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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1949)
More Says Cherry Buyers in East Use Rum or to Cut Price f i Concern over the possibility that eastern cherry buyers may be . attempting to lower prices on the 1949 crop by rumoring a 50 per ' cent tariff reduction was quoted Thursday from the state department by Sen. Wayne L. Morse in wires to area growef representatives. Morse seconds the report of James Webb, assistant secretary of State, by laying, MI am satisfied that the eastern cherry buyers are POUNDDD 1651 CRT 003I3G0 Senator Morse tries to ride a noman-iij;e i j.i ( -rflabnte on amendments to the Tho- m-. bill for rencaling the Ta ft- republicans Taft and Ive, on ccr- iain amcnamems, uut Senator Morse took the rumor opposed to the one giving the gov- I maUcr tQ lhe ,loor of ,he 8enate rnment power to obtain injunc. ;b, u.ny'Thursclay to air the unwar aions against strikes that Pacini- d represJntntions op the part late a national emergency (such ia of eastemM frujt buyers Bnd cJuse cou or railroad strikes) He ; Wijth(m to rcvis their earlier prices that abor will "just , go to Jail be- d .., think we mi)St fore it accepts a pattern of injunc- , h f fe th bu h Oregon senator comes up with a proposal of Jiis own to meet the sit uation. ""u' , .rr, : ; ta"ff. and I am hoping that Secre department authority to tary Webb's letter . . . will prove As7nint th national interest, re- serving to congress e - ' VetO power j oenjr we 7tul'7("' " ;( an injuncUon after wuure of j plants unless congress gave specif- ic authorization. t,Jn offers, I suggest that the grow- i Morse in objecting to use of tbe j J () rrange. Injunctive Prices said tha courts ment hby the pr4 w, are "not qualified to pass judg- reasonablv higher nreiif there is ment on the social and econom c drastic cutsin the cherry tariff ! questions of labor relations ' It is , d ,owcr on i doubtful however if his retenticn sca,e .f tfaere Mor$t dd(ed of a congressional veto on execu- . MnrKp., nrtirin u,ae nrrtmnt(,H bv i tivea action is a sa Us factory rolu- j tion. This throws the issue of na tional security into the caldron of "congress. If the injunction method is to be used the executive should be free to act, for time may be of the essence. In the Taft-Hartley law the in junctive power is of limited dura tion, and when invoked has been in the public interest. In this com plex society we cannot let vital services be cut off; very long while .employers and unions wrangle. That ought to be understood by all parties and means to prevent such work stoppage should be written in the law The right to strike or to .Jock out workers is limited byje. superior right of society to survi val. In rewriting the basic labor relations law of the land there should be no uncertainty on this point. s President Truman has appointed two supreme court justices: Bur ton and Vinson, and not lust one ps stated In this column Wednes day. y Truman Given Reform Power Over Agencies WASHINGTON. June 18 -(TV Congress today granted President Truman sweeping powers to re organize the executive depart ments and agencies of the federal government with their 2,100,000 employes. Swiftly, the house and senate approved the compromise version of the reorganization bill which bad been worked out by a joint committee of senators and repre sentatives after a month's dis agreement The measure is considered the almost indispensable key for put ting Into effect the detailed recom mendations of the bi-partisan commission created by congress to study reorganization of the gov ernment. Former President Her bert Hoover, who headed that commission, repeatedly urged en actment of the reorganization bill. The compromise bill provides that any reorganization plan the president sent to congress would go Into effect 60 days later, unless 1 ) A majority of the whole mem bership of higher house disa prov ed the plan, or (2) congress ad journed its session before the 60 day period was up. