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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1952)
MONDAY, JULY. 21. 1052 IlEnALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE N1NK TIME OUT! Yoimlks Sweep Olympic Slh Put "ham lhrf IDIh holt aur who rl lo nuking all lorlt of wild It la!" By Thr Asswlslrd Press A.MK.MCAN LKAUVK VI L Trt. New York 64 34 .614 lloslon 1 411 3 M3 Wnfhlniiloii 40 3D ,&OT Cleveland 49 40 .5.11 Chleaeo 48 43 .527 Phll.cTclnhl 111 43 .4m HI, Imlla 35 M ,3S Detroit 38 08 .3:13 rlundara Result Washington 18 Bl. liuia 6-3 l'hlladclnlila 8-3 Detroit 11 (sec nnd gsme called after nin innings, curlew i Chicago New York 4 Boston ( Cleveland 7 111 )nnlni.l NATIONAL LEAGUE W I. Brooklyn t 33 New Yoik 3 31 Ml. Louis " 3t Chlcaio 44 43 Philadelphia 43 46 Boston 31 60 Clnclmiall 36 63 Pittsburgh 36 61 bunder's Resulta Brooklyn 8 Pittsburgh Now York t Chlcano 7 HI. I-oula Boaion 4 Cincinnati 6-3 Philadelphia 6-4 Prl. .728 .631 .Ml .511 .4BD .4J& .404 .313 (Ural game 10 innlngai rACIPIO COAST LKAGl'K W L Pel. Hollywood " .JJJ Oakland 46 .666 Htallle 64 63 .606 Lo Angeles J 68 .461 Portland ' 51 "s Ban J'ranclnco 46 66 .406 fcacramento 44 6 J03 Hundajr'i Results Hollywood 10-0; San Diego 1-1 Oakland 3-4; Beallle 1-3 (Ural lame 13 liinlnga; second game u innings. , Portland 9-3; Ui Angeles 1-1 San Francisco 4-1; Saci amenta 31 isocond game 7 innings.) Western Internillonal League ... W L Pel. Victoria M 3 ftnokan. 61 41 44 3D .664 Vancouver Bale m lwlalon Yakima Trl-Clty Wenatchre .630 .473 43 41 41 41 .413 43 60 .463 38 61 .433 38 63 .416 Miiiiritv'i Rnunlta Victoria 1-8 Yakima 0-3 Spokane 3 Balem 0 (first game cancelled) Lewlnlon 2-1 Trl-Clty 1-3 Vancouver 33-6 Wenetcheo 3-3 Saturday's Results Balem 10-1 Spokane 1-6 Victoria 6 Yakima 3 Lewlston It Trl-Clty 5 Vancouver I Wenatchce 6 tlO In nings) Netmen Trounce Redding Hie Klamath Tails Tennis Club downed Redding yesterday, at Moore Park by an s-4 count. The local nelmen won all three doubles matches and five of the nine singles bouts. Ken Karns, ex-Klamalh ace and city champion now living In Red dins, beat Earl Brooks. Klamath Falls, In tr'tt sets, 6-1, 6-3, but learned with Ron Farley, lost to Brooks and Hon Lowell, i d, i-b, 3-6. Results: Singles! Karns R beat Brooks K, 6-1, 6-3: Lowell K beat Sorensen R, 6-4, 6-1; Tlce K beat Farley R, 6-4. 6-0: Bhuman R beat Kllnk K, 1-6, 8-4, 6-4: Case K beat R. Wag . ner R, 3-6, 6-0, 6-4; Dingier K beat T. Wagner n, le, , i-o; tacnen K beat Kay O'Brien R. 5-1, 6-1, 6-4; Mason R beat Browne K, 6-4, 6-3i Owlngs K bent Williams R, 1-6. 6-1. 6-3. Doubles i Brooks and Lowell K beat Karns and Farley n, 8-8, 6-1, 6-3; Kllnk and Olson K beat Mason and Williams R, 6-1, 6-3; Dingier and Tlce K bent T. Wagner and Borenaen R, 3-6, 6-3, 8-1. Mosebars Win Spouse Meet ' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mosebar won the husband-and-wlfe tourna ment at Reames yesterday. The mixed title went to Dr. Paul flharp and Dorothy Bwanson. Burn Tecrrs Molh Hole Worn Place Hewoven SALLY'S REWEAVING , Seattle Parties , ' ftsarsMsiie' r WUlbh'A 5 Games Records Tumble IfrMJllNKI i America's Jumpers and weight throwers con tinned to dominate . the major events In the 16th Olympic gamefi Monday as the second day'a track and Held events began. The United Stat, which placed one-two In the high lump Sunday, sent three men Info the Uriel round ol the shot put without effort and also qualified all Its three entries lor Hie broad Jump final. Without even taking off their sweat suits. Parry O'Hrlen ol Southern California, world record holder Jim Fucha of New York and Harrow Hooper of Fort Worth, Tea., surpassed the required dls lance of 41 feet 30 81 inchea In the shot put. The broad Jumpere had a little more trouble, but Mertdltli (Flash) Oourdlue of Cornell, Jerome Blffle of the tl. B. Army and Oeorue Brown of the University of Call!