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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1955)
.Visits .-' ' araTosman, aaiem, wra., aunaay, pru i, I y 35 (Sec j 9 : t. User So Meet Tojo on Card mm mw w m . I ... a rt w ' Top Matches OnElksSked Brande vs. Prall, v Woods vs. Sheldon Semi-finalists in all flights ex cept the championship will be determined in the Elks Golf Tournament at the Salem Golf Course Sunday with the wind-up of all second-round matches, Sev eral feature matches are on tap Sunday that will narrow the championship field to the quarter finals. Jerry Cloninger, medalist in the tourney, continued his domi nation of the links Saturday by defeating Harvey Quistad 2 and 1 with a three-under-par 69. Cloninger, who plays for the Oregon State varsity, will next meet a fellow Beaver teammate, Ray Lindquist Lindquist defeat ed Harry Carson 2 and 1. Miklia Defeats Ellis '- Other championship results were Pat Miklia's win over; Cliff Ellis on the 19th hole. It was only the second match in the top flight that had gone over thes reg ular 18 holes. Glen Lengren also moved along in the winner's bracket with a 3 and 2 victory over Hobart Price. Sunday's highlight will come, at 10:30 a.m. when a talented foursome tee off. It will be Jack Brande, defending Elks champ, against youn& Bob Prall and Dusty Woods, 1954 Coast cham pion, against Jim Sheldon. Two other top matches Sun day are Wally Hug vs, Hank Moon and Dick Hiller vs. Kent Meyers. A pair of 20-year-olds, bothHiller and Meyers are like ly to break par as often as the weather changes.. First Flight Winners First flight winners so far in the past week were Al Reibel over John R. Wood, Bert Victor over Pete Anderson, Bob Ste phenson over Del Gwynn, Jack Owens .over Glen Cushman and Monk Ally over Gary CampbelL Campbell was five down with five to go in his match with Ally but rallied to win the next fntir straieht onlv to miss a three-foot putt on the 18th that would have tied the two up. Cougar-Husky Games Called PULLMAN, Wash, w Wet grounds forced cancellation Satur day of a scheduled doubleheader between Washington and Washing ton State in the Northern Division baseball race of the Pacific Coast Conference. V The Friday opener was also call ed off because of weather. The first game got underway Saturday, the Huskies going down in order in their half of the ..first Inning against WSCs Ron Webb. Monte Geiger, the Washington pitcher, walked the first two men to face him in the Cougar half and had three balls on the third man when umpire Mel Ross halt ed action because of rain. The two teams waited 30 minutes and then Ross called it off when the grounds got too wet. The Hus kies, who will play WSC twice in Seattle later on, are due to meet Idaho at 'Moscow on Monday and Tuesday. Tri-Gty Tops Yakima In 13 to 12 Contest KENNEWICK, Wash. ( A double by Don Pries that scored Dick Herrara from first in the ninth inning "gave Tri-City a 13-12 baseball victory Saturday over Yakima In a Northwest League exhibition tilt Frank Strazzullo of Tri -City homered in .the eighth with two men on base. . .. (Continued from preceding page) and North Marion, and it looks like one that will be well balanced, for a time at least. The way tome of these schools are growing is astounding. There have been quite a few changes in league personnel in ' our area of late. -The Capitol League is no more, as Serra, Stayton, Cascade. Gervais and Salem Academy left it for greener pastures, Salem Academy has since joined the Yawama League, which is now made up of the Crusaders, Dayton, Willamina, Sheridan, Sherwood, xamniu ana canxs. ine wuiameue also, with Central Hi joining Dallas. Sandy. Estacada and Molalla And even the Marion County B League has been altered, with distant Philomath joining up with the old standbys at Chemawa, Oregon bcnooi for the Deaf.SL Paul, Jefferson- Sublimity, Scio, Mill City, Gates and Detroit , j Oddity of the whole shakenp Is noted here In Salem where both Serra and Salem Academy reside, but find themselves in different leagues . . . .... - ............ , . j , Hope Neic Prexy Takes Qiiick, Firm -Action We haven't yet had the pleasure of meeting Arthur Pohlman, cresident of the Northwest League, but hope that when we do we find a stern gent who isn't afraid to take a bite at one of his ball clubs when be has to. We don't blame the demise of the Western International League on Bob Abel, who rode herd on the circuit for . .a- m j ax. some 10 years. But Bob was at loop suffered because of it. As we see it, Pohlman nasi a definite and decisive mow to make, and pronto. We've learned that the Yakima club wishes the adoption of a rale that would allow Northwest League members to own and play an nnlimlted number of veteran ballgamers for the first 30 days of the season. The reason for the Yakima request is obvious when one notes that Mgr. Kittle has about 40 mea in spring teaming, many of them veterans. - When the Northwest circuit was formed it was wisely decided that no member be allowed more than five veterans. Those members who had been in the WIL had learned the hard way what too many vets will do to minor league ball clubs of Class A and B species. So if Pohlman now allows members to have all the vets they want for the first month of the season, he's placing the new league right back into the same woesome nit the WIL got itself into. . It would be a bad mistake. The Senators management is of being "vehement The others, the same. We can't imagine why an adoption, even if they have 40 They should bo slapped down, l ' . : m m m m - m Bowl Races to Open Sunday The Hollywood Bowl auto ing campaign for 1955 opens next Sunday, with an afternoon card starting with time trials at 1:30 p.m. When the weather becomes warmer, the weekly, race cards owner more than $200 in cash other Northwest tracks also dur will be held on Saturday nlchts. for the entire car and its parts, ing the season. Harry (Red) as has been the custom in the past. O Denim the Bowl season will be the modified Jalopies, owned and driven by members of Sa- lem's own Capital Racing Asso- elation. This is the group that started out originally as the Opens With Beavers Tuesday ' 4 - ' - f . . i ' ; 'v - 4 I ' ' t tf V ' - . f ' t.- ,-; f - f - w v f - - fT3 Mill fci PORTLAND Artie Wilson, above, veteran inficlder secured from the Seattle Rainiers, will be in the Portland Beavers lineup here Tuesday when the Bevos open their Vaughn Street baseball sea son. Wilson is only one of many new faces in Portland spangles this season. NBC to Announce Grid Sched For 1955 National TV Shotvs CHICAGO (A The National Broadcasting Co. is expected to I announce, the. 195S program of na tionally - televised college foot ball games on Tuesday. Final approval of the eight-game Video schedule presumably was granted by the television commit tee of the National Collegiate Ath letic Assn. at a meeting here Sat urday. The committee, however, de clined any comment en, the sched ule submitted by the NBC which reportedly offered $150,000 per game for the TV series. A spokes man said any announcement should come from NBC. Regional TV Waits Sked The Chicago Tribune quoted Tom Galkry, NBC sports director, at his Scarsdale, N. Y., home saying the program, if approved by the NCAA, would be announced for Tuesday morning papers. Once the NBC s national pro gram is disclosed, schedules for regional football telecasts jhII be shaped for the seven NCAA TV districts. The NCAA's 1955 TV plan per vauey jeague nas oeeu reviseu times mucn too pacuymg, ana me I against such a move to the point including Yakima, should feel just the Yaks should even want such veterans in camp. now and decisively ... rae-"Maniacs" but which changed names late last season. The Capitals will have 25 can ready for battle . in the opener, not a one of them costing its One of the racers has been on display at the valley Motor Co. in recent weeks. The