Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 22, 1949, Page 13, Image 13

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    r,
Steelers Eye
Junior 'C
eague Crown
Salem Steel Supply can wrap
up the championship of the Class
C division of the Salem Junior
league Wednesday evening when
they engage Elfstrom's, although
protest filed by Truax Oilers
may result in a tie for first hon
or. The Oilers have completed
their competition and are now
awaiting a decision on their pro
test, based on an alleged illegal
player on the part of the Steel
ers. Monday night Bishop Electric
and Four Corners will play on
the latter's diamond while River
Bend and Midget Market are
clashing on Olinger.
West Salem Lumber, two full
games out in front, will play Sa
lem Laundry at Olinger Tues
day night. Other Class B tilts
listed for Tuesday are Salem
Realtors vs. Salem Heights at
Leslie and Mayflower vs. Keizer
Merchants at Keizer.
Bremerton Loses
In Regional Meet
Yakima, Wash., Aug. 22 U.R
The Omaha, Neb., team split a
aoumeneaaer wnn two west
f ( (boast teams in the junior Amer-
Vcan Legion western regional
playoffs yesterday. The Ne
braskans whipped Bremerton,
Wash., 12 to 2, in a night game
after losing to Oakland, Calif.,
12 to 4, on four costly errors.
Bremerton plays Oakland to
night in the double elimination
meet.
Szasz, Stojack
In Mat Mainer
Al Szasz and Frank Stojack
have been assigned the main
event in Tuesday night's wrest
ling card of four events The
show will open at 8:30 with
two one fall preliminaries fea
turing Tony Faletti and George
Dusette : and Tony Ross and
Pierre LaBelle in the other. Tex
Hager and Al Williams have
been signed to a special event.
BoSox Take Advantage
Of Nats' Losing Ways
New York, Aug. 22 U.B You couldn't blame the forlorn Wash
ington baseball fan for his attitude of "nats? nertz!" today as Clark
Griffith's grouping ghouls groaned into the American league
cellar. !
Here Is a team which has made a fine art of losing. It loses so
much, in fact, that it has be
ime In a lett-nanaea way a
factor in the pennant race.
The Boston Red Sox have beaten
the Senators 14 games, and have
five more to play against them
this year. Thus the Sox may
ride to the pennant astride this
bumbling beast of burden
By losing to the Red Sox,
4 to 0 yesterday the Senators
dropped their 11th straight,
equalling a previous 1949 high
off 11 losses but still somewhat
hort of last year's 18 In a row
er the modern major league
record of 20. But don't give
p on the Nats. They may set
a record yet.
Since July 4" they have lost 41
of their last 47 games.
Last season, when the Nats
were working on that 18-defeat
string, pitcher Walt Masterson
quipped, "well, no matter how
many we lose, we won't go to
last place. There's always the
Browns."
But yesterday not even the
Browns eould give the Sen
ators a wisp of hope. They
apllt a donbleheader with De
troit winning the first, 4 to
t, and losing the second, 8 to 7
to climb out of the cellar by
three percentage points, mak
ing room for Washington. The
Browns had been down there
for 113 straight days.
The Senators bowed yester-
Say to the seven-hit pitching of
(Jack Kramer. It was his second
ihutout and fourth victory of the
season and, coupled with an 8
to 7 game the New York Yank
ees lost to Philadelphia, edged
the Sox to two and a half games
from first place.
Tho Chicago White Sox
chased Bob Feller in the first
inning for an eventual 5 to 4
first game victory over the
Cleveland Indians. However,
Larry Doby's three-run homer
in the six-run fifth inning gave
the Indians a 7 to 4 win in the
nightcap for a split.
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Balem 3-4016. evenines 3-8213.
Tigers Sweep Solon Series
The Taconia Tigers packed up
their duds and left town for good
around midnight Sunday and
their departure caused no tears
to be shed around these parts.
For the last place Tigers downed
the Senators twice Sunday eve
ning, 7-5 and 7-2 to make a clean
sweep of the four game series.
Manager Bill Beard and his
Solons shoved off for Spokane
following the nightcap for a
quick trip to the Inland Empire.
They will return Thursday to
duel with Wenatchee over the
four game route before winding
up against Yakima.
