THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
August 21, 1989
CRIPPLED SOX
GO DOVII BY
10-1 SCORE
TO CUT TIE
Carter Gets Stretched Out
RAIIIIERS NIP
SOLOIIS FIVE
STRAIGHT TO
Mr. Dykes Emphatically Denies He's an Umpire Baiter
DORRIS BEATS
GRANTS PASS
III PLAYOFF I
TILT SUNDAY
STRETCH LEAD
hi
PAGE SIX
1LOTER
VI V (II
Results of Sunday's games:
Redding 10, Klamath Falls 1.
McCloud 6. Mt. Shasta 3.
Weed a, Yreka 1.
Dunsmuir-HUt (no game).
The fast Redding Tigers invad
ed the local fairgrounds Sunday
afternoon and slaughtered a game
but crippled Klamath Falls Red
Sox nine to the tune of 10 to l
Manager Shlpman of the Sox
was without tne services or two
star players, Marshal Eyestone,
centerfielder and Clyde Carlstrom,
pitcher, Eyestone was out of
town on a vacation trip and Carl
strom was laid up with a sprained
ankle.
Cliff McLean, Sox relief hurl
er, went the full route for the
locals, allowing 13 base knocks
and Issuing six free passes to
first. Of the 10 Redding scores
only four were earned oft Mc
Lean. Lao Vlslntainer hurled a
nice game for Redding, scattering
10 safeties and yielding but one
free pass to first. McLean struck
out nine and Vlslntainer 1.
Redding scored first in the
third frame and Klamath came
right back to tie the ball game
up. Redding had a big fourth
Inning during which time they
collected four singles, a triple,
and a free pass to score five
times. All five runs crossed home
pfate after three outs should have
been made and were chalked up
as unearned.
With the big six to one lead,
the Tigers' Visintainer blanked
the locals for the remainder of the
fray while his mates romped home
three times In the sixth and once
gain In the eighth.
McDonald's triple wus the long
est hit of the day. Other Redding
batsmen, who led the parade,
were Hammerlcksen with two for
two and Huelsman with three
blows in fire trips to the plate.
' Jack Lloyd for the locals with
three hits In four time:, up, head
ed the Sox batters. Quinn col
lected two hits, a single and a
double.
Although the Red Sox made
but two errors, both were costly.
The Sox ran bases raggedly all
during the contest.
Cliff Neuffer, league secretary,
announced Monday morning that
official team standings for the
14-game schedule would be pub
lished this week. N e u 1 1 e r
stated that there were still some
Important matters to clear up be
fore playoff opponents were nam
ed. The Klamath Falls Red Sox
will be a member of the playoff
group and hope to be at full
strength once again by next bun
day. More about the coming playoff
will be released later in the week.
Box score:
Redding
AB R H PO A E
Ham'ksen. cf ....2 2 2 1 0 0
McDonald, lb -.4 1 2 11 10
Allen, 2b .........5 1 2 3 3 0
Flowers, rf 6 0 2 0 0 0
South, If 4 0 0 2 0 0
Coon, 3b J 6 113 0 0
Vis'talner, p .B 1114 0
Huelsman, c 5 2 3 4 0 1
Roman, ss 2 2 0 2 4 2
37 10 13 27 12 3
Red Sox
AB R H PO A B
Quinn,. 2b ..5 12 2 10
Bernadou, lb -4 0 0 8 0 0
Lloyd, 3b 4 0 3 1 2 0
McLean, p 3 0 0 0 3 0
Wheeler, ss 4 0 112 1
Fryer, c 4 0 1 9 0 1
Harshbarger, cf 4 0 1 1 0 0
Burkland, If ....4 0 1 2 0 0
Molatore, rf ....4 0 1 3 0 0
36 1 10 27 8 2
By Innings:
Red Sox
Hits 102 012 22010
Runs 001 000 000 1
Reddtnir
Hits ...... 102 503 01113
Runs -001 603 01010
Summary: Earned runs, Red'
ding 4, Red Sox 1. Two base hits,
Allen. Quinn. Three base hits,
McDonald. Bases on balls off Mc
Lean 6, off Vlslntainer 1. Struck
out by McLean 9, by Visintainer
1. Runs batted in, McDonald 3,
Hammerlcksen 2, Allen 3, Flow
ers 2, Lloyd. Left on bases, Red
ding 9, Red Sox 10. Runs respon
sible for, Visintainer 1, McLean
.4. Double plays, Roman, Allen
to McDonald. Stolen bases, Mc
Donald, Harshbarger. Sacrifices,
Hammerlcksen, McDonald, Ro
man, Bernadou. Umpires, Harmon
and Porter, Time of game 2:05.
