! Jackson, Wagner in Meanie Match Tonight; Legion Announces Bottle-1 ossing 1 aoooea - Two cf the meanest misters fat the lightheavy rasslin' racket . Gcwt "Crybaby" Wagner and Builder Beat 12m Up" Jack- son, match muscles, grants and . groans tonight in the main eVent of Matchmaker Don Owen's weekly ; rrapplinr ses sion, and for those paying- par ' tisans who 1 1 k e their rassles ' strictly on the thunder side the ' get-together should be a' whop 'ping success. In his last two times out in the Ferry street garden "Muscles" Wagner has succeed ed in bringing--out -cries for blood (mostly his ewn from the customers," so Matchmaker , Owen figured he'd put the in comparable Bulldog in with . Gorgeous George and. give the - fans really something to shout - about. It's a tessup here be tween the two as to . which one ' is-the most popularly unpopoalr, . with the edge, If any, going to .Jackson by. the slim margin of ""a kick to the. kisser. ' - . J Bouncing MUt' Olson, tbolvll- " iage favorite" was supposed to have "had his title match ; with " Tough' .Tony Koasjtonight,-but Tough Tony. has been 'battling - a ; siege ;of bils for "vthe" past, eoupie weeks' and. also- couldn't why he hould defeat the belt on sueeeosrvo nunu. " . Oddity of the war: Sgt? Lee Tallin, after aving been long ;f ehdugh" to personally get it overVwith: (;prgnlised he'd do just that when he left),' still at Camp Roberts," Califs and now not - only tutoring how to hit a bull in the hoof at 9000 yards with a field piece but also how to hunt big "game atnight armed with only a home-made sling shot. As sergeant of the guard, an other of "Morty's" duties, he : sees to. it personally that the camp is protected from prowl- ! ing beasts of the night. Already re's up for sharpshooter's rat ing, since it's openly said about the post a chipmunk or wood pecker; hasn't" a chance t with Morty on the hunt. And since there's only one tree in Lee's company," he says keeping the camp rid of such' ! beasts : is a snap. Incidentally, Lee says he's not yet ready to give the post's obstacle course a whirl claims you can get a broken . leg by just looking at the thing . .". No report on. whether Morty is do ing any pitching for the camp's ball club . , 1 Speaking of service nines, maybe it's a good thing the Fort Lewis JWarriors and Camp Adair All-Stars don't get together too oftenJSuch famous' bench jockeys as Frankie Frisch, Lefty omez, . Uppy Purocher, . Jimmy Dykes and Frankie Crosetti have : nothing at all on a few of the gents on "both those nines, particularly Warrior "Skipper Morrie Arnovich. When those boys ride'-jone an other , they ride for keeps, , and . Moanin' Morrie Is capable of an expert's job even without spurs . . Won't Be Long Now . Purely personal: Dr. G. Herbert ' Smith, head office man at' Willam . ette says he hopes to have an an-, nouncement on football as coached by ?? ready within the next week "or two; Adds WU Is waiting on a '. few! more applications and a.meet- - ing of the athletic board of direc tors . CPO Harry fDuke" Troti ter,! .UCLA's five-sportster, now ". helping put the local ,yr12ers through their paces isn't finding - making his' letter on the" Salem golf layout as easy as it was mak- . ing the five in 1934 at UCLA. Can't figure out how such a little .ball , . can go in so many different direc tions, but with Junior Cline ad ministering the sideline wisdom,' he's vowed hell make his letter or bust . . . Big black