July 12, 1973 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
©
Shelton Mason County Journal. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 11 (11 of 34 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
July 12, 1973 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
":%
Little League Photo Album
¢
MOOSE -- Major Division Champions: front, left to right, John Cook, Devin
Devaney, Tracy Young, David Perryman, Steve Chapman, Todd Lund;
second row, left to right, Jerry Randleas, Lane Jackstadt, Jim O'Dell, Tracy
West, Billy Smith, Dave Danielson; back row, Coach Fred Randleas, Coach
Bill Jackstadt, manager Ken O'Dell.
"~ : )
.... ~;~,~, ~ i ,i~"!i~:~,
: !!:i!iiiii!ii ........ ill¸ :/
SRA -- Major Division Runnerup: front, left to right, Chuck Christy, Mike
Krumpols, Mike Cross, Ken Thomason, Roger Dickinson, Reid Myers, Shane
Howell; second row, left to right, Jay Clark, Mike Wittenberg, Gary Orr, Phil
Franklin, Lloyd Smith, John Thomason; back row, manager Ron Dickinson,
coaches Jerry Christy, Dean Smith, Bud Franklin.
....< 0Z#
.... ~ i:!~i~iiiiiiii ill! !i!¸
i~ :
BECHTOLD BUILDERS: front, left to right, Tom Lindberg, Mark Taylor,
Jim Carney, Don Collins, Greg Lester, Tad Rutherford; second row, left to
right, Doug LaClair, Darryl LaClair, Archie Miller, Mike Lindberg, Ron
Twiddy, John Bolender; back row, Coach Don Rutherford, manager Ron
Twiddy, Sr., Coach Gene Lindberg.
MORGAN TRANSFER -- Coast League Champions: front, left to right,
Scott Hicks, Don Nolan, Mark Morgan, Billy Hagmann, Ray Gouley, Todd
Hagmann, Greg Twiddy; Barry Hagmann, Roger Murray, Mel Murray, Joel
Casebier, Don Evans, Lyle Gouley; back row, manager Lonnie Hagmann and
Coach AI Gouley.
KIWANIS: front, left to right, Todd Pearson, Karl Cuzick, Tony Liles, Leroy
Perrine, Mark Skaar, Martin Nelson; second row, left to right, Charles Keith,
Keith Schouviller, Lee Deffinbaugh, David VanderWal, Jim Webber, Jim
Dale, Larry Spencer, Joe Stone; back row, manager Dave (The Lip) Myer,
Coach Don (Earl Stanley) Gardner.
Jess' maintained their scant
lead in the Puget Sound League
by winning three of four games in
league play last week. Tuesday
Tom Thomas threw his second
no-hitter against Aahnest-Parkside
Realty, and Bill Null followed
with a one-hitter as Jess' swept a
twin bill from the Realtors.
Thursday evening the Mets split a
doubleheader with the
second-place Olympia Olys, losing
the first game 3-0, and taking the
second game 4-3.
In the Tuesday night opener
against Aahnest, Jess' supported
Thomas' no-hit pitching with four
home runs. Scott Swisher
homered with Bob Miller on base
in the first inning, Miller lined one
over the fence with Jerry Baker
aboard in the third, Rob Mills hit
a solo job in the fourth, and Pep
Nutt hit one oul after Tom
Thomas had doubled in the fifth.
Miller doubled and scored on a
pair of wild pitches to make the
final count 8-0.
Thomas fanned 19 and
allowed only two base runners,
one on a walk in the sixth, and a
second on a dropped third strike
in the seventh.
In the second game, Bill Nutt
allowed Aahnest a single hit with
two out in the first inning and
nothing after that. For the game
he registered 12 strike outs.
Scott Swisher scored the only
run Nutt needed in the second
inning when he doubled and
scored on Steve DeMiero's single.
Swisher scored again in the fourth
when he singled, advanced to
second base on a throw, and came
in on Tom Fredson's single.
Thursday night Jess' lost the
first game to Olympia 3-0 despite
the three-hit, 1 ! -strike-out
pitching of Ton] Thomas. Thomas
allowed a second-inning two-run
homer to Tom Jones and then
blanked the Olys until Doug
Brodin's inside-the-park homer in
the seventh. But Olympia's Gale
McGrath limited Jess' to three
hits (doubles by Swisher and
Armstrong and a single by Miller)
and no runs.
