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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1955)
A. . .' - - - ' ; t - ' r Sn WioD, UiM LeaoO , ' . . . - ' . . - :' ' : ' . ' ." A 1 L rrt I lining Up1 for State Fair Rating Meetl wo J Scores Easy Win . H, " cf Moving down the backstretch during a workout on Lone Oak Track at the State Fairgrounds here are Weody'a Pride, left, with Bobby Hildebrand up, and Fctreign Dett, ridden by Jimmy Proody. V Both horses will run in the annual State Fair Meeting starting next Saturday.' Fairgrounds barns are now full of thoroughbreds program with, post time at 1:15 Whitson Gets 16th Dials Chokes Rally; . i Playoff Setup Made ; . By AL LIGPTNER " Statesman Sports Editor The third time was the charm for Bill (Red) Whitson, ace of the Salem Senators' mound corps. Having tried for his 16th win -of the season on -two other re cent occasions, only to absorb setbacks instead, Whitson last night' nailed it by downing We oatchee 4-3 in the series finale at Waters Field. The win gave the Senators a sweep of all three , games with Edo Vanni's warriors. Big Bill Dials helped the red head in the ninth, after a two . run single by Pinch-hitter Tony Rivas had Whitson off balance. Dials came in and got Jack Buck owatz on a foul fly, to right field for the final out . Thir4 in Row . Also of notable importance was the fact that Whitson him self drove in what turned out to be the winning run, with a sacri fice line drive to deep center in the sixth inning, scoring Jack Steinagel from third. This amounted to the third straight night that a Salem hurler won his own game with the bat Mel Krause did it with a single Mon day and Ronnie King tripled across his winner on Tuesday. - The Salems now go on the road until Monday night when they return for a final doub!ehe?der (6:30 o'clock)' witaTri-City here. The Solons open at! Yakima to night 1 t . The post-season championship aeries with Eueene starts at Eu- gene on .-.Wednesday, September 7. The second game will be played here" September l the third at Eugene September '9 and the fourth back -here again Sep tember 10. The title series will be "best-four-of-seven." All Free Monday Incidentally, Monday's final double bill with Tri-City-will be free "to the fans no admission charge.. They'll be permitted to ' decorate conveniently placed barrels with any nickels, dimes, dollars, etc., however. . Glen Isringhaus was last night's loser he and the third base coach for the Chiefs. On two occasions runners were held up on the base paths for Wenatchee, when, they could have advanced. One could have scored easily in a "runless eighth when the Chiefs left the bases full. ) Floyd Robinson drove in , Sa lem's first run with a ' sacrifice flj in the opening frame, and ,. singles by Tommy Agosta, Jacx Steinagel , and Mel Tvrause made it 2-0 in the second. Wenatchee got.one back in the sixth in Bucko watz' double, Dick Watson's single and a bad throw by Agosta. Jack Bops Another !' An error by Watson dn A'gosta's hopper, Steinagel's towering triple that belted the tin ;"Coca Cola" sign adjacent to the scoreboard, and Whitson's - line-out to Phil Marvier in center brought across the telling tallies for Salem in the sixth. Doug Boehner's single. Herb An derson's double and j Rivas" pinch ; single, all with two out, got Whit son in his ninth inning jam and brought on Dials, j I -Each side had nine hits, thr?e of Salem's by Steinagel. He would have had four had s not Marvier taken a third inning try with a fine shoe-string catch. ' Bill. Entres. 