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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1944)
Beavers Slip Tvjip Twin Loss Puts 'Emiii 6th I h i mi ii n l I " 1 1111111 1 I' Add vanishing prep coaches: Ray Scott, ringmaster at Indepen dance high the past lew semesters, may have punched the Hopster timepiece the last time which means the already well-shorn state could be losing still another prep coach. Scott, a former Oregon Stater through and through, has been dickering for a post at.Bakersfield, Calif, land of plenty and ( espe cially much fatter pay-envelopes than can be ' collected In - most Oregon . sectors. Climatic '.differ-', ences and other noteworthy items' could keep the Indep boss In the state u ne couia snatcn nimseix off a : coaching job at the Vik villa. Otherwise it's apt to be Bak ersfield and the 4000 students en-' rolled there . . . Last we heard,' there was a coaching shortage' at the Villa". . . The 200-pound Dave Johnson signed up to play full-' back for Matty Mathews Port land grid pros next fall is the same gent . who now and then draws down ' a spot . on ' boxing shows in Portland. "Big Dave", as he's known , when in his silken panties, fought f KOn Hooker here a , few . months "ago and , has also had play-for-play ' football ' exper- ience with the once quite potent Los Angeles Bulldogs. If he's as rug ged in moleskins as he looks like he ought to be when in the bop bin, Mathews has 'himself a fullback first water. U of Idaho discovered Johnson's boxing and footballing, potentialities first . . . No .more KSLM Happy Howard Maple sportscasts like the other ether shows . it has taken a summer blow. May there isn't quite enough weekly rapid-fire blurt -When' and if the popular program does come back it will be minus -'caster Travis Cross he's started packing for col lege , . . You guess which one . . . Is our man Trisco Edwards slip-' ping? Gosh, there hasn't been a word booming from any spot on the' coast for weeks revealing his arbiting genius, and that's bad. Come on, 'Frisco, chase somebody so's we hometowners can read how you're doin Cook Gets Enviable Job at K-Falls i Klamath Falls got a Cook as coaching replacement for Frank Ramsev. but the Clack the Pells came un with isn't the Cook who would have also liked moving into that prep land of plenty, he being Claude Cook, the ex-Willamette er who bosses the boys at Bend. Claude was after the KF job also along with some 60-odd -other as pirants. Marble Cook, once" master' of the McMinnville high Bees, copped the plum. 'v ' - . And plum it is for any coach, to take over at K-Falls. When any prep school can suit up 125 footballers, all experienced in that they had previously tasted competition right from grade school on up, as did the Pelicans last fall, you can be assured most any physical edu cation mentor will go for that kind of job. Hence the 60-odd appli- - cants despite it being a "duration" stint. What coach wouldn't snap at a chance to ride herd on as much experienced talent as can txi realized at K-Falls? Unlike other school systems in the state, but only a few, the Pelicans get. their prep athletes .already schooled In es sential fundamentals and competition, same realized by the kids when they were hustling through the grades and junior high. Results have been fruitful in that you need only to check the Pelican athletic re cord the past two years, since the system went into effect The new boss takes over in . the wake of . such . previous .Pelican notables as Ramsey, Snowy Gustaf son, Dwight French, Buck Hammer and Wayne Scott . - . , " Cook's KF eleven plays the , Viks on Sweetland September 29, '..'Incidentally..'