poet
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Sunday. Julv 27. 1958 Sec. B Pace 1
from the st
Suggestion for the American League to raise money
for the old-timers fund:
m Let the New York Yankees go on tour playing a
team comprised of ex-Yankees now playing in the circuit
with other clubs. And don't kid yourself, there would be
more competition in this type of a set up than there is
now, in the regular league play.
The Yanks, never known to stand pat with a winner,
have picked up and then traded several times over and in
the process have given away some pretty good talent. Some so pood
that Casey Stengel sometimes wishes he had the boys back on his side.
It would be easy to lineup a
ell-rounded team to face t h e
Bronx Bombers on such a tour. I
Take pitchers like Ralph Terry of
Kansas City and Gerry Staley of
the Chicago While Sox to start a
mound staff. If you wanted to in
clude the National League's ex
Yankees, you'd have to give room
to Milwaukee's Lew Burdette.
What about an infield comprised i
or Gus Triandos at first, Billy
Martin at shortstop. Bob Martyn
at second and Jackie Jensen at
third. Martyn and Jensen are out
fielders, but have played in the
infield. Then in the outfield you'd
have to make room for Woody
Held, Bob Cerv and Gene Wood
ling. Two catchers to complete
the-team would be Lou Berberet
and Clint Courtney Triandos could
catch if needed.
Then such utility players as Har
ry Simpson. Billy Hunter, Vic Pow
er and Sherm Lollar wouldn't
hurt the cause.
Fre-senson football games with
stale-wide interest are less than a
month away for those of you in
terested in seeing the pigskin sail
into view for the start of another
sports season.
Portland's Multnomah Stadium
will he the site of a pro football
exhibition game and the annual
Shriner's all-star game within a
teven-day period. Tickets for both
these attractions are now on sale
through mail orders.
Fans interested in seeing the San
Francisco 4uors and Washington
Redskins meet August 23 can get
tickets worth more than their
weight in gold by writing to Ore
gon Sports Attractions, Multnomah
Stadium, Portland. All seats are
reserved for this game the only
pro game scheduled for Portland
this year and are $4 each. List
your preference for seating posi
tion. Applications will be sold on a
first-come, first-served basis.
The Shrine game officials are
boasting about a possible record
breaking attendance for their Aug.
'13 game at the stadium. Ticket
requests for this game can be
made by writing game headquar
ters at 1119 S.W. Park Avenue,
Portland, Oregon. Ticket prices for
this game are $3 and $2 for re
served seats. Again list your seat
ing preference to help select your
favorite position to watch t h e
game.
For those of you planning to
take in the pro game, the Port
land Beavers are playing an after
noon game Saturday. The base-ball-in-lhe-afternnon
and foohall-in-the-evening
program will he lots
of fun for the grounds keepers
who will have less than four hours
to line the field for football play
and put up the goal posts.
There are all- types of tourna
ments and championships for every
known sport and some things that
are questionable as to the degree
of sports they claim.
Medford is going to host a sel
dom heard of meet August R-in
when the Crater Lions Club of that
city sponsors the Western Regional
Water Ski Championships under the
auspices of the American Water
Ski Association. Winners in this
meet will qualify for the nationals.
There will be divisions for top
vater skiers in peewee. juniors,
mens, womens and veterans. Any
one interested in entering the meet
should write Dr. Frank Wilso.i.
Crater Lions Club. Medford for
more entry information.
ine meet win ne nolo at ixar
ender Lake, 15 miles Northeast of
Medford.
Short shots from here, there and
everywhere. . . .
It's going In he Interesting to
see what happens when the Los
Angeles Rams start playing foot
ball in the LA Coliseum . . . before
the Dodgers are through with
baseball ... we can just hear the
public address announcer call out
"first down and pitcher's mound
to go" . . . the baseball hill might
be a handicap to some broken
field runner headed for pay dirt.
There is a strong argument go
. Ing around the majors as to who
is the fastest pitcher today . . .
dome say the Yankees' Ryne Dur
en. others say Philadelphia's Dick
Ferrell ... a recent check of
baseball "people" by NEA shows
a 3-to-l poll favoring Duren. . . .
