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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1942)
Bums9 Rash Is Still Tough On Brave Nine Swope Victim of Tough PGA Survivors All Hot Shots; Prize Rookie BySords 3-0 Mound Battle With Nelson Scared 9 Salem, Oregon, Friday Lovely weather for baseball we're having, isn't is? A communique from 25th and Turner road area states that a submarine was trapped in the first-base coaching box the other day and a fleet of chasers attacked and sank her on the spot. And now'i a good time for Willamette to take up crew prac tice the ball park would be an ideal spot. They wouldn't lack a coach either, as Lt. 'ansome 'arold Hauk is now qualified to lead a marine team. Incidentally, have you seeri Lt. Hauk in his new outfit? A vote for he asf the best navy. dressed Louie in the O Good Old Suspended List All this hullabaloo being raised about both Portland's Bevos and Seattle's Rainiers work'.ig the "angles" of the good old baseball suspended list isn't at all new to Western Internatio nal league clubs. As long as the WI has been in operation advantage of the "sit uation,1' so to speak, has been taken, although teeth were bridged into the loopholed rule just last season. If a player U placed on the suspended list in this league aow, another most be released when suspended player is brought back to active duty. Before, it was just m matter of exchanging player for player, and viee versa. The suspended plajer or players travelled with the team and worked out before fames, but when the game start ed had to remove his suit and get up in the stands. And more than once during the course of i lame said player was called from the stands to don the suit and enter the game, changing places with some other member f the club. Seven days was the minimum time alloted anyone on the list, truly a ball club's protection, which, as we look at it. is a very favorable way to maintain play ers who would otherwise be forced loose by release. It's particularly favorable during times like these, as you never know when one or more of your key men will be grabbed up by the military, leav ing you with the bat boy to drive in the runs. O flayer Must Be 'Injured Of course the suspended list was originated wKh the idea that it should be used for injur ed players. Their respective pay goes on Just the same as if they were playing every day. And should a player come up with a sore finger, or feet, or a kink in the back things that are al ways wrong with every player at one time or another during a season he is rightfully eligi ble for the suspended list, much to the Joy of the club owner or manager who is always seek ing ways and means of bettering the club, but afraid to turn loose a player or two. Taking ad vantage of the situation is only natural for any ball club in war times now, as it's tough enough to find and maintain a team that will take up the slack left by the draft and better paying war in dustries. If the heads of the industry have nothing better to do, they should Visualize the difficulties of the player limit rule and relax it en tirely at least for the duration. grounders & Pickups The pace-setting Tacoma Ti gers have scheduled a benefit . game with the Sand Point Naval team for next month. And a few of the ex-WTers will be playing for the Bines, such as Don White, San Francisco Seals. Edo Tannic, Seattle Rainiers; "Chief Levi McConniek, Spo kane and Portland Bevo, and Joe Spadafere, who once played football for. the Santa Clara Broncos . . . Our Senators had Tracksters Will Hustle In PC Conference Meet SEATTLE, May M-GVThereTl be an extra incentive in all races and field events here Saturday for contestants in the annual Pacific Coast conference track and field meet. For reasons of economy conference moguls have ruled that only the first two finishers, in stead of three as formerly, will qualify for the dual meet be tween the Coast and Big Ten conferences to be held at North western university June IS. Meanwhile, all four southern teams, from the University of Southern ' California. UCLA, California and Stanford, were expected here Friday morning, with most of the northern di vision squads coming m the af ternoon and evening. Word from j Berkeley Thurs day disclosed that California changed earlier plans and is ,- sending only If men Instead at AL LIGHTNER Statesman Sports Editor Morning, May 29. 