The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 15, 1955, Page 1, Image 1

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Last August the very placid
organization of Girl Scouts was
catapulted into the news when
the convention of the American
Legion condemned its Handbook
as I unAmerican. The accusation
really was belated because in re
sponse to previous criticism by
an "extreme right-wing propa
gandist," Robert T. LeFevre, a
Florida TV newscaster, the Hand
book was undergoing revision.
The Girl Scouts is a girls' wel
fare organization, a counterpart
of the Boy. Scouts. Like the Boy
Scouts : (also Rotary Club, Ki
wanis, Lions, and Christian
Churches) it is international in
character. The Boy Scout inter
national jamboree is hailed as a
great means of getting boys of
different countries acquainted.
But the axe of over-fearful pa
triots fell on the unsuspecting
Girl Scouts. . ; f
What happened to the organi
zation and to its Handbook is
writen up by Ben H. Bagdikian
in - (he j April Atlantic Monthly.
He ! has gone through the latest
edition of the Girl Scout Hand
book to note the changes so it
will escape censure as being too
world-minded. Its founder in
America, Mrs. Juliete Gordon
Low, brought the Girl Scout idea
back from England. (The Boy
Scouts originated there.) That
was in 1912. She designed it to
be an organization promoting in
ternational friendship -
(Continued on editorial page, 4.)
Vaccine Test
WASHINGTON The White
House announced Saturday it will
release a voluminous report Mon
day on the Salk polio vaccine pro-
gram. j
The mass inoculation of first and
second grade school children be
gan picking up momentum again.
after a week-long suspension for
new safety checks, as government
" scientific inspectors moved into the
second of five laboratories making
- the serum.
Enough vaccine for more than' a
million shots was released by the
U.S. Public Health Service late
Friday as a result of their inspec
uuu vi me 111 01 purni uii uie uai,
Parke "Davis Co. of Detroit.
The check and doublecheck team
v Is now at the li Lilly & Co. lab
oratories in Indianapolis. Other
! plants ' to be visited, though not
necessarily by the same team, are
Pitman-Moore Co., Indianapolis,
and Sharp! k Dohme.. Inc.. and
Wyeth, Inc. both of Philadelphia.
The product of a sixth manufac
. turer, Cutter Laborators of Berke-
"ley, Calif.. ""has been withdrawn
for a special check.
The program is expected to pick
' np speed throughout the country
again as more vaccine is turned
loose from the five laboratories.
Report Due
On Monday
i White House Press Secretary
' James C. Hagerty said Monday s
report will be delivered to Presi
dent Eisenhower at 9:30 a.m. by
Secretary of Welfare Oveta Culp
( Hobby, and will be released to the
public a, few hours later.
WEST REICH ELECTION TODAY
MAINZ, Germany Ul Pro
Western Chancellor Konrad Aden
auer and the opposition Socialists
test their-strength Sunday in their
first election battle since West
Germany won sovereignty and
Joined the Atlantic alliance. '
Super-Deadly Nerve Gas Now'
In World's Warfare Arsenals
By ELTON C. FAY
WASHINGTON m Nerve gas
is so deadly that a single droplet
in the eye of a person can kill
him, a military publication dis
closed Saturday. ;
This new clue to the potency of
the silent, unseen, mass destruc
tion weapon is contained in a
I Chemical Warfare Service hand-
book. The booklet outlines first aid
treatment for laboratory workers
who might accidently become ex
posed to the material, which can
have the form of either a gas or
a liquid, ,v I .
i Nerve of 'Gn gas now U in the
chemical warfare arsenals of the
United : States and other military
powers. It could kill more people
more swiftly than the heaviest dose
of radioactivity from a . nuclear
bomb. : i
i The Chemical Warfare Service,
in an earlier,- general discussion
of the weapon, said nerve gas is
"designed to destroy life with sud
deness. The "G" gas is being
produced at the Rocky Mountain
Arsenal of the Army in Colorado.
The first aid handbook was pre
Tha
Highway
; f. .. -.v -v-
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4 .
I
::-,.v-v;v:, ., ....
