Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 12, 1952, Image 3

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    WIL Vets Rule
t
Thursday, June 12, 1952
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREB
To Remain Same
Yakima (U.R Western In
ternational league directors have
agreed to leave the veteran and
rookie rule as it now stands.
The rule means that a team
is limited to nine veterans, or
players with three years pro
fessional experience or more,
and must carry at least two
rookies, or first-year men. The
balance of the roster will be
made up of limited service play
ers who fall between the rookie
and veteran classifications.
The directors at their meeting
Wednesday also left intact the
rule by which a player-manager
is counted as a player.
PABCO CIN-DEK
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AMAZING MINT.. .AMAZING IAR6AIN
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Taylor Lbr. Co.
101 4th Street
JACKSONVILLE
11
Coast Conference Leaders
Will Probe Booster Clubs
Portland (U.R) Pacific
Coast conference directors have
set up a group to investigate col
lege booster clubs and to take any
necessary action to curb "a grow
ing number of code violations."
In other action at Wednes
day's annual spring meeting, the
directors revised basketball
schedules and re-established
spring cage training.
The group decided to organize
a three man committee whose
purpose it will be to find out as
much as possible about the ac
tivities of alumni and booster
clubs of PCC institutions.
Earlier Decision
The committee set-up followed
an earlier decision to hire a
staff of assistants to aid Com
missioner Victor Schmidt in in
vestigating the "growing num
ber of code violations."
It was announced that the con
ference will be given power to
declare athletes permanently in
eligible if it is found they re
ceive money or gifts for playing
or if it is proved they have bar
gained for their services.
H. P. (Dick) Everest, confer
ence spokesman from the Uni
versity of Washington, said that
if information about the booster
clubs is lacking, means will be
provided, to force the organiza
tions to provide more.
27 Cag Games
If the clubs are reluctant to
give more information, Everest
said that schools might be asked
by the conference to withhold
Standings
COAST LEAGUE
W.
45
...42
San Diego
Hollywood
Oaklana an
Seattle - 34
Los Angelei 33
San Francisco 30
Portland 28
Sacramento 28
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W.
New York 3.1
Boston 30
Cleveland .....30
Washington ...........24
Chicago .......26
Philadelphia 21
St. Louis 23
Detroit 15
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W.
Brooklyn . 35 ,
New York 31
Chicago 31
St. Louis -......as.
Cincinnati 24
Philadelphia ...... 19
Boston ....19
Pittsburgh 14
L.
13
17
19
28
27
28
29
40
Pet
.825
.600
.565
.500
.471
.423
.418
.304
Pet.
.600
.588
.577
.511
.510
.477
.442
.300
Pet
.729
.646
.620
.500
.471
.40,2
.396
.259.
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL
W. L. Pet
Victoria 33 15 .688
Spokane 32 21 .609
Vancouver 23 21 .535
Lewiston 24 25 .500
Salem . 23 28 .451
Wenatchee 23 38 .451
Tri-Clty 23 29 .442
YflKima IB AA .33.
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The perfect gift . . . for
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POSTAGE PAID MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
Medford Stationery Store, 210 E. Main, Medford, Ore.
Pitas Send:
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City
WALT YOUNG'S
Medford Stationery Store
preferential treatment to mem
bers of clubs, such as ticket and
parking privileges, and coaches
might be prohibited from partic
ipating in club meetings.
The changes In cage schedul
ing limit varsity and junior var
sity teams to 27 games a season
and freshman squads to 19. The
number of contests does not in
clude playoff or tournament
games.
Spring training was reestab
lished with teams allowed 20
sessions in 24 calendar days.
The basketball coaches de
cided to delay until December a
decision whether to hold title
playoffs on a neutral' floor.
Marion Real
Team Leader
From Start
By MILTON RICHMAN
New York-(U.R) Although he
didn't plan or want it that way,
likeable Marty Marion became
the real "leader" of the St.
Louis Browns the moment he
joined them this spring .
The majority of St. Louis play
ers admired Marion as ardently
as they disliked the iron-fisted
Rogers Hornsby.
They came to Marty with all
their problems, both baseball
and domestic. Marion, who want
ed no part of being "boss" of any
kind, tried to discourage the
practice but his popularity only
increased.
The players bombarded him
with every type of question.
Nvr Too Busy
Marion never was too busy to
answer their questions although
they ranged from "what did Stan
Musial do when he got into a
slump?" to "do you know of a
good formula I can feed my new
baby?"
. During infield practice, the
Brownie players not involved
would interrupt their chores to
marvel over Marion's graceful
movements at shortstop.
"Ballplayers don't stop to
watch many other ball players,
pitcher Ned Garver once observ
ed. "They stop to watch Williams
and DiMaggio hit . . . and they
also stop to watch Marty field.
BliTd In Leading
As manager of the Cardinals
in 1951, Marion believed in
leading his players rather than
driving them.
"I never had any trouble with
the boys," he said, "we got along
just fine together and I still
think we did well to finish in
third place."
Hornsby believed the complete
opposite from Marion. He insist
ed that his players eat, sleeo and
breathe baseball every minute of
the day and night. He never car
ed if he shamed them in front
of a crowd, either.
