SfEBFORT) JIXTL TRTRTTKE,' rTOPOTCD,' Vffl lffiftyV PI )NT1T.VY!.nrA'Y 1.Vt9V
PAflE-FrVW,
r
BR
ATHLETICS
1
FIRST PLACE BY
'Yanks Idle' As
V phians ..' Forge
Philadel
Ahead ft , i -r
CarUS MOVe Up tO lie TOP
; Lead Without f lay
ators Stop Browns.
By William J. Cblpuuiu
' Associated I'ress Sports Writer.
' Major league baseball lost anoth
er decision to tho weathei man
yesterday, but on a decision rather
than by a knockout. .Exactly one
half of the schedule " was ' saved,
enough to affeci the standlnR In
both lenKues. The Athletics pulled
into first place, half a ftame ahead
of tho idle Yankees, by defeating
the Tigers at Detroit, 10 to 8, In a
game which left eight pitchers
draped upon the ropes; while the
Braves shoved the Cubs into a
deadlock with the St. Louis Cards
in the National league by shading
the McCarthymen in twelvo in
nings, 6 to 5. :
: The Cardinals, moving Into a ttle'
for the lead in John Ileydlcr's cir
cuit without -so much as unllmber
ing a bat, thus profited from Idle
ness at a moment when the Yan
kees found It costly- Thin- is the
first tlmo In four years that the
Yanks have been anywhere but in
first placo at this particular time
in May.
. The Athletics also registered a
neat gain over the Browns, who
persist In threatening from the
third rung of the American league
ludder. The Senators stopped the
Browns in another knockdown-and-drag-out
affair by a score of 9 to 7
aiding both the A's and the Yan
kees. . .. ', .
'. The Chicago White, fox evened
their aeries against Boston by win
nlng. to 2. Bob Wetland pitched
a smart game, for, the Blackburnb
host, and received the aid of
home run contribution from Chal-
nier Clssell. .
, The Braves, and the Cubs had
the stago all to themselves In the
senior league, and. celebrated by
giving Boston fans their first extra
inning demonstration-;of. the sea
son. Tho twelfth-round celebration
of the Messrs. Berncy James and
AI ' Spohror, who doubled. . cost
Perce Malone his first defeat .of
the season atte flvo jWinnlnS 'ef7
forts. , ' '. '
The real feature was -the' bril
liant relief pitching of Johnny
Cooney. John entered the debate
in the eighth inning after the
Braves had tied the score at 5 to 5,
and held the Cubs to three Incon
npicuo'js hits In five rounds while
waiting for the home defenders to
get a run for him- -Ben Cantwell
gave the Bruins six hits and five
.runs through ..tho first seven In
ning?. ,' .
' Nobody can say with precision
just which team profited by the
carrying over of tho Red-Giant
fray at the Polo grounds, but It is
fairly certain that the Hobins lost
nothing by postponing their sched
uled hostilities against tho troulilo
eome Pirates at lihbots Kleld.
DIXON HASOLD
POWER IN RIGHT
PORTLAND. Ore., May 15. P)
Georglo Dixon, Portland, made
good in Ills comeback last night by
knocking out Willie Feldman. New
York, In thoslxth round of their
scheduled 10-round main event.
They aro middlcweights. Dixon
fought with the tigerish fury he
displayed a year ago and his dead
ly right was much in evidence. The
punishment Feldman took showed
In tho sixth and Dixon soon had
him helpless', the referee stopping
the battle. . - -
Franklo Warneckc and Jack
Kentworth, Salem, drew in four
rounds. A crowd of two thousand
saw the card which was held In
the city auditorium, v
. - 1
Kltnor Will Fly.
FIIKEI'OKT. N. V.. May 15.
BEATING
TIE
(P -"We" flew to Paris. It Is
tho intention of Kllnor Smith 17-5ear-old
bobbed blonde, to start
m somo flno day In tho next few
months on a-fllght to Rome. Ana
in that ship." she insists "there'll
be Just gasoline nnd nie."
