SUNDAY, .TUNE 14. 1953
HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 3 B
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Portland Beavers, behind
the five-hit pitching of Howie
Reed, defeated league leading
Sacramento 7-2 in Friday night
Pacific Coast League baseball'
game at Sacramento.
Reed struck out eight men and
set down the first 18 batten facing
him without a hit.
The Beavers won the game in
the first inning when they chased
BALL PARK PAINTING . A SPECIALTY KC Painter,, with an assist from the General
; Paint Company, tackled th paint-thirsty Mills LittU League Park bleachers with a van.
. geanc Thursday to givo thii project a big boost. Volunteering their services at tha
. nd of their regular work day, Keith Coddington's KC Paint crew poured 35 gallons of
paint onto the greedy rebuilt bleachers, then had to send out for mora paint. M. E.
Mountain, at left, Portland representative of General Paint obliged, readily. Pictured,
from left to right, Mountain, Keith Coddington, Ed GeRue, Wayne Bryan and Richard Blev.
Ins.
SF Giants Hanging Tough;
World Champions Backslide
Weather
Preserves
No-Hitter
Br THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
"Call it great," said Manager
Bin nigney.
"Call it lucky," said young
lefty Mike McCormick.
Call it a little of both, for Mc
Cormick pitched a no-hit shutout
In a 3-0 San Francisco victory
over the Philadelphia Phillies Fri
day night that was preserved at
live innings by rain.
The Phils' Richie Ashburn sin
gled in the bottom of the sixth
and a couple of walks had the
bases loaded before the rains
came, washing away the frame.
It also hoisted the Giants with
in a single game 'of Milwaukee's
National beague leading Braves
once more. The Braves were
beaten 9-7 at Chicago. Third
place Los Angeles defeated Pitts
burgh 9-6. St. Louis beat Cincin
nati 2-1 in 10 innings.
McCormick. 20, a one-time
$50,000 bonus kid. said the short
shutout wasn't his best game of
the year, although he officially
gave up only a fourth-inning walk
to Gene Freese. "I wasn't as
strong." he explained, "as I was
when I beat the Phillies out on
the Coast last month."
Giants 3, Phils 0
Friday night's job was Mc
Cormick'j fourth shutout In a
three-year career. It was his
third against the Phils, who have
been the victims for a third of
his 18 victories in the majors.
The last place Phillies also have
been hitless in their last 10 in
nings, scoreless in the last 17.
McCormick 4-5 . who had lost
two in a row. was given a 1-0
lead in the first on Jim Daven
port's triple and an error. Then
the Giants, who made three of
their five hits off Jack .Meyer
. (4-3i good for extra bases, scored
twice in the fifth on a double by
Ed Bressoud and Hobie Landrith's
second homer.
Cubs 9, Braves 7
- The Cuhs chased Lew Burdette
'9-51 with three-run bursts in the
first and second inning, opening
' tip with Lee Walls' third homer
' and Ernie Banks' IRth. They gave
John Buzhardt a 9-1 lead, but the
young right-hander needed Bill
Henry's relief help when the
Braves scored five in the sev
enth,. three on Johnny Logan's
Sixth homer.
Ed Mathews belted a pair of
bases-empty home runs for Mil
' waukee, upping his major league
I'leadmg total to 22 and once again
" pulling even with Babe Ruth's
.reenrd-sn pace of 1927.
Dodgers 9, Bucs 6
The Dodgers blew a 5-3 lead,
.scrambled back for a tie and then
won with three in the ninth. Norm
barker's pinch-hit. two-run single
scored the clinchers against los
ing reliever Bennie Daniels '3-Si.
.The Dodgers, who out-hit the Bucs
17-13. used seven pitchers, with
"Danny McDevitt 4-6 the winner.
Southpaw Harvey Haddix. the
first of six pitchers for Pittsburgh.
",Ieft after Don Demeter's two-run
13th homer m the filth.
:. Cards 2, Reds 1
" The Cardinals, held to two hits
Ior nine innings, beat the Reds
"and reliever Tom Acker 'l-li on
T.t sacrifice fly by pinch hitter
Kleorge Crowe after Bill White's
single. Ken Boyer's infield hit
ijmd a walk had loaded the bases
'Lindy McDamel i4- won it in
relief of Ernie Broglio. a winless
4-ight-hander who" gave up only
"four hits in his nine innings, one
Ed Bailey's fourth home run in
.the second inning. Brooks Law
rence, the Reds' starter, want
,ight innings, walking home an
unearned run in the first.
Major League
Play This Week
NATIONAL LKAGI'B
Monday Milwaukee at Los Artfrlts.
TWsdsy Pittsburgh at Chicago.
Philadelphia at St. Louis. Milwaukee
t Lot Article. Cincinnati at San
r run cinco.
