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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1953)
PAGE TEN vj i vi i . "I'd be satisfied io shoot my usual fame, If 1 could ever . Just do it!" By The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE ,. W L Pet. Brooklyn 60 31 .617 Milwaukee 49 33 .598 , Philadelphia 45 34 .610 Bt.Louis 46 3& 668 New York , 43 37 .538 Cincinnati 37 48 .446 'Chicago 1 30 M 31S Fittsbumh ' ' 27 61 .307 Sunday's Result' Brooklyn 4, -New York. 3 (10 in nings) ... Ptiilade!phla--8. Pittsburgh 4-5 Cincinnati 1-7. Chicago 4-3 Milwaukee 104, St. Louis 1-J Saturday's Results New York 6, Brooklyn 0 Philadelphia 8. Pittsburgh 4 . Chicago 5, Cincinnati 2 Bt.Louis t, Milwaukee 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE W ti P'l. New York- 88 36 ,688 Chicago . 63 31 ,619 Cleveland -. ' 48, 35 .678 Boston . 41 39 .647 Washington 43 .600 Philadelphia, ' , 34 61 . 400 et.Loula 31 65 ,360 Detroit 67 .321 Sunday's Results New York 6, Washington B Chicago 14-3, Cleveland 3-1 Boston 6-1, Philadelphia 6-4 Detroit 8-3, 8t, Louis 7-3 Saturday's Results New York 3, Washington 1 Chicago 6, Cleveland 4 Boston 4, Philadelphia 3 -8t. Louis 7, Detroit a PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W L Pet. Hollywood " 84 42 .604 Seattle 63 44 .589 Los Angeles ' 67 62 .523 Portland - 63 49 .520 San Diego 60 57 .467 San Francisco 49 68 .458 Sacramento 45 61 .425 Oakland 44 62 415 Sunday's Results Hollywood 8-4 Seattle 7-1 Oakland 12-10, Portland 9-3 San Diego 10-6, San Francisco 7-4 Sacramento 6-10, Los Angeles 4-3 Saturday's Results Seattle 5, Hollywood 3 (11 innings) Portland 11, Oakland 7 Sacramento 9, Los Angeles 3 San Diego 7, San Francisco Western International League W L Pet. Salem 9 3 .750 Spokane 10 4 .114 Calgary 7 5 .583 Lewiston 7 6 ,583 Vancouver ' 6 8 ,500 Yakima 6 8 .429 Tri-Clty , 5 7 .417 Edmonton 4 8 .333 Victoria 4 8 .333 Wenatchee 4 8 .333 Sunday's Results Lewiston 6-6, Yakima 4-1 Salem 6-0. Trl-Clty 3-5 Wenatchee 7-2, Spokane 4-7 Only games scheduled Saturday's Results Edmonton 4-2. Victoria 2-3 Calgary 6, Vancouver 1 Spokane 9, Wenatchee 2 Salem 10, Tri-Clty 2 Lewiston 9, Yakima 6 Minor League Baseball Raiid.i. o'JRNJTIO.NAL LEAGUE Ottawa 4, Montreal 3 Baltimore 10, Buffalo 0 Toronto 7, Springfield 3 Syracuse 6. Rochester 5 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Charleston 2. Kansas City i St.Paul 4, Indianapolis 1 Toledo 7, Minneapolis 0 Columbus 2, Louisville 1 TEXAS LEAGUE San Antonio 1, Oklahoma City 0 Tuba 6. Houston 4 Forth Worth 3. Shrevcport 1 Beaumont , Dallas 1 WESTERN LEAGUE Wichita 6-4, Sioux City 4-4, (sec ond game 10 innings) Dcs Moines 7-1, Colorado Springs 3-2 Other games postponed PIONEER LEAGUE Salt Lake 4, Great Falls 2 Ogdcn 9, Billings 2 Pocatcllo 6, Magic Valley 4 Boise 10, Idaho Falls 9, AMERICAN-BOSCH CORP. Announces the Appointment of SPECIALIZED SERVICE CO. As Sales and Service Representative ' for . Bosch Diesel Fuel Injection Equipment mm mm hi League 4 Knotted Klim.lh fill! Medford Grants Put . ... Central Point Sunday Scar.a Klamath Falla 1-4 Granla Pan t-3 The Klamath Cokes travel to Medford Wednesday with the lead In League 4 American Legion Jun ior Baseball hanging in the bal ance In the doubleheader. The Cokes, after a brief lead in League 4, slipped back into a tie with Medford yesterday when they split a twin bill with Grants Pass. Grants Pass won the first game, 8-1; the Cokes won the second 4-3. The Cokes got their only run in the fourth inning of the opener when Gary Hackley led off with a triple and scored on Craig Mccarty's single. That was two of the five hits given up by Grants Pass pitcher Brad Lucas. FOUR HITS Four hits off David D'Olivo and a walk in the second inning gave Grants Pass an ' early 2-0 lead. They added one in each the fourth and fifth innings and ran their total to six in the sixth on a single, double by Bill Krumhols and triple by Terry Martin, good for' two runs. Modesto Jlmenes pitched the second-game victory, giving up seven hits and getting out of beses lotided trouble tn both the second and third