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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1963)
Local Loan Tops Pacific; Oxygen Whips Eagle fcal Loan rode the one hit pitcnuig pertotmante of John Ferrell o an easy 11-0 victory over Pacific Supply Tuesday in uie aouw Suburban Babe Ruth League to continue its supremacy Famous Golfers Set Here Two of golfdom's brightest and probably most entertaining per sons will be at the Reames Golf and Country Club Friday after noon at 5:30. They are Chuck and Linda Lew is, a golf professional with one of the largest collections of v trick clubs ever assembled, and his daughter, 12 - year - old Linda, the world's youngest golf pro lessional and quite a little doll on the side. Chuck is one of the best known comedy golf stars in the busi ness but little Linda steals the show with her gags and zany shots. Their Friday afternoon perform ance should be a real treat to the local divot diggers and will be open to the public according to Jim Warner, pro at Reames. He urges all parents to bring the children. While here Chuck will challenge the longest hitter to a driving contest, but to make the contest fair Chuck will have his arms tied to bis side and be handcuffed while his challenger will hit with a conventional swing. Among other things, Chuck will be hitting moving golf balls, hit ting from a sitting and kneeling position, the machine-gun trick. hitting three swing balls, hitting with a club in each hand, and with clubs with buggy-whips and garden hose for shafts. He'll also use a club seven feet long. Linda has been hitting golf balls since she was 8-months-old and played in her first tournament at 17 months. Since then she has played in every National Golf Day Tournament. Her best score has been an incredible 39 for nine holes, 86 for 18. Thev have appeared on too nu meroSi? mention TV shows but you may have seen Linda hit the hall out of Andy Williams' mouth on Steve Allen's Show and out of Garry Moore's on I've Got A Secret. Little Miss Lewis will also use all the trick clubs including clubs made of old buggy whips, clubs with swivels, ones weighing four pounds, and a very bent one that she claims to have borrowed from Tommy Bolt (the renowned Mr. Temper). As a finale she'll try and per suade some person in the gallery to hold a golf tee in his mouth and let her hit a golf ball off of it. HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falli, Oregon Wrdneiday, July 3, 1963 r,E S-B in the loop. South Sixth Street Oxygen moved into a tie for sec ond place with Interstate Pump in Dealing Butte Valley s Eagles, 8-1. Fen-ell had a no-hit game go ing witn one out in the fifth and final frame when the ninth bat ter in Pacific Co-Op's order slapped a single off him. He walked four and struck out five in the five-inning game. I he Loaners wrapped the game up in tlie second inning when thev tallied seven runs off four base hits and four walks. Ferrell led off with a walk and stole both second and third. Ralph Jennings ground out and Gary Fanning singled to tally Ferrell. The next three batters walked, Percy Franklin, Bob Larman and Ter ry Preston. Dave Warren struck out but Mike Cunningham singled to score another run. Randy Si monsen doubled to chase two more home and Ferrell cleaned the bags with a triple. Jennings struck out to end the frame. They got one more run in the third and three in the fourth as insurance. Ferrell had the triple and a single, Fanning was the leader with a double and two sin gles while Franklin and Larman both had doubles as did Simon sen. Dan Burns got the only hit off Ferrell. South Sixth had too much for Butte Valley although the Eagles stayed close in the base hit de partment. Don D'Olivo was the winning pitcher in allowing eight hits. He walked only two and struck out four. Fred Fleming was the loser with 10 hits and seven strikeouts, no walks. Each club scored once in the second but Oxygen took the lead to stay in the second with a single run on a walk to Tom Osa, a stol en base and tsvo hits back-to-back by Greg Huck and Perry Hack Icr. Hackler had four singles in four trips to the plate. Nolan Ferrell had a double and single for the winners while Osa slammed a triple. Huck had a double and single in addition to Hackler's four safeties. Fleming led his own losing cause with three singles. Jim Bennett was the only other loser with two hits, a pair of singles. Pacific 000-00 0-1-2 Local Loan 071-3X 11-9-0 Burns. Mustoe (2 and Stein- bock; Ferrell and Simonsen. Butte Valley 010-000-01- 8-2 So. 6th Oxygen 011-024-x 8-10-2 Fleming and Bennett; D Olivo and P. Hackler. r:..,;,e,-s. . j r - .3. ,,, ' " .. , ... 