letters in San Francisco Chronicle say Oakland Oak Boss Vic Devincenzi has bor rowed from the scrap drive mo mentarily a big can to tie on easy going Manager Johnny Vergez. And of all people Devincenzi has In micd as successor Oscar Vitt! Nuf said , I . Sweeney to Brooklyn? The same sheet says Bill Swee ney, who has found life so sweet managing Los Angeles, is No. 1 . in' line to take over where Lippy . Leo Durocher leaves off at Brook lynif and when. At present most ly when . . !. Ere Kay tells of the new course record for women set by an unnamed army wife on bis layout last week. Ere says she - thundered, up No. 9 ' cutting and slashing as she came, counting out loud the strokes as she took them. Upon nearing the green he heard her chant "SS", then "36". Sens ing a new mark for .the gals to . shoot at, Ere watched and waited. But, then disappointment.' He found that this busy femme had taken , that many - swings on the last hole only! Still a new record, no doubt ; . . CI1AJM . . . LAM. Dr.X.XXanwNja. Dr.G.CbimJJD V-: 2H Kcrth'Ltlertr CrsUIrs Portland Genersl CectrlC Co Oic-opea Saturday, oriy i j ijt. to 1 o jt.: I to I pi m. Con 5 u . i i. r ;xt4 preur nJ unn it Lit cf , ciarz. Practice J ; s-1. - . - "" i is ZzT - .J wrestled Billy McEuin in a title tilt in Portland last night. The town's muscleman says, hell give Olson a try at It sooner or later, however, since he earned same by defeating Wagner last week. ; : .;.'.Vv- V - SUJJLDOG JACKSON "ii JOHNNY VEEGEZ Kahiit to Meet Jimmy Wallier PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 1 -JP) Matchmaker Joe Waterman' an nounced Monday the signing of Sunny Jim Walker, Oakland, - to meet Joe Kahut, hard-hitting Woodburn light heavyweight, . In a . 10-rounder here'- August 27. , Tho; bout' was substituted for ht Jimmy ' Garrison Kodolfo . Kamlrei return match,' post i poned Indefinitely. t ; .t , Waterman 'said. Walker .recently drew with Roman Starr and stop- ped Leroy Wade, negro belter. Planned for Overseas Men NEW YORK, -' (Special) - To place a fishing .kit in the lands of every service man overseas who wants to go fishing during time off from active duty, is the aim of the International .Game Fish association which is maVlng an appeal for funds for the non profit - manufacture of, a pocket sized kit especially designed ' for this purpose. - 1 'v " The drive, starting August 16, is being conducted by 4 the tackle committee of the International Game Fish association with, head quarters at the American Mu seum of Natural History in New York City. The American Bed Cross has assumed complete . dis tribution of the kits overseas, where they will be kept available for use by rotating troops. -The kits; will be returned .to a desig nated place for use by others. . Silverton Swim School Success T "SILVERTON The Learn to Swim" campaign In Silverton, an annual event ' sponsored. ' by ; the Red Cross and SavertonParent Teacher association, has been un der way only a week but is al ready heralded as successful. -The school opened, last Tues day with 82 registrants. By Thurs day the list Increased to 103 and since then even' more have signed up. i : 4. ' ,' ...' ' ' Miss Phyllis Gueffroy of Salem is in charge of ithe program as chief Instructor, She is assisted by Mrs. W.' IL .Woodard, president of the PTA, Mrs. Carl Hande, Mrs. O. E. Leo and Mrs. Lee Alfred.1 i " The various classes run from to U ija. daily except Sunday n it a r i ! - - t j r ' i ' V M , . - J So tonight Olson bides bis time with the tiS9 curtain raiser match against Ivan Jones In what should bo the only hold-for-hold clean sessiom on ? the bill. Jones Is the burly gent who refereed last week's card and gave Wagner a bouncing around after George had both' fouled ' Olson in the ringside chairs. ' 7 The semi-windup fracas brings a return engagement between Leo -Steenko" Karlinke - and Mel Peters, the 5 boys jwho brought 1 the pop-bottle bomb ardment from the clients last week. Peters -was awarded the match via foul but when Kar llnko Insisted with" violence ho had been gypped, a few. of the Ired onlookers attempted to '. skull him , with, the cokes.' . There'll; be not more bottle tossing,, practice : by, the fans, however. The sponsoring American Legion announced af ter last week's exhibition that from .now on bottled refresh ments' would have to be ' con sumed at the bar and not in the seats; -; ,, . .';;" "'"" . All ' of tonight's tussles are b 1 1 le , i or besi-twe-ef-lliree falbi yith Jtotint ogurerin- ed by. it iuiinute time limits "and the Jackson-Wagner brawl by BO hour. -.y ;; :r. i. ' I --I? Outfit 12: to 5 ' Late Frame Bombing Blasts Adair Nine So far as the 96th Division Alt Stars - of Camp Adair are con cerned, Fort Lewis heralded War riors are a cocky bunch but still pretty ..tough hombres tin a ball game. The Warriors erased all ideas the 96th might have had to ward salvaging the finale of their two-game series by shelling the Stars, 12-5, In Geo. E. Waters park Sunday. : . ; . For six Innings It looked very much like the 96th would get an even split In the series the Warriors started by winning C-l at Camp Adair on Saturday. But , in the seventh Big, Bill Reeder, - a Chicago White Sox chattel who had hurled the nine innings Sat urday and was back In there again Sunday In a relief role, weakened and down went the Stars. . . The 96th, field managed by Sa lem's own Lt. Bill Beard,' inciden tally, hopped .of to a 3-0 lead In the first, ; saw it tied by three Warrior tallies In the second, then went ahead 4-3 with a single counter in the third. Reeder, who relieved starter Canton in the third, then held the potent northerners to one bingle for three heats. In the seventh he faltered finally, and four' Fort Lewis hits, good for three runs, sent Moanin Morrie ArnoYieh's gang off to the win. t Boeder's successors, Bevridge and. Landis, the -former a , left hander, were bumped around mer cilessly in the Warrior eighth and ninth. Six Warrior hits were good enough for six runs in the two frames.. " I 1 '"-'. J . The Stars bunched two of their 10 hits off Steve Sakas in the eightii for their fifth and final run. '.- . "-. '- -! "0 s : : r . ' .'. '- The Warriors collected It bits In aU, six being divided : equally between Hal Lee, for-1 mer U of Washington hoopster, . and "Peewee" Bandy; colored and classy third sacker, to lead ; the way. - - -. -- "r: ! ' f i ' - c -p . Approximately 700 fans pitched in the proceeds which were divid ed, between the. two army teams. I WAXJUOKS (1X XABKirOAl Lee. cf : ; : s l a sea Maurer. ss . ; BIS 1 41 Belch, . lb ,-, 1 1 14 1 Handy. 3b , Q S O S I Arnovich. U 4 1 11 0 0 s-. a a --4 ..i.,o Zi o r o o o -43 13 IS 37 11 4 Moore, 2b . Brlxer, rf Sakas. p Kirk. " rf. If Rodriquez, . 1 Total AIX.ITAU ti Manhall. 3b " JX 1 S X JS o S 1 4 1 -3 0 -3 1 4 0 1 0 1 0 J 0 3 0 1 0 Gallavanni. cf riowaav so HtDK. , aa . Beard, e Krowlikowvki. 