Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 26, 1962, Image 8

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    Law, Ford
By MARTIN LADER
UPt Sporil Writ"
The stakes seem higher
than ever for Vernon Law
and Whitey Ford this year,
but the two veteran pitchers
are coming through in cham
pionship style.
Law and Ford already have
proven they can beat the best
and now they must best sore
arms that are threatening
their careers.
Law, who won only three
games last year, went all the
way or hij fifth triumph of
15)62 Monday night as the
Pittsburgh pirates routed the
New York Mets, 13-3. Ford
also showed championship
form in helping the New York
Yankees gain a 2-0 decision
STANDINGS
By I'ntlpd Prs InternaUonal
NATIONAL "'"t Pet.
l.n Aniete il
San Francisco ...47 27 .MJ
Pittsburch 41 31 .581)
St. Louis 31 2! -55?
.tl .IB .11 -551
GB
Milwaukee 35 37 .486 I Mi
Houston 31 3B .449 4
Philadelphia .... 31 3D .443 14',
Chicago 27 4B 370 20
New York 10 4 .279 24
Monday's Results
St. Louis 0. Chtcaso 4
c.,n L-rn,iin 3 Cincinnati I
bhiinriolnhia 4. Houston 3 (night)
PittshurBh 13. New York 3 inlRhtl
Milwaukee d, Loa Angeies
(night)
fmmliav'm I'mhahle I'ttrtierS
St. Louis at Chicago Brogllo
(2-3i vs. Ellsworth (4-101.
New York at Plttshurfh (nlht)
Hunter (1-21 vs. oinnon is-i.
ttn,.tinn at PhlladelDhia (2. twl
nichti Farrell 15-71 and Golden
15-31 vs. Mahaffey (8-81 and Ham
Milwaukee at Los Angeles (night)
Burriette 15-41 vs. Koufax (10-31.
Cincinnati at San Francisco
InlBhll Jay (10-7) vs. Santord
(7-61.
AMl-Hlf-AN I.KACIIK
W. I.. PM. OB
Cleveland 40 28 .588
Minnesota 41 32 MX I it
New York 39 29 .554 2's
Los Angeles 38 31 .551 2',i
Baltimore 35 35 .500 J
Chicago 38 38 .500
Detroit 33 34 .4113 fi'i
Boston 32 38 .457 8
Kansas City 32 40 .444 10
Washington 24 44 .353 18
Monday's itesults
New York 2. Detroit 0
Only game scheduled.
Tuesday's Probable Pitchers
Chicago at Baltimore (nlghtl
Bmhart (fl-71 vs. Pappas (7-3 1.
I.os Angeles at Boston (night)
Bcllnaky 17-21 vs. Wilson (5-21.
Kansas City at Washington (night)
Wynll (4-5) vs. Cheney (1-1).
Minnesota at New York (night)
Pascual (10-4) vs. Sheldon (4-3l.
Cleveland at Detroit (2. twl,nlght
Ramos (4-4l and Hartman (0-0)
nr Allen (1-1) vs. Bunning (0-4)
and Kline 11-2).
PACIFIC COAST I.KA'iUK
'V. I.. I
(IB
Sail Lake City
San Diego
Tacoma
Seattle
Portland
Hawaii
Vancouver .
Spokane
40
28
28
.588
.588
.529 4
.522 4"
.403 ',
.4114 8 V
.433 10',
.319 14
25 41
Mnndav's Itesults
Vancouver fl. San Diego 5
Portland 9. Tacoma 3
(Only gamea scheduled)
TUESDAY' fiAMF.8
Salt Lake City at Seattle
Tacoma at Portland
San Diego at Vancouver
Spokane at Hawaii
N0I1TI1WE8T LFAGI'K
W.
Pel.
.590
.558
.524
.508
.435
J87
GB
3
4
5
12',
Wentachee .18
Yakima 35
Salem 33
Trl-Cltv , 32
Lewiston 27
Eugene .. . 24
Mnndsv's Itesults
Trl-Clty 7. Lewiston 1
Eugene 9. Salem 3
Wenalchee 2. Yakima 1 (11 In
nings) INTERNATIONAL
V
Jacksonville J
Bulfalo :
Toronto :
Rochester :
Atlanta
Columbus I
Syracuse
LEAGUE
I.. Pel.
