Wednesday, August 21,
Skits and
Scratches
By Fred Zimmerman
Capital Journal Spurts Wrltei
Probably a vast majority of the
faithful who saw the Senators per
form against the Spokane Indians
won't admit it, but the home town
club still has a chance to finish
near the top. It will take better
baseball than they have displayed
recently, but they did it early in the
season and there is no reason they
can't do it again.
For one thing the Solons have a
break in the remaining schedule.
Out of 32 games remaining to be
played, 14 of them will be staged
at George E. Waters park. Five of
them are against the Wenatchee
Chiefs who have been consistent
in their determination to remain In
the cellar. Cooperation all the way
aown tne line win oe neeueu tu
, boost Bunny Griffiths' boys up the
ladder players must eliminate their
petty grievances while attendance
of the fans must be increased.
Tacoma has taken second
place away from Salem In the
matter of league attendance.
Spokane Is out in front and
will remain there. A couple of
big games turned the trick for
Tacoma. They staged a "Caval
cade of Baseball" one night and
gave away a trip to the San
Francisco fair another. Salem
Is close up on Tacoma and can
easily regain second position.
There will be plenty of baseball
starting next Friday night, which
will be "ladies" night with Tacoma
as the guest club. Saturday evening
the Tigers and Senators will engage
in a doublehcader to take care of a
game rained out earlier in the sea
son. A double bill Is slated for Sun
day. And then on Monday comes
the big game against the Portland
Beavers.
The Beavers may have grown used
to being the doormat for the oth
er Pacific coast league clubs, but
they don't relish a trimming from
a class B aggregation. So when
they come up here next Monday
night it will be for blood. The
Portland management wanted Bid-
dy Bishop to charge Coast league
prices for the contest, but the So
lon business manager wouldn't stand
for it.
Biddy did agree to eliminate
all WI league passes and make
a flat 60 cent charge for every
seat In the park exclusive of the
boxes. There will be no reser
vations and the ticket sale will
be on the "first come, first
served" plan. The WI schedule
called for the appearance of
Wenatchee here next Monday
nlg-ht but under a mutual agree
ment this contest will be doub
led up with the one set for Wed
nesday. The Wednesday double
bill will be the setting for the
George E. Waters appreciation
night.
Biddy Is still optimistic about the
club finishing the season In the
first division. "All clubs have their
little crack-ups and we've had ours.
There's still time to get back near
the top."
Many fans profess a dislike for
tactics such as the Spokane club
employ on the diamond, but we
honestly believe a little more fire
and fight on the part of the Sena
tors would cause considerable hap
piness in the business office de
partment of the organization. The
appearance of the Spokane Indians
Is the signal for mass heckling from
the bleachers.
They will turn out to see a ball
club which stirs up a rumpus over
close decisions. They may boo and
hiss but they like the atmosphere
of a scrap and they'll keep coming
back for more. A hearty dislike for
an opposing ball club is almost al
ways the forerunner of good gate
receipts. A few more bean ball
pitches such as Bud Brewer chucked
against Falconl would heighten in
terest aU around.
We don't exactly preach vio
lence. We have too much regard
for our own facial features.
But a few more caucuses around
the home plate wouldn't do any
harm.
Young Corbett
Takes Decision
Fresno, Cal., Aug. 21 (U.fi) There's
life in the old boy yet, even if Young
Corbett, III, former world welter'
weight champion, is approaching
the age of 36 when he will auto
matically be barred from caiiior
nia's rings.
"Young" Corbett mauled She
Rancek, a 21-year old middleweight,
for 10 rounds to win a decision from
Referee Fred Bottaro before 7500
fans in an outdoor fight here last
night.
Y. T. Lam, N. D. O. Chan, N. D
Herbal remedies for ailments 01
stomach, liver, kidneys, skin
blood, gland & urinary system of
men and vomen; 22 years In ser
vice. Naturopathic Physicians.
Ask your neighbors about CHAN
LAM.
DR. CHAN LAM
Chinese Medicine Co.
