K'ESDAY, JUNE 17. 1958
HERALD SN NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NINE
li was just an old family jinx
atching up when Tim Tarn hob-
led in second with a chipped
one in the Belmont Stakes to
ise out on the triple Crown . . .
:i daddy. Tom Fool, the treat
handicap champion, had his 3-
ear-old campaign wrecked, too.
then he came out of the Wood
.lemorial with a cough . . . which
persisted for S3 days. . . .
FranK Lawrence t suit aiainst
taseball for cutting him out as
minor league operator in Ports-
Inouth. Virginia has been held
lover until fall in New York courts
fcecause of a full docket. . . .
First thing that happened to Vir-
cil Akin after he won the welter
weight title was he got fired . . .
Weill Asks
For Heavy
Fight Today
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Al Weill
the former New York promoter
who managed Rocky Marciano to
the heavyweight title, makes his
pitch today, against heated local
opposition, for permission to stage
a title bout between champion
Floyd Patterson and Roy Hams,
the Texas challenger.
Weill goes before the California
state Athletic Commission to pre
sent a formal application for a
promoter's license, braving the
hard stares of those he calls the
"jealous" local promoters.
Weill said he will post the re
quired bond fog the projected Aug.
4 fight between Patterson and the
lad from the Texas town of Cut
and Shoot.
Signed contracts of both fight
ers. he said, will also be deposited
with the commission.
Harris and his manager, Lou
Viscusi, were due to attend the
meeting.
Before leaving Houston Monday
night. Vicusi said he and his fight
er who is just out of the Army
are hopeful of overcoming local
opposition to the bout.
"The other promoters out there
are fighting this thing hard," he
said. "They are afraid a heavy
weight championship fight will
hurt the gale for their fights.
Local fights which could be af
fected by the heavyweight bout
include the Pete Rademacher
Zora Folley fight scheduled for
July 24: and the Carmen Basilio-
Art Aragon fight scheduled for
late August.
Patterson's manager Cus D'A-
mato indicated he will go along
with Weill on his plans. D'Amato,
an ardent foe of the International
Boxing Club, has held Patterson's
title on ice since the champion
knocked out amateur Rademacher
last August in Seattle.
Peewee Leagues
Start Season
The Peewee League opened its
I9S8 softball season at Kiwanis
Park Monday night In two games
played simultaneously beginning
at 6:30.
Motor Investment edged the Jay-
cees 14-13 on Field 1, and Roberts
Hardware downed the Hart Con
(truction squad 14-4, on Field 2.
The Peewee league is made of
nine teams of boys aged 10 and
11. and will play at Kiwanis each
Monday, Wednesday and Friday
throughout the season.
Fights
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Frankie Ryff,
135'i, New York, outpointed Tom
my Tibbs. 134'i, Boston. 10.
TORONTO Alex Miteff. 209,
Argentina, drew with George Chu
valo. 2114, Toronto, 10.
MANILA Al Asuncion. 118'i,
Philippines, stopped Koji Ishi-
bashi. 1194, Japan. 7.
Football's Darkest
Cal Schools Couldn't Stand Own Rules
Editor's Note: Orin E. (Babel
Hollingberry, football coach at
w ashington State College Irom
192B throush 1942 wrote the fol
lowing story on the impending
breakup of the PCC. He typed it
out, gave it a tille, put on his
own "by line" and oflered it for
publication. Hollingberry. now a
Yakima Valley hop grower, had
a 93-53-14 football ecord in 7
years at WSC.l
By "BABE" HOLLINGBERRY
YAKIMA AP Yes. football's
darkest hour on the Pacific
Coast.
Three big California schools
couldn't take the pressure of their
own rules and regulations so de
cided to withdraw from one of the
oldest and finest conferences in the
nation.
It was the case of the boy who
couldn't pitch taking Ihe ball
home and breaking up the game.
They couldn't take it. Making
rules and breaking them then
Voliering "murder" and refusing
;o lake tne consequences, is n
'he America) collegiate way? Of
rrse not.
