The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 15, 1949, Page 1, Image 1

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    ,..... . , I . ' . . -
GOP Regains Congress
in Special Election
83tb TEAS
16 PAGES
Th Oregon Statesman, Salem. Oregon, Thursday. September IS. 1949
PRICE Sc
No. ItO
State Senators Scoff at Elliott
i POUNDDD 1651
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JOHNSTOWN, Pt Sept 1 John P. Saylor. Ticlcrioa? republican
In firht for 26th congressional seat, smile tt wife, Grate, at they
view election returns In GOP headquarter here early today. Saylor
defeated Mrs. Robert L- Coffey, sr.. mother of the late Rep. Robert
L. Coffee, jr, plane crash victim. (AP Wirephoto to the Statesman).
Ex-Navy Officer Tojps Gold Star
Mother in Pennsylvania Vote
By Elaine Kahn
JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Sept. 14-()-Bepublicans today wpn back the
18th Pennsylvania district congressional seat they lost in the 1948
democratic aweep - - and GOP leaders crowed about a "stinging re
buke" to President Truman's domestic policies.
John P. Saylor. 41-year-old former navy lieutenant who supplied
the flag raised by marines at Iwo
The poet Robert Burns Invoked
soma power by which wo might
"see ourselvea at othra e us."
The poet was speaking in personal
terms; but a stato bar association,
that of Iowa, has used an opinion
poll to reflect public opinion of
lawyers. Now that Oregon at
torneys are holding their annual
convention it seems a good time
to report on this poll.
Lawyers have labored under a
shadow of public suspicion. Some
persons still regard them as crafty
and undependable, more concern
ed with winning a case than pro
moting the ends of justice. But
this Iowa survey showed that the
majority dT people have a favor
able opinion of the legal profes
sion. And this is significant, it
showed that most parents would;
approve if their son wanted to
study law.
Of the persons interviewed 49
per cent only had hired lawyers,
but Of this number 92 per cent
were satisfied with the services
rendered. Only one out of five
felt they had been "charged too
much." ;
In response to the question:
"Which one of President, Con
gress or the Courts do you regard
as most important in protecting
personal rights?" the response
. showed that 47 per cent relied on
the courts, 17 per cent on con
gress, five per cent on the presi
dent; 25 per cent depended on the
three equally and 6 per cent was
undecided. That shows a high
degree of confidence in the courts
of the country, which is well de
served, even though four out of
ten persons said they would pre
fer to settle a lawsuit for damages
for half rather than go to courts
The summary of -this opinion sur
vey appears in the August num
ber of the Journal of the Ameri
can Judicature Society.
Legal business has changed
greatly, with the years. Criminal
(Continued on editorial page, 4.)
Animal Crackers
By WARREN GOODRICH
"Shorter hours, sure! 6ut
ow do you wy a hilt n egg?"
Kprjoe
ronn
I workers J 1 C
I arise j fdg "
6 '"V- V
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7
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'4 j
Jima. coasted to victory at a special
election.
He defeated Gold Star Mother
:Mrs. Robert L. Coffey, sr., who
sought; "the congressional post
made vacant by the death of her
son, Rep. Robert L. Coffey, jr., in
a navy jet plane crash.
Saylor said even he is surprised
by the size of his rnajority.
Returns from 317 ! of 325 pre
cincts in the three-county district
gave Saylor 57,037; Coffey 48,168.
The special election held in con
junction with the state party pri
maries was the first grass roots
test of the Truman administration
since Jast November
Republican leaders hailed Say
lor's triumph and Indicated they
think they have found a major is
sue for their 1930 efforts to regain
control of congress; j "
That Issue is what the republi
cans term "statism! and which
they variously defino to imply
democrats are trying to substitute
a paternalistic government for in
dividual initiative i
Edward J. Flynnj democratic na
tional committeeman from New
York, said the race was not a "fair
test" of party strength nationally
because the district is normally
republican. I
Chairman William M. Boyle, jr.,
said republican statements on the
election were "greatly exaggera
ted as far as repudiating the pres
ident's program is concerned."
But Rep. Martin of Massachus
etts, bouse republican leader, said:
"It is a conclusive demonstra
tion that the march toward tate
socialism can be stopped."
