The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 04, 1955, Page 10, Image 10

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    2 (Sec 2) Statesman, Salem, Ortgen, Monday, July 4, 1955
Salem Drivers in Boat Races on Fourth
v
.-Pi
Meagre Fight Week
Patterson in Top EBout
With Archie McBride
By JACK HAND
The Associated Press
Floyd Patterson, the 20-year-old former Olympic champ who is
being boomed as the heavyweight champ of the future, meets
Archie McBride of Trenton, -NJ Wednesday night at New York's
Madison Square Garden in the top bout of a meager holiday week
program.
TheyTl Do It Every Time
" By Jimmy Hatlo
43,
R4LLP4RK.4M'
Here's a pair of local racers who will be in action Monday daring the boat races at Wallace Marine
Park. The two Salem drivers are (top) Panl Woodroffe in a Class D Utility and (Bottom) Gil
Ward 1b a Class B Hydro. They will race in the afternoon show.
Boat Racing
Program Set
The sports scene in Salem will
nhift to the water variety for the
Fourth of July Monday when a
water show and boat racing re
gatta will be held on the Wil
lamette' River at Wallace Marine
Park. ' s
Undervthe joint forces of the
Salem Boat Club and the Wallace
Park Improvement and Boosters
Committee, the show is designed
to be the biggest ever presented
on the Willamette waters. V
-. Boat races will get underway
at 1 p.m. and continue through
the afternoon. All types of rac
ing craft from numerous cities
and clubs in the Northwest willi
participate in the speed events.
A $3,000 cabin cruiser, with out
board motor and trailer, will be
given away during the day as the
top prize.
British Open Tourney
Draws Shivering 273
By STERLING SLAPPEY
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland UPh-As nasty a brew of weather as
old Scotland can muster was thrown straight into the chattering
teetn 01 st Andrews Sunday on the eve of the British Open Golf
inampionsnip.
Th .1 l m .9
roruana lops
Angels Twice
'SPORTSMAN'S'
SMAGLESS Rd FOR
DEEP POOLS, ETC.
BUTT-CAST1N6,'
OR SPINNING
LINE '
(Continued From Page 1.)
1-0. Sacramento and Hollywood
also split with the Sactos win
ning the first 7-2 and the Stars
taking the second, 4-3. .
Seattle proved to be a double
winner, downing Oakland 4-1 and
1-0.
Lefty Vic Lombard! pitched and
hit his way to victory for Seattle
in the first game. He held the Oaks
a r i. : . J t V a. rU
lo luur oils, auu tame . mi uuyi
'withthree singles that figured in
all but one of the Seattle runs.
In the second game, Lou Kret
low, down from Baltimore, won
his third straight without defeat in
holding the Oaks to three hits. It
--ran Kretlow's string to 33 innings
with only two earned runs off him.
Tie Threatened
uaKiamr uireaienea 10 ue me
second contest in the seventh and
" final inning. Jim Marshall walked
and Billy Consolo singled,. George
Metkovich batted for Russ Rose
an4 wnrlrri tht rnunt to 3 and S
LINE '."-CAT
5vWT BAXT
swtvei
, SEWING
t, machine
"jVv . .THREAD
ft SINKER r m'
Two hundred and seventy three
golfers, including former U. S.
open champions Byron Nelson and
Ed Furgol, plus about 12 other
Americans, twiddled their -cold.
stiff thumbs Sunday and waited in
43 degree temperature in unheated
hotels, frigid boarding houses and
cheerless guest rooms for the start-
Senators Cop
1st Half Flag
Qub Opens 2nd Half
At Tri-Gty Tonight
(Continued From Page 1.) .'
with their only win in the four
game aeries.
Kraase Harts Seventh
Mel Krause hurled the final in
ning for Salem, and although in
trouble got by without a score.
Lefthander Ralph Rose, a mem
ber of the Senators' staff early in
the- season until sold to Lewiston,
went the route for the Broncs for
his first win. He spun up a 7-hitter
and looked sharp in doingso.