1942 Waits for Ted - Now that Ted Williams, slugging Red Sox outfielder, has enlisted as a cadet In the Naval Avia tion, any wedding plans held by Williams and Doris Soule (above) of Princeton, Minn., will have to wait. Miss Soule told newsmen she and Ted have no marriage plans yet and that Ted can't marry until he gets his Navy wings and a commission. Pekars Edge Heltzels in Weekly Golf By the slim margin of three strokes, 533 to 537, Millard Pekar's divot diggers won a dinner from John Heltzel's mashie marauders in the second intramural teacm match of the twilight golf season at the Salem Golf club Thursday afternoon. The outcome was in doubt until the last medal score was posted. jen foils d was low gross and Don Woodry's was low net. Net scores were: Capt. Pekar 34, W. Busick 42, Briston 43. Young 33, Bar ren 41. Fisher 38. Petre 38, dinger 37, Stevenson 36, Estey 36, Thrush 4, Gustafson 39, Hall 18, Waterman 38. Total 533. Capt. Heltxel 37, Joseph 33. Woodry 31, Eyre 41, Mill 39, Adolph 44. McAllister 39. Len gren 37. Emlen 41, Thomson 41. Lynch 37, MeCargar 41, Potts IS. Hainan 41. Total 537. a game scheduled with the Navy for George E Waters park next month, too, but since the Blues cannot stray over 19 miles off the reservation said game had to be cancelled ... If Gordon White wUl call at The Statesman of rice we can re turn the baseball glove he lost over on the coast. lt as first announced. The Bears will be minus their cap tain and pole vaulter, Gulna Smith, who reported for army air force training, , and their star tuartermiler, Grover Klem mer, who b out for the season, with a bad leg. Eight' men are coming from Stanford, led by the hurdle star, Ed HerteL who has done 14-1 in the high and 23.5 in the lows this year. Hertel probably will draw most of his competition from langlegged Pat Haley ef Washington State. " ' ' ' " V v: :x-:-x : :-:vX-..-: A1- BOSTON, May 28 -(S3) -The Brooklyn Dodgers continued their mastery over the Boston Braves Thursday; chalking up their sixth success of the season at the ex pense of Casey Stengel's men with a 6 to 4 decision. In running: their victory string to four straight, however, the Dodgers had to put down a ninth inning rally as the Braves sought to break the jinx that has kept them from winning a single game from the league - leaders this year. For seven in nings, Kir by Higbe held the Braves scoreless 'and allowed only three hits, then walked two men in the eighth. After a force out had moved Frank Demaree to third. Tommy Holmes came through with a run producing single. The- Braves continued their at tacks in the final frame with Max West connecting with his second homer of the year to account for two of the three runs the bean town boys scored in that inning. Higbe finally squelched the rally, however, by fanning Pinch Hit ter Ernie Lombardi. Brooklyn .001 203 000 6 11 0 Boston 000 000 0134 7 3 Higbe and Owen; Early, Dono van (9) and Kluttz. Lee Hurls Cub Win Over Cincy CHICAGO, May 28-(-Big Bill Lee limited Cincinnati to six hits Thursday and drove in the winning run in the 12th inning as the Chicago Cubs defeated the Reds 2 to 1. The big righthander's long fly scored Peanuts Lowrey from third to end the contest and give Lee his seventh victory of the season. The Cubs touched the Reds' 36-year-old rookie Ray Starr for 10 hits. The Reds scored in the second when Hank Sauer homered into the center field bleachers with a drive that traveled at least 450 feet. Cinci 010 000 000 0001 6 Chi 010 000 000 0012 10 0 (12 innings.) Starr and Lamanno; Lee and McCuIlough. Crespi's Clout Gives Cards Extra-Heat Win PITTSBURGH, May 26-(JP) Pinchhitter Frankie Crespi's sharp single into left scored George ivurowsKi irom second oase in the 11th inning Thursday night to give the St Louis Cardinals a to 2 triumph over Pittsburgh. A crowd of 16,577 saw the Bucca neers drop their fifth straight game. St. Louis 000 200 000 01-3 10 1 Pitts. ... 