Junior Golf
Classes Open
Weekly junior golf classes at
Rogue Valley Country club will
get under way this Friday and
are planned each Friday through
the summer, Club Pro AI Wil
liams said. '
Periodic tournaments will be
part of the program, Williams
reported.
Classes for boys nine through
12 years of age are set for 8:30
a.m. on Fridays, sessions for
girls under junior high age for
9:30 a.m. and classes for boys 13
through 17 from 10:30 through
11:30 a.m. "
Urness Assigned
To Eastern Club
The Dalles (U.R) Eddie
Urness, 18-year-old The Dalles
pitcher, signed by the Boston
Red Sox, will report to Albany
of the Class 'A' Eastern league.
Urness, who led The Dalles
to third place in this year's state
high school tourney, was be
lieved to have received at least
$50,000 and possibly more - for
signing.
Dead line Sunday Claanlfiedf I at
5:30 p.m. for following day; 10 a.m.
Monday for Monday; noon Saturday
WANTED
USED
CARS
To Sell Your Car
paid for or not see
Walker thtWtepar
Back of the Armory
Phon 2-8239
-,''..
W.
if..:.- i.SL " - :vvwi -f
THROWN UNDER FLYING HOOVES of Chanty Man (3), dramatic action photo of Jockey Scott
Riles Is made as his mount, Row (5) falls after jumping second fence during third race at New .
York's Belmont Park. Row 'had to be destroyed. Riles was unhurt. (International Soundphoto)
Completion of Canal Will
Speed Russian Submarines
London U.R) With the
opening, of the Volga-Don canal,
now near completion, Russian
submarines will be able to pass
through central Russia from the
Baltic and the White Sea to the
Black Sea in the south.
The latest number of the au
thoritative Communist party
pariodical Bolshevik disclosed
that the 63-mile-long canal will
be able to carry ships much larg
er than was originally believed
here.
It said ships with a net cargo
charge of 2,000 tons will be used
to transport grain and coal
through the canal.
Passenger ships more than
100 yards long with 500 "soft"
seats will pass through the canal
on regular trips from Moscow to
Rostov-on-the-Don, the Black Sea
summer resorts and back, the
periodical said.
. Experts here said the figures
indicated that all but the larg
est types of submarines will be
able to pass through the canal.
The canal stretches from Kras
noarmelsk, a town on the Volga
below Stalingrad, to the town
of Kalach on the Don. Ships
coming from the Volga will cross
the heights that divide the two
rivers by climbing a 45-yard
"ladder" made of nine locks,
then descend to the Don level
through four other locks.
According to the Soviet press,
the canal itself is already com
pleted and the Don waters are
gradually filling the gigantic
140-mile-long Tsimlanskoye res
ervoir at the Don end of the
route.
The stategic importance of the
canal, experts said, consists in
enabling the Russians to move
their submarines from their ship
yards in the north to the Black
Sea without making the long
journey around Europe. It will
ensure complete secrecy about
the disposition of the Soviet sub
marine forces and the possibility
of concentrating them in one
place.
The value of the canal for simi
lar operations in war-time is dis
puted by the. experts, since it
would be highly vulnerable to
air attacks.
The canal will join the 18,000
miles of navigable . rivers and
canals of the Volga and the
northwestern " water transport
system with the Black Sea. It
will enable the transport of bul
ky cargoes, such as timber, coal
and grain, to be switched from
the overloaded Soviet railways
to the rivers.
Donetz, coal, metals and ores,
North Caucasian grain, tinned
and fresh fruit will go up the
Volga. Down the Volga (or from
the Caspian Sea through the Vol
ga) and to the Black Sea will go
timber, chemicals and oil.
In the north, the Volga Basin
linked with Leningrad and the
Baltic with the old Marjinski
system of canals. The network
of canals links the Volga with
the White Sea.
In addition, Leningrad is link
ed with the White Sea by the
White Sea-Baltic canal.
The center of this huge river
transport system is Moscow, now
christened by the Soviet press
the port of the five seas."
Oak Grove School
District Election Set
Oak Grove Oak Grove
school district No. 69 will hold
its annual meeting for election
of a school board director and
other business on Monday,1 June
16, at 8 p. m.
Polls will open following nom
(nations for the director post,
George Kellington's candidacy
has been annunced and Wallace
Brill has been mentioned as a
candidate. The term of Loyal
McCay expires. The office term
is three years.
The meeting will be in the
eighth grade room at the school
Chances Good To
Insure Support
At Present Level
Washington (U.R) Bi-par
tisan support developed among
House farm leaders Thursday
for legislation to Insure that
farm support prices will remain
at their present high levels no
matter who wins the fall elec
tions.
Chances looked good for
House approval of some legis
lation of that kind before Con
gress adjourns. But the move
appeared likely to encounter
strong Senate opposition.
At stake are government price
props for wheat, corn, cotton,
peanuts and rice. They can
range from 75 to 90 per cent of
parity under a so-called "sliding
scale" which went Into force in
1951.
