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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1942)
Along The Sports Trail .BY WHITNEY MARTIN Wide World Sports Columnist ' NEW YORK, July 15 Professional golf will hold its third annual all-star game at Detroit next Saturday and Sunday with the prospect that about $25,000 will be poured into the Red Cross coffer as a result The game Is something of a synthetic Ryder rap match, la that it replaces, the American Brttkh. Kyder competition, nec essarily abandoned because of ike war, and nobody eaa quibble . I rer its all-otar ratine Inasmuch aa it brine tnta action the out standing, players of the nation. May Get Snead This year it matches the Ryder team against a squad captained by Walter Hagen. The Ryder team will be, intact with the possible exception of Sammy Snead, who recently joined the navy. Fred Corcoran, PGA tournament man ager, says efforts are being made to obtain . official permission for Snead's participation, Inasmuch as the match is 100 per cent char ity, but in event this is impossible, Hagen will be asked to release Ed Dudley, PGA prexy, from his team to fill Snead's place. If Ha gen does not like this idea, Craig Wood, captain of the Ryder team. will name Jimmy Hines. The all-star match idea sprouted on a dreary day late In the fall of 1939. This befud dled correspondent telephoned Corcoran to find out what was - new In the pro world, and why. Gene Sarazen had just been emitted from the Ryder team for , the first time In years and years, and the ready-witted Corcoran, , knowing Gene's delight in being the center of a controversy, said quickly: ; .,.,: ' , "Sure, here's someuung. Sara sen doesn't 'like the Kyder choices. He says he can pick a , ; better team, and will challenge the Ryder team to a match. 111 call you back In five minutes." Sarazen, we learned later, .was sitting there grinning like a Che- shire cat, and he and Corcoran got busy with pencil and paper and ; Jn five minutes had a team. We ' wrote the yarn, and Corcoran im mediately was flooded with offers from prospective sponsors of the match. ' Detroit Chosen Detroit finally was. chosen. The match raised $12400 for the Red Cross, and Sarasen's team, was defeated, 7 and 5. Last year Bobby Jones captained the chal lenge team, and Jones' team won by the same score. That match contributed $18,600 to the USO. There is a $15,000 advance sale for this year's match, which is the rubber (priority?) match of . the series to date. " Hagen will play in the four ban competition, but not In the singles matches as he says "1 - want my team to win." Other members of his team are Law son Little, Dudley, Sam Byrd, Harry Cooper, Dick Metz, Chick Harbert, Clayton Ileal ner,' Ralph Guldahl, Henry Picard, Jimmy Thompson, and Al Wat- - rous, the home pro. The Ryder ' t team Is made up of Wood, ' Jimmy Demaret . Ben no; an, Byron Nelson, Sam Snead, Hor ton Smith, Vie Ghezzt Harold McSpaden, Sarazen, and Lloyd Mangrum. Oddly enough, five members of the Ryder team Wood, Sarazen, ; Hogan, Demaret and Mangrum were oh Jones' team last year, and five of - Hagen's squad Hagen, Dudley, Metz, Guldahl and Picard t J-are " former Ryder team mem . bers. Jones was invited to com--pete, but was unable to accept . With the expected $25,008 from the match, the pros' char ity contributions will soar around . the $100,001 mark, a splendid showing by a croup whose livelihood has been bit perhaps more than any ether sports group by the war. Grounders and . Pickups - Our Senators satisfied all