SATURDAY, SEPT. 3, 1949 PACE IICHT HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON olons (Gems, Nicholas Baffles Redding The Gems have a packed sched ule of baseball fames for the Labor Day holiday! and afterward, hav ing added a contest with the semi pro Pioneers sandwiched In be tween the end of the regular Tar West league season and the start of the Shsughnessy playoffs. All are night games. Tonight the Gems meet the Redding Browns In the last of their current series and Sunday night a single fane at 7:4S opens a three-game series with the Marysville Braves. Labor Day baseball includes a doubleheader with the Braves, starting at 8:30. The game with the Pioneers will be played Tues day and proceeds of the game after expenses will go into a "players pool' from which the Individual Gems and Pioneers will share. The Far West's playoff starts Wednesday night, with Redding here and Willows playing the champion Diamonds at Pittsburg. First round of the playoff will be three of five and the President's Cup round between the winners will be four of seven. Last night the Oems topped Red ding 6-3 at Oems stadium while elsewhere in the league Pittsburg beat Willows 7-4 and Medford George Pain celebrated his 31st birthday by taming the ville Braves 10-3. Marys- HEAVY HITTING Joe Nicholas was the hero of the Oems win. batting and pitch ing. He limited the Brownies to six hit, fanned eight, and pounded out a triple, double and single at the plate. His triple drove in the first Klamath run and his double opened a seventh inning rally that broke a 3-3 deadlock and molded the Oems victory. Ray Perry didn't get much chance to add to his record of 45 homers. Nicholas walked him three times. The victory last night marked the 13th tuna the Gems have beaten Redding this season, against six losses to the Browns and made Nicholas win-loss record 13-10. The box: k44iar AB B O A sindtwn. rf setae Fobur. u 4 1 x e a Heitt, ef 4 e a e Godshau. if" so . ileal .4 i a 11 . 4 e s i Johnson, e . Scott. as Brown. X McN-U. 1 a Jen s' Grounded out lor atcNaU tk KlasMUi rails NordoU. m Buira. So Hemaadoa, 11 Elton, ci C.N1. if Jensen, lb Ktcnolaa. P S IS 27 10 . too oos ooe 1 1 . 021 000 21Z S KUmat Fall . SUMMARY: SB Scott. Brvwn. Nicho las. ZB Rotburf . Buick. Hcrmndcz. Nicholas. RBI Brown 2. Godstiall. Nicholas 2. Nordcli. Buick. Hemandri. SO br HrNrtl 3. Nicho.a ft. BB off McNeil 4, Nicholas 3. ER off McNeil 3. Nicholas 2. WP McNeil. DP Brown to Godahall. Johnson to God&hall, Des calfto to Nordrll. SB CaslU. LOB Reading a, Klamath 4V Umpires Perry and Tibbs. Dons Break Baltimore Colts, 49-17 LOS ANGELES, Sept 3 (Pv The Los Angeles Dons may be the sur , prise team in the All America football conference this season. They pulled their first surprise of the campaign last night, bury ing the Baltimore Colts under a seven touchdown, 49 to 17, avalanche of points and uncorking a host of flashy rookies in the process. Tailback Olenn Dobbs, Ignoring an ailing shoulder, ran, passed, punted and blocked the Dona to three touchdowns and set the stai;c for the fourth before going out of heavy action early In the third period. prized rookie halfback from Indi-iD us, hwi over auu passea tor tne fourth touchdown and then made the Dobbs supporters almost forget their Idol In leading the tesm to three more tallies. Accordion Classes Being Formed Beginning clssses in accordion are now being formed In Klamath Palls by Doris Frederick. 727 Roseway drive. Registration for the classes being conducted at Derby's Music company will close Septem ber 7. Classes will begin Septem ber 8. 