Balldoiers and ther equipment are shows at work here on a new
section of Highway 99E south of Salem. The site is just south
of niahee Hill and the camera is facing north. When completed
the work going on in the foreground will provide two additional
one-way lanes to become a part of .the present highway (in
background) which will also carry twt lanes one-way, according
Franco - German Jet Expected to
Cruise at Twice Speed of Sound
WASHINGTON Uf) An avia
tion magazine Saturday described
a strange Franco-German "Flying
Barrel" said to be capable.- of
"speed-of-sound vertical takeoff
and cruising at twice the speed
of sound. -
Aero Digest said the so-called
circular-wing aircraft is "the big-
Women Jail
Inmates Riot
In Tennessee
FAYETTEVILLE. Tenn. ( A
jail riot by 25 women strikers sub
sided here Saturday night when the
Serbin Garment factory workers
posted $500 bonds they had earlier
refused.
Lincoln County Sheriff Eugene S.
Barnes had earlier called for help
from the state capital when the
women, arrested for alleged viola
tion of an injunction regulating
picketing, started smashing win
dows and breaking soft, drink
bottles. A crowd gathered outside
the jail during the rumpus.
Barnes said he didn't know what
influenced the women, members of
the International Ladies Garment
Workers Union, to abandon their
"No bond" stand. They earlier re
fused bond offers from their hus
f bands. .
The sheriff said the women ac
companied him to jail voluntarily
Saturday afternoon, forming a pa
rade across the town square. He
said he called for help 'from Gov.
Frank Clement but the governor
was out of the state.
f State Safety Commissioner W. W.
Luttrell declined comment and
state troopers in the area refused
to act without orders.
pared at the laboratories of the
Army Chemical Center, Edgewood
Arsenal, Md.
In discussing various ways in
which-the deadly material can be
absorbed, the handbook warns that
rapid absorption is possible into
circulating blood through the struc
ture of the eye. '
' "Without treatment even a small
droplet of agent in the eye may
represent a fatal dose." the hand
book said.
Nerve gases (there are several
types) are a group of organic est
ers of phosphoric acid derivatives,
virtually colorless and odorless.
The handbook gives a timetable
for death from nerve gas when a
man inhales a heavy dose of the
vapor. In 5 to 15 minutes the circu
latory system ; would collapse,
bringing death.
The antidote emphasized is atro
pine, either injected ' or taken by
tablet Atropine is a common drug
(related to belladona) used to re
live spasms and pain and to di
mmish excessive secretions, such
as. saliva.
NDID 1651
Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon,
Expansion Being Carved in lllahee Hill
gest jolt since jets to modern aero-
dynamics."
It said the Flying Barrel has
been wind-tunnel tested, but so far
as is known has not yet actually
been flown. It added that the craft
has' potential value as a transport
and "immediate significance" as a
fighter plane. ' '
Aero Digest described the flying
barrel in these terms:
The machine, known as a coleop
ter, resembles a barrel open at
both ends. It stands on end for ver
ticle takeoff like, a rocket, then
gradually arcs over to fly horiz
ontally. -. j
The pilot's compartment , and
power-plant are inside the barrel.
The pilqt and crew occupy swivel
chairs that ' keep them upright
whether the craft is flying vertic
ally or horizontally. The power
plant can be either jet or piston
engines and is near the rear open
ing of the barrel. ' :
Thus the barrel is in effect an
"annular wing" a ring or tube
of metal around the plane, serv
ing as a wing.
1 Aero Digest ' said the cokopter
was designed by an Austrian en
gineer, Helmut Graf von Zborojr
ski. and is being built, in collab
0SC Mothers.
Elect Officers
CORVALLIS UT) Mrs. S. W.
McHugh of Corvallis Saturday was
elected president of the Oregon
State College Mothers Club. -
Other new officers are Mrs.
Spencer Alexander, Springfield,
vice president; Mrs. Emmett Rog
ers. Salem, secretary and Mrs..
Bertram Dick, Portland, treas
urer. ;
Seventeen students received full
tuition scholarships. They include:
Nancy Eileen Clark. Salem Ron
ald A. Shrock. Hubbard Freder
ick G. Rogers, Salem and Vaughn
Willoughby, Springfield.
MacBeth Performance
Given in Sign Language
WASHINGTON (UP)-Gallaudet
College for the Deaf presented a
performance of "MacBeth Friday
night, entirely in sign language.
An interpreter sitting backstage
spoke the lines for the benefit
of persons in the audience with
normal hearing.
