Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 19, 1958, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Vaimks Wira Pair; Qmts Dei Lead
Kubs Cop Opener
JifaXDAY. MAY 19. 1958
Turley Hurls Fourth
Shutout; A's Victors
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bring back the old split season.
That'i what the American League
ought to be yelling today as they
look at the fast-widening gap be
tween the streaking New York
Yankees and the rest o( the field.
Six straight Yankee victories
and 10 in their last 11 games put
Casey Stengel's gang almost out of
telescope range with a 19-5 season
record. Only one other club is play
ing better than .500 ball Kansas
City. That A's pulled into second
place with a 13-12 won-lost record
but they're struggling, 64 games
back.
Unless somebody can trip the
Duke Maas boosted the A's into
second place with a 2-0 two-hitter
against his former Detroit mates.
Dick Gernert hit two home runs
and Jackie Jensen a tremendous
three-run 450-foot drive in Boston's
8-4 victory over Baltimore. Cleve
land swept a pair from Chicago
7-4 and 10-6. winning the first in
the 11th on Rookie Carroll Hardy's
three-run homer.
In the National League, the San
Francisco Giants took over first
place with a double victory at Chi
cago 7-3 and 4-0.
Cincinnati knocked Milwaukee
out of the lead 11-7. Philadelphia
made it a clean sweep of their
four-game set with Pitlsbureh.
Yanks on their first Western trip. I downing the Pirates 64- and 6-2.
this pace could kill off interest in j St. Louis chased Los Angeles 6-5
TIME OUT
g!3T--H0LEy
the league,
The Yanks knocked over Wash
ington twice Sunday, 5-2 (or Sal
Maslie and 3-0 behind Bob Turley.
Snead Wins
Own Game,
.Whips Youth
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,
V. Va. ii Sam Snead. having
staved olf an assault on his castle
by a promising young aspirant to
golf's throne, turned his mind
again today to the one major title
that has eluded him the U. S.
Open.
Snead, who will be 46 next week,
was carried five extra holes yes
terday before he warded off 22-year-old
Gary Player of South
Africa in the Snead Festival.
Player gave two of golf's best,
Snead and Ben Hogan, fits
throughout the tourney before suc
cumbing. He played seesaw with
them for the first three rounds of
the regulation 72. and then tied
Snead at the end.
He lost out on the fiflh sudden
death playorf hole when he couldn't
make a five-foot putt. Snead, who
had blown two short putts on the
second and fourth, made his from
a yard away to win.
It was the fourth time in 11 of
Ihe tournaments on the course
where he has been pro for 21 years
that Snead has won the 52,300 first
prize.
His 72-hole score of 264, equaled
by Player, was only one stroke
higher than the best Snead has
ever shot in a pro career dating
back to 1934. He recorded 203 in
Winnine thp 1951 Iniirnev hnrp Par
for the route is 280.
Hogan. also preparing for the
IICAI J1IUIJII1 111 1 IllUrt, tYlll'le
he will try for a record fiflh cham
pionship, pulled up in third place
with 2fi5.
He and Snead started the last
round deadlocked one stroke bet
' ter than Player.
Player finished with a 66. Snead
with 67 and Hogan with 68. '
Smith Sweeps
Rawl Tourney
SPARTANBURG, S.C. 'UP)
Last week defending champion
Betsy Rawls predicted that a 21S
would win the sixth annual golf
tournament that bears her name.
And that was the score lhat won
it Sunday for freckled Wiffi Smith.
The 21-ycar-old sholmaker from
St. Clair Mich., put a hot put
to work in Ihe final round for a
72 that carried her past Beverly
Hanson of lndio, Calif., and
Mickey Wright of Chula Vista.
Calif., in the Peach Blossom-Betsy
Rawls event.
Miss Hanson closed out with a
75. Her 54-hole score of 218 was
pood for second money. Miss
Wright posted a 219 to tic Marlene
Rauer Hagqe of Del Ray Beach.
Fla., for third place. Miss Hanson
and Miss Wright had been tied
for the lead at 143 going into the
final.
Miss Smith's fine finish earned
her first money of $831.25 in the
(5,0110 tournament.
in the first game but the Dodgers
got even with a 4-0 shutout by Carl
crsKine.
Yanks 5-3, Nats 2-0
Turley's shutout was his fourth
in six winning starts, all complete
games. His earned run average
dropped to 0.83 per nine-inning
game over a stretch of 54 innings.