I've alwavs contended the ne
definitely to slop breach of
regulations the & offers, the
'inder the table deals, etc., 4t
in fire the ones that are reipon-i
O Peopla Read
SPOT ADS
- you are
from his job as a clerk in the
St. Louis drug store of his man
ager, Eddie Yawitz. . . . Yawitz
doesn't believe a champ needs to
worn. . . . one veteran boxine
manager sees a short reign for
Akins . . . soon as some nnnnnenl
discovers the St. Louis bomber
uses only his right glove to defend
both sides of his chin and can
get nailed by a fast puncher. . . .
Bud Palmer visiting Los Angeles
tried to get the attention of old
pals Duke Snider and Gil Hodges
in the Coliseum ... but the
glum vets wouldn't look up in the
stands to see who 'was paging
them. . . .
The Changing Times: Ben Ker-
ner. owner of the St. Louis Hawks,
advanced the city of St. Louis
$30,000 to provide new seating ar
rangements in Kiel Auditorium,
where the pro basketball champs
play all their games ... not
because the city's broke, but the
current budget didn't carry the
item, and Ben wants the extra
room for next season. . . , This
s the same Kerner who once had
to mortgage his home to hold onto
his franchise
The Triangle Round Robin Tour-
nament, a pet of industrialist Jack
McAuliffe (who generally drops
a bundle on it), has become the
biggest plum on the women's golf
circuit. ...
Marilyn Smith, the vivacious
Kansan who heads the Ladies'
PGA, went to high school in Wich
ita with Daryl Spencer . . . who
plays more than a spot of short
stop for the San Francisco Gi
ants. . . . "And do you know."
muses Marilyn, "he never made
our team." . . .
The Crockers of Uruguay can't
get over the fact that progeny Fay
piays lor money . . . because in
their rigid South American society
only caddies turn pro. . . .
uary flayer of the men s golf
tour worns on his torso relicious v.
does a half hour of nush-UDs and
deep knee bends every morning
wun a suncase on nis Back. . .
So on the eve of the U.S. Open
the South African youngster pops
up wun a Daa muscle pain in his
back. . . .
He might consult Mickey Wright,
the women's PGA champ who
once enrolled at Stanford to be
come a neurosurgeon ... but
quit after one year when she won
ner first golf tournament. . . .
Casey Stengel describing what
makes a smart manager: "Got this
feller in Washington who I remem
ber last time hit one good to left
center ... so I wave Mantle
way over to where he could shake
hands with Siebern . . . this
Washington feller hits one good
again and Mantle runs a country
mile and barely catches up with the
ball in right center. . . , And
that makes me a smart manager,"
If past training means anything,
Bill Norman should put some spar
kle in the Tigers ... he ap
prenticed three years for Bill
Veeck when old curley-top was
shooting off fireworks in Mil
waukee. . . .
Between you'n'me, Yogi Berra's
recent burst doesn t dispel the no
tion the Yankee blunderbuss may
have had it ... as an every
day slugger. ...
Jaycees Slate
League Meeting
CHILOQUIN A special meeting
for all persons interested in the
formation of a "Little Hardball
League" in the Reservation area
is scheduled for 7 o'clock Wednes
day evening at the Chiloquin Ball
Park, it was reported today by
Remo Minato, Klamath Reserva
tion Jaycee, who is chairman.
All boys aged 12 and under are
invited to attend. There is a spe
cial need for coaches, managers,
umpires, etc., Minato noted.
The sponsorship of the league
as well as aid in equipment and
transportation will be furnished by
the Klamath Reservation Jaycees
Hour
sible. coaches, directors or repre
sentatives. Many times in past years spec
ulations and rumors circulated
that the Pacific Coast Conference
would break certain schools
would be dropped but each
time the wiser faculty representa
tives and Presidents of our uni
versities would keep the confer
ence intact. In my book, Robert
Sproul (president of the Univer
sity or California' for years was
the final Pacific Coast Conference
balance wheel, straightening out
all difficulties to keep the confer
ence together o an even keel.
Evidently this stalwart figure
mellowed with age because he fi
nally acceded to pressure of alum
ni and athletic men. . .
Why did all this happen? The
almighty dollar is the answer. Foot
ball today is big business and the
schools with the big stadiums and
big drawing power want no prt
of smaller schools with smaller
gates. Ability of teams has noth
ing to do with it. . .