News and Herald Want-Ads get
results. .
No superlative claims just a
suggestion try Wieland's Beer.
" I ? f ADVENTURE
l-' V IN HISTORY!
PINE TREE FRIDAY
i s"!', """"r """"" "Xujiuni
Marshall Carter, scientific wrestler who will meet Frankin Hale
of Los Angeles in tne opening
is shown here at the business end
Toots Estes. George Wilson, former all-American from University
of Washington, will meet Cowboy
and in the middle bout of the card
Morelli.
Klamath Boys
In Fisticade
Klamath Falls will be repre
sented by three fighters In the
pre-Olympic Fisticade scheduled
for the Portland baseball park
Monday night, August, 2S, it was
announced by Eddie Volk, match
maker for the gigantic amateur
card, which has been sanctioned
by the National Amateur Athletic
union.
The local scrappers are Virgil
Jarrett, runner-up for the north
west Golden Gloves heavyweight
title last year; John Cobell, sen
sational Indian light-heavyweight
who as a middleweight won the
Oregon A. A. U. championship
this year, and Hal Burton, prom
ising lightweight.
The fighters will wear the
colors of the Chiloquin Athletic
club, of which Fred Motschman
is manager. They will be feat
ured on the all-star card, which
will include at least 12 bouts.
An International rivalry will
spice the program, as Canada Is
sending four champions to com
pete with the best talent in west
ern U. S. The Fisticade is being
staged to give northwest boxing
tans a preview of the fist-sliugers
who will be contenders for the
U. S. and Canadian Olympic teams
next year.
Tommy Mover of Portland,
holder of the Pacific coast Gold
en Gloves lightweight title and
one of the most prominent am
ateur fighters in the nation, will
meet one of the Canadian cham
pions In one of the headline at
tractions, Matchmaker Volk an
nounces.
Reserved seats at 11.10 each
can be obtained by writing to
Rich's Cigar store, S. W. Sixth
avenue and Washington street.
General admission will be 65
cents.
Rare Triple
Play Reported
MIAMI, Fla., Aug. 21 (ff) One
of baseball's rarest feats an un
assisted triple play was made In
an amateur game here Sundav.
Bruce Compton, 22-year-old
second baseman, caught a line
drive over second, stepped on
me sack to double off the run
ner and then raced to third De-
fore the player, who had started
home, could get back. Compton's
learn won 6-1.
POTATO INSPECTION
BEING MADE HERE
BY OSC PROFESSOR
Second field lnsnectfnn nn nn.
laioes entered for cert f rat nn i
being made AuguBt 21 to 24, In
clusive. Professor G. R. Hyslop
is again making Inspection. A
few fields of alsike clover and
other seed crops, on which work
was not comnleterf at thn Hm.
of the last field inspection, will
also be Inspected.
This Is the last field Inaneeffnn
given potatoes. The next in
spection occurs In Ihn rpllnrn
after they are dug.
BIG LAKES BOX
CREW TO PICNIC
B!e Lakes wooden box emnlnvpa
will- meet Tuesday at 7 n. m in
the company office to arrange for
a picnic 10 do neia auuaay, August
27.
Ken Gordon will act as chair-
WA8TED WORRY
HAMILTON, Mont.. (jp
Friends worried because Mrs.