Maglie slugged a three-run
homer, his first in the American
League, in the opener. Ryne Duren
bailed him out of ninth-inning
trouble. Mickey Mantle also
homered.
list game)
New York 000 500 000 5 9 0
Washington 100 010 000 2 7 1
Maglie, Duren 9 and Howard.
Ramos '2-3' and Courtney. Win
ner Maglie (1-0). HRs Mantle,
Maglie.
(2nd game)
New ork 003 000 000 3 7 3
Washington 000 000 000 0 5 1
Turley (6-0 and Berra. Cicotte.
Clevenger I4. Bverlv (8) and
Courtney. Loser Cicotte i0-l).
A's 2, Tigers 0
Detroit's only hits off Maas were
a single by Charlie Maxwell and a
pinch triple by Charlie Lau. Paul
Foytack was the loser, fielding
both runs in the second.
Detroit 000 000 000 0 2 2
Kansas City 020 ooo oox 2 3 0
Foytack 3-3 and Wilson. Maas
(1-31 and House.
Boston 8, Orioles 4
Gernert drove in four Boston
runs with his two homers and a
double while Jensen added three
singles to his long homer. Frank
Sullivan was the winner over Billy
Loes.
Baltimore 000 110 101 4 14 1
Boston 400 102 Klx 8 12 1
Loes. Lehman (fi, Mueller (8)
and Triandos. Sullivan, Kiely (9)
and Berbcret. Winner Sullivan
H-l). Loser Loes 1 0-4 . HRs
Jensen, Gernert 2, Gardner, Boyd.
Tribe 7-10, Sox 4-6
Rookie Carrol Hardy was sent
up to bat for Roger Maris in Ihe
llth at Cleveland when Chicago
changed from a right-hander to
lefty Bill Pierce. Gary Geiger and
Minnie Minoso were on base when
he drove Pierce's pitch into the left
field stands. Ray Narleski was the
winner over Jim Wilson. The Indi
ans came back to take the second
after spotting the Sox four runs in
the first inning with Don Mnssi
taking the decision.
Ust game, 11 innings)
Chgo. OOO 110 002 00 4 10 0
Cleve. ' 000 0110 211 03 7 9 1
Wynn. Slaley (8, Kccgan !,
Wilson HO', Pierce HI) and Lol
lar. Grant, Mossi 9. Narleski
i9 and Nixon. Winner Narleski
'5-2'. Loser Wilson 3-3. HRs
Harrell. Vernon. Hardy.
'2nd game)
Chicago 410 000 010 6 10 0
Cleveland 040 012 30x 10 15 0
Fischer, Qualters i2i, Staley 5 1
and Battey. Kelly, Tomanck 2i
Mossi '31 and Brown. Nixon '31
Winner Mossi '4-3'. Loser
Staley '0-31. HRs Phillips.
"Poor Ed . , , Three under par
with a hule-in-one on the sixteenth
and he develops laryngitis!"
SF Replaces Braves,
Beats Cubs Twice
Trainer May
Change Tim
Tarn Jockeys
BALTIMORE (i Jimmy
Jones, trainer of Derby-Preakness
winner Tim Tarn faces a seem
ingly tough decision if the Calu
met' colt goes In the Belmont
Stakes June 7:
Should he switch jockeys two
thirds of the way across the
stream in the try for the third
triple crown for Calumet?
The injured leg of regular Calu
met rider Bill Hartack is mending.
If he's in shape for the Belmont,
should Jones substitute Hartack
for Ismael Valenzuera, the little
Texan who's batting a thousand
aboard Tim Tarn?
When Hartack broke his leg a
week before the Kentucky Derby,
Valenzuela was called in to sub
stitute. He rode Tim Tarn to vic
tory in the Derby trials, the Derby
itself and did it again in the
Preakness Saturday at Pimlico.
Alter Valenzuela and the dark
bay romped home a length and a
half ahead of Lincoln Road to
raise Tim Tarn's winnings to $444
565, Jones didn't say whether Val
enzuela would be aboard the colt
in the Belmont.
Gone Fishin', third in the Preak
ness. is heading for California in
a couple of days. The Llangollen
f arm s mount may be a plane
mate of Silky Sullivan's, the wash
out of the Derby and Preakness
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The time has come to taKe se
riously the dashing play of the San
Francisco Giants.
