Tl'ESDAY. .U:LY 2P. 19.13
PAGE EIGHT
HERALD A.VD NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
County
Fina
Stars
(Sain
State
Safe Ruth
Lakeview Boy Hero
In 7-6 Semi Triumph
By WAYNE SCOTT
(Special Dispatch Via
The Associated Press)
PORTLAND In what went
Into the books as the most thrill
ing ball name of the Oregon State
Babe Ruth Tournament to date,
Gary Peters. Horn I.akeview, wal
loped a last-inning, two-out, three
ball, two-strike pitch into short
left field that scored two runs to
give the Klamath County All-Stars
a 7-6 victory over Mid-Portland
No. 1 in the first game of semi
final play at Lents Field Monday
night.
The win, the second in Portland
for the County nine, pushed them
Into the championship game to
night at 9 o'clock, when they face
Portland's Southeast National on
the Lents diamond. Should the
Klamath County crew get past
Southeast they will have earned
the right to represent Oregon as
state champions in the Pacific
Northwest R e g i o n a 1 s slated
for Klamath Falls starting August
6.
In Monday night's thriller, Pe
ters. who had come into the boll
game in the last half of the sixth
stanza as a replacement for his
brother, Larry Peters in left field,
waited until the last possible mo-
ment, then smashed a blow that
might have gone for extra bases
if anyone had waited to sec what
had happened. The happy young-
iter was swarmed over by team
mates, coaches and fans, seconds
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
New York
Boston
Baltimore
Chicago
Kansas City
Cleveland
Detroit
fi4 32
48 41!
47 46
47 SO
44 49
46 52
44 51
42 56
.667
.511 15
.51)5 IS'i
.465 17'i
.473 18'2
.4(111 I!)
.41.3 Ifl'i
.4211 23
Washington
Monday's Results
Detroit 5. Boston 4
Chicago 6. Washington 5
New York 14, Kansas City 7
Only games scheduled.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W I. Pel. GB
Milwaukee
San Francisco
Chicago
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
52 41
53 42
48 4!l
46 48
46 48
45 48
42 48
43 51
,5.i!l
.558
.4(15
.489
.489
.484
.467
.457
Philadelphia
Los Angeles
Monday's Results
San Francisco 3-2, Philadelphia 2-1
Only games scheduled
PACIFIC COAST LEAGl'E
W I. Pet. C.B
Vancouver 64 46 .582
Phoenix 62 45 .579 'j
San Diego 60 46 .566 2
Salt Lake City 33 51 .510 8
Portland 47 56 .456 13'4
Spokane 47 60 .439 154
Sacramento 47 61 .435 16
Seattle 47 62 .431 lG'j
Monday's Results
San Diego 4, Portland 1
Sacramento 7, Phoenix 6
Vancouver 8, Spokane 5
NORTHWEST l.EAGl'E
W I. Pet.
Lfwislnn 18 10
Yakima 17 11
Tri-City 17 14
Wennlchee 15 14
Eugene 14 17
Salem 8 23
.H4:i
.6111
.548
.317
.452
.258
Monday's Results
Yakima 4, Salem 3 1 10 innii
MINOR LEAGUE
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
INTERNATIONAL l.EAGl'E
Milwaukee Braves iNl.t 3. Inter
national All .Stars 2 'exhibition
AMERICAN ASSN.
Wichita 1, Minneapolis 0 U0 in
ningo
Louisville 6, Denver 3 U0 inninRS
Charleston 4. Omaha 0
TEXAS l.EAGl'E
Austin 12. Dallas 6
Fort Worth 7. Tulsa fi (10 innings1
Victoria 7. Houston 3
Corpus Christ i 5. San Antonio :
SOlTHEItN ASSN.
Atlanta at Memphis, odd rain
Little Rock 5, Birmingham 4
Special Deer Shoot
Season Set By Calif
SAN FRANCISCO I AIM - Spe
cial deer seasons in districts ol
six counties have been set by the
California Fish and Game Com
mission, which authorized issu
ance of 7.KH.S permits for the
hunts.
