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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1958)
f IONDAY. JULY 14. 1958 iSF Giants Take NL League Lead By I'nllrd Prrat Intrrnallonal A city built (or an extravagant irsiiny. a tall tale come true. . . Those words were used to de fine San Francisco in its earlv Bold Rush days but they never Jibbed more than today with an inazins Giant team trying to ite tne tallest tale of all a j.itional League pennant for San anciscoain us nrsi season in t major leagues! It would have sounded impossi i' a few months ago but who's ins to say it is now after the ants staged a winning ninth- ning, rally for the 141 h time year to beat the Milwaukee m aves. 6-5, Sunday? Even the "il Giants, who came from 13H imes behind on Aug. U to win, the 1954 Giants, who swept the dians four straight in the World tries, couldn't top the heroics of current club. Giants 6, Braves 3 A Crowd Of 29 MS at Kan Fran. eco saw the Braves take a 4-0 Htst-inning lead Sunday and lead, 44. as late as the eighth inning. Tfci'n came the sensational late Jnjiing heroics. A homer by Rookie Orlando Cepeda and a two - run pbich single by Boh Speake put Up Giants ahead. 5-4. Back came Olf Braves in the top of the niriih to tie the score on Red Sdioendienst's run-scoring single. And then the final act: A walk ten Willie Mays,, a sacrifice, an intentional walk to Cepeda and a game - winning single by rookie Felipe Alou. Chalk up another victory for Bill Rigncy's "cliff hangers." And put those Giants in first place, a half-game ahead (jf the Braves. faike McCormick, 1ft - year-old tonus lefty, gained credit for his sixth win while Ernie Johnson iuffered his first defeat for the Braves. It vas a great day all-around for underdogs in the N.L. as all three of the other "contenders" lost douhleheaders in a league so tight only seven games separate first and last place. The Pitts burgh Pirates whipped the St. Louis Cardinals, 10-8 and 8-6. the Chicago Cubs swept the Philadel- i phia Phillies, 3-2 and 2-1, and the f last-place Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Cincinnati Redlegs, 3-0 : and 3-2. Milwaukee 400 ooo not 5 in n S.Francisco 000 002 031 6 12 3 Willey, McMahon (6), Trow j' bridge m, Johnson (9) and Cran- dall. Miller, Giel (7. McCormick L (9) . and Schmidt. Winner McCor ' mick ifi-1). Loser Johnson 13-1). HR Jablonski, Cepeda. ! -In the American League, the '' New York Yankees maintained f. their 12'a game lead when they ibeat the Chicago White Sox, 5-4, F in 10 innings after a 7-4 loss. I The Detroit Tigers moved into '. second place via fi-5 and 5-3 '. victories over the Baltimore Orioles, the Washington Senators swept the Kansas City A's, 2-0 and 4-2, and the Cleveland In dians crushed the Boston Red Sox, -9-4. j Bucs 10-8, Cards 8-6 t Bob Skinner led the Pirates' first-game attack with a homer : and two singles that drove in t' inree runs ana men Bin iviazero- ed .in three runs in the second game. Ron Blackburn won the opener and Vern Law gained his eighth triumph in the nightcap. (1st game) Pittsburgh "(Xll 050 21110 12 1 St. Louis ' 010 400 012 8 12 3 Raydon, Porfcrfield 4 Black burn i5i, Face ' 8 , Gross 19. Law 19) and Hall. Brosnan. Jack son '5i, Paine 5), Mane mi and Smith. Landrith (9i. Winner Blackburn I2-1. Loser Jackson (5-7 . HR-Boycr, Hall, Skinner. Musial. i(2nd