Johnny Anlonelli and Stu Miller
pitched the Giants into the Na
tional League lead yesterday with
bnck-to-back complete games in
Chicago. Left-handed Johnny held
the Cubs to five hits in the 7-3
opener and slow bailer Miller, who
failed to finish a game in 13 starts
a year ago, threw a. three-hitter.
4-0. in the second game.
Cincinnati s 11-7 blackjack job on
Milwaukee left the Giants on top
by one lull game but only two per
centage points.
Philadelphia may have exploded
the Pittsburgh bubble, completing
a four-game series sweep by knock
ing off the Pirates 6-4 and 6-2.
Jack Sanford. 1957 Rookie of the
Year, and Ray Seinproch. who
may be a 1958 candidate, did the
pitching job. Semproch went all
the way but Sanford needed help
from Dick rarrell.
Carl Frskine stopped the Los
Angeles spin for at least one game
when he shut out St. Louis. 4-0 to
gain an even split for the Dodgers.
The Cardinals won the first game
6-5 on Ken Zoycr's grand - slam
homer, their 10th victory in 11
games.
Giants 7-4, Cubs 3-0
Danny O'Connell, Willie Kirk
land and Jim Davenport were the
big men for the Giants at Chicago.
O'Connell had two doubles in the
first game and a simile, double rew iork
and triple in tho second. Kirkkind 1 Kansas City
drove in three runs in the lirst ; l-lev eland
game with a single and liiple and Baltimore
added two more singles in the see-1 Boston
ond. Davenport had three hits, in-1 Washington
eluding a pair of doubles, in the Detroit
second. Chicago
Anlonelli held the Cubs hitless
for five innings until pinch hitter
Bobby Adams slammed a triple to
open the sixth. The Cubs hit only
six balls out of the inlield on Mil
ler's slow stuff.
'1st game)
San Fran. 020 100 400 7 11 1
Chicago 000 001 200 3 5 1
Anlonelli 3-3 and Schmidt.
Drabowsky, Rodriguez (71, Nich
ols i7, ' Hillman (7i, Fodge B
and Neeinan. Loser Drabowsky
H-41. HRs-Thomson, Neeman.
1 2nd game!
San Fran. 010 300 000 4 11 1
Chicago 000 ooo 000 0 3 0
Miller (1-0) and Thomas. Bros
nan, Hillman U', Droit 16', Els
ton 19' and S. Taylor. Loser
Brosnan 13-3).
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMERICAN
.EAGLE
W L Pet. CB
792
520 6' 2
484 Vi
,480 74
467 8
464 8
433 9
.407 94
19 5
13 12
15 16
12 13
14 16
13 15
13 17
11 16
rom
Duns
mr
NORTHERN CAL LEAGUE
W L Pel. OR
1
Klamath Falls
Mount Shasta
Yreka
Dunsmuir
Weed
Scott Valley
Sunday's Results
New York 5-3. Washington 2-0
Boston 8. Haltunore 4
Kansas City 2, Detroit 0
Cleveland 7-10 Chicago 4-6
Saturday's Results
New York 6. Washington 5
Chicago 3. Cleveland 2
Boston 7-3, Baltimore 4-5
Kansas City 4, Detroit 3
Southern Oregon
Nabs OCC Win
Briefs
TV Favorite
In Ring Meet
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Most boxing fans go for the free-
swinging, slambang fighters who
provide plenty of action Young
Mickey Crawford of Saginaw,
Mich., is one of the few class box
ers to make a hit with the paying
as well as video-viewing customers
in recent days.
The 24-year-old welterweight con
tender has built up a good follow
ing with his clever moves and fast,
accurate punching. He can take a
punch too.
Winner of three' straight this
year, Crawford is a S-l favuritr to
stretch the streak to four tonight
at the expense of aggressive Andy
'Figaro) Figueroa of New York at
New 'York's St. Nicholas A'rena.
Crawlord whipped Gil Turner in
his last outing at Madison Square
Garden, Feb. 28. His record is 21
2. Figueroa has a 19-10-3 record.
Du Mont will telecast at 10
p.m., EDT.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GOI.K
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS.
W.Va. P Sam Snead canned
birdie on Ihe fiflh hole of a
playoff with South Africa's Cary
Player and won the Snead Tourn
ament after they had tied with
2u4s.
MEMPHIS. Tenn. Billy Max
well of Odessa, Tex., shot a final
round 5-undcr-par for a 267 to cap
ture the Memphis Invitation.
