3 c Fi i mil mo chi stri at': ma Git 14 loc. als( C per of 1 doi oth mo bui 100 pro T one In me Th acri moi ing Tht anc clui ingi ors 1 full ies V a ble chu the chu con1 will just A ed day Act to i A 1 scle the Ml !30. 12 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Friday, July 15, 1949 Overlooked Pitcher Leads National League Flingers Major Standings (By United Prr0 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. W L Pet. Brooklyn 48 31 .608 New York 38 38 .506 St. Louis 47 33 .588 PitLsbtirih 35 43 .449 Boston 43 37 .538 Cincinnati 31 48 403 Phtldlphtfc 42 38 .525 CillCAKO 11 50 .383 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. York 51 27 .654 Detroit Cleveland 45 32 .584 Waflhtnutn PMldlphia 44 36 .550 Chicago Boston 53 36 .544 St. Loulx W t Pet. 41 40 .500 33 43 .434 34 47 .420 24 54 .308 Retutti Thuriday NATIONAL LEAOK PittirtmrBh 3 New York 4. Chlcaso 3, Boston 2. St. Louis 0, Philadelphia 1. Cincinnati 6, Brooklyn fl. (10 Inn In fa) AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 5. Detroit 2. Washington 5, St. Louis 0. Philadelphia 1, Cleveland 7. By JOE REICHLEK (Aftloel&ttd Pr.u floart Wrll.tl Boston's Billy Southworth couldn't see Ken Heintzelman when he selected his all-star pitchers. Southworth has nothing on the oauers. rney can t see him either. The 33-year-old southpaw, who is making a contender of the once leeDie rnuaaelphla rhillies, Is pitching the best ball in the National league. He is tied for most victories Bobo Suspended For Refusal to Take Choo Choo Washington, July 15 (U.R) Washington Senators President Clark Griffith today blasted Bo bo Newsom's minor league walk out as "the same old story" and vowed the ponderous pitcher had thrown away his last chance to return to the big time. Newsom, the wandering min strel of the ball yards, claimed there wasn't any future in mi nor league ball despite his 10 Southern Association victories this season. He refused to board a train with his Chattanooga teammates yesterday, and was promptly suspended indefinitely by the Senator farm club. Griffith, long a friend and pa tron of the veteran hurler, said, "i ve wasnea my hands of him, 1 don't want any part of Bobo after the way he did.' . "It was the same old story. He did the same thing to Connie Mack of the Philadelphia Ath letics." Actually, Griffith said, Bobo tossed away his chance for a possible return to major leagues in the near future. The Sena tors had been thinking only a week ago of pulling Newsom up. "But that's out now," Griffith insisted. Attendance Is Up At Calgary Rodeo Calgary, Alta., July 15 W) Attendance marks continued to topple as the Calgary stampede entered Us fourth day with cool nerved Canadian cowboys lead ing the dangerous steer decorat ing event. For the third straight day yes terday, huge crowds jamming their way into Calgary's Vic toria park set a new attendance mark. Official attendance yes terday was announced as 72,307, an Increase of 8,732 over the same date last year. Attendance figures now are 82,160 ahead of the same time last year. A trio of daring Canadian cowboys smashed the strangle hold of United States rodeo Btars on major cowboy events by making a clean sweep of the steer decorating competition, rated one of the most dangerous of all rodeo activities. with 11. He has lost only three. Manager Eddie Sawyer hates to think where his fourth place Phus would be without him. HeinUelman further embar rassed Southworth last night when he pitched the Phils to a 1-0 victory over Max Lanier and the Cardinals for his third shut out. His 11th victory, which inci dentally tied his best previous winning total, resulted when Outfielder Del Ennis crashed his 13th home run with one out in the last half of the ninth. The victory advanced the Phils to within one game of the Braves, who were beaten by the Cubs 3-2. The defeat dropped the Red birds a game and a half behind the Dodgers, who nosed out the Cincinnati Reds, 6-5, in a 10 inning struggle after tying t h e score in the ninth with two runs. A single by Marv Rackley and a double by Billy Cox, both off Relief Pitcher Ewell Blackwell gave the Dodgers their seventh straight triumph over the Reds at JSbbets field. Dutch Leonard, the Cubs' nard-luck knuckleballer, finally won a close one. At that, he had to oat in the winning run him self with a single in the eighth. The blow scored Frank Gustine and broke a 2-2 tie. Vern Bick ford, trying for his 12th victory iur me craves, was charged with his fifth defeat. Johnny Mize clouted his 14th home run with one oh in the first inning to lead the New York Giants to a 4-3 triumph OVERCOMES BURNS over the Pittsburgh Pirates. All National league games thus end ed in one-run margins. The New York Yankees, Clev eland Indians and Boston Red Sox won their games as the Yan-j kees retained their American league lead of five and a half games over the Indians. Allie Reynolds, who has sud denly found the secret of finish ing games, not only went the route for the second straight time, but shut