No More Gas
In Stomach
and Bowels
If r wish be P""'n.,"hV.,t
tek Blmmi' Tblel. M
n prepared ..pMUIiy lor .lomth
and .11 Uis l4.Hcts r.ltlot Irea
kit .1 th7itom.cS "III dl..pp.t:
.nllotia, nervoo lIin with """"'
tlUtlon will v.tilih. .nd To" will tmn
bl. to t.k. dtp brMlh wlthol
That drowty, flepr ',tt(
4lnnr will h repl.etd by
fi.trtmtnmot. Blo-Mn will
Your limb, rm. nd ffr J))
ttonf.r fM cold nd "go t 'frJ:
... Iron, (nt.rftrlng elr'",f-
itoM. C th genuln. In th yHow pacfc
at any good dmi rtc fl
; imiAXG'S VliVQ STofli
E
LIED IN
ATHLETIC CLUB
. .
NEW YORK.' May '15.-
11 iiu i
; New York . American said '" today
there 'was a liiiu of - suppressed
excitement at the Now York Ath
lelic club ovor. the outcome of ef
forts by both.' Gene Tunney and
Jack Dempsey to become members.
The fact that Tunney had ap
plied for membership lust July was
only revealed lam night when the'
board of governors after their
monthly meeting failed to an
nounce DempHey'8 election. Mom-
uera oc tne board explainer tnut
Dempuey'a name never had been
submitted by the' membership
commitee. r -
i no naiiiPH or an applicants
must first go to tho membership
committee, which is composed of
flvo members. Three black halls
are sufficient to prevent an appli
cation from being , sent ' to tho
board of governors for final action.
None of the membership commit-
eemen would admit any black
balls had been cast against Demp
sey. i ,' ... 1 1
The American quoted Dr. John
P. Connors, chairman of the com
mlttee that favorably roported the
Tunney application, an saying Tun
ney was elected to membership by
the board of governors but that
'something must have happened"
after the election to cause his re
jection. . t.
. r '
F
MOOItTOWN. Kngland, May 15
(P) Still iilnylng In brilliant
form, Walter Hagen', American
Ryder cup team captain and four
JACK
AND
GEN
BLACKBA
time British open champion, scored j the coal Industry of Britain appa--a
70 today to take the lead among . ' . ... i jr ; '
the qualifiers for the Yorkshire
Evening News thousand guineas
golf tournnmcnt. Ilagen's 70,
combined with Ills' 69 of yester
day,' gave him. a 36-holo total of
139. five strokes ahead of two
other Amorlcnns, . Leo Dlegol '.and
Al Watrous. who wero tied with
144. .-,'
...After a bard series of holes for
the first nine. Horton Smith re:
covered ,on tho second sufficiently
lo got a fair score. His outward
score of 41 included nn eight, but
ho finished with a birdie four for
a totul of 77 and 36 holo scoro
ofi 163, "Which -assured -him- quail
f icnlion. ' 1
Dudley played conservative golf
with few . slips on the . greens,
which left him with a score of 7
and sent him safoly Into the
mntch play. .
.lames Ockcndcn. former Frencn
open champion, came through
with a-score of 70 today, to tie
Hugeh's low mark for tho second
qualifying test. Ockenden, how
ever, took 83 yesterday.
STANDINGS
OF THE '
CLUBS.
Pacific Coast Ijeaguo
W.
Pet.
Mission 33
Los Angeles 2H
Oakland 21
San Francisco 25
Hollywood 20
Sacramento 20
Portland 17
Seattle. 15
12
21
21
. 24
23
311
' 21!
29
.733
.671
.671
.610
.465
.400
.35
.341
National Iieaguo
W. L."
Chicago 14 8
St. Louis 14 8
' Pet.
.636
.636
Boston -12 8
.600
" . 8 (1 6
1 .4.74
Pittsburgh 10 9
Philadelphia ..; 9 10
New York T 10
.41
Cincinnati 9 13
.409
Brooklyn 16
- - American leaguc '
. W. Li
Philadelphia 14 , 7
Now York , 13 ; 7
St. Louis :....13 10
Detroit 15 12
Cleveland ...11 12
Washington 8 1 S
Chlcngo 9 16
Boston 7 17
. .286
"Pet
.667
.660
.666
,T,r,6
.74
.400
.37
.392
Coast League
Yesterday
it.
