The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 21, 1955, Page 23, Image 23

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Action in Retriever Club Dog Trials Near Albany
Uatesmin, Salem, Ore., Sunday, Aug. 21, 1955 Sec 4-l
Ties With Metro
41 41 .4" !
White Sox Win
Yanks Batter Orioles,
Shrine Game
Ends 7 to 7
W.L.-.. . 1
One Pitched, the Other Hit
Slate
I t-, -nlr
Beaver Creek Tory (Duke), owned and handled by Park Thede of
Salem, is shown hitting the water after ducks in a Willamette.
Valley Retriever Club's licensed trial run at Conser Lake near
Albany, Duke, along with 44 other top dogs will ccjnpete today
M &Sufis Triumph wfeir CM
Krause
Senators Sweep Lewiston Series;
9-Run Inning Features Final Mix I
."
By AL LIGHTN'ER
Statesman Sports Editor x
Mel (Tarzan) Krause, just about as valuable a piece of baseball
merchandise as exists on the . Salem Senators ball club, gave a
double-barreled reason why Saturday afternoon by pitching and
batting an 11-1 Northwest League victory over the Lewiston Broncs.
Normally the second baseman ;
for Uncle Hugh Luby's flock, Mel !
was rushed into action when Long
John Wortham's ailing back
vouldn't permit him to start.
Krause responded with a five-hit J
job, whiffed two and walked only
cne. He also pounded out three'
hits, two in a rousing 9-run seventh .
iiining for the Salems, and scored t
three runs. " j
Saturday could well have been;
"Krause Day" at the ball yard,
for husky Melvin was the Mr. Big j
of the afternoon. j
The victory swept the three-game
series with Lewiston, and Salem '
r.ow hits the road, opening a short
series tonight at Tri-City with a
doubleheader. ' .
The only run off Krause was a
homer by Joe Riney in the fifth. :
The Broncs weren't exactly baffled ',
b the strong-armed infielder.-who
did considerable pitching when a
rah-rah boy at the U. of Oregon. ,
They hit a number of pitches hard, ;
but either right at some waiting
S 'em fielder or in such a manner ;
that same fielders could execute
eft-spectacular prays.
Gene Tanselli at short. Bill
Shields at third and Don Frailey
ir right came up with the top
fielding gems during the errorless
sortie by the home crew.
Salem scored twice off Bill
I ranks in the second on Ron
King's sun-field double to center,
Slf.f f1
jiui uVVa. rranw was cnasea
in the seventh when the Salems
unbuckled a combination of eisht
base hits, a walk and two very
costly errors, by Dieppa and Bob
(Continued on next page)
100 Kids Learn How
From Salem Senators
Almost 100 boys, ranging from
8-16 in age, turned out-'for Satur
day morning's Teletreat Baseball
Clinic at Keizer School. The clinic.
sponsored by the Teletreat Drive -
In of the Keizer district, was put
on by members of the Salem Sen
ators. Doing the coaching were
Manager Hugh Luby. Jack Stein
agel. Bill Whitson, Ronnie King,
Bill Dials, Bill Shields, -Don Frai
ley and .Gene Tanselli.
The boys were given tips on how i
to play the various positions in
baseball, and the clinic was but
toned up with a game in which
most of the kids got to play.
Don uth Race Winner
In Hard Top Title Go
By CHARLES IRELAND -Statesman
Staff Writer
Don Guth won the 75-lap cham
pionship main event of the season
for Hard Tops. Saturday night at
Hollywood Bowl.
It was a sweet victory for Guth,
a Vancouver. Wash., driver who
had been driving at Hollywood
Bowl for four years without win
ning a feature race. His best prev
ious efforts were two second pbces
in the big races, one of them ear
lier this year.
A crowd of nearly 2,000 watched
Cuth herd his white "62" Hard
Top to the finish line ahead of a
f eld of n cars that started the
75-lap grind, longest race to date
of the . season. Eleven cars were
still on the track at the finish.