- ornla at- Los Angeles all aurpaaned 34 feet on their qualifying jumps. All three Americana also quail fled for the pole vault finals with' out trouble. UUAI.IFV Don Las of Champaign, III., Bob Richards, the vaulting parson from La Verne. Calif., and Oeorue Mat- toa of Ban Francisco cleared the required height of 13 feel 16 Inchea. Rowing competition Monday was limited to repechage or "second trial" heats. Most of the American crews already qualified for the semi finals by placing first or second In Sunday's trials. In wrestling American Bantam weight Bill Borders ol Tulsa, Okla., loat a dedalon to Mohammed Yag houbl of Iran. Four Olympic records were bet- O'Brien Wins Mr TED SMITH HELSINKI t The United States scored a grand alam Mon day In the allot out of the Olympic names. Parrv O'Brien, Darrow Hooper and Jim Furhs finished 1-3-3, with O'Brien setting a new Olympic record ol 11.41 meters 167 feet 1.43 Inchea. I The old record was 11.1 metere 1 68 feet .03 Inches i set bv Wilbur Thompson of the United States at London In 1!48, Hooper also bettered the Olvmplo record with a throw of 61 feet 0.64 Inchea. This was the flfih record of the games to fall In only two days of brilliant competition. tered Sunday three in final event-i and another In a preliminary. ItKCORDrl The record amashera In final events Bunday were: I. Walt Davis, a Texaa cowboy, who cleared 6 feet 1.33 Inches In the high Jump. 3. Nina Romaschkova, a new name among the powerful Russian women athletes, who hurled the discus 168 feel 8:46 Inches , 3. Emll Zalopek of Csechoslova kla, who lias his sights ael on winning the 5.000 meters. 10.000 meters end the marathon. He took the 10.000 Sunday, lowering his own 1048 mark from 38:63.6 to 38:11.0. Charlie Moore, the former Cor nell star from Ithaca. N. Y., glided over the 400-meter hurdles in :60.6 hi Sunday' heals. The clocking was three-tenths of a second better than the previous mark. He was looking over his shoulder at the finish. . FAHTEHT III rowing, Yugoslavia and France won their heats In the four oars without coxswain event In tho fastest times ever recorded In the Olymplca. The Yugoslav mark of 6:34.4 for the 3,000-meter course was almost two seconds belter than the previ ous low mark set by Great Britain in 1028. The unbeaten heavyweight crew from theU. 8. Navy Academy won going away In Its battle with the vaunted Leander Club of Oreat Britain, but both boats qualified easily and neither one appeared lo go all out. The Russians won their heats In the elght-oared crew and double and single sculls and qualified for the semifinal In the four oars with out coxawaln. Meanwhile, American hopes suf fered aome sever Jolts through the two reversals In the 100 meters and the failure of two of three American seml-flnallsts to qualify for the final of the 400 meter hurdles. The favorite, Charlie Moore ol Cornell, who smashed the Olympic record with a 60.8 seconds per formance Bunday, won his semi final In a breete. VICTIMS Victims of the Judges decisions were Dean Smith of Texaa and Llndy Remlglno of Manhattan. Although it appeared to specta tors that Remlglno had won the second heat by two feet, officials named Herb Mckenley of Jamaica as the winner. Then 30 minute after Smith hsd been announced as the first heat winner, the Judges looked st finish photos and decided that Emajiuel McDonald Bailey of Oreat Britain had beaten him. : Both Smith and Remlglno quali fied for the final, but Art Bragg of Morgan State College (Baltimore, Md.) was eliminated when he fin ished last In his heat,, limping bsdly. UNOHWOM't Nejt krvlf 311 vWsrwMe- 6I"(, fhsw 4llf ' 1 ' , .7.