803 V4 Court St. Corner tf Libert?
Oftlca open Tuesday 8 tor day
only 10 i.m, to I p tn.i S to 7 pro
Can alC at ion. Mood prendre and
urine tula art frta of chant.
m m
1940
Quarter Finals State Softball Tourney Tonight
us hi m n" - urn Ann ma) - w w to otb aw ra m W w 3r -- - aw B mw w wjj bb us w wis m to ct ma
Ninth Inning Home Run Spells Defeat for Salem Senators, 1 to 0
Square Deal
Wins; Kennedy
ids Beaten
Games Tonight
8:00 Comallla vs. Julia
lee
Wright
9:15 Portland Firemen vs. Med.
ford
Last Night
Oregon City 9, McMlnnvllIe S
Pendleton 2, Kennedy's o
Square Deal 8, Woodburn 1
Bonneville 7, Eugene 0
First round winners in the an
nual state basketball tournament
will return for competition tonight
Sweetland field. Julia Lee
Wright, the Portland outfit which
beat Bend, will take on the hustling
Corvallls club. The champion kil'
lers Portland Firemen have t
date with Medford, southern Ore
gon pennant winners at 9:15. Both
games will be nine inning aiiairs.
A couple of superlative mound
performances and some good lusty
hitting provided the highlights as
the first round of state Softball
tournament play wac completed
last night before a crowd approxl
mating 1200.
As smooth a pitching edition as
ever slung a ball across the plat
ter .. . Pendleton's Hervey am-
fin, proved the big noise of the
tourney thus far as he greeted
the No. 2 Kennedy Kids wun a
no-hit pitching performance ... a
perfect game I The score was 2-0.
Only 21 Kids faced the Bucka-
roo hurler in the seven Innings.
The lone Kennedy batter to get on
the bass. Shortstop Lacey, via er
ror, was promptly erased the dou-
Die piay way.
To build higher the quality of
his achievement, Griffin struck out
14 hitters to approach his 1939
tournament pace when he whiffed
26 men in 16 Innings.
The Pendleton offensive was built
around the big bat of First Base
man Godwin. The two round-up
per tallies romped over in the sec
ond as Godwin uncorked a home
run to far left field with a mate
aboard.
The Kennedys played excellent
ball, went down gallantly, with
Pitchers Jake Bulkloy and Knight
twirling most creditably. It was
plainly too much Mr, Griffin,
The Square Dealers remained to
carry the laurels for the Cherry
City. With Henry singer tossing
up four-hit ball, the Dealers trounc
ed Woodburn, 8-1.
Badioster war clubs cannonaded
heavily In the Initial two Innings
to pile up five runs. From there
on it was merely a downhill road to
triumph, with one more In the
fourth and two In the sixth.
Leading the local barrage were
Second Baseman D'Autremont with
a triple and single, Lou Singer with
a double and single, ana Kiddy
Gentzkow with a brace of one
basers.
Woodburn got its lone marker
in the fourth on hits by Moe and
Tichnor.
To old Biff Georgeson goes the
heartbreak of the evening. George-
i. veteran of many a tourney
battle, had a no-hitter In his grasp,
Ditching for the Bonneville En
gineers, when, with two out In the
final frame, the seventh, Eugene
Centerflelder Phillips got a scratchy
infield blngle to ruin It all. Ironi
cally, Phillips had whiffed his two
initial trips.
The Engineers emerged easy win
ners, 7-0. Georgeson fanned eight,
A nine-hit attack, featuring a
three-run second Inning, put the
dam builders over In the offen
sive department.
The Oregon City Elks walked over
the McMlnnvllIe Firemen In the
evening's first tilt, 9-5. A 13-hit
barrage off the delivery of Bill
Jones placed the Elks in victory
row.
Oregon Oily (104 033 0 IS 3
McMlnnvllIe aao oou I a a i
Brandt una Hoppi Jones and E. Bar.
nurds, Plumeau 8. ,
Pendleton 030 000 0 a 7 1
Kennedy's 000 000 00 0 (
nrlffin and Heathman: E. Bulkier,
KnlBht (S) and J. Bulkier, Fanlle (fl).
Woodburn 000 100 01 4 J
Hauar. Deal 120 103 S 10 (
Bean and uaeltnan; H. Binier ana a,.
Slneer.
Bonneville 130 130 07
Euaene 000 000 0 0
Ocorgeaon and Miller; Wilaon, Adaml
(5) and Llbbr. Taylor (S).
S 10
Freckled, Red-Haired Verna Lee Stone, 13, and small for her age,
Is the only girl caddie of Louisville, Ky. She Is known to golfers
merely as "Red." She got her start at 7, when she became the
only caddie at a private course. Her best score to date is a 42
for nine holes and her low at 18 Is 86.
