July 17, 1947 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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Athlete
Home
a and family of
uest this week
: (Al) Crane,
Tom Arlington:
anes intend to
Northwest.
• ccently retired
as "t nationally
athlete at the
sylvania, where
e of and fellow
egan. The two
Stadium High
md Washington
ther.
ay man was a
player and out-
rd-llolder.
bs. FAT!
Plan ,
gure
rites. "I
mt ways
:ried the
,educing I]lkW, k &
permnce :,
as Mrs.
AYD$ I"
We ued
and :
ii flw
OUt aB¥ .,..
neat or ;::
a down.
)u • 0F
k2.2S, if .ml
IONEY '" IF
:. Phone
)HARMACY
i STORE
as a Reminder)
,,rbrook Trail%
DING
ABLE
lED and OPERATED by GENE
; East of Union Three Miles E=
Union 342 Phone
orses and Saddles for
Rooms
0
ervice
.'•
and
Ifh'Opi n'g and
ts
street
ty:City Bldg.
PHILLIPS PITCHES LOGGERS TO
VIL000RY OVER WINLOCK, 8 TO 2
EVERGRIEN STANDINGS
W L rf ra
Toledo .............. 8 2 49 31
SHELTON ...... 7 3 78 40
Kelso ................ 6 3 67 41
Longview ........ 5 4 41 50
Olympia .......... 5 5 59 56
Centralia .......... 4 5 54 54
Winlock ............ 2 8 42 58
Chehalis .......... 2 9 43 97
Latesf Scores
Shelton 8, Winlock 2
Toledo 2, Olympia 1
Longview 6, Cheltalis 3
Kelso 8, Winlock 7
Guinea This Week
Shelton at Centralia
Toledo at Longview
Olympia at Chehalis
Kelso at Winlock
In a brilliant if somewhat pe-
culiar pitching performance, Fire-
bailer Jess Phillips mixed a slow
curve very effectively with his
hard one Saturday night to baffle
Winlock betters as he hurled the
Shelton Loggers to their seventh
triumph in ten Evergreen league
starts this season by an 8 to 2
lights.
Plillips gave tle visitors only
t! We Score Again,!
two hits but walked five and hit
margin under the Loop Field
four for an odd hurling record.
The Shclton elbower was
matched through the first .our
innings by Fritz Korpi, Winlock
manager-pitcher, whose own base-
runing put the game into a 1-1
deadlock until the Loggers shook
four runs out of their bones in the
fifth to sew up the scrap.
] The Loggers tallied in the first
when Tony Conies led off with a
two-bagger down the third base
line and scored when Buck Arm-
strong got a ift triple on his long
fly to center on which Waino .Hill
fell down.
Korpi walked, stole both second
and third, and registered on kelly
M:athews fly to center to knot it
in the thirclf Then the Loggers
stowed it away in the ;ifth when
Phillips drew a life on •George
Heitzman's bobble at third, Contes,
Jack Hudson and Buck Armstrong
followed with singles and Don
Jonstone threw Stan Armstrong's
roller away at second,
Two more Logger runs spiked
the plate in the sixth' as Buft
Dickinson beat out a slow roller
to short, Chuck Walton singled
sharply to center and Both took an
extra sack when Hill booted the
ball: scoring when Phillips lashed
a stinging single to center.
Don Satra scored a finalLogger
run in the seventh when he was
hit for tle second time in the
game, stole second, advanced on
Walton's infield hit, and scored
when Catcher Ed Dorothy's throw
to pick him off third glanced off
his head into leftfield.
Hudson, Buck Armstrong, and
Walton each bagged three hits
with Contes notching a pair.
The Loggers go to Centralia this
weekend, play their next home
game July 26 against Kelso in a
re-dated rained out game of earlier
in the season. A non-league game
with Port Orchard was rained out
Friday night.