Support Rallie
To Mayor Lee
PORTLAND, Sept. 14 - (TP) - A
labor union and a group of coin
machine operators i both came out !
in support of Mayor Dorothy Mc-
Cutlough Lee today.
jThe AFL building and construc
tion trades council endorsed Mrs.
Lee's "forthright I law-enforcing
policy", and asked: its members to
refrain from signing any recall
petitions. j
A group of 60; coin machine
operators issued a ; statement say
ing! they had no Connection with
the recall move started here Mon
day; The men. Who run pinball
machines, juke boxes, and shuffle
boards, said their business opera
tions are licensed and fan rot
be considered "gambling".
Mayor Lee had; attributed the
recall to gambling interests.
FALLS INTO GRAND CANYON
GRAND CANYON. Ariz., Sept.
14-M'i-Mrs. Edith; Kindig, 63, of,
Long Beach, Calif.j fell 300 feet to
her d'-ath from the south rim of
Grand Canyon today.
. 'Lw ! ' 'LJa
Five Chicago Newspapers, Printers
Reach Terms in 22-Month-Old Strike
CHICAGO, Septi 14-VRepre-sentatives
of the j Chicago's five
major newspapers and their strike
ing printers agreed tonight upon
terms for settliftfithe 22-month-old
strike. f j
The agreement was reached at
an unpublicized meeting in a
downtown hotel of officials of the
Chicago Newspaper Publishers as
sociation and local 16, Chicago
Typographical Union (AFL).
Terms of a proposed new con
tract will be voted upon at a meet-
ing of the 1,500 striking printers
Sunday.
John J. Pilch,' local 16 president,
said : terms of the contract had been
approved by the executive council
of the International Typographical
union. ! I
. Piich recommended acceptance
Solons
Register
Disbelief
State Treasurer Walter Pearson
scoffed Wednesday at the charge,
that $200,000 was to be raised lor
him to run for governor of Oregon
on the democratic ticket. s j
Marion L. Elliott, the Multho-1
mah county sheriff who is the tar-1
get of a recall campaign, asserted j
that two men came to him asking
I his office to contribute $60,000 to-
ward a campaign; fund for Pear
son. tlJiott conienaea nis reiusai
turned some democrats against
him.
Too Ridiculous
"The Elliott charges are too rid
iculous for much comment," Pear
Son said. "If anyone is going to
raise $200,000 for me, I'll run, but
not for governor. I'd run to ;Ha
waii and retire."
PORTLAND, Sept. 14-P)-Mult-nomah
county democratic state
senators today branded as untrue
the charge by Sheriff M. L. Elliott
that he was being ousted from of-
inc u. . v "lopment program td
along on a party war chest fund . $1318546173
Tko mn riimtt oisimui passea 10.010,1 .3
was to have been for a guberna
torial campaign for State Treas
urer Walter Pearson.
Not Pointing at Bain
State Senator Jack Bain, who
has been both a political and bus-
iness friend of Pearson, said hej
was positive Elliott wasn't refer
ring to him.
State Senator Austin F. Flegel
jr. expressed disbelief in Elliott's
story. Flegel said the "reason is
he's made so many false state
ments you can't believe anything
he says."
State Senator Thomas Mahoney
declined to "dignify" Elliott's
charges.
Senator Richard L. Neuberger
said "State Treasurer Pearson is
no political associate of mine, but
I am sure Mr. Elliott's story is un
true." Soviet Watches
Greek Moves
Near Albania
By Eddie Gilmore
MOSCOW, Sept. 14 (A- For
eign observers commented here
today that if Greek troops invade
Albania no matter what the
reaso.i j the Soviet Union would
probably regard the action in a
most serious light.
They said recent GreekAlban
ian developments contain "diplo
matic dynamite."
(A Greek source said in Athens
Tuesday that Greece will invade j
Albania in "self-defense if any
new attacks are launched, by the
communist guerrillas from the
Albanian side.
(The informant said his country
would notify the United , Nations
of its plan of action at the com
ing U- N. general assembly. The
informant, one
of the ranking
delegates to the assembly, said
Greece had decided on this action
to put an en4 to the guerrilla
threat on the Greek-Albanian
border.)
Mows Lawn
With Shovel
SWEET HOME, Sept. 14 Spe
cial) Most local folk are using
mowers to curry their lawns these
days, but not Tom Kirk. Tom is
doing the job with a wheelbarrow
and scoop shovel.
