Senators Take Final Game of Vancouver Series, 7 to 1
Griffmen Continue
Heavy Work with Bat
"If they could only win on the road like they can at home"
was the burden of Salem fan sentiment last night as the Sa
lem Senators packed their dunnage sacks preparatory to their
departure ior xaKima, eany toaay.
Not only did the Griffmen continue
their barrage of hitting activities,
which characterized the 15-14
slaughter Tuesday night, but they
came close to making a clean sweep
of the series against the Vancou
ver Capilanos, The Solons won last
night, 7 to 1, with Francis Dlerickx
holding the opposition to six blows,
Skits and
Scratches
By Fred Zimmerman
Capital Journal Sports Editor
Human nature is a queer but en
tirely understandable element which
probably accounts for the fact that
09 910 per cent or the aoo plus tans
who were in the stands Tuesday
night enjoyed the clouting and scor
ing bee at Oco. E. Waters park.
About 99 per cent of that number
would have waxed sarcastic had the
Senators been on the short end of
the 15-14 score.
A game of that sort Is quite enter
taining but It Is to be hoped that
the league doesn't propose to dish
It up too often. It would most assur
edly pal! after a bit. But as a sort
of sideshow Tuesday night's per
formance was tops, especially that
1 eighth Inning splurge when the
Griffmen came up from behind to
nullify a six-run deficit and then
go out in front by three tallies.
A bit of second guessing would
Indicate that Manager Don Os
born did his club a bit of dis
service when he pulled Cy
. Greenlaw, top Vancouver left
bander, off the mound. The big,
fast ball pitcher had been hit
rather freely, still the Solons
had been able to reach him for
an average of but one blow an
Inning for seven frames. And
there's a big possibility that he
would have ridden the storm
had he been permitted to re
main atop the mound.
Skipper Griffiths made no effort
to conceal his satisfaction over the
outcome of the big show. He had
been bombarded from the stand?
with "take him out" as Duke Wind
sor was hit freely Jn the early
frames. It was the batting attack of
, the Solons which salvaged the con
test. Nevertheless, the director of
any sort of endeavor gains quite a
bit of satisfaction out of seeing his
own Judgment bear fruit.
Umpires Valerlo and Oravec ran
Into a storm of protest Tuesday
night and In fact they have been
subject to more abuse from the fans
than the other four Indicator thum
bers combined. Both men miss one
now and then, but far as this corner
has observed, they have averaged
up pretty well. Oravec has been un
fortunate in that he has made ft
couple of decisions too rapidly. Call
ing Jimmy Jewell safe at third Tues
day night was one of them. Eddie
George, according to the way It ap
peared from the press box, had
completed the play Insofar as Jew
ell was concerned and had pulled
his throwing arm back in an effort
to double Brenner at first when
the ball slipped out of his grasp.
The situation Is covered in the rules
and Jewell by all rights should have
been called out.
Henry Singer and Tim Bacon
were opposing softball pitchers
In the Astoria championship
early this week and Hank had
the better of the argument as
his Second Battalion club beat
the 18th Regiment 2 to 0. Singer
held the opposition to four hits, ,
while Bacon gave up bt three.
The Second Battalion represents .
Astoria In the district tourna
ment. Preceding the title game, Second
Battalion defeated Recreation 6 to
0 In a re-play of ft disputed ball
game with Bob Llndstrom holding
the opposing batters to one lone
some hit. Bacon fanned eight out
of nine men in the first three
frames of the championship contest.
SAYS WHICH ? Belllrerent Jimmy Dykes, whom friction
with umpires enlivens Chicago White Sox (ames, ran true to form
vocally in a Philadelphia folf match when Walter McGrath dared
to Question him about hi aonra: it w.. 94,
only one being of the extra base
variety a double by Catcher Bren
ner. In the meanwhile the Griffmen
bombarded Tex Goldman for seven
solid smashes before he abandon
ed the hillock early in the fifth. Big
Boy Thompson was heated in a
similar manner, the Solous collect
ing seven hits and three runs off his
delivery. Including a triple by Eddie
George and a double by Bob Berg
strom, Goldman had the Salem contin
gent pretty much on the hip as he
limited them to four scattered blows
during as many innings. But they
made up for it In the fifth as they
combined five hits, two walks and
two errors for a total of six runs off
Goldman and his successor. That
was more than enough to win the
ball game but Just for good mea
sure they added another In the
eighth on singles by Shoemaker,
George and Lanifero, plus Dlerickx'
second sacrifice of the evening.
