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Page Fourteen.
Riser, McEuin in
Title Mat Clash
H
IGH
CLIMBER
By DICK BTRIT1
The Hills Creek Hillbillies will
i- piny their baseball "swan son"
a the Swimmers' Delight diamond
j next Sunday afternoon In a State
"league game against the Bend
es.Blks.
Long lived the king the king
'Is deadl
I Tor some 15 years the Hills
Creek Lumber Co., has been pour-
' ing its iinancial support in the
i.life of, first the Pleasant Hill
f team of the Cascade league, then
the present Hillbillies.
i Although the 'Billies have never
! Jlnished far up in the State league
circuit, and sometimes nave been
In the ruck. Lane county baseball
i fans have taken them to their
i hearts a fightin', spirited bunch
of fellows who always played
!r heads-uri ball and never knew
i when they were licked.
! The Hillbillies made several
"flashes in the pan," placing third
In both the 1B3B and l3 state
"H' semi-Dro tournaments at Silver-
tar; ton. . . . and in the 1939 season
"finished second in the second'
-.half State league standings, and
tied for second in the total games
won and lost for the entire season.
When the original Pleasant Hill
!.t;team was organized all of the
utresent veterans were grade.
school youngsters. But as the years
:z rolled bv these kids gradually ais-
m placed the oldtimers and six of
' the fellows still remain in the
JS lineup and will be honored by
im spectators Sunday afternoon.
Set
r. The "spark" of the outfit to Gro
ver Kelsay, catcher and inflelder
Zul one of the best "money" hit-
tm ters on the club. The little success
the Hillbillies have enjoyed has
M been because or orovers wiuing--ness
to work under heavy handi-
- caps playing a circuit In which
"other teams were far superior in
finances and
talent. Grover Is
completing his 11th season and is
only 25 years old.
Bun Kelsay. the southpaw pitch
ing veteran and first-baseman, is
the veteran of the sextet and still
only 28 years old. This Is his 14th
season. Howard Parks, the slug-
' glng outfielder, is in his 10th sea
J son and only 25 years old. Brother
- Homer, an eaually eood fielder
it and almost as ootent as Brother
Jfei Howard at the plate, Is in his ninth
season, and 24 years old. , . . Cliff
Baxter, the peppery inflelder, is
5JJ playing his ninth season and is 28
I years old. Dick Wright is 25 and
jj In his eighth year with the club.
iii When Grover announced that
the "Old Horse Shay" is broken
JI down it probably made his heart
V i bleed. , . , Baseball Is in his blood
J and bones, the same as his team
JT mates. . . . And while the Hill-
billies pass on, no doubt most of
J" the players will still be out there
k knocking the apple around, come
another season.
m The Billies made one last effort
" to capture a State league pennant
J5 this season after so many years
m of dominance in the Cascade clr
?cult. . , . The club signed Monty
EjDean as manager and infielder,
EsaLen Stelzer at short, and made
!. offers to Johnny Bubalo and other
outstanding players. . . . But it
v' was no go and after Sunday it
, will be all over.
it'
Local fans no doTJbt will flock to
3 Swimmers' Delight to see this team
i in action for the last time. ... It
5' will be many years before Lane
j county can boast of its very own
i "Gas House Gang."
i After Sunday's game the players
a and their wives will gather for one
llast lling a picnic supper at the
j .resort that has been their home
I park these past few years.
3 And as the Hillbillies move on,
we say to these uncrowned cham
pions:
Long lived the king the king
is deadl
Local lumbermen, especially
those associated with plywood,
will be Interested to learn that
vi experiments have been made irf
" constructing crew shells with ply.
,y wood and found successful.
IJ Bruce Myers, sports editor of
I : the Corvallis Gazette-Times, says
that Oregon State's crew coach,
J' Ed Stevens, has built two four-
i oar shells and is now constructing
M an eight-oar craft at a tenth the
;,- cost of the standard shell built
i usually of western red cedar . . .
J Stevens used Douglas fir plywood.
Regulations Announced For 1941 Migratory Bird Season
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2101.19
(Secretary of Interior Harold L.
j- Ickes last night announced the
J 1941 rules for hunting migratory
i , game birds, including 60-day duck
l-i seasons throughout the country
! and a daily bag limit of 10 ducks.
