Ford To Manaqe AUts niv-c nuei l Uuily inc. eunestlay, June 23. District Soccer League Sets Team Limit at 20 If; ! . ... ' for Ketthikan Tourna Rusty Ford, manager of Prince v Rupert's Senior Baseball league leading .Gordon and Anderson team has been named manager of the all-.'-'.ar team which will play Ketchikan here June 30 and July 1, it was unnounceU yeste.-. rfny. Coaching tli All-Stan will be Commercial's utility player Cliff Danl. with ussisting coachin ertaimnent, , ,' SHi here ,!? !e:,,"lt-N'"k Kiviikis. b.);', M"''"e, Jerry ,'. Sl,!"'ie. hey' u, UV' 11 Sslph't W't w, f,f,, 'c;pl. Representatives from the four teams comprising the Prince Rupert and District Football A-so-;iation agreed to a 20 player limit for each team duriii1; the 1954 season at an organizattansl meeting held at the AnmiiKia-ti:m S?h(H)l last night. Salem Fans f ,, jf -v- v '- r' n ' 'fc j x f..---. -, i : ....., f -K . V i - .1 ' .V h - r s ta. ,'. . f . i r ' j A It -Li ' fr ' I i fe- i ; t : . ''- ' " "' - ' tiii'rrnit J- fit iS WB'M v - i ;' In additionplayers will i:;"li a . j player's form anil no transfer : will be allowed during icsular . I league play, or from Ore cum ! competition to another. Pl.tyer'i j forms will co-t a dollar ia:'h j Oji a siijtsH'stion by Jim :-cirv,i the Pulp Workers Loci.l 7iiiJ ' coach, the fees for tian.lerii ! from one team to another at tiie l I end of the season were set at $10. : The a- -ociution will oraw tip a , constitution outlining rules and ; c.uties cf teams with ie;i:d to I .iniiii the Held, putting up goal! net.; and :.ettin up the irantf- j work of the league. 1 The It ague. w,iih ets under-1 way with its first official uai-u I lof the .scixo'i tcniorriiw HUM j will play under the Dominion,) Football A:;.:!utSoii ivl ... j tial game, til Kiiosevelt Park, is: aim ;v,i duties being undertaken by Es-quire's Benny Windle and Cum-! mercial's Miner Si'mund.siii. Twenty-three players '.have been named hv the Prince Rupert Baseball Commission to the all-star team and committees 1 have been set up to hand.e e:i- Te:i:ice, ! M:i i.;-v.. cncs het, v.;. : Vv'enni ,(i V. Jn-e .UHI A " o. f"r t,';,m. iiurjf up- : i Rally To Keep 1 I I ! Team in WIL i I I i By Tlic Cnniulktn Press "Save. Your Senators Ninht," j j set up by the Salem manage- J j ment to determine whether the j j fans . want to keep their club in the Western International Baseball League, was a whopping success in the stands and on tin-playing field Tuesday night. Mindful that Spokane and Calgary were forced, by poor attendance, to drop out of the a return sn- . h a .MiiKlt ,,. wl ;nc S naiay and c, on July 5. Club Owner Dies On Ride Home VANCOUVER CP)' Jack W. Pattison, 72, widely known sportsman and r-.tee-hurse owner, died suddenly here Monday. Mr. Pattison was being driven by a friend from t!y Pacific Athletic Club here which he owned, to his North Vancouver home when he collapsed from a heart attack. Horn in Oxford, England, he came to Vancouver when he was 22. He operated the Central and Burrard Clubs before opening the P-A In the 1930s. SM'OGFR HANK BAt'FR I right i of the New York Yankeesollers a few batting tips to crooner Eddie Fisher deft', as another slugger, of boxing fame. Rocky Marciano (centre i, looks on. This impromptu batting bee took place lit the heavyweight champ's training quarters at Orossinger, New York, where Rocky trained for his June 17 Yankee Stadium clash with E.ard Charles. between Local ','03 and (lener.uj Motors. League prexy Maurice Bishop ; suggested that three referees be ; uppointed and that they I'V from mi pa; iicul.tr team. BUi Baxter-and Dan Muiven will take on the , j Bruiting duties at first and a:i- j ! other referee will be chosen ; ! later. Mr. Baxter agreed to ta!:-; mg on the re.spon.siuility of seu- ing that there was a referee on ' the ta-id for each game. ! The association will a-k the i