Today's Statcsr.zn
Sec fag
A. Robert Smith I.
Classifieds II.
Comics lin
6
Ml
Crossword
6
4
Editorials
Farm
1.10,11
Home Panorama
6
7;
Our Valley
Sports
Star Gazer .
TV, Radio .
Valley -
L.
L
.11
4
7
Sunday, May 15, 1955
' 'v-,;- 'k ,'V"" '
to state highway department officials. When completed, probably
early next year, the new one and one-half mile section will be the
first link in a proposed four-lane expressway from Salem to Albany.
The Salem-Portland section is practically completed. (Statesman
photo.) .
oration with a - French designing
team, for the French aircraft firm
Snecma." ' r
It said the jet engine for an ex
perimental model has been devel
oped by another group of Snecma's
German French designers under
the former German aircraft design
er Hermann Oestrich.
Vehicle Hike
Keeps Pace
With People
WASHINGTON ( The nation's
motor vehicle population increased
last year, almost as fast as its
human population, according to a
survey released Saturday by the
Bureau of Public Roads. -
the bureau said motor vehicle
registrations increased in 1934 by
2,300,000 to 58,589.863 passenger
cars, trucks and buses at the end
of the year.
This compared with a population
increase of 2.823,000 last year, to
a year end total of 163,930.000 peo
ple.
At the end of the year, conse
quently Americans had one car for
each 2.8 persons in the nation and
in the armed forces abroad.
The nation wound up 1954 with
48,498,870 registered passenger
cars, 9,842,647 trucks and 248,346
buses.
Americans drove their vehicles
at the astronomical pace of 557
billion vehicle miles equal to 3,000
round trips to the sun a gain of
3 per cent over 1953.
Billy Graham to
Stay at Queen's
Scottish Home
LONDON (UP) American evan
gelist Billy Graham will stay at
Queen Elizabeth's official Scot
tish residence when he returns to
Scotland for a brief visit the end
of the month, it was learned Satur
day. Graham will be guest of the
Duke of Hamilton at Holyrood
House in Edinburgh when the
evangelist goes north to address
the General Assembly of the
Church of Scotland. The duke is
lord high commissioner for Scot
land.
The exact date of Graham's two
day visit to Edinburgh has not
yet Deen announced. The assem
bly will meet from May 24 to June
Graham opened a week of re
vival meetings in Weubley stad
ium Saturday .night.
Salem Woman Heads
Oregon Mothers Club
EUGENE? W Mrs. James
Walton, Salem, was elected presi
dent of the Oregon Mothers Club
at the annual business meeting on
the University of Oregon campus
No. 49
B)nt
300 Take Part
4-H Exhibit
SUtcsmaa News Service "
DALLAS Over 300 4-H youngs
ters and club leaders took part
here Saturdayin the first annual
Polk County spring exhibit con
ducted by the state extension ser
vice. Primarily a practice session for
home economics clubs in prepara
tion for the county and state fairs,
the exhibit drew some 300 entries
in foods, clothing and health.
Tommy Hansen, a seventh grad
er at Rickreall, won the major
award of the day, the Polk County
Tuberculosis and Health Associa
tion trophy for personal health im
provement and community better
ment. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. N. John Hansen of Polk Sta
tion.- .
W. A. Wiest," association presi
dent from . Independence, pre
sented the trophy along wiui 12
other awards to 4-H Club mem
bers. Health judges cr Mrs.
E. K. Lettekin and Mrs. R. V.
Carleson, both of Rickreall.
Practice judging was conducted
under the direction of Mrs. Malno
Reichert, home extension agent,
and Mrs. Helen Van Santrn. jerre
tary of the county 4-H Leaders As
sociation. Instruction in health posters was
given by Mrs. Burton Bell cf Rick
reall. The entire program, which
was held in the Dallas Chamber
of Commerce rooms, was super
vised by John Grimes, county 4-H
extension agent. ,
A welcome to the day's event
was extended by Harlan Rohr
bough,, local manager for Pacific
Power and Light Co., sponsors of
the noon luncheon. Rib!xr.s for al
exhibitors were prov:ded by the
Dallas Chamber of Commerce.
Salem's Rainfall
Measured at .68
' Salem received more than a
half-inch of rain Saturday, but
the total rainfall is still below
average for the first 14 days of
May.