game) Pittsburgh 500 020 010 B 13 2 Bend Beaten By Basinettes i, BEND The Klamath Falls Ba Tinettes notched their first win of the season Saturday at Bend as thev knocked off the Bend girls tofihall club 13-9 in a single aft moon game. 1 A nil ne-run fourth inning supplied Bit Basinettes with more than enough to win the game after trail- t)v 4-0. Klamath added four more tur.s in the filth lor the final 13 s!lies. .4 Bend led 4-0 after the first in Ting when six base on balls went riamst Klamath starting picher ' p erresa Wickline. Bend scored two iore in the lourth and three in Ihe fth. but was behind liamath alt b lbs tssieettr' it innint. DrUr Perry but th big leoief V (laaiatk ri t bat twice d banting ant ton hits. Buth i8 i;elstein and BOv Lloyd both col lected doubles in the nine-run in ning. For the game. Perry had three hits in four trips. Wickline and Hagelstein both chipped in with two hits. Linescore: R H E Klamath nno 940 013 12 0 Bend 400 230 0 9 6 0 Boston 000 0.VI 010 4 R 3 Wickline and Hitchinsnn: Len-I Mrl.ish '7-5' and Brown. Brew burg. Holeman 4 and Day. er. Wall '8' and Berberet. Loser St. Louis 211 200 Ollfl S 12 0 Witt, Porterfield Hi, Blackburn '3i, Simith 14'. Law (51 and Foiles. McDaniel, Mahe (U, Stobbs 'S', fame ifi, Jackson '91 and Landrith. Winner Law 8-7. Los er Stohhs tO-ll. HR Landrith, wazerosKi. Cubs 3-2, Phils 2-1 Johnny Briggs scattered seven hits for the Cubs in their first game and Dave Hillman com pleted the sweep with a six hitter. Lee Walls had three hits in the opener and Walls and Al Dark had four each in the second game for the Cubs who moved into fourth place. 1st gamel Philadel. 000 no 000 2 7 0 Chicago 000 111 OOx 3 7 1 Meyer, Hearn (61. Farrell (8i and Sawatski. Briggs (3-fli and S. Taylor, Loser Meyer (1-21. HR Walls. (2nd game) Philadel. ino ooo ooo l 6 0 Chicago 101 ooo OOx 2 10 0 Simmons. Farrell (8i and Lo- pata, Sawatski 3. Hillman (2-0) and Neeman. Loser Simmons 16-9). Bums 3-3, Reds 0-2 Rookie pitchers Stan Williams and Bob Giallombardo. both aid ed by Clem Labine, gained credit lor tne Dodgers victories. Homers by Charlie Neal and Carl Furillo accounted (or all Los An geles' runs off Don Newcombe in the first game and Steve Bilko's eighth-inning homer won the sec ond. (1st game) Cincinnati OOO (too ooo 0 3 0 Los Angeles 010 000 20x 3 6 0 Newcombe, Lawrence (81 and Bailey. Williams, Labine (9) and Roseboro. Winner Williams 5-.H. Loser Newcombe (1-9). HR-Furil-lo, Neal. 2nd game) Cincinnati 010 ooo 010 2 7 0 Los Angeles 100 000 llx 3 4 3 Nuxhall (5-5) and Burgess. Gial lombardo, Labine i9 and Pigna- tano. Winner Giallombardo (1-1). HR Gilliam, Pignatano, Whisen ant, Bilko. ChiSox 7-4, NY 4-5 The Yankees gained a split on a pinch loth-inning double by Jerry Lumpe after N.L. castoff Turk Lown preserved the open ing win lor Billy Pierce and the While Sox. Lown entered the opener with the bases filled and none out in the seventh inning and got Bill Skowron to hit into double play and struck out Elston Howard. (1st game) Chicago 0114 003 000 7 11 1 New York 012 000 100 4 11 Pierce, Lown (7) and Lollar. Larsen, Maas (31, Trucks (7) Slurdivant (9 and Howard. Win nerPierce (9-5). Loser Larsen (7-31. '2nd game, in innings) Chicago 000 130 000 0 4 7 0 New York 022 000 000 1 S 13 0 Moore. Qualters (3), Keegan '5) and