Ohio World
Gets Shot in
New York. Aue. 21 (U.R)
a shot in the arm today when
last ditch rallies to pull games
Jockey Dew
Makes Fortune
Cleveland, Aug. 21 (TP) The di
minutive lad with the slicked back
hair picked up a pencil and scratch
ed around a bit after a few minutes
he chucked and jotted down "$20.
000." exclaiming: "I'll bet a lot of
big ball players don't make that
much."
The scratcher, tender in years but
strong at the finish wire, was 18
year old Jockey Earl John Dew.
A 65-race winner at Thistle Down,
he was credited by track officials
today with shattering all records
for a single summer race meeting.
Dew leathered home two winners
yesterday, Thistle Down's next to
last day, bringing to 148 his season's
total. Racing records placed him se
cond for the year, being led only by
W. Lloyd Taylor, currently riding at
Rockingham with a string of 167
The youthful horseman "Butch"
at the track doped out his year's
earnings on the basis of $10 a
mount plus $155 for each winner.
Adding in bonuses and his share of
stake winnings, compensation for 44
days at Thistle Down, came to about
$6000. Then he figured in Santa
Anita and one or two other tracks
and decided "it'll be about $20,000.
Not bad for a guy my age and size."
His employer, Californlan Earl
Beezley, agreed.
Baseball Results
(By the Asaociited Press)
National League
Cincinnati 3, New York X
St. Louis 3-4, Brooklyn 0-3.
Pittsburgh 6. Boston S.
Chicago 4. Philadelphia 0.
American Lea rue
New York 4-4, Detroit 3-3.
Cleveland 11, Boston 8.
Chicago 8-3, Philadelphia 1-1
St. Louis 6, Washington I.
Paclfle Coast Leans
Seattle 6, Los Angeles 4,
Hollywood 5, Oakland 4.
San Diego 8, Portland 3.
Sucramento 13-1, San . Francisco
Western International
Tncoma 1, Salem 0.
Yakima 18, Spokane 14.
Wenatchee 13, Vancouver 11,
Pioneer League
Idaho Falls 6, Ogden 3.
Bait Lake 11, Twin Falls 4.
Pocatello 13, Boise S.
American buyers purchased $83,
294,000 worth of products in Brit
ish Malaya in the first four months
of this year.
The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon
Series
Arm
The all-Ohio World Series got
the Indians and Reds staged
out of the fire, I he Keds
were losing, 2-0, going into uie
ninth. Bill Lohrman, Giants' pitch-
had the league-leaders hand
cuffed. They had made only three
hits off him and hadn't got a man
past second. Then things began to
happen fast and furiously and when
Bill Terry and the Giants recov
ered the Reds had won, 3-2.
Cleveland, with Bob Feller on the
mound, was trailing the Red Sox,
5-2 going into the eighth. Then
the Indians went on the warpath
and scored seven runs off Jack
Wilson and Emerson Dickma to
win, 11-6. -
Both triumphs were highly Im
portant to the pacemakers. Cleve
land picked up a game and a half
and increased its lead to 4 games
over Detroit as the Tigers bowed
to the Yanks twice, 4-3 and 4-2
The Reds also gained, a game and
a half and lengthened their margin
to 5tt games over Brooklyn as the
Dodgers took a double tumble be
fore the Cards, 3-0 and 4-3.
The Yanks moved into a fourth
place tie with the White Sox as a
result of the double victory.
The Athletics gained an even
break with the White Sox when
Wally Moses stole home on Thorn
ton Lee In the tenth Inning of the
nightcap, giving the Mackmen
4-3 victory. The White Sox won
the opener. 6-1, on Edgar Smith's
3-hitter.
Driving the rookie sensation, Sid
Hudson, out of the box, the Browns
annexed a 6-3 victory over the
Senators.
Claude Passeau scored his 15th
win as the Cubs took the Phillies 4-9,
Pittsburgh pounded out 15 hits
to beat the Bees, 6-3, with Dick
Lanahan outlasting Manuel Salvo to
win his fourth game.
Grouse Season .
Opens 3 Counties
Grouse hunters will have their
innings when the season for Sooty
or Blue grouse opens In three eas
tern counties Wallowa, Union
and Baker next week.
. The season opens Sunday, Au
gust 25, and closes on August 31,
The bag limit is four birds in any
one day but not more than eight
in any seven consecutive days.
