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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1932)
it- Th STATESMAN; Salem . Oregon, Bandar Blorftg. llay 29. I9331 P pac3 esYxrr t J 'heiu&d tm Sena LU)h " 1 IE TO T BE IT TODAY Jefferson on Holiday; Walt Erickson, dibble and I Moore are Signed Walt Erickson. Gas Moor and Lowell Ortbhle of the Willamette I predict , that university haeeball team will bo Whitman and with the Salem eenatora tor the first time this season when -the 8olons meet the Portland West eiders on Olin- ger field this aft ernoon at l:30fc o'clock. Harrey will oceupy the monad for their senators . In his first game for the local town team. Ho pitched three innings I Bearcat Track Team Goes ; Chance tor Fourth Place A dozen stalwart Willamette 1 1t. Cook has a chanee to place BearcaU will entrain for Walla Jin the mile and the Willamette Walla this morning In aneet of 1 relay team will probably set some northwest conference track hon-1 points. rants and Connors are likely to com through In the discos throw and shot pnt and Sherwood may place in the hroad Jump. James Is still undefeated In the low har dies, bat will meet the present conference record holder. Ralph ort. Barges Ford will accompany the team which will enter the meet Monday. Advance dope from Whitman Pacific onlTerslty. College of Paget sonnet will battle it ont for first puce, coach Ford stated last night McCnllough and "Wienie" Kaiser inai ni team would be a dark should be able to get some points norse unmoor, nut mat it would Jin the half mile run. not be last nor next to last. I The men who are coins; are ' Last season Willamette hit the Boh Bfethoe. in the 44 and relay. cellar and during the past fire Jack Connors, shot and discos. 7r oas never gow nigner tnan I Claude cook. mile. Enoch Duma. fourth place. Whitman ha won two mile. Don Faber. 100, 220 and the meet for the past five years relay; MUton James, low hurdles and College of Puget Sound has and 100: Wienie" Kaiser, half Wlt Ettektw I been In second place tour of those times. According to rcoeer Foliate Whitman's track coach, 'six or sev en of the conference records are likely to fall Monday. Last year wui ne recalled as the year in which eight records were bettered. or course the conference Is young mile and relay; Ralph McCul- lough, half mile and relay; Robert Mealey, two mile; Erwln Lange. two mile, and Ken Sherwood, broad Jump. The present records and holders are: 100 Hickox, College of Idaho :10.0, 1931. 220 Forquer, Whitman; :22.0. a gainst the TovniM at Enrioi -,nv. land in the future records will not ago and allowed but one hit dor- broken 80 frequently, but track 120 ing that time. That was when I!" HaproTlng by leaps and bounds I 440 Tatum, C. Manager Bashor was calling for "orinwesx circuit, nothing but straight balls. Willamette is entering 12 men TT.rrA h. ..rV, A. who are generally adjudged over arm is now In good enough con- Th9 mark th wT.AZnl T Aitinn tt ii .in .i.ra.fi.. ia mar tney nave made this season naye not been particularly good, but they hare not run on a good track yet. , n.. .1.1 O. P. S.( 2:02.2, P. 8.; 4:2t.4, P. B.j :51.J, 1922. 880 Teats, 1921. Mile Fasset, C, 1928. Two mile McKensle Whitman; 10:1.2, 1921. H. H. Phillips, Whitman; :15.6, 1921. L. H. Phillips, Whitman ; RiAm (Mm maA h.. . K.v I wii5or maa n wu last iSSl. h .r. in.i fnlVf ' ?ea?on- 7r th Bearcats lost Pole Vault Nelson. Willamette iaseball blVod of Pwtl C- P- B- 11 ft' 4 .w.u.vtu.t.. uuiiubi, UUl IlUt I 111., year hare won from those three High Jump Campbell, Pacific m auai meets ana in the fire way and Burnett, C. of I.; I ft. 11 H meet nere wmch also Included Co- dition that he will be alternating curres with his booming speed LalL Ray Brooks of the Multnomah Most of them are young, but they are by no means a bunch of "Boy Scouts" as they hare all played several years of fast ball. Treadway Charles and Jack Todd are the pitchers for the West Side outfit and they both hare a wide variety of balls they throw. in.. 1928 iumoia university. The Willamette team Is well balanced with no particularly out- Bianaing star unless Faber be called that. Faber will have good DOLP 3RD TIE GOLF GHlPli Beats Johnny Robblns 3 and 2; Frank Shafer Loses First FlightTmaJ PORTLAND. May 21 (aP) Frank Dolp of - the Alderwood Country club. Portland, success fully defended hi Oregon State Golf association championship here today, defeating Johnny Rob blns in the final round of the annual tournament, t and t. The victory gave Dolp Us third successive state