Reason: His lawn is being sown
with sawdust from a nearby mill
daily and the grass has bid the
sawdust goodbye. Kirk said pro-
j tests to the mill have fallen ort'
deaf ears "so I guess I'll just keep
using the shoveL"
by the local's rank and file.
Under the proposed contract, the
printers would get a $10 weekly
wage increase.
Frank Semenara, a member of
the executive board of local 16,
said the agreement "gives the
printer the best w'orking conditions
possible under the Taft-Hartley
act"
At the start of the strike in
November, 1947, the Chicago pub
lishers said they had rejected the
union's contract proposals because
! they called for closed shop condi
tions in violation of the Taft-Hartley
act.
The printers also demanded an
immediate $15 weekly pay. hike
A few hours after a stAike -vote
was taken, the printers walked out
of the composing rooms of the
U.S.
Steel
Seeks to Halt
Project Until
CVA Formed
WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 Pre
sident .Truman wants congress to
hold ba'fck on a proposed one-billion-dollar
Columbia river basin
program . and set up a Columbia
Valley Authority instead.
Mr. Truman's views, sent to the
senate public works committee two
weeks ago in a letter by the as
sistant secretary of interior, were
rmade public today by Senator
Cain (R-Wash).
Cain had planned to ask the
committee today to add the
$1,000,000 army engineer-reclamation
bureau Columbia basin deyel-
td the house-
water pro
jects bill, but he was, unable to do
so.
'Would Be Mistake'
The, letter, from William E.
Warne, said "the president be
lieves itx would be a mistake" to
mclude authorization for the army
engineers-reclamation program in
the present bill.
"He (Mr. Truman) does not
wish to indicate any lack of con
fidence in the interior-army con
solidated report," Warne wrote,
"but rather a strong feeling that
the report itself and all who are
interested in it would be bene
fitted if the regular order were fol
lowed and time given fcr the exe
cutive review that is contemplated
in the normal procedure."
Would Take Over Functions
The CVA advocated by the pre
sident would take over functions
now carried on by various gov
ernment agencies, including the
engineers and reclamation bureau.
During testimony on the CVA,
Senator Magnuson (D-Wash), In
terior Secretary Krug and other
administration spokesman urged
quick authorization of the projects
in the coordinated programs. They
saiH then that surh annrnval
would not interfere with theXVA 1
if congress should vote to estab
4ish it.
Keizer Area
Commercial
Club Formed
KEIZER, Sept. 14 -(Special)
Organization of the Keizer Com
mercial club, a new merchants';
rliiK frt Irfxir, mr with t-artiH'
V 1 hi v . ...... -
business developments in this
community, was well under way
today.
Business men, meeting this
week, completing initial organi
zational work, elected H. P. Teets
temporary chairman of the club
and Mrs. Dorthee Teeter tem
porary secretary.
Onas Olson. Louis Cross, Ben
Brown and Edward Ferrell were
appointed as a committee to draw
up a constitution and a set of
by-laws for presentation at a
meeting of the new club Tuesday
at the firehouse. All persons in
terested in Keizer's business de
velopment have been invited to
attend.
"It is the desire of members,
many of whom have been in
business here less than a year,"
Tects said, "to develop a more
cooperative spirit among business
t'o:' and foster ways and
means to better serve the com
munity." ,
CHANCELLOR NOMINATED
BONN, Germany, Sept. 14
Dr. Konrad Adenauer, a staunch
anti-communist, was nomina'.ed
by President Theodor Heuss to
day as chancellor of the new
West Germany republic.
city'i six major newspapers The
Tribune, The Morning Sun and
Evening Times, Daily News,! Herald-American
and Journal of Com
merce. The Sun and Times later merg
ed into the Sun-Times.
But the papers did not miss a
day's publication although ! they
took a new look.
In place of the printers the pa
pers substituted girl typists who
laboriously re-typed copy in col
umns which then were pasted on
cardboards and photographed.
Pages made up in such manner
then were reproduced by photo
engraving. As the strike went on.
i the techniaue developed so that it
j was hard to tell the final product
1 from printing.
'Refuses to Approve Peace ffffeir
A
sks Coly mbla River Work StaSIed
Smp Oil Intliirtrv Rvnttv J,,r
U. S. Gasoline Supply for; Centuries
By Howard V. Blakeslre
. A ociat?d Press Science Editor
RIFLE, Colorado, Sept. 14-(P)
The extraction of oil from shale
has been solved here, assuring
the United States of gasoline
for centuries.