001 000 001 00-2 9 2 M. Cooper, Bazley (9), Gumbert and W. Cooper; Heitzelman, Wil kie and Lopez, Baker. Fishin' Reported As Not so Good PORTLAND, May 28-(iiP)-Fish-ermen have only fair prospects for the weekend, the state game commission reported Thursday. Throughout the Willamette val ley most reports have been poor. Along the coast, fishing has been from fair to poor and in southern Oregon it has been uniformly poor. Deschutes county has had some good lake fishing and the Meto lius river in Jefferson county has been good for fly fishing. Else where in the state the report in dicates poor to fair prospects. How 7 hey ST AN DP, WESTERN INTERNATIONAL W L Pet. I w I . P.I Tacoma 22 U .667jSALM .14 17 .452 y MtiL-vr. ii is .331: Spokane 10 20 333 x nuraiay i results: At Vancouver 3. Salem . At Spokane 8. Ticonu 1 Hew Scries Stand: SALEM L. Vancouver 2. Spokane 1, Tacoma I. COAST LEAGUE W L Pet J ur i. t. Los Ang. 30 19 -il2 Oakland . 34 as .480 Sacra. 28 21 .571; San Frn. 21 M .447 s. uiego- 31 24 .564 HollYwd nn ill seatue zi 23 .540, Portland 19 31 .380 mnriaay i retails: At Portland-San Francis nnrt. poned). " At Oakland 7. Sacramento It Tirt At Seattle 3. Los Angeles 0. At Hollywood . San Diego 2. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct.1 W L Pet. Brookln 29 11 a St. Louis 23 17 .575! N. York lt 22 '.463 Boston - 23 19 348 Chicago 1 34 .424 ,1nfni -IS 20 .474 Ptula. 13 2S J17 sumaT rnuu: Brooklyn t. BostiM 4. Chicaeo 2. Cincinnati 1 M i ,S1-L""1 S. Pittsburgh a. (U innings at nicnt.) (Only games scheduled.) ' AJfTJUCAN LEAGUE N . York 27 10 .73ost. Louis . . . " -'" asn. is 22 . "nroit -24 20 -545.Phlla. 17 26 J95 Boston rJi9 1 JOOiChlcagO -15 25 J75 New Tork X Philadelphia 2. Detroit . Cleveland a. wasouunon . Boston L (Night St. Lotus f, Chicago . (Night game.) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 2-4, Minneapolis 1-0, Toledo 4, St. Paul a. Louisville X Milwaukee 1. Indiana doIm a. Kansas dtr S. Msl" " Vancouver's Henricsen VANCOUVER, BC.-(S p e c i a 1)-The Vancouver Capilanos made it two in a row over the Salem Senators here Thursday night behind the effective five-iit twirling of righthander Bob Henricsen, who turned in a neat 3-0 shutout over the visitors. Burton Swope was his adversary on the mound, and al though touched for seven blows by the Caps, pitched well enough to win most games. But Hemic sen had too much and kept the Senator hits well scattered, allow ing no two in the same inning. Swope's cause was not aided flawlessly as was Henricsen's, Shortstop Johnny Granato and Second Baseman Alf Cailteaux booting rollers for the only errors of the game. The game marked the debut of Salem's new first baseman. Jack Richards, who got one of the visitors' hits. Vancouver scored its first run in the third when Mallory singled, advanced to third on Mullen's one bagger, and scoring when he and the Cap second baseman pulled the double steal. Salem threatened often enough, but three swift double plays by the Caps cut the rallies short and pulled Henricsen out of what few jams he got into. The two clubs will continue with their series in Vancouver Friday night and will play a double header Saturday. Those dates were originally slated for the Salem park, but were trans ferred to Vancouver. Salem (0) AB R H PO A E Granato, ss ....3 0 113 1 Gonzales, If 4 0 0 3 0 0 Johnson, 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 Richards, lb 3 0 1 11 0 0 Warren, c 3 0 0 2 0 0 Leininger, cf ....3 0 0 3 2 0 Petersen, rf 3 0 1 2 0 0 Cailteaux, 2b ... 