T" The new regulations prohibit the
i-use of cattle, horses or mules as
J" blinds.
Jv Seasons:
I"" The 60-day waterfowl season
t-begins on:
Oct. 16 in Idaho, Washington,
i Oregon and California.
I The motirnlnff dove season.
shortened to a miximum of 42
consecutive days, extends from:
Sept. 1 to Oct. 12 in California;
Sept. 1 to Sept. 10 In Idaho; Sept.
1 to Sept. 15 in Oregon.
COMPLETE PROGRAM
Mam Event Champion Jiek
Kiser vs. Challenger BUI Me
Euln, Pacific coast light heavy,
weight championship.
Semi Final Gtorge Wagner
vs. George Kitsmiller.
Opener Toby Wallace vs.
Walter Achiu.
Referee Elton Owen.
Jack Kiser, the sensational Si
Johns youngster who holds the Pa
cific coast light-heavyweight title
only after three years In proles.
sional wrestling, is different from
most grappiers in bu uut uw uiuib
confidence.
Kiser signed for two champion
ship matches within a four-day
period, against George Wagner
and Billy McEuin. He defeated
Wagner in Portland Monday night,
taikng a gamble on Thursday's
meeting here with McEuin. But it
was no gamble for Kiser who is
sure he can take the measure of
any man 180 pounds and under
possibly even heavyweignts,
Bill McEuin Confident, Too
McEuin, who held the title un
til he ran into Kiser last month,
is another one of those confident
matmen and predicts a return step
to the throne Thursday night at
the fairgrounds arena where the
two men meet in the headline at
traction of Promoter Herb Owen's
weekly mat show.
Two other outstanding matches
are on the schedule. George Kitz
miller, who defeated Walter Achiu
in Portland earlier in the week,
will take on Wagner in a semi
final battle. Although forced to
give away some 20 pounds, Wag
ner, seeking another match with
Kiser, will be a slight favorite
over the 200-pound Portland
truckdriver.
Achiu will make an effort to
regain lost prestige in a match
against the talented Portlander,
Toby Wallace who was a first
night favorite here several weeks
ago in losing to McEuin, but show-
ins a sDlendid array of holds,
Kiser, the sun-tanned ship-yard
worker, lacks the experience and
talent of most of the performers
now in the Owen "stables," but his
lightning speed and aggressiveness
pulls him through.
Defense for "Skln-the-Rabblt"
The champion is well founded In
all the basic holds, and boasts on
one "clincher" a hold in which
ha m-nanii an ontoonent'a wrists and
pulls them through the victim's
legs, resulting In the startled grap
nler finding his shoulders pinned
to the mat and notmng to qo aDout
it. The hold has been dubbed
"skin-the-rabbit," resembling the
age-old backyard trick performed
by youngsters.
The hold is particularly potent
against McEuin who uses a head-
ainiost'astenslvely as trie' fa'cf
ney punch. But the tough Texan
claims he has perfected a defense
lor the hold and will avoid head
locks whenever possible.
Reserved seat tickets are on sale
at the Club cigar store.
The curtain-raiser is scheduled
to get under way promptly at 8:30
o'clock,
Pop Warner Quits
San Jose 'Post'
SAN JOSE, Cal., Aug. 21 (U.PJ
Glenn Scobey "Pop" Warner, one
of the nation's leading football
coaches, told San Jose State col
lege officials today he would not
return this year as advisory coach
at San Jose State.
Warner said he would remain at
Springville, N. Y because he
"wants a year to loaf."
Two years ago the former Stan.
ford university coach came to San
Jose State to assist Dud DeGroot,
head football mentor. Last year he
advised Ben Winkelman, who suc
ceeded DeGroot.
With Warner as advisory coach,
the Spartans won 23 games and
lost one.
Mrs. Mann Continues As
Western Golf Threat
CHICAGO. Aus. 21 U.R)Mrs.
Russell Mann co-medalist, matched
strokes today with Mrs. Frank
Newell, Long Beach, Cal., In the
feature quarter-final contest of
the Women's Western amateur
golf championship.
