Would Make It Two in Row Here Tonight
rmnm
DDH
0 & "2" 1
Curfew Halts 18-Inning Mix;
Tribe Wins as Yankees Lose
4 z .
'turrtt Bob" Grerr. pictured above, will be after bis second straight midget ante racing Ttetory to
alfbt In the roaring- runt events at Salem's Hollywood BowL Grerr won the Class A main event In
the flnt midget program here this season. Tonight's meet rets under way with 7:30 o'clock time trials.
(SB-egg
ftiralght 'Ciimmift5'
Midgets Race
At Holly-bowl
Barefoot Bob"' Gregg leads a
field of two-dozen or more midget
auto racers Into Salem's Holly
wood Bowl tonight for a full pro
gram of speed events, and the
heavyweight, from Camas, Wash.,
will be after his second straight
main event victory.
Rurlv Rnh and his swift No. 2 '
buzz buggy copped the 35-lap
Class A mainer here during the
first and only midget meet of the
1952 season, beating out Lou Sher
man and Shorty Templeman in
what was a thriil-filled romp.
Sherman and Templeman, the
latter the 1951 Northwest midget
racing champion will be back
again along with Gregg, and will
be piloting the capable Offenhau-ser-motored
mounts. Gregg herds
an "Offie" also.
Competition Looms
Plenty of competition in the
Trophy dashes, heat romps and
time trials, not to mention the
main events, will be provided by
such other midget driving worth
ies as Gordy Livingston, Dar
Moore, Frankie McGowan, Len
(Li'l Abner) Sutton, Chuck Tontz,
Wild Bill Hyde, Bud England and
others.
Over 24 cars, some of them from
Washington and others from the
southern part of Oregon have been
registered for the program by Val
ley Sports officials. They'll get go
ing in the time trials at 7:30 p.m.
Trophy dashes for both Offenhau
sers and Fords are to be held.
A Class B mainer will follow the
beat races and the Class A finale
of 35 laps will cap the program.
Valley Sports officials have had
some work done on the Holly
bowl paved strip, erasing the
bumps and kinks which have ac
cumulated In earlier races here
this season, and in the Chltwood
Auto Daredevil Circus of last week
md.
St. George is believed to be the
development of the ancient Perseus missioners from seven states meet
myth. here with the New York group.
Coleman Now a Semi-Pro
t I I H -
.VS. -i
ATTTATER, CaL Jerry Colemaa, right, former rtsr second baseman
fr the New York Yankees and now on active duty with the US
Marines, is shown with Woody Busby, manager of the Atwater
Packers semipro team with which he now plays. Coleman is station
ed at the El Toro Marine Air base and plays for Atwater m week
ends. (AF Wirephoto to The Statesman.)
Player Melp? Luby Wants lit, but Can't Afford It
1 By AL LIGHTNElt
Statesman Sports Editor
The Salem Senators have lost 10
Of their last 1 1 games in Western
International League play, and are
steadily sinking nearer to the
dungeon in the standings. No one
knows-it better than General Man
ager Hugh Luby, and no one wants
to correct the sorrowful situation
more than the popular second
sacker.
Luby wants to strengthen the
club with new players- But he
can't afford it. There is hardly
ough money in the Senators cof
fers with which to make the pur
Adoitds foir Secomid!
0
aZE
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL,
WLPct. WLPct.
Victoria 40 16 .714 Wenatche 28 31.475
Spokane 36 28 .581 Tri-city 27 33 .450
Vancouvr 28 23 .549 Salem 24 34 414
Lewiston 28 30 .483 Yakima 21 39 .350
Friday results: At Victoria 4. Salem
1. At Vancouver-Trl-City (rain). At
Wenatchee 9. Spokane 8. At Yakima
7- LewU,on 8
COAST LEAGUE
WLPct.! WLPct.
