Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 21, 1953, Page 11, Image 11

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    I .. . - .
j TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
- PAGE ELEVEN
.i i iiiim BLCwumx rtF rna !..).,. - ev j a mm am . -J ..' i ;.-:.:-, : v. a luMi-w: j i
MERCHANTS LEAOL'I
AliB P.hit Slor, '-.
Juckeland's Molora
Specialized Scrv.kt ,.
Griggs Food
Carl's Meats -
It I.
54
14 B
, 10 14
' 18 16
15 17
14 IS
14 18
, a ia
Eastslde Electric
Modoc Bldg Supply
East Main Shoe Shoo
Monday's Scares
Griggs 4 Carls 0 Itorfeitl
Modoc Bldg 4 Eastslde Eleo
Specialized 4 East Main Shoe 0
Juckeland's 3 AecB Paint 1
Juckeland's Motors knocked oft
the Merchants Bowling League
leaders, A&B Paint, last night 3-1
to gain a tie with that team In the
Monday night kegllng circuit.
Specialized' Service, 4-0 winner
over cellaring East Main Shoe
Bhop, monopolized the scoring hon
ors. Bob Morrison and Carl Brown
rolled 201 and 196 lines, one-two
In that department. Morrison add
ed A 198 and 184 for a E83 series,
high for the evening, followed by
another Specialized bowler, Mel
Robinson with a 542 string.
Specialized'! 1000 team game and
2832 series were also high. Griggs
j-ooas roiiea mi and 2668 for runner-up
honors In team play.
NL Home
Run Marie
NEW YORK Wl The National
League. -now a stronger hitting
circuit than the American, is a
good bet;, to eclipse its all-time
borne iun record this season.
With - about three-fifths of the
campaign gone, National League
batters have blasted out 705
homers. At that rate, the year's
totui would reach 1,115. The exist
ing mark Is 1,100 set in 1950.
tile - homer-conscious Brooklyn
Dodgers, who have walloped 53 in
tnetr . last 33 games, lead both
leagues in home runs with 116.
Tf.ie Cincinnati Redlegs, who broke
heir own mark of 110 last Sun
day, are second In the National
wiui 112.
The surging New York Giants
are third wltn 101 followed by tne
Milwaukee Braves, 91, Chicago
Cubs, 83; St. Louis Cardinals, 79;
Philadelphia -Phillies,. .11 and the
Kmer-less Pittsburgh Pirates, . 52,
In the American League, where
815 homers have been hit to date
(its record Is' 973), the Cleveland
Indians are tops 'With 88. Then
come the New York Yankees with
78: 8t. Louis Browns, 70; Boston
Red Sox, 66; Philadelphia Athlet
ics, 65: Detroit Tigers, 66; Chi
cago White Sox, 47; and Washing
ton Senators, 45.
Vic, Louise
Advance
HAVERFORD, Pa. W Top
seeded stars Vic Seixas and Louise
Brougb experienced little trouble
as play opened in the men's Penn
sylvania Stale and Women's Penn
sylvania and Eastern States Ten
nis championships at the Mcrion
Cricket Club Monday.
Wimbledon king Seixas, fresh
from winning the National Clay
Courts title in Chicago, eliminated
Dr. Stewart McCracken of Phila
delphia in their first-round match
6-1, 6-2.
Miss Brough breezed 'into the
third round with an easy 6-0, 6-0
victory over Carol Lecato, Haddon
Jield, N..J.
In the men's division, second
seeded Tony Trabert of Cincinnati
had only a slightly more difficult
lime wan Davis Cup teammate
Seixas. Trabert defeated Jeffrey
Arnold of Coral Gables, Pla, 6-1,
Bill Quillian, Seattle's fourth -i
ranked U. S. Junior player, easily
i defeated George Bass of the host
! club, 6-1, 6-0 while eastern inter
collegiate champ Clifton Mayne of
San Francisco outlasted Richard
Pine of New York, 6-4, 6-4.
Los Angeles
Out--Veeck
LOS ANGELES Ifl Owner
Bill Veeck of the St. Louis Browns
says there is no chance of moving
his club's American League base
ball franchise to Los Angeles. .
"Too many difficulties," he re
plied when asked Monday night
about such a move.
"In the first place, you don't
have a place to play.. Secondly,
a very fine gentleman named P.
K. Wrigley owns the franchise
here, and thirdly thprn are eight
fellows out here on the Pacific
Coast who already have a league
and wouldn't particularly care to
have someone move in."