1865 South Com mercial St.,-' an elderly Senators Regular" who had no TV set. won the Wills Music Store television prize last night. Wenatchee's John iThe Chaw) Marshall drew En tress name the very first -time. And young Eddie Fox J4 2155 . Jelden St., won the Salem Saw Works lawn mower prize. 1 Sweep: W.aaU ov-. j (4) S4l,m B H O A i HOA BkwUJt 4 1 1 J Krausej 3 1 3 5 Watsn 1 a 1 1 Dunn.m 4 1 3 e ljidgrn.1 4 3 10 Robisn.l 3 10 0 DuretoJ 4 0 2 1 Tnselli s 4 13 Kossi.c 4 1 Shields.r 4 1 J o Mrverjn 4 0 3 0 Agosta.3 4 13 1 Bhnerj- 4 14 0 Stnagel.I 4 3 11 1 Aridran.l 3 I O Kocotx 4 02 l Isrghs.p 3 0 0 3 Whtkn.p 3 0 13 Bivm.x 11SO. Dials.p 0 o o Haydnj " Total 33 9 24 Total Mtni x Singled for Isrfnghaus in 9th. x Ran for Rivas in fith. Wenatcheo 000 001 0(12 3 13 Salem 110 003 00 4 9 3 IP AB H R Xr So Bb iTlnghaua- 32 4 3 S WhitsoA - 31 t 1.3 1 4 "Dials 1 f f t - WIsm Whitson. 1TP Krause. laA WMitchM ;7. salem 7. Mtsoa, Rossi. Steinagel. Agosta. telauum. aa--ucko- Um Winn,' S Victory for the ?-day racing card. Ten races are on Saturday s opening p.m. (See story next page.) - m rciiotitafcniati Stattsman, Salem, Ort., Thursday, ' This, that, etc: - f . ! , The U of Southern Cal's 70-man football roster lists ex-Salem High halfback and place-kicking star Ray Taylor asa candidate for the left half spot, and rates mm jans' top hope for All-America recognition this semester signing of Pnil Jantze by tne m. Louis Cardials comes as a sur prise, since most everyone (and particularly Oregon State Coach Ralph Coleman) figuret the kid would finish out his schooling eligibility at Beavervil'- before yielding to the lun of the folding green. Phil picked off a modest bonus for s-'gning, and his first whirl will be with the Cards' Fresno farm in the Class Cali fornia League next spring. Cole man is quite disappointed, which i3 easily understood. Jantze was the best ball-playo the Staters had last season, as a sophomore. Colie had best chain down his star hurler Lowell Pe ce also, for one Bernie DeViveiros of the Detroit organization likek the right-hander more every time-he sees him . . . The NY Giants' Bea Agajanian isn't the only place- kicking old pro doubling up on his only a fair night against the LA Rams Sunday. Alex Groza, another of the professional game's "never miss" boys, blew two field goal tries from close in during the game with the-49ers, and the Cleve land Browns lost it 17-14. Aggie tried for three; FGs in the Rams game and missed two. Had he made the last one, from 35 yards, the Giants would have probably won the fray. But .then a 35-yard field goal isn't a normal happening in the pay-for-play sport . . . Yakima Bears Mgr. Hub Kittle will handle the ijermosillo entry in the Mexican Coast League the coming winter, he says, and may have two members of the town Senators playing 'on the club. Kittle likes the looks of both Shortstop Gene.Tanselli and Pitcher Bill Dials, and figures both could hack it in the Mex loop. Which is indexed as being comparable ot a Class AA circuit in the States, incidentally. Both Gino and Bill are available, tpo.. . . j . Conerly Showed 'Em He Those who saw 'the Giants-Rams game-j-and many : there were from the Salem area are still talking of Charley Conerly's l productiveness in the clash,-and wish he had played more. The "Old Pro" of the club, now in his eighth campaign, had a whopping good night at Portland, directing