Mrs. Newell, the former Eliza
beth Hicks, is expected to prove
a major hurdle in the Omaha ma.
tron's march to regain the title she
won in 1933. Mrs. Mann establish,
ed herself as a favciite by sweep
ing aside 17-year-old Jeanne Clino,
6 and 5. Mrs. Newell detested her
fellow townslady, Peggy Rutledge.
llnules, except coots, Is from Sept.
1 to Nov. 30, inclusive. Calirornia,
Idaho, Oregon, and Washington
have no open season.
Band-tailed pigeons: Sept. 16
to Sept. 30 in Washington; Dec. 1
to 15 in California; Sept. 1 to 15
in Oregon.
Bag Limits:
Ducks Ten a day, or 20 in pos
session, the same as last year.
However, one wood duck may be
included this year. Three buffle
heads or three redheads or three
of these species together, may be
in the daily bag, and six among
the ducks possessed. Canvasbacks
and ruddy ducks, formerly
grouped with the redhesds and
buffleheads, were restored to the
list of species with the 10-bac and
THE
Diamond
i
Quality Market
Beaten, 8 to 2
'Soup' Toman Again
Leads Team's Hitting
The Diamond "A" Canners won
a comparatively easy b-io-z vic
tory over Quality Market of Cot
tage Grove at Civic Stadium Wed
nesday night to gain a berth in the
state softball tournament opening
at Oregon City Sunday. The locals,
entrants last year, will piay tne
Portland No. 3 entry in a first-
round game.
Several hundred spectators saw
the Marketmen make a game of it
until the seventh when their de
fense tracked and the Canners
combined exlrs-base hits with an
error to score three urns. The con
test failed to stack up with the
excellent exhibition of Monday
night when the Canners eked out
a 2-1 win over Dunham Trans
fers of Roseburg in the first of
the single-elimination series.
"Soup" Toman, the leading hit
ter of the series with four for six,
opened the first inning with a
single off Frank Jacobs' glove at
third. He advanced on Johnny
Dunn's sacrifice, went to third on
Charlie DeAutremont's infield out,
and scored when Doc Taylor's
bounder went through Tommy
Cox at short.
Three No-No Innings
The Canners were never headed
and Toman added another run in
the third with a solid blow that
scooted under the leftfield fence
for a four-bagger.
In the meantime Vern Adams
had pitched no-hit, no-run ball,
striking out five in the first two
frames. Two errors at third put
Ed Russell and Pete Taylor on the
paths and Ed Wellnitz rappeoVout
a double to score both runners for
a 4-0 lead going into the last of
the fourth.
Adams was found for three hits
in that frame doubles by Dale
Gates and Jack Butterworth and
a single by Tom Gallo for two
Quality Market runs. The visitors
threatened again in the sixth
when Curt French beat out an
infield hit, but the Canners came
up with a nicely executed double
play.
Consecutive triples by Dunn and
DeAutremont and singles by Doc
Taylor and Russell gave the Fruit
Grower nine three markers in the
first of the seventh.
Marketmen Threaten Late
The champions rode along with
their substantial lead until the
ninth when Butterworth walked
the fifth issued by Adams and
advanced to second on Gallo s
second single. Ed Russell fumbled
Harold Harpole's ground ball, fill
ing the bases with none away. Cox
popped out to second, Skade filed
to third, and Billy Sutton raced
over near the leftfield line to snag
Tracy's fly to retire the side and
end the ball game.
Butterworth allowed only eight
hits and didn't Issue a walk, but
his teammates supported him
poorly. Gallo led the Grove hit
ters with two for three.
Box score:
ETJOENE
Toman If
Dunn 3
DeAutremont
D. Taylor e
Russell 1
P. Taylor el
Wellnllt rf
Walls rt
Chnstansm
Sutton as
Adams' p
TOTALS
COTTAOE OKOVE
Cox la 3
Skade 3
Tracy 1
Gates et
Hartman e
Vogler c
Jacobs. S
French ss
Butterworth p
Gallo if
Dugan rt
Harpole
TOTALS 53 9 S 27 17
() Batted for Duian In 9th.
