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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1941)
Spasrks By RON GEKXBIELL While next Monday has been set as opening day for football drills at the Vik villa, Coach Harold Hauk foresees a flagon of trouble in getting his pros pective pigskinners on the field '. . . Reason: Too many will want to stay at their jobs until school tarts a week later, and, since so maiij are neeaea in wuuuneiie valley harvests, it may, be diffi cult to bold organized practices even then. Though the 1949 Viking line was riddled from the guard on one side te the end en the ether by graduation, the Hank man isn't exactly brewing in the depths of despondency . . . Bight new he cant tell yon who is to svpplant big Bob Boardman at center. Tackles -Norm Sholseth an! Bill Thomp ' son. Guard Koule Cleveland and EndvLes Pearmlne, bat he fig mres . hell have a fair-to-mid-dun eleven alone toward mid season, at that. Both habba-dabba halfbacks, Rex Hardy and Dutch Simmons, are on tap, and - both should be veryf very good providing, of course, that they get a bit of pro tection lip front and some help from the all-important fullback spot in the double-wing system . . . Bill Pettit, who showed well in the latter stages of the '40 campaign, looms as the best full back bet, but.it may be that young Owen Garland, yet a junior high schooler at ParrJsh. may shift over and give a try at full-fledged high school football. : ' - .: O . ' ' - . Thef Start Early J 'Among the many high school training this week include wea ford, says Coach Bill Bowerman, who was through the capital city on a short jaunt before he starts the Black Tornado rolling today ... "I have nine experienced back- field men, all of them good, back this season, , but nothing much in the way of leftover linemen . . . If the prospective linemen, some of whom are pretty fair, start clicking, I'm going to have a tough outfit," said Bowerman. Medford. by the way, gees ; Salem one better in the way of " a farm system for its high school - football teams . . . Whereas Sa lem has only the junior high, senior high sophomore and var sity B team "farms," Medford goes on down into j the grade 1 1- '1 ' MIL. M W .1 I grammar schools comprise a leagae which plays , a regular schedule, said Bowerman, i who Is "czar", of the system and die tates its '.policies. li : ''.' ? Consequently, when ' Johnny JTrtnoa urhn Vucran nlnvinrf frmthall as a sixth, seventh or eighth grad er, comes to Bowerman as a jun ior in high school, Johnny is air ready pretty well grounded in the fundamentals of the system Bow erman employs '. .. . "We use the same system clear , through the or ganization," said Bowerman, "and maybe you think it doesn't make a difference!" ' j Net 41 Salmon Dell Oliver, late of our Sena tors, delivered a few pitches in a losing cause xur-. uib - oou jlsicku Padres Sunday . . . Dell, known by his teammates here as "Dogface," flipped the ball at two batters in the final inning of the nightcap, which the Padres lost to the Sac tos, 5-2. -., -:. Jest 41 salmon (forty one) did - Umom n.nnl Sfant Sim Keene. Barley Bosler. . Andy ; Barke. Mike Steinbeck. Dr. L. E. Barriek, ' Tom Holmaa, Dean Geist, Bud Bart and party take . from the. Columbia in a two-day angling session during the As toria derby, that's all . . . Largest of the take was Doe Barrtea s mm m . flil a 4Z-poander, one oi me neiuest caught durmg the derby, while, Maple moved la en 41-pound ': Chinook. :' f-:- almost as put out concerning man agement of the derby as Astoria basketball fans were with the prep hoop chase here last March