Bob Porter of Salem grabbed the
lead early in the race but lost
it to Guth on the 15th kp and Guth
led all the rest of the way Porter
held second until the wanini laps
when mechanical trouble forced
Hurls,
Boat Races
Here Today
Boat racing clubs of Salem.
Albaay, Corvallis and Lebanon
will go at Jt today in Inter
City Meet at Wallace Marine
Park here.:
Time trials for the races will
start at 10:30 a.m., with the
first heat race of the card
scheduled for 1 p.m.
Admission will be free, ac
cording to local club officials
ia charge of the meet Wallace
Marine Park is located beneath
the west ends of the two
bridges crossing the Willamette
River.
All types of outboard racing
craft will be ia the action.
Braves Even
Chief Series
KENNEW1CK (!
Tri-City
Ih ,hP Hps hv heatin th
' 'Haw niaht after rnmin? from be-
Wenatchee Chiefs, 9-3, in a North- j K.afhc,2S. on ad
i,aa,u hasphall amp t,,rJ ?.in? 'n "'T.0?". i
I T.
day night. 1
Vera Kindsfather shut out the;
Chiefs on four hits until the 9th
inning, wnen ne ran into iroume.
The tirst two men up singled, and
rn..r, i
uvug, ijuciuiiai nuiuci cu u Uic .
left field wall to spoil his shutout.
Tri-City scored its five fifth-inning
runs mostly because an in
tentional walk strategy failed.
With one run in, and runners on
second and third, Wenatchee pitch-
;er
John Marshall tried to walk
Tri-City's Milt Martin.
Martin reached nut with hi hat i
and hit the ball, which rolled down southpaw's 18th victory as Sacra
the first base line. Martin beat itfmento defeated San Diego. 5-3.
out. Marshall tried to throw him Jim Moore doubled in the 11th
out at first and the ball went Into!
right field,
the play.
Two runs came in on
Wenatchee . 000 000 003 3 3
Tri-City 000 050 40 9 11 1
Marshall. Neulin 7i and Rossi:
Duretto (8); Kindsfather and Mar
tin. him to slow up. He finished fourth
behind Red Monaghan (99) who
was second, and Clarence Smith .
(4. third.
No serious spills marred the
meet but the Hard Tops provided
plenty of slam-bang action for
which they are famous. Most' of
it came from Palmer Crowell who ,
spun out of control on four dif-
iciem ui.-vuiuii3 uuiuig uic mam
event, but always got back into
tI
7," V." ,. ,.
laiu iiciavu nvu tne tuitc u iui a ui iik: iiiiiui. r tiiuftuiicvr it 1x1111-
with a 17:73 lap around the quar-bardi singled infield and Bob Belter-mile
asphalt track. Bill Hyde, cena was hit by a pitched jail.
who limped through the mam event
with motor trouble, won the trophy
dash and Clarence Smith defeated
both Hyde and Guth in the fast
six-lap heaL
Other heats were won by Wayne
Vivian and Palmer CrowelL 1
Another 75-lap mam event is
scheduled next Saturday night at
Hollywood Bowl when the Stock
Cars pre sen their championship
card of the season.
In the club's open all-age, second annual licensed trial at the lake,
concluding the two-day meet Some of the top retrievers in the west
will be in the competition. (Don Harger photo)
Hits
7 in
V J
NORTHWFST LEAGUE
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Eugene 27 18 .(K) Tri-Citv 21 23 .489
Wenatch 24 IS .558 Spokane 20 25 .444
Lcwistn 22 21 .512 Yakima 19 2U . jW
Salem 23 22.511
Saturday'! results: At Salem 11.
Lewiston 1: at Tri-City 9. Wenatchee
3; at Eugene-Spokane (see page onej.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Seattle 83 61 .576 Los An( 72 72 .500
Hollvwd 78 66 .542 Sacra m 67 78 .462
S. Diego 78 68 .534 Oakland 65 81 .445
Portlnd 71 69 .507 Sn Fran 64 82 .438
Saturday's results: At Seattle 6.
