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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1947)
- . . . r - c- T 41 IAS rage e, itegister-uuarq, tugene, vr., om., m M,:mi i . ft Ma Snellstrom Ties Up Cascade League Race with 6-3 Win Uver qjus Hanauska Aids CASCADE LEAGUE Miller Lumbermen , 2 I .867 HUU Creek Billies 1 t . .887 Snellstrom Braves 2 1 .887 Giustina Reds 0 3 Sunday Game Glustina VI. Miller's, 3:30 p. m. The Cascade League baseball leadership was tied tighter than a cordon Friday night at Civic Sta dium when the Snellstrom Braves staged a three-run uprising in the seventh inning to defeat the GIus tina Reds 6-3 and move into i first-Dlace deadlock with the Mil ler Lumbermen and Hills Creek Billies. The Lumbermen have a chance Sunday to take sole possession of first place in a game against the cellar-dwelling Reds, although Managed Ed Brauner is planning on' Ex-Beaver Byron Speece for mound duty. Giustina outhit the Braves, but failed to couple fielding support with the pitching although Left fielder Jim Byers robbed Al Light ner of an extra-base blow with a bench-busting catch in the ninth and Joe Volk made a shoe-string catch of Wally Flager's liner in right field in the third frame, Hanauska Strikes Out 11 T'SlU Hanauska, the fast right hander, held the Reds in check most of the game, scattering nine hits including a double and single by both Johnny Dunn and Allie Cooper. He struck out 11 and walked two. It was Hanauska who sparked ' the winning rally, too. With one away in the seventh he laced out a 'double and advanced to third on Don Klrsch's single. Flager hit to Volk, then playing second, and he was safe on an error, Hanauska scoring. Lightner singled both runners home to salt the game away. -.-The Braves opened with two runs in the first, when Flager walked and Lightner singled. Woody Salmon singled to right where Volk fumbled the ground er, allowing Lightner to score. Two more Snellstrom runs came in the fifth. Pete Taylor led off with a double. Ed Wellnitz ground ed to the box and Pitcher Delano Fox tossed wild to second in an effort to trap Taylor, Wellnitz tak ing first. Both runners advanced on Hanauska's sacrifice bunt. Kirsch singled Taylor home, but was thrown out at second attempt ing to steal. Fox Injures Arm . Fox had a 1-1 count on Flager when the younger brother of Cin cinnati's Howard Fox "popped" his elbow and had to retire, Cav- lness replaced him and the south- paw walked Flager. Wally at tempted to steal, but Dick Bishop's pe .stopped him on a play trfat eventually maneuvered Wellnitz into a third-base "hot box" and re tired the side. ' The Reds scored twice In the fifth when Bishop collected the third hit of f Hanauska. Sam Tosti filed out. Howard Robertson lifted a fly behind second, but Kirsch dropped It for, an error. Caviness popped out and then Dunn scored both runners with a double Into deep left-center. The score was knotted in the sixth when Cooper led off with a single and scored on, Volk's double. Bill Byers and Tostl both singled for Giustina in the eighth, but Hanauska fanned two to put out the fire. SNELLSTROM t. Klnch, a Flager, a L Llfhtner. et Salmon, e O. Smith, t Reynolds, S P. Taylor, If wounltt, rt . AI I I n A E . . 9 ... 8 ... a ... s 4 . 4 Kins, rf 0 Hanauska, p , S TOTALS 34 2 0 1 s 1 II IJIUSTWA ,T. Dunn, 3 -- K. Brauner, 1C Jarvls. rf & 1 Cooper, 1 Kramer, rf VoWt, rf & 3 Byers, If Bishop, c Tostl. 2 ft ss Robertson, cf Fox, p Caviness, p TOTALS . Snellstrom 1 Giustina An r if ro 2 a .. ..1 s 3 0 1 s Helsinki Gets St. LOUIS WillS 7952 Olympics STOCKHOLM, Sweden, June 21 OJ.R) The International Olympic Committee announced Saturday that Helsinki had been voted the sit for the 195 Olym pics, wltH the winter events awarded . to Oslo. A committee delegate disclos ed that the results ef an Initial secret ballot gave Helsinki 14 votes, I 'Ok Angeles nd Minne apolis four voles each, Amster dam three, Detroit two, 'Chi cago one and Philadelphia none. In the voting for the site for the winter games, Oslo received 18 votes and Lake