The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 4, 1915, Page 7

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t fs 7n “ma aoe ete S753 27 oh We 3533 7 vev uD, ¢ 100 rat he june for. yer 2m ries ied 1 BL Shore Has New Fast Ball Peculiar Delivery Most "Baf fling BY BROWN HOLM Star Special Sport Writer, Who Spent Sev: Series Contenders of the American and National Leagues, to Get the “inside” Dope, The Boston Red Sox will go into the world series with two brands of pitching that will be new to the Dodgers. Smoky Joe Wood and Rube Shore, of the Sox, use fast balls that ‘are different from tho fast balls of other chuckers, Shore's fast ball ts entirely different trom any other, for the ball, thrown with an overhand delivery, sinke instead of going up, and bai ters hit on top of it There is not a pitcher in the National league who has a fast ball Itke that of shore, so Phil batters will look at something brand new when they face him. Only two National league pitchers, Grover Alexander and Al De. Maree, have a fast ball anything lke that of Wood Alexander and Demaree are with the Phils, so the Phil players, in the world series, 1 Weeks With the World would be at more of a handicap than any other National club. The fouxht to the top of the National Phils never have to bat against Alexander and Demaree league, The Phillies, on the other! Amertean league batters ha be trying for weral years hand, have loped along on an even to solve Wood's fooler, To what extent they have succeeded is shown by the fact that he continues to win a big majority of his games, comes thru with a one, two or three-hit game every now and then, and often fans in the neighborhood of 10 batters In a t single contest. | Grover Cleveland AtMander, no one The Detroit Tigers, with Crawford, Cobb and Veach tn the line Up,| knows much concerning the Quaker can hit as well as any club in the game, but they are helpless agalnst City team. Shore's sinking ball when he is right However, they do not compare While in the East to study the Sox and Tigers, I had a chance to| with the Giants who faced Boston see just how good Shore can be when right. I eaw him hold the Tigers,/tn 1 The Giants batted 60 the greatest hitting club in baseball, runiess tn a U-inning game. points more as a team than the The Tigers simply could not “get hold” of Shore's sinker, They were continually hitting on top of the ball as it broke under their bats, and the results were grounders to infielders on which the Tigers were easy outs at first base None of the Detroit sluggers struck out.| They were absolutely baffled by that sinking fast ball, the ball which Promises to figure in world series history. TRACK MEETS —(GONZAGA HAS AWARDED TO BLUE DIAMOND Athletic activities in the Pacific Northwest association for the year/ 1915-16 were outlined at the annual) meeting held Sunday in the Seattle LARGE CHUNK Gonzaga unive: » Spokane, has} dit off a large schedule chunk thie season. Three Northwest confer! ence teams are to mest the Spo-| *| horae” ever. BITTEN OFF A PHILLIES MAYPULL SURPRISE BY GEO, R. HOLMES NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—With the world series only four days away, the Phillies will enter the Struggle as the bigg: ark While the Braves, who made a wonderful win last year, were comparatively un- known, there was a world of dope on them compared to | the Phillies this y | The Braves enter race with the i the pennant glory of having | “titty-titty’ | flaht bitterly jloft thelr ri |throats. Except keel without having to and at all times have to out each other's the mighty Phitiies today, and they had Math ewson, Marquard and Tesreau as |the ranking stars, Yet Boston, ad. mittedly weaker in 1912 than to- day, won the pennant With the exception of Alexander, the Phillies are as big a crowd of misfits aw were the Braves. They are Castoffs gathered with an eye to saving a dollar in the face of a bad season. The Phillies, like the Braves, en. ter the contest hopelessly outclasd paper. But the Braves emashed thetr way thru to the pen ant goal by taking four straight games—an unheard-of feat The Phillies will—well, til October 17 wait un GOLF HINTS | kane eleven, of which Wee Coyle, Athletic club. |tormer Broadway and Washington H. 8. Burdeck of the Spokane | quarterback, is the coach. | club was elected president succeed. | a i making bid for a | place In © Northwest conference. | Soha “t Taaras, of Waa vies This ts not likely to be granted for| president; T. Morris Dunne, Mult.