The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 21, 1952, Page 12, Image 12

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    0 ' & fr
Connie, Gene Practice for
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Jtp ;-r
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, i i f , . ,i, if- ii . mi 1 1 in irftflff frtaftiiatfffir tuf jMrmirt"M'''"
Since Connie Peres and Gene TanseHi are to enrage In a cow-milklnj contest at Water Field Friday
nffhtlS one oftte "Salem Elk. Clnb Niaht" feature, both Senator insiders did tome tunin up Wed
" :"." piitTman neftt. a farmhand, shows Peres the proper technique as
t n'. -j ni,- B.ir
rcow beforeTwd Tcompete on a productive bad. at home plate. Jndre of the contest will be Joyce
Keirhtly. the blond beauty associated with this year's State Fair. Door prises, band music and other
events will accompany the milking
The University of California football team should have; a stand
out season the coming Fall, winning nine games, losuig jone, and
landing in the Rose Bowl with Wisconsin as its opposition.;
This longrange obseraUon is offered by one Francis Wallace
in this week's Coiner's mag as he
lists the publication's 13th football
preview. He also goes so far as to
tell that the one game- Pappy
"Waldorf's Bears will lose will be
the Washington mix of Novem
ber 8, and that Wisconsin I wilr
beat the "Bears in the Pasadena
classic. California's modern Rose
Bowl record being what it is, the
latter portion of that prediction
must've come rather easy for Wal
lace, i
The U. of Maryland will be the
nation's No. 1 collegiate team, el
aborates the gent, California will
be eighth. uULA tenin, oouxnern
Cal twelfth and Washington State
fourteenth. The Far West derby
will wind up with Cal atop the
heap witn a -l marK ana wen,
in order: USC and WSC 8-2, UC- t
LA 7-2, Stanford 6-4, Idaho 5-4,
Oregon 4-6 and Oregon State 4-5.
(Mr. Wallace automatically! be
lnnco at both Corvallis
and Eugene for his prognostications on the Beavers and Webfoots.)
These on-the-limb selections even before practice beings make
good reading, but seldom if ever to they com out the way they're
supposed to in the actual season. In this case, Wallace does manage
to blend his picks 'in with those of many other 'experts,"! for Cali
fornia is the team to beat for the title on the Coast, and (Wisconsin
is the hot selection in the Big Ten since Illinois isn't eligible for the
Pasadena trip next Jan. 1. Also, even their most devout supporters
cannot expect much other than so-so campaigns by either the Ore
gon or Oregon Staters. The Webfoots are still building, and the
Beavers are suffering plenty; from losing so many key players . . .
Waters Field Serious Rival
Twal snorts fans have become
that anything can and usually does happen at the Armory on Tuesday
nights when Maestro Elton Owen has his rasslers making (with their
mayhem. . , " . .
Waters field, home of the town Senators, is last becoming a
serious rival for the Ferry Street Garden In the extracurricular
activities department. Beauty contests, gag funeral marches,
various clowns, contortionists and acrobats, golfers, archers
ail have had their innings at the ball yard. And on Friday night
comes the latest addition, a real cow milking contest involving
Cuban Connie Feres and Gene Tanselll, neither of whom have
had any more to do with a farm than to call on the owner's
daughter. !
The milking contest will be
Elks Club Night" Fridayr and if a
have to be Perez. After all, he's
be just as capable from the right
to portside productiveness, which
At any rate, it should be a
isn't immune to noisy crowds, bright lights and inexperienced lingers.
Joyce Keightly, the blonde beauty
Fair an early success, is to judge
another handicap for TansellL . . j
Magician Billy Definitely Here Saturday j
Waters Fielders are in for still another major feature Saturday
night, for Billy Bishop, one of the nation's most capable mari
elans definitely will be here for the evening In connection with
the Old Timers game. As we mentioned here earlier in the week.