Although the special seasons
were set up Monday to cut down
(he number ol does that are oer
gracing ranges and damaging
crops, bucks as well nuy he shot
In I wo of the distticts.
Counties, districts, dates and
number of penuiis authorised:
Modoc County Sept. 27-Oct. 2.1.
Total of 1.760 permits. Vn in the
Interstate Zone. Rwi in West War
ner and 3.10 in Ea-t Wat ner, :l2
lo he offered on lust ionic, fust
served basis at Mimas
Los Angeles County ()i t. 1119.
after Dean llaskins and Dennis
Salvadori had crossed the plate
with the tieing and winning runs
The never-say-die County club
which is getting the reputation of
a hunch of comc-from-behinders,
jumped into a three-run first-inning
lead, and then got wobbly to
let the Portlanders take command
with a four-run fourth inning,
Credited with the win for the
Klamath squad was Chiloquin
pitcher Norman Jackson, who weot
the full distance, allowing eight
hits, striking out eight, and issuing
only four walks whilo his males
suffered a mild case of jitters and
committed four errors.
The loser. Mid-1'ortland's Larry
Frager. started the game at third
base but was called to the mound
alter starter John McCord had
walked the first three men to face
him. Frager gave up eight hits,
walked five and whiffed six during
the balance of the test.
Collecting the hits for Klamath
Falls were Dean llaskins, who
poled a single and a double in three
at bats, and shortstop Bucky Wil
son who lashed a pair of singles
in three trips. Peters, Bruce Brick
ner, Salvadori and Don Willey con
tributed the rest of the Klamath
safeties.
The big man at the plate for
both clubs was Portland's center-
fielder Harry Carlalcs, who got
four-for-four.
The County Stnrs broke the Ice
in the first as Wilson and Mob-
ley, who had gotten free passes
scampered home on Haskins dou
hie to right field. Haskins scored
from second base when Brickner,
County first sacker, beat out an
infield hit and the Portland first
basemen threw the ball into the
dirt trying to catch llaskins at the
plate.
Frnin here on the Mars went
hitless until the bottom of the
fifth when Willey and Wilson each
collected a single. The effort went
for nolhing, however, as Bob Mob
ley smashed a towering fly to left
field that Pat Donnelly hauled in.
Willev was caught off second by
the alert Portland lefUielder and
the side was retired.
.Another Klamath surge in the
bottom of the sixth canto aroused
false hope until some neat Port
land fielding stranded three Klam
ath runners on the bases.
In the bottom of the seventh
the County chances seemed slim
as they were on the small end of
a 6-3 count. Leadoff nian Don
Johnson, who entered the game as
pinch hitter for Jackson, grounded
out to second base for one out.
Willey got aboard on a walk and
hen advanced to third on a sin
gle by Wilson. With one away and
two men on, Mohley, who had
started in centerfield and then
switched places with catcher llas
kins in the fourth frame, went
down swinging for the second nut.
Following Mobley was Salvador)
who drove in Willey with a well
bit single. Wilson scored when
llaskins singled to center and Sal
vadori romped around third.
With runners on second and third,
Rrickner worked a full count off
Frager into a base on balls, bring
ing up Peters. Peters took one cut,
three balls and a called strike be
fore tagging the game-winning
hit
The Portlanders had their big
inning in the fourth when Dave
Lewis led off with a single, stole
second and then scored on Cartales'
singles. Cartales stole second and
third and scored when Donnelly
laid down a beautiful squeeze bunt.
Donnelly and Phil Thompson, who
got on with an error, tormented
the Klamath team on the base
paths until both scored when F.d
Nowhegin pushed out another suc
cessful bunt. The side was retired
when Mobley cautiht Nowhegin at
third and Jackson struck out Fra
ger. Portland collected a tally in the
tilth ntf two singles, an error and
a stolen base. In the sixth they
pushed another run across on a
base on balls, a bobble and a field-
er's choice.
The starling pitcher for tonight's
championship game with Southeast
National will be Salvadori. Salva
dori. who won the opening game
Sunday against Astoria with a sore
arm. has responded well to treat
ment, according to ( each r red
Taylor and will be ready lo go
tonishl.
