Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 07, 1959, Page 13, Image 13

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    HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore.
Friday. Aueust 7.
PACK 3 B
Gold Cup
Trials Run
Smoothly
SEATTLE (API - One of the
most trouble-tree qualifying
weeks in Gold Cup history was in
its last day Friday with only two
. unlimited hydroplanes yet to qual'
l(y for this Sunday's 52nd annual
' running of speedboat racing's
greatest classic.
Thirteen boats had churned
around the Gold Cup course on
Lake Washington at better than
the minimum needed speed by
Thursday. Seven qualified Tues
daythe first day of qualifying
. trials four on Wednesday and
two Thursday.
'. That left only the Miss Seattle
and the Coral Reef of Taeoma
yet to swing the three laps around
; the 3-mile course at better than
. the 95 mile an hour minimum.
' The Miss "Bardahl, a question-
. mark entry up to Friday, is defi
' nitely not going to enter the Gold
; Cup. Her owner, Ole Bardahl, tel-
; ephoned his Seattle headquarters
from Norway and told an assist
' ent: I stand on my previous
. statement. Miss Bardahl will not
: run.''
Race officials had said they be
' lieved Bardahl would change his
mind and allow last year's unlim-
ited hydro point champion to
'. make the chase for the cup.
T The KOL-roy and the Miss
' United "States I qualified Thurs-,
day. Bob Larsen, a Seattle airline
pilot, steered KOL-roy to an av
' erage of 95.462 m.p.h., just barely
over the minimum.
The Miss U.S. I turned in the
: fastest time of any of the 13 that
I had qualified through Thursday.
Don Wilson of Detroit whipped
George Simon's boat around the
three laps at an average of 115
. 056 miles an hour, nearly two
miles faster than the previous
. best time this week.
; Miss Spokane, driven by Norm
j Evans, had held the top speed in
a run Wednesday of 113.128 until
'. the powerful U.S. I made her try.
- The opinion is that this field
I may be fastest in the history of
' the Gold Cup and may break the
90-mile overall race record ofl
103.481 miles an hour set last year
'. when Jack Regas won the cup in
the Hawaii Kai 111. '
; The Kai, which qualified at a
speed of 109.533, is back to defend
; her title with a new driver, Brien
: Wygle. ,
. The other boats that had quali-
fied through Thursday were Miss
'. Pay 'n Save, Seattle; Gale V and
- Gale VI, both Detroit; Miss Wa
: hoo, Seattle; Breathless II, Pied-
mont, Calif.; Maverick, Lake
If I XT.. . rpUHirt.,.n, Tnn anA
Miss Thriftway, both Seattle, and
1 Nitrogen, Washington, D. C.
I wT 3- ' 1 ?
v m
f - w ,1 i i
I 1 ' I I ' v ' ill
I I i K t 1 1 I
I V I I
I O .i- n l 'nil I
vV ; U II
II U - .LJUrU
Clock Runs Out
No Room On Board
ChiSox, Orioles Can't Score; Pirates Won't Quit
BATTING BATTERY MATES Looking a liHle shocked.
Klamath Falls winning pitcher Sherm Allen, right, and his
catcher Rod Sparlin, left, walk off the field after the KF
15-6 bombarding of Tualatin in the nightcap of the open
ing round of the Babe Ruth state tourney. Both Allen and
Sparlin smashed inside-the-park home runs to assist the
Klamath Falls nine to the big victory.
United Preis International
Feast or famine take your
pick.
Sometimes a team can t beg.
borrow or steal a run as was the
case with the White Sox and
Orioles, who battled to an 18-in
ning 1-1 tie in the longest game
of the year Thursday night
And there are other times when
the poor guy running the score
board could use an adding ma
chine as was the case when the St. Louis
Pirates came up with 10 runs in Haddix
the ninth inning to swamp the
Cardinals, 18-2.
Southpaw Billy Pierce and
knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm were
the standouts in the four-hour-and-
eight-minute Chicago - Baltimore
marathon.
