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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1917)
SIX ( potato! ) If I You wouldntA i 11 like it raw J I (brings ou ) J flavor JO ff Have jroiryv ff I smoked the famous rtoastedJ is 1 TFBFT I 10c rt ) Guaranteed hy St: Watching the Scoreboard Pacific Coast League Standings. W. 1,. P.O. Pan Francisco 78 halt Lake 70 Los Angeles 72 Oakland t!7 J'ortland 61 Vernon , 00 01 62 6(1 71 70 78 .001 .030 .022 .486 .406 .435 Yesterday's Results. At Portland Oakland 0-4, Portland 2-0. At Ran 1'rnueisco Suit Lake 3-2, San Vraneisca 0-1. At Vernon--Los Angeles 4-11, Vernon 2-0. STANDING EOF TH STEAMS. American League, W. Chicago 72 Boston .. 08 Cleveland .. 63 Ketroit. 08 New York 54 Washington .. 03 Philadelphia 42 Ht. Louis - 44 National League. W. New York 70 Philadelphia OS . ht. Louis 00 Cincinnati .. . 62 Chicago 08 Jlrooklyn 03 tohtu .. 4(1 ' J'iUsburg 33 L. 44 44 00 66 67 09 67 71 L. 38 4(1 04 07 07 08 76 P.C. .621 .607 .029 .008 .480 .473 ,386 ! .442 .a 10 Meet to Talk Over Coast Highway Crescent City, t ah, Aug. 20. Coop eration between California and Oregon in the ennstriii-lien of a coast highway whivh will i;ive an all year route from !S:m Francisco to Portland w;is discuss ed here today when Governor Stephens of California, with the vahforiiin hi(.'h way commission and other officials met Governor Withvcoiube and a like di'le.-itioa from Oregon. The Oregon governor- and party ar rived late yesterday after being de'ay (! between Grants Puss and Crescent City when an automobile trn U ahead of 'them crashed "tliri.iuih n bridge. For s great many who wanted to be an officer in the reserve corps "there nin 't going to be no corps." - ASK FOR and GET E3 Giles's The Original ninltcd Hlilk '' Substitutes Cost YOU Sama Price VHiTE SOX LEAD REDS BY TWO FULL GAMES Team Is Weakened Bui Still Sircng Red Sox Fight Best Underneath (By H. O. Hamilton) (United Press Staff Correspondent) New Yorlf, Aug. 20. The question whether the Bed or White 8ox carried the griratcr amount of nerve will be set tled in the deadliest of series that begin today in Chicago. A display of cast iron feelings stuck out now and carried down through Sep tember will give the White Box the right to meet the Nationnl league pen nant winner in the world's series. A false step now and they might as well begin to make plans for next year. The Chicago Hot have kicked away several chancel to sew up the race, but today, in spite of their failings, they lead the procession by two full games. They now nro scheduled at home for a stretch that will carry them up to .September 17. The list of games should moan a ting. Injuries to Buck Weaver and a shat- ered pitching staff liave made the White Sox' task hard, but the season gives thnm a well developed edge over tho Red Sox in series played in Chica go. However, the present series is one of the kind that can hardly be measured with that rule. The Red Sox, history proves, have won their last two pen nants in the face of just such odds as they are called upon today to bat tle. They have the determination and no nerves. They compose one of the great- sc "money teams tho game ever new." If they should slaughter the White Sox no one would be greatly sur prised. lirnio Shore probably will be sent against the White Sox in today's en counter, with chance pointing at Eddie Cicotte for the C'hicagoans. The Athletics chased the ball while tho White Hox made fivo in the first and then did it again while their op ponents banged away for fivo in the eighth. The Giants got shut out by the Reds for tho benefit of the Sixty Ninth regi ment. Ty Cobb pulled one but the umpire wouldn't see it that way, so Clark Grif-.old fitli has protested tho Detroit victory. Two Games Today. Chicago, Aug. 20. The Sox White and Red formed on nil star cast here today for a revivnl of the old favorite drama, "tho crucial series." A matinee and evening performance will bo given today. It will bo repented