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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1956)
"The Weather Today's forecast:. Partly cloudy today and Tuesday, aarly morning drizzle both days. High today, 73; low to night, 41. (Complete report paa I) 106th Yoar Copter Brings Scout From Rainier Wilds I yy I v'""':f , v i SEATTLE, Wash. Navy medical eorpsmen lift Richard Mizuhata, 13 year-old Seattle Scout, Into ambulance: front" VTavrTiPncoptrrhTrtrlminEht htnTnurr theMtrRaIntrTrrirremte in which he had been lost dition was listed as good DTP PSODLl Os West, oldest living governor Of Oregon, who at age 83 still takes a lively interest in affairs and ex presses his views with pungent pen from time to time, tells in the Ure gonian's Northwest magazine sec tion what he would do "If 1 were Governor again." Reading it, one concludes that Os is slipping. What he proposes doing isn't nearly as spectacular or as important as what he did do in the four years that he was governor, 1911-1915. Still strong for law enforcement (he commends Gov. Smith for turn ing the attorney general loose on Multnomah County), Os says he would call a conference of state, county and municipal officials and tell them to' get busy enforcing the laws. Still a foe of "booze" he de clares he would call out the nation al guard to clean out "off-colored booze joints"-t-'as he once did for Copperfield, - 'a mining camp in Baker County. His other "radical" idea is to tell the legislature he would veto all bills that failed to reach him with in 60 days after the session opened. (He admits that the governor's job is far more complicated than it was when he served 45 years ago, but seems to make little allowance for legislative complications'. West might do that, hut he would get a mess of half-baked hills, and be forced to call an extra session in a year. West takes a characteristic cratk when he says he would insist (Continued on editorial page 4.) Singer Pinza Suffers Stroke CERVIA, Italy (. Ezio Pinza. operatic basso and Broadway star, suffered a slight paralytic stroke at his summer home here Friday and has canelled his contract to appear in a new play next season. Pinza, who turned to musical comedy to the hits "South Pac- ific" and "Fanny'' after a long career in opera, is 64. He had been scheduled to bein rehearsals for "A Very Special Baby on Sept, 17 in New York. Pinza's wile said he had been "very tired" before the stroke. Mrs. Pinza said her husband "suffered no permanent injury," WILBERT J I j "Soy, Mister, hove you got nlnvtef In.'r s 2 SECTIONS-14 PACES six days. Richard was found by Sunday night. (AP Wirephoto) Man Dies Under Train at Albany, Name Unknown ALBANY, Ore. Wl An uniden tified man died here about noon Sunday w hen he was crushed be neath the-wheels of an Oregon Electric Ry. freight train. Dep. Coroner Walter K r 0 p p Said the man, apparently a trans ient. Was believed knocked from the top of a car on the train as it passed beneath a Southern Pa cific Ry. trestle in downtown Al bany. Kropp said the victim's body was badly mangled in the acci dent and that state and city police were continuing efforts to deter mine his identity. Deputy Doubts 2 Prospectors Lost in Wilds CHEHALIS, Wash. W A spokesman for the Lewis Countv sheriff's office Sunday discounted reports that two elderly prospee tors were lost in the Skate Creek area near Packwood, in eastern Lewis County. He said that Joseph Castle, 91. and Charles Allger, 86, both of Tacoma "know how to take care of themselves." He added, "we expect they'll show up in a few days." The sheriff's office spokesman said, "at any rate, we don't in tend to get excited and do much hunting for them until about Tues day." Relatives of the pair were not concerned about the men, he said. . The two men, one of whom sur vived a six-day ordeal in the Cas cades with a companion last Sep tember, left Tacoma last Sunday on another of their frequent pros pecting trips. The men's car a dog and camping equipment lock ed inside was found parked be side a remote logging road Fri day. the men had said that this trip they would visit the Indian Hen ry mine near Packwood. They said they might stay as long as a week. . . Boat Owner Feared Lost PORTLAND" A sports fish erman whose small plywood boat was found wrecked in the Colunv bia River Saturday was missing and feared drowned Sunday. The boat may have been hit by a tug boat. The fisherman, Berf Harland, about 65, Portland, failed to re turn from an early morning fish ing trip on the river. His wife noti fied police late Saturday nighj and a friend identified the boat wreck age Sunday .al the Coast Guard stntinn