Glendale Loggers Win, 7-4,
From Ashland In Rogue Loop
Glendale'. Loggen crawled out
of tht Rogue Valley League cellar
Sunday afternoon by tripping vis.
King Ashland, 74. Lanson Rom
homered with two on in the ninth
for the win.
The win dropped Ashland into
the cellar with an 0-3 record. Glen,
dale has won one and lost one.
The Loggers had to come from
behind to capture the win. Ash
land romped into the lead in the
second inning with three runs.
Glendale cut the lead to a run in
the bottom of that frame with a
brace of its own. The hosts added
two more in the fifth to forge into
the lead, but Ashland tied it up
at 4-4 in the sixth.
The game was finally decided
in the ninth frame when Glen
dale exploded with three runs
due primarily to Lanson Ross'
home run.
Next Sunday, the Loggers go to
Camp White for their third leaeue
tilt. A pair of non league games
have oeen scheduled by the Log.
gers over the July 4 holiday. July
4. they will host Butte Falls as
part of the Glendale holiday cele
bration. The next day. thev in
vade Butte Falls for participation
in a celebration there.
Ashland 030 001 0004 4 i
Glendale 020 020 0037 9 1
E. Dumam and Montgomery;
Brown. Miller (6) and Ross.
Green Peewees Slate
Benefit Dance Friday
A benefit dance for the Green
Peewee baseball program is
scheduled June 25 at Lindv's
Sportsman's Center, reports
Green representative Ray Hester.
Sleanwhile the Green Peewce
program is well under way. Coach
Bunny Easter is d'illing about 80
boys, with the program still in t'.i
first week. Easter is still hoping,
nowever, mat more will turn out
for the 13 and '.4-year age groups.
He said that bovs may continue
to sign up amy time. He said that
ne nopea tne turnout would
swel'ed considerably when vaca
lion Bible schools and vacations
were over.
The proceeds from the dance
will be used to help finance the
program under Easter's directioih
The sponsoring committee met
at the home of Ray Michael (his
week and laid out final plans for
the benefit. Jack Foster's orches
tra will furnish the music.
with
KTRA-
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NEW
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oily "
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HAVE YOU MARVELLED at
the year's regular parade of Bow
er blossoms, each flower keeping
time and Dosilion? Crocuses and
wake robins bead up the parade
then come poppies, lupine, follow
ed by sunflowers, with goldenrod
ana asters bringing up me ena oi
the yearly procession. Why such
fixed seasonal positions?
To be sure richness of soil,
amount of moisture, and warmth
all help control the buiia;ng ot
the plant putting it into shape for
the blossoming. When frost is in
the soil late and spring remains
cold, the blossoms may be delay
ed a week or so at most, but once
they get started, each flower will
adhere to its blooming schedule.
The master switch which cracks
open the flowering buds is con
trolled by the keeper of daylight
hours, who assigns the marching
order. When the exact hours and
minutes of daylight arrive, he
throws the switch for each flow
ering plant. With many plants this
control is so precise mat outer
ence of only a few minutes deter
mines whether it will bloom or
not.
THUS the early spring flowers
such as crocus and wake-robin are
short-day bloomers; those that
flower around June 21 are long
day bloomers. (In' addition to
these, there are a few undiscip
lined plants which keep no hours
once the plant has matured, they
bloom continuously and pop up
throughout the growing season.)
This means that flowers attuned
to definite daylight hours - (and
overcast skies make no differ
ence), wait out their assigned po
sitions, regardless, of where they
may be growing. In Florida, the
wild azalea which is a 15-hour
daylight flower, cracks open its
flowering Duds in mm-Apni, re
gardless of rain or temperature.
But in Massachusetts this same
plant will wait almost two months
until early June when the same
daylight hours exist.
These Diooming nours control
the distribution of many wild
plants. Ragweed, for example.
needs a Ho nour day to start
making flowers. In Washington.
D. C. this occurs around July 1
and the plant begins shedding its
fine pollen by the middle of Aug
ust. Although tne tine pollen is
carried to northern Maine and
Canada, the summer days there
do not shorten to 14V4 hours until
August 1. So, adhering to its day
light schedule, me ragweed does
not start to form flowers until
August 1 which means that it is
generally frost-killed before its
pollen has a chance to mature
and spread. Therefore, in north
ern Maine or most of Canada,
look for no ragweed.
THE POINSETTIA which must
have its 12 hours of continuous
daylight will not flower outdoors
in New England although it may
grow wondrously well for a sea
son. The same holds for many oth
er southern plants.
