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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1952)
Pries Clings To Bat Lead In WH Race Victoria third baseman Don Pries and a .384 batting average elung to the lead in the Western International League's hitting der by at the finish of three weeks of play. Wenatchee'a Walt Pocekay led In total bases with 42 and in dou bles with eight. Vic Buccola, Tri Clty and Jake Helmuth of Lewis ton, along with Chuck Abernathy of Victoria shared the runs bat ted in lead with 18 each. Yakima's Jerry ZuvelLa and Vancouver's John Ritchey topped the three base hits with three ach. Victoria's Cere Garriott led In runs scored with 23, Pries and Yakima's Bill Andring had most hits, 28, and Helmuth topped the Circuit swatters with three. Manager Bill Brenner of Lewis ton topped the pitching column with a perfect 4-0 record. Statistics: TEAM BATTING Ab H 2 b 632 1B1 41 668 181 30 558 143 32 Victoria Lew.sion .... Vancouver Wenatch 631 187 34 Yakima 717 180 30 lalem 733 181 23 Spokans M9 1 24 Tn-Ciry 681 190 2$ 3b Hr Pet 1 28i S 1 4 7 10 11 2 3 271 289 1 265 4 2S1 247 245 235 TEAM FIELDING Dp Po A aj ti Tn-Oty Vancouver . Apokine LevYiston 14 513 204 36 892 Wenatcrw 19 5H 225 37 932 Yakima 23 521 243 41 949 Vict M la . 18 477 196 40 944 E Pet 27 553 25 527 963 13 551 243 30 964 .. 17 430 206 24 964 22 333 194 28 863 INDIVIDUAL BATTING Jhre.Vic Klinjer.Yak . Crnott,Vic . DurHto.Via - SmiUijJeww Adams. Wen ... Pockay,Wen . Perexjyew Lubr.Sal Helm ush .Lew Ab 73 67 . 73 bO 55 .. 73 76 .. 72 . 87 sa H 2b 28 6 3b Hr 0 6 Wastey.Spo 75 Locke. Van .. IS H. Jlmx.Wen 70 Ritcliey.Van . 52 Malmberc.Yak SO Moniz.Vi - 77 Mucan.Lew . .. . dfl Lodigiant.Yak . 57 Helson.Sal - 77 Ctiarourias.TC .. 87 Andrinr.Yak 95 Wert. Van 68 Abtrnathy.Vic 70 Monro. Wen 42 Budin.V. en . 42 TanelU.Sal 81 Mead .Lew 74 McCnrmaclt.Wn fiO Schmidt. Sal 39 Tjo; mlna.Yak 61 ponahue.Yak 72 Brown.Spo . 78 29 27 22 M 26 27 2S 23 23 25 3 23 17 26 25 22 1 1 24 2 26 28 20 20 12 12 23 21 17 11 17 20 21 PITCHERS W Brennpr.Lew 4 Conajit.S K . 3 Wisrv-skl.Vic 3 Gu!d!trJ!.Van 2 Mclrvin.Vic 2 McCay.Wen .. 1 Tiernv.Wen 1 Dials Yak .... 1 Wniht.Yak 1 Oubre.Wen 1 Tisnert.Van 1 Paine.TC 1 Whvte.Van 1 Heaiphtll.Sal 1 Chase.Soo - 4 Botrti.Sp 4 LorrejQ.Vic 3 Romero TC 3 Locke.Van 3 Thompson. Yk 3 Heard. Vic -.. 3 Bi'iop.Spo 2 IVOeonte.Sal 2 McNultv.Sal 3 Collins.Sal 3 L 0 0 0 0 22 0 IS IP 3f 37 16 H Hbi Pet 16 384 11 373 12 370 367 364 356 10 355 12 347 7 343 18 338 16 333 5 333 14 329 12 327 17 32.1 16 325 15 319 6 316 13 312 11 299 9 295 11 294 18 286 TheyTl Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo 286 2S6 284 17 284 283 282 18 279 12 278 7 276 36 12 30 18 Bb So 18 22 14 14 7 7 3 3 4 29 25 44 32 31 30 24 26 22 42 41 9 18 14 15 14 17 8 4 4 6 8 4 18 id 14 16 16 28 24 16 11 14 25 33 17 13 11 23 19 31 27 31 32 21 24 37 49 33 20 21 12 16 16 10 14 22 33 28 Ranis Top Sheridan 10-5 PORTLAND ( Special )-Central Catholic defeated Sheridan 10-5 Monday afternoon to win the Dis trict 3A title and a berth in the Albany state baseball tournament. Sheridan was 3A2 champ and Central Catholic 3A1. Sheridan 000 203 0 5 3 4 Central Cath. . 211 321 x 10 9 0 Shaw and Hampton: Barthole mew, Rutter (6) and Plumb. GAVILAN BEATS ZANNELLI PROVIDENCE, R. I. ;p-World welterweight boxing champion Kid Gavilan won an unanimous ten-round decision Monday night over the veteran Ralph Zannelli of Providence in a rugged clash. Tabic of Coastal Tides Tides for Tatt. Oregon. April. 