Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 01, 1949, Page 6, Image 6

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    HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON
MONDAY, AUCUST 1. .4f
Ad SIX
Gems Wobble
Under Double
Sabbath Loss
Vallejo Disbands
Leaving Circuit
With Seven Clubs
Pittsburg's Diamonds, Just too
knt to handle these days, npped
couple of seven-Inning victories
from the Klamath Pi Hi mi
Sunday to run their rr West
league lead over the Klamath
Palla team to tlx full gamee. The
scores were 8-0 and 4-1.
The Diamonds made It a clean
sweep. Hurler Blair Simpson did
the whitewash Job In the first
game, hanging up hit eleventh
consecutive victory. He haa not
tasted defeat thti year. Lou Bron
aan held the Oenu to six hits tn
the second tame and tot succee
slve double by Vince DiMsggio
and Tony Wlippo In the bottom
of the sixth to account for the
two-run martin.
NUea Jordan and Joe Nicholas
vera the victims.
i a-haaa. amund the circuit
over the week-end, the Vallejo
Chiefs made token resistance so
the Medford Nuggets Saturday
mnA ftnnriAv then droDDed
out of the league. Medford won
U-8 and 13-2.
The Far West wheel probably
will finish the season with just
even spoke and a new schedule
will have, to be drawn up for the
remainder of the term. Vallejo
was In seventh place and was
homeless after being toci.ru w
an. nark In Vallejo.
The Willows Cardinals took two
falls from the Santa Rosa Cat,
winning 11-' Saturday night and
6-1 last night Redding lost to the
Marysnlle Braves 7-6 Saturday
and won lasx nigni.
Saturday night, at Pittsburg
.h4 out the scheduled
V. . V. Wall mm flrSt timt
n ii - -
this season the Diamonds have
had to take a back seat to tne
weather. Hence, the twin-bill on
Sunday.
HARD TO BEAT
The double victory by PitU
i . hMmM thir victory march
to II wins tn their last 1 tames
and put them completely oui o
touch with the rest of the circuit
for the time being. A three-game
aeries with the Gems starts here
tomorrow night and If the Spuds
wan them all they'd "111 be three
Botches behind.
Jordan gave up six hits and
fcur runs to the Diamonds before
going out m favor of Stan Otlson
in the fourth frame of the first
Tha nans eot Hi DC hits
but they were ao acattered that
m-w uaaaa had three of them
and Oordy Hemandea had three.
In the aecond tame the Dia
monds, who usually can be pretty
a.-wa fnr Nirholaa. overcame the
jinx with two-run clusters tn the
second and sixth frames. Ralph
Mahler batted in coin Riunim
runs, singling with Bob Casselll
eo base on both occasions.
Nicholas tanned five and walk
ed two. Bremen struck out three
and walked one.
The box:
KLAMATH tallt
NonkU
Janaaa. 3b f J I X
rt
Rraaa. lb 1 ! ? J I I
CaaaalH. rt - ' I J I I i
Mcrnandaa. 11 . a e 1 3 e
Valvar, lb 1 J J 1 l e
Mohler. a
Jordan, p 1 e 1 0 e e
caaoa. e . I e e a e
Totals
. t IS 1
AU OAS
3 o e l o
s 1
3 B 1
ITTMItC
Whttntry. lb
Tt. Zb
Ha run. e .
jtnoti. rf
DiMallM), cf
V FUhppo. If
'lHaddock. 3b
Xacrar-e.lt. M
ftunpMkfl, p
Totala
Klamatl. Falla
PttUburf
ono ooo
030 101 m
SIT-TVAHY SB Htaa. Zarcarelil,
Haddock. RBI Zarrarelll 3. oimoaon.
UatMork. DP Haddock to Whttnc. SO
tor Simptxm S. Jordan 4, Cilsoti S. BB
off Sim poor) 1, Jordan 1. SB Hrhlr,
iimbcko. eh au. wtv-luamaia iu,
Pittsburg 4.
Sacond ttm:
Klamath -Pituburg
R H I
. oio loo 0 a i
. 030 003 K 4 S 0
Nlcholaa and Mohlcr; Bronzan and
Mania.
