The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 23, 1930, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TEN
The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Friday Morning, May 231930
alem High Dirops Ball Gaitoe to Qhemawa Redskimis, 6 to 4
IF
CQJIRT
EWTS
OB&fl
sXr
Thirteen Homers Made In Single Day By 2 Teams
Two, or thre months ago we
registered a plea for a real, actlre
American Lesion junior baseball
program ner. Right now it looks
like we're going to hay it. al
though bad weather and other
things nave interfered to date. A
lot of the boys haTe been practic
ing; a general practice is called
for tonight and the first local
game Sunday morniBg.
Ralph Coleman's Corrallis
Chicks will come here Monday.
That outfit include several play
ers who are well knows here in
Addition to Coleman himself.
There to Hflenfeldt. who nas
played various Infield podUnps
for the Senators In the last two
seasons; Roy Lamb, who played
. second base in Frisco's ontfit
last season; Amory "SUU" Gill,
who is a Salem boy; and Qni
senberry, who nsed to play for
Albany.
The Chicks haven't done much
yet bnt look out. The college
ball season is winding up and as
soon as It's over, Cooley will just
shift naiforms on some of his O.
S. C. tossers, and trot 'era out as
Chicks. The same will happen at
Eugene, though the Townies are
getting along nicely already,
thank you. Albany will draw
some boys from both state col
leges and some of the Willamette
players are due to be signed up
here, so the league will look like
a different piece of goods entirely.
. Iid yew notice- the "ostrich"
hold Ernie Arthur pnt on Dee
.Anderson Wednesday night?
Some fans said there was
'nothing to" Wednesday night's
match. We'll admit the latter part
of it went too quickly, but every
body was tickled pink with the
first part of it. Des couldn't keep
even with all that weight and
strength, but while he lasted, he
put up the best match of bis ca
reer since coming here.
One thing we noticed espe
cially was that Ernie and Des
couldn't pnt many punishing
holds on each other; both spe
cialised tn blocking tbem in
stead of getting oat of them, mm
some of the wrestlers we have
seen here have done. " ,
"What does he expect to do
with that leg hold?" the fans kept
asking while Ernie tried and tried
for it in the first round. They
found out just before the round
ended. It was the first move to
ward that body slam hold.
Good thins; Des knew where
the soft place In the mat was ,
located.
Little PTobJem Ja baseball eti
quette: Team" four runs behind,
eighth inning, man on first, bat
ter hits to left field"" and" fielder
fusses around with ball and does
n't recover it until about time
runner reaches third.
Should he go in?
Luke Gill told him he shouldn't
have done it, because one run was
of no use; there'd have to be more
hits if the team was going to win,
and if there was another bit, the
runner could get home with great
er safety. The book says Luke is
right; play safe when you're rubs
behind, take chances when you
need one run.
yesterday We Saw
A ball game held up for about
two minutes while the umpire
tried to herd away an elderly man
who had absent mindedly wan
dered onto the field, and didn't
seem to understand that he was
Interfering with the great Amer
ican game.
CHIEFS DEFEAT
LOCILJSSEBS
Indians Play Heads-up Game
and Take Red and Black
Who Hit Better
AURORA, May 22 A. L.
Strickland, who was operated up
on at the St. Vincents hospital
last week, is reported greatly im
prove. Mrs. Strickland spends a
part of every day at his bedside.
SALEM
SATURDAY
OLINGER ATHLETIC FIELD
K.snana4ank BnWnWnaV. aWanabbanaWnBaW n B9SkaWnanVhL atatSkk. ' KlLMfianBnw awnaniMnana assa hw
ID" W n 1 fl IV IVaUp AMO BETTER !
WJ-J I I I II IXJJ IMPROVED fl
pWEArrroFPcKiti'
e i fiisj-
"great SsSffiv
GRETONAS" kMw-
SENSATIONAL HIGH , f
WIRE ACT. FIRST Hf
TIME IN AMERICA tl&v&A&2
TWICE DAILY 2 AND 6 RM. DOORS OPEN 1 AND 7 P.M.
V : -
Grand Stand Chairs and General Admission
Ticket on Sale Circus Day at Central Pharmacy, 410 State St.