..101 310 300 8
000 300 000 .
Cot Ufa Grove
Runs batted m by DeAutremont. D.
Taylor. Ruaaell. Wellnitz 3, Gallo. Hom
ersToman. Triples Dunn. DeAutre
mont Doubles Wellnitz, D. Taylor. Rus
sell, Gates, Butterworth. Sacrifices
Dunn, DeAutremont, Double plays
Dunn-to-Russell-to-Sutton. Left on bases
Eugene 8. Cottage Grove 10, Earned
runs Eugene 4, Cottage Grove 1. struck
out by Adams 8. Butterworth 3. Walks
off Adams 5. Butterworth none. Wild
pitches Adams 1, Butterworth 1. Passed
balls Taylor I. Umpires T. Ooghlan.
Plate; H. Coghlan. bases. Time 1:30.
TARPON DERBY
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. Dis
ciples of Walton seeking the pug
nacious tarpon in Florida waters
are spurred en by $3000 in cash
prizes, plus medals, for the champ
tarpon fishermen of the season,
Geese and brant (except snow
geese in Idsho and Ross's geese
throughout the country, all of
which may not be hunted) three
a day, or six in possession. In ad
dition, hunters may take three
blue geese a day, and they may
have six blue geese in possession,
in addition to the general six
goose limit. The original three or
six may also Include .or consist
entirely of blue geese, and it is
thus possible for a hunter to take
six blue geese a day or have 12 in
posession, if he takes or possesses
no other kinds of geese.
The special three-a-week geese
limit in Siskiyou, Calif., is an "ex
periment in federal game manage
ment which will be closely
watched," Ickes said. "Records
show that in recent years the goose
AB It H PO A E
, , 9 3 3 0 0 0
4 1 1 S 2 2
I - - 4 l l s a o
S 1 1 11 0 0
,., , .4 117 11
4 1 0 9 0 1
... S 0 1 0 0 0
a o o o o o
ss 3 0 0 0 0 0
a oosoo
4 0 0 0 0 0
SS S S XI S 4
AB K 8 PO A E
4 0 0 0 8 2
4 0 0 0 1 0
S 0 0 IT 0 0
S 0 19 0 0
9 S 0 0 2 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
.,. , ... 3 1 0 0 3 3
2 0 10 10
1 J 3 110 4 0
3 0 2 2 0 0
3 0 0 1 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 0
s
REGISTER. OUARD. EUGENE. OREGOXI
W Canners Annex District Softball C
MURRAY PATRICK, big de
fense man of the New York Ran
gers hockey team, heads group
of New York selectees going to
Camp Upton.
Mrs. Wood Is
Golf Medalist
As it should be Mrs. Wendell
Wood, wife of the Eugene Country
club professional, captured med'
alist honors in qualifying rounds
of the women's annual handicap
tournament Wednesday over the
local 18-hole layout. Mrs. Wood,
playing only her second full sea.
son, took both low gross and net
honors with an 89-11 78. Her
card was seven strokes better than
the gross 96's posted by Mrs,
Howard Chandler, Mrs. Ed Sieg
mund and Mrs. David B. Evans,
and two strokes under Mrs. Grace
Moore's net 79.
Mrs. Willis Shepard, defending
champion, however, , did not vie
for medal honors, but will make
a defense of her title.
First - round matches opened
Thursday and will be completed
by Friday night, the beaten eight
entering the first flight. Quarter
final matches are due for com
pletion by next Monday, the semi
finals by Wednesday, and the
championship match Friday of
next week.
United States Golf association
rules will prevail, with the com
petitors using seven-eighths handi
cap, strokes on the card.
In special sweepstakes compe
tition Wednesday, Mrs. Chandler
won in class "A", Mrs. Moore in
class "B", and Mrs. W. N. Wintler
in class "C".
The medal scores and pairings
follow:
Mrs. Wendell Wood . 89-11.-78
Mrs. Grace Moore
. 99-20.-78
Mrs. W. N. Wintler
Mrs. Milo Marlatt
Mrs. Howard Chandler
Mrs, M, G. Howard
Mrs. Joseph Koke
Mrs. L. s. Axland
Mrs. Max Rtetman
Mrs. Don Ragen
Mrs, Ed Siegmuad
Mrs. David B. Evans
Mrs. Louis Roadman -Mrs.
