rail
rTmnfxnrr
U uuuujua
(IWTv 1FNKINS
Br r""";.,: , . finrmnnv.
W 11 But tltl much
feLtd.t.rmln.d
1""n B.Vlc. lv superior,
fe", n b. . pooh-poohed
. , . . '
'-, full of rumor,.
' deserting and
lIM7 - n Germany." (Mos-
orlouM.....lc rode.
I Iram Germany, vim Denmark,
KwWicwr II homb nil."
AINTAIN OKDHR.
And o on.
-ESTAPO CHIEr HIMM.
LEH (th Butcher) ha
milirth power o! III
Zi de.lh. the pow.r lo ,
KILL AND KILL German
it hU own discretion.
IIAYBE there whs n bombing,
lu.vhe NOT. Hitler and
is nml crow mny hnve dreamed
lo the bombing Inle as an ex-
llit to KILL Otr mo ni-
ininllod ucniinn ni..P
ihom we've been hearing rumor
h'- ... .
I ii nisy uo m "
true the luenrer in ui "i
liat the people will rally around
iim to the death In hl hour ol
STILL, the fact remain
(baud on fairly depend,
ible ldnee) that aimn ;.
irt shooting Carman i
HELPING US to kill ' off .
Gtimim, which I what will )
tnd th war.
bHERE ii thl note of caution:
Whntcvor ha happened. Hit
or ind hli crow are nil 11 In eon
rot of the radio. Wo'ro hearing
oplouily from them, but NOTH
NO from the alleged revoltor.
far ii the Russlun aro con
3 cerncd.; they nron't pulling
heir punches whllo Iho rumor
In the north, they are only 85
-niles from Rlitn, on tho Doltlc.
n the center, they have, stormed
across the Bug mid nro 1cm than
100 miles from Warsaw and
itill going.
In the south, they have Lwow
pretty well surrounded.' The
Germans seem to bo blowing It
up and getting ready to leave. .
N Normnndy, tha weather stays
1 pro-nnzl as It ha been from
the beginning. Torrential rnlna
bog down Montgomery' tank
cut of Caen. Lowering skies
continue to hnmpcr our air opera
tions. Pro-Gcrmon rnln pour
on the Italian front.
"NE more rumor, before, wo
"quit for the day:
The Vichy radio (German)
im TURKEY IS COMING IN
ordering her ship Into harbor,
etc
If Turkey IS moving In, It I
dependnblo sign tho Germans
" cracking.
p la not surprising lo learn this
. morning that our marine and
infantry nrc pouring Bslioro on
"iii. wo ve neon preparing
'to way now for more than two
weeks.
Admiral Nlmltz' communl
W says tho landings are con
IinulnE "luminal MnnroiTF
I'tomy ground resistance." That
probably meuns Hint the re
Wtarico from tho burrowed
"raw Japs is pretty tough.
,iA"cr, -Salpan, they will fight
"M wildcats to hold Guam.
QUAM is believed to bo gar
risoned by about 20,000
Jap rotmh V tlin nmn n. nt
snT"' U hns 11,0 M hUl
i uml croviccB a salpan
In these hills and caves
n.ircJvl.ccs the JnP may bo
10 the ln8t man
flahiWlll!lbo B hBrd and bloody
hav u5ul. .we wln WIN- We
"'vo what It takes to win.
.
0N 'ho home political front,
cajUm.w?s.,ono o' tho minor
deveE!.0 lhc "'"rt'lng world
the Tim i pco, hi luck n
w w!S!a-ot the news do-
CMptirfen JPf'W a dramatic
ontrrtv0u hls ,ourth nomlna
lr In 'tng ',cro'", th0 oun
not ove? . s,e.crocJ' (Probably
knowln. nL'L111"110" People
""O the mlnnn-i. "u unse lo
Wot ft oni on the great
. Tho fiilS2lcaB0 convontlon.
:nose this . ' ,na. tho! osps
!ll Hetatti
PRICE 5 CENTS
SHIPS GIVEN
Violent Bombardment
Prepared Way For
New Attack
By CHARLES 8. McMUHTHY
V. 8. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD
QUARTERS. Pearl Hurbor, July
21 ()) United Stutcs marlnca
and Infantry lire pouring nhoro
on Guam, first Amorlcun tcr
rilory seixed by tho Japanese,
and lighting their way Inland
under cover of a pulverizing
aerial and warship bombard
ment. Adm. Chester W. Nlmllv:
announced today.
