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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1954)
Bend Tips Caseys Valley Ply Nips Warren Foster's Beat Seven in 7th Gain 9-8 Win Jerry Christianson's triple with the bases loaded in the eighth inn ing gave Bend a 9-8 win over the Eugene Casey s Tuesday night at Bethel Park and brought the local winning streak to a halt after six Till Briggs, who had replaced Dick Weaver on the mound in the seventh inning, and Ray Stratton were the victims o the seven-run rally which wiped out a 5-2 Casey lead. Bend used four walks and four hits, including triples by Christianson and Ted Jantz to account for the big inning. The Caseys rallied in the ninth Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore. 2B Wed., July 21, 1954 Additional Sports Page 4-B but fell one run short when Ed Hunt made a fine running catch on Art Wright's long drive to center field to end the game. With two out, the Caseys had scored three times on Chuch DeAutre mont's walk, Stratton's single and a triple by Jack Fassett which was turned into the third run by an error. Eugene had scored twice in the first inning on DoAutremont's single, a walk to Stratton and a single by Fassett which was fol lowed by an error allowing the second run to tally. The Caseys lengthened their lead with a single by Tom Bowen and a triple by DoAutromont in the third and a pair of runs on two walks and singles by Weaver and Bowen in the fourth. Eugene continues its home schedule Thursday night when the strong Drain Black Sox come to Bethel Park. Game time is 8 p.m. Bend Oil) OOt 070 9 S Eugene 201 200 003 8 11 4 O'Hrer and Lovejoy; Weaver Briggs (7), Stratton (8) and Bowen. HICKEY-FREEMAN CLOTHES McDonald Theater Bldg. Same Expected On Waterfowl to kiss) fsfJfSfraji KLAMATH FALLS Ml Duck hunters in the western states this year may be subject to about the same regulations as a year ago, according to the Pacific Fly ways Council. Representatives of game com missions of tne seven western states wound up their annual meeting here Tuesday night af ter a long program that covered the intricate phases of migratory waterfowl management. Recommendations of the coun cil will be subject to approval by the Fish and Wildlife Serv ice in Washington, D. C, which was represented at the meeting and advised the council of the expected migration from inland breeding grounds this year. The councils recommcnda-i tions: Length of season to be 75 days or more; each state to choose its own dates. Bag limits the same as 1953. A special management sea son on pintail ducks of not more than 15 days. If the fish and wildlife serv ice authorizes a split season, the penalty for any state taking such a season should not be more than per cent. Hunting hours to be the same as in 1953. Consideration by the serv ice of giving states the right to determine possession limits. Simplify the goose regula tions by setting the daily bag at six for all species, but not more than three of dark varieties. Electrics 10-9 MEN'S MAJOR W L Pet. GB Warren Hardware ... 8 2 .800 Rubes 8 2 .800 Ed Jensen's 3 8 .273 5 Valley Plywood 2 9 .182 8 WOMEN W Foster Saw 11 Willamette Electric 12 Warren Hardware 7 Merchants 4 Police Assoc. 4 10 M&K Furniture 2 11 L Pet. GB 2 .848 .BOO 8 .938 S 8 .333 T.i .288 .184 BUICK TUNE-CARE The remarkable, new tonic for your engine ... it delivers new performance . . . economy . . . power. Includes: Clean, regap and lest spark plugs Test compression Clean distributor points and ad just Set ignition timing Ad just carburetor idle Adjust fan belt Inspect choke, cooling sys tem, throttle linkage Test bat tery Electronic Tune-care diagnosis. It's renewed power in a package now just 5-uid, if needed. materials cxtfa 9 out of 1 xne Class A Reigger Fires Perfect Double ELKO, Nev. (IT) Arnold Reig ger of Seattle, Wash., wrote a page in trapshooting history Tuesday by breaking 100 out of 100 birds in the Class A doubles event in the opening competition. of the $15,000 Nevada Operi'tfap- shoot. In the doubles, two birds are hurled in the air at the same time and the shooter scores by break ing both of them. Veteran shoot ers said Tuesday marked' the sixth time in trapshooting history that a perfect score has been re corded in the event. Reigger won the Class A cham pionship as more than 200 shoot ers from all parts of the United States gathered for the