ques- ' tion, temporarily at least, with their 0-5 triumph over Portland's Beavers last month but what is Mr. Solon Fan supposed to think when the Bevos trounce the Oax land Oaks after the Acorns had ' defeated Salem? . . . Could it be that George "The Duke", Wind , sor will be opposing Roy Helser . on the mound in the state semi pro championship? -Windsor is hurling for the Boilermakers while Helser pitches and plays : outfield for the Red Sox. Both are ex -Salem Senator moundsmen "'. Our softball correspondent ' tells of a heated battle last Mon - day night when the Pheasants and r the Browns began throwing every thing but punches. Frankie Evans, Bird outfielder, circled the bases non-stop amid the excitement of : three errors . .' . The life history of Frank Valerio, former WI league umpire, certainly gets around. Vancouver, Salem and Ta coma have given over a . column ' each to "One Eye." Raco Result - SEATTLE, July 15.--Val-dino Eterno beat off a stretch drive by the heavily favored Count Anklet to win the feature mile and one-sixteenth iraee at Loaracres In 1:44 S5 Wednes day. ' :;r :: . -: ' V ,'"" Vl; - The winner, ridden well by BUly Pearson, -paid $18, $7.S4 and $3.99 on a $2 mutuel ticket. Count Anklet, which cama up fast for second place, paid $2.30 and $2.40. Brlr D'Or, the, leader most of the way, paid $3.10 to show. ': " . . ' - '; ' , 1 V" . : A. v.: J A - I : " J GENE SARAZEN Semi-ProTUt Halted Again; Play Tonight SILYERTON, July lHPhThe semi-final came in the Oregon State semi-pro baseball tourna ment, scheduled lor Wednesday night, was postponed until to night Marin Electric, Portland, will meet the defending champion Silverton team. The winner will play the Portland Boilermak ers for the state title. Lefty Al Lien Purchased by San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO, July 15.-P) Lefthanded Al Lien, 26-year-old hurler from the Tacoma club of the " Western International leagued was purchased by the San Fran' cisco Coast league baseball team at an unannounced cash figure Wednesday in a move to bolster the Seals' weak pitching staff. Lien, whose 180 pounds are distributed over a six-feet-two frame, will report to the Seals at bnee. Seal Press Axent Wal ter Mails announced. The north erner has won 12 games and lost five to date this season, his last fame beinr a four-hitter. While pitching for the Yakima club, also in the Western Interna tional circuit, in 1941, Lien won 12 and lost 9, struck out 155 bat ters and' boasted an earned run average of 3.41. The deal came at a time when the Seals' best and most reliable hurler, 43-year-old Sam Gibson, Is readying himself to take the . mound in Friday night's game with Sacramento. Sam. has pitched 30 consecutive scoreless innings and Friday nigh he hopes to better the PCL record of 38 innings of shutout hurled by Tony Freitas, Sacramento mound star. Spokes Sock Tigers, 12-8 In Slugf est - V TACOMA. July 15-ff)-Spotting Tacoma a six-run lead in the first inning, the Spokane Indians came back with a rousing seven-run uprisings . of their own in ' the second and went on to gain a' 12 to 8 victory over the Western Inter national league leading Tigers in their series opener here Wednes day night The defeat, aceompanled by , the second-place Vancouver club's 1 to 0 victory over Salem, reduced - Tacoma's lead to single game. "'"1 Spokane, beaten m all seven previous appearances in Tacoma this season, - seemed v headed for another setback when the Tigers jumped on Bill Garland for six runs on five hits and two walks in the first