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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1941)
Rose Davis ine The Skip on Triple Traipse mpea OGI ht: Home: For 7th S ire- Win Before . "Losin pom Comb Trh; Soloiis Jaeva Swept- 1 0 (L jOB -It traig g One Indiana Sport By RON GBDIELL Whenever something out of the ordinary happens in a fistic session, as the bell argument in the Louis-Baer boppo did the other night, it . starts fans to reminiscing over" bygone oddi ties in f istiana s u c h as the Dempsey-Tunney long count and brings forth numerous ques tions . . . For that reason, today's Sparker spasm is devoted solely to a swing over some fight facts brought to mind by telephone calls to the sports department in the last few days.' i - j MIKE JACOBS Long before Mike Jacobs, the Duce of boxing, became associated with fight pro motion as head of the Twentieth Century Sporting club in New York, he was a silent backer: of Tex Rickard, the one and only $1,000,000 gate promoter. . As a ticket broker he put up the cash to build Boyle's Acres for the Dempsey-Carpentier fight, and several other times advanced money to Tex when the latter was In need of financing. JOE LOUIS Joe Louis is the second negro heavyweight cham pion in modern boxing . . . Jack Johnson, who got his start in bat tle royals when only 16, was first FIRST FIGHT This country's first actual pugilistic contest on record took place in J816 between Jacob Hyer and Tom Beasley . . This was strictly a personal grudge battle . . . After Hyer won he de clared, "I can lick everybody else in America." No one disputed him, so Jacob called himself the champion ... Hyer never fought again, and the "title" was vacant 25 years ... Hyer's son, Tom, claimed It, and he successfully de fended it against Yankee Sullivan, an experienced English fighter, whom he knocked out. Ryan First Champ LONDON RULES The cham pion under London prize ring rules before John L. Sullivan was Paddy Ryan,, who had only four fights In his entire career . He- lost the title to Sullivan in nine rounds in Mississippi City on February -7, 1882 . .; . Later Sulli van received universal recognition by defeating Jake Kilrain in! 75 rounds at Richbourg, Miss-, Sep tember 7, 1892 . . . This was the last of the bare-knuckle fights for the championship, I QUEENBURY RULES Under Queenbury rules, Joe Louis is the 15th holder of the heavyweight crown ... He has successfully defended the title 17 times since lifting it from James JTBraddock back in 1937 . . , His victims: Tommy Farr twice, Nathan Mann, Harry Thomas, Max Schmeling, John Henry Lewis, Jack Roper, Tony Galento, Max Baer, Bob Pastor, Arturo Godoy i twice, j Al McCoy, Red Burman, Tony Mus to, Abe Simon and Buddy Baer. EARNING S Gene . Tunney holds the record for earnings in single heavyweight title fight . . As champion he received $990,(45.54 for hit 10-ro under ; with Dempsey in Chicago in 1927 . . For a non-champion, Demp sey's pay constituted a record. . $423,000 . . . The highest rate of pay ever accorded a champion was the $470,000 Dempsey got for his bout with Luis Firpo in 1923 ... The contest lasted three min utes and 58 seconds and Dempsey was given about $120,000 a min - ute. ' Changes by KO's . TITLE CHANGES The title has changed hands most 'often on knockouts Jim 'Corbett,. Bob FiUsimmons, Jim " Jeffries, Jack Johnson, Jess W 1 1 1 a r d, Jack Dempsey, P r I m o Camera, Max Baer and Joe Louis won that way ... Tommy Bums, Gene Tunney, Jack Sharkey and Jim Braddock grabbed it by decision . . . Max Schmeling won it on a foul . Bums and Schmeling both capi talized retirement by undefeated - champions to gain the peak in Bums case Jeffries and in Schmeling's Tunney. TITLE REIGN John L. Sulli van rcignea longer t n a n any other champion .' . He was on top for ten years ... Jim Jeffries, Jack Johnson and Jack Dempsey ruled for seven, while Corbett was champ for five years Joe Louis has been the only champ since - uempsey to reign for more than two years- ! Sharkey, Camera and Baer each lasted only one year . Brad dock stuck around for ' two, but not once during, that time did he defend his title. NICKNAMES The nick names of the champions Included . Sullivari, Boston Strong Boy ' CorbettV Gentleman Jim i '. Fit - simmons. Ruby Roberti-. .". Jef fries, the Boilermaker . . . John son, Lil' Artha . . Willard, Cow boy Jess . . . Dempsey, Manassa Mauler ; . . Tunney, Fighting Ma' rine . . . Sharkey, Boston Gob . . Schmeling, Black Uhlan . . . Car- nera, Tall Tower of Sequals . . Eaer, Livermore Larruper Shaw Injured in $150,000 FuU Hour 9 See Winners PicttiireilPage' 6.. : '. .