jalopies will engage in trophy dash, heat races and main events following the trials to de- termine the fastest buggies in the field. mits a school to appear once on the national program and once re gionally or twice regionally. Five dates are reserved for regional telecasts. Homer Record Tied by Cubs ST. LOUIS un The Chicago Cubs tied a major league record shared by many clubs in both major leagues by hitting three successive home runs Saturday in the second inning of their game with the St. Louis Cardinals. Right hander Tom Poholsky was the Cardinal pitcher. Randy Jackson opened the in ning with a blast to the left center- field bleachers, for his third home run of the young season. .rme Banks followed with a home run to the left field bleach ers, his second of the season. Dee Fondy then rapped one to the right centerfield pavilion roof, giving the Cubs a 3-2 lead. . 13 '. " WhitwortlVDefeats Spokane Club 6-2 GLARKSTON, Wash. W) Whit- worth Pirates staged a 5 - run upsurge in the fifth inning to take a 6-4 exhibition baseball victory over Spokane of the Northwest League Saturday. Whitworth put its big fifth to gether on three singles, two walks and a 2-base error. Spokane was ahead at tbe ttme 3-1. American League Baltimore Boston .010 030 lift S 1 . 300 020 10 10 4 Palica, Byrd (5) and Moss; Delock, Kinder (7) and White. Kansas City .100 000 0023 10 1 Detroit 021 000 05 8 8 0 Portocarrero, Fricano (3). Van Bra bant (8), Gorman (8) and Robertson; Gaver and House. Cleveland L 121 000 000-4 10 I Chicago 102 060 00 9 H t Feller. Narleski (5). Mossi 5. Wight (8) and Hegan. Foiles (8); Pierce, Fornielet (3) and LoUar. New York . 003 000 002 S 10 0 Washington . 010 100 0003 8 3 Byrne. Morcan (7) and Berra; Por terfield. Pascual (9) and Edwards, Oldis (8). National Leasrue Brooklyn 000 000 150-6 7 0 Pittsburgh Meyer and 000 000 000 O 3 Campanella; Purkey, race (8), BeU (9) and Shepard. Philadelphia . New York . . 000 000 120 3 10 3 .101 600 00 6 10 0 Meyer. Ridzuc (4). Sprln 111 and Lopata; Hearn and.Westrum. Milwaukee 013 200 SOI I 18 0 Cincinnati . 000 030 1015 t 1 Burdette. Nichols 7 and Cran dall; Pierce, Fisher (3). Baczewskl (I). Hooper (7), Kllppstem (S) and Seminick. . Chicago 031 000 500 002 0011 IS St. Louis - 200 301 300 002 0112 17 Jones. Davis (6). Andre m. Jeff coat (7. Pollett (7). Church (10), Amor (12) and Chiti; Poholsky, Law rence (4), Smith (7). Tiefenauer (7). Schultz (8), lUAOix (13J. and Rice. Sarni (8). The Capital Association has held numerous meetings during the winter and have organised into a solid outfit which will race not only nere in saiem Dot on Weltman is association president, George Cooper vice president, Paul D. Rlckard secretary-treas- urer and Joe Owen sergeant at arms. . Racing will be held here on a weekly basis, weather permitting, following the opener Sunday. Horses Perish In Barn Fire LINCOLN, R. I. CD Investiga tors raked through the ; ruins of barn "T" at Lincoln Downs Sat urday to determine the cause of a fast moving blaze that brought death to 22 racing thoroughbreds and four lead ponies. Eighteen horses and three ponies were trapped in the big barn which was valued at $45,000. The other animals had to be destroyed be cause of injuries. Racing officials estimated the dead animals were worth $150,000. Saturday's races were held on schedule. None of the big-name horses that will take part in the $30,000 handi cap on Monday final day of the present meet was harmed. Ma jors Clout 28 Home Runs (Continued from preceding page.) players hitting a total of eight bases - empty homers. : Del CrandaiL Johnny Logan and Joe Adcock hit them for the Braves while Ray Jablonski, Andy Seminick, Bob Thurman and Wally Post found the range for the Red- legs. Jablonski had two. The total represented the biggest production of the day. The Cleveland Indians, also dropped their first game of the campaign when the Chicago White Sox licked them 9-5. Walt Dropo broke it up with a grand slammer, in