-MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Cleveland Clubs Yankees To Tighten
Raee; Brooklyn Opens Up Hide Gap
By FRED DOWN
United Prest Sports Wriltr
The Cleveland Indians re
established the American league
race as a three-team battle today
but there's still no challenger
In sight for the runaway Brook
lyn Dodgers in the National
league.
That was the result of the
weekend's two big series in
which the Indians set out to
prove they're still the team to
beat and the Chicago Cubs
sought to demonstrate they're
legitimate pennant contenders.
The Indians answered their
challenge in brilliant style when
they took three of four games
from the New York Yankees and
climaxed the series with rous
ing 10-2 and 7-3 triumphs before
69,532 the largest crowd of the
year. The Dodgers, however,
walloped the Cubs three out of
four, rebounding from a 9-5 loss
Sunday to gain a split with a 6-2
triumph in the nightcap.
As a result, the races shaped
up as follows today:
The Yankee's first-place lead
in the A.L. was cut to 2V2
games over the Chicago White
Sox and to 3V4 games over the
defending champion Indians. The
White Sox, who have been get
ting the best pitching in the ma
jors, swept a three-game series
with 1-0 and 8-4 victories over
the Washington Senators.
Dodgers Stretch Lead
In the N.L., the Dodgers have
opened up a massive lOVi-game
lead on the second-place Cubs
and lead the third-place New
York Giants by 14 games. They
are rolling on a skein of seven
wins in eight games, 11 in 13
and 16 in 20. A ".500-pace for
the remainder of the season
would give them 92 victories.
Early Wynn pitched a five-hitter
for his eighth victory and
Bob Lemon also gained his
eighth triumph although he
needed help from Mike Garcia in
the ninth. Wynn, Larry Doby,
Vic Wertz and George Strick
land all homered as the Indians
sent Bob Turley to his fifth loss.
Wertz's second homer of the day
and ninth of the year featured
the Indians' four-run seventh
inning that won the nightcap.
The victories were doubly im
pressive because they gave the
Indians a 6-2 edge over the
Yankees in their season series.
The Tribe was only 11-11 against
the Yankees last season, and,
in fact, no team has won a sea
son series from New York dur
ing Manager Casey Stengel's re
gime which began in 1949. '
Newcombe's Win Streak Ends
Don Newcombe's 10-game win
ning streak came to an end as
Harry Chiti, Ransom Jackson
and Dee Fondy homered in the
opener for the Cubs but the Dod
gers gained a split with the aid of
Clem Labine's brilliant, one-run
relief pitching for five innings
in the second game. Jim Davis
won his fourth game for the
Cubs while Labine's victory was
his fifth straight in an unbeat-
Owner of Swaps
Agrees To Race
Under Conditions
Inglewood (U.R) Rex
Ellsworth, owner of Kentucky
Derby winner Swaps, said to
day that he was agreeable to
a match race with Nashua pro
vided the race was held at the
Hollywood Park on any date
except July 9.
Hollywood Park has offered
to post a $100,000 purse for a
winner take all match meeting
between the two nation's top
three-year-olds.
Ellsworth, who discussed pos
sibilities of such a race with
William Woodward Jr., owner
of Nashua, last week said both
horses are at their peak.
"If we waited two months or
more until we have fullfilled
our objective in the American
Derby in Chicago late in Aug
ust, one or more horses may
have tailed off," Ellsworth said.
Perfect Condition
"I pointed out that he, Mr.
Woodward, desired the match
race, and by coming to Holly
wood Park he would be ship
ping into perfect conditions,"
Ellsworth said.
He objected to July 9 as a
date for the match race because
Swaps is entered in the Western
er at Hollywood Park on the
same day.
Nashua, beaten by Swaps in
the Kentucky Derby, scored an
impressive victory in the $100,
000 Belmont Stakes in New
York Saturday while Swaps set
a new world's record for a mile
and a sixteenth in the $100,000
Californian at Hollywood Park.
TO SET FAST PACE
Asbury Park, N. J. U.R)
Manager Sid Flaherty predicted
today that Bobo Olson will "set
a blinding pace" for his title
fight with light' heavyweight
champion Archie Moore, June
22. "Speed will be the important
factor in this fight and I want
Bobo to be fully prepared to
travel the 15 rounds at top
speed," Flaherty said.
en season.