.:..',."",. " , " Wildlife Classed as "Big Business" ;: Big business: A report from the federal fish and wildlife service says that 8,091,423 sportsmen across the country spent $13,598,423 for hunting licenses in the 1942-43 season, while anglers bought 8,028,647 fishing licenses at a cost of $10,024,329 an aggregate expenditure of ver 123,000,000. Oregon sportsmen bounced $358,683 for hunting licenses and anglers shelled out $319,584 for a near $700,000 total. 1 Wildlife," in a sense of the word, but not as the Izaak Waltonians would put it, has therefore become big business. Such figures mean huge revenues to not only the states but to the manufacturers as welL And if not too little of these fees are turned into resource maintenance, . reclamation and preservation, the principal tasks of the Waltonians and other sportsmen's groups will have been accomplished to a major extent. -.... - i All that money contributed by all those people with but one objective more game and more fish but just try and get anyone to admit publicly he's been hunting or fishing these days. Not -a peep will the sportsman peep with this gas and tire rationing in effect In Baseball 1 By the Aiwoclated Prew PUytr ul Clnb O Walker, Dodrert - 89 AB 338 345 352 373 278 K H 48 110 120 73 11 Pet. J28 J22 J20 Mualal. luminals w Doerr, Red Sox Holmes, Braves Siebert, Athletics Toxx. Red Sox . .91 7 37 120 33 89 43 83 71 293 Alt . Runs batted in: National league Nicholson. Cuba 67; Wetntraub. Giants SO; Sanders, Cardinals 80. American league - Stephens, Browns 64: Doerr, Red Sox 61: Johnson. Red Sox 55: Hayes, Athletics S5. Home runs: Ott, Giants 21; Nicholson. Cubs 21; Wein trauo. Giants 12; Kurowski. Cardinals 12. Doerr, Rex Sox 13; Metheny, Yan kees 12; Cullenbine, Indians 11; Hayes, Auueucs. ii. Braves, Beds Split BOSTON, July "26 -(ff)- After knocking Bucky Walters out oi the box . for a 9-2 victory,, the Boston Braves dropped the night cap by an 8-5 margin today while splitting a doubleheader with the Cincinnati Reds. . Cincinnati 100 000 002 t 2 Boston .000 036 00 S 1 2 - Walters, Delacrus () and Mueller; Barrett, Just (7) sad Hofferth. Cincinnati 102 002 030 S 11 Boston .GumDert and Muel : ler; Ilutchlnson, Javery and KJntU. ' "Steagles" Stack Up Okeh for National Pro Grid By JAMES JORDAN , I PITTSBUBGH, July '2 -(P) ' The Pittsburgh Steelers-Chicage Cardinals National . Football league entry Is easting? about for a coc;le cf centers and a name that wIU fit fato headlines, bat. otherwise the club figures It-is rreliy weU set for next autamn's , fsoitaa grLiJ. n7eve gat rot enourh rood men for every, resign 1st center," Head Coach 7alier lUiLzx li toiay, "and v.::h tizr t::a recently CIcLsrg cl ty tit amy. It last Ia v.t'rs t:'.!:r eff ("rsa we'va tcea Notchfe HiWWW'"'W 1 1 HI.. ,1, H nil II III ''.'.''.ir : " " - ' ' '" " " f - ' ' . : - r ? v 11 DWIGIIT FRENCH be. back in the fall, but right now material available for a 15-minute Linksmen list Thursday Play Not quite to the barrel's bottom yet, Tournament Committeeman Bill Goodwin yesterday announced still another new and different links meeting for the members of the Men's club at Salem golf course today. Call it "Lady Luck" if you will, but this time the han dicapped clientele is to tour either nine holes using full 'caps and then will draw for partners after posting - respective scores. The post-play team boasting the low est count, including reduction of handicap, will then take down all prizes. He who shoots the hottest round may come up with only praise in that he may draw in the lottery the gent who had posted the day's poorest round. Aggre gate scores will count No i announcement has - been made regarding weekend play al though another . Saturday-Sunday outing is definitely planned. Bain Cancels Tilt DETROIT, July 2Hff)-Rin stopped the Detroit-Boston game In the first of the eighth tonight, with the score tied 1-all. Boston . 1000 000 1-1 4 Detroit , ,' 000 100 0-1 C 0 ... for a couple of years. But yea can't tell what will happen." Last year the Pittsburgh-Philadelphia combination the y picked, the name of "Steagles" finished second In the eastern division of the leagve. 