MedfordTribunb
Lowry Measure Declaring ''War''
On Muskrats in County Now Law
Salem (U.R) Ninety days
after the Oregon Legislature ad
journs it will be legal to hunt
and kill muskrats without a
hunter's or trapper's license on
or within 100 feet of the canals,
ditches and dikes of irrigation
districts in Jackson county.
Gov. Paul L. Patterson yester
day signed into law the bill in-
Standings
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Sacramento
Seattle
Los Angeles ....
San Francisco
San Diego
Hollywood
Oakland
Portland
W.
1
L. Pet. GB
0 1.000
1 0 1.000
1 0 1.000
1 .500
1 1
0 1
.500
.000 1
.000 1
.000 1
Tuesday's Results
San Diego 7. San Francisco 5
San Francisco 4. San Diego 1
Sacramento 4. Hollywood 3
Los Angeles 9 Portland 5
Seattle 8, Oakland 2
Bow Series Stand
San Diego 1. San Francisco 1
Sacramento 1. Hollywood 0
Los Angeles 1. Portland 0
SeatUe 1. Oakland 0
Baseball
x ftv ITVITED PRESS
Milwaukee (N) 022 001 2018 13 0
Brooklvn (N 000 000 000 0 5 2
Buhl. Johnson (7) and Crandall,
White (9). Spooner. Labine (4). Roe
buck (7). Neerav 9 and Walker. Win
ning pitcher Buhl. Losing pitcher
Spooner.
New York fN) .000 010 0045 9 0
Cleveland A ... 000 000 100 1 8 0
Maglie and Wcstrum. Lemon and
Hegan.
Birm. fSoul 000 100 000 1 4 1
New York (A) ..000 000 llx 2' 4 0
Kile. Gabler (3) and Neeman.
Thacker (6) Depalo (7). Turley and
Berberet, Howard (8). Losing pitcher
Gabler.
Chicago (N) ..000 120 0003 7 0
Beamt (Tex.) 000 000 0011 4 3
Jones. Amor (8) and Fanning. Clark.
Lawrence (8) and Tate. Winning
pitcher Jones. Losing pitcher Clark.
Pittsburgh (N) . 021 000 0115 12 0
Baltimore fA) ....000 013 000 4 7 0
Littlefield. Kline (7). Wade (8) and
Shepard. Bvrd. Johnson (8) and Smith.
Winning pitcher Wade Losing pitcher
Johnson.
K. City (A) 32 10 202 (10)020 13 0
W.-Sal. (C) 00 0 300 100 4 5 3
Van Brabant. Ceccarelli (7) and
Robertson. Long. Junco (3). McLam-
rock (4). Foster (7). Peeler (9) and jji-
vito. Lee (4) Chetta (7). Winning
pitcher Van Brabant. Losing pitcher
Long.
Cincinnati (N) 600 030 03113 14 0
Washingtn. (A) 001 000 001 2 7 4
Staley, Lane 7). Acker (9). Fisher
(9) and Bailey. Stone. Hyde (7). Gon
zales (9) and Oldis. Winning pitcher
Staley. Losing pitcher Stone.
(1st Game)
Phila. (N) ..000 11 10 050 17 14 0
Boston (A)....024 0 20 310-12 16 2
Owens. Spring (4). Lovenguth (8)
and Lopata. Nixon. Hurd (4). Brown
(5) and Daley. Winning pitcher
Owens. Losing pitcher Nixon.
(2nd Game, called end of 5. agreement)
Philadelphia (N) ... 402 02 8 8 0
Boston (A) 000 20 2 5 1
Ridzik Mrozinski (4) and Burgess.
Brodowski. Smith (5) and Buck. Win
ning pitcher Ridzik. Losing pitcher
Brodowski.
(1st Game)
St. Louis (N) ..000 000 141 6 8 1
Chicago (A) ... 002 010 0003 6 1
Jackson. Moford (5 1. Tiefenauer (8
and Sarnl. Pierce. Chakales (9 and
Courtney. Winning pitcher Moford.
Losing pitcher Pierce.
(2nd Game, called after 5. agreement)
St. Louis (N) 201 00 3 5 0
Chicago (A) 000 101 3 0
Poholsky and Rice. Swift. Dorish (3)
and Wilbur. Losing pitcher Swift.