Placid, N. Y and Cortina D'Ampeizi In Italy one vote each. . Every one of the American representatives at the meeting praised the choice of Helsinki ! although they had campaigned for the games to be held in their own cities. Helsinki was award ed the 1S40 Olympia, which never was held because of the war. Only one dissonant pole was wounded over the result of the two ballots. The Norwegian delegates 'were disgruntled be-' cause Cortina received votes in the balloting. The Norwegians maintained that Italy, as a for mer enemy nation, should not have been considered. Bears, Texas Meet in West NCCA Finals DENVER, June 21 W Calif ornia's Golden Bears and the rexas Longhorns, just like every body anticipated, were entrenched in the finals of the Western NCAA baseball playoffs Saturday, but the two favorites had to get there the hard way. In Friday's first round games, California capitalized on a great and sorely needed one hit pitch ing performance by Nino Barnise to defeat unexpectedly tough Den ver, 3-1, and Texas was forced to battle from behind to decision Oklahoma, 10-9, in a wild slugging duel. ' Denver arid Oklahoma will meet Saturday for the consolation prize. Texas and California collide at 8:15 p.m. for the Western title and the right to meet, the Eastern champion in a collegiate "World Series ' next weekend at Kalama zoo, Mich. Sore Tummy Fails to Handicap Williams NEW YORK, June 21 W) Ike Williams,, a dark - brown .time bomb who explodes on schedule, complained Saturday that he had an upset stomach when he went into Madison Square Garden's ring with Tippy Larkin. And it s a lucky thing for Tippy he did. For, it took the NBA lightweight champion from Tren ton, N. J,, just three rounds and 1 minute, 44 seconds of the fourth Friday night to knock Tippy as stiff as daddy s red underwear hanging on the washline in mid' January. And . if he'd been feel ing any better, he might really have done Tippy some damage, After - three rounds of holding his own ,the lights suddenly went out on the bigger faster Tippy, As a matter of fact, with a weight bulge of 141 to 136 ',4 and an ad mittedly wide edge on boxing skill, Tippy had the better of everything except what they car ried in their respective right hands. Ikes was loaded, Willing to Fight PHOENIX, Arix., June 21 OJJB Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis, here for an exhibition bout, said he was willing to fight the winner of a Joey Maxim-Jersey Joe Walcott bout staged by Frank Sinatra for the title, . M S 9 27 IS and oio .Tooo 000 031 0003 Runs batted In by Salmon, Ktrsth, ' Dunn 9, Flager, Volk, Lightner 2. Doubles Cooper, P. Taylor, Dunn. Salmon, Volk, Hanauska. Sacrifices Hanauska. Stolen bases Dunn. Cooper. Double plavs Fla-ger-to-Ktrsch-to-G. Smith, Left on bases Snellstrom 5, Glusllna 7. Earned runs sneusirom 3, Giustina 1. Struck out by Fox 3. Hanauska 11. Walks olf Fox 1, Hanauska 2. Caviness 3. Balk Hanauska. Pitching summary 4 hits, 3 runs off Fox in s--a innings, loosing piicner caviness. Umpires Norv Libby, platei Henry (Associated Press) "Whitewasher" Walter Master- son, who hasn't been scored upon in his last 34 innings, threatens to win as many games this season as he , did all told in his pervious five and a fraction years In the big time. The tall, bespectacled righthand er, won only 20 in nearly six sea sons with Washington. Friday night he notched his sixth triumph against three defeats, shutting out the St. Louis Browns 3-0. Cards Drive Masterson's 34 consecutive score less innings tops the previous high of 31 strung together by Frank Papish of the White Sox. Clevei land's Bob Feller had 29 earlier this year. , The World Champion St. Louis Cardinals continued their rush for the top of the National League standings by winning their eighth straight 7-3 against the New York Giants. Harry "The Cat" Bre- cheen, the Redbirds' number one hurler, gained his ninth victory as he became the first St. Louis hurler to defeat the Giants this season. The Cards had lost six straight to the New ' Yorkers. , The onrushing Redbirds how are . in fifth place, but only three and a half games away from the front running Boston Braves who lost to the Chicago Cubs 6-5 in an afternoon game. - VThe New York Yankees went back into first place in the Amer ican League by defeating the slumping Detroit Tigers 5-3 while the Boston Red Sox were losing to the Cleveland Indians 3-2, Rookie Righthander Frank Shea of the Yankees continued his mas tery over the Bengals and Ace Southpaw Hal Newhouser with a four-hit effort. The Red Sox fell a half game behind the Yankees as Tex Hueh- son lost a tough decision to Cleve land's Allen Gettel. . Jim Hegan, Gettel's batterymate, for' whom fans of his home city of Lynn, Mass., put on a "night" drove in all the Indians' runs with a second inning home run and a ninth inn ing single. It marked the end of Boston's eight game- winning streak. Ernie Bonham, former 20-game winner for the New York Yankees, hurled a 6-0 shutout against the Philadelphia Phils In his first starting assignment for the Pirates in. a night game at Pittsburgh. Richardson-Allen, Scouts Win In Springfield Softball SPRINGFIELD, June 21 Richardson-Allen, and the ' Ex plorer Scouts scored make-up vie tories in. Springfield Softball, As sociation play Friday night at the high school field. Both were American League games. The Scout's Johnson held the Hardware Store scoreless till the sixth when Marshall homered. The score was 6-1. ' Richard-Allen had - too much plate power as. they collected eleven hits for 20 runs. Thurston could score but once, in the third inning, . ' . ' H E Scouie : 201 004 t S S 2 Wrlght'a 000 001 0 1 4 S Johnson and Nordllng; Owens, Good, brod, and Cameron. Thurston 001 000 0 1 3 13 Richardson-Allen 532 703 X 30 U 2 Miller and B, Chase; HUU, Wilson and Boqua, '''. Vets Stop Merchants In City Softball Play The Veterans of Foreign Wars tumbled ' the Eugene Merchants, 7-6 with a seventh inning rally in a City Recreational Softball League game Friday night at lBth and Lawrence. The game was the first played on the new play ground. . I The Merchants went into the last inning leading 6-3 but a series of hits and errors gave the Vets their win. The game wa a make-up from a postponed opener, Score: . n. e. Merchants 004 110 0 8 10 3 VFW 100 002 47 2 Murray and Tuckettl Martin, Anker berg and Marr. Of NCAA Meet SALT LAKE CITY, June 21 W) College boys who hope to visit London next year as' Uncle Sam's representatives in the Olym pic Games go ch-ising after title3 Saturday night in the N.C.A.A. track and field carnival after turning Firdays night's prelimin aries into a fine show despite mis erable weather. . The nation's ton track coaches agree that most o' the U. S. team in the international games will be made up of collegians competing here, although the Olympic trials will be held later. Cold rain fell before and during the elimination trials Friday night in University of Utah Stad ium, and un-Junelike winds did blow, yet look what happened: Harrison Dillard, defending champion in both hurdle races from Baldwin-Wallace, floated Henthome Out Angels AsSUDie Weayer Parks Additional Sports ON PAGE 4 over the high barriers in a stun ning 13.9 second', tying the N.C. A.A. record that Ed Dugger of Tufts set seven years ago. Mel Patton, Southern Califor- nias willowy six-footer, once again' tied the world's record of 9.4 seconds in the 100-yard dash, but. it won t get recognition. Be hind him blew a 4.1-mile tall- wind, 1.1 miles over the allowable maximum. . Lithe Herb McKenley of Il linois' defending team champions, making dead . sure., he will- be around to .fight foe the 220-yard and 440-yard dash titles he won a year ago, stepped his quarter mile heat In 46.6 seconds, fully 15 yards ahead of the field. This was announced as, unofficially, at least, the fastest 440 ever run around two curves. Three contenders from the Pa cific Northwest survived the elim inations and qualified for the fin als. . ., . . Jack Hensey, the University of Washington's crpek middle-distance runner, won the 'third heat of the half-mile in 1:55.3, the slowest winning