7 Oat of 24 men on the roster to date, the Plit&argh - Chicago combine . has 12 men with professional arid experience,: headed by Ted Doyle, ex-Nebraska tackle who baa played in the big time far even years, Well play ten leagues tils year," Cetellng said as ha work- -j, sf, ,pJi "40' Seattle Snaps Losing Streak - (J Suds Take First Co, V 3-2, Win Second, 5-6 SEATTLE, July 26 -P- Seattle snapped a five-game losing streak here tonight, defeating the' Port land .Beavers twice, 3-2 and 5-0, to climb from sixth place to a tie for fourth 1 in ; the tight Pacific Coast league' race. The loss drop ped : the . in-and-out Oregonians from fourth to sixth, just a half game behind Seattle and Holly wood. - I ' ' Seattle came from behind three times in winning the opener a scheduled seven-inning affair that went twelve frames. They tied it at 2-2 in the seventh, matched the Bevos' single tally in the ninth and then finally clinched the fra cas in the 12th 1 on two singles and a wild base throw by Pitcher Clarence Fedenneyer, . who had relieved Marino ! Pierettl In the ninth. Hal Turpin received credit for the Suds', win, although By ron Speece chucked up until the tenth frame, t i " - ' The league '. midnight curfew rule stopped the second encounter after 8 innings of play, after the Portlanders had got to Sud Hurler Carl Fischer for but four hits. Seattle 4 hammered : losing pitcher Don Pulford for nine hits hi the seven times they came, to hat ' Three of f the winners' five tallies came Inl the fourth in' ning of f a triple by Matheson, singles-by Libke and Fischer, a sacrifice by Gyselman a walk and a wild pitch. - , " - .. Port 000 Ml 001 0003 11 3 Seattle 000 100 101 0014 10 2 ; Pierettl, Fedenneyer (9) and Norsrer; j Speece, Turpin (10) and Sueme. Tori. L1000 000 00 0 4 1 Seattle ..000 300 2x 6. 9 1 ' Pulford and Norager; Fisch er and. SpindeL ?- . . ... - . Seraphs Win, Add to Lead . SAN FRANCISCO, July 2flr-(ff) The Los , Angeles Angels upset Pitcher. Boy Joyce's four-game winning streak tonight when they defeated the San' Francisco Seals, 5 to 1. The Angels now lead the Pacific coast league by two games. Don Osborn pitched the win. . L. A. 030 002 0005 7 1 San F. ..000 100 0001 7 1 Osborn and Fernandes; Joyce,' Flowers (9) and Sprlnx. J Sacs Triumph In 16 SAN DIEGO, Calif.; July 26 (P) Al McElreath's long fly to right field in the 16th Inning enabled Ralph Watsons to score from third to give the Sacramento Solons a 3 to 2 victory over the San Diego Padres in : a Pacific coast league baseball game tonight. Sacramento I 010 000 010 000 000 12 7 2 San Diego 000 100 010 000 000 02 8 2 Beasley, Power (12) and J. Steiner; Cecil, Dumler (13) and Ballinrer. : Smith, Twinks Top Oaks, 9-2 HOLLYWOOD, July, 26 -P)-The Hollywood Stars ran rough shod over the ; Oakland Acorns 9 to 2 tonight for their second consecutive victory for the series. Ron Smith held the Oaks in check all the way and allowed seven hits. , , ; , Oak. .0Q0 001 100-2 7 4 HoUy C03 940 02x 9 11 t Lots, Phillips (0) and Ral- raondl, Fenech; Smith and Younker. MaurieUo KO's Cox SCRANTON, Pa, July 26-VP)-Tami Mauriello of New York knocked out. Danny Cox of Har lem In 1:35 of the second round of the main 10-round event at the stadium tonight Mauriello weigh' ed in at 204; Cox at 193. Mauri ello flo6red his opponent five times before Cox was finally counted out. ; ed on details of. the combine's camp which opens at Carroll college, Waukesha, Wis August 14. "Three of ' them will be In Pittsburgh and . two In Chicago. The rest will be on the road. Cut we still need centers. The only one we . have signed so far la Al Wlklts, formerly of Daquesne. " He's had ana year ef professional experience." 