1952 ; compiled by U S Coast and Geodetic iurvey. Portland. Oreson). Pacific Standard Tim HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS 1 10:16 jn. 46 9:52 pjn. 6 9 81 1131 a.m. 4 7 19:2 pjn. 7 0 SS 12 :17 p m. 4 8 116 p.m. 7 1 86 1:06 p-m. 4S 11:41 p.m. 70 84 1:52 p.m. 4 7 25 81 12:17 s.m. 8:36 p.m 12:34 a.m. 3 20 pjn 1 :32 a.m. 44 p.m. 2:13 S-m. 4:51 pm. 2:5 IJtl. 3:36 P-m. 3 .4S ajn. 6:17 pjn. 4:52 a-m. 6:57 pjn. 68 4.7 6.6 4.8 6J 46 6 0 4.7 3-5 4.8 38 5 4.3 5J 4:14 a.m. 3:36 p.m. 8:02 a.m. 4:22 p.m. 3:46 ijh. 8-08 p.m. 6:28 a-m. 3 46 p jn. 7 06 a m. 6:27 pjn. 7:47 a.m. 7:01 pjn. 8 27 a.m. 7:50 pjn. 9 07 a m. 8:38 pjn. 9:48 a m. 9:35 p.m. 10:29 a m. 10:44 pjn. 11:11 ajn. 13:02 ajn. 11:53 ajn. 00 1.7 -0.7 2 2 -11 2J -14 2.7 -1.4 2.9 -1.3 3.0 -1.0 3.1 -ff.8 33 -0 5 33 -OS 3J 02 30 0.6 refreshed w ritky', Spearmint Cunv lively flavor cools your mouth. Freshens Ue - moisten, throat. Woy a hiiBSLE. CO YOU SET WHERE YOUR LICENSE IS OOOO BUT THE FISH INC? iw 1 I I J,.vwvw.wmMiW ..... MOO -VOU SNEAK Ovfk tmtih.. CO THE RSH STRIKJT GAME WARDEN-. 0SC Regains ND Lead With Duck Victory EUGENE (JP) - Bailey Brem's five hit pitching and timely lon wallops by Dwane Helbig and . John Thomas gave Oregon State , a 3-1 victory over Oregon here Monday. The win put Oregon State back on top of the Northern Division baseball standings in its see-saw ; battle with Oregon. OSC now ha.v nine victories and five defeats, ! while Oregon has an 8-4 record.' The winners got only one hit i off Bill Mays. Oregon's starting pitcher. But that was Helbig's homer in the seventh inning for the first run of the game. i Don Siegmund replaced Mays in the eighth and gave up two tal lies. Pete Goodbrod walked and Danny Johnston reached first when first baseman Phil Settecase dropped a throw on his sacrifice , bunt. Goodbrod and Johnston ad- beals to 1'ortland. vanced on Jay Dean's sacrifice,! Other series starting Tuesday and both scored when Thomas night find Sacramentao at Los drilled a double to right center. 1 Angeles, Hollywood at Seattle and Mc.Clnrney Pitches, Leivis Hits . . . Bearcats own Portland In Baseball Final 10-4 Willamette's Bearcats buttoned up their baseball season Monday on the Bush Field with a 10-4 conquest of the Portland U Pilots, a clash which was a scoreless deadlock until the Cats batted in the I fifth I Beavers Play Frisco Seals By The Associated Press The Portland Beavers spend a nother week at home in their Vaughn Street park starting Tues day night, opening a Coast League baseball series that night with the visiting San Francisco Seals. This will be the first visit of the sea son for Manager Tommy Heath's Oregon's lone run came in the ninth inning on a pinch-hit homer by Earl Averill Jr. It was Aver ill's fourth home run of the lea gue season. The two teams meet again Fri day and Saturday. Ore. State 000 000 120 3 -3 1 Oregon 000 000 001 1 5 1 Brem and Thomas; Mays, Sieg- . mund (8) and R. Bottler. San Diego at Oakland. Next week Portland moves to San Diego, Se attle to Sacramento, Los Angeles t . i Can Franicrn and OalrlanH to' Hollywood. Look and learn By A- C Gor4a 1. What large island of 840,000 square miles, with the exception of a narrow coastal strip, is cov ered with a coat of ice? 2. What does "par avion" mean on an envelope? 3. What common bird's flying muscles weigh as much as all oth er parts of the bird together? 4. What Is a sabbatical year? 5. What Englishman wrote the most famous diary? ANSWERS 1. Greenland. 2. By airmail. 3. The pigeon. 4. A leave of absence granted every seven years. 