efty Mclrvin Tosses 2-1 Overtime Win for Senators WIL Standings (By ibc AJaocUted Pre&a) W. L. PcU YaKima 99 28 .678 Vancouver 51 33 .607 Spokane 47 40 Wenatchee 41 47 Salem 39 47 .453 Victoria 38 48 .442 Bremerton 38 51 .427 Tacoma 36 65 .396 .540 .466 Results Tuesday ' lacoma 8, Bremerton 1-. Salem 2, Wenatchee 1 (11 innings) Vancouver 6. Victoria 5. Yakima 10. Spokane 7. No one could expect a fellow who has ridden the bench tor& half a season to have perfect control and that was the case of pal Mclrvin, redheaded, left-handed chucker who returned to the Salem Senators in a trade that sent Ray McNulty to the Portland Beavers. . Cal Indicated he wanted work and Manager Bill Beard accom modated him by sending him out against the Wenatchee Chiefs Tuesday night as the two clubs opened a series of three games. His wildness (10 walks and four wild pitches) was re sponsible for the only tally the Chiefs could manage as the Sen ators won in 11 innings 2 to 1.; thinks to a home run over ine light field fence by Wayne Pe terson. The blow, so near the base line that there was doubt as to whether it would be foul or fair until it disappeared in the darkness high over the bar rier, came as the last' half of the 11th - opened. There could have been no more fitting cli max to a tight struggle and the 1146 customers went home well satisfied. ; The loss was . charged up igKnst Lou McCollum, a right haMled flinger who previously had, had little difficulty in hand eiMtfing the Senators this season. He was hit freely and the So lons had men on base in every frame except the fifth and 10th as they collected an even dozen blows. Four eonsecutive walks in the second gave the Chiefs their run. With the bases still loaded Mclrvin fanned Lee Winter and forced McCollum to ground into a double play. Three bases on balls filled the bags again in the fourth with two out but the Chiefs, able to get but four hits off Mclrvin, were retired when Clyde Haskell flew out. A sin gle, a walk and a wild pitch placed runners on second and third in the sixth but again Has kell produced the third Out as he grounded to Wayne Peterson. Cal gained control as the in nings unwound and he retired the side in order in the 10th and 11th. ; Unable to hit In the clutch the Senators were kept from scoring through six Innings as McCollum- bore down when the situation grew threatening. But when Roy Carlson opened the seventh with a double off the left field boards, fans felt the time had come and their belief wag justified even though Mc lrvin and Wayne Peterson were easy outs on successive pop-ups. Carlson galloped home a mo ment later as Marty Krug drove a single just out of Hal Rhyne's reach at first. . That ended the scoring "on both sides until Wayne Peterson came through with his circuit smash his sixth of the season. Coast Leaguers Wonder How to Stop Hollywood (By the Associated Press) Early in the Pacific Coast league season, the so-called dopesters used to ask: "What's holding Hollywood up?" Now, the question is asked thusly: "Who's going to pull Hollywood down?" Ignored in pre-season selec tions, the Stars climbed quickly to the top of the league and stayed there. They are now 10 games in front of second-place Sacramento. All teams were idle Tuesday Wednesday's schedule brings Portland to Los Angeles, Holly wood to Sacramento, Seattle to San Francisco and Oakland to San Diego. Wenatchee (II B H O A Haskell, t Fiber, rf 4 Warner, of 4 Khyne, 1 4 Frjut, e 4 Bryant, t 4 Meyers.u 3 Wlnter.lt 4 UeColtum.p 1 3 W.Petrsn.3 6 t 0 Krui. 1 i 4 0 B.Petran,aa 5 8 0 Oherry.ct 4 4 1 Olsen.lf 4 0 0 Buckley.rf a 3 3 Hedlnatn,3 B 1 0 OarUon,c 4 0 1 Mclrvin. p (X) Salem B H O A 3 3 13 0 3 3 3 3 4 0 3 0 0 13 0 1 1 1 1(1 0 13 Total 3 4 30 7 Total 43 13 33 IS ' None out when wlnnlnt run scored. Wenatchee 010 000 000 001 4 3 Sa'em 000 000 100 013 13 3 Pitcher IP Ab R H Br So Bb McCollum ....10 plua 43 13 3 3 4 Mclrvin 11 30 4 1 1 5 10 Wild pitches: Mclrvin 4. Left on bases: Wenatchee 13. Balem 14. Errors: Bryant t. Rttyne, w. Peterson, B. Peterson. Home runs: W. Peterson. Two base hlta: B. Peterson, Warner, Carlson, cherry. Runs batted In: Meyers, Krus. w. Peterson. Dou- oie plays: Carlson to w. Peterson; w. rei eraon to B. Peterson to Krug. Time 3:18. Umpires: Mccullouth and Meneslch. At tendance: 