Fop Biddy Bishop, the rent who for yean was Mr. Baseball In
this area and who dreamed up and built Waters Field in 1949
la to pitch for the Salem side In the brief Old Timers came prior
to the regular Senators-Yakima WBL fray. I
When Biddy's services were secured, he offered to bring along
son Billy if he didn't have a show to do Saturday night; Billy was
free, and sent us a note telling
coming back to Waters Field. He was the Park s first pee-ay an
nouncer in 1940 while only a teen-age kid, and later climbed to the
very top in show business as a magician, doing 18 weeks at Billy
Rose's Diamond Horseshoe in New York City after being booked
originally for but one week. :":
V'' ' ': ' I "
One of the rope tricks "Bish the Magish" wiU perform Satur
day night is a lulu. i J
Billy used to put on his acts at the ball park when he was just
learning them. . So his Saturday appearance will be sort of a
home-coming for him. Millions, have seen them since; for he's
been on most of the big television shows.
Saturday nighters will be in for some real major league enter
tainment, along with the Portland vs. Salem Old Timers game and
the regular Senators-Yak tilt
At no advance In prices, too
rri Kteelhammer look on. Connie
conies ana w otuwu-muu
r w n nn
-
? . .
- ' -, , '
JOYCE KEIGHTLY
Shell judge contest.
for Armory
well acquainted with the saying
but one of the features (of "Salem
favorite were to be named it would
a switch hitter who has proved to
side as the left. TanseUi is limited
could De a teiung iacipr.
laugh. Particularly so if I Mrs. Bossie
helping to make the '52 State
the contest. Which amounts to
how much he is looking forward to
' j
Contest
and Gene, who never have milked
?? n
Favored Rubes
From Eugene
Licked Twice
MILL CITY (Special) A
scrapping bunch of softballers from
Corvallis propelled by the red hot
and iron man pitching of Hal Weh-
meier, Wednesday night roared to
the title in the 1952 State Softball
Tournament as they knocked off the
previously unbeaten Eugene Ruben
stein s in two straight games to
wind up the colorful five-day meet
at Allen Field.
Corvallis, given little chance of
breaking a Eugene title monopoly
which has continued for five con
secutive years, slammed through
to win the first of Wednesday
night's pair 8-0 behind the two-hit
hurling of Wehmeier and with
Wehmeier also on the hill in the
second for a sparkling one-hit ef
fort, the Benton County club took
a 5-0 decision and the gonfalon.
Big Fifth Inning
Corvallis exploded for four runs
in the fifth inning to sew up the
title-clinching mix, with big Bob
Willis, one of the touted aces of
the Eugene hill staff the victim.
Dick Sprick's two-run triple was
the big blow in the large frame.
A triple by Bob Quisenberry and
a flyout added the fifth Corvallis
marker in the sixth.
In the opener, which would have
been the only game of the evening
If Eugene had won, the torrid Cor
vallis gang opened with two runs
in the first frame, both coming on
a single by Ed Nelson off Ron
Willoughby. The champs put the tilt
on ice in the fifth with a six-run
outburst, featuring another two
run single by Nelson and a two
run triple by Wehmeier himself.
Wehmeier Top Hurler
Wehmeier was named as the
tournament's outstanding pitcher.
off his fine final nights perfor
mance. Dick Sprick of Corvallis
was adjudged the top hitter of the
meet (he socked a pair of horn'
ers) and Pete Valdez, Mill City
third baseman, was honored as
outstanding all-round player.
The all-star team included two
members of the Salem Campbell
Rock Wool outfield Centerfielder
John Payne and Rightfielder Glen
Blanton. Other all-star selection
were Lou Stagg, Corvallis, catcher;
Bob Wetzel. Eugene, first base;
Bill Hutchinson, Eugene, second:
Pete Valdez, Mill City, third; Al
Zuber, Mill City, short: Jim Collie,
Corvallis, utility outfield. Pitchers
in order of vote Wehmeier of Cor
vallis; Don Carey, Mill City and
Bob Willis of Eugene.
Eugene 000 000 00 2
Corvallis 200 060 x 8 7
Willoughby and Moore; Wehmei
er and Stagg.
Eugene 000 000 00 1
Corvallis 000 041 x 5 5
Willis and Moore; Wehmeier and
Stagg.
Tcfay's Pilchers
NATIONAL LEAGUE Brook
lyn at Pittsburgh Erskine (11-5)
vs Friend (&-15). New York at Chi
cago (2) Jansen (11-8) and Hearn
(12-5) vs Minner (11-4) and Rush
(12-11). Boston at St. Louis (night)
Spahn (11-13) vs MizeU (7-5)
Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE St Louis
at Washington (twinight) Byrne
(6-12) and Cain (8-7) vs Shea (9-
6) and Masterson (7-5). Chicago at
New York Pierce (12-S) vs Gor
man (4-1). Qeveland at Boston
Gromek (6-5) vs Hudson (8-9). Only
games scheduled.
