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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1955)
(Vodka in oraoge juice) m jy It leaves you Irgjj ' breathless jgiSJ 'tkeanahtt name VODKA Oproof. Mtdef nun 100 inin neuutl ipiriu, "&e. Piem Smirnoff Fli. Inc., Hartford, Cooa. By "CHUCK" itr nvic "Even our competitors odmire our service!" We are proud of our reputation of giving service that pleases and pays. LONG'S RICHFIELD SERVICE 303 S. Stephens Phone OR 2-9083 Padres Nab Tenth Straight, Get PCL Lead; Bevos Win PACIFIC COAST LEAGUf San Diego Seattle Los Angeles ' Oakland Sacramento Portland San Francisco Hollywood W L Pet. CB .595 .579 H 21 16 .568 1 17 19 .472 4A .472 44 .470 5 .444 5 .389 7Vi 22 15 22 16 17 19 16 18 16 20 14 22 Thursday's Rasults Seattle 6, Los Angeles 0 San Diego 4, Hollywood 3 Sacramento 6, San Francisco 5 Portland 3, Oakland 2 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The . defending champion San Diego Padres were in undisputed leadership of the Pacific Coast League Friday there by virtue of their 10th straight victory. Outfielder Earl Rapp smashed his 10th homer of thi season and drove in Buddy Peterson m the eighth to give San Diego a 4-3 decision over Hollywood Thursday nieht. Los Angeles had shared the top spot briefly for a day. But aeartie s men omgieion iiniueu the Angels to four hits to achieve a 6-0 victory that dropped Los Angeles into third place. Seattle is a half-game behind San Diego. i In other contests Portland de feated fourth-place Oakland 3-2 and Sacramento, in fifth place, edged out San Francisco e-a. At San Diego Raoo's homer over the right field fence broke a 2-2 tie. The Padres put down a Holly wood rallv in the too of the ninth after pinoh hitter Bill Hall singled THURSDAY'S FIGHTS n TUB AtCACIATED PRESS SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Raul (Raton) Marias. 121 Vi, Mexico City, stopped Baby Moe Mario, 120 Vt, Reno, Nev., 5. (Non-title), t nc iMr.RT.lTQ .Tnhnnv Sum. merlin, 193, Detroit, outpointed Young Jack Johnson, 207, Los An (fnlne 10 JOHNSTOWN, Pa. Johnny F.nhanks. 141. Pittsburgh, outpoint pd Olenn Flanaean. 136 Vi. St. Paul, 10. Moses Ward, 170, De troit, stopped Jimmy Welch, 269 Columbus, Ohio, 2. to drive in Carlos Bernier who had walked. Reliefer Al Lyons struck out R.C. Stevens on a 3-2 count to end the game. At Los Angeles Singleton's fine 4-hitter was accompanied by 11 timely Rainier blows, including a first inning homer by Monte Bas eall his fourth of the season. At Portland, Oakland center fielder George Metkovich was hit on the head by pitcher Dick Wai- nei. Meutovicn was tauen to a hospital for observation although he did not lose consciousness. The rest oi ine Kame seiueu mw a duel between Waibel and the vet eran Alan Gettel, Waibel scatter ing 7 hits, Gettel 8. Oakland 000 000 011-2 7 0 Portland 300 000 OOx 3 8 1 Gettel and Neal: Waibel and Caldone. Both Salem, Eugene Fall To NWL Foes By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NORTHWEST LEAGUE Wena tehee Tri-City Eugene Salem Lewiston Yakima Spokane W 11 9 7 7 7 6 4 11 Pet. CB .733 .563 2Vi .538 3 .500 3Va .467 4 .429 4V4 267 7 Sports In Brief By THI ASSOCIATED PRESS -r GOLF WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va. Mike Souchak, Dow Insterwald and Peter Thomson tied for first round lead in White Sulphur Springs open with 6-under-par 70s. HOT SPRINGS. Ark. Bo Wln lnger, Al Besselink, Doug Ford and Ted Kroll tied with 67s in first round Hot Springs Open. SHREVEPORT, La. Clifford Ann Creed, Opelousas, La., upset defending champion Polly Riley, Fort Worth, Tex., 