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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1925)
SALEM DEFEATS CAMAS NINE FOR THIRD TIME SF.XATOIt PI,AYRRS WIN BY 1:1G1IT1I IXXIXCJ RALLY Asliby, Salem Pitcher, SIiows Coh1 Form in Itox; Support Was "r.- 'fiilt-Ftlgrd . A'rally'In the last of Ihe eighth Inning ave Salem her third win over the Cam a ball club 5 to 4 Eunday afternoon at Oxford part, Camas lost on errors and errors alone. Big Bill Kusa, twirling for the visitors, played real ball, lie was the .hardest, worker on the visiting team and lost a game that should hate been marked to his credit. " : It". was- a comparatively easy p-ame for the Senators Ashby performing on the mound for the first peven, innings had little trou ble with the Camas swat kings, lie was given good support and never faced any trouble until the eighth, when the visitors began to hit, and succeeded in getting four runs- making the score 4-3 for Camas.' ' " . .' T ' -. ' Salem returned in the last of the eighth. ; Barr walked and was advanced to second on a sacrifice by Edwards. 'Coleman, batting for Ashby, got to first on an error and Barr went to third. Coleman reached econd on a bad pitch and Banton to first on the third strike parsed by Dubaeh. Camas catcher. (Salerno scored two runs on bad headwork by the Camas infield. Score, '5-4, Salem. Barham relieved Ashby in the lnth and handled the threeCaraas tatters that faced him with little erertlon. Batteries Salem: Ashby, nar i 1 1 a m a n a Kd wards; Cam as: Kuss 'and nnBah. 'A Other results in the Interstate eague were: - ? 'I Score R. If. E Paperniakcrs 9 11 7 Albany . 10 116 Batteries Brittle. Stone 'and Wells; u isen berry. Beam i3 and Fleska. . - . - .. . - - Score JlCIshqro Luekenbach . . t Batteries - Kreitz; Kallio "R. H. E . 5 s r. Sfoutenberg and and Helmeke. AMERICAN GOLFERS WIN Smith and kiuk woon win FKO.M 'BRITISH 'PLAYERS- ,' GLEN EAGLftS; Scotland, June 29.-1 By The-Associated Press). !rt i;n exhibition of superlative fcnlf-lk.it. produced a' score of lurdioa by the four players in a 36 Jfiole match.' MacDonald Sinithjjand 3oe KIrliwood.'the American pro fessionals, today defeated JJe I'.ritish palf. George DnncaTkfwJnd Abe Mitchell, 2 up and 1 to play. "l A gallery of several thousand Scots saw their national pastime p!ayed in masterly manner over the beautiful Glenses moorland of fhis highland resort. ! - PEN WlfiS GAME 5 TO 3 r.taffoiu xixk dkfeatkd ix ; wi:ll i'Kyi:ii match The penitentiarr tack the Ion? end of a 5-to 3 score from the Stafford ball team in a well played gtirae on the prison grounia Sun day afternoon. A single, a three bagger and a home run in the firs netted the convicts three tuns. Er rors were responsible for the other fwo-,1 E. Oldenstarit, Stafford pitcher, allowed but five hits. The prison nine completed two double plays. Foster, prison hurler, haS exceptionally good support. Score R. H. K. rtafford ... . . - . ). . 3 6 Z liiitentinrv ......... 5 5 0 t Batteries: K.. . Oldcnstadt and sfcherner; Foster and Kike. a , . : . , - j.-' Portland Woodmen Are . Defeated Here Saturday In a hard and rast contest Sat urday the Woodman camp No. 35 defeated the Salem Woodmen's baseball team 6 to 5 at the state fairgrounds. The game was held in connection with the celebration of the 33th anniversary, of the founding of the lodge. The Salem WOWS are making a strong run for honors in the Sundown league. Manager Hawk Is in charge of the team. 25 l is the . right price to pay for a good tooth paste LISTERINE TOOTH PASTE ' Large Tube ' 25' THE OREGON 'STATESMAN, SALEM. ORECOK V BASEBALL By tie AasociMfJ tttst w .. Ameriran Detroit 4-7; Cleveland 1-4. , Boston 10; New York 5. St. Louis 5; Chicago 2. Washington 4; Philadelphia 1. National 1 Brooklyn 8; Philadelphia 3. Pittsburgh 8; Cincinnati 1; Boston-New York game post poned; rain. ''"",:." n f - Chlcago-St." Louis game not scheduled. . . ! Pacific J Games in the Pacific Coast league this week will be played as follows: ", ';'-,'.;. ;;. " Oakland at SaniFrani?cor Salt Lake at Seattle; J Sacramento at Portland;. Vernon at Loa Angeles. LOSS OF LIFE! IS NOT LARGE (Continued f rotn pas - 1 ton hotel. Manager A- L. Rich mond said that he did not have the slightest hop? that the es caped, and debris' was being re moved to uncover the body. Man ager '.Richmond also believed that Bertram B. IIancpk of Los An geles, was killed. h;s room bavin been above Mrs. Perkins and de moiished. ?. ! Along the main thoroughfare state street, there; were many au tomobiles' ! arid trucks' wfcieh hat: been parked at the curb and whiel were almost buried under- the debris. It wa3 in one of these that Wil- liam llatthev.-s, killed. a lather va.