PAGE TWO flhe OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Orezcn. Sunday Morning, July 23, 1939 RecbrdCrayd Views Contest Sil verton to Play j - Team From Washington for -' ' Regional-Title r- (Continued from pas 1) and twice in the fiaal frame on Moye's Infield bingle, Satert dou ble and Qribble'a one-baa blow t right. , Two Doable Plays Kali Tea Game Two staling double plays, one by each club, helped give "lift" to a same otherwise lacking - the zest- of its immediate predecessors ' in the tourney. In the third, Catcher Lepttch gobbled BP Whit man's dribble- in front! of the plate, pegged him oat at rirst and received first baseman Eater's re lay back to the plate to nip Andy Harney's attempt to score. Silver ton's doable-killing ended! the ball game, coming in the last of the ninth as Pesky took I Grant grounder to force Gribble at sec ond, aad Klrsch relayed to get Grant at first ! 1 Commissioner Ray Brooks aald tonight's gate grossed 9121 over the preTions single night top. , .But the overflow, record crowd failed to bring the total tourna ment gate up to last year' mark of $4800. It fell approximately $500 abort, according to Brooks. Last year's record gate was set as Sllverton's entry came into the ' finals onee beaten and forced Ed wards Furniture into ani extra game to decide the title. Albany (3) - Shoots, 3 . Grant, m . McClalne, r Oravec, 1 Leptich, e b at h A 0 0 a o ..1 0 0 1 o o 0 o i i 0 0 0 Gentzkow, 2 4 Moye, .. 3 Sater. X .... 4 Wilson, p 2 Gribble, 3 . 4 MeFadden, p 2 Totals 33 S1I verton (11) B , Klrsch, 2 Pesky, a,.- 5 . Schwab,, 3 4 Harney, r 5 Bonney, 1 5 Sylvester, 1 5 Whitman, m S Erautt, c . 4 Heist, p ; 5 3 10 12 27 A O R H 3 4 I 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 7 1 2 0 3 0 C 1 12 2 27 1 0 4 2 21 2 0 1 1! 1 1 Totals . 44 11 17 Errors, Leptich. Moye, Gentx - kow. IS hits 10 runs off Wilson in ; 6, 2 and 1 off MeFadden In 3. 10 and 3 off Heist in 9. Losing pitcher, Wilson. Runs responsible for. Wilson 4, MeFadden 1. Heist 3. Struck oat, by Heist 11, Wilson 3. MeFadden 1. Bases on. balls, oft Heist 4, Wilson 1, MeFadden 1. Stolen base, Klrsch 2, Eraatt Three base hit, Klrsch, Pesky 2, Leptich, Bonney. Two base hit, McClalne, Erautt, Schwab,! Sater. Sacrifice, Leptich. Rons batted ni, Bonney I, Klrsch 3, Pesky 2, Eraatt 2, Leptich, Schwab, Grlb-4 "big 2. Double play, Leptich to Sater to Leptich,-Pesky to Klrsch to Sylvester. Left on base, Albany 1, Sllverton 8. Time of same 1 hour 50 minutes. Umpires 'Burke, Garbarino, Turple and Regele. , Waits Take Over ot (Continned from page l) him. The tall Pheasant insiders cot down some drives that looked good for hits. Elslminger got three hits for the Pheasants; L. Singer, W. GenUkow, Weisner and D'Arcy two each for the Dea lers. .- .. j . Schoen's had - only seven ball player on hand when the) opener was called but the absentees re ported ' in the nick : of time and the bakers worried through 12 ex citing inning to ease out a 4-a victory over' the 'Paper makers. The paper men scored in the sec ond when K. Lenaberg hit a ho mer to left and Mlckenham, next no. circled the base on three er rors. For the next five Innings, the Papermakers were held hit- less, only three men to. an inning facing Ken Larson. , f -That tisht defense did the ba kers no good until they eked out an earned run on one hit, by K. Larson himself. In the sixth; in the eigth Frankie Evans : banged League Top Sd O . -. - V i A Mercy Plane Crash Survivor Rejoins His Famly Walter B. Salter, 52. aviation machinist' mate, first class, is shown with his family bi wife and two children, Nancy Kay, left, and Dorothy Lee la their Brooklyn, N. Y, horn. Salter was out of those rescued when a coast guard hospital plare N : 7?f 7.V Vivv ;::: ?: , i jr. ? 1 ; RepreseatatiTe of Harlan connty, Kyn coal mine operator and the United Mine Worker of America are - show as they signed an agreement at Harlan for the ending; of the bitter labor dispnte that had been puctaated with shootings. Left to right (seated) George Ward, secretary of operators; R. K. Lawnou. operators' vice president; Earl Hoack, anion attorney ; O. E. Gassoway, of anion; C. L Dawson, opera tors attorney, and William. Tnrnbiazer, onion di!trkt president. Standing: G. Titter, onion district secretary; E. C. Townsend, onion coonsel, and W. H. Sienknecht, mine operator. out a homer just where Lena berg' had gone, and the score was tied. The payoff came in the 12th when Weller doubled and scored on an error and Gwynn, safe on fielder s choice, came home on Ken Larson's double. The Paper makers got two on in their half but couldn't score. K. Larson and Evans got two hits for the win ners, K, Lenaberg and Mlcken ham for the losers. Schoens . .4 8 4 Papermakers 2 5 1 K. Larson and B. Larson: Ml ckenham and G. Keller. Square Deal ...1 10 3 Pheasants ...6 8 0 H. Singer and L. Singer; Apple- gate and Pangle. . Parachute Device Traps 2d Couple NEW YORK. -July 22-tpv-The New York world's fair 250-foot captive" parachute jump trapped in mid-air tonight its second couple in less than two weeks. The victims, Deputy Sheriff Lawrence Tetrault. 