Lollar. Shantz, Kucks (5), Duren (91 and Howard. Winner Duren (4-2). Loser Keegan (0-1). HK Landis. Tigers 6-5, Birds 5-3 Ex White Sox - reliever Bill Fischer completed both games for the Tigers, who took the opener on a three-run homer by Gail Harris and the nightcap with a nine-hit attack including two each by Harvey Kucnn. Gus Zernial and Ossie Virgil. Charlie Beamon and Billy O'Dell were the losers. (1st game) Detroit ion 004 100 nil n Baltimore 210 000 020 5 15 1 Foylack. Aguirre '8'. Fischer 19) and Wilson. Beamon. Loes '8i, Lehman '91 and Ginsberg Winner Foytack ' 7-8 ' . Loser Beamon d-2. HR Harris. '2nd gamel Detroit . 020 100 101 5 9 0 Baltimore 200 000 100 3 9 0 Susce. Aguirre '9', Fischer '9' and Hegan. O'Dell. Zuverink 18). Lehman '9 and Triandos. Winner -Susce '2-0'. Loser O'Dell '8-10'. Nats 2AKC 0-2 Camilo Pascual struck out 10 hatters and pitched a six-hitter for the Senators in the opener and John Romonsky. 29-year-old rookie called up Friday I r 0 m Charleston, yielded three hits and two runs in seven innings to win the nightcap. Eddie Yost knock ed in three runs for Washington in the second game with two homers. '1st game) Kansas City 000 000 OSS 0 fi 0 Washington 200 000 OOx 2 7 2 Terry. Grim U, Tomaxifc '8 and House. Pascual '5-4' sk4 Courtney. Loser Terry H-J '2nd game) Kansas City M I'M - 4 I W.hing'M MS M- 1 Carver, oxrmaa '' an Wi. Rnmoinsky. ' (S im ("sv nov. Wiener Isv44f i-t . Lo'fOr-Garr '. HIUYs'. t. Trifea 9, Boston 4 Woody Held drove in five runs with a homer and a single for the Indians who got six-hit pitch ing from Cal McLish. Pete Run nels collected three of the falter ing Red Sox' hits. Cleveland 4n 113 000 9 in 1 ;; Brewer ij-a'. nn Mem. O Newspaper SPOT ADS are inexpensive reaeatetl daily Ma Today's Sport Fraley. Heifer Bow To Top Golf Greats By OSCAR FRAI.EY WHITE PLAINS, N Y. l'PI Progress is fine, electric lights are better than kerosene lamps and modern, baseball is a thing of machined beauty hut when it comes to golf, it don't. mean a thing if you ain't got that sw ing. Al Hefler. the jumbo-sized tele vision announcer, and old Fear less proved this to the complete satisfaction nf a breathless world today. We did it by absorbing a in and 8 shellacking from a pair of golf pros named Jay Hebert and Mike Turnesa at Knollwood Country Club. Such a rout might be expected under ordinary conditions but we figured we had these two guys on the- hip. Hebert and Turnesa played with Ine old-fashioned hickory-shafted clubs, most of them 75 years old. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB San Francisco 44 37 .543 Milwaukee 42 38 .538 'i St. Louis 39 38 .506 3 Chicago 42 41 .506 3 Philadelphia 38 38 .500 3'i Pittsburgh 39 43 .476 54 Cincinnati 37 41 .474 5'2 Los Angeles 37 44 .457 7 Sunday's Results San Francisco 6. Milwaukee 5 Chicago 3-2, Philadelphia 2-1 Pittsburgh 10-8. St. Louis 8-6 Los Angeles 3-3. Cincinnati 0-2 AMERICAN LEAGUE W Pet. GB New York , Detroit Boston Kansas City Chicago Cleveland Baltimore 53 27 40 39 40 40 38 41 39 42 39 44 37 42. 