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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1955)
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 1955 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SEVEN The Uets n Dim Al Umk ft. H 3p i-r-W- HANDING OUT PELICAN football equipment, Coach John McGinnis chats with three return ing lettermen as the Klamath Union High School gridiron picture prepares to open a nine-game season. Grouped with the Pel mentor are Dave Leeling, left, Earl Tichenor, center, and Donn Taueher, right. The Whitebirds officially open the year with practice tomorrow morning at Wright Field. ECU By CLAYTON HANNON The 1955 'football season offi-. daily opens tomorrow morning I when the Klamath Union High j School Pelicans meet tor their first practice session of the year. Coach John McQinnis Is expect ing 75 or more prep gridders to report for workouts, which for the first week will be twice-a-day. Of this number 12 will be lettermen. The Pelican coaching staff will be the same as last year with Harry Russell assisting McGinnis with the linemen and Gerald Be vans working as the backfleld men- j tor. Ralph "Baldy" Poster, Dick Vaillencour, Ray Coley and Joe Roberts will probably be working with McGinnis and his two assist ants until school opens, then they will have the Junior varsity and freshman teams to handle. Of the 12 returning lettermen, nine will be lineman and the other three backs. Donn Taueher, Dave Pepple and Dave Leeling are the lone returning lettermen backs. The big losses by last June's grad uation were quarterback Larry Yarnell, fullback Gerald Del Fatti and halfbacks Jack Sunltsch and Scott Hancock.. FOUR ENDS -' In the line the Pels will have four ends returning. Bill Badorek, Earle Tichenor, Larry Heaton and ,Leon Brown are all monogram winners of last year's team, which had a 4-3 record. Tackles Bob Harshbarger and Jim McGee will be back as will guards Modesto "Mighty Mo" Jlmlnez, Roy Ropp and possibly Ron Morris. The line losses of last year were center Dennis Todd, end Elvis Mitchell and tackle Marlin Causey. This year's schedule of nine games promises the Whitebird foot ballers no "cream-puffs", but in stead lots of hard work and bruises The season opens in two weeks on Saturday, September 10 when Grant of Portland invades the Mo doc Field turf for the traditional opener. This Is the only Saturday irnmd nf the vear for Klamath. Followinz the annual grid test with Grant, the Pels travel to Eu gene to do battle with the power ful Axemen of the Willamette Val ley. On September 23 the heavily loaded Redding Wolves come to Klamath to meet the Pels in the first of two' straight weeks of home football for the KUHS squad. La Grande is here the following Friday. The Pels then travel to meet Boise on September 30 only to return home from the long Jaunt to meet their traditional ri vals, the Medford Black Tornado. This will open the Southern Ore gon Conference season for the Pel icans. EVENING GAME After their clash with the Tor nado club, Reno is here for anoth er Friday evening game. On Octo ber 28 the Klamaths travel for - mother SOC game, this one with Grants Pass on the Cavemen's home field. Ashland is here on November 4 to close out the Pel's grid year, and what a year it .should be. The conference outlook gives Grants Pass a big edge towards winning the district honors. Coach Mel Ingram's Cavemen will field team that has five starters and 20 lettermen back from last year's club and a front wall that could very well average near the 200 pound mark. Medford cannot be over-looked, nor can one think Ash land will be a push-over. With only 10 days to prepare his team for Its opener with Grant, McGinnis has a big job ahead. Until school opens Septem ber 6, the Pels will hold morning workouts at 8:30 and evening ses sions at 6:30. After school starts. Just single afternoon practices will be held. The season ticket sale is In pro gress right now at the chamber of commerce office with a cut-rate bargain being offered to the Klam ath gridiron fans. The season tick et for all six home games Is sell ing for S6. This is a saving of 3. The single game reserved seats cost 11.50 and the general admis sion pasteboards will sell for 11. AH reserved seats will be held on sale until the morning of the Grant contest. II O People