Ralph thus ' becomes another
member of the "They Always
Come Back to Haunt You Frater
nity," but his achievement was in
vain so far as the Salems were
concerned. They, got what they
wanted that first clash Sunday. 1
Obviously whiffing the possible
pennant, 2,155 fans turned out for
the dottle bill to cheer their fav
orites home. The gathering was the
second largest at the park this
season, being topped only by the
Capital Shopping Center Night)
throng of 5,136. j
lie :emors now open second
half play tonight at Tri-City with
a "Fourth of July" double MIL
Fieke Wins Contest ,
The between-games long-ball hit
ting contest featuring gentlemen
of the grandstand was won by
"Chic" Kieke. He blasted one of
Pitcher Luby's serves into center
field for, a solid 268 feet Chic won
a sports shirt from Gus Hewitt's
Men's Store as his prize. Others
in trie contest, which provided
plenty of laughs for the crowd,
were Clarence Frey, Stearns Cush
ing. Sam Miles, Hub Saalfeld. Bob
Schwartz Sr., Henry Bruce, Lloyd
Arnold, George Scales. Enoch
Maerz. John Steelhammer, Ray
Dahlen, Dr. Vern Miller and Bob
Ashby.
Also. Grover Hillman of the
Patterson, winner of 22 of 23 pro
starts, was supposed to have met
McBride at Chicago in May but
pulled out due to ptomaine poison
ing. Bob Satterfield was subbed for
Patterson and lost a unanimous de
cision to the methodical.. McBride.
The Wednesday stop at the gar
den is the first of three or four
during the summer on the regular
television (ABC) schedule.
Sandy Saddler, the world feath
erweight champion, is over in
Tokyo where be will box Shigeki
Kaneko. the Orient champion, in
a non-Due bout Friday.
Savage Meets Walker
Charlie Johnston, Sandy's man
ager, is on the way to. Tokyo after
settling details for Archie Moore
to get a crack at Rocky Marci
ano's heavyweight crown Sept. 20
The other show on the TV Du
Mont) wheel comes from New
York's St. Nicholas Arena Mon
day where Milo Savage of Salt
Lake City and Sammy Walker , of
Springfield, Mass. meet in a re
match of their furious March 14
bout.
Walker was down twice in that
battle but climbed up to win a
split decision on a strong finish
Both are ordinary fighters but will
ing mixers.
as
-
OOO SEATS tii THE J we Antr H40lSeIl
i always rj 46oodcrovyd
HM4 CR WIS Jll SINCE OPENING W?r iJI
DOUBLE- c- D4VU FOOUORN W 'ZJLM
HOLLERING SINCE ME VteK 430NO k
vWf SOT WERE-E EVEN ffiglllplf
KsAk RAZZES THE GROtffiirS
-Trying td put up
wrm the LrxDworw
GETS A SEAT NEXT
TO SENSmVE SOULS-
Mills Victor
In Ski Race
BELLINGHAM (JP Sure it was
the day before the Fourth of July,
but they held a ski tournament on
the slopes of Mount Baker Sun
day.
Gordon Mills of Seattle's Pen
guin bta Club won the Class A
men's giant slalom in 53.8 seconds
The course was more than half a
mile long, with a drop of 1.200
took the . women's class A slalom
for the fifth straight time. Her
time was 34.3 seconds.
The event was called the Heather
Pr'j nail aartv fnnrlav tnnrainif
Play begins at 2 a. m. EST and!Masier 3 "7;:
IHIS K5EAL RIG MAY BE UStO
WTTH MINNOWS CRAWFISH (OR
CRAWFISH TAILS), HELLSRAM
MITESjUVATER D06S," ETC. EVEN
IF SINKER SNAGS, ITS LIGHTER
LINE TO SWIVEL BREAKS WHEN
SETTING HOOK IN, OR PLAYING
A FISH. CLEAR PLASTIC, BALL
SHAPED FLOAT ALARMS PISH .
VERY UTTLE; FILL WITH JUST
ENOUGH WATER TO SINK, BUT
KEEP BAIT ABOVE SNAGS (USE
THREAP LONGER THAN LEADER,
ALSO). LET SINKER S MAS, THEN
WAIT FOR FISH TO FIND BAIT.
The Big One:
Tint . fame: -Ltwiitoa
(2
B H O AT
Jwobf.J
McNam.e
Rineyjn
WHiam.!
