The Weather
Portrait: Fair tonight and
Friday; not much change In
temperature.
Temirature:
IHghest yesterday ..- , 9
Lowest this mnrnint .. U
Cash Buyer
Til short road to market la
through the classified ads la
tha Mall Tribune. Ads on this
pegs have brought csh bnyera
to the sellers door. What more
eonld one aik?
Tribune
FORD
Full Associated Press
all United Press
Thirtv-Second Year
MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1937.
No. 117.
i mm
Med
(o)fl(Ul
IK
nates
I
ft Lffi
By H. R. Baukhage
(Copyright, 1937, by the North Amer
ican Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) .
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6. Skipper
Kennedy of the maritime commis
lon Is Just about to bring another
big fleet into port.
It is only a matter of days until
he will be able to announce that
the powerful Dollar Line, most Im
portant shipping link with the
Orient, has signed up. Sixteen Amer
ican lines have already passed muster
aa eligible for six-month mail con
tracts and subsidies from the gov
ernment. Capturing the Dollar Line la some
what of en achievement. For when
Stanley Dollar, long-time fair-haired
boy of the old shipping board under
President Hoover, walked out on Mr.
Kennedy's Inspectors, he made .a hole
In the deck.
Mr. Kennedy's merchant marine In
the Pacific without a Dollar to Its
same wouldn't be such great shakes.
At the end of June, Mr. Kennedy
reported :
"The adjustment of the Dollar
steamship claims has been delayed
pending the receipt of essential in
formation concerning the company
and affiliated corporations and the
completion of the arrangements by
the company for providing additional
capital.'
This la the polite way of saying
that Stanley Dollar, accustomed to
getting Just about what he asked
for In the old shipping board days,
wouldn't talk.
Since the Dollar Line owed the
maritime commission some 1ft mil
lions for ships which It had pur
chased and loans lor construction,
Mr. Kennedy's boys thought they
were entitled to have the details of
the line's financing. This, of course,
applies to any company asking for
a subsidy.
The examination by the commis
sion of the financial structure and
reorganizations plana, when neces
sary. Is routine. These points must
be settled to the satisfaction of the
commission before a subsidy can be
granted.
The other sixteen lines were able
to get their clean bill of health by
July 1, when their temporary six
month subsidies began.
But Dollar delayed. At this writ
ing, however, everything but Chair
man Kennedy's okay on the last
page of the agreement Is written,
Continued on Page Bight.)
SON OF MEDFORD
MARYSVILLE, Cal.. Aug. 5. (AP
Charles Ross, 13, son of Mr, and
Mrs. L. E. Ross of Med ford. Ore.,
drowned In the Yuba liver while
wading with his brother Leonard,
and two sisters Wednesday.
All four children stepped Into a
deep bole, swimmers rescuing the
other three.
L. S. Ross has been employed In
the box factory at Timber Products
company for the past several years.
Four days ago he left here, presum
ably for a vacation trip In Califor
nia. It Is not known whether Mr.
Ross was In Mar ysv tile at the time of
his son's drowning.
Howard and Sten
Form Film Firm
HOLLYWOOD. Aug. 6. (TV-Leslie
Howard, English actor, and Eugene
Frenke, producer-husband of Anna
Sten, are the heads of a newly-formed
motion picture company, H. L. Kau:-
man, an associate, announced today
They nave teamed with an unnam
ed oil magnate, Kaufman said, to
produce six pictures a year for Grand
National release. At least one will
co-star Howard and Mlas Sten.
SIDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
Mrs, A. L. Pech of Lake Creek fas
tening her MT subscription to a
card with fancy crose stitches elao
orate enough to hold a greased pig
in place.
A. Frederick Stennett wonderinp
whether to buy a smaller car or build
a larger sarage. seeing as bow his
nw petrol wagon is too expansive
for the .structure.
E. P. Leavltt railing the nation!
park service the bes. federal agency,
and right In front of United BtaMa
forest service boys and girl, too.
George Prry In a hectic stew about
nrw-etln? a fallow bit-krr at th air
port, he re, Tins rotter of his guet
fir minutes beXora plana Uma.
SPECIAL BUSES
TAKE FIGHTERS
TO HUGE BLAZE
Applegate and South Fork
Camps Furnish Men for
Emergency Duty 1500
Now Fight Conflagration
Rogue River national forest head
quarters here were called upon again
today for emergency assistance In
combatting a roaring fire on the
Columbia national forest about ISO
miles northeast of Portland.