In Vancouver, Wash, ' .The tugboat skipper, Capt. John Nissen of Warren, Ore., said his tug George Birnei apparently hit the boat in a rain squall. The smaller boat, a 14-footer, was in thi main channel, It has not been (ietermined whether Harland was in the boat at the time. Coast guardmen and ( sheriff's deputies dragged the 'Columhia Sunday. SLIDE BLOCKS FAMED PASS BOLZANO, Italy tPi A giant landslide Sunday blocked trsffir through the Brenner Tass, the Al - pine lifeline between Italy and Austria. Tha Oregon searchers Saturday. His con-. Seattle Scout Eats Heartily After Ordeal -SEATTLE I Richard Mizu hata, 13-year-old Seattle Boy Scout who survived six days on the treacherous slopes of Mt. Rainier with virtually no food or water, ate three big meals in a Seattle hospital Sunday. The small, ahy Japanese-American boy was anatched from the woody prison of the Carbon River section of the Mt. Rainier Nat ional Park Saturday, nearly a week after he had become sepa rated from 13 other Scouts on a hikingtrip. During that time all he had to eat was a ' few candy bars and water from the mountain streams. Richard had no food or water with him. Physicians who examined the boy said he was "all dried out," that he apparently had drunk only a few drops of water during his ordeal. The boy miraculously escaped pneumonia through his six-day ex posure to cold winds and rain. His only injuries were a sprained ankle and a small cut on the fore head. When found he was still wearing his thick-lensed glasses without which he virtually can not see. Richard was first seen Saturday by Paul Uno, a member of a search team which had been part of a vast crew seeking the youth during every daylight hour this week. More Clouds On Forecast Partly cloudy skies are expected to continue today and Tuesday with early morning drizzle both days, according to the I'. S. weather station at McNary Field. Predicted high today is 75, the low tonight 48. A trace of rain fell Sunday, the weather bureau said. Maximum temperature Sunday was 72. Northern Oregon beaches will probably be cloudy this morning and this evening with partial clear ing during the afternoon. Expected high is 60 to 65, the low tonight 50 to 53. Part-Time Pastor Accused of $21,000 Embezzlement WAYNKSBl'RG, Pa. 1 - A part-time unordainrd Methodist minister who works as a hank teller was in Jail accused of il legally withdrawing $21,000 from a hank customer's account. He said he had a dual person ality and didn't spend the money on "wine, women or sung."...'..." "I know I took some money." Robert Drodge, 27, of noarby Mt. Morris, Ta., told Justice of the Peace Karl H. Fulton when ar raigned Saturday night after his arrest. "But 'I. don't think it was that much. And I don't know how it happened. 1 was handling so much money in the bank I was one man there. Then, when 1 got home, I was another. I .can't figure out what happened." Sheriff Thomas Boyd said , Drodge told him he took Icy "little by little'.'' t "I didn't dissipate it the mon- no wine, KUNDBD 1651 Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Nasser Agrees To Talk 'Heady -to Meet 5-Nation Group On Suez Crisis " By. WILTON WYNN CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Pres ident Nasser was reported readv and willing Sunday to talk over the Sue. Canal crisis on his home grounds with a five-nation committee setup by the London Suet conference. Sources close to the Egyptian government said Nasser had de cided to meet the committee in Cairo, but would insist the entire Sues problem be explored, not just the majority plan for international control to be brought by the com mittee. The Egyptian cabinet met with Nasser and reached a decision on a reply to the committee, but an official source declined to give its contents. The source said the reply would be forwarded to the Egypt ian embassy in London to be turned over to the committee. -Conference Committee Th five-nation committee, head- by Prime Minister Robert G. I at the end of the London confer- ence last wees, iq give passer an 103-mile waterway under an In ternational authority on which Egypt would be just one of the members. , Menzies stuck by a telephone in his London hotel suite waiting for word from Nasser. Prime Minister Eden also stood by at his country home at Chequers. In London there was a feeling that the dispute, touched off by Nasser's seizure of the Canal July 26,-was ap proaching a crucial stage. Efficiency Hurt The Sues Canal Co. the Inter national financed body that ran the Canal until Nasser national ized It, charged in a statement issued in London and Paris that Egypt was crippling efficiency of the Canal, While refusing to . accept any surrender of Egyptian sovereign ty, Nasser appeared xeager for the widest possible negotiations to ex plore every alternative solution. 