Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1929)
-., The OREGON STATESMAN, fakm, Oregon, Friday Morning, Jone 28, 1923 PAGE FIVE lONllLUI IS US LEADER Mickelson's Place Taken - by Homer Haworth; Game Sunday Seek Justice in Border Dry KiUing When the Montavilla ball team walks onto the diamond at Olin- rer field Sunday to open the sec ond fcalf Oregon-Waplrinston lea gue race against the Salem Sen ators, the Villnns will be without the jruidance of John Mickelson who toas directed the destinies of baseball- in the Portland Buburb for many years. It was announced Thursday that MickeLioa had resigned and that-Homer Haworth. heavy hit ting catcher, had taken over the Job. Since Montavilla finished in last place when the first half of the season closed last Sunday, It is expected that Haworth will take steps to strengthen the club. Albany May Disband The other important develop ment noted as the league prepared to awing into the second lap of theeeason race, was the second announcement of the year from "Red" Rupert, Albany manager, that the Alcos would disband. President Fred Oass had not re ceived this announcement official ly up to U te Thursday, ;rl sii.l that to far as he knew, the Mi. Scott teum vui.ld play c: A!' any Sunday. Lack of "financial support was given by Rupert as the cause for the Alcos withdrawal. Local fans are confident that the Senators are now ready to hit a stride which will keep them in the race throughout the second half. Early in the season the local, club was hampered by lack of hit ting strength; in ti;e iat two games they have hit acceptably, but last Sunday against Albany they lost because .of ineffective pitching. Schedule Seems Hiay That wasn't the fault of the pitchers, but rather of an overly heavy schedule in the preceding week. The Senators had played four games in rapid succession before taking on Albany in the league contest, and Russell had pitched a game Thursday while Barham had worked five Innings against Valseti Sunday morning. Russell, who let Montavilla down with five hits and one run the last time these two teams met here, will try to repeat Sunday, and with plenty of rest this week, ought 4o be able to accomplish it. ' Jr - -1 P. E. P. Ml HARD IT MX Postoffice Boys Punch Way to Three Runs on Four Base Smash The Portland Electric Power company ball team punched its way to a 5 o 3 victory over the Postoffice aggregation Thursday night at dinger field in an Indus trial league game which was not settled -until after two extra in nings had been played. The mall carriers scored all of their runs in the third inning on white's homer. Later in the same inning Wei born hit for three bases but died on third. Two versions of the slaying of Arthur t.ordoa near Plattsburg, .. Y.. as ho attempted to escape arrest by custom patrols are fcliown above. Lucien Bosworth, left, says be saw the shooting as pictured at the left when the customs guard fired on orders at Gordon, who was running through a field adja cent to the road. Collector TuUoch Insists that the men reported that as they pursued Gordon one fell and his rifle accidentally discharged as shown right. Whichever statement is right. District Attorney iri'onnel and Judge R. C. Booth, right, swore oat "John Doe" warrants for the agent's arret. The townspeople have assured 3Ir. Hoover that they will co-operate with him in ery way to stop smuggling, but that innocent persons must have some assurance of safety from shooting agents. 1WI ID n win, 9-3 Bush and Schulte; Mitchell and J. Wilson. NEW YORK. June 27. (AP) The Giants defeated tae Phillies by 9 to 3, here today In the first game of the seiies. Bill Walker pitched good ball and received the support of 12 hits. The score: Philadelphia 3 8 1 New York 9 12 3 noy, r-iwoii ana uhtiu; aiaer jjjeenj ana riogan. BROOKLYN, June 27. (AP) ' Th Brooklyn Rob:n3 opened ' their series agalast the Braves with an 8 to 5 victory here today. :The pitching was Ineffective on ! each side. The score : Boston 5 9 1 Brooklyn ... :. 