championship. It was the first time in the history of the state tournament that any en person has won the title three times in succession. Dolp shot on under par in the morning round, turning in a card of 71 to Robblns par 72. During the early part of the afternoon round the champion wavered and at the 27th hole he was two down. Then he mastered his dabs again, squared the match at the 20th hole and won three out or the next four to end the match. Miss Jean Plageman of the Multnomah Golf clab won the state association title in the worn en's division. She defeated Mrs A. C. Callan of the Portland Coif clab, 9 and 8. In the final event of the first flight Tab Boyer, winner of the recent civlo championship tourna ment, defeated Frank Shafer of Salem, 4 and I. Shaver advanced to the finals Friday with a 2 and 1 victory over Arlo Kyle, of the Riverside club. Prof. Newton Moves Here; Meets Davis Prof. Newton of Oregon City. who meets Tufty Davis in the preliminary bout . on Tuesday night's wrestling card at the ar mory, ha now sieved to Sal am and will make hi heme here. Newton has won his last four bouts her and if he can win from Davis will challenge Pat Fianegan for a match. Newton Is still pretty much of h youngster In the ring when compared with some of the old Teterans like Henry Jones, but during his tew years of professional grappling ha put a lot of dynamite in hi mat work and Is a good drawing card. In his bout with Taffy Davis nothing will be barred and.th two will be permitted to go at it In whatever manner they may chose. Davis is supposed to be a real tough customer, but Newton ha a habit, of treating these tough "blokes" anything bat gently. Pat Flnnegan is going to take another crack at Henry Jones be fore admitting that the old Straw berry King is the better man. Flnnegan almost had Jones sub dued in their last meeting here. but the little Irishman waa un able to nln him because his wn arm was Injured and he had use of only hi right. There was no wrestling match last Tuesday, so Matchmaker Plant has stirred round to get an excentlonally good one for this week. TndL'. ,TV, I m - . Will Ui s"rwi.ri or pmcmg to the 100 and Senators and the West Side club are members of that circuit and today's game will give some com parative dope on how the league will go this year. The Senator's lineup will be much strengthened today by the addition of four players. Hibbard w ill be in the llneuo at shortston. Hibbard 's home town Is Molalla I I and he is Just as much of a sen-1 sauon as Red Ridings of Molalla was when playing with the Solons a few years ago under Frisco Ed wards. Lowell Gribble may be back from Walla Walla and ready to go at third base. Gribble is clean up hitter for the Bearcats and his hitting power will be a great help to the Senators. Ashby will be on second and with "Smoky" Ad ams on first sack, as neat a little infield as could be desired will be on hand, Tjl COJOW COMMENTS CURTIb Broad jump Burnett, O. of I-t 22 ft 8tt In., 1928. Discus Ganero, 0. P. S.; 187 ft. 8 in., 1929. Shot put Lin d man, Whitman; 42 ft. 2 5-8 n.. 1931. Javelin Smith-, C. of I.; ITT ft. 7 in.. 1921. Relay Forques, Millam, Yee ney, and Felters, Whitman; 8:85, 1927. Four of these record holders, Teats, McKenzle, Phillips and Smith will compete again this year. Dads of Lincoln Players Win Out After trailing for eight innings the dads of the Lincoln school boys pulled the game out of the fire in the ninth Inning Friday and defeated their sons by a score of 21 to 19, in a lively baseball game at the Lincoln school grounds. The boys' team Included Rob ert and Melvln TJnruh, Dick Mc Namara, Malcolm Page, Jlmml McNeil, Kenneth TJtter. "Virgil Teem. Carlton Boehringer, Don- '.ald Cronemlller and Albert Lind- bePk. Mt. Angel Plays Monitor Monday MT. ANGEL. May 28 A ball game that fs causing much spec ulation among local baseball fans will be played on the Mount Angel Cascade League grounds at Ek ner Park Monday May 20, Decor ation day. Johnny Heck, former Mt. Angel college twlrler and late of the Portland and Los Anreles Coast league clubs, will pitch for Monitor and try to turn the tables oa the Mt. Angel Cascade League team, which last year won Its game from MonUor with a close score. IS BEAT' SALEM 2 T0 1 Witzel Blanks Redskins up Jb Eighth With Best Support of Year Salens Ramp, a McOaffery, , Mason. Sb ' Vaadeave, If Scheihner. rf . Pickens, lb . Maers. ef Elliott, 2b Witzel, p AB B H ,171 8 1 Totals Cmplra, BUI Roes. -II 1 T Inspired by the heady pitching of slender Dolp a Wlttet, the Sa lem high school baseball