S. C. Endlcott
HS-35-81
.100-24 S3
98-1S--8S
100-1SS
98-14-84
.108-21 -SS
.110-24-89
.113-38-87
98- 9-87
98- 9-87
.117-28-81)
110-1.-1
CHAMPIONSHIP PAIRINGS
Mrs. Shepard vs. bye; Mrs. Howard
vs. Mrs. Axlandi Mrs. Wintler vs.
Mrs, Ragen; Mrs. Marlatt vs. Mrs.
Slegmund.
Mrs. Wood vs. Mrs. Endlcottt Mrs.
Koke vs. Mrs. Rtetman; Mrs. Moore vs.
Mrs. Roadman; Mrs, Chandler vs. Mrs.
Evans.
Baseball
NATIONAL
Brooklyn
L ret
40 .898
41 .843
49 ,888
S3 .881
88 .800
67 .427
m .404
83 .273
St. Louis -Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
New York -
Chicago
Boston
Philadelphia
AMERICAN
New York
L Pel.
41 .64
98 .843
88 .813
98 .813
64 .463
68 .438
68 .431
65 .430
Chicago
89
Boston
..61
..89
Cleveland
Detroit
Philadelphia
St Louis . .
Washington .
altogether too heavy."
Rails and gallinules (except
sora and coot) 15 in the aggre
gate of all kinds; sora, 15; Coot,
25; woodcock, four; mourning and
white-winged doves, 12 in the
aggregate of all kinds; bsnd
tailed pigeons 10.
Possession limits on sora, coot,
rails, gallinules, doves and pig
eons are the same as the daily
Dag limits, out hunters may have
eight woodcocks, or two days' bag
in possession.
O ARROW
SHIRTS
The Man's Shoe
BYROM & KNEELAND
IS M
Cardinals Gain
On Brooklyn
Bridges Holds Yankees
To 2 Hits For Tigers
By JUDSON BAILEY
(Associated Press)
The nennant problem in the Na
tional leasue is (retting to be "can
the St. Louis Cardinals keep going
with all their injuries?" instead
Of "can the Cardinals beat the
Brooklyn Dodgers?"
In spite of a procession oi
trouble the Cardinals have kept
rieht on coming and Wednesday
swept a doubleheader from tne
Braves 2-0 and 3-2. Ernie White,
the Cards' great young lefthander,
pitched a six-hit shutout in the
first game for his ISth victory
and Howard Pollett, zo-year-om
southpaw, pitched a four-hitter
for his major league debut in the
nightcap.
Error Gives Dodgers Win
The double triumph enabled the
Cards to climb within a game and
a half of the Brooklyn Dodgers,
who were given a 7-8 handout by
the Pittsburgh Pirates for BrooK
lyn's sixth straight win.
The Dodgers exploded four runs
in the first inning, then were over
taken by a six-run rally of the
Buccaneers in the third, when
Bob Elliott hit a three-run homer.
The Dodgers tied the score on
Pete Reiser's homer In the seventh,
with the winning run crossing the
plate in the ninth when Right-
fielder Elliott dropped a fly ball
with the bases loaded and two out.
The Cincinnati Reds reinforced
their third-place nosition by shut
ting, out the poor Phillies twice,
2-0 and 3-0. John Vander Meer
allowed only three hits and Elmer
"The Great" Riddle kept six blows
scattered for his 14th triumph in
the nightcap.
The Chicago Cubs cut loose with
a 16-hit attack as Vsllle Eaves
kept eight hits spaced to beat the
New York Giants 9-4.
Bridges Gives Yanks 2 Hits
In the American league, the
New York Yankees were squeezed
out 1-0 by the Detroit Tigers as
Tommy Bridges pitched two-hit
ball for ten innings in one of the
finest performances of his long
career.
The Chicago White Sox chopped
another game off the Yankees'
ample lead as John Rigney blanked
the Philadelphia Athletics 9-0 for
the third shutout in two days by
a Sox pitcher and Rigney's sec
ond shutout In two starts.
