Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 07, 1952, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    mom
Gil Turner,
Kid Gavilan
Mix Tonight
Philadelphia U.R) Reas
sured by the forecast of fair,
warm weather for Monday night,
promoter Herman Taylor ex
pected 50,000 fans and more
than $330,000 for his "dream
title fight" between Welter
weight Champion Kid Gavilan
and challenger Gil Turner at
Municipal stadium.
For Taylor, it was a dream
fight because it matched unbeat
en young "Turner of Philadel
phia, hottest -local attraction m
25 yeafs, with the world champ
ion from Cuba.
Long Victory String
Gavilan, 26, was favored at
8va to 5 to tag the 21 - year-
old Philadelphia Negro with his
first defeat. Turner has a string
of 31 straight victories, includ
ing 2d knockouts.
Gavilan was favored because
of his greater experience in 98
pro fights with a style that was
natural to him but that was
copied by Turner. Gil uses his
rapid-fire attack, his fancy
footwork and even his long bolo
upper-cuts.
Turner sets a blistering pace,
but never tried the 15-round
route before. He could burn him
self out against the rugged Hav
ana "Hawk" who went the dis
tance four times.
ACHERY VICTOR
Portland (U.R) Bond
Whitmore, Gresham, captured
the 1952 Oregon State Archery
tournament men's champion
ships here Sunday at the wind-
up of three days of shooting in
the 25th annual classic. Whit
more scored 2034 points," edg
ing Ralph Dunn,' Astoria, with
2007 and Royal Gaines, Port
land, at 2004. Harriette War
nick, Oregon City, scored 1287
points to win the women's title,
dethroning Joe Redfield of Port
land who had 1235.
CATER RIFLE CHAMP
Portland (U.R) Charles
Cater of La Grande Monday was
the Oregon State Rifle and Pis
tol association small - bore
champion. Cater nabbed top
honors at the Clackamas range
Sunday, scoring. 3174 out of a
possible 3200 points. Second was
Lee Swem, Portland, with 3161
and W. J. Welch, Le Grande,
with 3159. Tressa Dodge, Boise,
Ida. scored 3128 for top wo
men's honors.
COLLEGE BOYS, MAYBE
Pocahontas, Ark. (U.R) Sher
iff Rex Harper is beginning to
wonder about some burglars
here. In two recent thefts, the
only items taken have been
women s girdles.
MgllonglKegdn Coastline"
More Enjoyable if You Take If Easy
Me jr
t (I :
If
FIRST PLACE-Jody Alderson,
17-year-old Northwestern fresh
. man from Chicago, won the 100
i meter freestyle event in 1:07 flat
1 at Indianapolis to take the first
berth on the Women's Olympic
swimming team.
j; v; i l
I ' - v-
ANOTHER TITLE Frank Sedg
man (above) of Australia,,
clinched his claim to the world's
lawn tennis singles champion
ship when he added the Wimble
don title to his U. S. crown by
defeating Jaroslav Drobney of
Egypt at Wimbledon, England. ,
Don't Speed Along;
Turn Off ' Highway
For Extra Dividend
The followlnf is a condensation
f m motorlog appearing in the
June 22 issue of the Northwest'
Own Magazine, Sunday Orero
Blan. It is one of an annual series
sponsored Jointly by The Orego
nlan and the Oregon State Motor
association.
BY GEORGE SPAGNA
t Staff Writer, The Oreffoolta
The biggest motel man in the
state, a 330-pound Dutchman
.with an implausible name, has
'operated at uoia ueacn lor two
years with one complaint, witn-
!out prodding, Lubbertus Buis
kool lets you know about it
'like second-hand advice.
It's this. Why don't motoring
vacationists stop and relax?
Take it easy. Throw away those
.ouu-miie-a-aay vacation scnea-
,ules. The big mans logic is
Iclear, even unchanged by two
lyears in a Jap prisoner of war
icamp.
We met this perceptive Dutcn-
man early on a week-long Ore
gon State Motor association-ine
Uregonian mo
torlog through
the couthwest-
ern O r e g o n
coast and north
ern California.
Little more
than a 1500
mile round trip.
the average un
der 200 miles
of driving a
day it was.
Time enough to
see something,
Buiskool sal
vaged what
was left of a
m a c h in ery
plant in Indo
nesia and came
to Gold Beach
with memories
of two years in
a Japanese
POW camp on
Batavia. Like
others at Gold
Beach, he waits
for the planned
tie-in with Bon
neville power
to develop that
fabulous "last
frontier " of the
West, which
still is without
a railroad near
ly a century
after gold was
found on her
sands. Gold
Beach sits like
a watchdog at
the mouth of
the wild Rogue river, which has
its beginnings high in the Cas
cades and thunders downhill
250 miles to the sea over jagged
rocks and deeo canyons.