out the St. Louis Browns, 5-0. Joe DiMaggio and Gene Woodling drove in two runs apiece. Bob Lemon won his 10th same for the Indians and Rookie Shortstop Ray Boone drove in three runs with a home run and long fly as the Tribe won its ninth game in the last 10 starts with a 7-1 victory over the Phil adelphia Athletics. The slumD- ing A's dropped their sixth in a row. Joe Dobson pitched the Red box to their eighth straight vie tory as Joe McCarthy's forces turned back the Detroit Tigers, J-. vi carina cracked a two- run homer for the victors. The triumph advanced the Bosox to within a half game of the third place Mackmen. Three bases on balls, an error oy iddie Robinson and Genree Metkovich's bases-loaded single gave the Chicago White Sox four runs in the third innimr a n ri helped them defeat the Washing ton Senators, 6-2. Sam Mele batted in both Senator runs. All games were Dlaved at night. Junior Softie Tourney Planned For Valley Towns Lebanon A junior Softball tournament of teams from Le banon, Albany, Corvallis and Sweet Home is becoming a cer tainty as plans are nearing com pletion, announced Bob Barber. Lebanon s summer recreation di rector. The games will be played ei ther in Albany or Lebanon with a traveling trophy awarded to the winners in each division. Trophies are being donated by a merchant from each city at a no minal cost. The sponsor's name will be engraved on each tro phy and it will become a per manent possession of any team winning it for three consecutive years. bdbV DdlffirV Slatisticians are thumbing back box scores ' I these days to find a teen-age battery that compares with southpaw pitcher Johnny Antonelli and catcher uei urandall or the Boston Braves. Both 19-year-olds have looked impressive. Antonelli, the $75,000 bonus kid from Rochester, N. Y., turned in two brilliant wins in June. He blanked the Cubs on June 12 with four hits, 2-0, and seven days later turned back the Reds, 3-2, on eight hits. Crandall, a 175-pound six-foot-one redhead, drove out nine hits in his first seven games to hit .333. Crandall was brought up from Evansville, Ind., in the Three I league where he was leading the class B team in home runs and runs batted in. BLAME IT ON LEO ALBANY SELECTED FOR PREP DIAMOND TOURNEY Portland, July 15 W) The state high school baseball tour nament will be held in Albany for the first time next year. The tourney, held in Portland previously, was shifted after Al bany sent assurances to the Ore gon School Activities association that a suitable site would be available. May 25-27 were set by the O. S.A.A. as the tentative dates. Changes Startle Writers Old Birds Take Rest as Young Pigeons Take Wine The old birds will be given a rest for the balance of the sea as racing pigeon fanciers conduct a training course for the youj er ones beginning this week with a test flight from Maupin, Succeeding flights will he maae- from Arlington. Walla Walla and another point or two. The latest flight for the old er birds was a 305 mile journey from Lewiston. Idaho back to the home cotes. Of the six pi geons entered, five of them got home the same day they were liberated and the sixth returned the next. One of Doug Chambers' birds finished first and one owned by Al Brown came in second. Their respective speeds were 719.705 and 707.984 yards per minute. As a result of the spring and early summer flights one of Chambers' homers was awarded the "bird of the year" title, with an accumulation of 862.75 points picked up as the result of flights from Arlington, Heppner, Pen dleton, Walla Walla and Lewis ton. The course from eastern Ore gon and Washington points to the Willamette valley is consid ered one of the most difficult in the country due to the varied nature of the country. Coaching Staff Inked by Pilots Portland, Ore., July 15 signing of two assistant footbj coaches and a trainer by Univi sity of Portland's athletic co mittee this week put H Coach Harry Wright's staff! full strength for the openings tne mot gria campaign m September. New assistant coaches Floyd Simmons, former No! Dame fullback and professiof star, who will instruct backfi men and Joe Tedeschi, ex-Pi guard, who will serve as frei man football coach. New fijji time trainer will be August P lino, who starred for Niaear university and served as train. at Aquinas Institute, Rochester. N.Y. when Wright was heSj coach there from 1946 to 194J. t : The. Prnnlrlun T.l ...J. victorious in ZO of their first starts at home this season .625 percentage. New York () Long before the Dodgers set up training camp at Vero Beach, Fla., last soring, writers covering the team's activity picked Brooklyn to win the National League pen nant: As the season reached the half-way mark the scribes had only one worry. We 11 win the pennant for sure, they said, unless Branch Rickey starts mak ing attempts to improve the team. The Dodger president always one to look to make improvements, has made few changes since the sea son started. Burt Shotton is picking his Pacer Wins First Race After Fire