The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 15, 1936, Page 7, Image 7

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    111-
Olympic Teams'- but ' Girl oMalzws
o-
Vha OREGON STATHolIATi, iSaiczi Uresoa, weaaesiay JBlorxuc, Jxny 15. l35
Dollar Chase
Is Successful
Swimmers 3Iay Be Short by
Three Bleinbers if Holm
Fails of Results
NEW YORK. July H-ypy-Aa
the zero hour seared tor Uncle
Sam's athletic argosy to the 11th
Olympic garnet la Berlin, officials
and athletes alike engaged today
in one of the greatest dollar
chases in history to assure a fall
team of 354 men and women when
tire liner Manhattan departs to
morrow., . V
All the poses returned with
their prey except the women's
swimming team. Unless Herbert
Holm, a little red faced, gray
haired hustler, suddenly runs into
a change of . fortune, only IS In
stead of IS feminine natators
will represent the United States
overseas.
Otherwise, the men's swimming
team, the women's track and field
team and the men's hockey team
faced with shortages last night
obviated the necessity of any
cuts, in their squads by some of
the fanciest, most frenzied indi
vidual financing ever .known.
Some obtained bank and personal
loans; others parted with bard
earned savings.
Girls Collect Well
Dee Boeekmann of St. Louis,
coach and manager of -the wom
en's track and field team, and her
sirls set the tempo for the thrill
ing fund raising drive. Ten days
ago Miss Boeckmann. was told to
reduce her equad to four com
petitors. If the girls display, halt
the fight they have shown since
then In acquiring expense money
they ought to be successful In
Berlin. v
"We've got a full team!" Miss
Boekmann informed A. C. Gilbert,
chairman of the administration
, committee, as tears of joy streak
el down her cheeks.. MWe're go
ling over 16 ttrong! A week ago
!I wouldn't have believed it pos
sible, but the girls did it them
jselres, Cod bless them." ,
Solons Close In
On Second Place
Cleveland Climbs Up Into
First Division With
"Win Over Boston
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W
L.
27
34
37
38
39
40
50
.52
Pet.
.CS3
.550
.543
.537
.524
.494
.359
.3 If
New York i 53
Detroit 4-
ashington .. 44
Cleveland 44
Boston L 43
Chicago L 39
PhOadelphla ..... 2 8
St. Louis 24
i WASHINGTON. July 14.-0"?)-Slugging
a pair of St, Louis
pitchers for 16 hits, the Wash
ington Senators defeated the
Browns 13 to 3 here today and
moved to within a half game of
second place as Philadelphia de
feated Detroit.
St. Louis , 3 9 2
Washington 13 IS 2
- Thomas, Yanatta and Hemsiey,
Ouilianl, Newsom and Bolton,
Millies. -
- A's Stop Tigers
i (PHILADELPHIA. July 1.-JP)
KThe Detroit- Tigers, lost an op
irtunity to gain on the league
leading Yankees today, falling
before the Athletics 10 to 2.
, Beaten two straight In the
ckrrent series, the A's won eas
ily behind Harry Kelley's seven
blt pitching.
Detroit - 2 7 4
Philadelphia . 10 13 0
jAuker, Kimseley and Myatt;
Kelley and Hayes. .
. Indians Move Up .
BOSTON. July 14.-;p)-The
Cleveland Indians knocked the
Red Sox out of the American
league first division today by
clubbing out a 5 to 1 decision
behind the combined three-hit
patching of Oral Hlldebrand, and
Denny Galehouse.
Cleveland 5 12 2
Boston 1 3 0
Hilcbrand. Galehouse and
3llivan; W. Ferrell and R. Ter
rell. Cannot Break Tie
SWith 4 Overtimes
JPade's and St. Vincent's were
u Sable to break a 2 to 2 tie in
rRir extra Innings In an industrial
league game Monday night. The
gme was remarkably clean with
oly one error committed. Smith
ed and Douglas each got two hits
for Fade's and Keenan collected
to for SL Vincent's. The game
wjll be replayed later In the sea-
McKay's defeated the' U. S.
Bink S to 5 in a hitfest at Leslie
Playground,
tin an inter-learua contest Tom
Hull's staged a six-ran rally la
tlfe seventh to beat the paper
call machine crew 9 to 6.
