The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 17, 1941, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    J
',1
f
I
Sports
Trail
By
WHITNEY MARTIN
(Special t The Stalesman)
NEW YORK, Sept 16 Frtd
Fit-summons is fat and 48. In "a
crowd he's about the last man
you'd pick out as a major league
baseball player. .
But he has what it takes.
His fingers are stubby and his
arms so short they must have "been
attached to him by mistake. He
keeps his elbows bent and away
, from - his ' body, like . a wrestler
jTeady to lunge. As he pitches, his
- right arm begins to curl up like' a
v burning match, ana at the xinisn
XP Same he cant straighten 11
out. :-;-v .; ; "
But he has what it takes.
He walks with quick, mincing
steps, and there is something spar
row-like, about his every move
ment He has more energy than a
dozen rookies put together. He
invents jobs for himself, and frets
and fumes when he is idle. His
windup is a Quick, pivoting mo
tion' which gives the batter only
a stern view of him, and. the ball,
delivered with an odd, half -arm
flip, seems . to come out of no
where. -, He can't throw hard
enough to break an egg, which the
hen that picked out his' locker in
Havana i last spring for nest
must have known.
- Bat he has what It takes.
: He has what it takes when a
cool head Is needed la 'a hot
game, when guile Is mere im
portant against ever-anxious
batters than the biasing speed of
stout-armed youngsters.
He has what it takes when re
sponsibility is loaded on his beefy
shoulders. It was no play for the
gallery when Leo Durocher select
ed Old Fat and Forty for that all-
Important opening game with St
Louis last Thursday, although no
stage ever was set more beauti
fully for sheer drama.
That was the game the Dodgers
had to win. They had seen their
lead sliced two full games in one
day. Another game cut from that
dwindling' lead might hit the team
in any ' team's' most vulnerable
spot its morale. A Cardinal vic
tory might have started the Red
Birds on a sweep of the series.
Baseball is like that
So it was stubby-armed, aged-,
in-the-wood Freddy Fitzsim
mons who was sent out there to
baffle the slagging Cardinals
with his dlpsle-doodle knuckler
and to fret and fame and in
wardly rage-when things were
n't going Just right
Dodger Forced in 17 'Inning Battle
.'';.-. :.: , . .
. .
i,MitM mm fciiim ii an m wnm mjiui,jwimiwhw iir.i wnir t .r- "i 'in-ivr ri i -n t ' r-r-1
.. j . .... . ..j-. s.j (- ...1 . . i...... . - .. .. j I ...... .
Catted Game Hard On Cards i ;
Dodgers Fall to Cimcys, 4 to 3
Billy Werber, third baseman of the Cincinnati Reds, Is eat at second en a forced play la the fourth
Innhur of the Reds 17-uminr Mains' battle with the Brooklyn Dodaero, National leaane leaders, la Can
etnnaU. Here, Shortstop Pee Wee Keese of the Dodgers gets oat of Werner's way and hurls to first In
an unsuccessful try for a doable play. The umpire, calling Werber oat Is Jocko Conlon. The Dodgers
won, 5 to L as both teams seared all their runs In the gathering darkness fat the 17th Inning.
0
Raiiiicrs Hold
Narrow Lead
In PCL Race
COAST LEAGUE STANDINGS
WLPct
Seattle 9S 6S .590j Oakland
Sacramto 9S 71 J7
San Diego 9S 74 J62L Angeles 70 93 .432
HoUywd 84 B9 .497
Scdezxu Oregon. Wednesday Morning. September 17, 1941 7
Short steps along the sports
trail - ... - , :
With Fat Freddy Fitzsimmons a
hero for the Dodgers, Estel Crab
tree doing all right with the Car
dinals, and Craig Wood winning
the national open championship,
the doddering old boys of the arm
chair brigade seem to be having
quite a year for themselves. Here's
the difference between a pennant
contender and a second-division
club The Giants have lost 28
games by one-run margins; the
Cardinals have won 30 of the
same. When a stout wind blew
down the fence and light fixtures
at the Newport, Ark, ball park,
Prexy Rex McCuistion wasn't
stumped. He ordered day games
and passed the hat
.J :
Add thrills of a lifetime: Jim
Hegen, until recently catching for
Wilkes-Barre, was in the major
leagues just five hours when he
was sent back of th : plate to catch
Bob Feller. He reported it was a
pleasure to catch a fellow who
knew where he was throwing.