Charlie Shoemaker opened the
fifth by drawing a walk and then
advanced to second as Dlerickx laid
down a bunt. The Salem chucker
was safe at first when Goldman
threw high to first after fielding
the ball. Then Eddie George crack
ed a twister to right field which
went for three sacks as Smead
Jolley chased the pellet along the
fence. Lanifero came through with
a single, as did Adams and Berg
strom. Petersen walked and War
ren singled to conclude the stick
work. Shoemaker, up for the sec
ond time, was thrown out at first
while Dlerickx popped ' out to Or
teig. The Senators took the series four
games out of five. When they re
turn to Geo. E. Waters park next
Monday night they will go up against
the league-leading Spokane Indians.
Vancouver (1) AB R It O A E
Warfield, m 5 0 0 4 0 0
Ortl. 3 4 0 0 3 0 0
Johns, 1 , ,,,,, 4 1 3 3 0 0
Jolley. r 4 0 1 3 0 0
Wright, 1 4 0 16 10
Jewell. 8 4 0 0 3 3 0
Callteaux, 3 3 0 1 3 3 1
Brenner, c 4 0 1 '3 3 0
Goldman, p 1 0 0 0 1 1
Thompson, P 10 0 10 0
Totals 34 1 6 24 8 2
Salem (.) AB R H O A E
George. 3 5 1 3 3 1 0
Lanifero, 3 ft 1 3 3
Adams, c 4 0 3 3
Bergstrom, 1 8 13 3
Petersen, m 3 1 01
Warren, r 4 0 11
Griffiths, s 4 0 3 3
Shoemaker, 1 3 3 17
Dlerickx, p 3 10 1
Totals 35 7 14 27
Vancouver 0001 0000 01 0 3
B&iem o o o o o o o i x 7 h :
Seven hits, 4 runs off Goldman In
plus lnnlnss; 7 and 3 off Thompson In 4:
runs responsible for. Goldman 4. Tliomrj.
son 3; Dlerickx 1; struck out by Goldman
a, uiencKX s; oases on bans, oil Gold'
man 3, Dlerickx 3. Thompson 1.
Wild pitches, Goldman; passed balls.
Adams: left on bases. Vancouver 9. Sa
lem 0; three-base hits, George; two-base
hits, Bergstrom, Brenner; runs batted In,
Jolley, Decree 3, Lanifero, Griffiths 3,
Adams; sacrifice, Goldman, Dlerickx 3:
stolen oases, Lanuero; time, 1:50; um
pires, oravec ana vaieno.
Scoreboard
(By the Associated Press)
National
Plttsburth 9. Brooklyn 7.
St. Louis 3-3. Boston 0-3.
Chlcaso B. New York 4.
Cincinnati 3-3, Philadelphia 0-0.
American
New York 0, Detroit 1 (10 lnninea).
Washington 9. Cleveland 3.
Philadelphia 0, Chicago 9.
Boston 9-3. St. Louis lt-4.
Pacific Coast
Hollywood 0-1. Oakland 1-0 (and tame
seven innings).
Portland 7. Ban Dleio 8.
Ban Francisco 0-8, Loi Angeles"1 6-3,
Ksnti iun seven innings'.
Seattle 3. Sacramento 0.
Western International
Vancouver 1, Balem T.
Tacoma 11. Wen a tehee 1.
Yakima 0-3, Spokane 134.
Pioneer
Twin Palls 0. Salt Lake 9.
Otden 3, Idaho Falls 0.
Pocatello 5, Boise 3,
Auto Racer Killed
Salt Lake City, Aug. 31 0J.R) Clyde
Goss, Jr., 28-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 he
made the five laps in 1 :24.4.
i in in i i ijfr
WHAT'S ALL THE SHOOTING FOR?
9
lis . - ' t(, A 4 . ST7
The Capital Journal, Salem,
Cardinals Gain Half Game,
While, Polled
Hurl Two Wins
Over Braves
By Judson Bailey
(By the Associated Press)
The pennant problem in the Na
tional league is getting to be "can
the St. Louis Cardinals keep going
with all their Injuries?" Instead of
"can the Cardinals beat the Brook
lyn Dodgers?"