LUMBERJACK BANQUE1
Players and coaches of the West
Salem Lumberjacks Class B Jun
ior Baseball team are urged to re
port sharply at seven o'clock to
night at the Golden Pheasant Rest
aurant ior a postseason banquet.
Another Game
Slated Today
x 'Comeback Kids Bop
f Hawaii Entry Twice
PARKER FIELD, Yakima (Spe
cial) -The Salem Capital Post
American Junior Legion baseball
club a never-say die bunch
swept to a pair of wins over the
hitherto j unbeaten Waipahu, Ha
waii. Wednesday night but a pall
was thrown over the elation of
the sang from Oregon as a sec
ond-game protest made by the
Islanders was upheld by tourna
ment officials. Salem had won the
Insert foil rule in another game
Box score of second SIem-Ha-
waii Legion game wil be found on
page two. v
first game 4-3 to make necessary
a second contest. And in the sec
ond game the fired up Capital
Posts leaped out to an early lead
and went on to a 9-5 triumph and
the Northwest Regional crown
IF the protest hadn't been upheld.
Because of the allowed protest,
another game has been sched
uled between the two clubs Thurs
day afternoon at 2 o'clock, with
the winner going to the Western
Regional at Hastings, Neb.
The protest stemmed from an
occurence in the first inning during
which the Salems tamed one run
Second-sacker Twink Pederson
had led off the frame with a walk
and then Centerfielder Mike
Campbell was sent to the plate by
Coach Vince Genna to sacrifice
his teammate along. Campbel
laid down a successful bunt, with
lam 1 11 1 W 1 1 H BULtXaMUl ULUIL. W 1 LI 1 t
PeHprsnn advancing tn nebond. hut
th Hawaiian rnmnlained to the
timnirM ! that f!amnhell had sten-
ned on the elate while bunt in e.
" - - . I
Campbell was called out but Ped-
erson was permitted to stay at sec-
ond. The weird part of the whole
business; was that the umpires
didn't notify Genna of the protest
until the seventh inning when the
Salems had a 9-3 margin. '
Protest Recognized
Earl Chandler, national junior
Legion field representative, gave.
Official Sanction to the protest.
&o me aaiem kios nave to ao
it nil nwr ncrain in th rlsch nn I
-n,Hv .ff.mnnn A Knttoro I
i j -1 .i i a :a i I
piicmng; siaii manes xne situation
far from cheery for them,, after
Wednesday night s heartbreaking
development.
Salems big Inning in the ill
atd swnnd came was the sec-
rnd whpn thpv tallipd fivi timps
ona wnen mey xaiiiea live umes
witn a two-run single ny i-eaer-
son ana mi uantze s xwo-run
triple the main blows
In the first game of the evening,
the Waipahu club from the land
of the lei jumped off to a quick
lead with two runs in the first
frame off Dan Feller, the Salem
recruit j from S t a y t o n. Ore.
Through the first five frames the
Capital Posts were goose-egged by
Gerald Ikeda but then came the
sixth and before that inning was
over Vince Genna's lads had
themselves their entire four-run
output-Uthree coming on a bases-
loauea inpie Dy werry vraiarop
and Ikeda was in the showers.
i j i 1 1 tit 1 1
Wilfred Yahiro. came in as re
liefer for the Hawaiians and
ucici jur me naw minus auu
blanked the Oregonians the re-
mainder of the way, but the Sa
lems by then had all the margin
they needed.
Big Sixth for Salem
"
Tho Ki e vth innintt tnr tha
Salems started when Shortstop
Chet Schmidt walked with one
away, j Pirstsacker Phil Jantze
thn sfntfid s-hTwt tn third nd
the peppery little shortstop scored
nis team's initial run wnen tne
waipanu iirsi Daseman s iorcej
tnrow to me piate on uurt jantze a
ground nan was too late, 'rmrd-
sacKer j jjarry opnnger louoweai
witn a siow rouer v snon mat
looked! like a sure double
balL But Shortstop Kato's toss to
Tom Tori at second was dropped
and the bags were loaded.
