The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem,' Oregon, Saturday Mornin, July 15; 1933 I- I . Isbtiro: Mi$i RaceiTied, Up woodburn Juniors Mil SLATED SUNDAY Mari'ori County Boys put up -Tight Game Afield and . Collect 14 Hits , - WOODBURN, July 14. Ma rion county's entry in the dis trict American Legion Junior baseball campaign got back into tne running with a vengeance today when the Woodburn Jun ior traveled to Hillsboro and vanquished that city's strong team 11 to 3. Hillsborol had won the first game of the series here last Sunday, and the deciding game will be played here this coming Sunday at 3 p. m. The winner will go to Klamath Falls for the state finals. - - ; In contrast to the first game here in which Hillsboro made seemingly impossible plays re peatedly and played air-tight ball, while Woodburn made numerous bobbles especially after Bevens was forced by illness to retire from the mound, the Woodburn boys grabbed everything in sight on the Hillsboro diamond though two excusable b'obblcs were made, while the home team muffed eight" chances, mostly by throw ing the ball away. Jimmy Nicholson starred at bat. getting four blows out of five trips, three of them two baggers. He and Bonney both turned in some good plays in the outer gardens. Despite this reversal of form, the race is still much in doubt is Hillsboro saved its strongest pitcher, Davis, allowing him to burl only two innings today. Bev ens went tbe route and it is un derstood he will be called upon again Sunday. However, he didn't bear down hard today and should be able to curve them effective ly again Sunday with a day's rest, and Coach Pete DeGuire has some other good chuckers to throw in if Bevens falters. The same two 13-year old boys' team that played last Sunday will play again at 12:30. The score: YYoodbnrn AB. R. II. Voget, c 6 1 1 Coleman, 2b .......... 5 Salstrom, ss .6 Nicholson, cf 5 Cant, lb 5 Bonney, rf 5 Bottleson, If 3 2 1 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 Oberst, 3 b Henny, 3b Bevens, p ..2 3 ...5 Totals . . . . . Hillsboro Barron, If .... Dierecks, c . . . Storey, 3b Helscher, ss . . .45 11 AB. It. -.3 0 14 H. 1 ..5 1 .4 .4 1 2 Sutherland, lb 4 Shattock, cf 3 Dlnsmore, rf 4 Bailey, 2b 4 Davis, p .2 1 Cross - Word Puzzle By EUGENE 12 13 15 16 18 'A 21 22 23 21 20 2 30 31 32 33 34 36 37 HO V7, H3 HI HQ 50 'A 3H 33 51 58 HORIZONTAL ' 1100,000 rupees 4 pertaining: to a thread frastent ; 12 shada tre 13 plant of the , eelerr ' family 14 sheltered side .;-' 15 seed of a . - well-known vine : 19 small -diatanc 17 section of a window 18 appraises 20 note of tha scale . 21 mother ' 23 weight of , India ' 24 best 28 unit of -. enersr , SO reverence . . 32 wander 34 body of i - water, i 33 Italian " eoin 88 those whs ; , deal In for ign roods 39 Roman ' .' underworld - cod 40 eavors 41 obese" " ' 43 Hebrew ' . - letter 1 . -. 44 supposed hypnotic . force - 45 three-dimensional 1 - 4? wide xnoathed pitcher 50 tax for a . . privilege 51 hog's thigh " looS1 54 hastened ' 55 silk ncUike ! fabric. 55 member of :a certain . I Indian tribe YA 1 ' Herewith is the solution to yes terday's puzzle. Owfrigk. it KKiat Near-Upsets Mark Kitball Friday Night; Parker's is Winner 6-3 Over Kay Mills The undefeated . Parker's . team found. Itself on the short end "of the score after the first inning of its Salem , Kitball .league " game with Kay Woolen 'Mills . Friday night on Sweetland field, but soon rallied and came out.ahe.ad. Nev ertheless it was the nearest to an upset the league leaders have ex perienced this season and indi cates that strengthening, process that the wool weavers have achieved. Parkers won, 6 to 3. . Kay Mills stepped out and garn ered three runs in the first inning to Parker's two. The sport goods boys got another In the second, two in the third and one in the eighth, holding Kay Mills score less after the first. Moye hit two for three to lead Kay Mills in batting. Keber and L. Singer got two hits apiece for am. NATIONAL LEAGUE BROOM W. L. Pet. New York 47 32 .595 Chicago . .46 39 .541 Pittsburgh .......43 38 .531 St. Louis 43 39 .524 Boston 42 41 .506 Brooklyn .. 