V. . -A lirfin Hvlr murh too small to accommodate fishermen, lack of an information bureau and the outrageous prices charged for care of fish caught were the main things we didn't like," report the capital city salmon-chasers . . .. "We were charged $1.25 for the first fish and 75 cents for each fish thereafter just for icing them down," groan the disgruntled fish ermen. . . Columbus Sure Of League Tie COLUMBUS, O, Sept 2-ff)-Staging a two-run rally in the ninth inning to defeat Toledo, 7 to 8, Columbus Tuesday night clinched at least a tie for the 1941 American association pen- ' nant - : Columbus is six full games ahead of second-place Louisville and each, team has six games to South River Road to Be Reopened Soon County Engineer a Hubbs said Tuesday he hoped td have the South River road section near Hoberts station opened to traffic by the end of this week. A de tour is now , in use- tv n?fneer intends today or Thursday to put a bulldozer and icraper at work wrm me new ; roadway, with a sligKirise in level eliminated, to su) .'ade- N EARING FAME mw.iS m a i m m ft V J KfVl MAI r.C IU Padres Move up 2nd on 4-2 Win Over Stars COAST LEAGtJS STANDINGS W b.Pctl W L Pet Sacrmto 92 S3 JM San rran 72 82 .468 S. Diego 88 85 JS75 Oakland 68 87 .439 Seattle M 64 .973 Loa Anf 65 85 .433 Hollyw'd 76 T7 .497 Portland 63 67 .420 HOLLYWOOD, Sept 2-)-Lou Tost . pitched two-hit ball for Hollywood .Tuesday night while his mates collected 12 hits, but San t)iego won a Coast league game 4 to 2. One of the Padre hits was a homer by Johnny Jen sen with the bases loaded in the seventh. The victory gave San Diego un disputed second place in the league standings. The Padres had been tied with Seattle, which was idle tonight. San Diego 4 2 1 Hollywood 2 12 1 Rich, Dilbeck (3) and Ballinger; Tost, Bittner (9) and Dapper. Sacks Sock Oaks ; "OAkLAND, Catosept 2-UP) -The Sacramento Senators, trying to build up their sum Coast league lead, nicked three Oakland hurl ers for fourteen hits to win an 8 3 victory here Tuesday night Chief performer at the bat was BUI Endicott, who banged out a single, a double and a home run for Sacramento. . ' Sacramento - 8 14 0 Oakland. 1. 3 10 0 Kleinke, Caplinger (8) and Marshal; Salveson, Darrow (5), Mulligan (8) and Raimondi. Train Halts Bevos PORTLAND, Sept t-(JF)-A de layed train brought the San Fran cisco Seals into Portland too late Tuesday night to play a scheduled Coast league baseball game with the Portland Beavers. . A doubleheader will be played Wednesday night Moore Presses Babe Herman LOS ANGELES, Sept 2 -JP)- The veteran Babe Herman really was getting competition Tuesday ttn his race for the Pacific Coast league batting championship.- And the competition came from an other oldster, Los Angeles John ny Moore, who has been around quite a while. , Herman was still leading the pack with a mark of .353, but Mod re, . having one of - the ' best seasons of his career, had climb- fed up to. .344. Moore also is tied with teammate Phil weintraub for home run honors ..' ' Gallon ' Establishes New Trotting Mark INDIANAPOLIS. Sept. 2 -WV Bill Gallon, 1941 Hambletonian winner. Tuesday established a new r one-heat record of 2:01 for the horseman futurity for three-year-old trotters at the Indiana itAte fair arand circuit meet The old record of 2:01Vi was set last year by Spencer Scott Driven by Lee Smith, Bill Gal lon won the second heat with a driving fininsh in 2:02t- Volstadt was second and His Excellency was third.. ' Wm 1 r.. 1 if i'" Portland Preps -Open Grid Drill PORTLAND' Sept 2-(tP)-FoTt-land high school grid aspirants started limbering up Tuesday for