Mary Jane Patterson, 93, didn't
appear for a party in honor of
the community's elderly women.
inen tney discovered she was
loo busy getting a license to
wed J. W. Hayden. 72. of Stevens-
vllle.
Best Quality Men'i
Half Soles $
Oxfords A Dress Shoes. Pr.
Jack Frost Shoe Shop
KnlfMi BntlNn
Bnnth th St.. Just Off Main
erem of next Tuesday s mat card
of an arm-stretcher applied by
Dude Chick In the main event
Bob Kenaston will wrestle Tony
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN' 1.KAGIK
BATTING DI.Maggio, New
York, .390; Poxx, Boston, .366,
RUNS Foxx, Boston, 111
Rolfe, New York, 99.
HITS Rolfe. New York, 153;
McQuinn, St. Louis, 149.
HOME RUNS Foxx, Boston,
32: Greenberg, Detroit. 28.
PITCHING Grove, Boston,
13-2; Donald, New York, 12-2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING Miic, St. Louts
.359: Bonura. New York, .340.
RUNS Frey and Werber, Cin
cinnati. S3.
HITS McCormick, Cincinnati,
150; Hack. Chicago. 146.
HOME RUNS Ott. New York,
24: Mize. St. Louis. 22.
PITCHING Thompson. Cin
cinnati, 8-2; Wyatt, .Brooklyn,
8-3.
Wooden Box to
Have Softball
Tourney Soon
A softball tournament among
wooden box teams of the area
will be worked out at a meeting
of the Wooden Box Central com
mittee Wednesday evening at the
Eagles ball, according to Russell
Downs, director.
AIbo on the business calendar
Is a review of membership ticket
sales.
The softball tourney will In
clude teams of Bend, Medford
Lakevlew, Kesterson, Big Lakes
and Weyerhaeuser.
Silverton Out
Of Big Tourney
WICHITA, Kas., Aug. 21 (yp)
Two undefeated nines, Duncan
Okla., and Worcester, Mass., will
meet tonight with a common am
bition to catch up with the fast
stepping Texans from Mt. Pleas
ant, four-time winners who Sun
day roped and branded the de
fending semi-pro baseball cham
pions from Buford, Ga., 1 to 0.
Golden, Colo., and the Wlch
ita Civics will play tonight's sec
ond game, the defeated team to
leave the tournament a two-time
lower.
Duncan has tnnnled Silvertnn
Ore., 6-0, the Wichita All-Steels
ll-l, and Rome, Ga., 9-1.
Omaha Juniors
Win West Title
STOCKTON, Calif., Aug. 21 (JP)
The west's representative In the
national American Legion Junior
baseball tournament is the Mc
Devitt post team of Omaha, Neb.,
which beat out the Sunrise post
or Los Angeles In the 13th In
ning yesterday In the western
sectional playoff final.
Victor over the Los Angeles
club by a 6 to 4 score, the Mc
Devltts will meet the eastern sec
tional winner In the "little world
series" in Omaha later this
month. -
Automobile gaskets, particularly
those in the shock absorbers,
should be Inspected periodically
to ascertain if they are leak
proof. 1
Do you drink because
it makes- you see dou
ble? No, because it makes
me feel single.
No. AO MrCormlrk
I e c r I n g harvester
thresher. Brand new.
Htandard equipment.
Price reduced to 9802.
Seattlo held a comtortuble nine-
game lead in the home stretch
of the Pacific Coast league pen
nant chase today after shutting
out the upstart Sncrdiiiento Sen
ators in five straight games.
The rampaging lulnlers capped
the second half of a split week
with a double triumph over the
Senators at Seattle yesterday
while the second - place Los
Angeles Angels were dropping a
pair to the lowly Oakland Oaks
at Los Angeles.
A ninth inning tally gave Se
attlo a 5 to 4 win in the opener,
and in the nightcap l.es Webber
gave up only five widely-scatter
ed hits as he blanked the Senators,
13 to 0.