USC. UCLA and California want
no restrictions no pennies. In
other words they want a tree hand
to proselyte and buy aihletes on a
JUNE IS
IONUS MOUTH
d? OLDSMOBILR
30 CARS lo Be Sold
durinq Jum It July
Lorqe Selection Larger
DEALS!
DICK Br MILLER CO.
Juniors
Kick Off
Tourney
PORTLAND (API - A second
day of blistering heat was at hand
as medal play began Tuesday in
the Oregon Junior Golf Tourna
ment here.
Temperatures that soared to 93
degrees helped choke off par per
formances lor all but one of the
meet's 270 young golfers in Mon
day's qualifying round.
Jim o joole. a 16-year-old who
helped lead Central Catholic of
Portland to the state prep title
this spring, shot the only tub-par
round a two-under-par 70.
0 Toole thus became the favor
ite for the junior crown as defend
ing champion Biff Lovett of Port
land opened with a 74.
The defending girls titlist, June
Robinson of Tillamook, also had
trouble with the sun-baked course
and shot up to an 87.
Treasure Sullivan, a calm 13-
year-old from Ashland, led the
qualifiers in the girls' field with
a steady 84.
rred Taylor of Portland won
medalist honors in Monday's qual
ifying round in the boys division
(ages 12-15 when he shot a one-
over-par 73.
Ten-year-old Dennis Olson of
Ashland led the Peewee division
with a record 39 for the young
sters 12 years old and under.
The tournament will wind up
with championship matches Fri
day.
Results of yesterday i opening
medal play:
JUNIOR BOYS
Championship flite Dennis Sor-
an, Klamath Falls, 79, (Soran
meets Jack Shriver of Seattle
Tuesday)
BOYS
Fourth flite Bobby Soran
Klamath Falls, 89. tSoran meets
Jerry Oulch of Eugene.)
PEE WEES
Championship flite Mike Soran,
Klamath Falls. 43: Steve Good,
Klamath Falls 46. (Soran plays
Mike Truax, Salem, Tuesday. Good
meets Jim Taggerd of Columbia
Edgewater Tuesday.)
GIRLS
Championship flite Judy Ang-
stead, Klamath Falls, 98. (Judy
meets Shurley Pinkstaff of Eugene
Tuesday.)
Fourth flite Linda Pernell,
Klamath Falls, 125.- (Linda meets
Joanne Miller, Klamath Falls, 125,
Tuesday.) Diane Drew, Klamath
Falls, 132. (Diane plays Karen
Jensen of Royal Oaks.)
Briefs
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TENNIS
LONDON Wimbledon favor
ite. Ashley Cooper. Australia,
withdrew from the Queen's Club
Tournament after suffering
pulled leg muscle while winning
a second round matcft from jonn
Cranslon, San Marino, Calif., 2-6,
6-3, 7-5.
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. Tony
Trabert, Salt Lake City, upset
Lew Hoad, Australia, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2,
in the first upset of Jack Kra
mer's Tournament of Champions.
ANNAPOLIS, Md. Ron Holm
berg, Tulane, defeated Edwardo
Guzman, Southern California, 4-6,
7-5, 6-1, and led a field of 32 play
ers into the third round of the
NCAA championships.
GOLF
AMES. Iowa - Clifford Ann
Creed, Lamar Tech, won medal
ist honors in the Women's NCAA
Tournament with a two-over-par
75.
YACHTING
ABOARD USS DARBY - Good
News, Hillsborough, Calif., and
the U.S. Coast Guard Academy's
Petrel vied for first place at the
end of the second day in the New
port to Bermuda race.
RACING
NEW YORK Restless Wind
'S3. 90) won the $32,020 National
Stallion Stakes (Colt Division) at
Belmont Park.
professsional basis. Would other
leagues accept such a wide open
program? Of course not.
The dollar sign it ruling college
fool ball.
The "big three" In the south re
alize that they cannot indefinitely
exist on independent open sched
ule competition independents
cannot survive if they do. The pub
lic will soon lose interest and there
is no incentive for team members'
best efforts. They realize that to
survive they must play for a
championship. . .
Realizing this they now sweep
Washington in en the tide and
Washington seem anxious to glide
downstream wKn the least resist
ance aid make the move for a
separate feaeua.
Staaferd still krtMs tut I be
lieve they wiU ultf U fallow
the raMiw'i "ptt i 9ii" he
cause Kaafard m a schoel beeed
on high fr'meim imi MtaarKy. ..