- .-V.V-, By CHARLES DUNKLEY ; INDIANAPOLIS, May 30-(P)-Mauri Rose, diminutive In dianapolis driver, and Floyd Davis of Springfield, IlL, accom plished a two-man job in . winning the 500-mile Indianapolis motor speedway, race Friday an event that was delayed an hour by fire and marred by three wrecks, j Rose and Davis split the task of piloting Davis' car to vic tory at a speed of 115.117 miles an hour in the annual Memorial day test of men and machinery on the 2 -mile brick and asphalt Winners, Injured (ow- -I K A MAURI ROSE FLOYD DAVIS 7 . v "i WILBUR SHAW Barnica Bowls Into 8th Spot Verna Bamica, of Salem Coca Cola team, bowled into eighth place in the" singles division of the Women's International Bowling congress at Los Angeles this week, it was learned in Salem Friday, Ther report stated Miss Barnica picked up 560 pins. ; f ' l l " i J i N - jjLk r'i - i iM Pugilistic Pastime Slipping to New , By WHITNEY MARTIN : ' (Special to The Statesman) NEW YORK. ' May. 30-The manly art of 'self defense could use a little right now, -for its go ing to take a lot- of feinting - and side-stepping to slip out" of the comer of disrepute into which' it cleverly has worked itself of late. The recent " Soose-Overlui "mis carriage of Justice and .the still more recent Louis- Baer Uiey-done-him-wrong episode did little toward purifying the atmosphere around the noble pastime, which never was noted - for, . the excel lence of its air-conditioning unit. It Is the fault or the game Itself .that It is - looked, upon with a leery eye by. the public . at large.- . The public cannot be expected to have any faith in the conduct of a sport whose Braddock, Cinderella i Man' ... Louis, Sepia Slayer, Brown Bomb er and Deadpan. ; . Crack-up; 1 J ! oval. Davis, who has kicked up dust on dirt tracks all over the coun try, started the race and Rose, one of the most consistent fin ishers In speedway competition, completed it Rose squirmed Into the seat of Davis' car at 177 miles after bis own mount had been forced eat by carbu retor trouble at 132 miles. .The split victory will go into the record books as a triumph for the car, which Is owned by Lou Moore of Indianapolis, retired race driver. '. There will be no official ruling until later as to whether Rose and Davis will be recorded as co-winners. The only other similar case was in 1824 when L. L. Corum started;: and Joe Boyer relieved him arid went on to win. They were listed as co-winners. Rose and Davis combined to turn in the second fastest race in the speedway's 29-year history despite nearly 100 miles of yellow flag, or "caution," driving while wreckage was being cleared from the track. Speedway officials estimated the crowd at 160,000, probably the 1 arrest yet lured by the speed classic Rose; finished more than 2 miles ahead of Rex Mays of Glen dale, Calif., who was second also in last year's race. Ted Horn, of Paterson, NJ, was third and Ralph Hepburn of Los Angeles fourth. Cliff Bergere, who makes his living as a stunt performer for Hollywood movie students, fin ished fifth and Chet Miller of De troit sixth. Harry McQuinn of In dianapolis was seventh, Frank Weame of Pasadena, Calif., eighth,? Paul Russo, of Kenosha, Wis., ninth, and Tommy Hin nershitz of Reading, Pa., tenth. Fifteen of the original 31 start ers finished the punishing grind. It was the smallest field since 1936. i With Wilbur Shaw of Indian apolis, seeking to become the only man ever to win four Indianapolis races, forced out of the running after 380 miles, the battle for the first prize of $20,000 was split wide open with Rose, Mays and Bergere as the contenders. Ber gere, forced to make a quick stop at the pits, wound up fifth but it was Rose who got out in front and stayed there. He took the lead at 412 miles, snatching it away from Bergere after Shaw was eliminated by a crash Into a wall on the south west turn. The dapper Shaw was safely in the lead when he smacked the wall. He