BOWLING
CLASSIC BOWLING LEAGUE .
Standings: W.
Hammer's Sporting Goods 14
Henry's Drive In 14
Hight Real Estate , -14
Oak Knoll Golf Club 13
E. H. Mann Co 12
Sam's Sporting Goods 11
Walker Real Estate 10
Stevens Kaiser Willys 9
Medford Furniture Store 9
Sierra Cascade Pine Co. 7
Pfaff Sewing Center 7
Valley Music Co. 6
Results:
Pfafrs 2
E. Lenr 448
A. Klatt 550
B. St. Hilaire 497
C. Smith
Absente
Walker's
R. Brock
R. DeVore
F. Little
F. Knox
R. Wise
Hammer's
C. Dawson
C. Hammer
V. Sprinkle
P. Peden
K. Preston
Henry's
G. Barr
C. Leonard
N. Florev
A. Sacchi
B. Hawley
Oak Knoll
J. Collcy
J. Kantor
G. Sikes
B. Curtis
F. Driscoll
524
480
2499
Med. Furn. 1
N. Hillyer 541
F. Boone 511
S. Van Dyke 529
S. Stark 472
R. Rector 521
2574
2 Mann Co. ' " 1
' 502 F. Anderson 517
468 H. Goode 485
508 F. Beck 436
540 G. Schultz 558
576 J. Burroughs 528
2594 2524
0
569
493
415
427
515
2419
3
550
518
572
517
595
2752
Sam's
D. Lubbers
J. Kantor
W. White
S. Straus
H. Schroeder
troduced by Sen. Phil Lowry (R
Medford) which amounts to a
declaration of war on the musk
rats. But in case you plan to go
hunting for what Webster calls
the aquatic furbearing rodents,
you must first get the permission
of the owner of privately owned
lands or other person in posses
sion of the lands at the time.
3 Stevens' 0
526 G. Spaunhorst 502
480 D. Wilson 477
504 D. Koblik 481
492 J. Harris 475
576 F. Stevens 563
2578 2498
2
565
496
575
575
590
2801
1
. 507
490
477
535
522
2531
Hight's
W. Paterson
B. HoweU
B. Wilson
B. Blunt
J. Morgan
Vallev Music
T. Mitchell
M. Cannon
R. Speer
G. Clam
2
558
520
513
461
- Sierra Cascade 1
L. Schneider 468
2520
B. Green
Absentee
D. Spain
B. Dyer
H. Vessey
424
483
532
563
479
2481
Baseball Briefs
Little Rock, Ark. (U.RJ Billy
Pierce, who is being relied upon
for a 15-to-20 victory campaign,
was one of the biggest disap
pointments today in the Chicago
White Sox camp.
Pierce yielded only two hits
for six innings Tuesday but sud
denly tired and suffered his
fifth loss of the spring as the
St. Louis Cardinals scored a 6-3
victory over the White Sox.
TURLEY FLASHES FORM
Lynchburg, Va. (U.R) Bob
Turley, - an early spring bust,
flashed the form today which
persuaded the New York
Yankees to acquire him in their
18-player winter deal with the
Baltimore Orioles.
The 215-pound fireballer struck
out 11 batters" and allowed only
four hits Tuesday as the Yankees
beat their Birmingham farm
club, 2-1.
REDLEGS BREAK OUT
Norfolk, Va. (U.R) Manager
Birdie Tebbetts hoped today that
his Cincinnati Redleg sluggers
have shaken their recent "mass
slump" at just the right time
a few days before the National
League season opens.
Shackled for almost "a week
by Washington pitching, the
Redlegs broke out Tuesday with
a 14-hit attack that carried them
to a 13-2 triumph.
HORRIBLE DREAM
EvansviUe, Ind. (U.R) Bob
Buhl, the Milwaukee Braves'
No. 1 flop last season, has Man
ager Charley Grimm just about
convinced today that his 1954
performance was a "horrible
dream."
Tuesday Buhl hurled six in
nings against the Brooklyn
Dodgers as the Braves won their
spring series 5-4, with an 8-0
victory.
