E Ftoj euwers McCimiis Field Fence Will Softball Crucial Game Monday ' ' ' v t . r t . .' - . Leaders Play Challenge Duck War Clubs Reliable Shoe, Opposing Coast -Leaders, Benefits From Proceeds With Prospect of Trip East; Invited to Wichita for U. S. Playoff PORTLAND, July 31 (AP) Portland's coast league baseball club will play a benefit night to aid the Reliable Shoe semi-pro nine go to the nation al tournament at Wichita, Kan., President E. J. Schefter nounced agreement to the game the Reliable Shoe starting at 8:30 at the Silverton park. The pro ceeds will help finance the trip east. If Moose Clabaugh, Beaver out fielder, can hit a home ran over the long Silverton tance, a $10 rprize awaits him. In more than 35 'games on the field the past season do one has pat a fly over the fence which is 365 feet from the home plate at the edges and 390 feet through cenW Held. - Ray Brooks, Oregon semi-pro baseball commissioner, announced a special invitation was received by the Oregon champions to com pete at the national tourney for the $5000 first prize. The game will mark the first I upstate appearance of the Beavers ni8 swing and tackle the problems in a number of years. The Silver- 0f the fairways where the afore ton management announces that sad duffer does his everv-day extra seats will be set up. Sara West Homes To Down Yankees DiMassio Hits two Round Trippers; Applet on HurU 2-Hitter NEW YORK, July 31-iA)-Har-tond Clift and Sam West won a battle of homers with Joe Di- Maggio today and led tne sat. Louis Browns to a ten-inning, 9 to S victory over the Yankees. The defeat, pinned on the Yanks when West walloped a round-tripper In the tenth inning with two, mates aboard to break a tie. cut the New Yorkers Amer- lean league- lead 1 to i iji games over the second place White .Sox. Ttiv..tviA hahiuim mir nil zain I and XOth homers, getting the for mer with the bases empty in the eighth, and the 30th with two board la the last ot tne mmn to throw the tame into a tie. Earlier, Bill THckey had given the Yanks their only other runs with his 18th homer with one on base in the second. st. Louis . . 9 1 Nr Ynrk ... 12 1 Knott, Hogsett and Heath; Ma lone, Makosky, Hadley and Dic key. Indiana Shut ont WASHINGTON. July 31-P- Pete Appleton, veteran ngni hander recently promoted from re- lief work, held cieveiana to live 1 hit. mn Washinrton won its sec- ond straight game today from the Indlans. 3 to 0. Cleveland . 0 S 0 w.hlnrton . 3 7 0 Hudlin and Pytlak; Appieton n.i xinilpn. PHILADELPHIA. July 31-UP) -Monte Stratton, hurling a 7-hit game, pitched the Lnicago wnne Sox to' a 2-0 triumph ln the open- inr clash of a three-game series todsv. TDe victory was me mu i the year for tne sox ngntnanocr. Luae aeweu aro.e .ia."' ... , , , i . of the fame with angles tne lOuria ana muiu muweo. Chicago .- IS ? PhilarfclDhia 0 7 1 Stratton and Sewell; Kelley and Brucker, Conroy. BOSTON, July 81-r-Pound- ing two Detroit aitchers for x hits, the Red ox alugged out a 12 to 1 victory today to climb j within one game of the third-place Tigers. . Detroit 1 Rmfnn 12 15 1 Wade. Gill and Tebbetts; Os- tertnueller and Desautels. Silver Falls and r f T?ia.-Tr racmc rnu lie SILVERTON The Silver Falla Timber company ball team and Pacific Fruit of Portland deeiaea to call it oft early this morning after they had nlayed 13 innings and were itlll deadlocked. There had been no scoring since the ninth and It ended 4-aU. Pacific Fruit scored a run in thM fifth innine to match the one Silverton had scored in the first. hnt th home team went ahead ....in with two In the fifth; the vi.nir matched that In the .ink sfiTi- falls scored, one In .-nnth in lead a rain but tne ti.ri it u in the ninth. t.h wtiit had nitched steady I v. hAm. team, and Hell- Vftll w - t..ifi Trnit notn were UC V. .- - jt i vo..l9h wu.v . . , ""V,,r ""T. 10 2 Csil. .W - . Hellner. Relsbeck and Hood: Jell. Schwab ,and Keumg. Bankers Dropped Rv VrillftV Motor .J vnv Motor defeated thelRJ r.ni. . .47 42 Bankers 6 to 2 in an industrial though theyi collected eight hits off Gilbert the Bangers ooois afield gave the V-8s the advan tage. Score:!.