innings. Grants Pass went ahead, 1-1, In the second inning on three walks and singles by BUI Mendenhall and Martin. LEAD ' , But Hackley singled, pen Dexter tripled and Jimenez singled in the third Inning to give the Cokes two runs and a 3-2 lead. They made it 4-2 in the fourth on Rod Wright's single to right field and Don Tauch er's triple. Grants Pass fell on 'ran short of tying the count, in the fourth when Al Drews doubled and waltzed home on pitcher Bryon Wil son's single. .. . There were no other league games with Central Point and Medford idle. Central Point goes to Orants Pass for a double header Tuesday. Line scores: First game: Klamath Falls 000 100 M 5 1 Grants Pass ....020 112 x-t H 1 "D.Olivo and' Kelly; Lucas and M. Drews. Second game: Klamath Falls ..012 100 0-4 8 1 Orants Pass .... 020 100 0-3 7 3 Jlmenes and Kelly; Wilson and M. Drews. Break Wins For Hankins Dale Hankins broke up the Cali fornia monopoly at Gems Speed way last night with a victory in the Main Event but he was thank ing a last-turn spinout by Yreka's Woody Thomason. Chick Robinson, who. with Thom ason, won Just about everything last uigm, was neriea out on the fifth lap of the Main Event and never returned. Thomason. after three re-starls. had the race all but won when, all Dy mmself he spun out on the home turn of the 25-lao event. Hankins. pushing him all the way, breezed by him for the top prize. The Yrekans, Robinson and Tho mason, won the first two heats in that order and lined up with Ben Morrison, winner of the third heat, and Andy Bergman. Yreka. fourth-beat winner, in' the Trophy Robinson and Thomason made the dash a two-car race with the former picking up the trophy and the kiss. Another Yreka car with Paul Nunes at the wheel won the final heat, ahead of Russ Newell and Morrison. The Semi Main was a wild affair and a tough one for the scorers to ngure. CASH SAVE $ ON GASOLINE B)k... 7R a t - - jejvnowK Petroleum V JT The Cokes, after a brief lead In I I i J , I ; May W J ( Suaejeit Yy J w, II VI !niiinc : . I N 1A-II . y.lj ."Tj. rfijtf""11"1" I I Xfj J" 1 111 1 I . I Burn 33 Lakevitw S I I : I ' C I I a I HOME ON RANGE Hank Sauer of the Cubs and tha Yan kees' Billy Martin practice in store clothes at Coney Island, N. Y., batting range. . . ' ' Home Runs As Stars By 'The Associated Press When Hollywood batters tag the ball it's been going for a nice long ride. And the Stars have ridden right along to top the Pacific Coast League again. . . Hollywood ' batsmen have hit homers in each of their put eight games and round trippers decided dow ends, of Sunday's double-head er when the Stars whipped Seat- tie's Kainiers 8-7 and 4-1 to tumble them from first place. ' An lnslde-the-park homer by Dale Long climaxed a five-run ninth inning uprising in the opener a mo eiars came from behind to win. The initial Hollywood run was a four-base blow hv Pnnti. Kelleher. ' But John Mozlngo or Merrill, in a ClOSe final flnnrt w.. 1, ----- ..n,tu iviuireu Betsoh at the wire. Fred Thurman lurnea over on the fifth lap and fiva other nara hari - tws4fi , - n v. ojiiv JHIM it took 10 minutes to untangle. xnomason and Robinson ran one two in the Special Pot Race be tween four California drivers and four Klamath pilots. Newell squeezed In for third place. Hankins warmed up for his Main Event win with a blue ribbon In the Klamath, Falls Pot Race. WESTERN LEAGUE Denver 8-1,- Omaha 6-3 (First game 11 innings) Lincoln 5-5, Pueblo 3-0 Des Moines 3-1, Colorado Springs 1-8. . . Wichita at Sioux City postponed SHIP X 0. JOHNSON, D.ildef 2525 Vint Avnut, PROTECTION HERALD k NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON If A Ruin Suds Tommy SaifeU's home run with a mate on base blasted a 1-1 dead lock in the seven-Inning finale.' Gordy Maltsberger, ; fifth- Holly wood hurler to work in the first game;, was. the winner and Harry Fisher took credit for- the finale. Manager Bobby Bragan has named Bill Mac Donald for pitch ing chores Monday night as Holly wood opens a series at Portland. Either Red Adams or Fred- San ford will hurl for the home club. Seattle meanwhile plays