th ktarf of the football season. Issuance of equipment and light exercise took up most of the practice sessions. Three new coaches wiH appear In the city's interscholastic league this year: Joe Houston at Roosevelt, ionara Gahrke at Lincoln and George Tgh at rrarjdin. sa . ca e aa MlTfet? LAS-f Bitsy Grant Upsets in National Net Tourney; Whips Mulloy By GAYLE TALBOT . NEW YORK, Sept 2-(ff)-Bryant Grant, jr., of Atlanta, con tinued to supply practically all the excitement in the national tennis championships out on Long Island. As .Tuesday's contribution toward lifting ai otherwise dull tournament out of the doldrums, the southern veteran- knocked the socks off big Gardnar Mulloy of Miami, the eighth seeded star, by thes quick scores of 6-3, 6-3, 6-2. . The npset came just in time to prevent the seeded men from going into Wednesday's quarter final round with ranks vnbrok en.gOnlj Monday, Bitsy knock ed oat the seedei foreign 'ar tist Pancho Sekora of Ecua dor. Maybe . Grant resents the fact that the tournament com mittee took him at his word about retiring. Against Mulloy he bore a strik ing resemblance to a little fellow named Grant who unexpectedly stiffened the defending champion, Ellsworth Vines, in the champion ships here nine years ago. He knocked the ball back, as always, and permitted Mulloy to make the errors. Grant scored only 10 points by placements in the three sets, which probably gives the clearest idea of what happened. The distinction of supplying the lone upset in th women's ranks went to comely Hope Knbwles of Philadelphia, who turned back seventh-seeded Mary Arnold of Los Angeles, 4-6, 6-4, 7-5, in a beautifully fought match - that went almost into darkness. Other wise the stars came through , on schedule, j with Pauline Betz of Los Angeles establishing herself a temporary .'favorite through a convincing .6-0, 6-2 win over Phylis Hunter of Watertown, SD. Grant next bumps into Ted Scaroeder of Glendsle, Calif eo-holder of the national doa ble title with John Kramer. Schreeder, seeded fourth, scor ed handily today ever Charles Mattmann of New York, 6-4, 7-5, 6-2, The ether four Quarter-finalists, Frank Kovaes, Don McNeill. Wayne Sabln and John Kramer, won their berths yesterday., Helen Jacobs, dean of the worn- Ward Might Have Needed a Played Goodman in Finals at By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK, Sept 2-(Special to The Statesman)-It was dis turbing to learn that the good citizens of oar No. 5 home town. Omaha, surren dered their dig nity to their feelings' and barked a little at Bud Ward as he was winning the national Am ateur golf cham pionship. , ' It should be disturbing to the Omahans, too, as it may be quite a spell before a Vhkir WarUa national championship : again is tossed their way.. : Snowing the folks out that way, and that they are no different than your sports fan in New York, or San , Fran cisco, or New Orleans, or Kala mazoo, it is difficult to imagine them descending to such open hostility toward a competitor in what ordinarily" is considered a genteel "sport j As our colleague. Earl , Hilligan,1 so" aptly pointed out,! golf seems to have gone democratic at last From, all reports the hostility was bora ta certain remarks Ward made in - which he In timated that the Omaha Field club course rhymed with frow- m.m msjn mw -..,..; ft i By 'Jack Sords '::::?::?:v::rf':$: &it CAAaJCC -to wio Continues Eastern Stars Set for Clash With Pro Club NEW YORK, Sept 2 -;p)-The Eastern AQ-Stars sporting a ros ter chock-full of name players from 18 colleges, applied the fin ishing touches to defense and of" fense Tuesday for