Park's Board lor pel mis-ami to ; league this week, the Salem front j office asked the fans to demon-jstrate by their turnout Tuesday night whether they want pro-j fessional baseball to continue in ! Oregon's capitol city. I The apparent answer . was SPORTS ROUND-UP j erect a change room at House- i I veil Park. I Jim Perry asserted that pre- ; ; sent facilities at the p'aik were ! imicleiiua.il' and .su;gesie(l tfwt ! , there be some place when teams 1 "yes." The management count-:, ed 4.124 paying customers in the j stands, the largest crowd of the i season. On the field, the Senators re HIGH-SCHOOL 1SOY Sir.NKD BY BUOWNS Chester Gilchrist, 18-year-old Her-Braok High School star fullback of Pittsburgh, has been signed by the Cleveland Browns. The professional football team is reputedly paying Gilchrist $5,500 a year. I!y GAYLK TALIIOT NEW YO'HK (AI') A man who spends much time trying to peer into the future in the spoils world falls on his i'aee so often that he takes an inordinate pleasure in callin'"' one right now and then. A ! MIAMT BEACH. Fla -Bob SaU jterfield, 116' j, CMiicago, kniH-ked -I out Cleveland Williams, 202, of i j Tampa. Fla. (3. ! I DETROIT Kenny Lane, 138. Muskegon, Mich , outKiinted El-j 1 mer Lakatos, 135, Young.stown, 'O. iB). could change, get a rub-down, or ; if IP 1'Pfillll'Pfi iVKT lf I sponded with a 7-5 eome-fiom-behind victory over Tri-City. Trailing S-l in the fourth inning, the Senators tied the game with Harry Warner's two-run homer, added a single run in the fifth, two in the sixth and an in Uiftil in-A rtile-'uook.s hve ! ''"' "Jn" been obtained, the meeting : Landy ran in Finland brought at reed I hat any dispute on a; a gentle little thrill to one who Orioles Hold Last Place As Capably as Browns ing the vagaries of Australian weather? On the day we saw I andy he was being ( losely chaperoned by his trainer-coaeh, a white-haired wisu of a man named Percy ! referee's decision should be su'j- j predicted 18 months ago tnat niitted to the a-sioialion Pr-j the Au.strali.in would be the ident Ui.s'liop suggested that a , world s best, player frequently sent from the! n was on a burning hot Jan-! lieM be given a suspension. I ua!-v day in Melbourne, immed-1 League secretary Frank Bol- ; at."lv after the 1952 Davis Cup Indians bowed to Philadelphia 4-1 while Chicago was beating Washington 7-5. This moved the By BK.N PHEI.GAR j Associnled Press Sports Writer j Browns or Orioles, St. Louis or j Baltimore the sad fact seems to : ; be that it's a last-place ball club. I More than $5,000,000 have been j j spent cm the franchise since a year aiio today. The net result . tong reported that the tinam-es matrn(.s that we watched thn White Sox within three games of the Indians. The New York Yankees lo.it at Detroit 4-1 and stayed five games behind. I In the National League the of the league had risen from $SJ 1 to $10: during the "test period" of tno lour team league, which concluded Saturday . DINING PLEASURE surance tally in the seventh. Tri- j City opened the scoring with two ; I first inning runs on singles by i j Terry Carroll, Vic Buccola and Edo Vanni. Dick Watson's single ; scored Len Tran, who had tiipl- ed, in the second, and the Braves closed their scoring with two runs in the sixth on h ts by Carroll, Buecolu and. Vanni. Yakima, the .main threat to league-leading Vancouver, reduced the Caps' first-place margin to three games by winning a J 3-2 10-inning thriller at Yakl-1 ma. ,' Vancouver scored twicp In the . third inning on Singles by Danny in the won and lost columns is a game-and-a-half improve in 1 New York Giants continued to t come up with hair-raising f in-; ishes, shading Milwaukee 3-2 on a bases-loaded single bv Monte : Irvin with two out "In the ninth. Cincinnati mauled Brooklyn SPARKLING NEW SURROUNDINGS No Brain Damage From Head Blows (Commodore Cafe! Cerrutty. Perry said his only j real problem was that he had a' temptrmental bloke" on his: hands. : IN' SAND PI NES j ' John can run a four-r.iinute mile any day he feels like n." h;s coach said. "I've Rot to find .seme way of making him extend himself, even if it's (o brins out a set of quarter aili i.s to u.ir-1 him. Maybe hu'h . a record wouldn't be i et op.ni ed, but I'd like to show 'em V'l. t he can do." Under r ' ' .ptii . .iinvd out that Ceriuiiy. a veteran 1 lion runner, h id some very un-u.