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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1958)
m SV vl -V? -1 m m v, - 11 a : : ljjj?W6l'aaaKSjaB pi--. 1, i i jr. V,' ' .03-'."-TI Jv HARD TO GET HOME St. Louis shortstop Gene.Freese ond Giants' catcher Volmey Thomas put on an exciting show around home plate in the eighth inning of a game in San Francisco. It all started when Freese tried to score from third on a fly ball to right field. In pictures above, top, left to right: Thomas bobbles throw in from right fielder Willie Kirkland as Freese misses plate. Lower photos, left to right: Freese scrambles for plate os Thomas goes for ball ond Thomas beats Freese for the put out. Giants won, 4-3. (AP Wirephoto) LA Again Douses Braves; White Sox Sustain Drive AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Chicago Boston Detroit. Baltimore Cleveland Kansas City Washington W 75 64 S9 57 SS 57 54 51 Wadntsday Raiults New York 7, Cleveland 1 Chicago 10, Boston 8 Detroit 7, Washington 1 Baltimore 4, Kansas City 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. GB .625 .538 10V4 .404 144 .487 16V4 .479 17V4 .475 18 .458 20 .432 23 W L Pet. GB 70 50 .583 63 54 .538 5V4 62 56 .525 7 .492 11 .479 124 .463 14Vi 53 62 .461 14 i 55 85 .458 15 58 60 56 61 56 65 Milwaukee ' San Francisco Pittsburgh Los Angelel St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia Cincinnati . Wtdnttday Rtiultt Pittsburgh 4-1, Chicago 2-5 (2nd game 5 innings, rain) San Francisco 4, Cincinnati 3 Philadelphia 12, St. Louis 2 Los Angeles 2, Milwaukee 1 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Dodgers did it again! They blew some more foam off Milwaukee's National League lead last night, taking their third in a row from the Braves 2-1. That slashed the champs' lead to yi games, with two games re maining in the series at Los An geles beforo Milwaukee plunges into a five-game set with the second-place Giants at San Francis co. The Dodgers got only four hits off Warren Spahn. At that, they needed only the last two, scoring in the fifth inning on Joe PtK nalano'a home run, a walk and Norm Larker's triple. All that with San Francisco's 4 3 afternoon victory over Cincin nati beaming down on the Braves from the Coliseum scoreboard. Philadelphia quit the cellar and rut a losing string at seven games by rapping St. luis 12-2 with Willie Jones driving in eight runs. Third-place Pittsburgh beat the Chicago Cubs 4-2, then lost 5-1 in the second game of the doUhlc header held to five innings by rain and darkness. NY Ends Slump In the American League, the New York Yankees ended their slump at four with a 7-1 victory ever Cleveland while the second place Chicago White Sox won 10 8 at Boston. Detroit belted Washing ton 71 and Baltimore defeated Kansas City 4-3. The Dodgers hnve a 12-6 sea son record over Iho Braves. Spahn (16-9) was staked to a 1-0 lead in the first inning on a field er's choice and Hunk Aaron's dou ble. But rookie Stan Williams then blanked the Braves on five sin- flies, although needing Johnny Klippstein's help with two on and two out in -the ninth. Klippstein fanned Del Kice. Bob Friend, the only other 16 game winner in the NL, also tailed at No. 17, taking his 13th defeat in the nightcap ut Chicago. Dick Stuart's two-run homer, his 11th, and a pair of Kill singles by Dick uroat bagged tne opener tor the Bucs and Hon Kline (12-11). The Giants, blanked on two hits for four innings by Harvey Uad- dix, scored two in the fifth on Kay Jablonski's pinch double and a bases-loaded walk, then handed re liever Brooks Lawrence (6-12) his ninth defeat in a row as Valmy Thomas singled, Jabbo doubled end Bill White lined a pinch sin gle that scored them both in the sixth. Al Worthington (10-5) won it in relief. The second-place Chicago While Sox have a seven-game winning streak, their longest in two years. The first-nlace New York Yankees have a winning streak of one, their longest in a week. Sox Fact Yanks That's the way things stand as Cleveland Official Doubtful Of Future CLEVELAND WFI "We obvious ly can't continue this way," said the chairman of the Cleveland In dians, William Daley. What he meant was the home attendance, and his remark was made in connection with talk about Minneapolis getting a major league ball club possibly Washington, possibly Cleveland. From the "can't continue" state ment he went on, "It's beginning to be evident that the Cleveland fans won I support us. His tone represents quite a change from the sort of response that used to' come from Indian management every time transfer rumors popped up. The statement in the past was to the effect that the management has no plans or intentions of mnv ing, followed by a mild "unless' attendance dropped too far. This time there still arc disclaim ers that the club is doing any ne gotiating. But Daley seems to he a little less specific these days in the customary