|* Ye*? Or so, ff it ever is consid Bomah, Portland, secretary and|@red, but that does not the treasurer: E. Frank, Portland, |C@tholics are not deserving. For Tegistration committee; George the first Ume in history the au-| Rertz, Portland, records commit-|‘horities are cleansing the ranks tee. Goldsmith consented to act |f all men who would hardly be| on the registration committee. eligible at a conference tnstitution| By Nicodemus Nimble Two interclub smokers will be held here during the season, less than the usual number, owing to the withdrawal until after the war Victoria and Vancouver Multnomah boxers and appear here November | Spokane comes here Jan. 28 Diamond invades Port- . and Spokane Feb. & jpokane shows are J acheduled for December 3 and Jan- ( wary 7 The P. N. A. championships were awarded, boxing and wrestling to Multnomah, March 2 and 3; indoor and outdoor track to Seattle, date undecided; swimming at Spokane, date undetermined. Those attending the meeting were: Portland, T. Morris Dunne and Frank Harmon; Spokane, H. S. Burdeck and D. B. Hell; Seattle, A S$. Goldsmith, John Moran and William Ing! Fourth and Pike St. Amateur Night Every Friday Amateurs Apply to E. K. MAITLAND, 3 to 5 p. m. French Dinner with Pint of Wine, 50c we ntee the superiority of the Lundberg. Truss, and give free ‘trial to prove it. A. LUNDBERG CO. ", Deformity Appliances ana Artificial Lim 1107 THIRD AVENUB OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY Mirsing teeth are replaced by ‘The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your original teeth. Examinations are now being conducted without charge, and estl Mates are furnished in all cases. WE STAND BACK OF OUR WORK FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE $15 Set of Teeth, Guaranteed se $8 $10 Set of Teeth, yer: Oi 10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown .... $4 510 Gold or Porcelain 4 ridge Work ........ Solid Gold Fillings ..$1 Up © Fillings 50¢ Sundays, Office Hours, 8:20 to 6. 9 to 12, Cut-Rate OHI Oo Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY 8ST. CORNER SECOND AVE. jto the conference law. | Coyle’ | W. eleven at Spokane Oct. 23, 1 | Nov. 13 and Washington Nov. 25. The first game was set for Oct. 2, Wenatchee high the ric time. Butte School of Mines plays Oct. 9 A tentative game with | Willamette ts arranged for Oct. 20 at Salem, with the Utah Aggies at |Salt Lake, Nov. 1, and Montana Ag gies at Bozeman, Nov. 6. aho Bill Lange, famous in his day as Ty Cobb is at present, is organizing the fans of San Francisco for a world’s series special. Bill no doubt will have success, for he is the most popular man in Frisco. Bill is reputed the best tango danc. er around the Bay, and is always in demand as a guest at the swell event Cynthla Grey: | did not follow the case. | do not care to argue about it. But | oppose the ex- tremity to which you go In your | arraignment of man. You call sen- al pleasure a devil-blind passion. | You say that some men are more brute than human. “Brute” and |“human” are synonymous. They are of the same significance. Man le a brute. He is so constituted. other pleasures, save for brutes. There are delusions. He can ape a mythical being and thus But ide © not at talnable. Man can ne | He Is a brute, a creature of dust. | He can work, he can delude him- self, he can be Inspired, he can think himeelf kin to a godly one, he can occasionally f: nowledg —and learn life ddest and bit- terest truth—that he Is only a brut and a brute he has always been, and a brute he will ever be, until the last of hie kind rots and withers in a sleep as eternal space. Do not condemn him for b Ing what he is. Can a brute become a God? Would you blame a brute for following hie inclinations as such? Understand, civilization, culture, art, science, literature, progress, are nothing; signify less than noth ling. They are too puny. They are lthe products of the brutes who have Ideals, and who have set °. pace foreign to brute nature cause of these ideals. They came from the brains of brutes who have died and are dying. They were the 9 tt of the brutes; they knew they were. They will accomplish more, much mort but, measured by time, the best and the greatest will be transient. Brutes cannot produ Immortal things. Then, why ideals? Out of his momentary life, the brute obta a little