3 0 0 3 2 1 Swope, p 2 0 1 0 2 0 Totals 28 0 5 24 7 2 Vancouver (3) AB R H PO A E Mallory, 3b 4 1112 0 Mullen, 2b 5 0 1 6 5 0 Maddern, cf 3 1110 0 Russo, rf 3 0 0 3 2 0 Wright, lb 4 1 1 12 0 0 Jonas, If ..3 0 0 0 0 0 Sueme, c 4 0 2 1 1 0 Kretchmar, ss .3 0 0 3 3 0 Henricsen, p ....2 0 1 0 2 0 Totals .. 31 3 7 27 15 0 Salem 000 000 0000 Vancouver ...001 100 10 3 Pitcher, Henricsen, runs re sponsible for, 0; struck out by, 1; base on balls off, 1. Swope, runs responsible for, 2; struck out by, 7: base on balls off. 2. Passed balls, Warren. Left on bases, Sa lem 3, Vancouver 12. Three base hits, Maddern. Two base hits, Wright. Runs batted in, Wright. Sacrifice, Henricsen. Stolen bases, Mullen, Mallory. Double plays, Kretchman to Mullen to Wright, Russo to Wright. Mullen to Kretchmar to Wright. Time 1.35 Umpires, Harris and Moran. Spokane Hits Stride With 8-1 Triumph SPOKANE, May 28-(vP)-With Earl Torgeson and Bob Daly pac ing a hit parade, the cellar dwell ing Spokane Indians looked like the old-time Western Internation al league champions Thursday night for the first time mis season, hammering their way to an 8 to 1 decision over Tacoma behind A Murray O'Flynne's eight-hit pitch ing. Tacoma bunched hits in only one inning, clustering three sin gles in the sixth for its only tally, and failed to earner an extra-base knock off OTlynne. Meanwhile Spokane was pounding- out 16 hits off Chet Johnson, three of them triples. Torgeson and Daly each hit one ef the three-baggers and each had two singles, the latter in five trips and Torgeson in four. Roy Younker and Manager piP Koehler each had two for four for Tacoma. Tacoma 000 001 0001 8 Spokane 020 012 03 S 16 0 Johnson and Spurgeon; OTlynne and Myers. Seattle Sinks Angels Behind Turp's Effort SEATTLE, May 28-iP)-Seattle took a one-game edge over Los Angeles in their Pacific Coast league series here by blanking the Angels 3 to 0 Thursday night for Farmer Hal Turpin's eighth victory of the) season. Each team collected seven hits but Seattle did a better job of bunching them effectively. - v " , Both teams threatened re peatedly in the early innings, bat Seattle peeked away with a run in each of three Innings to give Tnrpin Us eighth win against a single loss. It was the first win for Tnrpin in four starts after having won seven straight In his preriom three starts he lost once and pitched IS-inning- nasi nine-inning- ties. Los 4Angeles000 000 000-4 1 Seattle -0Qi 001 10x3 T 1 Lynn, Gehrman () and Todd; Turpin and Ctulina. Gordon's Ninth Inning Single Big Yank Blow NEW YORK, May 28-()-Joe Gordon waited until the ninth inning to stretch his batting streak to 13 straight games Thursday and then he came through with the blow that gave the New York Yankees a 3 to 2 decision over the Philadelphia Athletics. The single, hit with the bases loaded and scoring Tommy Henrich, broke np a pitching duel between Veteran Jack Knott and Rookie Hank Boro- wy and gave the world cham pions a sweep of the two-game series. The former Fordham pitcher had not worked in more than three weeks. As the result he was a bit rusty and gave up nine hits, compared with six the Yanks got off Knott Nevertheless, Boro- wy stuck it out to chalk up his second win of the season. Phil'd'lphia 100 100 000 2 9 1 New York......l00 010 001 3 3 1 Knott and Hayes; Borowy and Rosar. Trucks Tosses Tiger Victory DETROIT, May 28-(i!P)-For the first time this season. Rookie Vir gil "Fire" Trucks fulfilled expec tations Thursday by pitching the Detroit Tigers to a four-hit 6 to victory over the Cleveland In dians in the first of two games in a fight for the American league's second place. The Tigers now