8 13 t Eeibold ard Legxitt; McWeeny Moore, Uallou and Pic'.nica. street. She was S3 years eld. Mrs. Lee per was the mother of Dr. Alics Bancroft and Charles W. Leeper, both of Salem. Mr. Leeper died here six years ago. Funeral services will be held at the dough-Huston chapel on Saturday morning at 10:30 o'clock. Rev. Harry E. Gardner of :be Jason Lee church officiating, and interment will be made in the Cltyrlew cemetery. Mrs. Leeper Is also survived by another sob, Leon V. Leeper, of Cordova, Alaska; a brother, James Vincent of Pennsylvania; a niece, Mrs. Wayne Baker, of West Sa lem, and a granddaughter. Leone Leeper, of Redmond, Wash. Read the Classified Ads. PITTSBURGH, Penn., June 27. (AP) Pittsburgh evened the series with Cincinnati today by winning the second game 5 to 3. Heine Meine went the route for the Pirates. The score: Cincinnati : 8 9 2 Pittsburgh 6 13 0 May, Ash and Gooch; Meineand Hargreaves. The electricians had scored one run In the third o-i hits by Hoops and Boytana and Flagg's sacrifif-e. They got two more to tie the score in the fourth on singles by Mer riott and Hoops and a two bagger by Mathis. The fifth and sixth weie scoreless, but in the first ha'f of the seventh Hoops walked, and hits by Boytana and Seeley ac counted lor two runs. Score : r. e. p. Co. Player AB Boytana, c 3 Seeley, 2b 4 Hart well, 3b . . . 4 Merriott, lb 4 hero just as whole will the beer drinkers in Berlin. ! if he gets by the remaining hurdles. in recent weeks. "Frisco" has heartedly asiD-en worv-n8- nn the thporv that they couldn't bench him when he was already benched. Harvey, p-ss 3 Mathis, cf-p 3 Detkebaugh, ss 2 Hoops, If 2 Flags:, rf Barnholt, cf R 1 0 0 1 0 1 o 2 0 0 Totals 28 5 Postoffice Player AB R Price. 2b 4 1 O Xeil, It 4 1 White, lb 4 1 Thompson, c 3 0 Welborn, ss 3 0 Collins, cf 3 0 Garnett, rf 3 0 Fitzgerald, 3b ..... .3 0 Rider, p 3 o H 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 H 0 0 0 0 It is only fair to explain that up in the .Basque country, where Paulino comes from, bullfighting isn's so much the thing. Instead, they have a game called "pelota" or "jai alai," which Is a cross be tween handball and tennis, only much more strenuous than either. Those boys hurl the "pelota" 200 feet or more against a backstop, using a long handled icter with a basket on the end. Paulino didn't learn his fighting style by watch ing that game. Totals 30 3 5 3 Hurt vomments By CURTIS Deutscnland uber alles! That slogan, so unpopular in this country 12 years ago, crop ped out again Thursday when Max Schmeling made Paulino Uzcudun look like the battered sledge hammer the latter threw away when he found out there was more money in using pad ded gloves. But sport is sport, and American fight fans will hail Deutschland's Ho' mm will put the Hamilton Beach Vacuum Cleaner in your home Price has been cut from $64.00 to $4 Now You Can Afford the machine you have long wanted a high-grade cleaner combining : Motor-Driven Brush, Powerful Suction, Besting Action, Sweeping Action, Ball-Bearing Motor Never needs oiling. Save $23.00 At this unheard of low price, you save $25.00. Surely you can come to Hour store to save that. 1 W Guaranteed fw2 Yctn i 77 rr As near as we could figure It out from a ringside seat 3, OOO miles away, Uzrndun's ld was that of the bullfighter; wear the enemy down and save yourself for one killing punch; but he let the bull's horns get too close ia the tenth round. The P. E. P. and the Post office had another wild battle at dinger field Thursday night. Those two teams Ju&t love to see each other looming up on the schedule. "Frisco" will be back at his old receiving job Sunday. The only sad thing about that is that he won't be able to pow-wow jrith the umps so effectively as he has Bat maybe it will be all right anyway, if -Red" Rupert jumps clear out of the league aa he hs threatened. IE STIR SHOOTS EXCEPTIONAL GOLF Bespectacled Youth Looks Like Title Winner; Moe Drops Out BY TED VOSBI RGH American Press Sports Writer DEAL, N. J.. June 27. (AP) Maurice McCarthy, Jr., of Georgetown, defending champion in the national intercollegiate golf tournament here, and Lester Bol Ftad, of Minnesota, big ten title holder, both were eliminated to day by the golfing wizardry of Tommy Aycock, a slender bespec tacled Yale student from , Jack sonville. Aycock, who holds the amateur championship of his borne state, shot 23 holes over the difficult S Get Home Runs ST. LOUIS, June 27. ( AP) The Cubs defeated the Cardinals 6 to 4, here today. Hornsby, Dou thit and Frisch got home runs. The score: Chicago 14 2 St. Louis 4 8 2 TJgcr Defeat Cleveland DETROl i. Juae 27 (AP) The Detroit Timers deftaied 6 to 2 in their tei ies jpener here today. Roy Johnson knocked' a home run in the sec ond inning with the bases loaded. The score: Cleveland 2 8 1 Detroit 6 10 1 Ferrell and Myatt; Carroll and Shea. BOSTON, June 27 (AP) The Red Sox defeated the Wash ington Senators 4 to 1 here to day. Ed Morris held the visitors to five hits. The score: Washington 1 6 1 Boston 4 8 2 Liska. Burke and Tate, Spen cer; Morris and Having. Hollywood golf club links in just one stroke over par to put out McCarthy by one up in the morn ing 18 hole round and then to account for Bolstad, 4 and 3 in the afternoon. Assuring Yale its first Individ ual championship since 1924. when Dexter Cummings won the crown, a team male, Marshall Forrest of Lowell, Mass., came through to the final in the other half of the draw and will meet the amazing Tommy in the 36 hole battle for the title tomorrow. Forrest, the new president of the intercollegiate golf associa tion, defeated Don Moe of th? University of Oregon, one up, in the morning and then proceeded to defeat a fellow Yale man, Fred Bannerot. 