That set the stage for a long
three-base drive to center by
Waldrop, the lad from Stayton,
yi-i-i tn-..- j vi.j
fa the! two Waipahu runs in the
nrsi uuung arxer t eiier naa :v
xiied a walk and hit a hatsman.
The third Hawaiian marker came
lit uii uuuuin ui uie sum, wilu i
Centerfielder Eikichi Arakakil
driving itt in with a single.
Gary Espe took over for FeUer
in the sixth and stonried the
Islanders the rest of the way. In
the ninth Espe walked the bases
v.. m j 4V
iuu uui icuuicu uic icui man iu
sew ud the win. Feller and Espe
between them gave but four hits
to the; 10 colected by Salem.
SALCM (4) (3) HAWAII
H H II A U U t a I
PedrsonJ 5 13 UKato. 3 0 12
Cmpblljn SSI OlArakikjn 3100
senmat s 1 1 3!iuaj 2024
PJantze.l 5 1 6 HTsuhako.c S 1 7 0
C Jantze .c 4 011 OITakashljr 3 12 0
Spnngr.3 3 13 Z Lee.1
GwM.r 3 0 0 OlYoiri!
S 111 0
4 0 0 0
WaldropJ 4 3 1 OlYoriJI
S 0 2 0
relier.p a 0 0 0 Keaa.p
Beck.r 0 0 1 OlYahiro.p
10 0 0
10 10
Exdc.d 1 0 0 0!
Total H n ik Total
17 4 27 6
Salem .
Hawaii
000-004 000 4 a 0
200 000 100 1 4 1
Feuer
B'i IS
34 12
5'i 20
3?4 14
11-44
I 1 - 7 4
a -42
1 " 1 1 a
Espe .
Ikeda
Yahiro .
Errors
Kato. 3BH:
Waldrop. 2BH:
Takashi. RBI: Takaahi. C. Jantze. Ar-
akiakl, Waldrop S.
National League
Brooklyn
013 300 000 IS
Cincinnati
101 000 001 3 8
1m and rimninelli. Kaffensberffep.
Podbielan (4). Snath (8) and Seminick.
Philadelphia loo 000 811 3 8
- ioo 000 811 1 1
- ooo ooo ioo 1 8
Pttsbureh
aieyer ana ixp-ra; Hoeue ana uar
mm"i
Boston 101 ooo 00 a s
St Louis i lso 020 0' 8 10
(Caued. rain at end 8th.)
Burdette. Jones (2). Johnson (3) and
Burns; JHaddur and D. filce.
V v
Sizzle,
Stil
12 Tho Stcrtoamcra, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 21. 1952
n & .
unciians uusn isosox.
One Game from Front
: As Cliisox Whip Yanks
NEW YORK (JF) The Cleveland Indiana climbed to within one
game of first place Wednesday, walloping the Boston Red Sox, 18-8,
while the Chicago White Sox were administering a 12,3 drubbing to
the American League leading New York Yankees.
Brooklyn's Dodgers increased
the idle New York Giants to seven
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL
W L Pet. W L Pet
Victoria 78 39 .667!Lewiston 57 67 ..460
Spokan 73 55 .570 Yakim
5? S
53 67 .442 I
60 63 .488iWenatche 50 72 .410
Wednesday results: At Salem 3. Van-
couver 1: At Spokane 8-2. Yakima 3-1: I
. . . M ... . i a a . i. I
xi? ,1
.
ruit iust lcauvk .
r,..i. ...... ,& .'c,..i.
nuuwu ui ocauia t j. .iy i
Oakland 84 59 .587iLs Angels 68 76 .472
San Diego 78 64 .549'Sn Francis 59 84.413
Powt2Sn2v7?.1.iu"CAtmi5,t. Anie!
prtinr.H n- At nauiani i stti
At Sacramento o. San Francisco 2; At
s11 Die Hollywood 2.
UiTinvu irir.n
w L Pet. w L Pet.
Brooklyn 75 38 .664 Chicago 58 60 .492
-"i?" :5o
philadelp 63 53 .543 Pittsburgh 35 87.287
Wednesday results: At Cincinnati 3.