tomorrow and Wednesday. The home talent section of the cast will be crippled by the absence of one of its stars, Buek Weaver, who was in iured on a recent barnstorming trip. His 4understudy McMullin, will tuke his place. The road company, direct from a four day run in Clevelnnd, was expected to rIiow Kmio or Carl Mayes in star roles. The stage manager Rowland admitted ho did not know who would do the heavy work for the White Box. The boys enter this series two full games to tho good. In order to leave tho city atop the league, the Boston eso must tnko a clean sweep. Tho first gome will bo played at 1:30 p. m. Six Hundred Enter, Chicago, Aug. 20. More than six hundred appeared on the entry list whou the Grand American handicap trap shooting tournament opened here today. Many stars will participate. Amateurs opened piny in tho South Shore introductory in which there were 200 targets on au eighteen yard rise. Tho national amateur championship begins tomorrow. There will bo 100 single targets on a sixteen foot riso. Tho preliminary hnndicnp, open to amateurs, will be held Wednesday. The grand American event is to bo on Thursday mid the Consolation handicap Friday. Daily matches between professional shooters will be held in addition to the logular program. Preliminary events were cleaned up yesterday when li. A. King, of Dtfltn, Colo., won the A. B. Richardson mcinor ial trophy and William Ridley, of .383 j Watcher, Iowa, succesfully defended tho Hazard doubles trophy. P.O. .(118 j Tennis Stars to Battle. .O.-18 j Forest Hills, L. I., Aug. 20. R. Nor .022 iris Williams, 11., the national tennis .021 j singles champion, faced Walter Pate to .Oisidnv in the opening of the national pat- .4S2!iutie singles tournament on the courts of the West Side tennis club. Pate, a j veteran, promised ti give Williams a j hard argument, owing to Williams' in action while ho was in the officers' training camp at Plnttsburg. ' Hixty four entrants were to meet in tho first round of play with two rounds being scheduled today. This would bring the remaining entrants to sixteen at the close of the day. Proceeds fiom the matches this year will go to help support Ambulance sec tions the I'n it el States national lawn tennis association intends to equip and send to France. National Tennis Toarny Begins Today As Patriotic Charity New York, Aug. 20. Although lack ing through the absence of seine play ers the brilliance that has nttondod for mer tourneys, the annual national tonr i.ameut of the United States National Lawn Tennis Association began today on the courts of the AVest Side Tennis club nt Forest Hills, L. I. Contrary to the usual method, a leg on tho championship cup will not go to the winner of the tournament this year. Instead, he will be given a cer tificate. Proceeds will go to support am-1 balance sections the national associa- tion hna agreed to purchase, man, equip THE DAILY CAPITAE JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, TRAP AND FELD NOTES1 NO CLOSED SEASON. There is no closed season for the clav bird. The trapshooter may shoot 12 months in the year unhampered by game war dens and certain that the size of his bag will be limited only by his ability to hit 'em. Also, for the information of the be ginner, we will state that while any of the four seasons is a good time for starting in at this sport, winter has this added advantage that the blue- rocks break with less provocation when tney are well frozen. If your fall hunting doesn't pan out as well as you had hoped, it is probable that taking up trapshootinz will enable you to do better with your chances next fall. If you were hitting them about as often as you saw them, attendance at the club shoots will give you a chance to enjoy every week the same thrills of satisfaction you felt when afield. In the sunny Southtland, once upon a time, a husky young fellow, a bat tling Irishman who hailed from the same town where the "Indians" of long ago held their famous tea party, won