The Chemawa Indian school
team played heads-top baseball
Thursday afternoon to defeat Sa
lem "high c to 4 despite the fact
that the red and black excelled
in hitting.
Chemawa's victory leaves the
Marion county "A"' league race In
a, gecidedly unsettled condition,
with, th rqajangj Salem and
tftodTurh still In the nniu
Chemawa and Woodburn split
pair of games, Salem bag beaten
Woodburn once and has another
game coming up here. Chemawa
and Salem will play again at Che
mawa Saturday.
The Indians took advantage of
the fact that Roy Van Cleave was
n't quite "warm" when ha start
ed to pitch, and scored two runs
in the first inning. Three of the
foar hits in this inning were de
cidedly scratchy affairs, which
could have been fielded with a
little snappier play. The same was
true of a total of six Chemawa
hits. On the other hand, all but
three ef the 14 bingles Salem col
lected were clean, but they were
not sufficiently timely to be con
verted into the needed runs.
One more tally was counted by
the Indians in the second Inning
before Van Cleave found his bear
ings completely, two hits and a
sacrifice accounting for this one.
These early scores wouldn t
have proved fatal to the red and
black cause, but another bad
inning came along In the seventh.
The Indians scored three runs on
one hit, an error, a walk and two
fielder's choice plays, with a wild
pitch and a passed ball contribut
ing. Salem had- gathered one run in
the second on Bowden's Blngle
and Craig's two bagger. In the
second and seventh, two hits to
the inning failed to produce
runs.
Luke Gill's boys started a rally
in the eighth that looked like it
might get somewhere. Two runs
were scored on bits by M. Van
Cleave, McCaffery and Craig, but
little Meachem, Indian -catcher.
spoiled it all by grabbing Baker's
high foul, inehes from the grand
stand. Another run ; resulted in
the ninth from Kitchen's two
bagger and M. Van Cleave's third
hit of tte day.
J. Alexander. Chemawa right
fielder, robbed Salem of two runs
la the seventh by spearing a long
fly after a hard run. ViTette,
pitcher, U. Alexander, second
baseman, and the " diminutive
catcher looked exceptionally good
among the Indian players.
Craig of Salem high made a no
table play In the fifth inning
when his perfect throw from left
field cut off a run.
The score:
Chemawa
AB R H PO A E
Meachem, c . . 5 13 0 0
Franklin, u .i 1 2 2 4 0
TLAl'x'der, 2b 4 2 2 t 1, 2
VjlCtte. p . . . 4 0 1 0 4 0
Corbett," If .14 (Ml 0 9
J. Al'x'der, rf 4 0 1 2 0 0
McKay, 3b ..4 0 0 0 3 0
Simmons, cf .4 1 :1 2 0 0
Prettyman, lb 3 0 0 10 1
Totals ...36 6 11 27 13 2
Salein '
YANKS WALLOP
A'S 10 TIES
' AB R H PO A E
Garbarino, 3b 5 0 2 4 1 1
Baker, lb ...5 0 2 14 0
Foreman, ss .5 0:2 1 3 0
Kitchen. 2b . .5 11 1 2 0
1 V'n Cl've, p 5 0 0 0 6 0
M. Vn Cl've rf 6 1 3 0 0 0
McCaffery, c .6 11 5 2 1
Bowden, cf . . 3 1.1 0 0 0
Sugai, cf 1 0 0 0 0 0
Craig, lb 4 0 2 2 1 0
Totals ...43 4 14 27 15 2
Score by innings
Chemawa 210 000 300 6
Salem 010,000 021 4
Sacrifice hits, Franklin, Mc
Kay, Prettyman. Stolen bases.
Franklin, U. Alexander, Vivette,
Corbett. Two base hits, Craig,
M. Van Cleve, Kitchen. Bases on
balls, off It. Van Cleve 2, off VI
yette none. Struck out, L. Van
Cleve 5, Vivette 6. Passed balls,
McCaffery 2. Wild pitch, L. Van
Cleave. Umpire, Edwards.
fk
nn
VJ
No matter how severe,
you can always have
immediate reliefx
H NINE SIDED
BY WOOLEN MILLS
Ruth and Gehrig Pole Three
Four Base Hits Apiece;
Record Equalled
PHILADELPHIA. May 22.