The pattern of Sunday
night's encounter were fairly
identical in titat the Tigers
were spotted first inning bulg
es in both instances. They got
to Jim Olsen for five runs in
the opening stanza of the first
game and while the Solons had
evened the count by the end
of the fourth it was the Tigers
who broke the deadlock as the
contest went an extra inning.
So big Jim suffered his 11th
loss as compared with 10 wins.
Cal Mclrvin was the victim of
the attack in the nightcap as he
was reached for three runs in the
first. The red headed southpaw
gave way to Stu Fredericks aft
er seven innings but the change
did not bolster the Solons' for
tunes although they did break
through for two runs off Don
Carter in the ninth to bust up
that gentleman's chance for a
shutout.
It wasn't Dick Greco who
ruined the Senators in their
Sabbath day program, for that
powerful sticker was held to
one blow in four times up.
However, Eddie Barr, much
improved center fielder, did
his share of clouting as he
came through with a six for
nine performance for the eve
ning, driving in four runs.
After giving up four hits, in
cluding a triple by A' Cohen and
Glenn Stetter's double, Olsen
settled down to dish up a row
of gooseeggs until the eighth. In
that frame he retired Greco on
an easy ,grounder only to have
Barr poke a single into left. A
bad throw by Art Pennington on
Catcher Sheet's roller put two
men on base and Manager Bill
Johnson, inserting himself in the
Maior Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Louis 71 44 .617 New York
W L Pet.
58 57 .504
54 61 .470
4R68 .410
45 74 .378
Brooklyn 69 45 .605 Pittsburgh
Boston 59 56 .513 Cincinnati
PhllRdcl 60 53 .508 Chicago
Results Sunday:
St. Louis 4-0. Pittsburgh S-8.
Boston 5. Brooklyn 0.
Philadelphia 4-0, New York 0-9.
game forfeited to Giants).
Chicago 5-1, Cincinnati 4-4.
Results Saturday:
St. Louis 4. Pittsburgh 3.
Boston 4. Brooklyn 0 fnight).
Philadelphia 8, New York 3.
Cincinnati 7, Chicago 4.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet.
W L Pet.
New York 73 42 .635 Detroit
65 56 .537
58 67 .427
40 80 .333
38 77 .330
Boston 72 46 .610 Chicago
Cleveland 68 48 .590 St. Louis
Phlladel 63 54 .538 Washing
Results Sunday:
Philadelphia 8. New York 7.
Boston 4, Washington 0.
Chicago 8-4, Cleveland 4-7.
St. Louis 4-7, Detroit 2-8.
Results Saturday:
New York 7, Philadelphia 3.
Boston 8-7, Washington 4-1.
St. Louis 5. Detroit 1.
The St. Louis Cardinals
picked . up a precious half
game on the Brooklyn Dodg
ers in the National league
race when they split a double
header with the Pirates while
the Dodgers lost to Boston, S
to O. The Cards won the open
er, 4 to 2, but then lost to ex
teammate Mnrry Dickson, 8 to
0, in the second game.
Ken Heintzleman won his
15th of the season as the Phils
whipped the Giants, 4 to 0
in the first game of a double
header; it was his fifth shutout
The Giants were winning the
nightcap, 3-2, in the ninth when
Richie Ashburn made a some
sault attempt to catch a Giant
fly. Umpire George Barr ruled
that Ashburn did not catch
the ball. The crowd booed and
poured a storm of pop bottles
onto the field. Barr declared
the game forfeited to the Giants,
9 to 0.
Ken Raffensberger won his
13th of the season, a five-hitter,
over the Cubs, 4 to 1, in the
second game of a doubleheader
after the Cubs took the opener,
5 to 4, on three Red errors.
role of a pinch hitter for Jerry
Ballard came through with a
blow to score Barr. Sheets
WIL Standings
(By the Associated Prut)
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Yakima 89 43 .674 Victoria 58 7 .433
Vancouver 80 50 .615 Salem 58 16 .424
Spokane TO 03 .536 Bremerton 54 75 .419
Wenatchee 68 65 511 Ticoma 54 79 .406
Remit! Bandar
Yakima 2-13, Bremerton 1-9. find
name 1? Innings, first game 8 lnnlnia)
Spokane 6-8, Vancouver 5-11.
Victoria 10-4, Wenatchee 4-6.