There are many sportsmen from
all parts of the state who
Joy grouse shooting and it is ex
pected that the brief season will
attract many hunters,
V BLIaffij wrLf Here It or Not,"
e iioTuro us itu JysTfrt5i"Ti w R'p''t, -Royai
f rlllrlafcl WM II W; W t m Crown b won 9
i Jf I jli j out of 10 certified
KnomCPAZ'CQin )trl awe
hfttw aaBiaC?aw Keep tome on ice
f " Jl' JxA lh ,Olt 1 l" BEST BY TASTE-TCST
Pn Remember to lake home delicious Par-T-Fak. Beveraces
S Ginger Ale, Root Beer and other flavors. Only a dime lor
- ths full quart bottle . .
NEW DISTRIBUTING
Helser Drops
Pitching Duel
(By the Associated Press)
Frank Volpi's two homers in a
free hitting game gave the Wenat
chee Chiefs a 13-11 victory in their
Western International league con
test with the Vancouver Capilanos
In Wenatchee last night. '
Volpl hit a circuit clout in the
sixth inning to tie the count and
hammered out another In the eighth
with one aboard to assure victory.
In another free hitting game the
Yakima Pippins defeated the league
leading Spokane Indians 18-14 in
Spokane. Both teams used three
pitchers. Johnny Stamper led the
Yakima sluggers with five singles
in seven trips to the platter.
George FarrelPs homer with two
out In the last of the ninth gave
the Tacoma Tigeis a 1-0 victory over
the Salem senators in Tacoma.
It was a brilliant mound duel be
tween Roy Helser, Salem southpaw
and Ray Medeghinl a right hander,
until Farrell's blow. Medeghinl gave
up only three hits and Helser six.
Salem 000 000 0000 3 0
Tacoma 000 000 0011 6 1
Helser and Williams; Medeghinl
and Brenner.
Yakima 303 703 11018 22 1
Spokane 350 510 00014 16 6
Eisenman, Bryant (1), Schanz (4)
and Younker; Wry, Kinnaman (4).
Andrews (4) and McNamee.
Vancouver ...043 120 00111 16 3
Wenatchee . . .010 225 03x 13 17 1
Goldman, Kershaw (6), Cole (6)
and Lloyd; Clemence, Singleton (5)
and Volpi.
Western International
Spokane 71
Yakima tn
Tacoma 64
Vancouver 50
Salem oh
Wenatchee 48
National League W
Cincinnati 70
Brooklyn 85
New York 66 53 .510
St. Louis 58 53 .514
Chicago 68 57 .504
Pittsburgh 65 55 .500
Boston 44 67 .306
Philadelphia 37 69 .340
American League W L Pel.
Cleveland 70 46 .603
Detroit 66 51 .564
Boston 63 53 .543
Chicago 60 S3 .537
New York 59 53 .527
Washington 40 65 .430
St. Louis 48 69 .410
Philadelphia 44 66 .303
Pacific Coast League W L Pet.
Seattle 06 51 .653
Los Angeles 80 66 .548
Oakland 80 67 .544
San Diego 14 72 .507
Sacramento 15 14 .503
Hollywood 72 74 .493
San Francisco 65 82 .442
PorUand
Schools at Woodburn
Opening Week Later
Woodburn September 16 has been
set as the date for the opening of
the Woodburn schools, which Is
about a week later than usual on
account of hop picking. New teach
ers this year will be Marlx Mannlx,
University of Oregon graduate, who
replaces Lois McCurley, senior and
sophomore English; Charles Mere
dith. University of Oregon, who
takes the place of Charles Carlson,
teaching science; Leroy Plerson,
Pacific university graduate, teach
ing freshman English and commer
cial subjects in place of Miss Helen
Lotz and Miss Mary Mauley, who
replaces Mrs. Edna Olson, teaching
mathematics, history and civics.
Improvements made during the
summer are a new gym floor and
new baskets, improvements in the
shop which will enable a general
shop course to be given and thirty-new
lockers. A complete set of
text books may be rented at the
first of the year, the fee not to ex
ceed 44,
All residents of the Canal zone
will be vaccinated against small
pox. .enough for sli bl glasses.
CO. OF SALEM "S-ES
A MAC 51r)
Standings
W L Pet.
Jones 9 Trojans May
Drop Two Contests
By Eddie Brlets
Nflw York. Antr. 21 UPi A surDrisinp; number of people
in Southern California think
Trojans may drop two games
son,
iormer Army grid coacn, wno
was to have been transferred from
Hawaii to the Cornell engineering
school, has had his orders can
celled and will get a regular army
post.