30, of Brent wood (Long IsTand, NY), and his sister-in-law, Agnes Nielsen, 27, of Woburn, Mass., were released by mechanics after being suspend ed in their rfwlng-chair 140 feet above tUft ground fir 3 5 minutes., On July 12, Mf. and - Mrs: J. Cornelius Rathbone, socially prominent Long Islanders, spent five hours in the air about 14 feet lower than tonight's victims when a pulley froze on the guide wires that direct the 11 'chutes to the ground from the too of a huge steel tower. Tonight's accident was caused by a loose wire breaking the huge ring which hold9 the parachute distended. Water Front Held Due to Get Peace PORTLAND. July 2Z.-JPy-A diminishing number of waterfront disputes as "irresponsible" labor leaders, are replaced was predict ed last night by Almon Roth, pres ident ot the San Francisco employ ers council. Addressing a session of the in stitute on. northwest affairs. Roth said employers were responsible for 63 per cent of last year's 4000 strikes because in many cases em ployers refused to bargain collect ively with their men. He added that "now that cause of trouble Is past and business men have to deal collectively." - , Roth said be expected no water front tie-up in September because "pay, conditions of work and hours are good." crashed after off th ketch Two members Bailor died in picked up by a Union Contract Ends Harlan's Strife ddi tico . . . in the leu$ WYANET. 111.. July 22.-tiP- Sabscribers to the Wyanet Record, a weekly, received their papers today with one page of a four page section blank except for the following In small type; "Don't laugh. We had a helluva time filling the other three pages." NEW YORK, July 22.-(P)-Today's sea story is about the sailor on leave who, fatigued with waiting for a subway train after an evening In Brooklyn, started to walk. First Class Bosnian Paul W. Worshan, 22, of the USS Seattle, lowered himself carefully from the station platform and strode off down the track. But after a short distance, sleep overcame him. He lay down in a depression between the rails. At least two subway trains sipped over the sleeping gob, in visible in the gloom. Station Agent James Kinney, riding a train to work, saw a figure, between the rails. The train jolted to a stop. Seaman .Worshau opened a sleepy eye, and said, "Good morning, how are you 7" - He suffered only scratches. ,. , U . : ; Mill Worker Dies As Mishap Result LYONS, July 22. Otto Geer- ston, 41, of Mill City, died at a Sa lem hospital at 12:55 today of a fractured skull sustained while working at the Hallln Lumber company here. A timber which Geerston was loading on a railroad car is report ed to have slipped, hitting him on the head. CCC Educator Is Released on Bond VANCOUVER, Wash.. July 22. -;P-Donald s. Mace, 41, San Francisco, CCC education director for this district, arrested on his es tranged wife's complaint that he menaced her with a pistol, was re leased from the county jail on 250 bond today. Mrs. Elizabeth Mace told Police Sergeant Fred Rafferty her hus band objected to friends she en tertained. He appeared at her home yesterday with a pistol, she said, threatened to shoot, the friends, fired three shots into fireplace and insisted he would kill himself. No formal charge was filed. 1 taking a pneumonls-itrickcn saOot Atlantis, off th New Jersey coast. of the plana crew and th ailing th accident. Th survivor wart whale boat from th Atlantis. t '! ! J. f - - NY World's Fair Has Bargain Day NEW YORK, July 22-(fl)-The first "Dollar Day" at the New Nork world'a fair offering $2.25 worth for f 1 todxy drew 291,500 persons. It was the third highest dally attendance since opening day. A total of 256,253 bought spe cial weekend bargain tickets en titling them to admission, 20 cents worth of food and admission to five amusement attractions, and 35,247 were admitted on passes. The combined figure was exceeded only on opening day, April 30, and May 14 when official attendance figures were respectively 605,000 and 306,736. Under the present trial arrange ment, the regular 75ent general admission charge remains in ef fect Mondays through Fridays. Girl Is Suddenly Heir to $100,000 .ASHEVILLE, N. C, July 22.