Saturday's rainfall was .68
inch. Total this month is .91 inch
against .97 average.
The forecast by McNary Field
weathermen calls for partly sun
ny and a little warmer today and
fair Monday. A high of 62-64 is
expected today, and a low of 34
.36 tonight. . ; , -.
Max. Mia. free!
Salem .
Portland ,
Baker '
Medford .....
North Bend
Roseburf
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Chicago
SI
41
43
29
40
45-
42
44
M
S4
JU
.01
.03
.17
.19
.00
.00
.00
.00
44
SI
.52
50
2
65
74
New York
59
Willamette River 15 feet
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNary field. Salem I:
Partly sunny and a little warmer
today with high of 62-S4. Clearing
and cool tonight with low of 34-36.
Fair Monday. - -
Temperature at 12:01 a. m. today
was 41
SALEM PRKCrFITATloy
I lEYrt tIrYt"
PRICE 10c
Sw.
' v :m. 4&r
-
-1
In Polk County
Big 4
Pact; I
ToGr
First Freedom
In 17 Years
By ARTHUR GAVSHON AND
LYNN HEINZERUNG
VIENNA. Austria m The Big
Four foreign ministers Saturday
approver .the terms of Austria s
freedom-
Joined by Austrian Foreign Min
ister Leopold Figl for 80 minutes
Saturday afternoon,, the. high dip
lomats of Russia, the United
States, Britain and France ap
proved the text of the Austrian
treaty of independence.
With Figl they will sign the docu
ment in Vienna's Belvedere Palace
at 11:30 a. m. Sunday.
With the cheers of thousands of
happy Austrians ringing in their
ears, the Big Four foreign mini-
Jers took brief time out to confer
ith their advisors, r
Then they proceeded individual
ly in police convoys to the home
of U. S. Ambassador Llewellyn .
Thompson Jr.
There they discussed informally
the Western proposals that Presi
dent Eisenhower, Soviet. Premier
Bulganin, British Prime Minister
Eden and French Premier Faure
meet in July.
House Guarded
The talks r were in strictest pri
vacy. Only a few close advisors
were present with the ministers.
Thompson's house was heavily
guarded.
The agreement on the Austrian
treaty may be the first step to
ward ending the East-West cold
war.
For the Austrians it means the
end of more than 17 years of occu
pation by the Nazis and -later by
the four allies.
Blocked for 10 Years
The capital was gaily decorated
with flags for the happy event. The
Russians had blocked the treaty for
10 years and then unexpectedly
gave in.
The 80-minute session where the
38-artide text was approved began
with Figl calling for the Big Four
to eliminate a phrase in the pre
amble that would have perpetuat
ed a share of the blame on Austria
for starting World War.IL.
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles, British Foreign Secretary
Harold MacMillan and French For
eign Minister Antoine Pinay
agreed to drop the, war guilt stig
ma at once. Soviet Foreign Mini
ster V. M. Molotov then followed
suit. .
Observe Neutrality"
Molotov i raised the question of
the four powers joining in a declar
ation "recognixing and observing
Austrian neutrality along the Swiss
model."
The three Western fore Ira mini
sters agreed in principle', but said
they preferred to wait to see the
draft of such a declaration and the
precise formation of Austria's neu
tral policy .
Molotov then said he would cir
culate a draft, while Figl said he
would undertake to spell out' the
request his country intends to
make for j a Big Four guarantee
of Austrian neutrality. .
Coquille River
Victims Found
COQUILLE (I) The bodies of
Charles G. McGrady, 19, Spring
field, and his brother-in-law,
Harland Wyric, 33, Myrtle Point,
were recovered from the Coquille
River Saturday near the point
where their boat overturned April
24.
The body of Charles' brother,
Allen Richard McGrady, 18,
Springfield was recovered Friday
night. State police said it washed
ashore seven miles east of Myrtle
Point. j
Search then started for the other
two, and with the water low the
bodies' soon were found. 'Also
recovered was the boat' engine.
The three bad gone onto the river
to test the engine, then new. ,
ve Nation
Nebraska Motherof 5
Chosen Mrs.
(Picture on page 7, sec. 2.) '
ORMOND BEACH, Fla.
Mrs. Ramona Deitemeyer, a love
ly blue-eyed blonde Nebraska Sun
day School teacher, PTA president
and mother : of five" became Mrs.