Those of ynu who watched Sat
urday's game of the day televi
sion battle hrtween the Rnston Red
Snx and Chicago White Snx saw
a real fine example of throwing at
a hatter's head ... In (he lale
Innings. Ted Williams rocketed one
of Turk lown's pitches Into the
right field stands, hut It was foul
... on the very next pitch, Wil
liams took a Ittmhle to the dirt
In keep from gelling beaned . . .
the umpire failed In give a warn
ing n Ted took things Into his
awn hands and stroked a line
drive tingle to right center (or hit
by CLAYTON HANHOH
BILLY MARTIN
could lead ex-Yc
nks
rough treatment. ...
The quote of all quotes? . . .
Following last Monday's TV -fight
referee Teddy Martin was accused
of threatening welterweight Eddie
Lynch. . . . Lynch said Martin
told him he would hit him (Lynch i
if he and Billy Flamino wouldn't
stop clinching and start fighting
the right way . . . says Martin:
"1 didn't threaten to hit him, 1
just told him to cut it out because
I'm a pretty good belter myself"
. . . if that isn't a threat we've
yet to hear one . . . it's probably
lucky for .Martin that Lynch was
red between the eyes at Flamino
or he might have taken time to
pick up Martin's challenge in a
little extracurricular action. . . .
Frilzic Zivic said In a recent
magazine article that to be cham
pion, you have to fight dirty. .
Zivlc should know, he's an old
.hand at it . . . and if his words
arc correct, young Bobby Sean
Inn will be a real great cham
pion . . . when Scanlon defeated
Gale Kerwin in I he TV fight a
week ago, he used everything in
the books except a good straight
right or left hand punch. . . .
Scanlon won the fight, but Ker-
win's cause wasn't aided by the
"lacing" he took in the face or
the holdlng-and-hitting tactics used
by the undefeated Irishman. . . .
It could only happen to Y'ankees.
. . . .Mickey Mantle and Whitey
Ford missed the train that car
ried the New York Yankees to De
troit last Monday evening . . .
manager Casey Stengel said there
would not be a fine or official rep
rimands . . . says Casey, "I could
fine them $1(10 but they wouldn't
miss it, to 1 might arrange an
exhibition game and see that both
of them play the whole game."
Last Thursday evening. Buddy
Bomar. world famous howling
champion, appeared here in an
exhibition at Lucky Lanes. . . .
This coming week. Buddy has a
novel exhibition scheduled at Spo
kane ... a "basebowl" is set
Thursday at Spokane's city base
ball park ... a bowling alley
will be set up between home plate
and the mound and Bomar and
Bill Lillard will meet a pair of
local keglers in an exhibition be
fore the baseball game starts . . .
local sponsors of this event also
announced the alley will be laken
down so as not to hurt the feel
ings of the pitchers who will take
the mound in the Pacific Coast
League encounter to follow.
11 - pSJ;
Northern California League
All-Star Game Slated Today
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
LEAGUE
W L Pel. GB
Weed
Klamath Falls
Yreka
Mount Shasta
Dunsmuir
Scott Valley
.727
.636
.636
.583
.182
.222
Sunday's Schedule
All-Star game at Dunsmuir, 2
No other games scheduled
The Northern California League
teams take time off Sunday alter
noon, but the absence of regular
league play doesn't mean the
league fans will go without base
bail. In fact there will be lots of
action a'. Dunsmuir as the South
and North meet in the league's
annual all-star game.
Game time is billed for 2 o'clock.
Pacific Daylight Time.
Members of the South team are
Klamath Falls. Dunsmuir and
Mount Shasta. On the North side
will be league-leading Weed, Yreka
Cubs
Klamath Legion Club
Beaten By No-Hitter
NORTH BEND The Tower Mo
tor Company junior legion baseball
team of North Bend evened their
sub-district playoff series with
Klamath falls at one game apiece
here Saturday night behind the no-
hit, no-run pitching of Gary Wal
lace, a young righthander who also
stopped Klamath last Wednesday
night after the Southern Oregon
League winners had already sewed
up a 6-4 win at Klamath Falls.
the two teams meet in the all-
important third game of the best-
of-three playoff Sunday afternoon
at 1: JO. Klamath rails manager Hi
Hatfield announced the team would
be leaving for home as soon as Ihe
game was completed and would
arrive late Sunday evening.