Baseball Shorts Both the Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Athletics have lost 20 consecutive games, to hold the major league record in that department.. The largest crowd ever to wit ness a World Series game was the 86,288 at the fifth game of the Cleveland-Boston 1948 ser ies. The lowest batting average ever to win the National League championshp was the .320 of Larry Doyle in 1915. By RALPH D. HALL V i ft' Game Supervisor Issues Call for Antelope Tags C. A. Lockwood, Oregon state game supervisor, announced today that applications, on a tentative basis, for antelope tags Ihould be mailed to the Oregon State Game commission office In Portland at once. . . . I ine proposed antelope season 0f licon tor mis year in Oregon is only Scarfed Winner SfP""1"- with caretaker Martin , , Gibbons, stands near the scene of last Th1Ulry ' 'f.K Racewy 'hich destroyed 23 horses. The pacer left with scars on his left flank, was the only horse to escape the blare. Saratoga Springs, N. Y. ) Although unraced, Copperlight a three-year-old pacer with a heart of steel, already has scored one death Ph P5!ible " wlnn,n fiht Nearly six months ago the Dacer owned hv m,. ha.n nf Cl !... - , . ..u u OUUIItll- 6 w iuiuiiiuii, iuun., some how managed to free himself from his stall and escape from Saratoga raceway barn in a $150,000 blaze that trapped 23 horses in one of harness racing's worst disasters. Copperlight was the sole sur vivor but so hear death that many horsemen thought It best that he be destroyed. His IiIds and flanks were burned, his head and ears singed, his right tentative as regulations will not be made final until July 23. The tentative hunting regula tions call for a limited antelope hunt with 1,000 tags to be is lued. If more than that num ber of applications are received, a public drawing will be held to determine the successful appli rants. Applications for tags may oe made on regular forms which will be available at all license igencies byjhe first of next week or by letter. If applica tion is made by letter, the fol lowing information must be in rluded: the applicant's name (printed), his address, the type Husbands! Wives! Want new Pep and Vim? ThouMiifli nf mtiplM fcre weik. worn-out. ti. lllllind ole!r befliuaa bod Unkl Iroo. lor new rim, vli.liiy, t,y o.lr foul. r.bl,,,. n,ouin Tlumln Bi. Low ooxtl Introductory onl Joe! It ffli arm stora tverywher In Stltm. U Frtd Meyer't. and the license num ber. No money is to be sent with the application. Applications will be accepted for individuals or for parties of Individuals up to and inclurilne four persons. If party applica tions are made, the proper infor mation must be sunnlied for each member of the party. ah applications for antelnne tags must be in the came mm. mission office in Portland, Ore. by 5 p.m., July 27. Hemorrhoids P- "3 (Piles) Fistula Plssure Prolapse and oth er Rectal Dlsor Jfrs corrected th.i e a v . convenient way No hospital!! atlon. quick relief LJ Dr. E. Reynolds Clinic Nituro-Rccttl BpFetalttl 1114 Otnter St.. Stlcm. Or. Ph. 19160 ran pakkino eye swollen badly and his lungs vuuitea wnn smoke. Standing unsteadily near the smouldering embers, all that re mained of the barn and the oth- er fine horses, Copperlight luonea as inougn death was h driver. Today, however, the stalwart pacer is sound as any horse could be and the only clue of the tragic fire is a scar on his len nank. Yet, for days, he hovered close to death. Even breathing was a struggle. But his coura geous heart continued fiehtino- That, together with the skill of man's medicine and wonderful recuperative powers, saw Cop perlight through. Smoke dam age to his lungs proved the greatest threat to recovery, and Dr. V. C. Fabian, the Raceway's veterinarian, pumped heavy do ses of penicillin into the horse, to ward off pneumonia. Slowly but noticeably, Cop perlight summoned back his strength, eating lightly at first and then with considerable vi gor. Trainer Aubrey Rodney be gan to jog him easily when he appeared strong enough, finding the horse's wind surprisingly good. Under the careful, patient grooming of George Leggett and Martin Gibbqns, Copper- light s burns were healed and only the scar on his flank, ac tually a badge of rare courage remains as a stark reminder of the fire. At first, it was decided that Copperlight would be raced this season at the Saratoga oval. La ter, when Copperlight display such promise in training, it was decided not to take a chance on hampering his future. Thus, Copperlight has been moved to his owner's farm where he can romp to his heart's content for a year and absorb more strength. When he finally races for the first time, he will have a consid erable following. His backers feel that a horse with a sire named Torchlight and a heart that conquered death cannot be anything but outstanding. BIG, COLD DRINKS ' own lineup, something that was in doubt in 1947 when Shotton nurriedly accepted the job as interim manager after Leo Dur ocher was supended by Commis sioner