LayncJ
Dieppaj
BarretU
Shmidt.r
Lee.p
Dodel.p
Garry, x
3 Kra'tt.1
1 0 Dunnjn
L O Rbnsn.l
f 0 Tnselli.i
2 4 Stinjrl.l
3 JAfostaJ
t OShelds.r
1 0 Koepf.C
0 1 WhUn.p
0 0
(It) Sale
H O A
Bums, Pirates
Split in Pair
(Continued From Page 1.)
the Phillies peck away at Ruben
Gomez until the count was tied at
ends 12 hours later,
The Old and New Courses, where
qualifying rounds will be on Mon
day and Tuesday, have collected
hundreds of puddles of rain water.
Storm Winds Blow
Storm winds whipped the courses
by the side of the pounding North
Sea and the - setting was what
Shakespeare had in mind when be
wrote "The Tempest."
Peter Thomson, a nerveless Aus
trailian won this big title at calm
Royal Birkdale last year without
once using a driver or a brassie.
This year he is the 3 to 1 favorite
despite being a short hitter on a
lone course.
The Old Course stretches 6,883
yards, forming a near perfect out
line of a sea horse.
If the weather forecast for the
next couple of days is right the
two big courses in collegiate St.
Andrews will be playine very lone.
The forecast is for more wind and
rain, putting a definite end to three
weeks of balmy, bone-dry and most
un-jscotush weather.
Furgol Rated Second
. ,c vidjrwii, saa., pro j inwmiam. Whitson (3)
wno won the 1954 American Open Krause. Dunn C), Robinon (?)
is second choice at 4 to 1 while
to make his $100 presentation to
Jack Steinagel for the grand-slam
home run Jack whacked against
Spokane earlier in the week.
Totals ' 31 S 24 11 Total 38 IS J7
Flied out for Dodel In th.
Lewiston 101 000 000 2 S S
Salem 030 008 23 16 IS
Losinf pitcher Lee.
Pitching fummary:
Jp ab h
Lee 2 10
Dodel 3 . 14 3
Whitson t 31 I
Wild pitches Lee. Left on bases
U 7. S. 8. Errors DieDpa 13), Wil
liams. Jacobs. Three-base hits Whit
son. Robinson. Two-bse hits Dunn.
Rinev. Jacobs. Shields. Runs batted
Koepi 13),
Yachts Slate
Race Monday
LOS ANGELES Ufl Facing
what all hands agree are 10 and
more days of "happy misery," the
skippers and crews of -a record
fleet of 53 yachts put the final
touches on their boats Sunday,
awaiting the traditional July 4 noon
start for the race from Los Angel
es Harbor to Honolulu.
All was in readiness for the
2,225-mile race, the 18th crossing
in a sailing classic inaugurated in
1906 when Harry Sinclair's Lurline
defeated two rivals. Anemone, and
La Paloma, the latter owned by
the man who conceived the idea
of the race, ' C.W. MacFarlane of
Honolulu. ,
Takeoff Colorful
The present fleet includes two
yachts from Honolulu. E.C. Lam
bert's Altair and Joel B. Cox's Es
prit, and another from far off Aus
tralia, Magnus Halvorsen's cutter,
Solveig IV.
The takeoff is always a colorful
vnr Mnndav an ctim atari 1 Ann
"L ' Inr 1MM TtatAr raff will a -
Jeanette Burr Bray of Seattle j sernble m an reserved by the
Coast Guard away from the square
mile zone restricted to the racing
yachts.
Tn a matter nf minuto th
Cup Ski Tournament's eighth an-;yacnts saii past the starting line
Tide Table
(Tides tor Irt. Orecoa
(Compiled by U. S. Coast & Geo
detic Survey, Portland Ore.)
July
Hlfh Waters Low Waters
Time HL Time Ht
4 1:18 pm 4.7 S:22 am -1.1
11:42 pm 8.7 5:37 pm 3.7
5 1:50 pm 4.8 6:58 am -12
8:15 pm 2.7
12:17 am 6.7 7:28 am -1.1
2:20 pm 4.9 6:54 pm 2.8
T 12:54 am 8.8 7:59 am -10
2:49 pm 5.0 7:38 pm 2.5
8 1:32 am 8.3 8:28 am -0.8
3:19 pm 5 2 ' 8:24 pm 2.3
I 2:16 am 5 9 9:00 am -0.4
3:49 pm 5.5 9:18 pm 2.0
1 10 3:03 am 3.4 9:33 am 0.0
4:24 pm 5.8 10:17 pm 1.7
r
10
7
2
er
4
3
2
so bb
0 3
1 4
1 4
V.l . n .
eison, oi noanoKe. rex., winner
of the 1939 American championship
is 16 to 1.