1 Redden, lb 111 I t Canton, p . Reeder, p Bevridrc n : Loetfler, 3b , ' Kmlth, - , Laodis, If. P -3 0 Total a i n i 1 Batted for Brizer in 7th. 'Batted lor Bevridge In 7th. Warriors 030 000 31513 Kits , , , , , ..143 010 424 18 AU-stars -301 000 010 3 Hits 301 111 02110 . Wirmln Biteharr. Slim T M4n. nK V Rewler. Balk. Reeder. Struck out by Sakas S, by Reeder 1, by Bevridge 1. Base on balls off Sakas 1. off Lan dia.l. off Canton 3. Hit by pitcher. Arnovich by ; Bevridge. . Wild ' pitches, Reeder, Bevridge, Landis. Two base Ie'..Kubick Moore, Brizer. Marshall. Nowak 3. Runs batted in, giachter, Beard... Redden, Hapac. KubicekS. Moore 3. Lee 3. Maurer. Brizer. Sakas.. Double plays, - Hapae to Reddea a. Murer ; to Moore to 'en. i daorado ,TimeMl:10. TJmptres, Lightner and KlmmeU, Scorer, Grant. Ortiz Signed For LA Bout : LOS ANGELES, Aug 18 Matchmaker Charley MacDonald Monday announced the signing- of Manuel Ortiz to defend bis batan weight championship against Leo nard Lopea in - a 15-round bout hero October 1, it will be a chari ty affair for the benefit of service men. -" , . Varnors IM i - . . ' - Stanford! Tribe's Bagby Mauled in 8th For 6-3 Win Rookie Lefebvre Turns in Victory CLEVELAND,, August 16 -) Four ; consecutive singles . f 1 Cleveland's, . Jim Bagby 1 In " the eighth Inning Monday gave Wash ington a C-3 .. victory and enabled the Senators to' capture second place from the.Indians. .' ." ; ; Bagby, the 'Tribes mound aeo since Bob" Feller went to war" was locked In a three-ball dead- lock with Southpaw BUI " Le-' febvre, Just brought up v from - Mineapolis, when the Senators' .. found the , range. . ..' " . Bob Johnson, first up, and Gerald- Priddy hit to "center, Jake Early drove safely to left and Alex Kampouris lined against League Park's right field waH." Jacif Sal- veson replaced Bagby and John ny Sullivan's fly then .brought Early, home with the Nats final run, giving atiiem the series, "two games :to. one. . - : , Washington had pulled even in the, seventh when "Jim Ver non sent a pitch over right field wall for his sixthhomer of the season. "and rot ffa fti4VvA"imma aiier two were out in tnm ranrth eariya ugn bounder which ' went for a single,: a free ticket to Kampouris' and Sullivan's ' double."; . :" : - L It was the. second straight loss for the ; Indians after an eight- game winning streak. They took the lead In the first with a run on an error, a walk and Roy Cull en bine's single, and got their, two dther tallies in the fourth on Lou Boudreau's single, ene DeSautel'sl triple and Bagby's one-baser. Wash. 0 200 1306 11 1 Cleve 160 200 000 S 1 " Lefebvre and Early; Bagby, Salveson (t) and DeSa'utels. Louis to Go On Ring Tour WASHINGTON, Aug.' 18 -UP Sergeant Joe Louis will 'start an exhibition : trek August 30 that eventually will carry him over seas for a display of the fistic skill, that won him the heavy weight boxing crown. The war department, the Brown Bomber's duration manager, dis closed Monday that the champ will tour army camps in this country for 100 days and then go abroad for workouts before com bat troops. Cliff Lenz Guesses On Length of War i PORTLAND," Aug. l9 -JF)- Lt Cliff Lentz, fighter pilot decorat ed in ; the air. warfare over North Africa, . PanteUeriaT ' and ".Sicily, Monday,, added his prediction.; to the guesses on the : length of the war."'; - - '-.'