In spite of a procession of trouble
the Cardinals have kept right on
coming and yesterday they swept a
doubieheader from the Braves 2-0
and 3-2. Ernie White, the Cards'
great 5'oung lefthander, pitched a
six-hit shutout in the first game for
his 15th victory and Howard Pol
lett, 20-year old southpaw, pitched
a four-hitter for his major league
debut In the nightcap.
The double triumph enabled 'he
Cards to climb to within a game
and a half of the Brooklyn Dodgers,
who were given a 7-6 handout by
the Pittsburgh Pirates for Brooklyn's
sixth straight win.
The Cincinnati Reds reinforced
their third place position 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 scat
tered for his 14th triumph In the
nightcap.
The Chicago Cubs cut loose with
a 16-hit attack aa Vallle Eaves Vept
eight hits spaced to beat the New
York Giants 8 to 4.
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 per-
lormances of his long career.
The Chicago White Sox chopped
another game off the Yankees' am
ple lead as John Rlgney blanked' the
Philadelphia Athletics 9-0 for the
third shutout In two days by a Sox
pitcher and Rlgney's second shutout
in two starts.
The collapsing Cleveland Indians
dropped their 14th game in 15 dec!'
clslons 6-3 to the Washington Sen
ators in a pitching duel between
Arne Anderson and Al Smith which
was decided In the ninth Inning
wnen the Senators scored four times
to Cleveland's two.
Valselz Millers
Play Sunday, 1 P.M.
Dallas Valseti and Perjsl-Cola.
the only remaining teams in the
Shaughnessy playoff In the Port
land Valley league, will meet at
Mack field on Sunday afternoon
and before the teams walk off the
diamond for good either the Mill
ers or the Pepsi-Cola boys will be
the winners of the series. Tills word
came out of Valsetz Wednesday
with Manager Bert Thomas an
nouncing that the first game would
start at 1 o'clock and would he a
seven-Inning affair. The Millers
tane the Held with the odds against
them as they have lost one game In
the series. Should the Portland crew
win there will be no need for a sec
ond game but if the Millers win.
both teams will start the second
game from scratch, all even.
Thomas plans to send Ray Elliott
to the mound In the opener with
Dave Dixon as his battery male.
Reisbeck and Hood will form the
battery for Pepsi-Cola, j
j lyi Mjiji
Ore.
Fred Zimmerman, Sports Editor
Oliver to Succeed
Barry, Rumor Claims
By Gordon G. MacNab
1 (Associated Press Staff Writer)
After being bombarded by the press from all directions
except west of Los Angeles (the Honolulu papers aren't at
hand yet) on what's really what at USC, we get more of it
straight from the Trojan horse s
mouth.
Our Informant, who has never
yet yielded in his ability to second-guess
with the best of them,
assures me that Tex Oliver Is
"In" at the Trojan camp. Sam
Barry is just a blind, he declares,
because Tex wouldn't let the
Oregon down at the last mo
mcnt and insisted on holding
over for another year.
Other and differing estimates
Sacs' Lead Cut
To 6 Games
(Br the Associated Press)
Three victories on an aggregate
output of four runs, four defeats
without the solace of a single count
er. That gives some idea of the dis
play of pitching brilliance which
broke unexpectedly and perhaps in
explicably over a Coast league
wrestling with Its busy late-summer
schedule of postponed baseball
games.
Oakland nipped Hollywood, 1-0,
last 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 Francisco, 8-0,
At Sacramento, Les Webber of
Seattle was matched against the
combined pitching prowesK of Bill
Schmidt and Bill Caplinger, and
both sides were held to four safe
ties. The Rainlers, however, bracketed
two of their singles by Les Scar
sella and Bob Collins in the second
inning, These, followed by Ned
Stlckle's sacrifice and Bobby Blatt
ner's Infield error, produced the
only scores of the evening.
Los Angeles' shutout came In the
first of a doubieheader. the second
of which went to San Francisco, 6
3. It was the work of Ray Prim,
a five-hit Job. all single.
San Diego kept pace with Seattle
six games behind Sacramento by
nicking Portland, 8-7, The Beavers,
outhltttng the Padres 14-11, were
ahead until Pinch Hitter George De-
Tore cracked an eight-inning dou
ble good for two runs. Johnny Jen
sen noled a four-bagger for the
winners.