- A telephone call from the regional
forest office In Portland thlB after
noon said the fire was raging fiercely
and spreading rapidly. It was spread
over 2,000 acres this afternoon and
more than 1,600 men were thrown
on the fire lines In a strenuous ef
fort to check the leaping flames, the
message stated.
Issue General Call
A general call was Issued today for
CCC men especially trained as radio
operators for fire service. The Rogue
River national forest Is to send Its
five radio operators to the fire scene
by train tonight. Umpqua national
forest also was asked to send all
available radio men.
First call for help was received
here last evening and forces were
quickly mobilized by H. C. Obye, as
sistant supervisor in charge of fire
control on the Rogue River national,
forest.
At 9:30 p. m. two chartered busses
left here with 40 trained CCC fire
fighters from Camp Applegate under
W. L. White and E. B. Benbow as
foremen and 28 from Camp South
Fork under John Coodell. Lieut. Sam
uel W. Marker of Camp Applegate
accompanied the men, . , .
-The- fireflghterr toolt their own
tools and rations for two days.
Executives Needed
Later In the evening a call was
received for executive personnel and
Mr. Obye dispatched Slmerl ' Jarvl,
district ranger at Butte Falls; Albert
Young, protective assistant at Apple
gate; Dee Mills, Applegate CCC fore
man; Howard Ash, foreman at Un
ion Creek, and Ansil Pearce, guard
at Union Creek. The men left here
at 11 p. m. In two pickups.
Umpqua Aids
Responding to the emergency call.
Umpqua national forest headquarters
last night dispatched 62 Camp
Steamboat enrol lee a In chartered
buses, tha Associated Press reported.
No communities are Immediately
endangered by the forest fire, head
quarters here said. The fire started
In an old burn Monday when a snag
was struck by lightning, Mr. Obye
said. The flaming snag broke off,
slid down a 60-foot embankment
and threw flames over a wide area,
he explained.
Dispatches from the fire lines to
day indicated the flames bad leaped
to green timber.
Fighting the conflagration this
(Continued on Page Three.)
Urge Extra Session
To Pass Farm Laws
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6- (AP)
Senator Black (D.-Ala.) submitted a
petition tlgned by 41 senators today
urging a special semlon of congress
in the fall to enact general farm
legislation.
The petition was signed chiefly by
Democrats and independents.
It said the signers felt It would
be "unwise" to wait until Januarv
to enact farm legislation because
farmers making preparations for then
crops should know what laws would
be on the books ahead of that tlrnu.
Circulars for Senators
Rouse Storm of Protest
WASHINGTON. Aug. 8. (API
Circulation to senators by page boys
of a statement urging reconsideration
of an amendment to the Wagner
housing bill caused an uproar In the
chamber today.
Circulation of the statements,
called "propaganda" by Senator CI irk
(D-Mo). was denounced both by the
Missouri senator and Senator Mc
Nary, Republican leader. Clark made
a point of order against the pro
cedure. Senator Pittmao (D-Nev), presi
dent pro tempore, who was presiding,
ruled the pages could not be blamed,
and that if any blame attached to
the matter It should be laid to the
senator who had ordered the distri
bution. Senator Wagner ID-N.Y.), author
of the bouitlng bill, quickly assumed
"full responsibility." He said be had
not believed there was anything
"Improper" In the procedure and
thought "any enlightenment" on the
tMue mas "perfectly proper."
Clark said the pnxrf In diatnout
log tba UtaratUM involved "ealoji-
Prepare
Sniping Japanese Invaders
- - - -- -- 'tj.-aagte I
" aSjsSaf i , iafeTarnr'iii 'n I esr?,.fr3S
Chinese Midlers, deployed along the Yangtlng river, routhwrst of Pelp
lng, guard against Japanese attempts to take over control of the stream
and the nearby' railway line: . If the fighting should oome to close quar
ter, this sniper- wuuld unleash his big saurrt. (A. P. Photo.)
SPEAKS FRIDAY AT
ASHLAND FESTIVAL
Governor Charles H. Msrtln. ol
Oregon, will be guest speslter at
the Shakespearean Festival In Ash
land tomorrow night.