WINLOCK ab r h o a e
Heitzman, 3b .. 4 0 0 2 " 1 1
Dorothy, c ...... 3 0 0 6 1 1
Mathews, lb .. 5 0 0 7 0 0
Jonstone, ss .. 3 0 0 1. 3 1
Sippola, If ...... 4 0 0 1 2 0
Yahn. rf .......... 2 0 0 1 0 0
Hill, cf .............. 2 1 1 1 1 1
Warnath, 2b .... 2 0 0 2 0 0
Keller, 2b ........ 2 0 0 3 0 0
Korpi, p .......... 3 1 I 0 2 0
Totals .......... 30 2 2 24 10 4
SHELTON .... ab r h o a e
Conies, 3b ...... 5 2 2 1 3 1
Hudson, ss ...... 4 1 3 2 1 0
B.Armstrong, lf 5 1 3 0 0 0
S.Armstrong', cf 4 0 1 1 0
L,
! I
n e idea !l,t ! :,.'-
jets don't entitle them to I HEATER - CIRCULATOR -
€'re the very people who mtzst/ .. ,, -vice ]' OiL o,...-
buy must give good andsatisfact°ry;;; s¢i'l'U V]fl'] "
FURNACE
g you find at Penney's is tested for ': • THE SMART FELLOW ! " --
you every dime's worth of vale PHONE 196
d-all that, and more!
,zmmer-ln
oil tank and be able to keep your
for constant comfort.
of STORAGE TANKS
i to !,%0 gallons for new oi1 burner installations
Satra, c ............ 2 1 0 6 1
McComb. 2b .... 4 0 0 2 4
Dickinson, lb.. 3 1 1 15 0
Walton, rf ...... 4 1 3 0 0
Phillips, p ........ 4 1 1 0 3
Totals .......... 35 8 14 27 12
Score by Innings
Winlock .............. 001 001 000 2
Hits ................ 000 101 000--- 2
Shelton .............. 100 042 10x--- 8
Hits ................ 200 034 22x....14
SUMMARY: 3-base hit B.
Armstrong. 2-base hits--Walton,
Conies. S. Armstrong. Sacrifice
hits--Hudson. Runs batted in--
Phillips 2, McComb, B. Armstrong,
Hudson, Mathews, Korpi. Struck
ou--Phillips 4, Korpi 4. Walks--
Phillips 5, Korpi 1. Wild pitch--
Korpi. Hit batters--Sarta 2 by
Korpi, Hill, Heitzmann, Dorothy,
Jonstone by Phillips. Runs re-
sponsible for--Phillips 2, Korpi 5.
Stolen bases--S. Armstrong 2,
Satra 2, Korpi 2, B. Armstrong.
Double play- Jonstone to Keller.
Umpires---Felix DeLisle, plate;
Homer Taylor, bases.
Legion Unbeaten
Firbanks-Morse
PUMPS
For Every
00fter Whipping
Puyallup, Tacoma
4TII DISTRICT STANDINGS
W L rf ra
SHELTON ...... 11 0 96 21
Puyallup .......... 10 2 60 21
Boys Club ........ 5 4 51 27
Olympia .......... 5 5 42 26
Lincoln ............ 4 7 52 79
Stadium .......... 2 9 33 74
Bellarmine ...... 1 10 27 112
Latest Scores
Shelton 9, Puyallup 0
She]ton 15, Bellarmine 2
Playoffs Tonight at Olympia
6 p.m.Shelton vs Boys Club
8 p.m.---Olympia vs Puyallup
Triumphs over Puyallup y 9
to 0 and Bellarmine by 15 to 2
ran Shelton's vlctery skein to
eleven straight in 4th District ju-
nior legion baseball play during
the past week and left Norm Hill-
yard's young, club unbeaten in its
leagte schedule. Both games were
played on the losers' own dia-
monds.
A final game with Tacoma Boys
Club, slated for Loop Field last
night, was cancelled because of
its proximity to the 4th District
Playoffs, which commence tonight
at Olympia, and because it trod
no bearing on determining the
four playoff teams.
