The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, July 21, 1955, Image 7

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    Legwork On The Beach
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MORNING WORKOUT Sugar Roy Robinson, right, who
meets Rocky Castellani ot San Francisco's Cow Palace
July 22 in a non-title fight, does some early morning leg
work gn the beach accompanied by. Middleweight Champ
ion Carl "Bobo" Olson, who himself likes the beach for
limbering up. The morning air was chilly, hence the
warm clothes.
Tight Hurling Marks Diamond Play
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet. CB
Brooklyn 6.1 29 .685
Milwaukee 49 42 .538 m
New York 47 45 .511 16
Chicago 46 47 .495 mi
Philadelphia 46 48 .489 18
St. Louis 42 45 .48.1 mi
Cincinnati 40 50 .444 22
Pittsburgh 33 60 .355 30i4
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
New York 57 34 .626
Chicago 54 35 .607 2
Cleveland 53 38 .582 4
Boston 52 39 .371 5
Detroit 46 42 .523 9'i
Kansas City 36 54 .400 2Wi
Washington 32 57 .326 24
Baltimore 28 59 .322 27
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Every now and then this season
the smoke sent up by the sluggers,
zeroing in on the major league
home run records with 1,400 to
date, clears away and some bril
liant pitching shows through. Yes
terday was one o those days.
Boston's George Susce Jr. was
the leader, giving Kansas City just
one hit in a 6-0 victory. It was
the fifth one-hit job in the Ameri
can League this year and eighth
in the majors.
The 24-year-old right-hander, son
of the A's bullpen coach, gave up
a leadoff single to Vic Power in
the first and that was all.
'Big Don Newcombe came close
to his second one-hitler of the sea
son, but Chicago wound up with
two singles off the Brooklyn' right
hander as he won his 16th in the
first game of a twi-nighter 10-1.
The Cubs snapped a nine-game
losing streak in the nightcao 5-3.
Reliever Wins For Nats
It was relief pitching that won a
fifth straight for Washington, with
Pedro Ramos hurling 5 2-3 innings
of hitless ball to beat Cleveland
6-4. Ray Narlcski, Don Mossi and
Sfike Garcia, incidentally, tossed
no-hit stuff in 6 1-3 innings of relief
for the Tribe.
Saul Rogovin allowed just five
hits as Philadelphia beat Cincin
nati 6-0 and Curt Simmons fol
lowed it up with a four-hitter as
the Phils won their ninth straight
in the second game of the twi
nighter 4-2.
Clutch pitching paid off for the
Chicago White Sox, who barely
made an 8-0 lead hold up in an
8-6 victory over New York that
cut the Yankees' AL lead to two
games again. Billy Pierce, third
Sox pitcher, ended it with runner
on second and first by getting
Mickey Mantle to hit into a force
out. Orioles Stop Detroit
In the other AL game, Balti
more snapped Detroit's four-game
streak 6-3. And in the National '
Milwaukee fell 13',-i games behind1
Brooklyn with a 4-3 loss at Pitts
burgh while St. Louis whipped
New York 9-2.
Susce, now 5-3, fanned five and
walked three while toppling the
A's to their ninth straight defeat.
Four runs in the second innine on
three singles and Billy Goodman's
aouoie wrapped it up lor the Red
Sox.
Newcombe struck out eiaht and
afler Clyde McCullough's single in
me second inning, didn't a ow a
runner until Dee Fondy singled to
open ine eighth. The Brooks
smacked five home runs in his
support, two each by Don Zimmer
ana LiuKe snider, who now has
33.
The Cubs rallied for three runs
in the seventh to salvage the night
cap with Frank Baumholtz's pinch
hit eluding Jim Gilliam's shoe
string try in the left for a two-run
triple.
Sox Score Early Runs
The White Sox rapped loser Bob
Turley for four runs in the first
and tapped Johnny Kucks for four
in thcrthird then Kucks and Bob
Wiesler held them hitless the rest
of the way. Dick Donovan won his
13th, allhough chased in a five
run Yank seventh.
Cleveland, now still four games
behind, tumbled in the third when'
the Nats scored four times. Loser
Ejrfy Wynn set off the inning with
an error and Jose Valdievielso
capped it with a two-run triple
Rogovin, released recently by
Baltimore, batted home two runs
with a double, and Andy Seminirk
swatted a three-run homer in the
Phils' first-game victory. Willie
Jones gave Simmons a 3-0 lead
with his leadoff homer in the
fourth of the nightcap.
Mathews Powers Homer
The Braves lost their second
straight to the Bucs despite Ed
Mathews' 24th homer that fash
ioned an early 2-0 lead. Preston
Ward hit a pinch homer with two
on to tie it 3-3 in the seventh and
Jack Shepard lined a pinch, bases-
loaded single in the ninth to win
it.
Tom Poholsky, who never had
beaten the Giants since entering
the majors in 1951, gave 10 hits,
but had three of the Cards' 15
safeties. Stan Musial leveled his
21st homer with one on.
Ray Moore held Detroit hitless
for 6 2-3 innings, then gave way
to a 3-2 Tiger lead on homers by
Ray. Boone and Frank House. Hal
Smith hit a pair of two-run dou
bles, as the Orioles pulled it out.