1 Mrs. Tydings Seeks Senate Nomination OCEAN CITY. Md. I - Mrs Millard E. Tydings announced Sunday she will ask 'the state's Democrats to name her to the Senatorial nomination relinquish ed by her husband one week ago. The former Senator withdrew from the race against Republican Sen. John Marshall Butler be cause of a painful and prolonged case of shingles. Tydings was upset by Butler in 19.'i0 after a bitter campaign that resulted in a special investigation by a Senate subcommittee, which censured Buler's supporters for their activities. The state's Democratic commit tee meets Monday night to name a successor. Today's Statesman Pago Sec. Classified 12-13 II Comics 11...:. II Crossword 12 II Editorials 4 I Homo Panorama .. 6...... I Obituaries 12 II Radio-TV 11. -.11 Sports -10-M......II Star Gaier 5 I Valley News 3. I Wirephoto Pago ....11 II women and song." Drodge told the sheriff. "I gave some of it to people I knew needed It badly. I always figured I'd pay it back. I spent some money on improving our home. It was difficult to keep up with expenses. I' had to keep scar and the children needed many things." , Drodge anl his wile have a four-year-old child and are expect ing amlther. Mrs. Drodge also4ias a 6-year-old child by her first marriage. Boyd said the minister had been a teller at the bank 2'i years and began his withdrawals about six months after he was employed He did not attend a theological school and was not ordained. Drodge said he resigned his pas torates several years ago' alter he was married. However, he con tinued as an assistant pastor at a Morgantown church, He is being held without bond pending further action, ; i i .. . . Monday, August 27, 1956 Blaze Strikes At Hop, Ranch South of Salem Fire broke out early this morning In hop dry kilns at the L. H. Dalkenberg host ranch oa the Independence Jefferson Road. Five kilns and a stationary picking machine' were endan gered by the blaze. Mrs. Dalkenberg said the family was sleeping when the. fire started and first learned about the flames when a red glow was sighted in Salem and a friend drove out to wan them. Pickers have been working two 12 hour shifts a day at the hop. ranch sinre Monday. Mrs. Dalkenberg did not know how full the large ' kilns were. The picking machine was stationed near the kilns and a conveyor carried bops into the buildings. Independence fire equipment was rushed to the scene about I: IS Monday. Members of toe Dalkenberg family and hop crew workers were battling the flames. Rail Mishap Injures Man, Stalls Train A car and a railroad engine collided at the junction of Silver- ton Road and the Southern Pacific Urarks ahont ,. a.25-,pm Sunday sending one man to the hospital and temporarily halting the train Yern E. Miller, 49, of Lyons, Route I, was taken to Salem Gen eral Hospital by Willamette Am bulance Service. Ambulance at tendants said he received a lacer ation over the right eye and a cut inside his mouth. Miller was sched uled to remain in the hospital over night for observation, police said Miller's car was dragged about 180 feet south along the -tracks. A broken connection on an air reservoir tank left the train with but brakes and the engine' minus a headlight or a bell. Trainmen walked the freight into Salem yards for repairs. Daniel's Lead Paper Thin in Texas Race (Picture on Wirephoto Page.) DALLAS, Tex. United States Sen. Pric. Daniel held a paper-thin lead over Austin attor ney Ralph Yarborough Sunday in the bitter race for the governor ship of Texas. ,'arborough workers indicated they'll fight for every ballot at the olficial canvass. "he day's final tabulation of the Texas election bureau showed Daniel leading by 2.523 votes -nd an estimated 1.600 votes still un reported to the bureau. The totals gave Daniel 697,732 and Yarbor ough 695,209. Robert Johnson, head of. the bureau, said, "this is so close that it could go either way." A worker at Yarborough head quarters In Austin said "we can challenge some 3.000 votes in Webb County alone." State and district authorities are still investigating the Webb Coun ty vote in the first primary July 28. The worker did not state the basis of the possible challenge. I he race -actually w as for the Democratic nomination, but that almost means election in this strongly Democrat io state . Latest totals gave Daniel 697.427 voles and Yarborough 692,134 with an estimated 5,295 ballots unreport ed. On the final outcome of Sat urday's balloting hinges the pos- siDiniy mat