host to San Francisco in the only ,, other game scheduled. . They held a "salute the Oaks? day in Oakland Sunday and the home club downed Portland twice by scores of 12-9 and 10-3. San Diego spilled San Francisco twice, 10-7 . and 6-4 and Sacramento did the same to Los Angeles 6-4 and 10-3. . ' . Four Portland errors ' in ' the opener led to Oakland's overcom ing a 7-2 deficit. In the second game, Al Oettel won his 18th game of the year. Bill Howeron homered for the winners In both games. LIFETIME BATTERY ' 24M " aim tax Automatic self charging Naurranic plate, a-year gaarawtea by Hays's of Leaden. Call Your Local Representative: A. S. Smith HAla K. Falli Dan Barnaa 4S0a ' " Mtrrill Glena Hanitieatt 4101 - Merrill Dan PMaraan 7-B-;:n Tolrlaka aaTJaTJMHaaMaHHSJSaSJSJS Iced air and heated air, holding shipments at right temperatures across hundreds of miles of plains and desert, keep perishables right for market the year 'round. Union Pa cific P. F. E. service does the job. UNION PACIFIC Frtighf oncf Pautngw Agent Klamath falli, Orgon Burns bloated its lead in the Ore gon - California Border Baseball League to two full games yester day in a convincing manner. The Burns Elks slaughtered the Lakevlew Gems. 22-5, white Klam ath Falls tumbled into joint owner ship of the cellar with Alturas In a 7-2 loss to that team. -- The Klamath Merchants scored their two runs In the sixth inning and Alturas' Kennon came on to save the game for starter . Perry Skinner. Ralph Carroll started on the mound fo Klamath, was "relieved in the seventh by Andy Anderson. ' Ron Owings, catcher,- collect -d two of the four Klamath bits in four trips to the plate. Alturas picked up 11 hits off Car roll and Anderson. . Burns scored 11 runs in the first inning and were never threatened by Lakevlew. Jack Lutz got credit for the vic tory. Jack Olson was the loser and victim of the 11-run uprising in the first inning. Line score: Klamath 000 002 000-2 4 4 Alturas 200 032 OOx-7 11 2 Carroll, Anderson 7 and Owings: Skinner, Kennon 6 and Kudell. Grants Pass Racer Fifth MILWAUKEE (iB Frank Mundy, Atlanta, Ga won the 150-mile stock car race before 23.618 fans at State Fair Park Sunday for his fifth triumph in seven major starts this season. Fifth place went to Bob Christie of Granta Pass, Ore. TEXAS LEAGUE Fort Worth 1, Shreveport 0 Beaumont 4, Dallas 2 San Antonio 10-1, Oklahoma City 6-6. Houston 3-1, Tulsia 0-2 . INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal 9-3, - Ottawa 5-2 Syracuse 1, Rochester 0. . .- -Toronto 4-2 Springfield 1-4 Buffalo 11, Baltimore 4 ATTENTION! - ' W ,b.G OWNERS One Week FREE-Driving Trial in a New Dodge DERIVE No Strings Attached Go Anywhere You Like ! Drive your All-New '53 Dodgt 1,000, 2,000, 3,000 miles as far as yau like on your 7-Day Fret Driving Trial. Take a trip to Lake Louise, Yellowstone, Sun Valley, Las Vegas, Las Angeles ony where! We don't care. We're so sure you won't want to drive any ordinary car after driving your Dodge that we moke this astonish ing offer to you. WE DARE THEM ALL! Open Eveninqs Till 8:30 By The Associated Press TRACK PASADENA. Calif. Fortune oordien of the Los Angeles A. C. topped his own world discus rec ord with a tnrow 01 iuu ie, 1 a Inches. . GOLF wwinNTfi nava Douclas of Newark, Del., posted a five under par 66 to win the Canadian Open with 72-hnl snore of 273. SEATTLE The three man team of Tommy Jenkins, Bob I Incr .Tar-lrnnvillf Fla won the liw, inn linn huh n-oreKeni. Harding Cup for Public Links 1 goners with a total of 221. Brooks, Munroe Survive Defending champion Earl Brooks and Rich Munroe, a darkhorse, swept into the semi-finals of the Moose-sponsored City Tennis Tour nament ;er the weekend. - Brooks posted a 6-0, 6-2 win over Fred Klink in the quarterfinals; Munroe whipped Bud Case. 6-3. 6-2.- - In first round play Kllnk beat Mack St. John, 6-2. 6-4; Case de feated Ed Lander, 6-4, 6-3: Munroe disposed of Denny Todd, 6-i. "6; and Bob Knoll sidelined Wally Browne, 8-6, 6-2. In men's doubles play. Dr. Ray Tice and Munroe got over Lander and Todd, after losing the first set, 4-8, 6-2, 6-1. Todd defeated Lander 1-6. 