pleasure—sensual pleasure and pride pleasure, Love Is deeper than pleasure, and the brute who pos sessos it Is ind fortunate, since love, not based on ity, Is | scarce—very. love possible to the brute Is lim ite: it adds to his pride and pleasure. Again, he thinks he Is related to a God—one whom he re- gards, even then, as greatly his superior. A God, if such a one ex isted, would be emotloniess; devold of love jon, hate, or fear, The brute nsations. He can never be a God, Therefore, hia justly brutal pleasures—the respites of his brief existence—are not sinful. You, and others, have placed It jusions on a high pedestal, and the after brutes swarm vociferously them. Or else they are Inspired to do so of themselves. It Is all the same. They forget that |/lusions, and in other ways living according| men entertain the U. of} State! And the deepest of | } STAR--MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1915. PAGE 7. Speaker Sure to Cause Trouble in Big Series Anais MRS rane: Photo at right shows how Tris Speaker, Boston Red Sox elu stande behind the p #0 he can see pitched balie after they bre. photo at left shows how Ty Cobb stands in front of the plate to hit balle before they break. BY BROWN HOLMES Tris Speaker of the Boston Red Sox ts the big hitter pitehere will have to battle with in the world sorion, and Speaker {« a big hitter because he has an odd style at the plate Speaker stands as far back in the batter's box as the lines of the batter's box will permit. In this tion he is able to see pitched balls after they break and always kaows, before he awings his bat, if ho will hit a straight ball, curve or apitball American say 5 est men In the They say they can’t make him ewing at a wide curve and mise it off the end of his bi cause, in his position, h see the ball aft knows If he can reach it. Most batters stand even with the plate or tn front of ft and hit the ball before it has a chance to break or as it is breaking. In this post tion, they do not always know what stave aE ee rear of the box, lke Speaker, Speaker has been the le ter of the Sox thi# season. His swats have helped keep the club at the top and are expected to count for things in the big games. ! ig ‘CHICAGO FEDS , WIN PENNANT CHICAGO, Oct. 4,.—Chicago haw & pennant today, after five years of wallowing tn the trrough of the American and National leagues. Tho Federal league club brought the honors to the Windy City by breaking even in a doubleheader with the Pittsburg Rebels yester: day, The locals had to win one ea to finish a 4 of St. Louta, which wou its game pitchers The Wanderer pro {ce hockey team of Montral may be run on a co-operative basis this season. Lichtenhien will put it up to his | No. 3—Practice approaching at some rifle Fange, say at 500 yard }If you can make nine “bull’s-eyes, in isa shots, You may succeed as a Lig |realized, would be as bubbles in their hands. They cannot attain t ideals—illusions—they covet; |they cannot ape the slimy |stigma encompassing them—be-| |cauee they are brutes, Nature, thelr progenitor, brands them brut Control of brutal Instincts is partial denial of them. The word | “brutal” you 60 delight to use, can |be replaced by “earthly"—thus de- leting its effectiveness one of your cuss-words. E. F. A.—It would be worse than use jleas to argue with any one who | classes himself with the worms of the dust, who holds such a low esti mation of his kind, and I would not answer you, except that the readers | might think I agree with you. “As a man thinketh in his heart, so fs he.” You think you are a brute, you don't try to be anything else, consequently you are |a8 your essay on brutes plainly flects; but you have no (right men October 5. Players who do not wish to take a chance on the drawing power of the team will have the option of signing at a ight sa! they are swinging at Ty Cobb bats tn this style. He hits before the ball breaks, except when opposed to left-hand pitchers. Th h metimes stan in party? When they have ed y, if the common law entitled to any, what portion? A CITIZ A.