Citizens Group
Eyes Ball Club
PORTLAND. Aug. 1 P Officials
of the Portland Beavers, owners of
the Balem Western International
league franchise, know nothing of a
reported effort of Salem residents
to bur up the club's Interest.
Bill Mulligan, general manager of
the Coast league club, said he had
not been approached on such a deal.
It was reported tn Balem Satur
day that a group headed by William
Healy, assistant secretary of slate
for Oregon, might buy the club and
park.
Youngsters Set
For Golf Play
CHICAGO, Aug. 1 W)A field of
24 youngsters. 17 years old or less,
begin competition at Medlnah Coun
try club today In the fourth annual
William Randolph Hearst national
Junior golf championship.
The youths, who qualified in tour
naments sponsored by 12 Hearst
newspapers, tee off todsy In East-
West team matches. Actual tour
nament action begins tomorrow with
the first 11 holes of 72 medsl play.
A 96-hole wlndup Is Thursday.
University of Arizona athletic
teams recorded 01 victories against
47 defeats during the 1941-49 sports
year.
5 Min. from Town U
IJ,rf aW.'.M,'.
Mike Jacobs Sat There
JIM NORRIS TAKES
ON FISTIC REINS
AS TOP PROMOTER
AP Nwtfetiin
NEW YORK It Mm strmnRt
to at anyone but Mlkt Jacobs tut
ting tn on of tht chain from whtch
lw promoted 36 world hf-vyweight
ml bouU. But Jamn D. Norria aiu
ther these day.
Detroit millionaire. Norrla Is tht
new president of the International
Boxlnc club of New York. And If
anybody thinks the son of James
Tired Sam
Rakes In
"T aesa aaaa a Is.
I U LJ sa Uaall
Cash
I
ST. PAUL. Minn.. Aug. 1 11
Sam Snead, the White Sulphur
springs, w. va., protesslonai wno
sa-s he's "tired of golf" had some-
thing today to relieve that tired
feeling.
It was the XM00 he won wstarriav
by taking first place In the 48th
annual western open with a 72-hole
total of 2S. That score bettered
the western open record of 270. set
in 1947 by Johnny Palmer. Bahin.
N. C. and equaled the record for
the 8557-vard Keller course, set tn
194 by Henry Ransom.
Cary Middlecoff of Memphis shot
a 63 yesterday to boost himself to a
four-round total of 272 and take
down SI 900 second money.
Snead l first-place money in
creased hi winnings In the proles- j
Middlecoff staying right behind him
with a total of mMM. ;
Lloyd Mangrum. Chicago: Jimmy
Demaret, OjaL Calif., and Chick
Harbert. Detroit, finished yester
day's round with 273s. Mangrum
shot a 70. Demaret a (7 and Harbert
a 71 In the final round. They each
won tllt3J4.
Ted Nelst of Walla Walla. Wash.,
finished In a two-way tie for 18th
place and Ed Oliver. Seattle, was
grouped with six others for 20th.
Nelst had a 283. Oliver 2S4.
CANADIAN
IS CHAMP
IN WATER . i
SEATTLE. Aug. 1 v There was
a new champion today In the annual
Seattle Times - Green Lake mile
men's swim. But Ocean Palis. B. C,
still waa his hometown.
Jim Porte lance churned the dis
tance tn 76:06 to beat out his fellow
townsman and last year's winner.
Vic Chatt, by more than a minute
Saturday. Chatt took 29:112 for
the mile swim, held this year on
Lake Washington.
Oregon girls captured some of the :
other Saturday eventa. Lavelle !
Plannery of Portland, who won the
women's mil Friday, took the
women's 100 yard freestyle. Jan
Ice Rucker, The Dalles, came In
tourui. i
Delia Sehorn. Portland aquatic,
won the 100 yard breaststroke and
the Portland aoquauc girls ISO-yard
Medley team finished second behind I
the Washington Athletic club as
did the same organisation's 400-
yard free-style relay squad.
sally stadleman. The Dalles, won
the girls 60-yard freestyle with
Nancy Calloway, The Dalles, fifth.
Miss Stadelman waa aecond tn the
50-yard backstroke.