the sixth an nual Herald-Tribune fresh air fund' football game with the New York- Giants at the polo grounds Wednesday night Their roal will be a second straight AH-Star victory, and with It proof that a squad of highly-tooted individuals can be welded into just as effective a unit as the bunch of little known "okles" who apset the pros, 16-7, a year age. Of the 37 men who have been working under Coach Jim Crow ley of Fordham, 15 played in bowl games last New Year's day for Fordham, Boston college and Georgetown. Five others starred for Cornell, which rode high un til its fifth-down fall at Dart mouth. en survivors, gave warning to day that she is not to be counted out as she scored a convincing victory over Valerie ScnU, talent ed British girl,: 6-2, 8-6. Helen, who last won the crown in 1935, looked as good as ever until she tired in the latter stages. . '' sy, the Idea being that even If he did harbor inch thoughts he shoald hide them beneath a ve neer of sweetness and light J Unfortunately, the bushy-haired Spokane lad. is afflicted with the virtue of frankness, and, like Gene Sarazen, thinks tact Is how a car pet is put down. We recall that Sarazen made some disparaging remarks about the ' course on which the Kansas City open was played about three years ago, and virtually was Invited not to re turn, i ' It must have been Ward's nega tive remarks that caused the ani mosity of ; the ; gallery, for golf isn't : a game tending to promote antagonism. If he had tripped Pat Abbott as he was walking down the fairway . or potted him with a beanshooter when be was about to putt there would be some vis ible cause for his indictment by the gallery. 1 -. But Ward was playing the game according to the rules and not taking unfair advantage of any one. His personality on a course Is not contagious, but he prob bly; figures he Is out there to play golf and is not - competing in a personality contest which is decided by a running broad grin. 'We've watched Bod iay aft- . en. and he's the great stone face. Grlmness and - determination and concentration are blended la his sauare-jawed map. He's out te win, and his expression i 111 ill! Convo Creep Root Achieves 201st. Win for Chicago Cubs ' , BROOKLYN, Sept. 2--The Brooklyn Dodgers, experts at doing things the hard way, fTuesday, won the game they should have won Monday, 9 to 2 oyer the" Boston Braves, and regained a virtual tie with the-St Louis Cardinals for the National league It was a playoff of the 2-2 six-inning tie with which the Dodgers and Braves capped their Labor day doubleheader and brought Brooklyn' a total of two victories for 30 innings of work in the last two days., ' , It gave the Dodgers 84 vic tories and 46 defeats for a .648 percentage compared to 83-45 and .648 for the Cardinals, who bad an open date. . . K j! j : The ' Dodgers rolled three runs across in the first inning and piled up four more in a weird fourth. j - .. ; . j "On top of this, Kirby Kigbe, looking fiercely determined with a two-days' growth of beard, pitched no-hit ball for five in- NATIONAL XJCAGtTK STANDINGS W L Pctl W L Pet St. Louis S3 A5 M8 Brookl'n S5 4 .S46 Clnctn'tl 70 M 56 Pittsb'fh 68 35 ' NewYork C3 M .484 ChicSO 58 14 .439 Boston SS T5 .400 Ptuladet 36 tl MS nings, 'allowed only six safeties over the whole route, and easily achieved his 19th victory of the season highest total, in the sen ior circuit The Dodgers went te ' work en Al Javery in the first game, loading the bases en a hit bats man, Pete Reiser's single and a walk te Dolph CamillL Then Jim Wasdeli forced Camilli and two runners scored on what looked like a doable play