Nelson finished fifth in the 1937
British Open at Carnoustie. Other
odds, as quoted by London and
Scottish bookmakers, were 6 to l
before striking out. Marshall then 3-ail in the fourth. But a wUdX y ' 01 Afnca'
with' '": winner oi mis event,
17 to l tor curisty o Connor of Ire
land's Bundoran Course the clos
est golf course in Europe to the
U. S. and 7 to 1 for Dai Rees, of
Wales.
was trapped between second and 'pitch by reliefer Jack Meyer 'with
third for a double play that enaea
the game. ,
Seattle got its lone second-game
run in the fourth. Bill Glynn walked
and went to third on Art Schult's
single. Monty Basgall's sacrifice
fly helped Glynn across.
A walk and two singles gave Se
attle its first run, in the third in-j
nin? of the i9-'nnin opener. Schult's
double was the key blow in a 2
run fourth.
Seattle Scores -
Seattle got its last run under act
ing manager Alan Strange in the
6th. Umpire Cece Carlucci had
chased Seattle manager Freddie
Hutchinson for arguing. Two sin
gles and Oak outfielder Art Cuitti's
throw into the dugout while peg
ging to third produced the run.
Seattle's double victory while
San Diego was splitting with San
Francisco pulled Seattle three
frames behind league leading San
Diego.
Tanselli. Shield. Sacrifice Robinson
(21, Koepf, Lee. Stolen base Jacobs.
Time 2:06. Umpires Howe and
Reid.
Second fame:
Lewiston (4)
B H O A
the bases loaded in the seventh
permitted Willie Mays to score
with the winning run.
10 Pitchers Used
Both the Tigers and A's sent
five pitchers into their fray after
Detroit deadlocked the game with
three runs in the ninth. They each
notched one run in the 13th, and
the A's wrapped it up in the 14th
with one run.- SAN FRANCISCO UH An 18-
Schmitz permitted the Yanks j year-old making his first Pacific
only five hits to end a New York Coast League start pitched the San
winning streak at five. The victory : Francisco Seals to a 1-0 shutout
Youth 1st Hurler
To Blank Padres
Jacobs.2
Dieppaj
Riney.m
Wilms.l-r
LaynO
Garsy.c
Shmi..r-1
Bairett.l
Rose.p
McNamJ
0 Krs.2-p
1 Dunn.m
0 Rbnsn.l
0 Shldjs-2
2 Stnagl.1
1 AfostaJ
8 Fraleyjr
0 Kinj.c
6 Wtnm.p
0 Tna.,x
nual race, borne 4.000 persons
crowded the slopes. Summary:
Kennedy Second
Class A men's slalom 1. Mills.
2. Pete. Kennedy, Seattle, 55.2: 3.
tie between Jack Nagle. Seattle,
and By Dickinson, Seattle. 55.3.
L Men's class B Nick Stoddard,
Vancouver, B.C., 58.1, 2. Dave Gos
sard. Army Ski Qub, 58.4. 3. Art
Breitstrecher. Sun Valley, 61.2.
Women's Class A 1. Mrs.
Bray. 2. Dottie Campbell, Seattle..
35.1. 3. Sandra Fraser, Vancouver,
B. C., 37.2.
Women's Class B 1. Molly
Manlev, no home town given. 42.2.
2. Millie Menzies. Vancouver, B.
C. 42.2. 3. Joan Gamble, Portland,
42.3.
The Thundermug jumping cham
pionship was won by Einar Herge
stad of the Blue Mountain Ski Gub
with leaps of 108 and 102 feet.
in the outer harbor and soon dis
appear from sight. Once past
Santa Catalina Island, the long, si
lent hours begin "lor the contest
ants.
Russian Upset
By Chess Whiz
MOSCOW m American whiz
Samuel Reshevsky Sunday toppled
Russia's Mikhail Botvinnik from none of us had a chance to beat
his perch as undisputed master of ! him today.
Aly's Horse
Second Best
MALMOE, Sweden I Group
Capt. Peter Townsend spurred a
borrowed golden Swedish bay to
a clear win over Prince Aly Khan's
favorite stallion Sunday in an inter
national horse race for amateur
riders.