escaped serious injury and managed to drag himself out of the wreckage and walk to a waiting ambulance. , Everett Saylor, of Dayton, O., a former school teacher, was the most seriously hurt of the four drivers who figured in accidents. His car plowed into the infield re taining wall while coming out of a curve and smashed into two parked automobiles. He was rush ed to a downtown hospital semi conscious. Tonight he was report ed in a dangerous condition. Shaw's accident stunned the great f shirt-sleeved crowd. His pretty, brunette wife, watching from a box as he tore into the straightaway at blazing speed, Delay Scribbler Martin I business men wouldn't trust each other with the right time. ,The word sport must be used with gloves in the ring when such a simple procedure as donning the gloves in the ring cannot be car ried out without scouts from op posing comers being on hand to see that a railroad spike or door knob or some other little trinket isn't slipped into a mitten with malice "aforethought: . It's equiva lent to a college football team sending a representative to hawk around the opponent's dressing room to be sure no gimmicks find their way Into the knees of the pants of the running backs. ' '. The " fighters themselves, sur rounded by this atmosphere . of mutual distrust, are usually blameless, and when they 'io take part in some off-color exhibition it is at the instigation of their sponsors. The fighters are Just. the pawns in the game, and out side of their willingness to at tempt assault to commit great r -i i iiiiiiiiriiiiiir-mmiiiiliiwiirriiiriii - - m ff"rr" . h, v...v.. Bunny Griffiths, Little Skipper of base after smacking a triple down the first base fool line in Friday's opener at Geo. E. Waters park, won by the Senators 3-0 from Wen a tehee. The Chiefs crabbed the afterpiece, 4-3. Statesman photo. SaleoJ Oregon. Saturday Softball Opener For June 9; Parade, Drawing Slated; Ticket Sales 1500 Salem's "recreationaiizecT poned to June 9 from its original Friday by Gurnee Flesher, Salem It is then that the 26-team, five-league program will swing into action with all the trimmings usually attendant to openers, including a parade of the entire association personnel. Drawings Joy Boy Wins Argonaut Gap LOS ANGELES, May 3M)- In a surprise victory, movie mag nate Louis B. Mayer's Joy Boy won the $10,000 added Argonaut handicap at Hollywood pak to day. Exemplify was second and No Competition third. f Running the mile in 1:36 35, Joy Boy came in three lengths ahead of R. A. Coward's Exem plify and paid $31.60, $14.i0-and $5.60. Exemplify paid $9.20 and $4.60. - . .1: The betting choice was ;the B. B. Robinson-Hurst Philpot entry of No Competition and f Woof Woof, which returned $2.60. Woof Woof finished fourth. Johnny Lonaden on Exemplify claimed a foul against Jack Wes- trore. Dilot of Joy Boy, but it was disallowed. i The holiday program attracted a crowd of 52,000. was on the verge of collapse at ter he crashed. I The start of the race was de layed an hoar because of a 150,000 fire which swept 24 araies and . burned the car which was to have been driven by George Barrlnger of nous ton, Tex. The fire broke Out at 7 am. from a static spark as mechanics were draining- raso llne from the car In the garage section In the Infield. More than a doxen race ears were pulled ' from the flames and seven per sons received minor burns and Injuries. I vThe fire burned out a power line which controlled the electric timing device and the start of the race, scheduled for 8 ajnn . (PST) was delayed an hour until repairs could b made. The first accident of the race occurred after 12 4 miles and in volved cars driven by Emil Endres of Chicago and Joel Thome of Burbank, Calif. Thome, trying to pass Endres, crashed into the lat- ter's car on a turn. Neither driver wsa hurt seriously but the race had to be slowed down ! for .72 miles while the wreckage was re moved bodily harm are naive and harm less. They're lust in . there do ing a job for which nature and an odd mental quirk have fitted them. . , . 3 : Nearly .every big . fight i.has its sordid .claims of fouL of robbery, oi incompetent officiating. ! ; - . S a r e 1 y do such rolnss-on shadow .the name of : amateur sport The Dartmouth-Cornell football game last fall provides a glowing comparison between sportsmanship among the " tears and the fist-flhting pros. . . The referee in that game ad mitted. he. made: an error which gave 'Cornell an undeserved vir. tory.