1 . . The ex-servlco men signed p In the last week who' are ex pected ta boost the tee!er-Car-lnal chances for the first title eilher ever has won are remari ModetnlGolfina .i - C7 Dy CHARLES CJ1ASIBERLAIN CHICAGO, July 25 HJP)- A 72-hoIe score- f; 300 was con sidered a famy bit of golf shoot- -iag a. quarter el ! century go, I but it wouldn't win a j$l TFar f Stamp in the par4 Ithnshlng tourn aments of today; Why the big dif ference?; Is it he . modern 'crop a ( players better tthan the "old "Not on your life," argues Jock Hutchison, the old Scotchman still operating a 'a pro ,; the Chicago area. "Don't ever think1 - i.. 1 1 V V ! i SUMMER ' Jr. blow' : - f : I I : I I ; " A -shortage . of mjateriali for! broadcasting has shelved the popular Thursday evening broadcast ever KSLM by Bob Keuscher (left), Travis Cross . (center) and Bill Talbot (rifht), who ethered for Maple's. The protram may be back In the faU. A breather for Talbot In that he became father of a baby boy earlier this week. Donald, CLEVELAND, July 28-rAt- ley i Donald exercised his I old mas- tery over the- Cleveland Indians tonight, allowing only seven! hits as .the i New Yorjr. Yankees j de feated the tribe 6 to ;S before 25,583 in a benefit game for; the National War! Fund, Inc.; Ii In boosting his j lifetime record over the Indians j to 12 1 victories as against only one loss, Donald retired the side iq order, in seven of the nine Innings. Home i runs byf Oscar drimes and George Stirnweiss featured the Yanks' at tack on JimlBagpy, who retired in the sixth J j . I i New York i.OOJ 021 0006 f" 0 aeveland 4.000 100 0023 7 2 Donald and Hemsley; Bagby, Peat (6), Calvert (9) and Rosar. Eagles Bfose Trainers. 4-3 Coach Ralph ICaWs Eagles Lodge nine bf the Salem Junior baseball league traveled: to Wood burn yesterday to nose out the Training School club, 4-3. Side- armer Andy; Zahare practically won his own game in j the final frame by cracking out a triple. Lefty Schroeder of the Lion's Club and Zahare 'divided pitching chores for the Eagles and allowed but five hits between them.! The Eagles garnered seven off Haines, school pitcher, j ill Eagles .u i 002 001)1 4 7 2 Weodburn J 010 200 03 5 S 1 Schroeder, Zahare :(4) and Hoack; Balnea and Davis.! i I - I ! Chisox Tip Nats, 4-3 ! f l ! CHICAGO, July 28-rV-The White Sox defeated Washington; 4 to 3, on a two-run ninth Inning counter rally tonight after the Senators had scored two runs in their half of the frame.; ' ! i Wash. 010 000 002-2 f 2 Chicago 4 010 001002-4 1 i Nlggellngv Wynn (), Wolff (t) and FerreU; Humphries and Tresh. i 4 -.1,1 -1 loop Play Semes, of Dnuesne; , Coleman SlcDonouch af i Dayton uairer sity, who has played two years with the pros; Harryi Wynao of Arkansas and Tony Dove af St. Francis,' who has yet to sign his contract bat who Is expected in the fold any day. Eberle Schulta of Oregon SUte Is listed u i tackle. j. j H ,i ; "We don't have any XUmmer man, or anybody with ; a - tig name lie we had last year, bet the outfit looks pretty goad a that" Ttlr.?r .at it lYahks Greats JNo Better Than Were the Oldtimers that the Vardons, Hagens, Tay Iorsaye, and even the natchi sonscovldnt keep np with the Nelsons, McSpadens, nogans and Byrds If they were fat their youth today. , . Better-conditioned courses and playing equipment are mainly re sponsible for the sab-par blast ing of today. Thirty years ago , we had to pot more behind the ball to play the unpredictable bounces ' of vnwatered fairways gion S J How They, STTAKIID. , '. COAST LEAGUE 5 ' W Is Pet W X, Pet. Los Ana- 60 50 45ISeatU 55 56 .495 San Fran 58 52 .527 Portland 54 56 .481 Oakland 56 54 J09 Sacramn S3 5T .482 HoUywod 55 66 .495 i San Dief SI 61 .455 Last night s results: At Seattle 4-5. Portland 3-0 (first gam -12 innings, second game called in 8th inning, league curfew). At Houywooa s, uaxiana z. At San Francisco 1. Los Angeles I. At San Diego 2. Sacramento 0 (16 innings). NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. ' W L Pet. St Louis 63 34 .724 PhOadel 37 