Pide's 2 t t
SI Vincent's 2 4 , 1
ISmither and Taylor; Keenan
a&d Jarvis. !
Tam Hill's !.... 9 3 t
Paper Mill 31. 6 11
. fLindstrom and Grable; Lowe
and Ellis. .
McKay's 6 13
Uf S. Bank 5 -17 2
jj Parker and Crary; Orey and
Fhrter.
Ex -
mm-.
T"M1E pugilistic demise of Joe
Louis, even though it be only
temporary, has started an
epidemic of comebacks.
The fact that former champion
Max Schmeling is back on top of the
fistic world is very encouraging to
a couple of other ex-heavy kings.
Jack Sharkey and Max Baer. both
of whom are charter members of the
"I licked Schmeling" dub.
Forgot to Duck" Still Reason For
Joe Louis Defeat He Says, Denying
1 Reports Sister Said Arm Was "Shot"
DETROIT, July 14. (AP; A sister of Joe .Louis em
phatically denied today a copyright story in the Chi
v - a x a.
cago ivemng American quoting ner as cnarginjr inai
Louis was given a hypodermic June 20, the day he was
knocked lout by Max Schmeling in their heavyweight fight
in New York.
VI never made any snch state-
ment." said Mrs.; Knlalie Barrow
Gaines, "and there ain't nothing
to it at alL" i
Louis and ' John Roxborough,
one of his managers, were equal
ly emphatic in denials of the
charge.-" I :,
'Why. I It'a Juat a big He,"
Joe said.
"Absolutely not a scrap of
truth in it," Roxborough said.
The American said Sheridan A.
Bruaeax, Chicago: private detec
tive, had i mailed ; a sworn affi
davit, setting forth the charge he
attributed to Mrs. Gains, to John
Best Two in National Turnfest
r :
i
( alary Conlln j
Qosing of the 55tl anziual national Turnfest of the American Turn- ;
erbund'at OeveUnd marked the owriing of Misa Mary Conlin oft
HdelphlA as best la apparatus -work and Albert Fisher cf EUxa,;
" T" bellyN. JjjtJt aUyou" chamyloiy
Champs Return
By BURNLEY
HiAJMey,
7t z?oaj
Sharkey, dubbed the "Ancient
Mariner" by his pal Bill Coram,
really looked good in his last come
back effort against Young : Phil
Brnbaker. The temperamental Bos
tonian. enraged bj a first-round
knockdown, got up off the rosin to
give the Coast sensation a fearful
hiding.
Sharkey could always fight when
in the mood, and if, he hasn't imbibed
L. Phelan,' chairman of the New
York state athletic commission.
The affidavit, the newspaper
said,; asserts the charge Louis
was given the hypodermic was
made by Mrs. Gaines In a hotel
room In Chicago July 3 in the
presence of Al Monroe, sports edi
tor of the Chicago Defender, a
negro publication; Edward Plic
que, of the Savoy athletic club,
and Miss Semmie Mitchell of De
troit. i : - ,
The real reason for his defeat,
LobIs repeated:
v- -l forgot to duck. J M
I
A
Albert n&her
t
. .. . . ? "5
1!'
-t
1 tbrr
AS BELLIGRENT
jxiAPsetf 3u4so. jGFr h
Te mitts AGAfr4 I
too much beer at Els big Beantown
bar daring his two-year lay-off. the '
strange sailor may write another
fantastic chapter into Ting history.
Madcap Max Baer, meanwhile, is
again shouting threats at ill and !
sundry, now that his dark nemesis,
Joe Loo is, has bees) squelched. 'Baer V
and Sharkey may fight it eat Jn the g
battle of Schmehng's conquerors.
OwTttM. 111. Kl&t rMtarw STWSetla. 1m. 1
BY rAUL HOAStrK
It won't be long until Joel
Gordon, the former University
of Oregon shortstop whom the
with OAklaad wJU be np la the
big show, according to Joe De
vine. Gordon has been lookinar
awfnllv 'sweet down in Oakland i
and ha been raising his aver-
age considerable since be start- J
: ed there this spring. Another
Oregon boy whom Devtae marks
ww aVAM ; Mr 1 -
Lien, the southpaw who made
quite a stir in American Legion f
. . . i i. -i i.
circles nercaooHb uu iuuiii
for Toledo in the State leagve
last year. Lein Is pitching him
self Into a fine accord with Jop
lin of the Western league where
he has won something like 15
and lest only two- According to f
Devine he a improved so mucn
with expert handling that jon i
wouldn't know tie was the same
chncker. ' V"""
Looks like BUI; Sayles. the Un
iversity of Oregon's freshman
hurler. will be Oregon's only
hooeful to bound v across 'the
bounding main to -the Olympics.