35 46 .663 .506 12Vi .500 13 .481 14'i .481 144 470 154 468 154 432 184 Washington Sunday's Results Chicago 7-4, New Y'ork 4-5 (second game- 10 innings t Cleveland 9, Boston 4 Detroit 6-5. Baltimore 5-3 Washington 2-4, Kansas City 0-2 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W l Pet. GB San Diego Phoenix Vancouver Salt Lake City Portland Spokane Seattle Sacramento 54 36 55 38 52 40 45 41 39 45 40 51 .600 .591 4 .565 3 .523 7 .464 12 .440 144 38 54 .413 17 35 53 .398 18 Sunday's Results Vancouver 3-7, San Diego 4-3 Salt Lake 4-7. Portland 3-4 Seattle 10-0. Sacramento 9-1 Phoenix 8, Spokane 0 NORTHWEST LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Yakima Lewiston Wenatchee Eugene Tri-City Salem ' 9 5 9 6 9 6 9 8 7 10 4 12 .643 .600 .600 .529 .412 .250 Sunday's Results , Wenalchee 51. Y'akima 2-7 Salem 5-7. Tri-City 1-8 Lewiston 1-2, Eugene 6-4 BRL Linescores Sunday's Results R H E F.astside Electric 102 6514 5 1 Chiloquin 020 00 2 3 2 Palmberg and Saks: Jackson Ochoa (4) and Ochoa. Brewer '4' R H E Henley 303 3211 7 3 Lakeview No. 2 250 02 9 4 4 DeGrande and Crumrine; L. Pe ters and Faris. R H E Lakeview No. 1 100 102 2 Superior Troy 000 011 1 Cossey and Mobley; Spencer and Webb. R H E M. L. Johnson 130 004 917 20 Tulelake 150 010 0 7 3 6 Cassel. Brinsnn '2, Burke '21 ad Sparlin; Oelerich and Mauch. Home run Sherm Allen, M. L. Johssrx. iMtu ncaan ii T.W Tfttl U'Pl' New Yd Y s a II s t iafrMkr sWhhy Irwcm nwm a fmtw far IV was1 Urm turn' cn bis vifa ivt t s a va'(S ia itfytfra. N. j. Gale Cisco. Raleigh. N. C. re lief pitcher, played football at Ohio Slate University. TV SERVICE . COMPLETE All Mokti . All Model. BARABOO'S 1)1 L Mala PK. 4-461 Motorola Dealer HERALD AND Parade and the old-time dead ball. Heifer nd old Fearless used those gleaming, polished Spalding woods and irons which look as if they came from Tiffany's. Bui, as the old saying goes, you can't make a silk evening bag out of a oorker's ear. f SCORES ARE SECRET In the interest of self respect 'and because the 250-pound Hei fer held a ham-sized fist under my schnozzle) our scores will for ever remain a deeper and darker secret than sign language at the bottom of a well. As one fistic manager remarked alter a disas trous bout, "We shoulda stood in bed." But our hopes were higher than our now depleted funds when we saw the equipment which our two pigeons had to play. Those clubs looked as if they had been made about the time Mary Queen of Scots invented the first pair of lady s golf slippers. The shafts were cracked. The grips were of a leather as slick as a carnival hustler. The heads were rusted like a nine-year-old's. ears in potato diggin' time and the whole collection looked as if it had been rescued from a hock shop in the Gay 90 s. It says 'B.C. on this putter. moaned HehcYt, one of golfs top louring professionals. "It wasn't necessary to stamp it because this thing couldn't have been made A.D.' " Then, as Ihey waggled their wil lowy, creaking weapons on the first lee, we slipped over what we thought was the clincher. We made 'em use sand lees, too. So what happened? Personally, I don't believe it yet. ANCIENT VS. MODERN Hebert assumed the honors and cracked that "dead ball' 220 yards right smack down the mid dle. I can attest to that 220 yards because, alter two shots wih mv modern, high compression pellet, 1 still was exactly 20 yards be hind him and I am known inter nationally as a 100-yard man. Things got no better fast. Jay and Mike played those ancient slicks with such precision that Spalding must be thinking today of going back to the hickory shaft Turnesa added insult to injury on the 362-yard seventh hole when he hit his second shot into the pond and then used a club identified as something" -to hole out for a par anyhow. 