1146. ahortseorea:.' Bremerton O10 000 000 1 t 1 Taeoma R03 100 10a 9 15 0 ' Kohout, Baldwin '(31. Arnerlch (8) and Ronnlnai Walden and Warren. Victoria .000 130 0015 13 1 Vancouver 340 000 00a 8 10 I Blanxenahlp, Prowae 13) and Day; Nich olaa, R. Snyder (5) and Sheely. Spokana 000 01 300 7 10 3 Yakima 013 100 03310 15 1 . Conant, Babbitt (81 and Parks; Powell, flporer (7) and Ortela. University Bowl .LADIES SUMMER LEAGUE Carla Rob- iUon, United Wheels, scored a 171 sffme while June Lemon recorded n 4ED series for the high Individual scores Tues day. Plank construction tallied a 1555 series. '- Irove'i Jeweler (3) Edna McElhany M5, Alice Lee Locken 371, Hazel Maries iT4, Arois FredericKson 388. Ace's uarner Shdp (0) Del Delaney 338, Cecil Smith IBS. Ruth Welch 327. 8Ut 270. Vanity Box (3) Jean Angove 354, Le an a Kutner 312. Barbara causey os, Jean Mlchaud 367. Randall's Fine Meats (0) Evelyn Evans 408. Dorothy Mbm trettl 387, Gen Longer, 333, Be Davey 417. Plank Conitrnetlon 3 Ruby Garrison S70, Phyllss Reser 305. Mildred Plank 414, Betty Schroeder 488. State Street Mar ket (11 Dorothy Tlce 330, Mary Poltz 17T, June Carper 331, Leota Vibberts' 397. Wltlirow Hardware (1) Elsie Furrer S07. Gloria Houahman 279. Elsie WJ.iPm on 276, June Lemon 489. United Wheel (21 Ann Qlbb 454, Katny Ha Kins aw, Joyce Rowland 141, Carta Robertson 133. GREAT POPULARITY ISakesgood THINGS HARD TO find...like olympia beer. 1 shop early?) Crofoot Pitches Randle Victory; Maples Win Too With Percy Crofoot pitching 10 strikeout ball while giving up but three hits, Randle Oil won over Knights of Columbus, 7-2 Tuesday night in City league softball competition. Campbell Rock Wool, unable to field more than seven players, forfeited to Marine Reserves. An exhibi tion game resulted in a 6-4 win for Rock Wool. The Knights tallied twice in the fist frame but Crofoot went to work after that and came through with flying colors. A five run scoring bee in the sec ond, gave Randle's a lead that wasn't threatened. Maple Dairy swamped Inter state, 11 to 2 in an Industrial league encounter that went but five innings. Handle oil ,...053 110 07 9 1 K. of C 300 000 03 3 3 Crofoot and Enoch Maera; Parton and Alley. Interstate 000 11 3 3 8 Maple 373 Ox 11 3 3 Kreft and Butts; Htlflker and Stetter, Wednesday nlsht'a program of Indus trial league games; Interstate vs Paper Mill at 7:30; Clear Ike va Naval Rraerve at 0:30. OREGON TIDES Correct for Newport July It 3:01 a.m. 3.3 10:11 a.m. -0.8 4:41 p.m. 0.8 10:18 p.m. 3.4 July 15 8:47 a.m. 1.8 10:54 a.m. -0.3 5:35 p.m. 6.9 11:13 p.m. 3.4 July If 4:38 a.m. 7.3 11:36 a.m. 0.3 6:08 p.m. 7.0 July 17 5:30 a.m. 6.6 6:10 a.m. 3.3 6:53 p.m. 1.3 13:18 p.m. 0.8 Salem, Orego, Wednesday, July 13, 1949 13 Chiefs Transfer Hinges On Wl Officials Confab Yakima, Wash., July 13 (U.R) Action on a move to transfer Wenatchee's Western International league baseball franchise to, Kennewick, Wash., today awaited a conference of club owners and league officials. The possibility that such a transfer would be made was announced here last night at a WIL meeting by team repre sentatives and league president, Robert Able, Wenatchee co-owners Dick Richards and Orin "Babe" Hollingberry pointed out that the Chiefs only drew about 81,000 home town fans last year, and that a club doesn't start to pay off until attendance passes 100,000, Attendance this season is falling below that of 1948, Cold weather kept cash customers from the ball park during the early part of the season. If the franchise is transferred to Kennewick, fans could be drawn from the expanding Pasco-Kennewick-Richland area, booming because of the Hanford atomic plant's location there. Richards, business manager for the Chiefs, also mentioned the possibility of transferring the franchise to Klamath Falls, , or Eugene, Ore., or Bellingham or Aberdeen, Wash. Unconfirmed reports were being circulated here that the Tri-City Athletic association has already started to raise 75,000 to build a ball park for a Western International league entry. . d r' I -Na r.