SPARTANBURG, S.C. - Wiffi
Smith "of St. Clair. Mich., finished
with a 216 total and won the Betsy
Rawls-Peach Blossom T 0 u r n a-mc.nl.
TENNIS
CARACAS The U.S. advanced
to the second round of the Amer
ican zone Davis Cup competition
by swamping Venezuela 5-0.
CREW
PRINCETON- N.J. Yale's
varsity swept to victory in the
Eastern Sprint Championships.
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. Har
vard's lightweights captured Ihe
Eastern Assn. of rowing colleges
regatta on the Charles.
RACING
NEW YORK Bold Ruler
i$2.80 won the Tobaggan llandi
cap at Belmont Park in his 1958
debut.
CAMDEN. N.J. A glitter '$14'
whipped to victory in the $25,000
added Betsy Ross Stakes at Gar
den State Park.
Another Frenchman. Lahouari
Godih, a Parisian by way of Al
geria, makes his second American
start against New York's Johnny
Busso at Madison Square Garden
Friday night. It's a TV fight.
Redlegs 11, Braves 7
George Crowe and Dee Fondy
hit home runs for Cincinnati,
where Hob Purkey finally sneaked
in with a 13-hitter. Lew Burdettc
was chased by the Redlegs.
Purkey gave up two homers to
Joe Adcock and one each to John
ny Logan and Eddie Mathews.
A beaning controversy flared in
the fourth when Frank Robinson
was hit by Milwaukee's Dick Lit
tlefield. The pitcher was warned.
A similar rhubard had developed
Saturday night when two Braves
were hit by pitched balls.
Milwaukee 111 000 013 7 13 1
Cincinnati 013 601 OOx 11 13 0
Burdettc. Litllefield '4, Jay
'71 and Rice. Purkey 14-1) and
Bailey. Loser-Burdette (3-3). Hits-
Mathews. Adcock 2, Crowe,
Foudy, Logan.
Cards 6-0, Bums 5-4
Boyer homered for the Cardinals
in the first inning of the first game
off rred hipp alter fouling eight
pitchers on a 3-2 count. Rube Walk
er and Johnny Roseboro homered
for Ihe Dodgers in the first game.
Gil Hodges and Charlie Neal in
the second.
' 1st game)
Los Angeles 040 001 000' 5 8 1
St. Louis 401 001 OOx 6 10 2
Kipp, Drysdale '2', Roebuck (6),
Labine (7), and Roseboro. Mabe,
Barnes (3), Mulfett 191 and Katt,
II. Smith 17). Winner Barnes
U-li. Loser - Drysdale '1-71
HRs-Boyer, Walker, Roseboro.
'2nd game)
Sunday's Results
San Francisco 7-4. Chicago 3-0
St. Louis 6-0. Los Angeles 5-4
Cincinnati 11. Milwaukee 7
Philadelphia 6-6, Pittsburgh 4-2
Saturday s Results
St. Louis 10, Los Angeles 1
San Francisco 9, Chicago 4
Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 1
Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 3
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet. Gil
21 11. .656
17 9 .654 1
17 14 .518 3'i
14 16 .467 6
15 18 .455 64
13 16 .448 64
If 14 .440 64
11 21 .344 10
Son Francisco
Milwaukee
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
Chicago
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Los Angeles
W I, Pel. GB
Phoenix 21 15 .583
Vancouver 19 14 .576 4
Salt Lake City 18 14 .563 1
San Diego 17 16 .515 24
Sacramento 14 15 .483 34
Spokane 15 19 .441 5
Seattle 14 19 .424 54
Portland 11 17 .393 6
Sunday's Results
Vancouver 5. Sacramento 2
0 1.000
0 l.ooo
0 l.ooo
1 .000
1 .000
1 .000
Sunday's Results
Klamath Falls 20, Dunsmuir 11
Mount Shasta 12. Weed 1
Yreka 10. Scolt Valley 3
The Klamath Kalis Kubs opened
their l(.8 home and Northern Cal
ifornia League season here Sun
day on a slam-bang footing, knock
ing oil Dunsmuir 20-11 in a free
swinging contest at Gem Stud
htm.
The opener was a lively one for
both teams, with plenty of action
Uig Charlie Bogle, the hubs 6-9
lelthandcr, picked up the win but
be had to have help in Ihe late
irnmg Irom Loren Wade who
turned in a good relief job for
the local semi-pros.