fame and many shekels and smashed his name on Fistiana's Roll of Honor as champion, of champions John Lawrence Sullivan. Sully's career is no secret to those whose mental menus include sport sheets, but one battle John L. lost, a mix-np wherein Paddy Ryan'B conquer or was almost helpless, also happened in the sunny Southland, and is un known to many of the sporting fra ternity. In San Diego, Cal., recently, this same John L., now grown gray, was a guest of the Pastime Gun Club; at a trap matinee, and that afternoon the birdies sure handed tho old gladiator a gorgeous lacing. A big crowd was out to see Sullivan perform, and curiously enough tho old champion clouted the first bird an aw ful poke. The railbirds gasped! Could it be true was Jawn a gunman! Certainly his first slam had all the earmarks of the knockout punch, and the crowd awaited eagerly for his next swing, But alas! One after another, as they whizzed from tho trap houso, the tar hawks ducked and skipped out of dan ger, making their getaway with such ridiculous ease that for once in his life John L. Sullivan looked like a sterling boob. One string of 20 was enough for the gladiator, and at its finish ho cheerfully acknowledged that shooting dirtbirds and shooting the K. O. punch were two entirely different games. One lone bird, the first he ever swung at, was knocked out cold. That was all. Great sport, John L. said, it was, and he promised to try again, hoping, as in tho days of yore, to bring down more with his aim next time. Another heavy-weight boxer this one of the present day who is quite a trapshooter is Frank Moran, of Pitts burgh, Pa. Moran has broken over 80 per cent of his targets on a number of occasions. & 4t & & & & & 4e 4t lit & 1 " 1 " -1 -. ' , - -1 T -, ' EDISON VISITS WILSON Washington, Aug. 20 Thomas A. Edison will see President Wilson at four o'clock this af ternoon. This nows, given out at the white houso today, launched again tho query: "Has Edison got something?" For weeks the famous invent or has been closeted with his secrets in his New Jersey plant. The object of his visit is not revealed. c ss s( 5)c fr 'J and present to tho army, through the American Ilea Cross. Because of the war, however, it was decided to abandon the practice of awarding a championship leg. During the national play Miss Molla Bjurstedt, the national woman's champion, ana Miss Mary K. Browne, former champion will play. Tho national junior and national boys' championships will begin Thurs day. George 1. Adeo, president ot the national association, will referee pat riot io singles. Ranking players, r players whose ability is known will appear in the tour nament. Among the absentees will be Maurice E. McLaughlin and William M. Johnston, two California stars always favorites in national matches. R. Norris Williams, II., tho natioual champion, probably will play, even though ho has entered the United States aviation corps. Theofture Roosevelt Pell, Wallace Staivhnn, Dean Mathey, Carl Behr. It. Liiullev Murray, and others prominent probably will be entered. Old time champions who have not appeared in national tourneys for years, have sent 111 their entries, not to show what they can do on the courts, but in order to give their efforts to help along the ambulance fund. REALLY BEMOVES HAIR ROOTS, OR COSTS NOTHING (Phelactine, tho New Wonder worker) Without doubt the greatest thing yet discovered for hair disfigured wo mankind is the wonderful phelactine method. It has none of the disadvant ages of electrolysis or depilatories and, best of all, it removes the hairs entire, roots and all! It does this instantly, leaving the skin so smooth and soft that no one can tell the user was ever the possessor of a moustache or other hairy growth. Phelactine is nori-odorous, non-irri- itating, and so harmless child could eat it without any ill effct. A stick of this remnrkabie substance, accom panied by simple instructions, can be obtained at any drugstore, and ils price will he refunded