Portland 5; at San Francisco 8, Oak
land 7: at Sacramento 5. San Diego
3; at Hollywood 5, Los Angele 4.
AMERICA LEAGUE
W L Pet. W LPct.
N'w York 74 47 .61C Detroit 62 58 .517
Chicago- 71 46 .607 Kn City 49 73 .402
Cleveland 73 48 .603 Wshgtn 42 75 .359
Boston 69 51 .575 Baltimr 37 79 J19
Saturday's results: At Chicago 8.
Detroit 7. at Cleveland 7. Kansas
City 5: at Washington 6. Boston 2;
at New York 3, Baltimore 2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet. W L Pet.
BrooUvn 78 41 .655 Cincinn 60 63 .488
Milwauk 68 55 .553 Chicago 59 67 .468
N'w York 64 57 .529 St. Lou 52 67 .437
Philadel 2 61 .504 Pitsbgh 45 77 .369
Saturday's results: At Philadelphia
3. Brooklyn 2; at Pittsburgh 9. New
York 4: at Cincinnati 7. St. Louis 4;
at Milwaukee 6, Chicago 1.
Seattle Trims
Portland, 6-5
SEATTLE Seattle trimmed
Portland 6-5 in 11 innings Satur-
I e lne ga,mT a :!r -
tie a 4-1. lead in their Pacfic
Coast League series.
Elsewhere in the PCL, Holly-;
wouu raiueu iui uuw u.ia
eigmn inning as u.ey .
Ancrolcc u. ith HpnrPiP O Don-'
.-sv,vo, -
noU Koirn froAWaA with thp Win i
...i .,.0 , uic? irum me gun.
Sal Taormma belted an eighth in-; rne had an unreal qualit
ning home run with a man on base ; it Unlil then u .had seemed
to drive in the winning score as j that no long range runs were pos
San Francisco's Seals came from . si51e tight were tne
oenma xo Deat iwuduu,
8-7.
Harry Bright drove in four runs
and carried Bud Daley to tne
inning, the ball bouncing into the
left field bleachers. Leo Righetti
popped out and Jerry Zuvela was
purposely passed by Ed Burtschy,
Portland's third pitcher of the
game. The strategy ' backfired,
however, as Art Schult singled to
center and Moore cantered home,
ning victory of the week ovvr
Portland, the other beir" a 2-1 10
inning win Thursday night.
Seattle Man3?r Frrr! Hutchin
son was chased from the game in
the eighth for yelling at the
P'rfs-
Portland s big inning was the
eighth when it pushed across three
runs to take a 5-4 lead. Cart Schcib
singled and raced to third on Artie
Wilson's single. Carl Pow's skied
jto left, Scheib scoring after the
: catch. Out came Seattle pitcher
Larry Jansen to be replaced by
Howie Jucson.
Wally Westlake fiied to center.
but Luis Marquez walked. Then
Ed Mickelson walloped a triple
mai roiiea to ine rini iieia cor -
'ner. scoring Wilson and Marquez.
if . j . ., ...
Vu- U:-.iT n-- ilu-
Scheib was pulled out of the box
and replaced by Burtschy.
, 1 1, . . . ...
uuiuscny wiiiKeu ieu rui;neiii t
a w n ..... ....!
ana jerry zuveia 10 iorce in ine
tyin? run. He got Art Schult on
sti
to
strikes and Gene Verble hit infield
force Zuvela at second.
Portland W0 000 ISO CO 3 11 0
Seattle 200 110 001 01 lit 1
Fll'ntt Scheib (5. Burtehv 9
and Robertson; Jansen. Judwn (B.
Kennedy (10) and Swift, Ginsberg
I6i.
D
New Yorkers
Win by 28-17
Hcinricli, Webster
Epps Lead Attack
SEATTLE (Special to The States
man) Don Heinrich, Bobby Epps
and Alex Webster spearheaded a
superlative offensive football spec
tacle at the University of Washing
ton Stadium here Saturday after
noon as the New York Giants beat
the ; San Francisco 49ers, 23-17.