The landings, a quick follow
up to the great victory on Sal
pan, started yosterday morning,
and "aro continuing nRiiln.it
moderato ground opposition,"
Nlmltz' communique said,
Establish Baachheadi
"United States marines and
army assault troops established
beachhead on Guam island on
July 20 (west longitude U. S.
time) with the support of car
rier aircraft mid surface combat
unlt of,Uo fifth (loot,'-' tho early
morning communique continued.
"Enemy defenses are being
heavily bombed and shelled at
cloto range."
Guam Is tho southernmost and
largest of tho Marianas group of
islands. Its capture would
strengthen Salpun's position as
base from which Japan can bo
mortally assaulted. Guam is 130
miles southwest of Salpan and
both Islands arc within easy
Superfortress rnngo of Tokyo
and the whole of Japan.
Tho Philippines, lying some
1500 miles west of Guam and
(Continued on Pago Two)
Germans Fire at
Fallen Livorno
ROME, July 21 (VP) Big Ger
man guns in the hills behind
Pisa lobbed n harassing flro in
to tho stricken city of Livorno
todny whllo fifth army pntrols
probed Into enemy defense lines
north of tho Arno river for the
first time. '
.Allied headquarters an
nounced that American units
still were finding and extermi
nating pockets of oncmy re
sistance on the south side of
tho river yesterday, described
as ono of the quietest days ex
perienced by the fifth army
slnco tho offensive began May
11.
, Tho enemy was reported In
strong outpost positions on the
north sido of tho Arno, especial
ly where tho slrenm could bo
forded, but at the eastern end
of tho Italian front tho Ger
mans continued to flee before
tho avenging Poles.
SUPPORT FROM
Al
MARINER
Cpl. Dan Ellis Missing
In Action Since June 9
Word was received from the
war deportment on July 20 that
Cpl. Dan R. Ellis of tho medical
detachment of the paratroops
Is missing In action in Franco
slnco Juno 0. ,
Cpl. Ellis Is tho youngest son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Ellis of
5608 Shosta way. Ho went to
Mills school and attended KUHS
until his senior year. Ho gradu
ated from Marshfleld high
school In 1042, enlisting tho
same year In tho paratroops..
Juno 10 of this year the San
Francisco Chronicle carried a
radio photo of n group of happy
American paratroopors display
ing a captured nazi flag. Dan
Ellis was easily recognized as
ono of this group.
This same picture was In a
news reel at the. Pelican thea
tre' and his mother was thrilled
at s o e i n g her son's picture,
which was taken on D-Day in
France.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis havo two
other sons now in the service
ond a fourth son honorably discharged-
from the Seabeos. May
nard C, Ellis Is receiving train
ing , In ' the navy at. Farragut,
Ida, .Lt, James C. Ellis, In the
fn Tim Shunia
erican Weops iahd
KUHS Coach
L. Marbla Cook, above, will
head the KUHS athletic dot
tinlos. it was announced today.
Cook, who roplacor Frank Ram
sey os head basketball and foot
ball coach, has had coaching
expurlsnce in mnny Oregon high
schools, the latost of which was
Lincoln high In Potland.
H coach n
FOR HIGH SCHOOL
Klnmnth Union high school to
day hncl u new football and bas
kctbnll coach.
' Ho If L. Marble Cook, who
comes here from Lincoln high
school at Portland. Cook was
elected by the high school board
in special session this week, and
today gave final notification of
his acccplancu and his release
from ins rorunnd jou. mo is a
1034 University of Oregon grad
uate. Tho tall, blond. 39-year-old
conch was a drtrk horse In the
race for the Klamath post, left
vacant by the departure of Frank
Itnmscy for the marine corps. He
was not included in a list of pros
pects published a short time ago,
Having come recently into the sit
uation as the Klamath board
members senrchod for tho best
man available for tho key sports
jod liero,
Former Lincoln Coach
Cook was basketball, track and
assistant football coach at Lin
coln last year, and was slated for
(Continued on Page iwo)
a
Military Head '
Changes Title
HONOLULU, July 21 (P)
Lt. Gen. Robert C. Richardson
last night relinquished tho title
ot military governor of Hawaii
and said his office , would bo
continued under lhc name of
office of internal security.