9 and 10. Beginners In accordion will be admitted to an accordion band by Mrs. Frederick as soon as they qusi ify. Lloyd Derby, sponsor of the musical group, announced that a fee of 811 a month will pay for les sons and the rental of an accordion. ith rental fees applying on the urged students to register early, as me sue oi uie classes Is limited, Normal running speed of the antelope Is from 25 to 30 miles an hotuv-Sports Afield. It's Poole'. For BIKES Schwinn Built $39.95 POOLE'S 222 So. 7th Prub Hollywood, Pioneers Mix Tuesday H-N INVITATIONAL OPEN TENNIS PLAY UNDER WAY TODAY Tennis occupies the spotlight over the Labor Day holidays in Klam ath Falls when The Herald and News will sponsor the second annual invitational open tennis tournament on the court at beautiful Moore park. Play will be completed today. Sunday and Monday. Today's net skirmishes will bring together, in the majority, local players as out-of-towners an not a . Briers Aerial Defense Stressed MOSCOW. Idaho. Sept. i There U be none of that 1948 Idaho weakness on this year's Vandal squad if Coach Dixie Howell can avoid It. A one-hour practice ses sion yesterday was devoted to In dividual instruction hi pass defense. PULLMAN, Sept. J (Pi Three ! men's singles and consolation passers, all of whom tossed with rounds In men's singles and dou ef f tciency yesterday, are being eyed t bles. by Washington State college Foot- Arrangements for the tourney ball Coach Phil Sarboe as Cougar and pairings are being completed practice sessions continue. ! by the Klamath Falls Tennis club. Bob Gambol. Frank Matava and i The local net club will probably , casket bailer Scott Foxley showed to advantage during a two-hour scrimmage. VANCOUVER, B. C Sept. 3 i A hometown boy. long-driving Bill ! with a win over Bob Miller of Al Mawhlnney. shot a three-under- ; hambra. Calif., In the men's singles pass 68 yesterday to take a lead in the British Columbia Amateur Golf championships at the halfway mark. Oscar Sund. Seattle, trailed Maw. hlnney by two strokes for runner up honors. SEATTLE. Sept. 3 OPv Univer sity of Washington gridders get a partial holiday Monday. Coach Howie Odell scheduled only one turnout for Labor Day but it will be back to the two-a-day grind Tuesday. The Huskies had their first live l , scrimmage of the season yesterday. e I ASTORIA, Ore, Sept 3 Pv John 5 C. Hoikka. Roseburg. Wash, held e i the lead In both the Astoria and J j Chinook. Wash., salmon derbies to--1 day with a 41-pound 10 ounce Chinook. 114 Vets j; Greet Tule Coach TTJLELAKE. 8ept J Head Coach Fred I ten and Line Coach Harold Posberg made no predictions as to' the destiny of this year's football, squad but the skippers were greet-! ed Monday with the return of 14 lettermen. Iten said prospects In the forward wall "look fair" and the backfleld will be built around Jerry Brown, ' Bill Stonecypher, Eddi: Baley and Gilbert Youdy. The Honker's open grid action I Linesman Dick Fish has returned . to tl Tule fold alter absence . J' 1 uuuavcia -J u uvi uici m Siskiyou county league. The season schedule follows: Sept. 16. Merrill at Merrill: Sept. 23, Klamath Wildcats Tulelake; Oct. 1, McCloud at McCloud: Oct. 8. Mt. Shasta at Tulelake; Oct. 15 Etna at Tulelake: Oct. 27, McCloud at Tulelake: Oct. 29. Mt. Shasta at Mt. Shasta; Nov.' 8, Alturas at Tulelake; Nov. 11, Malin at Malln: Nov. 19. Crescent City (Del Norte county) at Tulelake. 180 Tee Off TOtCITI lOlG JASPE1. Alta.. Sept. 3 CP An estimated 180 golfers including for- until Wednesday afternoon to post i P'ays. .... mer champion Bing Crosby will tee qualifying round scores for the an- I A tentative first string backfleld off here Monday over the Jasper nual women's club championship 1 Includes Jim Buchanan at quarter course In the' 1949 Totem Pole Golf tournament. Most qualifying rounds "r. Ernie Johnson and Howard tournament. were played yesterday but rounds Hansen at the halves and Boo Included In the entrv list are de- union in hv Wednesdav will be 1 Watson at full. fending champion J. Edgar Green, j of Seattle, and Carl Haymond, Ta- I coma, a former winner. I Radio and Screen took the title in 1947. Star Crosby Knocked 'Em Down, Must Set 'Em Up NEWPORT. Sept. 3 (P-Stephen Arthur King Is goinz to hsve to re- place a whole group ol mall boxes I and put up four signs for the state highway department. 