36 43 .456 Philadelphia 35 46 .432 Cincinnati 35 49 .417 CHICAGO, July 14 (AP) Brooklyn hit Bud Tinning hard early today and defeated the Cubs 5 to 3 for their first victory in Chicago in over a year. Brooklyn 5 8 . 1 Chicago 3 12 3 Mungo, Thurston and Lopez, Outen; Tinning, Nelson, Henshaw and Hartnett. Giants Improve Lead ST. LOUIS, July 15 (API- New York increased its national league lead to four games today by hammering out 15 hits and a 12 to 7 victory over the Cardinals while the second place Chicago Cubs lost to Brooklyn. New York 12 16 1 St. Louis 7 16 3 Fitzsimmons, Bell and Mancu- 8o; Dean, Mooney, Johnson and O'Farrell. Frankhouse Wins Out PITTSBURGH, July 14 (AP) Freddy Frankhouse bested Lar ry French in a 10-lnning pitch ers' duel today, the Braves trounc ing the -Pirates 4 to 3. Boston 4 11 9 Pittsburgh 3 9 3 Berry, p l 0 0 Curry, p 0 9 0 Totals 34 3 9 Umpires: Garbarino and Burke. SHEFFER eT5 to 71 tTZ 20 V? 'A 2 2H 25 26 27 35 38 3? HI 21 51 52 53 56 5? 57 connective word 58 ieeds 59 obtain" VERTICAL . 1 lick np " 2 Peer Gynt's mother 8 barn par tially 4 abstained i . from food , . 5 engages the ' attention 6 falsehoods . . 7 venomous ' snaka 8 notef of the scale winged part 10 boggy land 11 gou mouni 17 section "of t wall 19 like 20 evergreen tree 21 deserve 22 pleasant odor 24 dreadfully 25 girl's nam 26 small piece: of parch ment 27 vex 29 holes 81 charge fox service S3 that which imparts motion 87 olor 88 carnivorouf rn,TTlTTHle 42 note of the scale 5 species In cluding the cabbaj 46 word uni- - tatingthe, . sound of a motor ' 47 historical period - 48 pale 49 conclude 50 open wood- ; en vessel ' 6Z consumed -63 encount- '" ered . " 65 -towards rwtsni YA v s s as s r ss s 00771 s s M s m m m. Parker'. Meline of Parker's made a number of spectacular ene-jianded- catches tn center, field, and Nutter, of Kay Mills, turned in a - pretty play at third base to stop rally. .. : . - . . In another near - upset, Salem linen Mills managed, by virtue of .a two run rally in the first inning, to beat the Elks, 3 io-1.-There was no more scoring until the ninth when each team scored once.. The bases were loaded sev eral, times and" it was anybody's game right up to the end. Salem Lihen 3 3 Elks 1 Serdota and Seguin; Hessman and Cross. " . . t ' . Parker's ;........... 6 j 8 4 Kay Mills ........... 3 ! 5 3 Kitchen and Sanford; Mentrer and Siegmnnd. Frankhouse and Hogan,) Har grave ; , French and Grace, j Rds Are Blanked CINCINNATI, July 14-i-(AP) Held hitless until the sixth, Cin cinnati lost to the Phillies ( to 0 today. Philadelphia 6 10 0 Cincinnati : 0 5 4 Rhem, Moore and Davis; Rixey, Stout and Hemsley, Manion. Bill Spaulding Gets Contract For Five Years LOS ANGELES, July 14-U(AP) William H. Spaulding who came here In 1925 to give the University of California at Los Angeles its first college football victory and built the team Into one of the coast s leading elevens in seven years, was given a new five-year contract today. ; The U. C. L. A. athletic boara of control. In signing Spaulding through 1937. took up his