Tacoma 7-7, Salem 5-2.
Beiulti Saturday
Bremerton 4, Yakima 3.
Wenatchee 7. Victoria 0.
Spokane 9, Vancouver 6.
Tacoma 1, Salem 1.
Official Box
First same:
xacoma
B H O A
Spader. 3
Kaney, 3
Stetter,.
Greco, r
Barr.m
Sheeta.c
Ballard.l
Cohen.sa
Kerlgan.p
x-Jhnsn.l
4 0 2
4 0 1
4 1 3
Burgher.r
Beard.c
Bartle.l
Cherry.m
4 1
4 0
3 0
j ? u wasiey.j 4 14 2
4 2 10 Snyder.l 4 110
2 1 11 0 Pnningtn.i 3 0 10
4 10 4 W.Ptrsn,2 4 3 3 4
4 10 0 Olsen.p 3 10 2
112 0
33 10 24 11 Total! 31 I 24 B
Totals
x singled lor Ballard in 8th.
Tacoma 600 000 027 10 0
Salem 002 300 005 9 2
Pitcher Ip Ab H R Er So Bb
Kerrigan 8 32 9 6 6 1 2
Olsen 8 33 10 7 6 2 3
Left on bases: Tacoma 6, Salem 6. Er
rors: Pennington, W. Peterson, Three
base hit: Cohen. Two base hits: Stetter,
W. Peterson, Wasley. Runs batted in:
Barr 2, Sheets, Cohen 3, Burgher 2, Bar
tie, W. Peterson, Olsen. Johnson. Sacri
fices: Ballard, Olsen. Double play: Wag
ley to W. Petemon to Bartle. Umplrea:
Regele and Henetlch. Time; 1:34.
Second game:
Tacoma (J)
(2) Salem
B H O A
B H O A
Spaeter.2
Kaney. 3
0 W.Ptrsn,2
2 Krug.r
0 Bartle.l
0 Cherry.m
1 Wasley.3
1 Burgher.e
0 Snyder.l
1 Pnnlngtn.s
1 Mclrvln.p
Predrcks.p
Buckley. a
G.Ptrsn,
Stetter.l
Greco, r
Barr.m
Gardner.e
Ballard, 1
Cohen.sa
Carter.p
0 0 0 0
Totals
38 13 37
Totals
35 10 27 14
a Singled for Fredericks In 9th,
z an lor Burkiey in flth.
Tacoma 300 011 2007 13 0
Salem 000 000 0022 10 3
Pitcher Ip Ab H R Er So Bb
Carter 9 35 10 2 2 3 2
Mclrvin 7 32 12 7 4 0 7
Fredericks 2 6 1 0 0 1 2
Left on bases: Tacoma 13, Salem 8. Er
rors: Pennington 2, Mclrvin, Three base
hit: Barr. Two base hits: Snyder 2. Runs
batted In: Stetter 2, Barr 2, Gardner,
Carter. Kaney, Buckley 2. Stolen base:
Ballard. Double plays: W. Peterson to
Bartle. Mclrvin to Burgher to Bartle.
Pennington to W. Peterson to Bartle. Um
pires: Nenezlch and Regele. Time: 2:02.
Attendance; 937.
Nfiflf II jWPPt Zoe Ann Olsen, Athens Athletic club,
IICQI II JIT CGI Oakland, Calif., twisted and sumer
saulted her way to a second successive women's national AAU
one meter diving championship at San Antonio, Texas. Here
Miss Olsen is executing a running half twist. (AP Wirephoto)
Softball Meet
Pairings Made
Eugene, Aug. 22 UP) Pair
ings for the first-round play In
the annual Oregon Softball tour
nament here August 28-Septem-
ber 1 were listed today.
Sixteen teams will compete
for a ticket to the regional tourn
ament at Boise September 2.
The winner there will go to the
national.
The pairings for August 28:
12 noon District 13 (Astoria
Seaside vs. District 7 (Klamath
Falls); 1 p.m. District 10 (Ba
ker-La Grande - Ontario-Nyssa)
vs. District 4 (Albany-Lebanon);
2 p.m. District 8 (Medford vs.
"p
I J
scored a moment later on Wayne
Peterson's miscue.