Yesterday's scores:
vtmi oao w i 4 i
flurrnmpntft WO tm tm ft 4 1
WfbT ftnti Collins: Schmidt, Ctpltnter
1) and Wiecsorelt.
Portland WM anfl 010 7 14 0
ann nipsn 310 300 02x it 3
field. OonralM Mi and Hnwkinn: He.
brrt, Thomas 4, PUIette 0 and Silk
ed. Hollywood rm rm ooo o ft o
Oakland 000 000 lOx 1 h 0
Bithorn and Dapper; Corbett and Con-
roy.
Hollvwood 000 010 ft I I
Oafclend 000 000 ft 0 I 0
Dano and Bremen Plppen, Ananlr (?;
and Ralmondl.
San PraneUco 0O0 ftvt 000 ft A 9
LOI Ant'le. 301 030 OOx 6 10 1
llarrell and Partee: Prim and c mo-
hell.
Ban Pranrlseo 014 000 1 ft 0
Lo Aiiaele 030 010 ft S ft 3
KpvtTlj and Cmodowski: Thorn aa. Berry
3) and Holm.
Unable to dispose of all of fto
corn, Argentina may use It as fuel.
of the situation will be available al
regular intervals for the next six
months or so.
Although It may be too late to get
a much heavier stand of grass on
Multnomah field before the season
opens, there's lots of time for other
things.
One of them is the state Eoftball
tournament opening Sunday at Ore
gon City. Teams start swinging at
the over-size ball at noon and they'll
be at it well into the night, all 16
taking the diamond on the opening
day.
As yet there are still a few dis
tricts unreported and even if all the
teams were lined up and ready to go
an estimate on the probable winner
would put even the best guessers on
a long mid trembling limb.
Our own experience with the
game in a region of the country
where it Is known by the unimpres
sive name "klttenbair suggests that
any team surviving the opening
round might come through in the
finals Thursday.
Longest Match in
History Net Play
Chestnut Hills. Mms.. Aug. 21 flj.p.)
Take It from Bryan (Bltsy) Orant,
Jr., tennis doubles la a "mighty
tough game."
The 30-year-old southerner, a
veteran of international competition
and former Davis cupper, ought to
know. He participated In the long
est match in the history of the na
tionals doubles championships.
Probably the smallest player In
top ranlcs, Bltsy was the big noise
yesterday when he and Russell Bob
bitt, a couple of Atlanta boys, out
lasted Edwin Amark of San Fran
cisco and Robin Hlpuenstlel of Los
Angeles In a grim four-hop mara
thon. No fewer than 102 games were
needed by the Orant-Bobbltt com
bine to gain the third round by
scores of 14-12, 15-17. fl-4. 4-6.
13-11. Irving Wright, national dou
bles committee chairman said it was
a new tournament record though he
could not recall the previous one.
It was a great day for Grant, sup
posedly at the end of the tennis
trail.
Frequently he raced 10 to 20 feet
back of the baseline to return the
sizzling smashea of his opponents
unltl they became over-anxious and
netted the ball. His service was
more than adequate and held
through the decisive fifth set.
Eugene Places in j
Softball Tourney I
Eugene, Aug. 21 MV- Eugene's i
Diamond A softball team won al
place In the state tournament by
defeatinc Cottage Orove 8 to 2 here
last night.
Vern Adams whiffed eight Cot-i
tage Orove batters and was nicked
for only five hits. Charles Toman
led the Eugene attack with three
blows Including a homer.
Eugene 0 ft 4
Cottage Orove 2 B 6 1
Adams and Taylor; Buttcrworth
and H&rtm&n, Vogler J
Thursday, August 21, 1941
Flatbush
Migratory Bird
Hunting Rules
Announced
Washington. Aug. 21 (U.R) The In
terior department today announced
the 1941 rules for hunting migra
tory birds, including 60-day duck
seasons throughout the country and
a daily bag limit of 10 ducks.
Changes In the rules removed can-
vasbacks and ruddy ducks from the
species that are limited to three
In the daily bag: legalized In IS
states the posscssoln of one wood
duck and prohibited the use of cat
tle, horses or mules as blinds.
Other new rules closed the season
on Wilson's snipes fjacksnipes); In
creased the blue-goose bag limit to
six a day if no other geese are tak
en and closed the season on snow
geese in Idaho to prevent hunters
from killing .the rare trumneter
swans which is sometimes confused
with the snow goose.