Read SPOT ADS -you are. rid Year 11 ?iPCM$ V bu CLMT0H HANNON ttTk i.nr:Ai. i-no I it ALL not, the Modoc Field gridiron will local sport fans in less than two weeks. Coach John McGinnis' Pelicans of Klamath Union High School will open practice sessions tomorrow and Rex Hunsaker's Oregon Technical Institute Owls will begin preparations for their grid year the following Monday, September 6. The county B-schools will open practice within the next week also, as old man baseball moves Into the background and kid football takes the spotlight. This could be a good year for the Pels and Owls. One thing is certain, the caliber of opposition to be undertaken by the two Klamath teams has never been better, especially for the Mile High Camnus eleven. And McGinnis , ... faces foes from four different states in his nine-game slate. Oregon Tech has 11 lettermen back and the Pels have 12. Ex perience could play a big part in the success to be enjoyed by these two teams. Tech's strength seems to be shaping at the ends and backfleld spots, while the Klamath Union outlook looks bright on the line and maybe at the quarterback position. SPEAKING OF FOOTBALL, word from the pniversity of Colo rado at Boulder brings news that Jack Himelwright, a 1954 grad uate of Klamath Union HLgh School, Is being counted on for help in the coming football sea son. Himelwright, a 6-3, 220-pound sophomore made an Impressive start at- Colorado last year aa a member of the frosh club, ac cording to school officials. Although Colorado is deep in experience up front this fall, Jack is expected to lend a great deal of reserve strength to the Buffa lo line. In fact, Colorado nas as lettermen back, and 19 of these are returning linemen from last "'''ginS' student at Colorado. Himelwright also Is counted on to give the school's wrestling picture a lift. Last year. Jack won the 191-pound championship In the Rocky Mountain aau meet and was rated outstanding at this meet. Coach Dallas Ward, a former Oregon State College man, looks for Jack to become one of the leading linemen In the conference if not the country before his college days are over. Ward said that Jack has "size, speed and the will to win." And that is what it takes. THOSE WHO DIDN'T SEE Thursday night's women's Softball game between the Arizona Ramblers and the Oakridge-Westflr Log gerettes missed one of the best games to be played here this year. The Loggerettes, runners-up In the recent state tournament, gave the Ramblers and the large crowd of fans a big surprise as they pushed their big league opponents to the limit before dropping a 3-2 verdict. , . , . ... Pitcher Darla Logan must feel st home when playing at the stadium here. Coach Chuck Parker said after the game that "this must be Darla's ball park." And right he may be. Although she has lost two games under the stadium lights while winning only one, she has been the standout pitcher in each game. Logan beat Klamath In the tournament, 3-2, then lost a 2-1 decision to Oswego in the championship game In nine Innings. Now she dropped another heartbreaker to Arizona, 3-2. In the Oswego game Logan pitched no-hit ball for seven-plus innings. Then Thurs day she didn't allow a run after the first inning and struck out 10 of the former world champions. Logan made the appearance even more impressive by allowing Just five base hits to the traveling Softball club from Phoenix. Logan's battery mate, Alda Wright, came loaded with her energy building secret, bubble gum. Yes. the pint-sized receiver for the Loggerettes had a big mouthful of the gum, and the faster was the game tempo, the faster Alda would chew. It. Is now a trademark of the Oakridge team as well as Wright to have the bubbles bursting when Alda's on the Job. The local soft ball followers first noticed the chewing gum action in the state playofls. It's for sure that the "big chaw" doesn't hurt the scrappy catcher's playing ability. SUNDAY 8 PORT SHORTS . . . Marlin Causey, 1955 graduate of KUHS left today for Brownwood, Texas, and Howard Payne Col lege where he plans to further his education and football career . . . the ex-Pelican footballer was awarded a scholarship by the school and is planning on taking part In the school's gridiron pro gram ... the 6-3, 195-pound tackle may also play basketball at HP when the hoop season rolls around . . . Oregon