The "indeterminate" flowers,
uninhibited by hours, are not both
ered with this time schedule and
grow, bloom and reproduce in
wide areas. (Tomatoes, which
know no hours, can be grown
successfully from the tropics to
the Arctic.) -
You may ask: It all spring tow
ers wait for a certain day-length,
say of 12 hours and 50 minutes
(as does Johnny-jump-up), then
why doesn't it bloom in the fall
when tne same day-tongtn is
reached? The answer is: it dcesl
Such mixed-up schedules occur
when some outside influence dur
ing spring delays the maturing of
the plant so that the flower bud?
are not ready on time. Maturing
too late, it then waits out the long
hours of summer until the ex
actly right daylight schedule of
12 hours and 50 minutes rolls
around in Die fail and then it
blooms, belatedly, on time. As a
result, the careful woodland wateti
er will discover violets, , Johnny.
jump-ups and other spring flow
ers bloom in the fall.
By artificial means these hour
conformists can be brought into
bloom in strange areas and at
strange times. That is by control
ling the photo-period, as it is call
ed. : REMEMBER how the store
bought chrysanthemums once de
layed their appearance on the
market to late November, just
about the time of the homecoming
football games: Today they ap
pear in the florist shops, two
months earlier. What happened?
Some smart joker found that this
fall flower could be tricked into
blooming by darkening the plant
with a black doth hereby creating
the right critical "daylight" flow
ering period, so, tne mixea-upn
conformist bow blooms in September.
Cornell Crew Shows Strength
As Navy Wins Championship
SYRACUSE, N. Y. I - Navy's
rowing dynasty isn't officialy over
yet but upstart Cornell appears
ready to bump J3xt kingpins off
the throne next spring.
As the invincible Navy eight of
the last three years climaxed an
unprecedented victory string by
winning its 29th straight race and
its third successive Intercollegiate
Rowing Assn. championship Satur
day, a heir apparent crew showed
on the Onondaga Lake scene in
Cornell's formidable freshmen.
The Big Red yearlings from Ca
yuga won the two-mile frosh race
by 3Vi lengths over Washington
in a poised, polished and powerful
performance.
"They reminded me of my Navy
crew when they first started," said
63-year-old Rusty Callow as he was
congratulated on all sides for
Navy's varsity victory. "They're
the successors to Navy."
Cornell will lose only one man,
varsity stroke Pete Sparhawk,
from the crews which finished sec
ond to Navy in the big race and
first in the freshman and junior
varsity contests, Cornell's best
showing since 1930.
But Cornell yearlings will have
to go some to match the peerless
performances of the magnificent
Middies of 1952, 1953 and 1954. In
twenty-nine races, they had 29
wins, including three IRA titles.
three spring championships, and
the prize of them all the 1952
Olympic championship.
Navy's victory in the bright sun
shine before 13,000 spectators was
a front running affair after the
first 200 yards. The main conten
tion was for second with Cornell
edging Washington and Wisconsin,
who finished third and fourth in
a duplicate of last year's placing.
Navy was timed in 16:04.4.
"The pendulum has swung te
the bast,' commented Washing.
:on Coach Al Ulbrlckson. For the
first time since 1932. the Huskies
didn't win a race.
Minor Leagues
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sunday's Results
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Rochester 11-8. Montreal 8-3
Ottawa 11-2, Toronto 8-3
Buffalo 8-3, Richmond 7-5
Syracuse 34, Havana 2-4
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis 2-4. Columbus 1-0
Kansas City 10-3, Charleston 7-2
Minneapolis 6-7 Toledo 2-1
St. Paul 5-4, Louisville 4 9
TEXAS LEAGUE
Beaumont 14-1. Oklahoma City 4-9
san Anionio e-a. ron worm J-4
s.lreveport 6-4. Tulsa 2-2
Houston 3, Dallas 2
PIONEER LEAGUE
Magic Valley 8. Ogdcn 4
idaho Falls 16. Great Falls 14
Salt Lake 3, Boise 0
Billings 5-7. Pocatello 3-0
Saturday's Results
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Buffalo 4, Richmond 2
Rochester 5, Montreal 2
Toronto IS. Ottawa 5
Syi- "ivna 4
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
V;. o. s 3, 'loirdo 1
St. Paul 3. Louisville 1
Kansas City 15. Charleston T
Indianapolis 6, Columbus 2
TEXAS LEAGUE
Dallas 3-1, Beaumont 1-4
Shreveport 7. Fort Worth 0
Oklahoma City 2. Houston 1
Tulsa 6, San Antonio 4
Men, June 21, 1954 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7
Starr-Gomez Duo Keeps Tag Crown
Rick! Starr and Pepper Gomez
kept their Northwest tag team
match championship trophy intact
Saturday night at the Roseburg
armory Dy disposing ot buck
Weaver and Boris Kameroff.