America of 1956 Saturday.
Her voice trembling with excite
ment, one of ihe first things she
said was:
I want the title to mean two
things:' First that the job of home
making wOl be kept on a terrifical
ly high-plane and next that my
church can be part of the title."
Mrs. Deitemeyer teaches ' the
second grade Sunday School class
in Christ Lutheran Church of her
home town of Lincoln, Neb., where
ber husband, i Carl, edits the Nc
braska Farmer magazine and is
chairman of the church congrega
tion. She is president of the Holmes
Elementary School Parent-Teacher
Assn. - l
For the first time in the 17 years
of the Mrs. America contest there
was no bathing suit . competition.
It was all homemaking.
The 35-year-old winner proved
OUehs Austria
To Sign Today
Dulles to Report
To Eisenhower,
Nation on Tuesday
WASHINGTON (fl See. of
State Dalles wUI report U the
atioa Taesday on plans for a
Big Four meeting. President
Eisenhower will serve as bis
"aanonacer."
" The broadcast, which will also
serve as a report to the Presi
dent, will be carried by all na
tional TV networks between 3
and 3:30 p.m. (PST). The radio
etworks will record It for later
broadcast: ABC beginning- at
4 p.m., (PST), Mutual at. 5:30
p.m., CBS and NBC at C:30 p.m.
Cabinet members and defense
officials will be present at the re
port, which also will disenss the
Austria treaty. (Additional de
tails oa page S, sec. 2.)
Red Allies of
East Europe
Form 'NATO'
WARSAW, Poland MJ The So
viet Union and seven East Euro
pean Communist states set up a
unified military command Satur
day to counter the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization .(NATO). So
viet Marshal Ivan Konev was
made supreme commander, with
headquarters in Moscow.
The eight allies signed a 20-year
mutual security and friendship
treaty and a protocol grouping
their military forces under a sin
gle command. Konev, the deputy
Soviet defense minister, has been
a Communist Party member for
37 years.
The treaty ceremonies took place
lin a white and marble hall of
Poland s Parliament building. Pre
miers of the eight nations the So
viet Union, Poland, Czechoslovak
ia. Hungary, , Bulgaria. Romania.
Albania and East Germany
signed the documents.;
Later, nearly 100,000 cheering
residents of Warsaw jammed into
Tzierdzinsky Square and heard top
Communist leaders hail the new
treaty as "a ; move " for world
peace." .
Sen. George
Doubts Russ
Air Buildup
WASHINGTON (Jl Sen. Georre
(D-Ga) said Saturday the Pentagon
mav be trvine to influence Senate
consideration of the new military
budget by stressing increases in
Soviet aircraft production.
I don t attach too much import
ance to it," George commented.
Sen. Knowland of California, the
Republican leader,' said he had no
information on a stepup in Russian
production of jet bombers ; and
fighters, as reported by the De
fense Department, but said Senate
committees "will want ' to go into
the situation."
The Pentagon nut out a orvotic
statement Friday, with White
House approval, saying that Rus
sia was cutting into this country's
lead in the nrodurtinn of heavv
and medium jet bombers. This was
followed Saturday by reports that
the Soviets have ' increased their
lead in turning out suoersonic iet
fighters.
George who is chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit
tee, recalled that Sen. Alfred M.
Gruenther, NATO commander, re
cently testified before the Foreign
Relations Committee that Russia's
air fleet does not measure im to
this country's.
AID CUT SEEN
WASHINGTON tfl Sen. Mans
field (D-Mont) said Saturday Con
gress is likely to slice at least 10
per cent from the Eisenhower ad
ministration's new 3-billion-dol-
lar foreign aid program.
her homemaking skill to the judges
even before- she was picked as
America's No. 1 housewife by win
ning two preliminary awards: One
for the best dinner menu and the
other for keeping the neatest and
cleanest, villa along Mrs. America
drive. . v ,
Six entrants made the finals.
The original field of 49 one from
each state and the District of Co
lumbiawas first trimmed to 19.
This group included . Mrs. Doris
McKean, 38, Portland, Ore.
When the public address system
boomed out the word all bad- been
waiting for, the ones that meant
$15,000 worth of prizes to the win
ner, Mrs. Deitemeyer's knees
weakened and she almost slumped
down. But attendants quickly led
her to a red carpet to the throne
on thf stage built on the ocean
beach.