the Gothams Jo all ! the, points they made. The club looked offensively sharp when he was directing traffic. It did not when he was out of the lineup.. j ! ; j .!. Conerly proved to those who might be critics that he still has plenty left. It was a pleasure to see the guy go at it, and .we're among many in this area who hope that his performance of Sunday launches him on one of . his biggest campaigns f. . j' Since this is their final week in town, the familiar question, "Will the Gianis be back again next year?" is again making the rounds. It cannot be answered now. The Nevf Yorkers would no doubt like to be back, for they .like it here. Arid "it" likes them. The 195S squad will do its training In the near neighbor hood of the first two or three exhibition games on the pre season schedule. If those games are played .in the Northwest, , they might be back. But it doesn't look too good now. The Giants-Green Bay sortie at Spokane laid a costly egg at the Kate, with only 14,000 paying to see it. The Seattle mix with San Francisco was big business, with 49,0001 in the seats. But Sunday's 22,222 for the Multnomah Stadium clash was a dis appointment. That one shonld have packed the joint. It didn't, " (Continued on page, three) t :" - 1 i': i Yakima Pounds Lewiston; Eugene Swamped by Braves LEWISTON, Idaho Ml DickrtaHies in every successive; inning Young limited Lewiston to five hits and only one earned run Wed nesday night as Yakima pounded 14 hits in taking a 6-2 Northwest League baseball victory. A crowd of 2,078, largest of the season, turnea out to see tne ; times. Eugene never posed a seri Broncs final home game. I! j ous thrat i but forced starting Lewiston took the lead in the first inning on an error and Jim Barret's double and Yakima even ed it up in the third. Then the Bears errupted for five runs in the fourth on five singles, an error, wild pitch, fielders choice and a double by Gary Robbins. The Broncs tallied once asain in the fifth, in the losing effort. Lewiston reliefer Jim Benton al- 1 A . Anlif 4nfA flita in ttk final five, innings, but the Bears had already- done their damage to Bronc starter Bob Wadsworth. ii Danny Holden hammered out 2 3-run homer in the first inning and Tri-City -added one or more wats, SteinageL Anderson. HBI Rob inson. Krause. Lundgren. $teinagel, Whiuon. Jtivss S. S Kobinson it). Whitson iTU DP Krsuse to Tanselli in steinagel. Steinagel to TanseUi to rieckjr. A-U82, steinagel. i vi- . . y. - . to Sept. 1, 1955--Sec? 2)-1 xso, 4 Denma Jon Arneii, ine lro- The GENE TANSELLI May play Mex loc p. practice this week, after having Hat Plenty Left Wednesday night to defeat Eu gene, 16-7, in a League game at Kennewick. Holden's hit was one of 11, with 14 walks and six Eugene errors making it j jwssible to scflre 16 ; pitcher John Kenway off the mound in the seventh with four rims off three walks and three singles. Tri-City jfans turned out 1,351 strong to watch their team win its third straight game of the ser- les. Yaklma ; 001 500 0008 14 2 100 010 COO 2 5 2 Zander: Wadsworth. Lewiston i- Young and Benton (4) iand M cNamara. -. . ; TrCity t .100 002 400 7 9 311 223 12 16 U 0 Chase. Han () and Hayes; Ken- way. Burns (7) and Martin. THOROUGHBREDS SET - i LONDON to Nineteen thor oughbreds! including an American owned cdif, were among Wednes day's fina acceptors for the Sept. 7 running jof the historic St. Leger he last classic of I the .British horsa, racing season. - s, - Jim Rivera's 