Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 22, 1958, Image 8

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    o
0
Beavers
e
Snlit: Indians
Salt Lake 14-13
By United Press International
The Spokane Indians out
lasted Salt Lake City 14-13 in
a 13-inning fray at Derks
Field, Salt Lake, last night
despite a parade of seven Bee
hurlers who tried to keep the
Utahans in contention for the
Pacific Coast League flag.
The loss left Salt Lake W2
games behind San Diego and
Vancouver who are tied for
the lead, with the Padres hold
ing a single percentage advan
tage. The Mounties lost a half
game margin by suffering a
9-3 loss to Seattle at the
Rainiers' home field. Portland
and Sacramento split a twin
Patterson-Harris Theatre
Television Fight Tickets
Go On Sale at Craterian
Tickets are now on sale at
the Craterian theater here for
the television presentation of
Flovd Patterson -Roy Harris
heavyweight title boxing bout,
Challenger Harris goes
against champion Patterson
on Monday nieht. Aug. 18 at
Los Angeles. There will be
no home television of the
fight.
Robert Corbin, manager
here for Oregon - California
theaters, general admission
tickets at the Craterian will
sell for $3 and center section
and loge seats will cost $5.
The amounts are higher than
the prices for two previous
bouts but considerably less
than what fans will be paying
In other communities.
Will Take Orders
The Craterian will fill
mail orders if checks or
money orders in the correct
amounts are included. Also
reservations will be taken and
tickets will be held through
Friday, Aug. 15. If these tick
ets have not been picked up
and paid for by that date, they
will be put back on sale.
On the basis of attendance
at the two Carmen Basilio
Ray Robinson fights shown
here previously, a sellout is
expected for the heavyweight
event. The two middleweight
tussles were great engage
G0
?
057
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and
Solons
Outlast
bill at Portland, the Solons
bouncing back for a 7-5 win
in the nightcap after dropping
the opener to the Beavers 6-3
Second place Phoenix and
San Diego were idle.
A Long, Slow Game
When the Bees came up to
bat in the seventh inning, th
home crowd of 4,000 fans was
ready to go home as the game
was a slow one and Spokane
led 10-3. But Salt Lake'
hitters began connecting
They piled up eight runs for
an 11-10 lead by the end of
the inning.
Spokane tied it up in the
ninth on doubles by Jim Wil
liams and Bob Jenkins. In the
ments and the video picture
was good, showing the action
adequately. Corbin stated
that the same equipment and
operator will be employed
here as for tke last of the two
Basilio-Robinson scraps.
Doors at the Craterian will
open at 6 p. m. and the fight
will begin at 7 p.m. (PST).
Favorites Win
In Oregon
Coast Tourney
Astoria (DPD June Robin
son, a 17 -year -old blonde
from Tillamook, fired a one-
under-women's par 73 Mon
day to cop medalist honors in
the women's division of the
48th annual Oregon Coast
Golf tournament at the Asto
ria Country club.
Leading the pack in the
senior men's division was
Joe Herron, Portland Golf
club. The 53-year-old veteran
carded a 74, two over par to
pace a field of 38 golfers.
iavorites in the men s
championship flight posted
first round victories Monday
all without mishap.
Chuck Hunter, the Univer
sity of Oregon golfer from
Tacoma, rallied from a one
hole deficit on the 17th hole
to defeat two-time champion
Bob Anderson of Astoria, 1-
up.
Junior men's medalist
Ralph Dichter of Astoria
trounced Hal Laman of Port
land Golf club, 6 and 5. Keith
Gubrud, University of Ore
gon, whipped Bob Smith of
Waverley, 4 and 3.
Men's play continues to
day with the women getting
the day off.
rne tournament runs
through Saturday.
company!
Coth MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS
24 20 12 6
paymts paymts paymts paymts
$100 S 5.90 S 6.72 S10.05 $18.46
208 11.81 13.44 20.09 36.92
300 17.71 20.16 30.14 55.38
500 28.86 32.97 49.64 91.66
1000 53.89 62.21 95.64 179.56
1500 77.87 90.38 140.57 266.36
uoumucU s chart u th monthly rata of 3 on
thai tort eft oalanaa not txaaiini SJOO. 2 on
that tort of a Una in ucass of S300 btU not
nutdint 1500. ana 1 am any rrmatnder.
in 13
12th, Jenkins doubled and
then scored on a single by
Norm Sherry. The Bees came
back with a run on singles
by Pete raton and Jim
Baumer.