With a tremor in her voice, she
said:
"I have only prayed each day to
do my best, never expecting to
win." ,
Vienna Talk
Site Proposed
By Molotov
By ARTHUR GAVSHON
VIENNA. Austria W) Russia's
V. M. Molotov premised at a din
ner meeting with Western foreign
ministers Saturday night that the
Soviet Union will join in a Big
Four power conference at the 'sum--mif
level in an effort to reach
an East-West settlement
The so-called meeting at the
summit would bring together Pres
ident Eisenhower, Soviet Premier
Bulganin, British Prime Minister
Eden and French Premier Faure
some time in the summer.
The four foreign ministers thus
capped an accord reached earlier
in the day when they approved in
80 minutes the text of a treaty
restoring to Austria her freedom
and independence after 17 years
of occupation. It had taken 10 post
war, years to negotiate the treaty.
"General Agreement"
An official British spokesman
said early Sunday Molotov, Sec
retary of State John Foster Dul
les, British Foreign Secretary Har
old MacMillan and French For
eign Minister Antoine Pinay i
reached a "general agreement on
the purposes and methods of oper
ation" of the meeting at the sum- t
mit. . . ;
The Western powers in a note
last week suggested the meeting
of Eisenhower, Bulganin, Eden
and Faure.
The spokesman said Molotov
probably will send a note pos
sibly this weekend formally ac
cepting the invitation. .
The time and place have " not
yet been decided.
Suggests Vienna
Molotov was reported to have
suggested Vienna as the site. Dul
les was to have served notice he
would oppose Geneva, Switzerland,
a locale with a politically unpleas
ant connotation for. some Ameri
cans because of the controversial "
Indochina cease - fire settlement
reached there last year with Red.
China sitting in.';;'., t -"
Lausanne, a Swiss city 35 miles
from Geneva, was said to have
been discussed favorably, however.
Discussion of the timing of the
meeting ranged from - late". July '
through August
To the surprise of his colleagues, -
informants said, Molotov at no
time pressed for Red China rep
resentation at the conference. .
Dulles said he would discuss the
question of time and place with
President Eisenhower in Washing
ton in "the next day or two.
No Agenda Discussed z
At no tune, an informant said, -
did the four discuss an agenda
for the meeting. -
The four ministers agreed that
if they are all present at the 10th
U. N. birthday ceremonies being
organized for late June in San
Francisco they would discuss fur
ther arrangements for the con
ference.
Dulles. MacMillan ; and Pinay .
were said to have reemphasized
to Molotov that the top level meet
ing would be too brief to reach
any hard and fast agreements.
They argued, however, that such
a meeting would be useful in de
fining future work of the foreign
ministers and other four-power .
groups that might be set up.
The Western proposal called for
a meeting of the four foreign min- ;
isters at a neutral spot, .possibly
in July, to prepare an outline of ,
the talks of their chiefs that would ?
follow' immediately and last but
a lew days.
The chiefs of government would
seek to formulate broad directives
on the basis of which the foreign
ministers and their deputies in ,
subsequent meetings would try to
reach firm accords.
Atom Shot Set
This Morning
LAS VEGAS. Nev. tfl The
Atomic Energy Commission an
nounced Saturday night that it wul
make another attempt at S am.
Sunday to fire the 14th and final
shot of the 1955 nuclear series in
Nevada.
Probable wind patterns were re
garded as favorable, but final de
cision to shoot - awaited another
weather briefing at 3:30 a.m.
The much-delayed finale is an
other 500-foot tower blast on Yucca
Flat. It is expected to be one U
the larger explosions of the series.
NOBTRWin LIAGCE
- At Salem-Spokan. rain.
At Eugene-Lewiston. rain.
At Tri-City-Wenatchee, rata.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
At Portland S, Oakland 4. "
At San Diego 10. Holly woof 1
At Lot Angeles 3. Seattle S.
At San Francisco 2. Sacramento T.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
At Washington-Cleveland, rain.
At Baltimore-Chicago, rain.
At. Boston X Kansas City U
At Mew York 7, Xetroit ,
national League
At Cincinnati 2. Brooklyn IS.
At Milwaukee . Philadelphia 1
At Chicago S. New York .
At St. Loula I KtUbursa .