- - The finest building in town, tu San Marcos, a big lour story first class structure, built as sn I- or a corner. Lad itV"whole corne renter, pushed into the Uebris.Dr. Jamea Angle, tentist, was killed In thi crash. ;4 : Father ' Augusicn at tha old Santa Barbara mission; told u thrilling stc-y of T. hat he declared to be a miraculous delivery. At the first tremor he went, to the second stsry room where FatheT Englebrecht, aed priest and author of histories of the mission, was ccntined an invalid. Lifting the invalid priest- to h'.s back, father Augusteu proceeded to the stairway jwhen with the second1 shock he) fell 'through a hole to the floor beiow with the in valid priest on h's back. Neither was killed. j . Olo Hanson, tbrmer mayor of Seattle, gave the following eye witness account of the earthquake: "It was about :40; the airvas Eiiltry. Everything was very quiet. I noticed as I lay on my bed that quite a large wave dashed against the beach. The ground seemed to raise up with a crunch something like a niillicn dogs crunching a bone. I leaped out of bed and the fioor seemed to rise up and hit me. j I stepped again and it seemed a though I could not reach the floor. I fee ,;4 ti i i You can purchase any of his used cars and drive for one week, and if at the end of that time you feel you have not made a jwise choice you can exchange your car at ftioc value on any other used 'or new car of same or 1 greater value, A ! i - s : ' '. ' 1924 Ford touring 1923 Ford touring 1921 Special Studebaker Oldsmohile eight iiiie for large family i 1924 Gardner coupe 1920 Overland touring 1922 Overland touring 1923 Overland touring , 1924 Overland sedan 1921 Overland coupe 1924 Oakland sedan 1921 Oakland touring t 1 920 Dodge touring 1923 Willys-Knight touring Be sure to see our selection ; before buying - H "Like all animals except the horse, in time of trouble, I dashvd for the open air and began to shout to the neighboring bunga low to arouse them and get them out to the open park. Then I heard, an explosion like a great fuse and I saw the walls of the power plant a block away fall then a Drignt mue name, sucu as iuc.t use in movies at night, lit up the heavens and then flashed out. Right behind me I heard a rend ing. Two block away I say the walla of the New Calitornia hole lean over gradually and 'collapse, leaving the occupants lying safe ly in bed, some covered and some uhcw.ered. They all escaped. ' ' - "Ciash after ! crash from the business district. The man sweep ing the streets on the water-front never qu't sweeping. He shoveled and swept. ; ; "V.'e built a fire, the ras was on, so the bonfire sutficed. We .ooked coTfee;. We ate our break fast. The (iamase on State stit-et -vas great. ; A mi!e on both sides ?a3 practically: destroyed. Tne two and a half million dollars pro posed by II. II. H. CoUon of the Hellman bank ar'd William G. Mc-d-io is the riht thsag to do. .Vithin a week we will start re building the town. It wiil ".;e built arger and better than ever." j Plans for tlie rebuiluing of the devastated " residential and busi ness sections of this city are al eady under way. , :r The main water supply of Santa Harbara wis reported safe late to lay when word from the Gibraltar lam, 18 miles east of here, was hat it was Litact. The tunnel through - the moun alris to Santa Barbara also es r.ped injury. The breaking ot he Sheffield dam merely means ?iimitii;tion of oae reservoir con trol, water officials said. City -.Manager Xuim announced 'hat ten .committees of architects were bens formed to start a sys tematic survey of all downtown buildings to determine the needs ot immediate work to eliminate menace of falling walls. 4? i; Later these committees will sur vey the residential districts. In line with suggestion made by Wil liam Uibbs .IcAdoo earlier in the day, the Sinta Darbara Chamber of Commerce adopted a plan to in stitute a $2,500,000 revolving fund for reconstruction. At the same meeting, attended by .the leading citizens of the quake stricken city, a $10,500 em ergency relief ! fund was sub scribe!. Ole Hanson, former may or of Seattle, Wash.; Max Fleisch mann, yeast manufacturer and the Hellman banks were the heaviest subscribers. j i At the meet'.Eg, which was held within half a block of State street, lying in iuins it was announced that a program of reconstruction would be underway tomorrow. A relief train from Los Angeles carrying two carloads of police of- " J:- t ' - ' try ficers and medical supplies arrived lata today to assist In the emer gency. Medical officers also came with it, but returned when their services were not required. (One of the narrowest escapes recorded was that of Robert Mal colm, gardener of the Hotel Ar lington, which was destroyed. The gardener was watering the flowers in front of the hotel when he felt the first shock. A moment later a fissure opened UP in the walls of the hotel through which a strong stream of water from