Portland 2
Seattle 3 1
Mahaffey nnd Itego, Bates
ham nnd Cox.
K. H. K
San Francisco 5 9
Los Angeles ...!:......... 6 li
(16 Innings)
' fltvnn. Dav'.s and Howard
Walsh and Ssndberg. Hannah.
It. H
. 3 It
. 1 6
Oakland ...
Sacramento
MeRvoy and
P. end:
Ylncl and
HcvcnV.
O O
R. H. E
Hollywood
Missions ,
Mollerson and Cook;
Baldwin.
, 6 "11
. 1 4
Cole and
o
4
NKWBBIKI Moore Grocery re
cently estahllnhed In remodeled
Quarters.
- 0
LI
BEATEN 4 AND 3l
, i MaiBhnl Koch hud attaked Clem-
,,, ,,.,, 'encenu, the altacks bused on thu
A.VDJlhtt'b, Scotland, Maj,. h , ,,,., ...
ST.
I 15. (P) Miss Glenna Coilett, ;
'American women's golf champion, ;
i entered the fourth round of the!
.... ,ilM,i , vini.!
- j
t queen, Toronto, canaus, seven'
up and six to play. After pre
viously defeating Reryl Rrown of
Formby, four nnd two, In a third
round match.'
. Miss Marlon Holllns. New York
and Del Monte, CM., former wo
men's . champion of the United
States, -.was defeated In the fo.urth
round by Mrs. Edith Lelteh Clued
alla. four up and three to play.
LOCAL SPORTS GOING
Ti
A largo caravan, composed of
dfclcBates from tho Jackson County
Game Protective association nnd
the Modford Gun club, will attend
tho annual salmon bake and trap
shooters tournament to be held
at Rbseburg Sunday. Tho cele
bration Is to be an all day event.
The local delegation which will
attend the meet at the Invitation
of the Dojiglas County Game Pro
tective association, will leave hero
early ' Sunday morning and return
tho same night. Information con.
ccrnlng the trip may be obtained
by setting in touch with Presi
dent Olen Arnsplgcr. who is in
charge of. arrangements and will
head tho delegation.
1 .
Brisbane's Today ;
(Continued from Page One.) .
. Unfortunately for IUtmsay Mac
Donald's sincerity and earnestness,
theory 1b one thing and praclico
is another.
- The labor party went In to settle
the nation's labor troubles, and al
most immediately the country was
plunged into the worst strike that
1 England "had. The labor party left
on
in
MILD and
THEY
K
o
!. Lieotrr Myrti Touceo Co.
Untly- Tulued. aiyl tens of thimaaua
I ol ineu have been out o worn ever
j since.
Cleinenceau has chaiiKeiO I11"
about to be published, mid
nnnnces that it will contain no
k on Koch the great marshal
i beitiK dead. 1
1(.joug mIin- an,i ciemcnceuu no-
toriously Irreligious.
lemenceau's lack . of reliKious
belief prevented his election as
president of France, after the war.
liVmichmpn. not verv rcliirious asUi i-i.m. i:.,t.. n..i.,.. ii-iii ,.. n:n
- , . . i ..
u rule, i uun i wtiui in y- vie -
man to bottler me, uut 1 tion t wnui
anybody to bother my .clergyman."
' I
Foch and Clcmenccau, of course.i
will meet in l eaven, in the front
row where good patriots sit to -
gether. Ami both will be surprised
to meet there.
Foch by thut time will know that
hut for Clenienceau there would
not have been Aiy "great Foch,"
or any victory for tho French, and
will pyibably consider that as Im
portant In tho long run as techni
cal religious belief.
RELIG1
THAN MEN AT COLLEGE
OREGON' STATE AtiRlCl'L
Tl'HAL. COI.I.IX1K, Corvallls, May
15. (Special.) Women students lit
Oregon State college show more
religious convictions than men stu
dents, according to figures Just
compclted 'from church proferenco
slips by the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W.