. The change docs not end Ha
waii's martial law status, now
under attack in U. S. courts. !
army signal corps, having en
listed In 1037, is now at Camp
Pickett, Va.
Cpl. Dan Ellis
r"' waJfcLr " ''1
r ( r
. V ')
T erf s4
1
wniiinrniii mii nrf"
- Cancade Wonderland
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON,
1
Rain Slows Offense;
Canadians Advance
One Mile
Br WES GALLAGHER
SUP'REME HEADQUARTERS
ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY
FORCE, July 21 (P) Torrential
rains and deep mud bogging the
battlefields of Normandy slowed
allied offensives today, but Can
adian troops slogging forward a
mile captured St. Martin de Fon
tenay, fivo miles duo south of
Jacn.
Slight Gain .
The British to the west gained
1000 yards, on two-mile front
below tho Caumont-Tllly road
and -AnSerlca'ril ' -pinched off a
longer portion- of the road from
bt. Lo to PcrlerSi supreme head
quarter said, but virtually con
tinuous rains for 36 hours "in
terfered with . ground oper
ations." .Canadian infantrymen routed
Germans from underground shel
ters in tho advance into St. Mar
tin aftdr seizing St. Andre-Sur-
urne on me .tuuwuux
Orrie river., . ....-.-.
CounUrputh Baatan .
A German tank counterattack
was beaton back near SL Mar
tin. -
British and Canadian, infantry
had taken over the brunt of the
fighting from Gon. Sir. Bernard
L. Montgomery's armored units.
The deepest penetration of the
German defenses took place di
rectly east of Caetf? where Brit
ish Tommies by-pfssing Troarn
to the north diwve - to within
1000 yards of ; the village of
Bures on the Dives river slight
ly more than eight miles from
Caen. The enemy has flooded
the river to block - the coastal
route to the great port of Le
Havre.
- Main ObiectWa Fail
It was apparent that Gon. Sir
Bernard L. Montgomery s ad
vance, while making gains, had
(Continued on rage two; r
Japanese Silent
On Guam Assault
:'; Sv Th Aitoelatarl Pnu !
Japanese radios were silent
today concerning the American
landings upon Guam, but a
cryptic Domel broadcast sug
gested Emperor Hirohito's war
lords had reconsidered the idea
of naming co-premiers to suc
ceed Gen. HideKl Tojo. .
"The Imnerial Rule Assist
ance association (Japan's fascist
party) at a special meeting of
party directors this afternoon
unanimously pledged to give
whole-hearted support to the
new cabinet which will be
formed under Gen. Kuniakl
Koiso or Admiral Mltsumasa
Yonai," the Domei dispatch
said.
This indicated that only ono
of them would get the No. 1
POSt. . ; '
Nazis Evacuate
Black Sea Ports
ISTANBUL. Turkey. July 20
(Delayed) (P) The Germans ap
pear to oe evacuating me Bul
garian Black sea ports of Varna
U1IU DUIfiW. o -
ern Bulgaria said today, adding
that during the past week he had
seen train loads of German troops
moving westward lrom tne vicin
ity of both norts.
.German -evacuation of. these
ports was believed to be one of
the Russian demands for contin
ued Soviet-Bulgarian diplomatic
relations :
Hardin Wounded
In Action
An announcement by the war
department of men wounded in
action included the name of PFC
Desel O. Hardin of Klamath
Falls.' :
Hardin is the son of Mrs. Ethel
L. Hardin .of 311 Division. He
was. wounded In the Mediterran
ean area.
ALLIES M
SILL GAINS
11
FRIDAY, JULY 2), 1944
Ballot Approached
By Demos; Wallace,
Truman Out Ahead
' ' ' 'VV'T- By JACK BELL -
CHICAGO STADIUM. July 21 UP) With Hanrr A. Wallace and Senator Harry Truman far
ahead and gaining on tha field,
the big and bitter business ol tne conclave selection oz a vice presidential nominee.