-- . Bankers .. I .......... 2 8 Valley Motor Ross and McCune; Gilbert and game at Silverton Monday as Oregon champions. of the Portland Beavers an and stated they would play CBJENTS CURTIS There's something highly in- trig ting to the average-to-poor golfer about the visit of a world- renowned, top-ranking ehotmaker to the home course. Seeing an ex pert play golf is interesting enough in itself, bit there's an extra bane to watching him take strue Une. So the- announcement .that Lawson Little, Jimmy Thomp son, Ilorton Smith and Harry Cooper will play an exhibition match here August 21 is prob ably as big a piece of news as Willamette valley golfers have heard in a decade. The fact that everybody is InvitedLand there 'll be no charge for gallery privileges makes it still bigger. The fame of Lawsoa Little as I an amateur who reached the top in this country and in England Ihe RmP vpnr la Btill frooh In th cura memory of golfs followers; ing a tie in the fifth with a fife Thomson's reputation as a long run r&Uy, Seattle beat San Die- htttor kMn: him in tho fnrefrnnf KO'S Padres 7 tO 3 here tonight. Unrtnn Smith'. nrnmtn. ence M medallgt ln the British op- r.rt,m.H hr. h hv ,.. ,.fi. vlm Bdequately as cne of the r . ' Which brines as down to Harry Cooper, more colorfully known as LIghthorse. Just this weekend ' Cooper is getting tbe headlines; Friday he set the pace in the St. Fanl open, and Saturday he furnished more fireworks by offsetting a "terrible" oatgoiag 40 with a screaming incoming S3 to sal vage a tie for second place. The facts are that although Little, Thomson and Smith are names to conjure with, Harry Cooper is probably the best golfer of the outfit. What we mean k --j - number of others such as Ralph Guldahl who holds the national OP11 llue mignt win any one tournament, the margin of ex- cellence at the top being so slight i ana goii ratner an u n c e r t a l n I game. But In eleven tournaments hi the first five months of 1937. lit was Harrv Coooer who aver- aged nearest to the top; his av- erage position was 4.72, and his -Ter.-e ttl)n for lg holes was 71.13. On thd am haela Hnrfnn smith nii fnrth .hi. . erage sllghtly nIeher hut stl . der 72. So on consistency, Cooper i vn tvuoiaivuti, topg thftm M thlg season. Thoae -boys play here on Sat urday', the TSlst, and the nation al amateur opens in Portland Monday, the 23rd, running all week. so. therell be plenty of golf to look at not far from home this month. Partly with the visit of the hot 28 irs as well, shots ln mind but for of the every day golfers the Salem Golf club Is -getting busy on that necessary though re grettable midsummer task ot top dressing the greens. They'll be tough for a week or more, but by Auiust 21 should be in he rr" over the k. i if i r inn Kf nnurgBitiiiniH aua for the ace professionals - and then the tees will be shoved away back ln the woods to make I tough for them. m a ii League Baseball CUAST LEAGUE r w ib. ".".V I San Diego ....73 51 ....69 54 .589 J Sacramento .5611 1 San Francisco ....67 56 .543 .537 Portland .........5 56 I Los Angeles ......64 59 J Oakland .........56 68 teatue i ix .418 .379 Missions ........ .17- 77 AMERICAN LEAGUE I nr , i . Pet. 1 . H f- A k n w ion ....... .09 zr .670 .604 .580 I r....,, tl 17 .570 I BW.WIl . .......-- Cleveland .42 44 .488 .452 .326 .303 Washington ......59 47 .......29 80 .2C 60 St. Louis . . Philadelphia NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. .....58 32 .....54 38 Pet-! 644 Chicago New York .587 PHtahnrrh . 47 42 .528 .528 j Bo8t0n 45 47 489 Brooklyn .36 51 414 Cincinnati ........35 52 Philadelnhia .....37 56 .409 398 WESTERN INTERNATIONAL Vancouver 7-1, Spokane 6-0 Tacoma 6. Wenatchee 4. Yakima 3. Lewiston 0. BK. MMM Mk. - - M - - . First Division Clubs all Lose Blis&ions Take Third From Beavers Who Develop Slumo in Hitting f 9- PORTLAND, July 31 -P)-The San Francisco Missions, playing great baseball behind the fine pitching of Tost, humbled the Portland Bavers for the thrd consecutive time tonight and put the series to date on a 4 and, z basis. The score was 5 to 1. Two of the Mission runs came in the sixth when West hit a home run over the right field fence be hind Rosenberg, who had doub led. 1 The Beavers' lone tally was scored in the sixth on a single Iby Manager Sweeney, a passea on" and ClabauKh's single. 