C. A. Of the total student enroll
ment, 1759 students show church
preference and 1-15 make no pref
erence. Those without church
preference number women as
against H33 men.
, The church preferred by most
men is Mie -Methodist, and among
women, '. tho - Presbyterian. ' Men
designating the Methodist church
number 260. Women naming the
Presbyterian church numbered 23(i.
1
Jack Cikw On Phone. "
NEW YOItK. May 15. (P)
Jack Dempsey, who has been In
doors much of tho tlmo becauso
of a cold nnd a soro throat, tele- j
nhoncs the Mrs. . at Hollywood;
dally. His secretary says as to
one conversation: "It was full of
such endeurlng terms I had to
diu-k out of hearing."
the track it's
SPEED
ciga rette its
yet
SATISFY
Che
FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED
I tiip iiinirTA I
j IHtWAKitlb
Livestock
I'OltTl.ANI), Ore.1. May 1'..-
CATTl.K AND CAl.VI'S. steady
receipts cattle 1!5, calves 40.
HlMiS Ijuotliblv fteady. receipts
SCO, iiifltuliiiK direct. Heavy
welKlu I '.". to :I..U lbs. I, medium
to choice. $10sji 11: medium weight
CIuo to 250 lbs.), medium to choice.
SlHi 11.S&: liKht wpIkIH tit!" to
200 lbs.lt. medium to choice. fll.Sfi
! 1 -.iv, ni,ui unum n.iw i--
in3 , mei hum to cliolce.' 31LH1
ll:S.ri: iiiickinir sows, rough 1111(1
j smooth, jsfu H-'Ju. Slaughter plus
(Sn to KIO lbs.), medium to choice,
i -ir, n, it :T. Feeder and Blocker
, ps (T0 (() ,.iQ medium to
ciive jio.SOii 11.00. (Soft or
oily hogs and roastlne, pigs exclud
Cd in above quotations).
" SHKKP AND 1,AMI!S Quntnhly
steady. Receipts 115. Following
quotations except on lambs, on
shorn basis: Lambs (S-l lbs.
down), good to cholco, $14 Ji 15; do
(!)2 lbs. down), medium, 12Di
IS.'.itl: do littl wctahls), cull to
common, $lUt 12.
Produce
POKTI-iAXD. Ore., May 13. PI
lU'TTKH Lower on all grades
except extras. Portland Dairy Kx
chanii net wholesale prices
(Cubes): Kxtras.. ir.p ; standards,
13c; prime (lists, lllVjc: firsts, 42c.
Creamery prices: Prints 3c over
cube standurds.
KIIC.S Standard extras cent low
on.' Portland Dairy Kxchango (net
basis): Fresh standards, extras,
2!c; fresh standard firsts, 2S)c;
fresh medium, extras, :Kc' i'resh
medium firsts, .,25c; current re
ceipts, , 2Sc. Prices to retailers 1
and 3c over exchange prices.
. iMIliK llutterfat cent lower nil
abound. v Hay milk II per cent),
$2.45 cwl. delivered Portland, less
1 per cent Hutterfat, station 4:1c:
Hack, lie; delivered at Portland,
I G I'll 47c.
- -Poultry, onions, -potatoes',' wool,
nuts, hay, cascara hark 'and hops
'-ffctoady and unchaiiRcd.
San Fnuiclsco llutlcrfat
SAN FRANCISCO. May 15. (AI
Putteriat . o. b. SuSn Francisco,
50c.
Wall Street Report
NKW VOIIK, May 15. W)
Illull call money rales again
prnved an Insurmountable barrier
TASTE
TASTE above everything
Taste shows, in Chesterfield,
in the tobaccos wc buy aromatic leaf of good
"body," free from harshness, high in natural
sugarmild, ripe. It shows, too, in the way wo
blend and "cross-blend" them.
Most of oil, it shows in the way men stick
to Chesterfields for that's final proof of taste!
sterfi eld
toieculators (or the advance in
today's stock market.