Tech's athletic stock shot higher this past week with the registration of two out standing athletes . . . Charles Bogle, a 6-8 basketball standout at San Mateo Junior College last year has transferred to the OTI campus as has Don Dexten 1954 graduate of KUHS and last year a member of the University of Oregon freshman football, wrestling and base ball teams . . . Bogle will give Coach Wally Palmberg a big step ping stone In building this coming year's Owl hoop squad ... the JC transfer was a Califomian all-state in 1953 and received honor able mention Ail-American the same year . . . Last year Charlie (Bylines Continued en Pag 8) Go SAFECO Check with JERRY THOMAS INS. Before You Buy or Renew 6th 1 Main Ph. 6465 Opens .. J SEASON is here. Believ be the center of attention for the JACK HIMELWRIGHT YOUR DODGE Dealer 2 Blocks South of Poit Office Women's Title Won By Lesser Bv HUGH Fl'LLERTON JR. CHARLOTTE, N. C. i Perky Patricia Ann Lesser of Seattle, scrambling but still superb, won the 55th Women's Amateur Cham pionship of the United States Golf Assn. Saturday by administering a crushing 7 and 6 defeat to Jane Ann Nelson, a spunky schoolteach er from Indianapolis, in the hple final. It was the most lopsided final match . in the women's national tournament since Babe Zaharias heat Mrs. Clara Sherman, 11 and 9, In 1946. Miss Lesser, barely 22 years old but already a golfer of note, took charge of her older but compara tively unknown opponent on the back nine of the morning round over the hilly, tricky Myers Park Country Club course to lead 5 up at the 18-hole mark. Except for one horribly bad hole in the morning, the Seattle Univer sity senior played sub-par golf all the way. And the 37-3174 wom en's par for the 6.413-yard Myers Park course Isn't easy to master. During the entire week of play only Miss Lesser has been able to beat ft consistently. Miss Nelson, a vacation-tiine golfer who hadn't gone beyond the fourth round in two previous ap pearances in the women's amateur couldn't malch that pace after the first half dozen holes. For that distance, Pat had to rely on a red hot putter to stay even. Then as she dropped behind, Jane com pletely lost control of Myers Park's tricky, bumpy Bermuda grass greens. The loser, twice a scml-flnallst before she reached the top and a member of the 1954 Curtis Cup team. Is a tall, deeply tanned girl who has plenty of endurance and competitive spirit. To some extent It was endurance that counted on this blazing hot day. At the start tne snm-ieggea, smooth swinging Hoosler was out- hitting Miss Lescsr. BUI as tne match went on and as she dropped farther and farther behind, her drives became shorter and her game seemed to come apart. Still It was someuiuiB ui w umph for Miss Nelson to get as far as the final. She's a history teacher in an Indianapolis school and can only play tournament golf during vacations. Pat manages to slay on the tournament trail most of the season. i. Phamnion. Miss Lesser suc ceeds Barbara Romack, who was knocked out in the second round. Pat came through the toughest half of the draw, beating Mary Ann Downey, Barbara's conquer or, Mrs. Jane Crum Covington and Polly Riley on the way to the final. Eugene Duo Wins Pro-Junior Crown PORTLAND (PI A Eugene combination. Duke Matthews and Garv Geertsen, Friday won the pro-Junior golf championship of the Oregon PGA. They finished five strokes ahead of Larry Lamberger and Jerry Cunari, Portland, the defending champions. Geertsen shot a one under par 67 and Matthews an even par to live them a total of 135. Third were Bill Walton and Sam Havnes, Pendleton, with 142. Bunny Mason, Salem, won the profesionals' end of the competi tion with 65. Geertsen was low among the Juniors. West Wins Shrine Tilt PENDLETON, Ore. 11 The West squad, underdogs in pre- game predictions, posted a nar row 7-6 victory In the Shrine bene fit East-West all-star football game here Saturday night." East 8 0 0 06 West 0 0 0 77 East scoring: Touchdown, Hatch. West scoring: Touchdown, Kum pula. Conversion, Manley. Ford Overtakes Snead In Montreal Tourney MONTREAL I Doug Ford of Kiamesha Lake. N. Y., snatched the lesd from veteran Sam Bnead of White Sulphur Springs In the third round of the 26,8O0 Montreal Open Saturday, shooting a two-un-der-par 68 for a 64-hole total of 203. Gene Littler of Palm