a broken main issued. The stream struck Malcolm in theehest with fbrce sufficient to throw him clear ot a four story wall which crashed to the street. Dr. Henry G. Hen sey, an interne at St. Francis 'hos pital, felt the first shock. He p-cked up Miss Ruth Allen, a nurse and leaped from a window. Doth sustained broken legs. - -5 - i Vuns at the St. Francis hospital added to the deeds of heroism by carrying patients from the wards while the walls of the institution trembled. ' It was a glorious day for the lawbreakers of Santa Barbara. The rear walls of the jail crumbled at the first shock and the prison ers fled to freedom. ; Extra precRntions were being taken in guarding the records of banta Barbara county. They were exposed to the weather in the de struction of the court house. The imposing facade, of the county bank appeared from the front as beautiful in its simplicity as ever, but down one side ran a jagged crack, like a lightning streak, through the concrete. ; The San Marcos, a stately four story, class. A structure of the new est type Just completed and occu-1 pied principally by professional j men,' seemed from the southern ana eastern ends of Its L. to be un- i touched. But its other elevations lay flat. The Santa Barbara mission,-which fell in an earthquake during the early eighties again was partly wrecked today. Its pair of towers are masses of crumpled clehHs. . I , The telephone company's build ing hds all four walls sail, stand ing by virtue of half a score of props made from telephone poles. Ins de the Arlington, a hostlery known to travelers of two hemis- of High Class and Useful H ou s e h o 1 d Furniture at the corner of South Liberty and Mission, one block east of South Com mercial, cn Wednesday, July 1, 1925, com mencing at 1 :30 p. m. sharp, the following: Overstuffed davenport and arm chair and rocker nphostered in Poker's cut velour: mahogany rocker; Axminster rug 9x12; several small mats; oak hall mirror :, library tables: mahogany oak dining room table and 7 chairs, box seats; 2 rocking chairs; 2 wicker chairs, birdseye maple dresser; chiffonier and chair to match; 2 white,smaU dressers; domestic drop head sewing machine; ok chiffonier; old dresser; full size brass bed and spring: 4 Simmon's white enamel beds, springs and mattress; single bed spring and mattress; 2 new comforters; 2 wicker chairs; 4 foot white enamel squaretable; long air tight range; 3-burner Reliance oil stove: heating stove and board and pipe; electric reading lamp; electric heater; kitchen chairs and table; auto tent 7x9; Coleman stove; brass bed; tubs; 42-piece dinner set; 8 dozen 1 and 2 quart sealers; 3 dozen milk bottles; two 9xi2 Congoleum rugs, one 6x9 and one 7-6x9; 60 feet -inch of new lawn hose; garden tools; quantity of kitchen wore and many other articles. Don't forget the time and place. Come, one, come all. Watch for sale flag. WOODIIV & 3S Mission List your sales with Woodry & Woodry .Come to Woodry & Woodry's First Kale Farties wanting furniture should attend this sale as the above furniture is in A-l condition, part of which is like new When You Are Ready To Move Call on us, for we have padded Vans and Fleece lined covers for your furniture and piano. First class piano and furniture movers. We also handle Brooder Stoves, Furnace Coals and Diamond Briquettes Larmer Transfer & Storage Co. Phone 930 List of Quake Casualties SANTA fcARHAKA. Cal., June 29.- (By Associated Press. Fol lowing is the list of known dead and injured: Dead: Mrs. Charles E. Perkins, Burlington. Ia.; Patrick Shea. Bertram . Hancock:. Los Angeles; Jf. Mostiero, Demitrias Sahttor, James . Starvow1. William Matt hewi.H Hazzard. Jamea E. Angle. Santa Baibara; three unidentified, two of whom are Mexicans. Injured: Dr. Henry G. Hensey, G. A. Hancoctes-Ituth Allen, 11 T. tronin. Louis VJ.' Diener, Seattle ; William Renwick, John Girode, Mesa, Cal.; Leo Stewart, Lompoe, Cal.; Mrs. Henrietta Best; Henry De F Agillo, A. R, Hensling, Mrs. Ethel Brener, Frank Rexroat, George Millerj Hernando Chavez, Mrs. J. Knutsen, William McEl roy. - V , ' ' . ' ' v ' ' - pheres a ' picture of absolute de struction presents itself. The cen ter dome crashed-with the first temblor, carrying with it rooms both diverging wings. The re mainder of the building is ripped and torn in a number of places. Manager Richmond says it is a complete loss. '' ' ' One newspaper, tne News, is homeless, its city desk and edi torial staff functioning from the civic square and its issues coming from the press of a sister publica tion at Ventura, 28 miles distant. The morning paper, the Press, has its plant intact, but lacks the power to turn its cog wheels. Two distinct sounds, not loud, but persistent, stand oat wherever one walks in the stricken nrea the tumbling of bricks and mortar as wreckers j remove dangerous walls and the hammers of build ers rushing up temporary struc tures. 