OB
.872
.800
.578
5
8's
.523 lOti
.471 13',
.433 18
.388 20 ',
.388 20',
Richmond
25
Monday's Results
Rnrhcsler 7, Atlanta 1
Jacksonville 3, Syracuse 2
Buffalo 3, Richmond 1
Columbus 4, Toronto 3
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STEVENS AUTO SALES
505 North Central Phone 773-3655
n 8mni8)(5l"
TUESDAY. JUNE 26. 1962
Win Despite Sore Arms
over the Detroit Tigers.
Ford was forced to leave
the game with one out in the
ninth inning, however, when
he felt a sharp twinge in his
left shoulder. Marshall
Bridges came on to complete
the shutout.
Law's task was made easier
when his teammates tallied
six runs in the first inning
off New York starter Craig
Anderson. Smoky Burgess
and Roberto Clemente paced
SIPdDIffiTS
Dairy Maids Play
Florists Tonight
This is a busy week at Me
morial field, White City. And
tonight the ladies take over
the men won't mind.
Rogue Valley Dairy Maids
are hostesses to the Erv Llnd
Florists of Portland for North
west Major league softball.
This will be a double feature.
First game is billed for
7.30 p.m.
The Florists are the first of
the "big name" foes the Maids
will oppose on the Veterans
Administration domiciliary di'
amond this season.
Tonight's play will be the
second get-together for the
two clubs this season. Erv
Lind's crew defeated the
Rogue Valley girls 5 to 1 and
to 1 in games earlier this
month in Portland.
Long Tradition
The Florists have a long
tradition of some 25 years of
fine softball. Perennially
they are the best in the Pa
cific northwest. Twice Llnd
teams have been the best in
the world. In the Dairy Maids
the Portlanders meet the de-
League Leaders
Bv United Press International
AiVIKIUCAN LKIUU.
Player It Club O. AB
H.
Jimenez. K.C. 60 233
Runnels, Bos. ..68 254
Rollins, Mln. . 73 287
Robnsn. Chi. 68 267
36
38
30
Smllh. Chi 59 215
Power. Minn. 56 235
Snyder, Bal. 84 172
F.seglan. Civ 47 156
Slchern. K.C. 72 270
Moran. L A. 88 2R1
Cunghm., Chi 67 234
NATIONAL LEAGUE
T Davis, L A 73 301
54 103
27 63
.342
.342
Muslal. S L. 56 184
H. Aaron. Mil 72 275
F. Alan. S F. 87 252
Altman. Chi. 65 240
Mays. S.F 74 281
Williams. Chi .73 296
Groat. Pitts 72 302
Clmnte. Pitts... 66 243
Flood. St. L. 68 304
W. Davis. L A .70 236
.331
.328
.325
.325
.321
.321
.321
.316
.316
Home Runs
American Lessue Wsgner.
An
eli 20:
Cash. Tigers
il): Gentile.
Orioles 17: Klllebrew,
Twins 15:
Colavllo, Tigers 14.
National League Banks, Cuba
21; Mays. Giants 21; MeJIas, Colts
H. Aaron. Braves 17: Cepeda.
Giants 17.
Runs Ratted In
American League Robinson,
White Sox 56; Wagner. Angels 54:
Slebern. Athletics 50: Romano. In
dians 47: Rollins, Twins 46: Klrk
land, Indians 46.
National Lessue T. Davis. Dodg
ers 73; Mays. Giants 68: H. Aaron.
Braves 62: Cepeda. Giants 62: Ro
binson, Reds 36.
Pltrhlng
American League Donovan. In
diana 11-2: Fnytack. Tigers 3-1;
Wtckeraham. Athletics 8-2; Belln
sky. Angels 7-2; Pascual. Twins 10
4: Wilson. Red Sox; Zanni. 'A'hlte
Sox; Agulrre. Tigers all 3-2.