Slated to draw starting pitching
chores for the visitors from Klam
ath Falls in Sunday's crucial game
will be righthander Rlake Griggs
who beat North Bend Wednesday
night on six hits. North Bend will
probably start Tom Younkers who
lost the first game of the sub-district
playoff.
The winner will meet Roseburg
at North Bend or Klamath Falls
next Wednesday in the first game
U.S. Distance
Runners Eye
Soviets1 Best
MOSCOW (API -U.S. distance
runners, never an. internationally
feared group, refuse to concede
anything to their Soviet opponents
in the mammoth dual track and
field meet opening Sunday in
lon.non-seat Lenin Stadium.
World track experts sav the So
viet distance runners will run off
and hide from the Americans
ihe races of more than 1,500
meters.
But the U.S. distance men ran
"off in the park somewhere" Sat
urday, hiding special tactics thev
were apparently cooking up for
the 5.000 and 10.000 meter runs
and the 3,000 meter steeplechase
I he steeplechase, won by Hor
ace Ashcnfeltcr at the 1952 Olvm
pic Games in Helsinki, was the
only distance title Americans have
won in the Olympics since loos
No American ollicial would
elaborate on the brief information
about Ihe park. But when Ihe six
U.S. distance runners failed to
train with the rest of the men and
women preparing for the two-day
meet, it appeared the United
States was trying to match Soviet
distance superiority with Ameri
can ingenuity.
It is expected that the Ameri
cans, who have been training vig
orously to improve Iheir stamina
and sprint finishes, will try to stay
with the front-running Russians as
long as possible and then try to
ouikick tnem.
The first test of the U.S. plan
will come tomorrow in the 10.000
meters, the ninth event on the
mnle-female program.
I here are 13 events Sunday and
16 .Monday, including the 5.000
meter and the steeplechase. The
decathlon runs both days.
the American distance entries
are Gordon McKenzie of New
York and Jerry Smartt of Hous
ton in the 10,000; Max Truex
of Los Angeles and Bill Dcllinger
of Eugene. Oregon, in the 5.000;
and Phil Coleman of Champaign
111., and Charlie Jones of Iowa
City in the steeplechase.
But even with Vladimir Kuts
soviet 5.000 and 10.000 meter
Olympic champ, on the sidelines
with stomach trouble, the Amer
ican chances appear slim in Ihe
distance events. The comparative
times of Ihe Soviet entrants all
outdo the Americans' best.
U.S. runners are naturallv fav
orcd in the sprints and middle
distances, r.d Moran of James
City, Pa., and Jim Grelle of Port
land. Ore., the U.S. 1.500 meter
duo. feel they can hold their own
at that distance.
and Scott Valley.
Five members of the Klamath
Falls Kubs will be on Ihe South
team to be directed by Kub man
ager Irv Whitt. The five are
pitcher Dave D'Olivo. infielders
Ron Conner and Dorm Martin and
outfielders Donn Taucher and
'Floyd Linderman. D'Olivo is ex
pected to start on the mound for
Whin's South team.
Other members of the South
squad are catchers Dick Rerensen
ot Mount Shasta and John Mazzie
of Dunsmuir: infielders Mickey
Risberg and Gene English of
Mount Shasta and Peter Ander
son of Dunsmuir: outfielders Rollie
Brooks of Mount Shasta and Gary
Hisey of Dunsmuir: pitchers Bob
Lawary of Mount Shasta and Lar
ry Moulton of Dunsmuir.
The North team members in
rlude: Pitchers George Zander of
Yreka. Bob Martin ot Scott Val
ley and Weed's Gene Milliard: in
fielders Lee Templctnn and Willie
Jones of Yreka, Vince Tallenco
!IRI
Whip Milwaukee, Yanks Win
of another best of three series that
will decide the District 3 champion
ship. The winner of the district fi
nal goes straight into the state
semi-finals.
Saturday night, Wallace had real
fine stuif as he struck out 13
Klamath Falls batters in seven in
nings and walked only two to keep
from hurling a perfect game. Wal
lace walked Bob Yunck in the sec
ond inning and Smiley Herrera in
the fourth. Herrera got as far as
second on a stolen base, but was
thrown out at third attempting an
other theft.