Springs, Calif., former U. S. Amateur champion, fired a 68 for a 204 total to take second place alone. Eagles Clip Bears V PraLADELPrflA Wl End Pete Pihos picked up 134 yards on ae rials, two of them good for touch downs, to lead the Philadelphia Eagles to a 27-20 victory Friday night over the Chicago Bears in the annual inquirer cnaruy game. It was the Eagles' third exhibi tion win thl .aa.nn in h Vt. tlonsl Football League. They are undefeated. For Sale: AKC Registered BLACK LABRADOR PUPPIES Inquire At 803 St. Froncil St. Phone 7411 Herald an Scant Crowd Sees Bevos Blank Acorns OAKLAND. Calif. Dick Whitman bit a double and three singles in four chances Saturday as his Portland Beavers trimmed Oakland 12-0, before a scant crowd of 681. It was one 'of the smallest crowds in Oakland history. Portland scored four times In the third inning on a double by Artie Wilson, singles by Royce Lliit, Luis Marqucz and Eddie Baslnski, a By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. G. B. Brooklyn 81 45 .643 Milwaukee 72 56 .563 10 Philadelphia 67 62 .519 ib'i New York 65 61 .516 16 Cincinnati 64 66 .492 19 Chicago 61 71 .462 23 St. Louis 54 72 .429 27 Pittsburgh 48 79 .378 3314 FRIDAY'S IthSUL'lS Cincinnati 4, Brooklyn 2 Milwaukee 7, New York I St. Louie 4, Philadelphia 1 Chicago 0, Pittsburgh 3 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 3 Milwaukee 5, New York '4 Brooklyn 7, Cincinnati o Philadelphia 8, St. Louis 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. G. B New York 77 50 .606 Cleveland 77 50 .606 Chicago 76 50 .603 Vi Boston 73 64 .576 4 Detroit . 65 63 .508 12 'i Kansas City 53 74 .417 24 Washington 44 79 .358 31 Baltimore 39 84 .317 36 FRIDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 6, Boston 4 Cleveland 6, New York 2 Washington 10, Chicago 0 Kansas Citv 3. Baltimore 2 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Boston 4. Detroit 3 Cleveland 7, New York 6 Chicago 11, Washington 1 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. Pet. G. B. 85 66 .559 83 70 .542 2"a Bl 72 .529 4'i 78 72 .520 6 77 76 .603 8!J 71 83 .461 16 69 85 .448 17 67 86 .438 18 ( i Seattle Hollywood San Diego Portland Los Angeles Sacramento San Francisco Oakland FRIDAY'S RESULTS Sacramento 4, San Francisco 1 Los Angeles 7, Seattle 1 Portland 5, Oakland 4 Hollywood 4. San Diego 3 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Portland 12, Oakland 0 San Diego 2, Hollywood 1 Los Angeles 10. Seattle 8 Sacramento 6, San Francisco 6 NORTHWEST LEAGUE W I, Pet, GB Eugene Wenatchee Tri-Clty Salem Lewiston Yakima 3.1 18 28 23 27 25 26 27 24 38 25 31 .647 .549 5 . .519 614 .481 8 .462 9'i .446 10' Spokane 22 32 .407 12 !i FRIDAY'S RESULTS Eugene 12, Spokane 4 Yakima 8, Wenatchee 0 Trl-City 12, Lewiston 7 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Tri-Clty 8, Spokane 14 Eugene 17, Lewiston 2 Salem 2, Yakima 6 Steelers Triumph OREEN BAY, Wis 11 Art Mlchalik kicked a 14-yard field goal wllh 65 seconds remaining to give the PIltsDurgn sieeiers a virtorv over the Oreen Bay Pack ers In an exhibition pro football game Saturday night. Pittsburgh 0 7 6 316 Oreen Bay 7 0 7 o n Scoring: Pittsburgh Touch downs, Mathews 3. Mathews (38 yard pass fiom Finks in 2ndi; Mathews (41 yard pass from Finks in 3rd; Field goal, Mlchalik. Con version, Mlchalik. Oreen Bay Touchdown, Car michael, Rote. Conversions, Cone. FRIDAY'S FIOHTS Br THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN FRANCISCO Carl (Bobo) Olson. 185. Ssn Francisco, out pointed Joey Giambia, 191, Buf- tnl' 10 RELOADERS JUST RECEIVED ALS, AL7 4895 & 4831 Powder The GUN STORE 714 Main Ph. 3863 CLAYTON HANNON SPORTS EDITOR walk to Whitman, a fielder's choice and a sacrifice by Jim Robertson. The Beavers got four more tuns the next inning on a walk to Frank Austin, singles by Lint, Whitman, Marquez and Wally Westlake and a throwing error by pitcher Tom Birland. The relief chucker threw the ball into the dugout after Wil son bunted. Baslnski's double, a single by Whitman and a walk pioductd a run In the slxih. Two more crossed the plate In the seventh on singles by Don Eggert and Austin and a sacrifice by Wilson. The last run scored on singles by Austin and Wilson and a grounder by Marques. For Royce Lint it was tne eigntn pitching victory against nine loss- Charles Beamon, tne starting pitcher for Oakland, was charged with his sixth loss against two wins. Portland . . 