Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 06, 1958, Page 13, Image 13

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    WEDNESDAY. Al'Gt'ST B. 19SR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 3 B
Braves Boost League
Lead, Top Pittsburgh
' (Continued from Page 1R)
York Yankees, a 4-1 verdict over
Baltimore, The Red Sox .beat
Washington 7-1. Jim Piersall hit
a three-run homer. Cleveland
downed Detroit 6-1.
Braves 6, Bucs 1
Burdetle shut out Pittsburgh for
seven innings on the way to his
11th victory. Successive singles by
Pick Groat. Hank Foiles and pinch
hitter Ted Kluszewskt finally pro
duced the run in the eighth. All
Milwaukee scores were charged
eainst Ron Kline, who gave up
a'l live Brave nits lor his loth
defeat.
Pittsburgh not) 000 010 1 10 3
Milwaukee 003 003 oox 6 5 0
Kline. Smith (7). Blackburn (8
and Foiles; Burdette (11-8) and
Crandall. Loser-Kline (11-10). Hrs-
Matheus, Crandall.
Cubs 10, Giants 9
Banks had four hits, including
his 31st homer, high in both
leagues. Rookie Morris Thacker
also homered for the Cubs and
Leon Wagner and Orlando Cepeda
tor the Giants.
Willie Mays, who had three hits
rromm
?iPELWS$
tnj ClAYTON HANNOtf
LA Attendance Runs
Ahead Of Milwaukee
(Continued from Pate IB)
far this year and is pointing for a
200.0O0-fan season.
Heath is taking a page from the
old hnok bv Bill Veeck. former
for a .3-11 average, singled during major league general manager,
Indians,
BoSox
Victors
(Continued from Page IB)
with 21 hits in a 13-3 romp over
Los Angeles.
NY 4, Orioles 1
With 40 games to play in al
most eight weeks, Turley appears
to have a good shot at a 25-win
season for the Yanks. His best
record was 17-13, in 1955. A walk,
Gene Woodling's single and an in
field out produced the Oriole run
In the first.
New York 003 001 0004 10 0
Baltimore 100 000 0001 7 1
Turley (17-4) and Berra. John
son, O'Dell (3. Loes (8) and Gins
berg. Loser - Johnston (3-7). HR
Mantle.
Tribe 6, Tigers 1
Cleveland scored all its runs off
George Susce in the first three
innings. Two came on Mickey Ver
non's homer. Charlie Maxwell led
off the Detroit fifth with a homer
for the lone run off McLish.
Cleveland 015 000 ooo 6 10 0
Detroit 000 010 0001 7 1
McLish Ill-It1 and Nixon. Susce,
Cicotte (3) and Wilson. Lnser
Susce (3-1). Hrs-Vernon, Maxwell.
Boston 7, Nats 1
Monbouquelte, brought up from
the five-run seventh inning before
Cepeda's 21st homer. The Giants
tied it m the ninth on a wild pucn
by winner Glen Hobbie only to
lose on an error by Danny O'Con
ncll, a walk and Banks' single.
110 innings'
San Fran 200 001 501 0 11 2
Chicago 200 115 000 110 15 1
Miller, Monzant i6. Johnson
(7i, Grissom ' Ri. Antonelli (91
and Schmidt, Thomas (6). Hill
man. Henry (7). Elston (7), Hob
bie 8) and Thacker. Winner-Hob-hie
(9-6). Loser Antonelli (11-10).
HRs - Wagner, Thacker, Banks,
Cepeda.
Reds 6, Phillies 5
When Sanford left the game in
Cincinnati, the Phils had two on
with none out. Farrell retired the
lirst two men he faced but Crowe
slammed a single off his glove
for one run and Robinson hit a 1-2
pitch into center field. Joe Nix-
hall was the winner on relief.
Philadelphia 102 002 0005 10 1
Cincinnati 000 010 203 6 11 0
Sanford, Farrell (9) and Hegan
ewcombe, Schmidt (6), Nuxhall
'8) and Burgess. Winner-Nuxhall
18-7). Loser Farrell (6-5). Hr
Lynch.