trail the Indians by a single game. While it was his second ma jor league victory, it was the first time Trucks, 23-year-old right-hander from Buffalo of the International league, was around at the finish in four games. Roy Weatherly gathered two of the safeties, Including his third homer in the fourth inning, and Les Fleming singled across the other run in the sev enth. Cleveland ..000 100 1002 4 Detroit 201030 00x 6 9 Milnar, Ferrick (6), Eisenstat (8) and Hegan, Denning (8); Trucks and Tebbetts. Servo Donates Share Of Purse to Relief NEW TORK, May Z -(JP) Marty Servo announced Thurs day night, after losing a close ten-round decision to Ray Rob inson, that he is donating ten per cent of his purse to US coast guard relief. He is a member of the coast guard. With a gross gate of $31,870, this contribution would amount to more than $500. His purse was estimated at some $5000 to $6000. Enzler Applies for V7 PORTLAND, May 28-(P)-Joe Enzler, coach at Boardman high school and 1939 little All-America fullback at Portland university applied to the naval reserve Thursday for class V-7. He was the first to apply under a new regulation permitting mar ried men to take the officer train ing course. Lighthorse Harry Is the Gent Does It' the Mostest in Big Pro By WHITNEY MARTIN Wide World Sports Columnist NEW YORK, May 28 He won't win the PGA tournament. After all, medalists seldom do, partic ularly if they are golfers like Har ry Cooper, who has been runner up so often his name should be Harry Cooper, the second. If Lighthorse Harry had run true to form he would have lost out on the final green in the final match when his opponent sank a chip shot for a birdie. That's his kind of luck. . If you consider only the num ber of times he's come close to winning one of the major tourna ments, and failed, you might de scribe his career as a saga of fu tility. The only drawback to that description is that few golfers have profited more financially over a long period of years, and someone once said the goal of a pro golfer is to make money. And, come to think of it, why limit it to pro golfers? !i He's a slight, baldish little gentleman who practically teethed on a nlblkk. . He was born tn Leather head. England, although he'd probably get sore if yon called him a Leatherhead. His dad was a pro before hiss, and started initiating his off spring into the mysteries of the By GAYLE TALBOT ATLANTIC CITY, May 28 -P) Outside of the 4rief scare in the afternoon, when the veteran Joe Kirkwood made an amazing rally to tie Byron Nelson at the 32nd hole, the PGA championships ran their pre-destined, unruffled course through the second round of match play at the Sea view club Thursday. The eight survivors who wUl square off in Friday's quarter finals are fairways big shots. The little fellows who came here hopefully were cleaned out and on their way back home, more convinced than ever that the modern money game is a closed corporation. Friday's lineup will look fa miliar to the golf fan: Jimmy Demaret plays Craig Wood; Sammy Snead plays Ed Dudley; Byron Nelson meets Har ry Cooper, and Ben Hogan will endeavor to send Corporal Jim Turnesa back to the army. Included in the eight were the national open . champion, Wood; the Augusta masters' king, Nel son; tne noider oi tne varaon trophy and leading money win ner, Hogan; the man who once took eight strokes on the 72nd hole of an open championship, Sammy Snead, and the Argentine open champion, Demaret. Nelson, the tournament fav orite, must have been the most startled man in New Jersey when Kirkwood, the 45-year-old trick shot star, caught him and looked him in the eye on the 32nd green. Nelson had been 4-up at lunch and appear ed to have the match safely salted away. And then he start ed frittering away while Kirk wood settled down to par-shattering golf. At any rate, the jolt appeared to have done Nelson