The linescore:
R II E
Mid-Portland non 411 06 8 2
Klamath Falls 300 00(1 4-7 8 4
McCord. Frager ll1 and Davis:
Jackson and llaskins. Mobley (41.
S iwiiiill-Lielne Zone, .100 permits,
and Yaolyermn. 2ih.
Tulare Counl Sept. 25 27 and
28 .10 in the Mineral King National
Game Hetuge and Oct. 1-23 in
Monacag area. Bucks may be
taken in the game roluso with
150 permits issued for each pe
riod. Dot, only may be taken in
Monacag. with 800 permits of
lereil. ten given on first-come,
ttisl-sened basis at Visalia.
O People Read
SPOT ADS
- you ore
Heavy King Floored
In Sparring Session
OCEANSIDL", Calif. (UPI -
Heavyweight Champion Floyd
Patterson is "grateful he got
clobbered to the deck by his mid
dleweight sparring partner, Man-
iger Cus D'Amato explained to
day.
I) Amato, while maintaining
! loyd wasn t really knocked down
Soviet
Thinclads
Post Win
MOSCOW I API The Soviets are
closing in, surely and speedily, on
American leadership in sports
And even a controversial ruling
and a debatable scoring system
can't make it appear otherwise.
In the first United States vs,
Soviet Union track and field meet
which ended last night, the So
viols outscored the Americans 172
points to 170; their women ath
letes defeated the American wom
en 63 44; and. most important of
11, the American men could only
defeat the Soiet men 126 to Ml.
"This was the greatest day in
Soviet track and field history.
said the Soviet men's coach, Va-
vriel Korobkov.
Who would have thought we
could beat the American pole
vaullcrs. that we could finish one
two in the high jump and javelin?
Or who would have thought a So
viet sprinter would finish second
in the 200 meters, (hat another
would be second in the broad
jump and that we would set a
world hopstepjump record? It
was a wonderful showing."
As the U.S. team packed to go
on to meets in Warsaw, Budapest
and Alliens, the American women
could look back with considerable
pride on their performances here.
So could some of the men. Un
questionably, the greatest feat of
the two-day meet was liafer
Johnson's world record score of
8.302 points in the decathlon, wip
ing out his own accepted record
and the unofficial 8,013 points
made by his Soviet rival, Vasily
Kiiznctsov.
The only things that rankled a
bit were the Soviet system of
lumping together the scores of
men's and women's competition
;nd the disqualification of Gordon
McKenzie in the 10,000 meters.
There was no real bitterness;
just some discontent among U.S.
coaches and officials.
McKenzie's disqualification in a
controversial ruling cost the U.S.
team a point. He tried to quit the
lO.ooo meler race and was sent
back by Coach George Eastment.
Soviet officials without hearing
the American side ruled he was
disqualified for leaving the track.
The American men won every
running event up to 5.000 meters.
Bill Dellinger finished second to
the Soviet Union's lluhert Pyaran
kivi in the 5.000 by a matter of
inches in a great performance and
Phil Coleman finished second ill
the steeplechase.
American men scored one-two
sweeps in 7 of 19 individual events
and also won both relays. Ol the
22 men's events, the U S. won 14.
But they had expected to score
8 to 10 points better.
Greer Leads
Hudson Team
PORTLAND (API Profes
sinnal Joe Greer, of Yakima, was
named the lop qualifier Monday
for the Hudson Cup professional
golf team.
Selection for the team, which
meets a team of Northwest ama
tour golfers in Tacoma Sept. 2(1
:M, was based on previous per
lormance in Northwest profession
al golf tourneys.
Greer receied 352'i points. He
was followed by Kd Oldlield. As
toria. 250 points: Chuck Concdon
Tacoma, 2l7'i points, and Bud
llotmeisler, llayden Lake. Idaho
175 pomls.
Other qualifiers included: Jim
Russell. Walla Walla. 87'i point
Joe Sletger. Spokane, 75. and Bob
Duden. Oswego, Ore., o.
Bunny Mason, Salem and Al
l-'eldman. Tacoma were named
alternates.
Congdon was named honorary
captain of the team.