Jim - Gentile homered for
the Indians in the 13th and
the Tribe added an important
insurance run on singles by
Tony Koig and Jim Baxes
Carlos Bernier scored on Dick
Barone's single for Salt Lake
in their half, but that was all
and the game ended just 15
minutes short of five hours
of baseball.
Sacramento saved its split
in the double-header with
Portland on the three-run-
homer blasted by Bob Roselli
in the top of the ninth. Port
land's Dave Melton did the
same in the bottom of the
frame, but it was not enough
The Beavers took the opener
on a neat seven-hit job by
Elmer Singleton. He was
given a good start with a five
run margin in the first in
ning.
Seattle .bounced the Moun
ties out of tneir narrow
league lead with a 13-hit at
tack, overtaking" the Canadi
ans in the third with the help
of a wild pitch by Gordon
Sundin and an error.
THE LINES CORES:
Vancouver .. 012 000 000 3 8
Seattle 013 230 OOx 9 13
Sundin. Held (3). Moeller (8) and
White. Patton (3); Surkont and
tsevan.
Spokane
....240 000 401 001 2 14
Salt Lake
16
100 002 8000011 13 1-8
Grob. Milhken (7). Patrick (1
Palmquist (9) and N. Sherry: Urqu
hart. O'Brien (2), Shepard (7), Kil-
naraison tuj ana in a ton
fist same 7 inninec)
Sacramento 000 210 0 3 7
Portland 500 010 x 6 7
Oreen. Kume (4). B6wman ffi)
and DalrymDle: Sinffletnn and
meal.
(2nd came)
Sacramento ..003 000 004 7 14
Portland 000 002 003 5 12
Osenbaueh. Rosa (61. Kume ffll
and Roselli; Mayer, Judson (8) and
-Dai i dgan.
Sports Bulletin:
Philadelphia (UPD The
Philadelphia Phillies today
fired Mayo Smith as mana
ger and rehired Eddie Saw
yer who piloted the team to
the last pennant in 1950.
Louis Kurz
Stock Car
Race Victor
rtsniana i,ouis is.urz was
A 1 1 J -w
victor in the main event Sat
urday in stock car races at
Valley View speedway.
His car was one of five to
finish the race out of a start
ing field of 14. Kurz was fol
lowed to the checkered flag
Dy cecu James and Lon Gay.
Other survivors were Earl
Stevenson and Jack Keck Sr,
Although the gals in the
powder puff derby had a few
precarious moments they
managed to stay right side up.
Helen Kurz was winner with
Opal Jenkins second and
Juanita Bunker third.
In the trophy dash Louis
Kurz was not quite able to
take the hardware away from
the McGilvray family. Red
McGilvray was first across
the line to get the Copeland
Lumber Yard of Medford
prize. This is the third
straight time one of the Mc
Gilvray brothers has taken
home the trophy.
Sleiten Spill Thrills
Ted Sletten was first in the
opening heat with Jerry Weir
next and Cliff McGilvray
third. Jack Keck Jr. won out
the battle for fourth spot and
a place in the final heat. Red
McGilvray, James and Harold
Silver were one-two-three in
the second heat, and Red Mc
Gilvray, Sletten and Kurz in
that order in the final heat.
Sletten put the crowd to its
feet in the 12th lap of the
main. His car blew a tire and
executed a 1 roll. Kurz
barely missed the big Lincoln
but Red McGilvray damaged
the right front end of his car
and the front end of Silver's
car totaled out. Lon Gay had
at least two wheels in the air
to avoid being involved. Slet
ten suffered a bruised shoul
der. Jack Keck Jr., who cot a
wheel hub repaired after
breaking it in the time trials,
blew a piston and burned out
main bearing in the main
event.
The track was fast and ac
tion was the keynote Satur
day. Drivers seemed to be go
ing all out to give the fans a
show.
BEND VICTOR
The Dalles (UPD Bend de
feated The Dalles 12-6 in Jun
ior Legion baseball play Sun
day to earn the right to enter
the quarter-final playoffs.
8 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Tuesday, July 22, 1958
MedfordS&WTribune
siPdDinrs
Rogue All
Faces Camp White
Ex -Medford High school
athletes predominate on the
roster of the Rogue Valley
All-Stars baseball nine which
will meet Camp White on
Wednesday evening at the
Veterans Administration dom
iciliary's Memorial stadium at
Camp White.