-()-Fifteen year old Nancy Cooper Ken nickel was back at her farm home at Fletcher today from trip to Florida that made her the foster daughter of Mrs. Mary E. Adamson of Miami and heir to a $100,000 trust fund. Mrs. Adamson, who said she was attracted to the youngster during a visit at an inn operated by the girl's parents, plans to undergo an operation here after an indefinite rest period. Mrs. Adamson and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kennickell signed papers in Florida this week making Nan cy the legal daughter of Mrs. Adamson. The foster mother said she wanted to get the adoption completed before undergoing the operation. Citizen Soldiers Begin Gun Firing CAMP BONNEVILLE, July 22- (P)-Opening of the annual CMTC camp was marked today by the rattle of rifle, machine gun and pistol fire today as 585 young sters from southwest Washington and Oregon started their short term military training. Practice shooting with rifles was started by basic students. Sec ond yearmen took up work with automatic rifle on the 1.000-inch range, third year men fired pis tols and fourth year men machine guns. Widow of Editor Dies at Portland PORTLAND, July 22 UP Mrs. Harriet D. Fisher, 15, the widow of . Rev. A. N. Fisher, for mer editor ot the Pacific Chris- tian Advocate .Methodist church publication, died yesterday at the nome of her son, Ray D. Fisher, in Forest Grove. At the time of her death, Mrs. Fisher waa the oldest living gra duate of Northwestern universi ty, Evanston, 111. Gold Rush Boosts Town Population VMESQU1TK. Sonora. Mex'Only 22 -W) A gold rush has swelled the population of this little Til lage from 20 to several thoutand la recent weeks. Francisco- Arballo. who has been panning gold in this region several years, reported making a rich strike June 24. News of his discovery spread, attracting 2,000 miner an 4 their families. Body Ig Recovered : PORTLAND, Jaly 22-7-Po-ilce and a professional diver recov ered the body of Gebrga Taylor, 18, from Columbia slough near Hayden Island yesterday. He drowned while swimming the channeL Hi body was lodged be tween two railroad trestle pilings. Seattle Has Tremor SEATTLE, . July JJrV-T h first local earth , tremor sine 19S7 were recorded at 8:01 a. m. today on th seismograph at the University of Washington and felt by many Seattle residents. ii'iu'ii'''1"'''"'' Boy Shoots Girl Over two Cents Said He 'Aimed .22 Rifle at Her to Scare Her, It , Went off Mt. CLEMENS, Mich... July 22 (jf) Eleven-year-old Stanley Dobrok tearfully told authorities today be ahot hi 14-year-old; Bis ter Trances fatally during an ar gument over two cents she owed him for picking berries. "Bat I didn't mean to oo u.r Prosecutor Iran A. Johnston Quoted the boy ss saying. The fatal weapon was n .22 ca liber rifle Stanley won in a ma gaslne contest. His father, John Dobruk, 43-year-old farmer, baa forbidden him to use the gun. Frances was Killed as she stood at an ironing board in the kitchen of the Dobrnks' farm home near New Haven, Mich. He was using the gun to frighten her, Stanley told John ston, when "suddenly it went off. and she fell to the floor." The boy said he was angry be cause of the two-cent debt, and also because "she skid I took 15 cents from her bedroom, and said she would get even with me -the next time I had any money. Johnston sent the boy home with hi parent tonight. After funeral services for the girl have been held, the prosecutor will pre sent a report to Probate Judge Ray H. Callens, who presides in Juvenile cases, and Judge Callens will determine what action is to be taken. Man Badly Burned In Saving Family La GRANDE. July 22 UP) Edwin Phillips was in critical con dition at a hospital here today, suffering from burns received in rescuing two of his children from burning house at Elgin. The family awakened to find the house in flames early today. Mrs. Phillips and two other chil dren also were badly burned. They were in the hospital, too. Kitten Born on Hot Day Are Given Biblical Names TOLEDO. Ore.. July 22-(JP)- The mercury went to 95 todoay, breaking all 1939 hear records, nd Susie, feline mascot in the of fice of Associated Press Corres pondent Lamar Newklrk, gave birth to three black kittens. Their names Shadrack, Me- shack and Abednego for biblical characters who braved the Baby lonian fiery furnace. CAPITOL LUMBER CO. :Ww Ky WW rawiaiyW W Lowest Term Loan on the Market! Smallest Monthly Payments! Only 5 Interest! Pay Like Rent! . Ilighest Appraisal Value! There's A Leads Eapitel M EBlS3If ,6B Inc. 