Brooklyn 6: At Pittsburgh 1. Philadel
phia 3; At St. Louis 9. Boston 2. At
Chicago-New York, rain.
American league
w L Pet.
W L Pet.
Nw York 70 50 .583IP1
hiladelp
82 56 .525
Cleveland 68 50 .576!Chicago 62 58 .517
Boston 62 53 .539 St. Louis 50 70 .417
Washngtn 62 56 .525! Detroit 39 80.328
i cfi eqcTM4.Ai tn on wo i
Wednesday results: At, New York 3.
0,3.,, 12- At Boston 8.' Cleveland 18:
At Philadelphia 4, Detroit 3. At Wash-
lngton-st. iouis. rain
ington-ai. iouis, rain.
p ' T j
Laptains Named
B v Uo-Staters
f M.
PORTLAND WVDoug Simmons,
Astoria center, and Dick Knieht.
bJcc " .ik,-v w.jj '
Grants Pass halfback, Wednesday
fT"ratr forSaturdav night's
x if -
o ;B Wncnital honpfit fonthall
5?rine Hospital Denent lootoail
game.
ine team or upstaxe au-siars
,., . ; j j
"f? k.uS,
Portland at Muitnoman &taaium.
Coach Mel Ingram sent the Up-
staters through their final drill
at Portland University Wednes-
I j -1 111 U1 J I ,LI ..,.1,
Uav. lnejr Will liuiu u6ui, num-
o"1?. inur!Qa7 ujr -i :
siacuum.
Ingram said John . Harbour,
Grants Pass tackle who suffered
a knee Injury, would not be able
i to ptay. ...
me ruiuauu koui, waiu j
r ranx u ieui, wiu unun utuu i
cieveiana mgn ocnooi inursuayj
ana won out xiiuajr v re -
aium. .
i
Senator Swat:
Ab H 2b 3b Hr Rbi Pet.
la uo I ii 74 l
i Nelson, c .
I SDaeter.rf
342 101 19 7
0 32 .295
1 '24 .289
1 36 .288
m mm so
.187 54 9 2
.427 123 18 11
.444 125 29 2
..408 10S 20 6
.22 57 8 J
If!?
4 36 3eo
l 26 .252
ft 15 ' .229
Deyo cf
whiteOf
I Galli.u
.140 32 1 3
ThrMher'li -a"8, w i. ' VibEr
tm(-. .
Francis 20 87i 7 2 40 54 30
2 !5 Jl
CoUinS 22 137 10 8 98 115 46
i fdmunda 44 150 B V oa W
Hmnhui 28 1544 a 70 69 69
DiBiast 9 58 j a s 25 is 24
'Doubie-phiys! lll'Von at home. 22;
road. 28. Lost at home. 26; on road.
I?? rad'
YIL Line Scores:
Yakima
010 001 001 3 8 3
Spokane
000 006 20 S 7 1
Thompson. Jarre tt (6) and Donahue;
rnnant and Sheets.
Yakima 000 100 0 1 1 1
Snokane 010 100 I B O
Savage ana uonanuc; rum. uuh
(7). and llinz, sneea t . . '
Victoria 000 000 000 0 4 1
Tri-Citr 000 110 04' 9 14 1
Heard. Prior (S) ana ootuer; wreen
wnod and Lewis.
wtchM 300 325 00013 17 1
Lewiston 020 003 010 6 11 4
Dahle. and Pocekav: Shulte. Clancy
(1). PoweU (3). Brenner (6). and Luna
HP1
Derf . . - I (3), McDonald 3), OstrowsH. (4). MU
- - . s ller (8) and Berra. Houk 7).
Double No-Hit Game -
.-.,rr v , a v.nCi7i
OAiAvm,. " rfVT1"
rarity a oouoie no-ut pjwamgi
performance was recorcxi wea -
nesday night as Bracuora neat ua-
I fatria 1-A in ih fTlasB D ' PrmV
League. 'Frank EtchbergeTj' the
1 oraaioru nurier, gamea tne vwunj
i as his teammates put together a
2 uraaiora nurier, gamea me victory
- inraiv sarrifirp a wild nitrh ana
a grounder for the sole run or tne
8 game in the 8th inning. Batavia's
e Ditcher. Jim MitchelL set up his
lrt Hnomfaii wK ha Rth innlnff
v ru MwniMdM niMt m j m wm
wild toss.