Wednesday Same as Tuesday.
Thursday Pittsburgh at Chtcim
Milwaukee at Los Angeles. Cincinnati
at San rranctsro.
Friday Philadelphia at Chicago.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, Cincinnati at
Lob Angeles, Milwaukee at San Fran
cisco.
Saturday Same as Fridav.
Sunday Philadelphia at Chicago.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis 3. Cincin
nati at Los Angeles, Milwaukee at
n Francisco.
AMERICAN It AG IE
Monday Kansas City at Washing
ton. Detroit at Baltimore, Cleveland at
tsosion.
Tuesday Kansas Cil r at Wsh.n-
ton. Detroit at Baltimore, Chicsge at
ew Tom. Cleveland at Boston.
Wednesday Same as Tuesday.
Thursday Kansas City at Washing
ton. Detroit at Baltimore. Chicago at
rw Tom. Cleveland at Boston.
Friday Detroit at Washington. Kan
as City at Baltimore, Cleveland at
new Torn, cnirago at Boston.
Saturday Detroit at Washington
Kansas City at Baltimore, Cleveland
ai new York. Chicago at Boston.
Saturday Detroit at Washington. Kan
as City at Baltimore, Celveland at
new York, Chicago at Boston.
Sunday Detroit at Washington
Kansas City at Baltimore. Cleveland
at New York 2t, Chicago at Boston,
MIXED FOURSOME LEA Gil
X.
10
11
Witts Market l.Vi
Curleys Clipper 14
Haps Photo 12'
Mcmeo Milkers 12
McCloud Cleaners 12
Maxlnes Twisters' 12
Four Mugs 11
Snowballs T
Last Night's Results:
Cleaners 4. Snowballs A
Twisters 4. Four Mugs 0
Wilts 3, Haps 1
Curleys 4, Milken 0
High team game Curleys Clippers S21
Mign team serits cur ley Clippers
237
High tnd. game (mem Moa McGreg
or Xll
High ind. series imeni Moa McGreg
or 375
Huh ind. game (women i Bea Mc
Kennev 17
High Ind. series worn en i Bea Mc-1
Kenney 4M
CITS AND GALS LlAGt'E
W 1
Mtkea Ptare 19
Thrifty Produce 1 I
Dee and Bills IS I
River Rats 14' i
Shastan Laundry 12 V,
Wundertirk 014 i
LaPoriaa Cafe 11
Busy Builders 4 2t
Last night's -results:
Dee and Bills 4. Rtver Rata
Shastan 4. Busy Builders ft
Mikes Place 4. L Port as 0
Thrtfty Produce 4. Wunderlick t)
High team game Mikes Place H31
High team series Mikes Place Mil
Huh ind gam (merit Frank Bam
bino IM
High ind. series f merit John Brand
Ml
High Ind. game (women Irene
Blount 1R2
High ind. neriet (women Iren
Blmint 4112
Stan HnrIf thai nM min.
ltajtuvr who now manage the Den
ver Bears is me American Assn..
is the leamie'l 0lde.1t xkinDtr. He's
49.
Don Mossi
Conquers
Yankees
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
What is it about the world
champion New York Yankees that
makes starting pitchers out of re
lievers who once worked for
Cleveland?
Take Hoyt Wilhelm 'and who
woudn't?i. He was used as a
starter infrequently by the Indi
ans, but really made K after shift
ing to Baltimore and pitching thai
no-hitter against the Yankees last
September. At the moment he's
9-0. with four in a row over New
York.
Then there's Bud Daley, the
left-h a n d e r who moved from
Cleveland to Baltimore to Kansas
City. He was a bullpen guy until
he blanked the Yankees on two
hits in a six-inning relief job last
May 8. That gave him a chance
as a starter, and he's won four of
six since.
Or take Don Mossi. once
southpaw relief, ace and a some-
tunes starter for Cleveland. He
was strictly a reliever after the
winter trade to Detroit, but he
turned starter with an eight-hitter
that beat New ork May 3.
Frida y night Mossi won his
fourth in a row over the Yankees
allowing six hits for a 3-1 victory
that jumped the Tigers into
third place tie in the American
League race, two games shy of
first.
Tigers 3, Yanks 1
Mossi. 29, who has won four in
a row for a 5-J record, lost his
bid for a second consecutive shut'
out over the Yankees in the sec
ond inning. That's when Bill
Skowron's single followed two
walks, the only passes Mossi al
lowed. He struck out five.
The Tigers, who have lost only
four of 19 in their surge from the
cellar, handed rookie Jim Bron
stad the loss in his first major
league start. They collected five
of their seven hits m the first
three innings, scoring twice in the
second against the young right
hander on singles by Larry Os
borne. Lew Berberet and Hockey
Bridges, and a dnubleplay.
