DeMarco, Ford To Battle
In 10-Round Test Tonight
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. 'J Fa
vored former world lightweight
champion Paddy DeMarco tries
the mettle of Jimmy rord 'lues
day night in a 10-round major test
of the Miami boxer.
Ford has won eight of 14 bouts
this year, most of them in Latin
American rings. DeMarco, who
won the lightweight crown, from
Jimmy Carter in 1954 and lost it
back to Carter the same year,
has won, lost and drawn once each
this year.
If Ford makes a good showing
against DeMarco he is scheduled
to meet Ludwig Lightburn at
Kingston, Jamaica, in his next
start.
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T Shriners
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eastern and Western Oregon's
Class B high school all-star foot
ball teams beean their last wpaIt
of practice Monday in preparation
for the annual Shrine benefit
game at Pendleton Saturday
night.
The players were in Portland
last weekend to watch the class
A prep all-star game and visit the
snrine Hospital for crippled
children.
Connie SDroul of Sileti. rnarhinir
the Western Oregon team training
ai renaieion, saia tne team had
elected co-captains for the game.
They are Jack Bitton of Nehalem,
a guard, and halfback George
.Thompson of Siletz.
S p r o u 1 scheduled morning
scrimmage and afternoon drills
without pass Monday and Tues
day. The East coach, Jim Monroe of
Malin, is drilling his squad at
La Grande. He and assistant John
Comiskey of Union are using a
single wing offense with unbal
anced line. Sproul favors a T-
tormation.
Babe Ruth Series
Starting Tonight
At Portland Site
PORTLAND uei The Babe
Ruth baseball world series gets
under way here Tuesday night,
with New Haven, Conn., meeting
Tulsa, Okla.p in the leadoff game
at 7 p.m. (PST).
Chicago and Huntington Park,
Calif., are slated to play in the
nightcap, starting at 9 p.m.
The first round of play for the
young diamond stars, most aged
between 13 and 15, will be com
pleted Wednesday night with
games pitting Trenton, N. J.
against Pensacola, Fla., and Wi
chita, Kan., against Portland, Ore.
The games will be played in
Multnomah Stadium, the home of
the Portland Beavers of the Pa
cific Coast League.
The eight Babe Ruth teams
take Thursday off and resume
play Friday night, with Tuesday's
winners playing in the first game
and Wednesday's winners matched
in the nightcap.
Friday's losers play in Satur
day night's opener for third place,
wniie rrmays winners meet in
the second game Saturday for the
title.
Of the eight teams competing,
only Portland and Tulsa will be
repeat performers from last year.
Both squads were knocked out
during the first round in 1955.
BROTHER HAS THE BALL
DETROIT M Wayne Universi
ty publicist Paul Pentecost can be
excused if he gets carried away
in the press box during the 1956
lootDau season, his Drotner Hon
will be a halfback on the Tartar
varsity.
Ray Robinson won his first 40
pro boxing bouts before losing to
Jane L.aM0tia in Detroit early in
1943.
40-Gal. Westinghouse Water Heater,
not including installation, only
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I
BIG BEAR Larry Leonard of Umpqua brought down this
husky fellow on the A. B. Leonard ranch at Tyee. Two
shots from his .32 special were needed for the kill. The
bear weighed 340 pounds and measured six feet five
inches.
Colic Will Scratch Nashua
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.
tin Nashua won't start in the
$50,000 added Saratoga Handicap
here on Saturday, trainer Sunny
Jim Fitzsimmons said Tuesday as
the 4-year-old colt was recovering
from his second attack of the colic
in 10 days.
msnua, insured lor $1,251,200 at
premium of $50,048 a year, was
stricken yesterday for the second
time in 10 days. A week ago last
Saturday, he had to be scratched
from the $100,000 Atlantic City
Handicap for the same ailment.
Mr. Htz was puzzled over Nash
ua s two illnesses.
"He's never been really sick,
he said. "We know something's
wrong with him when he paws at
the floor of his stall and acts restless.
"I wouldn't say he was in ter
rific pain. You might call it more
of a disturbance."
Nashua was stricken just as the
weights for the Saratoga Handicap
were announced. He, ot course,
drew top impost of 132 pounds.
Originally, Leslie Combs, head of
the syndicate which owns him, had
decided not to accept anything
higher than 130 pounds.
Combs and Mr. Fitz, however,
were so pleased with his fast
recovery, that they were deter
mined to run him in the Saratoga
no matter what weight he was as
signed. At first, Fitzsimmons said Nash
ua definitely would not run in the
Saratoga, but he later thought it
over.
Northwest League Pennant
Race Tightens; Bears Fall
Yakima
Salem
Spokane
Lewiston
Eugene
Wenatchee
Tri-City
W L Pci.-GB
26 16 .619
.574 1V
.512 4Vi
.511 4V4
,458 7
.455 7
.372 lOVi
27 20
22 21
23 22
22 26
20 24
16 27
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Northwest League pennant
chase tightened up a notch Mon
day night as the first-place Yak
ima Bears were humbled by Lew
iston while second-place Salem
edged out Wenatchee's Chiefs.
Salem splurged for three runs
in the eighth inning to nip the
Chiefs 4-3 and pull within one and
a half games of the Bears, who
were shut out by the Lewiston
Broncs, 9-0, on Bob Roberts' seven-hitter.
The third-place Spokane Indians
hung another crusher on the Tri
City Braves, 15-3, in the league's
other scheduled game.