Dr. ewj Mau. ti Vaetane
lrt ne suit Hwept arg the
currext HKwan irwwure fw-
II
mtTctmttt
4jiisft a e&diflsa wf)
MIXED DOl'BLE
W L
H HarucanvM. Hanaram
W. Baiiey-C. Hoopr
I. Tomlln-E Tomtln
E. Brav-P. Bray
A. Thomai-G. Thomas
H. Kalch-R. dough
rinon-A. rinon
Beard-F. Btnnatt
Luquar-F. Luquar
Book-H DUUtrom
Butltr-C. Butler
Butlar-T. BulUr
Bailey -Hooper 3. Parsona-Partons 1
Bray-Brav .1. Luaucr-Luauar 1
TOmlin.Tnmlifi .1 V HuDcr.T. Butler 1
Hanacam-nanacam 3, Tnornae-inornaa
Book-DIIUtrom S.
Kclch-Clough 3, I
M.lUnnatt 1
. Builar-C. Butltr 1
High laam gama Luqutr-Luquer 430
High team eerlea Tomlin -Toml In liTfl
mgn individual game iwomwi to
High Individual gam (Maitl Eddie
TOmiln zoo
High individual write iHen) IJdie
Tomlin 484
High individual atrial (Men) Eddla
Tomlin 673
MIXED rOUBSOME.
W L
14
13 1
13 8
11 0
11 9
10't fi'i
9 11
ft m
14
B IS
Satellite!
Malin Terrori
Four Squirta
Pin Benders
The Dobermani
Four Jinx
The Conqueror
Scrubi
Sweep Twn'i
Tht Bill Rlngera
Laat nleht'a reiulti:
Dobermam 3, Squirt 1
Malin Ttrrora 4. The Conautrora 0
Satellite! 3. Scrub! 1
Sweep Two'a 3. Pin Bandera 3
i our jinx ti, sen rumen i
High team game Four Jinx M4
High team aeries Satellite! 237
win individual gam iwomeni nuoy
Hiwlv 1H2
High individual gam (Mem Bob Vie
to rin 24
High individual series (Women) Ruby
niwiry sun
High individual itrlaa (Men) Bob Vic
ie no Ms
W L
Knight nf Columbus 29 7
R. L. Smith Lumbar 24 12
Acme Road Hogs 2:t 1.1
Dunsmuir Lloni 1? 19
McCloud Horaemen 17 19
Thorn's Chevrolet 17 19
Forest Service 10 3d
Dunsmuir Frttlancera 9 37
Laat nleht'a result:
K or C a ft. L. Smith 1
Lions 3. Horsemen 2
Forest service o. noan rings
Freelancers 1, Chevrolet 3
High itam game Thorn's Chevrolet
884
High team aeriea Thom'a Chevrolet
2US
High Individual game F. Rubldoiu
200
Higt- Individual aeries r. Rubidoux
7
JM, Bob's Win
LL Contests
Behind a four-hit, 11 strike out
pitching job by Larry Binney,
Johns-Manville won an 8-4 victory
over Car-Ad-Co at Wright Field
Monday night as the Little League
opened its second week of play.
On Wright Field No. 1, Bob's
Union Service blasted Weyerhaeus-
- Don s 7-1, as winning miner
Mac Cunningham yielded only two
hits and walked none over the six
inning route.
Darkness lorced the Johns-Man
ville Car-Ad-Co contest halt before
the halfway mark of t h e sixth
frame had been reached. In the
first half of the sixth with one out
the J-M nine had collected an ad
ditional eight runs which were
stricken from the board when of
ficials decided against continuing
Ihe game for fear of injuring one
of the players because 01 the tan
ins light.
Binney, who walked seven men
without severe damage was the
winning Ditcher while. Car - Ad
Co's loss was charged to Rose,
although two more twirlers were
called upon to try to stifle the foe.
The three pitchers allowed only
eight hits but a total of 6 errors
and 11 walks gave the Johns -Manville
team all the edge they
needed.
Longest hit nf the contest was
registered by John Jendrzeiewski,
J-M catcher who poled a bases-
loaded two-bagger, in the non
counting sixth inning. Binney also
had four hits lor the winners.