(AP) Hitting at an amating
rate the New Tork Yankees swept
both games of a doubleheader
from the Athletic today by scores
of 10 to 1 -and 20 to 13. Thirteen
home runs were hit in the two
games, three each by Ruth and
Gehrig. Ten homers by the two
teams in the second game equalled
a ma lor league record.
K U
New York ..10 1
Philadelphia 1
Pipgras and Hargrave; Ehmke.
Rommel, Mahaffey and Perkins.
Una
New York 20 23 0
Philadelphia ...1? 16 2
Hoyt, McEvoy, Jonnson, ner
id and Dickey; Shores, Qninn,
Rommell. Earnshaw, Grove, Lleb
hard and Schang. Perkins.
Tigers Whip Chicago
CHICAGO. May 22. (AP)
Detroit pounced on Dutch Henry
today to win to 1. The Tigers
got 12 hits which they bunched in
the sixth and eighth innings.
Jolley's homer was the only
Sox marker.
R H E
Detroit 6 12 0
Chicago 1 1
Uhle and Hargrave; Henry,
Blankenship, Caraway and Berg.
Bayer Aspirin stops pain quickly. It
does it without one ill effects. Harmless
to the heart; harmless to anybody. Bat
it always brings relief. Why suffer?
&IPIIIHmRJ
It's A Mighty
Comfortable Feeling
to know that you own good
public utility stock which brings
you generous dividend check
every three months.
Central Public Service
Corporation
$4 CUMULATIVE PREFERRED SHARES
A safe investment . . . can be easily sold . . . are good bank collateral
... and yield almost 7
Mail the coupon below tor full uiforniatkm abom these
shares and the easy Thrift Plan by which you can become
a customer-shareholder for as little as $5 a month.
Albert E. Peirc A Co.
fat cere ef
PACIFIC NORTHWEST PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY
(A Pari of Central Public Service System)
SALEM OFFICE TELEPHONE 3490
-j.. ciffi"1": Pt JKttt obBgsdo iirfotsaadow aboex Cental
Name
Kay Woolen Mills, nosed out a
victory, 11 to 10, over McKay
Chevrolet in an Industrial league,
twilight baseball game Thursday
night. The score was tied when
Kay Mills started the last half of
the fifth. Hart singled and stole
second, and after the next man
struck out, Hart scored to break
up the game on a hit by Allport,
which happened to be the latter's
fourth bingle of the. day.
Chevrolet scored one ran In the.
first Inning, one in the second.
three In the third, two in the
fonrtb and three In the fifth. Kay
Mills scored three in the first, one
in the second, three in the third,
three in the fourth - and one in
the fifth. Ritchie pitched the first
for Innings -for Chevrolet and
Frame the last. Westley pitched
three innings and Kerber one for
Kay Mills.
The score:
Chevrolet
1 AB R H
Moriarty. c . . 4 0 0
Dodge, lb ...K... ,..4 1 0
Ritchie, p, cf i . . 4 S 3
Mish. rf ...3 1 1
Frame, cf, p ....... 2 0 0
Brown, ss, 2b ...'... 3 1 0
Mlsson, 3b .2 1 1
Conway, If 3 2 2
Ganderson, rf, 2b .'...2 1 0
V ' - i
27 10 7
Kay Mills
AB R H
Seamster, cf ...... ..4 2 1
Allport, 3b ....' 2 4
Lehman, if, lb ......3 1 0
Page, ss . . . 3 1 1
Pickens, lb rf 1 1 0
Westley, p, If ..... ..3 1 1
Kerber, If, p 3 1 1
Noak, c -...3 1 0
Hart, 2b J... 3 l i
27 11 9
Solons Take Two
WASHINGTON, May 22.
(AP) The Washington Nation
als made it four straight off the
Boston Red Sox today, winning
the second game of a doublehead
er 13 to 1.
R H E
Boston 2 S 0
Washington 3 5 2
Gaston, Llsenbee, Berry; Had
ley, Spencer.
R H B
Boston ' 1 S 2
Washington 13 18 2
Morris, Sheilds and Heving;
Buske and Ruel.
DUCKS
CHANG
E
ID LOSE 10
Custom Broken by Portland
When Pair of Games Lost
l Instead of One
ANOEL.ES. Cal.. May 22.