Governor Msrtln, honorary presi
dent of the Oregon Shakespearean
Festival association, sponsoring this
year's series of plays In Ashland's
outdoor thester, la making a special
trip from Salem tomorrow with Mrs.
Martin In order to attend the second
performance of "Twelfth Night."
The Governor will be the featured
speaker on a special program at 8
o'clock before the opening curtain.
It will be the governor's first pub
lic appearance In southern Oregon
(Continued on Page Two.)
Cancer Research
Money Authorized
WASHINGTON. Aug. 5 (AP)
Senator Bone (D.-Wnsh.) said today
President Roosevelt had signed his
bill authorizing an appropriation of
760,000 for construction of a cancer
research laboratory here.
The bill also authorizes an annual
appropriation of 7O0.0O0 to carry on
the research work under direction of
the public health service and a com
mittee of scientists.
lng tha machinery of the senate to
cover senators' desks with propagan
da MeNary asserted that acceptance of
responsibility for distributing the
statement by Wagner "does not cover
the case."
The Republican leader said It was
"the boldest attempt to Influence
legislation I have seen in 20 years in
the senate.
The statements were distributed to
senators in personally addressed en
velopes accompanied by letters signed
by Langdon Post, as president of
the American Federation of Housing
Authorities.
MeNary told the senate th-t If
there was no senate rule now, at the
next meeting of the rules committee
he would submit a rule Inflicting a
penalty on any organisation at
tempting to circularize members of
the senate In the chamber
The statement was Issued by the
American Federation of Housing
Authorities, the bowing legislation
information office, the labor homing
conference and the Ka;;onal Assoc ia
Um of HoualOi OXXlcUia,
to Evacuate Americans
Doctors Advance
Price For Aiding !
Stork In Landing
ST. HELENS. Aug. B. (AP)
The stork boosted his prices in
Columbia county today.
Members of the county medical
association agreed hereafter to
charge 950 per baby instead of
25, wl th mi leage added If the
child is born outside the St.
elens city limits.
Judge J. B. WUkerson, learning
of the action, said he hoped it
might be reflected in a lowered
birth rate for persons on relief,
citing that one couple had had
a child each year for three years
at the county's expense.
But a doubtful doctor observed
that "we might as welt charge
100 and forget It; I have three
rasea unpaid now."
17 MINERS HURT
E
PRINCETON, B. C Aug. 5. (AP)
Seventeen miners lay Jn hospital
today three of them In critical con
dition as a government mines In
spector sought the cause of a ma
chinery breakdown which plummeted
their hoist cage down 400 feet of a
shaft at Copper mountain mine yes
terday. As doctors sought to save the life
of the most severely injured, rest
dent mine Inspector, J. Biggs, studied
a broken bolt found in the hoist
machinery after the cage had drop
ped back to the bottom of its pit
after climbing halfway up 800 feet
toward the mlnehead.
Those dangerously hurt were:
Peter G. Celsllkowskl, undetermin
ed brain Injury.
Mike Cvotkovlch, spine fracture
and leg Injuries,
Harold Hart, back fractured.
Three others had leg fractures.
A counter balance attached to the
cage and quick application of com
pressed air and band brakes by
Hoist Operator John Coggin. pre
vented the men from striking the
bottom of the pit with the full Im
pact of the drop.
China Seeks Loan
For War Purposes
LONDON. Aug. 5. (P) China,
through her finance minister, has
reached agreement In principle In
London on a 100.000 000 loan to his
country hM my be world-wide in
scope, a Chinese embassy spokesman
said today.
It would be secured by Chinese
customs revenue and probably be
raised oy general subscription. The
Kpokeaman said interest In the prot
ect had net-n shown In the United
Franc and Belgium, as well
as la Ofet Siiuift.
PLACE ON BENCH
LEFT BY
Klamath Falls Attorney Is
Nominated by Roosevelt
for Judgeship in United
States District of Oregon
WASHINGTON, Aug. fl. (AP)
President Roosevelt today nominated
Claude McColloch to be United States
district Judge for the district of
Oregon.
KLAMATH PALLS, Aug. 5. (AP)
"I deeply appreciate th high honor
the president has accorded me,"
said Claude McColloch, Klamath
Palls attorney, when Informed at
lunch of his nomination by Presi
dent Roosevelt to the federal bench.
McColloch said he had no other
statement to make at this time.