-1.1.11 i ) i Irs PATHbR'S SPIKESTEPS Charley Moore (right) went io the Olympic Games a definite candidate for a new record in 400-meter hurdles 28 years after his father, Crip, sailed to Peril at a member of th United States team. The senior Moore, renowned at Pennsylvania Stat College, alio wat a hurdler. Junior competed for Cornell. Nats Half Game Out Of Second Four consecutive victories by one run. ..21 one-run triumphs for the season. That Is the prlnclpsl resson why Washington's scrappy Sena tors are In third place Monday af ter all but a handful of experts picked them lo finish In the Ameri can League cellar. The Nam added their fourth straight one-run victory Sunday as they awepl dnublrheader from the Bl. Louts Browns, 1-6 and 6-3. to move Into third place, a half game, behind tha Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox picked un a full game on the pace-setting Yankees, vanquishing Una Cleveland Indians 8-1, In 13 Innings on Johnny Llpon's basea-loaded alngle. The fifth-place Chicago White Box upset the New York Yankees, 6-4. Homers by Ed die Robinson and Sherin Lollar ended Chicago six-game losing streak. 3-3 TIE Philadelphia's Athletics look the opener of a doublehesder from ueiron, on Joe Tipton's nlnlh Innlng sinule. Th. teams then played a 3-3 tie In the sec ond game, halted by ' Pennsylva nia's curfew at the end of nine Innings. The Tigers tallied twice In the top of the 10th to take a 6-3 lead but the score reverted bsck to the end of the ninth as the Athletics did not have time to take their turn at bat In the 10th. The nightcap will have to be played over. BULGE LEAD Brooklyn's runaway Dodgers maintained their 1 ' game bulge In the National Lcaizue. taklnir Pittsburgh Into camp for the 13th siraigm time -s. The runner-up New York Giants whlnned the Chi. cago Cubs, 0-1, and the third-place St. Louis Cardinals defeated the tioaton Braves, 8-4. . Philadelphia and Clnctnnntl di vided a doublehesder, the Phillies bounding back behind Robin Rob erts with a 4-3 win after the Reds had taken the opener, 6-3 In 10 Innings. Woolies Win 2 Non-leaguers The Oregon Wools, teague-lead-Ing girls softbnll team, won two non-lcngue games over the week end. The Woolies out-slugged Duns mulr, 13-10, Snturday and out-lasted Lakevlew, 16-11, Sunday. Alturas beat Tlk-Tok, Klamath Falls' second-place team, 16-9, Sat urday. Dee Hcnnlnger and Maxlne Jo hnnson knocked home runs for the Wools Saturday, Dnrlene Oordon connected on a circuit clout Sunday Carol Shirley homered for Tilc Tok. ,'iok tmim OK JOI MOr '' SECCKl. m ii Wl 1 w ' A 1 " "ft dm D'Olivo, George Wing Double Coke Victory David D'Olivo and Jo Jo George fashioned three and four-hlttera re spectively yesterday at Gem Sta dium as the Klamath Cokes spanked Medford in both ends of a non-league Junior Legion dou bleheader. D'Olivo, a relief pitcher for the Cokes nil season, pitched a 6-2 win in the live-inning opener. George got revenge for the maul ing he got from Medford last week in a 4-2 seven-Inning game. Aieaiora went aneaa in tne nrst game when Max Llndley and Terry Sherwood rapped singles in the sec ond inning with two out alter D'Olivo had loaded the bases with three walks. But DOilvo followed Louie Tau- chcr's Single with a run-scoring double In the third frame and Ron Owlngs chased D'Olivo across with the tying run on a single. A two-run error by Medlord Third-baseman Eddie Baker and a one-run single by Don Dexter gave me uokcs uiree runs in tne lourtn inning as D'Olivo settled down the South Beats North, 12-5 The South bent the North. 