The seconi:l game looked like
more of the same when the Olys
scored three first-inning runs, but
Bill Nutt held them to a pair of
harmless singles the rest of the
way.
Jess' began their come-back in
the fourth inning when Miller
singled, stole second, advanced to
third on Swisher's infield hit, and
scored when ~he attempt to get
Swisher at first was wild.
A single by Lynn Spilseth, a
walk to DeMiero, an infield hit by
Baker and a single by Miller
produced the tying runs in the
fifth, and Swisher, aboard on an
error, scored the clincher on
Spilseth's second single of the
game.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Jess' closed out a busy week
of softball by winning three out
of four against a pair of Canadian
teams last weekend at Callanan
Park. Saturday night they split
two with Abbotsford, winning the
first game 6-2, but dropping the
second game 3-1 in nine innings.
Sunday afternoon Jess' swept a
pair from Bate Construction of
Victoria by scores of 1-0 and 4-3.
Jess' jumped off to a quick
1-0 lead in the first inning
Saturday night against
Abbotsford when Scott Swisher
singled home Bob Miller who had
reached base on a fielder's choice.
Miller singled in Lynn Spilseth,
aboard on a walk, in the third to
make it 2-0. Three more runs
crossed the plate in the fourth
when Tom Marshall singled, Tom
Fredson reached base on an error,
and Spilseth hit a long twisting fly
ball over the right fielder's head,
scoring Marshall and Fredson.
Spilseth came in when the
outfielder fell attempting to hurry
the ball back into the infield. Jon
Armstrong's homer in the sixth
made the final score 6-2.
Marshall had three singles in
three trips and Armstrong had a
single and a home run.
Tom Thomas limited the
Canadians to three hits and held
Abbotsford to no earned runs, as
both of Abbotsford's fourth
inning runs were the result of a
pair of errors.
In the second game, Ted
McCallum, whom Jess' had
reached for six runs and eight hits
in the opener, came back to
throw a nine-inning five-hitter,
fanning 15. Swisher collected a
single and a double, Marshall
added a double, and Armstrong
and Fredson had the only other
hits, both singles.
In the Sunday opener, Jess'
clipped Victoria 1-0, in a game
that was almost completely void
of hitting. Bill Nutt gave the
Canadians two hits, while Jess'
could manage only one.
Jerry Baker collected Jess'
only hit, a single, to lead off the
first inning. Pep Nutt sacrificed
him to second and from there he
stole third and scored when the
catcher's throw sailed into left
field. After that it was all futility
for hitters, as Nutt and Victoria's
Kern and Ruthowski permitted
By JOHN BOGGS
The Shelton Junior Legion
baseball team split four games
over the last week, winning two
and losing two.
July 3 at Parkland, the
Shelton JL's scored twice in the
third inning to take a 2-1 win.
Terry Knight started it off in the
top of the third inning when he
walked, then Ray Krumpols
walked to move him to second.
Pat Davidson singled to score
Knight, then Doug Long doubled,
sending Krumpols home with the
second score. Long was 3-4 at the
plate for the game, and Ray
Krumpols was the winning
pitcher.
Two days later at Puyallup
several Shelton errors throughout
the game helped the hosts take a
13-4 win.
July 6 against South Kitsap,
Shelton dropped a 3-2 decision
despite a fine pitching
performance by Ken Aries, who
had I1 strikeouts.
Tuesday, against South Kitsap
again, the Shelton JL's played one
of their best games of the year as
they took an 8-1 win.
The scoring started in the first
inning when Terry Knight walked
and Ray Krumpols sacrificed him
to second. Ken Aries then got a
hit that bounced past the second
baseman and between the
outfielders for a home run.
Shelton scored again when
Krumpols singled, Clyde Rains
Time out during the filming of a commercial for Dean's
Studio. Dean makes a personal check on an OUCHIF_. finger.
Then it will be back to work to finish Amy's sum~er special
sitting (6 lovely portraits for only $17.50). This summer while
the kids are healthy, bring them in for a personal touch
portrait special. Call 426-3272.
only four base runners.