Oakland's Manager Johnny
Verges cracked out a homo run
with two on deck in the fifth
inning to give the Oaks a 5 to 3
victory over Los Angeles In the
first game, and in the second
affair the Oaks punned across
four hits in the final frume for a
7 to 3 triumph.
At San Francisco, the third
place Seals ftnd tho Hollywood
Stars divided honors in a twin
bill by identical scores of 5 to 3
Heavy batwork by Dominic Dl-
Maggio and Ted Noruert was a
big factor in the opener. Holly
wood got four runs In the sixth
Inning to clinch the nightcap.
Fifty-five base hits echoed In
the Portland park ns the home
town Beavers nipped San Diego
in both ends of a bargain bill, 8
to 7 and 11 to 3. Portland bunch
ed four hits in the eighth to ice
the opener and six in the fifth to
clinch the nightcap.
Betting Boys
See Armstrong
7-5 Favorite
NEW YORK. Aug. 21 UP)
The usual pre-fight rumors of
"business" drifted along Bash
boulevard today on the eve of
Henry Arnstrong s lightweight
title defense against Lou Ambers,
b t even the betting men weren't
the slightest bit Interested.
As you know, this betting fra
ternity takes very good care not
to catch cold in its pocketbook.
The odds-layers came rlcht out
in meeting and continued to lay
7 to 5 that Armstrong would be
"winnah and still champeen"
when the tea party Is over in
Yankee stadium tomorrow night.
The two will cut out the cap
ers and get down to serious sock
ing for 15 rounds or less. The
fight itself figures to be the "na
tural" of the year. Their last
tussle was a honey. As a re
sult. Promoter Mike Jacobs still
is hoping for a gate somewhere
between $200,000 and 1250,000.
1
Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
Cincinnati 69 41 .827
St. Louis 6i 44 .596
Chicago 62 62 .544
New York 55 64 .505
Brooklyn -i......54 64 .500
Pittsburgh 30 58 .463
Boston 47 61 .436
Philadelphia 34 72 .321
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L.
Pet.
.696
.631
.558
.518
.513
.431
.348
.303
New York 78 34
Boston .70 41
Chicago ...j. 63 60
Cleveland 58 54
Detroit 58 65
Washington 50 66
Philadelphia ...4. 39 73
St. Louis 33 76
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W. L. Pet.
Seattle 88 67 .607
Los Angeles 79 66 .545
San Francisco ........75 66 .632
Sacramento 72 72 .600
Portland ... 65 76 .461
Hollywood 66 78 .458
Oakland 65 80 .448
San Diego 65 80 .448
OV8M
m rnrr zrer to . 1
F CD fRSKJtS!
'SISKIES Is
90 solid ood.
Comparative
anslyses of 23
dogfoodsihow
Friskiej com
leu to feed!
Complete!
Tested! First
choice In West!
"What? Mo an umpire bailer?"
says Jimmy Dykes, who will
manage the White Sox for two
more years at a salary ol 320,000.
State Softball
Tourney Opens
SALEM. Aug. 21 (.Tl The
1939 Oregon State softball tour
nament opens here today with
three women's games in the after
noon and four men's contests at
night.
Half of the tournament's record
entry list will play into today's
games, with the other halt slated
to siring Into action tomorrow.
One defeat will eliminate a team
from the tournament.
Men's games will be played to
night as follows:
Square Deal Radio of Salem vs.
Grants Pass, 7:30 p. m.; Walt's
of Salem vs. La Grunde, 8:30
p. ni.; St. Helens vs. Albany, 9:30
p. ra., and McMinnvlIle vs. Pendlo
ton. 10:30 p. m.
The women's schedulo for the
afternoon pitted Pado-Barrlcks of
Salem against East Side Dairy of
Portland at 2:80 p. m.; Conn
Bros, of Portland agulnst Salem
Uees at 3:30 p. m., mid Klamath
Falls against Montgomery Ward
of Portland at 4:30 p. m.
Albany drew a bye In tbe upper
balf of the women's , bracket and
will play the winner of the Klam
ath Falls-Montgomery Ward of
Portland gamo in the quarter fin
als Wednesday. McMlnnville drew
the bye In the lower bracket.