Capacity Boost
EUGENE. Ore, Aug. 1 bPV Foun
dations are being laid to add 2240
new bleacher seats to Havward
field's capacity before the Oregon
lootoau season rolls around, Leo
Harris, Duck athletic director, re
ports.
The addition will boost capacity
to 22300 fans.
An electric scoreboard also Is
being added.
Rested. Packs Potent Punch
For National's Pitt Pirates
AP ewtf eatarre
PITTSBURGH You can give a
bespectacled Italian from California
most of the credit for pulling the
Pittsburgh Pirates out of the dumps
and the National league cellar.
Dino Restelll, the Bucs' new 24-year-old
hitting star. Isn't the whole
team, of course. But, oddly enough,
much of his help has come a flock
of California teammates.
The quiet, powerful rookie came
up the hard way. Restelll got hla
first chance with the San Francisco
Seals In the Pacific Coast league.
That was in 1944.
He was batting better than JOO
and talent scouts were glued to him
when he was called Into the army
the same year.
The real struggle came after his
discharge In 1946. Here's how he
describes It:
"The end of the war sent swarms
of players back to their clubs. The
Coast league was loaded and it was
hard to get back Into the twlnf ."
H. E. JONES and SON
Machine Shop and Welding
! Fabrication, Trailer Hitches, Drive Line ... or any
' thing to your tpecificationi. Repairs of Farm Machinery,
; Log Equipment, Straightening Bunkt . . . make Gears
ond Splines
Box Pumps Made T Order All Make Pumps Repslred
S20 Plum St. Phone 4818
Acroii the street from Inmon Motor's shop door
4444444444aaaaaasaaaaas44444a'
Norrls. a native of St. Catharines,
i Ontario, who made hla fortune In
wheat. Is a new hand at promoting
he i all w et.
I Norrls, who looks much younger
1 than his 42 years, has been con-
nected with various sports promo
i tlons "for about 17 years." as he
I PUU It. a
I 'We promoted Joe Louis tights
! before Mike Jacobs ever heard of
him." says Jim rather modestly. "We
put on about six or eight of his
: fight In Chicago and Detroit before
Joe became champion.
"We also promoted Jack Drmp
sey's last fight In Chicago. It was
a four-round exhibition with King
fijh Levtnsky In 1M2. the second
va i.t IVn.iiiav'1 fiaat MnwhiKb H
I The "we" Komi talks about In-
eludes his father who Is president of
both the $ .500.000 Chicago stadium
1 and the $4,000,000 Olympta arena In
j Detroit and has owned the Detroit
nra nuiiw o n niuunu nwirj
; league since 1933. and Arthur M.
1 Wins. Young Jim ts executive vice
president and secretary of both
; arenas.
Wirtx. more famous for his Sonja
Heme Ice productions, U In a num
ber of business ventures with young
Norm. They have the Indianapolis
Capitols of the American Hockey
league and the Omaha Knights of
the U. S. Hockey league. They also
operate New York's Center theatre
and both are In the IRC.
In Detroit It s the IBC of Mlchl
gsn and in Chicago It's the IBC of
Illinois. Here in the big city the
boxing writers refer to the IBC as
the OBHM (One Big Happy Monop-
But Jim Norrls takes It all tn
stride, even to the extent of )oklng
' "Li " "V
, . H .
Norrls' right-hand man In New
ork Is Harry Markson. who ran the
Twentieth Century S. C. during its
final year of existence. He to the
IBC i managing director here while
Al Weill, former fight manager, I
matchmaker.
Although Noma and the IBC
gained much prestige by prompting
the Ezzard Charles-Joe Walcott
heavyweight title fight In Chicago,
he says his biggest promotion was
the second Rocky Granano-Tony
Zale fight Indoors In Chicago sta
dium In 1947. The bout drew
432.911
The IBC. he savs. made about
150 000 on the Charlea-Walcott bout
but "lost a couple of thousand dol
lars when Jake LaMottt recently
stopped Marcel Cerdan of Casa
blanca for the middleweight crown
tn Detroit.
Norrla believes the IBC. despite
cries of monopoly, will be a boon to
boxmg. He thinks there's still time
Una summer for -three or four big
outdoor shows."