12-5. yesterday In the Northern Califor nia League annual All-Stnr game at nut. Dunsmulr's Root was named the league's "most valuable player" following the game. Home runs were poled by Mt. 8hasta'a Gasparl for the South nnd Scott Valley's Alexander for the North. .?''' Short score: '..". South :.....12 14 2 North 8 .1 Root (Dunsmuir), Anderson (Mt. Shasta), Kursten (McCloudi nnd Oartwrlght (Dunsmuir, Brooks (Mt. Shastal: Bnrron (Weedi, Cummings (Hilt), Mnddox (Hilt) and Fruzia (Weed), Trinca (HUD. 'THATS NOT HOWTOCHANft ATlRE." Ss us for all yeur automotive needs repeirs and accessaries, all makes, all models. ifiPl 1 ' ,Aaawiaf ; . iaJI -i"Sesaai i-rif v ' " -'I 11 1 ISaWWl 111 rest of the way to give Medford Just one harmless single. George and Mcdford's Kay Kel lcy hooked up In brilliant pitch ing duel for four and a half In nings of the nightcap. But In the bottom of the fifth. Second-baseman Bob Hill lost the handle on ft ground ball and then overthrew first base to account for two Klamath runs. Dexter tripled Oeorge home for the third run and went all the way home when Kelley threw wild to Catcher Dick Woolen on the at tempted putout. Medford scored on wooton a long flv and Klamath eror in the sixth but couldn't close the gap. The Cokes go to North Bend Fri day to represent League 4 In the Southern Oregon district playoffs. Short scores: First game: Medford 020 00-2 3 3 Klamath i 002 3x-5 5 1 J. Kelly and Wooton; D'Olivo and Yarnell. . Second game: Medlord uou w u-a a Klamath 000 040 x-4 6 1 K. Kellev nd Wooton; George and Hatcher, Merrill Wins 4th Merrill notched lis fourth Klam ath Basin Independent Leafrne vic tory against no defeats Sunday, 10-6 win over Chlloquln. Danny Derrnh homered for Mer rill. Herrera for Chiloquln. The Alturas at Bcatty game was not reported. Short score: Chlloquln ......100 012 110-6 8 6 Merrill . 030 032 llx-10 10 6 Burkey, Franks and Gentry; Perkins, Marsh and Johnson. Wl USI litif. OOODYiAl MATIKIAIS aW FACTORY - METHODS I 1.41, STOP IN I TODAY FOB . goodyear , fxfra-A1iOB . RECAPPING n 50; . U V 8.00x16 Jr ' CONVENItNT TERMS goodyear SERVICE STORE 8th ond Klamath Ph. 8141 frDAYii 1 IIp ,J bKsWrWaMal Bottler, Lorino In Twin Win Br The Asaodated Press The Victoria Tyees, resting 10 full gsmes In the lead, proved over the weekend that they're going to be hard to stop In their drive for a Western International League pen nant. The Canadian club ehoooed down Yaklma'a Bears three tlmea, 6-3 Saturday nli'ht and twice Sun day. 10 and 8-3. The loss dropped me Bears irom lourtn to sixtn place In the standings. In other league action. Spokane won two of three games with Halem s senators, tpllttlm.' a Satur day mgnt contest 10-3 and 1-6 and winning Bunday 2-0: Vancouver thumped Wenatchee thrice. 8-6 In 10 Innlntrs Saturday nlKht and Ci-i. e-3 bunday night; and Lewis- ton defeated Trl-Cltv three times, winning- Saturday nisht 11-3 and sweeping a Sunday night double header. 