Today's Guest Star
Robert E. Hooney, Ohio State
Journal: "The first World's Se-
Henry Picard will be top choice
in the Professional Golfers as
sociation championship over
his own Hershey, Pa. links start
ing next Monday. Picard is the
defending champion.
Zale Favored lo
Win Over Soose
Chicago, Aug. 21 (U.R What the
boys have been calling the "middle
weight muddle" for the last couple
of seasons reaches a crucial stage
tonight when N. B. A. champion
Tony Zale of Gary, Ind., boxes 10
non-title rounds with a boy who
licked New York's champion.
If cleancut Bill Soose of Scran
ton, Pa., adds Zale to his list of
victims, which Includes the New
York king. Ken Overlln, the divi
sion sinks to an all-time low with
three champions two official and
one unofficial.
It could happen but the bettors
say it won't. Zale's heavy body-
punching, which produced a 13
round technical knockout in a title
bout against Al Hostak of Seattle,
established htm a favorite at 3 to 1.
Merchandise Shoot
Set for Sunday
A variety of useful prizes will be
up for competition next Sunday
when the Salem Trapshooters club
sponsors a merchandise program
at its Turner road traps. Firing will
start at 10 a. m. The new Tad
Shelton purse for class O and D
shooters will be a feature of the
meet In addition there will be firing
In a 50 bird 16-target event and in
the handicap.
Called to Funeral
Scotts Mills Mrs. Addle Smith
went to Portland to be with her
sister, Mrs. Thomas Palmer, whose
husband died very suddenly Satur
day. She returned home Tuesday
following the funeral service which
was held in Portland with burial In
the Miller cemetery on the Sllver-ton-Marquam
highway.
PHONE 211 19
r - Tjp!F
If'
fl
Howard Jones' Rose Bowl
next fall . . . Capt. Gar David-
lies game played at night? . . .
Don't be a bit surprised if It la
this year, especially if Cleveland
wins the pennant . . . sooner or
later a nocturnal series game Is
bound to come, say those who
should know whereof they
speak."
Good Mffhtt
When wilder and wooller ball
games are dished out, the Canadian
American league will do the dish
ing ... In the aioversville-Amster-
dam game the other night the ioi-
lowing things happened and they all
look like some sort of records to
us ... In winning, 31-7, Glovers-
vllle scored 18 times in one Inning.
. . . Palmer, Gloversville catcher,
was up three times in the hectic
seventh and singled each time. Cul
llnane, Gloversville third sacker,
also was at bat three times in the
same frame and each time drew
pass. . . . Now If any team in or
ganized ball can beat that, we're
willing to learn.
Did You Know That-
The average big leaguer goes
down to first In slightly less
than four seconds. . . . The fast
est cover the 90 feet In Z sec
onds , . . the slowest In about
5 310 seconds.
Handicap Fails
Bother Texan
Vandalia, Ohio, Aug. 21 (;
Sportsdom will travel a long way
before it finds another champion
with the background, color and
"heart" boasted by trapshooting's
new North American clay target
king 65-year old Forest McNelr o'
Houston, Texas.
Lela Hall, the charming housewife
from Strasburg, Mo., won her fifth
North American feminine crown
yesterday at the 41st Grand Amer
ican, and Fred Tomlln of Glassboro,
N. J., grabbed his fifth professional
title, but all the talk today around
the big cartridge carnival was about
McNelr. .
The Texan, wearing a high, stiff
ly-starched collar, paid no atten
tion to the high wind as he cracked
200 straight to beat the best In the
land for trapdom's toughest title. It
was the only perfect count of the
day. And It gave McNelr a cham
pionship he had tied for in 1920
and 1935, only to lose in shoot-offs.
But today he wore the royal robes
and the trapshooting world will tell
you he won 'em the hard way.
Four years ago he fell from a
building in Houston, suffering a
broken back and a crushed left arm.
His left hand was amputated at the
wrist, but when McNelr regained
consciousness he had the hand sew
ed back on. The fingers failed to
function, and two Inches of flesh
and bone are missing from the arm.
but he asks no odds of anyone.
Surgeons told him he probably
would never shoot again, but two
years after his accident he was back
at the "roaring grand" with a caddy
to carry and load his gun. He fired
the entire program.