Kameroff gave the champs the
edge by losing the first fall to
Starr on a foul. But he bounced
back to vindicate himself by win
ning the second fall.
Gomez took a hand in the third
fall and turned what looked like
certain defeat into a victory. Kanv
eroff had him in a "hangman's
hold" and was about to put the
clincher on him when Gomez sud
denly became alive. He flipped
over Kameroffs head and bounc
ed to the canvas. When his feet
touched, he was again in the air
with a drop kick. The surprise
and impact stunned the big Rus
sian. Before he knew it, he was
neatly tucked away in a Boston
crab.
The same four men took over
the preliminaries. Kameroff beat
Gomez in slightly less than 16
minutes In the first prelim, and
Clan. Ai,nnA UrA.i.Ar in lmMl
the same amount of time in the
ouier.
Fights Last Night
SATURDAY'S FIGHTS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOLEDO, Ohio Pal Lowry,
.48, Toledo, outoointed Joe Miceil,
150, New York, 10.
MEXICO CITY Orlando Chav
arria, 123", Cuba, stepped Guil
lermo Vaiero, 132, Mexico, 2.
HOLLYWOOD. Calif. Willie
Vaughn, 164, Hollywood, outooin
eri Esau Ferdinand, 161V4, San
r'rancisco 10.
WILKINS WITH COLTS
NEW YOIK - Dick Wilkins
of the Baltimore Colts was ac
quired by the New York football
Giants Saturday in exchange for
an undisclosed draft choice. Wil
kins, an end on offense, is from
the University of Oregon.
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SPORTS IN BRIEF
By THS ASSOCIATED PRESS
GOLF
SPRINGFIELD, N.J. Ed Fur
gol won the U.S National Open
championship with a total of 284.
iVAUKEGAN, ILL-Betty Jame
son defeated Louise Suggs S and
5 for the women's Western Open
title.
Seattle Colfer Takes
State Amateur Title
TACOMA UPl A 37 - year - old
Seattle floor covering store prop
rietor who'd knocked five times
on the dtor to the Washinnton
State amateur golf throne room
finally got it to open Sunday.
Erv Parent, the new king of the
state's play-for-fun brigade, gained
h.s title with a lopsided 9 and 8
victory over fellow-townsman Jrn
ilallorv Jr. in their scheduled 3fi
hnle final at the Fircrest Golf
Club.
FAVORITES WIN
WIMBLEDON. England UK -Vic
Seixas. the defending cham
oion, and Tony Trabcrt, the tour
.iey favorite, easily won firt
round matches in the all-England
lawn tennis championships Mon
day. Seixas, of Philadelphia, routed
Geoffrey Cass, a club player, 6-1,
f-0, 6-1. Trahert walloped Pail
Wooller, another minor Briton,
6 0. 6-2, 6-2.
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THE HIGH-LEVEL SQUINT
thinks he knows the forest-but has never met a tree
The Squint is an advertising executive who prefers U.
float above the rough-and-tumble of selling.
He thinks he gets the "big view" by closini Lis eyes to
details.
And his favorite art is a silhouette - because it has no
highlights and shadows.
He thinks of the nation as a one-color map - where
towns and people and needs are gratifyinp.lv all alike.
And he advertises accordingly.
Fortunately the Squint is a rare creature, Most ad men
adapt their advertising to meet the problems of sales -and
sales problems vary.
They know that one town may buy twice as many
girdles or puddings or toothpaste as another town - even
hough incomes are equal . . .
because regions are different,
tastes are different, and
people are different!
So most advertisers concentrate their advertising itt
areas that pay - instead of spending loftily in across-the-board
campaigns.
Their "national" advertising starts at the local level -in
newspapers!
All btmncKs in local . . . and no are all newspapers!
Thi. mag prepared b III REAL' OF ADVERTISING, Aiwrica. N.mpaptr Publisher. Aociallmi
Ml publhlKd hi lb. tomm of fuller nndenrtandinf of wmpapm by Ro.eourg Newf-newew