BOWLING
-V-'
LADIES VICTORY LEAGUE
Standings W.
Keith Brothers ;...30
Beatty and McDougal 28
U. S. Bank 2614
Starks Finance 26
Picks Apparel 22 ',4
Town Beauty Shoppe 2 Hi
Trowbridge and Flynn 20 4
Davis Transfer 17
L.
18
20
21', a
22
25 Va
26,i
27 2
31
Results:
B and M
A. Harris
L. Vogel
J. Dean
D. Pfaff
L. Cabler
T and F
H. Frye
R. Blaylock
R. Dean
E. McCary
J. Russell
0 Keith Bros.
443 J. Runtz
309 M. Herman
307 L. Keith
332 J. Crosley
401 N. Keith
Handicap
1792
Wi Stark's
378 J. Howard
250 E. Corliss
312 J. Gadden
423 R. Vessev
457 M. Simmonds 357
3
406
344
345
433
385
135
2048
3.
427
307'
376
407
1820
1874
Town Beauty 4
N. Roberts 412
L. Bell 280
H. Culy 435
B. Chase 344
V. Corby - 27
Handicap 27
1922
U. S. Bank 1
I. Schroeder 443
G. Ingle 347
J. Offe.ibacker
(abs.) 324
J. Ingle ' 385
P. Gardner 460
1959
Pick's
M. White
M. Puett
J. Coffeen
T. Maggenti
J. Le Cuyer
Handicap
ZV Davis Transfer 1
338 W. Jenkins 378
369 D. Huston v 308
386 J. Mahoney x 329
315 B. Wright 353
400 M. Dyer 346
27 Handicap 9
1835
W.
-'.36 Vi
...33 i
. 29
...26
..26
..25
COPCO LEAGUE
Standings:
Short Circuits
Hi Voltage
Hot Spots
Delta Stars
Grounded Wyes
Atom Snlitters
Hi Tension 24 4
Circuit Breakers 23
Results:
Grounded Wyes 2 Hot Spots
H. Fisher 454 F. Pickell
E. Green 380 D. Harper
L. Stinson 465 C. JNorris
Handicap
1299
1743
L.
19 2
22 Va
27
29 Va
30
31
31 '4
33
4
440
440
496
90
1466
Short Circuits 3 Hi Voltage 3
D. Ross 458 F. Brewer 462
R. Barbee 472 H. Dugan 512
R. Sterton 523 E. Barry 515
1453
Hi Tension
L. Duff
J. Thompson
D. Browne
Handicap
2 Delta Stars
416 O. Phelan
392 R. Rolls
441 W. Bish
72
1321
1489
0
405
397
428
1230
Atom Splitters 1 Circuit Breakers 1
B. Kight 401 R. Smith 416
G. Guilev 358 T. Anseth 369
O. Hanson 570 R. Brock 570
Handicap 66 Handicap 12
1336
1367
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday: 1 a.m. Monday for
Monday: other days 5:30 previous day.
s
hating
Wednesday
Night,
Friday Night,
and Sunday Afternoon 2 to 4:30
DOUBLE SESSION FRIDAY NIGHT
Clamp On Skates 25c to Children Under 12. Parents
Invited FREE To Watch ... Hat Check FREE for Skaters
ROGUE VALLEY BALLROOM
Rogue River
Tops EP in
Track Meet
Eagle Point Rogue River
high, taking eight first places
and tying for first in another,
downed Eagle Point 65 2-3 to
51 1-3 yesterday in a track meet.
Ted Stanfield paced the Chief
tains to victory by winning the
high hurdles in :18.3, the low
hurdles in :22.01, the broad
jump with 20 feet 4 inches, and
tying with Eagle Point's Gale
Friend at 5-7 in the high jump.
Jack Herburger and Bob
Hoover were double winners for
Rogue River and Jerry Eastgate
copped both distances for Eagle
Point. Herburger put the shot
45 feet and threw the discus an
unmeasured distance. Hoover ran
the 100-yard dash in .11 and the
:23.7. Eastgate ran the mile in
5:10 and the half mile in 2:23.