Hollywd 47 32 .595 L'Angele 40 39 .508
S Diego 48 33 .593 STran. 35 45 .438
Oakl d 41 37 .52 Portland 31 43 .419
Seattle 38 37 .517 Sacram'to 33 47 .413
Friday results: At Los Angeles 6.
Portland 1: At Oakland 12. Seattle 5:
At San Diego 1. Hollywood 5: At Sacra
mento 2, San Francisco .
Oakland Bumps Seattle ...
leavers Prop 6-1 Nod;
lucky' Sevens Blanked
By The Associates! Press
Eddie Chandler throttled the Portland Beavers with six hits Fri
day night to pitch Los Angeles to a 6-1 victory and. square their Coast
League baseball series at two games apiece. Maririo Pieretti was the
'Sugar' Win May
Cost Him Title
NEW YORK (JP)- The New York
State Athletic Commission Friday
ruled provisionally that Sugar
Ray Robinson, now an 11 to 10
favorite to lift Joey Maxim's light
heavyweight title Monday night,
will automatically vacate the
middleweight championship if he
wins.
Chairman Bob Chris tenberry,
however, said the two-title sub
ject certainly would be discussed
Sunday and Monday when corn-
j..:Ls
chase of a new uniform, let alone
someone to 01 it.
It is obvious that the team needs
at least two outfielders who can
hit. The combined batting average
of the Senators outfield as it now
stands is mired far below the
feeble .250 mark, and in baseball
it's the outfield that is supposed
to supply the run-making punch
for any team.
With the addition of Connie Pe
rez at third base, and the way
Dick Bartle has been getting his
share of base hits, the Solon in
field is acceptable. The catching is
good, thanks to Bob Nelson. And
lil
I 't -"iS--iLS-;, r-,-r-
i -1 i i i i - - J
ofctoiry
AMERICAN LEAGUE
WLPct.i WLPct.
N'York 33 21 .6111 Wash "ton 28 26.519
Boston 33 26 .559 St .Louis 27 32 .458
Chicago 33 27 .550 Phila. 24 29 .453
Clevel'd 33 28 .541 1 Detroit 18 40.310
Friday results: At Cleveland 9. Bos
ton 2; At Detroit 1. Philadelphia 3; At
St. Louis 5. Washington S (Tie); At
Chicago 8, New York 5.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W Li Pet r L Pet
Brooklyn 41 15 .732 Cincinnati 28 31.475
NYork 36 20 .643! Phila. 24 33.424
Chicago 34 25 .576 Boston 24 35 .414
St. Louis 31 31 .500 Pittabgh 17 46 .270
Friday results: At New York 4. Chi
cago 3: At Philadelphia 3. Cincinnati 1;
At Brooklyn 5. Pittsburgh4; At Boston
12. St. Louis 7.
ioser.
Portland scored its only run in
the third, but Los Angeles tallied
twice in each of the fourth and
fifth frames.
The San Diego Padres dropped
the league lead to the Hollywood
Stars when the Stars beat them
5-1 at San Diego. The Padres had
led the circuit since April 17. Jim
Walsh hurled the win over the
Padres.
Bill Bevens and Ken Gables
staged a tight pitching duel at
Sacramento, with the Sacs coming
through with two runs In the
eighth inning for a 2-0 win over
San Francisco. Bevens gave but
five hits, Gables four.
The Oakland Oaks scored six
times in the third inning, three of
the runs coming on Pete Milne's
home run, to blast the Seattle
Rainiers 12-3 at Oakland. Al Wid
mar was the loser.
San Diego now trails tha new
league leaders by two percentage
points. Portland's loss and Sacra
mento's win dropped the Beavers
to within six percentage points of
tha last-place Sacs.
Portland (1)
) Lot Anfelei
H O A
d n u A
12 4
4 2 6 1
4 2 2 0
5 0 1 0
4 1 i 0
3 112
5 1 2 2
4 0 11
4 2 2 0
0 0 2 0
Austin.