11 didn t matter. Hebert knocked in an eight-footer with a poato masher putter for a birdie. lleber wound up with a one- over-par 37-3572. Turnesa shot himself a 38-3674 and observed that "with good slicks, Ihe way we played today we both would have broken my course record of 64." As I said, it don't mean a thing if you ain't got that swing. Briefs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS GOLF WETHERSFIELD, Conn.-Jack Burke Jr., nf Kiamesha Lake. N.Y., captured Ihe Insurance City Open with a 268. CHICAGO Don Sikes, Univer sity of Florida law studenl. de- (eatew Bob Ludlow of Indianapn- 3 and 2. and won Ihe National Puhlinx title. MINNEAPOLIS Patty Berg of Minneapolis captured the Amer ican Championship Women's Open with a 288. TENNIS TORONTO - The U.S. advanced In the final round of the Ameri can Zone Davis Cup competition by running up a 3-0 lead over Canada. TRACK LONDON Brian Hewsnn set a British half-mile record of 1:48 3 in beating Australia's Herb El liott. RACING INGLEWOOD. Calif. Gallant Man '$21 won the $162,100 Gold Cup at Hollywood Park. NEW YORK Nasco '$39.80 was victorious in the Saranac Handicap at Jamaica. Charlie Warren Picks Webfoots EUGENE 'API Charlie War ren. 6-5, South Eugene High School basketball star, said Saturday he will enroll this fall at the Univer sity jf Oregna. where his father, Jan, (re was heid coach. ffc sid he hdP selected Oregon over Oi schools, including Idaho. Washington. Colorado and the University of Portland. Warren also starred in two .ither sports in high school. SIERRA DRILLING & BIT CO. Rotary Exploration Open Pit Drilling Core Drilling TOM MORLEY WH 7-4T71 TA 7-4 Lakeview. Ore. 431 Hill Mr-t Rtne, Stv6 NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. Klamath Wins Kubs Whip Scott Locals Top GP For Title SOUTHERN OREGON JR. LEGION LEAGUE W L Pel. GB Klamath Falls Grants Pass Medford 7 1 5 2 2 3 2 4 0 6 .874 .714 14 .400 3 4 .333 4 4 .000 6 Central Point Lakeview Sunday's Results Klamath 5-1. Grants Pass 1-8 (first game counts in league standings' Hi Hatfield's Klamath Falls American Legion Junior Baseball club clinched the District 3 South ern Oregon Junior Legion baseball championship at Grants Pass Sun day afternoon by dclealing Ihe host Cavemen 5-1 in the first and count ing game of a doubleheader. The win Ihe second in two days for Klamath assured Hatfield's nine of the league title regardless of the outcome of next week's Grants Pass-Mcdford league fray. This is Ihe first legion title for Klamath Falls in three years. Klamath, under the sponsorship of Easlside Electric and Superior Troy Laundry, now meets North Bend, winner of the District 3 Coast League race. The first of a three-game scries will probably be played here Sunday. July 27 with the second game billed for North Bend. If a third game is neces sary, it too will be played in North Bend. Hatfield has two practice games scheduled Ihis week. Wednesday night Ihe Chiloquin Cubs of the Klamath Basin Independent League will be at Gem Stadium lor a sin gle game, and Friday night the legion club may face Ihe Babe Ruth League All-Stars from the American League. Sunday at Grants Pass, Blake GriggJ turned back Mel Ingram's club (or the second