Bob Tobey was in fine fettle
again at Puyallup Saturday eve-
ning, limiting the Fair City ju-
niors to three hits while his team-
mates were slamming two Puyal-
lup hurlers for thirteen, led by
Secondbaseman Wayne Clary, who
enjoyed a perfect four-for-four
night at the plate,
Shelton sewed the tilt up early,
scoring six runs in the first and
another pair' in the second off
Banazak to make it easy for Tob-
ey. The Shelton southpaw allowed
only one Puyallup baserunner as
far as third, only two others as
far as second. Tobey struck out
eleven, walked only two, both in
the first inning.
Whtle Shelton played fine ball
against PuyaHup, it was just the
reverse against Bellarmine last
Wednesday, when the local aggre-
gation probably unfatched its poor-
est game of the season, fortunate-
ly against the weakest team in
the district.
However, Tobey, Johnny John-
son and Ken Carlson, sharing Shel-
ton's mound assignment, collect-
;rely hurled a no-hit game but
five errors by their teammates
allowed the Tacoma team a coup-
le of unearned scores in the fourth
while Johnson was on the slab.
Gene Wells produced three hits,
including a triple, to lead Shel-
ton's eleven-hit, attack. Wells wal-
loped his three-sack smash during
a six-run splurge in the fourth
which sewed up the tilt for Shel-
ton, Quint McPherson's double
1 also figured in this outburst, the
only extra base blow among Shel-
0 ton's eleven bingles.
0 Floyd Priszner turned in two
0 fine games behind the bat against
0',Bellarmine and Puyatlup to me-
0
2 terially counteract some of the
pessimism which followed the
news that the team's regular
catcher, Carl Sundsten, had suf-
fered a broken finger on his
throwing hand mid would be side-
lined for the rest of the junior
legion season. Whether he will
be able to even pinch hit is doubt-
' ] Purpose Banazak, p .... 2 0 1 1 2
R.- on co.
lad I:iatributor for Associated Oil Products ELECTRIC CO.
[ : = ' . G°vey BidS' Phone 154"W
' MoreFunon Pi
() "
9- ChiC-, o.
•
Also Many Styles st
d milk products make
Picc foods taste better.
bread, cheese for
milk for the thil-
fOP the coffee, ice
dessert what would a"
Without these things?
than good taste,
most nearly per-
"--rich in vitamins, rain-
Proteins. No group of
take the place of milk
Products.
for all the family, serve
form "everyday for
FOR E
Sheer black rayO
misty loveliest, ca
ows over the
cool as shade its
pletely, charmingly
a new mood a new
mid flays.
your most belove
they're re
your most im
the rest of'
and wilted. So
smart for those sat
•. inex}ensive at.
ful, Hillyard said.
The box scores:
SHELTON ab r,h o a e
Cartwright,ss 2 2 1 1 2 0
Clary, 2b ........ 4 2 4 1 2 0
Tobey, p ........ 4 1 1 0 1 0
Carlson, 3b-p.. 5 1 1 1 1 1
Cardinal, lb .... 4 1 1 7 0 0
Wells, If .......... 4 .1 2 0 0 0
Anderson. rf .... 4 1 2 0 0 0
McPherson, cf 4 0 1 1 0 0
Priszner, c .... 4 0 0 11 2 1
Totals .......... 33 9 13 21 7 1
PUYALLUP ab r h o -a e
Balmer, 2b ...... 2 0 0 1 3 0
Swanson, ss .... 3 0 0 2 1 t
Absher, cf ........ 2 0 0 0 1 0
Lindberg, rf-lb 3 0 0 1 0 0
Predmore, lf .... 3 0 1 0 0 0
Heinz, lb ........ 2 0 1 7 0 0
Erickson, rf .... 1 0 0 0 0 .0
Wisstngey, 3b.. 2 0 0 0 2 0
Winkins, c ...... 2 0 0 9 2 1
0'
Bates, p ........ 1 0 0 0' 0 0
aNames 0 0 0 0 0 0
bThrall ........ 1 0 0 0 0 0
a batted for Wisstnger in 7th.
b batted for Wlnkins in 7th.