Athletics 3, Boston 2
Harry Chiti's first home run of
the season, a three-run shot in
the fourth inning, bagged it for
the A s. Lefty Rip Coleman (2-4
shut out Boston on four hits for
seven innings, then needed a
splendid two-inning relief job from
Tom Sturdivant to nail it.
Sturdivant came on with the
bases loaded, none out and one run
home in the eighth. He farmed
Frank Malzone, retired Gary
Geiger on a run-scoring grounder
and then got Hrrbie Plews to hit
into a force out after giving up
an intentional walk to Vic Wertz
Frank Sullivan ' 3-5 was the
loser, dropping bis third to the
A's.
Big Beaver First
Stops PCL Leaders
Eye Cut
Factor
In Victory
NEW YORK (AP Carlos Ortiz
and Kenny Lane were just settling
down to a hard night's work when
a cut over Lane's right eye gave
the Puerto Rican-born New York
er the newly revived junior wel
terweight title.
The controversy over the sudden
ending probaHy will continue un
til Friday night's Madison Square
Garden principals meet again in
an Aug. 21 or Aug. 28 rematch.
Dr. Harry Kleiman of the New
York State Athletic commission
advised Referee Harry Kessler to
stop the bout between the second
and third rounds. Under New
York rules it went as a second
round technical knockout. In Na
tional Boxing Assn. territory it
would have been scored as a third
round TKO.
"It was a butt." complained
Lane, the talented southpaw from
Muskegon. Mich., who is the No.
1 contender to 'lightweight king
Joe Brown.
"It was a right hand punch."
said the 22-year-old Ortiz. "But
our heads met after the punch."
About 10 stitches were needed
to close the gash.
Lane, bitterly disappointed, said
'they should have let it go a cou
ple rounds more. I was just get
ing to him. I would have knocked
him out in the eighth or ninth."
Ortiz, who floored Lane for a
four-count earlier in the stormy
second, said he would welcome a
rematch.
"I know I'll knock him out next
time," he said. "I'll show every
body I would have won without
any argument."
Two officials gave Lane the
first and Ortiz the second. Judge
Artie Aidala scored both rounds
for Ortiz.
across four runs. Three of fhem
came on Jim Greengrass' three
run, out-of-the-park homer.
In other games, the Vancouver
Mounties defeated Phoenix 1S-7
and San Diego whipped Seattle
2-1.
The results left Sacramento on
ly two games ahead of San Die
go's Padres, three ahead of the
Mounties and only four and a half
games in front of the Portland
Beavers.
In a battle of second division
clubs, the Spokane Indians
snipped Salt Lake City's victory
skein off at six by beating the
Bees 5-2. 1
Jim Pagliaroni. Ray Barker and
Marv Breeding got the other Van
couver homers. Willie McCovey
tot a pair of round-trippers (or
fnocmx and Jose Pagan blasted
out a four-bagger for the losers.
The Giants lost the services, at
least lor a couple of weeks, of
catcher Al btieglitz, who suffered a
severe gash on his left hand when
he was hit by a foul tin.
Kuss Heman gave the Rainiers
tneir lone run in the first on Jack
Dittmers single and Paul Petlit's
double, then three-hit Seattle the
rest of the way. Don Dillard's dou
ble, a wild pitch and a sacrifice
fly tied it up at 1-t in the eighth
ana tne Pads won in the nmth
with another singleton on Billv
nioran s double and Steve Jan-
kowski's single.
Cuno Barragan. winning pitcher
Chuck Churn, Al Norris and big
Steve Bilko whacked out homers
for the- Indians. Churn, whose
four-bagger in the second turned
out to be the winning run, held
tne Bees to seven hits in winning
his fourth game without a loss.
The shortscores:
Vancouver 230 044 20015 21 1
Phoenix 000 003 103 7 8 2
Watkins and Pagliaroni: Fisher.
Lindner '3 . McMinn 5', Navarro
' and Stieglitz, Harvey (1).
Portland 400 012 0007 13 0
Sacramento 000 000 lot 2 5 2
Reed and Tornay: Osenhaugh.
Mickelsen (1), Bowman (6) and
Daley.
Seat lie inoonoooo I 5 0
San Diego 000 000 011 2 11 2
Urquhart and Sevan; Heman
and Retzcr.
Spokane am not ion s 10 o
Salt Lake City 110 000 0002 7 1
Churn and Barragan: Rowe, Bau-
ta (21, Post 18) and Onuska.
Postponement
To Be Aired
ASTORIA. Ore. (API A pro
posal to postpone the commer
cial summer salmon fishing sea
son on tne Columbia River will
be aired Sunday at a meeting in
roruana.
The meeting, announced here
Friday, will be open to commer
cial salmon fishermen to meet
with the Oregon Game Commis
sion and a representative of the
Washington Fisheries Depart
ment.