Ex-Talent and ex-Ashland
high players also are on the
squad and a majority of the
squad members listed are now
attending college.
Ed Reinking, ex - Medford
outfielder ' and member -this
spring of the Oregon State
college varsity, is manager of
the all-star club. '
He reported that -ex-Med-ford
athletes on the crew in
clude Dennis King, Dick Mc
Loughlin, Larry Perkins, Gor
don Ousley and Eldon Fran
cis. Gordy Thoreson and
Dale Walter are from Talent
high and Pete Cotton from
Ashland. '
Possible Line-Up Told
Walter or McLaughlin
Loggers Top
In Softball Tilt Monday
Butte Falls topped the Bu
reau of Reclamation 8-6 in an
extra inning Jackson County
Softball association league
game Monday night at Camp
White after the first game of
the evening, Eagle Point vs.
the Junior Chamber of Com
merce, was called) after five
innings because it was run
ning late.
The Jaycees were leading
the Eagle Point Merchants 21
20 when the game was called
after more than two hours.
League Director Willie Bar
num reported that the final
two innings will be played
later in the season.
Bill Irwin struck out 12
batters and smashed a triple
to help his own cause while
going the distance for the
Butte Falls Loggers. Team
mates George Bray and Har
Butler Earns
In Senior Links Seedings
Laurence Butler with an
even par 72 was medalist in
qualifying rounds for the
men s senior match play goli
tourney of Rogue Valey Coun
try ' club.
Butler thereby gained No. 1
seeded position in an eight
man championship flight. He
was billed against George
Stacey -for his first match.
First round of play, which
STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L.
Pet.
.568
.558
.505
.494
.471
.470
.466 .
.466
GB
1
5i
6'i
8 'i
8".i
9
San Francisco .
50
48
46
42
41
39
41
38
38
45
43
46
44
47
47
Milwaukee
Chicago
St. Louis
Cincinanti ..
Philadelphia
i'lttsburgn
Los Angeles 41
Monday's Results
Cincinnati a, cnicago 4 (nignt)
St. Louis 5. Milwaukee 4 (13 in
nings, night)
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Probable Pitchers
ban Francisco at .Fnuaaeipnia
(night, preceded by June 22 sus
pended game) Antonelli (10-7) or
McCormick (7-1) vs. Semproch
(11-6).
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (night)
Williams (6-3) vs. Kline (9-9).
Chicago at Cincinnati (night)
Hillman (2-1) vs. Nuxhall (6-5).
St. Louis at Milwaukee (night)
Magiie (2-3) vs. winey (Z-3).
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Cincinnati (night)
St. Louis at Milwaukee (night)
San Francisco at Philadelphia
(night)
(Only games scheduled)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L.
Pet. GB
.659
.534 11
.494 14 'i
.483 15Vi
.478 16
.471 16',i
.456 18
.427 20 ',i
New York
Boston
58
47
43
42
43
41
41
38
30
41
44
45
47
46
49
51
Baltimore
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City .
Cleveland .
Washington .
Monday's Results
(Imo games scheduled)
Tuesday's Probable Pitchers
Baltimore at Chicago (night)
Harshman (7-7) vs. Pierce (9-6).
Boston at Kansas City (night)
Brewer (4-8) vs. Dickson (6-4).
New York at Detroit (night)
Turley (14-3) vs. Foytack (7-8).
Washington at Cleveland (2, twi
light-night) Pascual (5-5) and Ro
monosky (1-1) vs. McLish (8-5).
nd Grant (6-8) or Woodeschick
(1-0).
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore at cnicago
Boston at Kansas City (night)
New York at Detroit (night)
(Only games scheduled)
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
GB
San Diego 56
41
42
43
44
43
44
59
57
.577
.576
.566 1
.532 4'i
.484 9
.439 13 i
.416 15'i
.412 15 ',2
Vancouver 57
Phoenix 56
Salt Lake 50
Portland 45
Spokane 43
Seattle 42
Sacramento 40
Monday's Results
Portland 6, Sacramento 3 (1st
game. 7 innings)
Sacramento 7, Portland 5 (2nd
game) '
Spokane 14, Salt Lake 13 (13 in
nings) Seattle 9, Vancouver 3
(Only games scheduled)
How Series Stand
Portland 1, Sacramento 1
Spokane 1. Salt Lake 0
Seattle 1, Vancouver 0
- Star Nine
could be starting pitcher for
the Stars with Eldon Francis
or McLaughlin catching. King
may be at first base, Perkins
at second, Ousley at shortstop
and Thoreson at third with
Reinking in center field, and
Cotton in right. Francis may
be in the left pasture if he
doesn't catch.