Joe Molrier, who will coach Co
lumbia I'niversity's soccer team
next fall, was a center hnllhack on
Oberlin's unbeaten 1952 team. He
also captained the 11 that season.
Extra Work
Made Easy
Rent a Typewriter or
Addinq Machine
Lait month's rental il
applied to purchato prico
JONES.'
PIONEER OFFICE SUPPLY
l' Main rhftn TI Mint
Monday but merely was off bal
ance when slugged with a right
lo the head, put it this way:
"Every time Patterson gets hit
he thinks he did something
wrong.
And, as a matter of fact, Cus
went on, "He's grateful for the
opportunity of having something
called to his attention he didn't
realize before."
The man who sent Patterson
sprawling in his training camp
here was Jose Torres, a Puerto
Rican who was a member of (he
U.S. 1956 Olympic boxing team
Flovd maintained he "was slip
ping" at the lime the well-placed
blow landed. He wasn t hurt.
"Patterson wants his sparring
partners to be good," D'Amato
continued. "The harder they arc
to hit, the harder he has to work
to hit em. He welcomes any im
provement in them.
"If a fighter hits him, lie has
to think that much harder. He
has to figure out why he got hit
and this is very helpful.
D'Amato, deploring press hand
ling of the affair, added that af
ter a workout, Patterson tells his
partners why he hit them '
they won't make the same mistake
again."
Did Torres tell Floyd this time
what he did wrong?
Cus sighed.
"There's even rumors around
that he got knocked out and all.
I was sitting only six feet away
with four newspapermen and it
didn't look like a knockdown to
me. But right away they all say
it's a knockdown. Everybody made
a big thing out of it. lie wasn t
hurt. He got right up and started
fighting again. It was one of the
most furious rounds we've seen
in a training camp. No one was
hurt, though, and no one was
mad."
Immediately following the bout,
Cus gave Floyd today off.
"But I was going to give him
the day off, anyway, . Cus
declared.
Market Basket
WinsTwmbill
Market Basket. Klamath Falls'
l-star men's Softball team, made
it four straight over Redmond Sun
day afternoon by sweeping both
ends of a douhloheader 90 and
6-2. The double win was the second
twinbill triumph by the locals over
Redmond in a home-and-home
series.
Frank Detz pitched Klamath to
a 9-0 triumph over Redmond in
the first game, giving up only two
hits. Detz didn't allow a Redmond
base runner lo pass second base
in the five inning contest.
Ralph Beard hammered out
hree hits in four trips to lead
the Market Basket win.
In the second game. Klamath
hitters clubbed out 10 hits to give
Dale Himmelwright some fine of
tensive support as lie pitched five
hit ball to claim the nightcap win.
Himmelwright gave up single runs
to Redmond in the first and fifth
innings.
Danny Derrah hit a home run
lor Market Basket with one run
net on. Jerry Johnson also hom
ered for the winners wilh no one
on in the lourlli. The longest blow
of the game was a triple by Red
mond's John lludecker in the first.
Heard continued his hitting assault
with two hits in lour times at bat.
Linescores;
R II E
Market Basket 102 611-9 8 0
Redmond (ion on 0 2 4
Dctz and Harris; Whitson and
Slace.
R II E
Market Basket .110 inn 1-6 10 1
Redmond loo nio n2 5 0
Himmelwright and Harris; Waite
and Elliot.
BALL FARE
MEN'S SOI ril.M.L
al Conger I'irld
6 45 Hill's s. National Ciiard
8; 15 Big Y u. Market Basket'1
BABE KITH l.EAGl'E
(State Tournament)
at Portland
9: IK) Klamath F.ilK vs. Southeast
N a I i o n a 1 'championship
game 1
HYDRAMATIC
Complete Overhaul
Sand and Linkage
Adjustments
Repair Leaks
Complete Hydramatic
Service -Drivf
in to
DICK B. MILLER CO.
7th I Klomoth Ph. 4-4IS4
NewYorkClubsA's
Hants Win Fair
By United Press International
Bill Rigney loves kids, especial
ly those San Francisco youngsters
of his who may surprise the "Old
Man" by getting him named the
"manager of the year."