'Courting Brings Charges : : - .a JSwV-M .A. v.' -' James J. Kehoe, 24, acensed of the side of her present hnsband and holding her 24 hours, to shown (center) 1st Northampton, Massu, as state police booked htm oo char ges of kidnaping, nalawfnl noessiosi of a dangerous weapon, armed robbery and larceny. His former wife, bow Mrs. Berniee Beckwith, was amhart. American Victim Of Chinese Riots SHANGHAI, Jaly 22-H An American and three Chinese were killed and 19 persons wounded to day in Shanghai's worst outbreak of terrorism in two years. A. F. Wilson, 47, former Phila- delphian known np and down the China coast as "Tug," died of gunshot wounds received when he tried to halt one of a. group of terrorists fleeing from' a pistol and grenade; raid on the plants of two newspaper supporting the Chinese regime of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. One of the Chinese" was killed when the terrorists fired several shots into one of the newspaper offices. Another Chinese and one of the gunmen was killed in an ensuing gun battle with police on a densely crowded street. A Russian cabaret girl, three Chinese policemen of the interna tional settlement and 15 Chinese bystanders were among the Jim kw 25. YEN mm Payments as low as $5.85 per $1000 per month! Buy your own home with what you now pay for rent! Reason Why the Field! - " ' " t - - I'M 4 'v- 'J f abduction of hi ex-wife from the wounded. Mor than 159 ahot were tired and ' several handgre nades thrown. Police said the terrorists all were ot Chinese nationality. English "Terries'' Started Training LONDON, July 22-flP)-Peaceful rural roads of England echoed to night to the rumble ot tanks, the roar of trucks and the tramp of marching men as 50,000 territor ial troops set out for two weeks ot intensive training. Batchers, bakers and farmers who mustered out were the first ot 135,000 men who will be in camp within 10 days in New For est, South Hampshire. - The maneuvers by the territor ial troops the equivalent of the United States national guard will be the largest in Britain's peacetime history. Why Pay Rent when I X K-"' '1' J V" - - . v- " M .4; 7 i - ' . liberal rovernment-insured F, H. A. Loan which. pro tectar your equity in your property and . build your own home, to your own requirements, .in a highly re stricted residential district? , 1020 N. Commercial St. Troops Searching Kidnaped Minister JERUSALEM, July 11.JP) British troops, warplanes and po lice prepared tonight to seek Rev. Gerould R. Goldner, kidnaped Ohio pastor, -as failure to contact his Arab abductors diminished hope for ransoming of the Ameri can. United States Consul - General George Wads worth said .action was being taken to launch the search probably tomorrow in. the Moab hills, where the 29-year-old- Mogadore, O., preacher has been held since Tuesday. The latest disappointment, came tonight when a search of the Bethlehem countryside, touched off by an ananymous telephone call from Bethlehem, proved fruit less. The message from Bethlehem said the Arabs were ready to re lease the American, but Bedouin tribesmen were unable either to trace the call or to find any clue to the whereabouts of the kidnap band. A. A. Miller, of Sioux City, la., general secretary of the YMCA, in Jerusalem, said the failure of this lead destroyed hopes of es tablishing contact with Goldner's abductors before morning. Sky-Writer Takes Speedy Ride Here Within less than 24 hours fly ing time from New York City. Jack 'Wilcox, commercial flier, dropped down into Salem at 4:15 o'clock Saturday morning to ful fill an engagement which Included skywriting and stunting. He had left the metropolis at 2:30 a. m. Friday, bat stopped In Chicago for two hours. He was not trying tor speed on this trip. Flying "from fair to fair" re cently, Wilcox left San Francisco and . arrived over Manhattan 11 hours and 15 minutes later ac tually 40 mnlutes faster than the recognized cross-continental speed record, for which he is not eli gible to .compete. He flies a low wing Hanley Page monoplane with twin mo tors, each 240 horsepower. He flies for the American Tobacco company and the Standard Oil company. forld Famous AKRON TRUSSES Correctly Fitted We Guarantee Comfort and Security CAPITAL DRUG STORE . 1 05 State, Cor. Liberty Your Friends are Building YOU CAN TOO! Take Advantage of the Services of an AutBority ! Mr. John R, Towlem, former Associate Direc tor Federal Howslng Administration, is at the Capitol Lumber Company and will help yon secure yowr loan, prepare all paper and other details free of charge. There is abso Intely no charge for onr many complete, addi tional servctes. . - von can take advantage of thb Phone 9293