2 Home Runs j By ED W1LKS I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jim Rivera cracked a pair of two-run homers that retained Chi caco's first place lead - in the steaming American League race Wednesday, carrying the White Sox to a 4-2 triumph over the Bos ton Red Sox, now ' faced ' with a five-game deficit in fourth, place. Cleveland and New York stayed a half game behind the White Sox in la second place tie. Young Herb Score kept the . In dians moving, checking Washinig- toa on three hits in a 5-1 decision; while fanning 13 to run his strike-1 out total to 209. The Yanks, dumped from the lead at Kansas City Tuesday night, . got' back at the A s with an 11-6 romp. 13th Victory yeteran Tommy Bryne hung up hi? 13th .victory for New York with relief in a five-run ninth by the A'js. Irv Noren, Mickey Mantle and Gil McDougald homered for the Yankees. " In the only other AL game, Earl Torgeson hit a pinch home run with two on in the seventh inning, that lifted Detroit to a 7-4 decision ever Washington. The White Sox won on a gamble with righthander Bob Keegan, who spaced eight hits for his first vic tory and initial complete game' since Sept. 12, 1954, when he also beat the Bosox. Keegan (1-4) gave u Norm Zauchin's 25th home run in the sixth and was touched for a ; double by Sam White that scored the other run in the ninth. Four Home Runs Keegan had his working margin early. Rivera tagged his first' homer off loser Tom Brewer in the first inning, then reached the Red Sox righthander for his clinch er in the third. Jungle Jim has hit four homers against Boston U)is season all off Brewer, who now is 9-10., - 1 Score,, the rookie southpaw, be came the first pitcher to pass the 200-strikeout mark since Cleve land's Bobby Feller did it in 1946. He, too, had an early cushion as (Contd on next page) Suds, Bevos Divide Pair i PORTLAND UrV-Seattle's thread bare Pacific Coast League lead oyer. Hollywood held up here Wednesday night as Elmer Single-! tAn hlantra1 Pnrllinri ft-A in tka ' V viuiinvw va uhiiu w w aa iiiv seven-inning first game of a twin bill. Portland won the second game, 4-2. I It was the veteran Singleton's 17th pitching victory against 12 defeats. I Home runs accounted for all the fiainiers' runs. Jerry Zuyela's clout over the right field fence with two men on in the third gave them 411 the margin they needed. But Joe Ginsberg, batting behind him, duplicated the blow. In other league tilts, Ted Beard drove the winning run home Wed nesday night by hitting a second inning homer with one fpan on base as San Francisco's Seals beat the Oakland Acorns, 8-5. Before 15,483 fans, largest turn-, Out in the Pacific Coast League this season, Los Angeles whipped Hollwood, $4 at Los Angeles. Don Elston limited the Stars to four hits, one a homer by first, sacker tt. C. Stevens. I San Diego defeated Sacramento, 5-0 and 6-2, in a double-header. Eddie Erautt shutout the Solons in the opener on four hits. !Cal Mc pish pitched the second game and registered his 14th mound victory of the season at San Diego. j The first game box: Seattle (t) (I) Portland ! ABHOA ABHOA Zernla.2 3 0 4 3 Wilson.2 4 3 0 3 Verble.3 4 0 0 2 Powis.m 4 0 3 0 Zuvela.r 3 10 0 Whit'n.l 3 13 0 Gnsbg.c 2 14 1 Marqz.r 3 0 4 0 Blcna.m 3 10 0 Miklsn.l 3 17 0 Glynn. 1 3 19 1 Rtbtsn.c 3 14 0 Schlt.l 3 110 EggertJ 2 2 0 0 Rigettij 3 0 1 S Austin.s 3 0 0 3 Sngltn.p 3 12 1 Btchy.p l 0 0 0 Mauroj: 1 0 0 0 Hall.p '10 0 1 a-Westllc 1 0 0 0 ! Totals 27 21 12 Totals 28 7 21 7 a-Struck out for Hall in fh. Seattle . OOT 103 Portland 000 000 T. Eegert. RBI Zuvela 3. Gins berg. Glynm. Schult 3. 