(AP) A ninth Inning rally in
the opener and timely hitting in
the nightcap gave Hollywood, two
victories over Portland in a aou
ble biil ner today. The first
game, was won 7 V and he
seven inning final 2 to 1.
Fi 11 Tde was credited with a
vlrtorv In the first contest al
though he pitched but one ball.
He relieved W. A. Jones in the
last half of the ninth with two
down.? Despite the effective hurl
lnsr of Fred Ortman. who meted
out only three hits, the Stars
bunched their efforts to score
two runs and eke out a victory;
the Bfavers,. seven hits were good
ror oniy one lauy.
' R H E
Portland S 11 0
Hollywood .7 10 2
Maty and Palmisano; jonns
and Severeid.
ii R H E
Portland 1 7 0
Hollywood .......... 2 S 1
(Seven Innings.)
Ortman and Woodall: Wetzel
and Sassier.
New York 8 12 2
(12 innings).
Willoughby, Lucas, Collins and
Davis: Walker, Genewlch, Mitchell
and O'Farrell.
Braves Shade Robins
BOSTON. May 22. AP) A
two mn rally in the ninth inning
today enabled the Braves to de
feat the Brooklyn Robins, t to 5.
Harry Seibold pitched the entire
game for Boston and drove In
the winning run with a single in
the ninth.
R H E
Brooklyn 5 10 0
Boston IS 1
Elliott, Morrison and Lopes;
Seibold and Spohrer.
Al. SINGER TO
FIGHT TON T
COAST LEAGUE
W. U Vet. W. L. Pet.
Sae'to 26 18 .581) MisiieDi 21 22 .488
OkkL 2 19 .578 Holly. 11 28 .477
Lot A. 24 19 .SS8Sattl 20 24 .455
Sn F. 24 21 '.533 Portland 14 90 .318
Browns Shade Indians
CLEVELAND, May 22. (AP)
The St. Louis Browns took the
Becond game in the series with the
Indians here today, 3 to 2.
R H E
St. Louis 3 12 0
Cleveland 2- 7 0
Collins, Holshanser and Fer
rell, Manion; Brown and L.
Sewell.
Linfield Beats
Pacific Team in
Net Tournament
LINFIELD, COLLEGE. Mc
Minnville, May 22 (Special)
The Linfield college tennis teams
yesterday defeated the Paclfie
university racquet wielders for
the second time in a tournament
held on the Linfield courts.
Six matches out of nine went to
the Wildcat net artists. Linfield
took two of three women's single
matches and one of the men's
singles, men's doubles, women's
doubles and mixed doubles. The
most Interesting match was the
singles contest between Wake
man of Linfield and Norton of Pa
cific. Wakeman took the match,
but it went three sets. The sec
ond set went to 15-13 games.
STUDENT VISITS HOME
AURORA, May 22 Evelyn
Grim, a freshman of O.S.C., spent
the week-end with her father,
Walter Grim, and attended the
wedding anniversary of her grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Kraus.
SIGN
MAD
E
E1LL OUT AND TURN GRAY
K Specialist Started Her to Using
Lea's Hair Tonic Which Ban
ished All Traces of Gray
and StoppedJt Fall.
inz Out
HAIR AS YOUTHFUL AS
WHEN 20 YEARS OLD
ma...
.1',' W.- . Z .
"It was tea yean at that a
spell ef sickness esaaed say kair te
begin falUnsT eat. and taraiaa array
asal at that tiate I was teld te be-l
ri aaiar Mrs. Lea's Hair TeeieJ
It is wendeifnl what ft wta e fsr
Ike hair and aa sees mien al appli-
te
did when I was a girl ef twenty
and net s sign ef gray," eeatinees
Mrs. Marshall ef Remains, Mick
TlMMssands of at en sad wesaea
ase Lea's though even aa expert
eaajiac detect It. Lea'a weeks as
y seajp Sas kept BtyjBkely aad gradaal, the day by day
kair perfect ever since then," den
dares Mrs. A net UarakalL who
Bk thoasaads ef ethers have
foand Lea's the laest areas
far the hair that ateae cs
; "Since getting sack spleadid re-
sails ayseir. 1 have eftea arced
There te try it , aad they tea have
btaiaed the sasae pleasing resalU.