North Bend scored once in the
first, second and third innings to
score more than enough to assure
them of the win to even Ihe play
olf. All three of the scores were
unearned. In the first, Colin
Rush singled, advanced on a base
on balls and scored when Klamath
third baseman Estin Kiger was
charged with an out that would
have ended the inning without a
run for the Towermen.
North Bend picked up nine hits
off Klamath starting pitcher Dean
Dunson in four innings. All were
singles with two going to Terry
Leiniger and Bob Brown.
Keith Ferrell. Klamath relief
pitcher who worked the fifth and
sixth innings, turned in a spectacu
lar job in blanking the hosts, win
ners of 14 of 17 games so far this
year. Ferrell faced only seven bat
ters in the last two innings, strik
ing out five and walking one.
Wallace proved that his fine re
lief work last Wednesday night was
no fluke. He replaced jounkers
who worked four and two-thirds
innings before being knocked out
of the box in the series opener at
Klamath Falls. Wallace faced
seven batters in the last two and
one-third innings and didn't allow
hit. So in all. he has pitched
nine and one third innings of hitless
ball against the Klamath Falls
club, under the sponsorship of
Eastsidc Electric and Superior
Troy Laundry, two Klamath sports-
minded business houses.
Linescore:
R II E
Klamath 000 000 0-0 0 5
North Bend 111 300 x R 9 0
Dunson, Ferrell (51 and Moore
Wallace and Payne.
PCL Linescores
(First game:)
San Diego ooo non 051--6 10 o
Sacramento 000 000 200-2 6 1
Lemon. Brodowski (81 and A.
Jones: Watkins, Ross (81. Kume
i8i and Roselli. W Lemon. L
Watkins.
'Second game:!
Salt Lake Cily loo OOfl 1035 12 1
Vancouver 000 OOfl 0336 12 1
Green. Kildno (8i, Urnuhart '91
and H. Peterson, Nalon t ; Held.
Hughes (8), Wade (91 and Pat
ton, White (81.
W Wade (2-2). L Urqu-
hart (10-7).
Home run Green (1).
Spokane 010 001 100-3 8 0
Seattle 020 010 001-4 10 I
Fowler and Sherry; Surknnt and
Bevan.
W Surkanl, 8-7. L Fowler. 10-9.
Home runs: Seattle, Basinski;
Spokane, Gentile.
'First game:)
Salt Lake City noi ooo 0 -2 5 1
Vancouver 220 300 x--7 8 0
Lamahe. Hardison (2', Srhmees
'5i. and H. Peterson; Heman an8
White.
W Heman '8-61. L Lamabe
'4-41.
Home runs Dyck (9 and 10.
'Second game:)
San Diego (Kifl 012 0-3 7 1
Sacramento 000 000 0-0 4 3
Lary and A. Jones; Mesa and
Dalrymple.
Portland mil 000 200 3 12 1
Phoenix 202 502 12x 14 18 1
Mayer, Lary '4'. Lohrke '5i,
Brenner '6i and Neal: Barclay
and Jenkins.
L Mayer.
and Ray Brown of Weed and Ed
Fisher of Scott Valley; outfielders
Jim Kutzer and Lew Fasoletti of
Yreka, Raul Perez of Weed and
Dale Evans of Scott Valley; catch
ers Rod Vinall of Scott Valley and
the hard-hitting Eli Brown of
Weed.
Last year's all-star classic was
won by the North, which included
Klamath Falls players. Whitt sees
a good chance for the Kubs to
be on the winning side this year
playing with the South.
Assisting Whitt with the South
club is John Carroll of Mount
Shasta. Directing Ihe North are
John Hitchcock and Jack Beneke
of Yreka.
This year's all-star game is ex
pected to attract a good crowd
and could develop into one of the
best star clashes ever plaved in
the league's history. There is plen
ty ot hitting power and some good
pitching to see which is more im
portant to the game of baseball-
pitching or hitting.