previ ous contract, which had two years to run. He will continue as direct or of athletics and head football coach- The salary was not an nounced. Spaulding came here in the fall of 1925 from Minnesota where he had been head football coach. MICKEY MOUSE HEY HORACE ! HAVE YOU HEAOO THE NEWS?, TUB tOUNTY O M GONNA ENTER TANGLEFOOT tN A REAL HORSE THIMBLE THEATRE Starring Popcye .YOO SA-y THERE'S AH V. UNCONSCIOUS MWH USING Gt THE SlDCULK DOU)H BY THE MUNICIPAL BUUDlHC.? OKN- TLL SEND MEM T FOR STORV AKD PICTURESJ 9 i ' '" HMM,ltt OtTOT . UAiuy BLAST LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY - CM. IEROW1LLVA L0OV V i 1 VvDNESX ITWNK VOUR H , V TVClC NAME5 SWEIL.TDO -1 r I AT THOSE THREE NICE Y- IJl ': TXXSS ASHE UU6T THEY DOWT LOOK LIKE TU6T J - A -S LITTLE MIDGETS VflTH WHAT5THEW2 UKWESb? J COMMOM POOCHES THAT TJ06- ) r S "-T-l GCEAr C jsjj)-jT 'rwmm ( CATCHERS ARE ALVW5 j ''THEYRE U CHA5IN' ' uebomJ TOOTS AND CASPER V. TOOTS AND MV HlraaJJD ADC uavuo. A DUX CCttTEST AND THEY'RE BOTH tXy5tN4 THEM TO 4VIVE ME THEv THEV.UOSEi I CCU.D :l-y-H: Vc - - M aL il f VSI XM V :.rw .ii v- i r mr mm ei a l r xm : I i tm im - - - ..w 11a ss m mm m w a- ' s mt mt - m n i'l AM"Wm . : 1 : a W a a lW sT a ::. i I ; I I 9r . - - II B SBJB 1 T 111' I 1 1 1 ' W 1 1 fdxmw. Inc. Gw I BOWMAN HURLS 7-HIT SHUTOUT Oana Scores Both of Runs For : Ducks; Demagio ' Breaks Record ; - COAST LEAGUE - W. - L PcL -.602 .588 .584 .574 .461 .443 .374 .372 Sacramento ......62 41 Portland 60 42 Los Angeles ......59 42 Hollywood . i .Y. . . 5 8 - 4 3 Oakland ..."......47 55 Mission .....46 "58 Seattle ..........37 62 San Francisco ....38 64 OAKLAND. Calif.. July -14. -( AP) " Henry ;. Oana, Portland outfielder, starred at the bat here tonight to account for the two runs by which- the Ducks beat the non-scoring Oaklands Oaks. Joe .Bowman, on the' mound for Portland, and Bill Ludolph, pitching for , the Oaks, staged - a nice pitching " duel. . Oana'a hit ting tunred the balance In' Bow man's favor. Oana crossed the plate for the first Portland score In the fourth inning after his Infield roller to Werawent for a hit. He cracked a home run over the left field fence in the ninth for the other tally. Bowman allowed but seven hits while Ludolph was reached for eight. romand 2 8 0 Oakland ..0 7 0 Bowman and Palmisano; Lu dolph and Ralmondi. SAN FRANCISCO, July 14. (AP) Coming from behind with an eighth inning rally that chas ed Bill Henderson to the show ers, Los Angeles' Angels pushed and edge out the Seals 7 to here tonight. Joe Demagglo, young Seal' outfielder, got two hits out of five times up as he broke the Coast league record by making it his fiftieth consecutive safe hit game. Los Angeles 7 15 1 San Francisco 6 11 3 Newsom, Ballou, Hermann and McMullen; Henderson, Douglas, Stuts- and Mclsaacs, Bottarlnl. KHE7.Y0U fNMTEURS JJ Vc a SEE-IV YOU CAN rVXNDLE TWA fXSSlSNME- TrEHE e4 ONCONSCtOUS, LOOK T n I . ... .. VAVl'vl V7 T" w3 1 . . X r-ki-' rYER A HAWHAW-HAWWWW! HORACE... SO! t ?, J:?T-TORT tTt HI V S . TF-M-wr r a VSX nX-nrr-v I . ' ' I 'III I M II F I I t-'-' S n- I . -J i- mm I Ilk I . UI 1 - I 1 v m - Ml es I... ' I DAL 1 J. J SNEW - - M..1 I 1 ItTVvl I II I VTf?l U ' U t-! - "T I II - M 1 I , fM ASTHJN ASA RAIL1 THEY COULD BURY ME WSlDe OF A STRIP OF GARDEN HOSE WEIGHT .THAT USS ITS ClJsTp - - -sJ GARDEN HOSE! J VVv K m a . .. .. m m ai m m-mm. a a .. - i as - n - --mmmmw- . a a a ... - a a a .-..av 'Bk m v mi ii t a Seattle .......... .....6 11 1 Sacramento ...'..'.....'.7 18 1 Caater Sewell and Bradbury; Noon, House, Bander and Wirt. Missions- ..,...... 