Neither Rachel Tfocom nor Win-
field Needham Of Salem made
rood their attempts to win steam
er fare and a lease on a cemenVf
cottage in the suburbs of Berlin.
Georza Varoff. wtorld'a- champion
sole vaulter and an Oregonian by
adoption, also failed to max tae
rrado. ; Sayles wBi go -wun tne
American baseball team but it
looks as if theyilShave ifiobody to
nlav over there but themselves
as no other countries are ' send
Ina- baseball teams. J Baseball, a
purely American port,. counts no
counts in the Olympics.
Inspired by the visit to Sa
lem of the iW, Checlzzli of
the Ethiopian Coptic : church
one of the crewf suggests that'
the Notre Dame "Irish' have
overlooked bet in not signing
np a few Ethiopians t add
more verbal color to their pub
lished lineups.
The post-Olympic schedule pro
mises to rest for Uncle Sam's Jes-
and-arm weary , winners and - dis-
appolntees. According to Dan Fer
Irs. United States 6lympic Impres
ario, sixty of.ourtrack and field
stars will battle sixty uruisii mm
plre stars at London on August
1. . . . Japan, Ifranee and the
United SUtes will compete in
trlanicular meet at Paris August
23, with twenty-five aces on each
side . . . Poland, the Scandinavian
countries, and France have in
vited the United States Olympic
swimmers to, linger awhile, for
post-Olympic dol paining . . . A
price of 25O,O00, One of the high
est on record; was paid by an Am
erican syndicate for the Aga
Khan's nine-year-old Derby win
ner. Blenheim, which will stand
in Kentucky at Ai B. Hancoek's
Clairborne Stud, home or Sir Gal
ahad. Gallant Fox Stimulus, and
other pers of the Sturl . , . Bobby
urns Defeats
Danny McShain
Arm-Jumping Game Two
Can ' Play; CostUIo
Winner on Foul
The arm of Bobby Burns, West
Palm Beach, Fla., grappler. was
umped on by Danny McShain Is
true McShain fashion last night
but Burns made up for it by tak
ing the last two falls for a win
from . ' the :- uagentleraanly ; gent
from' Holly wood. -
McShain was repaid" amply for
his alley tactics In the two final
roughhojse sessions and although
Barns took soma of the' punish
ment It was the Beverly Hills
tyrant who got most of it in the
neck. . .. ' .
He got some of it on the arm.
too, for that was the way Burns
turned, the tables to win the sec
ond fall, using the old McShain
trick of Jumping up and down
on an arm until the victim sub
sides.' ' - V ' .
Barns took the final after a
riotous session in which both
grapplers were on the floor out
side the ring much of the time.
After, butting McShain through
the ropes a . few r times Burns
missed , him once and went
through! himself. Meanwhile Ref
eree Harry Elliott and McShain
got Into a little altercation, Elliott
lipping the bad man one on the
neck that sent him reeling to the
ropes. Burns, standing on the out
side of I the ropes, clipped, him
again and then dashed in to fin
ish things up with a body press.
Costillo loses, wins -AI
Williams, the crime wave
from Chicago took the last two
falls from Pascual Costillo, Spain,
In the 45 minute go. using Bos
ton crabs for both falls. Costillo,
who won the first fall, was given
the - match on a foal, however,
when Williams wasn't content
with winning and had to Jump
on the prone Spaniard.
Harry Elliott, pinch-hitting for
Rod Fenton, and Jack Clayborn,
St., Louis negro, went through a
happy half-hour for a draw. Clay
born's tumbleweed tactics baffled
the Eugene referee and he was
unable to apply any damaging
holds. In fact the only holds
either applied were the kind, In
which both wrestlers get so nope-
lessly? tangled that they have to
be unwound by the referee.
It was announced that the far-
famed Bulldoa- Jackson is on hi?
way back from a California ap
pearance and will soon be seen
in the local arena.