004 401 20112 19 0 Oakland 000 000 000 0 U Lint and Robertson; Beamon, Borland (4) and Meal. Pads Edge Stars SAN DIEGO, Calif. UR Earl Rapp's 28th home run of the season enabled San Diego to edge Holly wood, 2-1, In a Pacific Coast League game Saturday. ' Eddie Erautt held the stars to live nits to pitch his 15th victory against nine defeats. Hollywood 000 000 0101 5 1 San Diego 001 000 Olx 2 6 3 Wade, O Donneu u) ana nan; Erautt and Bailey. . Angels Whip Suds LOS ANGELES Ifl Home runs by Buzz Clarkson and pitcher Turk Lown broke a 7-7 deadlock in the . . LeagvSorV vr"seau,r E was thft Antrels second siraiRnt win over the league leaders, Seattle 021 100 301 8 16 1 Los Angeles 030 004 03x 10 14 2 Lombardl, Blackwell (61, uianam (6). Kennedy (7) and Ginsberg: Elston, Bauer (4), Lown 17) and Fanning, Tappe (9) Seals Nudge Sacs SACRAMENTO. Cnllf. (fl Home runs by Johnny Ritchey and Reno Cheso gave San Francisco an ear ly lead which It carried down to the wire Saturday night as Jim Walsh bested four Sacramento pitchers and won 6-5. San Francisco 210 030 000-6 10 0 Sacramento 102 001 0016 10 3 Walsh and Ritchey; Brlggs, Os enbaugh (5), R. Jones (71, Candinl (9) and Batch, Heslet (6). .... riw . A Y ANXIOUSLY AWAITING field trial competition to be held here September 9-10-1 1 at the Litkey Lost River Ranch it Oak creek's Sir Dorchetter, male Golden Retriever owned and handled by Jim Stilwell of Klamath Falls. Ty, which ii his call name, it field trial champion end will be leekinq to make it two fall trial wini in-a-row. Lait September Ty won the Sheit Catcsde Retriever Club'i Open All Age clan. Indians Edge Yanks, Tie For League Lead By MURRAY ROSE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The American League race be came hotter than noon at the equa tor In July Saturday as Cleveland pulled up even with the New York Yankees and the Chicago White Sox slammed their way within a half game of the pacesetters. A four-run rally In the eighth brought the Indians from behind to a thrilling 7-6 victory over the Yankees. The White Sox had It easier, crushing Washington 11-1. And the Red Sox kept right In the battle by edging Detroit 4-3 on Ted Williams' , dramatic, two-out grand.slam homer in the ninth In ning, to pull within four games of the leaders. In the National Leacue. SandV Koufax, a husky, 19-year-old bonus baby, pulled the league-leading Dodgers out of a tallspin by blank ing Cincinnati 7-0 with a brilliant two-hit, 14-strlkeout performance. Milwaukee kept 10 games behind by nipping New York 6-4, and dropped the Giants into fourth place and moved the Philadelphia Phillies into intra, ine rnus wal loped St. Louis 8-3. In the other game, Chicago edged Pittsburgh 4-3 on Walker Cooper's ninth inning nomer. ai' tlnioie and Kansas city were not scheduled Ti ailing 6-3, mainly on Bill Skow- rons three-run homer ana starter Don Larsen's two-run homer, the Indians blasted their way Into a tie for the lead on their four-run spree in the eighth. Bobby Avlla's three-run homer off Johnny Kucks evened the count at 6-6. Alter the Indians loaded the bags on Bob Orlm, Bob Lemon hit a sacrifice fly for the winning run. The White Sox snapped a three game' losmg spell on lefty Jack Harshman's elght-hlt flinging and a 13-hlt assault atralnst lour Wash ington pitchers. Minnie Mlnoso hit a two-run homer for Chicago. Detroit got only two hits Jack Phillips' run-scoring single In the first and BUI Tuttle's two-run hom er in the third and made it stand un for a 3-0 lead going Into the ninth. Then Detroit's Frank Lary weakened, With one wav. he was reached for slngljs by Eddie Joost and Fave Throneberry. Blllv Goodman filed out but Billy Klaus singled to right to load the bases. Lary waB replaced by Al Aber. Wham I Williams sent ine oan flvlna' hum In the miner rlghttleld ZTX ... the 14th of his career. The Red Ho were back In the race. Koufax, making his second start of the year (he went only 4 2-3 lnnln.s against PIltsDurgn ouiy oi, vleldcd only a two-out single to Ted Kluszewski In the first inning and a two-out double by Sam Meie In the ninth. His 14 whiffs was a National Leatrue high for the year, surpas sing the 12 strikeouts of Chicago's Sam Jones and Milwaukee's Bob Buhl. Carl Furillo and Jackie Robin son each hit two-run Homers