good. He gathered himself to shoot birdies both on the 33rd and 34th holes and to send Kirkwood tumbling, eventually, 2 and 1. Nelson has no confidence in his present form, though, and predicted today that Hogan and Snead would be the finalists. Angry Pirate Fan Charges Wrong plmps' PITTSBURGH, May 28 -(P) Police had. to go to the aid of Umpire Tommy Dunn Thursday night when an angry fan grap pled with him at the end of the Pittsburgh - St. Louis baseball game at Forbes field. Dunn said afterwards, it was a case of "mistaken identity." The fan with part of the 16,577 fans who watched the game cheering him on, accused Dunn of mak ing a decision in the 11th inning which helped the Cardinals win It was Umpire Ziggy Sears who ruled Martin Marion was safe on a bunt, and who banished First Baseman Elbie Fletcher for dis Dutine the decision. The fan thought Dunn had called the play, No one was hurt in the mixup Coast League OAKLAND, Calif., May 2 8 (AVScore of first night game (7 innings by agreement). Sacramento 300 031 411 1568 Oakland 050 101 t 7 13 4 Lyons, Wicker (2), Beers (5) and Mueller; Di Biasi, Pippen (5), Ananics (7), and Raimon di. HOLLYWOOD, May 28 (A5) Night game: San Diego 020 010 000-3 9 Hollywood 000 000 000-0 2 Dilbeck and Salkeld; Bittner and At wood, Brenzel (8). game when Harry was six. Con sequently the lad developed a style which today is rated al most flawless. He's the most jittery guy we ever saw on a golf links, and we've seen him give a hot-foot leap when a camera clicked while he was putting. It's a mystery to us how he would win the medal at Atlantic City with the gnats as bad as our Mr. Gayle Talbot told you they were. Our only theory is that they were just apprentice gnats, as the gnats we've seen out in the mid west would have picked up the second nine holes and put them ahead of the first nine, instead of just forcing the tournament com mittee to play the two nines trans posed. What we mean, they were mean, and we've seen night ball games practically gnatted out. Anyway, Cooper's airing of "almost" reads like the story of a man who never quit made It, although ho had seconds to spare. Be finished second in the 1927 opes, losing in the playoff after tying Tommy Armour for first. He finished second in the 1938 open, with Tony Manero coming out of nowhere to win after Light horse Harry appeared, safely in also mas BvERyrAiAiGr f ( 5-vVf OUrR6LD6K: f - :t A Fw3in ATLAMtA aRL7 K Booties oP YAP Salem Golfers to Play Tourney for The Salem Golf club announced Thursday that the net proceeds from the first annual handicap tournament starting this weekend will be turned over to the Red Cross.. Proceeds will come from the entrance fee to the meet. Robinson Runs Win Streak to 121 Straight NEW YORK, May 28-;p)-Ray Robinson ran his all-victorious string to 121 triumphs in a row as a fighter Thursday night, but he never came closor to having it broken than he did in going all out to take a 10 round deci sion from Marty Servo before a roaring, thrilled crowd in Madi son Square garden. Robinson weighed 144; Servo 143. As a matter of fact, on the Associated Press score card, Robinson won by the mere mar gin of one round. And this margin might have been the second, in which both fighters were guilty of hitting low, but for which Referee Billy Cava nagh penalised only Servo with loss of the round. After the verdict was announc ed, the booing was so loud that Announcer Harry Balogh was unable to make himself heard sufficiently over the public ad dress system to introduce the next fight. And, though Referee Cavanagh took the second round away from the little coast guardsman from Schenectady, NY, without first warning him, he took the trouble of warning the skinny Harlem hammer- for using his head in the final Vound and then did not penalize him. A crowd of 13,673 fans con tributed to a gross gate of $31,870 to