"Ain't those kids of mine ter
rific?" Rigney beamed with ob
vious pride after they swept a twi
night twin-bill from the Phillies
Monday nigh' to move into a vir
tual first-place tie with Milwaukee
only one percentage point olf the
pace.
Rigney, who was down In sixth
place 14'i games off the pace a
year ago today, had ample reason
to be proud of his young players.
SF3-2, Phils 2-1
In the opener, 19-year-old south
paw Mike McCormick heat the
Phils, 3-2. for his eighth victory of
the season against only two de
feats. Then 20-year-old Orlando
Cepeda singled home what proved
to be the winning run in a 2-1
nightcap triumph.
Ust game)
San Fran 000 020 0013 10 1
Philadel. 000 110 0002 9 1
McCormick '8-2) and Schmidt.
J-M Clinches
At Least Tie
For LL Crown
Johns-Manville all but clinched
the 1958 Little League champion
ship Monday night at Wright Field
by taking a pair of victories from
second - place Park-Moyina. The
double win assured the J-M team
of no less than a tie for first
place in the final standings with
only two games left to play.
In the "deep freeze" game
called in their last meeting with
the score tied at 8-8 after six
innings, Johns-Manville came up
with a pair of runs in the first
extra inning to edge P-M, 10-9. In
the regularly scheduled clash be
tween the two teams, J-M whipped
the Park-Moyina baseballers. 6-1.
In the other action at Weight
Field Monday evening, 'Bob's Un
ion added a win to its credit with
an 8-0 win over Hal's Sport Shop.
Larry Binney was the winning
pitcher in the "deep freeze" game
Tor Johns-Manville. Binney walked
four hatters and gave up one run
to Park-Moyina, but leftfielder
Mike Soran ended the P-M threat
by hauling in a long fly ball for
t he third and game-winning out
J-M scored twice in their half
of the seventh on walks to Steve
Good and Binney. Eddie Weaver's
single, an error and a passed bal
Binney. weaver ano rJoony iuck
er each had two hits in the play
olf game for the winners.
In the regular game. Weaver
hurled four hit ball. He struck
out U and walked just one in
besting P-M's ace pitcher Ronnie
Yunck. J-M collected seven hits
off Yunck, two each by Binney,
Weaver and Tucker. Binney had a
double and Weaver a triple.
Marvin Yunck scored P-M s only
run in the lourth alter singling
and advancing on a single by
Danny Woster and scoring on a
passed hall. Marvin Yunck had
two of the hits off Weaver. Wos
ter and Denny Coleman getting the
others.
Weaver's triple scored two runs
in the second inning for the win
ning margin. John Jendrzejewski
was on base with a fielder's choice
and Good scored the eventual win
ning run after a single.
Mack Cunningham hurled Bob's
to their single victory over Hal's,
giving up only one hit. The lone
base rap off Bob s fine righthander
was a double by Eddie Young in
the fourth inning. Young advanced'
to third, but didn't score.
Hal's held Bob's to a 1-0 game
until the top of the sixth when
the Union Service club exploded
for six runs. Jim Patzke's single;
and triple and another three-base
hit by Gary Benson were the big
hits of the six-run inning.
Patzkc had three hits for the
winners. .
RUE
Bub's DIM 0078 7 0
Hal's 000 nno 8 1 3
Cunningham and Patzke; Dun
ham and Kitching.
RUE
IM
P-M
Vea er,
ejewski;
Edwards.
Bin mu 2 10 9 4
002 303 1 9 3 3
Binney '7' and Jcndr-i
Yunck, Crain
It 11 K
OHO 1001 4 3
022 11X 6 7 2
P-M
J-M
Weaver
and
Jendrzejewski;
Yunck and Edwards.
EE
we hove it or will get it!
See Your
INTERNATIONAL DEALER
Juckeland
11th to 12th on Klomoth
Semproch. Farrell 9i and Hegan.
Loser-Farrell (6-4). HR-Alou.
1 2nd game)
San Fran 010 001 0002 6 0
Philadel. 000 001 (1001 4 0
Gomez (6-7) and Thomas.
Meyer (1-31 and Sawatski.