The second game saw Jess'
score first with a single run when
Miller and Swisher hit
back-to-back singles and Miller
came around on an outfield
error. Armstrong and Fredson
added consecutive singles in the
second and Armstrong scored
when the Victoria infielders
played dropsies with a pair of
ground balls.
Jess' gave up their lead in the
third, however, when Victoria
scored twice, with the aid of an
infield rhrowing error. A
fourth-inning home run gave the
Canadians a 3-2 lead.
In the fifth inning, Miller was
safe on a fielder's choice and
Swisher followed with a single.
Pep Nutt's single scored Miller to
knot the score at 3-3.
Tom Thomas then held
Victoria scoreless until Jess' could
cash in on the bottonr of the
eighth inning. Scott Swisher,
swinging a hot bat of late, led off .....
with a double. Pep Nutt then
reached base as his attempted
bunt was thrown away in an
attempt lo nail Swisher at third.
With Jon Armstrong at the plate,
Victoria pitcher Stan Kern
uncorked a wild pitch and
Swisher came in with the winning
FUll.
Tonight (Thursday) Jess'
plays host to Heidelberg of Port
Angeles for a pair of Puget Sound
League games scheduled to start
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon.
Jess' has scheduled a make-up of a
p reviously-rained-out
d o u b l e-h eader with Cloverleaf
:iii i!ii!i
Tavern of Bremerton. Action at .....
Callanan Park is scheduled to
begin at 1 p.m.
got hit with a pitch to move him
to second, and George Landram
singled to send him in, making it
3-0.
South Kitsap scored its run in
the fourth inning, and Shelton
added two more in the fifth
inning. Terry Knight singled and
Ray Krumpols bunted to get on.
Ken Ari~s beat out a bunt to load
the bases. Clyde Rains walked
to score Knight, then George
Landram singled to score
Krumpols.
Sheiton added their last three
runs in the sixth inning. Pete
Krueger singled• and Don
Shellgren bunted to get on. Terry
Knight singled to score Krueger,
then Ken Aries singled to move
Shellgren to third and Knight to
second. Clyde Rains singled and
Shellgren was thrown out at
home, but the bases were still
loaded and George Landram was
hit with a pitch, scoring Knight.
Rains was thrown out, then Mark
Johnson was hit with a pitch to
score Aries, making the final 8-1.
JESS' PITCHER TOM THOMAS continued his brilliant
throwing last Tuesday with a no-hitter against Aahnest
Realty. He fanned 19 batters in the seven-inning game which
Jess' won 8-0.
FROM
FOOTBALL INJURIES:
A study was done in
Philadelphia to determine the
effects of various shoe designs
on knee and leg injuries due to
participation in football games.
Over a 3 year period, =t was
noted that teams utilizing the
soccer style had suffered about
one quarter the number of
serious injuries as had teams
using the conventional football
shoe.
The main structural
differences in the shoes are
noted in the cleats. The
conventional football shoe
contains 7 cleats, each with a
diameter of 3/8 to 1/2 inch.
Fixation of the foot in turf and
subsequent contact is
responsible for a large number
of leg injuries. It is felt that the
more cleats on the shoe, the
less chance for the foot to be
set firmly in the ground. In
addition to the decreased
diameter, the maximal length
of the cleat is recommended to
be 3,./8 inch.
~occer shoes cost
approximately 60*/, of the
price of conventional football
shoes. Orthopedic physicians
feel that shoes with a larger
number of smaller cleats are
less likely to lead to serious leg
injuries.
Neil's Pharmacy
Emergency Ph. 426-2165
Fifth & Franklin St.--426-3327
Open Daily 9:30 to 7:30
Saturdays -- 9:30 to 6:00
Decorator Bowl by International
13 Beal
This lovely decorator bowl, is just one of 13 beautiful International
Silver gifts for you to choose from at oil of our TCF offices.
It's FREE with a deposit of $1,000. You con purchase it for only
$4.00 with a $300 deposit or only $5.50 with a minimum deposit
of $50.
You can purchase as many items as you wish. Add to your own
precious collection . . . and they make great gifts, too. But hurry!
Stop by and see this collection of beautiful silver gifts while they
lost.
THURSTON COUNTY FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OLYMPIA. SHELTON • LACEY
Thursday, July 12, 1973 -Shelton-Mason County Journal - Page 1