Eren soiae of the aeasi; saops ate
tt aince they learned ef what It
win de. ffreas m.- Se m see
asa a sincere ea4efser. aad riadlr
iaipreveaient, sad dtsappearaace ef
gray is seldom aetked by friends,
bat ia a few weeks tiate the aser'
is amazed te mete the rioant
search shews aa gray hair. The
hair aad scaln appear healtkier
sad growing eat Ihicker sad mare
beaatifaL If the reader wishes te
try Lea' Hair TeaSe, let them ee-
taia a bottle ef local ervrxist, or
der er check te the well
Lea Taato - - Cs. BreaJweed,
end my aktirr 'that eaa mavlTkev etadlv fin eswr srder irv mall
ueany see new ajce my aair JsJ
I . weald hate te tH m mlA
I am for yea weald sever believe)
lw a? aair aexaallr la ska Eke HI
and guarantee absolste satiaf ae
refSaoed U ia ax
weeks yea are aet mtireir
Oakland Loses Again
OAKLAND,. Cal., May 22.
(AP Taking the lead in the
first Inning, the San Francisco
Seals maintained their pace and
defeated Oakland, 5-3 today. Cro
settifopened the game with a Walk
and ' fionovan followed with a
home run. In the second frame,
Craghead, Oaks' hurler. hit a bat
ter ari( walked another and Cro
setti: came up with a single that
scored two more tallies. Wingo
hit his twelfth homer of the sea
son in the sixth. All of the Seal
runs; were made off Craghead.
Johnny Vergez, Oaks' third Back
er, got in the road of a fast ball
by Elmer Jacobs, Seal pitcher, and
was knocked out, in the second
inning.: It was a terrific smack
on the head and he had to leave
the game.
t i R H E
San 'Francisco 5 4 4
Oakland, 3 4 0
Jacobs and Gaston; Craghead,
Edwards and Lombard!.
V NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. U ret. W. I. Prt.
BrooU. IS 12 .6131 Chicago 18 10 .514
8t. L. 19 ia-,594! Boston 13 17 .433
PitUb. 16 13 .532Cinfin. U II .400
N. T. 16 14 .533 Pliilnd. 19 .S21
AMEBIC AX LEAGUE
W. L. P-f. W. L. Pet.
24 10 .706ifit L. 19 18 .419
Philkd. 20 19 .25iOhinro 12 17 .414
C1t). 17 14 .5481 Detroit 13 21 .382
N. Y. 16 14 .5331 Boston 12 21 .364
i
COAST LEAGUE
At Stockton: xn Angeles 8; Sacra
mento 4. '
At San Francisco: Seattle ; Mission
At Oakland 8; Ran Franci ro 5.
At Los Anpeles: Hollywood 7-2; Port
land 6-1.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
At Pittsburgh 5: Chicago 12.
At St. Louis 4: Cincinnati 2.
At New Tork 8; Philadelphia 10.
At Boston 6; Brooklyn 5.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
At Philadflphia 1-13: Nw York 10-20.
At Chicago 1; Detroit 6.
At Washington 3 13; Enjston 1-1.
At Clereland 2; St. Louis 9.
I
o-
Business Directory
Lightweight Title Sought In
Battle With Sammy Man
dell at New York
NEW TORK. Mar 52 (AP)
Al' Singer will find out tomorrow
night whether his dream of a ti
tle tilt with Sammy Mandell. the
light weight champion, is to come
true.
inger Is hero of the Bronx and
the successor to Benny Leonard
as idol of the east side. He
tackles Ignacio Fernandez, clout
ing Filipino, In a ten round main
bout in Madison Square Oarden.
Fernandez knocked Al out
In three rounds a year ago to the
amaiement of the faithful and
Singer must wipe out that defeat
in order to win a chance at Man
dell's title in one of the open air
ball park shows of the summer.
Singer, with an advantage in
weight and an added year of pol
ish and experience, i rated a two
to one favorite over the game Fi
lipino whose chief assets are abil
ity to take it and a right hand
thatals always dangerous. The
psychological handicap appears to
have bothered Singer little for he
has paid Fernandez hoard jtm!
room bills here for the last
month in order to k'-i) liiiu on
deck for the return engagement.