2B Singleton. HR Zuvela. Ginsberg. Glvnn. Schult. t Left Seattle 1. Portland 8. BB. off Singleton 2, Burtschy 2. HaU 1.. SO. by Singleton 5, Burtschy 1. Hall 2. R-ER Burtschy S-5. Hall 3-3. Hits, off Burtschy 4 in 3 plus (none out in 4th): Hall 2 in 4. Winner Single ton (17-12). Loser Burtschy (6-8). U Valenti, Mutart and Orr. T 1:30. Second game: Seattle 100 000 0012 S 1 Portland . 002 001 lOx 4 11 1 Brenner. Black well (8) and Gins berg; Lint and Robertson. First game seven innings: Sacramento 000 000 00 4 0 San Diego ; 000 221 x 5 9 0 Johnson. .Watkins (5) and Baich; Erautt and Aylward. Second game: Sacramento 000 001 0012 13 1 San Diego . 012 000 30x 6 11 0 Osenbaugh, Jones (6), Candini (8) and Baich. Haslet (4); McLish and Bailey. San Francisco 240 020 0008 11 Oakland 302 000 000 S 0 Bradford. Nagy (5). and Rltchey; Van Cuyk, Drews (2) and NeaL - Hollywood 000 000 0101 4 2 Los Angeles Oil 001 41x 8 11 1 Wade. King (6), O Donnell (7) and Hall; Elston and Tappe. Vaughn Maacha, line coach at Florida State University, was a star center at Alabama. He played in the Sugar; Bowl gam twice and the Rote Bowl once. Victory ; LSlI-tJ From Swaps NORTHWEST LEAGUE . WLPct. 'j WLPct Eufene 35 21 .625 Yakima 28 33 .139 Tri-City- 3027.326 Lewistn . 25 32 .439 Wenlche 28 26 19 SDOkana 24 32 .429 ! W 1 ..i... 11 1 c. , 1 Wenatohee 3: at Tri-City is. Eugene . PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE WLPct. 1 ' WLPet Seattle 88 71 .548 Los Ang 81 77 .513 Hollywd BS 73 .544 Sacram : 72 88 .4o6 S. Diego 83 75 .525 San Frn 71 87 .449 Portland 81 75 Jl Oakland 76 87.446 Wednesday results: At Portland 0 4. Seattle 8-2: at Los Angeles 8. Hol lywood 1: at Oakland 5. San Fran cisco 8; at San Diego 5-6, Sacramento 0-2. i . americav league w t w t -p-t i Chicago 79 si .608 Detroit i 67 65 .508 , fid.ouo ry.. .iiT Jin.iwipr N. York 79 52 .603 Washgtn 46 81 .362 Boston 74 56.569 Baltimr 4186.323 Wednesday results:: At Chicago 4. Boston 2: at Kansas City 6. New York It:-at Detroit 7, Washington 4; at Cleveland 9. Baltimore 1. NATIONAL LEAGUE Broklyn 84 46.646 cincinn 65 71 .478 1 Milwke 73 59 .553 Chicago 64 72 .471 Philadel 70 64.522 St. Luis 55 76.420 N. York 68 63.519 Pittsbgh 52 80 .394 Wednesday results: At Brooklyn S. Milwaukee 13: at New York 5. Cin cinnati 0; at Philadelphia 13, Chicago 2; at Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 3. Two Hit Finals In Junior Golf TACOMA W) Ted Puetz. Se attle, and Bryan Copp, Vancouver, 1 R C unn thoir uiav WaHnAcriov in: 4i!A r est Golf Assn. Junfor Tourna. ; ment v i title with a 2 and 1 victory over nn ru f attu tL t-. coma County Club course. Copp, smooth-stroking British fST1 T3- coma s cunt mmes. 2 ud The finalists 'will play their -36- hole match Thursday. in Anartorf ,i Vfc- it longest homestretch in the world In quarterfinal matches In the , , .Lj xt forenoon Copp defeated Jerry Smythe, Lake Grove, Ore., 5 and 4; Names defeated Ward Hunter. Ta - coma, 1 up; Puetz defeated Charles Hunter, 1 up at the 20th, and Bies won . from Bill Lauer, Spokane, 2 and 1. Senator Swat: LTp to date: ' ' AB H 2B 3B HR RBI Pet. Agosta 456 15S 22 IS 382 14 1.1 6 447 146 18 7 307 97 14 10 4 80 .347 1 42 ' .323 2 43 .324 Krause Shields Dunn 13 75 jj : 'tanselli 44S 140 29 7 frailey 362 113 21 7 Robinson 313 M 7 Steinagel 405 109 17 6 Koepf 319 81 0 King 111 30 , 5 1. Webster 3 . i , 1 0 Pitching: 16 82 .309 1 9 57 joo " S' -25?i. l n ' 2M o o .200 1 so bb er G IP W J. King Whitson Dials Krause. Walsh Francis Wortham .23 80i 7 1 -23' 43 40 25 18523 16 6 116 102 74 44 164'j IS 13 112 80 68 33, 1 1 14 12 11 37 121i 9 .7 79 109 67 34 179a 8 7 74 99 87 22 118 7 8 43 79 49 DONT TAKE CHANCES ... ENJOY YOUR VACATION f , ":v . ; let : '. check you? fat flits Here's What We Do n Remove Front Wheels and In . " spoct Brake Drvms ond-liiino. a Clson, lnspt and Repock Pront Whool Roarings. . 