Seasons:
The 60-day waterfowl season be
gins on:
Oct. 1 In Montana.
Oct. 16 in Idaho. 'Washington.
Oregon and California.
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 aa last year. How
ever, one wood duck may be In
cluded this year. Three buffleheads
or three redheads or three of these
species together, may be In the dally
bag, and six among the ducks pos
sessed. Canvasbacks and ruddy
ducks, formerly grouped with the
redheads and buffleheads, were re
stored to the list of species with
the 10-bag and 20-possesslon limits.
Major League
Leaders
(By the Associated Press i
National League
Batting Reiser, Brooklyn, ami
Hopp. St. Louis. .320.
Runs Reiser, Brooklyn, 87; Hack.
Chicago, 8fl.
Home runs Camlill. Brooklyn,
25; Ott, New York, and Nicholson,
Chicago. 21.
Pitching Riddle, Cincinnati, 14
2; White, St. Louis, 15.4.
Amerlran League
Batting Williams, Boston, .411:
Travis, Washington, .369.
Runs DiMaggio. New York. 113;
Williams, Boston, 106.
Home runs Keller. New York,
30; Williams, Boston, 28.
Pitching Oomez, New York, 11-
4; Murphy, New York, 8-3.
Petersen Popular
With Ball Fans
Charlie Petersen Is popular with
the fans who make a practice of
watching the Salem Senators play
Western International league op
ponents at Oeo. E. Waters field. His
popularity bore fruit last night when
he was awarded a traveling bag by
Frank Shafer because he received
the greatest number of votes bv the
cash customers, "Pete" gained the
good will of the fans largely be
cause of his ability to cover center
field better than any other player
in the league. Howevpr, some of his
mates gave him some pretty close
7
1.
competition. 1
Rickey and McPhail
In Furious Pen Scrap
y iiarry
New York, Aug. 21 (U.R)
Cardinals and Larry MacPhail of the Brooklyn Dodgers have
chosen their weapons: Fountain pins and the duel is on. It
win last until September 28 when
the National league season cuds.
It is a "battle of ink" in which
Rickey fills out little slips of paper
transferring Cardinal farm hands
to the parent club in an attempt to
straighten the team for the pennant
drive. MacPhail also fills out little
slips of paper, but they are checks
Softball Shots
By Bob Keuscher
Square Deal had two big innings
Wednesday night and they were en
ough to give the Dealers a 5 to 0
triumph over the Papermakers,
evening their playoff series at a
game apiece, As a result, the two
teams will play the rubber game
to decide Salem's entrant in the
state meeting Friday night at 8
p.m.
George Roth gave the Papermak
ers one scratch hit last night and
pitched the Dealers to their much-
needed triumph. Roth allowed Just
three men to reach first base and
whiffed nine. The Dealers got but
three blows off Knight, but four
bases on balls and several costly
wild pitches set up all of the Square
Deal scores.
Bill Lacey got a drive through the
thirdsacker's legs in the first frame
for the lone Papermaker hit. The
Dealers scored in the fifth but Lou
Singer drove in two markers with
a Texas leaguer double, and added
another trio of tallies In the sixth
on one hit, two errors, a walk and
a pair of wild pitches.
Salem Box wound up their series
with the Commercial league
champs. Elfstrom's. with a 5 to 0 vic
tory achieved mainly on Bob Free
man's one hit hurling and good
fielding by Enlch Maerz. The win
ners put together a five-run rally
In the second frame for their scor
ing. Scores :
Square Deal 5 3
Papermakers 0 1
Roth and Singer; Knight and
Lenaburg.
Elfstrom's 0 1
Salem Box 5 4
Beardsley and Curry; Freeman
and Ohlsen.
3 Teams Gain
Playoff Spot
(By the United Prcssl
Three teams are certainties for
the Western International league's
annual play-offs, but the fourth
spot was still wide open today with
less than three weeks of the regular
schedule remaining.
The Salem Senators, currently in
fourth position, held their 3'. game
margin over Tacoma last night,
downing the third-place Vancouver
nine 7 to 1. The Solons landed on
Lou Goldman In the sixth, scoring
six runs, and added another in the
eighth.
Tacoma kept pace with an 11-1
decision over the lowly Wenatchee
Chiefs. The Tigers started off with
four runs in the opening frame and
were never headed, getting 13 hits.