1 After their great winning streak in which they won 20 games out of 2 3 played, the reac tion has struck the Beavers, near ly all of whom have gone Into a hitting slump before tne strong arm pitching of the Mission hujrl- ers. m Missions ....6 14 Portland 1 1 I Tost and Sprinz: Hare ahd Tresh. Suds WinrAgain SEA IX Lb, JUiy i A-uri-urea.' The tribe got 11 Stffe blOWS 6ff Salvo and Gonzales, and Capital ised on four San Diego errors. Two runs in the first put the Indians ahead. but the. Padtes Md the score with ran in the third and fourth. In the fifth Seattle went "wild to tally five runs on three hjts and a couple of errors. Sao Diego made one more in the seventh- San Diego's starting battery Salvo and Detere, went out in the first Inning for protesting a deci sion. San Diego ........... . Seattle 7 11 Salvor Gonzales and Dot or Starr; Barrett and Splndel. Angels Still Win LOS ANGELES, July Sl.-JQ- A tw-r.in rallv in tho last of the ninth innine Kave the Angels their seventh triumph in a row today over sacramenw. t Red Evans finally received cred it for a masterful hurling per- forma nee as Los Angeies won. to 2 The Angels came into the ninth one run bemna, dui won oeiore there were any outs. 1 Sacramento i Los Angeles - 3 10 3 Klinger and Franks; Evans and Collins. L Oaks Defeat Seals SAN i'KAWUXSUU. JUiy x -Bill Meyers" iast-siepping u registerea anotner vum baseoan victory over iub ou Francisco Seals here today, 8 to s Jack La Rocca, speedy hurler ' UUI1CI Is don 1 for tbe Oaks, set the Seals in all but one inning, uaaiana ... o San Francisco .2 2 I La Rocca and Raimondi; La manski and Monso. Sodality Winner I V In First 1 MT. ANGEL The first ga !ZJ2 Ulaved Friday night with the So- i - 4-. From the first inning tie game was a pitching duel between M M.y and Bean, but errors gave the Sodality a four-run margin. ! The second game ot the two tout ot mreo se feyr n out of three series will be played -4 -1 ' 0 -0 4. t 3 mnA Beyer; Bean and 1 J I Warner. Umpires Scharbach and Schleslnger. In the preliminary gtrl'i game c.lf.lri'a Whit. Rnt fmrretin an Plavotf " early lead to defeat Walton's Red !"Sox 18-12. This was a practice game to prepare the girls tor the state softball tournament to held at Salem. J. L. Wachter Is now managing the team Girl Softballers Wai Co on Road SILVERTON The local soft ball girls' 'team sponsored, by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, will play MeMlnnville August 8 at tie McMinnvIlle field. f Taking part in the team work are Wreva Devericas, captain. Thelma DonneU, manager; Helen I Selley. catcher; Genevieve Scott, pitcher; first base, Ethel Buf- I roughs; second base, Neva- Don- neil; third base, Audna MHH: 1 short stop, Juanita Moe and Wreva Devericks: left field. Eve lyn Green; center field, Wllma Kneiss; right field. Viginta Meek;, subs. Wllma Mills and Can't Use Them it . t m tvIi r L y ?VO - J I . 4 . , " f . v mMSs0 w " t j. N is' ' -""N, Some fight authorities think Tommy Farr will need all those gloves if he intends to knock the heavyweight erown from the head of Joe Louis. Farr, British heavyweight champ, is pictured unpacking at Jus training tamp, Long Branch, N. J., where he is preparing for his scheduled tussle Hew York with the Brown Bomber. Andy Tremaine Seeks Vengeance in Name of Qeanies Upon bad Moran; . Burns and Higami Also on Program Sailor Moran, big and bad torso tormentor from the wharves of New Orleans, will meet Andy Tremaine, trappier from Tucson in the great southwest, as the main event fea ture of the American Legion's weekly wrestling shindig at the local concussion coliseum Tuesday night. Moran, whose greatest fame is as an exponent of a Softball INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE W. Hansen's 3 St. Joseph's 3 Paper Machine .... 