Billy Pierce, who has allowed
only one run and 15 hits in his
last three games, tossed a five
hitter for his fifth win and then
Dick Donovan gained his sev
enth victory behind an eight-hit
White Sox attack that included
Bob Nieman's grandslam homer
in the midst of a seven-run, third
inning outburst. Bob Porterfield
lost a heart-breaker in the open
er when the White Sox scored
an unearned run in the first in
ning with the aid of B r u c e Ed
wards' error.
Art Ceccarelli spun a three-
sipciDninrs
W $1
,',
SPARKPLUG OF TEAM, Sal Mortal, 11, fence-busting star of
Duquesne. Pa. Little League Cardinals, Is ruled Ineligible to par
ticipate because she's a girl. Little League headquarters say
their insurance does not cover girls. (International Soundphoto)
CP-Medford Legion Slaps
Lakeview; Heads District
JUNIOR LEGION STANDINGS
W L Pet.
Central Point-Medford 4 O 1.000
Klamath Falls 2 2 .500
Ashland 2 2 .500
Lakeview 0 4 .000
Tosser Henry Putney threw
nifty two-hitter in one game,
Pitchers Fred Herrmann and
Duane Sides combined for a five
hitter shutout in the other and
the Central Point - Medford ag
gregation used its own hits, ri
val errors and superior know
ledge of the game to outclass
hapless Lakeview here yester
day in a American Legion jun:
ior baseball twinbill.
CP-Medford won the opening
conflict 11 to 0 and the second
8 to 2 to take over first place
alone in the district chase. Ash-
QT's Split
KF Tussles
Camp White got a preview of
what softball fans will see at
Medford this ' Thursday when
the Rogue Valley QT's and Kla
math Falls split a girls' double
header yesterday.
The Cuties won the first game
5 to 4 and dropped the second 8
to 4 in tussles on the Veterans
administration field.
Both clubs will be seen in ac
tion Thursday at the fair
grounds ball park. Klamath
Falls will oppose the former
world champidn Lind Florist of
Portland, still one of the top
women's teams in western semi
pro circles. The QT's tangle with
the Roseburg Lumberjills in the
opener.
pick up six joint eaS joint pi
LINESCORES:
(First Game)
Klamath Falls 010 001 2 4 4 5
Rogue Valley . .... 200 300 x 5 6 3
Hayman and Barron; Ingle and
Schroeder.
(Second Game)
Klamath Falls 033 208
Rogue Valley 012 10 i
Barron and Larson: Hickson,
(2) and Schroeder. Bigham (3).
2 4
2 7
Ingle
Wenatchee Hopes
To Gain Ground
By UNITED PRESS
Wenatchee moved into Yakima
today, hoping to regain some of
the ground lost during the past
week of Northwest League play.
The Chiefs held only a two
game margin after Sunday's
round of doubleheaders. They
won twice, beating Lewiston,
4-3 and 13-6. But second-place
Salem won a pair also, tripping
Tri-City, 8-5 and 9-8, to stay
within two games of the league
leaders. Yakima split with Spo
kane, winning the opener 5-4
but dropping the nightcap, 19-6.
Monday, June 13, 195S
hitter and Enos Slaughter drove
in two runs as the Kansas City
Athletics scored a 3-0 triumph
after losing to the Baltimore Or
ioles, 7-2 in other A.L. action.
Boston at Detroit was rained
out.
Giants, Cardinals Split
Pitcher Paul La Palm doub
led home ; the winning run . in
the 13th inning to give the St.
Louis Cardinals a 6-5 win and
a split with the Giants. The
Giants won the first game, 8-3,
as Johnny Antonelli pitched a
seven-hitter and hit one of New
York's three homers. Others
land defeated Klamath Falls
11 to 1 and 5 to 4 in other tussle
in the district.
Putney came through with his
two-hitter in the second fray of
the afternoon. He struckout 16
batters and didn't walk a one
over seven innings. Lakeview
got both its bingles in the fifth
inning, the only time the visitors
got men on base.
McLaughlin Sparks
A catcher's interference, an in
field hit by Smyth and a triple
on, a misjudged ball by McDon
ald gave Lakeview its runs.