The league leading Spokane club
stretched its margin over Yakima
to 16 games with a double triumph
over the Pippins, 12-0 and 4-3. The
opener produced the third success
ive shutout of the series. Spokane
was forced to overcome Yakima's
early three-run lead in the nightcap,
Tacoma 421 010 30011 13 2
Wenatchee . . . .000 000 001 1 7 4
Marlowe and Stoeber; Richardson,
flpesman and Mayer.
Yakima 000 000 00 3 3
Spokane 602 103 x 12 11 0
Bryant and Sueme, Emery; O'
Flvnn and Beard.
Yakima 000 030 0003 B 1
Spokane 000 002 02x 4 7 2
BarkelriW, Lien and Bueme; Lann
Ing and Meyers.
YOU CAN'T I
f5EAT IT !
f ok taste., irerr)
Old Drum Brand BLBNDED WHISKEY: 90 Proof-75 Grain Nutrl
Spirit. Copyright 1940. Calvert Diilillem Corpormion, New York City.
tergusou
Branch Rickev of the St. Louis
-
In payment for ball players to
strengthen the Dodgers for the pen
nant drive.
Rickey was one up on MacPhail
until 3 p. m. yesterday afternoon
when the Dodgers" general manager
macie a great rally by signing a
check for $7,500 and buying Larry
M-encn, leit-nanded pitcher, from
the Chicago Cubs. The contest 1
getting so close now that MacPhail
not only acquires a player every time
Rickey does, but he gets the same
kind of player. The purchase of
French was in retaliation for Rickey
bringing up from the Cardinals
farm at Houston a young left-handed
pitcher named Howard Pollet. If
the Cards are going to have a new
left-handed pitcher, says MacPhail,
then the Dodgers are going to have
one, too.
Tills can go on Indefinitely and
probably will. Rickey, being a fru
gal, canny soul where a dollar Is
concerned, will not write any check
for players, but he has a vast res
ervoir of farm hands in Houston,
Rochester, Columbus and the other
towns where St. Louis has chain
teams.
MacPhail, ordinarily a florid gent,
has become absolutely purple-faced
in the last two days over Rickey1!
policy of importing new hired hands.
"We want to win the pennant thla
year but not at the expenses of
wrecking our farm clubs," says Mac
Phall in his normal conversational
tone which carries from Ebbets field
all the way to Grant's tomb on a
clear day. "We have some men with
our Montreal and Durham clubs
who would definitely help us if we
brought them in. But that's not the
way we do business."
Wrstern International W L
Spokane 79 38
Pel.
.676
.RSI
.58
.466
.41 J
t.
..ei'
.94
.666
.SSI
.500
.497
.404
.73
Pet.
Yakima 63 S
Vanr-oiiver flu as
Snlrm ,14 S3
Tnroma M fll
WcnntcliPG 44 78 ,
National w .!
Brooklyn IS 40 ;
St. Louis 74 41
Cincinnati m 40
Plltshurwh 00 S3
New York M S6.
nil Ic Otto !tn 87
Boston 40 68
Phllfldflpla 31 S3
Amfrlran VP 1,
New York1 fll 41
Chicago 6J .IS
Boston 81 SB
Clevrland flfl ,16
Detroit 5S 64
Philadelphia 51 68
St. Louis .10 66
Washington 4Q 65
Coasl W L
Sacramento flfl 54
San Dleao 7ft 69
Seattle , 7P 59
Hollywood 89 89
Lou Anaeles 61 75
San Francisco 63 76
.430
Pet.
.614
.ill
Oakland 61 79
Portland 67 81
Angels Swap Kush
For Augie Galan
Los Angeles. Aug. 21 U.W Th
Los Angeles of the Pacific Coast
league announced today that Emil
Kush, richt -handed pitcher, hu
been traded to the Chicago Cubs
for Augie Galan, outfielder.
Kush has been under option to
Tulsa and will remain at Tulsa for
the season, reporting to the Cubs
at the start of the new training
season. Galan will report here Im
mediately.
Oalan Is a former San Francisco
Seals player. Rush's home Is in
Chicago.
Attend Cresham Fair
Grand Island George Dougla
senior of Amity union high school
and Russell Sargeant. sophomore,
members of the Future Farmers of
America stock Judging team, at
tended the Multnomah county falf
at Greshnm Monday.
PINT
$00
Standings