6everal days ago the north Lin coln county truck driver thought It would be fun to see how many mall ooxes and -ilgns wi wumuuu. iv vurnro out ne couia knock down quite a lot. The Judge suspended a 30-day jail sentence on condition King replace all the damaged signs and boxes. o WASH $ GREASE Your Cr JUL Uth & Oak Signal Service cAimm mj uuvw 111 wau UIUU Sunday. At a late hour Friday evening only eight Invaders had aired in- tentlons of competing in the open j tourney. I They are John Richard and Todd ' Tibbutt of Medford. Dorothy Mor , ris of Ashland. Don Megale of Coos ; Bay, Shandy Moore of Roseburg. Max Hicks, formerly of this city j but now residing In Bend, and Dar i&i rell Walker and Dick Green of Sa lem, However, more entries from Northern California and Southern Oregon towns will probably come in at the last minute. The tournament will be composed of six divisions: men's singles and doubles, women's singles. Junior I enter several players In each dlvt- sion. Last year Ken Karns. first-seed- led Klamath Falls racqueteer. chrls- i tened the first local open tourney I final George Mills. Klamath Falls, and Miller teamed up to spank Eddie Dent and Jerry Olson, both of this city. In the doubles finals. .STANDINGS FAR WEST LEAGl'E W L Pet. Pittsburgh 81 41 .664 Klamath Falls 1i 44 &a Willows M M -Ml Redding 82 1 JVM Marysville & 4 .467 Medford 37 83 Jll Yesterday's ttesalta Klamath Falls 4. Redding 3. Pittsburg 7. Willows 4. Medford 10, Marysville 3. PACIFIC COAST LEAGl'E p., Fyl W L Hollywood 0 73 74 73 7 80 84 M M M3 ty, ... to, ... ' Oakland 88 Sacramento 87 San Diego 84 Seattle San Francisco 77 Portland 7 I Los Angeles 84 Last Night's Resells Seattle S. Portland 4. San Diego 7, Oakland 4. Sacramento 4. Hollywood 1. Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE New yoti t 47 Boston " ? M Cleveland" 75 63 .634 .600 Detroit Philadelphia -.74 .87 .43 -47 Ml 423 Chicago All I st. Louis J63 333 v Reanlta jTSJuo 0. Boston . Philadelphia 4 (night). Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGl'E St. Louis 79 48 22 MM 423 408 404 .452 .405 J77 Brooklyn '8 I Boston 67 Philsdelphla 65 New York 64 Pittsburgh 57 Cincinnati 51 Chicago - 49 Yesterday's Resalta Brooklyn 8. New York 0 (night). Philadelphia 6, Boston 3 (night). Only games scheduled. Golfers Asked To Post Scores Women golfers at Reames have accepted. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Chicago Sandy Saddler. 127'i, New York, outpointed Harold Dade, 126. Chicago (10). Hollywood Clarence Henry, ltu1,, Los Angeles, knocked out Jay Lambert, 178 !i. West Jordon, Utah I3i. Sen Diego Irish Bob Murphy, 168, San Diego, stopped Ike Patton, ... . ' ,,W" ' 1 Average size of the greet bar racuda of the Atlantic Is from 5 to 10 pounds. Sports Afield. PUMICE TILE l.aharslarr Una prava Pamirs ssalttars. Tlmm Aluminum Windows Gold Seal Waterproofing Gold Seal Plaster Bond New Site Pomlce Block r'x8"xl8" Klamath Pumice Tile Co. 'Permanent as the Pyramids'' 164 Owens Phne 4)119 4-1 San Diego Trounces Oakland By The Associated Press The Hollywood stsrs now have both Oakland and Sacrametfto breathing down their necks in the steadily tightening Pacific Coast league race. Even though the Oaks lost to San Diego. 7-4. last night, they re mained only two games behind the pace setting Stars because Hollywood lost. loo. and to third place Sacramento. 4-1. The Solon now are only three games back. Hollywood came back home after two and one-half weeks on the road but the hometown fans had little to cheer about. The Stars and aolons each scored in the third inning. Sacramento went ahead 3-1 in the fourth and added two more In the seventh. Twice the Stars left the bases full, in the third and seventh Innings. Orval Grove, relieving Mai Mai- , lette in the seventh, saved the win tor juaiiette. rogetner uiey gave Hollywood only five hit. less no res went tne route for San Diego and drove in two runs in the eighth, putting the Padres out ahead of Oakland after a 4-4 tie. Oakland's Dirk Kryhoski hit two of the game's four homers. Seattle trimmed Portland 5-4 by virtue of Tony York s ninth inning triple with the bases loaded. York was a one-man team, practically. griung