Cards 13, Bums 3
Billy Muffett went all the way
in the steaming heat of an August
afternoon in St. Louis, holding the
Dodgers to seven hits. Danny Mc
Devitt was chased with his
lourth defeat.
Los Angeles 003 000 000 3 7 0
St. Louis 013 701 10X 13 21 1
McDevitt, Kipp (3), Erskine (4),
Birrer (7) and Roseboro. Mulfett
(4-3) and Green. Loser-McDevitt
(1-4). HR-Moon.
who called on anything and every
thing to add interest to his ball
games. It was Veeck, you will re
member, who used a midget as
a pinchhitter in a couple of
games before former baseball com
missioner Happy Chandler en-
voked a rule against such practices.
A note of Interest from a news
release sent out this week by the
University of Portland:
University of Portland s first
doctor of education will be granted
Saturday, August 9, to Edward J.
Ryan of Portland, supervisor of
athletic activities in the Portland
public schools.
Hvan. who is a tormer Kiamatn
Union High School football coach
has been in the Portland school
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPD -All
the last place Los Angeles
Dodgers may get out of this
year's National League pennant
race is a oratwurst ana oi
course attendance money.
When Walter O'Malley moved
his Bums from the traaition-
seeped Flatbush precinct to the
spacious Los Angeles coliseum.
there were those who forecast
that Southern California crowds
would eclipse the Milwaukee
Braves record of 2.215.404 set last
season.
Milwaukee owner Lou Penni
scoffed at such talk.
'I'll beat a bratwurst we out-
draw the Dodgers," he said.
With the season two thirds over,
it looks like Perini will be
masticating his remark while
O'Malley dines on the crinkly,
brown, oversize frankfurter which
the sausage makers say made
Milwaukee famous long before the
advent of beer barons.
Even Bill Eberly, who runs Per
Gardner's Skein
Snapped At 361
BALTIMORE. Md. (UPD-Sec-ond
baseman Billy Gardner's con
secutive game nlavine streak end
system since leaving here in theied at 361 games Tuesday night
Banks Points
For 50 Homers
CHICAGO (API Ernie Banks,
slugging Chicago Cub shortstop,
is enjoying his greatest year in
the majors and might very well
become the fifth man in National
the Minneapolis farm about four League history to hit 50 or more
weeks ago, iinally got some soud home runs.
hitting and steady defense from1 "I think he can do it, says
the Red Sox. Among the batting
beats was an acrohatic double by
Don Buddin, who eluded a tag at
second and then performed a
swan dive from the shortstop side
of the hag.
Washington ooo 100 ono 1 7 1
Boston 004 001 llx 7 12 0
Pascual, Romonosky (7) and
Courtney. Monbouquette (1-2) and
White. Loser-Pascual (6-6. Hrs
Piersall (8th), Williams (19th),
Chicaqo 5, A's 4
Lown put down a Kansas City
uprising in the fifth and blanked
the A's the rest of the way to
earn the victory.
Chicago 005 000 OOO 5 8
Kansas City 010 030 0004 12 1
Wilson, Staley (5), Lown (5) and
Battey. Grim. Herbert (3), Gor
man I5i, Tomanek (fi Garver
(9). and House. Winner-Low n
(2-2). Loser-Grim (1-3).
Rhodes Fined
After Fracas
PHOENIX. Ariz. (UPD For
mer World Series hero Dusty
Rhodes and pitcher Joe Mar
goneri of the Phoenix Giants
scoffed today at reports of their
ficht aboard an airliner and said
they're "still good friends."
Rhodes and Margoneri were
tooled from a Western Airlines
plane at San Francisco Monday
night.
"It was a scuffle, not a fight.
said Dusty, a New York Giants
hero of the 1954 World Scries. "Joe
and I are still good friends.
William (Rosy) Ryan, general
manager of the Pacific Coast
League farm team, said both men
had been fined. The amount was
not announced.
The report of the plane fight by
an airline stewardess invnivea
jousting along a narrow aisle,
with lounge chairs broken and
tables smashed. The reason for
the fight wss not established.
Margoneri. a pitcher, said.
"Those reports of damage to the
plane are grossly exaggerated.