5. Samuel Pepys (1633-1703). Waltons Book Regular Meet Some of the best entertainment of the year is in store for mem bers and guests of the Salem Chapter, Izaak Walton League, during its regular meeting at the Clubhouse Wednesday night, ac cording to Secretary Eino E. Se tala. Two moving pictures, furnished i by the Mercury Motors organiza tion, are to be snown. one is a stunt movie in full color taken at the Mercury Proving grounds in the Everglades of Florida. The other features Glen Wooldridge and an up-river excurison through the lower Rogue River Canyon. Woolridge is the undisputed white water navigator of the country. Totals Portland Willamette Pitcher Penny D T . . 1 ' V. Colored slides sponsored by the j McClarney inning. In the fifth the WU's batted across six runs, five of same ac counted for by circuit swats off the bats of Dick Brouwer and Dave Perlman. Brouwer belted his homer over the center field, fence with two runners aboard, and after another runner had reached base Perlman cracked out his blow over the same fence. It was easy from there for the Methodists who also scored twice in the seventh when Denny El sasser delivered a two-run single. Lewis used four freshmen pitch ers in the game, Dave Gray, Vern Vannice, Ben Holt and Andy George in that order. Vannice was the winner. Portland Coach Art McLarney took over the pitching chores in the eighth frame for the Pilots and was touched for one run as a bit of mirth was inserted into the final clash of the season. Bearcat Boss Johnny Lewis batted during the eighth and drove a long fly to the outfield. For their season the Bearcats won 13 games and lost seven, winning their last seven straight. They finished in a tie for second place in the Northwest Confer ence standings, one game behind the champion Whitman Missionaries. Portland (4) B H O A P.Lulichjt 4 Bozjch.m 3 Dorson.l Piro.l Sattichj- BartelJ ClarliJ Hlbergr.c Penny. p B.Luhch.3 Fajer.r Glfnnen i Becick.c Morehse.2 MClrny.p 1 2 3 2 2 10 1 1 (10) Willamette B H O A 1 6 2 4 3 5 3 4 1 1 0 2 2 2 1 1 2 Sheld.m l'Girod 3. 2iKoepf.c 0! Brouwer.l 0 Mark-ski. r 01 Brown. 1 2Perlman,3 2Hauthj llGreen.p 11 Vannica 0! Holt.p 0 Elaasser.m OIHande.c 2iOnzuka.r 01 Bates.s 1 George, p 0 3 1 3 0 2 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 "Keep Oregon Green" society also will be shown. Meeting time is 8 p. m. Scorer Takes a Beating Figuring a Mo-Hit Same By WHTTNEV MARTIN ! It waa a towering fly directly NEW YORK (TP) -The tension n 1 In front of the mound. The pit a pitcher with a no-hit game in cher, and the cacther, and third sight must be positiTely agoniz- baseman, and the first baseman Inc. but there is another ruy in . fathered in a huddle and while Gray Annice Holt Georffe . .. . Wild pitches pitcher: Lulich, 34 8 24 13 Totals 38 16 27 8 000 001 210 4 8 2 e 000 072 01 10 16 1 IP AB H R ER SO BB 4'323 12 7 7 1 4 2j 9 2 2 2 1 4 . 1 6 2 111 1 - 2 8 1 0 0 0 1 3 12 4000 1 - 2 7 1 3 3 0 S .2 8 2 1 1 2 1 Holt. George. Hit by Elsasser. Holt. Clark. Th Stotanan, galw, Orxon, To dor, May jgf Left on bases- Portland 14. Willamette 14. Home runs: Brouwer. Perlman. Two-base hits: Brown. Torson. Bartel. Runs batted jn: P. Lulich. Satthch. Bartel. Clark. Shield 2. Elsasser. Girod. Koepf. Brouwer 3. Perlman 2. Sacrifice hit: Clark. Stolen bases: Haugen. Shield. Brown. Umpires: Beal and Johnson. Time: 2:10. Glazed tiles came into general use in Europe during the second half of the 12th Century. the ball park who is undergoin? a similar strain, and cant do a thins about It. j He's the official scorer Bitting , up there in the press eeop stew- 1 ing in his own juice, praying fer- ! entlr that If a hit does come it' will be a robust clout which will I leaTC no question as to Its legit imacy. The pitcher's tension is relieved somewhat by his own activity. Every game is a potential no hitter, and for that reason one of the cardinal rales of scoring is to be certain the first hit off either pitcher In a game should leave no question as to its