—This state does not recognize common law marriages, consequent ly the couple are fn no way boun to each other In the « © prop-|miam, ae the case may be, and then fo in| raise a how! because they don’t fit. |If you see go little In living, why don't you call a halt on yourself and k yourself what you are, and what it ls you want to do, to be, or to have? Did you ever figure It out that your own self, that le In you law. Legally the prope 1 almost as a separate personality belong to the one iq whose} it from your experienc \s, fs. If justice ts toNBe Xaken {nto after all, all there is in you and is consideration, it wou be divided |the same identical self that is In fn half if It was gainedijointly. levery form of life? And uniess you - let that self become real to you, you Laborer: That all deo Sometimes it is, others to find you, But to find your- and sometimes it isn’t. e,-ques- self, bell me, you can’t be your. worth living? neither find yourself mor enable tion Is, what males it while, self all the time, but only long ness, Self which admits also of in- rifinity is something entirely differ. nt, and demands all one’s common faith, energy and enthuse! and what akeg it chgip can discov at, tfm/your ex-|self in common with all life. Self, Gucym" perience and\from of others,|which knows nothing outside of! then ur own to narrow limits, is ignorant selfish. | | yer ite will : wn jatandarde, o ptigiism or pees! ding hit-| If youlenough to realize that you have a|Corn. areen, sack CALIFORNIA PLANS ON A SPEED TEAM BERKELEY, fornia varsity Oct. 4 in rounding Into a The Call that the Washingtonians will have |to play the highest grade of foot ball to win the big game on Novem ber 6 fornia team will be its speed |the game with the Olymple club} last Saturday the varsity showed not only its ability to defend its goal against weight, but also tts ability to score against a heavy team It is not infrequently that the results of rugby training show themselves. The California rugby pass promises fair to be come as famous as the Idah shift. The Id not an en. tirely new one, but the execu- tion is so difficult for the ordl- narily trained player that It has seldom been used. It Is only after nine years of training that the execution h become satisfactory for use in the American game. The back fields that have been used in the games thus far have been light. Two of the men used j--Glanelli and Gratf—weigh less |than 150 pounds. The line, on the lother hand, is composed of heavy | material. ‘This will be the type of jteam that will be used all season k Smith of Astoria is playing center and fullback. \DETROITERS WIN | 100 GAMES BUT |” FINISH SECON DETROIT, Oct. 4—The De- troit Tigers, by beating Cie In the fi nm, set a new The Tigers won 100 games, yet fin- Ished in second place. Cobb second In the second In- is mark ee. ning, for the | | HANDBALL ON | A call for hasdball sharks to turn out for the annual Y. M. C. A }tournament, which will begin Oct |16 and continue for two months, {has been given by 8. M. Berthiaume jand Thos. EB. Sandry, committee in | charge. | In the tournament three games | will be played to a set, three sets to a victory, the loser being elfm- |inated. The tournament winner | will play the winners of Portland land Tacoma associations, the win- | ner of this tricity meet to receive | a cup. A number of Iast year’s near |champlons are already out, and | promise to take the honors from Dr. Wm. C. Speidel, last year's champ | Ben Donnelly, famous Princeton |player of the early ‘90's, says the | California team is too light in the line. He marveled at the triplicate rugby pass made by the Berkeley players from the kickoff. Donnelly has been out of the game so long he doesn't know much about It 1.00 oo rapefruit . joupes, Yakima, Cranberries, Washington, barrel Cranberries, box arr nck flower, dor 1. le c Cucumbers, hothouw new . Grapes, Concord, b sacen Oruae Suen DY YOUSS EE to achleve and realize ¢ Rot Mantra to ee tua a | And why worry about eduontional | Parsiey, dom : pr ; |opportunities? Life Is education, | penches * |an effort to live up to that stan + | Pines | lor he will degenerate. Yo and what you get at universities Is |r. +e @ 180 |afraid to face the truth To those j Yeee Otter Fae trem thet 10 ail Gor | Beet Sut lun’ vos 190 | buried in belief of sin and self, Hy- | pends on the person. Real life Is no) Cri) ra, bell, lug box 1.60 ing only for pleasure or the grat |soft snap, no ring-around-the-roay | pro x 0 @ 60 fication of the senses, Jesus said affair, If that Is what you look | R« hie |Mterally: “Having eyes, ya see not, |for, you mise the best education |Toriieare melons ib. 01% land having ears, ye hear not, lest nd life. For life is more, let us| Yelow preserving toma- | jye should understand and be con |hope, than the