It is hoped to round out the
squad with baseballers who
have just completed Ameri
can Legion junior baseball
slates. '
Of the group King played
with the Oregon State Rook
squad last spring and Mc
Laughlin saw some duty with
the Rooks. Perkins was with
the University of Oregon
Frosh. Thoreson, Francis and
Walter were on the Southern
Oregon college crew and Ous
ley attended SOC.
Game time is 8 p.m.
The tussle had been
planned for last week but was
postponed because of stormy
weather.
Bureau, 8-6,
old yLang contributed to the
winners cause witn doubles.
With the Bureau team lead
ing 5 to 2 in the bottom of
the fourth inning Bud Ash
smashed a home run for the
losers but in the top of the
fifth the Loggers came back
to tie it up and force the game
into an extra inning.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Camp White Memorial stadi
um the M and W Chain Saw
club is scheduled to meet the
Rogue Valley Dairy Maids,
and at 9 p.m. the Butte Falls
Loggers will take on Parson
Motors. Action slated for next
Monday includes the Cheney
Studs vs. the Bureau of Recla
mation and the Jaycees vs. the
Butte Falls Loggers.
LINESCOR:
Butte Falls ..101 040 02 8 10 1
Bureau of Reclamation
050 100 006 7 5
Irwin and Lang; Trimble and
Bishop.
No. 1 Spot
amounts to quarter-finals, is
to be completed by Sunday
evening, July 27.
Bill Catey is defending
champ and is matched against
Jack Creager. Other first
round pairings are Leland
Clark versus John Moffat in
the upper part of the bracket
and Merlen Emmans against
Ted Porterfield in the lower
bracket.
Second flight matchings
are Forest Casey versus Frank
Perl, E. A. Littrell versus E.
K. Ricker, Stoy Elliot versus
Morris Leonard and A.' C.
Broyles versus B. L. Martin.
BACKSTROKE RECORD
Nijmgen, Holland (UPD
Rita Van Velzen, 15-year-old
Dutch swimming star, set
a new world' record of 1:12.3
for the women's 100 -meter
backstroke Sunday. The
young Dutch girl achieved
the feat in a 50-meter pool
during the Dutch-German In
terland swimming meet.
League Leaders
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Player & Club
G. AB R. R.
Musial. St. L. 82 293 44 105
Mays, S. Fran. 87 343 69 118
Ashb'rn, Phil. 85 339 53 111
Dark, Chicago 73 291 35 95
Walls, Chic-go 91 364 63 115
Pet
358
.344
327
321
316
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Goodm'n, Chi. 57 223 24 74
Runnels, Bos. 82 311 54 104
Power, Cleve. 82 330 57 109
Cerv., K. City 80 298 58 97
Kuenn, Detr'it 77 301 39 96
.337
334
.330
325
319
Home Runs
National league: Thomas, Pirates
26; Banks, Cubs 26: Walls, Cubs
21; Aaron, Braves 20; Cedepa, Gi
ants 19; Boyer, Cardinals 19; Ma
thews, Braves 19.
American league: Jensen Red
Sox 27; Mantle, Yankees 24; Siev
ers, Senators 25; Cerv, Athletics
24; Lemon, Senators 18.
Runs Batted In
National league: Thomas, Pirates,
74; Banks, Cubs 73; Cepeda, Giants
60; Anderson, Phils 59; Spencer, Gi
ants 56.
American league: Jensen, Red
Sox 83; Cerv, Athletics 55; Sievers,
Senators 61; Lemon, Senators 57;
Malzone, Red Sox 56.
Pitching
National league: Spahn, Braves
18-6; Semproch, Phillies 11-6; Pur
key, Redlegs 11-6; Koufax, Dodgers
7-4; Worthington, Giants 8-5.
American league: Delock, Red
Sox 10-0; Turley, Yankees 14-3;
Ford, Yankees 12-4; Sullivan, Red
Sox 8-3; Shantz, Yankees 7-3.
Windshields
Tell your insurance agent
Selby's will install your wind
shield while you rest in a
comfortable waiting room.
