Beavers Boiimce Iinitto " Spot With 6 to Thanks to the shortcomings of the National Association of Professional Baseball leagues, whose executive committee has oft times proven to be apparently naught but stooges for the major leagues, we've probably seen the last of Whackin Jack Warren, - 4 P A Z ?3i4f wV " et-Maw 1Was - , : i JACK WARREN , . .-'..it...-. -.y .... y . .v,.v.-,j V: ) - j this semester, and what with the National association's laws and by laws being what they are, Warren is as attached to the Senators about as much as is Joe DiMaggio. He's one thing of which there isn't much of these times free. So if the Dodgers want him all they need do is get him to pen their document delivery okeh after the war. Might Insert here that this Is the second time Downer has cast his shadow m the Senator front office It was he who argued Woodburn WIHJ0 Hananska Into signing a Dodger pact last summer Instead of the attractive set-ay offered Hananska by the . Salons. ' Had Him Sold to Cincinnati , - 'Course it makes no difference to the National association that our town Senators had Warren all but delivered to Cincinnati's Reds, last summer, . with . price agreed upon and all, when his draft number came up and he instead joined the Coast Guard. Instead of legislating allowances wherein the Salem club, and other clubs facing the same circumstances for that matter, could reserve Warren until after the war and then sell him for the few thousand pesos the club should rightfully get -for its investment, the esteemed Association saw fit to let ride a silly rule which makes all playing personnel in any capacity free agents in the event the club does not function. ' All well and rood if the particular, player in question Is free to play ball. Bat when he's tied up with the bigger game and ' will be playing no professional ball until It's ever, then the law is as- idiotic as some of the things the Association persists on doing. The Senators eaa bow in no way protect themselves on Warren and lose their Investment. " t Runs, Hits, Errors of Another Type - A like example: You own a piece of real estate. The war comes along and makes it impossible for you to keep on cultivating mat property. So because you are helpless to cultivate it, the big boy up In the next block, wanting that piece and being in no way restricted on using his cultivator, steps in and takes over while you sit by powerless to do anymorethan cuss the unfair law. : Sure, "Warren" could louse up the whole works by declaring. "No, Tm going to be faithful and stick with the Senators through thick and thin." Yeah, he could do that, but like any other ball player who yearns for his big break and finally sees a chance to grab It, he wont. ' Some tun, eh? There's more to this baseball than runs, hits and errors of the regular game type. In this instance the National asso ciation hit the little fellas, then proceeded to run all over 'em. The error? Well, what do you think? i Incidentally, Warren is scheduled -back from school abont June 2, and that to say the least is a mighty red-lettered day for our ex-slugger. Seems Jack left for school Just three weeks before his baby son was born, so Is very anxious to get through school and home to see the heir for the first time. - ; ;:'.-? f'Si t - " " The Sports Front Fifteen Years Ago April 28, 1928 "W. J. 'Bill Wade, 'golf professional, arrived in Salem this week from Klamath Falls and will be the golf instructor at the BJihee country club. He has a remarkable record in back of him as a golfer arid Illihee club members consider themselves for tunate to get . a man of his caliber as instructor ... Coach Ralph Coleman's Oregon State college 'Aggies' knocked out 17 hits in trip ping the Washington Huskies 13 to 3 yesterday. Catcher Howard Maple got four hits for the Aggies " ; Closer Than Close Canby Scantclads - Scoot Out 614-60 Win Over Woodburn WOODBURN, ApriT 27-(Special) --By the narrow margin of one point, and that gained in a re-run in the low hurdle event, the Canby high school spikemen romped to a 61 to 60 vic tory over the District 7 Woodburn Bulldogs here Tuesday after- noon. Had the meet judges not rul ed a re-run , necessary in the low hurdle event, daring which a hurdle was knocked into the path ; of another - runner, . the meet would have been a tie.' -100 yard' dash Pelt. W: Dexter fW: Anderson C). Tlme ilOS., 220 yard - dash Pelts. W: Dexter IWJi Anderson (C. Time 24.5. - 440 Fason W): R. Spers jtC): Lau csch (W) Tim . 