At 1:30 p. m. (PWT) Wallace had a total of 389 delegate vote pledged, and claimed in ad
vance of th actual roll call. The senator from Missouri had 213 H, with S89 needed to nom
inate. - : ::; ' ; ' V. . ,
Thirteen other candidates ware assured first-ballot support serious or complimentary and
an early conclusion drew prospectively increasingly remote. Senator Alben W. Berkley of Ken
tucky, claiming 75 to 100 first-ballot votes, declared!
r "I won't iimrlfiAH if thprp
LONDON, July 21 (P Red
army troops today captured Os
trov near the Latvian border and
150 other populated places, and
cut the road from Brest Litovsk
to Chelm in old Poland, the Rus
sian communique announced to
night. Russian troops crossed the Bug
river on a front of 37 miles and
advanced up to more than nine
miles, seizing over 20 populated
places in a sweep toward War
saw. ' .
Roads Cut
'- Both the road and railroad between-
Bsest Litovsk - and Chelm
were snipped.
""More1 man TOO b o o 'u 1 a f.e d
places were swept up. in the bat-
tie veering toward Brest latovsk.
Farther south more than 100
populated places were enveloped
in the offensive toward Lwow,
said the bulletin broadcast by
Moscow and recorded by the sov
iet monitor.
Premier Marshal . Stalin had
announced the capture of Ostrov
a few hours earlier in an order
of the day.
Ostrov. 10 miles from the Lat
(Continued on Page Two) ,
Stimson Returns
To Washington
' WASHINGTON, July 21 P)
Secretary of War Stimson re
turned today from a trip to the
battlcfronts in Italy and Nor
mandy and a visit to England.
Coming back with him were
Mnj. Gen. Alexander D. Surles,
chief of the army's bureau of
public relations, and Harvey H.
Dundy, special assistant to the
secretary. Stimson had been out
of the country about three
weeks. . - - - -"-
Turkey May End
Neutrality Soon
LONDON, July 21 (tP) Signs
increased today that' Turkey
soon may swing from her tenderly-balanced
neutral . position
to a possible declaration of war
against the axis.
One such indication was a
broadcast by the German-controlled
Vichy radio that all
Turkish shins had been ordered
into Turkish harbors without
delay; and that all navigation
in Turkish waters of the Black
con hnri hppn suspended.
There was a growing belief
In London that Turkey may at
tempt to improve her position
at the allied peace table by
handing axis diplomats their
walking papers.
Expulsion of nazi agents has
been at the top of allied re
quests to the Turks ever since
they agreed to end shipping of
chrome to Germany.
- Earlier in the war, Turkey
declined to become a belliger
ent on the allied side despite
delivery of millions of dollars
wprth of allied supplies.
Germans Order
Hitler Edition
' NEW YORK, July 21 (P) The
German radio today instructed
this German armv newsnaDer to
issue a special edition on Adolf
Hitler, stressing the "unshake-
able faithfulness of all the men
to Hitler. ,.i.-.'
U. S. government monitors
heard the broadcast order a pic
ture layout to include photo
graphs of Hitler, Heinrich
Alumina . ,tic iiomj-auiii.cu
Chief-of-Staff Col. Gen. Heinz
Guderian, and Col. Gen Hans
Stemnf. new chief of Luftwaffe
torccs inside the reicti,
July
Max. (July 20) 87 Mln. 52
Precipitation last 24 hours 00
Stream year to data ....10.42
Normal 12.07 ' Last ytar 17.82
Forecasts Fair.
Oh
the. democratic national convention
is a deadlock. Anytmng may
happen after that." .
It was a tense, irritable con
vention . that booed at times,
cheered often and repeatedly
defied tne efforts of Senator
Samuel - Jackson of Indiana , to
maintain .order as nominating
speakers and seconders ' droned
on The galleries,' heavy -with
Wallace banners, let go for. the
vice - president at every oppor
tunity, and, despite the. threats
and pleas of Jackson, cat-calls
and boos "for others.;'-,-; "
r :.-Ohio Caucus ,": ""
Wallace, starting the day with
316 pledged and claimed votes,
made his first move when big
Ohio caucused and reported 21
of its 52 delegates for Wallace,
with 9 for Truman. New York,
which had' been claimed heavily
for Truman, followed with a re
ported 20 for Wallace find 16 for
Truman. ' " .. .. !
Truman, arriving; at" the; sta
dium during a demonstration for
wauace alter a seconding speecn,
said:
OK With Truman -
' "It's all rieht. 'The mort Mr.