Manager InvWhitl s Kubs pound
ed out 24 base hits in rapping
four Dunsmuir hurlers. The visit-i
ors managed to collect 12 hits
making a game-total of 36 safeties.
Paced by the long-ball hitting of
Floyd Linderman. the Kubs took a
lead in Ihe second inning, then
broke a 4-4 third-inning deadlock
to go ahead of Dunsmuir for keeps.
Dunsmuir scored four times in
the sixth and three more in Ihe
ninth, but the Kubs had tallied
seven big runs in the sixth and
added four more in the seventh
lo "ice" Ihe fray. .
In the second inning. Scott Hart
lev singled, and Bob Kelly dou
bled putting runners on second
and third. Bogle drove both runs
home with another double and
scored later after an inlield out
and an error. Dunsmuir tied the
count with two runs in the top of
the third, but the Kubs pushed
icross two tie-breaking scores in
iheir half of the frame and never
tripled.
In the fifth. Linderman blasted
; long triple scoring George Han
son, who had singled ahead ot
him. In the seventh. Linderman
drove a 360-foot home run out of
the stadium over the left-center-
Held wall with Fran Miller and
Hanson aboard to highlight the '
(our-run inning. Miller had sin
gled and Hanson walked setting
the stage for Linderman's three
run poke.
Linderman had three hits in six
trips for the Kubs. Hartley, Kel
ly and Mike McKenzie also had
three hits each, but the day's bat
ling honors went to Whitt who had
a four-for-five afternoon at the
plate including a double and three
runs baited in. For Dunsmuir, for
mer Klamalh Falls prep and semi-
pro star. Ed Whitney banged out
three hits in four times at bat, one
a double to lead Uie losers. Whit
ney also had four RBIs.
In other league games played
Sunday, Yreka thumped Scott Val
ley 10-3 and Mount Shasta tripped
Weed 12-1.
Maxwell Nabs
Memphis Nod
MEMPHIS. Tenn. 'UP)-Tcxan
Billy Maxwell turned in "a Tim
Tarn finish" in winning the Mem
phis Invitational golf tournament.
In Odessa. Tex., parbuster post
ed a five-undcr-par 65 in Ihe final
round Sunday to edge hometown
er Cary Middlecoff by one stroke
for Ihe top prize of $2,800.
Maxwell wound up with a 72-
hold total of 267 while Middlecofl
fired a 66 in the final round for
a 268. Walker Cup player Mason
Rudolph of Clarksville, Tenn., who
entered the last round with a
Ihree-slroke lead over Maxwell,
Middlecoff and Marty Furgol. hod
to settle for third place with a
70269.
Furgol and Paul Harney of Wor
cester, Mass., won $1,300 each at
271.
Bailey Honored
ASHLAND If Flawless pilch-
I , I c .,1 nA..
the baseball championship of 'he OreOOfl Athlete
PCL Linescores
Sacramento 020 000 00O2 7 2
Vancouver 103 000 lOx 5 8 0
Bridges. Mesa im. Bowman '8
and Dalrymple: Held and Patton.
First game:
Seattle 300 000 0O03 7 0
San Diego 010 030 21x 7 13 2
Fowler, Kennedy '7' and (pot
terer: Alexander. Woiey '8'
Woodeschik '81 and Jones. W
Alexander. L Fowler. HR San
Diego: Glynn. Averill.
Second game:
Seattle 000 130 94 I 0
Sin Dieio 000 110 01 5 2
Kutyna and Orteig. Dotterer
(Si; Larry, Podbielan ' and
Jonss. U Kutyna. L Lary.
ft Lake 02 104 1819 14 2
Spokane 010 010 M2 4 s 1
O'Brien and Hall. Naton ';
Hanlnn, Mauriello '7' and Shrry.
W O'Brien. L-Hanlon. HI
Salt Lake. Hall.
First game:
Portland 0O0 001 01 7 0
Phaiix ,012 001 x 4 8 0
Janseif and Neal: Janni and
McCardell. W Zanni. L Jansen.
HR Portland, DiPietro; Phoenix
Prescott.
frcond game
Portia
Phoenix 131
Judson. Garber '5', Bauer '8'
and Fanning: Jones and JJallcr.
W-tones? L-Judson. HR-Port-wnd.
Fanning. Phoenix, Rodgers,
AJou.