National League Purkey. Reds
13-1; Mcl.lah. Phils 5-1; Bruce,
Colls 3-1: Pierce. Giants 8-2; Kou
fax, Dodgers 10-3.
Pittsburgh's IS hit attack with
three safeties each. The vic
tory was Law's fifth in eight
decisions.
Daveloptd Arm Troubla
Ford, who enjoyed his best
year in 1961 with 25 victories,
two World Series triumphs
and the Cy Young award, de
veloped his arm trouble early
this season. Still he yielded
only two hits Monday and it
was the second straight game
in which he pitched shutout
fending state titlist. The Maids
took the crown at White City
last year. They have some fine
talent of their own.
Louise Mazzuca, one of the
top softball flingcrs in this
country, and Marion Kozak
are expected to do the pitch
ing for the Florists. Pat Bar
ron and Ellen Callaghan are
the Maid pitchers.
Rogue Valley will catch the
Florists on their way home
from a tour that took them to
Utah, Arizona and California.
Softballers
Vie Tonight
Two games and a part of
another are slated this eve
ning in tne Jackson uounty
Softball association.
Central Point Merchants
meet Communication Work
ers of America at 6:45 p.m.
at Cheney field. Then Central
Point and Tru-Mix Concrete
will replay a game from point
of protest in the top of the
seventh Inning. Tru-Mix then
has a full game against Keith
Schulz.
All of this action is vital
since Schulz is tied wltn
Grants Pass for top spot in
the loop and Tru-Mix is just
a half-game behind.
Games tonight are the last
on the regular schedule of the
league's first half, except for
a Butte Falls-Grants Pass
makeup fray, date for wliicli
has not been reported. Sam
Jennings company has pro
tested Its game last week with
Jay Allen Cars but no de
cision has been made on the
matter. League President Har
ry Chipman said he had yet
to receive an umpire's report
on the matter.
Wednesday and Thursday
are dates for league makeup.
A league meeting has been
set for Thursday evening at
the Mcdford hotel. It will be
determined whether the
league will continue as one
unit or be split into major
and minor leagues for the
second half.
White Sox Deal For
Maxwell, Dean Stone
Chicago-fUrii-Chicago White
Sox brass felt today they got
the best of the deal in trading
Bob Farley and Russ Kemmer
er to get Charlie Maxwell
and Dean Stone.
Maxwell, 35, came from the
Tigers in a waiver deal for the
25-year-old Farley. Stone, 32,
also was obtained on waivers
from the Houston Colts who,
in turn, purchased Kemmerer
from the White Sox for an es
timated $20,000.
Denver Bears Smack
Indianapolis in AA
By United Press International
The Denver Dears smacked
the front-running Indianapolis
Indians 6-3 last night and
moved to within a half game
of second place Omaha in the
American Association.
The hosting Dodgers were
walloped 6-3 by the Dallas'
Fort Worth Rangers. Visiting
Louisville chucked Oklahoma
City, 4-2.
ball before being removed in
the ninth inning. His string
of scoreless innings now
stands at 20 13.
The Yankee -Tiger affair
was the only game scheduled
in the American league, while
in other National league ac
tion the San Francisco Giants
closed in on first place by
beating the Cincinnati Reds,
3-1; the Los Angeles Dodgers
lost to the Milwaukee Braves,
6-4; the St. Louis Cardinals
rallied for a 6-4 victory over
the Chicago Cubs, and the
Philadelphia Phillies edged
the Houston Colts, 4-3.
San Francisco, sparked by
Willie Mays' alert base run
ning and some surprising de
fense work by leftfielder
Willie McCovey, moved to
within a half-game of the
league-leading Dodgers. Mays
set up the decisive run by
stealing third base in the third
inning and McCovey started
a double play in the fifth
after catching a sinking liner
by losing pitcher Jim Ma
looey. Billy O'Dell went all
the way for his eighth vic
tory. Aaron, Mathews Pace Braves
Hank Aaron drove in three
runs with a single and a
homer and Eddie Mathews
drove home two others as the
Braves overcame a four-run
deficit. Tommy Davis had
five hits in five attempts for
the Dodgers to raise his bat
ting average to .342 and a tie
for the league lead with Stan
Musial. Reliever Carl Willey
got the win and Ron Perran
oski took the loss.