team turned in its best defensive game of the year Saturday en dinger field bot lost to Chemawa Indian school, t to 1. - WltzeL 'rated in about fourth place in Salem's noMoe-lmposlng pitching stafL- shut the Indians out for seven innings, with the aid of steady and sometimes phe nomenal support. The Indians fan ned the breeze at Wltsel's slow eurve and slower slowball and failed to hit either squarely un til the eighth when Dowd Frank 11a went, in as a pinch hitter and suited the rally that tied the count. ' Meaehem ' and Bobb also had a part in that rally. In the ninth two Redskins hit the dust before Franklin's second hit brought Isall in with the win nlng run. Salem also started strong on attack. Ramp, leadotf man. smackiag a three bagger over the center fielder's head in the first Inning. He might have stretched it te a homer but pulled up and scored en Mason's single. Van Cleave and Schetbner also hit that inning to fill the bases, but then Vlvette, Indian hurler, lightened and stopped further scoring. Ne Salem runner got farther than first base after that. Vlv ette allowing but three more hits. He struck out 11 men. Twice Che mawa had men oa third with none down, but Witsel and his mates stopped them there. A double play engineered by Mason spoiled a Chemawa threat in the fifth. The score: Chemawa Alt R Meaehem. 5 9 Bobb, 2b 4 Vlvette. p 4 Kalama, lb 4 Palmer, 2b 4 Alexander, rf 4 Irall. cf 4 F. Miller, If I W. Miller, ss 2 Franklin, ss 2 Totals 2 Bryan Pulls Out of Bad Hole to Win COAST IKMXTU W. U P. W. U Pet. HH. tt n .H ft'to -ST IT .see A. SI TTIVUHM Z SI .111 rartf'mj t tS Jtni B rt tS St 4 8u r. zt ts .i;iUKiom ss jit PORTLAND. Ore.. May ZAP) Ed Bryan, Sacramento pitcher pulled himself out of a hole in the sUath Inning today te defeat Portland. 8 te 2. It was the visitors second victory in the present series. The Ducks filled the bases in Che ninth before a putout was counted against them. Only two runs were needed to tie the score but Bryan allowed only one of the men on base te score before retir ing: the side. R H S Sacramento 2 8 Portland 2 t Bryan and Wlrts; McDonald aad Palmisano. LOS ANGELES. May 28 (AP Hollywood f 18 Los Angeles 2 II Sheehaa and Bassler; Sweet- land, Stittel, Moncrlef aad Camp bell. SEATTLH. May 28 (AP) Oaklaad ' 8 T Seattl s f Thomas and Read; Walters aad Cox. REDS CREEK LDGSE TI1HI IU il tin mo piidc nil um.ii uuuj sranowax zxiotra w. i ret. w. I yt. CUwn 14 jSSSlBaMkL -11 Bhu jn it .! rkiii. is r am Claetm. tl tt .!. U. IT tl Af Fitwv. it is .seat, r. ii se -4i CHICAGO. May 28 fAP Held te one hit In fir Innings to day by Charlie Root. Cincinnati broke loose in the sixth and bat tered out i I ti I victory over the Cuba. Dan Howley. pilot of the Reds, benched Mickey Heath and Lee Durocher for lack of hitting, send ing Harry Heflmaaa to first ant Jee Morrlssey te short. HeCiaann contributed two doubles to the attack. R H Cincinnati 9 It t Chicago 8- T 1 Frey and Lombard!; Root, May aad Hartnett. Pirates Still Wtn PITTSBURGH. May 28 (AP) Pittsburgh hung up its fifth straight victory today by beatlax St. Louis 8 te t. R H St. Louis t 8 t Pittsburgh t 18 Dean. Lindsay and Maacuso; Swetonle and Grace. Dodgers Win Third NKW YORK. May 28 (AP) Home runs by Cucctnelle aad Wright accounted for four run as Brooklyn defeated the Giants for the third straight time 8 te 4 today. R H Brooklyn 14 1 New York 4 9 Thurston and Lopes; Walker, Gibson and Hogaa, O'FarretL FAMTLT REUXIOX PLAXXKD RICKEY, May 22 Mr. and Mrs. ii. iiagee or At bland were weekend gaests of Mr. and Mrs Glen Magee. Mr. Magee is an em ploye of the Southern Pa cific company. The Magees will attend a family reunion te be given at the Dale Mage, home at Scotts Mills, honoring Mr. aad Mrs. Hans Linrler (Mildred Ma- 9 gee) wbo were married recently. Renge Is Stingy PHILADELPHIA. May (AP) Ran Benge limited the Braves to four hits aad the Phils made a clean sweep of the three game series by beating Boston to day. 4 to 1. Chuck Klein's eleventh home run of the season with Bertell en base in the first gave the Phil their winning margin. R H Boston I 4 t Philadelphia 4 f1 Selbold and Spohrer. Hargravet Benge and McCurdy. MICKEY MOUSE 'The Port of Missing Men Our Platform for Today A change in the rules that will permit both teams to win if they deserve It, A clean sweep In major sports for Whitman in the Northwest conference this year with Wil lamette the runner-up In each case, actually If not technically. Llnfield had a better basketball percentage than Willamette, bnt didn't play Whitman. All the