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The Times Standard from Eureka, California • Page 11

Location:
Eureka, California
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Arcata Chiefs Play Cresent City Nine Tonight At Arcata AROUND OUR TOWN By SCOOP BEAL WE HOPE THERE ARE ENOUGH PEOPLE seeking entertainment to go around this weekend it is probably the busiest' in the history of the local area more events scheduled at the same time than ever before tonight there is the Shrine Circus at Redwood the Harlem Clowns playing softball at Albee Stadium', and a Redwood Baseball League game at Arcata Saturday night there is more circus, the Crabs playing baseball at Albee Stadium and the Miss Humboldt contest at the Kiwanis Swim dance at the Municipal Auditorium, and on Sunday there will be Crabs double-header baseball, two Redwood League games and the Kiwanis Swim Meet at Freshwater Back in 1917 the Klamath river was closed to sturgeon i i this year for the first time since then, the river is open to sturgeon fishing yesterday the first sturgeon under the new open season law was caught by Benny Calkins of Lindley, California the fish weighed 105 pounds and was six feet and one-half inches long and was caught on a 32 pound test line "Doc" Hindley out at the Ferndale Fairgrounds was all smiles last Tuesday afternoon when we dropped in on him about 5 o'clock said. "This is the first time I have ever been able to sit back and relax without worrying about horses for our race meeting we have good ones and lots of them" but the next day fire broke out and burned seven stock barns so "Doc" has no time now to relax but at least he doesn't have to worrv about the horses. Redwood League Tilt Slated ForSP.M. The Arcata Chiefs meet the Crescent City Merchants in a Redwooi! Baseball league game tonight at the Arcata ballpark starting at 8 o'clock, Manager Eddie Baiocchi of the Chiefs will send his skyscraper pitcher Jeremiah. Strauss, seven, against the visitors.

Stauss, a former Bakersfield high mound ace, has had two years of pro experience. Baiocchi's batting lineup for tonight will be as follows: Bill Tuttle, ss; Jack Kinser, cf; Billie Cox, 3b; Phil Huff, Ib; Don Vanni, Cal Phelps, If; Keith Darling, rf; Bud Peterson, 2b, and Jeremiah Strauss, p. Mel Pritchard or Clausen will hurl for Crescent How're They Biting? By CJIET SCHWARZKOPF THESE BLASTED WINDS just about have the salmon fishermen talking to themselves. We've been "enjoying" them off and on for nearly a month, but the fishing has been fair to quite good in between blows. "Bones' 1 Jones, of Bucksport fame, tells us that the salmon are right in the bay entrance before the breeze starts to blast, as this is written.

Have at 'em! SAGA OF EEL RIVER County clerk Fred Moore recently returned from a week's trip back into the primitive area on the middle fork of Eel river, in Mendocino County. Fred and party went in via Ruth in the upper Mad river country, and at and, in the mornings, came out at Covelo, after sixty miles of hiking via trail. That's some nice ones have been we'd call a hairy-chested i And Fred says some of Al Weatherbee adds his 0. K. to the story by stating that he and his party caught six Tuesday, with his visiting brother Tom getting the biggest one- Dodgers, Cards Win Pony Tilts The Moose Lodge Dodgers cashed in on timely hitting and costly Mutual Plywood Orioles errors to post a 10-5 win in a Pony League game at Albee Stadium yesterday.

In the other half of the split twin bill, the Kiwanis Cardinals romped to a 14-4 triumph over the Bernie Anderson Tigers. The wins kept both clubs running one-two in the pennant chase. Mike Lutje, making his first mound appearance of the season, set the Orioles down with six hits. The Orioles held a 4-2 advantage going into the last of the fourth but a five-run outburst cinched it for the league-leaders. At Parkside, Billy Sullivan banged out a homer, a triple and a single in five trips to -lead the Card's 14-hit barrage.

Both Ray Luzzi, the winning hurler, and Carl Sleeves had three-for-four days at the plate those deep holes 'way back in winners. there contained trout so large that he doubted his own eyes. His crowd caught a number of a 20 inside the en-i them, and they weighed between seven and nine pounds! trance, good. All of which sounds STEELHEAD ARE IN the Klsmath river, according to several reports. Buck Barnes, of Naylor's, said that a four and a six-pnunder were taken In the vicinity of Klamath Glen this veek.

The lucky angler brought them in to show, and said the going had been good since last week. Single eggs seemed to do the trick. Fly fishing ought to he looking up, by now, although the are spotty in places. Incidentally, its just about salmon i on the Klamath gosh, how time flies! The Smith Fred Janke hit a himer for the Cards while Des Stone was rapping one for the circuit for the Dodgers in the other game. The Cards started it with a four-run first inning and finished it with a five-run sixth.

SWIMMERS AND DIVERS, plus nationally famed Aquacade stars from San Francisco, will" hold the-spotlight at Freshwater Pool, five miles east of Eureka, Sunday afternoon when the annual Kiwanis Swim Meet and Water Foliles is held. Among the many swimming contestants is this group from the Eureka Recreation Department. They are, reading from left to right: Front Row: Markel Eskra, Lolah Bishop, Marcia Red- man, Joycelyn Rogers, Janet Lyman, Cecile Cook, Dale Hoover, Paul Dahl, Kenny Fischer. Back row: Kenneth Pearce, Leah Rogers, Kenny Kycek, Jim McClure, Robin Lovering, Mike Redman, Gordon Johnson, Eldon Johnson, Lawrence Rogers, John McClure and Coach Carolyn Goldsmith. STANDARD Attendance Mark I At Cubs Game H-UMBOLDT Friday, July 23, STANDARD 1954, Page I I Chicago The Chicago Cubs set a new attendance mark yesterday in their game river ought to begin to perk up things That stretch about now also.