The baptism of this new in
dustry takes place here next
week. Then the U. S. bureau
of -mines will demonstrate to
more than 200 key industrial
men- the new shale mine, the
oil plant and new processes
which make this new kind of oil
as cheaply as petroleum.
Boyd Guthrie, supervising "en
gineer, said today: "Based on
Site Selected
For Catholic
CenterBuildinjf
(Picture on page 5)
Construction cf a rS50.000 SnUm
Catholic center will begin Monday
at Shipping and North Cottage
streets. ;
Funds for the two-story concrete
building were raised by members
of both Catholic parishes and oth
ers of Salem in a drive being spon
sored by the local Knights of Co
lumbus and Catholic Daughters of
America.
The center is to be used by both j
parishes for social, recreational,
meeting and other purposes. Way
ne Barham is contractor and
Lawrence Kelsh, engineer. Both
are from Salem.
On the lower floor of the 50 by
110 foot structure will be two
commercial rental units facing
Cottage street.
ladies lounge and
clubrooms and the Knights of
Columbus clubrooms. A ballroom
banquet hall, kitchen and small
meeting, cloak and rest rooms are
to be on the upper floor. An off
street parking lot is provided in
the rear.
It is hoped to have the center
completed in about five months, j
The center is the only one of its
type in Oreeon Catholic parishes,
according to Knight Al Cramer.
Water Tower
Suggested for
West Salem
WEST SALEM, Sept. 14-(Special)-
What new steps could be
taken to improve West Salem's'
water supply, particularly if
merger with Salem is approved,
were outlined to the local Lions
club Wednesday night by J. L.
Franzen, Salem city manager.
Thirty members dined at the
West Salem city hall in the club's
first regular dinner meeting of
the fall season.
Franzen told them the next pipe
line from Salem's water supply
would probably be placed under
the river, as he doubted the state
would permit a second line to be
run under the intercounty bridge.
Franzen said a 100,000-gallon
water tower should be erected on
the heights above West Salem to
increase the storage capacity of
two present feservoirs. He said
he would also study the feasibility
of enlarging the present reser
voirs. Under merger a local water of
fice would be maintained as a
substation of Salem's water de
partment, Franzen said.
The Salem official predicted the
new fire station at Glen Creek
road and Parkway drive would be
completed in six weeks. The Sa
lem fire department, which al
ready serves West Salem on a
contract basis, , will man the new
station to serve also newly an
nexed Salem territory which sur
rounds the city of West Salem,
Max.
. SS
Mia. rreelp.
49 .
4 JT
M trace
42 .60
aleia
Portland
Saa Francisco
Chicago
M
73
New York
at
70 M
Willamette nvr -3.S feet.
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNary field) : Cloudy today
and tonight with intermittent rain this
morninf becoming a httle heavier this
afternoon and tonight. High today near
70 with a low toniiht near 12. The
heavier rains during afternoon hours
will hinder farm acttvitie today.
SALEM PRECIPITATION
This Year Last Year Normal
.n j m
work to dilte, we estimate, a
barrel of crude shale oil can be
produced from $2.25 to $2.50'
Crude petroleum has been
selling for just under or over
$2.50 a barrel recently.
An act of congress in 1944,
five years work and about
$6,000,000 produced this indus
trial miracle. Congress legislated
with the idea that in the fore
seeable future the United States
snould never run short of oil.
The single mass of marlestone
shale, a 9000-foot high plateau
covering 1000 square miles,
which tne bureau of mines has
tapped here in west central
Lebanon Boy Drowns,
Search Precedes
LEBANON, Sept. 15, Thursday-($pecial)-A two-year-old boy was
discovered oruwned in a millpond here about 1 a. m. this morning
alur a six-hour search that drew several thousand volunteers from
all over the city. j
Tne lnd, Dana Jensen, was the ionly child of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff
Jensen, 2ia .Fourtn pi. He was lound jin the Fir Ridge lumber company
Tne search, directed by police
ana fire department officials, be
gan about 7 p. m. Wednesday when
the boy disappeared from his home
in a housing project here.
A hired girl had last seen him
playing in the yard when she
tailed him for dinner. When he
failed to appear she went outside
to get him but he was nowhere in
Signt.