1 . - . - . i t "-' V Vt!"" .- "'iiii - ' ' " 3 :r- v f MM TITLK FIGHT SET BANGKOK (UP1) Plans have been announced for world flyweight champion Pone King pctch of Thailand to defend his crown against Japanese challeng er Hiroyuki Ebihard in Tokyo on Sept. 7 or 10. I ih.ii J J jmuMnium wiuj. CHAMPION UPSET Maria Ester Bueno of Braiil strives to return volley during her women's singles match against America's Billie Jean Moffitt in Wimbledon, England, Tuesday, in semifinals of the 77th All-England Lawn Tennis Championships. Billie Jean, 19-year-old, "upset queen" of women's tennis, defeated Maria, 6-2, 7-5. UPI Telephofo McKinley Gains WimbSedon Finals; Moffitt Upsets Foe WIMBLEDON, Eng. (UPD Chuck McKinley, the dynamic tennis slugger from San Antonio, Tex., was favored to whip Ger man upstart Willy Bungert today and reach the men's singles fi nal of the Wimbledon champion ships for the second time in three years. The other semifinal match on the famed center court at the All-England Club pitted second- seeded (Manuel Santana of Spain against unseeded Fred Stolle of Australia. McKinley, ranked Mo. 1 in the States and seeded fourth here, hopes to become the first Yank to win the men's crown since Tony Trabert walked off with the trophy in 1955. Chunky Chuck almost made it in 1961 when be marched all the way to the final before bowing to Australia's Rod Lavcr. Bungert, a 24-year-old student architect, gained the semifinals by surprising top-seeded Roy Emerson of Australia in a five- set thriller Monday. He looked ahead to his match with McKin ley with great confidence. "Of all the players in the semi finals, McKinley is the one I fear least, said the unseeded Cai man upstart. "I don't know why exactly because he has beaten me this season (at Bristol last month). But I understand his game much better than that of the others and I think I can beat him this time." Santana ruled a slight favorite over Stolle, who eliminated Frank Foehling of Coral Gables, Fla., in the quarter-finals. Chances for the first All-Ameri can final in the women's singles since 1957 improved Tuesday when Darlene Hard of Los Ange les and Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Calif., won their quarter-final matches. In Thursday s semilmals, Miss Hard will meet top-seeded Mar garet Smith of Australia in a re match of last year's U.S. final at Forest Hills, N.Y., won by the powerful Aussie, and Miss Mof- (hiloquin Pulls Biggest Upset Of Season In Downing Merrill Chiloquin, which was winless in seven games, pulled off the upset of the year in the Klamath Basin Babe Ruth League Tuesday night by beating once-beaten Merrill. 13-2, despite getting only two hits and committing seven errors. The Gun Store rapped Dugan and Mest in the other contest, 3-0, on a fine two-hit pitching per formance by Pave Lyman. Chiloquin s hapless nine could fitt will play Ann Haydon-Jones of England. Miss Moffitt reeled off her sec ond straight upset Tuesday when she whipped Maria Bueno, two time champion from Brazil, 6-2, 7-5. The 22-year-old Californian surprised second-seeded Lesley Turner of Australia in the pre vious round. Miss Hard, a two-time runner up here, strolled into the semi finals when Jan Lehane, another Aussie, twisted her ankle in the fourth game of the second set and had to retire. Miss Hard won the opening set, 6-1, but was trailing 1-2 in the second when Miss Lehane was injured. Big Y, Hal's Team Cop Wins Big Y Market stumped Hal's Sport Shop, 15-8. and Western Oil rocked DARCO, 10-3. Tuesday night in South Suburban Little League action. Tlie Big Y team went all the way with Rod Allred who gave up only five hits in getting tlie pitch ing victory. He whiffed 10 and walked only four. David Selinsky was the loser in hurling the first three frames. Paul DeVoss hurled Die final two frames, Big Y ,got 12 hits off the two