480 Stewart C: R. Sperx (C); Col lins (W. Tim 2M. . Mile L. Spers tC): rills W); Wood (C- Time S:ia. -- . " ' 110 high hurdles Nelson (W): Dar ken fC); R Sperx C. Time :1S. 20O low hurdles Anderson C: Nel oon (W); Morris (C); Monacker (W). Time HSJt. . Shot put Austin (W): DenUey (W); Llnd (C) Distance 3S feet 10 inches. Javelin Lind C); Burgen C): Ram ace (W) Distance lit feet. S inches. .Discus Lind C): Austin W: Dent ley tW). Distance 114 feet S Inches. " Pole vaulV-Nelson (W; Lind (C); Burkert (C) Heiht: 10 feet. High Jump Ramage (W): Lind (C); Byrd C. Height: S feet. inches. Broad jump Mictes C): Bur ten (C: Anderson C). Distance IS feet, 2 Inches. ' yf . ! 1 Relay WoodburnV team i of Mason. Dexter. Lausch. PelULsTimO 1 MA. DRS. CHAN ... LAM Dr.Y.TXaawN.D. ' Dr.O.CtuuuN jj. ' CHINESE Herbalists ' ".-'.241 North Liberty Upstairs Portland General Electric Co. : Office open Saturday only 10 ajn. to 1 p.m.,- I to T pj jm. Con sultation. Blood pressure and urine tests are tree of chars. Practiced since 1917. f1- Yf -, relished tatooing the Geo. E. waters park fences while per forming ? in a Salem Senator suit. A letter from his mother informs- that Jack is at present attending a Coast Guard school in Grototi, 'Conn.,' and has been contacted numerous times by one Tom Downey who. would have Jack's John Henry on the dotted line of a Brooklyn Dodg er contract ; but right now. So Jack would like to know if he's at liberty to sign with Downey, or does he still belong to the Senators? . Since the war made it utterly impossible for the Western In ternational and all but nine other minor leagues to operate Buck Bailey Gets New Job MORAGA, Calif, April 27-(P) Lt Arthur B. "Buck" Bailey, foot ball line coach at Washington State college for 17 years, is the new chief of the hand-to-hand combat 'department of the navy preflight school at St Mary's col lege. . ; ; ' ' ; Bailey, who' played football for - Texas A&M ; and the San Francisco Olympic elnb and was captain of the western eleven la - the, first , Shrine East-West game, succeeds LL J. A. "Ab" .Young, assigned to a naval sta tion aviation squadron in Ice . land. ' i , - : Jefferson Nine Rou& -Stayton Qub, 17-0 JEFTERSON : Paced by the two-hit ) hurling of Don Skelton and 'the 4 for 5 hitting of Gary Barns ; Jefferson high - smacked Stay ton on the . losers diamond yesterday, 17-0J VTh Lions laced Out nine ' hits off Schuetz and mixed them nip with nine Stay ton errors for the rout ; Jefferson -. Stayton 17 9 2 2 Skelton and Hayes; Schaets and DoellheUner. i - Top 5 Victory Jlew Dealers Scale Heights Over Padres Gullied Last-Heat Oout Brings Win . SAN DIEGO, CALIF, April 27 -(Ph-T e d Gullic's ninth-inning double provided the winning margin Tuesday as Portland nos ed out San Diego, 6 to 5, and pushed the Padres from the top spot in the coast, league, . Hollywood's ! win - ever Los Angeles coupled with San Die ge"s reverse broke a three-way , tie for the leadersshlp and gave the Beavers undisputed posses sion of : first position. Gullic opened the final inning with a double, went to third on Larry Barton's sacrifice. Marv Owen was purposely walked, and Gullic scored the winning run as John Gill was being tossed out at first on a slow roller. 8an Diego picked np a run in the second urn Jack Calvey's single, aided by two errors and a stolen base, and went ahead 2 to t In the third as George McDonald doabled and scored asJDel Balling er lifted on to the : outfield. : I . .: Portland tallied once in the fourth as Barton walked and scored on Roy' Easterwood's dou ble, and went ahead with a three run outburst in the fifth. Tommy Thompson and Stan v Rogers sin gled. Then Gullic was safe on Walter Lowe's . error, Thompson scoring the tying run. Barton was hit by a pitched ball, and Owen singled In Rogers and Gullic. The Padres came back with a three-ma attack In the same Inning to take - a 5-4 lead. . Swede Jensen, Lowe and