A. B. Chandler. Shotton was unfamiliar with the league and its personnel. He had to rely on his coaches and Rickey's uncanny knack for spotting the minute flaws in the Dodger team. In 1948 when Durocher was reinstated and returned to man age Brooklyn there still was some doubt about whether Leo or Branch ran the day-to-day controls. Leo, of course, was giving the hit and run and steal signals but some writers had the suspicion that Rickey was pick ing the lineups and sometimes the pitchers. When Durocher left Brooklyn last July to become manager of the Giants the suspicion that Rickey was running things in Ebbets Field still remained. But now with Durocher solid ly planted as manager of the Giants under a new three-year contract running through 1951, the baseball experts are begin ning to notice that it must have been Lippy who was running the Dodgers all the time. The changes he has made in the Giant team are remindful of the alterations he used to make with the Dodgers. When you go to the Polo Grounds these days you really must depend on the scorecard seller's axiom "You can't tell the players without a scorecard." Leo has used so many different lineups this year By FRANK ECK that he must be picking them out of a medicine bottle. You know, the one one that says "shake well before using." Branch Rickey has been blamed for a lot of things in Brooklyn but when it comes to shaking up a team Durocher is in a class by himself. In the Giants' first 65 games this season, Lippy has used 37 lineup combinations. Only Sid Gordon and Bob Thomson have played in every game. All the others have been benched for light hitting at one time or another. Despite the fact that the Giants were only seven games out of first place at the end of June, Durocher had employed 14 different double play com binations. Half the season is gone and nobody seems to know from day to day what players will handle the important short stop and second base positions. The writers with the team just shake their heads as new double play combinations attempt to get acquainted. Buddy Kerr, a good short stop but often in Durocher's dog house, has played beside five different second basemen. Other Giant shortstops have been Bill Rigney, Jack Lohrke who also plays second base or third base and Dick Culler. Each of them has teamed with three dif ferent second sackers. It's a good thing Frankie Frisch left the Giant coach ing lines to become Chicago Cub manager. If he were still a Giant he might be Leo's shortstop tomorrow. It's tough to be old . . . it's tough to be poor . . . but it is really tough to be old and poor at the same time. Social Security will not pay you enough for a decent retire ment. A few dollars saved now will pay an additional $30 to $50 per month when you are unable to produce. See C. W. "TOBE" 'ROBBINS, Dist. Mgr. Business Men's Assurance Company 229 North Commercial Dial 2-1900 CASH LOANS Auto or Persona UOOtoUOOO COMMERCIAL CREDIT FLA1V INCORPOriATI Salem Agency: 460 N. Church St. Tel. 34161 ilijj0f 1 IF YOU HAD Jf-gym EYES took at the most advanced car in America. There's nothing like it there simply can't be I Here is the only car scientifically designed with Girder Built Unitiied Body-and-Frame one solid, welded, low slung unit the greatest basic improvement in 40 years. You get far more interior room. ..50 greater rigidity. ., useless, excess weight eliminated . . . body-to-frame squeaks ond rattles ended and a bigger, better, safer car for your money. Drive a Nash Airflyte today. Your Nash dealer will wel come the opportunity to demonstrate the most modem car in America. IN TWO CMF Sims, TM NASH AMBASSADOR AND NASH "t00" MARION MOTORS 333 Center St. From where I sit ... Joe Marsh e (E)g Windy Sure "Stopped The Show"! The other night a hnnch of na were over at Judge Cunningham's watching a swell vauderille pro gram on his new television act It came in flnr, but just once, the screen got a little streaky. Before the Judge could touch the knob to bring it into focus, eld Windy Taylor starta fooling around with tha antenna connec tion. "I can fix that!" he says. Windy fixed It all right. He 'topped the show" for as, and Bun Ellis had to come ortr and do a SM repair Job. I understand Windy feels so bad, that he's pay ing the bill and has apologised to the Judge for acting so smart. From where I sit, it pays to practice a little restraint when ever we get the urge to meddle. Whether it's television or a per son's right to enjoy a temperate glass of sparkling beer now and then let's get a good clear "pic ture" of the real situation before we nut more harm than good. got hu Cipyritht, 1949, Viulti Suit Brewers FKJtHm !;. v .1 1 u n i i J L . .. .. h iQHmtm,tHCstoA What if clouds do gather and the drizzle starts! Whether it rains or shines, there's something so delicious and taste-satisfying about the mellow, rare flavor of that Old Bohemian Type Lager, Bohemian Club, that beer enthusiasts even start "singing in the rain once they start drinking it Yes . , . It's always GOOD. 1