Linescore:
R H E
Johns-Manville 301 13 g 2
Car-Ad-Co 010 034 4 6
Binney and .Tendrzejewski: Rose,
Malley (31, Kurth (6) and Ash,
Herman (4)
Bob s Union-Weverhaeuser-Donsijury occurred as he was turning
linescore unavailable.
Says Babe Hollingberry
erful alumni and regent groups.
Neither do I concur with Dr. A. L.
Strand's (Oregon Slate) throw-in-the-towel
attitude, thai "we might
as well disband we've had
it." What kind of offense is that?
Is that the "will to win" we teach
our young men?
Yes. something's wrong with in
tercollegiate athletics when a dis
gruntled few can tear the Pacific
Coast Conference apart, cause the
elimination of the conference com
missioner and attempt to control
the entire football situation,
A great sport supported by the
public is ironically being made
the "football" of a few. , .
Surely this is feotball's darkest
hour.
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Bouchee
Answers
Questions
PHILADELPHIA AP In an
empty Dan park a lonely man
faced a formidable array of pitch
ers. The pitchers were tossing
words, not baseballs. Tht lonely
man hit back in kind.
The pitchers were reporters, ra
dio broadcasters and telecasters.
The hitter was Edward Francis
Bouchee, who proved he could
still hit a curve, even the verbal
kind.
It was a strange scene indeed
at Connie Mack Stadium Monday.
On the field, groundskeepers were
readying things for Tuesday
night's game between the Phila
delphia Phillies and the Los An
geles Dodgers. Standing in the
dugout with one foot on the steps,
former Philly first baseman Bou
chee faced an ordeal he has feared
ever since a judge in Spokane.
Wash., placed him on three
years' probation after he had
pleaded guilty to a morals charge.
This was his first press confer-
once since the sentencing last
March. In a sense, he was on trial
all over again. His deportment,
his answers, the impressions he
made, all were important in a
carefully planned program to re
gain for Bouchee his citizenship in
organized baseball.
No mention was made during
the hour-long interview of the
sordid event which led to the ar
rest of one of the national league's
most promising young ball play
ers. Bob Carpenter, owner of the
Phillies, requested it that way on
the advice of Bouchee's psychia
trist.
That was the only ground rule
for the conference.
Bouchee, 25. former Washing-
on State College football player,
asserted, "baseball is my life.
I'm ready to face anything to re
turn to the game."
Bouchee's comments ranged
from anxiety over his pregnant
wife she is expected to give
birth to their second child in July
to the reception of his team-
mates. He said pitchers Robin
Roberts and Curt Simmons and in
fielder Willie Jones had expressed
joy at having him back.
The handsome native of Mon
tana gave evidence that he had
not lost his sense of humor. Short
stop Chico Fernandez pupped into
the dugout during tne interview
and Bouchee, In a whisper that
could be heard, asked the Cuban,
"have you learned to hit the curve
bain-
There was no Spanish transla
tion of Fernandez' reply. Chico
chose to overlook the jibe In his
obvious pleasure at seeing his old
teammate back in uniform,
Derby King
Under Knife
PHILADELPHIA (VPV - Ken
tucky Derby champion Tim Tarn
was scheduled to go under the
knife today in an operation on his
painful leg injury that was seen
having about a 30-50 chance of
restoring him to racing.
Dr. Jacques Jenny, associate
professor at the University of
Pennsylvania's school of veteri
nary medicine who was to head
the team conducting the opera
tion, warned that it was difficult
to predict the outcome.
However. Dr. Jenny said ne
had performed similar operations
on about 30 horses and that
about half of them returned to
the track to race again. He said
even if the operation is a sue
cess, it would be some time be-
fore Tim Tarn was able to run
again.
Tim Tarn's injury was diag
nosed as a bone chip of the sesa
moid bone in an ankle. The in-
unto me nome stretcn oi ine oei-
imont Stakes and cost him his
chance at winning the turf s
triple crown.
The Calumet Farm colt arrived
here Sunday and has been kept
timet to avoid aggravating the in
jury. He was to be given Iran
auilizing drugs today as pre
sedation before the administration
of anestheisa
PCL Linescores
Seattle 200 110 0127 13
Salt Lake 100 001 0114 9 1
Kutyna, Kennedy (8), Fowler
191 and Dotterer; Urquhart and
Miley. W Kutyna (5-31. L -
Urquhart (6-2). HR - Seattle,
Dyck, Balcena. Salt Lake, Stuart
Auto Painting!