Secretary of Agriculture
Charles F. Brannan, advocate of
high supports, this year pegged
them at the highest level per
mitted. But as the law now
stands, the administration which
comes In next year--be 'it Re
publican or Democratic could
decide otherwise and lower sup
ports to 75 per cent of parity.
House moves to suspend the
flexible system and make high
supports mandatory developed
on two fronts Wednesday:
1. The House Banking com
mittee by an overwhelming vote
tacked onto a bill to extend
price-wage-rent controls a rider
that would require supports
kept at 90 per cent of parity
next year. The rider is not con
tained in the controls bill under
debate in the Senate.
2. The House Agriculture
committee rushed hearings ort a
bill that would require supports
kept at 90 per cent of parity
through 1955. The Senate Agri
culture committee after hearings
failed to approve a variety of
similar propooals.
Around Hollywood
MnllvurnnH UI.R) Rita Gam
the Avu Gardner of television,
was whisked to nouywooa to
try to seduce
4 Ray Milland
for her first
' movie in
which she does
not have one
word to say.
Miss Gam, a
sultry brunette
with an eye-
(f J catching birth-
Aline MosbV nr .lin nn
New York television shows and
has had strong men embracing
their 17-inch screpns.
Movie-makers Russell H
and Clarence Green spotted her
picture in Life magazine, and
signed the voluntitnus hpnntv in
woo Milland in "The Thief."
Then they broke the news
that. 1Mb 1 U11 ,- ! .
...... .ma ,a ,iuiifvwuun s IirSl
talkless Dicturp sinpp iq31
For one thing, Rita doesn't
get within four feet of Ray Mil
land. And she has tn pmirt him
without opening her mouth.
No Dialogue In Picture
The nlcture has nn rlinlniriip
for a plot reason. Milland plays
a scientist who's the obiprt nf
a suspense chase.
But Rita doesn't mind llinl she
has no diajpgue to memorize for
iiki niuvie aeDUT.
"Trying to seduce him Is all
in the wav I mnvp. nr in tho wnv
I look," she explained. "What
you say even In a real life love
scene isn't so Imoortant as how
you feel and what you do.
"I don't like to talk, anyway,'
winked Rita.
Acting in the style of the si
lent movie queens is "exciting,'
she went on.
Dialoau Nat Actinar
"This is reallv whnt notlnc
is, she shrugged. "It lias notlv
ty ALINE MOSBT
United Press CorrBipondcrtt
ing to do with dialogue. It's what
you do that counts. The words
are incidental.. After, all, the
great moments in movies are
those in which there isn't any
dialogue."
Rita's set is right out of the
days when directors wore puttees
and their caps on backwards.
The scenes are shot with a silent
camera no microphone boom,
sound man, dialogue director,
prompting script girl, shouts of
"quiet" or red lights blinking
while the camera turns.
Not So Easy '
Milland said playing his first
silent role "isn't as easy as I
thought It would be." And his
leading lady admits It's no cinch,
either.
LdDdDM
ON
IPage 3
SECTION
TWO
TODAY
FOR
GROCETERIA
SAVINGS!
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Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey
AMSTER
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OwIanusus DismW
'1T...
It PROOF 4 Yars Old
Rich Old-Fashioned
Kentucky Straight
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f 60 Pint
OLD LANCASTER DISTILLERY CO.
Sardltown. Nallvn County, Kantwtiiy
There are all sorts of "drives" and
"shifts" on the market.
Some still operate entirely by hand.
Some depend on shifting gears, but do
this automatically. Some feed the power
through oil, but use a lock-out device at
cruising speeds.
But we still think that Dynaflow is the
best of all for this simple reason:
The big idea of Dynaflow Drive is to
make life easy for the driver.
In traffic, you can start and stop, slow
down, accelerate, with complete and
infinite smoothness because no gears
have to shift, ever, in Dynaflow Drive.
So there's no lurch, buck or bobble.
Dynaflow always feeds power with a
steady, willing swoop at 3 miles an
hour or 30-or as high as it's legal to go.
On hills, you get the same sure, steady,
unfaltering power-feed for the same
reason. No gears ever shift.
On a long day's drive, you can ride with
wonderful freedom from tension your
foot relaxed on the throttle because
you always drive through oil.
And at any speed you get a smoother
ride, in part because Dynaflow Drive
provides such a smooth and gentle
linkage between that mighty Fireball 8
Engine and the rest of the chassis.
But this is not all. Our service records
show that Dynaflow also makes life
easier for your bank account. It saves
wear and strain on the engine, banishes
the cost of clutch repairs, saves strain on
the transmission and even on the rear
tires.
6-patttriger Super CocriW.
There are a lot of other good reasons tor
buying a Buick its style, its room, its
ride, its power, its thrift, its durability
and its price.
When you can get all this-plus
Dynaflow Drive why be a holdout?
Come in and give Dynaflow a try today.
Equipment, tcceisorUt, trim and models art subject
to change without notice. 'Standard on Roadmaiter,
optional at txlra cost on other Serici.
Sure is true for 11
GEIKNHEEi'S GARAGE
210 E. MAIN
PHONE 2-6780
7
143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE
PHONE 2-626S