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH "ivtr gnet ih0 wss 'cover eVr on th firm jourml $hi'i txtn Impossible!? " r'"z-i--i-XT " ass f I I using this unrounded rumor in an attempt to take an unwarranted price advantage of Oregon cherry growers. I The eastern; buyers have quoted prices from 4fe to 5 cents for the current crtp tin the basis that re duced tarifs will allowf an influx 3f low priced fruit from Italy, thereby flooding the American market ' No Basis for Rumors Webb reported there s no basis for such rumors by the buyers, because the results of tairiff nego tiations amortg 23 nations now 'meeting in Annecy, France, are not conclusive and have not been dis- tions are kept secret to prevent k nnA ,..,. ,.i,t,- "u;; j s w selves ma v be laboring under . ,..ly,7l .If. . ?.?J ! good-faith feat that there is a dan- j jger that the market will; be flood- i a4 Vv t fiftti't suit ir thA Korrv i V etit 1 1 Wf.ct: r- inlon. - . . " i .1 . ... L ... th. rhrrv iynu.'ir" I Morse said. I Work lor Antemeiii information which I have ,Qi. rMllIf 4 . a Mten from tRt growe"rs tic reductions; in offered prices may cause some of the 1949 crop to be left on the trees because of marginal profits. He safd he was forwarding copies of the letters to I the government agencies Concerned and to the United States delegation at Annecy. j New Lights-Due On Commercial Street Soon New street lights soon will brighten downtown Commercial street. J llrgj&mmatl: 78 mercCry vapor JIghlpg units between Center and Trade streets twill begii Monday, with City Electric, Inc. carrying out the lighting job agreed bet ween the city of Salem wid Port land General Electric Co. The 39 standards placed will each support two light units of the latest type, parallel to th? street. The total includes lights for the blocks of Chemcketa, Court and State streets between Com mercial and Liberty streets. Completion of the job is ex pected by August 1. it was stated Thursday by Fred M. Sriider. pro prietor of the firm which PGE has contracted to do the Iwork. The lighting syctem will be an im provement even on the recently in stalled High street light's and will make Commercial strfet many times brighter than at present, he said. ii,tfi ltjft?iiHA tlUWJ W3fi3UUUU Salrm , Portland . . . . ii San Franc ico .. . Chicago , es S3 70 . 70 49 48 13 trace .08 Nw York 83 88 WlllatTH-tt rivtr .4 of foot. FORECAST ifrom U.S. weather bu reau. McNary field. Salm: Partly cloudy this meaning clearing during afternoon and evening. High today near 72; low tonight near 4. Agricul ture outlook: Except for moderate to fresh winds throughout most of the day condition will be favorable for moct farm activities. I Sept . I in June 7 SALEM PRft IPITATIOV This Year LaM Year ' Normal 0 77 4S81 38.39 Gresham Lass Starts Job As State's Girl Governor A Gresham girl. Pat McCuliough. took office as girl governor of Oregon Thursday as the annual Girls' State meeting wei)t into full swing at the itatehouse. Wore than'; 20ft, girls from all parts of Oregon are here for the governmejft t-instruct ion event sponsored by the American Legion auxiliary. ' Conduct of mock legislative ses sions in the senate and house chambers Thursday fallowed an earlier address to the group by Gov. Douglas McKay and organ ization of the program, i. Mist McCutlough succeeds Pa tricia Bellmer, Cascade Locks, as governor. Other new officers are: Evelyn Low Portland; secretary of state: Barbara Chritenon. Sherwood, state treasurer; Fay Coxen, Toledo, labor commission er; Nancy Nelson, Astoria, attor ney general: Nancy Erickson, As toria, superintendent of public in struction, and Bleen Fricke, Glen wood, chief justice of the state su preme court. I i Sara Archibald, Grants Pass, was elected president of the senate and Delores Brice, Portland, speaker of 93th YEAH tHlSss Trial WBtaess Adirats Security 'ESireaclD' Cited; Lilienthal Asks0 rplianed Squirrel Drinks Milkl?rcsiAcnl Sees FBI To Check Gn Magazine WASHINGTON SfiL ? " WASHINGTON, June 16 -fVP)- Lhal said today an month's "Nation's Business" may violate securitv regulations, and that he will ask th. FBf to check on it. The article is entitled. "Is the A-Bomfc Secure?" by William Bradford Huie. It is in the June issue. I Lilienthal, chairman of the ""Sf lu""'";-,lu"' the senate-house atomic commit- tee that the article is "inaccurate," "reckless and irresponsible," and that it! contains "certain state ments" i regarding "highly classi fied piejees of information." He tiA these pertained to the present A-bomb and an "infer ence" as to the number of weapons in the stockpile. "Furthermore, he said, there is "a curious and distorted state ment" of what should now be in the stockpile- "Nation's Business" is published by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. Apparently