:i
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pel. GI
Milwaukee
San Francisco
Chicago
Cincinnati
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
Los Angeles
51 41
51 41
48 48
45 47
554
.554
.500
.489
44 47 .484 6'i
45 48
41 46
.484 fi'i
.471 7'i
43 50 .462 84
Saturday's Results
San Francisco 1. Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 7, Milwaukee 4
Los Angeles 10, Philadelphia 4
Cincinnati 2. St. Louis 1
Friday's Results
Chicago 5-1, Milwaukee 4-4
St. Louis 5-2. Cincinnati 4-3
Pittsburgh 10, San Francisco 0
Los Angeles 7, Philadelphia 3
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. C.B
6.1 30 .677
47 45 .511 15'j
47 45 .511 lS'i
New York
Boston
Baltimore
Chicago
Kansas City
46 40 .484 18
43 48 .473 19
Detroit
43 49
44 52
40 53
.467 194
.458 20' 2
.421 24
Cleveland
Washington
Saturday's Results
Chicago 11, Boston 6
New York 8, Cleveland 3
Detroit 9. Washington 1
Baltimore 4. Kansas City 3
Friday's Results
Chicago 4. Boston 0
Washington 4, Detroit 3
New York 6, Cleveland 0
Baltimore 8, Kansas City 3
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Vancouver
Phoenix
62 45
.579
.577
.573 1
.520 6
.470 11
60 44
59 44
52 48
47 53
47 60
45 59
44 61
San Diego
Salt Lake Cily
Portland
Seattle
.439 15
.433 15'i
.419 17
Spokane
Sacramento
Saturday's Results
Vancouver 7-6, Salt Lake City 2-5
San Diego 6-3. Sacramento 2-0
Phoenix 14. Portland 3
Seattle 4. Spokane 3
Fridays Results
Vancouver 5. Salt Lake City
(Completion of a game sus
pended April 201
Vancouver 3-4. Salt Lake City 0-0
Seattle 7-7, Spokane 5-4
Phoenix 5. Portland 4 (11 innings)
Sacramento 7, San Diego 3
Basinettes
Top Pennants
Klamath Falls' Basinettes pulled
out one of the biggest upsets in the
slate's women's snflhall season at
Gem Stadium Saturday night as
they knocked off the touted Dotty
Moore Pennant Shop club from
Portland 5-3 in an exhibition game.
Klamath nitrher .In Adreon host
ed Dotty Moore's all-American I
hurler Doris Barrett in a brilliant
pitchers duel. The Portlanders
were able to garner only two hits
ntf Adreon s offerings. Klamath
touched Barrett for six base hits
including two each hv Chris Shear
er and Ruth Hagelstein. the latter
a former member of the Pennant
Shop team.
Dotty Moore s team took a 1-0
lead in the first then went ahead
3-0 with single runs in the third
and fourth innings. In the Klam
ath half of the fourth, two Ba
sinettes scored to cut the margin
down lo a one run deficit.
In the filth inning Dee Brown
was sale on an infield hit and ad
vanced on a fielding error. Sharon
Anderson walked and Darlene Per
ry singled scoring one run that lied
the game at 3-3. Hagelstein came
through with another single that
scored two more runs as the local
girls soft ball club moved ahead
of their highly favored visitors.
The Portland team got one run
ner on base in the sixth inning.
hut Adreon stopped any possible
rally short by getting the side out
without further damage.
Linescore:
R II E
Pennant Shop 101 100 03 2 1
Basinettes 000 230 x 5 7 6
Barrett and Sparks; Adreon and
Chase.
Norkus Bows
To McMurty
TACOMA (,B - Irish Pat Mc
Murtry chopped out a unanimous
10-round decision Saturday night
OVPr Iflllnh hill clllhhnrn fharlift
Norkus of Port Washington. N. V.
McMurtry, a Tacomnn, weighed
iar; isorkus 103.
There was no knockdowns, Mc
Murtry coming closest in the sixth
when he whipped a left hook that
staggered the New Yorker. It was
the worst round for Norkus, who
hung on desperately while Mc
Murtry, trying for his 27th kayo,
punished his man with both hands.
Rights to the head and body
shook Norkus again in the ninth,
hut Charlie was wary and keeping:
.Mr.vtiirtry at long range.
Both judges and the referee
gae McMurtry Ihe full count on)
eery round under the in-poinl
system. The Associated Press
card had three rounds even, with
McMurtry winning the rest.