2 Kay Mill 2 Valley Motor 1 Building Supply ....1 Bankers . . 0 Paper Office 0 L. Pet. 0 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .333 .333 .000 .000 Scores Last Week Kay 8-Valley Motor 3; Bank ers 5-St. Joseph's 9; Hansen 10 P. O. ; Building Sup, 7-Paper Machine 5; Paper Machine 8-P. O. 1; St. Joseph's 16-Building Supply 10; Hansen 3-Kay ; Bankers 2 -Valley Motor 6. Schedule Monday V-8- vs. Paper (OMnaer): Hansen vs. B. M. S. (Leslie). Tuesday Bank vs. Paper O. (O.); Kay vs. SL Joseph's (L.). Thursday- Kay vs. B. S. (O.); Bank vs. Hansen (L.). Friday Paper M. vs. St. Jo aeph's (O.): Paper M. vs. V-8 (I). Leading Hitters AB H PcV M. Hall. P. O. 83 17 .515 J. Monoco. Hansen .35 17 .486 "Don Brown, B. S. ..22 H -471 Garrett, B. S. ..... .38 18 .474 W. Ritchie, Bank ..20 9 .460 Medill. Hansen 20 9 .450 Armstrong. P. O. ..27 12 .444 K. Browa, B. S. ....34 14 .412 Anderson, H. L. ... .38 15 .394 O. Bahlburr. H. L. ..22 12 .375 E. Kay, Kay z& Follrich. Hansen ....28 10 357 Ross. Bank ........34 12 352 N. Hllborn, B. S. ..34 12 N. Dels. St. Joseph ..23 8 .348 Barrkk, B. S. 29 10 .345 Bodenhelmer, Kay ..35 12 .343 P. Hoffert, St. Jos. ..25 8 .320 Shlpman, Kay ......25 8 .329 KV Gallagher, St. Jo. 29 9 .31 J. Tlush. Bank 33 10 .303 Fitzgerald,' B. S. ....33 10 -m E. Reid, Kay 33 xo -30J Dtielteen. B. S. .... 30 9 .300 Approaching Test Honor Is Divided SILVERTON Mrs. Carl Hande and Mrs. C. A. Reynolds wete winners of this, week's approach Ing contest for the Silverton tem- lnina rollers. A strip contest bad been planned but due to the cool er weather plans were cnangea. "Mrs. Henry Waldner and her danrhter. Miss Phvllis were hos tesses. Mrs. Alfred Adams wUl Salem, Oregon Sunday Morning, Angust All, Tommy! right to the heart which be calls a wrestling hold, has been terror izing the cleanie contingent for some weeks past and Tremaine, riding the rattlers from Arizona, has sworn to rid this half of the continent of the Louisiana Lar- ruper. Tremaine last week lost out to Bob Cummings in a fearfully clean and unexciting match but the de feat has left the valiant Arlzonan undaunted. Bobby Burns, suntanned pro duct ot West Palm Beach real estate tracts, will tangle with Tet- suro Higami, Japanese expert whose auntan has been with him since birth. In' the 45 minute event. Higami is an expert in the jiu-jitsu popular in his native Nip pon but doesn't hold out so well against the hit and run tactics of American grappling. Bob Cummings. San Francisco, will meet Ted Kusik in the 30- minute opener. Martin on Record For Better Came BEND, July 21. --Reitera ting his previous statements that we must keep the game commis sion out ot politics," Governor Martin said here tonight that the money sportsmen put up must go back Into the production of fish and birds so that the bountiful outdoors nature has given Oregon can be developed to the fullest extent." Arriving here with members of the game commission after visit ing fish hatcheries and game farms along the coast the execu tive declared "we should urge the people to get out of the crowded cities on to hunting and fishing trips." On the first two days of a three day trip the party saw 1, 500.000 steelheads, 100.000 rainbow trout and thousands of cut-throats In the hatcheries and thousands of Chinese pheasant eggs being hatched at tbe game farms at Eugene and Corvallis. A NOTICE! We Will not be responsible for acci dents happening to anyone riding on unsafe tires . . . when they can get Goodrich Safety Silvertowns for as little as 75c per week. : GOODRICH SILVERTOWN STORES . WALTER H. ZOSEL, Mgr. 108 Sonth ComT. : r Ph. 1, 1937 Cubs Continue ? To Widen Lead Land on Carl liubbell for Dozen Blows; Cards in Tie for Third now CHICAGO. July 31.