these are the pass ages tolwhich Lilienthal objected: "A fair estimate is that we should how have enough fission able material fashioned into bomb forms and enough of each com nonent to assemble 400 1949 model bombs within a few hours. I say we should 'have this, or we could have had this; not that we do have it; "On pec. 5, 1945, Dr. Robert J Oppenheimer publicly test i f i e d that we could make 500 bombs a year, 'hut the country would feel it. or, he said, we could make 50 bombs every nine months without any particular sacrifice." Anti-Sales Tax Stand Kept By State Grange COO$ BAY, June 16-(P)-The Oregon' state grange, rebelling against its tax committee, stuck to Mr"1 """"" ' ' tax todav Delegates to the 76th annual convention voted overwhelmingly against a resolution which favored j a "fair :and impartial sales tax to relieve j "the farmer's overtaxed situation." British-Slav Treaty Near LONDON. June 16-UP-Bri tain's envoy ;to Yugoslavia said today this country is on the verge of completing a five-year trade pact with Marshal Tito's government. Th rliulttnr ram in the midst I ot reports that Yugoslavia's ItSftvUt satellite neighbors are in creasing tncir eiioris to pui an economic freeze on Tito. Agreement on the new five-year trade pact between Britain and Tito was predicted by Sir Charles Peake, British ambassador, as he left foe Prague enroute back to Belgrade after three weeks of conferences here and in Paris. Unofficial estimates were that the pact would involve about 200.0w0,000 ($800,000,000) worth of goods; British manufactures would j be swapped for timber, grain aind food. the house. Othef senate officers included Veronica Buckholtz. Mt. Ang, sergeans-ai-arms. House officers, others than speaker include Sharon Gulstrap. Grand Ronde, assistant chief clerk; Vicky loran, Woodburn, lerge- ant-at-arms. The nrwiy elected governor, in her inaugural address, at a Joint session lot- lhe senate and house, emphasized the current and poten tial activities of the girls atate and reviewed briefly what was being accomplished. She said a study of state, county and city government was not only interesting but of outstanding educational value. Thursday afternoon was given over tot an instructional seaaion, followed by a general meeting at night addressed by Mayor Dorothy Lee of Portland and other speak ers. Sfate Sen. Marie Wilcox, Grants Pass, is serving as an In structor. At this afternoon's session there will be introduction and consider ation of bills. The girls will visit a number of state offices Friday forenoon, 24 PAGES ' , ' - ' v.. , ( 7 I Li v Being an orphaned squirrel isn't so bad when the master fs Stanley Friese. jr.. 15. son of Police Capt and Mrs. S. K. Friese, 1725 N. 19th tt., according to Susie, the squirrel. Stan is shown above feed ing Susie from a miniature milk bottle. The squirrel was given to Stan after being found in a nest in a newly cut-down tree. She is now about five or six weeks old. (Statesman photo). Fires Scar 3 Northwest towns; Threat Subsides Cloud-s and scattered showers broke the Pacific Northwest's forest fire threat yesterday (Thursday), but only after damaging blazes at lone and McNarv City, Ore., and near Packwood, Wash. C.ni;.U.-tT..n'l Tr l The forest fire ne?r Packwood started in a refuse burner, and fire that raced over 250 acres of j slashings before it was controlled. A small house and two barns were destroyed. At lone in eastern Oregon flames started in a seed mill and spread to the city hall. Both were destroyed. The blaze threatened to engulf the whole town, but fire departments from six neighboring cities arrived in time to save lone. At McNary City, near the ?ite LOiumoia ner a m now construction, two small under frame warehouses were wiped out in a quick fire. Damage was esti-! mated at $20,000 Millmen Reject Wage Offer A wage Increase of l'i cents per hour was rejected by a 101-01 vote Thursday nignt Dy memDers of Salem Millmcn's union, local 1411. F, D. VanSweringen, executive secretary of Salem building trades council, announced the result of the balloting at the labor temple. He said Portland millworkers re jected the same offer Tuesday by a 402-0 vote. About 100 Salem union mem bers were laid off last April 25 when four local plants that are members of the Woodworker Em ployers association closed down. The union had asked a 17i cents per hour increase. South Salem