5 Throughout the residential dis trict, particularly in the east side, the smaller frame houses in many cases were knocked askew by the temblor, some with fronts fallen out, chimneys and gables, gone and yards flooded by the broken water mains. - Lawn room is almost at a prem ium, for Santa Barbara residents tonight are shunning the confine ment of their walls. The stiock WOOIHIY Auctioneers. Phone TUESDAY MOtiNlNU.jUjNU iw, was too recent and fresh in their minds. ' " - . ' From fashionable . .hotels .and apartments iruests fled in the early morning clad as they had jumoci o mad been thrown from -their beds. ',. J .',.'.-. - ' Many never went back for their belongings.- For forty miles both way up and down the coast telephone and tele graph wires "were whipped back and forth ort Iheir poles by the shocks anJUj became bo ; badly tangled that it will take many hours of work to put them into commission again. Several stretches of pavement to the north have been badly torn and in some places the high way Is almost impassable. RECONSTRUCTION STARTS SAXTA RIRIZARA CALMLY SUR VEYS IA)SS AVI REBUILDS ' "SANTA BARBARA, Cal.. June 29. (By the Associated Press.) . This city by the sea, which early today staggered under the blows of a rending earthquf' e, tonight surveyed its great losses and be gan fighting back. No -community ever took and absorbed punishment with more stoicism and calm. Bluejackets of the naval militia and national guardsmen patrolled the heart of the business district, but never at any time hacl, there been the least sfgTi of disorder. ' No frenzy, no rushing about marked this disaster. The dead were collected as quickly as possible; upwards of a dozen bodies. Close to a score of injured were cared for, and even as the ambulances moved -off to the hospitals, they were soon fol lowed by trucks loaded with bat tered brick and twisted steel. The work of cleaning up had be gun. Handling of the sudden emerg ency could not have been more efficieut if it had been a motion "Feeds : those; ' oil-starved 11 7T i Fords" II niettire scene nlanned weeks in advance. :''::;-- ' v .'"- The main street of the city State street was a picttfre of calm rnin almost from end to end. Not all of its business buildings were demolished, but all had suf fered, tome twisted beyond rev pair. - CEXK- TUXXEY SIGXEH C1HCAGO. June 29. By As sociated Press.) Gene Tunney, American light heavyweight cham pion, was signed today to engage In a 10-round contest at East Chi cago, July 17, but his opponent has not been selected. After taking a slight workout here today, Tunney left for Kan sas City" where he will 'meet Ital fan Jack Hetman Friday night. WILL PETITION DENIED OLYMPIA. une 29 (By The Associated Press) The supreme Expert Automobile Mechanics Our shop is in charge of Horace Wooley who has had 15 years of automobile me chanical experience here in Salem. And who no doubt many of you know. We are equipped to take care of your automobile troubles. Our prices are reasonable. And all of our work is guar anteed. Come in and give us a trial. F. W. Pettyjohn Co. 365 N. Commercial St. Phone 1260. "Yes, sir, that old Ford hasn't soldiered a day since I took to using- this new Zerolene 'F for Fords. And work I - she never could negotiate before, and un less I'm crazy she travels quite a bit farther on a gallon of Fords all up and down the Pacific Coast are picking up and surprising those owners who "tried out" Zerolene "F" for Fords when it was first put on the market, a little oyer a year ago, and have been sticking to it ever since. Zerolene "F" for Fords is made by the Standard Oil Company 's patented vacuum process. It lubricates all the bearing sur faces where oil is needed, especially the wrist-pin bearings and the upper half of the cylinder walls which are frequently "oil starved" when an unsuitable lubricant is used. The result is improved gasoline mile age, quicker startin g and increased freedom from carbon and other motor troubles. - ' - - f" Yet Zerolene "F" for Fords costs not more, but less than most of the . special Ford oils now on the market. A Ford is an A-l transportation invest ment Protect your investment with proper lubrication. - " STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) court today denied the petition of Mrs." David Vaughn for a writ of review of . Walla "Walla county court, admitting the will of Dav id Vaughn probate. With a few minor exceptions, the will of the deceased., left property valai at about $100,000 in -equal shares to the widow and to Mary Vaughn, sister of David Vaughn. Now is the Time to Kegin ; Tire Economy McCLAREN CORD s A Perfect NON SKID 4 Jim Biir Smith & Watkins Snappy Service PHOXE 44 Say, she takes hills on high gasoline.' j High Street at Trade