Leaders in Coast
League Both Lose
. , , - : '2 '
SAN DIEGO. Jary 14-!P)-Dlck
Ward, right hander, limited the
league leading Seattle Indians to
three hits as the San Diego Padres
chalked up a 2-0 victory in the
aeries opener here today. Ward,
formerly of the St. Louis Cardi
nals, has yielded only one run in
the last 27 Innings he has pitched.
Dick Barrett pitched five-hit
ball for the tribe. . '
Seattle 0 S 2
San Diego 2 ' 0
Barrett and Spindel; Ward and
Desautels. . :
Oak Hurler Fail
OAKLAND. July- 1 i-iJPBiU
Meyer sent five of his- pitchers to
the mound this afternoon trying
to stop Frank, O'Doul's Seals from
defeating the Oaks in the opening
game of the series. . but the san
Francisco club palled the game
oat ef the fire, scoring two runs
In the eighth inning and another
in the ninth with a 9 to 8 victory.
San Francisco ........ 9 14 1
Oakland i S 14 2
Sheeban. Stutz. Hald and Mon-
xo; Ludoipn, conian, urns, K.
Miller and Hartje. ,
" Night Games
Los Angeles ........ 13 14 1
Sacramento .......... 5 10 3
Casey and Bottarinl; , Ross,
Wahonicke and Head.
lowan Gets Lead
In Western Meet
OMAHA. Neb.. July .. 1 HJVA
subpar 88, by Billy Cordingley.of
Des Moines, DU today topped the
first day's qualifying test of the
western amateur golf tournament:
Don Edwafda of San Jose,
Calif., and i Jack Pollard of Oma
ha' shared second Place with 69 s.
Jack Munger. Dallas ace, was
fire under par after 12 holes, but
eased off to finish with a 70.
Frank Cormaci. Omaha, and
Freddie Haas of New Orleans, also
had 70s, while Don Schumacher
of Dallas, holder of the Texas
amateur title, had 71.
A Broiling son boosted the tem
perature to 110 degrees.,
Mad Joss Is Winner
SEATTLE, July ll-i-MaJ. E.
C. Woodruff's Mad Joss of Mesa
Gr?.nde, Arix., beat the odds-on fa
vorite. Ladv Bowman, by a necK
here today in the Shrine handicap
at Longacres race tracx.
Wilson. Southern Methodist's hip-
throwing halfback of last fall, has
signed for the annual fall super
neclal football movie. . . . Bleach-
eritea sobbed when Joe DIMaggio
went iitless In the All-Star game
at'Eoston, forgetful that, another
IdoL Lou Gehrig had gone hitless
In - the - three previous mlxed-
leaxae slugfests. When Lou con
nected, in the seventh, he unjinx
ed himself with a homer . . . What
?3 more Greek than the picture of
a discus-thrower? "Yet no Greek
has won the modern Olympic dU
cua laurel. Two Finn, on Hangar-
llan and seven American victories
stand in the discus column.
Froni Missouri
.
L
Helen Stephens
Chief hopes for victory in ftie
women's track events at the
Olympics in Berlin rests on the
sturdy shoulders of Miss Helen
Stephens of Fulton, Mo follow
ing her triple victory in the 100
meter sprint, shot put and discus
events at the final Olympic try-
out at Providence, R. L i 1
Hoee and Bakerl
Softball WiniiAis
Hits liattle in Secona
Came With Artisans
; Taking Short End if
Hogg Bros, won a one-sided
Softball - game from the - Eagles
14 to 4 in the first game of last
night's doubleheader at Sweet
land field. Hogg Bros, collected
15 hits off of three Eagle pitch
ers. .'Mack Serdotz, pitcher for
the - winners, hit a long home
run against the centerfieid
bleachers in .-the seventh inning
for the only .home run of .the
game. .
The nightcap between Master
Bread and the Artisans waf ja
mixture of base hits and errors.
The two teams collected 32 hits
and made 12 bobbles. The pitch
ers for Master Bread were the
most consistent hitters, Bahlburg
getting three in three and H ess-
man two in two. ! g
Don Hendrie, Master Bread
manager, played for - the first
time- in a league game this, sea
son. ; -. , J .
Hogg. Bros. L. .14 .18 I 8
Eagles . . 4 61
M. Serdots and P. McCaf fery:
Hemman, Maddy, Stock we 11 and
Wilkerson. - r 1 1
Master Bread :20 19 1 t
Artisans , .14 U 9
Bahlbarg, Heeeman and MOt
tarty; N. Serdots and Miller.