49 .430 New Yk 41 68 .420 Pittsburg 48 37 .565 Cincinnat 50 39 62 Boston 37 53 .411 Chicago 37 47 .440IBrooklyn 36 S3 .404 Yesterday s results: At Boston S-5. Cincinnati 3-3. At Philadelphia 6. St Louis S (10 innings). - At Brooklyn I, uncago . At New York 5. Pittsburg S. AMERICAN LEAGVE t W L Pet W L Pet St Louis 54 41 ,568iDetroit 46 47 .493 New Yrk 46 43 .533 'Chicago 43 45 .489 Boston 48 44 .522Washing 43 50 .457 Cleveand 46 46 JUlLphuadel 39 S3 .424 Yesterday s results: At Detroit 1. Boston 1 (game called in sth, rain). At Cleveland a, New yotk t. imgnt tune). - At St LouiS 4, Philadelphia S (night At uucago . - wasningion a , inigm game). Curley's Vies With Portland A 6-2 victory under their slid ing pads as a result of last Sat urday's game at Waters park, the Curly's Dairy club of the Junior league travels to Portland today for an 11 a. m. series finale with the Wade Williams Baseball School Kids. The tussle is set for Kamm field. The Curly's will take along handful of borrowed playing help to fill In positions left open by players who cannot make the trip north. The team departs from the Valley Motor company terminal at 8 o'clock this morning. , Jockey Zufelt Boots 4 More SEATTLE, July 2HP)--Grant Zufelt, the hard - riding Jockey from Utah, booted home four win ners at Longacres tonight to boost his total for the track's season to 31. ! His winning mounts and the pari mutuel return on a $2 ticket were: Valiant Aosie, $5.50; Lady Hiiika, $5.70; Clover Leaf in the feature race, 14.90; Silk Wind, $7.90. Peters Pops Starr OAKLAND, Calif., July 28-6P) Paulle Peters. 157. San Francisco. won a-lo-round decision over Ro man Starr, 181, Tulsa, Okla,vin a slam-bang bout at the Oakland auditorium tonight Peters had decided edge over his heavier op ponent throughout In a six-rclmd semi-windu? Eddie IlaUlan, 152, Oakland, won the decision-over Speedy Cannon, 131, Seattle. Le and ' greens. Tott took year life fat year hands when you pitched to a green. We used rock-hard balls. We didn't have such a wea pon as a wedge, which saves the fellows from one to five strokes a round today. And we played for p rites ranging from $150 to $500. Most of the pros wouldn't walk across the street for that kind of money today." There is an average difference f about 25 strokes in winning Nin3i in ith Albany i Here Tonight 7 WUTenTilts Maple's, 9-7 CRT SOFTBALL STANDINGS W L Pet Willamette r.,; ., J 0 1X00 Keith . Brown 1 j .687 Papermakers : 1 1 .500 Maple's ' -i S .333 Golden Fbeasant - ,. 9 S JWU Yesterday's results: s- Willamette S, Maple's 7. PaDermakers won by forfeit from Golden Pheasant Bunching five hits and two walks around a pair of Maple er rors for . eight runs in the ' first inning, the Willamette university Softball outfit went on to defeat the Sporting Gooders, 9-7 on Ol ingeT field yesterday to retain their undisputed possession of first place in' the' City circuit. Maple Pitcher ,. Bob Keuscher held the Collegians to but five more hits after the .fateful first, but his teammates couldnt quite overcome the large margin. Trail ing 8-3 In the top! half of the eighth inning, Maple's closed the gap to a single tally when Claude O'Connell lofted a home run to right field, stands with the sacks loaded, but WU Pitcher Marv Goodman then retired the side in order, and the College nine added a tally of their own in the latter half of the inning, i Al - Lightner swatted a long four-bagger for the Maplemen in the first frame, getting three hits out of eight gathered by the losers. i. Golden Pheasant sank into the cellar via their forfeit to Paper- makers,, who were? elevated to third place, a half game behind Keith Brown in second. Maple's loss skidded them to fourth. Maple's 10O 200 0407 s 3 aoo coo oi 1 10 e Willamette Keuscher and Plath: ; Goodman and Dickerson. ; Biggies Would Junk Stymie COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. July 