Chief lmer Fltlgeraldf was or
ganized a few minutes later when
the boys father, an auto mechanic
came home from work.
The hunt, conducted in a steady
rain that drenched many workers,
had encompassed the entire city
by midnight. Swing-shift crews at
various plants joined the growing
number of volunteers and every
house and store In the a?ea had
been searched before the child was
discovered.
Cars were lined for blocks in
! every direction from the housing
i project area, bounded by two mill-
! ponds, both of which were drag-
! ged, and railroad tracks.
Sen. Morse to
Leave Hospital
Sen. Wayne Morse is scheduled
to leave Salem General hospital
this morning where he has been
resting since Saturday night when
injured in a horse-show accident
at the state fairgrounds.
Morie indicated he would return
to Washington, D. C, today but
would be back in Salem next year;
to compete for a third and final leg
on a horse-show trophy he has won
the past two years.
Committee Backs
State Tax Program
The board of control's tax study j
committee reported Wednesday
that Oregon has one of the best
tax systems in the country. j
At a conference the committee
made plans for investigating ex4
isting taxes. It said the legisla-f
ture's tax study committee will in4
vestigate possible new faxes, s
that the committees won't dupli-
cate each other's work.
Albany Petitioners Ask City
Manager Resign, Brings Defense
ALBANY, Sept 14-(4VMayof
Jess Savage and a city councilman
tonight defended the administra4
tion of City Manager J. B. Bach-?
man against arguments of a group
demanding the manager's resigna
tion, j
The council took no action orj
the request. !
The protest against Bachman,
who took over the work earliet
this year as Albany's first city;
manager, was signed by 300 citi
zens. It charged he had caused dis
sention among the city's depart4
ments, resulting in inefficient opi
eration. i
In answering the charge. Mayor
Savage noted the petition lacked
specific charges. !
"I would like to have some
evidence," Savage said, "if youj
have any." j
He added that 100 signatures!
represented a small percentage for
a city having a population of
15,000.
Colorado, contains about seven
tunes more oil than the United
Spates has used in all 90 years
since oil was discovered in
Pennsylvania.
j The plateau has 22 times more
recoverable oil than the proven
petroleum reserves of the entire
United States.
j Crude shale oil is a cross, be
tween oil and coal. Unde 9Q
degrees Fahrenheit, the new oil)
is a soft, black solid. But it
makes good gasoline and daesel
oil, good fuel oils and promises
powerful new. jet plane fuels.
Refining still, has to be per
fected. -t
Bastogne Hero
To Head Army
Chemical Corps
j WASHINGTON. Sept. 14-(P)-jMaj.
Gen. Anthony Clement Mc
Auliffe, the hero of Bastogne who
replied "nuts" to a German de
mand for surrender of his hard
;pressed troops in 1944, today was
picked to be chief of the army's
chemical corps.
McAuliffe, fondly known to his
GI's as "old crock," was singled I
out for the post by President Tru
man. His nomination was sent to
the senate.
If the senate approves, the
World War II hero will succeed
Maj. Gen. Alden H. Waitt about
October 1. '
Waitt was suspended from the
post last July when his name crop
ped up in the senate's investiga
tion of "five percenters.' The 58-year-old
officer technically was
restored to active duty last Sat
urday but his application for im
mediate retirement was granted.
Besides McAuliffe, Mr. Truman
also sent these nominations to the
senate
Stanton Griffis to be ambassador
to Argentina, succeeding James
Bruce, resigned; Thomas W. S.
Davis of Virginia to be assistant
commerce secretary; Maj. Gen.
Alfred Maximilian Gruenther to
be deputy chief of staff for plans
and combat operations of the army
with the rank of beutenant gen
eral. McAuliffe now is commander of
the 24th infantry division station
ed in Japan.
BABIES GET DYSENTERY
LITTLE CURRENT. Ont, Sept.
14-iihVBetween 40 and 50 babies
are ill with dysentery in the near
by Wikwemikong Indian reserva
tion, it was reported here today.
Between 10 and 20 Indian infants
were believed to have died of the
disease recently.
City Councilman Raymond Bar
rett said, "The city is much better
managed now than before he
(Bachman) came here."