The big attraction, of course, to
the heavyweight battle between
Charles and Gus Leanevlch tn
Yankee stadium on August 10. even
though New York's boxine eommiaa
alon remains firm in refusing to
recognise the winner aa champion,
.
PIONEERS
aaaa a a aaa.
HI niUHhll
m 1"av
DTJNSMUIR. Aug. I Klamath
Palls and Dunsmuir tied uo for
the Northern California baseball
league lead again yesterday at
nine wins and three loses each.
The Pioneers fell out of the
lead on the one-hit pitching of
Yreka s Jack Ptckart and Yreka
took a 6-0 victory. The lone hit
for the Klamath Falls team was
a single by Fran Miller In the
second inning.
Yreka totaled 13 hits off Pat
Williams and made one error. The
Pioneers had only one error.
Dunsmuir defeated Weed 4-1 on
Lyle Turpln's five-hit tossing. Mt.
Shasta surprised the Hilt Jeu 4-2
and McCloud beat 8hasta Dam
-4. Hilt and McCloud are tied
for the circuit's fourth place be
hind Klamath Falls. Dunsmuir and
Yreka.
Last year Restelll returned to his
old hltUng pace. His batting earlier
this season prompted a Buc spokes
man to label hla purchase for an
undisclosed sum and two players
one of the "most promising In
years."
Another Pirate from the same
slate, and whose ancestors claim
the same "old country," la Vic Lom-
1 bardl. The Bakersfleld player stacks
I up as a real diamond oddity a hit
I ting pitcher. Besides his respectable
hurling record. Lorn bardl s Been nit
tlng aa high. 391.
Six other players from California
are important cogs tn the current
Pirate resurge Ralph Klner, Welly
WestUke, Ernie Bon ham, Cliff
Chambers, Bill Werle and Eddie
Bockman.
The golden state has always bred
t rich strain of Italian baseball
greats. A few of note are Joe and
Dom DIMagglo, Tony Laxxerl and
Prank- Proaatti.
' And If the English translation of
jffjL
lb
r4 a ; ;
TV
STOPPER Young Chuck
Schildmeyer, who hos don
mostly relief duty for the
Klamath Gems, may be called
to itart tomorrow night when I
the Cemj return home to try
to stop the Pittsburg Dia
monds. Schildmeyer hos a 4-0
record.
.STANDINGS
PAR WEST LEAGl'E
W L Pet.
Pittsburg C2 20 .674
Klamath Falls 54 24 .414
Willows SO 41 A49
Redding 47 41 -532
Marysville S 45 .500
Santa Rosa 41 4t .461
Vallejo 24 Si J70
Medford .. - 29 (2 J19
Saaday't Resalls
Pittsburg 5-4. Klamath Palls 0-2.
Redding 11. Marysville 7.
Medford 12. Vallejo 1
Willows a. Santa Rosa 3.
St. Louia ..-
. St
. M
- 51
t 49
50
45
611
J24
.516
.515
.479
J9
J7
Brooklyn ...
Boston . ..
New York
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh -
Cincinnati 1
Chicago . M
Sanday's Rtsalta
Brooklyn 4. St. Louis 2.
New York 10-9. Cincinnati 0-0.
Boston O-S. Pittsburgh 1-6.
Philadelphia 5. Chicago 4.
AMERICAN LEAGl'E
New York 90 SS
.03
.589
.552 '
.540 '
i3i l
.41
JMJ7 I
Cleveland , S
Boston S3
Detroit S4
Philadelphia S3
Chicago 41
Washington 38
81 Louis - S3
J44
Sunday's Results
New York 3-1. Chicago 2-2.
Boston 3. Cleveland 0.
Detroit 3-8. Philadelphia 0-0.
Washington 1, St. Louis 3.
PACIFIC COAST LEAC.l'E .
Hollywood 77 S3 J92
Sacramento 58 M3
Oakland 87 81 .523 .
San Diego 84 84
Portland
Seattle 83 67 .45
San Francisco 68 72 .43
Los Antelea . 54 75 .423
Mondays Results
Hollywood 12-S. Portland 3-2.
San Francisco 13-1. San Diego 0 4.
Los Angeles 7-3. Sacramento 1-0.
Oakland 13-4, Seattle 7-6.