hurlers from Hal's and Alan Pranghofer was one of tlie lead ers with a home run and a sin gle. Dick Stockton had three sin gles and Danny Taber slapped two singles. Dave Dalton also had a double. The losers were paced by Billy Warren with two singles and Terry Herbert and Tom Gath- wright each with a double. Western had 12 hits off loser Keith Clinton while Bobby Kuhn held DARCO to only throe. Kuhn aided his cause with a double and single. Bob Ernj. had two sin gles, Ron Blacksmith a home run and single, and Marv Cassidy three singles. Doug Hasskamp had two of the three hit for the los ers, a double and single. muster only a pair of singles off i losers Mike McKoen and Russ Smith. But the losers had a sad case of no control and issued in astounding 19 free passes to Chiloquin batters to give tlie Chil oquin nine tlie victory. Chiloquin's Joe Hood went the distance and got the pitching win on an eight- hitter. Hood struck out four and won the game by walking only one batsman. The two hits by him and lus mates came off the bats of Daryl Hale and Erwin Miller, both singles and only one figured in the scoring. Merrill was led at the plate hy Mike North and -Mike .Mc Koen, each with two singles. Smith slammed a double and single and Ken Haskins a double. Merrill stayed right with Chiloquin with its timely hits and Chiloquin er rors. Tlie Merrill team took a 4-0 lead in the first frame on three hits and a hit batsman. They added one more run off a dou ble and an error. The Chiloquin team took ad vantage in their half of tlie sec ond for two runs on four walks and an error. They grabbed the lead, 7-5, in the third with a five run rally. They were issued sev en walks, got both their hits in that frame, two stolen bases and one wild pitch. Merrill tied the game in tlie fourth witli two runs on one hit, two errors, a balk, passed ball and a stolen base. But Chiloquin regained tlie one-run margin in the bottom of tlie irame on three walks, a passed ball and an er ror. Both teams mustered five runs in the fifth and final inning. Mer rill tallied first on two singles, a sacrifice, four errors and a passed ball and it looked sad for Chilo quin. But Merrill's pitching fell Kranenburg Cops President's Cup Dick Kranenburg recently wonlmedalist in tlie tournament. apart and tliey walked four in a row, had a pair of wild pitches, an error, a strikeout for the first out and another walk and passed ball for the five runs and the clincher. Lyman hurled a neat game for the Gun Store in allowing only two hits and one walk. He struck out 12 Dugan and Mest batsmen. The winners picked up seven hits off loser Lee Turner and reliever Jim Tucker. Turner allowed all seven hits. Gun Store got the only run it needed in the second when Scott Kellstrom led off with a single, advanced on Duane Stark's single and scored on Fred Pusser's hit. The other two runs came in the third when, with one out, Mike Pisan doubled and Lyman walked. Kellstrom flied out but Stark de livered another single to drive them both home. Stark was tlie only one with two hits and Lyman had the only extra base blow of the game. Leadoff man Alan Mitchell cot both hits for the losers, both sin gles. Merrill 410-25 12-8-3 Chiloquin 025-1513-2-7 Mchcen, Smith (3) and Has kins; Hood and Miller. the Reames Golf and Country Club President's Cup with a 54 hole total of 207 with Carl Bartlett right on his heels in the runner- up spot with 208. The Spring Handicap fin ished last week with Dick Wendt walking oft with top honors in winning the championship flight. Ho beat out Bill Bradshaw lor the title. Tom Wood copped the first flight championship by nos ing out Bob HarrahiU. Frank Tarr edged Jim Johnson for the sec ond flight honors. Nick Carter was the third flight champion with Adolph Zam sky in the runnerup position. Rod Bell was the fourth flight cham pion while Bob Strickland pulled The Twilight League standings finds L. Drew leading the Low Net category with 32 points. Right behind is Murdo Morrison with 32'i, Jim Slusser with 33 along willi Harry Fredricks and Lee Flink. The Low Gross is also led by Drew with 37 points along with Lee Flink. Flink had tlie longest drive with Bob Strickland. Drew and Flink had the KP. Dugan and Mest 000-00 0-2-0 Gun Store 012-0x 3-7-2 Turner, Tucker (4) and Lynch; Lyman and O'Connor. HAVE YOUR CAR WASHED . . . ulomttlcally In lets ttiati 10 mlnutsa, 11.13. Sparkle Car Wash 4023 So. Sixth Farmers! Loggers! Bulk Gasoline Competitive Prices and S&H Green Stamps TANKS AVAILABLE CliffYaden's SERVICE 2S60 So. 6th TU 2-7201 OPEN 24 HOURS Association of eggs with ob servance of Easter came to us from ancient Egypt and Persia. The eggs are a sign of new life. People Read SPOT ADS you are new. HIGHLIGHT OF MEET CHICAGO (UPD - The $100. 