass, the firm tf Class & Bishop was started at ICrawfordsville in 1878. The firm continued under this name for iix years, after which Mr. Bishop, having disposed of his interests,! opened a store in McMinnville. Five years later he came to Salem here he became a member of the Thomas Kay Wool en Mills company, and is the only one of the orijfinAl incorporators wno is still aiie. ; The following year M. . Bishop went into the Splcm Woolen Mills store, started by the company. This was the foundation of the present Bishops store. One year later he acquired control of the store and opefated it until lat year, when thej store was sold to a corporation atid Its name chang ed to the Bishop's Clothing. & Woolen Mills store. ; Mr. Bishop took an active part in the founding of several woolen mills along thej coast, all of which are now owned by the Bishop or ganization. Tpieae mills are lo- i rated at Pendleton, Washougal, i Wash., and EUreka, Cal. Students at Willamette univer sity have joined the nation-wide Republican movement among col leges started last jrear by John Hamlin, director of the college bu reau! of the Republican national committee and arrangements have been completed for the formation of a permanent Republican club at the university according to Eu gene F. Short, representative of the college bureau. - - ' . ' Merle Bonney is acting chair man of the newly organized club and is supportd by an executive committee ; made up of Republi can students in the university. The club has direct contact with the national Republica; . committee which will enable its members to benefit from the educational work planned by the. college bureau. Plans are outlined by the club for cooperating 'with the state Repub lican, committee 1 of Oregon through County Chairman Paul F. Burris, of Salem. In the north-, west, . Republican clubs have al ready been formed and are work ing at the University of Oregon, Oregon Agricultural college. Uni versity of r Washington, Washing ton State' college arid the Univer sity of Idaho. In commenting on the work here Mr. Short said: "The clubs are permanent or ganizations for the serious study of current conditions, party planks and ideals. Students have the op portunity of hearing speakers of state and national importance, and otherwise, to further their know ledge of our. governmental system. 'The movement has been taken up enthusiastically by state col leges and universities all over the country, j To date over 2Q0 col leges haTe been organized; Last year the University of Oregon and 0AC clubs showed much activity and a great deal of work was done during the spring semester. Plans are announced by the dif ferent clubs for active participa tion during the campaign.". Eugene Will Get Big New $100,000 Store Building EUGENE, Or., Oct. 7. George C. Stanley, for 15 years a retail merchant here, leaving seven years ago for. Ontario, Cal., announced tonight plans for a" $100,00 build ing, and store' here, lie has BROADCUG ON BIG SCALE ARGUED WASHINGTON. Oct. T. An nouncement today by a radio.cor poration of America, that it stands redy Immediately to begin con st?uction w-ithin a few miles of Nejw York city of the first of its proposed system of super high power - broadcasting stations, de veloped opposition to. super power plants. at i the third annual radio conference, j The announcement on bejhalf of the radio corporation wis made by its general manager, Dvis Sarnoff, shortly after the opening of: the first of the-Conference's technical sessions. The conference jwas called by Secre tary Hoover to bring about a meet ing of representatives of all branches of the radio industry for the discussion of radio problems arising since the conference of a year ago. : More than 200 dele gates from all sections of the country are In attendance. , Mr. Sarnoff, speaking for the radio corporation, "cited to the committee a statement by George K. Burgess, director of the bureau of standards of the commerce de partment, in which Mr.; Burgess tld the "conference . that, interfer-; ence from a 10 kilowatt station located 30 miles from a city would t be no greater than that from a one kilowatt station located in the city itself. It is mostly upon the contemplation that a high pow ered station , would cut: out the lesser ones that opposition to their construction, is being , advanced. The objection also was made that operation on wave lengths to pre vent interference would make it impossible to "receive their signals on the present ordinary; radio re ceivins set. T "' : j ;ttA lh-- '72 I ta Portland and return! ' j Benefit by low weeJcend feres now in efrect,j - ! ( on sale Friday, Satnrday and Sunday return 1 i limit following Ttiesdayy" j T 'Or ij-day fares, on sale any day-tum lirat i iiy days, with stopover at any point enroutc' ;j .Make aQ your gcang away plans to take advsn ,' tagc of these low round trip fares. j , ' For full information communicate with O. X. Darlins, Agent,' Salem, I or A. A Mlckel. D. V 1 A., 14 Liberty Street SdDunttoeinm JPeizz - TO THE POtlCYHOLDERS OF i THE PRUDEKTIAU 'J CSStntANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ! NOTICE I. hewby liwn that f't tti policvhoMer. of THE PRUpENTlAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA will ba held at tha Horn Ot&t of aaid Com pany in th City of Nawark. NW. cm Monday, tha Firat day of December, 14. a twelra o'clock noon, for tbe purnoaa of aleet tnv four peraoin to be voted for by the P"''; bolders' Tniatee a member of the Bt Director at the annual election of W'Jtp" pt the Company to be held on tha Twelfth day Of January, 1925. . . . i " At uch meeting eery poHcyholdee of th Corporation .who i of tw year or upwnraa ana """- force for at leaat one year laat paat ahall be bought the lot, and has sold out I rtjSD VWrVprZiE?' at Ontario..; ' V . ' ; - :; 1 jj ;. ' A $1,600 Diamond Lost And Found at Eugene EUGENE, )re.;. Oct. 7. tast week an uimotintcd diamond, worth $ 1, 60o dropped from the finger-ring of Earl Wattis of the Utah Construction company ! at Oak Ridge, from where the Na tron cut-off fs being built.- lie offered a $20 1 reward for the re turn of the ge-m: i On 'Monday, ac cording to reporU reaching .here today, Eleu Clark, . lS-year-oid school girl, chanced upon it in the street. She has started a bank ac count with the reward. ALL NEW SHOW TODAY a! - . ; ; " i Peter B. Kynes . - . Famous Ited Book Story "ONE EIGHTH APACHE ' - With Roy Stewart ft The M "WAY OF A MAN" i : - By -V- . i Emerson Hough Author of "Th Covered Wagon" A Thrilling Chapter Play of Pioneer Days Permanent roads are a good investment not an expense Millions now recognize the automo bile as a necessity. It is no longer a luxury for the few. Sixty per cent of its use is for business. i: Because of this the modern paved i highway has become an economic ne cessity. : ; Yet although the mileage of Concrete Roads and Streets has been steadily in creasing, our highway system today lags - far behind the automobile. The great majority of our highways are as out of date as the single-track, narrow gauge railway of fifty, years ago.: - Such a condition not only seriously handicaps the progress of the automo , bile jas a comfortable, profitable means of transportation, but also holds back commercial, industrial and agricultural advancement in practically every sec tion1 of the country. It is costing tax- : payers millions of dollars annually. " Highway building should be con tinued and enlarged upon.' " Your highway authorities are ready to . ; carry on their share of this great public . . ' work. But they must have your support, . Tell them you are ready to invest in more . and wider Concrete Highways now.' PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION i Gasco Building' ' PORTLAND, OREG. A National Organization to Improve and I Extend the U$es of Concrete " j OFFICES, IN 29 CITIES