Restelll bears significance, the
Pirates' Italian Is destined for even
greater doings. Dino explains It a
little bashfully:
Restelll, In Italian, meant "King
of Uie Stars."
No. 1 Cyclist
LONO BEACH, Wash.. Aut. 1 11
Roy Burke of Portland was named
the outstanding rider yesterday of
more than 2000 motorcyclists per
forming In the windup of the three-day-lont
beach motorcycle tour.
Eight western and mid-western
stairs were represented In the event,
the first held since the war. It
formerly waa an annual show.
COMFORT
Unlimited
fete Trsss Wemrert
"A cocneortsbie aa eat tela
pear of shoe" awyt the meat
wearing one of our new
truasea developed during the
wear awed now available to
truoa wearere. If ywsi are
toofcieeg far trwaraastred pore
fnr. yew. OTJARA! I tMXM
See sal ewasy
Lee Hendricks
Your Neighborhood Druggist
1212 So. 4tb Ph. 4321
Dodgers Down
Redbirds 4-2
To Slice Lead
Victory Shoves
Brooklyn Bock
Into Flag Chase
By The Amoruited (Tea
Don Newcombc. big Negro right
hander of the Brooklyn Dodgers
w ho has hsd his Uu and downs, has
something to smile about today
He s turned the tables on his chief
tormentors Die St, Louis Card
inals. Solidly culled In three previous
encounters with the rollicking Red
birds, Newcombe clipped the league
leaders, 4-3. yesterday to snap Uie
Cards' nine-game Inning streak
and put the Bums back In the Na
tional league race.
Newcombe had the Cards' num
ber. The largest St. Louis crowd
of the season. 33 mi fans saw the
oi fellow check the Cards on eight
hits.
He blanked the league leaders
until the ninth wheh sinsles bv
Ron Northey. Olen Nelson and Lou
Klein plus Duke Snider s first error
of the season allowed the Cards to
score twice. Newcombe got Pinch
hltter Bill Baker to ground out u
ena me game.
The victory. rut the Cards' ad
vantage over the Dodgers to one and
naiz games.
Meanwhile, the New York Yan
kees streu-hed their American
league lead to four game over the
aecond place Cleveland Indiana.
The Yanks split a twin bill with
the Chicago While Sox. taking the
opener. 3-2. and dropping the
nuthu-ap. 2-1. in ten Innings. The
Indians were blanked. 3-0. by
Maurice McDrrmotl and the Red
Sox in Boston.
LINDM.L HOMERS
Ed Lopat bested young Billy
Pierce in the first game on Johnny
Lindell'a ninth inning homer anJ
Tommy Hen Mens run-scoring
single.
Luke Appling slammed a two-run
homer with two down in the tenth
u give Lefty Bob Kuaava the nod
over Duane Pillette in the nightcap.
The Detroit Tigers made it three
straight shutouts over the Phila
delphia Athletics aa Ted Gray and
Fred Hutchinson pitched the Ben
gala to 3-0 and 8-0 triumphs in the
Quaker city. Gray yielded eigh'.
hits and Huich five.
Sherry Robertson snckrd a pair
of homers and Eddie Robinson one
to pace the Washington Senators to
a 7-3 triumph over the St. Louis
Browns.
The New York Otsnts butchered
the Cincinnati Reds. 10-0 and 9-0.
confining their scoring to three in
nings. They scored ten runs In the
first two innings of the opener with
home runs by Johnny XI lie. Ray
Mueller and Hank Thompson fea
turing the bombardment.
Sid Oordon was the big msn In
the nightcap with two homers dur
ing a nine-run second Inning up
rising, Adrian Zabala. making his first
start since returning from the Mex
ican league, limited the Reds to
five blows in the finsle.
GIANTS ELEVATED
The triumph elevated the Oiants
Into fourth place, one percentage
point ahead of the Philadelphia
Phils. The Phils edged the Chicago
Cubs. S-4 in ten Innings in Chicago.
Dick Slaler singled home Oran
Hamner from second base to break
up the game for Philadelphia. Hank
Bauer socked his 31st homer to ac
count for Chicago's first two runs
and Andy Psfko sent the gsme in
to overtime with a two run four
bagger in the ninth.