6-2. 6-1 in the consolation singles play. Clover North and Gertrude Brooks won In women's singles play. North disposing of Pauline Pirnell, 64). 9-7. and Brooks, get ting a battle from "Brick Bo land, but winning 6-2, 5-7 6-2. Dr. Tice and Clover North won over the Pernells 6-3, 6-0. in mixed doubles play,, while Todd, a junior division favorite, whipped Don Fayette, 6-0. (3-0 in junior men's singles play along with St. John's 6-0, 6-1 win over Dan Lowe. . . The meet continues all week with semifinals and finals scheduled for Saturday and Sunday. Polio Insurance? YOU BET! NORM WILSON The Personal Aqeney 724 Pine r Phone 2-3377 Mc A DODGE FOR 7 Compare Them All You'll Drive A Dodge From BOB MEST Who Else? Would DARE ) Make on Offer National League 7-5 Favorite in k. inr RFirHLER Vi.TT.jMATr lipw. skenLical Am erican Leaguers, openly critical of Casey 'Stengel's pitching strategy, hoped the old manager's World Series magic win woia. row's All-Star Game against the powerhouse National Leasue. ,. . Stengel is under fire for his in sistence on going with only one southpaw pnener vu;b Pierce against the National's left handed fencebusters. , Only the memory of Stengel's successlul use of lefty Bob Kuzava agamst the National's tough riglil-lianded hitters in the last two World Ser ies tempered their remarks. Condrey Calls Softball Meet George Condrey, president of the Mens uuy ouuoau ucbbuc has called a meeting Tuesday 7:30 D.nii. in the City Hall. Condrey stresses the Importance of managers, players and sponsors aiienaing uie session. Goodwill Puffs Yacht Lead HONOLULU I The schooner Goodwill, aided by a fresh breeze, stretched its lead over ' the ketch Morning Star as the Transpacific yacht race entered Us loth day. At last report, the Goodwill, owned by. Ralph E. Larrabee of Huntington Park, Calif., was 752 miles from the finish linen the 2.225-mile race . from Los Angeles to Honolulu. The Mornipg ' Star, owned by Richard E Rhcem of San Fran cisco, was reported 50 miles be hind the Goodwill, but far in front of the third-place yawl Adios, owned by Dr. Carl D. F. Jensen of Seattle; . - PIONEER LEAGUE Boise 8-16, Idaho Falls 6-1 Ogden 8, Billings ,7 Pocatello 5, Magic Valley 4 Salt Lake 5, Great Falls 3 Even the staff of the Herald and News will be tuned in to 1150 on Your Dial at 10:15 tomorrow morning for the All Star Ball Game KFJI WE don't think you know the POWER, PERFORM ANCE and ECONOMY that's been built into the 140 h.p. Red Ram V-8 engine or you'd be driving a Dodge instead of your present high-priced car. FULL DAYS u u u. MONDAY, JULY 13, 1933 Star Tilt c..HnL.inff a fan." suld Gen OHcnmMB ' . eral Manager Frank Laue of t.ie White Sox, "I can't see why Sten gel picked only one left-hander .nuhmiv nan see that the National Is stacked with southpaw swingers. How am ne ovcuoua. Farnell, Boston's fine left-hander? 'If I were the National League manager, you can bet I'd keep my left-handers in all games. But then again, we front office men aren t supposed to know as much aa the managers." . ' Calvin Griffith, Washington vice president, also expressed amaze mftit over Stengel's failure to ae lect Farnell. "The last time I looked," Griff ith said,"' Parnell had the best record in the league. How d,Id Sten gel ever pass him up?" National Leaguers, still smarting from four straight World Series defeats by Stengel, were confident they could gain some measure of revenge by whipping the Yankee skipper for the fourth straight time in tne nuasummcr They beat him 4-3, 8-3 and 3-2 in the last three years. Although the American League has won 12 of the previous 19 clashes, the betting gentry has In stalled the Nationals a 7-5 favor ite. They base their odds on the home run abilty of Cincinnati's 'fed Kluszewski and Gus Bell, Mil waukee's Eddie Mathews and St. Louis' Stan Musial, and Enos Slaughter, all of whom bat left handed. Red Schoendlenst of the r..rjini, (ho National League'! leading utter, nits win Burns Tears Moth Holes Worn Places Rewoven SALLY'S REWEAYING Seattle Portland Represented by mush9 j 522 So. 6th St. Phone 8101