Braves Dumped 7-4;
Boosts
MILWAUKEE (AP) The Chi
cago Cuhs, backed up by the tack
sharp relief pitching of Marcelino
Solis who hurled four-hit, shutout
all for 6 2-3 innings, beat the
Milwaukee Braves 7-4 Saturday.
The loss, coupled with San Fran
cisco s 1-0 decision over Pitts
burgh, dropped the Braves into a
tie with the Giants for the Na
tional League lead. Each team
has an identical 51-41 record.
A county stadium crowd of 31..
150. including Braves' owner Lou
Perini, watched the 28-year-old
Solis register his first Major
League triumph in relief of start
er Dick Drott. Solis, a southpaw
recently purchased from Fort
Worth, has lost one.
The losep for the sixth time with
out a victory was Gene Conley,
who spelled starter Lew Burdette
in the second and gave up the
Cub's final three runs. Conley
clipped Droit lor his first Major
League homer in the second. Bob
by Thomson hit his 12th for the
Cuhs.
Chicago 310 100 0117 20 0
Milwaukee 211 000 0004 9 1
Drott, Solis '31 and S. Taylor;
Burdette, Conley (2, McMahon
9) and Crandall. W Solis. L
Conley.
Home runs Chicago. Thom
son (12th of year). Milwaukee,
Conley (1st).
NY 8, Tribe 3
CLEVELAND (API - Bill Skow
ron drove in four runs with a pair
of singles Saturday as Ihe New
York Yankees rolled to their sev
enth straight triumph 8-3 over the
Cleveland Indians. .
The victory boosted Ihe Y'anks'
runaway American League lead
to 154 games their biggest
margin of the season.
The Yanks led 4-3 going into
Ihe ninth but turned on the power
for four runs with six singles and
h walk off relief pitchers Don Mos-
si and Morne Martin, both left
handers. New York 012 000 1048 12 1
Cleveland 200 000 Hill 3 7 2
Maas, Shantz (71, Ditmar (71
and Howard, Woodeshick; Bell
i8i, Mossi (9), Martin (9) and
Nixon, Porter (81.
W Maas. L Woodeshick.
Giants 1, Bucs 0
PITTSBURGH (AP) .The San
Francisco Giants, shutout in Iheir
last two starts, turned the tables
cm the Pittsburgh Pirates Satur
day with a 1-0 triumph and moved
into a first place lie with Mil
waukee in the Nalional League
race.
Southpaw Johnny Anlonelli
gained his 1 1th victory against
eight defeats hut needed help
Irom veteran Marv Grissom. The
oss ended a four-game Pirates
winning streak.
Major League
Piay This Week
AMKRir'AN I.KAfil K
Monday WnshinRlon At Chirano:
Now York at Kansas Cily; Boston at
Delroit
Tursdny WnshirtRton at Chicago;
New York at Kanxat Cily; Boston at
Detroit; Baltimore at Cleveland,
Wednesday Washington at Chicago:
New York a( Kansas Cily; Boston at
Detroit; Baltimore at Cleveland.
Thursday Washington at Chicago;
New York at Kansas City; Boston at
Detroit: Baltimore at Cleveland.
Friday New Yrk t Chicago:
Washington at Kansas City: Baltimore
ai ueiroii; unnton at Cleveland.
S.iturdav New York at Chicago
Washington at Kansac Cily; Baltimore
at ueiron; rinton at Cleveland.
Snndav New York at Chicago;
Wa-hmgtnn at Kansas City; Baltimore
at Dctroil: Bnstnn at Cleveland (lit.
NATIONAL LKAfil K
Monday No game scheduled.
Tuesday San Francisco at Cincin
nati: Los Angeles at Milwaukee; St
Louis at Philadelphia; Chicago at
pjtt.hurgh.
Wednesday San Francisco at Cin
cinnati. Los Angeles at Milwaukee:
St. Louis at Philadelphia; Chicago at
Pittsburgh
Thursday San Franrisco at Cincin
nati: Los Angeles at Milwaukee; St
Louis at Philadelphia; Chicago at
Piiishurgh.
Friday Los Angeles at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Milwaukee; Chicago
at Philadelphia; St. Louii al PjlU
burgh Satiuday Lo Angelea at Cincinnati;
Ran Francisco at Milwaukee; Chicago
at Philadelphia; St. Louis at Pi t ta
bu re h
Sunday-Ln, Angeles at Cincinnati
'2). San Francisco at Milwaukee '2i;
ChiraRo at Philadelphia i2; St. Louis
al Pitlsburgh tit.