-si - ' 'i- "It Germany, breaks internally. the ; war " may be over lit six months.'If not, Td say it will take a year and a half more," Lentz told the chamber of commerce. The Salem pUot was accompanied by .his bride of 24 hours. Dodge rs' Rebuildins; PrOsrain Continues; Sign&Twb Fire Two DODGERS REBUIilcIing 2-30-2 sp BROOKLYN. .Ang. It -(ff) The reconstruction of the Brook- i lyn Dodgers into an organlxa- tion, of youths con finned Mondy 4 wltii Branch Rickey n annovneing the acquisition , ef 4 wo pitchers and a- catcher, the oldest i of BRANCH XXCKXY V whom is Harold Gregg, XL a star hurler for the Montreal Royals. ' ' Gregg and another rlghthand ed hurler, 18-year-old Rex Bar ......ii ii. 3 Hold ' 8th Annual' Flight of the Trim sailboats by the score, from : "Tllxbt of the Cr.owt'jd3- la J.'rwTcit hirtor. at Calboa,- CzlJ. ese tf tii larrtst cf l: lizi Li the t.-ir - : . . .... . . . Cancels Eetiire Folklball Scnedlole: emaltors Regam .2ed.- Place" in AinaieFlIs ClbaG3 f i y """--" inniii.i . kmi 1 1 i m i" m m i himi i w min i iniiinn i tr i i Above are tho champion, nmner-sp m cww in vnicago over we weekend. Dorothy Gennin (far right) defeated XXary Agnes Wall (second from left) for the title, I ud 4. Catherine Fox (third from left) and Peggy Kirk (far left) failed to survive semi-final matches. - , r Terranova ' NEW ORLEANS, August le--Punching Phil Terranova, 23-year-old youngster from the Bronx, NY, won the NBA world's feather-weight championship from Jackie Calluro with an eighth- round knockout before an estimated 8300 fans Monday night. . Woodburn 9 Wiri 4-3 Tat I WOODBURN Coach, Pete De- Guire's Junior American Legion ball clubbers pasted out 4-3 victory over the visiting Camas, Waslu, Juniors here Sunday. Both teams garnered only' four safeties apiece; but Woodburn needed no hits to salt the tussle away in the eighth. - t A walk, a Camas error and flies to the outfield brought across Woodburn's third and fourth runs in that frame. ? ' ; ? "Red" Bielemeler, Woodburn's ' pitching ace who . was awarded the most valuable player trophy In the recent state tournament, pitched ; effectively n til the ninth when two walks, an error' ' and. a s Ingle produced two f fiirmi tallies. v - n . . ; v - " C a ma s won ; the ; Washington state' Legion title but were not sept to the a regional tourney in Hot Reds Win Again-, ; 5 NEW, YORK, Aug. . l.-UP)-The red-hot Cincinnati' Reds captured their fifth -victory- In ''three .''days Monday ' as Johny Vander Meer stopped . the New York Giants 5 to 2 with eight-hit hurling. . ney, who started the season at Durham in the Piedmont league, were, promoted., to "the . Dodgers. Moaulay night la exchange . for . Pitcher Max Macon and rookie - Shortstop John Barknely. " : ; ; i s JUacon, who has" won seven' ud aost five 'j this season for Brooklyn, was released to the Royals outright and Rickey said : he probably would be used at . i-, n&rki, wu farmed ont "on option. - f . 4 In addition, Rickey announe ,. ed the signing of sv 17-year-old catcher,' Joe Soskovic; who was -. discovered recently at a tryoat camp at Holyoke, Mass. ;-: : r , . . v n marts of southern California, 1-2-3-4 Finishers in Women's and two send-finalists In the Yictor Tleet'Done For Season NEW YORK, Aug. l6.