Which Is more than they could say
about Rapid Robert about three
years ago. Pat Kennedy, Just
Real . Stuff Coming
Out in Coast Men
VCORVALLIS, Ore., Sept 16-(-Oregon State college
football players took a light practice session Tuesday in
preparation for the first game scrimmage of the season.
Coach Lon Stiner said he expected to select first-string
players by their performances in the scrimmage.
Line-Backers Shine
EUGENE, Ore, Sept. 1&-JP)-
The line-backing combination of
Center Elliott Wilson and Half
back Duke Iverson stood out in
University of Oregon football
practice Tuesday. f
Wilson, a 6-foot 5-inch 225
po under, broke up numerous pass
attempts, while Iverson, the block
ing back, smeared line plays.
snapper-back convert has showed
during the first week of practice
better passing technique than
Mucha. Harrison proved himself
a sturdy line backer as a reserve
fullback last year, but he still
will have to smash over a flock of
ball carriers to fill Mucha's de
fensive boots.
Phelan Happier
SEATTLE, Sept le-fl-Coach
Jimmy Phelan's worries over the
loss of his all-star center, Rudy
Mucha, are diminishing with
every day's performance by 195
pound Walt Harrison. -
Harrison, like Mucha, is a
made-over fullback. Phelan said
Tuesday that the big Seattle
about the whistling est basketball
referee who ever tried to blow the
roof off Madison Square Garden,
has' been doing right well as an
umpire in the Interstate league.
Promoter Mike Jacobs should
eround Lew Jenkins unless he
wants to hold a lightweight elim
ination tournament Or maybe
that motorcycle did a pretty fair
job of grounding the champion.
DODGER HURLER - By Jack Sords
my
E W
cc:as: XZ CCD CP
Albert Still Ace
PALO ALTO, Calif., Sept 18-
(iP1) Frankie Albert, Stanford's
ace quarterback, seemingly hasn't
ost a bit of his old passing skill.
His passes found their mark
with brilliant accuracy during
90-minute football scrimmage
the Indians' first of the season
for the game with Oregon
Sept 27.
Several times Albert completed
tosses to Bob Ditlevsen, a strong
candidate for the right halfback
job. Pete Kmetovic, shifty left
half, was on the receiving end of
others.
on
(6
Jurky" Peps UC
BERKELEY, Calf., Sept
-Jim Jurkovich, fleet-footed left
halfback, dashed through the
Rambler squad "for three touch
downs in University of Calif or
nia's first varsity football scrim'
mage of the season Tuesday, and
Coach L. B- 'S tub" Allison was
all smiles.
"I'm expecting a lot from Jurk
ovich this year," said the head
man.
Another scrimmage was slated
for Thursday.
Ukes Really Work
LOS ANGELES, Sept 18-6P)-
The UCLA football squad turned
out Tuesday for a scheduled
dummy scrimmage, but, it devel
oped into something near the real
thing.
Coach Babe HorrelL still watch
ing a keen struggle for backfield
positions, ordered a long drill on
offense, with a touch of stiff
blocking thrown in for good
measure.
Reserve Pulls up 1
LOS ANGELES, Sept 18-V
Reserve Quarterback Bob Musick
proved to be something of a sen'
sation Tuesday as. the University
of Southern California football
team held a double workout
Musick actual 1 y outpassed
Coach Sam -Barry's &-two best
throwers, Bob Robertson and Paul
Taylor, and found himself at the
close of the drill elevated to the
second string backfield. .
Works to Stop Q-T
PULLMAN, Wash, Sept
-Coach Babe Hollingbery put his
Washington State football varsity
to work Tuesday on a defense he
said was designed to stop the
UOLA "Q-T" attack "cold," when
the two teams meet in Los An
geles Sept 28.
With Don Greeley, and Assist
ant Coach Buck Bailey leading
the third string in the UCLA role,
Hollingbery put the WJS.C. grid-
Vders through two long- periods of
liefensiva practice today.
WLPct.
78 M .459
S Francis 78 93 .459
Blacked-out
Game Ends
In 1.1 Tie
NATIONAL tUOCI STANDINGS
WL-Pctt WLPct.