4 0 3 2; Baker j
Russell, m 4
TlptonJ 4
Brovla.r 4
Arft.l 4
BaslnakiJ 3
Efgert.3 3
Robinan.e 2
Fieretti.p 1
a-Conatsr 0
Drilling. p 0
b-Reich 1
Walbel.p 0
1 8 0lTalbot.m
2 2 01 Usher a
0 2 0INorthey,r
0 S OlPeden.c
0 2 4 Brinkof,3
1 2 II Connors. 1
1 2 liHolli.J
1 0 HChandlr.p
0 OLayton.l
0 0 0!
0 0 0
0 0 0!
Total! 30 6 24 0 Totals 34 10 27 11
Walked for Pieretti in 6th.
b Forced for Drilling in 8th.
Portland 001 000 0001
Los Angeles 000 221 10
Pitcher IP AB R HER BBSO
Pieretti 5 20 4 S 4 2 1
Drilling 2 10 2 4 2 0 6
Waibel 1 4 0 1 0 0 1
Chandler SO 1 6 1 2 2
Errors Baslnski. Robinson. Left
on base Portland 4, Los Angeles 7.
Home run Eggert. two-base hit
Peden. Stolen base Usher. Runs
batted in Eggert, Connors. Usher,
Northey. Hollls. Peden. Double plays
Talbot and Connors; Baker and
Connors: Connors. Baker and Con
nors. Umpires Orr. Runge and Ford.
Attendance 3045. Time 1:53.
Seattle 200 000 300 5 7 0
Oakland 006 010 23 12 11 0
Wldmar. Johnson (3). Schanz (7) and
Wilson; Bowman. Candlnl (7) and No
ble. San Francisco
Sacramento .
Bevana and
000 000 0000 4 1
000 000 02 2 S 0
Orteig; Gables end
Hollywood - 100 012 0103 11 0
San Diego 000 010 0001 6 3
Walsh and Sandlock; Flowers. Mal
loy (S) and Kerr.
'9
the pitching, although spotty, is
good enough to win more than half
of the games played if any reason
able run-making support were giv
en it.
Luby contacted the Chattanooga
club of the Southern Association
for Dick Sinovic, the WTL's No. 2
hitter last year with Vancouver.
The Lookouts placed a $2,000 price
tag on Sinovic, which is cheap
considering the way Rousing Rich
ard blisters WIL pitching and plays
the outfield.
But the club has no $2,000 to
invest in Sinovic.
The Senators proved to be
Lorino Bests
Sal DeGeorge
Nelson Dingles Home
Only Salem Marker
ROYAL. 'ATHLETIC PARK,
Victoria (Special)- Ben Lorino
southpawed a snappy 4-1 victory
over the tumbling Salem Senators
Friday night for the Western In
ternational League leading Vic
toria Tyees, allowing five hits.
When the Senators finally scored
in the eighth Inning, it was the
first run Lorino had given up in
23 consecutive Innings.
A double by Dick Bartle, who
wound up with two of the five
hits, and a single by Bob Nelson
scored the Salem run.
Victoria scored twice in the
fourth inning off Sal DeGeorge on
Lu Branham's single. Bob Moniz'
single, Cece Garriott's outfield fly
and Granny Gladstone's double.
Eight Hits off Sal
Two more runs scored in the
eighth on Garriott's single, Lil
Marcucci's triple and Jim Clark's
infield single. Victoria had eight
hits off the DeGeorge slants, three
in the eighth frame.
The win was Lorino's 11th of
the season. DeGeorge's loss was
his fourth, against three wins.
The loss was Salem's tenth in
the last 11 games. The two teams
play again Saturday, a srjlit
doubleheader.
Salem third baseman Connie
Perez was chased from the game
in the second inning by Umpire
Red Eiler when Perez angrily
threw his bat after being called
out on a third strike.