000 added Gold Cup Stakes will highlight Hawthorne race course's 35-day meeting opening Sept. 10. In addition to the Gold Cup, which will be run on Oct. 19 for three-year-olds and up at a mile and a quarter, Hawthorne will of fer 10 other stakes races and 13 handicaps r 25 !eward for information leading to the re covery of the following items which were stolen: 4 Fibre Glass Fishing Rods, 5 spinning reels, 1 aluminum tackle box complete with lures and tackle, 1 aluminum fishing creel. 'Please contact Leo Glinkman, 430S Cottage, Ph. TU 4-9511. wm f AinnAni fM . OIL SAE30 Air Mattress AM With Pillow 30i73, Built-in nllotor. Reg. 11.95 STATION WAGON Air Mattress Reg. 7.95 PT 26-in. Plastic Reg. 1.59 Boat 109 79 38 Gal. Reg. 2.99 Mombo Hats Straw 4 C Reg. 49c 1 I F C A - rS$ A3 Gnl. 2" ill Just in time for the Fourth Weekend Wading Pools 198 -499 Prices Effective Thru the Fourth OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY So. 6th & E. Main 0 ftfil AORFQ formeMHCEt DAMMI PRINEVILLE, ORE. ifeyUUJL rWllBaV CATTLE BliVBl (SMILES from business DISTRICT) MILES FROM NEW PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR AND RECREATION AREA! i l i urn u a Z?-160 ACRE PARCELS or more: FOR BIDDERS CONVENIENCE SALE WILL BE HELD IN WEST BALLROOM, SHERATON PORTLAND HOTEL LLOYD CENTER - PORTLAND, OREGON STARTS AT :30 P.M. Monday, JULY IS NOTE: Modem 3-bedroom, sptit-level ranch heme wEh aB modern ofllectficfty, tolepborat c9rpoBn& drapes, etc 2 -bedroom Foreman's home; 1 -bedroom btrakhotisa, corral, stables, barn, equipment garage, etc. wiM be offered with surrounding 160 acres as 8 parcel. Bidders may acquire additional sorrooDding parcels as designated on property map. FINEST FISHING IN CENTRAL OREGON PACIFIC NORTHWEST'S PARADISE FOR ROCK-HOUNDS . . . HUNTING FISHING ... ALL WATER SPORTS! FlrstTime Offered! Most of this property has been owned by one family for several generations. THE "LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY" YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR! This 12.681 ACRE CATTLE RANCH, mostly level, rolling land, is only 3 miles from famed Prineville Recreation Area with boating, fishing, water sports, etc The ONLY PAVED MAIN HIGHWAY to Recreation Area runs right through the ranch. Over 5 miles of Highway frontage. k MAIN RANCH HOUSE is modem, split-level 3-bedroom, with all modern conveniences carpeted and draped. There's also a 2-bedroom frame home; 1-bedroom bunk house, stables, barn, corral, equipment garage, etc. This will be offered with 160 acres or more. & UTILITIES AT RANCH: Electricity, phone, water from wells, creeks, artesian springs. Irrigation rights from the State of Oregon, d BUY AS LITTLE AS 160 ACRES OR AS MUCH AS YOU LIKE. Parcels will be detailed. Much of the land is studded with Juniper trees, etc. r TERMS: 10 down at the auction on award of bid, an additional 10 upon delivery of sales contract; balance payable in five equal annual installments, plus 6 interest per annum, starting March 1, 1964. Phone, wri'fe, wire for FREE BROCHURE Free Flights Over The Property and Recreation Area Sm tho nmch and tha acting PrirKnifflu ftoxnok Rocmtlaa Am vta fret WghU.Stavdey and Sunday, July 13th and M) 14th. ..from 10 ajn. to 5 p m. wn Prtnaiflle Airport usf west of town. r-n " ochoco LiEU STATE PARK MnOMl i A FORC3T CAUP fORLST -- V 1 OB AOATE BCD irftfcSrV. ''ifVC CS tsaWK- nSir, to - - 2$ ( J mhkJf"" lff rir Plenty of Rolling end Level Land lor Horseback Riding at the Ranch I Paved Highway through Ranch is only I access to this Recreation Area View of Srjnt-Lavet. 3-Bedroom Modom Ranch House t4 1 . T-' Wit 1 4 r i 1 Boating. Fiehmg, Water Sports it Prlnevfl'e Recreation Area HI! W-M, J I j W WWWIWailWMMMMMMWM.BMMMMMMMHMWWWWWWMwJ