time of the three heats. Lyle Clark, also of Washington, became one of the qualifiers by placing second in the 120-yard high hurdles heat won by Porter. Joe Nebolon of Washington State remained in the running by finishing second to McKenley, in the second heat of the 440-yard dash. It was in this place that Robinson of Washington was elim inated. Two other Northwesterners also fell by the wayside. Dave Hen thome of Oregon placed third in his heat of the 100-yard dash and was among the also-rans in the 220. Dick Keniston of Washing ton State suffered the same fate, failing to place in either of the sprints. - Riggs Faces Stiffest Test in Pro Net Play NEW YORK, June 21 (U.R Bobby Riggs Saturday faced his sternest test so far in defense of his National Professional Tennis crown in . a semi-final match against Rugged Frank Kovacs of Oakland, Cal., at Forest Hills. Riggs, formerly of Altadena, Cal., but now playing out of Fern dale, N. Y., Friday swept througkJ his quarter-final rival. filwood Cooke of New York, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2, Kovacs, third-seeded, beat John Faunce of Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2. Second-seeded Don'Budge, also of Oakland, gained the semi-final with a 6-2, 6-3,. 6-4 win over Wayne Sabin, Mt.. Washington, N. H. - ' Sign New Grid Coach MILTON-FREEWATER, June 21 (P) McLoughlin High School has named Frank Nihil as foot ball coach to succeed Al Weinel. Nihil, football lineman and 1938 graduate of Oregon State College, formerly coached at Klamath Falls, Mann Junior College in California, and at Redding, Cauf-wenMchei" Leaders Role . (Associated Press) 1 Vince. the eldest of the fly- chasing DiMaggios, is on the fence busting beam again 'and almost single-handedly keeping the Oak land Acorns in the thick or tne hectic Coast League chase. . DiMaggio clouted a three-run homer Friday night his sixth cir cuit smash in the last nine games to give the Oaks a 5-3 victory over Portland. It enabled ine Oaks to move into second place, one point ahead of San Francisco and one game behind tne new leader what again? IjOS An geles.. Angels Win The Angels sailed into the lead on the very good left arm of ace Pitcher Cliff Chambers wno sei San Diego's slipnipg Padres down with four hits in notching a 3-1 decision. It was Chambers' 11th win against four defeats. Sacramento clipped San Fran cisco, 9-4, toppling the Seals from first tn third, and Seattle shut out Hollywood for the second straigni time, 10.-0. In all. DiMaggio batted in iour of the Oaks' five runs to run his RBI total to 38, which is consid erably better than par for his total of 38 hits. His home run. No. 11 of the season, traveled 370 feet into right center. Once the whiffing King or me major leagues, the oldest DiMag-r after a moderate start appears enroute to Coast slugging honors. Only Max West, San Diego, and Ed Sauer, Los Angeles, w eacn, and Lou Novikoff, Seattle,- 12, top him in fourmasters. Kewpie Dick Barrett, Seattle's veteran righthander, blanked Hollywood with six hits. The Rainiers clouted Starter Xavier Rescigno for six runs, then added four more off Ed Albosta in the eighth. Hillis Layne drove in four tallies. A three-run splurge in the third inning sewed up the Apgels' vic torytheir fourth straignt over the Padres. Larry Barton's homer and Tuck Stainback's triple fea tured. Swede Jensen's boundary belt deprived Chambers of a shut out. The big lefty laned elgnt, in shading Al Olsen.' Sacramento's steady stopped, Tiny Tony Freitas, checked the slugging Seals for the first time in their current series, while his Solon mates clammed three chuck ers for 18 hits. Starter Jack Brewer was the loser. Bill Ram sey's homer and Joe Marty's two triples led the assault. Freitas scattered eight blows, whiffed seven men. . Scores: B. nr. Portland .000 003 0103 10 1 Oakland 130 100 OOx S 13 1 Maldovan, Llska IS) and Silver j Wllkle and Raimondl, Kearse (6), i B. . E. Hollywood ' : 000 000 000 0 6 1 Seattle 300 040 04x 10 13 0 Rescigno, Hufford-161, Albosta (7) and Cameron; Barrett and