'i Striplnr FUmM Seailcpt ()
GairanUed To Pltitt )
' Al't Custom Painting
i( Cmtr t OrtgoB At. A Bilbo ,
TIME OUT
71
Well! That makes up for all the
bad shots I've had on this hole
BR League
Twin Slate
Ends In Routs
A twilight Babe Ruth League
doubleheader at Conger f leid Mon
day night saw relatively close ball
games turn into routs In the last
innings as Eastside Electric blast
ed Ralsigers 14-4, and Fluhrer's
bombed Henley Sporting Goods
26-4, in the same fashion.
Both games were called in the
sixth frame because of a league
regulation which provides that the
game Is over when one learn has
a 10-run lead after the filth inning.
In the Eastside-Balsiger clash
starting pitchers David Saks, for
bastside and Fat Carney, of Bal
sigers waged a tight 4-3 duel for
he first five innings.
Carney, the loser, fanned nine
men and allowed only three hits
before losing his control in the
fateful sixth inning when a com
bination of seven walks, four errors
and four hits gave Eastside a 10-
run parade. Carney worked two-
thirds of the inning before being
replaced by Mike Stilwell, who was
in turn relieved by Gary Bishop,
The Balsiger tallies came on
combination of one-hit, two walks
and a pair of errors, one commit
ted by Saks, who threw the ball
away trying to catch Pat Carney
off third. Kent Hunsaker, Saks re
placement, walked the first four
men to face him, scoring another
Balsiger run before pitching him
self out of the hole. Hunsaker
fanned four of the last six men to
face him.
Wally Palmberg was the power
at the plate for Eastside as he
boomed a two - run triple in the
third, then returned in the sixth
to again clean the basepaths with
a sharp rap to roughly the same
spot in right field. Tne nit was
scored as a single although Palm
berg made a complete round trip
scoring two men ahead of him
An error was charged to right-
fielder Larry Wolters who let Palm
berg's blow slip through his fing
ers.
The Fluhrer's-Henley Sporting
Goods contest followed approxi
mately the tame pattern. Henley
jumped off to a two run lead in
the top oi tne nrst as tnree f lun
rer errors, -a walk and a single
by Henley's Campbell pushed two
men across the plate.
Fluhrer s counted their first tal
ly in the second inning as Tay
lor, who collected two home runs
for his night's work, garnered his
first one with none aboard. His
second roundtripper came in the
fourth stanza when he scored Hurl
er Rhoads ahead of him.
Henley retaliated with two more
counters in their half of the fourth.
Fluhrer s performed their mas
sacre in the top of the sixth as
Ihey counted 15 runs on 12 walks,
four hits and one Henley error.
Linescorcs:
R H E
Henley 200 200 4 2 7
Fluhrer's 014 42 IS) 26 14
Allbritton. Crumrine. Blofsky,
Reiline. Al britton and Phillips,
Crumrine: Pynes, Rhoads (2) and
Herrcra.
R H E
Eastside 002 02 (10114 7 i
Balsigers 000 210 3 2 (
Saks. Hunsaker (5), and .lay Pax
Ion, Saks (Si; Carney, Stilwell (61
Bishop (6) and Riley.
BALL FARE
BANTAM LEAGUE
At Kiwanis Park
6-30 Spudnut Shop vs. Motor In
vestment Field 1.
6:30 Cub Pack No. 3 vs. Eastside
Cubs Field 2.
BABE RUTH LEAGUE
At Gem Stadium
6:30 Redwings vs. M. L. Johnson
8:30 Chiloquin vs. Tulelake
Inglri
PltHmtipl
(pnej Mh)f3
(omMAff)
3 pr5GD ' ea
Cardinals
Cincinnati Reds
Ry United Press International
The St. Louis Cardinals may
yet catch the Milwaukee Braves
but Manager Fred Hutchinson
wishes they'd stop trying to do
it the hard way.
A .469 pace since May 7 has
brought the Cardinals back from
their 3-14 start into a tie for
fourth place in the National
League. That's the best pace of
any NL team over the five-week
period but it's been like pulling
teeth all the way.