-&hTot the 'fourth time since he sprained his ankle in June, Count Fleet's return ; to racing was : delayed Monday and this time he . was put on the shelf probably for the rest of the year. ' , ? ' Owner John D. Hertz, the Chi cago, taxicab and U-drive-it man, announced that. this .triple crown champ is galloping again after re covering from a second injury, but that the chances are he won't be ready to strut his stuff in what Is left of the 1943 campaign. MnD .... COAST LEAGVC w l Pet. W.L Xet. Los An tl 31 .7 jHollywd 69 7 AOS San rraa.77 44 J3 Oakland -Si Tl .411 Seattle 'S3 5S .5211 San Dice SI 73 419 Portland v SI 00 S04Sacramt 37 Si JOS wo games Monday . r Sunday results: . " ; r 1 : Sundar results: " - At Hollywood 7-4. Portland f-3 (2nd came S Innlncsl. At San XMeso 4-0, Los Angeles 1-1 (3nd game S .innings). . . At Sacramento T-S. San rrancisco i-f NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. W L Pet. St. Louis 69 36 .697!Boaton 48 85 .468 Clncinna 50 49 46'PhUadel SI 60 .459 Pittsburg SS SO J37jChicafo .49 SS .454 Brooklyn 56 53 JliNew Yrk 39 6S J64 Monday results; At Boston 1, Pittsburgh S. At Brooklyn 7. St. Louis S. At New York -3. Cincinnati S. At Philadelphia 4. Chicago 3 (night game). sunaay renins: At Brooklyn 3-4, St. Louis 11-3. At New . York 4-5, Cincinnati S-0. At -Boston 5-1,-Pittsburgh .1-11. At Philadelphia 3-0. Chicago 5-3. AMISICAN LUGUI - W L Pet- W L Pet. New Yrk 64 40 615 Chicaso v55 63 JSU Washlngn 50 53 J32 Boston 53 55 Ml Cleveland 55 SO J 24 St. Louis 45 60 A2 Detroit '54 50 JlS.PhUadel 40 6S J70 Monday results: At nntiihd a: Washbistoa 6. At Chieago 0, New York 7 (night -At St. JOUIS v, nonon mgui ini (Onlr sames scheduled) Sunday results: ' f - AI WetTOlX -. rniunroimi .... At St. Louis 3-0. Boston 3-4. At Cleveland 0-O. Waatnnrton 3-4. Snowbirds'; participated., la the,pieturesue rifs nationally famea-yacbt-race is I Western Fileet Women's Western Open which came He Stays V BIARCIXMONT SCHWARTZ, foot ball coach now without team or schedule at Stanford nnivet sity, wiH stay on tho sUff to mentor physical education. Schw'arts is the former. Notre Dame AU-American halfback. slPdols'f;!1;";; Entertain 927 Apparently.: brought, out . by swimming-weather,, a t o t a 1 of 927 assorted .waders and bathers took to the Leslie . and Olinger playground swimming pools over Sunday and yesterday. ; . .t Leslie counted 448-204 on Sun day and 245 yesterday and Oling- her had 222 Sunday and 256 y ester- BIG SIX In Baseball By the" Associated Prew BatUac (three leasers m each learne) Player ud elas - OABIH Pet. MuaiaL Cardinals -..109 436 70 154 J53 Appling. White Sox 106 404 41 136 .337 Wakefield. Tigers im j ie szi Herman. , Dodgers . 110 41 S 53 134 .333 Curtright. WhiteSox. 89 300 47 94 J13 W. Cooper. Cardinals S4 300 33 96 J13 Kbju hatted imi Natlenal Leasue Amerieaa League Nicholson. Cuba 83 Ette n. Yankees SO Elliott. Pirates 74! York. Tigers 74 Herman. Dodgr 71j Johnson, Yanks 70 ' Heaae runs: - -.- National leasue Asaerleaa Lear at Nicholson. Cuba 17 1 York Tigers 33 Ott. Giants 13 Keller. Yankees 19 DiMagglo, Pirts 13 Ooerr. -Red Sox 14 .i&tepnens. Brwn 14 Bums BROOKLYN, Aug. lMtf'J-Held scoreless - for ' four v innings, the Brooklyn .Dodgers bombarded Mort Cooper for four runs in the fifth Monday and went on to beat the St. Louis - Cardinals 7 to 3 in a. twilight "game. -. "VVhiUow Wyatt held the cham pions to eight hits, allowing a run in the first and two more in the seventh, ai'd himself participated in ' Brooklyn's ' 15-hit assault on Cooper, Murry Dickson and Ernie White. v,i:r t - Wyatt made three hits' -and in serted " a " double in - the midst . of five singles by teammates during tte Dodders . game-clinchi.ij rally. The alert. Cardinal infield . caught two runners off