The Pittsburgh Pirates and the
Boston Bravea spilt a bargain bill,
the Braves winning the first game.
9-1. behind Johnny Sain and the
Pirates the nightcap, 6-5 with three
runs in the ninth.
Couole Out
Of Tourney
PORTLAND. Aug. 1 (! Two
more teams tumbled out of the slate
semi-pro baseball tournament last
nlcht.
They were the Odell Firemen,
ousted. 10-2. bv Albanv's drfenriing
champions, and 8weet Home, ellml.
rated. 3 to 1. by the Portland Red
Sox. That left 19 clubs still In Uie
tourney.
Jim Hudson. Pacific university
pitcher, hurled a no-hit seven-Inning
game to give Banks a 2-1 vic
tory over Archer Blower and Pipe.
Hudson, who scored his third
straight win. struck out eight. The
opponents' lone run came in the
opening Inning, when Hudson
walked hla opposing pitcher and
then committed an error on an at
tempted sacrifice bunt.
Tt Daitra (a flaws t ha US.,, AM. I II
0mvwnmmiiimtJat n n. ipmwniiiii wmw "v,
Ken (Cams, Ruth Hagelstein
Capture City Tennis Crowns
Defending Champions Ken Kama
and Kulh Hagelstein successfully
defended their singles tennis titles
tiunday an the Moore park courts.
fanny Ken, far some reason seed
ed behind Eddie Dent, blasted Dr.
Raymond Tire In straight aria Han
dsv morning, 6-4, I t 6-3.
Miss Hagelstein, playing a watch
ful, cautious game, outlasted Mary
Love, Trxus girl, but was extended
the full three sets In so doing. The
defending champion waa pushed III
the first set to win 1-6. She dropped
the second set to Miss Love, 4-6.
but came back to cop the clincher
6-3.
Kams got a whack at the chance
to delend his til la by downing Blast
ing Bill Crawford, 20 year old
Hollywood Breathes Again
UPWARD
TWO NINES HALTED
Br The Aawrtaled Preaa
The Sacramento Solons, who have
been creeping toward the top of the
Pacific Coast league ladder, have
temporarily loat their footing and
for awhile, anyway, the Hollywood
Siara ran start breathing again.
While the Twinks were sweeping
a Sunday twin bill from Portland,
the Solons were absorbing a double
drubbing from the tall end Lna An
grlrs crowd, all of which leaves Hol
lywood 6't games atop Sacramento
in Monday's standings.
Hollywood whipped Portland. 12
to 3. In the opener and took the
finale. 6 to 2 Loa Angrlee larrupped
Uie Solons, 7 to I and 3 to 0.
At Oakland, meanwhile, tht
Beeber Is
Links Ace
Young Spike Beeber won the
Klamath county links ehsmplonshlp
yesterdsy. turning In a 73-hole card
that waa four strokes better than
that of his nearest competitor.
Beeber'a total over the Reamea ;
Country club layout waa 308. made j
up of consistent rounds of 77-76- J
76-78 His 154 for Uie but two rounds j
edged him from second place at Uie
halfway mark Into the champion
ship. Trailing Spike was veteran John
West Sr. who had cards of 80-77-75-79
for 311.
Ray Beeber. Spike's father, was
two strokes down Uie line with
78-77-H-77 for 315
Ken Torgerwn. who waa Uie lead
er halfway through Uie county tour
nament plsy and was aiming for bis I
first notable tile had S3 snd 61 on
hla Sunday rounds to put with pre-.
vious scores of 79-75 for a 316 total
and fourth place.
lit llUllWIIr, WM ,MIHPim
radio station KPJI and many prises
were awarded tn addition to Uie
major trophy to Beeher,
Davids Best
Monarchs In
Muddy Match
The Israelite House of David base
bailers proved to be belter mudders
than the Kansas City Mnnarrha last
night at Gem- stadium and came
out on Uie long end of a free-hitting
IS to II score.
The Davids exploded for five big
runs In the seventh frame after the
Negroes held a slim 6 to 7 lead.
The House of David picked up
three more runs In the eighth to
hold a commanding 1S-6 lead.
Kansas City started a rally In the
top of the ninth to score three runs
but It fell short when Bob Curry
filed out to renter field.