Paper Mill Office Teanu.
Betas Hansen - Liljequist
-.-Si"
- ' . iff!
The Paper Mill office team de
feated ; Hansen-Liljequist 10 ' to 1
in. .an industrial league softball
game last night. T... - j l!
Paper Mill O. I: 19 14 if I
Hansen-Liljequist 7 14 0
'Savage and - Armstrong:
Hams, Exultgen and Fallricb.
:". Anrnr-i IImImI . - 11
AURORA. July 14.--Lone El-
der defeated the Aurora baseball
team in the last game scheduled
in the Central Valley series SuM
day by a score of 9 to 3. July 19
the postponed, game between Au
rora and Molalla win oe piayea
and Molalla will be played : I
irora. ! ill
" . i
at Aurora.
1
, Here' our - I could get c
l offer. W 111 I ing Prince
awalKtew"rtaegi.- VI
Cnbs Continue
Y7iriniri2 Habit
. . O Si - -
. -
Pepper !EIarlin Wifjij Pair
of Homers For .6 fluns
' Keeps Cards Up?
NATIONAL LKAG
- ... y ! . W. U
Pet;
.628
New T6rk ........ 4 t
St. LouU ...,,....60
Pittsburgh ........43 v
Claciaaati ........ 40 f
ChJcaeo".. .48 I
30 .425
T4 :S44
38 .SIS
40 .500
Boston ".I.;. 38 5 2
481
Philadelnhia 30 19 .380
Drooklyn
,iVr.V.27 1S4 ,333
I CHICAGO. July l4.f4VThe
Cuba tightened their grips dn first
place in the national league to
day with' a ( to 1 decision over
the New York Giants, thei third
in the four-game series. ; I
Curt Davis seven-hit .Pitching
held the Giants until the ighth.
when singles by Gas Mancuso and
joe Moore, and Mel Oil's slow
bounder brought In the only New
yors: ran. : s? t
j ' 111
New York ... .1 ..... .t
7 - 2
Chicago f i
13 1
p ! Schumacher, Coffman and; Man
cuso, Spencer; . C. Davis and p Dea.
I ' - Hemer Decides It
i PITTSBURGH, July'
Woody , Jensen's homer with one
on and Mac Brown's fdur-hit
pitching Job combined today to
give the Pirates a 2 to 1 tlctory
oer the Boston ; Bees fori .their
first win in four starts. TM de
feat ended a five-game twinning
streak for the Bees. P f
Boston ........ j..... 14 0
Pittsburgh !. .... 2-J 9 1
i Mac Fay den and. M u e 1:1 e r ;
Brown and Finney, s I I .
repper Geta Hot ?!
ST. LOUIS. July 14-rpV-Ptp-
per Martin, the "Wild Hoss bf the
Osage," went on a tear today ana
personally accounted for nll to
7. win by the Cardinals over the
aroused Brooklyn Dodgers,
i He hit a home run with af
on base in the fourth to keip the
Cards in the running, despite a
six-run Brooklyn surge fa
fifth. Then. In the last halt tf the
ninth, with the score tiea. he
broke up the ball game
with
another homer with the
loaded. ;.'!-'' u:
Brooklyn ........ .... 7
St. Louis Ill
bases
! Frankhouse, Clark, Jeffcoat and
Berres, Phelps; Parmelee, itkines.
Heusser and Davis.
Phils Even Kerle '
i CINCINNATI. July 1 -(JP-
Philadelphia evened the I series
with Cincinnati at two all today,
staging a three run rally In the
ninth tar a -rrlrtrtrv yui
Philadelphia
9
Cincinnati ........... S 10
Kowalik, Bowman, Sivess and
Atwood, Grace; Schott, Stlne. Hal-
lahan, Brennan and Campbell.
Eugene Ties Fqr
! Tennis Loop Top
. ! i :?.;;( -
i PORTLAND, July 1 4.--Eu-gene
shared the top rung; of the
Columbia -Willamette 1 1 jlennis
league today by virtue of iclean
sweep, 5 to 0, over the defending
champions, the Portland Y.M.C.A.