The match was postponed a
month due to singer"? bad banrK
State Prison's
Population Now
At 908 Total
A new population record was
broken at the Oregon state peni
tentiary on Thursday when the to
tal reached 90 8.
The new administration and
women's quarters will be open for
public inspection on Saturday and
Sunday, May 24 and 25 between
the hours of S and 11 and 2 and
4. Officials hare extended an in
vitation to the general public to
call and inspect the new quarters.
o i
I ;
o
Tribesmen Take Missions
Svp FRANCISCO, May 22.
(AP) Seattle came to life today
and won an 8-6 win over San
Francisco's Missions. The In
dians too: an early lead with the
locals tied in the seventh but a
two iron rally in the ninth sewed
up the game. The Missions were
blanked in their half of the ninth.
Ear; Kunz on the mound for Se
attle, went the entire route while
his mates bombarded three Mfs
slon Imoundsmen for 15 hits.
?! ' R H E
Seattle 8 15 1
Missions 6 11 o
(Ten innings.)
Kunr and Cox; H. Plllette, Cas
tor find Hoffman.
Angels Nick Sacs
STOCKTON, May 22. (AP)
Los ?: Angeles bunched hits and
took; advantage of Tom Flynn's
wildness to defeat Sacramento by
the score of 8 to 4 here today. In
the ; third innine. the eranri
scored' three runs on four singles
tnrongh the infield, a sacrifice hit
and a double steal. In the sixth,
Flynn; walked three successive
batters after retiring Dittmar.
Vine! ' relieved but three mn
came across on a sacrifice fly and
singled oy Hannah and Walsh.
ine-aacs, in turn, drove Welsh
from the box in the last half nf iho
sixth, when he walked the first
tnree batters and yielded a single
to iloag, scoring two.
v ' R H E
Los-; A-ngeles 8- 10 0
Sacramento . . ; 4 9
Walsh. Peters and Manna h
FlviinL Vinoi Thnma- j
ler. ;
AUCTIONEERS
F. N. Woodry
IS Tra. Salem's leading Auctioneer
and Furniture Dealer
Residence and Store
1610 N. Summer St
Phnne 511
BATHS
TurklFh baths and ma&rage. & H.
Logan. Phone 2214. Ne-nr Bank.
BATTERY ELECTRICIAN
R. D. Barton National Batteries
Starter and generator work. 103
South Htsrh
. BICYCLE REPAIRING
LLOYD E. RAMSDEN Columbia
Blovles and repairing. SST Court.
CHIROPRACTORS
P1"- O. I. SCOTT. PSC. Chiropractor.
856 N. -Blgh. Tel. 7. Rea. J104-J.
DR& SCOFIELD, Palmer Chiro
practors. X-Ray and N. C. M. New
Bank Bide
CLEANING SERVICE
Center St. Valeterla, tel JJ27.
r IT,S,ean'd Pressed $1, V AB
LET CLEANERS. 13 N. ComT. ever
ELECTRICIANS
HALIK ELECTRIC CO. 461 North
PVont ft.. Tel. No. J.
FLORISTS
FLOWERS FOR ALL occasions
Olsen'a. Court High St.. TeL S01.
CUT Flowers, veddine boumii
Brelthaupt, florist. El 2 State Street!
Tel. 310.
CUBS COME
BACK
TC BEAT PIRATES
PITTSBURGH, Pa,, May J2.
(AH Chicago and Pittuhnrrh
eacli made U hits bnt tbe cham
pions batted timely while the play
of the locals 'was loose and the
Cuba evened the series bT tktn
the game 12 to S.
r R H E
Chicago it ia i
Pittsburgh g is
Osborne, Moss and Hartnett;
Pettr. Snencer. Charon
Erickson and Bool. -
Cards Trim Reds
ST, LOUIS. May 22. ( API
The St, Louis Cardinals defeated
tne; Cincinnati Reds- today 4 to 2
and Went Into first nlare in the
National league.
-! R H E
Cincinnati a 8 1
StLonls ..4 10 1
frey and Gooch; Grabowskl.
Bell land Wilson.
AdT.