the fifth for the Sox while George Strickland and Al Rosen connected for the losers. Moss Slams Homer The only home run in the Bos ton Baltimore game was hit y Oriole catcher Les Moss but it was a wasted effort because the Red Sox won out 6-5. Faye Throneberry, who took Ted Williams' place in left field for the Sox, drove in two runs and scored three. Ike DeLock and El lis Kinder handled the Sox pitch ing chores. Ned Carver tossed the Detroit Tigers to an 8-3 triumph over the Kansas City A's with Jim Delsing and Harvey Kuenn hitting homers for the winners and Jim Finigan for the A's. Arnold Portocarrero. ace KC pitcher, got only as far as the third, although the Bengals didn't ice the decision until the eighth when they scored five times. Masters Chamv Offers Lesson To President AUGUSTA, Ga. UF Cary Mid- dlecoff, the 1955 Masters tourna ment winner, showed President Eisenhower how to do it Saturday by firing a six-under-par 68 for 18 holes at the Augusta National Course. Playing in the President's four some, Middlecoff came in with eight birdiesfive of them on con secutive holes. It was at the Na tional last Sunday that the Mem phis dentist won the Masters. His best score for 18 holes in that tournament was a 65, just short of the course record of 64. ; Patton in Foursome Also in Eisenhower's foursome was Billy Joe Patton, the long- mtung amateur from Morganton, N. c, whose sensational golf al' most won the 1954 Masters. He had a 70 Saturday and five birdies. Aides reported the President and the other members of the four some. New York investment bank er Cliff Roberts, board chairman of the Augusta National, kept no score cards. Indications were. however, they both had pretty good rounds. They each had eight par holes. Ike in Good Hnmor The President appeared to be having the time of his life as he left the first tee. He was in high good humor and was hitting the ball well. As photographers : crowded around, the chief executive stepped up and drove first "Age has some privileges around here, I guess," he laughed. Cudd Late Entry In Open Tourney TACOMA IB Portland's Bruce Cudd. member of the U. S. Walker Cup team in 1954 and winner of just about every amateur golf title in the Northwest during his mete oric links career, k among several last-minute entrants in Tacoma s first annual Daffodil Open Tourna ment, scheduled here Monday and Tuesday. The two-day meet wQl be a 54- hole medal play affair, starting with 18 holes Monday, after which 'the field will be reduced sharply , lor Tuesday s windup 36. Amory T. (Slats) GUI, above, vet eran Oregon State College basket ball coach who copped the Coast Conference championship in the recent season, will be the guest speaker for Monday morning's Salem Breakfast Club meeting at the Senator Hotel Gill Speaker At SBC Meet The took will be basketball Mon day morning during the weekly meeting of the Salem breakfast Club at the Senator Hotel. Amory T. (Slats) Gill, the for mer Salem boy who went on to oeoat rvlavirvo anri fnarhina nr. complishments at Oregon State Col lege, will be the guest speaker dur ing the 7:30 a. m. session. Gill has appeared here before, and has al ways given interesting and color ful talks on his favorite sport. His Beavers won the Coast Con ference championship during the 1954-53 campaign and were defeat ed by a single point in the regional tournament by U of San Francisco, the eventual national champion. A full turnout of the membership is urged for the breakfast-meeting, Also, Oregon btate alumni are in vited to attend. Whitman Raps Coyotes Twice CALDWELL, Idaho W Pitcher Nick Aronson narrowly missed a no hit, no-run game Saturday as Whit man, won a Pacific Northwest Con ference doubleheader from College of Idaho. 