Second, Again;
Salem (1) (4) Victoria
Ab H O A' Ab H O A
Tselli.a 4 0 1 3 Br'h'm.2 4 13 1
Luby.2 4 1 2 2 Maniz.lf 4 13 0
Deyo.cf 4 0 2 0 Gar ott.cf 4 13 0
Perez.3 1 0 0 0 Marc'cl.c 4 2 4 0
Moore.rf 4 0 2 0 Glstone.rf 3 12 1
Bartle, 1 3 2 14 0 Clarkjsj 4 12 0
Thaherjf 2 1 1 0Treece,3 2 0 0 2
Nelson.c 2 1 2 1 Melrvtn.l 2 1 10 0
D'G'rge.p 3 0 0 2 Lorino. p 3 0 0 2
Galli.3 3 0 0 2!
Total 30 3 24 10' Total 32 8 27 12
Salem 000 000 0101 3 0
Victoria 000 200 02 x 4 8 0
Ip Ab H R Er So Bb
DeGeorge 6 32 8 4 4 1 3
Lorino 9 30 3 1 1 4 1
WP DeGeorge. 3b Marcuccl. 2b
Gladstone. Bartle. Rbl Garriott. Glad
stone. Nelson. Marcuccl. Clark. Dp De
George to Tanselli to Bartle. T:l:52.
U Eiler and Ziruolo.
Mt. Anel Books
Archer Blowers
MT. ANGEL (Special) The
Mt. Angel Townies take on the
strong Archer Blowers of Portland
here Sunday in Ebner ball park,
with game time set for eight
o'clock. Manager Bill Carney's
Blowers won the first half pen
nant in the Portland City League.
Norb Wellman, one of the Ore
gon State College pitching aces,
will probably pitch the Sunday
game. He hurled a 9-1 win over
the Salem News Agency team here
last Tuesday night in the first
State League game of the season.
Mt. Angel plays Eugene here next
Tuesday night In another State
League tilt.
Yale Oarsmen
Upset Harvard
NEW LONDON, Conn. CD
Yale's heretofore winless crew
sprang a major rowing upset Fri
day by defeating Harvard in the
100th anniversary Yale-Harvard
regatta. The Elis finished the
four-mile grind slightly less than
a length ahead of Harvard.
The Yale victory followed a
thrilling two-mile Junior varsity
race in which Yale nosed out
Harvard by no more than a half
a dozen feet.
Harvard won the combination
race Thursday and the freshman
two-miler Friday afternoon.
Senator Swat:
Ab H 2b 3b Hr
Rbi Pet
19 .325
33 .319
38 .306
29 .279
11 .262
14 .242
21 222
13 .212
22 .213
2 .183
Bb Er
20 8
40 38
32 26
41 44
31 23
67 21
2 1
Luby. 2b 200 63
13
Perez. 3b 204z6S 10
Nelson, c 196 60 11
Bartle. lb 213 60 17
Tanseia. sa 191 50 7
Deyo. If 182 44 I
Moore, cf 133 58 $
GaUi. u 99 21 I
Anderson, rf 188 40 7
Thrasher, c 27 0
Pitching:
O Ip W L So
AuDertin 4 li'i l 11
McNUlty IS 126 7
Edmunds IS 74, 8
7
3
DeGeorge 14 70 3
4
4
6
0
Hemphill 13 3Bi 3
Collins 12 73 4
Francis 2 3"4 0
Total double plays. 70. Won a
t home.
14; on road. 10. Lost at nome
road. 20
14; on
losing proposition in 1951 despite
the fact that they established a
new season attendance record for
Waters Field. Their punity at bat
this season, which has cost them
game afte,r game in the win col
umn, has hurt attendance and the
needed revenue that goes with ac
tive turnstiles.
Exactly what the answer will be
remains to be seen. Luby and the
club's board of directors are busy
trying to solve the difficult prob
lem, one that presents itself in
baseball right along a club that
must draw at the gate to stay alive,
but isn't because it can't win.