Phillies Nick GUnts
IfEW YORK, May 22. (AP)
Chnck Klein hit his eleventh hum
eri of the- season In the 12 th. Inning-'
of todays came to giye the
Phillies 10 to S'Tlctorv a 4h.
Giants. It was the first time this
season rmLadeipala has beaten
thf.ffew Yorkers, : .
PhUadelpnla' ....... ;i : lo j
GARBAGE
PAINTING
Kalsomlne $J to $. per room. .i!so
Interior painting reasonable prices.
TeL 1763J. Faye lompson.
Commercial and industrial air end
Power Painting
CAPITAL PAINTING SERVICE
460 North IS. Tel. 1716J.
PAPER HANGING
PHONE GLENN Adans for honsi
decorating, paperhar.sin. tinting, etc.
Reliable workman.
PLUMBING
PLUMBING an 3 gf-neral repair
work. Graber Bros 155 Sa Liberty.
Tel. 650.
PRINTING
FOR STATIONERY, cards, pam
phlets, program. book or any k!nd
of printing, call at The Statesman
Printing Department. 215 S. Commer
cial TeL 600.
RADIO
FORT eyery purpose, for oery purse
All standard !zes of Radio T'ibes.
EOFF ELECTRICAL SHOP. 235 Co jrt
St. TeL 488.
ROOFING
SOLVE yo-r roofinK dlfftaiitien
with Pioneer Yoserrrite rvk Burfa.-J
shlnarles. Carlton Pi'meer Roofinc Co.
170 N Vrnn. Tel 4 57
STOVES
STOV ES and stove repairing. Stoves
for sale, rebuilt and repaired. All
kinds of woven wire fence, fancy and
plain, hop baskets and hooka, logan
nooks. Salem Fence and itove Works.
262 Chemeketa street. R. K Fleming.
Pnlem Scavenger. Tel. 17 or 2290.
INSURANCE
WARREN F. POWERS
TeL C07.
212 u. a Bank Bide
Willamette: tnsu ranch
III Maaonio Bldg. Phone No. 112.
BECICE a mrMnPTCTro
1S N. Hlrh Tt ii
KODAK DEVELOPING
NELSON HUNT. Court and Liberty.
LAUNDRIES
THE NEW SALEM LAUNDRY
Tim trnnrn i.iTTvnsT
Telephone 2i MS 8. Bigh
capital crrr laundry
The Laundry of Pure Materials"
Xrjrgngl5 L Broadway
MATTRESSES
New pring-fllled matrcswa retailed
directly fram factory to you. Capita!
City Bedding Cow Tel It. 1030 North
Capitol. .-.
MUSIC STORES
Stiff Fumitnr Company.
graphiL Bearing machlMa, sheet muaie
sou vuluq aiuaiea, , nepajnng Dnono
granha and sewing machines. 412 gut
mr rrrt fw r-m ....
OPTOMETRISTS
...Pk1 BURDbTTTIC, ptornetrlst.
412 Flrrt Nan. Bank BUav Tai, lit
Reliable Gas Range
Burning ROCKGAS. makes - Mmi
cooking equipment, tor particulars.
PACIFIC ROCKGAS CO.
2 Pacific Bldg. Portland.
TAILORS
D. H. M OS HER Tailor for men aa
romen. 4 74 Co-irt St.
TRANSFER
PIPIT AT. Pita . mam
State St. TeL 92S. Distrfbatlag. for-
Otir rates.
WATCH REPAIRING
NO or money bock. THE JEWEL.
Real Estate
Directory
BECKS A HSXDR1CK8
111 N. High TeL 1CL
JOSEPI? RADRint noi.TT PO
Grey Bldg. Phone 720
. ' S. 1L EARLS
24 N. High EC TeL 2242.
HOMER IX FOSTER REALTY CO.
87 State Et. TeL 142.
- W. H. GRABENHORST A CO,
124 a Ubarty St. . - TeL ilt.
'QJBRTRtTOB 4. PAGE
ill H. Cottaga - t - TeL tl.
... . SOCOLOFSKT SON
04- rtrat Kat. Bk. Bldg. Tel.
. i. V. TJLRICH
U N. Commercial TeL Mi.
441.BUU 8CF U WOD Tet T.4.