The general upward luovement
was halted when late borrowers
had to pay 15 per cent for call
loans, much of tho early advance
) ! was whittled down as aelllnK prcs-
nine Krew ami several ijiiuiui m
I duslrlals were quoted Well under
j ycatenlay's close. The closo wus
l:ivy.
Sales
(Ouires.
uiiproxlmatcd a.luO.t-qo
Dempsey Gets No )
Purse for Fight
With J.' Benjamin
4. 4t44
!
fr. NKW VOIIK, May J5.r-W)
I The Dally News today pVlntid
! an announcement of an alter-
cation between Jack Demp-
scy. former heavyweight
champion, und .loo IJenJa-
mln, a former lightweight, at
a party la a hotel.
s the story goes, there
re 'words over girls at the
party, and Jack gave Joe a
,hort crushing right. Joe
went down and got up again.
Dempsey left. licnjamlu
yelled after him to return and
fight.. Ho didn't.
M'ACOMA, Wash.. May 15. (!')
The West Coast Lumberman's as
sociation embracing more than 100
mills manufacturing- Duuglas fir
lumber, this morning adopted new
grading rules for all lumber cut
fur the domestic niarkot. Only
minor modifications wero made In
tho rules as proposed by tho grad
ing comnilttoe. .
Lucky Mike.
NEW .YOItK (P) Customs "'
forceuicnt officers are not -a. bad
sort, Michael Dillon has learned.
Two of thein Jumped Into the
Hudson river to save Dillon's life,
when his boat overturned and
later when ;they stretched him
out on tho duck, wet and chilled,
they nmi rod liquor down his
throat.
o ;;;:'!'; ;
:
An
Architectural
if
Triumph of
Enduring
Beauty
Paiko thatch siiinclis inaugurate an entirely new
style of roof beauty . . . with graceful, curving
thatched roofs, reminiscent, of the Old World's
glorious creations. . ' - ..- -, ...
Not only is each shingle woven together. -it the bot
tom and sides with a patented thatch, but in addition
every shingle is made an integral rigid part of the roofv '
It is the only shingle made which is nailed at.the top,
center and bottom . . ; making it impossible for the
shingle to ever llap in the wind or permit the rain to
penetrate. The shingles arc ingeniously arranged so
that not a single nail head is exposed. :
Convenient Terms
No matter what price you wish to pay for a shingled
roof, the Pabco Thatch Shingle is within your reach..
Its cost can be made to fit your purse by a variance in
the manner of laying. A flexible deferred payment plan
makes payments a matter of your convenience. '
Pabco Thatch Shingles arc fire-resistant and can be laid
right over old wooden shingles. Only Pabco dealers .
and authorized application agents can supply these su
perior patented shingles. '",'.
Free IRoof Inspection Service
ARibcoRoofcxpcrt will gladly inspect yourroof and tell
you about its actual condition. Write our nearest office.
The Parafline Companies, Inc.
to Angeles - Oddand San Fwncisco ' Portland Scude Kansas City
" We carry a complete line of . '
PABCO products
Biff Pines Lumber Co.
v ... . ,'.'-''''.
When They're Klein-made
; They're Tailor-made
in Medford
It is neither expensive, extravagant rior uneconomical to
wear clothes made for you. They carry smartness, cor
rectness and individuality in every line..',' ' . , ;
Priced from
$35 up
Rex Cafe
' THE PLACE TO EAT
Good Food Good Service
IOC
Trowbridge Lumber Yard .
Evarythina in Lumbef and Building Matarlala ,
Dlttrlbutora for Johnt-Mannvllla Rooflnga
Trowbridge Cabinet Works
- Cablneta, Window, Doora, Screens, Etc
i ' ' ' Tha Old Reliable Eatabllihed In 190S
When In need of ANYTHING for Building, Phona 13.
Wa can ba of real aervlca to you,
OE
if
.If
r"v'-"n,i
yii'r 'amj
UPSTAIP.S
OEZXOE
0E3O
OcnoE
3013.0