4 and 3 in quar ter finals of women's Southern Amateur. RACING LOUISVILLE, Ky. Lori-Jane ($36.60) scored by a head over Oil Painting in the feature at Churchill Downs. ALBANY. Calif. -Scotch ($10.40) captured the $28,000 Golden Gate Futurity. . . m It 11 FULLER PAINT COLOR CONTEST 4 Ford Ranch Wagons to lucky winners! PLUS-1030 OTHER PRIZES! Nothing to buy! Here's all you do... 1 , Pick a favorite color from the famous Fuller Jewel Case. 2. Write the name and num ber of the color chip, and your Enter todayl Visit name and address, on an entry blank. Deposit in entry box. (If you prefer, write to the nearest office of W. R Fuller &j Co., and they will send you an entry blank and a col"' card). GERRETSEN BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY 402 West Ook Phone OR 2-2636 Thursday's Results Yakima 11, Tri-City 4 Spokane 9, Eugene 3 Lewiston 7, Salem 4 Friday's Schedule Wenatchee at Tri-City Lewiston at Eugene Spokane at Salem Yakima draws bye By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Second division clubs turned on the leaders in Northwest League baseball Thursday night but the. "uprising" wasn't reflected in the standings. Cellar-dwelling Spokane picked up its fourth win in 15 starts, a 9-3 triumph over Eugene: Yakima made it two straight over Tri-City, 11-4, and Lewiston outlasted Sa lem, 7-4. After dropping three in a row at Eugene, Spokane sent the vet eran' John Conant to the mound against the Emeralds. He gave up 10 hits but kept them well scat tered, walked four and struck out seven. Spokane batters, mean while, teed off on Eugene pitch ing, collecting 15 hits. Yakima batters handed out 12 safe blows as ' the Bears evened the series with Tri-City at two wins and two losses. Tri-City grabbed an early 3-run lead but Yakima tied it in the fourth in ning, added one run in the fifth, two in the seventh and put the game out of reach wish a 5-run outburst in the seventh. A 4-run rally in the seventh in ning gave Lewiston its second win of the 4-game series at Salem. The Broncs combined three singles and two Salem errors for runs that snapped the 2-2 deadlock that prevailed going into the inning. Don Frailey homered with a man aboard for Salem in the eighth. It was his third homer in three nights. Boxing Probe Postponed For Further Investigation PHILADELPHIA (AV-The Penn sylvania Athletic Commission Thursday postponed until Monday the start of its scheduled probe of professional boxing in the state and, especially, last Friday night's Harold Johnson - Julio Mederos bout. Commissioner Al Klein said the delay was to enable further in vestigation before the open hearing. COLLEGE SPORTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Thursday's Results BASEBALL Willamette 8-3, Pacific U 2-0 Grays Harbor JC 3-5, Clark JC 11-6 TENNIS Linfield 9. Oregon Education" 0 Lewis & Clark 4, Pacific U. 3 GOLF ' Pacific U. 12 V4, Lewis & Clark 5V4 POSTPONED AGAIN VICTORIA, B. C. Ul The on again, off-again attempt of Tacoma logger Bert Thomas tu swim the Strait of Juan de Fuca is off again until 10 p.m. Friday. Thomas was slated to set out on the 20-mile swim to Port Angelesi Wash., at 9 p.m. Thursday. High winds battered the strait as that hour approached, however, and the ex-Marine frogman postponod the try another 24 nours. Huskies Snap Ducks' String NORTHERN DIVISION By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS W L Pet 5 0 1.000 .875 .500 .455 .000 Oregon State Oregon 7 Washington State 4 Washington 5 laaho o Thursday's Results Oregon State 9, Washington State 1 Washington 5, Oregon 1 Friday's Sch.dula Oregon at Washington