Pierce, once thought to be "too
frail'' during the early part of his
career, pitched the first 16 innings
for the White Sox before giving
way to Turk Lown.
The 35-year-old Wilhelm took
over for staVter Billy O'Dell in
the ninth and pitched no-hit ball
for 8 2-3 innings before Billy
Goodman singled with two out in
the 17th.
tional League lead to a full game
with a 7-1 decision over Milwau
kee and Chicago beat Philadelphia
i'i. Los Angeles and Cincinnati
were not scheduled.
In the American League, Cleve
land climbed to within 14 games
of the top with a 5-2 victory over
Washington; Detroit blanked New
York, 4 0, and Boston nipped Kan
sas City, 4-3.
Pittsburgh 300 010 04 1018 23 1
020 000 00 0 2 7 0
8-9 1 and Burgess. Jack-
f ft u
MaaH
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
American League
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Chicago 63 42 .600
Cleveland 63 45 - .583 IVi
Baltimore 55 54 .505 10
Kansas City 52 54 .491 11V4
Detroit 53 56 .486 12
New York 51 54 .486 12
Boston 48 59 .449 16
Washington .... 44 65 .404 21
Thursday Results
Chicago 1, Baltimore 1 (18-
innings tie, called curfew)
Cleveland 5, Washington 2
Detroit 4, New" York 0
Boston 4, Kansas City 3
National League
W. L. Pel. G.B.
San Francisco .. 61 46 .570
Los Angeles 61 48 .560 1
Milwaukee 58 47 .552 . 2
Chicago 51 55 .481 9lA
Pittsburgh 52 56 .481 9'
ARCARO WINS FOUR
' SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. -
.(UPl) Jockey Eddie Arcaro,
: making a strong comeback after
a near-fatal spill in the June 13
. Belmont Stakes, booted home four
winners Thursday -at Saratoga
' Arcaro's victories were aboard
Pat Livingston, Destiny Unknown,
, Gawain and Warlike.
Cincinnati 50 56 .472 10'
St. Louis 50 58 .403 11"
Philadelphia . .. 44 61 .419 16
Thursday Results
San Francisco 7, Milwaukee 1
Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2
Pittsburgh 18, St. Louis 2
Only games scheduled
Pacific Coast League
Won Lost Pet. Behind
MINOR LEAGUE
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
International League
Columbus 1 .Montreal 0
Buffalo 5, Miami 1
Richmond 6, Toronto 2
Rochester 3, Havana 1
American Assn.
Minneapolis 5-13, Houston 3-4
Omaha 5, Charleston 3
St. Paul 1, Fort Worth 0
Louisville 3, Indianapolis 2
Dallas 13, Denver 4
Sacramento 61 54 .530
Portland 58 54 .518
Vancouver 60 56 .517
Salt Lake City 59 56 .513
Phoenix 58 57 .504
San Diego 58 58 .500
Spokane 56 60 .483
Seattle 49 64
Thursday's Results
Vancouver 4, Sacramento
San Diego 6, Portland 1
Only games scheduled
l'i
Hi
2
3
Vi
514
.434 11
Northwest League
Won Lost Pet.
Yakima
Wenatchee
Lewiston
Eugene
Salem
Tri-City
21
19
18
18
16
15
.568
.528
.514
.500
.457
.429
Chicago, Orioles Tie
Chicago scored the first run in
the third inning on a walk and
John Romano's triple off the left
field barrier which just missed be
ing a homer by inches. Baltimore
scored its runs in the eighth on
Chico Carrasquel's single, a sacri
fice and another single by Willie
Tasby.
The two teams, finally halted by
the midnight curfew, had played
17-inning games on June 41 h and
July 25lh of this season with Chi
cago winning both games.
(18 innings, called, curfew)
Chicago
001 000 000 000 000 000 1 7 0
Baltimore
ooo ooo oto ooo ooo ooo 1121
Pierce, Lown (17) and Romano.
O'Dell, Wilhelm (9) and Ginsberg.
Bucs 18, Cards 2
In Pittsburgh's slaughter of St.