Sixteen other gentlemen jockeys
from seven countries, were on the
track but they didn't get much
attention.
Townsend is the handsome Brit
ish air attache at Brussels de
scribed by some as the only true
love of England's Princess Mar
garet. Aly Khan is the former hus
band of screen star Rita Hayworth
He is the heir to the immensely
wealthy Aga Khan
"A worthy winner indeed," Aly
Khan said. "He rode like a cham
pion, his horse was excellent and
world chess.
Reshevsky and Botvinnik drew
?) Salem the third of their four-pamp series
4 1 i Wn the Russia-United States match.
This means that Botvinnik cannot
The box IFirst game): -Los
Anteles 3 (4) Portland
AB H O A AB H O A
Wade.m 4 1 1 0 WUon.s 5 12 1
MauchJ 4 14 3 P'wis.m 4 2 10
RiceJ 4 3 3 6 Mrauz.l 4 S 3 1
ClarksnJ 4 2 2 3 Taylor .r 3 1 4 0
Bilko.l 4 0 8 1 MkUn.l 4 1 10 8
Uiher.r 4 110 EgfertJ 4 18 2
Hardin j 4 6 3 4 Austin. 4 1 3 S
ranlng.c 4 14 1 Rbrtsn.e 4 3 16
Bauer.p 0 6 6 0 Wrrle.o 3 6 2 1
a-Pra'esa 1 0.6 eb-Wht'n I860
Lown.p 16 6 1
ToUls 39 8 2514 Totals 3)12 27 13
a Fanned for Bauer in 7th.
b Grounded for Werle in 9th.
2 out when winning run scored.
Loo Angeles 100 000 1103
Portland . 000 C0J 0014
I Austin. Igfert. Usher. RBI
Clarksoa. . Taylor. Mlcbelsoa 2),
Usbor. Rice. IB Marque. Powis.
HR ailckelson. Usher. SB Wilson,
Usher. SAC Marques. Piktuxli. DP
Hardin and Bilko. Left Lot An-
feies 6: Portland 6. BB off PI k tuns
Uwa 1. SO by Piktuiis 1. Bauer
was the Nats' fourth in their last
25 games. They collected 12 hits
off three Yank pitchers with start
er Ed Lopat the loser.
Chicago's loss to Cleveland
shaved the White Sox' second
place margin over the Indians to
a half game. Ray Nariesiu, who
relieved Bob Lemon in the fifth,
was the winner, while Morrie Mar
tin, second of four Sox elbowmen,
took the defeat. v
Tribe Scores in Cluster
The Tribe came up with clusters
of four and five in the fifth and
sixth innings.
The rock-and-roll Red Sox. who
now are only three games out of
third place, won their 22nd game
in their last 27 decisions behind
Frank Sullivan, who racked up No.
11.
For the Orioles, it was their 12th
defeat in a row. Ted Williams re-
of the San Diego Padres here Sun
day after the league-leading Padres
had won the opener of the diuhle
header 4-1. The Padres took the
series, four games to three.
Lowel (Scrapbook) Creighton. re
cent graduate of Jefferson Hieh
School. Daly City, allowed only
three hits.
The crew-cut kid. whose shutout
was the first the Padres have suf
fered in 93 games this year, al
readv has a voluminous scrapbooa
of his triumphs. He " can reel off
facts and figures of every game
he has ever pitched.
Totals 28 1021 4 Totals 27 7Z1 6
x Struck out for Worth am In 6th.
Lewiston - 100 012 04 10 1
Salem .... 001 010 01 7 0
Losing pitcher Wortham.
Pitching summary.
ip ab h r er so bb
Rose 7 27 7 2 1 4 4
Wortham 6 23 9 4 4 2 1
Krause 1 3 16 0 11
Hit by pitcher Layne. Wild pitch
esRose (2). Left on bases L, 7,
S. 8. Error Dieppa. Home run
Schmidt. Two-base hit Dunn. Runs
batted in Williams. Shields 2, Rin
ev. Schmidt (2). Stolen bases frail
ey. Double plays Krause to Shields
Steinagel Z). lime i x. um-
Reid and Howe. Att.-z.l53.
win. The most he can do is tie
the series by winning the final
game Tuesday.
The two tied the first and. third
games and Reshevsky won the sec
ond. Until Sunday. Botvinnik gen
erally was considered unbeatable.