Oregon Collegiate Conference.
SOC needed a sweep ot a double-
header with Eastern Oregon here
Saturday lo clinch the pennant.
The Red Raiders took the games
with ease. 10-1 in the opener be
hind the three-hit pitching of Jim
Eggers. and 16-1 in Ihe nightcap
as Jack Brown was touched for
only two hits.
EUGENE (tf Jim Bailey, ace
miler from Australia, received Ihe
Emerald Award of Ihe University
of Oregon Saturday.
Bailey, the first man to run a
mile in less than 4 minutes in Ihe
United States, was graduated
from the university in December
and now works in Portland.
San Diego 7-2, Seattle 3-4
Salt Lake City 9, Spokane 4
Phoenix 4-12, Portland 1-5
Saturday's Results
Salt Lake City 7-9, Spokane 6-5
Sacramento 1 .Vancouver 0
Phoenix 10. Portland 7
San Diego 5, Seattle 1
' NORTHWEST LEAGUE
W L Pet. Gil
Lewiston 16 5 .762 .
Wenatchee 15 9 .625 2'
Tri-City 12 11 .522 5
Eugene 11 11 .500 6
Yakima 8 17 .320 10
Salem 6 15 .286 10
Sunday's Results
Tri-City 3-6, Yakima 0-3
Eugene 5-3, Wenatchee 4-4 -Lewiston
1-4, Salem 0-3.
Saturday s Results
Los' Angeles
SI. Louis
201 100 000
000 000 000
0 8 o i 'I'ri-Cily 5, Yakima 2
Eugene 13, Wenatchee 1.
Mount Shasta
Tumbles Sons
MOUNT SHASTA Mickey Ris-
burg clouted a pair of home runs
and Fred lllosscr hurled four-hit
hall as Mount Shasta whipped
Weed 12-1 in a Northern Colifornin
League baseball name here Sun-!
day. It was the first league action
fur both teams.
Kisburg hit a tvfo-run homer hi
the first inning to provide Mount
Shasta with its eventual winning
runs then clammed another four-
master in the eighth inning to head
a four-run scoring spree.
dlosser struckout 12 Weed hit
lers while scattering four base
hits. -A Mount Mi ast a double play
in the second inning aided ulos-
er s pitching efforts.
Lineseore:
RUE
Weed 000 000 010- 1 4 U
Mount Shasta 200 150 04x 12 13 1
Simmons and Gonzales, Robin
son (fli; Glosser and Davis.
Hoxscorc:
Dunsmuir
AmliTMin. c
Rutherford. 3b
Brlmkc. ai3
tliimtlton, .lb
Summers, p-lf
Milter, If
HiH'se. rf
Carr, p
Snwlrs, p
Whilnry, lb
Sttu-um, n
Moulton, lf-p-rf
Hisoy. 2b
Dofn. cf
Falkowakl
Total
Z ran fur Dor in in 9th.
AH-H B-BI O-A E
4-1 2-0 9-0 1
1-0 1-0 0-0 1
3- 0 1-0 1-0 O
1- 0 0-0 0-0 0
4- 1 2-1 1-2 I
0- 0 0-0 0-0 0
2- 0 0-1 0-1 O
1- 0 0-0 0-0 0
2- 0 0-0 1-5 O
4- 3 1-4 8-1 O
6-3 0-3 2-3 3
5- l 0-0 0-2 0
ft-2 2-2 2-1 O
3- 1 1-0 0-1 O
0-0 1-0 0-0 0
AA.it 11-11 2-lff
Dummtilr
Mallaffev, 2b
Hurkc, 2b
Miller, rf-lf
HuiiMin. Ih
l.lndfrmnn, If
Copi'land, rf
Whiil. cf
Cohen, cf
McKenzie, 3b
lliirlley. u
Kelly, c
BokIc, p
Wuric, p
AR-lf R-ni O-A E
2- 0 0-0 0-0 1
5- 2 2-3 3-2 3
3- 1 2-1 2-0 0
7- 2 4-3 13-0 0
6- 3. 2-4 0-0 0
1-0 0-0 0-0 0
8- 4 1-3 0-0 0
1-0 0-0 0-0 0
3-3 2-2 0-2 1
3-3 2-1 1-4 3
3-3 3-0 8-0 0
3-2 1-2 0-6 0
3-1 1-0 0-5 0
TotaU AI.t4fn.IBl?. 19 f
Summary: 2B Burke. Whitt, Bo
gU Krllv, Whitney. ;tB Linderman.