Webster tumbled into the end
zone with the final touchdown just
as the gun sounded ending the
game
Heinrich, hitting on 12 of 25
passes for 178 yards and one touch
down, went all the wav for the
Giants at quarterback. It was his!
first appearance as a pro on the j
field where he had starred as a
collegian. i
One of Heinrich's passes went 61 1
yards to Ken MacAfee for the
third Giant touchdown. As a field
general, Heinrich was alert and
quick to set up the determined
Giant offense. Epps. the diminu
tive fullback, was always driving
for the tough short yardage. In
all he gained 102 yards on 16
tries.
The Giants, recovering from a
halftime deficit of 17-14 before 49,
000 fans, had gone ahead to stay
at 4:42 of . the third quarter. After
that it was largely a question of
whether or not the Giant defense
could stop rugged ball carriers like
John Henry Johnson and Joe Per-
ry- ;
Defense Hold
They could and did. Ray Collins.
Cliff Livingston and Kay Krouse
were rigid in the line. The pass
defense of Tom Landry. Dick Nol
an, Em Tunnel! and John Williams
successfully gummed up Y. A. Tit
tle's passing most of the after
noon. -;
Heinrich helped on offense bvifiPlHprs rhnires
"."A w tiZTX,
1 ""vu6" ",c W31
2uarter' For 15 stS"t plays the
Giants drove downfield on the
the last
!pound. an Ward march. As the
gun went off Webster bulled across
rom 14 for the final SCOfe
first half was a struaoie
irom the opening kickoff until
BlIly Wilson went d Uh
T:.1 . . .
,a nine oass iwo ana a nait mm.
... t ' . "
i both sides. At
least six Giants
had a shot at Wilson, but no one
even touched him.
The Giants scored first at 3:28
of the first period when Webster
crashed around left end for nine
yards and the touchdown. The key
play in this 67-yard march was a
40-yard gain on the halfback op
tion play of Frank Gifford to Kyle
Rote.
Price Fumbles
The 49ers were back four min
utes later when Rex Berry recov-
j ered Eddie Price.s fumble 0R the
Giant 10. Perry, the National Foot
ball League's leading ground gain
er last year, rammed over from
the 4 three plays -later.
In similar fashion, the Giants
2ot it back four nlivs nftr tha
um-:second quarter started. Tunnell
; ran 61 yards with an errant Tittle
j pass to the 49ers' 20. It took the
Giants six plays from there but
Enns finallv Hrv frm fw
one
A 20-yard fiel,d goal by Gordy 1
Soltau, who also made both 49cri
conversions, was all the scoring'
until Wilson's run, although Ben
Agajanian did try a 41-yard field;
goai ior we uianis which was
blocked. Agajaniap made all four
j extra points for the New Yorkers
;
lan ""j0 49r -- ' o "
New York Gianu 7 7 7 728
San Francisco 49trs touchdowns:
Perry 5-yard plunge. Wilson 5S-yard
pass-run: iieia goal: Soltau. 12 yards;
conversions: Powell. Soltau.
New York Giants touchdowns:
Webster 1. 8-yard plunge and 14
yard plunge: Epps. 1-yard plunge:
i f'JIOlCt, VI-;IU IWWIUII, VUUVVr-
! jl . n A f .... m,
stons: Agajaaian (4).
THE JOCKEY RETURNETH
OCEAN PORT, N. J.
Jockey Louis Berardi had served
two years in the. Army with he
Combat Engineers in Korea. His
first mount at Monmouth Park
here after returning to his pro
fession was a winner.
Indians Down
Athletics, 7-5
Phillies Again Top
Brooklyn Club, 3-2
By MURRAY ROSE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The American League pennant
race maintained its nip and tuck
pace Saturday as the three leaders
each came through with victories.
Whacking their Baltimore "cous
ins" 3-2 for their 17th victory in 19
meetings with the Orioles, the New
York Yankees held to their one
game lead over the Chicago White
Sox and the Geveland Indians.