time in as many weeks, this time on a bril liant three-hitler. Outside of a sin gle second inning run by Grants Pass when the Cavemen picneo up two of their three hits Griggs was in complete control. Besides Ihe fine pitching. Hat field also got a four-for-lour hitting show from Eslin Kiger and time ly base hits by Steve Binney and Griggs. n Ihe first inning. Mgor ana Bill Worlein singled with two out. Binnev cleared the bases with a double down the right field line before Grants Pass starter Dick ' No-Hit I Hayes could put down the Klamath rally. A single run in the second came when Boh Yunck was safe on an error and advanced the rest of Ihe way on a sacrifice, an error and a passed ball. Griggs aided his own cause in the sixth by lashing oul a one-run triple scoring Yunck who had walked belore him. Griggs scored minutes later on an error. After the second inning when the Cavemen scored their only. run. Griggs allowed just one runner to reach third and only two got as far as second while ho set 15 of the last 19 batters down. Griggs had seven strikeouts while walk ing only one. In the non-counting game. Grants Pass scored twice in the first and five times in the second off starter Keith Ferrell lo sew-up Ihe contest early. Boh Patterson homered for Grants Pass with the bases loaded to highlight the second-inning up rising against Ferrell, who gave up live scattered hits, for Klamath in the second game. Saturday afternoon at Lakeview. Klamath notched another league win by dumping Ihe Lake County legion team 16-3 behind the two-hit pitching efforts nf Dean Dunson and Ricky Adkins. Dunson worked Ihe first four inning, while Adkins hurled hitless ball in Ihe final three. Klamath broke up a 1-1 tie in Ihe scrnnd inning with three runs then iced the game with six more scored in the sixth inning Herrera. Griggs. Binney and Worlein each had two hits for Klamath. Linescores: R H I 131.106 2 16 13 : 100 110 0 3 2 Klamath Lakeview Dunson. Adkins '5 and Moore Smith and Murphy. R H Klamath 210 002 0 5 9 I Grants Pass 010 000 0 1 3 4 Grtgcs and Moore; Hayes and Hunnicutt. R H E Klamath 010 00 1 3 5 Grants Pass 250 Ix 8 5 1 Ferrell and Moore; Cole and Longncc ker. BALANCE 99: Per Wheel Weights Extra With This Ad Cunningham & Rickey Motors So. 7th and Commercial I ORECOV TIME OUT "It Kavrd our marriage. I just refused In live under the same roof will. Ed the davit he tails to break ion!' Merrill Raps Alturas T For KBI Win KLAMATH BASIN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Lnkeview 4 1 .800 Chiloquin Townies 4 4 2 2 1 1 .667 .667 Merrill Alturas Chiloquin Cubs .5011 14 .333 2 .250 2 Malm Beatty .167 34 Sunday's Results Merrill 21, Alturas 7 Beatty forfeited two games In Lakeview Malin forfeited one game to Chil oquin Cubs Merrill won the only game played in the Klamath Basin Independent League Sunday afternoon but there were enough runs and base hits in the single game to cover the whole league. Merrill defeated Alturas 21-7 in a slugfest. In the other scheduled aelion. Realty forfeited two games to Lake view, while Chiloquin's Cubs won a single game via forleit from Malin. The Chiloquin Townies were idle this week. In the Merrill-Alturas game. John Hunneeutl went the distance scattering 11 base hits over Ihe Alturas lineup. He had more than enough help from Ted Ammcrman and Lorcn Wade who