For one thing, the Cardinals'
starting pitchers aren't winning.
Only one starter has won in the
last 10 days and the big four
of Larry Jackson. Lindy McDan-
lel, Vinegar Bend Mizell, and
Sam Jones show a combined 15-
21 record. Only the erratic but
surprisingly successful relief
work of Morris Martin, Billy Muf
fet and Phil Paine, 8-2 combined,
has saved the staff from buckling
altogether.
And, for another, the Cardinals
are next-to-last in scoring runs
and in hitting homers. Yet the
team stands 27-27 for the season
with no less than 12 of the vic
tories by one-run margins.
Cards 6, Reds 5
There was more of the "heart-
stopping" for Hutchinson Monday
night when the Cardinals out
scrambled the Cincinnati Redlegs,
6-5, in 11 innings.
Cincinnati's Joe Nuxhall car
ried a 3-1 lead into the ninth but
the Cardinals tied it on pinch
hitter Joe Cunningham's two-run
single. Then the Redbirds pushed
over three runs in the top of the
1 1th for an apparently easy vie-
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
New York
Boston
Kansas City
Cleveland
Detroit
35 19
30 28
28 27
29 30
27 29
26 31
25 30
.648
.517 7
.509 7'4
.492 H'l
.482 9
.456 10'4
.455 10li
Washington
Chicago
Baltimore
24 30
,444 11
Monday's Results
No games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pel. GB
Milwaukee
31 22 .585
32 26 .552 1V4
26 25 .510 4
28 28 .500 Hi
27 27 .500 414
28 31 .475 6
24 30 .444 V
24 31 .436 8
Results
San Francisco
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago
Philadelphia
Los Angeles
Monday
St. Louis 6, Cincinnati S (11 In
nings)
Only games scheduled
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pet, GB
Vancouver 41 22 .651
Phoenix 39 26 .600 3
San Diego 36 26 .581 4'i
Salt Lake City 33 28 .550 7
Spokane 26 37 .413 15
Seattle 26 38 .406 154
Portland 23 34 .404 15
Sacramento 23 36 .390 16
Monday's Result
Seattle 7, Salt Lake City 4
Only game scheduled
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86
Edge
tory only to have the Redlegi
rally for two in the last of the
11th and force Hutchinson to go
to the bullpen for the fourth time
of the night.
Eddie Kasko. whose error
helped the Redlegs take a 3-1 lead
in the sixth, doubled home the
final two St. Louis runs in the
Uth. Don Blasingame broke the
3-3 tie with a single.
The three-run margin appeared
to be more than enough for Mor
ris Martin, who did gain credit
for his third win, but the ex-
Brooklyn lefty never retired a
batter in the Uth, Burgess sin
gled and Gus Bell homered where
upon Hutchinson signalled for
Jackson. Jackson, who has won
two of his five decisions in relief.
retired the side in order.
Tom Acker, fourth Cincinnati
pitcher, suffered his second de
feat without a victory.
(11 innings)
St. Louis 010 000 002 03-8 11 S
Cinci. 000 003 000 025 7 0
Mizell, Wight (8), Paine (9).
Martin (10, Jackson U) and
Jeffcoat (9, Acker (10), Lown
ill) and Burgess. Winner Mar
tin (3-D. Loser Acker (0-2). HR-
Bell.
The' Redleg Cardinals game
was the only one in the majors
Monday but the Chicago Cubs got
a brilliant performance from their
newly signed bonus pitcher Dick
Ellsworth in an exhibition game
with the Chicago White Sox.
Ellsworth, an 18-year-old left
hander from Fresno Hlgh School,
pitched a four-hitter. Pinch-hitter
Walt Moryn singled home the win
ning run for the Cubs after they
filled the bases on walks to Cal
Neman, Ellsworth and Tony
Taylor. Rookie Bob Shaw was the
loser.
East goes West in the Ameri
can League in tonight's all-night
game schedule while the West in
vades East in the National
League. In the AL it's Boston at
Chicago. Washington at Detroit,
New York at Cleveland Baltimore
at Kansas City. In the NL it's
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, Lot
Angeles at Philadelphia, Chicago
at Milwaukee and St. Louis at
Cincinnati.
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