FlH-Linderman. SAC Summers. DP
Slocum, Hisoy and Whitney. SO
BnK)c 4. Wade 8, Carr 1, Sowlei O.
Bn -Suninura 1. Moulton 3. Bogle 3,
Wnde 2. PB Kelly. Winner BoBte.
Loner Summers. Altcndnnce 130
ipatdi. Umpires Cloyd and Madden.
Krskine and Piynatano. Mizcll,
Clark i5i, Paine Hi, Mabe Kit
and II. Smith. Loser - Mizcll. HRs
-Neal, Hodges.
Phillies 667Bucs 4-2
Clunk Esscijian and Hip' Itcpul-
ski hit home runs for Ihe Phils
while Dick Groat and Frank
Thomas homered for the Pirates
in their first game. Harry Ander
son led the Phils' 13-hit attack in
the second with a home run and
two singles.
list eamel
Pittsburgh 101 000 020 4
Phila. 010 200 21x (i
Kline. Face I7, Ravdon
and Foiles. Sanford, Karrell
and Lonnclt. Winner Sanford
'3-31. Loser Kline H-3. Hits
Groat, Kssegian, Thomas, Kcpul-sky.
2nd game)
Pittsburgh lino 010 001 2 0 0
Philadelphia 110 002 20x 0 13 1
Law. Face ffii. Smilh T . Itay-
don '8 and Kravitz. Semproch
'4-3i and Lonnelt. I.oser-l.aw
'5-2'. HRs-Jones, Stevens. Ander
son, Sinner.
CALIFORNIA LEAGUE
W LI'ct. GB
Visalia 17 10 .030
Fresno IS 10 .0110 1
Hakersfield 111 12 .571 l'i
Stockton 15 13 .530 2'i
Salinas 12 l(i .420 5'i
Modesto II 15 .423 52
San Jose ll 15 .423 5'2
Reno 10 16 .385 (i'a
Sunday's Results
San .lose 4-0 Salinas 1-11
Stockton 7-4 Modeslo 0-0
8 1
8 1
(81
181
Lewiston 10, Salejn 0
Reno 8-3 Bakerslield 8-2
Fresno 6 Visalia 4
MARATHON
YOXKF.RS, N.Y. - John K
Kelley, 27-year-old Groton, Conn.,
high school teacher, won ihe Na
tional AAU title in record time
of 2 hours, 21 minutes and four
tenths.
Grants Pass Man
Qualifies In 500
INDIANAPOLIS Wi Hob
Christie of Grants Pass, Ore.,
won the $1,000 prize money Sun
day as he qualified for Ihe Indi
anapolis 500-mile aulo race.
He operated his ear at 141.9
miles an hour just before the Track
closed for Ihe day.
His was the slowest qualifica
tion in the first weekend of the
10-milc eliminations for the 42nd
Memorial Day Classic May 30.
Hut being the only qualifier, he
was Ihe fastest and won the prize
money.
High winds and rain prevented
any qualification attempts until
just a few minutes helurc Ihe
Irack was closed.
Christie has finished Kith in two
previous races.
VACATION
SPECIAL!
BRAKES
n Remove wheels
Examine lining
D Adjust foot brakes
Adjust hand brake
Bleed lines
Replace fluid
ffO 9c LABOR
ONLY
REG. $5.00
Only One Special Per Visit
Bring This Ad To
Cunningham &
Rickey Motors
So. 7th and Commercial
OLD
Wiggins Sweeps
Champions Title
SALEM li Hoy Wiggins of
Portland won the Oregon Cham
pion of Champions Golf Tourna
ment Sunday, nipping Ralph Dich
ter of Astoria by one stroke.
Wiggins' score was 68-7 1 131 for
the par 72 course. IJichter shot
71-00140. Frank Isaac. Kugene.
was lliird with 08-74-142.
Oilier scores: Sid .Milligan. Ku
gene. 70-73140: Marshall Smilh.
Roseburg. 74-80 154: Babe Car
ter. Eugene. 79-78157: Dick
Marks. Klamalh Falls. 80-82-171.
PC Conference Heads Start
Spring Meet In Portland Today
(UP) Ofli-iity. football schedules beyond
1962. establishment of dates and
sites lor 1958-59 spring sports
playoffs, and a review of football
and basketball rules changes.