PORTLAND. Aug. 8. AP Claude
McColloch. appointed to tho federal
Judge vacancy in Oregon today by
President Roosevelt, has been prom
inently associated with the demo
cratic party since he was admitted
to the state bar In 1009.
Aa a resident of Baker, he rep
resented eastern Oregon In the state
senate In 1911 to 1013. There he
was , Identified with the fight to
establish Industrial accident insur
ance laws and waa one of the spon
sors of legislation for the corpora
tion department, - -
Ha moved to Klamath ; Palls In
1037, first practicing law with Hor
ace Manning and tho late Ralph
Horan, former Klamath legislator.
Recently McColloch has been associ
ated in law practice with Harry Boi
vln. speaker of the house. .
He Is a brother of Frank O. Mc
Colloch, former public utilities com
missioner. Their father is Judge O.
H. McColloch of Baker county.
McColloch, who succeeds the late
Judge John MeNary, waa born at
Red Bluff, Cal., In 1888. He studied
at Stanford university and the Uni
versity of Chicago.
He served on the port of Portland
commission by appointment of
former Governor Walter M. Pierce in
1933 and 1034.
He la married but has no children.
Upon the confirmation of his ap
pointment by the senate, he will
move to Portland.
4
TO CALL POLICEMAN
EUOENE. Aug. Pr Alice
Blaine again "sat down" In front of
a residence today, again adjusting her
sign which .read. "A. O. Mathews
owes my 83-year-old father 600 for
hard labor."
Mathews came out to the porch and
glared at Mrs. Blaine.
One minute later, pretty brunette
Mrs. Blslne was drenched by a stream
of water, Mathews had turned the
hose on the picket and routed her.
Mrs. Blaine fled to a nearby store
and waa later aald to be planning
legal retaliation
Mathews admitted that he turned
the water on Mrs. Blaine, claiming
that he acted under legal advice.
"After I turned the hose on her.1
he continued. "I Invited her to come
In and use my telephone If she want
ed to call the police.'
Mrs. Blaine, witnesses aald, refused
his Invitation.
S. M. Calkins, city attorney, aald
today that as far as he could ascer
tain. Mrs. Blaine was within her legal
lights in operating her "sltdown
strike" In front of Mathews' resl
dence.
OF
FAILS TO RETURN
ORANTS PASS. Au. 8. PW. B.
"Bill" Steffen. who charged he was
kidnaped by Orants Pass busln
men early Monday morning;, had not
returned here this afternoon and his
definite whereabouts were still un
known.
Indications that the charges might
not be aired In the courts grew with
each delay In his promised appear
a nee.
A letter apparently from Bteffen
written on an Ashland hotel's sta-
. llonery and mailed from Ashland last
I ntht was In the hands of peaoa au
1 tiumuea.
CANFIELD; LEAV1TT
IS
Park Heads Are Honored at
Banquet and Crater Club
Initiation Gratitude Is
Voiced for Cooperation
A farewell was said to David H.
Canfleld and a welcome was extend
ed to E. P. Leavltt at a banquet given
In their honor at the Hotel Med ford
last night by the Jackson County
Chamber of Commerce and the Cra
ter olub.
Mr. Canfleld will leave soon to be
come superintendent of Rocky Moun
tain national park In Colorado, a po
sition to which he has been promoted
from the super In tendency of Crater
lake national park. Mr. Leavltt, now
superintendent of Lassen Volcanic
national park, will succeed Mr. Can
fleld at Crater lake.
After the banquet Mr. Leavltt was
Initiated a member of the Crater club,
the full ritual being used In the cere
mony. Regrets Departure
Mr. Canfleld said he regretted leav
ing here where his work has always
been pleasant because of the friend
liness and cooperative spirit of tha
peoplo. Since the change has been or
dered, however, he stated he was
glad to receive the promotion, ad
vancement being the hope of all fed'
eral employes.
- Mtr canfleld expressed appreciation
of the loyal Bsslstnnco always given
him by his co-workers, crediting them
with whatever success baa been at
tained by his administration of Cr
national monument and tha Oregon
Caves national monument. If
The thanked also other federal
agencies for their cooperation speci
fying the Rogue River. Siskiyou, Ump-
qua and Modoc national forests, the
biological survey and the reclamation
service.