upon request in case of dissatisfaction. .ut what wo man would not be satisfied and delight ed after seeing those ugly hairs come om including the root: eyes t uh her own JfljfJIjj STARS ARE MAKING HNE SHOWING Got In Their -Work In the Second Round S. Howard Vosseil Defeated Forest Hills, L. I., Aug. 20. One time stars took part in the annual na tional tennis singles here today to the extent of making entries. Several matches were defaulted by them. Results of the first round were: William T. Tilden, Jr., defeated Count Otto Balm, Austria, 6-0, 6-1; Dean Mathey, Craneford, N. J., defeat ed G. G. Burrows, Brooklyn, by de fault; George S. Walker, Jr., New York defeated Harry Seymour. Pittsburg, 6-2, 6-0; Craig Biddle, Philadelphia, de feated Cedric A. Major, New York, by default; Elliott H. Binzen, New York, defeated Herbert L. Bowman, New York, by default; A. W. McPherson, New York, defeated Fred H. Harris. Burlington, Vt., by default; George O. Waenor, New York, defeated Moses Berk, tNcw York, 6-3, 6-0; Ludlow Van Deventer, Plainfield. N. J.. defeated Christian Mack, Ann Arbor, Mich., by aerauit; Frederick (J. Baees. New York defeated James 8. O'Neale, Jr., New York, by default. Howard Vosseil and Frederick C. Inman, two stars of the tournament were elininated in the first round. Henry S. Parker. New York, defeated Inman 6-1 and 6-3 and Holcomb Ward, New York, eliminated Vosseil, 6-4, 1-6, 0-3. Other results were: Herbert , L. Westfall, Brooklyn, defeated Gerald B. Emerson, East Orange, N. J., 6-3, '6-1; Nat W. Niles, Boston, defeated . Mar shall Allen,, Seattle, Wash., 6-4,, 0-2; Herbert Voil, Locust Valley, New York defeated Kenneth c. Villsack, Pitts burg, 6-3, 9-7; Philip Vandeventor, Plainfield, N. J., was eliminated in the second round by Leonard Bookman, Jow l'ork, B-Z, 6-4. Tho stars began to live up to their true form as the second thirty two got into action. Theodore Roosevelt Pell, New Tfork, defeated Dr. William Rosenbaum,1 New York, 6-3, 6-3; Frederick B. Alexander, New York, defeated Abraham Bossford Jr., New York, 6-1, -6-0; Douglas Wat- ters, Now Orleans, defeated John T Allen, Brooklyn, 7-5, 6-4; Selichiro Kashio, Tokio! Japan, defeated F. Ran som Brown, Beaver Falls, Pa., 7-9, 7-5 and 10-8; Clarence Griffin, San Fran cisco, defeated Charles W. MacMullen, New Y'ork, 6-2, 6-3; Harold A. Throck morton, Elizabeth, N. J., defeated Har ry C. Johnson, BoBton, 6-4, 6-4; Watson M. Washburn, New York, defeated Hunt T. Dickinson, Locust Valley, Now York, 6-3, 6-3; L. G. French, ., Mont j 11 El II ti ii t! n ii 11 u ti El ti M n n ti n 11 11 El 11 ii ii M u u II 11 M rj n 11 M Ii ISO SUITS IllK.' i ft jort " A HP fe"4 II MMMMIMM ,;,;, MMHIMMM M ' j f ' if U ttMMMOMtMtMMt f , J g.jj si-.' j tf 1 - If :,-J E - - - p J rw w These are all-wool suitsbest makes many styles, patterns and materials-big values at the regular price but to close them out at once we have divided them into three lots and priced them as follows: II 11 II Ii u m ti 11 El M A II II li ll li 11 ri 11 11 11 ti $15.00 Grades $20.00 Grades $25.00 Grades HATS All Straw and Panama Hats One-Half reg ular price. Sailors 50c ea, u 11 11 ti 11 ti n ti Salem Woolen Mills 136 N. COMMERCIAL STREET MS WW MONDAY, AUG. 20, 1917. HAS BEEN DEFEATING ALL OPPONENTS R. LINGLEY MURRAY OF Buffalo who has just succeeded in addinsr Win. M. Johnson, former champion, to his list of victims. Copyright Underwood & Underwood Claire, N. J"., defeated Robert L. James Saratoga, N. Y., 3-6, 6-3, 6-1. 