Salem scored two in the third
as the result of Wayne Peter
son s double; singles by Bill Bur
gher and Bill Beard and Dick
Bartle's long fly. They added
three more in the fourth on Mel
Wasley's double and singles by
Wayne Peterson, Olsen and Bur
gher. Carter, a newcomer with the
Tigers, stood the Solons off
through eight frames of the
nightcap and he was well on
his way to a shutout until Bur
gher singled after Wasley had
flown out to open the frame.
Orrin Snyder drove a double
to the left center boards (one
that even Eddie Barr couldn't
haul down) and Claude Buck
ley, batting for Fredericks,
produced the single that scor
ed two runs.
Saturday night's game went to
the Tigers, 2 to 1, with Gene
Peterson getting the loss.
Elsewhere in the league Yak
ima upped its first place margin
to eight full games by downing
Bremerton twice Sunday, 2-1
and 13-9. Vancouver and Spo
kane broke even with the Indians
taking the first, 6-5 and losing
the second 11-8. Victoria down
ed Wenatchee 10-4 in the first
contest and dropped the second
6 to 4.
The Senators retained sixth
place, a game and a half behind
Victoria.
(8 inninitjO
Yakima 000 010 012 11
Bremerton 000 300 402 000 9 19
Dickie and Tornay; Raenl and Neal.
(12 innlncx)
Yakima 001 040 031 00413 13
Bremerton ... 000 300 402 0 19
Sporer, Babbitt 7, Soriano 10 and
Tornay; Dame, Plrack (5), Marshall IB),
Baldwin (9j and Ronning.
Vancouver 040 0i 1005 15 1
Spokane OKI 001 0116 11 2
Coxtello, HcdKccock (9i and Brenner;
Brlllhart, Bishop (9) and Parks.
Vancouver 410 310 20011 17 6
Spokane 500 201 000 8 12 1
Anderson. Snyder (1 and Shcely; Wer
bowskl, Kimball (4) and Parks.
Victoria , 300 140 310 11 0
Wenatchee 000 002 2491
Propst and Day; Johnson, Pesut (5) and
Winter,
Victoria 101 100 0104 12 3
Wenatchee 004 100 Olx R 10 0
Ward, Lome (8) and Morgan; McCol-
lum and Pesut.
District 11 (Pendleton); 3 p.m.
District 12 (The Dalles-Bonne-ville)
vs. District 5 (Corvallis);
4 p.m. District 14 (Salem) vs,
District 9 (Redmond-Bend-Prine-
vme-jonn Day-Hines); 7:30 p.
m. District 15 (Springfield)
vs. District 1 (West Lmn-Tigard
Oswego-Hubbard-Molalla - Esta
cada); 8:30 p.m. District 6
CCoos Bay- Roseburg - Cottage
Grove) vs. District 2 (McMinn
ville-Mount Angel - Tillamook) ;
9:30 p.m. District 16 (Eugene)
vs. District 3 (Forest Grove
Hillsboro-St. Helens-Orenco).
Coach Jim Turner of the Yan
kees pitched the Boston Braves
to 20 victories in 1937. As Beau
mont, Tex., manager in 1946 he
pitched his team to 11 wins while
losing three.
LimiJLmM .limn ri& mmmnimij:yiLn.Si'ut
firanH 0IH Mrlil Baseball's Grand Old Man, Connie
WlQIIU Will i IUII ,l9nH nn In rsr to seknowlfdn
the cheers of New Yorkers lining Broadway as parade in his
honor moves past Pine street toward City hall and an official
welcome. Sandlot ball players march alongside the car as an
escort. The owner-manager of the Philadelphia Athletics was
received at City hall by Mayor William O'Dwycr. (AP Wire-photo)
LOCAL UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS AND FEATURES
Shelton Speeds
To Victorv in .
Roadster Race
Local auto racing fans today
continued to ask "When is some
body going to repeat?"
Before Saturday night's hot
rod racing program at Holly
wood Bowl, three drivers had
racked up main event victories
three roadster main events.
They were Max Humm. Gordy
Livingston and Len Sutton.
All three were on hand Satur
day to attempt to become the
first driver to win a main event
in Salem twice.
But Mickey Shelton had other
ideas. He piloted his red "27
car to a victory in the 35-lap
main to become the fourth driv
er to win a Hollywood Bowl
mainer in as many races.