One of those little plastic trays
might have gotten broken, but
that was about all."
Manager Bob Scheffing. Ernie
usually gets most of his homers
August and beptember. Last
year he hit 13 in September.'
Banks knocked in three runs,
including the one which won the
game, in a 10-9, 10-inning victory
over San Francisco yesterday. He
also banged his 31st homer ot the
season and boosted his RBI total
o 90.
"Check the figures," said Schef
fing, "and I'll bet he has one of
the best RBI percentages in the
league.
Banks 90 RBls have come in
426 times at bat for an RBI in
every 4.7 times at bat. Willie Mays
of the Giants has 57 in 410 at Dais
for a 7.1 average
Banks is the current leader in
both home runs and runs batted
in. in the National League.
Does Banks thinks he can hit
50 home runs?
"I don't know," says Ernie, 27
vear-old right-handed swinger. "1
guess you have to be lucky to do
that. I ll be swinging, mat s ail i
can do.
The only other players in the
National League to reach the 50
mark have- been "Hack Wilson,
Ralph Kiner, Johnny Mize and
Mays.
Banks also has another objec
tive this season and that is to fin
ish with a .300 average. Currently
batting .310, he came close with
.295 in 1955 and .297 in 19o6.
late 1940s.
The University of Oregon Ath
letic Department has gone all out
with one of the snappiest looking
letterhead envelopes that has
crossed our desk in some time.
U of O athletic news is passing
through the mail in fancy white
envelopes trimmed in green with
the slogan "Follow the Champs
. . . Follow the Ducks."
On the front are pictured two
Duck football stars, tackle Jim
Linden and end Ron Stover, both
of whom are candidates for all
coast and all-American honors this
season. On the back are small
characters depicting the Wehfoots
four home games against Idaho.
USC, WSC and Stanford.
It's getting to be interesting to
watch and see how schools around
the country are growing more pub
licity conscious these days when
the competition is so high for the
entertainment dollar. One school
is trying to out bid the other with
some sort of an attraction just like
one grocery store tries to under
sell a competitor.
Athletic news director Hal Childs
of Portland State College Is really
on the ball.
Childs has already sent out the
Vikings 1958-59 basketball sched
ule and football coach Les Liggett
docsn t know yet who he has on
tap for the football season
Hal. a real fine publicity man
for PSC, has been burning up the
sports desks around the state and
in southern Washington with all
types of news about his school's
athletic teams. And in case you
missed it, education leaders
around the state are talking about
Portland State becoming a big
school" such as Oregon and Ore
gon State. PSC's cause is being
helped out by Childs' work.
when he failed to break into the
Baltimore Orioles' lineup.
Gardner is expected to be side
lined several days as a result of
being hit by one of Don Larsen's
pitches in Monday night's game
with the New York Y'ankees.
CUT FROM SQUAD
SALEM, Ore. (UPD-The New
York Giants of the National Foot
ball League have released rookie
end Lifus Johnson, the first train
ing camp cut made by the club in
10 days of practice.
ini's box office, admits the Braves
won t achieve their 1957 atten
dance this year. "We'd have to
average 39.000 a day for the rest
ol the season and that s impossible."
In fact, the Braves will be hard-
pressed to even reach two mil
lion, a mark which they have sur
passed each of the past four
years.
As of today, the Braves' home
attendance was 1,376,868. The Dod
gers had drawn but 1,334,320.
However, the Braves have
played to 51 home dates while
Los Angeles has made but 47
home appearances. Milwaukee
was averaging 27.026 each time
the box office opened at County
Stadium. I he Dodgers average
was 28.389 per home date 1,363
more than the Braves.
Furthermore. O'Malley had the
law of averages on his side in
the run for the bratwurst. He has
23 home dates left, four with the
Braves. Perini has 20 home dates
remaining.
Projecting the Los Angeles at
tendance through the rest of the
season, you get a year's total of
1,986,267.
Do the same for the Braves and
it adds up to 1,918.869.
Even the schedule spells brat
wurst for the Dodgers. Los An
geles has 12 dates remaining with
first division clubs, including three
with the neighboring Giants. Mil
waukee has seven dates with first
division teams.