Mayor Savage intimated" that the
movement against Bachman start
ed with the recent dismissal ' ef
Police Chief J. O. Byerley and
Policeman Martin Holmes by Bach
man. Savage endorsed Bachman's ac
tion by reading to the assembly
that overflowed the council hall a
letter charging Byerley with in
efficient handling of the police de
partment. The letter was signed
by most of the policeman who
served under the former chief, in
cluding Holmes who was discharg
ed after the letter was written.
Holmes, since his dismissal is a
party to the protest against Man
ager Bachman.
Seven police officers tonight en
dorsed management of the police
department by Manager Bachman
who has directed police activity
since Byer ley's dismissal.
! via "srv !
firm UoeSIl t
Like Formula,
Willing to Talk
PITTSBURGH.! Sept 14 -UP)
United States Steel corporation
today bluntly refused to accopl
the presidential! fact findinf
board's steel peace formula with
out bargaining.
CIO Steelworker President
Philip Murray forced the 1mu.
developing anew I the threat of A
nationwide steel Strike at the
piration of the presid-ntial true
September 25. j
Murray told Ut S. Steel Presi
dent Benjamin F.i Fairless to rtat
plainly whether the nation's No.
1 steel producer would accept th
board's recommendations.
Murray didn't like Fairless' ini
tial answer that they resume bar
gaining without committing b4f
steel on the board findings.
Willing: to Confer
Fairless quickly fired back that
the steelworker chief can't dic
tate U. S. Steel's acceptance as
a condition to bargaining but he's
willing to renew conferences.
And Fairless made it plain for
the first time just how bis steel
feels about the fact finders' re
port. Big steel doesn't like it.
President Truman's board rec
ommended a 10-cent hourly pack
age for the steelworkers million
members to coyer company fi
nanced insurance tmd pensions
but not wages. Financing the pro
gram is the thorn in the side of
big steel.
Production Cost to Rise
Said Fairless: ! " i'
"In spite of the fact that th
cost of producing steel will be
increased by arty new contribu
tory program of social Insurance,
United States Steel is willing to
pay up to four tents an hour, the
amount suggested by the presi
dential steel board, a 1 its proper
share, of the cost of a proper pro
gram for social insurance on t
contributory basis arrived at
through collective bargaining,
"It s position, i however, is that
as a matter of sound principle any
program of social insurance be on
a 'contributory basis.
"At first glance a cost of 19
cents an hour for social security
under the recommended non-t on- .
tributory program may seem like
a small amount.'
Cot Estimated
"But when applied to the steel
industry, the cost of such a non
contributory program would b
approximately $200,000,00 a year
when operating at full capacity,
as in 1948. That would be; the
equivalent of adding $3 to th
cost of each ton of steel produced;
in the country last year. . .;
Mm ray didn't comment Imme
diately. A spokesman said he wsf
studying big steel's reply and, that
no answer could be expected be
fore tomorrow at the earliest.
The - close mouthed Scotsman
gave up his fight for a fourth
round wage increase for his men
who average around $1.63 an hour.
But he insists j on an lnsufanoe
and pension program financed en
tirely by the Industry.
Permits Issued
For 9 Homes!
Building permits totaling nearly
$55,000 for construction of; nine
homes in the Salem area were Is
sued Wednesday by the city en
gineer's office. t
Permits to build six homes at
costs estimated from $3,100 to $8,
450 were issued to Ben Meyers.
1139 Union st. The homes all will
be located In the 600 block tt
Breys street.
Two permits for home construc
tion were issued to Ness and Nesa
construction company for dwell
ings at 1880 and 1840 S. Capitol
st at an estimated cost of $0,300
and $5,200. J 3 i : .
James Roberts received a $6,300
permit for erection of a dwellinf
and garage at 1150 N. 16th st
vnx ItlAyoff
At Vancouver-Yakisna. rain.
Coast League
At San Diego t, Portland f
At Sacramento 1, fteattie 1 M
At Saa Franeiaea Hollywood 1
At Los Angeles S. Oakland :
' i
Asaerlcasi League '
At New York 2-11. St. Louis 7
At Boston 1, Detroit i I
At Philadelphia X. Cleveland li
At Washington L Chicago a
. National Leaga
At St. Louis S. New York S I I
At Pittsburgh 4. Philadelphia U
At Chicago a. Boa ton 1 , i
it rirwlnn.ti Zfc.l m t
nil
i 1