28-aVBig Ed ; Dudley, Pro fessional Golfers association president, and. Fred Corcoran, PGA tournament ' manager, are compaigning for abolition of the stymie rule from the PGA regu lations before the PGA tourna ment In Spokane, Wash, August 14-20. . ! The rule permits the ball near er the hole to be lifted and the far ball played only - when the near ball is within six Inches of the hole or one Is within six inches of the other. Corcoran and Dudley would like to see the sty mie headache erased completely from .the rules of., match play. The stymie is purely a matter of luck and luck should have no place in a sport of skm,"" they declared. D?J3. CIIAN...LA5I Ot.y.TXaraJJ. . OrX.CoaaJUi CHINES 3 Cerballsts ' 211 North Liberty Upstairs Portland General Cectrk Co Office pen Saturday. only 10 aja to 1 pjta4 to I pm Con suitatioa. Ciood pressure and erine uwts aro troo u charga. Practiced unco lilt ; - . - scores today and 30 years ago. The US open was won or tied 13 times between 1389, and 1320 by aggregates of 300 or more, rang ing upward to Fred Herd's 328. The most f outstanding accom plishment in that period was the phenomlnal - 286 . Chick Evans - posted In 1916 to win the open a. record which stood onUI 1930 - when Tony Manero won' with 282. , I '. ,T,see where Nelson and Mc- - ' i Spaden have averaged 9 strokes in 52 tournament rounds this season," says Jock. "Well, that's pretty good but it certainly . doesn't make .fern any better than ' the old timers who were whining with 73's, and 80'a.". " ' r , Finale ; "Rubber" Tilt Setfor6:30 - -W m, Outside of perhaps an -"inside" game with, the Oregon State Peni tentiary Greys in, the near future, Capital Post No. 8's American Le gion . Junior I baseballers pull the curtain on their brief but welcome campaigning tonight with a 6:30 m. 'rubber, mix with the Al bany- Cummings .Movers Lgion club in Geo. R Waters park. Other games . were scheduled for - the Capital Posters, but were cancelled when prospective opposition fold ed up for the summer.: . Although the green pea No. 9 s will be definite underdogs tonight they'll nonetheless be battling for series win against the Movers. Salem copped the first of the three game skein , 12-11 after . a hair raising 8-run rally in . the ninth, but Albany came back in game No. 2 to top the locals 9-3. The Movers will be playing one of their final brush-up games before enter ing the State Junior. Legion tour ney next week .in Portland. To night's game will have no bearing on that tourney entry since Al bany represents another district. Manager Bill Wilkinson will have one of three top Gingers to toss at the Sal ems Neil Rich ardson, the curve - bailer from Dallas who beat the Prison Greys at Albany. Sunday, - Bob Ellis, . a fastballer, or Dale Elkins; rated on a par wun ine xirst two. me. CPs will be forced to use no pitch er longer than ' three Innings . so that . none will be unavailable for effective duties come Sunday in the village Junior, league. The trio to probably draw , Solera. . as signments are Joe "Cowboy". Car roll. wAndy Zahare' and- Stan Wilkes. Rod Province " and - Bud Craig may also see slab worki The Balance of the CP lineup will probably be' Roger Dasch at short, Pete Valdez or Dick Allison at Second,' John Dalke at first, Craig at third, Ev Staats in left, Jack Malmin in center, Dick Hen- drie or Warren Valdez in -right and Dean Hagedorn or Al Russell behind the dislu' Schuster Buys Willie Joyce LOS ANGELES? July 2S-(JP) Charley Schuster, Hollywood bus inessman, announced today he had purchased the contract of Willie Joyce, Gary, InL, light weight, from George Traf ton. Traf ton has returned to football and has signed as assistant coach for the Green Bay Packers. Schuster said Joyce's next fight in San Francisco against Henry Armstrong , had been postponed from August 7 to August 21 to enable Armstrong to recover from a