alr we breathe and| toes, box “ en | verted, and I might heal you.” He| ¥ |the death that follows. It Is all of | Yakima turnips, yellow « it |taught that the material senses| nd a courage bes Watermetens 3 a1 shut out Truth, and you are as| Apples ) blind as a bat when it comes to the success, until It finds Its true eelf, 125 @ 1.50 | ’ e doctors serv d e self, . | real truth of Life! How can you|{naucement. that Intangible self we have In com pennns | ae |prove your theory that man ta K for the Yellow Frome mon. Some call It God, but that cooking i purely brate and cannot be a God,| = |shouldn’t scare you, ANON, e | when Jesus Christ was in the form | euasesitineS tts e jof a man? Woe are not simply of | ¥ |the earth, as our splritual self ‘SCIENTIST HERE Micka enietan le proves. The Divine Mind is back a | Untons of each and every one of us, and Ontons, green . that we open our eyes “Physical | PIKE # 1QUOR Co. Walla Walla, POM ose ses 45 @ A765 sensation, not Soul, produces ma 411 Pike # ‘ke Sta: Now spuda, redo .sceeees Yr, Frederick Starr of the Unt lterial e¢stacy and emotion. If| D , New spuds, white, 1b. .... 01 @ |epiritual sense always guided men,|{ Sella zynuine Sunnybrook full at, || versity of Chicago, and a noted an- |there would grow out of ecstatic || 60°! full Pt. Ae; hull ts-pt. 200" 1) thropologist, ts in Seattle for a few | tandard brands of w ‘ane for |condemn marriage; it is the ex-,J ‘Her oF Olympla, ice cola, will then walk over the old Japan- | pression of Life, and Life, Love and Intelligence are all expressions of God. But I do condemn adultery. | A woman who, in my estimation, has ma the furthest strides tn | comprehending the truth of Life, wrote: “Chastity {s the cement of | civilization and progress; without | it there Js no standard tn society, | and without it one cannot attain} the Science of Life. | Q—Will you kindly tell me thru | your column If, when a woman has! lived with a man under the common | law from 12 to 20 years, do they need a divorce to separate, one of them wishing to marry a third | _ part of the country left unsullted | | BR by the modern railroad e He will alzo collect specimens Jand material for a Korean museum, Just Printer] |'s v6 00 tho Pacitic const. eccmaemeeny HOLD REHEARSALS | FREE ADMISSION Rehearsals for the Society Cir AT DREAMLAND cus, scheduled for the Hippodrome . October 18 to 28, are being held oaee eraooen nightly, Three hundred most prom {nent girls will take part in. the Why Pay Moret jese highway from Tokio to Kyoto, which is, he says, about the only Hens, 8% Ibe Hons, 3 Iba and under... Spring ducklings, over 8 oT eeses P Feninw | * Butter Native Washington creamery, brick af Native Washingt creamery, solid pack .. entertainment for charity. Cheese co | | Young America « FOOTBALL DOPE IS BADLY SCRAMBLED--PHILLIES “DARK HORSES” ||STRAIGHT STUFF Sporting Editor By the | | 0. Jsuch as few high school quarterba | Standing on hie own 12-yard |i ‘ward pass. Even if he had gotten shape that ts pleasing. It is evident |for It Is too risky a play to try any where inside home territory, Guern- y fumbled the ball however, and Jing It up, had only a few steps to t | the glant center, kicked go: points, Virginia copping, 10 to 0. | Every season at least one team has to beat Yale, #0 the New Haven folks can rest easy until the Har. jvard duel. Colgate handed old El a package in 1913, last season It was Washington and Jefferson, and this season dear old Virginia. |Yale has been hooked so often by |minor teams in recent years tt is difficult to remember the scores. cee | Harvard had a tough time with |the Massachusetts Aggies, winning Jonly 7 to 0, W |tartar in West Virginia, the score jending 6 all. The Army was held |to a 14-14 tle by Holy Cross, an lother jolt to dope. The defeat of the Navy by Georgetown, did not stir up as much comment as would be expected, for the Navy is not as etrong as in former years. Princeton beat Georgetown, 13 to 0, |& week ago. cee | Princeton handled the burly Rut gers team in workmanlike fashion Saturday, winning, 10 to 0. The | Tigers are not saying much, but they have a well balanced team. Tibbott, a new man, caught the ball on the kick-off and ran 80 yards thru the Rutgers field for a touch- down. Tricks of this sort are re- served for the White brothers. | oe. | West Virginia accomplished {something in the past two weeks. After holding Penn to a 7 to 0 |ncore, the eleven