Dick McLaughlin sparked CP
Medford in the second scrape
with three hits in three times up,
In the first inning he whammed
a triple after a pair of walks and
tallied a thrid run on Eldon
Francis's squeeze bunt. Dick
squeezed in two runs with a
bunt in the second inning. There
were four markers in the frame
and figuring were a single by
LaTy Perkins, a double by Fran
cis, an error and three stolen
bases. In the fourth inning Mc
Laughlin singled, advanced on
a ground out by Francis and
scored on Jim Putney's single,
In the opener Herrmann gave
way to Sides in the second inn
ing because of a pulled arm
muscle. Herrmann whiffed two
batters and gave two hits. Sides
was tagged for three bingles. He
struck out eight batters hit two
batsmen and walked one.
Mac Homers
McLaughlin homered in the
third inning of the starter. CP-
Medford's big innings were the
fourth and fifth. Three runs
crossed in the fourth on two er
rors, two bases on balls, a pass
ed ball, and three stolen bases
including a steal home by Herr
mann.
Perkins and Sides singled in
the fifth and three errors and a
passed ball went into production
of four scores.
Perkins hit three for four in
the second mix. h
Lakeview displayed a lack of
baseball savvy in the scrambles.
LINESCORES:
(First Game)
Lakeview 000 000 0 0 5 8
CP-Medford .. 121 340 x 11 6 4
Hoyez and Creel; Herrmann, Sides,
(2) and Meunier.
(Second Game)
Lakeview 000 020 0 2 2 1
CP-Medford .... 340 100 x 8 0
Hale, Cossey. (1), Kopacz (5), and
Creel; H. Putney and Meunier.
CONDITIONS APPROVED
Columbus, Ohio (U.R) The
United States Trotting Associa
tion today aprpoved conditions
for two new $75,000 harness
races to be staged at Hollywood
Park next autumn.
were by Gail Harris and Whitey
Lockman.
Frank Thomas and Ramon
Mejias homered to lead the
Pittsburgh Pirates to a 5-3 vic
tory but the Milwaukee Braves
won the second game, 6-5, as
Bob Buhl won his third game.
Del Rice hit his first homer for
Milwaukee in the nightcap.
The Philadelphia Phillies
scored seven runs in the sixth
inning to win a battle of six hom
ers from the Cincinnati Redlegs
12-8. The Phillies made only
seven hits but two were homers
by Del Ennis and Stan Lopata
and they profited by three Cin
cinnati errors. The second game
was rained out.
National League
(1st Game)
Milwaukee 002 010 000 S 9 1
Pittsburgh 030 020 00 x 5 8 2
Spahn. Crone 6, Johnson 7 and
Crandall. Law. Face 9 and Peterson.
Winning pitcher Law 2-1. Losing
pitcher Spahn 4-7.
(Second Game) 1
Milwaukee 210 003 0008 8 3
Pittsburgh 000 200 0215 6 0
Buhl 3-4 and Rice. Surkont, King
8. Wade 8 and Atwell. Losing pitcher,
Surkont 5-6.
Cincinnati 100 121 012 8 12 3
Philarelphia .... 103 107 OOx 12 7 0
Nuxhall. Black 6. Fowler 7 and Bur
gess. Kuzava - Dickson 2. Simmons 6
and Lopata. Winning pitcher. Sim
mons 3-2. Lisong pitcher, Nuxhall 5-4
(1st Game)
Chicago 000 603 0009 11 1
Brooklyn 100 000 ISO 5 8 2
Davis. Jeffcoat 9 and Chiti. New
combe. Sponer 6. Roebuck 7. Hughes
9 and Campanella. Winning pitcher,
Davis 4-2. Losing pitcher. Newcombe
10-1.
(Second Game)
Chicago 000 100 1002 6 2
Brooklyn 010 011 30x 6 11 0
Rush. Pollet 7. Jeffcoat 7. Andre 7
and ChiU. Mever. Labine 5 and
Walker. Campanella 6. Winning pitch
er. laDine s-o. Losing pitcner. Kusn
4-3.
(1st game)
at. Louis
000 201 000 3 7 0
New York 010 300 40x 8 11 2
Moford. LaPalme 4. Lawrence 5,
Schultz 6. Smith 7 and Burbrink. An
tonelli 6-7 and Katt. Westrum 5. Los
ing pitcher. Moford 1-1.