Score by Innhlgs
Shelton .......... 620 OOl 0- 9
Hits ............ 641 001 1 13
Puyallup ........ 000 000 0 0
Hits ............ 010 110 O-- 3
SUMMARY: 3-bae hit---Cart-
wright. 2-bae hits--Clary, Pred-
more. Runt batted inClary 2,
Anderson 2, Wells, Carlson. Struck
outTobey I1, Bnazak 4, Bates
Walks--Tobey 2, Banazak 1,
Bates 2. Wild pitoh--Banazak ,
Bates. Passed balls--Winkins 2,
Priszner. lnnings pitched--Bana-
zak 4. Runs responsible f6r--Ban-
dzak 6, Bates 1. Charge defeat to
Banazak. Stolen bases--Clary,
Cartwright. Double play--Balmr
er to Swanson to Lindberg.
SHELTON ab r h o a e
Cartwright, ss 5 2 1 2 2 1
Clark, 2b ........ 3 2 1 0 0 0
Tobey, p-cf ...... 5 2 1 0 0
Carlson, 3b-p4 5 1 1 1 1 1
Cardinal, ib .... 5 2 1 5 0 1
Anderson, rf-3b 3 2 1 0 0 1
Wells, If .......... 4 2 3 0 0 0
McPherson, ef 2 1 1 0 0 0
Johnson, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Valley, rf ........ 1 0 1 0 0 0
Priszner, c ...... 4 1 0 13 1 0
Totals ...... 88 15 11 21 4 5
BELLARMINEab r h o a e
Turner, If ........ 4 0 O 1 0 0
Boscko, 2b ...... 3 0 0 0 2 3
Pravels, lb ...... 3 0 0 12/)2 4Q
George, ss ...... 3 0 0 1
Beck, 3b-p ...... 3 l 0 0' 2
Uran, ef-p-3b.. 3 1 0 2 0 1
Nugent, c ........ 3 0 0 5 4 0
Mason, p-cf .... 3 0 0 0 1 0
Robinson, rf .... 3 0 0 0 0 0
Totals .......... 28 2 0 21 11 11
Shelton .......... 001 614 3---15
Hits ............ 001 514 0--11
Bellarmine .. 000 200 0 2
Hits ............ 000 000 0--- 0
SUMMARY : 3-base hit.--Wells.
2-base hit -- McPherson. Runs
batted in--Wells 2, Anderson 2,
McPherson, Valley, Clary, Tobey,
Carlson, Cardinal. Struck out--
Tobey 6, Carlson 6, Mason 4, Uran
1, Beck i. Walks--Tobey 2, John-
son 1. Mason 1, Uran 1, Beck 1,
Wild pitchUlan, Beck. Pa.
balls--Nugent 2, Priszner. Inning_
pitched--Tobey 3, Johnson 1, Carl*
!0 WIN A $9.90
jmber of pennies in the jar in
luly 18th.
r Whzs Blanket
I
By Ted Kesting
It's amazing how many other-
wise exemplary citizens don't
know the first thing" about fish-
ing etiquette. If 20 million of us
are going to fish together in har-
[ony, we will have to be more
considerate of the other fellow.
Havilah Babcock, noted outdoor
writer, views some of the more
obvious breaches of etiquette on
the part of the piscatorial man.
"The surest way to tell. wheth-
er a fellow's a gentleman is to
take him fishing," says the head
of a manufacturing firm. "I have
four daughters," says another
manr "and whenever one of them
gets serious designs on a young
fellow, I don't hire a genealogist
to look up his family tree. No
sir. 1 just take my prospective
son-in-'law on a fishing trip. :f
want no surer index to a man's
character than his conduct on a
fishing trip."
Have you ever taken a friend
fishing and sworn by the eternal
never to take him again? What
is the surest way a man can
make himself i)er)na non gTata
on a fishing trip? Whom do you
nominate as Public Nuisance
Numb'er One? What is the most
.discourteous thing a fisherman
can do? Wirer, in short, is the
unpardonable sin on the part of
a fellow mgler?