The Cardinals, down 3-0
after three innings, drew even
with Chicago in the fifth in
ning and went ahead for good
with two runs in the sixth.
Bill White homered for St.
Louis while Ernie Banks hit
three-run homer for the
Cubs, his 21st. Starter Ray
Washburn gained credit for
his fifth victory in eight de
cisions while Glen Hobbie
was charged with his ninth
defeat against a single win.
Tony Taylor got his third
single with one out in the
ninth inning to drive in the
winning run for Philadelphia.
It also was his third RBI of
the game. Dallas Green re
tired the first 11 batters he
faced in relief to even his
season record at 2-2.
A5IKRICAN l.RAOUK
New York . 000 oil 000 2 10 o
Detroit 000 000 0000 3 1
Ford. Bridges ID) and Howard.
Mossi. Kline (8) and Roarke. Win
ner Ford (5-4). Loser Mossi
(6-81.
(Only game scheduled)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis o,-,o 122 ino 8 II 2
Chicago ,. .on3 001 0OO 4 0 1
Washburn, McDaniel 161 and Sa
watski. Schaffer (fil. Hobble,
Schultz I7i. Gerard (Ol and Thack
er. Winner Washhurn (5-3i. Loser
Hobble (1-8). HR Banks. White.
Cincinnati ... 010 000 000 I 3 1
San Fran 011 000 Olx 3 6 1
Maloney, Drabowsky (6). Bros
nan (8) and Folcs. O'Dell (8-6) and
Bailey. Loser Maloney (3-1).
Houston 000 300 0003 8 2
Philadelphia 011 010 01114 9 0
Woodeshlck. McMahon (9) and
Rancw. McLtsh. Green (6) and
White. Winner Green (2-2). Loser
Woodeshlck (2-SI. HR Mejlas.
New York .. 020 000 010 3 8 2
Pittsburgh . 600 304 00X 13 15 2
Anderson, uavlauit til. wizen
(7) and Taylor. Lnw (5-3) and
Burgess. Loser Anderson (3-7).
Milwaukee ... onn 002 3018 II 0
Los Angeles 003 010 0004 14 0
Hendlev. Wlllev (3). flcne (7 .
Curtis (6) and Crandall. Mocller,
Perranoakl (7i, L. Sherry (7). Roe
buck i8i. Ortega (0) and N. Sherry.
Camllll int. Winner Willey (1-3).
Loser Perranoskl (3-2). HR H.
Aaron.
Len Sutton Expects
To Get Back Into
Action by August
Portland - (IINI - "After a
couple of races, I'll be as
good as new."
Race driver Len Sutton,
wearing a bock brace because
of injuries suffered in a re
cent race track injury at Mil
waukee, Wis., said he expect
ed to got back Into action in
August in a stock car race in
that city.
Sutton, who finished sec
ond In the Indianapolis "500,"
was home to recuperate from
fractures of four vertebrae
suffered in the Milwaukee ac
cident. He said the brakes
failed on his cur as he was
going into a turn at about 135
miles an hour.
Sutton said he had plenty
of time to think in the hos
pital "but never once did I
consider quitting the race circuit."
PHONE
773-7555
MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON
W 1
W l s,
O
OPPOSES FLORISTS - Ellen
Callaghan, above, will be seen
on the pitching slab and in
the outfield this evening for
the Rogue Valley Dairy Maids
Softball team when they meet
the Erv Llnd Florists at Me
morial field. White City.
Jerry Tarr,
Forman on
U.S. Team
Walnut, Calif. (UPU Ore
gon's Jerry Tarr and Keith
Forman are going to get a
crack at the Russians.
They were named to the
U.S. team which will compete
next month against Russia in
an international track meet.
The squad also will face Po
land. Former Oregon stand
out J 1 m Grelle also was
named to the team.