anomer triple and a double He scored two and drove in the other three of Seattle's runs. Los Angeles and San Francisco were not scheduled. Today's schedule: San Diego Lyman Unde 13-151 i at Oakland (Charlie Oassaway 14- Los Angeles I unavailable! at Se attle (Denny Oalehouse 7-8 1. San Francisco (unavailable) at Portland (unavailable). Sacramento (Ken Holcombe 11-71 at Hollywood (Glen Moulder 13-8'. King, Coe Clash For Golf Title ! ROCHESTER. N. Y.. Sept. 3 (' A Texas rancher who keeps pinch- I I ing himself to find out If It's true ! and a determined young Oklaho- I man clashed today In the "100-1 I shot- finals of the national a ma- uur .01 f to... Rufus King, a jolly cow and oil man from Wichita Palls. Tex., and Charlie Coe. 114-pound buggy whip ' from Oklahoma City, were to play j holee or less over Oak HlU s ' ooded acres to decide a successor 1 to Willie Tumesa. Oosh. I can hardly believe it King exclaimed after he had elim inated Tumesa, 3 and 1. yesterday in a fiercely waged 36-hole semi final. Coe blew out William C. Camp bell, the Huntington. W. Vs . law maker with cold dispatch. Just as if it was part of the script. The score wss a one-sided t and 7. ' Oakland, Cincy Vie In AL Play OMAHA. Sept. 3 .innatl. O., and Oakland. Calif., will meet for a second time tonight in the American Legion little world series. Thursday night, Oakland defeated Cincinnati 11 to 6. Cincinnati earned a ticket to the finals last night by eliminating Wheeling, W. Vs. S to 0. The Ohio kids will need a victory to night over unbeaten Oakland to force a Sunday night playoff. Red Sanders Puts Skirmish On Film LOS ANGELES. Sept. 3 iAl Heavy duty scrimmage is on tan today for the UCLA football squad. Coach Red Sanders planned to shoot movies of the fray to show his lads their correct and Incorrect The prong-homed antelope Is the only animal with hollow horns that are branched or pronged, and the only hollow-horned ruminant that annually sheds Its horns. Sports Afield. , Male your insurance: responsible for th thoughtlessness of other. Buy th pro tection offered by found insurance compart!, through ' art actiy agency. Our s reputation i your beat safeguard. JOHN SAHDMEYER INSURANCE I MM q In t y 0 SOFTBALL CHAMPIONS This gioup of youngsters won league, front row, from left: Rodney Klus, Chuck Boettcher, Robert Herrero ond Robert Flora. Back row: Clyde Jones, Jnmes Robinson, Art Van Buren, N. J. Belard, onager, George Hanson, Bob Koch and Everett Leach. Newcombe Shuts Out New York Giants As Brooklyn Moves Up By The Associated Preaa The baseball world laughed when I Branch Rickey hung a 1500.000 price tag on Don Newcombe before j the big Negro righthander ever : donned a major league uniform. j Laughter turned to snickers when 1 the head man oi tne uoogers ; "slashed the price to JJOO.OOO this spring. Today they're not even i smiling. just wishing that they owned Fort Knox and Its gold. Newcombe is the -solid' member of an otherwise shsky Brooklyn pitching staff. The husky Negro hasn't any trick pitches, no sliders, screwballs or junk. Just a hopping fast ball, sharp breaking rune and a change of ; pare. i Newcombe looked like a million i dollars last night as he pitched the : Dodgers to an 8-0 five-hit triumph ZnJL.T Yrk "",U ""i""1 "P. bn'v half i Polo Grounds. ThiT.Teiir. ... hi. ..iK, The victory as his third straight , shutout and his 14tn of the season : against six defeats. The triumph ! also moved the second place Dudg ' ers to within a game and a half of the Idle front-running St. Louis Cardinals. Newcombe now has pitched 10 consecutive scoreless Innings. He previously blanked the Cards and Pittsburgh and held Boston score less in the last three innings of a game. The defeat dumped the Oiatitt its fifth place, the Philadelphia Pioneers Vs. Yreka Northern California Baball , league action will center at Yreka land Hilt tomorrow in ih. ,n,i round of the league's 8haughneasy 1 playoffs. i The Klamath Pioneers move down ; 10 Yreka to meet the Indians at 1 30 P- - while the Dummuir Railroaders