Cal vey singled, and Merry Abbott doabled to provide the The Beavers knotted the count in the seventh on Barton's double and a single by Owen. ' Portland tM.lSO 191 4 It S San Diego-Ill 03t 5 11 1 Cook, EsealaaU (S) and Eaa terwood! Johnson and Ballia- : ger.' r Bearcats, Vie With Linf ield Willamette's ballgaming Bear cats, currently on a three straight win binge which includes a vic tory over both Oregon! and Ore gon State, hop to McMinnville this afternoon for a pair against the Linfield Wildcats. I As today's twin bill is listed as conference clashes neither Clint : Cameron nor Weodbara BUI Hananska, cemprisers of the new deal baU program' at WU, will be allowed io play. Hal McAbee and A m m o n Adams get Coach Spec Keene's mound assignments for today and either or both Hank Ercolini and Ben Schaad . will ; do the ; mask work. The tussles will be the first for the 'Cats this season In de fense of their Northwest confer ence title. . v Thnrsday the Methodists go to Camp Adair for a 6:000 p. m. test against the SS3rd infantry outfit Professionals Hananska and Cameron will of coarse be eligible for the Thnrsday date. Today's Probable Major Mounclgmen NEW YORK, April 27-(Pro-bable pitchers in the major leagues Wednesday (won-lost records in parentheses) ; National League : 1: ' Chicago at St Louis Bithorn (1-0) vs. White (0-1). Cincinnati at Pittsburgh-Riddle (0-1) or Walters (0-0) vs. Her bers (0-0). .Brooklyn at Philadelphia Head (1-0) vs. Padgajny (0-1). Boston at New York Javery (0-1) vs. Wittig (1-0). : . - American Learne : j New York at Boston Bonham (0-0) vs. Dobson (0-1). Philadelphia at Washington Christopherson (1-1) " vs. Pyle (o-i). r . St Louis at Detroit Hollings worth (1-0) vs. Bridges (0-1). ' Cleveland at Chicago A Smith (0-0) vs. Dietrich (0-1). , California Coast Home-and-Home LOS ANGELES, AprC 27HP) r Their tnterseetlonal aames al ready cancelled because of. trav el restrictions, California mem : bers of the Pacific Coast Inter collesiate Athletle eonferenco have drawn up a home-and-' . home football sched ale for next fan. :..;- ; : "- c : i :- The elan f or Stanford, Cali fornia, Soatbern California and UCLA to play one another twice -will be presented at the Jnne meeting ef the conference. Ar , neld Eddy Southern Califor District 7 Track Tussle Set for JEFFERSON. April 27-(Spe-cial-The district. 7 track and field meet an annual affair for Olinger oval In Salem, will be battled off on that Held Friday, April 30, Director Pat Beat an nounced Tuesday, Preliminaries and qualifying heats will be run off starting at It o'clock with the finals slated for a l:St start Both ; the A and B division schools 'will participate, al though la announcing that Sil verton, Salem, Woodburn, Che- iwa and Molalla would enter -7 : . Pete Waiklns ef Texas AM goes ever the bar at C feet S laeaes at year-eld high Jump record. It was formerly feet f inches. (Note 6 Wave9 Sends Derby Stock Soaring With Walkaway Win in TriaJStakes By SID FEDER LOUISVILLE, Ky April 27-(P)-Ocean Wave rolled around ChurchiU Downs muddy rac ing strip like the Johnstown flood Tuesday and for the first time even the mighty Count Fleet was threatened by the undertow. t Hitting as hard as his stablemate Whirlaway in Warren Wright's barn, the Chestnut Wave Timber Wolves - Try New Home Salem's Adopted Nine Has Dress Rehearsal Camp Adair's Timber Wolves ball team, from Athletic Officer Lt Bob Duffy, Business Manager Sgt John Wulf and Manager Sgt Jack Knott on down through 19 players, took to their adopted home, Geo. E. Waters park, Tues day for the first time and went through a two and a half hour long batting and fielding drill "just to get the feel of things." During the session Pvt Beau Belt ex-snajor league lnflelder,' and Kay OTJeut a catcher, clouted drives over the distant left field wait Flingers Knott and Lt Joe Quia, once a Wash ington Senator, took their turns oa the batting practice mound along with four other pitchers. The Timber Wolves open their season Thursday at Albany against the University of Oregon nine. First official game for the Geo. E. Water park diamond is due in about two weeks, Lt Duffy said. It will probably be against a bol stered Willamette