The Russian fans are just as
thrilled as the American team
since there are about 200,000,000
chess enthusiasts in this country
who like a good, game no matter
who wins.
Other Games Adjourned
A half Anyen ntKr camAe kairA
K. -Tit j A'T' : 7! New York ... 300 000 100-4 13 0
iccu aujuuiucu. viuy one result is , Philadelphia 020 100 0003 7
Certain When action resumes Tues- Gomez and Katt; Dickson Miller
TVin Pvra t P.,u,.. ,(). Mrozinski 7), Meyer (7) and
t..i.MA ... , i i ,-. . . . .
viauup, iw irons aneaa oi cum-
Aly did not seem disappointed.
He flashed a broad smile to Towns
end as he congratulated him and
declared: I m fully satisfied.
Townsend won 1.500 crowns
S3O0) and Aly Khan 500 crowns
($100).
A record crowd of 20,000 jammed
the stands of Malmoe's Jagersbro
trotting arena for the race the
Swedish Amateur Grand Prix. Of
ficials acknowledged that perhaps
. . . ,jt i .
some were auracieui oy parucipa
tion of Townsend aid Aly Khan
Townsend is a frequent competi
tor in races for amateur riders.
National laffue
to
pires
PCL Line Scores:
first game:
Oakland
SeatUe ...
.000 000 0101 4 3
. 001 201 00 5 IS 1
Black. Berana (8) and Swift: Lom
bard! and Ginsberg.
Second came:
turned to the Red Sox lineuo for: Oakland ooo ooo 3 e
i as ui.
the first time in nine days and
made one hit a dribbler past the
mound.
MAGNETIC GRID
ATTRACTION I
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) When No
tre Dame plays Miami in the
! Orange Bowl stadium next Octo-
1 Lown l. Werle 1. r-er mtuzi
s-S; Bauer 0-0: Lown 1-6: Werle
3-3. Hiu off Piktujia t in 5j: Bau.'ber. football fans from all parts
er 6 in ,; Lown 3 in 2',: Werle 8,ftf th 'nation will h in the
The University of Miami
In 9. winner wr uo-3). Loner '
fjtwn 7-5. u ova. Mcmtiq ana
Athford. T 2.-01- J ;
Second game: . - .
Loe Anaele 1 68 t 1
Portland . - - J t 6-8 14 1
Cohen, lioer 3). Unr (4K
Church (41 and Pramesa. fanning
(4): Burtachy. Scheib (4) and Rob
Seattle 000 100 1 S 1
Van Cuyk and Net!; Kretlow nd
Cinsberg. t
First game:
Sacramento . 000 201- 004 T 12 1
Hollywood 000 000 1101 7 1
Briggs. Cerefhino (7) and Baich;
Garber. O'DonneU (() and Hall
Second game:
Sacramento 011 000 13 8 1
Hollywood 001 ill 4 6 1
Jones. PieretU (61 and Baieh:
Trimble. Kln (3). Naranjo (5). Gar
ber (St and hiil
I first game:
re- 3sn uiego
-..010 101 OOt4 9 1
v i. ti.v.i. ... K.. -m (. 91 San rrancisco . . .. ...oio ooo ooo 1 3
IT'" V: IT. " MeLish and Bafiey; Bearden and
siaics, Lugs, ruing wro anu ine i Ritchey.
Bahamas Snfial - trains will! Second lame:
come from Daytona Beach and ! ' - SJ? SSS 1 1
Jacksonville. Fla, SL Louis ndl? BaiiwcreTghion
DetroiL j, and Torney.
Look and I-rearn
By A. C GORDON
1. How much does the earth
weigh?
2. How long does it take lor
food" to travel from the mouth to
the stomach?
3. What U.S. president popular
ized the poltlcal expression, "My
hat's in the ring"? -
4. Of what three vegetables do
we eat only the seeds?
S. What is the slowest of all
creatures, in the world?
Answers
1. About six sextillion tons. 2.
About six seconds. 3. Theodore
Roosevelt, in 1912, when he
sought a third term. 4 Peas, beans
and corn. 5. The ordinary snail,
which make about one mile in
three weeks.
geuer -and is the sure winner.
It seems obvious, however, that
despite Botvinnik's demise, the
Russians are going to sweep the
match.