One unpardonable sin is abus-
ing the corifidence of a host. Here
is an example. After much quest-
ing, you finally ferret out a fish-
ing place, some secluded and un-
haunted spot wl)ich always yields
a handsome string. Then one day
brotherly love wells up within
you. ' You get to feeling sorry for
the henpecked and*luckless fellow
next door, so you take him to
your secret place. Of course, you
enjoin him to secrecy, implicitly
trusting his innate sense of ]toner.
B'ut when you. go back to the self-
same spot, there sits yot, r erst-
while friend witl two of his
friends. He has been sneaking
back unbeknownst to you and
bringing his cronies, who in turn
halve been bringing their cronies.
Now your seeret place has be-
come a mecca for the hoi polloi.
Have you ever had a companion
son 3, Mason 3 plus, Uran 2 plus,
Beck 2. Winning pitcherTobey.
Losing pttcherMason. Runs re-
spinsible for--Johnson 0, :Mason 3
Uran 4, BeCk 0. Hit batter-.-
Clary by Beck. Balk-.--Mason.
Stolen Bases--Ca.rtwright 2, Car-
dinal 2, Clary, Wells, Johnson.
drop his hook right beside yours
while you were getting a bite, or
right in the precise spot where you
had just caught a fish? That is
the severest test of friendship
known, It's perfectly legal, to be
sure, but to heck with legality.
It is certainly not qn evidence of
good breeding.
There are few ttings a hook-
and-line fisherman resents more
than having somebody else tell
him when to pull. It is always
construed as a reflection on the
puller's intelligence. If the fel-
low pulls and lands his fish, he
tells himself tlmt he was going to
do it anyway. If he pulls and
n'/isses, he reproaches you with an
et tu, Brnie look. Telling a corn-
paw ion When to pull is bad enough,
but wlen he pulls and misses, nev-
er never say: "You didn't give him
Lamon's Trail and Guide Service
Headquarters 1019 Cots,, Shelton -- Plmne 771
Trail Trips Into Heart of Olympics
BASE CAMPS: Staircase Resort, Lake Cushman,
and Waumila Lodge, oort Angeles
Special Staircase-Port Angeles Trip
F'OUR IO-DAY ALL-EXPENSE TRIPS SCHEDULED
...... ............. ' " ' • IIIII1'1"
GASCO BRIOUETS
ALL HEAT -- NO ASH
Almost Automatic
time enough. If' you had just
waited a second longer--." That's
an invitation to jnstifiable homi- HURST COAL
ride!
It in also umnannerly to ques-
tion the weight of a companion's 25 So. 2nd Street
fish. One who has the instincts
of a gentleman acepts tim other
fellow's eimate. When you haul
inn fish, heft it gleefully and say, II [ I
"ive puads or I'm a DUtclmmn," , .......
you have every moral right to
expect a gentlemanly conflna-
tion from your companion. 1 you
want a fellow to be your friend
for life, if you want to marry his
youngest daughter, if you want to
be made the bneficiary uncr his
will, just say: Sorry to differ, old
man, but you are underestimating
the weight of your fish. He'll go
nearer seven than five. And did
that son of a gun fight!"
Now people who commit such
moral misdemeanors are not nec-
essarily hardened sinners. 'They
may be thoughtless rather than
unneighborly. But obviously a lit-
tic_etiquette would not ,be amiss.
Mason County Post No. 1694
Veterans of Foreign
Wars
Regular :Meeting
Friday, July 18 -- 8 p,m.
Memorial Building
W. T. Jackson, Commander
Phone 697
J. H. Gray, Q.M. Adj.
Phone 352J
Like
from
Morgan a Eacren
Lumber. Co.
OFFICE QUARTERS
AT 1324 OLYMPIC HIGHWAY
e@
PHONE ,656
for
?ITTSBURGH FAMOUS PAIN
e
HAULING AND BUILDING SUPPLIES
€ooling Bre
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Since 1878 " f.O. Sick, Ptes///e
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