university team. Friday Fight Card Canceled There will be no Legion spon sored fistic frolics in the armory this coming Friday night. Com mander Ira Pilcher announced Tuesday. "The Camp Adair fighters are now in the midst of deciding their divisional championships, so our hoped-for card for Fri day night wlll have to be post poned.'' forwards the local post : boss. -'. "We hope to have a card all lined up in the next week or two, however," Pilcher added. Attention Wins Gittings'Cap BALTIMORE, April 27 Max. Hirsch's distance performer. Attention, showed Tuesday he was a fit horse for the $20,000-added Dixie handicap as he romped off with the Gittings handicap before a crowd of 8889 at Pimlico race course.' "' ''C;:v!'v':r ; ?.'-'-). ':-" The five-year-old son of Equi poise won the Gittings by three lengths over H. M. Babylon's Abbe Pierre. Time for the mile and one sixteenth was 1:43 45. ; Conference Schools Adopt Grid Sched for Next Season nia's business manager, pro- posed several weeks age that the conference split up : into northern and soathern divisions , for the dnrstlon ' to eliminate travel. . - y - -Eddy and ether managers of athletics, Clint Evans of Cali fornia. AI Masters of Stanford and William C. " Ackerman of UCLA, recommended . that ' the northern schools, Washington, WashlnstoB State, Oregon, Ore gon State. Montana and Idaho, . adopt m separate schedule, the as A schools, Beal said that up to Tuesday no B school had yet catered the meet -- All first place winners and the winning relay, team Friday will : qualify for entry m the state meet at Eugene on May 7. Only first placers will be eligi ble, according to Beat Ribbons will be awarded to first second .and third " place winners in the district session and a trophy will be awarded 'the winning team.' .i, How They COAST LZAGUI W I. Pet Portland .7 1 .77SHolywd. San Die S S .OCT (Oakland Los An -S 9 .Ml (Seattle San Fran -S S .SSSiSacram. Tuesday results: . W L Pet .4 S .444 I I.JW t S .150 Jl S JM At San Diego I, Portland . At Loo Angeles X. Hollywood f . At Sacramento Seattle postponed. At San Francisco Oakland post poned. ' r AHBBICAK UAOUS . W X. Pet W L Pet New York 3 1 .750 Phils. S 4 .429 Cleveland 4 S .667 J Boston 1 X .400 St. Louis S I .OCT Detroit I S .400 Wash. 3 S JOOjChicago 1 3 .SM Tuesday results: Boston 5. New York 1. Philadelphia S, Washington 1. (II In nings). , Cleveland 4, Chicago S. (St Louis-Detroit postponed) NATIONAL. LEAGUE W L Pet W L Pet Brooklyn 3 1 .TSO Chicago 1 3 .40 rmsourgh 3 1 .SOO.Cincin. 1 St. Louis 3 3 .eoo! Boston 1 New York S 1 .500, Phils del. I Tuesday results: . St Louis 7. Chicago 0. Brooklyn 4. Philadelphia 3. New York 11, Boston 3. Pittsburgh 4. Cincinnati L. 400 .333 .333 SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Birmingham 4. New Orleans S. Chattanooga 19. KnoxviUe S. Foxes Down Molalla 5-2 SILVERTON Getting - a three hit job from the elbowing of Burt Burr, Silverton high's Silver Fox es measured the Molalla Bucka roos here yesterday, 5-2, In a Duration,- league ball game. ; Burr fanned eight Bucks and had but one bad inning the fourth, dur ing which Molalla got both runs on a double by McElroy. The Foxes tallied one in the first and then went ahead in the fifth on triples by Ray Elliott and Jim Rue. Molalla ....0Q 2N 0002 2 f SllTerten 10l 020 llx 5 lt 2 Nicholson and Moore; Barr ' and Zahler. Federal Judge ; Resigns Post PORTLAND, Ore, April 27-(iP) Kenneth F. Fraxier, United States commissioner here for, 22 years, resigned Tuesday , to enter private law practice. Federal Judge Claude McColloch said he would confer with Federal Judge James A. Fee, now in New YorlLon temporary replacement. , ' .winner to meet the soathern division champion - in a post season game. : The tentative sched ale for the southern division: . Sept. 25 USC at UCLA; Cal ifornia at Stanford. Oct. 2 USC at California; Stanford at UCLA. Oct. IS USC at Stanford; Cali fornia at UCLA. Oct. 20 Cali fornia at USC; UCLA at Stan ford. Nov. 12 Stanford at USC; UCLA at California, Nov. 20 Stanford' at California. Nov. 27 USC at UCLA. Friday Go Beal was appointed chairman ef the district 7 committee re cently and has as assisting com mitteemen MUtoa Grallap of Woodburn and H. W. Adams of ' Sllverton. ... : ' J .'