Clop "siBiicsiiazcsiy
i
their National League lead over
full games with a 6-3 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
In the only other daylight action,
the Philadelphia Phils made it two
straight over the hapless Pitts-
i burgh Pirates as pitcher Russ Mey
er and second baseman Connie
Ryan teamed up to pace the Phils
to a 3-1 triumph,
Rain washed out the game be
tween the Giants and Cubs in Chi
cago and also a night contest be
tween the St. Louis Browns and
Senators in Washington
The Indians erupted for a 10-run
third inning to erase a 3-0 Boston
i i I , i l.ii.
1CcHi auu ouucu iuui uiuic iu uum
the fifth and seventh innings as
thev nounded five Red Sox hurlers
" .
ior 10 mis
tasier urana Mams
uKe r-asier arove in six runs
nomer ana a smgie. arry ajoDy
.and Ray Boone also homered for
the winners- Boone, too, had six
. . t t i
ftms. n was uooys an nomer,
In night games, the Philadephia
Athletics nipped the Detroit Tigers,
4-3, and the St. Louis Cardinals
drubbed the Boston Braves, 9-2, in
a game called after seven and one
half innings because of rain.
Harvey (The Kitten) Haddix
made his first major league start
a winning one "for the Cardinals.
Haddix, awaiting discharge from
the Army limited the Braves to
five hits.
The Cards wrapped up the de-
clsion with six runs in the second
innine on three doubles, thrpe sin-
gles and two walks. Lew Burdette
was the loser.
. c
Aussies Drive
, .
BROOKLINE, Mass. WT De-
2JhSftS!J?!5k !m?n
...m. r .. '
aiong wiui six or me otner seven
victorious seeded teams, drove in-
l?.?ituaeam 0the-.Men's
1 ivh 1 iiirii 1 mi 1 ni u 1 onni o 1
, . iuuiiw-
jent Wednesday with straight set
victories at Lonewood.-
The only extPnHori mir H,m
I w .uu wu wc nam
La..
-nd Boh P-rrv a-i
,hn en ,'
disposing of Belgium's PhiUippe
Washer and JarlHo Pr,M, t
I . " . ' -
17.10. 4-1K nq
Sedgman and McGregor, who
appear invincible in this interna-
tional field, had easy tasks dispos
jn nf th Rtato t w,.i,in'.
standard bearers. Don Flye of Ta-
coma and Bill Quilhan of Seattle
o-, o-u,
veterans Gardnar , Mullov of
Miami and Bill Talbert of New
icorx upnela their top-domestic
seedmgs in flawless fashion bv
-rrrrinr through Now -Rn0i9nH'e
best. Blair Awley of Winchester.
Mass., and Henri Salaun of Hart
ford, Conn., 6-2, 6-3, 6-1.
Silsox Defeat
Eugene Bailers
SILVERTON - (Special) - The
Silverton Red Sox sparked by the
stead V hurling of fThai-lv Ranvain
d tt ot Manager Wally
riager, Wednesday night gained
a 6-3 State League victory over
Eugene. Flager collected two sin-
, . rfrtM- BA tl,,l j-
wuvi, buu auwacu ui
five runs
The Silsox play host to the strong
andon club of the Southwest
Oregon League Saturday night at
8:30 and also meet the same team
I Sunday, 2:30 at McGinnis Field
Eugene 000 000 3003 8
Silverton 200 202 OOx 6 8
Aune, Siegmund (2) and Tichey
Sauvin and Roth.
American League
Cleveland .
00(10) 040 40018 18
21 0 040 001 S 15
Boston
Lemon and Tipton: McDermott: Scar
borough (3). Nixon (3). Benton (5)
i Brodowskt (6) and White. Niarhos (7)
Chicago
106 201 02012 14
110 000 001 3 S
I New York
- 1 Kogovin and LoUar: Sain. Schaeffer
Detroit , ' 001 000 020 3 10 1
Philadelphia . 100 000 83 4 15 0
I Wight. Madison (8) and Ginsberg;
scheio. Hooper (9) and A troth, Mur
i ray i
Central U-Drive
Truck Service
Corner 12th and SUto
' Tans. Stakes. P.U.