Cokes are on the house.
Phone SP 3-3613
SELBY
GLASS
CO.
303 North Bartlett
OSC May
Leave PCC
Portland (UPD Oregon
State indicated today that it
may drop out of the troubled
Pacific Coast conference if
Washington and Stanford join
three other schools in bolting
from the loop.
Dr. A. L. Strand, president
of the Corvallis school, said
Oregon State would stay
in the PCC as long as there
were five members. "We will
consider dropping out if the
number is cut to four." He
was here to attend a meeting
of the State Board of High
er Education.
Southern California, Calif
ornia and UCLA already have
announced plans to bolt the
PCC. Washington's board of
regents has given the Seattle
school a go-ahead to withdraw
although no official word has
been forthcoming from it as
yet.
Washington's withdrawal
would leave Oregon State,
Oregon, Washington State,
Idaho and Stanford in the
PCC. ,
Dr. Strand was of the opin
ion that Stanford probably
would go along with the other
California members of the
conference. In that case, he
said, "the rest of us might as
well disband. We have just
about had it." He said the
other schools probably would
go along as independents.
Dr. O. Meredith Wilson,
president of the University of
Oregon, had "no comment"
on Dr. Strand's satement.
Eugene (UPD Greg Willen
er, all-state end for South Eu
gene High school last fall
Saturday disclosed plans to
enroll at the University of
Oregon.
Sport
Parade
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press International
r Havertown, Pa. (UPD Tom
my Bolt walks a temperamen
tal tight rope today all be
cause of a golf course built
by 500 pounds of sugar and
the breaking of a golf club
fashioned from a tank's radio
antenna.
There are other Ingredients
which contribute to Tommy's
reputation as a "Thunder'
Bolt. They ' are two five-gal
lon GI cans which were filled
with golf balls, a dozen and
a half Number 10 tomato cans
and the partisan heckling of
a horde of Italian fairway
enthusiasts.
All of them were concern
ed in the branding of Bolt as
"terrible tempered" Tommy.
The story of Bolt's tribula
tions started when Dugan Ay-
cock, golf professional at the
Lexington Country Club in
North Carolina, swapped his
cleats for khaki and shipped
out as sergeant in the 605th
Ordnance attached to the
Fifth Army. Aycock managed
to crowd five sets of golf clubs
into the duffle and packed 400
golf balls into the potato
pots.
Arabs Paid In Sugar
Then came the day when
a semblance of peace reigned
in Casablanca and Aycock set
about building a golf course
even though he had nothing
to do with Special Services.
Dugan laid out fairways and,
paying the Arab laborers off
in sugar, used 500 pounds in
getting his fairways mowed
by hand. The tomato cans
from the mess shack were
used for cups and sand greens
were dressed up with motor
oil and ground cork.
The course was such a
smashing success that, when
Aycock's outfit finally moved
on to Rome, he was given
permission to build another
course. The greens were
there, this time, but the fair
ways had grown wild. Equip
ment was getting scarce, too.
"We finally got the course
into some kind of shape," he
recalls, "and had a windfall
when we found 20 putter
heads in a bombed out build
ing near the course. But we
had a maintenance outfit
which could do anything and
it fashioned shafts out of tank
radio antennas."
Enter Bolt
CRATER LAKE f
MOTORS' I
A
mm
dr'
NEW ANGLIA TUDOR
ONLY $
CRATER LAKE
Cardinals Stop Braves
5-4 In 14 Inning Game
Redlegs Whip Chicago
By FRED DOWN
United Press International
Bill Wight, a pitcher both
Baltimore's Paul Richards and
Cincinnati's Birdie Tebbets
gave up on within the span
of a couple of months, shaped
up today as the relief hurler
St. Louis Cardinal manager
Fred Hutchinson has been
seeking all season.
, Wight, a 36-year-old left
hander from Rio Vista, Calif.,
who's knocked around the ma
jor leagues with indifferent
success since 1946, pitched six
shutout innings Monday night
that enabled the Cardinals to
beat the Milwaukee Braves,
5-4, in 14 innings. It was the
best relief job turned in by
a Cardinal pitcher all season.
Rookie Curt Flood, obtain
ed from the Cincinnati Red
legs last Dec. 5, broke up the
game when he homered off
Lew Burdette in the 14th. It
was the eighth loss of the
year for the 1957 World Se
ries hero, who went all the
way and had a 4-3 lead in
the ninth when Wally Moon
tied the score with a homer.