Wallace gets on the first ballot
snort, oi course,' ol the needed
number the better my chances
thereafter. I hope ' he gets as
many as 500." '
Jake Moore, Iowa state chair
man, predicted Wallace would
have "more than 400 on the first
ballot." He said -the vice presi
dent would -not come to-the1 con
vention "until after he is nomi
nated." With delegates elbowing their
way into this stadium for the cli
(Continued on Page Two)
Unidentified
Girl Found Dead
PORTLAND, Ore:, July 21 VP)
An unidentified Birl. whose Durse
contained a match-folder adver
tising a Seattle firm and some
Washington tax tokens, ' was
found dead today in the bath
room of a hotel here. -
The hotel manager said . the
girl, apparently about 17 or 19
years old, had not -registered
there. The coroner ordered an
autopsy to determine the cause of
death.
French Blow Up
Munitions Dumps
LONDON, July 21 (P) In the
biggest stroke of sabotage since
D-Day, French , patriots' at' Cru
gey blew up munition dumps
supplying all German air force
bases in eastern. France between
June 19 and 22,' authoritative
French informants ' in London
said last -night Approximately
10,000 tons of ammunition in
more than 7000 rail cars were
reported destroyed.
Heart of Germany Bombed
By 2500 American Planes
LONDON. July 21 . (fP)
Around 2500 American . planes
bombed the heart of Germany to
day, with 2000 flying above a
howling channel storm for at
tacks on Regensberg and
Schweinfurt and another 500
from Italy penetrating within
125 miles of Berlin.
It was the fourth consecutive
day of massive, coordinated
American attacks on Germany
from the west and south.
More than 1100 American hea
vy bombers flew from Britain,
convoyed by nearly 300 fighters
from the U. S. eighth air force,
the largest number of fighters
from the force ever to take the
air at one time. Scores of enemy
aircraft were seen, but most kept
a respectful distance. .
En route home, some fighters
dipped low to strafe in Sudeten
land. .
Targets of the Italy -based
bombers were at Brux in Sudet
enland, the mountainous border
21, 1944
Number 10216
approached a ballot today on
ft AGES AT AITAPE
ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD-
QUARTERS,. NEW- GUINEA,
July. 21 (JP) Fighting on the-Ai-tape
beachhead has reverted to
savage hand-to-Hand combat with
Americansand Japanese strug-
..1 i -U 1 . ... , .
guiug m uie;aarit wua Dayonei
ana Knue..
ai least au .Japanese were
killed in such a battle Monday
nieht. One enemv sereeant was
pinned to the side of a slit trench
with his own bayonet - -
Hayden Lennard, - Australian
corresnOndent.-. related the rnir.
ticulars of one bitter episode-of
the struazle in which, the Jana.
nese, fought desperately to break
the ring of American steel- sep
Brauiig mem irom me last en
emy bases on northwest New
Guinea. . . .. . . . .- -. ...
(Reports from Gen.: Douglas
MacArthur's headquarters have
, (Continued on Page Two) --
Radio Reports
Hitler Prepares
To Flee Country
NEW YORK, July 21 OP)
NBC said today that a clandes
tine German radio' station had
reported a: four-engine trans
port plane capable of flying
10,000 miles was standing . by
at a secret airbase in Germany
at the disposal of Adolf Hitler.
. The station "implied that HuV
ler may be preparing to flee
the country, or at least is get
ting things in readiness for any
eventual emergency," NBC said.
'The plane is the same craft
that' last year flew non-stop to
Japan." ".
Indian Goes On ':
Warpath in Jail
PORTLAND July 21 (P) A
three-year-old Indian boy was
back on the Warm Springs res
ervation today iter going on the
war path in tl city jail. :
The leather-l-nged youngster
whooped and howled his protest
at being held, in the jail while
waiting for his parents who were
jailed on drunk charges. Judge
John Seabrook sentenced the par
ents to six months each, suspend
ed on condition they return to
the reservation. -
An infant s-ter of the boy
SDent the day happily in her pa
poose basket, unmoved- by her
brother's protests or her parents'
troubles. -
province which Germany, stole
from Czechoslovakia in the Mun
ich conference which prefaced
the war. Brux is northwest of
Praha (Prague), the Czech capi
tal, the flight entailed a.i4UU-
mile roundtrip.
The twin assaults carried the
bombing offensive to new peaks.
In a little more than 24 hours, it
was estimated a total of about
7000 allied planes cast around
is.uuo tons of bombs on the foe.