- : Cornell promptly ; conceded that' Dartmouth was the winner. una everyoouy .was nappy abOU xne wnoie ining.;- .-,- contrast tnat exmbiuon with the one in Washington the other a a. i t TZ-Z "oanasw Wed SV1 or thorough- ly licked fighter on the basis of an unintentional foul. . - the Solons, swinrs around the Initial Morning, May 31, 1941 Rescheduled sof tball opener has been post June 2 dating, it was announced Softball association manager. are to be made ion the field to de- ermine the opening night adver saries, with each of the 26 teams standing an equal chance at par ticipation in first night's play. Ticket sales, which are ex pected to net the necessary $1500 to finance the program for the 65-nif ht season, are pro gressinr satisfactorily, Flesher stated. They have now reached the 1500-4nark, about half the uota set Opening night schedule calls for Commercial and Industrial league clubs to play the 8 pjn. game, for two City league teams to clash at 9 and for either the girls league or junior league teams to meet at 10. The games are to be regular seven-inning; affairs and are to count in the ; standings. Up to date lists of teams in the respective leagues: " City league Square Deal. Waits, Golden Pheasant, Paper Mill Office, Paper Mill Machine and an unannounced team. Commercial league Kiwanis. Blue Lake, Elfstroms, Brass Ducks, Stubby Mill's and Presby terian church. , Industrial league Paper Mil Machine, West Salem box factory. I'ostoixice, Unemployment .. com mission. Building Supply and Mile's Linen. Girls league Ester Arnold's. nuc Morgan's, Phyllis Gueff roy's and Bob Keuscher'i Sham rocks. ' Lake Fishing Held Good Good trout catches have been made in the Elk, Tumble, Leone and Joni lakes during the nas! week, states report from Glenn Charlton, district manager. . All camp grounds in the area are free of snow except Santiam, Duffy and Mowich lakes. Most of the high lakes are open but fish ermen must transverse snow to reach them, says the report Hostak Floored for Count y s Hi x NBA middleweight boxing champion, stands over the fallen i ITSalKeS-noatak of SeatUe, former tiUeholder, after Zale knocked out the Slurring Slav In the second round of their Chicago ):. battle. Zale fleored HosUk eight times. The referee is Johnny Behr. Hot Caps Top Pip uns, Defeat Tises WESTERN INTERNATIONAL - -- W U Pctl . - W t. Spokane 18 1 .720 Wen tc IS IS Yakima 413 -1 .MUTacoma 0 IS Pet JS5 .375 Vncouv'l IS ' ;J7lJSalem f It Yaumi-TMoma, rain. - SPOhtANE,7 May " 30-(P)-An eveningj thunderstorm left Van couver one-up on the league lead ing Spokane Indians -Friday by washing out the night half of a Westenf International league dou ble bill after squat Fete Jonas had tossed a three-hit, 4 to 1 vic tory fqf Vancouver's Capilanos. . The redhot Caps, currently the winningest team in the circuit, found plenty of support in the crowd tif 2000 for the trio of ex Indians who teamed up to squelch the champions.. Paul McGinn Is helped Jonas with three hits in five trips and Smead Jolley connected for two doublet. Jonas, backing . his speed with an unexpected change of pace, struck out sev en and forced eight men to pop Out' i - ' Jolley doubled In a run in the first and Spokane, tied the count immediately on a single and a Cap error, but two singles, two walks and two errors gave the Caps two tallies in the sixth to sew up! the game. - Vancouver r 4 8 2 Spokane 13 2 Jonas and Brenner; Hayes, Lan- ning (8) and Myers. i. Yaks 6, Tacoma 5 YAKIMA, May 3HVA home run inlthe last half of the 14th inning by Roy Younker gave the Yakima; Pippins a 6-5 victory over the Tacoma Tigers in a Western International league game Friday night The game saw the Tigers take a one-run lead, then the Pippins go ahead 4-1 and 5-4 and Ta coma tie the count in the ninth to force the extra innings. Sharing honors with - Younker, who hit five for seven, was Ron nie Bryant Pippins twirler who went in nail cold in the nintn aft er Quick Greer, relief) pitcher who had opened the inning and permitted the tying run to score, and forced Morry Abbott Taco ma slugger, to ground