The White Sox nipped Detroit's
Tigers 8-7 as George Kell drove in
five runs, including the winning
run in the eighth inning. And then
in a night game the Indians kept
pace by downing the Kansas City
Athletics, 7-5 with Gene Woodling
and Vic Wertz doubling in the
seventh inning to break up a tie
game.
Nats Top Boston
The Boston1 Red Sox dropped 4 H
games back of the leaders as they!
fell before the Washington Senators
6-2 in a night affair in which 20
year old Pedro Ramos hurled 7-hit
ball for the winners.
In the National League, the
Brooklyn Dodgers' lead was le
duced to 12 games as they bowed
to the Philadelphia Phillies 3-2 in
a night contest after the second
place Braves had whipped the
Chicago Cubs 6-1 oil Ray Crone's
four-hitter in the afternoon.
Milwaukee remained three in
front of the New York Giants, who
(Continued on next page)
Shamrocks Win
Opening Game
EUGENE (Special Mill City.
0rpSn City and Corvallis won
opening round games in the state
softball tournament here Saturday,
In the next-to-last game of the
night the Mill Citv- Shamrocks
edged Springfield VFW to stay in
the winners bracket of the double
elimination tourney. Mill City will
EUGENE (Special) Ruben
steia't of Eugene, the Defend
ing champion, won their first
round game in the state softball
tourney by edging Sam Hou.ser
Chevrolet of Sheridan, 2-1, in
Saturday night's final of four
games in the opening day of the
tourney.
next meet the winner of Saturday
night s final game between de-
fending champion Eugene and
I Sheridan.
Springfield scored twice in the
first and once in the second to
stay ahead of Mill City until the
sixth inning. The Shamrocks scored
first in the fourth frame when Bob
DomfcrowsKi oouoiea ana men $3 20 to place. There was no show
came home on a single by winning betting and there was a minus
pitcher Don Carey. They tied it piace 0f $1,933.
up with two more runs in the Tne victory swelled Swaps' win
sixth when Joe Helberg was hit ningsby $89,600, giving him a total
by the pitcher, Dombrowski sin- of $413,550 as a sophomore nd
eled and both scored on three
i The winning run in the bottom
of the seventh came when Dale
Bennett walked and was hit in by
Dombrowski.
Oregon City defeated Tobler's
Feed of Nyssa, 7-2, and the Cor
vallis Elks nipped the Bend VFW
in eight innings, 2-1.
.
i V4
. 210 000 0 3 6 1
. 000 102 1 4 7 2
m,n r;i,?
-iJ
Johnson, Todorobicn 5) and Cy-
hert; Carey and LeLack.
ALL TYPES ALL MAKES ALL BARGAINS
7 Lots of Used Boats for
you our
1 8' Cabin Cruiser, like new .
14 Outboard with Windshield
13' Wizard with all controls .
13'Enfab, like new
4Vvxvxm.x.xxxBMYxxxxxvvxv
And Many More!
Open Evenings
mi
PTES
C;-; ; 1 :
f - - - - a ;
- J ; ' "'. tSL j
v .'"'X-' I -
GEORGE KELL
Belts ball for Cbisox win
Traffic Judge Fails
Swaps Wins American
Derby by One Length
CHICAGO (P) Sensational. Swaps, leading all the way but
never by more than 2'i lengths, Saturday spurted to a one length
victory over the fast-closing Traffic Judge to win the $146,425
American Derby.
Rex. C. Ellsworth's chestnut colt'
g nis ut'uui on me grd's
course, covered tne mile ana inree- ""- "
sixteenths in a record-matching ; yor Game With Giants
time of 1:54.6. It equalled tiiei
American turf mark recently set j PORTLAND LP The profes
by Platan in the Arlington Handi- sj0nat Los Angeles Rams return
cap- 1 to Portland the night of Aug. 28 ,
But possibly such a time would : for a football game at Multnomah J Actor Gene Lockhart was a top
not have been accomplished h:.d j stadium against the New York notch athlete as a youth. In 1909
not jockey Willie Shoemaker, corn-: Giants. j he held the Canadian one - mile
ing nonchalantly up to the one- Two wwks an thp Rams i?p. cwimmin? rhamninnshin From
sixteenth pole, glanced over his .
shoulder and seen Traffic Jud:e
bearing down upon him.