(2nd Game, 13 innings)
St. L. 102 000 200 000 18 10 3
N. Y 410 000 000 000 05 11 1
Haddix. Lawrence 2. LaPalme 7 and
Sarni. Maglie, McCall 7, Grissom 10
and Westrum. Katt 12. Winning pitch
er. LaPalme 2-0. Losing pitcher. Gris
som 2-1. 4
American League
(1st game)
Baltimore 100 000 0247 11 0
Kansas City 010 010 0002 8 3
- D. Johnson. Dorish 7 and Smith.
Portocarrero. Kellner 4- and Astroth.
Winning pitcher Dorish 3-0. Losing
piicner, neuner 4-9.
(2nd came)
Baltimore 000 000 0000 3 0
Kansas City 100 020 OOx 3 8 2
Palica. Schallock 1, Coleman 8 and
smith, ceccarelli 2-4 and W. Snantz,
Losing pitcher. Palica 2-7.
(1st came)
Washington 000 000 000 0 S 1
Chicago 100 000 OOx 1 4 0
. Porterfield 7-7 and Fitzgerald.
Pierce 5-3 and Lollar.
(2nd game)
Washington 030 000 0104 11 0
Chicago 007 000 Olx 8 8 2
Schmitz. Chakalo 3. Stone 7. Ramos
8 and Courtney. Donovan 7-2 and Lol
lar. Losing pitcher. Scmitz 4-4.
(1st game)
New York 000 000 002 2 8 0
Cleveland 000 004 OOx 10 11 1
Turley. Wiesler 8 and Bcrra. How
ard 8. Wynn 8-1 and Hegan. Losing
pitcher. Turley 8-5.
(2nd game)
New York 110 001 0003 0
Cleveland 300 000 40x 7 3 1
Grim. Ford 2. Sturdivant 8 and
Berra. Lemon, Garcia 9 and Hegan.
Winning pitcher Lemon 8-5. Losing
pitcher. Ford 7-2.
Standings
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Club
W. V
Pet. G.B.
San Diego
Seattle
Hollywood ....
Oakland
.. 43 29
. 40 32
597
.556 3
35 34 307
34 36 .486
6',i
8
San Francisco . .. 34 36 .486 8
Portland ....... 31 35 .470
Los Angeles ............ 32 39
Sacramento 31 39
451 10 ',i
443 11
Sunday's Results:
San Francisco 4-6. Ookland 3-2
Sacramento 5-2. Portland 2-10
Hollywood 16-5, Las Angeles 1-4
Seattle 8-3. San Diego 2-2
How Series Ended:
Sacramento 4. Portland 3
Hollywood 8. Los Angeles 1
Seattle 5, San Diego 2
San Francisco 4, Oakland 3
Next Series:
San Francisco at Seattle
San Diego at Oakland
Portland at Hollywood
Los Angeles at Sacramento
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Club
New York ,
Chicago
Cleveland .
Detroit
W. L. Pet. 6.B.
38 20 .655
32 19 .627 3'i
33 22 .600 3i
30 24 .838 6
25 31 .446 12
22 32 .407 14
22 34 .393 15
IS 38 .321 19 ,
Boston
Washington
Kansas City
Baltimore
Sunday's Results: -Chicago
1 Washington 0 (1st)
Chicago 8 Washington 4 (2nd)
Baltimore 7 Kansas City 2 (1st)
Kansas City 3 Baltimore 0 (2nd)
Cleveland 10 New York 2 (1st)
Cleveland 7 New York 3 (2nd)
Boston at Detroit, ppd. rain
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Club W. L.
Brooklyn 43 13
Chicago 33 24
New York . 29 27
Milwaukee 28 27
Philadelphia 23 30
St. Louis 22 30
Cincinnati 21 29
Pittsburgh 18 37
Pet. G.B.
.768
.579 10 la
.518 14
.509 14 ',i
.434 18 "i
.423 19
.420 19
.327 24 i
Sunday's Results:
Chicago 9 Brooklyn S (1st)
Brooklyn 6 Chicago 2 (2nd)
New York 8 St. Louis 3 (1st)
St. Louis 6 New York 5 (2nd 13
innings)
Philadelphia 13 Cincinnati 8 (1st)
Cincinnati at Philadelphia (2nd
game postponed, rain) -
Pittsburgh 5 Milwaukee 3 (1st)
Milwaukee 6 Pittsburgh S (2nd)
Gerhard Hecht Victor
In Europe Title Bout
Dortmund, Germany (U.R)
Gerhard Hecht of Germany won
the European light-heavyweight
championship Sunday night' by
scoring a. 13th round knockout
over Willi Hopener of Germany.