out and leave three men on the bases. Tacoma 5 12 2 Yakima 6 14 2 Holrrfes, Smith (9) and Cardo- za, Stoler (9); Barkelew, Greer (9) Bryant (9) and Sueme. Putters Fail Favored Pair HOUSTON, Tex., May 30-UP)-On the rolling 18th green of River Oaks Friday Marion Miley and Ellamae Williams buried their chances for the women's trans Mississippi golf title. Two of the finest putters in the female bri gade, they three-putted the haz ardous' carpet to lose semi-finals matches. . Mrs. Russell Mann of Omaha defeated Miss Miley, who was gunning for her third trans-Mississippi championship, .and 22- year-old Mary Agnes Wall of Menominee, Mich, chilled Miss Williams.- Each match was even through 17 holes, with holes changing like a chamelon's colors. J Ar.40MC.t4v. rf.!.----.- i Fallin Registers Third. SJmtQiit;CdleTH Boards Cameron By RON Statesman -Those highway-hungry Salem Senators stretched their home victory swath to seven straight secutive shutout in the native tive string of home shutout frames to 41 before baseball lightn ing struck, abetting the real thunder flashes which attended the steady downpour during the second game of the Western Inter national loop Memorial day doubleheader at Geo. E. Waters park Friday afternoon.; 4 Our revamped f legislators took the first game, 3 to 0, as big Ed Coleman, who signed on just before game . time, lashed a suit-winning doable against the 382-foot distant centerfleld scoreboard- to drive home Clint Cameron, Willamette U young ster who also Inked a Solon, pact Just before f tame time, with the first of three eighth inning counters. " The Chiefs scored a 4 to 3 win in the rain-swept i nightcap all runs of the game scoring in the final frame with two out and Sa lem's coming as the result of Cameron's home run blast over the rightfield wall with two bases occupied. It was the first fourply poke of the season in Geo. E. Wa ters park, and of course netted young Cameron, who fielded his third base position faultlessly and who came up with a double and a home run in five 'official trips to the plate, a big, juicy Valpack ham. . Coleman's scoreboard clout, which netted him a $50 suit from Bishop's, broke up a tight twirl ing duel between Salem's Lee Fal lin and Wenatchee's Al Libke. It came in the eighth,; with one out and Cameron on first by dint of a walk. It was the first real power blow a Senator has ladled out be fore the home folks -this season. and incited Charlie Bates and Skipper Griffiths to bat home two more with, respectively, a dou ble and a single. r Three sweetly executed dou ble plays, a scintillating piece of fielding by Griffiths In par ticular and errorless, smart play by the team as a whole played a major role in keeping Fal lin's pitching slate clean of a single tally In 27 Innings hurled In the home orchard. Fallin's home record reads: Beat Ta coma 1-t May' 3; beat Yakima 2- 0 May 18; beat Wenatchee 3- t May 36. Lengthy Lee gave up 11 hits but they were all singles and were never more closely ; bunched than two an inning. The Solons reached Libke for nine, including Grif fith's triple and doubles by Cole man and Bates. Dell Oliver, making his first home start of the season, extended the skein of scoreless frames Sa lem pitchers began May 18 when Fallin and Helser j horse-collared the Yakimas in a pair to 41 be fore, with two away and count two strikes on Hitter Ernie Eh dress in the final inning, he hung a slow curve in the slot Endress punched it for a screaming single that scored Bushy Bushong and began a rally that, with Cox and Gyp Bonetti connecting for dou bles, tallied four before Manager Ted Mayer deliberately got him' self tagged out to end the Inning, Mayer's give-away play was made to forestall ' any attempt on Salem's part to prolong the half Inning ontU It might be called because of the heavy shower that was at that time visiting the park. Had the game been called at that point, the score of course would have re verted to the sixth Inning and the game would have gone down as an - tie. .. With two away' and Griffith roosting on first by dint of a base on balls in Salem's half of the final frame, the nightcap, which was held up for 30 minutes en route and which was subjected to some pert showers ' throughout, looked over. But not so. Lanifero beat out a slow roller, advancing Griffiths, ; and ;. ; Cameron came through with his homer to pound them both home in" front of him. Charlie Petersen followed with a single but Jack. Warren, who took over rightfield after Coleman had pinch-hit ' for - Lightner in the sixth, struckout to. end the game. The Senators, who did .quite .a stroke of baseball business in the front office before taking ; the field, looked considerably , more powerful with Coleman and Cam eron studding . the lineup. Both provided those extra base knocks that have so far been sadly lack ing and ; sadly needed. Coleman played "just long enough : in.