to help end Brooklyn's three-game losing streak. Danny O'Connell's 11th Inning homer, his second of the game, propelled the Braves to victory and a three-game sweep of the Ciants. Glass for all autoi, home, show windows, show eases and similar uses. Let us supply you . , . our prices, quality and service are unexcelled. KIMBALL'S GLASS SHOP Fl.nty e( Parkins la Rear S21 Walnut Phase 7)71 Stan Lopata's three-run homer in the third inning and Murry Dick son's tight nine-hit pitching sent the Phils to their triumph their seventh in the last eight games. In Friday's play In the Ameri can League Cleveland smacked New Voik. 6-2; Chicago was pasted by Washington, 12-0; De troit nudged Boston, 6-4, ana Kan sas City edged Baltimore, 3-2. Cleveland won despite the ab sence of three of Its big men. Larry Do by Is out because of a pulled thigh muscle: Gene Wood ling har bruised ribs, and Vto Wertz was stricken with polio. The Indians still battered Tommy Byrne fur 12 hits In seven Innings. Bob Lemon scattered nine hits and took his 14th victory. . 1 The White Sox managed only a fourth-inning double by Minnie Minoso, who ran his hitting streak to 19 games, and a two-out single by Jim Rivera In the ninth off Pedro Ramos, who walked only two and struck out three. The National League race aroused itself as Cincinnati smacked Brooklyn, 4-2, cutting the Dodgers' lead to 10 gamea the shortest spread alnce their t!j game edge June 10. Milwaukee's second place Braves whipped New York 7-1. St. Louis kept Philadelphia from replacing the Olants in third place, 4-1, and Chicago snapped a seven game losing streak, t-3, at Pitts burgh. Boston swung for 11 hits. in. eluding homers by Sammy While and Jim Flersall. but Billy Hoett hung on for his 13th triumph. Bill Tuttle hit two doubles and a home run to pace Detroit's 10-hlt attack on five Boston pitchers. johnny Temple had three hits as Cincinnati denied Cark Eraklne his 100th major league victory, and knocked In the winning run with a double as the Pedlegs broke a 1-3 tie In the seventh. Gil Hodges hom ered and Duke Snider, breaking a - slump, had three alngles off winner Don Gross, who needed help from Buster Freeman. Milwaukee wrapped the Giants up early as Dol Crandall hit a bases-loaded home run off Ruben Gomez In the aecond Inning. Bob Buhl spaced eight hits for a 1S-S record and his fourth straight victory, Wlllard Schmidt cut oft Philadel phia's six-game winning string with a five-nitter while the Cards ran up a 2-0 lead on Curt Simmons In the first four frames. The tJubs whacked 11 hits, with Ernie Banks getting a double and triple, while Bam Jones, ' who walked eight, permitted three Pittsburgh safeties. Spokane Wallops Tri-Cit Braves SPOKANE ijfi The lowly Spo kane Indians came out into the sunlight Friday afternoon and un loaded four home runs In taking a 14-18 Northwest League win over the Trl-City Braves. Two of the homers came off the bat of Bob Cerrato and the other Indian big blows were by Johnny Bellone and Nap Gulley. Bellone also had a double In his fine three for four performance at thp plate, The Braves were able to collect 12 hits themselves, Just one less thsn Spokane, and counted one homer, a blast over the left field wall by Gene Kllnger. Trl-Clly. reneier Stan Arthur gave up nine runs to the Indians, but starter Don Hopp, wno allowed Hip other five runs, was tagged llth the loss. . Trl-City 003 100 020- I 12 I Spokane 201 204 32X-14 13 i Hopp Arthur (si, Rugne (81 ana Martin: Trlerwcller and Sheets. Yakima Clips Salem SALEM Yakima opened a three game Northwest League baseball series here Saturday night with a 5-2 victory over the Salem Senators. Sam Mitchell's two-run triple In the third was the big blow for the winners. Dave Hammermelster had a home run for Yakima In the sixth. Salem's two runs came in the olghth inning on two walks and two hits, including a double by Mcl Kiause. Yakima 004 001 0005 8 2 Salem 000 000 0202 8 2 Young and Mitchell; Whltson and Kcopf. Ems Club Lewiston LEWISTON W The Eugene Emeralds smashed 22 hits Satur day night to overwhelm Lewiston. 17-2, In Northwest League baseball action. Eugene 301 006 602-17 91 1 Lewiston 000 002 000- 2 S Hodges and Dapper; Wadsworth, Benton (0), Rote (7) and McNamara. Chrome Trailer Connecters Tailored T gj Fit Yeur Car SMITH AUTO SUPPLY 1 Klemolh Ave. Ph. 1411