plsy the Jets at Hilt. i L1 wee tne Pioneers were clipped by Yreka here 4-1 while Dunsmuir defeated Hilt 3-1. The series in each case is two out ol three and the winners of these aeries will meet for the lesgue's President ! cup later. Bells Kayo Swannanoa WICHTTA. Kas.. Sept. 3 rl Six teams, headed by the undefeated Golden. Colo.. Coors. went into the last three days of the national semi-pro baseball tournament to day. All six play tonight, survivors of a starting field of 32 tesms from across the- nation. Semifinals are scheduled tomorrow and finals Monday. ni.ht !?TiI h! , , T U,t; ?nd . rctr 4-3 The lo ' the fir! in h. .o-.-,.. me io cnampions. In the night's only other tame the Belllngham. Wash., Bells ellmi. ! nated the Swannanoa, N. C, Mills, 9-2. An Inexpensive Want Ad today will mean 8 9 8 for you tomorrow I OlcLJimsL Square dances, called by Otto Ellis Schottisches, Waltzes, Two-Steps. Saturday, Sept. 3 Music by Langell Valley Western Ramblers JBiSBKaSM Phillies taking over forth as a The Sol Junied on Plill Murrhll result of their (-3 victory over the don for five runs In the first inning Boston Braves. The Phils won 111.' game In the eighth Inning, scoring three runs to snap a 3-3 ue. Willie Jones singled across two of the runs. Meanwhile, the Boston Red Sox I made hay in the American league j pennant chase, crushing the Phlla- ' delphla Athletics. (-4. under the . lights in Boston. The victory cut the New York Yankees' lead over; the runner-up Snx la two and one- i half games. The Yanks were Idle. 1 1 Portsider Art Stands In Pancho's Way FI1HENT HIT IK N V Haul ,oaT D"w"n ncno uoruaies and ttmm championship. The men having been separated from the boys, the Mill annual tournament entered the showdown Charity, Dade Take Trouncing CHICAGO. Sept. 3 (It Charity and former bantamweight Champ- Ion Harold Dade both took a beat- Inf tn the "Carnival of Champtona' ! at Chicago stadium laat night, i Andy Haddler. New Vork'a form er featherweight champion, gave r"uh iolnaj-oyer for a one- i "cd victory In their 10-rounder which was the chief Item of busi ness as five world champions mixed In as many exhibition bouts. The show, billed as a benefit for Negro chanties, attracted only 7236 patrons, who paid a gate of $21, m. That was less than half the (46.000 the sponsors needed to make a profit. Retired Heavyweight Champion ! joe Louis referred the four-round exhibition between Ezxard Charles NBA heavyweight title-holder, and lumbering Joe Modzelle. New Ken sington. Pa., which was little more than exercise for the Cincinnati scrapper. I Other champions who displayed their talent before the many empty seats Included Middleweight Jake LaMotta. Featherweight Willie Pep. Bantamweight Manuel Ortlx. Light weight Ike Williams, and Welter weight Ray (Sugar) Robinson. No Labor Day Rest For S.C. Southern California's Trojsn grid - "r" h"d 'n, notn'r "renuotj. wnonng me neat. Ouard Paul McMurtry. advised earlier this week to quit football because of a knee Injury, Is bark In action, however. Intent on mak ing the team If the knee will hold up. labor Day will not be a holiday for the Trojans. the sofrboll title In the Eogles Bobby Doerr kcynoted the uprising with a three-run homer. Virgil Trucks pitched the Detroit Tigers to an 1-0 triumph over the Chicago While Sox In the major's lone day game. Trucks yielded ten singles but kept them well scattered to gain his loth victory. Besides the Yanks and Cards, the Cleveland Indiana, si. Louli Browns. Washington Senators, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Keds and Chicago Cuba were Idle. . - Larsen 1 , 3ft C1L A . T . r- I dosen other seeded compeiltor. stood a successful defense of his national stage with all eight survivors sched uled to see action In quarter-final duels today. If Oorualea la la hang on to the title he won last year at the age of JO. he first must get past Lar sen. 34-year-old conqueror of Aus tralia's John Bromwirh. to enter the semi-finals. The other quarter-final bout In the upper bracket sends fourth seeded