Hemsley. . H. c. .000 000 1001 4 0 003 000 OOx 3 In Title Bout .Buck Weaver, the Pacific Coast junior - heavyweight . wrestung champion, and neio rants renew thoir mat feud tonight in the main event of the weekly mat show at the armory. Weaver's champion ship will be at stake and a slam bang, all-out battle is expected. .Tack Kiser and Buck Davidson will meet in the semi-final event and Leo "Mad Dog Karlinko win, tangle with Lou Savoldi in a spe. rial event. Pierre I.aBelle, smooth- wrestlinz Frenchman, will meet Silent Rattan in the opener at 8:30 p.m. . A eanacitv crowd is expected to be on hand to see Weaver dereno his title against the villainous parKs. weaver won the title from rarKs in a Dioooy battle two weeks ago. . Diamond Dusters JOE GORDON (Cleveland Indians) - 170 24 40 .235 120 143 ' 5 .961 BOBBY DOEBB (Boston Bed Sox) AB RBI H ret. PO A E Pet, 165 31 41 .248 118 127 i .960 McKENZIE Roy Rogers in "Home tn Oklahoma" Last Times To'nite STARTS SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY! LSGI1 V 1 - wvw Ismi n a n ur UIKKI rAKKj rv 1 lv mm Hits fcXIlN.. IUIW" 0WAKST Dance At IDYLLW00D 9:30 to 12:30 EVERY SATURDAY MITE Is "New Years Eve" Glaspey's Band Benton-Lane Park. Doors Open 1:45 P.M. Plenty of Parking Room ' Good Sound! SATHdimu .. form. . " Us) raeniJhj, DANCE SWIMMERS DELIGHT SATURDAY. JUNE 21 9:30 to 12:30 ' Musie by Wayne Ryan and Bis Band Phone Springfield 8861 for Table Reservations San Diego . S 0 , and Kerr; Chambers Los Angeles Olsen, Caster (&) ana iviaione. R.B.E, ..-000 103 0004 S 3 ...123 021 OOx 18 1 -Brewer. Seward (41. Lien (71 and Gladd; Freitas and Fernandes.' San Francisco - Sacramento Baseball NATIONAL Boston New York Brooklyn cnicago St. Louis Cincinnati Philadelphia . Pittsburgh AMERICAN New York Boston Detroit Phlladelohla . Cleveland Washington . Chicago st. lAuta ..31 t Pet. 24 .564 .28 23 .538 .30 25 .545 .30 35 .843 28 28 .300 .27 30 .474 24 34 .414 .22 32 COAST Los Angeles Oakland Snn Fianclsco . Portland Sacramento Hollywood San Diego Seattle W Tj 32 24 ..29 23 .-2T SS ..2826 ..24 23 .-24 27 ..26 31 .-21 33 W L 43 38 ..44 36 ..38 38 39 41 ..38 43 -36 43 W1L Bremerton - Spokane . Salem Victoria Vancouver Tacoma Yakima W 38 36 .407 Pet. .571 .958 .519 .519 .511 .471 .456 .396 Pet .561 .551 .550 .493 .488 .469 .438 DANCING , SAT JUNE 21 I.O.O.F. HALL ALPINE, OREGON 9:30 12:30 ED DUGAN'S Orchestra Unknowns Lead PGA as Stars Fall at Plum Hollow DETROIT. Jnn 21 ( AP Thp :29th National PGA golf cham pionship hit the third round and 36-hole match play Saturday but few of the pre-tournament favor ites were around to appreciate it. With the heaviest casualty list in history marking the first two 18-hole match rounds, most of the front-ranking name stars were al ready looking on from the side lines as play went into the fourth day over the treacherous 6,922 yard Plum Hollow golf club lay out. Knocked out in the opening round were such aces as Ben Ho gan, defending champion; JimmJ Demaret, medalist and leading lournament money winner of the Jennings, Lees In OGA Finals PORTLAND, June 21OP) i,ou Jennings, former champion, and unheralded Bill Lees, public links player, teed off here Satur day for the Oregon Golf Associa tion championship. Each won his way to the finals with par-busting rallies on the Portland Golf Club course Friday. Jennings, who won the title In 1940, swamped Ray Weston, 7 and , shooting two under par for the 30 holes played. Both were rep resenting Portland's Alderwood club. Lees, who downed Jennings in the first round last year only to falter later, made a strong come back to nose out Bud Jensen, 2 and 1..; At one point Lees was five down. Then his short Irons and BUttcr fot tot, tnd h closed out the match from a trap to within two feet of the cun for rinrh putt. Both are from Portland's Rose Cily course. For the women's cliamnionshin the defending titlisl. Mrs. Lyle Bowman, met Mrs. J. C. Herron. Both are from Portland. Included in thp fourth riloM whs Robert Sederstroms of Eu gene win over Frank Sntilinnk. Columbia, 5-4. In fifth flight