tourney. Feck Parsons, of Klamath Falls, Ore., won the Class B doubles event by breaking 94, and Barney Glavm, Twin Falls, Idaho, won the Class C event by hitting 89. O. B. Milligan, of Coos Bay, Ore., broke 100 out of 100 in the Class AA, 16-yard event, and was followed by Reigger who broke 912 Olive St. Scherer Noior Co. Phone 5-2361 division went to Walt Heilman, of Cottage Grove, Ore., with a score of 99, and the Class B was won by W. A. Finney, of Great Falls, Mont., and Joe Macado, of San Diego, Calif., with tic scores of 99. Joe Her man of Eaton, Colo., won the Class C event with a 99. ft. NW!CVA ttttlfEP0 I TTi INSURANCE M-lll nanf wEnvKsnA v schedule Diamond 1 Register-Guard vs River Road, 7 p.m.; FMllps vs ASSOCiaieu Plywood, 8:30. Diamond 2 Foster Saw va Warren Hardware, 8 p.m.; Kendall vs High School, 7:15; Marines vs Glen it Vern's, 8:30. Civic Stadium Planing Mill vs Active Club, 7; Snellstrom vs Martin, 8:30. Valley Plywood has won only two lien's. Major Softball games this season but its second triumph Tuesday night was over Warren Hardware. 1-0, and jerked tht losers back into a deadlock with the Rubes for league leadership The Rubes claimed their eighth victory against two losses in blanking Ed Jensen's, 6-0, in one of three other battles at Wash ington Park. Foster Saw all .but clinched first place in the women's race by defeating Willamette Electric 10-9. at Oakridge. Warren Wom en edged Police Association, 13 12, and Eugene Merchants nipped M&K Furniture, 4-3, in other loop action. Valley Plywood tallied its un earned but winning run in the bottom of the third inning when Warren's Pitcher Ron Willoughby walked Gib Smith, who moved to second on a passed ball, ad vanced to third on an error, and dashed home on a wild pitch. Ralph Mohler meanwhile scat tered four hits in gaining .his shutout over the league-leaders, while Bun Barker had singled in the second inning for the only hit off Willoughby. The losing hurler collected 11 strikeouts and walked none, while Mohler fanned four and walked five. Ed Jensen's battled the Rubes through four scoreless innings before yielding six runs in the last three frames. Tom Collie contributed two of the Rubes' six hits off Art Wical, while Boyd Morgan had two of the five off Bob Willis. Wical had eight strikeouts and Willis whiffed three. Linda Lee singled with the bases loaded and ran all the way home before Willamette Electric .put-the ball in a cage as Foster .Saw gained the lead for keeps with seven runs in the top of the sixth inning. She also aided, the winners with a home run, while Juanita Conner had three hits and Nancy' Thomas added two including a homer. Pearl Anderson collected three hits for the losers, while Helen Sanders and Gerry Gandy had two apiece including a homer for each. Foster's could win the league race by defeating Warren Hardware in a 6 p.m. Wednesday makeup game at Washington Park. Warren Women rallied for four runs in the last half of the sev enth inning to win a slugfest over Police Association. Pat Brown, Dcanna Davis and Donette Lopu- son helped the victory with two hits apiece. Nina Edwards led all hitters with three for Police, while Betty Craig, Kay Atkinson, Mcrriel McCallum and Adele Shcrwin added two apiece. Eugene Merchants managed to edge M&K Furniture with only one hit, by Carolyn Vaaler, against two M&K pitchers. Sharon Phillips scattered five hits among as many M&K batters. n ii e Warren Hardware 000 000 0 0 4 2 Valley Plywood 001 000 x t 1 3 Willoughby and Walker; Mohler and Harris. Rubes 000 014 1 8 8 n' Jensen's 000 000 0 0 S 2 Willis and Miller; A. Wical and Reynolds, n h Police Assoc. 011 341 212 13 8 Warren Women 113 112 413 10 8 Craig and Dickie; B. Sage and Emerson. R II F. M&K Furniture 0110 201 0 3 5 2 Merchants . 000 301 s 4 1 .1 Clifton, Adamsey (4), and Norrls; rhilllps and C. Vaaler. R It K Foster Saw .... . 