The possibility of major league
baseball on the West Coast 1 a
top sports subject these days.
Veeck, alighting from an air
liner, said he's enroute to Pebble
Beach for a conference with one of
the club directors on developments
at a recent major league meeting.
LIFETIME BATTERY
24"
plul tax
Automatic self charging - Nanrrenic
slatt. 4-year jueraate r H're
! ef London.
! Call Veur Local RgieiitaHv!
i a a aniih lt K-
n Stumped By ; TfijfR
tag Tuesday In thl, cn..ntrv.
biggest betting mystery in mire
than a century, . ..
Three stewards m (ho ti....
Club which numbers five dukes,
seven earls and Prime Mmi.i
Winston Churchill inn. it. .
elusive membership joined
Scotland Yard detectives In seek-
E me answers to these questions
Was It really Prancasal, never
noted as a speed demon, that wpn
the Two O'clock race at Bath last
Thursday: . -V t
Or was It Santa Arharo. a'horse
with -a much more convincing rec
ord who happens to look like Fran
casal's twin?
Who was behind the flood of bets
on Prancasai that engulfed Bri
tain s legal bookmakers with more
than a million dollars In wagers?
And who snipped telephone wires
linking the Bath race track with
bookie offices all over Britain, so
'nat Prancasal went off at a tempt
ing 10-1
The bookmakers were most anx-
s aeiermipe the answer to
the last question, for they could
have easily laved off their hu m
Prancasal at the track If the lines
naa Been operating normally. This
would have sent the odds on Pran
casal tumbling, of course.
ine Scotland Yard men already
have interviewd Francnsnl nnrt
Santa Amaro, but reportedly had
some trouble deciding which was
which. Both are 2-year-old bay
colts with no distinguishing marks.
Allen Has
Big Night
A player couldn't do much more
than Sherman Allen did last night
in 'the Pee Wee National League.
The Wiard's Ditcher dished tin
shutout over Silani's Real Estate
and helped account for his team's
36 runs with a home run, two dou
bles and a -'ngle.
Graham Bros, nipped 20-30, t-5
In the other National League game.
In the American League, Pluh
rer's whipped Estside Pharmacy,
12-8, and Eastslde Electric got over
Jaycees, 11-7.
O'Brien Boosts
Batting Average
PITTSBURGH fl j- Johnny
O'Brien, the former Seattle U.
basketball star is making Nation-
al League pitchers sit up and take
notice these days.
The young second baseman, who
was batting a lowly .242 two weeks
ago, has collected 12 hits In 33 at
bats to raise his average to a re
spectable .266.
- He had one safety In two trips
m Monaay s game against the St,
Louis Cardinals. .
GOODYEAR
MOTORISTS! Protect Your Clothes
fi- L'1
m
ENJOY FREE PARKING and BUDGET TERMS
11th and Klamath
; By The Associated Press , .
'.: . TENNIS
COPENHAGEN, ! 'ark Bel
glum won the European Cone Da
vis Cup championship, turning
back Denmark, S-2. -
HAVERFORD, Pa. Vic Selx
as and Tony Trabert scored easy
victories In the first-round of the
Pennsylvania Slate tournament,
Irvin Pushes
Schoendienst
NEW YORK U Monte Irvin
mav be the lirst New York Giant
hitter to win the National IMue
k.uino rh.mnionshiD since Bill
Terry 4 .401 won the crown In 1931,
Irvin climlbtng steadily the past
rru ntKL now is iik" u"
he-la nf rjace-settina Red Schoen'
nifn-.st of the St. Louis Cardinals.
schoendienst. who has topped the
league since the end oi May, is
batting .334, while Irvln's average
is .331. ' .
In the American League batting
deroy George Kelt of the Boston
Red Sox again has pulled away
iiom teammate Billy Goodman.
Kell, tied with Goodman tor the
lead last week, boosted his aver-,
age to .333, while Goodman slipped
back into the runnerup spot with
.326.- - -; - . ... , ,
Orestes (Minnie) .Mlnoso of-the
Chicago While Sox remains third
with .322. In going 8-for-23, Mln
oso skidded two points. ......