Eagles Missing
Friend won the pole vault at
10-3 and Adrian Eldrod took the
440-yard run for the Eagles in
.60. Bill Headrick, Rogue River,
nabbed the javelin at 155-10.
There was no relay.
The Eagle team was without
the services of Ken Bitterling,
who is in San Francisco as a
4-Her for the livestock exposi
tion, and Frank Reich, who was
working. Eldon Mason was on
the hobbled list with a knee in
jury. ,
Oregon Staters
Lick Linfield
Corvallis (U.R) Oregon
State baseballers defeated Lin
field 7-1 here yesterday after
noon. Sophomore Syl Johnson Jr.,
held Linfield to only six hits,
one of them a home run by
centerfielder Dick Shaw.
Record-Breaking Entry
In NW Bowling Tourney
Portland, Ore. (U.R) A record-breaking
number of teams
are entered in the 39th annu
al Northwestern International
Bowling tournament to be held
here April 30-May 22, it was an
nounced today by the tourney
committee. There are 414 teams
to take part in the tourney, and
800 doubles entries and 1,600
singles are registered.
Teams from Oregon, Washing
ton, Idaho, Montana, Alaska and
California will take part.
NEW SCHOOL PLANNED
Corvallis U.R) Voters here
yesterday approved a $140,000
bond issue for the start of the
first new elementary school here
since 1923. The vote was 434 to
131.
NOTICE OF HEARING
BY THE PLANNING COMMISSION
OF THE CITY OF MEDFORD
Notice is hereby given that a pub
lic hearing will be held by the Plan
ning Commission of the City of Med
ford at the Council Chamber in the
City Hall of said City at the hour of
7:30 o'clock P.M., April 11. 1955 for
the change of Zone from 1 B. Two
Family Dwelling district to Zone VI,
Heavy Industrial District of the fol
lowing described property to-wit:
All property within the Mingua
Sub-division and the Hights Sub
division north of Clark Street in
the City of Medford, now Zoned
as 1 B Two Family District.
All persons interested in the
change of zone as above set forth,
will be heard by the Planning Com
mission upon the changes at the time
and place aforesaid.
By order of the Planning Commis
sion March 14, 1955.
H. E. Mackie
Building Inspector
IW Official Sees Backward Step
If Measure on Water Resources
Passes Senate in Present Form
Eugene "Oregon will take a
backward step in fish and wild
life conservation if the water re
sources measure, House Bill 25,
passes the state legislature at
Salem m its present form, Dan
P. Allen, state president of the
Izaak Walton League of Amer
ica, advised 30 chapters of the
league in Oregon this week.
Allen stated he is requesting
a public hearing on the bill,
which is now being considered
by the Senate Natural Resources
committee, after having been
passed by the House last week.
Sen: Paul E. Geddes of Roseburg
is chairman of the committee.
Ducks Win Two .
From Portland
Portland U.R) Oregon's
Ducks took .two seven-inning
baseball games from the Port
land Pilots at Vaughn street park
here in sunny weather yesterday
3-0 and 6-5.
Pitcher Bill Blodgett held
Portland to three hits in the first
game while Oregon got but four
off Bill Wiitala and Joe Erceg.
One of these was a 335-foot
homer by George Shaw.
Oregon rallied for two runs
in the final inning to take the
second game with Erceg, who
also relieved in this one, the
losing pitcher. Bill Garner was
the winning Duck moundsman.
Ted Norbert hit a pinch homer
fo the Pilot's.
Player Representatives
Vote To Modify Rule
On Training Deadline
Cincinnati, Ohio (U.R) Major
league baseball player repre
sentatives, unhappy over the
the March 1 spring training
deadline, have voted to modify
the ruling to permit volunteers
to begin workouts at an earlier
date.
The deadline was adopted this
season at the players' request.
It forbade training before March
1 and met opposition from play
ers and club owners alike when
it went into operation.
Representatives of 15 of the
16 major league clubs, ' meeting
here to discuss the wage mini
mum problem and others, re
versed their earlier attitude on
spring training. They voted to
retain the March 1 deadline, but
recommended that players could
volunteer to open training be
fore that date.