Willie Uses Whip
Snoernaker then went to the whip
and Swaps responded to score his
eighth successive triumph as a 3-
year-old.
Traffic Judge, owned by Clifford
Mooers and ridden by a substitute
jockey, Peter Anderson, ran tlie
same race as he did against Nash
ua in the Arlington Classic.
In that race last month. Traffic
Judge, in a great stretch drie,
nearly caught Nashua and failed
by only one-half a length.
Swaps' triumph set up his $100,
000 winner-take-all match race at
Washington Park on Aug. 31
against Nashua, whose only defeat
was by the Khaled-Iron Reward
COIt ln tne ientucKy uerpy.
Winnings Swelled
Swans naid $2 40 and J2 20 to
those who backed him in a crowd i
0f 25.178 as a l-to-5 choice on the j
board. Traffic Judge returned
: u; . - a
cr-i
shows m 14 starts. He won his last
race as a 2-year-old, so now has a
treak going of nine victorie.
The yachting and rowing
events of the 1956 Olympic
Games in Australia will be held
on Lake Lcarmonth, a 1,400 acre
bodv of fresh water near the city
of Ballarat. It is 77 miles west
'of Melbourne.
all purposes let us show
selection
$595.00
49.50
275,00
325.00
'Til 9 P. M.
RAY CRONE
Brave pitches 4 hitter
r t . k
feated the Pittsburgh Stealers 35-24
in an exniomon game nere.
Towne & King
p
I
j KIAMA m CAPE j
Vil V r : . gb
I H ' (
1 ) M Si I 1
I . ip. I. I
0, TrrT , Jji
Ingenious mating perfects
T& K's famous lambs ivools,,
Exclusive new Kiama Cape combines the best properties
of two of the world's finest imported lambs' wools
... achieves a springy softness, color and wearing quality
unknown to former single-strain yarns.
See our choice of the best of 26 California cole !
Towne and King styling at its best!
PULLOVER; long sleeves; 36-46 SI 1.95
PULLOVER; sleeveless; I-M I XI S8 95
KING Size, for tall men, 38-46 $13.95
SOX; crew length; 9xJ rib; IQ'i 13-51.75
Scbeidel Intercepts
Pass to Score TD
PORTLAND (Special) The
State and Metro teams battled to
a 7-7 tie here Saturday night at
Multnomah Stadium in the 8th an
nual Shrine All-Star high school
football classic.
Both teams pushed across a first
quarter' touchdown and followed it
with a conversion but from then
on were unable to hit paydirt, al
though they each came within
touching distance of the other's
goal.
The Staters touchdown was both
set up and scored by South Sa
lems Neil Scheidel. He intercept
ed a pass and returned it 37 yards
to the 7 yard line. Two plays later
he plunged over from the four
yard line.
Tony Arana of Vale booted the
extra point for the Staters.
Miller Scored TD
Ted Miller thrilled the Portland
side of the crowd of 16,703 by tak
ing a quarterback sneak from two
yards out to score the Metros only
touchdown. State was offside when
the Metros attempted but missed
their kick for the extra point. On
! the next play Miller again tried a
; quarterback sneak to give his team
! the needed point for the eventual
tie.
! The game was a see-saw battle
I for much of the remainder of play.
! Doing the heavy running for the
; Metros was Gene Schutzler from,
i Lake Oswego, voted the game's
most outstanding player, Duane
Marshall from St. Helens and Don
avan Laudenslager from Gresham.
Terry Salisbury of North Salem
was the big ground gainer for the
State with Scheidel coming sec
ond. ! 1910 to 1913 he played on the Tor-
onio Argonauts iooioaii team.
Your
Headquarters
J
In the' Capitol Shopping Center
Open Mon. and Fri. Till 9 p.m.
t