fl- Walt Erickson. who hit a home 1 nxl decisive contests were played run and a triple In one game oa Walla Walla snow, hardwood against Whitman this season, will anl turf respectively by which be back to his old position in the we mean no alibi. But next, year outfield and Gus Moore will be taeru ne played in Salem, if the another of the heavy hitting Bear-1 various seasons reach the same cats to play. Scales will probably be kept In his position at center field. Frank "Burly" Bashor will be behind the bat with the big pad and mask. He has bee; doing a good Job at catching and is strong on figuring the opposing hitters. With the additional players. the Senators should show up bet ter in the field and will doubtless be stronger at bat. The entire team with the exception of Hib bard is composed of local talent and Hlbbar4 is a close neighbor of his new team mates. "Squeak" Wilson will pitch for the Senators Monday when they meet the league leading Jefferson Albany team in a Memoral day game. rams UB; pn pi AKE2ICAJT UUGTO W. U Pet. W. I Pet K. T. tS 11 .64C1t1, .SI is .538 WMh. 14 14 .S3: St. iU IS SI .463 DettU .SI IS .SSS CMM 14 14 Jt$ rbtlM. J( IS .SSS BMtM f St .1T1 BOSTON, May 28 (AP) The Athletics combined . seven hit with three Boston errors to de-! feat the Red Sox t te S today. It was th Mackmea's eighth win in niae starts against the Sox. Simmons hit his seventh home run of the season off MacFayden while Foxx, for the first time in ! ,11 games, went faltless. '"t-- " - Z"" . : R - B B Philadelphia. , S T t Boston S T - t Mahaffey and Cochrane; .Mac-1 Fay den, Klein and Connolly, Tate. ! Senator Near Top WASHINGTON. May 28 - (AP) The Senators cut New j .York's lead to two games today by winning both games of a dou ble header, I to 1 and 18 to 8. Babe Ruth hit a homer in each game. - . :" New York 1 T , 1 Washington f It . Allen, W. Brown, Well and Dickey; Brown and Berg. New York ......... S 11 S Washington . . . . . .12 : If - i S Pipfras, Rhodes, Murphy and Dickey, Jorgens; . Wearer . and Berg. ' . L - I Indians Beat Brown - ST. LOUUIS. May 18 (AP) Cleveland defeated St. Louis S to 1 today, ; vr r 1 ? ? Cleveland ......... 8- 8 2 6t LeuU .... ...... 1 T 1 W. FarreU and Sewell; Hadley, Gray and R, FerrelL climax. Andy why mourn? WU- I lamette won a clean sweep two years ago and two of the three championships last year. Speaking once more of Andy Peterson being "knocked ont ef the box, we learn that Andy was nicked for fear hits, two of them in that disastrous fifth inning which was his last in the opening game of th cham pionship eerie. There were four error that inning and Whitman got four runs ont of the combination. Andy struck out eight men in the five Innings he pitched in that game. Whoever was the source of the Whitman-colored report wo received on the wire, it apparent ly wasn't the sports writer of the Walla Walla Union, who lauded Andy to the skies, gave him due credit for that home run and also spoke a word in praise of George Erickson who hurled one-hit bail for, the last three Innings accord ing to that writer's scorebook. Elsewhere on the Union's sport page we find farther evi dence that Andy was appreciat ed sip there; remark in a twi light league story that so-and-so "palled n Peterson by allow ing the Pnntorisun only two hit nod by getting n homer in the third Inning. Ana in n sports column wo find: "Nothing of the prima don na about Andy though; ho just grinned . and worked while the men - made bobbles behind him. This tolerance of n talented ath lete to his less capable mates is seldom seenj -. '' Hn. Ercel Kay and ' Mrs. -Graham Sharkey won - In the two flights of the Salens Golf dab's women's spring tourna menta lndiratlng something or other about the aloe of in struction from - pro except' couldnt understand how nay woman .could accept in--strnctions from her husband. Bat now we know. Mrs. Shar key took her golf lessons from ' ErceL . : 8ox. Tiger Divide DETROIT. May 18 (AP) Chicago put over two. runs in the tenth, inning of the second game to spilt a double header with De troit. The Sox won the night cap T to f after the Tigers had taken the opener 4 to L Chlcaco I S 1 Detroit ........... 4 I t Gaston, Gregory and Grube; Goldstein and Hay worth. 1 Chicago ........... T 18 .1 Detroit .......;. Frasier, Thomas. Jones - and Berry. Grube; - Uhlo, Hogsett, Herring and Roel, Hayworth. r i don't know i Ncvfo Jft vl j CRfcW? our our-A ussen cWnA DID QEUEVg IN GHOSTS 8UT lFlM Wvi AW THAJ , I THOUGHT VOUCOUtiXY lS AJ? 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