17-0 and 7-1. Aronson hurled a no-hitter in the second game but lost his shutout on a third inning error: Al Sparks, the losing pitcher, walked to open that frame, took second on a wild pitch, moved to third as Roger Judd grounded out at first and scored when the Whit man third baseman made an error on Stan Ryan's grounder. Clicker Slaps Homer Del Clicker batted In seven runs in the opener. He homered in the fourth with two on and repeated the feat in the ninth, again with two on. In addition, he got a sin gle which drove across one run. Dick Anderson and Bobby Sloan doubled for College of Idaho. First game: Whitman 003 603 023-17 15 0 of I 000 000 00- 0 3 10 Mobley and Hostetler: Sanchez, Keeney, Troyer and Makini. Second game: Whitman 301 300 1-8 7 2 of I 001 000 0-1 0 4 Arnson and Hostetler: Sparks and Makini. Cox Appointed Montana Coach MISSOULA. Mont ( Forrest . (Frosty) Cox, former head bas ketball coach at the University of Colorado for 15 years, will take over the head basketball coaching job at Montana, Dr. Carl McFar- land, university president, an nounced Saturday. Cox, 46, fills the post vacated last January by George P. (Jiggs) Dahlberg, now athletic director.. Cox, who resigned at Colorado In 1950 to enter the cattle business in Wakefield, Kan., will assume his new duties July 1. Cox won 147 games and lost 79 in 13 seasons with Colorado. In conference play his teams won 120 games and lost 55. Bearcats Bow- But Only to Rain Rain again proved its overpow enng force Saturday and wet grounds caused postponement of the Willamette-Portland Univer sity game. The scheduled game between Oregon College and Pacific U at Monmouth met the same fate. Willamette hopes to open North west conference play with Pacific at Forest Grove Tuesday in doubleheader providing of course, wai weainer aoesn t prevent it. AMEE1CAN LEAGUE Cleveland at Chicago (2) Houtte- man UJ-i) ana Lemon 123-7) v Marsnman (14-8) and Trucka (19-12) Kansas City at Detroit Gray (3-13) vs. uromeit U4-ll). New York at Washington Ford (18-8) . Schmitz (U-8). Baltimore at Boston (2 Kogevm (o-o) ana Byrd (9-7) vs. Kretlow (-U) or Sullivan (15-121 ana Jiemmerer (-3). NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia ! at New York 2 Roberts (23-13) and Dickson (10-20) vs. Antonelll (21-7) and Liddle (9-4) or Maglie (14-6). Brooklyn at Pitts. burgh (2 Podres (11-7) and Labine (7-fii vs. Thies (3-9) and Kline (0-0). Milwaukee at Cincinnati (2) Crone (1-0) and Spahn (11-12) vs. rowler (12-10) and Staley (7-13V. Chicago at St. Louis (2 Perkewskl (2-8) and Minner (11-11) vs. Jones (4-4) and Jackson (0-0). Jack (Tiger) Kiser, one of the most spectacular grapplers in the game and long a favorite with Ore gon fans since be bails from Port land, has been added to Tuesday Bight's card by Matchmaker El ton Owen. ' Hi, The blond owifty, who has been campaigning . in various parts of the country since last seen here, will appear in a special scrap Tues day with the sneering Oriental, Mr. Tojo. ift ' "This match will open the card at 8:30 o'clock Owen added, "but I'm sure everyone will' agree it is much more than a curtain-raiser." Tuesday's special event will have Bulldog Bud Curtis,! the broad- 'Shaggy Still Unbeaten . . Boston Doge Captures Governor's Gold Cup BOWIE, Md. (P)-Boston Doge again belied his rather raggedy looks Saturday to continue unbeaten in winning the Governor's Gold Cup. His 10th straight triumph is unequalled in the glamor class of 3-year-olds. The onlv objection to the little dark horse's easy victory by lengths was voice by jockey Eldon Nelson aboard the fourth place Chuck Thompson. 'i Nelson claimed that Boston Doge and jockey Eric Gueriri had inter fered with him at the half mile stage of the three-quarter of a mile race. But the officials couldn't see it that way in movies and let Boston Doge keep : ' his fourth straight major victory this year and enhance his likelihood of going to the Kentucky Derby. 