9 8 -2 Hollywood . . . .". . . . . . .10 13 0 H. PlUette. Chellni.'and Dug- gan; Shoe ban and Summer. Frank. . . , 7 mm For consistency, we elect George Bertz, sports editor of the Oregon Journal. Friday in one breath he criticizes the "gamble" Involved in 18-hole matches' in the British amateur golf cham pionship, contending- . that such matches do not really test the players; and in the next breath he opposes the seeding of players In American tourneys, urging that they take their places in he bracket according to the way they qualify. It may cheer up some golf d offer to read an excerpt from . the hole - by - hole account of the Densmore Shnte - Craig Wood playoff for the British open, which Shnte won. This excerpt concerns a par three hole which the boys halved in fives. Keep in mind that this occurred on the unusually tricky St. Andrews, Scotland, coarse: "Hole 11, 164 yards, par 3. With the wind from the west and the pin close to Strath hunker. Wood's drive stopped on the very edge of the bunker. Strute's drive l was on the right line but too near the edge of the same hazard and the ball took an unlucky kick in to it. Wood proceeded to chip plumb into the bunker with Shute. Shute plowed at his, but failed to extricate It. Shute then got out of the bunker as Wood went down into it. Wood came out with his niblick and Shute descended again and his niblick shot took him safe ly to the green. They each took two putts for 5s. The Tortoise "On the X JJ, IttE fLREMV COT THATl STDRt. MISTtH SVZXLttJOODJ mo HEWS fSRE SDCPrOTOG'RNrlC It) 7 Her A Dream AT MS! s III 1U J uu Washington Drops; its .Third I SuccessiYe;;Gam'e ; and r I : Margin. Dwindles .... ; AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. . Washington . . . . . .51. 29. Pet. .638 .634 .512 .506 .476 .471 .420 .363 New York 52 Philadelphia 42 30 40 41 '44 45 47 55 Chicago .42 Detroit K.40 Cleveland . . .-....-.40 Boston . St. Louis ,r34 ..32 WASHINGTON, July 14 (AP) Washington today suffered. Its third defeat In four games by Chi cago and the 4 to 0 loss, while the New York Yankees were winning, dropped them to only a few per centage points above a league leadership tie Chicago ...;.;: 4 10 9 Washington . 3 0 Miller and Berry; Crowder and Sewell. Yanks Win Easily NEW YORK, July 14 (AP) The Yankees batted around against George Blaeholder In the sixth today to score eight runs and defeat St. Louis 11 to 6. St. Louis 6 8 0 New York I 11 12 2 ' Blaeholder, Gray and Shea; Vanatta, Brown and Dickey. Tiger Tie Series BOSTON, July 14 (AP) De troit evened its four-game series with Boston by taking the final contest, 8 to 3, today behind the seven-hit pitching of Tommy Bridges. Detroit 8 13 0 Boston . 3 7 1 Bridges and Hay worth; plp gras, Welch and Ferrell. Miller A's Hero PHILADELPHIA. July 14- (AP) A home run by Bing Mil ler In the eighth with Foxz and Coleman on the bases, gave Phil adelphia a 3 to 2 victory over Cleveland today. Cleveland 2 6 0 Philadelphia 3 9 0 Ferrell and Pytlak; Oliver and Cochrane. and the Hares Spot" Prize of Beauty YANK III N VIRTUAL TIE rf.6fXefT. YOO MUST HW I THrXSfX CaOOO OOKE ( UjEtbET BEEN ON THE SPOTJ ( V (ON rCCOUKT O? KHOCKEO 1 ( OUR MWA UJHENn HAPPENED O V N. ) ShNA OUT MESELF 1US Sftl VJUOLU1 V 0 T CsET SUMPlK'TQ UJRlTEj "T THIS IS THE HEPWY-y f Jjtez. TTBOUTX , LrO Grim m rn w m IX IT) LIKE TO BE PLUMP -f " AMD HAVE A NICE ClArlaTPl 1 I HAVENT MUCH OF AN APPETITE BUT 1 THINK fLL START STUFFING MYSELF WITH FATTENING FOODS AND BLRLD UP MY WEIGHT - IF I BUST! YESSIR - THAT'S WHAT lU. Campbell to Meet Black, Golf Finals '. , VANCOUVER. B. C. July. 14 (AP) Albert "Scotty