came back Satur- |day and tled W. and J., 6 to 6. W. jand J. is having hard sledding this season. The week previous they | beat Geneva, 6 to 0 1 - | | Brown ran into a surprise, Trin- jity earning a scoreless tie. Brown d weak this season. has been reporte ee | | Dartmouth men are feeling chesty Monday because the Green handle |the Aggies in lrougher style than Harvard was able to do. Dartmouth beat these |fellows, 18 to 0, 10 days ago, and Harvard fell short of this score by one touchdown, . Yale and Dartmouth stack up about even by comparative scores, Yale beat Maine, 87 to 0, while the Green trimmed the same team, 34 to 0. It is a shame neither Yale nor Harvard will give Dartmouth a chance, Cavanaugh’s men would sive either team an awful battle. ee The Middle West brought ex- pected results. Minnesota was not expected to beat North Dakota by Jany 41 to 0 score, tho. Indiana de- feated Depauw, 7 to 0; Wisconsin |walloped Lawrence, 82 to 0; Pur- due {is no better than last year, Wabash holding the Boller Makers to a 7 to 7 tle. Colorado university Wisconsin trip! | Washington twins a 28 26 Country Hay and Grain (Prices paid produser) i —@ ifaife, No t NATIONAL Pot. Philadelphia . 1 Boston ... 5 Brooklyn 0 Chios) art Pittebure m4 Bt Louls an New York 79 463 Cinctnnatt 1 & 4m AMERICAN LEAGUE Won. Lost. Pet. Boston oo 47 ers Detroit 100 68a Chicago os ek 800 Washington 88 Keo New York 6s ost Bt Louls ... 6380 c bs 88 Phi 41 108 LEAGUR Won. Loat. ss 68 oe a6 6T a 78 80 | 8 1. (3 7% 088 Baltimore 46 106 COAST LEAGUE Won. Lost. Once again Yale has bitten the dust, or it might have been mud, produced by tears from the Blue rooters who saw Virginia win, 10 to And Yale lost by poor generals hip, because of a breach of tactics and a few minutes later, standing on The strong point of the Call-|the 40-yard line, booted the ball between the uprights for three more In| and J. ran into a| 9 to 0,! | positing a fixed sum at regular cke would perpatrate. ne, Wilson of Yale called for a fore away with it, he. deserved censure, Coleman, Virginia captain, scoop. ake for the touchdown, Thurman, jof early season strength by defeat. ing Wyoming, 20 to 0 oe. Until more complete reports are in, there is little to be sald about Northwest games. As predicted in this column, Montana gave Idaho a slap, winning 16 to 3. Montana will win from @ lot of conference teams with her imported talent, |Oregon defeated Pacific, 47 to 0, the new backfield men, Bob Ma larkey and Monteith, playing sensa- tlonally. Hoskins, a 210-pounder, and Tuerck, the former a new luminary, gave a great exhibition, Whitman showed a good defense, holding Mutlnomah to one touch- down, which is better than Oregon did the previous week, the Winged M winning, 16 to 7. The State col- lege alumni held the Varsity to 3 to 2, indicating weakness in the Varsity attack. cee Since he's talked himself out of the world series money, Johnny Evers now probably realizes there’s something in that old proverb about silence being golden. . « Branch Rickey is pulling some deep stuff these days. He's got a pitcher from the Charleston (W. Va.) club of the Ohio State league and another hurler from the Wilkesbarre (Pa.) team of the New York State league. While oppose ing teams are trying to figure out that geography, Rickey’s rookies slip over victories, oe “Ball players earn their salaries,” remarks Charley Ebbets. No doubt his do by having to Hsten to him talk. ‘MILLER GIVEN HUNT'S HONOR Hap Miller, the best halfback im the Northwest, no matter how he is taken, will be field general of the Washington team hereafter, Coach Dobie stripping Mike Hunt of these following a lamentable showing by the team against the Ballard Meteors Saturday, when the U. of W. won a desultory game, 32 to 0. Doble says Hunt failed to assert rights of the varsity team on sev« eral occasions, and for this reason declared him captain in name only, The change indicates Doble’s faith in Miller and indicates he believes, him the best football general on the squad. The showing of Sub-Quarterback Wood was anything but encourage Iso appeared | Onkiand | Portland BASEBALL RESULTS (National) —Pittsdurg 6, Cincinnatt 9 Chicago 7, St. Louis 2. (American)—De- trot 6, Cleveland 5; Chicago §, St. Loule os Angeles Vernon 4-15 Oakland 2-0, Portland 1-0; Salt 11-4, San Francisco 1-1. (Fed rg $-0, Chicago 4-3; St. Lo City 2; Baltimore 9. 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