West Blanks East 0 Yard 1 - MOST VALUABLE Ron Robinson from Uniod was I named the Most Valuable lineman for the East squad '. following Saturday's Shrine game in Pendleton, Rob- Z inson played both offense and defense for the East, who dropped an 8-0 decision to the West on Doyle c Bransom's 90 yard TD romp on the opening kick joff. r ' (Observer Photo by Joe Difch!) Pick Quinn Country Club Title .Dick Quinn was crowned Club Champion at the La - Grande Country club after grabbing a 1 end 2 win over Dick Lyman in a Jfr-hole playoff. ? The two men battled over the Jourse on a warm and sunny after noon with Lyman almost pulling the match out of the fire with Some pretty spectacular golf. Cleveland Cuts Into Sox Margin ' United Prtti International 1 Things are picking up for JL'leveland, and the guy providing the big lift is Tito Krancona, who began the season picking up plinterj on the bench. Francona was unhappy merely fitting around and doing nothing nvith the Detroit Tigers this Spring. So he came up with the 4ench-warmer't age-old ultima tum "play me or trade me!'' I The Tigers quickly obliged him Sy dealing him to the Indians on Jvlatx-h 21 and Krank Lane has Jieen receiving congratulations ver since. '3 Single-handedly, the 25 year old Vrancona who couldn't even break into the Cleveland outfield acarlior this year, has won more dhan 15 games for the Indians so Jar this season, lie has won three 5)f those games with last-inning fiomers. S Belts Two Homers . Tito connected for his Kith honv rr in the ninth to beat the Hed Jx 10, in the opening game of a doubleheader Sunday and then Jocked his 17th to help Cleveland jvin the nightcap, 6-2. The sweep fan the Indians' winning streak Jo six straight and moved them within I'j games of the first jlace White Sox. . The league-leading White Sox plit a twin-bill with the Yankees, losing the opener. 7-1, but win ding the nightcap. 50. Washing ton defeated Kansas City, 7-3, in Jhc first of two games but the Athletics salvaged the second ome, 5-2. Detroit beat Baltimore, -5, in the 0cncr and the second fame was washed out by rain. In the National League, a dou bleheader between league-leading an Francisco and Philadelphia 3as iwstiwned because of rain, i'lay was called in the fourth in Jing with the Giants ahead. 2-1. a'ittsburgh won a pair from Los ngeles, 9-2 and 4-3 in 10 innings Jvith relief ace Roy Face gaming is 16th straight victory in the Jiifihtcnp; Milwaukee climbed into econd place with a 2-0 win over Chicago, and Cincinnati topped t. Louis, 5-3. t Nurfs Three Hitter Art Ditmar hurled a three-hit-jler for the Yanks in their opon :Jng game triumph over Early Jv.vnn of the White Sox. Knos Old Folks' Slaughter broke a I I Jie with a pinch two-run single in :1he seventh. Bob Shaw scored his J3th victory in the nightcap, itching a six-hitter and striking ut six. i Eddie Yost'f grand-slam homer end a five-for-five performance Jy Harvey Kuenn siiarked the T1 er to victory over the Oriole. 'rank Lary posted his 16th vic tory with Tom Morgan's aid in the seventh. Bob Nieman hit two Touchdown Romp '4' V,' -J t. 1 '',' Ml f -.' r'l ftA . . '.J - .'. I v'ivj Captures Twice, after being four strokes down, Lyman pulled up even with his opponent. Quinn rallied to go ahead on the final nine with a one under par round and capture the title Lyman grabbed second place in the tournament. i Both golfers played better than average golf curing the final 36 hol?s of play. The two men toured the rolling and well trapped country club course in less than par during the final eighteen holes of the alternoon. This is Quinn's first club title and he h:.d to beat a man who has grabbed the club title many timrs to Win. Lyman lias been club champion several times over the past years. Weekend Sports Briefs United Press International Saturday CHICAGO Favored Round Ta ble, ridden by Willie Slioemaker. ret a world grass recurd when he won the mile and three -sixteenths Arlington Handicap in 1:53 2-5. Manassas was second and Noureddin third. ATLANTIC Cm-. N.J. Idle Hour Farm's Julmar, a 33-1 shot captured the Ventnor Handicap in a four-horse blanket finish. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Jack Nicklaus of Silver Spring, Md won the Trans - Mississippi Open golf tournament for the second straight year by beating Dean E. Beman of Bethesda, Md., 3 and 2. Sunday C11KSTMT HILL. Mass-Australians Neale Fraser and, Hoy Emerson defeated Alex Olmedo of Los Angeles and Earl Buchholz of St. Louis, 3 6. 6-3. 5-7. 6 f (o win the National Doubles champion ships. AKRON. Ohio Tom Nieorte of Bronxville. N Y., won hi first professional title when he fired a 5-under-par 66 to take the Rubber City Open with a total of 267. SPOKANE. Wash. Bev.Hanson of Indio, Calif., won the Spokane Women's Open with a 72-holc to tal of 287. homers for Baltimore and then belted a third in the first inning of the nightcap, which was wiped out because of rain. Heddix Whips Dedgers Harvey Haddix, who hadn't beaten a Dodger team in four years, ltd the Pirates to their opening game triumph over Los Angeles. Not only did he pitch a seven-hitter, but he also doubled with the bases loaded to cap a five-run rally in the seventh. Face, who now has won 21 In a row over two seasons, entered the nightcap in relief of Vera Law In the ninth. The Pirates tied the score in the bottom of the ninth and won the game in the 10th on Dick Groat's two-out sin gle with the bases loaded. The Braves, who moved Into second place and arc now four games from the top, won their game from the Cubs on only two hits. Bob Buhl held thfl Cubs te six hits and won his 11th. Jerry Lynch broke a 3-3 tie be tween the Reds and Cards with a two-run homer off loser Ernie Bioglio in the eighth. C-0 On D ylc Bransom brought (S.5G0 f?ns to their fe ;t seconds after the opening kickoff with a uo yard TD run and then paced nn underdog West team to en 80 victory over the Eist in the 8th mnual Shrine football game in Pendleton. . i Bransom grabbed the opening kickoff on the 10 yard bne ilarted straight up the field, cut to his right and outraced East defenders to the goal line for tht .lily touchdown in the B school contest. The first six points wer. enough as the rugged Westerner cutfuught and outcharged thcii heavier opponents from East ol .lie Cascades. Eariy in the fourth period, the WM ad'Jed the frLSting when Bob Pennel raeked up llcppner't Dick Ruhl behind the goal line for a safety and the final two points. When Bransom stepped into the end zone the clock showed 16 seconds gone in the first period. The West threatened at least four more times in the gam but a series of mishaps and a tighten ed East line kepi the West (ram increasing their margin. Four East fumbles and a pass interception set up the scoring opportunities but the West was unable to capitalize on the breaks. After Jerry Westerholm's attempted conversion went awry the East received. The first play from scrimmage almost add dd to the Wests score as Bill Ransom from Culver fumbled on the 23. Buck Colleknon and Bob Pennel picked up a first down on the East 11 before Colleknon fumbled on the two and Dick Ruhl recovered for the East. The West had another oppor unity to score in the middle jf the second quarter. Ruhl let a West punt Dounce over nis nead on the 20 and the football oounc d to the 13 where Web Vernon ol Alsea grabbed the pigskin for the East. Vernon, who replaced Larry Seits of Alsea in the starting lineup just a few days before the game, was named the Wests top lineman. Another West scoring oppor tunity misfired late in the third period. Ben Harper of Gaston recovered a Bud Maupin tumble jn the East 20. Lcroy Smith, on the n t i)lay, tossed a pass tt vernoni who slipped behind a stumbling East defender. Ver non, all alone, dropped the pass. The East line stiffened and stopped Bob Pennel on a fourth down and on.; situation and took jer on duwns. With the East in possession Don Shaffer of Con don fired a pass from the end zone only to see Colleknon grab the ball on the interception. Two running plays and an at tempted pass failed to pick up iho necessary yardage and a lourth down pass to the two-yard tine didn't help. Seconds later he West picked up their final two points when Ruhl, swinging ide to his right, was dropped into the end zone. The East team got de.