Hecht weighted 173 Vi pounds;
Hoepner, 173. .
RoZvdiev'Garher Heaves 2 Star
Loop Leader
ROGUE VALLEY LEAGUE
W L Pet.
i O l.U'JO
.. 2 1 .667
1 1 .500
1 1 .500
1 2 .333
0 2 .000
Camp Whit
Glendale
Grants Pass
Eagle Point -Butte
Falls -
Ashland
Camp White was lone leader
in the Roggue Valley Baseball
league after blasting Glendale
out of unbeaten ranks on Sun
day. The Whiters won their second
mix in as many tries by bounc
ing the Douglas county crew 7
to 4. Glendale was relegated to
second position with a 2-1 rec
ord. In other loops frays Eagle
Point beat Ashland 14 to 6 and
Grants Pass nudged Butte Falls
6 to 4.
Both clubs at Glendale got
eight hits but the Camp White
cause was helped along by home
runs by Frank Rector and Willie
Garner.
Keith Johnson singled in Bill
Caldwell for the first Whiter
fun in the second inning to start
the scoring. Garner homered
in the third. Rector's four-baser
was in the ninth after Al Kim-
ura had walked.
Rector Hits 3 for 5
Prestiani homored in the
fourth frame for Glendale and
three runs in the seventh inning
were aided by two hits and an
error.
Rector batted three for five
for Camp White. Keith Johnson
hit two for four. He fanned six
and walked six in the pitching
department.
Mel Drews, a catcher through
his high school career, turned
pitcher as GP topped BF at Pros
pect. He yielded only five hits,
struck out six batters, walked
one and hit one. Only two runs
were earned against him.
LINESCORE:
Camp White 011 200 1027 8 2
Glendale 000 100 300 4 8 3
Johnson and Garner; Miller and
Munyon.
Medford Divides With Millers;
Loggers Take Lead in SO Loop
SOUTHERN OREGON
LEAGUE STANDINGS
W L
Pet.
.833
.500
,500
.500
.500
.500
.167
Coquille 5
Medford 3
Roseburg .............. 3
Drain ... 2
Bend ; 1
Bandon 1
Grants Pass . 1
Extra-base knocks accounted
for most of the scoring and the
winning hurlers boosted their
own causes with heavy belting
as the Medford Cheney Studs
and the Bandon Millers split
a pair of fast-moving scuffles in
a week end Southern Oregon
League series at the fairgrounds
baseball park here.
Terry Maddox, who turned in
a six-hitter in his 1955 pitching
starter for the Studs, romped
home with the winning run yes
terday as Medford nicked Ban
don 3 to 2. Maddox, who threw
"just junk" at the Millers be
cause of an ailing shoulder,
tripled in the eighth inning. He
scored when the throw-in from
centerfield got by Third Base
man Ray Stratton.
Goat of the Sunday brush,
Stratton was, nevertheless, the
hero on Saturday night when
Bandon won 5 to 2. He bludgeon
ed out a two-run homer and, on
the mound, held the Studs to
three hits. The roundtripper,
smashed over the left field fence,
was the first out-of-the-park hit
at the fairgrounds in a couple
of seasons.
Both encounters moved along
at a rapid, crowd-pleasing pace.
Action was completed in two
hours on Saturday and the final
out was recorded after an hour
and 40 minutes yesterday.
In other week end scraps Co
quille took sole possession of
first place by topping Drain 3
to 1 at Drain on Saturday and
8 to 2 at Coquille on Sunday.
Roseburg and Grants Pass won
on their home fields with the
Chiefs slugging out a 21 to 5
verdict on Saturday and GP tak
ing an 11-inning affair 15 to 14
yesterday. Roseburg, Medford,
Drain, Bandon and Bend all
stand .500 in the percentage col
umn with Medford and Rose
burg having played the most
games.
Three-baggers figured in all
the Medford runmaking on Sun
day and in both the markers on
Saturday night. Doubles had a
role in both Miller scores on Sun-
Isaac Logart Favored
To Defeat Lightburn
New York (U.R) Welter
weight Isaac Logart of Cuba is
favored at 7Va to 5 to beat Lud
wig Lightburn of British Hon
duras again tonight in their
television rematch at St. Nich
olas Arena.