Mr. Canfleld said he did not ask
to be transferred from Crater lake
and knew nothing about tha change
until he learned that Mr. Leavltt was
coming here. Later, he added, he was
notified of his transfer.
Resources Conserved
Mr. Leavltt described the national
park service as the best of the fed
eral agencies. The park service, he
(Continued on Page Two.)
'BEAN BALL' HITS
NEW YORK. Aug. 8. (API Jake
Powell, New York Yankee outfielder,
was hit by a pitched ball in the
fourth inning of today's game with
the Chicago White Soi and had to
be carried off the field on a atretcher.
One of Monto Stratton'a fast bslls
struck Powell high over the left ear.
He fell to the ground, his feet kick
ing wildly,, and then appeared to
lapse Into unconsciousness.
Rookie Tom Henrlcb. himself only
newly recovered from an Injury, took
Powell's plsce and went to first bsse.
Dr. Robert E. Walsh, Yankee olub
physlctsn, examined him In the club
house and announced he suffered an
Injury to his left ear.
He will remain In the hospital for
observation, at least overnight.
Papa Dionne s Dander Up
Over Emilie s Sore Throat
CALLANDER. Ont., Aug. S (Ca
nadian Press) Pspa Olivia Dionne
got hla dander up today about Quin
tuplet Emllle'a sore throat.
He said he read Dr. Alien Roy
Dafoe's statement that Emllle caught
her cold from an "outside source"
end made up his mind that Dr.
Daloe "was blaming us because Eml
lle got sick."
Besides, the quintuplet fsther com
plained, "we didn't even know she
had It until some of those tourist
told us Monday."
Dr. Da foe answered that he didn't
mean It that way. Although he aald
he waa certain th Infection came
from "someone outside" the nursery,
hs added that "t certainly didn't
say one of the Donne famly."
Papa Dionne, who lives with his
wife and als other children Just
serosa the road from the nursery,
explained he and Mrs. Dionne hsdu't
suited IL qulutunJeU lot mote,
Periled in China1
i
Death and Stork
WiU Make Calls .
At Same Moment
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 8. (AP)
Phystclana at the Philadelphia
general hospital stood by today
waiting for Mrs. Mary Boccasslni
to die so they may deliver an ex
pected baby.
Mrs. Boccasstnl, 37, is suffering
from tuberculous meningitis for
which they said there Is no cure.
The doctors told the husband,
Domlnlck of the situation and
that they would perform an ope
ration aa soon as death came to
the mother, to save the child.
They hoped the baby would ar
rive beforo the mother passed
away.
The husband objected, telling
the doctors that if the wife must
die to let the baby go with her.
The physicians sought legal ad
vice and the matter was taken
before Judge Harry K. Kalodner.
He decided that when the time
comes the operation can be per
formed. "Even an unborn babe has Its
rights," he said.
. H ELI
OF STATE POLICE
PASSES SUDDENLY
Funeral servloes for Sergeant WU'
Ham H. Ellcnburg of the Oregon state
police, who died of a heart stuck at
4 .o'clock yesterday afternoon In his
home at BJl
North River
side avenue,
will be held
at the Keeney
funeral home
In Oorvallls
S t a rday.
Tentative
plans are for
the funeral to
be held under
auspices of the
Oregon na
tlonal guard,
of which El'
lenburg was A
Wm. II. Ellenburf major In the
102nd Infantry. It will be a full mil'
ltary funeral.
Death came to Sergeant Ellenburg
following an Illness of less than 34
hours. He suffered a heart attack
Tuesday evening and waa ordered to
bed by Dr. Edwin R. Durno, where
he remained until the end yesterday
afternoon. At hla bedside when he
died was his wife. Dr. Durno said
today the actual cause of death was
acute coronary occlusion, with which
he had been troubled for about two
years.
The extremely well-liked and re
spected state police and national
guard officer leave to .mourn, be
sides his wife, three daughters, Doris
and Chios Ellenburg of Medford and
Mrs. Dick Baiiy of Medford; four sla
ters, Mrs. L. 8. Taylor and Irene El
lenburg of Roseburg, Urs. Walter B
Morris of Los Angeles and Mrs. Ralph
Edmond of Portland, and one brother,
Geary Ellenburg of Lebanon, Ore.
The body wVI be transferred to cor
vallls tonight from the Perl funeal
home. Friends may see the remains
of Sergeant Ellenburg at the funeral
home until 7 p. m. today, Prank Perl,
announced.