Injuries contributed to Portland's
defeat." . . ! i if
Oregon City, which drew ji bye
this week, a 1 s o has a perfect
tourney record. ill
Salem Y.M.C.A. i defeated ! Cor
vallis 4 to 3 to Uke third place;
Vancouver went into a tie f with
Corvallis for fourth by whipping
Longvlew 7 to 0. Portland; was
left in sixth place .and Longvlew
In the cellar. ; J , p. ,
Sauvies Island k
! Furnished Power
One of the last frontiers of the
electrical industry ln western
Oregon has been crossed with the
building of a transmission line on
Sauries Island, which has an area
of approximately M square miles,
announced " O. B. Coldwell. 2vtce
presldent of the Portland General
Electric company, i -
, The project is part of Pepco'a
program for adding this year; 135
miles . of new lines, costing. $100.-
00i to its present rural ' electrifi
cation system oi zju roues yoia -
well explained. - -',J -
i , i j
cation system of 2300 mIleSj?Cold-
A power line was- extended
acrous and along the Columbia
side" of Sauviea island, bringing
electric service for the first time
to 20 customers, most. of. whom are
operating large dairy farms.
Engineers Start
Convention Today
1000 Expected to Gather
;in Portland; National
Leaders to Speak , v
PORTLAND. Ore.k July H-iff)
Teachers and doctors who re
cently held national and sectional
conferences here gave way to an
other profession today as hun
dreds of delegates arrived for the
64th annual convention of the.
American Society of Civil Engi
neers. .
Attendance was expected to ap
proximate 1,00. Registration will
tegln tomorrow morning, after
which day-long sessions, to be cli
maxed by a banquet, wil start.
Governor Charles Martin of
Oregon and Mayor Joseph K. Car
son of Portland will give the wel
coming addresses.
. Twenty eight talks are sched
uled for the Initial day, headed
by those to be given by Dr. Daniel
W. Mead of Milwaukee. .Wis., and
George T. Sea bury of New York
City, president and secretary re
spectively of the engineering or
ganization. Will Visit Dams
- More technical discussions will
be held In four seperate divisions
Thursday and the remainder of
the week will be given over to
trips to Bonneville and Grand
Coulee dams. "
Special side-trips and dinners
will be given for the wives of
visitors. i
Delegates from several western
states held a conference late .to
day in prparation for the forma)
opening of the convention.
Family Traveling
Overland by Boat
Party From Hawaii Stops
Here; Cabin Cruiser
Rides on Trailer
A trip from California to Wash
ington by boat overland , thats
about the only way to describe the
Journey being made now by J.. It
Cox of Eleele, Kanai.. Hawaii, and
his three sons. Doak, Richard and
Charles. The Coxes stopped in Sa
lem yesterday to vlU relatives
while en route from Ean Francisco
to Seattle with the "Kai Naln." a
27-foot cabin cruiser which Cox
bought, in Alemeda recently.
The boat', in which the owners
are living daring. their- trip, I a.!
warencraft cruiser with 9 foot
equipped with four berths and a
galley aft the cock pit. It is being
conveyed on a trailer behind a
light rnck, and yesterday was a
source df considerable surprise on
the part of local people as they
saw -Its slim white length being
hauled about Salem streets.
'Cox. who came here from the
Islands where he is employed as a
civil engineer on a sugar plants- "
tion, has been testing the boat in
the south for some weeks. He in
tends to use it on Puget Sound -for
about five weeks before
leaving again for Hawaii. Despite
the burden of the near seagoing .
craft. Cox said the truck.,and
trailer, were-' able to make gbod
speed on the road.'
Mystery No Traged
MEDFORD, July 1 4-(P)-Search
for Dan Davis of Talent, who was
feared to have met death la a
mine, ended today when bis
father reported him alive and
well in the Bend area. The hunt
for the miner began when his dog
was found. In a shaft and refuse
to leave.
Zu in wait Improves
LONGVIEW, Wash.. July-li.
--Hospital attendants said to
day Alva zumwalt, 49, or Salem,
Ore., was not yet out of dsnger
but that he showed a slight Im
provement today. Zumwalt was
injured in an auto accident near
here Sunday.
Forfeits Game
' it
StLVERTON, July 14. Com
pany I of'O.N.G. forfeited its
game Monday night to Brush
Creek when the former failed'
i m "" ov f
4 came.
.
to show up for the scheduled
Iwknewwhatpleasorear i
.Al Wtes the tongue. I
11 !i-
i i
s
llil'