Eberly says the recession and
the weather are the major reas
ons Milwaukee attendance is run
ning about 100,000 less than a year
ago.
"For us to draw two million the
same people have to come out
many times. When the recreation
dollar is down, those people come
out less often, he said.
i: $3 H I
if ff
Salem, Tigard Win, Even
Junior Legion Ball Playoffs
MEN'S GOLF
Klamath Falls golfers from
Reames finished third in a three
way club match held last weekend
at Princville, but as usual the
Central Oregon trip was one of
the highlights of the local golfing
season. Princville won the match
with 66 points, followed by Bend
with 63 and Klamath Falls 60.
Alex Webster, Prineville pro, led
the scoring with a 33-31 64, two un
der par. Jim Johnson of Reames
paced all amateur scoring with a
38-32. Bend pro Bud Davis carded
a 74, the same as turned in by
Clark Good, pro at Reames.
This Friday. August 8, is the fi
nal day for qualifying for the Club
Championship To'-.rnament.
Through today s qualilying scores.
Moon Mums still leads in the race
for medalist honors with a 74, two
over par.
A Blind Hole tournament is
slated for Ladies Day, Friday
August 8. The pairings are as
follows: '
18 Hole Croup
8:30 Maskell, Egge, Raymond.
8-35 Schuss, Swanson. Drew,
R:40 Sproat, Good. Grove. 8:45
Mosebar, Marks, Anderson. 8:50
Bechen. Zamsky. Robin. 8:55
Coddington. Jones. Pernell.
9 Hole Group
9:00 Hooper, Adams, Farley.
9:05 Larkin, Mead. Marvin. 9:10
Robertson, Stonecypher, Robin
son. 9:15 Ashley, Beane, Ellis.
9:20 Wiley, Dakin, Peyton.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .Bend
Salem and Tigard evened their
Oregon American Legion junior
baseball semilinal playolfs Tues
day night to send both into third
and deciding games Thursday
night.
Salem scored lour runs in the
first inning and went on to defeat
the North Bend entry. 7-3. to
square that series at one game
apiece. The decider will be al
North Bend at 8 p.m. ihursday.
Tigard outlasted Bend in a wild
slugfest at Bend, putting together
a string of big innings to win
15-8. Tigard scored six runs in the
sixth inning and four more in the
seventh to overcome an early
Bend lead.
The Tigard-Bend playoff, also
even at one game apiece, will re
sume Thursday night at Giard for
the deciding contest.
042 020 000 8 9 1
Tigard 003 116 40x IS 1
McCarthy, Riley (4). Newell (6.
Bauer (6 and Joanis; Lewis and
Hing.
Salem 400 000 300 7 11 4
North Bend 010 000 200 3 9 9
Bcvans and Hofstetter; Younk
ker, Wallace (8) and Payne.
The Pioneer League was organ
ized in 1939. It is a Class C base
ball league this season.
Mosquitoes and Flies
Don't b cbwtd to bin bf thc blood
ihirnr ptra. JuK bum lirtlt BUHACH
wbvtrtr you want poet ud comfort.
Mi BUHACH
Coach Luman Harris of the Bal
timore Orioles won 35 games and
lost 63 as a pitcher with the Phil
adelphia Athletics.
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Cubs Capture Games
Motor Investment defeated the
Eastside Cubs 30-3 in. one of the
two frecscoring Bantam League
softball games played Tuesday
night at Kiwanis Park.
In the other game. Cub Pack
No. 3 walloped Houston - Abbey
32-13.
BOLT SCHEDULED
SAX FRANCISCO (UPD The
scheduled Aug. 23 fight between
former bantamweight champion
Mario D'Agata and Joe Tuloco
opez has been postponed until
Sept. 13, because of Lopez ill
ness.
Gutowski Sets
Portland Meet
PORTLAND (AP) The world
pole-vault record holder will com
nete in a track meet here Aug. 16.
He' is Bob Gutowski of Los
Angeles, who holds the mark of
15 feet, 9"4 inches. He is entered
in an all-comers meet at Jeffer
son High School.
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