20,956 Watch Race 1 Most of the crowd of 20,956 al ready perspiring under a glaring sun grew hotter under; the collar while the judges made their minds. Of the $129,367 first place bets. $80,807 was on Boston Doge. That made the payoff winner only $2.80. $2.60 and $2.20. The Andohno brothers, Paul and rank of Boston " who own and train the hot prospect, collected $23,500. They now have gleaned $35,720 from the colt they offered to sell early last year for $7,500. Time Nears Record Trailing the Boston Flash In the Gold Cup were Eugene: Constantin Jr.'s Amber's Tolly, an eligible for the triple crown, arid Brecken ridge Long's Westward Ho. Boston Doge left no doubt he s master at three quarters of a mile which he ran easily in 1:10.6, only two fifths slower than the Bowie track record i shared '0j Chuck Thompson. Betty Jameson Holds to Lead BEAUMONT. Tex. (fl Betty Jameson, the San Antonio veteran, shot her second straight sub-par round Saturday to increase her ead over the field in the $5,000 Babe Zaharias Open Golf Tourna ment to 10 strokes. Miss Jameson had a 2-under-par 71 to make her total for 36 holes 136 and make her a ; prohibitive favorite to win first money in .the final 18 holes Sunday, i Patty Berg of St. Andrews. 111.. was the only other player in the field of 21 professionals and six amateurs to make the 6,219-yard Beaumont Country Club course in under par figures. Miss Berg turned in a 72 to push from a tie for fifth place into a tie for second with Jackie Pung of Honolulu. Each had 146; Miss Pung shot a 74 Saturday. Whitman Team Nazarene Victor NAMPA. Idaho Wvi-A powerful Whitman College team, which scored all but eight of its 92 points in running events, won the sixth annual Northwest Nazarene Col- ege invitational track; and field meet Saturday. Ricks College of Rexburg edeed Eastern Oregon College of Educa tion of LaGrande, 51 5-6 to 504 or second place. NNC:was fourth with 44 2-3 points, followed by Weber of Ogden with 28, West minster of Salt Lake City with IS, Boise Junior College with 11 and College of Idaho with8. Four records were broken and three tied. Whitman runners broke records In the 220-yard dash. the 880-yard run and; the mile. Coaches voted Wayne Barney of Kicks outstanding performer. Bar ney posted a 10:20.5 in the two-mile to break a mark of 10:25.8 set in 1953. In the mile, Barney finished third to Harold Parrott of Whitman who tied the record of 4:11.5 that he set last year. Parrott tied an other of his own marks, also set last year, when he ran the half- mile in 2:03.1. Santee to Try Again For Four Minute Mile CORAL GABLES, Fla. (fi - The great miler Wes Santee will at tempt to break through the four minutes barrier during a special University of Miami invitational mile run May 7. Arrangements for the race fol lowed three way negotiations in volving Dan Ferris, secretary treasurer of the National AAU, University of Kansas Athletic offi cials and Lloyd Bennett, head track coach at the University of Miami. . FREE ESTIMATES Oa Floor Coverings NORRIS-WALKER PAINT COMPANY 1710 Front Phone 4-22TI shouldered bruiser against Irish Red McKim,. former Oklahoma A k M national AAU champion who has appeared here briefly before. Curtis has stated that he wants to be very much in the eliminations for the Northwest heavyweight cbaxnpionship belt f This tourney is now going on in both Oregon and Washington. When the champions of both states are named, they will appear here in the title match, Owen tells. Tuesday's mainer will be the re match involving Mr. Sakata and Luther (The Tank) Lindsey. These two produced a riotous battle last week, which was finally won by the popular Negro on a disqualifi Pairings Made For Golf Meet Pairings were announced Satur day for the first round of the Spring Handicap Tournament of the; Salem Women's Golf Assn. Pljay in the tournament will be gin Wednesday. Sixteen women will be vieing for the championship flight. Medalist last week was Mrs. William Whit- more, who carded a net 73. The pairings by flights is as follows: Championship Flight Mrs. Wm. whitmore vs. Mrs. Chas. Musser; Mrs. Ellis vs. Mrs. Morris Crothers; Mrs. ' H. R. Ives vs. Mrs. Harold Cllnger; Mrs. Merritt Truax vs. Mrs. Richard Nelson: Mrs. Wern er Brown vs. Mrs. Leland Plank; Mrs. Ivan Marble vs. Mrs. Kenneth Vollmer; Mrs. Ralph Hamilton vs. Mrs. Lynn Hammerstad; Mrs. Wal ter Tooze vs. Mrs. Frank Snelgrove. 