FOB RENT
Phono 2-9061
Helps Tribe
If' 111 ffll'i- l - - III II Ill Ml I '
BOSTON Larry Doby (above)
socked his 27th homer Wednes
day to- help the Cleveland In
dians maul the Boston Bed Sox
18-8.
Beavers Take
5-0 Blanking
From Seraphs
LOS ANGELES UPl Lefty Joe
Hatten pitched Los Angeles to a
5-0 Pacific Coast League victory
over; the Portland Beavers Wed
nesday night to even the series at
one game apiece. Hatten had a
shaky ninth inning when he walked
the bases full, but the Bevos failed
to score. It was the Angels' sec
ond win in their last 12 games
They collected 11 hits while Hatten
was limiting the Beavecs to three.
Seattle's Steve Nagy registered
his fifth win over the Oakland
Oaks in six tries as he hurled the
Rainiers to a five-hit 5-1 verdict
to square the series. Walter Clough
pitched San Francisco's Seals to
a 2-0 i win over Sacramento s Sol-
ons, also yielding but five hits. Paul
La Palme, making his first start
in the Coast League, pitched Hol
lywood to a 2-1 decision over San
Diego. He gave but two hits.
PORTLAND (0) (5) LOS ANGELES
Ab H O A Ab H O A
Barr.lf 4 0 2 O Hollisb 4 13
Austin,ss 4 0 2 1 Usher.cf .rf 4 1 X
McCrk.cf 4 11 OiConnrs.lb 4 I
Tipton.rf 3 10 OiNorthey.rf 4 11
EggerOb 3 0 2 3 Layton if 111
Reich.lb 2 18 3!Peden.c 4 17
BsnskiJZb 4 0 2 2!BrnkofJb 4 2 1
Gladd.c 4 0 5 0!Baker,s8 3 118
Pieretti.p 2 0 1 3 Hatten.p 3 10
x-Magire 0 0 0 0 z-Tlbot,ci 0 0 0
Waibel.p 0 0 0 0
Totals 30 3 24 121 Totals 33 112710
x Walked for Pierettl in 8th.
a Ran for Northey in 8 th.
Portland ...
. 000 000 000 0
. 003 010 01 5
Los Angeles
Pitcher Ab
R H Er Bb So
Pierettl 7 . 28
Waibel i 1 S
Hatten 9 30
4 9 4 0
12 12
0 3 0 4
Loser Pierettl. R-
-Brinkopf, Baker,
Conners. Hollis 2. E Eggert. HBP
Reich. Left Portland -: Loa Angeles
2B Connors. HR Brinkopf. SH
Hatten. SB Brinkopf. Hollis, Connora
Baker. DP Eggert to Baslnski to
Reich. U Somen, Anske and Silva
1.351. T 1:48.
Seattle "" 000 011 300 S
Oakland 000 000 010 1 5
Nagy and Wilson: GetteL Van Cuvk
i7i, t-anaini .) ana inodic
San Francisco 002 000 000 S S
Sacramento 000 000 000 0 S
Clough and Ortega; Osenbaugh
Barkeiew (8), Fa ilea (8) and Smith
Hollywood
00 000 020 t
9
S
san Diego
. 010 000 000 1
LaPalme and Man Kan: Luna
and
Summers.
Still Bollio':
VANCOUVER 1
(3) salem
Ab H Po A
AD H rO A
Vanni-r
0 3 01 Tanselll. 4 0 2 4
0 1 2!Luby4 4 12 4
1 9 1! Perez J 3 1 3 2
Moore 4
Wert.l
Brnsck.m
Ritchey.c
LockeJ
1 3 OlSpaeterj 4 0 2 1
0 2 l'Bartle.l .3 014 0
1 1 0! White J 3 110
DurettoJ
R.Tranji
1 1 llDeyo.m 2 11
0 3 SIThrashr.c 2 12 1
0 1 2!Francls.p 3 10 3
Guldber.p 3
x-Leavitt 1
0 0 OlEdmnds.D 0 0 0 0
Total 28 4 24 101 Total 28 6 27 IS
x Fouled out for Guldborg in 9th.