Norman Keys, Monarch pitcher,
was relieved by Joe Barber In the
sevenlh frame. Dick "Lefty" Moran
went almost the route for the Israel.
lies, relieved by Pollock when two
were out in the last Inning.
About 1000 customers turned out
despite the steady drizzle that con-
tinned for three or four Innings.
The Infield was slippy and caused
many hits that should have been
easy outs.
Is Orarea Ira
McCredie Hot Mineral
Springs Retort
Oa All Vaar
Oa Ortffaa'a Sharl Cat
llilkwsr SS
Hl.wsr Trvt!ra Alwars Walrasis
McCredie Hprlngs, Oregon
fourth-seeded player, yesterday by
an 6-6, 9-7 score.
It took a lot of tennis for Dr. Tire
to slip Into the final match with
Kama Sunday. He had to eliminate
Bud Case at 6 o'clock Haturday
morning. 7-6, 6-4, and took tht court
the same day In the semi-finals to
get Eddie Dent, 7-6, 6-2.
After several hours' rest. Kama
teamed with Crawford to win a
handy 6-2. 6-0. 6-2 straight set vie
lory over Jerry Olson and Eddie
Dent for the mens double bauble.
Kama and Cram ford won on their
aggressiveness, using a fast, smash
ing game at the nrta In blasting
first -seeded Dent and Olson.
Crawford, troubled bv foot faults
In his singles match with Kams the
DRIVES OF
Aroma presented a study In organ,
laed violence In trouncing Seattle,
II to 7 In their opener, but the
Ralnlera bounced back for a 6 to 4
triumph In the afterpiece. Oakland
took five tamea of the seven-game
series.
Seattle ued 17 players and Oak
land 13 In the first game. The Oaks
chilled Seattle early with a
run third Inning.
San Diego moved Into fourth plare '
via a spin witn nan rranrisco. The
Seals faahloned an effortless 13 to 0
victory In the first gsme on Harry
Peldman's neat four-hitter. As he
batted thai many himself during
the melee, one of them good for two
baaea.
The Padres look Uie series, four !
games to three. i
Coast league clubs will rest Mon- j
dsy. and continue the wart an
Tuesday.
Short scores- R H E
Hollywood 410 Oil 004-12 IS I;
Portland 100 001 loo I (4
Roy. Batveaon (ll tnl nandick; I
Fleming. MrNulty III. Dterlrki ill
I Bridges t7. Dlablasl i and
Burgher. i
(Second tame seven Innlneo-
nnuvwona irrj ono 18
Portland 000 o o-3
Moulder and Unser: Diehl. Plem
ing up, MrNulty iSi and aladd
sttle 002 son ono t is
uesiana 07 0M 03x 13 IS 3
Hoffman. Masse Oppliger i3
; Oalehouae i4'. Srhana igt and
; Oraaaov Cecil. Tost (4 and Padgetl.
i Kerr 4.
i Seattle 020 120 l- II a
' Oakland 110 002 0 g 13 a
I Karpel and Warren: Janes. Tool
j son i3. Thnmpaon 1S1. Tote i6
Oassawsy 171 and Kerr.
Sacramento 000 on) ooo I 8 a
Urn Angeles 072 010 OOv-7 in a
, Johnson. Salvo S Preltee n
, d R.imondl; W.ikins and No-
TOtnCy
Sacramento 000 ono fta j a
Loa Angelea 0O0 002 g 3 4
Grove. Conger 161 and rinmw
Carlaen. MrUsh 17) and Novotney.
San Francisco SOI orrj 040 13 g 0
nan uiego 000 000 000 0 4 1
Peldmsn and Jarvia; JurUlrh.
Thompson 1S1, Mooty t n
Rltchey.
San Francisco 000 001 001 3
Ban Diego 000 100 014 t 0
Mrlion. Singleton ti and Block
er; Klpp and Moore.
Army Slates Annual
Golf Tournament
SAN ANTONIO. Teg.. Aug. I M1
The army's annual golf tourna
ment starts here August 7 over the
Fort Sam Houston course and
teams from all over the globe are
eipected.
Entries Include PFC Robert L.