6 The- Stcrt antra, Scdom, Orocon. Saturday, Juno 21, 19S2
BIG SUGAR AHEAD
mmmm
JOEY
MAYIM
WHO
UGHT-HZA
TTLE
mUGAR
RAY
YORK
ON
JUNB
23
&p 1
'j
To Run for Constable ...
Lovellette Enters Politics
LAWRENCE, Kas. (JP) - Clyde
Lovellette. All-American Kansas
University basketball player and
a member of the United States
1952 Olympic cage squad, is a
candidate for the Republican nom
ination for Lawrence Township
constable in the coming elections.
When asked how he plans to
handle his constabulary duties if
elected from long range, the
Spinning Club
Events Sun.
The Salem Spinning Club will
hold the first of the three an
nual Spin Casting tonrnaments
Sunday, Jane 22, at Leslie
swimming pool.
The one-quarter ox. accuracy
casting will take place in the
pool Itself while the three -eights
ox. distance casting will
be held on the high school ath
letic field.
President of the Salem Spin
Club. H. E. Harris states that
the tournament will be held In
place of the rerular monthly
meeting and that all Interested
persons are cordially Invited to
attend.
Time for the accuracy east
ing to get under way Is 2 p.m.
and there will be plenty of room
for spectators in the bleacher
seats along the sides of the pool.
Off-Track Wagering
Seen as Race Problem
NEW YORK (Jpy-The chairman
of the New York State Racing
Commission said Friday that if
off-track betting was legalized in
the state the same groups which
brought about prohibition would
attack gambling and might "wipe
out racing all over the country."
Ashley T. Cole, commission
chairman since 1945, appeared
before a special legislative com
mittee studying the proposal to
make horse race gambling legal
throughout the state instead of
only on race tracks.
Broken Leg Prove No
Handicap to Young Gal
DALLAS. Tex. (JP)-A little thing
like a broken leg couldn't keep
Suzanne Norton, pretty 18-year-old
Roswell, N. M girl, out of
the Dallas charity horse show.
With the combined efforts of
physicians and mechanics, a riding
spur was cemented into the cast
covering Suzanne's right leg.
Central U-Drfve
Truck Service
Corner 12th and State
Tans, Stakes, P.U.
FOR RENT
Phone Z-tC3
By Alan Mover
.V-,-X, fW-$Wl ..all
"I ; -V -'
yjOEY. DSPiT0
Tfig FACT THAT
Ht? PUNCHING
A jUCH OF a pertr
1 liA9 7
1 ARrHlG
Ort THS.
7ieR MPPLErtElGHT CHAM?
court ace smiled and said: "I Just
wanted to see how many votes I
can get.
"But even if I won't be around,"
he said, "the law says if I'm elected
as a township constable I can ap
point a deputy to help me while
I'm gone, and I'll come back here
from time to time to check up on
him."
Oilers, Wools
In Softy Wins
The Randle Oilers got a five-hit
pitching chore from Wimpy Car
ver and downed the Teamsters
Union 8-1 in their City League
softball clash at Olinger Field.
The Oilers banged eight hits.
Two walks, an error and a single
by Don Hoy netted two runs in
the third frame, and Daryl Girod's
double, Jones' single and Skip
Eshelman's double helped in three
more tallies in the seventh. The
Teamsters scored In the second on
an error and Johnson's triple.
In a Commercial League make
up game the Bears walloped the
Capital Seat Cover nine, 16-8,
with Bob Ochse socking a seventh
inning homer for the winners.
Gordy McMorri. and Chris
Christianson smacked homers for
the Campbell Rock Wools as they
downed Hallmark Cards in their
City League mix at Leslie. George
Kealey homered for the losers.
Randle Oil 002 000 35 8 2
Teamsters 010 000 0 1 5 1
Carver and Eshelman; Michael
and Vandiver.
Campbells -....000 103 08 7 1
Hallmarks 010 001 02 4 1
Parton and Wickert; Jones and
Taylor.