inning, but the Indians promptly moved out in front in the second when they chased seven tallies across on four walks and a like number of hits, driving Del Holmes to the showers in tho-pro-cess. "Lefty" Al Lien, snaking his last appearance for the Tigers before ; reporting to the San Frasciseo Seals of the Pacific Coast league, relieved- BoUnes : and allowed only four hits and two runs, one unearned, daring his six and one-third tunings of relief work before be was lifted for a plBch-hiiter.in the eighth. Spokane 071 000 103-12 11 j 1 Tacoma .600 000 200- 8 1 10 , 3 Garland and Myers; Holmes, Lien (2) Scharu (9) andSpurgeon. enat dr&; -to ae' WTiirlaway rowned Champ Turf ' Brmdwinner ?7ins Suffolk Downs To Replace Bi By SED FEDER (AP) SporU Writer BOSTON, July 15-(P-Whirlaway buried Seabiscuit's all- time money wirining record deep of championV? Wednesday with a all but set fire to the track. Taking the Biscuit's throne as ' the world champion breadwin- : ner of the turf, the lonstafled Kentucky cannon ball turned loose his "crusher' kick in one burst of running power to come from almost out of sicht and win the rich Massachusetts handicap faster than it ever has been done before. ? . And with the $43,850 nay-check he picked up as he zipped across the finish line the colt they used to call crasy added enough to his earnings to - give him a total of $454,336 for his 2Vi years of rac ing, thereby wiping out the $437,- 730 mark the Biscuit took so long to pile up a few years back. Yet, In spite of the 130 pounds on his back, In spite of the fact he was spotting the front-runners up to 38 pounds apiece, In spite of the fact he'd never tan gled with Suffolk's "graveyard" before, Whirly came from 11 lengths back to hit the wire In 1:4$ 15 for the mile-and-an-eighth, lopping two-fifths of a second off the track record war relic chalked up In this same stake a year ago. At the finish, he had a clear edge of 214 lengths on rounders, the Irish-bred invader from Texas Emercon Woodward's barn and the margin was getting bigger with every stride, so fast wax he moving, to the accompaniment of cheers from 33,000 customers who knocked Mr. Big Tail down to even money in the betting. Another length farther back came Mrs. Parker Coming's Speedy Attention, one-time Whir la way jinx, and four lengths behind him was William Woodward's Apache, the tall, handsome three-year-old who was a surprise starter in this race after setting-'a track record at Empire City last Saturday. Jockey Georgie Woolf, the "ice man who has become Whirly s regular rider in the last month. was in the saddle again Wednes day. ; Stein gin9 With the SOFTBALLERS By DAN MOKLEY SOFTBALL STANDINGS W Pet. Papermakera . Keith Brown Golden Pheasant PM Office : Soldiers RamaAes 1.000 .750 .600 .500 .333 .000 .000 PM Machine Friday'! Game. 8:00 Valdex vs. Jr. Papermakers. 7:00 Keith Brown vs. Ramages. 8:00 PM Office vs. Soldiers. Tin wheel" Percy Crofoot and the Papermakers remained un defeated atop the Salem Softball league by edging out the Golden Pheasants 3 to 0. Crofoot limited the usually hard hitting Pheas ants to three hits, hone of which figured In the scoring. In the five inning opener; the Soldiers un leashed a nine hit attack against PM Machine Moundsman McFar land, good for 10 runs and a 10 to 3 victory. The Maker-Pheasant contest was a pitcher's' battle an the way, Koenlg allowing but five hits in losing the 3-2 heart breaker. The "Brass Ducks" did all of their scoring in the sec- L end Inning, capitalizing on one error and two fielder's