Tarr, two-time NCAA 120
yard high hurdles champion,
Won his specialty and edged
archrival Hayes Jones in the
process. His time was 13.4 sec
onds.
He took the 220-yard low
hurdles race in 22.6 seconds.
Forman, who turned in a
sub f o u r-minute mile this
spring, finished second in the
3,000-meter steeplechase. He
was behind George Young of
Las Cruces, N.M., and was
timed in R:52.2.
Grelle came in second in
the mile. Jim Beatty of the
Los Angeles Track club won
the race in 3:57.9 and Grelle
was clocked in 3:58.1, his best
effort yet.
The U.S. team will face Po
land this weekend at Chicago
and will take on the Russians
at Stanford, Calif., July 21
22. However, Grelle won't run
against Poland. He is getting
married next week end.
Dyrol Burleson, Oregon's
great miler, dropped out of
the three-mile race at the
meet going into the eighth
lap.
Wenatchee Ups
Northwest
League Margin
By Uniied Press International
Wenatchee boosted its
Northwest League margin to
two games over Yakima Mon
day night with a 2-1 victory
in 11 innings over the second
place Bears.
Eugene topped Salem S-3
and Tri-City won over Lewis
ton 7-1 in other action.
Ken Fruchter of Wenatchee
homered in the first inning
and the Chiefs downed the
Bears in the overtime on a
pair of singles, an intentional
walk and then another walk
to Nelpon Matthews with the
sacks loaded.
Dick Estcllc pitched a five
hitter in Eugene's victory as
the Emeralds broke it wide
open with five runs in the
sixth. Estclle banged a triple
during the big frame.
Bob Sprout of Tri-City lim
ited Lewiston to but three
hits. Tri-City scored six runs
in the seventh to win it on
four singles, two walks, two
errors and a double.
The E u g e n e-Salom game
was played in Mcdford's
While City stadium. About
2.0IKI fans attended
Lake Geneva, Wis. - il'PP
Wendy Mobrrry of La
Grande, Ore., shot a 45-46 91
Monday in the Women's West
em Golf Association junior
tournament here. Medalist
was Sherry Taylor. Oklahoma
City, with a 711
RA7 Builders Sunply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Chimneys
repressed
. Concrete
"t;
'Pi
7J7
McAndrtwi
Eugene Diamonders Smash
Salem Dodgers 9-3 inNWL
Engagement at White City
Memorial Field, White City
A Eugene Emerald baseball
team, unproclaimed ai a hit
ting aggregation and riding in
its circuit's cellar spot, burst
out with a bombardment of
base blows here last night that
rocked the Salem Dodgers 9
to 3.
Eugene rose up to squelch
the Dodgers with a 14-hit as
sault in a regular Northwest
league fracas which displayed
the Class B brand of pro
fessional baseball to an esti
mated 2,000 Rogue valley
fans.
The Emerald's Dick Estelle,
who went into the tangle with
an unimpressive 2-11 pitching
record, chucked a five-hitter
at the Salemites and helped
on offense with a single and a
triple. He scored two runs and
blasted one across.
Dick Dietz, bonus player
catcher, paced the Em attack.
He doubled twice, singled
once and batted home two
runs.
Script Tossed Out
For five cantos the engage
ment was played as if to a
script. Then Eugene banged
over a go-ahead sixth-inning
score and in the seventh
chukker completely threw
away the book. The Ems at
this stage battered relief
pitcher Tom Murray for four
hits and five runs. And, these
markers put triumph in the
bag.
Murray, relieving the Dodg
er's highly-prized starter, Dar
rell Peters, who was charged
with his third loss, came in
at the start of the seventh.
He struck out Dietz but gave
up a single to Wally Cockrell
and walk to Stan Patykula.
Joe McLaughlin followed with
a safety and Arley Kangas
and Dick Estelle belted back
to back three-base knocks.
That put four runs across
the platter and Murray gave
way to hurler Ken Page. Car
los Dore grounded out but
Don Pope singled home Es
telle who was Murray's re
sponsibility.