2 1 and 1-2. At Yakima. Ben Lorino and Bill Bottler teamed to hold Yakima to a total of alx hits as the Victoria Tyees swept the Sunday twin bill. Lorino set the Bears down on two hits in the opener and Bottler was tagged for only four safeties In the afterpiece. Both hits Lorino issued were doubles to Yoklma first sacker Len Noren. Victoria cot Its lone run In the opener on a single, a sacrifice hit and Cece Garrlott's double. DeWitts Wins Northwest Net Crown TACOMA 11 A slender Csltfor- nlan, Jerry DeWitts, Oakland, copped the Pacific Northwest Ten nis Championships title Saturday, downing Paul Wllley, Vancouver. B. C, In straight set final, 6-4. 8-3. 8-0. Another Golden Bear States In vader, Herschel Hyde, Berkeley, won the Junior men's crown with a 6-2, 8-3, 8-1 lacing of Seattle's oarry uriaen. Both Hyde and De Witt were top-seeded in their event. Other results: ' ; t Men' doubles: ' Jim Demas, Sacramento, and Jim Livingstone, Sen Francisco, defeated Oeorge Manset, Santa Barbara, and Clyde Knox, Fort- land. 6-4, 7-9. 9-1, 8-0. Women's singles: Amy Yee, Seattle, defeated Mrs. George Manset, Sant Barbara, 6-2, 7-8. 8-3. Girl's singles: Diane Peterson. Portland, de feated Anne Barclay, Vancouver, B. C. 8-3, 6-2. Veterans doubles: Bill Mlllikan, Fort Lewis, de feated Ed Leonard, Seattle, 6-2, 6-0. Junior men's doubles: Jack Eng and Milton Lew, Seat tle, defeated Clarence Mull, Sac ramento, and Vernon Ball, Wenat chee. (Scores unavailable.) Junior women's singles: Lee Davenport. Vancouver,' B.C.. defeated Sylvia Downs. Vancouver, B. C. (Scores unavailable.) Connie Oldershaw . Wins Idaho Title BOISE- Ifl Bonini ur for the National Women's Tournament at Portland next month. Spokane's 18-year-old eolflmr sensation. Con-. nie Oldershaw. breexed to her second straight Idaho Women s xolf title Saturday. Miss Oldershaw who also says shell be gunning lor the Washtng- itate title at Seattle Aug. 11-16. chopped down Dorothey Pierce, Twin Falls, Ida., for the Gem State title. OVERHAUL YOUR CAR MOTOR NOW.. PAY LATER! OUR SPECIAL complete overhaul c will: " .. .InaS lastall " lntt.ll .11 MlMl " r iu.. CUa ail "" Tana ' ASHLEY CHEVROLET 410 So. 6th Carlson, Harrington On Show Matchmaker Mack Llllard yester day completed Friday night's 36 round boxing show at the Armory. Two Seattle Negroes were signed to meet Rudy Carlson and Darrell Harrington, Klamath's fighting mlllhands. Carlson will face Chu Chu Ben son. Harrington draws Millard John son. Both bouts are down for six rounds preceding the seml-windup between Seattle's Pat Mahoney and Bruce Miller. Mahoney thrashed Kid Pollard of Willow Ranch on a recent boxing card; Miller battled to a draw with Pollard. This one is also billed for six heats. RENAl'O BACK The 10-round main event brings back Jarln' Jerry Renaud, Port land lightweight who methodically chopped Carlson down two weeks ago here but couldn't stop blm. It' Renaud s trip-hammer left Jab and whistling right uppercut against Ralph Weiser's bombs that the Indian lad carles in both gloves. Welser earned the main event spot by beating Blackle Vander veer of Seattle on the July 13 card after Vanderveer handed the Beatty Bomber a boxing- lesson in their first meeting. CLASSV Renaud get the top spot on class and the fact that he's rated the best lightweight In Oregon right now. Two four-rounders show Zane Mingo, Klamath Falls, against Danny Rlos, Merrill, and Keith Fenecal, Klamath Falls, against Gabriel Estrada. Chlloquln. Reserved tickets for the ring show are on sale at Dick Read er's, 5th and Main. . HEATONS IN LEAD Heatons broke the first-place deadlock in the Junior Baseball League