Brooklyn SI SI 44New York 4 74 .464
BearcoL Name Captains,
Go to Work for Positions
On ScHUmaeintr Elevens
i . iU i ;. 7
St. Louis 89 51 .636
Cincinnati 77 S3 J550
Chicago
Boston'
65 78 .455
S9 83 .418
Ptttsbrgh 77 CS 442PhUadelnh 40 SS J90
Buddy Re;
both two-le
for the season
in the second
regular season
team from the
tten
rni
d
olds, halfback, and Martin Barstad, tackle.
men, were voted Bearcat football co-captains
esday, as teams scrambled with the pigskin
ay of scrimmage. A game in advance of the
set for Sweetland field Friday night with a
base at Portland. 4; J V
Head Man Spec Keene had added help in the backfield
By EDDIE LAWSON
ST. LOUIS, Sept 18.-OP)-Dark-
ness fell like a heavy blanket on j Tuesday as Dick Weisgerber, ex-Bearcat who went professional,
returned to help coach the backs
4
Browns Sweep
Series With
Athletics
AMERICAN LEAOCK STANDINGS
W L Pct. WLPct.
New York X 49 4621
Boston 78 66 3421
Chicago
Detroit TOTS .483
St. Louis 65 77 .458
73 73 M0 Waahingtn 62 80 .437
Philadelph 63 S3 .428
Portland 68 94 .420
LOS ANGELES, Sept U-t)-
Seattle retained its narrow lead
in the Coast league baseball race
Tuesday night by defeating Los
Angeles X to 1 with the aid of
Kewpie Dick Barrett's four -hit
pitching and a homer by Bill
Matheson with none on.
Seattle 2 7 0
Angeles 1 4 1
Barrett and Fallon; Prim,
Brown (9) and Campbell.
Seals Douse Beavers
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 16-flP)
-Bunching eight runs in the fifth
and sixth innings, San Francisco
routed Portland 11-6 in a free-
hitting Coast league baseball game
Friday night
Ray Harrell went the full route
for the Seals, yielding 15 hits but
holding down in the pinches.
Forty-one batters faced him. The
Seals smashed three Portland hurl
ers for 18, but collected 10 of
them in the busy fifth and sixth.
Don Trower, second baseman.
paced the Seal attack two triples.
a double and a single in six trips
up.
Portland 6 15 2
San Francisco 11 16 1
LLska, Orrell (5), Callahan (6)
and Schultz; Harrell and Partee.
the championship chances of the
St Louis Cardinals Tuesday, smo
thering their final clash with the
New York Giants in a 1 to 1 tie
at the end of ten innings.
It was a cloudy, foreboding day
in St. Louis, brightened for a
while in Sportsman's park by a
magnificent pitching duel between
Ernie White and Hal Schumacher
and the Scoreboard's tidings that
Brooklyn had lost an extra-in
ning struggle at Cincinnati, cut
ting the Dodgers National league 1 Cleveland 70 73.490
lead to 1 games.
The Cardinals chalked up a
run in the first inning on a single
by Johnny Hopp, a base on balls
to Terry Moore and a one-baser
by old Estel Crabtree and for a
long time this loomed big.
T r.l nee Hal" Schumacher
never gave' the Bedbtrds an
other ran, bat White, the superb
young southpaw who was mak
ing his third quest for victory
No. 18, appeared even more
overpowering la barling shut
out ban oa four hits for eight
mnmgs.
Then in the early twilight of the
ninth Inning trouble crept out of
the shadows. Babe Young was an
easy out but Morrie Arnovich
singled and Billy Jurges doubled
to put runners on first and third.
Lean Lon Warneke was rushed
to the mound to rescue White, but
instead gave another single to
Mirkpv Witek to let in the trine!
run. After purposely passing JoejTigeS Cut SoloilS
Moore, who pinch hit for Schuma- WASHINGTON, Sept.
cher. Warneke snurlea out tne
rally.
This left the Cardinals still
with a chance to take full ad
vantage of the loss of Brook
lyn's National league . leaders,
bat when neither team scored
again and the ampires called
the same. It waa blacked eat of
the books forever.
The Cards have a doubleheader
with Boston Wednesday. The tie
Sactos Beat Oaks
SACRAMENTO, Sept 16.-UP)-
Sacramento held fast to its slim
hope of a pennant by defeating
Oakland 4 to 2 here Tuesday night
in the first game of the final se
ries of 1941.
Nubs'Kleinke hurled the vie
tory his third in three starts
against the Oaks in recent weeks.
Henry Pippen started for the
Oaks and was blasted for three
runs in the first inning as Handley
doubled and Wieczorek tripled
after Shewey opened the inning
with a single. Mulligan and D ar
row later went to the mound to
stop the Sacs but Kleinke would
not yield,
Oakland 2 6 0
Sacramento 4 10 1
Pippen, Mulligan (1), Darrell
(7) and Conroy: Kleinke and
Klutz.