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Ph. TU 4-785d First Hanqcr On Left
Kinqslcy Field
Playoff
Loop Lead
Singles by Bob Schmidt and An-
lonelli, a sacrifice and a long fly
ball by Willie Kirkland produced
Ihe lone run for the Giants in
Ihe third.
San Fran. no I ooo ooo i 7 0
Pittsburgh 000 000 0000 8 0
Anlonelli, Grissom (7) and
Schmidt; Law and Foiles. W
Antonelli.
Reds 2, Cards 1
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Little Har
vey Haddix pitched the Cincinnati
Redlegs back into the first divi
sion in the lightly-packed National
League race Saturday night with
an eight-hit 2-1 victory over the
St. Louis Cardinals.
Cincinnati 000 100 100 2 5 0
SI. Louis 010 000 000-1 8 1
Haddix and Bailey; Mizell.
Brnsnan 18) and Smith. L Mi
zell.
Home Runs Cincinnati, Whis
enant (5). St. Louis, Ennis (2).
Bums 10, Phils 4
PHILADELPHIA ( AP) - Firsl
Baseman Gil Hodges, veteran
Dodger who has been limping
around the National League with
a .239 batting average, exploded
for four hits and drove in five i
runs to pace Los Angeles to
10-4 victory over the Philadelnhia !
Phillies Saturday night.
Boh Bowman homered for Phila
delphia. Los Angeles 400 002 02210 13 0
Philadelphia 001 010 002 4 7 1
Koufax and Roseboro; Sanford.
Hearn (D, Morchead (8) and Sa
watski. L Sanlord.
Home runs Los Angeles, Hodges
'141. Philadelphia, Bowman (61.
Chi 11, Boston 6 j
CHICAGO ( AP) The Chicago
While Sox, paced by the slugging
of Sherm Lollar. Jim Rivera and
Jim Landis, kayoed previously un
beaten Boston right-hander Ike
Delock Saturday and rolled to an
U-6 victory behind a 15 hit attack.
Unbeaten since last August and
holder of a 10-0 record, Delock
was knocked out in a five-run
fifth. He had won 13 straight since
the same While Sox defeated him
Aug. 24, .1957.
Boston 000 015 000 6 11 1
Chicago 012 030 30x 11 15 1
Delock. Wall (5', Fornieles (6)
Kicly . (7) and White; Moore,
Staley (6), Lown (61, Wynn (9)
and Lollar. W Moore. L De-
lock.
Home runs Chicago. Lollar
13lh of, year), Rivera (5th).
Orioles 4, KC 3
KANSAS CITY I AP) - Lelty
.lack Harshman hit a home run
for Baltimore Saturday night but
had to have pitching help from
Billy Loes and Disaer O'Dell in
the ninth inning before the Ori
oles made off with a 4-3 victory
over the Kansas City Athletics.
Baltimore 200 010 1004 7 2
Kansas City 000 000 1113 9 0
Harshman, Loes (9. O'Dell (!l
and Triandos; Davis. Herbert (71.
Daley i!l and Smith. W Harsh
man. I. Davis. i
Home runs Baltimore. Trian
dos Mill. Harshman '4). Kan
sas City, Demaestri (3). i
Tigers 9, Nats 1 i
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit
Tigers ended a five-game losing1
streak Saturday, beating the
Washington Senators ill behind
rookie pitcher Herb Moford's first
American League victory and Al
Kalinr's lusty hitting.
Kaline drove home three runs
with his 1 1th homer, a single and
a double.
The side-arming Mofnrd. who
won one game in a brief 1055 stint
with Ihe St. Louis Cardinals, had
little trouble with the lowly Sen
ators. He went all the way and
limited them to six well-scattered
hits.
Washington not oral ooo 1 6 2
Detroit ' I .'in 010 40x 9 12 0
Romonosky, (iriggs (5), Valen
tinelti (71 and Fitzgerald; Molord
and Wilson. L Romonosky.
Home Hun Detroit, Kaline
lllh of year).
than any other Aircrolr
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