-p into West territory on only two occa sions. In the second quarter, 'parked bv Bob Lorence and Bud Maupin the East moved to their opponents 29 yard line only to lose the ball on downs. Th'J East moved to the West V late in the third period with Jud Maupin and Don Shcffer providing the big advances. Mau pin picked up 11 yards and Shaf cr 13 on a well executed roll out. The East picked up four first downs to the West s two in a losing effort. West gained 77 yards on the ground and added 15 fiom Dassina for a total of 92. The East picked up 75 yards, all on the ground. Ron Robinson of union was named the outstanding lineman from the East and Bud Maupin he top back. Doyle Bransom was voted the outstanding player of the game. Bob Pennell the top West back and 'Vernon top lineman. The more than 8.500 fans add ed close to $11,000 to the total for the Shrine hospital In Port land. - . GE Motors FOR ALL PURPOSES Authorized Dealer INDUSTRIAL Machinery & Supply 1410 Ademt WO 3-4423 Observer, La Grande, Ore., Men., Aug. 24, 1959 Page 2 Motilities 4-1 In PCL Action The Portland Beavers tonight will call on righthander Howie Reed to try to snap them out of a slump that has seen them lose four straight games and drop into third place, three games off the PCL pace. Po-tland dropied a 41 -lecisio.-l to Vancouver Sunday afternoon before a disappointing turnout of only 3,136 fans. Saturday night Vancouver won by the same score in 13 innings. Reed 7-5i will go up against Standings United Press International Major League Standings United Press International National League W. L. Pet. CB San Francisco Milwaukee Los Angeles Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago St. Louis 71 52 .577 ... 67 56 .545 4 G8 58 .540 4'4 64 61 .512 I 61 64 .475 11 58 64 .475 12'-i 57 70 .449 16 52 73 .416 20 Philadelphia Sunday's Results Pitts. 9 Los Angeles 2 (1st game I Pitts. 4 Los Ang. 3 2d, 10 inns.) Milwaukee 2 Chicago 0 Cincinnati 5 St. Louis 3 S.F. at Phila , 2 games, ppd. rain Saturday's Results San Francisco 8 Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 2 Los Angeles 0 Milwaukee 7 Chicago 0 Milwaukee 3 Chicago 2 Cincinnati 11 St. Louis 4 American League W.L. Pet. CB Chicago Cleveland New York Detroit Baltimore Kansas City 73 48 .603 73 51 .589 m 62 62 .500 12'j 61 63 .492 134 59 62 .488 14 58 66 .468 164 57 67 .460 174 Boston Washington 50 74 .403 244 Sunday's Results New York 7 Chicago 1 1st Chicago 5 New York 0 1 2nd I Cleveland 1 Boston 0 HsU Cleveland 6 Boston 2 2nd Detroit 9 Baltimore 5 list) Bait, at Oct. 1 2d game, ppd. rain) Wash. 7 Kansas City 3 Ust) Kansas -feity 5 Waste 2 2ndi Saturday's Results Chicago 1 Washington 0 Cleveland 4 Baltimore 2 Kansas City 8 New York 7 Boston 7 Detroit. 1 Pacific Coast League W. L. Pet. CB Salt Lake 71 62 .534 Vancouver 70 62 .530 4 Portland 67 64 .511 3 San Diego 68 65 .511 3 Spokane 67 67 .500 44 Sacramento 65 68 .489 6 Seattle 63 69 .477 64 Phoenix 60 74 .448 114 Sunday's Results Spokftie 5 Seattle 2 Vancouver 4 Portland 1 Salt Lake 6 Phoenix 4 San Diego 3 Sacramento 2 Northwest League Standings W. L. Pet. GB Wenatchee 27 25 .519 Salm 27 26 .509 ' Yakima 28 27 .509 4 Eugene 28 28 .500 1 Lewiston 26 26 .500 1 Tri-City 25 29 .462 3 Sunday's Games Salem 4 Tri-City 3 Eugene 5-13 Lewiston 2-0 Yakima 7 Wenatchee 5 SATCH PAIGE HELPS PITCH BROOKLYN lUPIl Ancient Satchel Paige helped pitch the first three innings, striking out four batters and allowing one earned run. NOW THRU TUES i t MttMISK.4K4M 3 ENDS TCNITE KIRK DOrGf-AS "THE VIKINGS" Plus "PARTY GIRL" 1X1 ftAAOOT 1 J OBSERVER Nail Andersen Top Bevos the Mounties Erv Palica 10-101 tonight. Lefty Joe flatten pitched the Sunday win for Vancouver while George Brunei, another southpaw, dropoed his 12th loss in 17 deci sion for Portland. The Mounties broke a 1-1 tie in Hie sixth whea catcher Len Neal of Po'tland threw Jim Kinigai's short hopper into right field, al lowing Einigan to circle the bases with the go-ahead run. . Basinski Homers Ed lie Basinski, a former Port laid favorite, then hit a homer and