Bill's Place
Tavern, Goes to Top
Bill's Place is a full game ahead
of Suburban Tavern after a squeaky
4-3 win last night over the erstwhile
leaders, a game that saw four home
runs and one called back -
Cal Bonney, Bill's Flac hurler,
and Suburban's Gus - Gestvang
hooked up In a duel that saw each
give up four hits while their mates
clouted home runs.-
Home runs accounted for all of
Suburban's runs. The Tavern nine
took an early lead when Ralph
Beard doubled In the first Inning
and came home on Bill Sari's cir
cuit clout. '
Roy Harris banged a four-bagger
in the fourth with no mates aboard
to tie the. score, 3-all, after Bill's
3 GOODYEAR fj
m
by th makr
VAl-A-PAK!
MEN'S
REG.
LADIES'
REG.
..aW
UMrv
WfM of wtty.
(D CD DDE A DS
SERVICE STORE ' Prion. 8141
Uhen vfcill Stopped Running
I-
i
ROLAND LoSTARZA
. hit footrace tndi
Enos Slaughter of the Cardinals
has played In two World Series,
1942 and 1946, and has been on
the winning side both times,- In
the 1946 Series he scored the win
ning run against the Red Sox,
Shades
Place had gone ahead 3-3 hi the
third frame. '('
Bonney scored on a wild pitch
in the fifth for the win.
Bonney and Jim Derrah clubbed
home runs for Bill s Place In the
third Inning,
, Sari cuffed another home run
that didn't count. Umpires ruled he
didn't touch first base.
Kalpine and Southern Pacific bat
tled to a 9-all tie in the other game
called by the curfew. The game
will be played over at a later date
Line score: j .
Suburban . 200 10-3 4 1
Bill's Place 003 01-4 4 0
Gestvang and Harris; Bonney
and Derrah
of famous
40" Size
$7.95
54" Size
$8.95 .
Dust proof . . . keeps clolhas
freih. .
Wear resistant , . . rugged con
struction throughout.
Lightweight . . . easy to carry.
Zipper flap opens fully for easy
packing.
IP?
SfMC Mvtfff
tarof fr
vt r bMt
., By BARRY GKAYKO.V .
NBA Sport Editor '
NEW YORK (NEA) -Al Weill
finally stopped running from Ro
land LaStarza afttr-i ' three-and-a-half
year chase. '',',' ' v-..--
So Rocky Marcfano. who would
have fought LaStarza. on. ... street
corner the day after, their con
troversial match of 42 months ago,
now will take on the termer City
College of New York, student in a
Joust scheduled for 15 rounds at the
Polo Orounds, Sept, 24.
Weill, then the Madison Square
Garden matchmaker V carefully
bulldln Marclano on the side,
and Jimmy DeAngelo. who handles
Jockey Draws
5-Day Benching
INGLEWOOD, Caill. WI Holly
wood Park stewards have banded
Jocxey Ralph Neves a five-day sus
pension tor causing. Interference
aboard Rejected. , In . Saturday's
$100,000 Sunset Stakes, -. .
.The stewards claimed Monday
that Neves crossed over at one
point without enough clearance.
Rejected ran seventh. '-
Judy Johnston who holds a train
er's license. Is one of several wnm.
en who gallop horses each morn
ing curing tne workout hours at
Monmouth Park.
The University of Florida oiiar.
lerback. Doug Dickey. complet
ed si. 3 per cent .of his forward
passes in 1953.
Thit lower atop Mount
JH.Xyv' - ' .-:-', - A4 'Mi
Angeles SpV lnm ' ; 7
n IK tuif . Mm rwjt$s - i ,. i n -
r. - ayjpgSeattle . , : M' r L-JT II V . r-
across tne international ooraer oawetn oeatue ana v murm, u.
UNDERWATER TELEPHONE CALLS TAKE
- Radio-relay now carries many calls over Pacific eoastal
. . f- ' i - --,..-
Long distance calls between Seattle and Vancouver Island,
in Canada, are now traveling by air . . . beamed on microwave
from one radio-relay tower to another much as'a search
light's rays are directed. These calls were formerly carried
through submarine cables on the floor of the 900-foot-deep
Haro Strait. But, because of extreme tidal action, the Haro
Strait telephone cable had to be replaced every three or four
years. Now, the hew radio-relay system will do the same
communications job'st less cost. -
lk&L - M1
u iaei i, r ix iwl tm m ,'irir rrir- Maaiil
1. Catalina Island, too, is being served by microwave
radio. This link crosses the twenty-fivc-mile ocean channel
between the Island and southern California mainland, sup
plementing service provided by underwater cable. This has
increased the number of telephone circuits available to
meet growing needs and saves installing additional cables.