Oregon State at Idaho By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington halted Oregon's Northern Division baseball win ning streak at seven straight Thursday but Oregon State kept its record unblemished with anoth er easy victory over Washington State. The Beavers from Corvallls drubbed WSC, 9-1, and took over undisputed possession of first place in the standings after iVahington clipped Oregon 5-1. tor the Beaver, it was win No. 5 without a loss and for Washington it was the first win in six starts. At Pullman, OSC pitcher Jerrv Epperle limited WSC to six hits and was backed up by three dou ble plays. He walked six and struck out six. Five WSC errors helped the Beavers. Oregon outliit Washington 8-6 but the Huskies managed to con vert their safe blows Into scores. Three singles produced 'wo Wash ington tallies in the third inning. The Huskies added three more in the sixth when Monte Geiger dou bled home two runners and scored on an infield error. COACH NAMED LA GRANDE Wl Jack Raney, Weiser, Idaho, high school basket ball coach, will become Msketball coach at La Grande High next season. He succeeds Vic Adams, veteran coach who resigned recently, Fri., May 13, 195S The Newt-Review, Retebunj, Ore. 7 Ab Rice Bangs Out 255 Line, Hefty 631 Series Ab Rice of the Hardtoppers bang ed out a 255 game and a high Commercial League series for the reason Thursday night wheu he toppled 631 pins. His game scores included 179, 197 and 255. In the Merchants League, Uoydj Casteel of First Christian Church rolled high game of 127 and Jim Hennebeck had high series of 579 (195-177-207) for Firmco. Other high Commercial games included those by Doc Wellman 218, Chick Monnier 212, Selby Leep 216, John Tilley 208 and Ted Thor son 203. In the Merchants, Tony DeGroot had a 226, Doyle Presnall rolled a 202 and Gary Hennebeck bad a 203. Commercial results: Ohrysrtalite TUe , Boyd's Coffee 1; M & H Market 3, Morris Plumbing 0; Bru on's Shoe 2, The Foresters 1; Hardtoppers 2, M Ic M Printing 1. Merchants results: Self Service Laundry 2, First Christian 1; Firmco No. 2 3, Yon. alia Lions 0; coca cola z, ratterson s Bakery l t-irmco No. rs 1. COMMERCIAL LEAGUE W L Pts. The Foresters '1 14 40 Bruton's Shoe 25 20 36V4 M & H Market "A 21 32 Boyd's Coffee 24 21 31 Hardtoppers 21 24 30V4 Chrystalite Tile 20 25 26 Morris Plumbing 17 28 23 M & M Printing 19 26 21 MERCHANTS LEAGUE W L Pts. Firmco No. 1 3t 14 42 Coca Cola 26 19 37 Self Service 25 20 35 Patterson's Bky 22 23 32 Thatcher's Clnrs. 21 24 "27 First Chris. Ch. " 19V4 25V4 23W Yoncalla Lions 19 26 23 Firmco No. 2 16V4 28V4 20V4 Bids Scheduled June 10 For Umpqua Fish Ladder Construction bids for a fish lad-' der to be built around Jia South Umpqua Falls are being received by the Oregon State Game Com mission until June 10, according to P. W. Schneider, director of the commission The new ladder will be located at a spot approximately 21 miles ' east of Tiller. It will open up a new spawning ground above the falls of approximately 22 miles. At present, fish can negctiate the falls only at extremely nigh water levels. The ladder will be about 160 feet long and will be concrete throughout. It will have a rise of a little better than 17 leet, with a small gate and grillwork at one end. There will be about 20 boxes ' that measure eight feet in width ' and 20 feet in length in the ladder. i 1 2, ' hatcher's Clean- Indians Protest Game Laws On Reservation KLAMATH FALLS Wl J. C. O'Neill, attorney for the Klamath Indian Tribe, reported Tuesday a formal attack on state game laws on the Klamath Reservation. He said he is asking