Gardner Mulloy of Coral Clahlea S1b Inti SMnki- O b of lM Ang,M. Mln, former j champion, who la aeeded fifth. In the lower hslf, It will be top ranked Ted Schroeder. the Wimble don champion from La Crescents, Calif., against Prank Bedgman. the Australian utlrholder, and BlllTal bert of New York against Jaroalav Drobny, the aelf-esiled Ctech. Moat observers figure Schroeder will win the title he Is seeking for th first time since, he won It In 143. Major League LEADERS By The Associated Preaa National League Batting Robinson. Brooklyn. JM: Slaughter. St. Louis, j:i. Runs batted In Robinson. Brook lyn. 110; Kiner, Pittsburgh 98. Home runs Klnrr. Flttaburgh. 39. Musial. St. Louis. 37. Pitching Wilka. St. Louis. 11 3 .786; Rue, Brooklyn. 11-4 .733. American League Batting Williams, Boston. .353; Kell. Detroit. J43. Runs batted In Stephens. Bos ton. 140: Williams. Boston 139. Home runs Williams, Boston. 36: Stephens, Boston, 35. Pitching Kinder, Boston. 17-5 .773; Psrnell, Boston, 20-7 .741. 1 There are 33 birds of prey In Nortb Amerlca.-elport. Afield 0 5 Min. from Town 11 "M..ffi7 Baseball Tonite! 7:45 Redding Browns Vi. GEMS LAST GAME OF THE REDDING SERIES Sunday Nite. 7:45 Marysville "Braves" Monday Nite, 6:30 Double-Header Gems Stadium SPORTS I ROUNDUP " rfsvwiy Hugh Fuller RfX IIKHTEH. N. Y, Sept. I ( Charles Cue, the Iran Oklahoma, rncou.itrred two of the toughest Ilea of the Amateur tlolf championship Thursday. . . and they weren't the kind somebody told him. . .on the til Hi hole of his morning match against Harvle Ward, Ones drive lodged at the foot of a tree, among some debris on the bank of a water hatartl. It was the nearest thing to an unplayable he that could be ruled otherwise, and Charlie had to turn around left handed and hit the ball with the toe uf his club. He got out In two swings, then holed out a short pitch to halve the hole wllh a live. . . .tmOA Secretary Joe Dey, who irlerrrd the niauh, told him: "'on d better frame that ball." , . . In the altrriioon he again found the foot of a tree on the ninth, wasted a stroke getting out and then hi a sliot so far lover His green that the siectators didn't even duck . .Ward had tire trouble, too. getting under some low brandies on the Uth. . . It was lust after that, when the miti'h was square, that the wlae erarklng North Carolinian re ma i krd : "I feel like I got the whole world on my sl.i ulders." A rumor heard around the club Is that K A King, the Wichita Falls, Tea. oil man whose sun la a srml'fliialitl here, it planning to honk up with Del Webb of the Yan kees and Lou Jacobs, the Buffalo coiueuituis man, lo I ulld a fancy new sKria arena In t4sa Anielea , . . seeiiu like somebody alwavs la gelling that Idea frugal Willie 'l'urura rlaima he usea Just o n a golf ball for an entire round unless he cuts It or sum's It. Hull he III urea it costs him about 1700 for a werk a practice and a week of the ' tournament. Ireland s Mag Mc Creaily seu Die figure at 1 1 000. ma counting travel from overaeaa. Won der tshat Krankie Htrsushan spends , . .aniittwr of llarvie Ward's un studied remarks: When his ball tell off the tee twice. Harvle cracked, "Gee. the ball s nervous." ; Yesterday s Stars Flv The Associated Preaa I Batting Bobby Doerr, Red Sox. homered, doubled and singled and ; drove home three nana to lead i Boston to an 1-4 triumph over 1 Philadelphia j niching-Don Newcombe, Dodg , era pitched Brooklyn to u M five-hit triumph over New Tor lo run consecutive arorelesa Inamt skein to 30. Austin Scores Sixth Shutout AUSTIN. Tex, Sept. ( iTS Aaaw tin turned In Its atiUt etratgh shutout victory of the 14 attesial vrw sotiOkll tournament her las night to take the title from Port Madison. la. 4-0. Ufty Krelg of Austin's post 1717 turned loose only esse M foe- his third straight win ef the J Can You Do This? ond still have your lawn thoroughly watered at the same time? We didn't hear from yeai last week. Are yon going to eae a hoae for Ihe rest of yoar Ufef C. S. Whitcomb Co. rMOrirasnS UvH Strlobllag , Phone 7859 Evenings