The collapsing Cleveland In
dians dropped their 14th game in
IS decisions 6-3 to the Washing
ton Senators In a pitching duel
between Arne Anderson and Al
Smith which was decided in the
ninth inning when the Senators
scored four times to Cleveland's
two.
The Boston Red Sox were
beaten in both ends of a double
header by the St. Louis Browns,
11-9, and 4-3. Each team made
a dozen hits in the first game, but
the Browns grouped five runs In
the first inning to keep ahead.
The second session was a ten-
inning affair finally won on John
Berardino's squeeze bunt.
Major Leaders
(United Prut)
LEADING BAITERS
AMERICAN O AB Si R Pet.
Williams. Boston 108 390 108 144 ,411
Travis, Washington 113 483 77 187 .389
DIMagglo. New York 123 481 118 171 .558
NATIONAL O AB If Pet,
Reiser, Brooklyn 101 899 67 130 .319
Hopp. St Louis 99 393 62 98 ,328
Etten, Philadelphia 111 397 81 ISO .328
BOMB ISUNS
Keller. Yankees
Williams. Red Sox
DIMagglo, Yankees
BUNS
DIMagglo. Yankees
Williams, Red Sox .
Rolfe. Yankees ..
-11S
-108
-103
RVNS BATTED IN
DIMagglo. Yankees .
Keller, Yankees
Williams, Red Sox ,
-112
-107
hits
DIMagglo. Yankees
Travis, Senators
Heath, Indians
-187
-148
av
Billows Fills One Of
Six Tourney Vacancies
NEW YORK, Aug. 21 (U.PJ
uue to late withdrawals, six places
remained vacant today in the pair
ings for the 45th National amateur
gon tournament beginning Mo
day at Omaha.
Eight of the 14 qualifiers In the
New York area, including low man
William Y. Dear, Jr., announced
they would not make the trin. Thai
withdrawals made room for Ray
uiiiows, semi-iinaust last year.
.u i . . , . ,
wjiuac oa naa zauea to qualify.
WRESTLING
Fairgrounds Horse Arena
TONIGHT 8i30 P. M.
MAIN EVENT
JACK KAISER vs. BOXY MeEUDf
4S-MTNTJTE SEMI-WINDTJP
GEORGE WAGNER vt. GEORGE KITZMILLER
SO-MINUTE CURTAIN RAISER
WALTER ACHIU ti. TOBY WALLACE
HERB OWEN, Promoter
EUGENE WRESTLING COMMISSION
County Trap
Shoot Sunday
The Eugene Gun elub will hold
the annual Lane county trap
shoot Sunday, August 24, at the
club grounds on Eleventh avenue
west All six eiubs in the county
will be eligible to enter uve-man
teams to shoot for the champion
ship trophy of the eeunty.
The duo winning inn
will stage the shoot and furnish
the trophy next year. A number
of shooters from outside points
are expected to attend, as there
will be about two dozen trophies
given to the winners of the dif
ferent classes of shooters.
Lunch Batting Champ
Of Grove Softball
FINAL STANDINGS
pat,
.887
Quality Market .
Drain
.788
Creswell .
.871
Lorane
.800
.800
.429
.289
.214
Knickerbockers -
Eagles
Culp Creek
Grove Hardware .
COTTAGE GROVE, Aug. 20.
(Special) The Quality Market-
men annexed the Cottage Grove
softball league championship Mon
day night by defeating Drain in a
doubleheader, but must still face
Knickerbocker for the city title
here Friday night.
With the league officially clos
ed, H. A. Hagen, representing the
local merchants, presented the
silver trophy to Fred Anderson,
sponsor of Quality Market, for the
second straight year.
Statistics for the season show
that Lunch of Lorane captured the
league batting championship with
a remarkable average of .763.
There were 41 home runs hit dur
ing the season, four each by Jac
obs of Drain, French of Quality
Market and Leonard of Grove
Hardware. Gorsline of Drain hit
the longest of the season, in the
playoff Monday. Both French and
Leonard hit two four-baggers in
one game.