The 3ears, who have shown ex
plosive power at the plate through
out the season, were mere cubs
against Roberts. The Yakimans
could only generate one scoring
threat, in the sixth. With two
Bears aboard, Lewiston promptly
whipped up three straight outs to
choke off the rally.
Joe Riney was the big man for
the Broncs, getting a two-run
homer in the eighth and a dou
ble. He swatted in five runs.
Mel Krause led off Salem's big
inning with a single. Jack Dunn
walked and two runs scored on
Russ Rosburg's double. Rosburg
came home on Frank Szekula's
single. Glen Isringhaus, Wenat
chee's pitching ace, was tagged
for the loss, although he fanned
13 batters.
Spokane scored all the runs it
needed to whip the helpless
Braces in the first two innings.
The Tribe got a singleton in the
first and then pushed six more
across in the second on three sin
gles, a brace of doubles, a walk
and an error. Bill Bottler, who
homered with a mate aboard in
the fifth, won the game for SdO'
kane, his 15th victory against nine
aeieais.
Tuei., Aug. 21, 1956 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7
GIANTS WIN
BOSTON Cft Dick Modzelew
ski took matters into his own
hands Monday night to launch the
New York Giants- toward a 28-10
triumph over Baltimore before
21,000 at Boston University field
in a National Football League ex
hibition game.
With the Giants trailing 10-7 in
The lineup for Tuesday night is 1 the second neriori. Modzelewski
the same, with Eugene again idle, acquired in a recent deal to
Entries Nearly Complete
For Eugene Olympic Meet
The entry list for the Olympic
Games track and field squad ex
hibition meet at Hayward Field at
the University of Oregon on Labor
Day appeared to be near comple
tion today as Bill Bowerman, Ore
gon track coach and meet director,
announced the names of more than
50 track and field stars who would
be on hand for the competition.
The meet, designed to offer pre
Olympic competition for the United
States team prior to its departure
for Australia, has drawn 33 mem
bers of the American team and
the remainder of the entries come
from a list of collegiate stars and
natives of other countries.
Dave Sime, the Duke sophomore
sensation in the sprints, Jim Bail
ey, the Oregon star, who will run
for Australia in the Olympics, Mo
dris Peterson, a Swedish 400 meter
hurdler, Jim Lawson, the USC hur
dle ace and a dccatholon star,
Norm Lloyd, an English middle
distance runner, and Wayne Moss,
tne Oregon Mate high jump ace,
lead the list of non-Olympic team
competitors who will be on hand.
This list of Olympic team mem
bers includes such stars as Parry
O'Brien in the shot put, Fortune
Gordicn in the discus. Bob Rich
ards in the pole vault, Oregon's
Bill Dellingcr in the 5000 meter
run, Webfoot Ken Reiser in the
steeplechase, Jim Lea and J. W.
Mashburn in the 400 meter dash,
Lon Spurrier and Lang Stanley in
the 800 meter run, Cy Young and
Bud Held in the javelin, Eddie
Southern and Josh Culbreath in the
400 meter hurdles and the entire
1500 meter field of Jerome Wolt
ers, Ted Wheeler, Don Bowden and
Fred Dwycr to face Bailey in that
event. The remainder of the list
includes top representation from
ENJOY
DEEP SEA
FISHING
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TRIPS OR CHARTERS
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Call Reediport 6R02, after 8 p.m.
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strengthen the New York tackles
fell on a fumble at the Colts' 26.
In four plays, New York scored
what proved to be the winning
touchdown as Alex Webster boom
ed nine yards into the end zone.
Modzelewski recovered another
fumble early in the third period
and when Don Chandler missed a
field goal, Modzelewski took
charge again.
all events and Bowerman said the
list makes certain the meet will be
the finest ever held in the north
west. Advance ticket sales, with re
served seats set at $3, have been
brisk. Two finish lines have been
established for the meet with one
set for the east stands and another
for the west stands.
Micro-Midget
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AGE NO BARRIER IN BOWLING
SANTA MONICA, Calif. Wl
Nellis Kirchner is proof that bowl
ing knows no age barrier. She is
79 yet bowled in two leagues here.
She has rolled a 601 series and
has high games of 250 and 239.
Horace Gillom is the oldest mem
ber of the Cleveland Browns at
age 35. He is listed to play end
this season, his 10th in pro football.
t'rsi'
if ffk p-1
j 1 1 i V' "'--4 f tJ v""
TOPS IN OFFENSE-. Basktthaller Clyde Lovellette,
left, and bueball's Mickey Mintle, both letdlnc scorers In
their sports, discuss tactics before a Chlcwo ball rime.
Johns-Manville
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Quillian, Most Claim Victors
BROOKLINE, Mass. m The
fifth-seeded team of Bill Quillian,
Seattle, and Jerry Moss of St.
Petersburg, Fla., had little trou
ble Monday in the first round of
the National Doubles Tennis
Tournament.
Quillian and Moss, who were
beaten in the finals of this tourney
last year, moved into the second
round with a 6-3, 6-0, 6-1 victory
over Dave and Larry Caton of
Pensacola, Fla.
The top-seeded team of Ham
Richardson and Vic Scixas, the
U.S. Davis Cuppers, led the ad
vance Monday by whipping Eng
land's Roger Becker and Mike
Davies, 6-4, 9-7, 6-2.
In the women's division, Janet
Hopps of Seattle and Diane Woo-!
tccn, Santa Barbara, Calif., seed
ed No. 3, beat back Ruth Jcffery
of Melrose, Mass., and Mrs. Vir
gina Johnson of New Haven, Conn.
6-3, 6-1.
The United States uses about 130
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