base" to "suppress the uprising. . ;4 - City Actum ManpoivcrLacI: Reason Given; -Schwartz Kept Army's Ban on Grid , Playing Blentioned PALO ALTO. Calif- Ausrust I P-Stanford university Monday; night ' cancelled its 1943 Pacifio Coast conference football schedule because of "lack of manpower." ' Graduate. Manager Al Masters said Coach Marchmont ISchwarta Stanford Cancellation . Not to Affect Bear ' BERKELEY, Califs-August 10 (flVCoaeh -Leonard B. ' "Stub Allison said Monday night that Stanford's abandonment of foot ban. this coming season : would have' no effect on the University' of California program except forthe necessity of cancelling the big game" - with SUnf ord after half a decade of rivalry. " " ptbere's no Question about It over here,, Allison saJd.iyo don't have any manpower short-' .ago at all 'and our schedule has been snade up since- June. We'll definitely go-ahead with foot- and 'his ' staff . woud 'remain; and handle the army's physical , fitness program - for the approximately 2500 cadets , now enrolled at' the university.1 ; r -' -"1 ' "Chancellor Ray Lyman Wil bur has authorised me to an-' Bounce that Stanford university cannot play Its conference foot ball schedule because of lack of manpower on the campus, Mas ters declared. "All games are cancelled." Stanford had games lined up with California, Santa Clara, the University of San, Francisco and other teams inside ! a reasonable radius. - . Pacific Coast conference games with schools which would have involved extensive travel were not scheduled because of wartime transportation restrictions. The move was seen as a di rect result of the army's policy of declining to allow Its person nel to participate , In Intercol legiate football at schools and universities at which they are enrolled for training. 'Nother $100 L For Schoolboy PHILADELPHIA, Aug. lo.-P) Schoolboy Rowe won his 1 1th game and ended the Phailes los ing streak at four straight when he pitched a 4-3 victory over tho Chicago . Cubs before 460 fans at Shibe park Monday night. , - Rowe, who received a $1000 bonuswhen he; won his tenth game, Is reported to be getting $100 extra for each additional victory. .,.. i : : Chicago . 00 00 J eOO-S 5 Philaderia 103 &$ C0x-4 g 1 t .Erickson. Warneke , and Me Cullougb; Rowe and Moore. Yankees Shell Pale Hose 7-0 CHICAGO,' m. Au. Supporting Hank Borowv'a four. hit pitching with a 14-hit attack of their own, the New York Yankees shut - .out the' Chicago Wlute Sox, 6 to 0, before 25,227 spectators Monday night ' to go ahead in the series, two games to one. "r ' '". New York - ill 109 3o7 14 Chieago ...09 600 tOO-O 4 4 Borowy anad Dickey; Diet rich, Ilaynes and Turner. Bosox 9, Browns O ST. LOUIS. Aug. 16-0Pr-Honi runs by Bobby Doerr and Mike Metkovich and doubles bv Pet. Fox, John Lazor and Metkovitch accounted for eight runs Monday night as the B o s t o n Red Sox trimmed - the St. Louis Browns 9 to 0. JBpmbqrfl k Brooklyn - CO I2 10xr7 15 1 M. Cooper, Dickson (I), White (7) and W. Cooper; Wyatt and Cragan. f frftvi k Cet Cellef Zasy Vcy ' S: l,n Corr.fert Vrularmoa Fe-!J a a omck, dpcnd.LLj rcljcrev-tif itchifi. poiuiu rtxi&l monnttm yropt.m !., aceonspany ' pues and tmorrh:iii. hnngt aontuins; cm f romfort .yua contact, fonrrpru. tenure Cin otrr r r, eip, e6troy iefcrtioua sernp. mi i Ntr krml vp rw broke tjun. Ko el-no rmu to atm rlothir. feo.fi oa wn Lu it goarnta. Uet ttiis modern r r lodar . . , sk for p . , ----.-r - FRED LiEYER :