Grove Hardware, although end
ing the season in last place, had
the distinction of scoring the most
runs in one inning 13 after two
were cut
Collage Grove
Wins Golf Match
COTTAGE GROVE, Aug. 21
(Special) The ladies of the local
golf club entertained the ladies
from the Roseburg elub Wednes
day. In the tournament played
Wednesday, morning, Cottage
Grove won from Roseburg, 17
to 4.
The local ladies served a lunch
eon at the club house on the
table place under the trees. In
the afternoon bridge was played
with Mrs. Alfred C. Anderson
winning high score.
COTTAGE GBOVS
Mary Gibson 47
Daisy Hamlin 48 . -
Georgia Hammond S3
Fts.
S
Merle . King 49
Barbara Bill 80
Doris Morelock 48
Sua Zinunerly 81
Ruth Sehroader 80
Belle Burkholder 85
Cora. Peek ss
Marian Denson 84
Ft ancle Hunter 67.
ROSEBUKQ
Hilda Qulne so
Ruth Bridges 48
Betty Stearns 53 .
Velma DUlard 84 ;
Genexlexe McClintock 7
Ruth Anderson 89
Marie Kohlhagen 71
Helen Casey 87
Mrs. Rogers
rts.
0
Mrs. Green 69
Mrs. Olmshleid
. Maxine Steams 65
International Star Boat
Championship Deadlock
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 21 U.B
vieorge neiti of Los Angeles har
bor, sailing the trim sloon Wmrh
stepped into a first-place tie with
Myron -enman of Newport Har
bor, Cal., Wednesday when he won
the third race In the intemoti
star boat championships on the
uiympic sailing course.
Midget Pilot Is Killed
After Setting Record
,S&U&C&' -Aug. 21-
vv jie. or., zs-year-old
Los Angeles midget auto race
driver, was killed last night in a
collision on a curve of the Utah
fairgrounds track.
In his first race, Goss set a new
one-mile record for the track when
no maae me live laps In 124.4,
Stellar Hurling
In Coast League
Shutouts Posted In
Many Mound Classics
COAST
Sacramento
San Diego
Seattle
I. Pet.
84 .814
.79 89
-79 89
Hollywood
..89 89
-81 . 78
-82 78
-91 79
-87 81
Loa Angeles
Ban Francisco
Oakland
Portland
(Associated Press)
Three victories on an aggregate
output of four runs; four defeats
without the solace ot a Single
counter.
That gives some Idea of the dis
play of pitching brilliance which
broke unexpectedly and perhaps
inexplicably over Coast league
wicouiiiK, wiui iia Dusy laie-SUm-
mer schedule of postponed base
ball games.
Oakland nipped Hollywood 1-0
Wednesday night and Hollywood
in turn caught the Oaks 1-0, while
Seattle beat Sacramento 2-0 for
the second time in a row to cut the
Senators' lead to six games, and
Los Angeles whitewashed San
i rancisco e-o.
At Sacramento, Les Webber of
Seattle was matched against the
combined pitching prowess of Bill
Schmidt and Bill Caplinger. and
'both sides were held to four safe
ties.
Los Angeles' shutout came in
the first of a doubleheader, the
second of which went to San Fran
cisco, 6-3. It was the work ot Ray
Prim a five-hit Job.
San Dieso kert race with Seat
tle, six games behind Sacramento,
by nicking Portland 8-7. The
Beavers, outfitting the Padres 14-
11, were ahead until Pinch Hitter
George Detore cracked an eighth-
inning double good for two runs.
Oakland profited by a bit of
luck in its shutout. Hiram Bithorn
of Hollywood actually out-tossed
Stan Corbett, five hits to eight
In the second game, a seven'
inning affair, each side got only a
lone single, but the blow Henry
Plppen gave to Johnny Dlckshot in
the fifth was followed by three
walks, while the hit Gudat drew
from Frankie Dasso went to pot.
Scores:
BBS
Seattle -020 000 000 2 4
Sacramento 000 000 000 0 4
1
I
Weber and Collins! Schmidt, Caplin
ger 7 and Wiectorek.
BBS
Portland OOt 300 010- 1 14 0
San Diego 210 300 02x 8 11 a
Reid, Gonzales 4 and Hawkins; He-
Bert. Tnomas . PiUette and Salkeld.