Saturday with a 6-3 win over chuck wagon. Both had 4-0 record going Into tne game. With the score knotted 3-all going into the fifth and last Inning. Don Taucher led off with a triple tor Heatons and craig Mccarty casnea him in with a single. Mccarty scored on Eddie Bigby's squeeze bunt after be had worked around to third on a passed ball and In field out-out. Chuck Wagon opened a rally on Orin Perkins' triple but he was left stranded there. Ronnie Conner pitched four-hit ball for Heatons; Perkins gave up six in the losing role. In other games. Heilbronners beat Chiloquln. 13-4, and Pelican City won by forfeit when Malin tailed to snow up. jerry Aierim tripled for Heilbronners. D 1-1.- Laul.tul Pr.H anA nl mnnt. PhilllM fetmintalr hit -a grand 'slam home run in ine role 01 a puwiuiikicr 111 fifth Inning, then went behind the I lha wlnninff Vim 'after hitting a double In the 10th as tne tteas won uie opener. r. t H.n.n. hn. Hniihlna anrt ft iiuuie iuii u .v.. huw ..... in the pnus' second game a-a wui tor tne spin. Pitching: Harry Dorish. White 6a T3nloawi rhiu-fe- fitnhba with Chicago leading the Yankees. 5-4 in tne eignui. one out tum iuuia on first and third. He fanned pinch hitter Hank Bauer and retired the next four batters - to preserve Chicago's one-run margin. fliten una- litii '" " All """ be' a a S QuarH H . . 1 jL JERRY RENAUD , returns to Armory Portland Wins Two From LA. Hollywood's shootin? .tar. shotiM keep right on zooming this week. Fred Haney's club plays host to hapless Sacramento, languishing In the cellar 23 games off the pace. The Stars had won 10 straight until San Diego finally beat them 1-0 in the nightcap of Sunday's' twin bill. It was San Diego's fourth win in 21 games with Hollywood this season. - Theolic Smith tossed the) Padres to their win with a six hit shutout. In the opener, a 10-9 slugfest, it was Tom Saffell's pinch triple in the seventh that gave Hollywood the winning margin. They played 23 Innings of base ball at Seattle where Tookle Gil bert led Oakland to two wins. Gil bert drove In both runs in the 2-1, iz-inning opener and scored the winning run in the 4-3, 11-lnning finale. Portland snowed Los Angeles under 9-2 In the first game, al though the Angels outhit the Beav ers 11 to 10. The big blow was Don Eggert's' grand slam homer, his eleventh of the year. The Beav ers took the nightcap 2-1. In the "battle lor the basement" series, San Francisco won the opener 5-2 then lost to Sacramento fW. ' ' ' The .Solons entertain Portland Monday1 in an unusual day-off doublehesder, making up previous ly postponed games. . . By The Associated Press INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ' Montreal 6-5 Ottawa 5-3 Buffalo 5 Toronto 5 (First game tie: called after eight innings, rain. Second game postponed) Rochester 5-4 Syracuse 0-5 '. Baltimore 4 Springfield 3 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION - Milwaukee 3-2 Indianapolis 2-8. . St. Paul 3-5 Columbus 0-10 Minneapolis 14-5 Charleston 2-8 Kansas City 2 Louisville 1 : SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Atlanta 5-7 Chattanooga 1-0 Little Rock 4-4 Mobile 3-2 Memphis 4-0 New Orleans 3-1 Birmingham 6-2 Nashville 3-J. TEXAS LEAGUE Shreveport 18 Dallas 1 - ' Beaumont 6-0 Fort Worth 5-5 Oklahoma City 9-1 San Antonio - Houston 4-0 Tulsa 3-2 PIONEER LEAGUE Focatello 3-7 Ogden 1-16 Great Falls 6-3 Boise 1-4 Salt Lake City 3 Idaho Falls 2 Billings 4 Magic Valley 3. 50 Pay Only $6.63 Per Month! ' FIX YOUR CAR NOW AND FIX US LATER! Ph. 4113 4th $ Klamath Ph. 8146