Move Into Fifth
The Redlegs whipped the
Chicago Cubs, 9-4, in the only
other major league action of
the day or night and vaulted
from last to fifth place in the
National League. Harvey Had-
By .
OSCAR FRALEY
Sports Writer
United Press
One of the horde of 285
contestants was a young GI
named Tommy Bolt who was
awaiting replacement with an
infantry outfit.
"We also let in a few of the
top Italian players," Aycock
recalls. "One of these was
fellow named Ueo Grappo
soni. Naturally the Italians
wanted him to win the tour
nament and they were as ex
cited as chickens with f
weasel in the henhouse when
it looked like he would.' So,
when Bolt began to close in
on Ugo, they began to give
Tommy all the heckling they
could.
Bolt blew his stack. On one
green he snapped one of those
precious putter shafts made
out a tank antenna.
A writer with Stars and
Stripes saw him do it and
"Thunder" Bolt was born.
When Tommy marched home
it was his misfortune to play
in a tournament covered by
the same writer, now back
on the home front sports
beat. "Thunder" hit the head
lines to stay and people have
been heckling him to explode
and "throw it" ever since.
"T o m m y's temperament
made it easy for him to
oblige them," Aycock says.
Now he'll have to control
himself, however, for he is
under indefinite probation for
"conduct detrimental to the
game."
"Tf he's smart and controls
himself, he'll be one of the
most colorful players since
Walter Hagen," says Aycock.
"But he proved to me when
we . were in service, and I
eave him what for because
he broke that precious putter,
that he could."
It's been a long road from
Rome. Aycock now is ".home
club professional of the year.
Rolt. as winner of the U-S.
Open, is in the running for
"Golfer of the Year" nonors.
And it all eoes back to that
sugar, those tomato cans and
a tank antenna which would
have been safer in battle.
PACKS HEAVIEST LOAD
Inglewood, Calif. (UPD
Gallant Man, for the first
time in his career, will carry
132 pounds Tuesday when he
heads a small field of six turf
stars in the $100,000 Sunset
Handicap, which closes the
Hollywood Park meeting.
SAVE
$250
on English Fords!
00 per month
35 Miles Per Gallon
MOTORS
Main
at Fir
dix went all the way for the
Redlegs to register his sixth
victory.
The Braves jumped off to
a 3-0 lead as they routed
Lindy McDaniel in the first
ining but the Cards pecked
away a run at a time and
finally tied the score at 3-3
in the top of the seventh when
rookie Ruben Amaro scored
after knocking the ball from
Burdette's glove during a run
down between third and
home.
Joe Adcock homered in the
bottom of, the inning to put
the Braves back in front but
Moon's ninth-inning blast sent
the game into overtime.
Wight took over for the
Cardinals in the eighth inning
and limited the Braves to
four hits over the last six
frames. Double plays helped
him out of jams in both the
11th and 13th innings.
Record 16 and 16
The Braves collected 16
hits, including four by Bill
Bruton and three each by
Hank Aaron and Adcock but
left 16 runners stranded.
George Crowe's two - run
fourth inning double and Bob
Thurman's three-run seventh
inning homer were the big
blows for the Redlegs, who
dealt rookie Marcelino Selis
his first defeat.
The Cardinals' victory over
the Braves gives the San
Francisco Giants an oppor
tunity to "make hay" tonight
when they have a suspended
game, which they are leading,
to complete before playing
the Philadelphia Phillies in a
regular game.
In the American League,
the runaway New York Yan
kees are in Detroit protecting
an 11-game lead. The Yankees
stand only 6-9 against the
Tigers for the season but are
' ' '
FOR THE
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LIXESCOKES
National League
Chicago 010 002 001 ( 10 1
Cincinnati 011 400 30x 9 0 2
Drott, Solis (2), Hobbie (4),
Fodge (6) and Neeman. Haddix
(6-5) and Bailey. Loser Solis (0-1).
HRs Thurman, Neeman. (14 ln-
nines)
St. Louis
100 001 101 013 -0 a
Milwaukee
....300 000 100 000 00 1 1J 1
McDaniel, Brosnan (1), Paine (5).
Wight (8) and Landrith; Burdette
(9-8) and Crandall. Winner Wight
(1-1). HRs Adcock, Moone, Flood.
(Only games scheduled)
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