2nd FUght Mrs. Thomas B. Watson vs. Mrs. Richard Chase; Mrs. Bruce Williams vs. Mrs. Robert Cannon; Mrs. Chas. McDevitt vs. Mrs. Boscoe Wilson; Mrs. John Kolb vs. Mrs. Glenn Stev ens; Mrs. John Johnson vs. Mr Woodson Bennett; Mrs. Kenneth Potts vs. Mrs. Clayborne Dyer; Mrs. Edw. Roth vs. Mrs. Robt. Oslund; Mrs. , R. I. MacLaughlin vs. Mrs. F. S. Anunson. 4th FUght Mrs. Carrie Fish vs. Mrs. T. W. Lowrv; Mrs. Harold Gillespie vs. Mrs. Elmore Hill; Mrs. ojhn R. Wood vs. Mrs. Millard Pekar; Mrs. Reyn old Allen vs. Mrs. Harold Busick; Mrs. Orval Lama vs. Mrs. Sidney Hoffman; Mrs. Glenn Wilbur vs. Mrs. John Ficklin; Mrs. Wm. Wess ner vs. Mrs. Henry Simmons: Mrs. Agnes Lee vs. Mrs. James Ha worth. Cth FUght Mrs. McAlvin vs. Mrs. Wood rrr Mrs. Walter Cline vs. bye: Mrs. Hans Nichols vs. bye: Mrs. James Devers vs. oye; Mrs. Robt. Herrall vs. bye; Mrs. Leonard Hicks vs. bye; Mrs. James Stone vs. bye; Mrs. frank ward vs. bye. BANDED RABBIT HUNT SUNBURST, Mont VP) This community near the Montana Canadian border held a rabbit hunt to help itt high school band. Hunters brought lunches and shotguns' and beat the brushes. Several hundred rabbits were sold. The money defrayed ex penses for the band to attend an annual Music Educators' meeting in Eugene, Ore. .Announcing -a :;:'" MOTORCYCLE SALES' ) 1375 Highland Ave. 7 At Portland Rd. II I Ph. 2-1423 1 STS Nr II OStlAT MEWS far oatboam 1 J cation. Sakata left the ring to beet with Pepper Gomez, who was acting as Lindsey'g second, and al most got himself mobbed by tha irate customers. The action was hot and heavy, and it wouldn't have taken much for a rear explos ion. The fuse was lit Sakata figured he was given the short end of everything in that one. First Gomez pulled Lindsey to safety just as Sakata was in the process o winning the final fall. Then when the berserk Jap braved the audience to have his raps at Gomez, Referee Bill Curry gave him a short count and fouled him out On Card s Ml f ( JACK KISER Returns to Armory. Allie Reynolds Denies Charge ARDMORE, Okla. (UP) Allie Reynolds, former New, York Yank ees baseball pitcher, today denied a charge by Carter County officers that 150 to 200 drunken teenagers from Oklahoma City staged a wild sex party at Cie Lake Murray lodge where he and his wife were chaperoning . an outing last week end. Reynolds admitted that he and - his wife accompanied a small group of teenagers to the lodge for the weekend, but that they all "be haved themselves." The former baseball star said from "10 to 15 other couples of parents from Oklahoma City" had gone down to Ardmore along with a group of students from Classen High School. But, he denied that any drinking or sex parties had taken place. Reynolds -Denies Charge "All the kids from Classen that I saw were behaving themselves. There were some youngsters who were not, but they were a very small majority and I don't believe they were from Classen," Reynolds said. Undersheriff LeRoy Baker charged yesterday that a wild par ty lasted more than 48 hours at tha lodge. He said "wild parties" had been observed k the lodge area each weekend for the past two years, but the "orgy" last weekend was the biggest end the worst. Rookie outfielder Bill Virdon of the Cardinals was a high school track star. He participated in the 100 and 200 yard dashes, pole vault, shot put and relay. OtUAT MEWS for fans! Now ready to servo yoa k another enibnaiatir Scott Atwater dtaUr ... offering America's finest, most modem outboard motors, clu helpful, friendly servics. You'll oajor looking over the bow lino of smooth, quiet Soott-Atwater motors with Bail-a-mati powtr batting: 6, 7H. 10, 1 and 30 h.p. And be sure to tee the 3.6 bp. Soper Single, too. Drop m sooo.Wrs sooting forward to tsjiiiit ycwit FtVC MOTORS..; AND THEY ALL BAIL YOUR BOAT!