Club m jrr i g -r mi lO Work IOf IOlltll Recreation Hay A. youth recreation hall in South Salem will be undertaken by the South Salem Progrcsi club. The new project was unanim ously approved by 30 members at a meeting Thursday night in Clay ton Jones' Upholstery shop. De tails will be worked out with other residents of the community. Ofi-street parking was discus? ed following1 a review of action by the club's committee on the sub ject, A recording of a recent KOCO open forum broadcast on off-street parking was played. WATER RATION IN MEDFORD MEDFORD. June 16 -(A1)- Re striction of the use of water for lawns and gardens was ordered here today. Robert A. Duff, water superintendent, said current use was exceeding storage capacity. At fticary Ciiy, near wic mc,wr, ana Mrs. o. i. win, ' of the Columbia river dam now j Nebraska St.. incurred severe cuts Tb Oregon Statesman, Salem, wipe out"Vh,",own. The- blaze a small community east of was puffed by wind into a roaring j 3-Year-01dBoy Struck By Car Michael Delk, 3-year-old son of ; Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Delk. 1130 neorasxa si., "icurrea .evxre cuts and abrasions at 4:30 p.m.. Thurs- day when he was struck by a car while riding a tricycle at the in- tersection of North Capitol Nebraska streets. and City first aid men tookhim to Salem General hospital where his condition was called 'favorable by attendants Thursday night. The driver of the car, Agatha' Leslie Vogl, 1389 Lee st., was j charged with operating a motor vehicle with imoaired vision and defective brakes. Ml. Angel Meets Queen Contestants At Civic Dance ht k vrTf t. . i a c :i ivi i . nvjt-ij, .June io i ourtidi t Kathleen Templis of Silverton, Yvonne Bailey and Stella Drum mer of Mt. Angel and Jackie Rue of Woodburn. Hi Brendon and Gene Barrett, chairman and manager respect ively of this year's festival also were introduced. Joe Berchtold w master of ceremonies. More candidates will be Intro- ducfd at another dance Thursday, June 30, it was announced. BRIDGES PLEADS INNOCENTS SAN FRANCISCCX June 1S-(A-Harry Bridges and two fetlow-of- ficiaUi of the CIO longshore union pleaded innocent as exported to day to federal charges growing out of his 1945 naturalization. DETROIT CONTRACT lZT PORTLAND, June 16-P)-Con-tract for constructing the resident engineer's office building and uti lities at Detroit Dam site on the North SanUam river was let today to rushlight automatic sprinkler Co., Portland, on its bid of $53,933. iiiKii n uiiii Mi Bisiu luuaj. Candidates for queen of the 11th "i've jugt; received a telegram annual Mt. Angel Flan festival .j from John L. Lewis requesting the were introduced at a d-nce here mirc" to ?, back to the P'JS-" i John Busarello, president of dis Thursday night. itrict No 5 of the UMW told Tne iThey are Mona Berg of Monitor. 1 Associated press. Mildred Brentano of St. Paul, j "1 Oregon, Friday, Jun 17, 1949 (Siiwinig Truiman "Decries hysteria End Soon To Spy Scares WASHINGTON, June 16 -P)-President Truman said today that there's hysteria after every war. and that the current spy hunts come under that heading. Even tually, he said, the hysteria dies down. Adopting the role of history professor at his news conference, Mr. Truman said it would be a good thing it thoe alarmed about the fate of the country would read up on the Alien and Sedition laws, passed in the 1790s. He said they would be .surprised at the parallels between then and now. Also, he said, they should read how it came out. tSaid Mr. Truman: The hysteria dkxi down, the country didn't go ta hell and thj country isn't go ing to hell now. Spy investigations, and kindred subjects, took up the major part of the 15 minutes of questioning. It began with a very first ques tion. A published story yesterday said there was dissension between FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover and Attorney General Clark. It said that Hoover Was so upset over the way FBI evidence had been used by the justice department that he had resigned The story was promptly denied, Mr. Truman also denied it. In answer to other questions, he said that Hoover frequently makes reports to him, and that he thinks Hoover has ;done a good job. Mr. Truman also found time to bet a dollar with a reporter that the administration farm program would become law. Klamath Falls Policeman Held For Murder KLAMATH FALLS, June 18- (JP)-A policeman was under