020 Ot7 010 10 3 Willamette Electric 022 311 9 13 8 Berklus and Peake; J. Sanders, Lo gan 16), Sage (6) and Saxon. Ducks Cleared For Far East Oregon's basketball team has received permission fr6m the Pacific Coast Conference to make a tour of the Far East In August and early September, It was an nounced here Tuesday by Leo Harris, Atlantic director. Harris said plans for the five weeks trip were still In the tent ative stage, pending final settle ment of the schedule and fi nancial arrangements. The Web foots would play about 20 games and woiro appear in Japan, South Korea, the Philippine Is lands and other points against, all-star teams of the countries involved. Conference permission for the trip was necessary, Harris ex plained, because of the league rules which prohibit off-season basketball competition for mem ber teams. The regular season normally runs from December 1 through the close of the North ern Division season. The games played on the summer tour would not count toward the nor mal season limit of 26 games, adopted this year by the NCAA. Harris indicated final plans for the overseas trip would not be settled for another week. "We have favorable indications tho trip will be made," he said, "but there are still a number, of de tails to be ironed but. We hope to have a definite answer within the next week;" Oregon had originally obtained permission to make a tour of South America this summer, but plans were changed when Latin American sponsors asked for cancellation of the plans be cause of financial troubles. Hixson, Mundle Qualify Williams Leads In Western Am . SEATTLE HI Maj. Harlcy Williams of Seattle and the Air iw tf-ncniantorl Texan, reigned Wednesday as medalist ofi the 1954 Western Amateur Golf Tournament in spite of trees,, traps, Dale Morey and grass as thick as the hair on an angora goat.; Williams hattled around the Broadmoor layout's 6,328 bitter; yards in 72 Tuesday, two over par, for a 36-hole total of 142. De- fending champion Morey oi In dianapolis, whose daily garb dulls the rainbow, also had a 72 and that gave him a 141 for the quali fying schedule, although he did n't have to qualify. Sixtv-three. including Williams. survived the cut and moved with Morey into Wednesday's first round of match play, which will culm mate In the 36-hole unais Sunday. Two Eugene entrants qualified as Harvey Hixson shot 76-74150 and Al Mundle carded 75-76151. Pete Mundle bowed out with 86- 83169. Four Seattle golfers had to en ter a sudden-death playoff for the last spot on the list after they deadlocked at 156 and Paul Jo hanson, not long out of the Uni versity of Washington, won the birth on the first extra hole. Par held its own for the second day, only three players accom plishing a 70. One of these, Bill Burns of nearby Kirkland, Wash., had the tourney's first eagle, a 3 on the 518-yard 15th hole. Lt. Joseph Conrad of San An tonio, Texas, got a par to qualify with 152 and lessen the pain of his first-day 82. The third was fired by Eddie Draper of Seattle. Harry Givan of Seattle, the graying former Walker Cupper, had. a 71 to close the medal com petition with 144 in a tie for second behind Williams dis counting Morey's round as prac tice. Deadlocked with Givan was Louis Barnes of Redondo Beach, Calif, who had a 73 Tuesday. Tied with Draper and George Harrington of Medford, Ore., at 1'45 was another former Walker Cup player, John Dawson of Los Angeles. Robert Frail, the 18-year-old from Salem, Ore., faded to 147 after being tied with Wil liams in the first round. Casualties and there were nearly 90 who failed to mako the grade included a trio of enter tainers, Bing Crosby, Phil Harris and Jack Benny. Billing them in order of finish, Crosby had 159, Harris was out in 37 yesterday before folding and Benny called it quits after touring the front side in the neighborhood of 40. Somebody wrote in a 28 for Benny's final nine on the official score board and he would neither confirm nor deny it. SUMMERjSPEfJljJ NO. 2 OAK SHQBR 110.00 PER M Russell's Materi 3565 Franklin Blvd. 5-5618 or'91!lf MODEL 99 for Production pnd Big Timber 1 4 ' . " 7W' i Portlander Qualifies PORTLAND 0PI J. J. Haean fired a two-under-par 70 at the Columbia-Edgewater course here Tuesday to, qualify for the. .Na tional Junior Golf tournament at Los. Angele's in August. .' Hagan was the lone qualifier out of five Oregon players seek ing a birth at the nationals. The most poioeritt a!!ina saw or ilj uieioht.a I mnrket tnAaut ( market today, FEATURES: ,111 wit, iua.ui u, iiii, smaller niclUJOCn SlWI rim I swivel transmission and special "Cushioned Power" i i son operator fatigue In all-day hlgh-productlnn Weighs only 55 pounds with 2Mki iSJ Available with 20, 30. 40. 50. iS H Price 459.00 to 499.00 LOGGERS CHAIN SAW 3748 FKAIVKMIN BLVD. PH, big timber. and chain. Available with 20, straignt made ana zu-incn dow. 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