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
Spahn and
Klippstein (4).
gess.
first game:
0C2 300 0007 9 0
000 101 0103 10 2
Crandall; Nuxhall,
Rirzik (6) and Bur-
Bob Byrne of Brooklyn arrived Pittsburgh
20 minutes late for his match with rr
202 110 0017 9 0
410 000 000 S 8 2
I.. Keres as a result of an over-: Spooner. ' Roebuck (3). Hughes (8)
long afternoon nap. Keres insisted Hoeu
both clocks be put back, thereby ; pnuburch ooo not ooo l o
not penalizing the American. The
American team hailed this as "a
wonderful example of good sportsmanship."
Homer in Ninth Wins
Game for Grays, 9-8
A ninth inning home run by
John Palmer gave the Oregon
State Prison Grays a 9 to 8 win
over Aurora in a non-league base
ball game at the prison diamond
Sunday.
Homers sparked the day's play
with. Erwin Speer andBudThiele
each slamming one for the Grays
and L. Mendenhall hitting one
Brooklyn 000 003 00 3 8 0
Surkont. fare (7) and Atwell. Pe
terson 18); Loes, Labine (8) and
Walker.
, First game;
St. .Louis Li 320 010 1018 8 0
Chicago . 101 000 0002 S 1
Wooldridge and Burbrink: Davis.
Hillman (2) and Chiti.
Second game:
St Louis ...200 002 001 S S 1
Chicago 301 020 40-10 13 1
Haddix. G. Jones ID. LaPalme (St.
Wright (S). Smith (6) and Sarni; S.
Jones and McCuilough.
American League
Washington 000 140 000 S 12 2
New York - 000 000 0006 6 1
Schmitz i and Courtney; Lopat,
Sturdlvant (. Wiealer and Sil-
vera.
for Aurora. Sneer and Thiele
each clobbered thah-s with one Chicago . 111 030 003- 9 14 0
fnattr-ir it ivict I t cieveuna o on w h i i
-lVL- ra-fcAaii on. Donovan. Martin 4. Howell (51,
NUKf ULK, VS. W II you Aurora .030 300 101 9 2 f ornieles (8 and Lollar, Moss (7);
havent the nrice of a ticket vou r.ravt 100(110 2410 11 5 Lemon, Narleiki S) and Naragon
dont have to stay away from the
baseball game in this city. -
Norfolk stores, working in co
operation with civic groups,! will
issue you a season ticket and
eharge it to your account It is all
in the interest of supporting the
Norfolk Tars in the Piedmont
1 League. ;
Olson, Owings (9) and A. Men- Detroit
denhall: Layton. Gault (4). Wil- Kn, city
liams (0) and PruitL .
Rookie infieldef Hector Lopez
of the Kansas City Athletics is
a native of Colon, Panama. Last
season he played for Ottawa in
the Internationa Leaxue.
001 020 103 000 108 17 1
204 000 010 000 11 14 !
Mass. Cristante (3). .foytack (4)
Birrer 9. Zuverink (141 and R.
Wilson; Rsschi. Harrington (9). Cec
carelli it). Sain (9). Sleater (14) and
Astroth.
Boston -104 000 020 7 10 6
Baltimore "18 000 0012 7 1
Sullivan and White; McDonald.
Dorlsh 13), eJhnson lU and Smith.
EXPERIENCED ROLE
SANTA FE, N.M. ( AP) The
Los Alamos Clowns Softball team
was playing the New Mexico Pen
itentiary team. And they were
using one of their favorite stunts
a blindfolded pitcher.
He pitched a close one. It was
ruled a ball by the inmate um
pire. : ,
"Oh, you wouldn't rob a blind
man would you, ump?" yelled a
Clown,
The answer rose from one in a
crowd of watching convicts:
"How do you think he got
here?"
9
I- , w v ---it mmmmmtaktmmmmm w:. -
suits
CLEARANCE
men's
o regular stock o famous brands
s50-$55 Roger Kent
Suits
Single breasted, 2 and 3 button styles, all colors in
group. Now's the time to buy .
that "extra" suit .
s65 Roger Kent Suits
Save $16 on a top quality suit Flannels, worsteds,
blends, gabardines, sharkskins. SLO
Several styles. '. J
s85-$100 Kuppenlieimer
Suit?
Remarkable savings on these famous brand suits.
Come in and try one . r . they have 371
the tailor-made look. 4 X
Lipman's mens clothing, first floor