-flV-Tex Carleton baffled the Giants like Houdini today with a three-hit nftrhinr martarntaoa that vara tho Cuba a 7 to 1 victory over the National league lead to five full eamea. Hurling one of the best games OI ms career, uarieton pucnea perfect ball from tne ena or tne first to the start of the ninth inning. Not a man reached first base off him in that stretch, and only two batters were able to get the ball out of the infield. The Cubs landed on Carl Hub- bell for a dozen hits, and, after taking a 4-0 edge by the fifth inning, never left any doubt as to the outcome. The victory was the second in a row for the Cubs in the current series. Led by Gabby Hartnett, who hit a three-run double and a single and drove in four runs, the Cubs New York 1 s 1 Chicago , 7 12 0 Hubbell and Danning; Carle- ton and Hartnett. Mayo Does Blerriwell PITTSBURGH, July 31.-P)- Eddie Mayo's pinch single in the ninth with the bases loaded lent a story-book finish to a 9-7 tri-: umph of the Boston Bees over Pittsburgh today. Mayo came up with two out and slashed a single Into center. scoring Gene Moore, who had doubled, and Elble Fletcher, who had been purposely passed. Boston 9 13 2 Pittsburgh 7 t 0 Fette. Lanning. Gabler, Hutch inson, Smith and Muller; Bow man, Weaver, Brown, Swift and Todd. Reds Rally Short CINCINNATI, July 31.-3V- Scorlng three runs on Les Scar- Bella's ninth-inning homer, a CIn cinnatl rally fell short today and the Reds lost a tree-hitting con test to the Phils. 10 to 8. The Quaker city cellar-dwellers garnered a total of 18 safeties oftl Red hurlers. Philadelphia -.10 18 3 Cincinnati 8 14 3 Walters, Johnson, Mulcahy and At wood; Hallahan, Mooty. Schott and Lombard!. Haines Fools Dodgers ST. -LOUIS, July Zl.-JPy- Grandpa Jesse Haines and his venerable fenuekle-ball fooled the Dodgers in the pinches today and the Cardinals topped the Brook - lyns, 4 to 3, in their current series opener. Although he was tagged for a J dozen hits, he pitched the Cards! into a tie for third place in the National league Brooklyn 3 12 1 St. Louis 4 8 0 Fltssimmons, H e n s h a w and Phelps; Haines and Owen. Sweeney Signs up For x4nother Year PORTLAND, July 31-W)- Wllliam Joseph Sweeney, fiery baseball leader who piloted Port land's ball team to a coast league nanwent tti 1 O Is mTtrl tlft-fisvt whn.. m,n.rnnt th Bavers . . 7h.. unuvi todav the contract to manage the team ln 1938 Sweeney, who also plays first base with the team, will receive an increase in salary. President sr. j Schafter aald. The manager was surprised to b handed a contract so early. Holm Beats Leal For State Crown EVERETT. July 30-UPV-Rudy Holm, of the Olympic club, Seat tle, was crowned the 1937 state amateur golf champion at the Everett Golf and Country club thin evening. Over a gruelling 26-hole match, the culmination of a full week of coif here, he defeated Leslie Leal, Cellinaham, the defending champion, by the narrow margin of one up. PAGE SEVEN . Silverton Is not a town to let a good thing lie Idle. The baseball loving Inhabitants of our perky little neighbor to the northeast haTe been getting plenty of good oat of their S12.000 baseball plant. The Silver Falls club, be sides its regular Sunday engage ments, has been playing several night games a week, one of which Friday night went to ao many extra frames that they finally had to call it a draw. Now comes tbe "i,. lj J?"La.nd park MonT niKht L,iaoaugn s Ambition. Outwardly the purpose of the eame at Silverton Monday be tween the Beavers and Reliable Shoe is to aid the Shoemen, win ners of the Oregon semi-pro title, to go to Wichita for the national tournament but in re ality it all comes from the am bition of Moose Clabaugh to be the first man to knock n ball out of I Silverton V Immense park. PVom home plate to the .closest board in fair territory it's 305 yards and that is quite a drive for anybody. It was enough so that in all of the semi-pro tournament not even the lustiest sluggers eould park one outside the field. riemy OT AOOm. The playing area of the Silver- ton park is big enough to be the theatre of action of a South Am erican revolution and a few Boston tea parties on the side. There have been nlentv of home on the Inside of the fence with the gents who ride herd on the outer fringes galloping around In search : for the strayed horse- hide but the batter who puts one out ot the park will probably have his name enscrolled in the records as a super-colossal. Heuman Hits Heavy. Al