Seat Cover ..200 040 2 8 6 3
Bears 320 041 616 11 2
She rode the Desert Fox. a big
gelding, over the course of four
foot obstacles for a faultless per
formance Thursday night in the
handy Jumpers class. It was the
only perfect exhibition of the
class.
tze are
authorized
dealers for
the famous
OUTDOOR SHOES
BISHOP'S
Downstairs Store-
To Sox; Bums Lome 1 lirough
By The Associated Press
Old Satchel Paige pitched 10 brilliant innings In relief for th
Browns Friday night as the St. Louis club and the Washington Sen
ators battled 18 innings to a 5-5 tie in the longest game this year In
the major leagues. An American League rule prohibiting this start
of any inning after 12;50 a.m., local time, brought an end to th
lengthy show.
The same two teams, In their last meeting in Washington, had
played 17 innings with the Browns gaining a 3-2 decision.
Olympic Games
Berths Taken
At Long Beach
LONG BEACH, Calif. (P) Cur
tis Stone won the National AAU
10,000 meter run Friday night and
qualified for a place on the Amer
ican Olympic team along with
Fred Wilt and Horace Ashenfelter.
The long race, approximately six
and one-quarter miles, was the
only final tryout on the program.
The talance of the American track
team will be selected in Los An
geles June 27-28.
Stone, Wilt, Ashenfelter and
Browning Ross set the pace from
the half way mark on. Gradually
Ross dropped back. On the last lap
Stone, former Penn Stater, cut
loose with a sprint that was too
much for Wilt, FBI man. All three
place winners represented the New
York Athletic Club.
The time for the 10,000 was 30:
33.4, a meet and American citi
zen's record. The former meet rec
ord was 31:05.7 set by Wilt in
1949.
To start the evening Parry O'
Brien of Southern California beat
Jim Fuchs, formerly of Yale and
the world record holder, with a
new meet shot put mark of 57 feet
inches. Fuchs held the former
mark at 57 2ls. His best put was
56 7l4.
Donnelly Wins
Junior Title
PORTLAND (JP)- Bob Donnelly,
a recent graduate of Grant High
School here, defeated Lloyd Eck
hardt, a former teammate, 3 and
2, Friday to win the Oregon Golf
Association's junior golf cham
pionship. :
Gary Hval won the boys' cham
pionship by defeating Roger
Sielicky on the fourth extra hole.
The two, both Portlanders, were
tied at the end of the regulation
36. i
Sue DeVoe won the girls' title
with a 2 and 1 victory over Ann
Quast of Marysville, Wash.
Em! to End Wins
Longacres Romp
SEATTLE (JP) - End to End,
owned by Mr. and Mrs. D. A.
Lozzi, Seattle, raced to a two
length victory in the $3,000 Benton
Handicap, feature race of Friday's
opening card at Longacres.
The winner, ridden by veteran
Delmar Jones, forged ahead in the
stretch to outrun the Northern
Stable's Coiner and Cecil Jolly's
Sir Calbenor. Time for the six
furlongs over a rain-softened track
was 1:11 1-5. End to End paid
$9.10, $4.30 and $3.40, Coiner $5.80
and $4.80, and Sir Calbenor $3.80
Attendance was 4,800 and the
mutuel handle $177,208.
American League
Boston
. 000 000 ZOO t S S
Cleveland
211001 22x 0 14 2
ParnelL Brodowski (1). Scarborough
(8) and White: Lemon and Hegan.
Philadelphia 101 000 1004 8 0
Detroit 100 000 0001 8 1
Byrd and Atroth; Trucks. Hoeft (8)
and Swift. Ginsberg (8).
New York 100 000 211 008 S 2
Chicago 000 010 004 038 13 2
Raschl. ostrowaki (9). Hogue ( ana
Berra: Rogovln. Kretlow i8). Aloma
(8), DorUh 10) and Masl.