choices. The Papermakers- tied It up In the third when Serdots tripled home Crofoot and French, and scored the winning tally hi the sixth, Morley scoring on Cro foot's bingle to right field. Cro foot fanned nine men and failed to walk a single batter. The win leaves the lUakers in an enviable position in the ti tle race as they have beaten the ; three runners-up ; . once each and now have only the tailend ers to defeat to win the first round. V-;-; -x'-- The : Soldiers opened fire with their heavy artillery in the opener to completely submerge ; Paper Mill Machine, scoring one run in the first frame, and gathering two more in the third, four in the fourth, and ; a final trio in the fifth. The three Machine runs came in a vain last inning, rally when they bunched four solid bingles. Moran was the Soldiers' batting leader, slamming out two doubles and a single in four trips to the plate. .SHE Papermakers .3 5 Golden Pheasant - 3 Crofoot and M. Nordquist Koenig and.Bulkley. " Soldiers i PM 'Machine . . , . Mack and . Moore; and Miller. -10 10 - 3 7 McFarland in. Suffolk Downs "graveyard streak of lightning speed that -- Dodgers Nab Hilarious 10-5 Win . Cub Hurler Fires Ball at Sly Bum Benchwarmers CHICAGO, July 15--The Brooklyn Dodgers and Chicago Cubs staged a stormy struggle for hours and 37 minutes Wednes day with the Dodgers emerging from what their fans would call a "rhubarb" on the long end of a 0 to 5 count By ' any name it was a wild afternoon, with the Dodger Jockeys giving- five Chicago hurlers a rough riding from the dugout as well as making 13 hits. The Cubs were so unsettled that they made five errors and in the fifth inning when Hiram Bithorn was removed fr dsn the mound he threw the ball at the Brooklyn benchwarmers. The Bruins fur ther showed their spirit by bat tling every step of the way, even though they were beaten to all intents and purposes when Clyde Passeau was driven out of the box in the third inning. When they were trailing 5-0 in the fourth Lou Novikoff and Jimmie Foxx blasted successive home runs and even in the eighth, beaten 10-3, the Cubs, managed to knoek out Kirby Higbe. - Brooklyn 013 131 010-10 13 2 Chicago :.OW210 020- S 9 5 Higbe, Casey (8) & Owen; Passeau, Bithorn (3), Erlckson (5), Pressnell (7), Mooty (8) and Hernandez, McCullough f5). Reds, Braves Split CINCINNATI, July 15-(jP)-Af ter losing their tenth straight game to Cincinnati in the opener 6-2, the Boston Braves Wednes day put together a five-run fifth inning in the nightcap to beat Paul Derringer, 7 to 2. In the opening game, three Boston mis cues contributed to the Reds' first three runs one in the second and two in the third. Boston 000110 000-2 5 3 Cincinnati 012 000 30x-6 12 1 Tobin and Lombardi; Walters and Lamanno. . Boston , .000 050 101-7 9 0 Cincinnati 000 001 100-2 7 1 Salvo and Kluttz; Derringer, Thompson (6), Shoun (8) and Hemsley, West (6), Lamanno (8). Pirates 6, Giants 2 PITTSBURGH, July 15-W3) Truett "Rip" SeweU quieted the noisy bats of the New York Giants Wednesday, holding them torsfx hits and scoreless till the ninth, as the Pittsburgh Pirates rang up a 6 to 2 victory. . i New York nnn 000 002-2 8 1 Pittsburgh' 002 100 30x-d 9 2 Carpenter, Sunk el (7), Adams (7) and Danning; Sewell and Lo pez. : .4 . : '- Cards Take Two ST. LOUIS, July 15.