hand injured in "tus last bout with Slugger White. Pros to Seek Ward's Record SPOKANE, Wash., July 26-(P) When the nation's top profession al golfers string out on Spokane's Manito golf course Aug. 14 to 20 for the National Professional Golfers association $20,000 tour ney, they'll be firing at course records established by an ama teur. The amateur is Spokane's du ration national amateur ' cham pion, Lt Bud Ward tf the army air forces, now In New Guinea, who toured the course in 63, nine under regulation, figures. On ' the round he also set a non-competitive record for nine holes, going the back nine In 30, getting bir dies on six. .No Certificate. Required , Choice af A-C-F Babber Let -our factory-trained ex perts ; recap your smooth tires and be ready for your next tire Inspection. Loaners furnished free whQe service oy arpounncni. ccr:: Dodgers Drop To Hole; Cubs Climb to 4th - All Aceomplislied On 4 to 1 Victory UROOKLVN, "NY, July 26H53) The Brooklyn Dodgers took over sole occupancy of last place in the National league when they lost to the Cubs, 4 to 1, tonight In a War Relief fund game that drew 11,738 spectators and' receipts of $13,417. But all the while the. Cubs, long Jw.ii.m in4h wllar themxelvea. climbed intq, fourth place, replac ing the New .York Giants. It was the first time .this-season Chicago has made the first. division. ' ' Les "BO Fleming pitched a steady game for the Cubs to gaini his sixth . victory allowing aix hits. Clyde - King, ' 19-year-old U ot North Carolina pitcher, soade hlg lirst start for ; Brooklyn and re mained -until the eighth when he was lifted for a pinch bitter. : 1 v chL - j -ete 200 2te 4 it . 1 Brook. 01S 900 SOO 1 f Fleming - and ; WiUiaaas; King, Branca (9) aad Bragaav Owen .)... , ; . -.-." ' Brownies Bump Maclanena4-2 ST. LOUIS, July -26--t!Ph The league-leading St Louts -Browns made it two' straight over the Phil adelphia Athletics tonight with a 4 to 2 victory although outhit by the visitors 11 to 6. ; Myron ."Red" Hayworth's home run in the fourth inning with two on base provided the winning mar gin -for the. home club. . Both the runners were on . base on walks issued by losing , pitcher Luke "Hot Potato", Hamlin. - - ; Phiia, ee 2e eoo 2 11 St Louis 901 300 S0x--4 0 Ilamiin and - Hayes; Kramer and Baywortb. : Cards Pressed But Win, 8-6 - ' i ' ' PHILADELPHIA, July 26-Jt) The St Louis "Cardinals scored two, runs in the tenth inning for ah 8-6 -victory over the Philadel phia Phillies in a war fund game tonight : Danny LitwhUer, who had sent the Cards out in front with a three-run pinch-hit homer in the eighth, scored the winning run on Johnny Hopp's single. Hopp him self : tallied later on. Stan Musial'a hit ; St Louis -0003 000 030 2- 12 t rPhlla. .. 000 103101I- 10 2 ' Schmidt Wilkes (t), Donnel ly (8), Lanier (9) and W. Coo per; Schanx, Barrett (7), Mus slU (9), Karl (10) and Peacock. Pirates Take Second Place s NEW YORK, July 26-(-Tha Pittsburgh Pirates moved into sec ond place in the National league) standings by defeating the New York Giants, 6-5, before 12,909 war relief fans tonight Fritz Os termueller, though he failed ta finish, gained his eighth triumph. Pittsburgh -..20S 030 001-4 13 2 New York.000 200 021-5 11 1 . : Ostermneller, Strineevich (0) and Lopes; Feldman, Fischer (5), Adams (7) and Lombardl, Mancuso (9). WU V-12'cr to Play "Pen" Nine Saturday Inaugurating their long over-, due season, a band of WiUametteT university V-12'ers, but in no way representing the school on the na val program, hop over to the peni tentiary Saturday afternoon f or a double-header with the Greys. Two seven-inning games art) planned by the gobs, who claim to have cooked up a considerably potent - crew from the various signees now attending the school. SPORT COATS and SLACKS S A, N Clothiers 456 State tires aro being recapped. 24-hour V Raten . 11.' HrrSTI A CLT7im ETS."- '-''; Ttlwi C4