ball. Reiser racing wildly around third and touching home with his outstretched hand after slid ing past Lew Klggs followed with a doable scoring WasdeC The Braves made a run in the sixth on Gene Moore's single, a double by Max West and Carvel Rowell's single and added anoth er in the eighth ort West's single and Rowell's double. Boston : -J 2 6 1 Brooklyn 1 .9 12 1 Javery, Lamanna (3) and Ber res, Montgomery (6); Higbe and Owen. Root Bags 201st CHICAGO, Sept 2-iflV-Charley Root veteran Chicago Cubs right hander, went to work on his third set of 100 pitching victories Tues day, notching the 201st win tof his major league career by beat ing the. Cincinnati Reds, 3 to I, in the final game of the series. Root held the Red Legs to five hits and allowed their only ran in the third wen Eddie Jeost walked, and advanced on a sacrifice and scored en Lloyd Wanera doable. The -Cubs made only four hits off Gene Thompson, Cincinnati hurler, but converted half of them, a double by Lou Stringer and a single by Stan Hack, plus a walk and, a long fly, into two runs in the third inning. They scored their third marker in the sixth. - ; Cincinnati ; . ,t '- , 1 5 0 Chicago - : .S 4 0 Thompson and Lombard!; Root and Scheffing. Casino, Mathews SEATTLE, Sept., 2 -(-Promoter Nate Druxman announced Tuesday night he has signed Jim my Casino, Los. Angeles middle weight who stopped the come back of Freddie Steele In Holly wood several -months ago, to meet Harry "Kid" Mathews, Emmett Idaho! in the ten-round main event of a boxing card here Sep tember 16. , Had He Omaha Meet the kind that tenches . the hearts of a gallery. However, he's the kind of gay we'd like to have en. oar side when : the shooting : starts. lie's a toogh, rucred he-maa with the cold, pale eyes of the fighter. i Ott the course he is as likeable a tad as you'd find, and he prob ably Is a Utile bewildered by the fact he can play his game clean-. ly, asking no niarter and1 giving none, and yet be so unpopular. He isn't ordinarily a jopoff. Some one probably asked him what he thought of the course, and he gave his opinion. A guy is entitled to that and the Omahans were en titled to get a little peeved when the opinion gave them a black eye. Nobody likes an .outsider to come in and teU him his yard needs cleaning up, especially when the yard has just been prettied It looks like acase of mutual up for a festival. f-j'r-'L- i misunderstandmg, -the' Omahans condemning Ward for his frank ness, and ' Ward getting an unfa vorable ' Impression because: the Omahans obeyed the natural ten dency to take a whack at some one who belittled their baby. Both parties should shake hands and forget it . In, view of what happened.' we'd hate ta think ef hew Ward weald have been treated had J he been- playing Johnny Good man la the final. He would have seeded a convoy. - r mqpr on Mile Solons Clinch 4th as Tiges Lose to Caps WIS TERN rMTCnjiATIONAI W L Pctl . W L Pet Spokane 87 41 J74ISalem 1 M A9& Vancouv 70 Ct JSOITacoma ST .73 .436 Yakima 67 63 J15Wentch . 41 M 363 Though forced out of action, by rain at Spokane, our Senators were Tuesday night assured of at least a fourth place finish in the 1941 Western International league campaign by Tacoma's double de feat at the hands of the Vancouv er Capilanos. The Tlges downfall sent them five and one half games below the Solons. who have left bat five games one mere at Spokane tonight and four at Wens tehee beginning Thursday night VANCOUVER, Sept 2 -()-Vancouver's Capilanos swept both ends of a Western International Baseball league doubleheader here Tuesday night defeating the Ta com& Tigers 4 to 1 in the night cap after taking the first game 3 to 1. The double victory gave the Caps a 2-1 lead in the current four-game series, the fourth game of which will be played Wednes day night - - The Vancouver team won the second game in the third inning, bringing in three runs on three singles coupled with two Tacoma errors. Tacoma's lone run came in the sixth when Fay Starr was safe on Cailteaux's error and scored on a double by Ray Perry. First game: Tacoma . , 1 7 1 Vancouver , . 