(Only games scheduled)
All other National League clubs
were idle.
Yanks 14, A's7
The New York Y'ankees
stretched their American League
lead to 15 games again when they
bombarded five Kansas City
pitchers for 16 hits in a 14-7 vic
tory. Mickey Mantle slammed his
27th and 28th homers and Gil
.VlcDougald entered into the spirit
of the occasion by rapping his 9th
and 10th home runs. Bob Ccrv of
the As also hit two, his 27th and
28th. and Hal Smith belted his
third of the season.
Rookie Zack Monroe was cred
ited wilh the victory although he
gave way lo Johnny Kucks in the
sixth. Dick Tomanek yielded the
Yanks' first eight runs and was
Bums Cleaning House
Before Alston Goes
LOS ANGELES (LTD The
faltering Los Angeles Dodgers, in
past years a pennant contender
but now a doormat, today shook
up their roster in a move to get
out of the collar and possibly save
Manager Walt Alston's job.
General Manager Buzzi Bavasi
gave hint to the wholesale per
sonnel shift earlier in the day in
denying an exclusive United Press
Bowles Joins
Game Brass
SALEM (API Rollin E. Bowles,
Portland attorney and past presi
dent of the state Izaak Walton
League, was appointed to the
state Game Commission Monday
by Gov. Robert D. Holmes.
Appointed for a lour-year term.
Bowies succeeds Don M. Mitchell,
Taft, on the five-man commission.
Gov. Holmes appointed Bowles
last year to the state Water Re
sources Board, but the Senate re
fused to confirm the appointment.
i The confirmation was blocked by
commercial tisning ana irrigation
! interests who feared that Bowles
.i"ul"u Mi"e '"'
A Game Commission appoint
ment, however, doesn't require
Senate confirmation.
Bowles was born in Bellingham,
Wash., 50 years ago, and is a
graduate of Northwestern College
of Law.
He was state president of the
Izaak Walton League in 1956,
served as its legislative chairman
last year, and was active in de
veloping Oregon's new Water Re
sources Board legislation.
He helped negotiate in 1936 the
U.S. -Canadian treaty lor control
of the Fraser River fisheries, and
has urged state control of its wa
ter resources.
IMPROVEMENTS ANNOUNCED
STANTON. Del. (UPD Bryan
Field, vice president and general
manager of Delaware Park, re
vealed Monday that the course
will spend $3,100,000 on improve
ments next year and will operate
a so-day meeting from May 29
through July 25.
Motors
Ph. 2-25C1
I Don't Gomfale Bj H JM jl
! $2' p
Muffler Installation I t fk- '! S'!'
Headquarters EB '!.!' ' jr AnnflN :'! i,: 381
I nl ::: 3 ; -h m
Muffler, S71S : jfe ;! ''f .;l J l1 !' 5SN
For All Cot, ondup ).' ' J & JL, I '3!QY V W'W
Service E imim V 1Sdry RH
1201 E. Main TU 4-8304 I IMS f! Iffl. n fc 1 C,H ' JilHBjRi
i m if plea M'M'. es'.'.I
If its tor a J M
From Philadelphia
charged with the loss.
New York 100 5.13 01114 16 1
Kansas City 200 113 000 7 10 1
Monroe, Kucks I6i and Howard.
Tomanek, Gorman 5 ' . Daley (5,
Herbert (6), Craddock (7) and
Smith. Winner-Monroe '2-D. Los-er-Tomanek
(5-5). HRs-Mantle 2,
Cerv 2. McDougald 2. Smith.
ChiSox6, Nats 5
A three-run homer by Sherm
Lollar and a key triple by Nellie
Fox were the big blows in Chi
cago's 6-5 victory over Washing
ton. Lollar hit his homer off Tex
Clevenger in the fourth to put Chi
cago ahead, 5-4. The Senators tied
the score in the fifth, however,
and the White Sox pushed across
the deciding run in the sixth on
Fox's triple and Ray Boone's in
field out.
Turk Lown, the fourth of Chi
cago's five pitchers, was credited
with the victory while Dick Hyde
was the loser.