Henmaa, Willamette baseball j player last year and the year before, was second In bitting in the recent semi-pro tsMraamcnt. As a St. Helens tfJelder Henmaa collected 11 aafetk la Z times at bat. He eras second to a team-mate, Lorcn Wodeage, who got 15 kits fat 20 bats. Wodeage will now Join the House of David, the grapevine says. Wait's vs. Hogg's. Wait's and Hogg's, who have been on even terms in the soft- I ball war since Wait s dropped an extra Inning game to the Paper makers last week, will battle it ( out Monday night on Sweetland field. So far Wait's have had it I over Hogg's, winning both times tbe clubs have met in regular play I although Hogg's took a win in a game which didn't count in the standings.; They are the most I powerful and best balanced of any J of the six clubs and one or both 1 of them Is sure to be a Salem J representative ln the state tour I nament. Square Deal and the Man's Shop, a club which has begun to make tbe leaders worry, meet in the second contest HeaviesMaybe? There may be a move coming np aooa to bring heavyweight wreaUerm into Salem to replace the p reseat mlddlewelghts. The heavies have outdrawn the mid dies meat everywhere the two have ran in competition and the American Legion, sponsor of wrestling here, is toying with the gea ot changing to heavies. Wrestling crowds have 7allem off lately and tbe boys have be gnn to wonder whether the wrestling fans aren't tiring ot it all. too9 I Rogers Hornsby was booted out lot the pilot honse of the St. Lewis Rras for betting on the ponies na' according to the Sporting News, Frankie Frisch may suffer the- same i fate at the Cardinal establishment. Despite their chain gang of farms the St. Louis Na tionai leaguers nave one 01 tneir most poorly balanced clubs in years and Frisch, no longer valu able as an active player, may get the ax. VJ El IS S BOB CmiMINCS ysTED kuslk Salem Armory, Lowe Moor ftOc, Balcony 4Uc. Reserved Scats T3e (K Tax) , Stndeats 2Sc, Ladlca S5c rlckeia. Cliff Parker's and Lytle's . Aaaplrea American Legion Herb Owen, Matchmaker Wait and Hogg Will Break Tie Barring Later Upset, It's Deciding .Contest for Season's Honors SOFTBALL LEAGUE W. L. PH. Wait's ...J 10 2 .833 Hogg Bros. 10 2 .833 Papermakers 8 4 .661 Man's Shop i 7 .417 Square Deal ..2 10 .167 Eagles 1 11 .083 It may be alt over but the shouting after Wait's and Hog Bros, play their "crucial" soft ball tilt on Sweetland field Mon day night at 8:15. There is possibility of a lat er upset but it appears that the. winner of the big game M 'iiday night will be tbe team which comes out on top at tbe nd of the season. tThe two clubs have been bat tling for top position from the opening night. Walt's held a slight edge until they" were upset last week by .the Papermakers becaj.se they had twice defeated Hogg's In league battles. Hogg's only losses during the season have been the two to Wait's while the Papermakers and the Man's Shop both posted wins over Wait's. Clothiers Threaten The Man's Shop, which has shown 6igns of becoming a tough. , hurdle in the stretch, will be the obstacle the winning team of the Wait's-Hogg business has to get over. Both of them have yet a game with the Clothiers on schedule. Should Hogg's win they will have the toughest row to hoe for they must also meet the driving Papermakers while Waits, be sides the Man's Shop, have left only a game with the .- hapless Eagles. The Papermakers. with three games yet to play, have a math ematical but improbable chance to tie for the title. For them to get Into a tie would necessi tate both Hogg Bros, and Walt'e (Turn to Page 2. Col. 1 ) lirowhx yesr tire rkHsrs tvray ca Tires U How's your chance to save real money 07 oimac wcw mileage.fuH dimension Command er. Extra wide, heavy tread. Buy act oy-rsn Commanders while prices are low. Trtt toktmt 1 ifc mux Goodrich Commanders -CYUY INC A CMnglCB TIBg 45 Walter H. Zose! MANAGER 190 South Com!. Ph. 9156 IT H II N SAILOR MORAN vs. ANDY TREMAINE 1 Howr BOBBY BURNS vs. TETSURO HICAAIl 43 Mln. TUESDAY AUG. 3 0:30 ax in as ins Am vL nil Thelma DonneU. be next week's hostess.