play Forest Lemelv nf Fn L. G. Railsback, Portland, 3-2. THREE-GAME SERIES EAST LANS1NR. Mirh rnarh John H. Kobs of Michigan State recommends mat ro pen hacphn De piayea in series of three games at a lick to determine true team fupremacy. year: Bobby Locke, the knickered South African tourist, and two other ex-PGA champs, Johnny Revolta and Bob Hamilton. Sam Snead, 1942 PGA champion and rurinerup last week in the na tional open, wasn't long in join ing them as 45-year-old Gene Sarazen kayod himi 2-1, on the second lap after Snead had squeezed past Hitting Jimmy Thomson In his first match, 2-up. Sarazen's third round opponent was 39-year-old Ky Laffoon, the Chicago veteran who ousted one of the giant-killers in the second round, kayoing Toney Penna of Cincinnati whose eight birdies in 17 holes was enough to drop Ho gan in his first match, 3 and 1. Another . star-wrecker, Texas born Henry Ransom, now of Ra vinia, 111., couldn't hold up after throwing the bombshell that elim inated Locke, 1-up, and he bowed to 39-year-old Dick Metz of Chi cago in the afternoon. Earl Martin of Inglewood, Calif., administered the knockout drops to Demaret, a former Plum Hol low pro who put together a 68 and 69 for medalist honors. But promptly after swatting Demaret, Martin bowed out as Vic Ghezzi's second 8-5 victim of the day, Mike Turneta earned the right i to tangle with Lloyd Mangrum, 1946 National Open champion, and his brother, Jim Turnesa, equared off against Ghezzi. Lee Worsham of Pittsburgh, who less than a week ago out lasted Snead to win the U. S. Open in a playoff, continued his drive for a "double" by taking comfortable decisions over Johnny Morris of Montgomery, Ala., 4-3, and Clarence Doser of Hortsdale, N. Y., 5-4. The 29-year-old Wors ham faced Myles in the third round. Ed Oliver, curly-haired Wilm ington, Del., threat who was run nerup last year tn Hogan at Port land, Ore., also was still in the chase, squaring off against Chick Harbert who came from behind to a 20-hole verdict over Red-hot Clayton Heafner In the second round. Hottest sub-par streak belonged to Clause Harmon, Mamaroneck, N. Y., sharpshooter who stood 18 under .par for 69 holes going into his third round clash with Australian-born Jim Ferrier. Harmon, six under regulation figures through the qualifying rounds, lopped five more strikes off par with a 67 that beat Home Pro Sam Byrd 1-up in the first round end then tank tlx birdie and an eagle while eliminating Jimmy Milward, Madison, Wis., driving range operator 5-3. STARTS SUNDAY DE CARIO 'h ruin AUMONT IM DONLEVY In Unlvtrtol't IH TtCNNICOUR . mb ENDS TONIGHT Kingofth? PRESTOM fDSTIR'SAIt PATRICK ml SftmtlO mmiZi PLUS "BLONDE'S HOLIDAY LAST TIMES TODAYI ' Rosalind Russell Alexander Knox "SISTER KENNEY" SPLUS; CHESTER MORRIS JANE WYATT "THE GIRL" FROM GOD'S COUNTRY" Tomorrow i Tonfu DANAArroREwg "er Sister's Secret" STARTS SUNDAY utlllOlM nix HAWtlSON ! Km : ji.I.tiHPAWW-i ENDS. TONIGHT PBS ALSn "YUKON FLlftim with tu:'w'i sauH Garden Hos Khek - Its 50 Fe-..J7! AT BANCE SATURDAY. JUNE 21 BIG BARN SHOW DANCE AT VAUGHAN , BY WESTERN SWING PLAY BOYS FROM 9 P.M. TO 1AJ4 "FUN FOR ALL" WITH SKIP YOUMAN'S BAND and the largest dance floor in Eugerie. dadcade (tub On McKenxle Kway, Make ysuf rMmta 2 miles East ol early tor dinner, Springfield . Call Turn at Neon Sign Springfield 523 lPlLMGlilOUND (OLD SHADY NOOK) ' 20 Minute Scenio Drive from Emene on Jasper W 11 EVERY Y SATURDAY NITI jtm EARL RUM" mj OBCHESISA 11 C I 'I Swimming & Picnicking Daily i. We are now making reservations for private prei a Phone spia. sum The MLLAI Eugene's Jeading club for floor shows and entertauiiw LAST TIMES SATURDAY kiiMAM niCK WOW YVONNE & VICTOR COMING MONDAY lo.hia tun WORLD'S CHAMPION FIGURE SKATER MOTION PICTURE STM IN HER PREMIER APPEARANCE PRESENTING '79 3d laiosodn on A complete ice review with original sn costumes, scenery... . ersTEHS imiiMffinTs 11 PUflMklun sa'" .7 itLAiunuiui u - ,jitiI NOTICE: Due to the site of this 'He db1"4 iwi.ks .-.t Tt. a.: Hnr-Prlse Nilht win tnis week only Phone 4080 of Reservation.