see the show. For action and punch-a-mln-ute fireworks, there have been few clout parties in this big Eighth avenue sports palace like Thursday night's tussle. From start to finish, the kid from up-state carried the fight to the BP-town string-bean, who went Into the ring a 1 to 6 favorite, and it wasn't until the third round that Roundhouse Ray's bole punches under the heart began to pull him through. Who 'Almost Tourneys with a record 284. He finished second in the 1936 Masters, tied for second in the same event in 1938. He was runnerup in the San Francisco match play tournament in 1935, and in that same year fin ished second in the Agua Caliente, Atlanta Metropolitan, Pasadena and Louisville Opens. By this it may be seen that any body who answered: "Just a sec ond" when Harry asked them to hustle up was in danger of getting his ears slapped down, but just to queU any hurried impression that the little guy never won any thing, it might be remarked that he won plenty of tournaments. Enough, In fact, to snake him the leading money winner In 1S37 with 14,13S. That year he also won the first PGA Tardon trophy with S points, aad he had the best scoring average of the year. Since 1923 when, at 1$. he crashed into the money by win ning the Texas PGA , champion ship, he's been up there at the payoff window consistently, and usually well up front You cant fed sorry for those fellows. But when , it came to the big ones, he always has been the guy who didn't win; the perennial No. 2 man in the golf crew. . 1 Red Cross Pairings were made Thursday for the first round matches, which must be played by Sun day night. May 31. Champion ship and runner-up trophies will be donated winners by the Pioneer Trust company. The championship cup wUl become a permanent possession of the player who wins, it three times, while the runner-up cup will need but one win for perma nency. The pairings for Sunday and respective handicaps are: Chambers (8) vs. Petre (11): Bates (9) vs. Nash 4); W. Busick (8) vs. Victor (4); Glais yer (11) vs. Woodry (17); Gus tafson (13) vs. Thrush (14); Hague (9) vs. Pekar (11); Par ker (9) vs. McCalllster (10); Haman (10) vs. O. E. Thomp son (12); Creech (11) vs. E. H. Thompson (7); Hunter (17) vs. Scales (7); Lynch (8) vs. bye; Bristol (17) vs. Owen (14); Hendrie (lt) vs. Otten (12); Emlen (9) vs. G. Stevenson (11) ; Day (13) vs. bye; Earl (14) vs. Olinger (5); Heltsel (12) vs. Lenaren (5); H. Bus ick (9) vs. Painter (4); Col lins (15) vs. Joseph (13); Eyre (11) vs. Waterman (10); Bal dock (15) vs. Potts (8); Flan nery (6) vs. Hill (10); Adolph (12) vs. bye: Hart (19) vs. Skelley (9); Fisher (8) vs. J. H. Thompson (2); Estey (8) vs. B. Thompson; Alley (8) vs. Dr. Sears (29); Bones teele (I) vs. Bibbens (11); Curtis (11) vs. McLoughlin (16); Cline (1) vs. bye; Cop pock (16) vs. Ms Garger (15). Silverton Awaits I Opener, June 3 SILVERTON Baseball fans will have a chance to see their "fa vorite in action at Silverton next Wednesday night, June 3, when the Portland Firemen come hero to open the State league season with the Red Sox on McGinnia Field. The same teams will play a re turn game June 7, also on Mc Ginnis field. Nothing more has, been indi cated as to just who will play foi the Red Sox this season. To data only one regular player has signed his contract Manager Ken Man ning. Brownie Rally Gives Chisox Another Loss ST. 0UIS, May 28 -(JP)- Tha Chicago White Sox contributed three walks and the Browns slammed out two hits, one a rous ing double by Rick FerrelL, in a big eighth inning in which St, Louis crossed the plate four times for a 6 to 4 triumph Thursday night Chicago .200 000 200-4 9 1 St. Louis 010 100 04-4! 9 2 Grove, V. Appleton (8) and Dickey; Auker, Hanning (8), Cas ter (9) and Swift, Ferrell. CANT KEEP GRAtMlA III her era VmT hMhms nHm iisIn'wImU jU. 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