14
10
Padres Drop Two
Hollywood 8
San Diego 2
Gay and Dapper; Hebert and
Salkeld.
(8 innings)
Hollywood , 6 i
San Diego 4 7
Bithorn and BrenzeL Dapper
(8); Olsen, Hallbourg (5), Thom
as (6) and Salkeld.
PHILADELPHIA, Sept 16.HJP)
-Chet Laabs' 12th inning home
run, his second of the game, gave
the St. Louis Browns a 9-8 victory
over the Athletics today. It gave
them a sweep of the four-game
series and their second extra in
ning conquest in two days.
Laabs batted in five runs, cap
ping a five run assault in the first
inning by bitting for the circuit
with two aboard. v
Elmo Valo, rookie up from Wil
mington, Del., smashed his first
major league homer with two on
base to tie the score for the A's
in the ninth.
St Louis 15 1
Philadelphia 8 19 1
Niggeling, Kramer (9), McKain
(1), Trotter (11) and Ferrell;
Besse, Hadley (2), C. Harris (8),
Shirley "(10), Fowler (11) and
Wagner.
16.-V
The Detroit Tigers, made their
blows count for runs as they de
feated the Washington Senators
4 to 2 Tuesday behind the effect
ive hurling of Schoolboy Rowe
and Buck Newsom.
Rowe allowed only four hits
until the eighth, when the Sena
tors produced a pair of runs on
three hits and a walk. Newsom
took over during the rally with
one out and Senators on first and
n h off and it will third and quelled the uprising
mom that SL Iuia will have onlv Detroit L : i 4 5 1
1- Tna n tm uimn mm. I Wa&ninglOn Z B U
pared to Brooklyn's 154.
New York -1 8 2
St. Louis 1 7 2
Schumacher, Carpenter (9) and
Hartnett, Dannlng (7); White,
Warneke (9). Shoun (10) and
Cooper.
Rowe and Tebbetts; Chase, Car-
rasquel (9) and Evans, r
League Football
Weisgerber made the Little Ail-
American team while at Willam
ette, thai joined the Green Bay
Packers for three years. For the
past two summers, he has umpired
in the. Western International
baseball league. 1
Keene lined up two elevens but
gave no hint as to who would be
on Friday night's first string. The
boys were -fighting with, high
spirits to . try to make a starting
berth. ,
Two fast backfields appeared in
the making as they formed up
Tuesday across, hard-blocking
lines. On the so-called "first
string" Al Walden, back only two
days, went into the fullback
spot Buddy Reynolds and Chuck
Furno were the halfback, while
Jim Burgess was quarter. '
In the second ; backfield, Neil
Owens went in as full; three-year
Gene Stewart and Ted Ogdahl at
the halves, and Ken Jacobsen at
quarter. All the backs are letter
The rest of the "first" string
had, on the ends, Bill Reder and
Paul Cookingham; tackles, Martin
Barstad and Neil Morley; guards,
Tony Fraiola and Gordon . Moore,
and center, Pat White. All have
letters.
The second line comprised, at
the ends, Marvin Goodman and
Clarence Walden; tackles, George
Pittard and Gar rail Delner;
guards, Keith Wymore and David
Kurtz; center, Allen Barrett All
are first-year men except Deiner,
who played end for a letter in
1940.
Draft Hits Rocky
Mountain Teams;
Frosk May Play
CHICAGO, Sept 16 -(P)-The
Cleveland Rams scored a touch
down, converted the point and
added a field goal in the second
period Tuesday night to defeat
the Chicago Cardinals, 10 to in
a National league professional
football game in Comiskey park.
DENVER, Sept W--Severe Bowling Scores
losses to the draft and defense
jobs may force the Rocky Moun
tain conference to let freshmen
play varsity football this season.
Faculty representatives of the
five-college circuit will meet Wed
nesday night to decide: whether
Boar Walk
theirs will be the first conference f""
in the nation this year to take j MUihoua
this step, only three days ahead of I Tomkina
Al - ? Ms A I rKTKM
we season a ursi game.
MERCANTILE LEAGUE
Valley Motor
aussoa , . 1a 11s
J. Doerfier 164 169
Smith 4 91
Hart 160 ITS
ColdweU .173 113
Total 736 677
167 420
14 476
120 307
14S 483
ISO 476
761 3M4
130
13S
94
-123
Total
.103
SS4
146
143
S3
116
120
41S
school but Colorado
x,..
W1""v"' j SUchflel Oils
Mines, wnose engineering stuaents 1 Schwab
are deferred from the selective ?!3,8h1"'
service, lost important first string
players to the draft. The hardest
hit were Western State: at Gun
nison, Colo., and Greeley, Colo.,
State.