Washington . 220 010 0005 12 0
Chicago 010 401 OOx 6 12 0
Constable, Clevenger (21, Hyde
'41 and Courtney; Wynn, Qual-
International dispatch from New
ork. The report, quoting an ot-
ficial authority, said that the
Dodger skipper was "out" unless
the club changed to winning ways
in the next 10 days.
"We will probably change some
horses (players) before the team
returns, but there s not a thought
of changing our manager," Bavasi
said.
He wasted little time. He got
Alston on the phone in St. Paul,
where the Dodgers slopped off for
exhibition game with farm
club St. Paul, and came up with
the following checker moves:
The voluntary retirement of
relief hurler Ed Roebuck, who
has been nursing an achine shoul
der season - long. ("He might be
back next season," Bavasi clari
fied.) Optioning of rookie third base
man Dick Gray to St, Paul of the
American Association".
Optioning rookie starting
pitcher Bob Giallomhardo to Mon
treal of the International League.
1 lie recall from St. Paul of
southpaw hurler Danny McDevitt.
who began the season with the
Dodgers only to be shipped down
after the first month with a 1-3
record. He brings back a 9-4
mark from Montreal.
Purchase of hurler Werner
'Babe) Birrir from Montreal, a
right-hander with a 12-5 record to
date and an impressive 2.30
earned run average.
Recall from St. Paul of in-
(ieldcr Bobby Lillis.
tamer in the day Bavasi said
the Dodgers had "no plans" to
replace Alston with Coach Charley
uressen. Bonny Bragan (former
Pittsburgh and Cleveland manager
and now skipper of the Dorieers'
Spokane. Wash., farm cluhi, or
Leo Durochcr. He did admit talk
ing to Durocher recently about
the club, but added:
"I'm not embarassed about it.
I consider Leo the most intelligent
manager out of baseball."
Hi There's no Gin icc
1 1 GORDON 1
inc. H pwu m
111. 11:- ,TrryWm,
im win sriiis nsniiii rtcM win nag. tm s dk cn co . im hm. i
Qiltnbi'OM- PorreM t, Co., Son FroncilCO, lei Ahq.Im, Portlo-d, SjoOlo
Tigers Whip Boston
ters (2i, Stalcy ' 3 . Lown (5),
Moore '81 and Lollar. Winner
Lown (1-2). Loser-Hyde (8-3). Hrs
Pearson, Lollar.
(Only games scheduled)
Tigers 5, Sox 4
Leo Kiely walked Charley Max
well with the bases loaded and
two out in the ninth to force in
the winning run and give Detroit
a 5-4 triumph over Boston.
Kiely walked in the winning run
after rain had delayed the game
for an hour and nine minutes in
the ninth. Bnston hopped on start
er Al Cicotte for four runs in the
fifth but Al Kaline. who collected
four of Detroit's 11 hits, singled
home two runs to tie the score in
the seventh. Reliever Bill Fischer
gained his fourth victory.
Boston 000 040 000 4 11' 0
Detroit 010 001 2015 11 1
Sisler. Wall 6i, Fornieles (7),
Kiely (9 and White. Cicotte,
Aguirrc. '5, Moford (5', Fischer
'8i, and Lau. Winner-Fischer (4-.
61. Loser-Kiely (4-2).
Baltimore and Cleveland were
not scheduled.
Webb Tosses
RBLNo-No
Johnny Webb, a member of the
American League all-star team to
host the Regional Babe Ruth
League Tournament here next
week, warmed tip lo the playoff
Monday night by throwing a no
hit, no-run victory for Superior
Troy as theLaunrirymcn whipped
the Gun Store 9-0.
Webb struck out 10 in seven
innings and walked only three.
Two fielding errors on the part of
Superior Troy failed to hinder
Webb's shutout.
Rich Depew homered for the
winners in the fourth. Don Grcsdel
had two hits in four at bats for Su
perior Troy.
Linescores:
R H E
Gun Store 000 000 00 0 7
Superior Troy 000 702 x 9 9 2
Webb and Crawley; Robatcek
and Springer.
-wwwjMWJJ'.it.'t'rim
L J.V.I.. .I-,.- .,
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