-(ff-Ex-plqsive hitting combined with ef fective pitching Wednesday gave the Cardinals victory over the Philadelphia Phillies, 7 to 3 In the ; opener and 9 to v 4 in i the nightcap of a double bill played for the benefit of the tuberculosis society of St. Louis. j ; M The double triumph boosted the Cards within 71? games of the league-leading Brooklyn - Dodgers. Johnny Beazley, Cardinal rookie, breezed to his 10th victory of the season in the first game. Philadelphia 000 100 020-3 9 3 St Louis - 020 100 22x-7 11 1 Hoerst, Pearson (7), N ahem (8) and Warren; Beazley and W. Cooper. ' Philadelphia '100 200 160-4 7 5 St Louis 100 107 OOx-9 11 1 ; Podgajny, Beck (7), Naylor (7) and Warren; Dickson and ODea. Senator Swat: CA ventres do not Include (irh with Vancouver wentneeoayr ' '-- as H pet . . Richards 158 51 323 Swope Warren J82 S8 212 Moore Johnson J73 84 .306 Erautt Petersen 228 65 ie5 Clow Cailtaux 2 T3 72 Smith Leinlngr 269 7: .268 Kelly--Adams 125 30 .240 Roube Taormin IS 4 XIX Sucpton AB H Pet Mil 2201 43 J09I 39 7 J79 60 10 .17 20 2 J00 e oaoo! A Ti lit Pitdhin Does Handicap Whirlaway, the Kentucky cannon ball whe dethroned the famous Sea Biscuit Wednesday afternoon when he romped home first hi the Suffolk Downs Massachusetts handicap In the record time of 1:48 15. (See story column 2.) Scdem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, July 16, 1942 Hal Turpin Adds 15th Win; Bevos Bounce Oaks Again SEATTLE, July 15-()-Hal Turpin, SeatUe's veteran right hander, chalked up his 15th victory Of the Pacific Coast league baseball season Wednesday night hits in a 2 to 1 first game of How They STAKfuD... WESTERN ENTERNATIONAI. "i" WLPct. s WLPct. Tacoma 49 34 J75; SALEM - 33 41 .446 Vancourr 43 35 .551 Spokane 33 4575 Wednesday's Results . SALEM 0, at Vancouver 1. Spokane 13, at Tacoma S. COAST LEAGUE - - WLPct WLPct Sacramto S3 39 418! Seattle ' 50 51 .495 Lot Aug 82 39 414, Oakland 44 57 .436 San Dieeo 55 SO 524! Holly wd 44 62 .415 San rran SO 48 -510PorUand 38 60 J88 Wednesday Kesnlts Portland 4, Oakland S. Startle 2-3, HoUywood 1-0. Sacramento 4, Los Angeles 8. San Diego 6, San Francisco 4. 2nd Portland-Oakland game post poned.) NATIONAL LEAGUE WLPct. WLPct Brooklyn 58 23 .716 ChlcaSO 41 45.477 St. Louis 49 30 .6201 Pittsburgh 38 42 .475 f Cincinnati 45 38 .NeiBostoa 37 sz .4is New York 42 42 .500 Philadel 22 60 68 Wednesday's Results Brooklyn 10, Chicago s. Boston 2-7, Cincinnati 6-2. New York 2. Pittsburgh 6. Philadelphia 3-4. St Louis 7-9. AMERICAN LEAGUE WLPct. WLPct New York 5a 28 .677; St. Louis 42 43.494 Boston 49 34 .590! Chicago 42 45 .483 Cleveland 49 36 .576 Philadel 35 55 .389 Detroit 444 JOS) Waahngtn 31 54 J65 Wednesday's Besolts New York 4. Cleveland 0. Chicago 1-11, Boston 10-6. St Louis 7, Philadelphia 4. . Washington 4, Detroit 3. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville S, Indianapolis 4. Milwaukee 3, Kansas City 2. MinneapoUs S, St Paul 4. 1 Columbus 6. Toledo 0, PIONEEK LEAGUE Idaho Falls 000 400 0004 Twin Falls 305 001 OOx Biale and Mulcahy; Cecil TTat-Htt 6 2 S 3 and Salt Lake - 000 050 009 016 11 Boise 020 000 102 005 3 Dijanich and Kerr; Staley and Paul Oeden 001 000 000 I 4 S Poratni 110 000 OOx 2 3 MasDero and Smith: Vergaa and Petersen. Mermaids Sicim For Records In Meet Today ItH take a lot of weathering to force the postponement ; of the scheduled-Leslie playground swimming and diving champion ships this afternoon, Barbara Smith, playground lifeguard ; di rector, promised Wednesday. A pair of slender mermaids threaten all existing records m the girls' division. Leah Smith and Snzanne Small, regular Bra dents of Bill Cody in Portland, are the annual record winners. Officials for today's meet: Start er,i Herbert: Ray; Judges,' Lloyd Girod, Guraee Flesher and Janet Rogers; clerk, Barbara