Next Saturday all four pre
vious winners will be striving
to become the first repeat win
ner on the quarter-mile asphalt
speedway.
Ferrier Finally
First in Tourney
Grand Rapids, Mich., Aug. 22
(TP) Big Jim Ferrier of San
Francisco finally won a golf
tournament yesterday and re
wrote the record book in doing
it.
Ferrier, the perennial runner
up in pro golfing circles this sea
son, turned in a 263 score to cop
$2,600 first prize money in the
Grand Rapids Open golf tourna
ment at Cascade Hills Country
club.
Today enjoy
truly delicious.
delightful, deluxe
Kentucky flavor!
KENTUCKY BOURBON
WHISKEY A BLEND
O30
360
Qt.
a.
Pint
National Distillers Products Corporation, N. Y.
86.8 Prnol . 51 Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Whiskey 49 Griio Neutral Spirits
Roufbon
r deluxe
I
JV-, V Taste...
f( Coinpare...
Enjy-
Salem, Oregon, Monday, August 22, 1949
OREGON TIDES
Correct for Newport
6:18 a.m. -1.3
6:17 P.m. 2.3
6:59 a.m. -1.6
7:05 p.m. 1.7
7:30 a.m. -1.8
7:51 p.m.1 1.0
8:17 a.m. -1.4
8:37 p.m. 0.4
8:55 a.m. -0.8
9:25 p.m. -0.1
12:42 p.m. 6.5
0:25 a.m. 8.2
1:21 p.m. 7.0
0:54 a.m. 8.4
1:57 p.m. 7.5
1:42 a.m. 8.4
2:32 p.m. 8.0
2:30 a.m. 8.1
3.00 p.m. 8.4
Woodburn Issues
Football Call
Woodburn Candidates for
the 1949 Woodburn high school
football team have been given
their initial call for the season
at 6 p.m. Thursday by Coach
Chuck Sherron.
The first practice game of the
season will be September 16 at
Hood River.
Uniforms will be issued Thurs
day evening and the first prac
tice session will be August 26,
with the following three weeks
given over to conditioning and
perfecting plays preparatory to
the start of the season's sched
ule. The first Bulldog home game
frijjoy a
GO
JE.. MAGICON Et
MAGICON SECURED DOORS WILL NOT OPEN WHILE CAR'S IN MOTON
1. Y, yoa can tllmlnafa all danger of your
young! tar er a pauangar falling out of your
ear while the Ignition li turned en with tho
amazing nw MAGICON "electrically oper
ated" door lafety locks. Alio prevonti In
truders fram entering your car.
2. MAGICON locks can be Installed on any make,
model and year car from 1939 through 1949
and many older cars. The locks can be In
stalled en tho right front door as well as both
rear doers.
STATE MOTORS, INC.
PACKARD
J40 North High St., Salem, Oregon
HERRALL OWENS CO.
PONTIAC
660 North Liberty, Salem, Oregon
It Was a Great Day
For the Great Old Man
By OSCAR FRALEY
New York, Aug. 22 U.R
Gaunt and erect, the tall old
man stood in the cool shade
of the dugout with his silvery
hair brushing the ceiling and,
with suspiciously moist eyes,
watched a ghostly procession out
of the past
It was Connie Mack day at
Yankee stadium and a handful
of his old time stars, once the
best athletes in the game but
now scrawny or obese with the
weight of fleeing years, flipped
the ball through the hot sun
shine with the remembered mo
tions of other days.
And there in the dugout, the
86-vear-old manager of the Phil
adelphia Athletics watched them
with his alert blue eyes, now sad
and now twinkling as memories
of the past tumbled through the
privacy behind his wrinkled
face. Those ever-changing eyes
surveyed them all.
Stubby Max Bishop . . . Moon
faced Mule Haas . . . Sturdy,
red-faced Mickey Cochrane . . .
Beefy Al Simmons . . . Pudgy
Jimmy Foxx . . . bald-Bing Mill
er. Heavy, grey-haired home run
Baker . . . bespectacled Jack
Barry . . . and lean lefty Grove,
white haired and carrying slight
paunch.
Grove, a surly man back in
the days when he was the best
Page 13
will be September 23 against
Willamina. The Willamette Val
ley league jamboree will be at
Estacada September 27 and the
first loop game will be Scptem
ber 30 against Silverton on the
local field.