pounrten out home runs. Ammerman clouted Ihe ball for a three-run homer while Wade picked up two fourmasters one a three-run blast, tne oiner a grand slammer. Linescore: R II E 23 4 11 5 Merrill 21 Alturas 7 Hunnecult and Taylor: Jerry Glnsler, Foot (31, John Glostcr (61 and Dorris. Kaline Injured By Pitched Ball RALTIMUHK. Md. IUPP UUl- ficlder Al Kaline of the Detroil I'igers was injured Sunday when he was struck on the right wrist hv a pitch thrown by Baltimore Orioles pitcher Charley Beamnn. Orioles physician Dr. Erwin Mayer said Kaline had escaped any fractures. He said it would be in lo Kaline himself lo say when he will relurn lo ine lineup. KENTUCKY OLD U "jQ jpl HP Jill 0 tm to find a greater bourbon anywhere ! THE fXDHEMlTGE CO., tOU'SViLLE. KY DISTRIBUTED BY NU10NAI DISTILLERS PPOCUCX COMPANY. 86 PPW Le gioii C Valley KF Victory By Martin, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Yreka Weed 7 3 7 3 7 4 6 4 2 8 1.7 .700 .700 .636 .600 .200 .125 Mount Shasta Klamath Falls Dunsmuir Scott Vallev Sunday's Results Klamath Falls 13. Scott Valley 1 Weed 6, Yreka 5 Mount Shasta 11, Dunsmuir 3 With the bats of Donn Taucher and Dorm Martin speaking loud and clear, manager lrv Whitt's Klamath Falls Kubs snapped their three-game Northern California League losing streak Sunday after noon at Fort Jones as the Kubs whipped the Scott Valley Slars 13-1. Going into the Sunday game with the Stars, Klamath had dronned three straight games. B u t wilh Taucher and Martin rannine the ball for nine base hits between (hem and little Wayne Huonaka hurling a live - hitter. Klamath shook off (be slump wilh ease. In other league action Sunday. Inst place Yreka -lost to Weed 6-5 on the Sons home ground while Dunsmuir lost another battle, this one to third-place Mount Shasta by a 11-3 margin. The Klamath win was the second in two days for Ihe Kubs. Satur day night at Gem Stadium, Whitt's club whipped the strong Prineville M'uu-pros i-i in a good game sparked hy the brilliant pitching ol newcomer Gerry Burcher, who was making his lirst slart for the Kubs since arriving from Fresno Sate College via Los Angeles. Sunday. Martin bloke loose his nig nai lor ine first time this year, blasting Ihe hall for five hits in al-bats, including a double. He also scored four times and had one run balled in. Taucher gave innn wun a inur-lor-live atternoon. all singles thai drove in four Kub scores. Ilironaka not only looked good on the mound, but Ihe ninl- size Japanese southpaw banged oul two hits in three trips to the plale, one good for a double. The Kuhs left litlle doubt in Senlt vaney s mind they were oul, lo shake the slump yesterday al Fort ones, four runs in the first in ning set the game up for Ihe isi tors Horn hlamath Falls. Srnii Valley's lone run came in the third on hod Marlm s single and a one uase nil by Dale Evans. I hen Mamalh roared bark wilh inree in ino fourth. to in the sixth three in Ihe seventh and one in the ninth. Aflcr Scott Valley scored ils run in Ihe third, Ilironaka only faced Ji nailers in the last six innines Martin got Ihrce hits off Wnvne wilh the olher Iwo hits holh sin. gles going to Evans and Ed La pa rie. Martin and Taucher sinelrd in Ihe first inning and both scored as did Ron Conner and Floyd Linricftiian. Conner walked and I.inderman was safe on an out field error. In the