(18 lnnlngi. tie. called, curfew)
Wash. 000 120 020 000 000 0008 U 1
St. L ..100 400 000 000 000 0008 11 t
Sleater, Haynes (3), Consuegra (11).
Ferrlck (18) and Kluttx, Graiso (9):
Byrne. Bearden (J). Paige (8), Madi
son (18) and Johnson.
It was formerly believed that
the earliest men were of very
large size and that contemporary
men were dwarfed descendants,
but in recent centuries it has been
recognized that there is little or
no basis for such a belief.
ASSOCIATED FUEL OILS
oCouch
OUCH A
a
HOME FUEL CO.
JUST
CALL
2-4119
( Cf J
in game goes into the record
books, but must be replayed from
the start at a later date.
It was the longest relief effort
of the year for -Paige, who had
gone innings against Wash
ington to win the 17 -inning game.
Paige had won both of St. Louis'
victories over the Senators this
year.
Chisox Gain Game
In the American League, the
rampaging Chicago White Sox
gained a full game on the pace
setting New York Yankees by
overpowering the world's champ
ions, 8-5. in a hair-raising elev
enth inning finish.
The Sox, trailing 5 to 1, ex
ploded four runs in the ninth to
tie the score.
Then, in the eleventh. Nelson
Fox opened with a double off Bob
Hogue, the Yankees' third pitcher.
Minnie Minoso was purposely
gassed. Sam Mele propelled a
ome run into the left field
stands to score Fox and Minoso
ahead of him and end the game in
a dramatic finish after four hours
and six minutes of play.
The thrilling contest was wit
nessed by 39,444, largest night
crowd of the season. The victory
enabled the White Sox to cling td
Yankees.
Shuba Hits Homer
The Brooklyn Dodgers pulled
game out of the fire in the ninth
inning to cling to their five game
National League lead over the
runner-up New York Giants.
Pinch-h i 1 1 e r George Shuba
clouted a two-out-two-run homer
to give the Brooks a 5-4 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the
majors' only day game.
The Giants edged the slumping
Chicago Cubs, 4-3, in ten inning!
under the lights.
The Boston Braves outlasted the
St. Louis Cardinals, 12-7, and the
Philadelphia Phillies turned back
the Cincinnati Reds, 3-1, in other
National League games.
National League
Chicago 030 000 000 0 7
New York 020 001 000 1 10 0
Minner and Atwell. Edward (10) j
Maglie, Lanier (3) and Yvan.
Pittsburgh 002 020 000 4 S 9
Brooklyn 000 010 0225 0
Pollet. Wllki (8) and Garaglolat
Wade. Branca (6). Labtne (9) and
Campanell.
St. Louis .... 000 000 700 7 11 1
Boston 010 001 10X 12 13 1
Staley. Werle (. Schmidt (8).
Brecheen (7) and D. Rice; Wilson.
Burdette (7). Spahn (7) and Cooper,
Burria (7).
ClnclnnaU 000 000 1001 1
Philadelphia 000 210 OOx i i 0
BlackweU. Podbielan (8). NuxhaU
(7). Haugstad (8) and Seminlck; Rob
erts and Burgess. .
WIL Line Scores:
Lewlston 010 002 013 000 19 20
Yakima 000 004 021 000 07 15
Bowman. Schulte (8)i Brenner
and Helmuth; Wright, Thompson
and Donahue, Meyers (12).
Spokane
000 601 010-S U 1
Wenatchee 613 102 02 I
MarahaU. Palm (8). Roberts (I)
Sheets. Hlna 8) Ouhre. fltlte
and Pocekay.
TODAYI
AT litis A. M.
HEAR
Major League
Baseball
NEW YORK YANKEES
VS.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
Followed
By
Collogialo
Grow Ooccs
THEN AT 2:39 P. 14
AND AGAIN
AT 8x18 P. M.
SALEtl
vs.
VICTORIA
n -
J