The league sponsored the 1953
legislation which created the
State Water Resources commit
tee. This group, appointed by
Gov. Paul Patterson, was charg
ed with making a comprehensive
study of the water resources of
the state and reporting its find
ings and recommendations to the
1955 legislature. The present bill
is the outgrowth of the work of
the Water Resources committeee.
Not Commilted
"We concur in the necessity
for establishing sound water
policy for the future growth of
Oregon, but simply because we
back the Water Resources com
mittee legislation does not mean
we are committed to the bill,"
Allen asserted.
"Recommendations made by
fish and wildlife interests, in
cluding state agencies, have
been almost completely ignored.
Existing statutes which have and
will protect these important re
sources are being scuttled by
HB 25 in its present form, and
in their stead it is proposed that
the future of both commercial
and sports fishing and some
phases of wildlife management
be left to the discretion of a
board which may be totally un
familiar with such manage
ment,", Allen concluded.
Wednesday, April 6, 195S
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
Prospect Loser
In No-Hit Mix
Prospect Vernon Joe and
Heglund combined on the pitch
ing mound to give Chiloquin
high a 1 to 0 no-hit no-run base
ball win over Prospect at Chilo
quin yesterday. The Panthers
put together a hit and an error
in the second stanza for their
marker.
LINESCORE:
Prospect 090 000 0 0 0 4
Chiloquin 010 000 x 1 5 3
Peteron. Babb and Freed; V. Joe,
Heglund and Hobach.
Indian Education
Proposal Introduced
Salem U.R) Representa
tives from Lane, Yamhill and
Marion counties have introduced
legislation calling for an educational-
program for Indians in
western Oregon on the samejja
sis as that recently provided for
Klamath Indians.
Funds for the program would
be appropriated by the state but
it would be reimbursed by the
federal . government. Klamath
Indians were the subject of a
bill which passed both Houses
earlier in the session to educate
them in the mechanics of self
government.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 1 a. m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day.
TONY SHOULD BE READY
New York (U.R) A doc
tor's report today showed "noth
ing to indicate" that welter
weight champion Tony DeMar
co's injuries will prevent him
from making the first defense of
his title against Carmen Basilio
at Syracuse, N.Y., June 10. De
Marco currently is listed as "un
available" by the Massachusetts
Boxing commission because of
a hand injury and facial cuts
he incurred in winning the
championship from Johnny Sax
ton last Friday on a technical
knockout.
Sam Snead
Razor Sharp
For Masters
Augusta, Ga. (U.R) From
far and near, the greats of golf
gathered today for a nostalgic
crack at par-as-Bobby-Jones fig
ured it should be in his own
Masters tournament and Sam
Snead appeared to be the hung
riest of the. lot. .
With practice rounds of 65
and 67 under his belt over the
par 72 Augusta National course,
Snead seemed razor sharp in his
bid to set two precedents in the
19th Masters tournament."
Seeks Fourth Win "
First, if he won, he, would
be the first player ever to cap
ture two straight masters titles.
Second, he would be the first
ever to win it four times.
A possible field of 80, one
more than last year's record 79,
shaped up for the four days of
18-hole play starting Thursday.
Names like Gene Littler, Mike
Souchak and Bob Toski dropped
abruptly from the pre-Masters
talk Tuesday.
Pistons Deadlock
Play-Off Series
Indianapolis (U.R) "That
was the best game the Pistons
have played against - Syracuse
in the current series."
So spoke Fort Wayne Piston
Coach Charley Eckman follow
ing Tuesday night's "crucial"
victory over the troublesome
Nats. The win gave the resurg
ent Pistons an even 2-2 cards
with the Nats in their best-of-seven
NBA basketball title
series.
The 109-102 triumph, the high
est score of the present series,
was a must for Fort Wayne,
which will seek to pick up a 3-2
edge in their final home game
here Thursday.
COAST BOXERS WIN
Vailejo, Calif. OJ.R) Navy
boxers representing the West
Coast won eight of the 10 deci
sions over the Pacific Fleet in
1955 all-Navy Pacific area box
ing championships at the Mare
Island Naval shipyard. Winners
of last night's matches will meet
the Atlantic - Mediterranean
champs in the world-wide Navy
finals at the Oakland auditorium
April 12. Proceeds from both
matches will go to the Navy re
lief society.
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