TENNIS
PHILADELPHIA Tony Tra
bert advanced to the quarter fi
nals of the Pennsylvania cham
pionships with a 6-2, 6-1 victory
over Gerald Moss, San Francisco
Thur., July 21, 1955 The Newt-Review, Roieburg, Ore. 7
Glide Teachers Dump
Amman's In Glide Test
GLIDE SOFTBALL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Douglas County Lbr. 4 0 1.000
Glide Lumber Co. 3 2 .600
Glide Teachers 2 2 .500
Amann'a Assoc. 2 3 .400
Updegrave Trucking 0 4 .000
The Glide Teachers reversed
the furniture on Amann's Associ
ated Mation Wednesday night with
a 14-10 triumph in the Glide Soft
ball League. That was the same
score by which Amann's had whip
ped the Teachers in the first
round.
Ten men went to .bat for the
Teachers in the first inning when
the winners scored half their final
total runs. They led 14-3 after
three innings of play and the game
was called on account of darkness
after six innings.
There were three homers in the
game. Tom Amos of the Teach
ers drove in two runs in the sec
ond frame. Lincoln Kennaday hom
ered in the sixth for two markers
and Butch Hansen drove in two
more in the fifth, both for Amann's.
Amann's 030 12410 12 3
Teachers 725 OOx 14 11 2
Watson and Kennaday; Bond
and Thornton.
Bisplinghoff Leads Way
In Western Am Tryouts
ROCKFORD, III. H Eleven
players, led by husky 20-year-old
Don Bisplinghoff of Orlando, Fla.,
Thursday opened a stampede for
seven qualifying berths in the
Western Amateur golf tournament.
Bisplinghoff, drawling blond
blaster who won the North-South
title at Pinehurst this season roll,
ed up a 67 Wednesday for a 54
hole tally of 206 seven under par
for the exacting fiockforH rmmtrv
Club course.
Ring Record
By THE ASOCIATED PRESS
NEW York' rtH;An b...
Garden) Ramon Fuentes. 151,
Los Angeles. niitnntntwt u.tn..
Constance, 147V4, Trinidad, 10.
BUENOS AIRES Oscar Pit..
148, Buenos Aires, outpointed Al
fonso Moreno, 145, Argentina, 12.
AUKHA
Nashua, Swaps Will Race
In Track Classic Aug. 31
CHICAGO Ifl A supreme mo
ment in .thoroughbred horse rac
ing history is destined for Chi
cago's Washington Park Aug. 31
when Nashua and. Swaps line up
in a winner-take-all $100,000 match
race by popular demand.
The announcement Wednesday
that the country's two premier 3
year olds would be matched at a
mile and a quarter on the sleek
south suburban oval surprised and
delighted horse lovers everywhere.
Only Monday, it was thought
that a run-off between them talk-
BASEBALL
ROSEBURG CHIEFS
vt.
.COQUILLE
8 p.m. SAT.
FINLAY FIELD
ed about for months never would
come off.
Nashua, winner of Saturday'!
$148,500 Arlington Classic at Ar
lington Park, had been shipped to
New York for "a much-needed
rest." Swaps was on his home
grounds in California. His owner,
Rex Ellsworth, reported him
champing at the bit for a personal
duel with Nashua but distance and
other factors of the "East-is-East
and West-is-West" variety were
considered insurmountable.
The announcement that the race
finally had been agreed upon by
Ellsworth and Woodward thus
came at a most welcome time.
Each horse will carry 126 pounds
I and Washington Park is putting
up the entire $100,000 for the win
ner, plus appropriate trophies for
owner and jockey.
yitH E AVY-
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Dial 3-6628
202 N. Jackson
Oakland Interested
In Vancouver Move
i OAKLAND, Calif. Ml The Oak
! land Oaks of the Pacific Coast
League would be interested in
; transferring to Vancouver, B. C,
j if the proposition was a good one.
I So said Brick Laws, club presi
dent, after word from the Canad
! ian city Tuesday that chances
j seemed good for a franchise there
next season.
"I haven't talked to anvbodv In
Vancouver in monins, .Laws said.
'''Sure, I'd consider the proposition :
if it were a good one." i
Laws definitely is interested In
moving his franchise. Attendance
has been poor, with the club deep
in the second division. The Oaks I
are tied with Sacramento for last '
place, 17 games behind pace-set-!
ting Seattle. Tuesday night, only!
1,102 fans turned out to watch the j
Oaks beat the first-place Bainiers. j
Snead Paces Qualifiers
! DETROIT UH It may be true
that golf's "old guard" the Ho
gans, Sneads and llangrums is
i being eased into the rocking chair,
; but there's one old codger who
i still has plenty of fight left in him.
! He's a balding businessman
1 golfer who goes by the name ot
Samuel Jackson Snead and don't
call him "Grandpa."
It is SflH hill Irn. fUaf nA Cmm..
now 43, can't hit a lick in the U.S.
Open. He's been trying for almost
20 years bar still no cigar. When
it rnmP. tft fho Pr?A tmtrmmdnl
; however, there are few who tin
measure up to his record.
i Using a brand new putter, he
shot a 5-under-par 6 yesterday
to seize the lead in the first of
two qualifying rounds at the 6,701-
i yard, par-71 layout.
TAKE NO CHANCES
ON YOUR BRAKES
Always be 100 certain
that you can rely on
FULL braking power when
you need it.
.
BRAKE SPECIAL
For All Chrysler Products
2250
Includes all labor and bond
ed lining. Guaranteed parts
and lobor.
'PAi LCfi'mmcB&r
ROSEBURG, OREGON
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