4 and 3, in the semifinals. CHICAGO. June 27 ( AP) The St. Louis Browns hopped on to Tommy .Thomas for four runs in the ninth inning today, and took the series opener from the White Sox 4 to 1. Heinie Manush and Melillo hit home runs for the Browns. The score: St. Louis 4 8 1 Chicago 1 7 1 Gray, Blaeholder and Schang; Thomas and Berg. ssssbbh sbPVbIIbVbvssi 'fr ( MRS. LEEPER DIES a.f HER HOME HERE Mrs. Tauline V. Leeper. resi dent of Salem the past 25 years, died Thursday morning at ths family home at 497 North Front 'WexEiiiifil Spe3alls2 Fly Tox $1.25 size for 75c Dr. Hess Fly Chaser, A sprayer FREE with each can Mason Jar Chick Founts 2 for 15c See our tables for OTHER SPECIALS Salem Seed & Orchard Supply Co. 178 S. Commercial Money-saving Forest w TAKE dtit year vacation trip m a bis hmro Pickwick cocck. Th: Ntioa-wide tramportatioa system reaches tttonMad f delightful vacation pots along the scenic highways of America. REDWOQD HIGHWAY North from Sa Fraac'aco Eureka and Grants Pass, through a hundred coatiavow miles of giaat Redwoods. Finest fcshiBg and hunting. PACIFIC HIGHWAY From Sa Fr.Bci.co te PortlaBd. Seattle aad Vancouver. Seres Ml. Lassen National Park. Mt. Shasta resorts. Crater Lake. Mt. Hood, Colombia River Highway, Rainier Park and the Evergreen Playground. EL CAM I NO REAI Coast Mis.ion Highway from San Francisco to Los Angeles and San Diego, serving all Cali fornia beaches aad old Missions. TWO HIGHWAYS EAST-NordSer. wnte flow San Francisco to all Eastern points via Lake Tahoe, Reno, Salt Lake City and Denver, or from Lo. Angeles by w.y of Zxrn National Park and Salt Lake. Southern route from Los Angeles lo Imperial Valley, Phoe nix, El Paso. St. Louis and to all Atlantic Coast points. Scenic Bightny ftomte of Ammem OFFICE Hotel Senator Phone 696 Burnett Bros., Jewelers "Pay Us as You Are Paid" Fourteen Stores on the Pacific Coast Not Only Largest but (We Hope) the Best WediaiMta Chime Ctodk SMS "SETH THOMAS" The Gift that can be handed down to the Children's Children -The world-famous Seth Thomas I 4 I 10 J0k At the lowest price in all history and on terms easier than you'd ask triT7TTrwrmflTf7Sr7 if! "IT THEN Rosa PonseJle sung in Covent Garden VY Theatre the London critics ftated that "there were just two classes of singers, Rosa was in the one class and all the other singers were in the other !" And that same statement may be applied to Clocks There are two classes of clocks The Seth Thomas Clocks are in one class all the other clocks are in the other. And this ia a chance to get one that no frugal soul should miss. For heretofore we've had to ask fifty dollars for such splendid affairs as are here presented , . r1,..o at Thirty-Nine fifty. Seth Thomas Clocks ; Are unconditionally guar anteed not only by the greatest and the best beloved clock maker in the world but by Burnett Bros, as well. THE cases are of the richest mahogany in ' two-tone effects and measure twenty-one inches along the base - . . They are equipped with a full set of silvery-toned gongs which chime all the hours and aD the four quarters in the most delightful fashion reproducing the famous Chimes of Westminster Abbey. They are faithful timekeepers and beyond winding once a week need no attention. With fair treat ment they can be mentioned in your will and left to the third or fourth generation. Friday- and Saturday (and here's hoping that they last that long!) we are authorized to sell them for Thirty-Nine Fifty No more and no less. And you may take one for half a dollar and pay the balance a dollar or so a week. Established over thirtu years ago Anybody and Everybody . can have Corham Sterling Silver on the table For all the Burnett Store sell U at the cash price on the Burnett Budget Plan a dollar or so a week. Net a penny; added to the cost ST HmVmm. 457 State Street All the Best Watches are here the Eights' the Hamiltons the Helbros -ihe Bulovas tho Ta vannesthe Benrusthe WaUhams not in a few models 6 nt in all - the new style Sold at the advertised cash price a dollar a week - pay tor any one ," " r' fy V t