the Mounties added an insur ance tally in the seventh. Portland wasn't the only home team to lose Sunday all of them did. Salt Lake tity downed Phoenix, 6-4; San Diego edged Sacramento 3-2 and Spokane whipped Seattle 5-2. .. Claude Harmon banged home four runs while pacing the Bees to their victory. Harmon, a 33-year old veteran, slammed a game win ning homer with a man on in the seventh inning. The win went to Jim Umbricht, who came in to pitch in the third inning after the Giants had tallied three runs off starter George Perez. Dick Barone, the Bees' sparkplug shortstop, also homered. Curt Barclay, who went all the Union Grid Practice Underway US'ION i Special ) Union high school football practice will start Monday at S p.m. according to Coach Bud Lewis. Equipment was issued to grid ders Saturday morning and a turn out of more than 30 men was expected by Lewis. Nine lettermn. three from each class, were on hand to gladden the heart of the coaching staff. Tom Cox. Henry Miller and Allan Livingston are returning seniors expected to gain starting berths. Dale Tyler, Stanley Wilde end BiU Ricker are the three returning junior lettermen. Freshmen who lettered last year and will be battling for a starting berth as sophomores on this years team are Don Baxter, Bob Cockrell and Douglas McConkey. Two transfer students are ex pected to be on hand for opening day practice. Wayne Crampton, transfer from La Grande, and Dave Hampton of Chelan, Wash., are expected to bolster this years squad. Dan Berger, who played with last years squad, will not play this year because of a back injury. The Union team has scheduled its first game against La Grande on the Tiger's field Sept. 11. SIGNS WITH BRAVES MILWAUKEE (UPD-Joe Tor re of Brooklyn, N.Y.. a brother of Milwaukee first baseman Frank Torre, has signed a non bonus contract with the Braves. The younger Torre, a right-handed hitting catcher, will report to Jacksonville of the Class A Sally League next season. ALL NEW: HOME LITE DIRECT. DRIVE chain saw; ftnhf ?3 balanced pounds (lets fear and chain) ' fell treet upH7 fat In ; d mi mater new art new detipw a gvarantaad tor 7 months Mava a fraa tfamonatrallon tadarf Homelite Saws as low as $169.50 2 GI s way fur the Giants, was charged with the loss. . Steve Jankowski belted a two- run homer for the Padres to pro- tide the big bio in San Diego c narrow win. Jankowski's clout fol lowed a 400 foot triple by Larry Doby. - Doby, a veteran of 12 years in the American League, broke his ankle when he collapsed while CALLING ALL; It's 8 f'l TPC There's no better time than now to get your topcoat for the new sea son ahead, men, and Falk's has just what you wantl Beautifully ertfted topcoats of wool end com binations of wool and silk ... in a variety of tweed tones, checks, herringbone and ncvelty weaves. Smart region shoulders. And the price is just the shot-in-the-arm your pocketbeok has been needing! Come in . . . we'll fit you. . 175 of - r .r Fine Quality TOPCOATS for your selection! SIZES 32 TO 44 Shorts Regulars Longs 100 WOOLS and combinations of Wool & Silk MADE BY A NAME FAMOUS FOR ITS FINE' TOPCOATS! SORRY... WE CAN'T MENTION The NAME! Regular Values To 65.00, How. LAYAWAYOW S2.S0 FOR ONLY. This Eyenl Is Year To Get SHOP reaching tlilid b.ix.ou his tri"le. The left handed slugger has been bothered by a bad back recently and he was obviously in pain while rounding the bases.. When he reached third, he seemed to collapse as he toppled over the bag, . breaking his ankle. Carl Thomas, the Padre relief pitcher, was credited with the win while Joe Stanka was the loser. Big Annual "i sjiw r--" ..ft.wjijjii jp fun.!- We Will Hold Of Your Choice The Besi Oppariuniiy Oi The Thai New Topcoat For Winter! FALK'S l.D. STORE FIRST Siiuk.ni'' matle iL two in a row 'over the Kaimers with its 5-2 win. Dave Hoskin neia tne nainiers to six hits all of them coming in the last four frames. It was. Se attle's fourth straight loss after winning 14 out of 15. .Mark Kreemun, the Seattle start er was tagged with the defeat. Paul Pettit spanked his 15th hom er for Seattle. MEN! The Topcoat Until Dec. 1st.