They had a hard, close fight
at St. Nick's on May 9. Logart's
stronger finish in the last round
gave him the verdict. That was
the last fight for each.
Virgil Akins ol St. Louis, fifth
ranking contender, was slated
originally to meet Logart to
night; but he suffered a sprained
wrist in training. Lightburn was
an eager substitute.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; I a. m Monday for
Monday; ether days 5:30 previous day.
PGL All-Star Encounter Tonight
By DON THACKREY
United Press Sports Writer
The Pacific Coast League
holds its annual All-Star base
ball game in San Diego tonight,
but Hollywood's Bob Garber,
who was plenty of all-star yes
terday, was taking a well-deserved
day off.
All Garber did Sunday was
pitch a four-hitter in the first
game and blast two home runs
and then win the second game
in relief to lift the Stars into
third place in the league stand
ings. Garber authored the 16-1 first
game win over Los Angeles and
then pitched scoreless relief ball
in the second to take a 5-4 de
cision. Seattle stunned first place
San Diego twice 8-2 and 3-2 to
move to within three games of
the top. And San Francisco
New Record
In Decathlon
Kingsburg, Calif. U.R) Rafer
Johnson, 19-year-old freshman
sensation from UCLA, has re
placed Bob Mathias as holder of
the decathlon world record.
Johnson returned to his home
town Saturday to run up a point
total of 7983 in the Central Cali
fornia AAU Decathlon cham
pionships nearly 100 points
more than Mathias' world record
of 7887.
The young track and field
star swept to victory in eight of
the 10 events, tied for first in
another and placed a close sec
ond in the tenth in establishing
his record.
Johnson surpassed Mathias
total with an outstanding per
formance in the final event of
the two-day program the 1500
meter race.
day and after Stratton's homer
Saturday a three-baser brought
in another counter.
Both clubs needed all the
extra bases their hits could get
because of . pitcher stinginess.
Warren Noyes, like Maddox,
yielded six swats on Saturday.
Yesterday Allen Prewett held
the Studs to five.
Bandon pushed over both its
runs before Medford scored yes
terday. Vic Backlund drove
them in. He singled after Pat
Rooney's double in the second
stanza and two-baggered after
Moreno's single in the fourth.-
Mellbye drew a walk for the
Studs in the fourth canto. He
went to second on Jack Cooney's
groundout and hurt a toe sliding
into the sack. Larry Bigham took
over as a courtesy runner and
Bill McLean's three base swat
brought him home. Mellbye, al
though the toe was sore, finished
the game at shortstop.
Fred Luper got the other of
Medford's long blows in the
fifth. Ed McCullough's flyout
allowed him to score.
Stratton's home run in the
sixth panel broke the scoring
ice for both clubs Saturday. The
circuit clout followed a base
on balls to Moose Blevins. In the
eighth Blevins tripled home Pete
Goodbrod, who had walked. Hits
by Herb Moreno and Wimpy
Hastings, an error and a wild
pitch were responsible for two
additional scores in the ninth.
Medford got its two runs in
the eighth inning. Maddox walk
ed, and Mellbye tripled him
home. Howard Morris's flyout
allowed Mellbye to reach the
plate. .
Stratton, normally a third
baseman or outfielder, and Mad
dox used "stuff' to fashion their
victories. The Miller tosser sel
dom threw hard and Maddox
didn't bear down because of pull
ed ligaments suffered three
weeks ago.
Holding back in order to be
available for Sunday relief if
needed, Stratton had the "junk"
and control to restrain the Med
ford batters. And he got almost
perfect support from his fielders,
including two double plays. The
one Miller error did no damage.
Stratton whiffed five batters and
walked two while his rival,
Noyes, fanned seven and issued
five free passes. Two of Noye's
bases on balls and on Stratton's
were costly.
Maddox got stronger after al
lowing four hits in the early in
nings. Infield and outfield sup
port proved more than adequate.
Two Stud errors didn't hurt
although they had Maddox in
tough spots. The University of
1950 FORD V8
F-2 Ton Pickup
Special Throughout
Radio, Hooter
Factory Stock Rack
$795.00
36 South Bartlett
Phone 3-4381
claimed a small portion of the
first division with 4-3 and 6-2
victories over Oakland.