-ml ideas about trainin't L inriy and a number of otiur promis-init yuuaesters he hud t-'ken under his win? with a 1m; vu w' to the 1958 Oiymiilcs to be held at Melbourne. , He liked K run th-m in the fund dunes t i ;-tn naUicn their ; lc;:. While thi idea mi",l:t not be eai'.i'i'ly embraced by the ' world's ether track couches, il for its fifth straight victory. Philadelphia defeated Chicago 4-1. St. Louis and the Pirates were rained out. : In Proper Fights i Holden. K. Chorlton and D:c! i Greco. Yakima tied th gam Aussie reel off a 4 02 8 mile under poor conditions and becamo convinced he would cut under i the then t.iblid fuur-minut? mark without much trouble the first time he hid a fair chance a it. Aficr th" race we wrote: "You could do wor.e than bit that L nciy will be th" first athle'.e In h -t:ry to i nil the four-minute n.iie. It is more th m probable if he had not been foiced to buck a stiff breeze over the Lnal 150 yai-c's loday the niircclc mile' would be en Us way to the record books now." You would hive lout the bet to R';eav Bannister's historic 3:59 -1 clily a ft w week:; back, but mil ide that we stiil like to think it wasn't a bad hit of predicting 'on .slu.rl nolle- Wh- ran say th-t L-.ndy v -aid i i t have i racked tie1 ' rnii-L:!ioii wide open a yeai ...,o li hid been ruim.n'; then under Finland's ideal conditions instead of bin-k ment. . The Orioles have won 2? games and lost 42. A year ago today the Browns stood 21-44. The Orioles of 1954 lost their ninth in a row. Tuesday night, 3-1 to Boston in 12 innings. It also was their ninth straight loss at home, starting June 1. The only outstanding difference is in ine crowds. The P'nwr.s lost in privacy. More than 130.000 have suffered with the Orioles through their last nine defeats. The Orioles are 22 V2 games behind the Cleveland Indians who lost one game of their American League lead Tuesday night. The SAN FiiANCSCO A-R!;'Ws to Ihe head i i "v.ell--'ondu?te I lights" apparen'ly do not pro-dace cither punch-drunkenne 'S rr other brain damage, two New York University physicians re- in the- sixth with a series of singles by Dirk Brifkey, Len Noren and John Aibeni. Th .? Bears won it in th? 10th when Briskey singled, advanced en a one-baser by Herman Lewis and Mixed League Playoffs Set For Thursday came home on a 5-incle by Noren. , ttu noa. . )V, . ' In cn-opr-ra J i;i with the Nc.v for 15 hit:- Wenatchee pitchers Wrathall's. winners of A Division will mort B Division champion Tiger Cats in a five-game, total pins series this Thursday York state bixin'i roaniilssio i,'-Dr. Harry A. Kaplan and D:. Jeffer-on frcwdcr sluol.-d the brain waves of 1.043 prolessiori.il bcx rs. The patterns (iianie.1 little over Ion.; peric.1:, the twa phyt;ic.iani to'd the Am;::i.'.ri Medical Association. If a boxer is punch-drunk, they added, the chances are that Major League Leaders appears to Hive done Uiiuty : ia.slint! harm. as the Eskimos subdued tlM Chiefs 16-3 in th? series-opener at Wenatchee. The Eskimos scored five runs in- the third off starter Larry Richardson and seven more in the sixth off Jack Thompson, who relieved Richardson. Ray McNulty allowed nl,.hl V,Ho ir, nnino tVlc rUslnllCi' at 7 p.m. for the Spring Mixed Bowling League champion.ship.3. Wrathall's took ths A Division honors Monday after over SENIOR BASEBALL at Rooi2vf.!t Park, Thins., June 24, ot 6:30 p.m. G & A vs. COMMERCIAL HOTEL for Edmonton. The Eskimos " , .. ., ,,'..', .. ,, ' coming a lD-pin deficit in the fourth game to beat Leftovers with a new team high of 1,320 notnhr.o . ' 1:1 11 .nail Wenatchee ; were helped Pot. I .373 1 .364 .380 .368 I -3M p.tnisliment he has taken in the NATIONAL I F W.l E AB R H Silkier. Brooklyn . 