arrest today in a Ihree-yaer-old $13,000 ! j hall robbery and brutal slay ing of a nightwatchman. C. E. Mi horn, Klamath Falls patrolman and candidate for sher iff last yeir, was arrested last night as he left his police station shift. Milhorn was the second man ar rested in the long-unsolved case. Leonard Evans, former Tulelake and Pendleton resident, is already in jail at Yreka, Calif. The Klamath Falls patrolman j denied anv knowiHp of lh rrim 2" he wasT when he Wag uk j t custody : bv state police s-t. r,rI T.chenor by State Police Sgt. Earl Tichenor ; jast niYit ; ... ,', But a warrant issued by Siski- you county charged the patrolman, did not operate ThurMlay because j the United Nations relief and ir Lvans. and Marvin Morns - -the latter a man already serving ar j 199-year sentence in Folsom pris- on -- with murder and conDiracy to commit burglary. 11 'as 39 months ago that El Rancho Tule dance hall was rob - fed or 113,000, and the night ; watchman, Charles Twiggs, left bedten to death on the dance hall floor. Miners to Return to Pits, Union Official States K PITTSBURGH, June 16-VThe 1 nation's 480,000 United Mine I Workers will end their week-long! -T .itr ,,...- . . . , nmiiuui I'll Bvucuuic t m West Salem Voters to Decide on Budget Levy WEST SALEM, June 18 -(Special)- Voters will be called upon June 30 to approve a S3 .60 3 levy to make West Salem city budget ends meet, it was decided tonight by the city's budget committee. The amount needed outside the state 6 per cent increase limia- tion Is considerably lower than the $20,978 voted last year, al though the total budget as ap proved tonight is about the same. The proposed budget totals S74. 538 a compared with last year's $75,687. Cutting the extra tax revenue needed was accomplished through higher revenue estimates outside taxes and through a $9,000 sur plus which the city has recently acquired through sale of property and surplus steel pipe and curb ing work which ; was reimbursed by local industries. Principal changes in tha new PRICE 5c Data Yes, There Was Another One at Home Like Her LOS ANGELES, June 16-(P)-Walter Fisher, 19-ytar-old New York upholsterer, was sued for divorce today and how! There were two plaintiffs, and sister?, at that! Helen Blanc Fisher, 20, stated that she eloped with Fisher to Las Vegas, New, March 16, 1948, and that he deserted her an hour after the wedding. Evelyn Blanc Fisher, 21. said she married the same man July 3. 1948. in Baltimore. She said they lived together three months. Evelyn wrote her sister, telling her of her marriage, and was surprised to learn her husband was in reality Helen's. Grasshoppers Eating Across Fields at Baker BAKER, June 16-0TVA plague of grasshoppers was eating its way down a half-mile-wide highway of hay today. But airplanes were fpraying chlorodane over the insects, in the j hope the infestation could be checked before serious damage re sults. The next 10 days will be the critical ones, said County Agent Leroy C. Wright. The grasshoppers have covered a path two miles long and a half mile wide at Durkee, where hay is the principal crop. Smaller hordes of the insects infested Keating find Pondosa areas. A grasshopper expert from the U. S. bureau of entomology at Denver headed for Baker to help in the fight. The chief danger is to hay crops, although a few peach and apricot orchards also might be affected. Installations Made At Dallas Sub-Station DALLAS, June 18 -(Special) Installation of replacement equip ment at the Mountain State! Power company sub-station here was practically completed nt 10:30 p.m. Thursday, according to R. G. McFarland. district mana ger of the company. The sub-station was damaged V(.ncivoiv hv f ,t wh " L; L . 1 , L J 1LJ !r ! oiantt restored service o ?.!. 7- u- P. gurners In the Dallas-Falls City con- area soon after it wa. disrupted. 1936 he went to It he state riep.-.rt-Most Da I his ltimhr inrliiKtrif 8 ' mnnt r,. irmni in lOd i,, McFarland said facilities of the company at Dallas wilt have to ho rernorll.rl hut the .Hnatlnn was back to normal as far as customers were concerned. 