Texas could have a Republican Senator, and the ques tion of whether party loyalists will capture -control .the state party maenmery lor two years. Marilyn Monroe's Honeymoon Ends LONDON tP) Plavwriuht Arthur Miller clasped his wife Marilyn Monroe in a farewell embrace Sunday night. Then he flew off to the United States where a congressional citation for contempt still hangs over him. On July 25 the house of repre sentatives cited Miller and seven others for refusing to answer questions before the committee on un-American activities. Miller said he had never been a Com munist but had belonged to Communist-front groups anH refused to identify others at Communist party writers' meetings in 1939 40. 'Landlord' Quitkly . Provide Lodging A man knocked on the win dows in the front door of the Salem police station about 8 55 p.m. Sunday. Two officers walked out to see who he Wanted. The landlord, the man said. He was given a room and booked on a drunk charge. PRICE 5c Ends 46 Years of Service Rev. II. W. Gross Is shown Sunday after preaching his farewell sermon at St. John s Lutheran Church where he has served for nearly 46 years. An ordained minister for 50 years, he will- leave -thie-week with-Mr where the couple will live. Long Pastorate Ends For Minister in Salem Approximately 500 mcmWrs of St. John's Lutheran Church lionored the -Rev.' If. W. Gross and his w ife at a social hour Sunday evening as the Salem minister ended nearly 40 years of service with St. John's. Representatives of church croups and clubs at St lohn's spole "during the evening affair. a cash gilt. . The Rev. Gross preached his farewell sermon Sunday morning. He has been an ordained minister for 50 years. Pastor and Mrs. Gross leave this week for East Lansing, Mich., where they will reside near the home of their son. Dr. Carl Gross, a. professor at the University of Michigan. Congratulatory messages from classmates, church officials and; pastors and Oregon political lead ers were read at a vesper service held in honor of the Rev, Gross last Sunday. Approximately 450 persons at tended the service. A reception followed. Road Toll 10 In Northwest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Highway accidents killed two persons in Oregon Sunday, the only weekend traffic victims re ported in the state. In neighboring Washington the weekend traffic toll stood at eight Sunday night, bringing the two-state total to 10. Mrs. Ada Bell Murray, 63, Hood River, died in a two-car collision on the Siinset Highway five rntles east of Cannon Beach. Mrs. Mur ray, a passenger in a car driven by her daughter, was dead on. ar rival at a Seaside hospital. Oregon's other highway death was that of Kenneth Paul Bro magin, - 29,- Clackamas. .. Driving alone, Bromagin was thrown from hir car after it swerved from the highway near Clackamas and hit a utility pole. He died at a Port land hospital. OIL FLOODS FIELDS TEHRAN, Iran. W) Informed sources said Sunday oil has been struck in the Qum area, 100 miles south of Tehran, with a gusher that has flooded nearby fields. Stars 'Rushing Into Outer Space At 75,000 By REN'NIE TAYLOR BERKELEY, Calif. ( - Some great star clusters i the far dis tant react es of creation are rush ing on into outer space at a speed of 75.000 miles per, second, an astninoiiirr from Mt. Wilson and P.ilomnr observatories re ported Sundiiy. , -This incredible velocity, 40 per" rent of the speed of light, is tas ter by far -than the movement of debris in the blast of an atom bomb, and it involves countless numbers of suns nnd other bodies of astronomical size. The calculations involved sug gest, the astronomer said, an in finitely expanding universe or' something not far from jt. The report was marie to the American Astronomical Society by Dr. W A. Rai.m. who used the grrat 200 inch Palnmar telescope and some additional now equipment to ob tain the results. Dr. Baum's work further No. 153 V.? - 1 s Cross - fw-nslnir-MkbvP. Tlie pastor was presented with Slide Traps Car, Blocks Highway 101 SANTA MONICA, Calif. Wl -An estimated 15.000 to '.O.OOO tons of earth brok. away from the Paci fic Palisades Sunday, carried four women picnickers down from a 175-foot high bluff and cascaded across the coast highway. Two of the women suffered broken backs. The avalanche slammed into an auto moving along U, S. 101 and crashed into a garage: It com pletely blocked the ocean-paralleling highway to a depth of IS feet for a distance of about 150 feet. The car's two occupants es caped. Police expressed doubt that any other machines were caught under the slide. But road crews went to work immediately with trucks and bulldozers, and an am bulance