fourth, calcher Bob Kelly led off wilh a walk and was sacrificed lo second by Hir onaka. Conner was safe on a field er s choire and Martin drove Kelly nome wun nis inira Int. nl Ihe game. Taucher sent Conner home wilh the second hit of the day and Martin scored later on Georee Hanson's inlield out. The troublesome (wosonie of STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY IOR6T . u p OLD HERMITAGE BRAND mvTIXKY STRMf.Ht 601RBON WHISKEY In 0 Hit." "t Cm'" PAGE NINE rWBi Sparked Toucher Martin and Taucher also figured in the sixth and seventh inning runs. Conner opened the sixth with walk, Martin followed with his double and Taucher drove both runners home with a single. In the seventh, Ilironaka doubled with one away, Conner singled home Hiron- aka and came home following Mar tin's filth hit of the afternoon and Taucher's single. Whitt singled home Hanson in the ninth wilh the Kubs' final run. Hanson had walked and moved to second on a base on balls to Fran Miller setting the stage (or Whitt's blast. Saturday night at Gem Stadium. Burcher looked very good as he slruckoiit 12 while not giving up a single walk. Burcher was guilty of issuing three balls to a batter only wice in the nine innings he worked. The two hits off the Fresno State athlete were both singles, one an imioia scratch hit. The Kubs scored once in the sec ond on singles hy Conner, Willie Dunster and Jerry Burke. In the third, an outfield error slowed Taucher to score. The final two Klamath runs came in Ihe seventh on back-to-back singles by Dunster and Burke and a two-run single by Taucher. The lone run off Burcher came in the fourth on the scratch sin gle, a sacrifice and a Klamath Holding error. Burke had three hits for Klam ath. Dunster two. Roxscore: Klamath Connpr, .111 Martin, an Taurhrr, rf Stars, 13-1 AH II R.BI O A E 3- 1 4-1 4-1 0 8.1 4-1 1-J 0 5-4 14 2-0 1 1-0 0-O 2-0 O 4- 0 1-0 1-0 O i-o o.n o-o o 4-n 1 a 8-0 3 3- 0 0.0 0W1 1 1- l 0-(l 0-0 0 4- n n-o o-i o 2- 1 0-1 1-0 0 .1-0 1-tl 7-1 0 3- 3 1-0 0-3 0 4 - -1 4 13.9 2; s AH H n-111 O A E 3- 0 0-0 0-0 0 4- 1 0-1 S-0 1 4-0 fl-0 0-4 0 2- 0 n-0 2-1 0 0- n n-o o-n n- 3- 0 0-0 8-0 2 1- 0 0.0 1-0 0 2- 1 0-0 2-1 0 1- 0 0-0 0-0 0 4- 0 0-0 S-2 0 2- 0 0-0 2-0 0 3- 3 1-0 4-10 31-3 1-1 21-0 3 4nn 302 30113 001 CKIO 000 1 D Ollvn. of ndrrninn. If MrKfnnr. II anson. in )unater. rl Miller, rf nurki 2b Whltt, 2b Krllv. c Hirfinaka. p Totals Srott Vall-y it-an. rf Kvana. is Flaher. nb Evan. b-D Huff, p Millnn. cf Kilhltr.a. rf I.Hpjulr- c-h. 2b Vinatl. Pnrrlv. If Martin, p-lb rnlali Klamath Srnlt Valley Summary: 2B Martin. Miller. Hlron Akfl, Innmpa pitehed Hironaka 11, .Mar tin S, L. Evans 2. Buff 2. SO by Ilironaka s, Martin 4. L. Evani 1, Ruff a HR oft - Ilironaka 2. Martin S. L Evaih 0. fluff 2. Hits off Ifiron aka ft. Martin 7. I.. Evana fi. null 3. Huns off- Ilironaka I. Martin 7. L. Evans ft. miff I. Wild pitehL. Ev- Passrd Balls Vtnall. Kellv. Left on haspKlamath 8. Svolt Valley 5. I'mpires Durarha and Drrrah. R H E Prineville ooo ion ooo 1 2 2 Klamath Oil 000 200 4 8 2 Lunde and McClain; Burcher and Owings, Kelly (8). R H E 011 000 030 5 12 0 010 004 001 8 8 2 Ewing (6) and Sword; Milliard (8) and E. Yreka Weed Zander, Simmons, Rrnwn. pitwri US)').1 I PROFESSIONAL RODEO July 25-26-27 4 wm'ii'iiiaiiiitjuirsg( YEARS OLD $2 80 pi.vr m 6 MiillHsV'iYtAIIS OlD1? it V s