McCune
Hammond
Herrinatoa
Total
-173
-102
-1S7
-104
Siletz Salmon run
On; Catches Good
TAFT, Sept 16 (JP - The
Silets bay salmon nut started
nearly two weeks ahead of
schedule, fishermen Tuesday
ascribing ft to heavy fall rains.
. Salmon were caught ever" the
weekend at the rate ef one
every five salnates. i. ! j
Dr. Pepper
Lenaburg
Warner
J. Kaffun .
Heneary .
H. Kafnin .
Total
193
132
302
106
-180 128
-716 761
17$
113
107
122
60S
-135
-132
-US
90
.150
.622
Capital City Laos-fty
Handicap . 47 47
Ktrchner , 190 186
Woe Ike 147 164
LaOuke 7, H5 129
Wallace . 148 146
Colgan ' IIS 157
Total 790 BZ9
Seia
Deusmore
Zander
Crow
Otds
Shrunk
Total'
-146 174
Jtt 114
86 104
.161 158
.149 181
-684 731
106 382
160447
120 307
135 373
113 335
6431845
199 565
119 353
178 637
125 333
153 461
7662243
1S7 497
127 372
69 272
118 315
151 423
6521879
47 141
201 577
166 477
98 372
127421
111 386
7502374
138452
109 370
67 277
17148
202 S32
706-2121
Ashley ,
Total
Champion Ward Wins Match and
Gallery in Omaha Exhibition
. By ODELL HANSON
OMAHA, Sept 16-VMarvin II "Bud" Ward scored
two-wav triumnh on Omaha's field club fairwnv Tiimsrlav. I Rich
beating Omaha's favorite son, Johnny Goodman, one-up in an I tjhny
18-hoie charity exhibition and putting a gallery of once-hostile I sv7
. . 1 ..:
opoxane i
I Gleans Ke wbJU
Paul Spendla J62
Walker S3
Bramei 1M
Dull .149
-150
167
12S
144
96.
131
153 482
159378
143439
152 387
143 434
.706 644 : 750 2129
Laatsh Celery
Tsukamoto
Bailey '
Tanaka
Affura .
Teda
Total
J61
.S3
163
139
163
Bosler Electric
Bendciaoa -
-121
-125 137
.114 162
.004 764
Omaha fans on the
swinger's band , wagon in the
process.
Wooing much the same gallery
that was accused of undue ani
mosity toward Ward while he was
winning his second amateur title
on the same course last month
proved the easier job. v
From gallery reaction, it looked
as though both were favorite sons.
A crowd that swelled to more than
1000 before . the , match's end
cheered lustily for every excep
tional ; shot whether Ward's or
Goodman's and the applause on
the 7 18th - green when " Ward
cinched - the " win should have
wiped away any unpleasant mem
ories the jut-jawed champion car
148 470
133359
132416
189 442
151 427
743 aiao
116-i- 414
95 356
193 503
129 443
332
.736 SS2 : 6322056
-161
J6l
.147
153 161
.114 119
137
102
163
ried back to Spokane after his I ff Jfc?7 1r m 133- 37
championship appearance.
- The match .itself
Smith
was
Mitchell
mnr I Dye
arviHviH4 MMUA WftiUUMUta VU I - Total
carded 73s, one oyer par.
12 128 i 148 306
.J3S ISO 174 471
95 140 132 SSf
143 200 ' 172 515
-.628 749 759 2136
' Handicap
Dumy ,-,
K ester
7 From the outset Ward showed
&im efforta of m vtlrl an1 (nflnmn
that had kept him under a doctor's
care much of the time since hilH?!r?
par-five third to a birdie for the
Omaharv former national and
open champion. '
Proceeds went to Father Flan
agan's Boys Town, already the
recipient of a $1000 i check from
the Spokane Athletic round table
of which Ward is secretary.
. 2T
-17
-11
-692
27 J7 SI
96 179 462
90 1104-3
125 152 404
98 119 SZt
91 94 279
53S 690 X
Trz C: 7nrr
hnitm Warlar - rel OB .
Daily Trips to YarUaaS
rhaaa 49CS US S. Cottaco
gJBBBSssss-isiistlasSiBBas
McNeill out
Of Pacific
Tennis Meet
LOS ANGELES, Sept 16-ff)-Former
National Singles Champ
ion Don McNeill of Oklahoma City
met defeat in a surprising r
versal of form Tuesday as play
continued in the annual Pacific
Southwest Tennis tournament
Larry Dee, 20-year old Stan
ford university student caught
McNeill in an epidemic of errors
and knocked him out of the
tournament, 6-4, 4-6, 8-6.