- the opener " to - put it . away with, his ricochet off the. scoreboard the second time In history a ball has ever been batted against it and made a pinch-hit appearance, only in the nightcap. .-, . : . . 1: ,v : In addition to signing Cole- .: man and Cameron,, the Senator management : released Infield ers Lee4 Shlnn and Johnny Gran ate outright; gave pitcher Gene ' Fenter, who is . suffering with a -sore shoulder, . a suspension; Homes GEMMELL; ' Sports Editor - cave Lee Fallin his third con pasture an4 upped their consecu N V f 4 'i LEE FALLIN and sent pitchers Burton Swope And Gordon Lieb back? U the Portland ; Beavers. Roy Helser is slated to pitch tonight's 8:15 game, attempting to hang up his fourth straight win of the year, while George "The Duke" Windsor, newly optioned from Seattle, and young Francis Dierickx are to get the assignment in Sunday's doubleheader. First game: WENATCHEC () Knobles. Endress, 1 Coy. 3 i B K H o 1 6 0 2 1 A E 0 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Farrell,e-. Bonetti, m Stinson, 1 . Martonetti. s Bushong, 2 . Libke. p ... Mayer, . s i 3 0 0 Totals 0 11 24 .Batted for Libke in fitta. SALEM (J Lanifero. I . Cameron. 3 Petersen,; in Coleman, r ;.. Bates. I Bergstrom, 4- Grtlfiths.-. Adams, c:.. Fallin. p ..... Ughtner, r Totals . Wenatcheei Salem s .. 000 000 0000 000 000 03 3 Runs responsible for, Libke 3. Struck out by Fallin 3, Libke 2. Bases on balls off Fallin 1. Libke 3. Hit by pitcher, Cameron by Libke. Passed balls, Far rell. Left on bases. Wenatchee 8. Sa lem S. Three-base hits, Griffiths. Two base hits, Coleman, Bates. Runs batted In. Colemaa. Bate. Griffiths. Sacrifice. Libke. Double plays. MarionetU to Bushong;. Lanifero to Griffiths to Bates. Griffiths to Lanifero to Bates, Cameron to Lanifero to Bates. Time 1:41 Umpires, Nelson and In fer. Second aame: WENATCHEE (4) Knobjes, r B K H A E 0 0 4 0 1 Endress, 1 : ; 4 Cox. 3 4 Mayer, .,,, . -fl Bonetti, in , 4 Stinson, 1 Marionetu, s , 3 Bushong. c 2 Weller. p, 3 Jacobsen, p , - 0 Totals i ..29 t 21 SALEM jj) Lanifero. 2 Cameron; 3 , Petersen, m . Lightner r . Bates. 1 u.... Bergstrom, 1 Griffiths, Adams, C Oliver, p; Coleman,. Warren, r Helser, f; B R H O .4114 A E 2 0 Totals i. .J8 31 Batted for Lhrhtner in 6th. T Batted for Oliver In 7th. Wenatchee. Salem . ..1 000 000 000 000 33 Winning : pitcher, Weller. Innings pitched byi Oliver 7, Weller ei, Jacob sen s. At bat off Oliver 29, Weller 27, Jacobsen 1. HiU off Oliver t, Wel ler a Runs scored off Oliver 4, Weller 3. Runs responsible for. Oliver 4. Wel ler 3. Struck out by Oliver 5. Weller 3, Jacobsen 1. Bases on balls' off Oliver 2, Weller 2; Hit by pitcher. Bushong by Oliver. Left on bases. Wenatchee T. Salem 7. Home runs, Cameron. Two-base hits, Weller. Bonetti 2, Cameron. Martonetti. Runs batted in. Endress, Cox 2. Bonetti, Cameron 3. Sacrifice, Oliver. , Time 1:23. Umpires, Enger .anq Kel son. ... s .. Albany Defeats Eugejie 14 to 2 ALBANY, Ore., May 30-(P)-. Albany scored a 14-2 victory over Eugene before rain ended a State baseball league game here Friday in- the sixth inning. . - : Riley Richards, Albany shoVt Stopr'. clouted two - homers, and ' Volker, Albany outfielder, hit an other. ' . br. V. r. Lam. NO , . Ot. a. Chaa, NO 'DR. CHAN LAM Cfclaso Medklae Ca. ; ' : . - 241 Nortli Liberty. ;. , CrsUtrs rortlaaO General Electric Co. Office opea Tuesday and Sat arday only 10 ia, u 1 to 1 p.a. CeasoltaUea, Bleed pressure tad aria tests are free f char (a. 21 tears la 'Business! ' B R H O A - 4 0 2 4 S O 1 10 1 2 0 4 0 15 0 0 A 1 9 n n a 4 1 1 S 0 4 0 1 2 0 0 4 0 2 3 3 0 3 0 0 4 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 31 3 9 27 14 0