Eugene got off to a shaky
start which allowed the
game's lone unearned run.
Lou Ertle was safe on a bunt
single in the first panel and
made it to second base on
Estelle's bad throw on a pick
off attempt. With two out
Dick Bogard popped the ball.
The fly ball hopped out of
third baseman Patykula's
glove and Ertle raced home
for the score.
The Ems bounced back in
the bottom of the frame on a
double by Pope, a wild pitch,
a walk and a single by Dietz.
It was three up and three
down for both clubs in the
next two stanzas. In the
fourth Bogard's hit, two of
the seven walks Estelle is
sued and a sacrifice flyout by
Bob Cox scored a run for
Salem. But Eugene made it
two-all on a two-bagger down
the third base line by Dietz
and one-base socks by Wally
Cockrell and Patykula.
Doubles by Vic Pagel and
Bill Kelso put Salem on top
3 to 2 in the top of the fifth
inning
Eugene tied it again
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Lots of pe
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. ....u,... i uriitnairon
in the bottom of the frame on
a base on balls, a hit by Jose
Calero and a Dietz's double.
The Ems in this canto had a
runner forced at the plate and
left three men stranded.
In the sixth session Estelle
singled and advanced to sec
ond on a Dore groundout. Don
Pope two-baggered. Calero
doubled, scoring Estelle. Pope
tried to make it home but was
thrown out at the plate by
centerfielder Pagel.
While the big seventh in
ning splurge settled the issue,
Salem did bid in the eighth
inning when Estelle walked
two batters with no one out.
Salem then went down on two
strikeouts and a flyout. The
Dodgers had the bases full
with two down in the ninth.
Hard-hitting marked the
contest. Six of the 14 Eugene
hits were for extra bases. Sal
em had two doubles among
its five blows. A clout by the
Ems' Dietz was an automatic
double when it bounced over
the right field fence some
410 feet from home.
Pope, Calero, Cockrell
along with Estelle for Eugene
and Pagel of Salem each had
two hits.
Estelle recorded seven
strikeouts. Peters, who has
won eight tilts, gave up nine
hits along with the first four
runs before leaving the game.
Fielding Jewel
Fielding gem of the night
was centerfielder Dore's long
run for a one-handed shoe
string snare of a fly ball off
Pagel's hat.
Each team left 10 men on
base.
The game was one of four
Eugene is scheduled to play
at White City this summer.
Eugene will meet Salem again
on Aug. 2 and Lewiston, Ida
ho, and Tri-City, Wash., in
later August games. They also
will be In regular league play
as the Northwest loop seeks
to stir Rogue valley interest
in the circuit.
Trouble with the record
player, a warped record ver
sion of the Star Spangled Ban
ner and a faux pas with the
lights marked the start of the
game. But, these things were
pretty well forgotten as the
fray progressed. The lights
would not go on by the usual
push of the press box button
because a switch elsewhere
was off.
The crowd fell short of
hopes of the sponsoring Cen
Pollard Wins
At Salt Lake
Art Pollard of Medford,
representing Oregon at the
Inter-Mountain championship
modified races at Salt Lake
City last week end, was high
point man.
Pollard compiled a total of
158 points out of a possible
170. Runner-up was Bill Crow
of Boise, Idaho with 149.
Some 12,000 fans watched
Pollard win both the feat heat
and main event both Friday
and Saturday nights. Fifty
cars were entered. A trophy
and good share of the $3,000
purse went to the winner.
DODGE DIVIDEND
WHATEVER YOU WANT IN AN AUTOMOBILE, YOUR DODGE DEALER IS READY TO
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dend Days. Pick a Dodge, any size or price, and get our big Dodge Dealer DIVIDEND DEAL!
BIO 00DQC CUSTOM 110. Cusrrm-mads for thi big car mm. Mmulicturer's suggested retail price (or the Ctis
torn 880 4-Joor sedan, exclusive ol destination chargei. Super Spinner wheel covers and white walls: 529M.
V-'XiW
entrees, covers ana wnite wans: '41,
PARSONS MOTORS,
i tral Point Junior Chamber of
Commerce who had made seat
ing available for 3,000 per
sons.