A , Pacific Telephone
LaStarza, were old friends, shook
hands In agreeing that the winner
of -the first outing; would give the
loser a. prompt return providing It
was booo light. It was an excel
lent battle;-to a highly debatable
split decision.
Quick to Weill meant three-and-
a-half years, however, or until ha
figured 'his tiger was Just about
ready to step In with anvane.
During Ujat period, LaStarza and
Fats DeAngelo who, If he ever
was porky, certainly Isn't after this
light income period of waiting-
sat around pleading for the oppor
tunity, . , .
When that got them nowhere.
they took on meaningless scraps,
made little money and even less in
tne way -of reputation.! Indeed. La
Starza twice had' to regain lost
prestige In rematches.
LaStarza, the home-grown who
made it close, figures to draw more
with Marclano than Etiard
Charles. And -In the books of most
competent, observers, 'he also fig
ures to be an easier opponent. This, .
to Weill's way of thinking, makes
mm tne perfect opponent, and you
can't blame Alphonse for that. ,
we walled so long for this one
that I didn't even know what Mar
ciano looked like any more," says
me personaoie juaoiarza wun . a
Wry smile. .
"But I remember bow he fights.
I recall that I beat the guy, and
know I'll beat him again. ' -
While a good share of those who
saw the first fight will agree that
LaStarza, who bad most is lose
at the time, was entitled to the de
cision. ' mightv few of thf?p give
the Bronx butcher's son anything
more than the chance u.at puts
Blyn, Washington, is an intermediate
MMdma&tf ,, i i m i mmm i satV
LaStarza
him In the ring" with "the current
Marclano. . .'-
LaStarza, whd flies his own plane
and plans to establish an air line,
has the mental capacity far burn
ing ambition, and the feeling here
la that he will show it. Their first
engagement was Weill's first
gamble with peagreen Marclano.
He was banking on Marclano land
ing with- his big right fist. The
Brockton -Block Buster did get it
In Just once but LaStarza got
up and kept his pugilistic poise.
He Jabbed, ducked and slipped The
Rock's then incredibly sloppy pun
ches, and If he din't win, he made
the result too close for Weill's com
fort. .. -. v.. -, ; " i
Since then. Charley Goldman has
nervously groomed and fretted over
Marclano like a mother ben. Tne
result Is a far better battler, a
guy who, dips, fakes and moves a
; .ri. . .Om of America's GJjjj
IA Famous Old Whhkeys MjQV
r VcLJ0 . OUtlOlii WWHISMY N-T
HIS WH1SKM IS F0UD rtRS 010 St MOOf OOOOtftHAU I WOTa I'D. KOftt, It'
station for telephone calls earned by
CP ' bA
2. More and more long distance calls, as well as tele
vision programs, are now being carried on radio-relay lacili-
ties here in the Pacific West. This, and other improvements
in recent years, k one of the reasons your long distance calls
are going through fast these days . . . in most cases, while
you hold the line. .
Radio-relay helps keep costs
of telephone service low
Installing radio-relay facilities in place of
submarine cable opens new voice, highways and
helps reduce the cost of providing service. This is
one of many ways we are constantly improving
telephone service while holding its cost down
keeping it so low, in fact, that your telephone re
mains one of your best buys today.
YOUR TELEPHONE'S ONE OF
TODAY'S BEST BARGAINS
Caurjta ipp
bit and stlU .retains that awful
punching power In both hands, per
haps the hardest In the sour scien
ce a history.
' LaStarza didn't look too bad and
came behind- to beat Rex Layne.
He couldn't get the finisher across
despite flooring Dan Eucceronl
five times. , , .- ,
But LaStarza was fighting for or
dinary money. This Is a bit differ
ent. He's getting the big payday
and crack at the crown he has
waited for. We don't look tor him
to win, but anticipate his putting
up a rather well executed and gam
stand. . . - :
LaStarza, 26, at least is not an
bid pappy guy showing! up lor a
final touch. "
Rocky Marclano will have to maka
Roland LaStarza the next victim. -
This one will be,-1 -fight, whilt
It lasts, not a sltdown strike.
radio-relay back mni forth ,
j
TO THE SKY
waters
i Han Barnes
I ftlrnn Hnnnlentl
Dan r-rsww
jtaa M.rrlll
4111 Mrrrlll
3 GOODYEAR
J GOODYEAR f