Bang, Bang, Bang!
Trapshoot Opens
Vandalia, O., Aug. 22 W)
The championship chips go
down today in the golden anni
versary grand American trap-
shoot. Shooters from practically
everywhere have fired more
than a quarter million practice
shots the last three days in tune
up events.
Another million targets will
be blasted before the final shot
roars across the Miami valley
next Saturday.
Today's program, expected to
attract some 700 marksmen
the introductory 200-target race
at 16 yards, A half dozen minor
championships will be decided
on the first 100.
(jJoAM - Jjm
TO YOUR NEAREST MAGICON
DEALER NOWI AND ORDER
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electro magnetic control system, which has
only ono moving part the latch Itself. Thero
are no springs.
4. MAGICON works Independently of the regular
door lock and Is so concealed In the door
posts that It cannot bo tampered with.
I. MAGICON Is operated by breaker switch
on the dash bourd to allow entrance or eiit
of passenqers at will.
4, MAGICON Is Inactive only when the Ignltloa.
is turned off. or the breaker switch Is vsed.
See your dealer today.
SALEM DEALERS
VALLEY MOTOR CO.
FORD
37S Center St., Salem, Oregon
LODER BROS.
OLDSMOBILE
465 Center St., Salem, Oregon
DOUGLAS McKAY CHEVROLET CO.
510 North Commercial, Salem, Oregon
Distributor M. E. McMorine, 241 1 N. E. Klickitat St.
Portland 12, Oregon
left handed pitcher in the game,
was smiling now. And it seem
ed typical that h should com
plain mildly:
Say, I'm the only pitcher in
this club."
'Don't worry," replied Al
Schacht, as the old A's prepared
to play two exhibition innings
against former Yankee stars,
'pitch 'em low and they won't
be able to see over their
stomachs."
The old timers stood around
the batting cage, watching with
a wistful yearning as the current
day Yanks and A's took their
cuts. Every once in a while one
of the oldsters would slip in and
take a few swings. And the old
timers set a bellow when Baker,
who used to knock them out of
the park, hit one out of the in
field.
Then the public address sys
tem called them to home plate,
one by one, and they walked
erectly from the dugout under
Mack s watchful eyes. Most of
them lifted their hats only
momentarily at the applause.
clamping the caps on again
quickly to hide the baldness or
the white frosted hair.
And then, as they stood thero
in a waiting "V at the plate,
they called for Connie.
He stood there a moment,
gnarled hands twisting a score
card. He looked down a moment,
ironing the quiver from thin
lips, and then climbed the dug
out steps with his amazing agil
ity and strode toward the wait
ing players with that quick, age
less walk.
They gave him a lot of gifts
then. There was a huge silver
tray from the town of Meridan,
Conn., where Connie started
playing ball In 1884; a silver
loving cup from the citizens of
Wilmington, Del.; a watch from
the City of Philadelphia, and a
plaque from the Yankees.
Connie thanked them then, in
a voice which trembled at times,
and not from age. And he told
them that even at 86 there was
no thought of retirement in his
mind.
"It is my great desire to give
Philadelphia a team they will
be proud of," he said in part.
And I hope to do it in tho
next few years."
Over in the Athletics dugout,
big Lou Brissie, who was to
pitch against the Yanks, pound
ed his glove and muttered:
"I d sure like to win this ono
for the old man."
Then he went out and did it.
As Connie remarked:
"It was a great day for met"
George Metkovich, White Sox
outfielder, made three errors in
one inning while playing first
base for the Red Sox in 194S.
Three of Gene Hermanski's 15
home runs for the Dodgers in
1948 came in one gam last
August.
Vacation
S
r l Pel.
17 SB .MS
0 S8 .420
0 IT .342
.1 eo J3
7 L Pet.
9 SS .504
4 63 .411
8 70.4OT
1 79 .380
loiest
since
m.
night,
1 In
ntage they
enth-
:s re
hold imest
ntage
Chi-
ives
ied
the
Bfty
this
Bos-
cher,
lead
i 5-3
?ubs.
Pi
sh
y
to
10
oma
hera
npU
ears
Her-
tries
aper
year
by
r 30
ered
or a
club
roup
iday
ago.