the federal court to rule that treaty rights Klamaths, Modocs and Yahooskin Indians would be violated if state fish and game regulations were put into effect on reservation land. The case is an outgrowth f the federal withdrawal of jurisdiction over the Klamath Indians. A simi lar action against state hunting and fishing laws is being taken at Umatilla Reservation. WRESTLING SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE ARMORY DOUBLE MAIN EVENT Erie "The Magnificent" Pederson vs. s Don Kindred and "Bulldog" Bud Curtis vs. Danno McDonald SPECIAL EVENT "Irish" Red McKim vs. Jerry Woods Matches under supervision of Roteburg Wrestling Comm. FIRST MATCH STARTS 8:30 P. M. 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Box 49 Riddle, Oregon Tel: 2678 jMMfjil.yfirj fi'TTTTTm complete, lower cost protection 1 1 A 1 1 H i .Til i L i r t. ' ' -' ' r j Look in phone directory, under i -. s Farinaarti fneiirnat flmtm E. E. VAN HORN P. O. Box 106 Conyonville, Oregon , Tel: 2327 Farmers Insurance Group. See Your Nearest Agent! VERA M. WHITE P. O. Box 203 Myrtle Creek, Oregon Tel: 80S CLARENCE V. DeCAMP DISTRICT AGENT 636 S. Stephens St. ORcheni 2-2618 aaMksfNi. a -AMD ALL YOURS You certainly can throw out your chest and call this Buick yours. Because as comparison shows the dollar difference between this brawny beauty and the well-known smaller cars is virtually erased. So if you've been thinking a Buick was out of reach let yourself go. You can afford a Buick if you can afford any new car and the price we show here proves it. Buick Sales Soaring To New Highs That's a major reason for the phe nomenal success of Buick today. So much so, that production and sales are hitting new peaks to move Buick more firmly into the tight circle of America's best sellers. And a companion reason for this soaring popularity is Buick's full line of cars to give you a choice in any price class the bedrock-priced Special, the high-powered Century, the extra-roomy Super, and the custom-built Roadmaster. But pure and simple, it's all the car for only 2670 50 tfeverect loemllfl you get for your money that's winning so many new owners to Buick. It's the extra pride you feel, the extra room you en joy, the extra comfort you get, the extra safety you sense from Buick styling, Buick size, Buick ride-engineering, Buick solidity of structure. It's the extra lift and snap and ginger you get from Buick high-compression V8 power and the fun and thrill of bossing such eager might. As we said-if you can afford any new car, you can afford a Buick even with the spectacular performance of Variable Pitch Dynaflowf. at modest extra cost. So why settle for anything less than a Buick? Drop in on us, take the wheel, press that pedal, and see for yourself what a whale of an automobile and a whale ef a buy today's Buick really is. iDynaftfw Drill it tttmdtri on Rosdmsitlr, optional st txlrt (Oil on olhtr StrttS 2-fosr.-paMngr luiek SPECIAL Sdan,Modal 4l.lllitrel4 Optional quipmwil, oecMieriM, ilat and local toxati If ony, additional, fricai may vory iltghlly In adloining communihoi. Even lha factory-lnttollod xtrat you may want ara barooini, inch an Kaattr Doil-SSI.70j Radio & Antonna-Stl.50. r """"ttBuWs,,, oriol,l 9 "" ov. V "9n,'' 1 """'ow prfc,, ""X athar Mr Thrill of the year is Buiclc aMUIOM lllll STAIS fO lUICC-SMiha b.'ck'lwlt Stow IMu tMufay t-M ' CAN YOU Stt IIIEI IW SAEir CHECK VOUI CAt-CHECK ACCIDENTS ' WHIN ItTTIK AUTOMOlllEI AM IUIIT WICK Wilt WltB THM ' "Drive from foetory Save up to 163.00 See Your BUICK Dealer" ROSEBURG MOTOR CO. ROSE and WASHINGTON STS. Phone OR 3-6651 iJ m .