All first-round games In the
men's division will be seven In
nings. Ono of the largest prairie dog
towns ever reported extended
from Trego county, Kan., along
the divide north of the Smoky
Hill river almost to Colorado.
Parts of the town were located
In areas where water was 350
feet below the surface.
For Rest
Relaxation
Special Rates
Think of HI A room at low at
$2.00 at rha Northwett'i fin
est seashora resort. Also, re
markably low weekly and fam
ily rate.
Dinner
Dancing
Nightly
Golfing Surf Bathing
For Information: i Write
GEARHART
HOTEL
Gearhart, Oregon.
"Umpires make me want to
tear my hair out ot times. Most
of them .arc too urroRnnt, too
quick to show their authority."
Snorts Briefs
BY KOniK nillKTZ
NEW YORK. Aug. 21 (JP)
Week's Wash: smart old Krnnklo
Krlsch told you way Inst spring
not to sail those Cardinals short
. . Chicago papers say that ex-all-Amcrican
star was canned by
the football Cardinals for not
hustling . . . Look Allkes: Clyde
Jeffrey, Stanford sprinter and
l.i guy who pluyed lleathecllffe
in "Wutherlng Heights."
IH THAT HO?
Reporting a recent trade by
the Chicago Hears, one of the
wire services reportod: "Both
players are beginning their sec
ond year in the pro gnme, Zarnas
having played at Ohio State and
Slegal at Columbia."
Rrondway Melody: The Yanks
aro getting rendy to bid for Hank
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Clroenherg If and when he goes
up for action.
Quick ones: they'ro expecting
tho Dana X. lllble system to
renlly Mart clicking at Texas V.
this year , . , Jack Ogdeu, new
hunlni'ss manager of the I'htllles,
will hnvo five Ivory hunters
combing the bushes In 1940 , . ,
nirklo Griffin, the blind pro
moter, Is Inking bows for pulling
boxing In Dallas on a new high.
i i:kiiiox M'Kciai,
If Tom Hhenhaii. Minneapolis
manager. Is prnmnled to thn
Majors next year, thn dope Is
Halm (iniuel may tnnvn across
thn river from Kt. Paul to suc
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yenrs. but a day on Ihn planet Is
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Dnrrls defeated Grants Pass,
t to i Hmiiluy, In the first gam
of a rlinmplonslilp pluyoff In the
Southern Oregon lent no. The
n,A whm ..lnu.il nl IWiiiIb An.
oilier III Hi" series will be played
next. Kiimluy at Grunts I'usa.
Features of Iho giuua worn th
tlireo-hlt pitching of A Ivlno, Dorris
nioiiiiilsman, and lha hlg-llma
slugging of M. HtolU'li and Cold
aver. AIvIko was definitely on fur
lha ilny, mill guvo n demount ra
tion of brilliant hurling that
brought ontliinilusllc applause
from a big spectator section.
Colilivver and Slnlirh smushed
out two homers eh for Dorris.
Score :
II. II. K.
('.mills Pass 3 5
Dorris 1 I
Crlppou ami Woods; Alvlso and
Mi-lniyro.
MKDFOKD. AK. 21 (.TV Mlka
Koll, Crescent City pllcher slam
med out a homer In the tenth
Inning, with two in. n on bases,
and tho score knotted at 7-nll to
detent .Medford 10 to 7, In the
first of n three-game series be
tween I lie two teams In Ihn South
ern Oregon league play-off.
Score:
It. II. E.
Crescent CHy 10
Medford 7 13 5
M. Koll, lieo, It. Koll aiu!Koriu;
l.eggett. Ilaynea and Ullsen.
nVYNKIt III HT
ST. I.OI'IH. Aug. 21 (II Ham
Hrendon. owner of tho St. Louis
Cardinals National League base
ball club, was Injured seriously
yesterday afternoon In fall from
a horse. Dr. Itohort K. llyland
sulci Dresden's Injury was serious
and he may Jisvn a fractured
skull.
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