BBS
Hollywood 000 000 000 0 8 0
Oakland 000 000 lOx 1 8 0
Bttnorn and Dapperi Corbett and Con-
roy.
BBS
Hollywood MO 018 0 1 1 1
Oakland 000 000 0 0 1 0
Daiso and Bremen Plppen, Ananlct
7 and Ralmondl.
SRC
San Francisco) 000 080 000 0 8 8
um Angeles soi 020 no tin i
Harrell and Partee; Prim and Camp-
DCU.
B I
San Francisco . 014 000 1 8 8 0
Los Angeles 020 010 0 8 8 I
ipperiy and ogrodcwskli Thomas.
neiry a ana Holm.
Ray Billows Looms
As Amateur Threat
CHICAGO. Aug. 21 OP) Little
Ray Billows of Poughkeepsie, N.
Y is hoping this is the year he'll
be able to crack the jinx that's
been following him in the last six
National amateur golf champion
shipsbut If he doesn't he won't
be able to say he didn't have his
game ready for the big test.
The eastern expert who learn
ed the game's fundamentals in his
native Racine, Wis -today oppos'
ed Frank Stranahan of Toledo. 0.,
for the first annual Great Lakes
amateur championship at the
Knollwood club. And the way Bll.
lows qualified for this title shot
inaicatea ne mignt improve on a
National amateur performance
which has seen him become a fi
nalist twice in the last four years.
Billows yesterday gained i
measure of revenge for the 7-snd-
S licking handed him In the 1939
National amateur by Marvin "Bud"
Ward of Spokane, Wash. Billows
whipped Ward, 8 and 4 and in the
afternoon had just as easy going,
defeating Art Sweet of Chicago,
and 3.
and ihotauni now.
Buy
now . . --; . h
Plan, lid"1
770 Willamette
rov,
'wo tandem 2 'J
COftstltutT?,
constituted 77
Vibusmirk.
n.ldouV
h Was un.M.Tt,li8l
ousmirk,
Defending tftu
and TH
National Singles (w)
JNeill and Frisk jH
liamChoy.-CT'.
Gardner Mi J
Sabm trounced ojbetaJ
and William CIoM
SdvanM ef -id I
was completed who to!
and Gene Miknot.iJr'
a shaky tint to J7
Greenburg ted
3
h-k K a a
Spokane Holds!
GameLeadinl:
lAUOrJltat B c
The Snokina Ml,.-1
the Yakinu Rppij, ft
International leagut boea
nesday night to wit beta
ITCSH meir jeira gal
games.
The Taeoma Ttfen st
in rairgMMWHnwi
won 11-1.
Frankie Clench eM'
Vancouver Cullnai
six scattered hits to f)ni
i-i victory ua their m
oi live games in thenttf
Dick Chapmtih
Repeat Victory In
National kraia
OMAHA, Auf, ilJ
Chapman, Nitloul a
champion, arrived "i
Omaha Field dub,
1941 amiteur tamas
week, tiled up the m
named the mtti to
other than Dick Qipss
After tiirverhf -'
tree-studded iiirwiji
the champlcolptile
ined, Chapman nil
for repeat.! ;
doubled."
' Chapman nfiM
competition will cant S
Stranahan, ToteM,1
Byron NeUon. J
"TliUOhtoyaat"
thing tttate to
perience," Caum
course, there ahfli1
Ward, Ray Billows
Todd to deal witn." .
Joe Gonfc
ml siaioki new
Blttlai . I
AB SB J
488
rielllaf ' ,
PO A
...net WritS CAI"
HONOLULU. J t
George
sportawnwrr-pj
conference
and return to8,
though ne so"
dethrone the
Pioneer Baseball
. fait I.1
B uy Your
Gun Now!
The faetories are irV
more ... and we expert I
to go Into effect very
. .. -imVoII
We have a eompiew TsiVAS'v
L.. ...tuwrSTER una
Tool
Ammunition
From present
umte shortage of vtmf" I
nowl . , tafK
itm HeioWi
HendersboS
V The season ca tail asd 11-
aO-P9f8Mioa limit
kUit to tte tsmlim hwi ttmi