3 lnPt Groaso Jools. A Chock CompUtsf Hydroolk System and Add Irako fluid - if Noodod. , C Adjgst Irak Shoo to Socvre , Ml Contact with Drums.; Cartfvlly Tost Brakes. ft?0rtme Store Downtown pt Center & Liberty Phone Dashes May- 1 - r By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN CHICAGO - on ' With heart, speed, stamina and the feel of if l,k; im the start, the; Dowerful. Nashua ran 1 1 'swaps' into the ground Wednesday If scoring a ,6 length 1 victory in 1 their $100,000 winner-takie-all match jrace at Washington Park. The big, mahogany Bay of Wit ham Woodward Jr. burst from the gate first and was hever headed. He covered the mile arid a quart er over "a "good"' track' in 2:04- one fifth. The victory wiped out Nashua's only defeat in nine previous starts I 1 1J X n s a : iiic-jbh-uiu sea o waus, Rex Ellsworth's big chestnut charg- rmii California unr tn s length and a half triumph in the 1 Kentucky Derby. '.'if Swaps Favored ; If Swajis was the 1-5 choice of the 35.262 fans jn the pari-jmutuel win at Nashua paid his backers 54.40. The winning pool . amounted to $174,737. 6f which $67,378 was bet on Nashua and $107,359 on Swaps. The showdown of the brilliant three-year-Wd colts, resulting in Swaps' first loss in nin starts this year, appeared -to be relatively simple as Arcaro got jNashua out of the -inside post position first und er the whip and pushed him ahead by three-quarters of i length at the first furlong. He had him in front by a neck after the second furlong, at the clubhouse turn, and from there on the duel settled down this way: At three furlongs at the head of 1 l a. a I . t i backstretch, Arcaro had Nash- ua one-nait length ahead of Willie j Lif j , f-. r t , and a half and at furlongs to a length and three quarters. At three-quarters of a mile, entering the. far turn. Shoemaker called on Swaps and he closed in to within three-quarters of a length. But rounding tne turn and entering tne ,i i-u : , ! a I iehth 1 h 1 and . t ;!?,, 1)016 he as f i nan, Draws Away From then on Nashua drew away to win about just as he pleased. The time was far off of 'Wash-1 ingion rarx s recoro ior me ais tance 2:00-two fifths by Ponder in 1949 and also Swaps' winning time in; the Kentucky Der'by of " S:01- four fifths Both trainers left the running of the race pretty much to the jockeys Sunny Jim Fitzsimnions told Ar caro "Keep the other hofse busy all the time. Run when ypu have to, Swaps' trainer, Meshach Tenney, said to Shoemaker just before go ing to tne post: "Save a little of yojir horse but run when necessary. Back in the winner's circle Ar (Continued on page 3.) brakes to foy SPECIAL QffiC0BB 2-2491 i m 7xZZ f.2 I iSc!:m ;t cnJ u n r: Scl ct sen Z H cat h I ! V, .d. m W ua it M V.. 17 V t: i: t: i: i: i: t: n i: i: Sk W -a rrr - At a'frscticn'cf hzlr sold r.:v fcr cs much cs C 'CD. CO! G.E, Ccrscla RADIO' a. Zen;.:i Ti',: r.j.M ki.i..lv i 1. . 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