Biologists of the commission
recommended the river salmon
season for commercial fishing be
put off from June 18 until July 1
in view of the low salmon count
at Bonneville Dam.
The biologists contend the sal
mon still are below the dam and
the harvest would be loo big
which would adversely affect the
salmon population.
Commercial fishermen contend
ed at a meeting here Friday the
water is clear and the river is
high. They say the salmon are in
the sanctuary below the dam, and
not in the lower reaches, of the
river where they would be caught.
There will be no spying during
the University of Colorado's spring
football workouts. A canvas fence
has been erected around the Buff
practice field on orders of new
coach Everett (Sonny I Grandelius
McCormick
Terms Effort
'Cheap One
PHILADELPHIA (API "A
cheap no-hitter, but I'll take it
That was bonus lefthander
Mike McCormick's reaction Fri
day night after he pitched the San
Francisco Giants to a 3-0 no-hit
victory over the Philadelphia Phil
lies in a game halted by rain in
the Phillies' sixth.
Actually. Richie Ashburn
touched McCormick for a clean
single over second in the sixth,
but the hit was wiped off the rec
ord books when the umpires called
the game. The contest reverted
back to the fifth inning and went
on the record books that way.
"I was lucky.". McCormick said
calmly. "I'm just glad I won. I've
been having my troubles lately.
You know I lost my last two."
McCormick said that it wasn t
his best performance this year.
No, he declared, I d have to
say my best performance was
against the Phillies the last time
we met them on the coast. I had
a no-hitter going for 7 1-3 innings
until Granny Hamner touched me
for a double. They got two more
hits in the ninth but I ended up
with an 8-0 victory."
In gaining his fourth victory
against five defeats, the 20-year-old
Los Angeles native pointed
out that It save him added confi
dence.
Nwspopr
SPOT ADS
art incxpensivs
repeated daily 94
HARDTOP
US
SUNDAY
JUNE 14th
Time Trials -4:30
RACES START
AT 5:30
8 BIG RACES
r
Klamath Speedway
East End of Ebtrlcin
CftATERIAN
THEATRE
Medford, Oregon
Thursday -June 25th
Floyd Patterson
Ingemar Johansson
Heavyweight Championship
Fight
On Closed Circuit Television
Not Shown on Any Home Television
Doors Opn 5 P. M. Fight Starrs at
6:30 P. M.
Sears Rtssrvtd by Ssction
Pricts: Log & Ctntsr Ssction SS
General Admission $3
Mail Orders Promptly Filled
U alfjSBBSBBlaai S S IV. -. -J s
I ttSBBBkWIBir' "iISSSBIIly
VOLUNTEERS SHOW . HELP WANTED Another local business firm showed up at th
Mills Little- League Ball Park Saturday morning to assur parents of Little Leaguers a
place to park while watching thair tons njoy playing on thair new horn grounds. Work
ing with Kan Carrier, canter background, of tha city engineer's department, in readying
the parking area ara Lloyd Ebbingar, left, and H. C. Melton, right, who ar associated
with Ray Burn's Asphalt Paving Company. Parents ara invited to assist tho local com
panies volunteering tima, labor and money in making tha community project a reality.
Cal Hopes Newell Will Say No
BERKELEY, Calif. AP-Alh-
letic Director Greg Englchard ex
pressed hope Friday that Califor
nia basketball coach Pete Newell
will reject any University of
Washington bids.
He based his hope partially on
California's revised athletic policy.
Newell, approached bv the
Northwest school to replace Tippy
Dye. said he was giving the offer
some thought. Dye resigned a few
days ago- to become athletic di
rector at Wichita.
Pete led the Bears to the NCAA
championship this year and to
three straight Pacific Coast Con
ference titles. He's been at Cal
ifornia five years.
Before leaving on a Yosemite
vacation. Newell made it clear
that he wasn't happy with many
goings-on at Berkeley. He de
clined details, but did say finan
cial aid to athletes was only
minor issue.
Englchard said the university Is
in the process of revising its ath
letic policy because of the switch
from the dead PCC to the new
Athletic Assn. of Western Univer
sities. He said the difference between
the two conferences Is that the
PCC spelled out policy while the
new Big Four California. Wash
ington, UCLA and Southern Cal
iforniacalls for each school, for
the most part, to write its own
rules.
This concerns such Important
items to big schools as recruit
ment rules, eligibility,, grants-in-
aid and scheduling.
"We have to get the final an
swers from the top level." Engle-
hard said, "and they should be
forthcoming in a week or 10
days." That's the time limit New-
well set for making his decision
public.
"I don't consider Uie Washing
ton talk a real threat, and I hop
that this is all cleared up and
blows over when the final deci
sions are made.
"I certainly want Newell to
stay."
Washington Athletic Director
George Briggs. a friend of New
well, called the California coach.
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