3 , 9 1 Cadinha and Stoeber; Adams and Brenner. Second game: Tacoma . 1 3 2 Vancouver ...4 12 1 Marlowe and Stoeber; Tate and Brenner. Pips, Chiefs Split YAKIMA, Sept 2.!VYakima and Wena tehee split a Western International league doublehead er Tuesday night the Chiefs tak ing the first game 3-2 and the home team "the nightcap 8-6. Carl Fornei sparked the Chiefs in the first game with a double and a triple after the Pippins had taken a two-run lead on a field made slippery by heavy rams. Weaatehee eeanted three tunes In the nightcap, bat Yak ima tied it vp hi Its half of the inning when Bob Williams Is sued five walks te force la two runners. He fanned three te re tire the side. The Pippins took the lead with a three-run rally in the fourth which sent Williams to the show ers. Carl Cox homered with one aboard for Wenatchee in the fifth. He was the batting star of the game with a single, two doubles and the homer. Yakima added two more in the sixth, but the Chiefs could get back only one run. , - Second game: ? Wenatchee 6 12 3 Yakima .8 7 4 Williams, Raimondi, (4) and McConneU; McConneU, Bryant (3) and iSueme. First game: ! Wenatchee , t . 8 2 Yakima L I 2 6 1 Phebusi and Mayer; Greer and Sueme. it : Salmon Swarm Up jNestucca tillamook; sept 2-ypi Thousands of silverside salmon swarmed Up i the Little Nestucca river today, three weeks ahead of the regular n:t;i:Htii? State Game Officer Felix Gatens said ari f ocean 1 storm', probably drove s the fish in. He, reported many limit catches oh the lower Lcaguo Baseball SENATOK IBATTDTO AVXKAGES 5 Laniito tei 1st J35 Camera 346 64 J64 Brxtnt 4711U J24 Windsor 47 O Jl Helser j' 6t 34 J9;Shonkr S3 IS jn Adams 1390113 89 Dierickx SO T .140 Cflrths 442 11, J85,Fllia SB J01 Warren 204 56 J82 0'Conrf 16 1 400 0ort 17 4t78:SimMoa SO S .106 Petrtn j 43412ft x:3,SroiUk 3 0 4W0 AMEBICAN ASSOCIATION . St. Paul S. SUnaeapolis S. ' Toledo 6, Columbus 7. Milwaukee U, Kansas City J6-S. : LouisviUe-Indlaaapolla. raia. , rioNtrn LXAGCE 'f v ; Boise t. Twin Pails . Ogden 10, Salt Lake 4. , - Idaho Tails 4-X, PacateUo S-S. s BraveSo ; 9 to . (barcilniials . v SoJem, Oregon, Wednesday ? Malraaloha Moi At Lone Oak; Governor's Handicap Tops Today's Meet Mainaloha, B. N. Jolles 8-year-old bay gelding, drove from behind on a muddy track here Tuesday to defeat Holster, an an cient running rival, in the featured seventh race of the state fair racing card.' - . Canny riding by young Tommy Gibson gave Mamaloha the victory, which returned $9 to straight bettors. But when counled Tcday'j Seledicn Oa Lcne Oak Daces Graded in order of handicap By GEORGE BOVXC rrasT xace nvtt fvbxongs s TO. OLDS AND UP FLOBIS (C. Dye) lU-Strictly the class here. STAKBOM (H. Conley) 111 Sur prises when least expected. BXKO Mr (U Josephson ) lit Baa a "NirtjT the last out, may repeat, CHIN (No Boy) 113 Could aneak in for part. ' . CHIC X AM IN ( I. Bate) 111 Get Ung ready for a killinc soon. LADY ELLIS (H. Lasswell) 106 WU1 be In there trying. SECOND RACK FIVE FUXLONGS 1 TO. OLDS AND VP MARINE STAR (B. Coon) 111 Likes toe going and fit as a fiddle. , LITTLE BOT (H. Conley) 118 Will be running : over . horses in the stretch. RUBE WILSON (R. Smith) 105 Merely a question of racing luck. IRISH PEER (R. Headrick) IIS Could be the upset horse, dangerous. . NOTICEABLE (H. Lasswell) 100 Conditions made to order here. BE AUREMONT (G. Dye) IIS Hardly figures to beat these. REVEILLE GIRL (T. Corn) 106 May not like the track condition. THIRD RACE FIVE FURLONG S I YR, OLDS AND UP FETCHING SHOT (No Boy) -41 S- Revels in the mud and may be best. LANNT GIRL (R. Smith) 101 They all have this one to beat. - MORCLASS (H. Conley) 116 Strictly the contender. , . BRILLIANT BABY (K. Base) a10t WU1 take a run at 'em in the stretch. FID DLEDEXD EE (G. Dye) 116 Won last one cleverly, could repeat SIR TIMOTHY (A. HolMday) 116 Runs a good one now and then. YOGANO (F. Dahl) 116 Ran dose up at Gresham. : TRINTTT ROBERTS (T. Corn) 111 May not be equal o the task. FOURTH RACE FIVE FURLONGS S YR. OLDS AND UP GEORGE BLANKET (A. HoUiday) 10 Figures the best of these. IKE'S FANCY (G. Dye) 116 Will be close up and may be best. r LADY HIGH (M. 1 Perry) 113 Should get part of the money. LILA CLARK (E. Baze ) 1 03 Will be close up for a ways, may not last. VEROL TRUANT (R. Smith) 106 Might surprise at a price. SALTY BOB (No Boy) 116 Has a high turn of speed at times. GOOD WORK (L. Josephson) 106 Good boy. good horse, may make a GOOD pair. MISS REPEAL (L. Josephson) 106 May want a dry track. FIFTH RACE FIVE YR. OLDS AND UP FURLONGS I PRINCE NAD JI (T. Corn) 116 Looks best of these. GLAD MABLR cH. Conley) IIS xi.c one to beat. GLADSANTA- , (G. Dye) US- Should save part of the SDoils. 3 MARY VAN TRUMP (H. Lasswell) 113 Can fry in the going. MISS SISKIYOU (M. Perry) 106 May not stick it out here. ' NOYO (A. HoUiday) lit May need a race first.. . SIXTH RACE: GOVERNOR'S HANDI CAPONE MILE AND 76 YARDS tMYV UNIVERSE (L. Josephson) 111 Is strictly the class. VALIANT BOY H. Lasswell) 116 Will help stablemate set the pace. tCHlSF PICKEM (No Boy) 106 If starts, will pace the Universe: GOOLE (A. HoUiday) 114 Gets salty at times and could surprise. STINGY LADY N Boy 114 Strictly a contender. . CRETE (K. Baze)-.10-Likes tht footing and distance. , . VOLADOR H. Conley) 111 Won last cleverly, iftay get part here. MIGHTYCAsV-(0. Dye) lOS-Eider helps chances. MAMALOHOA (T. Gibson) 106 Dark horse of the race. BOLSTER (No Boy) 110 While placed last, sUU figures. ' '.tMcFarland entry. , SEVENTH RACE FURLONGS S YR. OLDS AND UP WARRIOR LYONS (E.' Base) 10f weu piacea xor acuon. figures best. SKf NURSE (L. Josephson) IIS AU conditions made to order here. WALLOPER DID (H. LaaawUI 116 Could surprise and nip these at the wire. , ; , .'..-...:. WRAGBY' (X. Smith) 103 May wlfgle out m small part. - bOGATO (H. Conley) 116 If breaks on top will never be headed. - BANG (No Boy) 116 May not be quite ready. - CALA c (G. Dye) IIS Rider helps chances, .-j . ; i EIGHTH RACE FIVE FURLONGS I YR. OLDS AND UP J - WIGTOWN H. Lasswell) IIS Looks like a "Goodie- here. - DARK LASSIE (M.- Perry 113 Likes the going end may be Best. ROSETTA V L. Jesephaon) 11S Won last cleverly but may not repeat. DODLK (iL Conley ) 111 Coniey helps this horse's chances. , t CLEAR (B. Coon) 111 Runs well in the mud, could get pert, f ID AD ANA (R. Smith ) 108 Throw Out last race, can do better. MONK'S FIRST (E. Bale) 166 Due to awaken soon. . . - . . (SUBSTITUTE RACE TO BE USED IP NECESSARY) FIVE FURLONGS CAPTIVATOR (R. Headrick) lift The ene te beat. , 8EAGAYLE (H. Smith) 106 la light and may never be heeded. BONNIE DtG, Dye) 11 WiB be salty in here. AHTRAHITH (H. Conley) 113 Will take a run at 'em In back stretch. ATLAS EV 4NO Boy) 111 Should make them run far it. : ; TO - nrLsr--' Morning. September 3, 41 t 1 with holster, the race paid the meet's lowest quiniela. 