denials. TENNIS TV SET NEW YORK (AP) - The Na I tional Singles Tennis Champion j ship matches at Forest Hills here will be televised by MIC Sept. 6-7. ! Don Budge, former tennis chant- pi(,n, will be one of the coininon I tutors. VODKA COLL! most refreshing ... made with Smirnoff Drain Victor In NBC Event WICHITA, Kan. (AP)-Reliever Claude Green walked in the win ning run as the Drain, Ore., Black Sox defeated the Macon, Ga., Peaches, 5-4, in the first round of! the National Baseball Congress Non-pro baseball tournament here Wednesday. Green, who relieved starter Charlie Perry after he was shaken up in a collision at first base, walked a man with the bases loaded, Klwood Hahn went the distance for Drain, allowing nine hits and striking out four. The leading Drain hitter was Jim O'Rourke With three hits in four trips. Macon 210 000 0104 9 4 Drain 000 011 0125 7 2 Perry, Green (9) and Beard; Hahn and Roth. Lowly Suds Lick Bevos Again; Phoenix Beaten PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W L 77 55 Riddle Triumphs In Twilight Play YMCA TWILIGHT LEAGUE City Drive In Vet's Employes Winston Drive In U. S. Plywood Riddle Lions First Christian Jaycees Mark s Market W 10 10 10 8 7 6 2 12 1 13 Pet. .769 .769 .714 .615 .500 .462 .143 .071 the White Sox roll into Yankee Stadium tonight for the opener in a three-game set. The White Sox are on a drive to nail second place although Manager Al Lopez, insists they're shooting for the flag and at the moment they're doing right well, winning 15 of their last 18 games in a rush from fourth place. They're now 10'i games behind New York. They built a three-game lead over third-place Boston by beat ing the Red Sox yesterday after blowing a six-run lead. Jim Landis drove in four runs for the White Sox, doubling home a pair for a 7-1 lead and then nailing it with a two-run homer, his 15th, in the seventh inning. Turk Lown won bis third in relief. Gerry Slaley had to get the final out, fanning Don Buddin with the bases loaded. Art Ditmar (9-4) had a four-hit shutout for six innings and wound up with an eight-hitter for the first complete game by a Yankee pitch er in 13 games. Yogi Berra belted .'lis 18th and 19th homo runs for a .1-0 lead against loser Gary Bell (7-8). The Riddle Lions mbved up to the .500 mark in the YMCA Twi light League standings Wednesday night with a 6-4 win over the Wins ton Drive In team. Al the same time, the Christian Church team posted a default win over Mark's Market when the latter club was unable to field a team. The Lions came back from a 3-0 score in the third inning with their six markers. Three hits and three errors by the Winston club gave the Lions a 6-3 lead. Winston added another run in the fifth on a hit, a walk and two wild pitches. Linescore: Riddle 006 0006 5 1 Winston 210 0104 4 S Batteries: Watson and Rachor; I Complon and Myers. Roseburg Attorney Fires Hole-ln-One Bill Whipple, Roseburg attorney, scored a hole-in-one on the 158 yard third hole at the Roseburg Country Club Wednesday. Whipple used a No. 5 wood for his first hole-in-one in the 37 years he had been playing. He was playing in a foursome with Spencer Yates, Paul Gcddcs and O. R. Peterson. Grove Named New Hoop Coach At Lincoln High PORTLAND (AP) Allen Grove was named Wednesday as head basketball coach at Lincoln High School here. Grove succeeds Wayne Sturdl vant, who in turn succeeds Grove as athletic director at the school. Sturdivant led Lincoln to two class A state basketball titles. PVi ' aIsSM H A , ' Ft 9 1 I TIGHT FIT Happy Farmor Humphrey, 750-pound Macon, Ga , wrestler got himself in an unusual predica ment in a movie theater at Windsor, Ont. Ushers Lawrence Breault and Bob Lamoureux seek to free the grunt ond grooner who is stuck fast in his seat. He was released alter a seat was partly dismantled. (AP Wirephoto) GET ON THE JtSti VODKA WAOON WITH I I J"Hv MWr rx M yak Bowling Instruction And Clinic With Kelly Watson jitirnoffvobKA It I IN toll. "Iillil Ina (no. Ill Pint laimtl lit. (In. it liitlin), liilliil. tin. Hit srsatfst !!! In Pnonot Inttrucfion i Fitting of Bowling Bolli. Ktlly Walton hod tha higheit avaroga in Oragon tort vor, 20S! Recaivad honorobla mantion in All-Amtrican National Bowling Taam and ia a mimbtr of tint team in Wait Coo it All-Am. ricon. THURS. Starting at 6 P.M. FRI. Starting at 10 A.M. FRI. Storting at 1 P.M. Thraa htlpful, informatua clinici to htlp you bowl biggar icorat. Pet. GB 583 75 57 .568 2 73 60 .549 4'4 65 68 .489 12'j 64 69 .481 13Mi 61 70 .466 15'i 59 74 .444 lBVa 421 21Vi 56 77 ROSEBURG BOWL 2400 Div.mond Lake Boulevard Phoenix San Diego Vancouver Portland Salt Lake City Spokane Sacramento Seattle Wadnaiday's Results Sacramento 3, Vancouver 2 Salt Lake City 5, San Diego 2 Spokane 7, Phoenix 4 Seattle 6, Portland 5 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The tail-end Seattle Rainiers continued to spoil Portland's "Build