! " The tourist, not in too much
' of a hurry to stop, is afforded a
ride up the rapid-lashed Rogue
j on the boat that takes the daily
; mail to Agness 32 miles in
land. The town is reached only
one other way, then in the dry
season, by a tortuous 66-mile
Hog road.
j For 200 years or more, the
Lpnly explorations of the Oregon
SM itans
HOUPIUU
TATt
31W VIX-" "
m m
r
IB
0
t
y
V
I
SOLDBSACH
Oregon State Highway Commission photo
Between Yachats and Florence are renowned Sea Lion caves,
where dozens of sea mammals frolic in surf and on rocks.
country by white men was by
sea. That accounts for the
names of Oregon's famous head
lands, the promontories and
capes that poke right out into
the sea.
There's a legend with every
one. Take Cape Perpetua, a
rocky promontory eight miles
south of the mouth of the Ya
chats river where hordes of sal
mon ascend to spawning
grounds. -
Our white AAA car turned
off the coast highway U. S.
101 at a stone, marking point
ing tne way, loiiowing a gravel
forest road two miles up to the
top of the cape. From the bluff
one of the most thrilling ex
panses of the coastline anv-
where is seen, stretching many
miles north and south and look
ing straight down at breakers
rattling like distant artillery
against rocKs suu feet below.
Story has it, a famed English
explorer, japt. James Cook, dis
covered this cape and save it its
name for "bad weather seemed
to hold him perpetually in its
signt."
Better known is Cape Blan
co. To- newspaper readers,
waicning tne weather, its a
place where the storm warnings
are hoisted for ships out at sea.
Twenty-one miles south of Ban
don, the city destroyed by a fire,
turn off the highway by the
Sixes river. The Sixes, they say,
got its name from Chinook jar
gon meaning "friend."
Blanco is at the end of a six
mile drive, a good gravel road
straight to the sea. Its ancient
lighthouse seemingly hasn't
changed in looks since it was
fashioned of home-made bricks
in 1870. For years the rocks on
the cape were a dull white. They
gleam under bright sun. The
name "Blanco" is from the
Spanish, meaning white.
too fapanish navigators, sail
ing northward, got lost and sep
arated in a storm. One reached
a promotory just south of Gold
Beach, left it with the captain's
name Cape Sebastian. The oth
er put in at Blanco.
To Oregon, its coast is "400 J
miles, of air-conditioned high
way." Try an early morning i
drive in the crisp salted ocean!
air A cure pnrp -fnr ti-Qvol uroa n. i
ness and an appetite-builder of
tht first order
Between the blue sea and for-!
ested greens at many points are
lavish stands of wild rhododen-1
dron, golden Scotch broom and
English snrse
Another stop is the sea lion
caves just north of Florence,
past an avenue of rhododendrons
that ride the highway with you
on both sides for miles. Many of
them are two stories high. I
The caves are midway on the i
coast between Washington andi
California. An old sea captain
is credited with finding them in
1880. He entered the caves in a
small skiff on a calm day. A'
storm came up, marooning him'
for days. j
He thrived on the flesh of the j
ancestors of the hundreds of!
strange, playsome mammals;
who today come to this onlyj
mainland rookery to mate and:
make a home. j
More than a dozen state
parks, all lush picnicking spots,.'
dot the length of the southwest)
Oregon coast highway. Honey-
man state park, on Cleowax;
lake near Westlake, offers every
recreational need even boat
ing, fishing and swimming.
Only once does the highway
wander far from the open Pa
cific. It happens 30 miles south
of Reedsport, leading to the
twin lumber centers of North
Bend and Coos Bay, so looka
like they could well be one city.i
Coos bav. an invprtprl V-chanorl
inlet, makes one of the finest;
lano-iocsed narbors m the'
world extending 13 milea:
around.
North of North Bend are the
"everdriftine" sand dunes!
which covered several islands :
of trees in their advance.'
On the extreme southern end '
of the Oregon coast is Brook
ings, with its arrps of Prnfl-
lilies and azalea park. Upriver
is the only stand of redwoods in
uregon an inevitable remind
er of California. ,
Junior Fireman's
Badge Brings Smile
Omaha, Neb. (U.R) Ronnie
Augustyn, 3 -year-old Sargent,
Neb., lad was in pain in Chil
dren's Memorial Hospital here.
In spite of the severe burns re
ceived when he vainly tried to
save his puppies from a burning
corn' crib, Ronnie was wearing
a big smile.
Representatives of the Omaha
police department paid him a
call and gave him an Omaha
junior fireman's badge.
Said Fire Commissioner Wil
liam D. Noyes: "You are such a
brave boy that we want you in
our fire department. Here's a
badge just like all firemen
wear."