William H. Ellenburg was W years
old. He was born In Drain, Ore., Feb
ruary 36, 1893, and lived there with
hla family until 1908. when they
moved to CorvaUls. He attended Ore-
(Continued on Page rhrwe.)
thsn 'a wsek before Emllls csught
cold. Furthermore, h said, none of
his family had been sick.
Th fsther said that whan hs
besrd only four of the quint wr
being "shown" Monday, hs hurried
to the nursery.
"A nurse told me Emllle was sick
with a sort throat and had a little
fever," Dionne said. "1 saw her
through a screen."
It stood to reason, the fsther ex
plained, that strangers who might be
disease carriers brought Emilie her
oold on one of the tourist excursions
to the Quintuplet nursery.
Also, Dionne said, he found out
once that Yvonne had mumps and
hs wasn't told snout It.
That Isn't true," Dr. Dafoe re
plied. Unaware of th aquabble, Emllle
was sble to sit on the verandah to
day. Dr. Dafoe ssld her temperature
ass bark to normal and that aba
was geUlris along veils
C o 1
i - i
1 "4
AM
FIGHT TO
DEATH
IS
BY CHINA CHIEF
Motorized Japanese Col
umns Roll North to Halt
Chinese Advance Mis
sionaries Fear Invasion
snANQHAI, Aug. 8. ( AP) Unit
ed States oo Hauler officials In all
China organized the whole American
population tonight to guard their
lives and get them out of possible
dsnger rones If necessary, while
China's generalissimo, Cbalng Ka4
Shek, suddenly proclaimed:
"We will tight to the death."
By night fall the month-old us
deolared war brought these develop
menta. ,
1. Columns of motorlced Japanese
troops rolled north to halt a Chinese
advance from behind China's great
wall.
3. Generalissimo Chiang Kat-Bhek,
China's "strong man" leader of the
central government, flew to Killing -to
tell the natlon'a ohlef educators
that China will resist the Japanese
advance "even though It mease
fighting Inadequately prepared and
to the death."
8. American missionaries, re celling
previous Japanese oonquests, feared
Japanese domination of Norta
China would wipe out missionary awl
education work representing millions
of d oilers In Amorlcan Investments,
and years of the hardest toll.
4. Counsel General Clarenee Gauss
at Shanghai directed formation at
. (Continued on Pag Tnre.
NEW MliCIL
TO BE FORMED HERE
SHORT TIME
A central labor council, embracing
eight local unions, will be established
here within a week or ten days. A
L. Rice, general organizer for south
era Oreson for the American Peder
atlon of Labor reports. Be says ap
plication has been made for a cen
tral labor council charter.
The unions, recently organised
her, are the butchers, barbers, cul
lnary workers, retail clerks, electrical
workers, truckmen and machinists.
The Typographical union has long
been established here. Rice said the
bakers were also unionised but were
affiliated with the Klamath Palls
central labor council.
Rice said he had met with packing
house representatives this week and
had outlined the local labor situa
tion and a plan, "I think will be of
mutual benefit to all concerned.1
Rice aald a statement on the packing
house situation would probably be
forthcoming In a few days.
The A. P. of L. organiser aald his
organisation and himself were op
posed to all forms of labor agitation
whether by individual agitators or
Inspired by "communistic" lnflu- t
ncea.
BASEBALL
National
R. H. .
Philadelphia ., - ,. 4 10 0
Chicago 3 4 0
Walters and Atwood; Bhoun, Bry
ant, Root and Harnett, Odes.
Brooklyn
Pittsburgh
Hoyt and Phelps; Blanton, Brandt.
Weaver and Todd,
(13 Innlnga)
New York ,.
Cincinnati
Caatleman and
and V. Davis.
R. H. .
3 18 0
oat
Dannlng; Orlaaom
American
R.
.
. 8
Detroit ,,
Philadelphia .
Auker and York; Smith and Bruck
R, H. t.
Chicago
New York
8 14
I3 10 1
Stratton. Brown and Sewell; Wick
er, Makosky, Murphy and Dickey.
R. H. .
Cleveland - 4 0
Boston . 8 11 1
Hudlln. and Pytlak; Newsom and
Desautels.
St. Louis
Washington
Koupal. Hofsett and Hemsley; Ap
nlttoo, Lu Chase and atUUea,