247 47 92 Hiimner. Phillies . 28 38 83 Mueller. New York 247 42 H9 Robinson. Brooklyn 159 25 57 Jnblonskl. St. Louis 263 30 93 Runs MumuI. St. Louis. 53. ' Runs timed in Muslul. 71. Hits Jablonskl. 93. head in the fifth game. The photo- c"u,a' ! graphers bested Leftovers by a! The Victoria Tyees and Lewts-1 Ai.nmt ,rin wrofhoii', 1 ton Broncs got six hits apiece at 1 bowled scratch and Leftovers had Brain-wave ' records failed to-show any significant change in I boxf rs who lost their fights by i ' knc2kouls, the dc:.iors .said. They did confirm, however, that some fighters are more susceptible to 1 a 40 handicap for the series. Doubles-Snider. 21. Triples Schoendienst. St UUUIS, TIIlQ p- and Haniner. six. the B Division 185 handicap. Lewiston but Tyees combined theirs for a 5-2 triumph. Bub Drilling was the winning pitcher and John TiarshiU the loser. Neil Sheriu-n h.-nured for Victoria In the fourth and Larry Barton lifted one out of the park 'Home runs MuMal. t2 I hear! bio than ;ni;:.s. These i Stolen bases Bruton, Milwaukee. I- ' -Team '.standings after play-jbffs were: A Leagu" Wfat halls, i r.o1 handicap, 5894: Leftovers, I handicap 40, 5834: Whalens, han JPTZJS&CjIIXnmiM J Him iH Wl I ) HUWi N W M refrincraior mil to... ihmt grease. 111A0 di.his - " " ' AS IT 1 1 ANS! j i IflSi, I "JAVFX" gently ' ."TT VfVjqOT fout stubborn siain .- - I KViXaS removes miUUw an.1 J WK-hn-rk,...!. V.lCA cotton, .nd linen, whiter... f: ' V r J rCi' Pzs ,,i . . . 1-- Pilrhlni; Five decisions, Ant-mcll) Ni w York. 9-2 - 818. Strikeouts--Hack! IX, St. Louis. 8(5. AMI. UK AN I I: Vill i: are the types referred to as hav-ini ',-lass jaws." They jwit can't take blows in that area, but this dcesn't mean they smfer greater brain damage than others LO:"i Of C.'J!!S"i'J'JS!iCs:: bV 11 boxer frequently ccmes fro'n blows on parts of the body other m:.n ihe nt-ad. t.i.y ri a-irtcd. AB R dicap 265, 362C No-Names, handicap 415, ta98; Headpinners, handicap 4''5, 5534; and Aces, for Lewiston in the seventh., PHILADELPHIA Davey Gal-lardo, 130, Los Angeles, outpointed Bolden Abrams, 1C3"2, Philadelphia (10). Pet. .382 .345 .331 .325 .310 l!ll 174 200 1S1 210 Avila. CUt'veland Rosen. Clevelniul Fox. Chicago . . . Hour Detroit Tultle. Detroit Runs Fox. T5. Runs biittf-U i 58. handicap L'jO, 5162. I Team scores for B League were: Tiger Cats, handicap 185, i -Minoso. Chirugo, 'J-"! J 1f I ' I rC pants, etc.. AND DIMM M l 5 ; f U r :J I ft " AS 11' CLE ANSI iJ r r mm tin , ' . ..r f (t"t-- "....ajua w v ym in.i'-d. i . mmw7 -. -w mi " irf ill -' mm 5296; Cantels, handicap 155, 5174; ! Family Market, handicap 105, 5075; Hotshots, handicap 105, 4856; Chums, handicap 420, 4707: and Lucky Strikes who bowled a lady short and took ladies' low score each game, finished last with 4192 with no handicap. Hits Fox. Bfi. Doubles Vernon. Washington. 10 TripU-s Runnels. Washington, 10. Home runs Boone, Detroit, and Rosen. 13. Stolen bases Jensen. Boston and Rivera. Chicago, nine. Pitching Reynolds, New York, 8-1 .88(1. Strikeouts Turley.' Baltimore. 94. S V. ' it V ' " ".., It -it? si' '.. . i; ., ! . ; v --vv " -v. it"' " 1 :- w 1 W" 'f ! l CJfi. " 1. :. ' ' l a .. '": y t '! vx- f '".'., ! - - if ' Excifinj heul Needs absolutely NO CX)OKING! Alt you do mix with milk and enjoy creamier texture and richer flavor, than any pudding you've ever tasted! It's bomoge-nixed! Get sensational new KOYAL INSTANT Puddings today chocolate, butterscotch and vanilla. SM'"!1 . dry AS IT CLEANS! f , "V. 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