AsUrford of Port Lewis. Wash.,
sixth army match play champion,
and Bgt. Joe R. Torrla. Camp
Cooke. Calif., 1946 sixth army
champion.
Four privatet and one sergeant
will represent the first army. A
major. Herman N. Rell, It an el-
. ternate.
1 f
I
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BASEBALL
The Crucial Series
Klamath Gems
vs.
Pittsburg Diamonds
TUESDAY
Pinky Hesse
Night
Games Each Night at 7:45 P. M.,
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Aug. 1-1-4
Gems Stadium
day before, had hit ao
the doubles play.
Dolores Steele figured In two Ullaa.
After teaming with Mary Love Fri
day to cop the women'! double
crown, slit paired with Jerry Olsou
Sunday atlernoon to whip Bud Case,
and Mary I-ove 6-0, 1-6 for th
mlsed doubles championship.
Olson and Miss Hirele got In tht
finals when Ken and Virginia Kami
defaulted afler holding a slight edge
In Uie deciding set 111 a match thai
waa positioned twice.
Kama waa due for acUon In the
men a doubles and apparently didn't
want to sacrifice any strength by
engaging In the mixed matches.
Evert Kama waa extended to Uie
limit in winning Uie Junior men
singles tills over Ronnie Lowell,
6- 4. 6-3. 11-9.
Kams and lowell teamed up
Saturday In drubbing Bob Petaoldl
and Bruce Dingier for the Junior
men's doubles rhemplonshrp. The
tally waa 6-0. 8-2. 9-7.
In the bnva' division, I -eater Plnea
chlnl walked off with the top prlea
bv whipping Al Shulte 6-4. S-7. 6-2.
Plncrhlnl got to the finals with a
cloae 6-6. S-7. (-6 win over Jerry 1st),
snd Hhulie by downing Joe Sheaier,
7- S. 7-6. 6-3.
The Shearer brothers. Joe and
Rusa. snankrd Brothers Floyd and
(.ester Florchlul 6-4. 6-3 to capture
the boys' doubles crown.
The only competition not com
pleted Is the Junior women a singlet,
and doubles and Uie men s consols
linn rounds.
Ill the singles bracket, Jan la Tay
lor and Ruih Oavlord will mix for a
shot at Jran Mahan In tlte flnala.
Beverly llama and Jams Taylor
will play lluih (lavlord and Jean
Mahan for Uie Junior women's dou
blea title
Jim Plnnigsn and Churk Hell
brntiner will scrap for the top ptlre
In the cotaolation bracket In the
men a dlvuion Plnnigsn gained the
finals wlili a 9-7. 6-0 victory over
John Humphrey in the eemi-finsl
brarkeia llrilbrnnner whacked
George Bell I t. 8-6. 6-4 In the semis.
Final play In thrae three bracken
la scheduled todsy.
Tarn Links
JGold Rush
! Draws All
CHICAGO. Aug I Oolf
reaches Uie realm of the fan last it
this week with preornuunn of the
Tarn O Shanter 84200 variety enow.
The gold rush starts Friday ana
continues merrily for 10 daya.
In addition u being the worlds
richest gull outing. It la the longest,
hat Uie biggest field 1 about SOOi,
and. without a doubt, la the trrew.
leai.
Any golfer who can hear trie
Unkle of a dime during a stampede -of
lunghorns will be Uiere.
The lam, whtch haa been a con
fusion of gulling Ira tile In the put,
will be more an thia lime. Proa
moter Oeurge 8. May. club prvsl-
I dent and former Bible aalesman.
has a new package deal for hit esti
mated average of 18.000 dally
cu'tomers.
He oilers seven tournaments in
one. Running the first five days are
Uie All-American men's pro tourney,
Uie All-American mens amateur
and Uie All-Amerlran women t
Open.
When all Una la om. It 1 only the
beginning.
Then starts the world chsmplon
ships of filt 1 Promoter May I
world).
On a 72-holt medal basis, thee
tournaments (all Into four clari
fication mm pros, men amateurs,
women pros and women amateurs.
To Buy or Sell-Use Uie Want Adsl
3
GUN REPAIRING
SCOPE MOt NTINO
All Hark (iuaranteea
The GUN STORE
714 Mala Mt.
xjjlgtti.g44t
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