8. Howard Vosseil met defeat in the second round, losing to Holcombo Ward New vorky -4, its, 8-3. H. Norris Williams II, the national champion; won his match with Walter L. Pate, Brooklyn in straight sets, 6-2. Lyle K. Mahan lost his match with Charles S. Garland, Pittsburg, 6-1, 7-5. WHITE SOX TREATS ' - (Continued from page one.) ber doubled to left. Rain started to fall and time was called- Play was resumed at 3:55 p. m. After a delay of almost one hour, the game was resumed. . Lcibold hit to Foster, whose throw to Gardner was too late to get Faber at third. McMullin singled to center, scoring Faber and sending Leibold to second- Collins flew' to Lewis. Jackson flew to Hoover. One run, two hits, no errors. Seventh Inning:Boston: Hoblitzel flew to Jackson. Gardner out, Collins to Gandil. Hooper singled. Lewis forced Hooper. McMullin to Collins. No runs, $11.75 W V g v $15.75 (If I ' II $19.75 , ii . I SHOES SHIRTS H! If A I Full line Ox ford Shoes, tan or black rub ber or leather soles; $5 shoes now $3.65. one hit, no errors. Chicago: Felsch walked and took sec ond on a wild pitch. Gandil flew to Hooper. Bisberg popped to Scott. Schalk singled scoring Felsch, but Scott was out trying to reach second, Walsh io Thomas to Barry to Hoblitzcll. One run, one hit, no errors. Eighth inning: Boston Shorten bat ted for Scott. Shorten flew to Jackson. Thomas walkpd. Walker batting for Foster singled. Walsh forced Walker and was doubled at first, Collins to Risberg to Gandil. No runs, One hit, no errors. Chicago Bader now pitching and Janvrin playing short for .Boston. Fa ber fanned. Leibold singled to left. Mc Mullin singled. Leibold and McMullin pulled a double steal. Collins singled to center, scoring Leibold. Collins was caught off first, Walsh to Bader to Hoblitzel to Barry. McMullin scored- Jackson flew to Hooper. Two runs, I three hits, no errors. Ninth inning: Boston Ruth battina for Barry, fanned. Hoblitzol lined to Jackson. Gardner out, Collins (o Gan dil. No runs, no hits, no errors. Totals: Boston 0 i 0 Chicago 7 13 0 Men's Silk iS ' I ! ti Shirts, $5 and If !!ff u ) $6 values, spec- ;j ? I -tf j i I! ial now at If ri $3.65 :i hfj. lJAi'" I H Store y. School Children to Teach War Economy By George Martin (United Press staff correspondent) Washington, Aug. 20; Uncle S:im has just recruited and trained an army of 800,000 American boys and girls, who will be on duty at state and coun ty fairs everywhere this fall. Their work now consist of helping their fathers and mothers preserve, pickle, dry and can the enormous sur plus of America's war gardens. Their work at the fairs will consist of prac tical demonstration of methods. It is estimated that this juvenile army will exhibit its prowess and pro ducts to about 20,000,000 Americans. They will bo tho principal attraction at the series of food training camps the department of agriculture is or ganizing for every section of the coun try for late August, September ana October. The boys and girls in this great food drive are the members of the thousands of boys' and girls' clubs organized by and working under tho direcuon of the Lnited States department of agricul ture. Tho national headquarters is at Wash ington with a specialist of the juvenile; ex-ension department in charge. Each day at tho food training camps the children will can and dry food pro ducts in different ways, giving the public a correct idea as to how it should be done. Tho particular boys and girls who will demonstrate for the state colleges of agriculture and tor the government, are now being chosen through a series of competitive tests in practically ev ery community in the country. These contests are being held in the schools, at community fairs and picnics, who have shown by their work that they are capable of discharging tne tasks for government will cive them, will be per mitted to demonstrate at tho food train ing camps. In addition to this the girls will con duct exhibits and demonstrations on, home baking, cooking, methods of ar rranging the canned and preserved foods into balanced menus for tho fam ily, efficient home management, anl garment making. The boys in addition to their work in the field of canning and drying, will conduct exhibits on poultry husbandry, and the raising of farm crops, ami demonstrations with farm animals such as calves, pigs, sheep and horses. COMING FRIDAY CHAS. CHAPLIN IN THE IMMIGRANT Never here before YE (LIBERTY !WWL lkWl mVL "WW II m TELEPHONE 166ii u or