authenticity. Nothing could be tougher on a pitcher or cause a scorer greater regret than to nave an early blow called a hit when It could have been called either way, and to have that hit the only hit of the game eft the pitcher. We had personal experience with a near no-hitter. It was many years ago when we were official scorer fer Western Leagve games in Omaha. The game In question only went seven in flings for some forgotten reason, and the only hit off a pitcher- whoso name also ts forgot ten should not have been a hit at all. k7P ackf handy (IMS , . BaMB i they were bowing to each other with a "you take it" the bail drop ped untouched among them. That evening two or three play ers came up to the office each begging that he be given an error on the play. Any no-hitter has its thrills, al though some are more spectacular than others. When Bill Bevens had a no-hitter going for the Yankees against the Dodgers with only one out to go in the 1947 World Series much of the edge was taken off the performance because he was so wild the bases always were cluttered up with Brooklyns and probably many In the crowd didn't realise they were watching a po tential no-hitter. Allie Reynolds' second no-hitter last year probably packed as much tension as any no -hitter could pack, inasmuch as the fi nal man to face him was the best hitter In baseball, unless you want to argue a little about Stan Mus lal's claim to that honor. With two outs In the ninth Ted Williams came to the plate, and Reynolds must have had to rebuff a strong temptation to throw four straight balls over his head and take a chance en the next hitter. But Allie pitched to him. and what's more, really had to get Ted out twice. A high foul directly behind the plate found Yogi Berra circling around under the ball like he intended to surround it. He fi nally lunged, and missed. Allie had it to do all over again, and he forced Teddy boy to pop p another foul which this time Tod mitted for keeps. A any try ing for a no-hitter doesn't usually have to give a hitter such as Wil liams two chances to spoil It. Anyway, the next time a no hitter is pitched give a thought to the official scorer. He's the guy who really sweats it out. y as a jcap! -that's PQES-YO-ILOGS THI CONVENIENT, CLEAN Aii-rucrosf fuo. cit'im noa CAPITOL LUMBER CO. 2S60 N. Cherry Ave, Ph. 3-862 or 2-4431 The Nation's Top Comics DAILY AND SUNDAY j in Your Home Newspaper BLONDS PIflF IWOODLEY- -VlPIIIIIH rr 'iiVES DAGWOOQ V (THE nerve of that, fl UL- v DO YOU KNOW) fa V'STWoa mV gitv calling at rr V f ' X how ooes wOOCXEASfy WHAT TIME (P) UJ v J txl vrV2 ' 21 LXLUSTLrS. OME UNDO f VVMAT NOu'RE DOING rS I AND AT MEADQUAPTEPS--" TV yj , oVni rr irr ue THE WIRES. WE MUST" CT POOUSM. 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BUZZ TVIlS COSMIC OiSTuKSANCE 7 smi err? u l TWOUGUT VO 9liP INTO SOAAETTWINO "AKE NOT AFJ5AJP I'LL PKACTUKE j OP u ""'SETTING J TMEM IN TMI3 J INNOCENT rSETl OUTFIT! I STOP "TMEM! KHAN DvOO 00 NOT WISH TO iiMTEJ?FEEE with rKACTUKrNS TOOCE9S i MICKEY MOUSE TWB?S HO, WP PUQE! MO! ASA.MST UU .. IT'S VQU'VE GOT YOU TWEV WAKTT, AND rf'O STIC IT SOU HAVEN'T GOT A CUAMCE! ITA OjT. PLEASe I I'M OJ'TTiig3i JL. P0 E! !0 p ' VOU" TO ST: TI Pj FOR I f That's Y jl B06BU I 1 :- GASOuiNE ALLET BALLS cy FIRE!! HOW DO VE LIKE 5 aav cnnanrwic wukn ivulm in hll CATFISH FRY AN' V wv BORNEO DAYS, VOTE-GfTTlN RALLV7" Rl DOLES CALEB ? S T' i rg"fl THEM (AAJZ TH MOST 1 SHOC SCRUMPTIOUS V1TTLES N ( AM I EVER LAID TONGUE TO" ) TICKLE0, I-ll-lE I KEPT GOfN BACK AN' GCHN' BACK AN GOIN BACK AN' G0IH' BACKU 1 TRUST i YE'LL SHOW TH SAME SORT 0 VIGGEft WHEN YE VOTE, CALcB 6AEKET GOOGIB I - I X 1 ! . . v ' . I ' . '. i Li