Box:
Salem
Pagel. ci .
Ertle. 2b .
B H PO A
12 11
110 2
0 1 10 2
113 0
0 0 7 0
0 0 2 0
0 0 11
0 0 0 1
0 0 0 1
0 0 O 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
3 5 24 "g
Kelso. ;
Boaar
D. Mc
.lcLauehlin.
ID 3
Richards, rt 3
Cox. 3b 3
Plumlee. ss.. 4
Peters, p .... 2
a Jones . . 0
b Boehlert 0
Murray, p .. 0
Pane, o .... 0
d Shinn .. 0
ToUls 32
a Walked lor Peters In 7th.
b Ran ror Jones In 7th.
d Walked lor Page In 9th.
Eugene AB
Dore, cf .... 4
Pope, ss .... 4
Calero, lb .. 4
Diotz. c . 5
Cockrell. rf 4
Patykula. 3b 3
J. McLaughlin,
If S
Kangas, 2b . 4
Estelle. p ... 4
PO
2
2
3
8
Totals
37
Salem 100 110 0003
Eugene 100 111 50x 9
Runs batted In Cox. Kelso,
Pope, Calero, Dietz 2, Patykula, J.
McLaughlin. Kangas 2. Estelle 1.
Two-base bits Pagel. Kelso. Pope.
Dietz 2. Calero. Three base hits
Kangas. Estelle. Sacrifice fly Cox.
Left on bases Salem 10, Eugene
10. Strikeouts By Peters 3, Mur
ray 1, Ppge 3. Estelle 7. Bases on
bnlls Peters 4, Murray 1, Page 1,
Estelle 7. Nine hits and 4 runs off
Peters In 6 innings: 4 hits and 5
runs off Murray in !i Inning; 1
hit and no runs off Page in 13
innings. Earned runs Salem 2,
Eugene 9. Wild pitches Peters,
Murray, Estelle. Losing pitcher
Peters. Umpires Jelks and
Henrion.
$95
$015
Pi.
s Qt.
Worthy of
your Trust
JIM
BEAR1
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(low twin, nduiivs ol destination entries, whiti walls tnt wheel covrri: 1951.
315 E. 5th, Medford
Portland Ties
PCL Mark With
8 Straight Hits
By United Press International
Portland tied a Pacific
Coast league record Monday
night and in the process un
doubtedly left John "Red"
Davis, Tacoma manager, fit
to be tied.
Eight straight hits helped
account for seven runs during
a wild second inning as Port
land bopped the Giants, 9-3.
Meanwhile, the yo-yo race
for first place continued una
bated as Vancouver topped
San Diego 6-5 with an unearn
ed run in the seventh in the
only other game played.
The loss left the Padres and
Salt Lake City in a virtual
tie for first place with the
Bees enjoying a lead of but
two percentage points.
Portland teed off on Danny
Rivas for six straight hits in
the big second which was fea
tured by doubles by Chet
Boak and Charlie Secrest.
Relief pitcher Tom Arruda
gave up two more hits and
the skein of eight straight tied
a mark held jointly by fiva
other teams.
Ron Dedus, Portland third
sacker, hit a two-run homer
in the seventh and Bill Hain
of the losers belted one with
nobody aboard in the fourth.
Jim Rants of Vancouver re
ceived credit for the Moun
ties' victory in relief of
George Bamberger. The game
was marred by two errors for
each club in addition to three
wild pitches.
The linescores:
San Diego ... 2no 100 2DO-5 11 1
Vancouver . 000 014 lOx 6 10
Briggs Monroe (61 and Gonrier;
Bamberger, Rantz 17! and McCabe,
Henry (Si. Wp Ran-.z.
Tacoma 000 300 COO 3 9 1
Portland 070 000 20x 9 13 It
Rias. Arruda 2) Carlton 171 and
Wilson: Archer and Mackenzie.
Lp Rivas.
I Only games scheduled.)
DAY!
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Ashland Medford
PH0NI 773-457J