Officials were faced wilh the
problem of' how to select future
PORTLAND. Ore.
cials of the strife-torn Pacific
Coast Conference today tackled a
number of thorny problems, in
cluding the future of the Rose
Bowl.
Delegates from I'CLA. South
ern Calilornia and CalilorniaiRose Bowl learns after 1000. wilh
ihe departure of Ihe
Calilornia "Big Three.
The Big Ten went along wilh
the Rose Bowl agreement with
Ihe understanding that the games
would match schools from the
two conferences. Whether L'CLA
The possibility of a six team
basketball circuit, composed of
Oregon, Oregon State, Washing
ton. Washington Stale. Idaho and i Kattiboiir
laninra, nas neen aiscussea y- Drolar
but this laced a problem ofi(2-5i
scheduling. I plr'st Kiml(.
lli..i nas saiQ u plans iu mv-i Salt'in
NWL Linescores
First game:
Kugene 111 000 (HI2 5 5 2
Wenatchee 201 nun (ml 4 8 3
Domenichelli and Sprcen: Rich
ards. Hanson ' tl ' and I.iltlcjohn.
W-Mcnichclli 4-2. L-Rithards.
2-2.
Second game '8 innings'
Eugene 102 nun 00 3 B 2
Wenatchee mm illl 1014 10 0
Hodges and Harrison: Owen
and Littlejohn. W-Owen '2-1 L
Hodges 13-5'. Hit Kugene. Hoi
den: Wenatchee, Wilson.
First game:
Tri-Cily 000 ?n 03 fi 1
Yakima 'Km mm 00 4 1
McClure and Whitcnmb: Don
nellv. Crehoski 'fi' and Gongola.
W-McC'lure. L-Donnrlly.
Home Run Tri-Cily, McClure.
Second game:
Tri-Cily ooo mis (ik 7 0
Yakima 101 (110 03 fi 3
Acosta. Kunert '5'. Drolar '5'.
Slanton '0' and Whitcoinb; Old
am, t.lebo'-ki 'Oi, Robert '6'
7 and Gongola.
'4-0'. 1. Cloboski
were vpected lo attend the three
day spring meeting, although all
three schools have announced in
tentions to pull out of the PCC
alter July 1, 1059.
Representatives of two Califor
nia independents San Jose Stale
and College of Pacific were also
expected lo be on hand for an
Ul p n) flU
tea mm
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY
35
ss2iv,aT.
YKAHS
OLD
om uon n n c 1
so-called1. """" 'i""'"" Lewislon 001 10(1 14 4
.-.uiwu-iii .M.llimi.1 i-Aiipi no-.il- L- vnn an I.lini icru: Mnlirsllni
inglon aflcr il pulls , out of lneaiid".McNamara.
PCC, bill Cal and Southern Cal: Second game
may be receptive lo meeting tliejsalcm irnono-3 6 2
schools in spoils other lhan loot- Lewislon (ml 100 IK4 4 1
ball. Mt'Kinni'V. White '71 and I'eler-
001 20'tOOO 5 11 l'atlempt break into a reformed ; Bowl pacts remained to be ironed pan r
131 040 30X-12 IS 1 Pf ' jout - although observers said aalheU,s was
Ilonit nn the aonn.la in artrti. i definite solution may not
tion 10 the Rose Bowl problem, rcacnec, ai mis meeting,
included: Basketball schedules The current contract between
for 1959-fiO, a review of rules on the Tournament of Roses and the
recruiting and scholastic eligibil-lpCC still has two games to go.
Southern Cal and California wuu)d he so receptive, however,
wouia ik uiciuueu in imuie nrat wa, another question.
or giving more aid (0
as beaten fi-2. at the
',e!last conlerenc' meeting in S;tn
Francisco. W'a.shinglcn and South
ern Calilornia favored Ihe plan,
while Calilornia was nol reprci
senled. '
i;on: Sadler and McNainara.
Newspaper
SPOT ADS
are inexpensive
repeated dally tc
m
m 6
HERMITAGE
IIIUND
llNK ( KYSTfUloH!
BOIIIIION WlllSKtY
1 Ii;.:f.....;'
Lic?-"'sJ
32
RO
PINT
to find a greater bourbon anywbere !
1
THE 010 HERMITAGE CO.
LOUISVILLE, KY.OISTSIBUItD BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY. 86 PROOF