Smith; an nouncer,' Tom , Drynan; assistant clerk, Lore tta Deacon; diving judges, Barbara Smith, Herbert Ray and Janet Rogers. The dty meet Is slated for Frl day, July 24. GeryaisIIighCoach rtiesiirns Jrosmon . GERVAIS Larry Mauion . has resigned as athletic coach at Ger vais "high school and has accepted the ! Dositiott of assistant - to the I director -nf TTn t Dlvmnia i ... ( - wasn. : '.ivi. ' -r-r 1 vais lour years. , rus - wue ana f daushtpr. TCnthprin. acrnmnanipd IVW1 . ' r him to Obmpia Friday. . ' -SI is m m - nr in Record Time . - . as he held Hollywood to eight a doubleheader. The second game was later - postponed. HoUywood scored first tn the fourth Inning. Joe Hoover got a scratch single, advanced on a sacrifice and scored on Del Tonne's single. Seattle bunched four singles, one of them by Turpin, for its two runs in the fifth. Turpin also contributed a double to Seattle's nine-hit attack. Hollywood 000 100 000: 0 L 8 T 9 Seattle 000 020 00 Bittner and Brenzel; Turpin and Collins. SEATTLE, July IS.-GPA three-hit pitching performance by Rookie Mike Budnick in the seven-inning second game gave Seattle a clean sweep over Holly wood In a Pacific Coast league baseball doubleheader Wednes day night Hollywood 000 000 0-0 3 2 Seattle 000 102 x-3 4 1 Perez. Joiner (5) and Atwood: Budnick and Beard. - Beavers 4, Oaks 2 PORTLAND, July 15-P) Portland's Beavers made it three in a row over Oakland's . Pacific Coast-league baseball team' Wed nesday night? with a 4-2 win in the seven-inning opener of a dou bleheader. (First night game). Oakland .i. ,, 010 100 02 8 3 Portland 030 001 4 8 I Salveson and Raimondi; Osborne and Mayer. Angels 8, Sacs 4 LOS ANGELES, 7uly 15-UP). Sacramento 000 200 0114 10 1 Los Angeles 204 000 11 8 15 2 Donnelly, Schmidt (3), Pintar (4), Wicker (6) and Mueller; Prim and Todd. ' .'' Seals 6, Padres 4 SAN! FRANCISCO, July 15- San Diego's Padres filled the bases and. banged across two runs in the tenth inning Wednesday night to-beat the San Francisco Seals, 6 to 4, and square their Coast league baseball series at a game apiece. ' : San Diego 011 200 000 2 14 -; 0 Seals -000 200 200 04 11 3 Brief Net Action In NW Tourney TACOMA, July lS.-ipHThird day of the 52nd annual Pacific northwest tennis tournament saw play of ; but 14 matches Wednes day. Unplayable conditions forced cancellation of all other net ac tivity. . - - - . IICIEY Announces - . . Tone 1st . -National "Eatw Wave SlaiicaCDiC Corned Beef & Cabbage Every Tues. 35 0 aad Thurs. u a. nr. t s r. m. Fresh Corned - C Beef Hash Friday. VSOv 479 (SOURT ST. g Battle Outhit Caps, ? Run Scored in VANCOUVER, BC, July than two to one, the Vancouver Capilanoa squeezed: across . the only run of the game in the initial frame to take a 1-0 decision from Hurler Ron Smith and the 2nd Straight Shutout Win Donald Dunks Tribe With Four Singles; Laab Hits for AY NEW YORK, July 15-P-The Regurgent New 'York Yankees chalked up their fourth "straight victory and second successive shutout Wednesday as Atley Don ald blanked the Cleveland Indians 4 to 0 on four hits. . ' It was Donald's sixth success contrasted to two defeats. He was supreme throughout keep ing the Indians' quarter of singles well spaced, fanning five and walking only one; No run ner reached second. The shutout was New York's ninth and followed on the heels of Hank Borowy's whitewashing of the Detroit Tigers yesterday. Cleveland 000 000 000-0 4 New York 011 010 10x-4 10 Dean & Hegan; Donald Rosar. Bosox, Chisox Split BOSTON, July J5-flP) The Bos ton Red Sox and Chicago . White Sox split a double bill. Wednesday, Boston lambasting Edgar Smith, 10-1, in the opener and the Pale Hose surging back with a rash of basehits to capture the nightcap, 11-6. Smith went the distance in the first game and was doing fairly well until the Red Sox combined hitting and two Chicago errors for a total of seven runs In the "eighth inning. Until that frame they had been leading-, 3-L It was "Tex" Hughson's 10th win of the season against three de feats: Smith was charged with his 15th loss of the year. The White Sox settled the issue in the first two innings of the second game, scoring twice in the initial frame and chasing six more across in the second while shelling Charlie Wagner from the mound. Chicago . 100 000 000- 1 7 3 Boston .,-100 020 70x-ll 13 2 Smith and Turner; Hughson and Conroy. Chicago 260 002 010-11 IS 0 Boston 004 000 200- 6 10 3 Dietrich, Haynes (6) and Tresh; Wagner, Butland (2),. Terry (7), Ryba (9) and Peacock. Browns 7, A's 4 PHHADELPHIA, July 1S.-F) dhet' Tjiah's . srrmd innfnff home run with the bases loaded sent the Yankees Chalk St. Louis Browns -oil to a liymg:Detroit 000 100 101 00-3 15 9 start Wednesday night and they Wash 100 01q j00i 01 12 q went on to trounce the Philadel- - 1, phia Athletics 7-4. ; Bridges, White I (8) and Teb- In the next Inning-, Laabs In 7 S YmfiX R 31 m Sir1 Ipudl SNP , . ' r- J ' ; -ur- -fey lJw ' Bill Paris, Distributor, Salcn 1 to 0 to;4; of M . . 15 - (CP) - A1 though uthit .ietter Salem Senators in WI league game nere Wednesday night: . The Caps capitalized on the lone tally In the- first tanlng when Ward Mullen, first sucker, suagled, went to third on Verne Maddern'g h double and scored on Bill Wright's fly to the outfield. ' Six foot-four inch Ron Smith held the Caps to but four blows while his mates hammered away at Vancouver's Ronnie Bryant for ' no avail. They were unable to -bunch their hits for anything re sembling a run.' Vancouver (1) AB R n po A Mallory, 3b 4 0 Mullen, 2b 4 Maddern, cf 2 Donovan, c Wright, lb Paton, rf Sueme, c Kretchmar, ss Bryant, p Totals . Salem (0) AB 5 4 4 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 frfOA 2 V 0 E I 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Leininger, cf Robbe, ss Johnson, 3b i-i 5 J 101 2 0 Taormina, If Richards, lb Adams, c . Cailteaux, 2b 1 2. 0 0 , 9 j Petersen, rf 1 0 O 24 Smith, p x Lightner z Babich Totals .35 2 x Batted for Smith in 9th. z Bated for Robbe in 9th. Salem Vancouver 000 000 0000 100 000 OOx 1 Struck out by Smith 2, Bryant 5. Bases on balls off Smith 5, off Bryant 2. Hit by pitcher, Taor mina, by Bryant. Left on base, Salem 11, Vancouver 7. Two-base hit . Maddern. Runs batted in, Wright Sacrifice, Bryant, Dono van. Stolen base, Maddern. Double plays Robbe to Cailteaux to Rich ards, Cailteaux to Robbe to Rich ards. Time 1:30. Umpires Moran and Stevenson, slammed one of the longest hits of the year tn Shibe park to. j drive tn another run, making his total for the evening five. Eldon Auker held the A's to six hits in garnering his 11th pitching victory. St. Louis -043 000 000-7 Philadelphia 002 002 000-4 6 ! Auker and Hayes; Fowler, Shu ley (4) and Swift Solons 4, Tigs 3 I Washington, July 15.-ot)a single byimmy Pofahl with two on in the 11th inning enabled the Washington .Senators to defeat ,.Dctfpit 4-3 t?nifiht' betts, Parsons; Wynnand Early, Sort Cops to Uck Jopt tl ruin I First -E 0 1 2 0 1 If 4 10 0 1 4 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 3 0 0 7 1 0 2 0 0 11 0 3 0 0 3 2 0 -J 0 14J0 J 0 0 0 0 1 25 1 4 25 10 1 3 -4 0 1