Louis, the Pirates sent 15 men to
bat in the ninth. Smoky Burgess
paced a 25 -hit assault on five Car
dinal pitchers, driving in six
runs with five hits, including
homer and two doubles. Bill Vir-
don drove in five runs.
The winner was left-hander Har
vey Haddix, who hurled a seven
hitter and breezed to his eighth
victory. The same Haddix would
have done anything for a couple
of those runs when he lost a 13-
inning one-hit 1-0 decision to the
Braves last May 26th.
San Francisco stretched its Na-
Pitchers
Bafflino
m
Enemy
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-With
all the fuss about the batting
heroic of young Willie McCovey,
you're apt to forget how well the
San Francisco Giants pitching
staff is baffling the opposition.
Big Sam Jones, for instance,
won his 15th victory of the season
Thursday in hurling the National
League leaders to a 7-1 triumph
over the defending champion Mil
waukee Braves.
Never before in his major e ,
league career that goes back tlcieveland
isi nas ine o-ioom rigm-nanucr
won that many contests in a season.
It looked for a few minutes
Thursday as if he might have to
call it quits after the fifth inning
when Hank Aaron slid into him
during a play at third base. Jones
was knocked dizzy and suffered a
slit on his left leg. But he de
clares:
'You couldn t have pulled me
out with 10 teams of horses.
son, McUaniel 8 , SI one i8. Ur
ban 191. Jeffcoat 191 and Smith.
Porter 7. Loser Jackson I9-10.
HRS Virdon, Burgess.
Giants 7, Braves 1
Sam Jones of the Giants scored
his 15th victory of the season with
an eight-hitter over the Braves.
Milwaukee 000 001 000 1 8 1
San Fran. 200 400 tux 7 10 0
Burdeltc. Pizarro (7 and Cran
dall. Jones 1 15-10 and Landrith.
Loser Burdeite (15-1H. HRS
Biessoud, .Mays.
1
Cubs 4, Phillies 2 j
The Cubs snapped a seven-game
losing streak when Ernie Banks'
double touched off a two-run rally
in the eighth against the Phillies.
Phila. 000 000 020 2 8 2
Chicago 100 001 02x 4 10 0
Owens. Robinson (8, Farrell
(8) and Lonnett. Ceccarelli, El
ston (8) and S. Taylor. Winner
Elston (6-41. Loser Robinson
(2-2).
er, Hyde 181 and Courtney. Loser
Kemmerer 15-12'.
vito.
HR
coia-
Tigers 4, Yanks 0
Paul Foylack of the Tigers
stopped the Yankees on three hits
en route to his 10th victory.
Detroit 000 010 012 4 10 0
New York 000 OOO 000 0 3 1
Foylack (10-10) and Wilson. Dit-
mar. Maas 191 and Berra. Loser' Williams, Tuttle.
-Ditmar (7-8. HRS Wilson,
Yost.
Boston 4, KC 3
Boston won its game from Kan
sas City with four unearned Tuns
in the fourth inning.
Kansas City 100 001 010 SSI
Boston 0O0 400 OOx 4 4 0
Herbert. Tsitouris 18) and Chiti,
House (4). Casale, Kicly 19) and
White. Winner Casale (8-71.
Loser Herbert (10-8). HRS R.
Indians 5, Nats 2
Rocky Colavito's 32nd homer
with one on highlighted .a three-
run rally that carried the In
dians to their victory over the
020 000 030 5 11 0
Washington 200 000 000 2 6 0
Bell (12-9) and Nixon. Kemmer
Thursday's Results
Yakima 6, Salem 4
Lewiston 11, Tri-City 5
Phoenix (PCD 4, Eugene 1
Friday's Schedule
Yakima at Eugene
Wenatchee at Salem ,
Tri-City at Lewiston
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MAKE IT HERMAN
RENSSELAER, Ind. (UPI) -Willie
Herman Lee, the Chicago
Bears' veteran offensive tackle,
told teammates at their training
camp Thursday he would prefer
being called Herman from now on.
Lee's wife likes Herman better
than Willie.
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