George Richards of nearby
Montebello defeated National
Doubles Champion Ted Schroeder,
6-3, 6-4, and Hal Surface, the
Kansas City player now a flying
cadet at March Field, Calif-
ousted Ted Olewine of Los An
geles, 6-4, 8-10, 6-1.
Frank Kovacs of Oakland won
from 1 Willis Anderson, Los An
geles, national : public courts
champion, 6-4, 9-7. while William
Talbert Cincinnati, won from
Douglas Woodbury, Los Angeles,
4-6, 6-3, 6-2. ,
In the women's: division, Sarah
Palfrey Cooke, Boston, national
women's champion, defeated Shir
ley Postel, Lbs Angeles, 6-1, 6-0;
Margaret Osborne; San Francisco,
defeated Jan Stanton, Beverly
Hills, 6-0, 6-0: Midge Van Ryn.
Austin, Tex eliminated Valerie
Scott England, 6-2, 6-0, and De
fending Champion Dorothy Bundy,
canta Monica, won from Patricia
Hover Rose, 2-6, 6-0, 6-2.
Leaders Go
. ' 7 - 7' r;-7'x -j ) : ."
Into Lengthy
Game Again
By JOHN FRYE
CINCINNATI, Sept 16-flV'
The Brooklyn Dodgers and Cin
cinnati's former world champions
developed a reasonable facsimile
Tuesday of their dinner at eight
affair Monday -but there was
one important variation. "
The Reds won 4 to 1 in 11
innings. Instead of the Dodgers,
to salvage one victory out of their
three-games series. Since St
Louis finished in a tie with the
New York Giants, this was not
a particularly, punishing blow. .
Otherwise the game went ex
tra innings; it was full of beau
tiful pitching and also full of
flubdub, and it finally ended in
daylight at that
The end came when Bill Wer
ber came to bat in the 11th with
two out and Eddie Joost roosting
on second after getting a single.
Werber, who had knocked ha
every one of the Reds' other
runs one with a single ta the
first and two more with a doa
ble In the seventh this time
lined a cracking single Into left
field and Joost slid home de
spite a Herculean throw by Joe
Med wick. That gave Reekie Ray
Starr, Cincinnati's third pitch
er, his first victory since arriv
ing from Indianapolis two
weeks age,
Elmer Riddle, the Reds' silent
young phenom from Georgia, sup
plied practically all the beautiful
pitching In an effort .to win his
18th game of the year. Not an
earned run was scored off him in
the nine innings he labored. Sup
port that would cause wagging
heads in a Class D league cost
him one run in the second and
two more in the ninth.
Brooklyn 3 6 1
Cincinnati 4 12 4
Kimball, Hamlin (7), Higbe (8),
Casey (fl) and Owen, Franks (9);
E. Riddle, Beggs (10), Starr (10)
and LombardL
Braves Sock Cubs
CHICAGO. Sept lMVTha
Boston Braves unloosed a 15
hit attack Tuesday to defeat
the Chicago Cubs, 8 U 5, in the
final meeting of the teams this
season. The Cabs get 12 hits
eft Al Javery. bat he kept them
well scattered.
The Braves pummel ed Claude
Passeau for five runs in the first
five innings and kept the lead
thereafter. Henry Gornickl, Wim
py jQuinn and Ken Raffensber
ger, rookies, finished up for the
Cubs.
Boston 8 15 4
Chicago . ..5 12 1
Javery and Masi; Passeau, Gor
nickl (6), Quinn (8), Raffensber
ger (9) and Schefflmg.
750 Antelope Tags
Left for Hunters
PORTLAND, Sept 18 -(ff)-Only
730 antelope tags remain,
the state game commission said
Tuesday.
They are for use in Malheur
county south of the Burns-Ontario
highway for the season opening
October 22 and in parts of Lake
and Harney counties starting Sep
tember 28.
Three thousand tags
authorized.
were
Filberts Uasled
EeUey Farcpitar
Salem, Oregon
Youll Need This Boot
for
HUNTING!
It's Light
It's Flexible
Its Durable
- o
I ,w.
uulitljli. $ .mW M
' Us3e to -Illaxnette
' Valley -'
: - Opmlons"
DaSy-'.-KSLEl
' '
Ut to U.-4J
387 Sttle St.
Salem