- -3'4s V J Discussing Strategy Mrs. Harry W. Stepp (left), Mrs. M. L. Veatch, both of Riverside club, Portland, converse with Mrs. Harold dinger of Salem plans for the day's program prior to the opening shot of the annual women's golf tournament Wednesday morning. Still Coaches Tennis After 50-Year Career Santa Monica, Calif. (U.R) May Sutton Bundy, Wimbledon sin gles champion in 1905 and 1907, still bounds around like a school girl, gives tennis lessons and supervises a large family, It has been 50 years since she won the Southern California women's singles championship and went on in later years to capture tennis' highest honors as a member of a four-sister team of "tennis-playing Suttons." From 1900 to 1917, either May Sutton or one of her his ters, Ethel, Violet or Florence, took the Southern California singles championships. Today, May, daughter of a British sea captain who settled here in 1898, teaches regular tennis classes at a girls' school and occasionally gives private tutoring at local tennis clubs. "You have to teach the game to play it and know it well," she said. "There so much dif ference." In looking back on her ath letic career, Mrs. Bundy says winning at Wimbledon was her biggest thrill. At that time, the British crown was considered to be the world championship honor. After winning in 1907 she re tired, married and had a family of four children, one of whom is Dorothy Bundy, a tennis star known from Melbourne, Austra lia, to Paris. Mrs. Bundy's three sons, Bill, Nathan,- and Tom, starred at football, golf and swimming. Tennis doesn't occupy all the former women's Wimbledon champion's life at all. Her fami ly and her two grand children really come first. But she misses the "good old days" and recalls with pride the old matches at Santa Monica's casino courts where the specta tors drank tea, bands played be tween matches and "everything was scrumptious." TOO CUTE! Feller Due for Comeback New York, July 13 (U.R) Get ting "too cute" developing a new pitch caused the downfall of Bobby Feller, all-star catcher Birdie Tebbetts asserted today, but the Boston Red Sox back stop insisted that bullet Bob still had his fast one and was on the way back. The blocky Birdie, who still thinks that his Red Sox mates will come on to win the Ameri can League pennant, doesn't hold with the critics who be lieve that Feller is through as a star pitcher. "Trying to throw a slider, be ing too cute, hurt Feller," Teb betts explained. "And, while his fast one may not have the old time hop, it still is plenty fast enough." Birdie's theory was that Fel ler hurt his arm using the slider when he didn't need it. "The slider is a resistance pitch," he argued. "Where a curve takes only the wrist or the elbow, a slider puts a strain both there and on the shoulder. Feller had all he needed in a curve, a fast ball and a change of pace. That slider put a strain on his shoulder and hurt his fast ball." Tebbetts said that in one game against the Red Sox last season Feller didn't throw a single fast Baseball Shorts Walter Johnson struck out 3,497 batters in his 21 years with the Washington Senators an overage of better than 166 a season. Your Choice Now Super Reductions! on Beautiful Rayon Sports Shirts Through the cooperation with the 0 largest manufacturer of fine rayon men's wear . . . Solid Colon Pattarni Whites Available in Short and long sleeves The M (Sorry we can't advertise the name) we are now able to of fer you these finer rayon sports shirts at a TERRIFIC SAVINGS! STOCK UP NOW! Give your summer wardrobe that needed "lift"! 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And your nearby Oldamobile dealer is ready and willing to arrange this "drive of a lifetime." So find his telephone number below. Call him today. And soon you'll know the most thrilling "New Thrill" of all a demonstration date with the Oldsmobile "88V 1 w "fr tWrii. m "76." IMn UnnAnr4 Sirin "98" an4 ii at xtrm ILE) SIM BDIL 11 , GtNlKAL MOTOtS VALUl ball. "This season he used it and bent us twice," Tebbetts said. Feller withdrew from the all- star game last year after being chosen and wasn t named this season, but Birdie said that such antics won't be tolerated from now on. "This is a real honor," said the 34-year-old redhead who is the starting American League By OSCAR FRALEY catcher today, the fourth time he has been selected for the inter-league game. "The players should be proud to be selected and, if they don't show up without a good reason, the other guys are really set to get on them." 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