During the squally night, a
force of around 1000 RAF heavy
bombers pummeled objectives in
Germany, France and Belgium,
losing 31 planes. The major rail
yards of Courtrai bottlenecking
three trunk lines leading to the
Normandy battlefields were tar
gets, along with German oil
Dlants at Hombertf and Rnttrnn-
Wilheim in the Ruhr, the port of
riamourg,- rorjqt oomb piauorms
in northern ranee and road con
voys north and. south of . Paris,
Italy-based planes struck around
tne river fo and in Yugoslavia
mm
mm CLIQUE
CHARGED WITH
ADOLF ATTACK
i . i
Heinrich H i m m I e r'
Begins Purge of
. . Generals '
By Th Associated Pre
LONDON, July 21 P) A
purge of German generals by
Heinrich Himmler apparently
was proceeding in Germany toy
day a an aftermath to what
Adolf Hitler described as an
army clique's attempt to assas
sinate him and pave the way for
surrender.
' Berlin announced that Col.
Gen. Ludwig Beck, former chief
of the general staff, was dead.
Nazis tonight disclosed that
"insurgents" had narrowly miss-,r
ed seizing government quarters-'
in - Berlin.. . -
- . Goebbels Consulted . -
The German military radio;
declared reichs Minister Goeb
bels had frustrated a conspira
tors' coup to take over capital
buildings through forced orders,
to a crack army battalion.
These orders said Hitler had
been killed and that the Ger
man high command was taking,
over, the broadcast said, but the;
battalion commander first con
sulted Goebbels before moving',
his troops, and the ruse wasi
discovered. Hitler himself then
gave the orders to the battalion
major, the broadcast added.
Communications Broken
Broken communication mask
ed actual conditions within Ger
many, leaving only the Germanf
accounts and a flood of rumors"
in neutral countries. A traveler
who reached Sweden said two
German divisions had revolted ir
East Prussia Wednesday, appar
ently touching off the movement
against Hitler. There was no'
confirmation of this, nor of va
rious reports of street fighting;
in German tQwnj. '
. Field . Marshal Gen. GuentheY,
von Kluge. whose forces are op
posing the armies of Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower in Trance, found-
it necessary to issue an order
of the day to his troops, urging
them . to "inflexible determin
ation and unconditional loyalty
to the fuehrer."
. . "No 1918"
'There will be no repetition
of the year 1918," Von Kluge dc
dared, according to Berlin
broadcasts.
Switzerland clamped down a
rigid censorship on the trans
mission abroad of reports that
reached there from Germany,
A German Transocean News
agency (propaganda) broadcast
(continued on Jfage xwoj .
Tulelake Man
Missing After
Ship Explosion
Eugene ' W. Garrett of Tilled
lake was among the names of
66 ' merchant . seamen missing
and believed to have been killed
on the : two merchant ships
blown up by the Monday night
explosion- at the Pprt Chicago,
Calif., naval ammunition depot.
it was announced today by the
tweutn naval distnnt.
Garrett is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Garrett of Tulelake
and was a machinist on the
victory ship Quinault Victory.
.nis orotner, timer, was .also
In the area of the explosion but
he called his p a r e nt s and,
friends after the explosion tell
ing mem that he was all right.
General Pleads
For Nazi Loyalty
LONDON. July 21 (Pi The
German radio said tonight that
Fieldmarshal .Gen. Guenther
von Kluge in an order of the
day to his French command un
derlined what he called the ab
solute necessity for loyalty to
Hitler."
The text of the order, as re
ported by the Berlin radio:.
. "Soldiers of the west:a small
clique of retired officers made
a mean attempt on the life of
our fuehrer. The fuehrer is
alive, he spoke to the German
people and to German soldiers
last night.
"The perpetrators have been
rendered harmless. Calm ; and,
order prevail at home."
' 1 ,-' ';. i t
Baseball Scores
. NATIONAL LEAGUE .
' '- . : - R H
Chicago v....-:...:....,;....- 4 7
Boston .' 2 9
Lynn and Williams; Cardonl
and Hofferth. '
.,v.i, - H ' H
Cincinnati ....... ........ 3 7 II
Brooklyn 2 7 1
Heusser and Mueller; ' Davis
and Owen. ; -,:
AMERICAN LEAGUE P
R H B
Washington ......:.;.;. 5 9 - i
Detroit 8 12 3
Niggeling, Carrasquel (6),
Wynn (8) and Ferrell; Trout and
Swift.
. . . . t . . .