and fire department res cue crew stood by, just in case. Marcel Gentillon, Santa Monica assistant director of public works, estimated the downpour of rocks and dirt a 15.000 to 20.000 tons. Policemen Not In on Excitement, Open 'BomiV NEW ORLEANS (A - A whir ring noise from an unclaimed suit case brought firemen, police and a bomb expert to Union passen ger terminal Sunday night. The expert diagnosed the sound as a time bomb and ordered the container soaked in water over night. Two unidentified policemen, who had missed the feverish activity, saw the wet container, opened it and found a batffry-operated pho nograph whirring merrily inside. MileTirSeconaTlate' strengthens the theory that the universe is ballooning outward with ever-increasing speed, with no sign that this progressive in crease ever will stop. At every turn so far astronomers have found that the farther away stars are. the faster they are going. Dr. Baum found these results in observing a group oi galaxies known as Cluster' I44if. Figuring this cluster increases its speed "by 30 miles" per second for, every millkon light years of its travel, it is now 18 billion light years away, he said, The results could be inter preted, Dr. Baum ;aid, as indi cating that the outward speed will continue to increase but per haps not quite so much os it has up to now. This wimld suggest a slightly curved universe rather than a wide open straight out expanding one. Dr. Damn's results show star speeds just bout double those H-Bomb Test; Site Revealed Nuclear. Mast Detected by U.S.; Proving Area Located in Siberia 1 t Br MARVIN rEBBI.E BEACH, Calif. (AP) - President Eisenhower dis closed Sunday that Russia has resumed nuclear weapon testt and that a blast detected last Friday possibly -hvdrot;en ex-plosion-had the force of almost one million tons of TNT. This government put the blast in the category of "special interest" to the? United States because of some unusual fact but did not spell out the reason for the t special interest. The United States. In disclosing the test, . also officially made known-lor the first time the site of the Russian proving ground. Teit Site z Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, said ' the proving ground, where most of the Soviet tests have oc curred, is located in Southwest Siberia, north of India, Afghanis tan, and Pakistan, and west of China. In addition to this area, the Soviet have also utilised the area of the Barents sea for nuclear testing. , The test announcement came from Eisenhower'a vacation head quarters here. The President him self coupled It with a new piea em phasizing "the necessity lor ef fective international control of atomic energy and such measures of adequately saleguardeu meas ures of disarmament as are now feasible." Mecatoa Fares White House press secretary James C. Hagerty told a news conference the latest Soviet blast last Friday was almost" of me gaton force. A megaton is the equivalent of one million tons of Last NovT0)eFhn'er Slates announced a Soviet nuclear blast described as "the largest thus far" in Russia's proving grounds and "on the range of megatons." Nikita Khrushchev. Communist party boss, later called It an ex plosion of "unprecedented might." Hagerty was unable to say im mediately whether the latest So viet test involved explosion oi a hvdrosen device. He indicated it did. but wanted to check first with the Atomic Energy Commission, It was higher (sic) than atom ic, he aeciarea wnen aura pe cifically whether it was a hydro gen blast. "That la as hut as i can go." 131k ExpWeioa The President's announcement Sunday was tha 13th to the world by the United States of nuclear explosions by the soviet union. The first was on Sept. J3. 1949. Eisenhower also mada public a report to him on the latest Rus sian testing. It was prepared and submitted to him by Lewis U Strauss. As usual in disclosing Soviet nu clear tests, this government gave out no information of just how the new explosion was detected. A White House statement aaid Strauss' report was being made public in accordance with tne President's policy of keeping the American people informed to the fullest practical extent of Import ant developments at home and abroad concerning nuclear weap ons. Urgent Plea For Pickers At Mt. Angel Stotnmoa Niwa Itrvlco MT. ANGEL Harvest fields here are heavy with produce and growers are urgently looking or pickers, it was reported Sunday. Cucumber growers are appar ently hardest hit by the labor shortage. Cucumber acreage this season is above average and yield is reportedly higher than usual. Picking is expected to continue until Oct. 1. Blackberry and bean growers