Campbell; youthful Seattle golf star who won the Pacific northwest amateur ti tle at Victoria two weeks ago, got anotherchance at' a major title to day by outbattling- Frank Dolp; Portland sharpshooter,' .to wjn,' 4 and 3 in the semi-final . round of the, Canadian amateur- tourna ment. Tomorrow's finals, however,, be came an ''international .affair" when Ken Black, of Vancouver, sole remaining Canadian, finish ed a few minutes later -with a 2 and l'win over Harry Givan, of Seattle. The Campbell-Dolp- match was a ding-dong battle through most of the day, the 19-year-pld Seattle youth finally put together a win ning margin' in the afternoon round; to go three np at the -end of 27 holes. . . In the morning he shot two suc cessive birdies, to go one np at the end of the first nine holes, but tbe edge was short-lived and the two finished the first 18 holes all square. Dolp was - around in a par 72, while Campbell took , one more. In the third nine-hole stretch, however, Campbell, a runner-up last year at the national public links tournament, got "hot" and took a commanding lead when he shot the nine holes three under par, while Dolp was one over. ST T LOS ANGELES, July 14 (AP) Coach Howard Jones of the Un iversity of Southern California, named 22 men today for his west ern squad which will meet a foot ball team coached by Dick Hanley at Soldier Field, Chicago, on the night of August 24. The western all-star aggrega tion includes: ends, Ray Sparling, Southern California; Dave Nesbit, Washington and Hands Slavich, Santa Clara. Tackles, Tay Brown By DO Elf,1 &rl VMF-- ---""-WW tt-s,V.----'"-sLJ and , Ernie Smith. Southern Cal ifornia; Jack Johnson, Utah; Paul Schwegler, Washington.' and Dick Toser. California." Guard. ; John Baker. Southern California; Peta Heiser,' Stanford.' Sam Gill, Cali fornia and : William . O'Brien, Washington, Center. Stanley Wil liamson, Southern California and Red Sargeant,- Loyola at Los Angeles.'-V ; - - - . - ". "Jones baxkrield ? will be com posed -of Gus Shaver,": Morley Drury and Howard-Tipton. South ern ' California; Hank Schaldach, California; Bill B e a 1 e y, St. Mary's - Max Krluse, : Goniaga; George Sander,: Washington State and Frank Christensen, Utah.- Move Swats In all State ... - Leafgue Tilts Bill Moye, speedy Willamette university shortstop whom Man ager Frank : "Burly" B a s h o r placed behind the plate, has hit in every appearance wrth the Sen ators in the state league. Playing in all but the opener, Bill has hit la seven consecutive games and attained an average of .310. Paul Keber, Kenneth Man ning and Lee Chester went hitless for the ' first ' time last Sunday against Hellner, ace . hurler of Schapp's team. Carl Wood got two hits in his first appearance with the Solons last Sunday. Lowell Gribble, who has hit in all but one game, is leading in runs batted in with eight to his credit. His ninth inning hit last Sunday drove Carl Wood home for the winning run. Bill Moye la second in runs batted in with, seven. Salem is second only to Bend in the number of runs scored this season- The Solons have scored 43, for a 5 a game average. The league average is 4.' Batting averages: AB H Pet Wood 4 2 .500 Gribble 30 10 .333 Manning 30 10 .333 Moye 29 9 .310 Keber 29 8 .276 Chester 19 5 .263 Colgan 4 1 .250 Pemberton 21 4 .190 Scales 33 6 .182 Wilson 24 4 .167 Mason . 12 1 .083 By WALT DISNEY By SEGAR DARRELL McCLURE TOMTFEELTAn TrtPO-AlAVRP- vnt AKcrRG-.BurrufaF?r vmiCF audi ' nuTF" AMTwnts rwxrroAnEvnu carte? ANY LXJOcVtM IF HE WVo BtCGESUAU ELEPHANT AH VWS ALL, COVERED WITH BLUE KieBOMS By . JIMMY MURPHY r a v. j -1 ;