In a night doubleheader, Ma
rino Pieretti pitched Sacramento
to a 5-2 win in the opener and
then Portland exploded for eight
runs on three home runs in the
ninth to take the nightcap 10-2.
Garbers two homers were his
second and third of the season
and he did not allow the Angels
a run until the ninth inning when
he had a 16-0 lead.
Lee Walls also homered for
the Stars as they unleashed a
17-hit attack including six runs
Ed Furgol
Takes Toga
Washington (U.R) Steel
nerved Ed Furgol turned the
International golf championship
into an all-American victory
here after passing golfs most
gruelling test thev sudden death
playoff.
The withered arm professional
came home with his best round
of the four-day tournament at
Columbia Club Sunday, a 67, to
end in a three-way tie for the
individual title with a 279 for
72 holes. He matched the scores
turned in by Australia's Peter
Thomson and Belgium's Flory
van Donck.
In the playoff, Van Donck was
eliminated at the second hole
with a bogey five. Thomson then
fired a drive into the rough. The
Australian's recovery landed a
few yards short of Furgol's drive
ana that ended the match as
Furgol played safe for his par.
PCA champion Chick Harbert
fired a 72 to stretch the U.S. lead
to six holes over runner-up Aus
tralia for the $2,500 team trophy
and Canada Cup for the Inter
national championship.
Oregon star struck out just one
batter. He walked two. Prewett
fanned two and gave three bases
on balls, one of which heirs d
in a run.
No batter got more than one
hit on Saturday but yesterday
Backlund hit two for three and
Maddox two for four.
Oddity of the afternoon yes
terday came in the second inning
when Mellbye made a long run
for a fly ball. He couldn't quite
hang onto it but managed to flip
the pellett to Outfielder McLean
who made the catch for the put-
out.
Medford will play a non-league
mix with Grants Pass at the fair
grounds on Wednesday night.
SATURDAY BOX:
Bandon ab
Hastings. 2b 4
Goodbrod. cf 3
h po
1 2
0 4
1 0
1- 2
1 10
0 1
1 2
1 5
0 1
Blevins. If
4
Stratton, p
Johnson, lb
Roney. rf
Moreno, ss
Backlund. c
Jarvis. 3b
4
4
4
4
2
32 S 27 11 1
Medford
McCullough, 3b
Prince. 2 b
McLean, If
Cooney. lb .
Maddox, cf
Mellbye. ss .
Tonn. rf
Niles. rf
Morris, c .
Noyes, p
ab
3
4
4
4
2 .
3
2
1
2
3
28 2 3 27 8 2
Bandon .. , 000 002 012 S
Medford 000 000 020 2
Runs batted in Stratton 2. Blevins,
Hastings, Mellbye, Morris. Three-base
hits Blevins. Mellbye. Home run
Stratton. Stolen base Hastings. Sac
rifice hits Hastings. Jarv's. Sacrifftce
fly Morris. Double olavs Stratton to
Johnson. Hastings to Johnson. Left on
base Bandon 7, Medford 2. Bases on
balls Off Noyes 5. off Stratton 2.
Strikeouts Bv Novel 7. bv Stratton
5. Earned runs Bandon 4. Medford 2.
Wild pitches Noyes 2. Umpiri
Copeland and Swanson.
SUNDAY LINESCORE:
Bandon 010 100 0002 6 1
Medford 000 110 Olx 3' 5 2
Prewett and Backlund; Maddox and
Morris.
SATURDAY AT DRAIN:
Coquille 000 111 000 3 7 0
Drain 000 000 0101 3 2
Hyde and earner. Cade and Beard.
SUNDAY AT COQUILLE:
Drain 100 010 0002 5 2
Coquille 001 002 14x 8 11 2
Diller. Bartow (7). Helser (8) and
Beard; Palica and Garner.
SATURDAY AT ROSEBURG:
Grants Pass .... 020 030 000 5 9 10
Roseburg 050 060 64x 21 11 3
Reid, Seymour (5) and Smith; White,
Christenso (7) and Niro.
SUNDAY AT GRANTS PASS:
Roseburg 020 055 20014 17 1
Grants Pass 020 161 20215 21 4
Whitteker, Christenson (St. Zur
cher (5) and Luby; Lucas, Hartman (6)
Meyers (6), Seymour (7), Reid (10) and
Shollin.