are also short-handed. Picking of both crops will probably continue for severs! weeks. Primary cause of the picker shortage is the. departure of Cal ifornia and Washington migrant workers, headed for home prior to Labor Day and the re-opening of schools. Growers must now rely on local labor sources. previously found by Dr. Milton Humason, also of Mt. Wilson and Palomar, who calculated that stars about 3ffl million light years away were continuing their out- ' ward bound flight at about 31.000 miles per second. , Dr. Baum utilized a new instru ment which was not available to i Dr. Humason. The older method was to' get the tight of distant stars into a, spectroscope which broke up. rays into their different colors, the extent these rays were shifted to the red side of the spectrum was 'e yardstick of speed, This red shift is a slowing down effect like the soiind of a whistle or horn from a' receding vehicle. 'v The new work involved the use of photoelectric equipment which did a better job of bringing the distant starlight through the earth's atmosphere and into the instruments with less chance of interference and error, L. ARROWSMITH Skin Diver's Spear-Used in Murder Try ATLANTA Or) A 43-year-old man was shot through the cheat with a akin diver's spear gun Sua day. The six-inch spear shaft, stud ded with two-inch barbs., enter ed John T. Pritchett's chest and came out under the left shoulder blade. He is in a critical condi tion. .f'... Patrolman F. M. Bonner aaid he had to clip the steel cable, at tached to the shaft, from the gua before Pritchett could bo placed in an ambulance. Vernon Hugh Loudermilk. SS, was held oa a charge of assault with intent to commit murder. Bonner said a witness told him the shooting came after a drink ing bout and failure of Pritchett to Dav off a ht Th witneu mmA Loudermilk bet he could drive hla 1955 Ford through . the wooden walls of a barn behind Pritchett's noma in juouroan Tucker. At stake was Laudermilk'a ear against Pritchett's refrigerator. Tht car crashed through both walls of the bars. Loudermilk drove the battered vehicle to Prit chett's house and started to take the refrigerator when an argu ment ensued, the witness said. The witness told officers that Louder milk took the spear gua from his car and shot Pritchett. Spear guns art used normally, to shoot fish. The weapon used on Pritchett is powered by two largo rubber bands and is Capable f exerting a tremendous force. Adlai, Estes r Jan Portland Visit Tuesday PORTLAND Wl - Adlai Steven son and Sen. , Estes Kefauver of Tennessee, Democratic candidates for president and vice president. will mako hrif finhli innaiF. ances and speeches Tuesday at Vancouver, Wash. The candidates, arriving hero by air at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, will motor to Bonneville Dam before ' going to Vancouver for talks from the courthouse steps and a 1 p.m. campaign strategy confer ence with Northwest Democrats. Oregon Democratic officials, an nouncing a revised itinerary Sun day, said the courthouse appear ance was a late addition. The campaign conference will bo closed to the public but a press conference may be held afterward, officials said. Stevenson and Ke fauver, -touring the nation for a series of such meetings, are sched uled to leave for the midwest at I P m. The Democratic meeting at Van couver will follow closely a Re publican conference in the tamo meeting place, the Evergreen Ho tel. Gov. Arthur Langlie of Wash ington is 'to speak at a luncheon. (Story also oa Pago Klamath Forest Fire. Rages Over 1,600-Acre Area YREKA. Calif. Wl - A fire fan ned by an unexpected north wind raged out of control for tha sixth day Sunday through the Klamath National Forest. By Sunday night, it has burned through 1,600 acres of valuabe timber. The fire, burning along; Dillon Creek between Someshar and Haj py Camp, was the last of more than 100 biases set by lightning last week to remain out of con trol. The unexpected north wind hampered the efforts of Zuni In dian fire fighters. The national for est headquarters here reported they were unable to set backfires NOKTHWEST LKAGIK Al s"m S-S, LowiiHin t-H. M Kuirn S-l. WtnitchM 3-1. , At VWo 0-10, Trl-Clty 1-4. PACIFIC COAST tKAGUK At I.o Anstlrs S-l, Buttle S-L At Sacramento 11-1, San Franrlsco S-4. At San Dio 3-1. Hollywood -. At Vancouver 3-0, Portland 1-0, NATIONAL I fAOt g At Cincinnati 10-4, Philadelphia S-ll At Milwaukee S. Bronklvn I . At Chlcan 0-1, Plltahurah 1-1. At St. Louis 4-3. New York 3-11, AMtRICAV IK AC. IF At Un.hinelnn 1, Cleveland 4. At Baltimore S-l, Cniraioj 1-S. At New Yorlc 7-4. Detroit 0-5 At Boa Ion 1-S, Konaae City 1-t,