1 Mrs, Parr Never Forgets a Face DALLAS. June 1 -0F- Mrs. Alice Parr has been separated from some of her relatives for more than half a century, but she never forgets a face. When a stranger, too well dress- ' v p. ' . . v . . door to asK lor a handout, Mrs. Parr was stymied only a second. "Why," she said then, "you're my brother Allen!" Though they had corresponded. It was 63 years since she had seen him. He was 16 then. budget are $20 monthly pay raises for seven city officers and em ployes, including the recorder, police chief-water superintendent, three policemen and two water maintenance men. The total tax levy is placed at $22,228. Last year it was $38,M7. Of the total budget for the com ing year, as proposed, the gen eral fund la $28,310. Other budget departments include: Water, $20,970; street, $9,530; sewer, 15.000: sewage and drain age reserve. $1,500; sinking funds (covertagfwater bonds, street im provement bonds and water note), $11528. Budget committeemen are Mrs. Verne Axelson, chairman; Victor Utterback j Clyde Everett, Robert Covert, Jake Foos and Council men Walter Musgrave, L. F. Sher idan,! Chester Douglas, Earl C. Burk, W. C. Heise, C. A. Rust and A- N. Copenhaver, No. SO to ttecls i. Wadleigli Tells Of Association With Chambers NEW YORK June 16 -(41 Henry Julian U'sdleigh. In a tvol, dramatic admission, said today h handed over state department secrets to Whi(taker Chambcis, self-styled courier fof a prewar Russian spy ring. He said Chambers might have gotten hi explosive "pumpkin papers" from him but added that he did not think; so. Wadleigh told; a crowded fed eral court roomj that he was a communist j y m p a t hizer who wwked hand-id-glove with rd agents from almost the Inslr-nt he entered the state dpartmnt in 1936. He left the department 10 em later. He testified fof the government at the perjury ttjial of Alger Hiss, his one-time associate In the Mai department. f Chambers named Hiss and Wiidleigh among five governrm-rit officials he said fed secrrts ti him for Soviet agent.. Hiss denied the accusation and was indicted on a perjury chaite. Willing Collaborator Completely composed, the 44-year-bld 'ad!eih, an (b.lind univeryity graduate, said candidly that he "was wjlling to collabo rate with the communists if tht re was anvthing 1 1 could do to lm useful." j Then, under questioning by Ar sistnnt U. S Attorney Thoms F. Murphy. Waflcigh, a cleiry man's son, biok the tight-lirrd silence he iuis Vnaintained- finre Chambers fir t accused him ncin ly a year as?o. "Were you ear a communist?' Murphy asked. "I collai)oratett with the com munists," WadlHgh replied in clipped, neat syllables, hi mod erate voire carrying easily crs the court room. Then Murphy akedf "Did you ever take any gov ernment documents?" Affirmative Answer "Yes," Wadleigh answered,' Ms lean pale face showing no emo tion. : "When did ypu begin taking these doeumenNl" "As soon as I entered the niite department, in March, 1936," the witness said. i "To whom di(f you turn ter these documents?" "To a person' who has been identified as Daid Carpcritert." Chambers has; identified Car penter as one cjf the men who helped him photograph : documents before copies Kcre relayed to Russian agents. Gave Documents to Chamber "There were some occasions," Wadleigh went on, "when 1 giive documents to Whittakcr Cham bers." In 1930, Wadleigh said he join ed the federal farm board. In RRA). In 1948. Wadleigh said he went u,nrir t, k it,n. ment. assisting : it in ecorn.n.ie dealings with the U. S. "Did there come a time wht-n you were no longer sympathise to the communists?'' Murphy nfk ed. "After the Nazi-Soviet pact (in 1939) I had verj neriQus misgiv ings and I wa no longer willing to take the risks; involved," Wad- ' leigh said. McKay Leaves For Colorado It Gov. Douglas McKay left Thurs day for Colorado Springs, Colo., to attend the annual governors convention. He Was accompanied by Mrs. McKgy and their daugh ter, Mary Lou. I The governor later will fly to Washington. D. C to appear be fore a congressional committee in vestigating feasibility Of the Col umbia valley authority. Senate President William Walsh, Cooa Bay, will serve as governor dur ing McKay's absence. LVV.fixrraniltrili Wester Interna Ueaal At nmittm 0-2. Vancouver 9-a At Spokane J, Tacoma S At Yikima 11, Vjrtorta 4 At Wenstchee 14.? Bremerton Cat Learns At Portland . L Aneelea 4 At Seattle 3, Sr francisco t At Hollywood , Sacrament I At Oakland S. Salt Diego 3 American Leaf Be At New York t-i, Chicago 10- At Philadelphia f. Detroit 3 At Boston 1. Cleveland At Washington Si t. Louis National Leant At St. Louis f, Brooklyn 3 At Pittsburgh LsBortml t At Chicago 3. Philadelphia 4 At Cincinnati, Sfw York itala)