13.70. Crete, enetime big "wdka entrant, found the gooey going to lus liking and walked off with the sixth race, coasting into the home stretch ander veteran neward Conley. Two harness races were can celled because of the mud, while several running races were short ened to escape, dangerous turn conditions. It was a small but good betting crowd that took in the second day's Lone Oak races. It wagered 111,736 $574 more than the second day crowd of 1940 despite the fact there were but seven races to ninfc last year. ! ; The governor's handicap is the feature of today's races. The overnight for this sixth race lists 11 horses. RESULTS FIRST RACE; claiming, four and half furlongs Black Streak (Dye) 67.40. S4. S3.10; Washita (Smith) S4.H. $340; Frost Sox (Conley) 3 JO. Quiniela S SI atf swu r M . . m ma. S.au. ium .wo., juso ran, ixOia ru, -regon Lassie. Silk Wind (FeU). 8ECOND RACE, five furlongs Too Lazy (HoUiday) 638.80. $10.70, S3S0; Dungeness (Baze) S6J0. S2S0; Manteca i (Josephson) tM. Quiniela 31.60. Time :5.. Also ran. J Miss Walsh, Brone Rider. Lerack. 1 THIRD RACE.1 claiming, five fur longs Bettys Pride (Conley) SSSe. g.80. S3 SO; Paracalso TDye) S4.S0.S3S8; bh Peer (Headrick) S.80. Quinieas S1S.60. Time 11.4. Also ran. Peace Leg. Don O War, Baggage Master. Port Akdy. Peggy McGilL - FOURTH RACE, claiming, five fur- dcii 9 nwua nouioayi mi l-Ov. St70. SS.60; Pour Moi (Dye) 84-70. 83.70; rUliant Baby (Base) 4.70. Quiniela S2L20, Time 1:02.8. Also ran. Oucaro Swift, Chinn. Cayette, Glad Mable. . FIFTH RACE, claiming, five and half " furlongs Hop Boy (HoUiday) 6.80. 83.80. $3.30; Dad Butler (Conley) $3.10. $3.80: Crema (Smith) $4 80. Qui niela 13.30. Time liiax. Also ran, Bonnie D. Joe C. Paulimis, Saga Sage. SIXTH RACE, claiming, one mile Crete (Conley) 3.50. $1.70, $2 JO; Bon nie Frances (Joeephion) $4.10, $2.70: Black Hat (HoUiday) $3.10. ' Quiniela 7S0. Time 16 A. Also ran. Mike Reyn olds. Red Copper; Tiedeman. SEVENTH RACE, claiming, one mile and 70 yards Mamaloha (Gibson) $8. $3.1 $2.60; Holster (Josephson) $2.46, $2J0; Stepmother (Smith) $20. Qui niela 3.70. Time 155. Also ran. Paplay. Carbine Man. Yankees Still NEW YORK, Sept 2 -CPV-The New York Yankees left for Bos ton Tuesday without their injur ed outfield star, Joei rUMaggio, who was left at hone for treat ment by Dr. Emmett Walsh, the club physician. .. .. 1 - DOktaggto : twisted I Ids left ankle at Detroit Amgast It and has net played since, altheagh ' he continued to travel with the Yanks and did not reach here ". ata Tuesday. ' It also was learned that Di Maggib has a sore wrist which he apparently hurt sliding: into home against the Philadelphia Athletics two days before be in jured. his ankle. At the time (he wrist did not pain him, however, and Dr. Walsh said it was only slightly sprained. Lromelli Leader, California Meet PEBBLE BEACH, Calif., Sept. J -&)- Coupling a 74 Tuesday to his first-round par 7 Ralph Lomelli of Porterville went into an early lead for medal honors of the. 30th j annual California amateur golf i championship. .His 38-hole qualifying total of 148 looked good as gold despite the fact he was one of the earliest to finish the second round. Scores included: - J. W. Hogsh, Portland, T9-3 182. Dr.T.T.Lasa,' f.D Ot.O. Chaajf Jb. CbtaeM Meeietee Co. , ZU Nertk Liberty Cpstalrs Portland Ocneral Eee. Co. Office epea Taesaay aad Satareay mlw49 ajsu 1 paM 6 ta I pjm. CeMRatiaa, Weed pressere and ariae tests are free ef charge. SS Tears 8a stasteeas Doavti Holster Without DiMag no