The firemen wanted to replace
the lost puppies but neighbors
had already taken care of that.
HALL'S NAME CHANGED
Chicago (U.R) The name of
the convention hall, located at
Halsted and 43rd streets next to
the vast Union Stock Yard, re
cently was changed from Inter
national Amphitheatre to Chi
cago Convention Building &
International Amphi theatre.
The building is the site of the
annual international livestock
exposition.
K I Roseburq
335R
illf Minutes . hiA.
ESAI A QUICK lilt WM
a I jo mi same g&
L ' V MOUHVflSll h
Call: Rogue j
Travel Serv-
ice, 2-6779 or ... k?-
WCA 2-7 2S
Fits any refrigerator
rK' End the mess and both-
er removing ice
S?, ' 5?K x CUDes under the
$350
tTT .1
vvesmignouse
ICE CUBE TRAY
Limit 2 tb a Customer
OMtf
With Westinghouse Handi-Out Ice Cube Trays, you can
remove cubes singly or all at a time with just a flip of
the wrist . . . freeze 14 big cubes in each tray . . . and
freeze them really fast in these anodized aluminum trays.
Bargains like this are few and far between, so act now!
Gaf Acquainted m with
WOmghou$ Work-Saving Btcfrk Applianctt
33
tfrigrafor HofncFrMiw Kong laundry Twim Dnhwadw Wads-Away WgtorHMlsr
GET ACQUAINTED WITH US WITH VALUE '
Trowbridge & Flynn
ELECTRIC COMPANY
Monday, July 7. 1952
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
'Plastic Kidney7 Purifies Blood Drawn From Patient
214 WEST MAIN
PHONE 2-5211
Pittsburgh, Pa.-ttJ.R) West
inghouse Electric Corp. has an
nounced development of a new
portable 'plastic kidney" which
draws blood from a patient,
purifies it and returns it to his
body.
Dr. T. S. Danowski, senior
staff physician of Children's hos
pital here, disclosed that a clin
ical model of . the improved
"kidney" which fits in a cabi
net about the size of a small
floor model radio has perform
ed outstandingly over a period
of . several months. A similar
model also -is in use at Peter
Bent Brigham hospital in Bos
ton, Mass. :
Cellophane Tubing Used
The plastic "kidney" which
takes over when normal kidney
functioning fails or is inade
quate has as its key feature a 50
foot strip of cellophane tubing
wound in spiral fashion around
three hollow-cylinders made of
fine mesh wire. The tubing is
the-same kind of material used
for sausage casing, according to
George W. Jernstedt, manager
of the Westinghouse special'
products engineering department.
are immersed in a specially pre
pared bath called a 'dialyzate,'
and as the impurities are drawn
out of the tubing, they pass into
the bath and are drained off,''
the engineer said.
"The purified blood continues
through the tubing and returns
to the patient by way of a vein
ous . opening in the other arm."
Physicians More Familiar
Dr. Danowski reported that
life-saving applications of the
"kidney" continue to grow as
physicians become more famil
iar with the device.
."We have used the device suc
cessfully for combating acute
uremic poisoning which takes
place when kidney functioning
breaks down," he said. "In case
of poisoning caused by sulfa
drugs, barbituates, or carbon
tetrachloride we believe the
'kidney can take over the job of
the overworked human organ.
"It may also prove useful aft
er certain abdominal operations,
when kidney blockage results.
WANTED. SURE ENOUGH .
Fort Worth, Tex. (U.R)
Oificfer H. O. Middleton got a
call at police headquarters from
a woman asking if she were
wanted for any crime. The Avo
man gave him her address and
hung up after Middleton offered
to check the records. ' Sure
enough, he found the woman
was wanted in Houston, Tex., on
felony charges.
umv- i! ,l1; j 1 ueaa line -sunaay L-iassiiieai is a'
The - metal screen cylinders 100n Saturdays
YOU'LL ENJOY
Breakfast
HERE
NEW HOURS:
Open 6:00 a.m. - Close 8:00 p.m.
franklin's cafe
Harry Stratman
Travis Mitchell
tmh &M4 rmt
n 7n nrzn n n n n n
Real enjoyment of food is essential! Little
children who come to meals eagerly and
take pleasure in eating seldom give parents
trouble. Watch the smiles of delight when
you bring home better-baked Holsum
the taste sensation of the nation! Don't
let your family down get some today.
1 ' -IstWfflfflk&m,--! . , jam. II
The delicious taste and aroma of
new Holsum combines the best
nourishment for your growing child
with a likeable flavor that keeps
stay-healthy smiles on young faces!
You'll like Holsum yourself.
0ok Holsum
m
Plastic Wrapper
Pick up the new plastic-coated wrapper that
keeps Holsum flavor fresher, costs no more.
The W. E. long Co.
mm