CLEARANCE SALE!
Now Is the Time to Save on
Garden Farm Sporting Hardware
Electrical and Paint Supplies
Least 20 off Stock!
Better Hurry to . . .
Phoenix Feed & Seed
Phoenix, Oregon
For Big Savings on Present and Future Needs.
OPEN UNTIL NOON ON SUNDAYS
Triumphs;
in the third inning and seven
in the seventh. ' ,
In the second game the An
gels got four first inning runs
but could not hold the lead. Hol
lywood tied it in the bottom
of the fourth and, after Garber
took the hill in the fifth, scored
the winning run.
Pieretti kept the Beavers un
der control until the seventh in
ning of the short first game
when Clarence Maddern's third
homer of the year ruined his
shutout.
In the second game Richie My
ers homered to keep the teams
tied at 2-2 going into the ninth.
Then the Beavers struck as Jim
Robertson, Carl Powis and Joe
Taylor each hit homers as the
Bevos rolled to eight final frame
runs.
LINESCORES:
(1st Game)
Los Angeles 000 000 001 1 4 3
Hollywood .. 106 001 71x 16 17 3
Piktuzis. Hatten 3. Zick 7. Lary 7
iu nwueuii vraroer ana eragaa
(2nd Game)
Los Angeles 400 000 04 10 1
Hollywood 002 210 x 5 8 0
Church. Elston 3. Lown 4 and Fan
ning; Trimble, Donoso 1, O'DonneU
4, Garber 5 and Bragan.
(1st Game)
Seattle 000 OOO 512 It 1 n
San Diego 001 000 0012 9 0
Blackwell, Kennedy 6 and Gins
berg; Erautt, Lyons 7 and Bailey.
(2nd Game)
Seattle 010 200 0 3 7 n
San Diego 000 101 0 2 7 1
uianam. Judson 7, Kennedy 7 and
Ginsberg; Bishop and Aylward.
(1st Game)
Oakland 011 001 000 3 7 0
San Fran 000 012 0014 11 1
uettel. Black 9 and Neal: Green.
wood, Fracchia 7 and Ritchey.
(2nd Game)
Oakland Oil 000 0 2 B 1
San Fran 002 220 x 6 9 2
Drews and Neal; Bearden and
Ritchey.
(1st Game)
Portland w 000 000 2 2 7 2
Sacramento 032 000 x 5 7 0
Alexander. Elliott 2, Hall S, and
Robertson, Pieretti and Sheely. ,
- i
(2nd Game) '
PorUand 001 000 018 10 15 0
Sacramento 000 020 000 2 10 2
Lint, Scheif 8 and Robertson;
Jones. Candini 9. Brazle 9. Cere
ghino 9 and Baich.
Baker Boy Beats
National Mark
Portland (U.R) A 15-year-old
Baker, Ore., lad and a 17-year-old
from Portland both cracked
national marks in the Junior
Olympics here Saturday, and
Beaverton took the state crown
with 107 points.
Marty Sharp of Baker broke
the national high jump record
in the 14-15-year-old class with
a leap of 6-feet, Va-inch. The old
record was 5-feet, 10-inches.
Phil Knight set the other mark
in the 880 for 17 and 18-year-olds.
He clipped off the distance
in 2:13.3, whittling down the
old mark of 2:4.
About 1500 boys and girls
from over the state participated
in the event, sponsored by the
Oregon AAU and the American
Legion; Beaverton was helped
to victory by its strong girls
team which piled up 80 points.
TOUGH STRUGGLE
Summit, N.J. (U.R) Archie
Moore admitted today "it's been
a tough struggle" getting down
to the light-heavyweight limit
for his title defense against Bobo
Olson, June 22. "I hope it doesn't
leave me weak," he said.
Dead line for Sunday Classified is
Monday: other days 5:30 previous day.
the more you
SMOXE A FALCO'I
ti sweeter it tsstcst
mm
Falcon's imported brier
bowl always smokes
sweet always stays
lose dry-oven after 5
thonosnd smokes--.
because Falcon's
HiiHiKlume i
BOOTS THS GOO I
my puff baton i
retxikM asm. Nn .
fine briar Dine doe that.
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WORLD'S FIRST
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