Vancouver 000 000 001 1 4 1
Salem - 000 010 20 S 0
Pitcher
Ip Ab H R Er So Bb
Guldberf
8 28 8 tit 2
84 23 4 1 1 S 8
Francis
Edmunds
, 1 0 0 0 0 1
Hit by pitcher
Thrasher. Wild pit-
ches:, Guldborg. Left on bases: Van
couver 8. Salem 4. Errors: Puretto. Two
base hits: Thrasher. Runs batted, in:
Tansem. Thrasher. Francis. Duretto
Sacrifice: Guldborjr. Double plays: Tran
to Moore to Wert. Bartle unassisted.
Luby to Bartle. Time: 2:01. Umpires:
Xiamen oc iaiksik. An.: V4Z.
There are about 35,000 plants in
the United States processing milk.
butter, cheese, ice cream, and
other dairy products.
I CANT DEPEND ON 1
iTHE WEATHER! BUT 1
1 YOU GAN ALWAYS 1
iDEPEND ON THL
(RARE FLAVOR)
1 OF LIGHT)
10LYMPiABEER?
arum sJtfwws ca oynpia. i ijL
31
Doubleheader
VI
Set Tonight
Francis, Edmunds Stop
Vans for 4th Straight
By AL UtGHTNEK
Statesman Sports Editor
All of a sudden the hottest col
lection of hombres In the WI
League, the town Senators again
upended the Vancouver Caps last
night at Waters Field, this tlmo
1 to make it three in a row over
Edo Vanni's crippled crew, .four
straight altogether and six vic
tories in the last seven outings.
The "Archery Night" win ele
vated the resident flock to within
three games of the staggering
third placers and set things up in
grand fashion for the series endin
doubleheader tonight at seven
o'clock.
Vince DiBiasi (3r5) and Ray
McNulty (15-14), who have had
some sparkling games in their
latest trips postward, will face
the Caps in tonight's pair. Bob
Snyder (11-11) and Ed Locke
(9-11) are the Van probables.
Pitching Now Sharp
More solid pitching by tho Solon
staff, a welcome item In recent
games, and this time by Rookio
Bud Francis with a little help
from Fireman Ted Edmunds, was
the biggest factor In subduing the
Vancouvers last night Francis had
the visitors checked with two
scratch singles through 8 inn
ings when he gave up a walk and
two more singles to cut short his "
stay. The Fireman came to the res
cue, and although he walked tho
first batter he faced he got. the
next one, the final out, to foul out
to Connie Perez.
It was young Bud's seventh win
of the season and the kid looks
more and more like a real comer
with each trip out. He had him
self in trouble often despite giving
ms meager output of base hits, as
he walked eight. But oft-brilliant
play by his defense, including two
double plays and the corraling of
four well-smacked line drives,
hauled him out of the woe until
the ninth.
Faulty base-running by the Caps
on two glaring occasions were big
; l i i -i
aisiis in ineir oowniau aiso.
Guldbor; Victim
Spectacled Bud Guldborg, a 13
game winner, was Francis' victim.
He went along in great shape until
the fifth when Jim Deyo's singlo
a hit batter and Francis well
placer bunt, which went right by
the mound for a hit, loaded tho
sacks with nobody out. The first
Salem run scored after Gene Tan
selll flew out to Vanni smack
against the right field wall.
A walk to Deyo in the seventh,
followed by Art Thrasher's smok
ing double to left field scored tho
second Salem run, Thrasher ram
bling to third on the relays aimed
at cutting down Deyo. Thrasher
then scored when Francis biffed a
line-out to Gordy Brunswick In
center field.
Two of the Caps regular in
fielders are laid up with wounds.
Len Tran and Jessie Williams. The
latter was shelved when Tanselll
cartwheeled him the night before
while breaking up a double play
at second base ... . The Salems
are jiow hut three games In ar
rears of the even .500 mark again
. . . Members of the Salem Jabber
walkie Archery club including
mothers, fathers and kids, put on
a 30-minute demonstration ot
their favorite sport before gam
time last night and was well re
warded by the audience." Catcher
Bob Nelson of the Salems had a
few shots and managed to bust
one of the balloon targets ...
Tho submmerged mountain
chain of which Puerto Rico is a
part would be one of the highest
in the world if it were above.
l rawer man below, sea level.
i . -
Why Just Watch It GrewT
C'mon Help It Growl
Salem Senators
Attendance
W. W.
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