Guests Rose Home
Silverton Mr. and Mrs. S. Par
zy Rose have as their house guests
for the week Mrs. C. W. Kohagen
and three children, Junior, Gene
and Beverly, from Hood River. Mr.
Kohagen Is in Philadelphia attend
ing a national fruit growers' con
vention for ten days.
Mill City Little Marlene Verbeck,
7-year-old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Verbeck, Is at home re
cuperating from a recent tonsllec
tomy. The operation was performed
In a Salem hospital.
mmmmm
j f TRY IT
gkj TODAY
flijibAn l Enjoyed straight or In
' wMkXwiM super-smooth cocktails
if mWwwWl or taU drink8 tWs "oft-
' LHkii '! tuied" Sin stays "rich
f to the last sip." J
Seagram's Kind Arthur Distilled London Dry Oin. 00 Proof. Distilled from
Grain Neutral Spirits. Seagram- Distiller, Cow. Executive Offices! Mew York
Five
Rainiers End
Losing Streak
With 64 Win
(Br ths Associated Press)
A home run, with two aboard.
sent the Seattle Rainiers scooting
15 hi games ahead of the Pacific
coast league field today.
Pinch-Hitter Spencer Harris
eighth inning explosion brought the
champion Rainiers up from behind
to beat their nearest competitor,
Los Angeles, fl to 4.
It also ended , a four-game los
ing streak and let Pitcher Dick
Barrett run his league -leading vie-.
tory total to 21,
The Angels clung to their half-
game grip on second place, how
ever, because the third-running
Oakland Acorns fumbled their way
to a 5 to 4 defeat at the hands of
Hollywood.
San Diego edged ahead In the
battle for fourth place by beating
the caboose club, Portland, 8 to 3,
with Wally Hebert allowing the
Beavers seven hits.
Sacramento, contending with the
Padres for a place in the post-sea
son playoff, shared a double feature
with the unfathomable San Fran
cisco Seals, taking the opener 13
to 0 and dropping the finale S to
1.
The Seals, always good for a
laugh, in one Inning of the first
game played with only eight men.
Not until one Senator grounded out
was it discovered that Rlghtfield
er Brooks Holder was still in the
clubhouse.
Yesterday's scores:
Hollywood 200 100 110 B 10 S
Oakland 100 310 0001 9 1
Osborne and Brenrel, Dapper; Oorbelt
and Conroy.
Seattle 110 000 0404 10 1
Los Angeles 100 103 0004 9 7
Barrett and Campbell; Stlne and Holm.
San Francisco 000 000 0000 0
Sacramento 030 413 30x 13 1 0
fituta and Sprint. Botelho (7); Judd
and Osrodowskl, Ballanger (8).
San Francisco 003 001 0 S V 0
Sacramento 000 001 0 1 0 0
(7 innlrjRi).
Dasio and Leonard: Munier and Or-
rodowskl.
PorUand 000 002 1003 7 9
San Diego 003 033 llx 8 14 3
Llska. Fallla (B) and Adamsi Hebert
and Balkeld.
MAJOR LEAGUE
LEADERS
(By the Associated Press)
American Leaftie
Batting Radcllff, St. Louis, .380; Fin
ney, Boston, .347.
Runs Williams, Boston. lOOi HoOos-
ky. Detroit, 93.
Hits Cramer, Boston, 159s Badcliff, St.
Louis. 199.
Home runs Foxx, Boston, 33 dl Blai
Klo, Mew York, 35.
Stolen bases Case, WashlmtoD, 37f
Walker. Washington, 18.
Pitching Ncwsom, Detroit, 19-3: Feller,
Oleveland, 33-8; Rowe, Detroit, 11-3,
National League
Battlni Rowell, Boston, .130; Walker.
Brooklyn, .934.
Runs Frey, Cincinnati, 87t St
Louis, 85.
Hits F. McCormtck, Cincinnati, 1431
Herman, Chicago, 141.
Home tuns M lie, St. Louis, SB; Nich
olson, Chicago, and RIeio, Philadelphia,
Iff.
Stolen bases Reest, Brooklyn, 15; Frey.
Cincinnati, 13.
Pitching Fltzslmmons, Brooklyn, 13-3;
Sewell, Pittsburgh, 10-3.
Mill City Mr .and Mrs. R. L.
Faust, accompanied by their young
est daughter, Urlvay, left early Sun
day morning for The Dalles to visit
at the home of a brother of Faust,
They planned to return home Tues
day evening, Faust being part owner
of the Red and White store here.