--.- Athletle D I r e e t e r Gurnee Flesher and Coach Tom Drynaa of Salem will be la charge of : the actual running off of tbo meet as hosts, a practice carry ing ever front years past when members ef the Salem athletle family sponsored the meet UP'N OVER - . i the Drake relays to smash the 21 the form). ran off and hit from a dozen oth- ers to take the Derby Trial Stakes by nine big lengths and establish himself as something more than the best of the second place set for Saturday's Kentucky derby. The wave put the crasher oa such ether derby hopefuls as J. Graham " . Brown's Seven Hearts, Mrs. Ethel V. Mar's No Wrinkles $ and Eddie "Roches ter" Anderson's Burnt Cork. . , , . At the same time, he gave the boys and girls who have nick named thia derby the "buy me a place ticket" race,- something to think about, despite a whizzing workout by Count Fleet earlier in the day. ' The Count took the track be tween races before the estimat ed crowd of SJ00 and sipped through the mud for a mile and an eighth In 1:52 25 and the full derby mile and a quarter in 2:07. Bulldogs Edge Canby 3 to 2 WOODBURN Woodburn's Bulldogs scored another baseball victory here Tuesday afternoon as the locals eked out a 3-2 triumph over the visiting Canby nine. The Bulldogs bunched their hits In the fourth and fifth frames, combining- two extra base blows with costly Canby errors. ;'.:--';vV"" Three Woodburn double plays paid dividends in the clutch. The visitors outhit the victors, -5. Canby -.6Q 000 029 2 f 5 Woodburn 000 120 00 2 S 3 Dastman and Garber; Roman, Mathews U) and Reed. Cards Hammer Bruins7to0 . ST. LOUIS, April 27-P)-' The world champion Cardinals found their batting eyes at home Tues day ' and despite the dead ball, hammered out a 7-0 victory for Morton Cooper over the Chicago Cubs. Opening the national league sea son before 6994 cash customers, the Cards drove Paul Derringer from the box in a first inning sal ly that: yielded five runs, two more than they ; scored in 39 in nings at Cincinnati. Chicago .O0O 000 0000 5 0 .SL Loals 501 001 OOx 7 12 0 Derringer. Fleming (1) Bar rett (t) and Hernandes; M. Coo- per and W. Cooper. Train Crash Kills Four AURORA, I1L, April 27-CP) Four trainmen were killed and at least a dozen passengers were in jured Tuesday when a gasoline motor . car on . the Chicago Bur lington and Quincy railroad col lided headon with freight loco motive and caught fire. . ' The trainmen, . all in the front of the gasoline ' car - which was northbound with passengers from Streator to Aurora, evidently were burned to death. Many of the pas sengers, dazed .by the .Impact and cut by splintered glass, were car ried from the car in a race with the spreading flames " Coltru Orogoxu Vodaedcrf Momlng April 23 1S13 Webjoote Waddling Bucks Bunk Huskies 2 tO ly Sweep EUQJENE, Ore., April 27-OTVThe University of Oregon in creased its Northern division coast conference baseball lead Tues day, by edging Washington out for the second time. .The score was 2 to' 1. ':f'j.;-'.':::J';:-';.';rf '.-:-' ; ' K.":":' '' -. .''' .!. ' Yanks Suffer First Setback Screwy , Game Taken By Gold Sox, 5-1 BOSTON, ApriP7-)-The Boston Red Sox opened their Fen way Park season successfully Tuesday by stopping the hitherto unbeaten New York Yankees 5-1. Bat It was a confusing game the 395 paying- customers saw after Governor Leverett Salton stall, a southpaw, had tossed ont the first ball. ' The American league champions made 12 hits, yet might have been shut out by Tex Hughson except for a three-base error by rookie Centerfielder Ford Garrison in the ninth. fe New York 000 000 0011 12 2 Boston -.100 012 01 5 1 Russo, Donald (f). Byrne (I) and Dickey; Hoghson and Pea cock. Flores Fires 16-HeatWin WASHINGTON, A p r 1 1 27-ff) Rookie Jesse Flores Tuesday hurl ed Philadelphia to a 2-1 win over the Washington . Senators in a gruelling, 18 inning baseball mar athon, longest in the major lea gues this season. Flores and early Wynn of the Senators tangled in a brilliant mound duel, for 13 heats. Rae Scarborough took over for Wynn in the fourteenth. Phil 000 000 000 000 000 22 8 0 Wn. 000 000 000 000 000 11 7 2 Flores, Wolff (10) and Swift, Wagner (15); Wynn, Scarbor ough (11) and Early. Akins Poison To Vandals PULLMAN, Wash, April T1-JP) Al Akins, who turned last Satur day's dual track meet into an un pleasant experience for university of Idaho, turned up in a baseball uniform Tuesday, plagued the Idahoans with two home runs and paced Washington State to a 13 to 5 victory. It was Stat's second win from the Vandals in a pair of days and left the losers deep and winless in the Northern division. Pacific Coast conference cellar. r Idaho 000 005 00 5 f 3 WSC ..444 010 00 13 10 4 Gardner, Woods and Kaopka; Rockey, Olson and Dodge. NY 11, Boston 3 NEW YORK. April 27-A5)-The New York Giants celebrated their debut in the. Polo Grounds and President Horace Stoneham's 40th birthday Tuesday by walloping the Boston Braves 11-3 before 0110 fans. Boston ...001 010 100 3 10 2 Jr. Y. - 021 030 05x 11 10 1 . Tobin and Masl; Johrman and Poland. Schnozz to Giants Loiialbardi BOSTON, April 27-()-A straight-player deal that sends catcher Ernie - Lombard!, the Na tion a 1 leagues 35-year-old bat- ting champion, to tne Hew York j x Giants in ex-1 change for catch- S er Hugh Poland Mid lnflelder! Connie Ryan . was jreporxea Tuesday night by the Boston; ' Braves. . . Y t The trade, sd-'fc" Secretary - John j lombardi t Quinn, will give the Braves some much needed infielder strength. Ryan, for whom the Giants paid $40,"000, to the Atlanta Southern association club in 1941, ' played second base for Jersey City last season. He is 23 and. like the 33- AL LICHTNER - SUtesmaa Sports Editor Pitchers John Bubalo of Oregon and Doug Ford of Washington hooked up in a scoreless duel until the seventh Inning when Oregon scored two runs after two were out , ! v , .. Bob Cavlneas gained life -on Second Baseman Bob Weake's ; en Barney NOKTHEKV DIVISION , W LPct Oreson T 1 .S791WSC OSC a s .T30 : Idaho Wash. S I jM7 TuMilaT results: At Oregon Z. wasnutgion s. At WSC 13. Idaho S. Koch's double. Koch scored oa Bill Hautel's hot grounded through Wenke, - Washington's tally was squeezed home in the ninth. Bubalo limited the Huskies to five hits. Ford gave up but six blows. . : 1 Washington 000 000 001-1 I 2 Oregon 000 000 202 2 Ford and Anderson; Babale -.and Carlson. . , Phillies Take Relays, Bums TV Ball Game; PHILADELPHIA, April 27-(P) The track-minded Phillies won, the foot race, but lost their home opening ball game to the. league leading Brooklyn Dodgers, 4 to 2, before 4291 fans Tuesday. The foot race termed an Aus tralian pursuit race by youthful 33-year-old Phils owner, William D. Ox was part of the p re-game series dampened by inclement weather. To track fans it was more like a Perm relay race. It went this way: A Dodger started at second base and a Phil player at home. Each tore around the bases and passed a baton to the next member , of his team. After eight players 1 had circled the sacks the Phils were adjudged to be farther ahead and hence the winner. But once the umpires called "play ball" it was a different sto-J ry, although the Phils eh a s ed Whitlow Wyatt to the showers in the seventh and were in the game until the last out. . ' f Brooklyn ... 011100 001-4 9 4 Philadelphia 100 000 100-2 I 2 Rowe, Fnchs (5), Johnson (I) and Livingston. Root Stifles Angels, 6-2 HOLLYWOOD, April 27 -vp) Manager Charley Root pitched and batted Hollywood to a 6 to 2 decision oer Los Angeles Tues day in the opening game of the series. ' ' "Wimpy" Quinn's two-run hom er in the second was the only real blow struck In the Los Angeles cause. . -.. L. A. .... 020 000 0002 7 1 BoUy. . 010 400 Olx 12 3 Raffensberger, Baker (4), MaTJory (4) and Land; Root and Younkers. ' ' Lulu Victorious NEW YORK, April 27 lu Constantino, 131-pound east side New York candy store clerk easily defeated Mario "Chico" Morales, 123, Havana; Cuba, in a dull eight round bout Tuesday night. ' , ' ' , Swapped year-old Poland, Is married and nas one child, Poland was the first-string catcher for the Co lumbus American association club in 1941 and the Giants Jersey City farm team in 1942. ! ... . , Lombard! Is single, but has draft deferment because of family de pendents. . . ,. - j i , "0 AU-Wool - Hulls w S & N v Clothiers 450 State ... aTn