And some gosh Rjver probab has a wallopers come into that stream. What those fish did to the boys' tackle was plenty. WHAT MANNER OF TROUT are these? They are steelhead- rainbows that, for reasons un-, known, come in from the sea! many months before spawning time, and revert back to stream life. They seem to forget the sea Indefinitely, and they also resume much of their rain-! ba)1 team defeated the Califor- bow coloration. Fred said there' i a i Market combine, 9-2, were literally hundreds of thesei last TMS ht at Samoa Park.

big fish holed up, back Samoa defeated the Rio Del And he says he saw one Foresters 6 4 in the second looked as if It were three ame of the evening. Frank Detz, pitching for Humboldt Plywood, struck out eight and walked -three. He Ed Oliver Wins Medal Honors Rocky Castellani Hosts Youngsters San Rafael, Calif. Rocky Castellani, who starts serious Draining for his middleweight the New York GiantsJ title fight with champion Carl JAmong the 29,136 fans in theiBobo Olson next month in San jpark were 5,665 children --iFrancisco's Cow Palace, in a 'the largest number of children'few days, played host to more NATIONAL LEAGUE Teams- New York Brooklyn Milwaukee W. L.

Pet. GB 62 31 .667 56 37 .602 6 47 45 .511 Cincinnati St. Louis 47 47 .500 15 Vis 45 46 .495 16 Philadelphia 44 44 .500 15V 2 a ing camp at Bermuda Palms.jNew York The amiable Castellani l.realed|Chicago the kids to ice and popcorn and then put on a four-' round exhibition with spar Chicago 36 53 .404 24 Pittsburgh '29 63 .315 AMERICAN LEAGUE Teams- W. L. Pet.

GB 63 28 .692 64 30 .681 V2. 58 36 .617 6Va Detroit 40 50 .4.44 22 Vz to buy tickets for Cubs' history. a game in than 2000 youngsters and parents yesterday at his train-IRobertson. Washington 38 50 .432 23Vz Boston 37 52 .416 25 and Cliff i a i a 31 57 .3152 32 60 31V 2 HOUSE OF QUALITY BRANDS Humboldt Plywood Samoa Win Games In Softball Loop The Humboldt Plywood soft- long. Nor was fred "seeing other west.

big fish in it than any comparable place in the MORE ON THE KLAMATH-1 We Ve Io Frank Pidgeon reports Charlie i i Harms in frqm the TM NG BAC1 5 TO riffle, on the 'upper Klamath be: The ar a few steelhead tween Orleans and 6 Iower steelhead! The fish were not Eel TM ver mouth-with three fresh rfoolhonHl Tho i wprp W6 S0me of them may be bound for that fabulous middle fork region. while they're on the way, parently the advance guard already is upstream. And Verne Johnson recently came back 1 poor blokes at from the upper Klamath country to report seeing steelhead showing all the way up to Orleans. Make your reel finger itch? Ours too. We also hear that the Trinity river is looking up.

So the picture looks good. least have a chance. All in all. 'we're glad the middle fork is so remote, for that will insure a steelhead supply for the future, in measure. We also hear that there are a few hefty-sized trout in the lower' Mad river, CASH FOR YOUR VACATION See us for a TRAVELOAN of SSO S500 or more! 24 months to pay 1st payment not due 45 days! I Mercantile Acceptance Ross Lowry, Branch Manager 511 St.

Eureka HI 3-1608 I allowed four hits. "Spider" Klingenspore was the hitting star for the Plywood team with three for four L. Emmerson hit a homer in the fourth. Next games are July 27 at Parkside in Eureka with California Fruit vs. Samoa and Humboldt Plywood Dell Foresters.

Plywood-- T. BorKes, 3b 4 R. Lamnna, 2b 3 S. Klinnenspore. ss 4 I Jt Emmerson, Ib 2 H.

W.vatt, cf 4 A. BorKes. IE -3 Butts, 4 F. Detz. 3 W.

Rleter. It 1 E. Cardoza, 1 St. Paul (in Jovial Ed Porky Oliver, who won 1 medal qualifying honors with' six-under-par 136, tees off- against Jackson' Bradley Houston today in the rugged 36th annual PGA golf tournament's "Black Friday" phase. The roly-poly Lemont, 111., veteran, who said he was "jinxed" because he was low medalist met Bradley in one of the 32 first-round matches of the week-long battle.

only three others who won low medal honors have gone on to win the title, Oliver was favored 'in his first round. Bradley came in with a 145 in qualifying play. Sam Snead and Gary Middlecoff, two of the top favorites, also tee off this' morning, with Snead matched against Tony Holguin of Midlothian, 111., and Middlecoff against Joe Brown of Des Moines, Iowa. Today's first round of match play is called "Black Friday" by the' pros because they have to battle through two 18-hole rounds and some of the big names almost' a a are; knocked out of the running. Totals 32 9 12 a i i a i Market-- AH G.

Bray.il. 3b 4 0 I N. MaHla. ss 2 0 0 R. Carroll, cf 2 0 I) Bell, Ib 3 0 0 D.

Jones, 3 0 2 W. Baich, If 2 0 0 Celll, 2b 3 0 0 B. Jones, rf 3 1 I T. Jones, 2 1 0 Totals 24 2 4 below Highway 101. Cutthroats lurk in some of the holes, and an occasional rainbow is being taken.

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About The Times Standard Archive

Pages Available:
125,274
Years Available:
1952-1977