Baseball Week" by spill ing the Beavers the third straight time, 6-5, Wednesday night, before 6,515 Portland fans. The Rainiers drove veteran right-hander Larry Jansen out of the box with two runs each in the second and third innings. They added single runs in the fourth and sixth off Howie Judson. Portland cut Seattle's lead to one in the seventh with two runs on an error, a double by Bob Di Pietro and a single by George Freese. The Beavers threatened to tie it in the eighth when Nini Tornay singled and Alex Cosmidis doubled him to third. But at this point southpaw Jim Davis relieved starting Seattle pitcher Max Sar kont and stopped Portland dead the rest of the way. Kaiak Homors Eddie Kazak got Seattle off to a lead in the second with a homer. Gordy Bloomfield doubled and Jim McManus singled for another run in the same inning. The Rainiers' third inning runs came on a double by Vada Pinson, singles by Juan Delis and Kazak and Eddie Basinski's sacrifice by McManus and Pinson, with two infield outs in between, gave Seattle another in the fourth. The Rainiers' final run came on Dick DiTusa's sixth inning homer. Kazak's error, a passed ball, and Bob DiPietro's single pro duced Portland's first tally in the third. Judson singled home Len Neat, who had doubled, for Portland's second run in the fourth. Dave Melton's double and Neat's single gave Portland another in the sixth. In other games, seventh-place Sacramento edged the third-place Vancouver Mounties 3-2, Spokane routed Phoenix 7-4, and the fifth place Salt Lake City Bees trounced second place San Diego 5-2. Spokas Gain Edge The Indians grabbed a 2-0 lead: over Phoenix after one and a half frames and they were never head ed as Art Fowler set the Giants down on nine hits. The Giants made it 3-3 in the fifth, but the Indians stormed back with three runs in the sixth and they were home free. The Bees' Don Urquhart held San Diego tightly in check as he limit ed the Padres to five hits. Urqu hart struck out four and walked only one in a nine-inning stint on the mound. The loser was Steve Ridzik, the San Diego starter. Roger Osenbaugh, Sacramento's tall righthander, was the winner over the Mounties. He gave up nine scattered hits and the two runs the Mounties scored both were flukes. The first came in the third frame on three walks and a wild pitch. The second came in the fifth on a single, a sacrifice and an infield out. Buddy Peterson raced from second to home on the infield out. Seattle's victory over Portland was the sixth straight for the Rain iers, who pounded out 16 hits in tagging Portland starter Larry nsen with his 10th loss in 18 de cisions. Max Surkont won it, al though he needed help from Jim Davis in the eighth. 8 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Ttiur., Aug. 21 1958 Public Golf Course Set For Six-Month Closure The Roseburg public golf course will be closed Sept. 2 for approxi mately six months. Harry Bridges, course supervisor, says the course possibly will be re-opened some time in March. During the closed period, fair ways and greens will be seeded and additional work completed, ac cording to Bridges. 1958 Roseburg High Grid Candidates To Turn Out FriJ Roseburg gridders move closer, to the start of the 1958 season when candidates for this year's In-1 dian eleven draw equipment and receive physicals Friday and Sat urday nights. Monday morning, the Tribe will take to the field for the first prac tice session. Daily-doubles will be in effect for at least the first week of practice.' In the first week of workouts, the Indians will prac tice in the morning and late after noon. Extension Poisibla In the event Coach Roy Thomp son feels the team needs additional time on the practice grounds, the team will extend the daily-double ! routine into the second week. In the first sessions, the fresh man players will be excluded. Frosh candidates will turnout aft-1 er the start of the school year. Another large turnout for frosh, JV and varsity teams is expected. Last year found the largest num ber of candidates for Roseburg High School football ever recorded. Ashland Homa Opanar The Tribe opens the season host ing Ashland Sept. 12 at Finlay. Field. The previous week, tha Roseburg team will play an inter squad tilt at Finlay Field. This fray will be played either Friday or Saturday night Sept. 5 or 6. Season reserved seat tickets are now being mailed to those return ing applications. Those fans wish ing a preference in seats for the five home games are urged by Athletic Director Dutch Simons to return applications promptly to the high school athletic department. lva Duddy Holt guided Idaho Stale College to six Rocky Mountain Con ference championships in his first seven years as track coach. The Bankers' Bowling League in Salt Lake City becomes the Bank ers' Amateur Golf League when the weather turns nice. 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