Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 10, 1956, Image 9

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    Bob Friend
First Ten
Game Winner
By FEED DOWN
United Press Sporti Writer
Bob Friend gained the honor
of being the major league's first
10-game winner Friday and set
hi sights on becoming the Pitts
burgh Pirates' biggest winner
since Burleigh Grimes notched
25 victories in 1928.
The 26-year-old righthander
gained his 10th decision of the
season when he shut out the St.
Louis Cardinals, 2-0. in 11 in
nings to pitch the Pirates into
undisputed possession of second
place. It was Friend's second
shutout in two tries against the
Cardinals and he also has tossed
four one-run games in a bril
liant 10-3 campaign.
The Pirates have had only
four 20-game pitching seasons
since Crimes' 25-game campaign,
Ray Kremer scoring 20 in 1930,
Truett Rip Sewell notching 21
in both 1943 and 1944 and Mur
ray Dickson gaining 20 in 1951.
The 40-year-old Dickson was
the hard-luck losing pitcher Fri
day night, matching pitch for
pitch with Friend for 10 innings.
During that period he fanned
eight batters and walked only
one while Friend struck out
nine and issued four bases on
balls.
In the 11th. however. Dick
Cole and Bill Virdon singled
with one out. Dickson retired
Lee Walls but then Dale Long,
coming through as he so often
has in Friend's games, broke the
scoreless deadlock with a single.
Frank Thomas followed with an
other single to give Friend an
insurance run.
Friend, who struck out Stan
Musial with the bases filled to
get out of trouble in the 10th,
retired the Cardinals in order
in the 11th.
Oregon Schedules
Coaching Clinic
University of Oregon will con
duct its annual coaching clinic
Monday through Saturday, June
11 through 16, on the campus
at Eugene.
Basketball, wrestling, baseball,
track and field, football and
trampolining will be covered in
the six-day program.
Visiting coaches will be head
ed by Sid Gillman, Los Angeles
Rams football mentor, and
Bucky O'Connor, University of
Iowa basketball tutor. Other
visiting instructors will be Jack
Mooberry, Washington State col
lege, track: Mel Krause, Frank
lin high school of Portland,, bas- j
ketball, and Dutch Kawasoe,
Vale high school, football.
Krause and Kawasoe coached
their teams to state champion
ships. ARNOLD, BROWN ADVANCE
Mill Valley, Calif. (U.R) Top
seeded. Mimi Arnold and Tom
Brown advanced as scheduled
Saturday but upsets marked the
other matches in the semi-finals
of the Mill Valley Invitational
Tennis tournament.
STALLION DIES
Toronto, Ont. (U.R) Bunty
Lawless, famed Canr.dian thor
oughbred sire, died Thursday of
acute indigestion at the age of
21. The stallion was twice Cana
dian champion during his racing
days and was the top Canadian
sire from 1948 through 1951.
ALL MEDAL PLAY .
Detroit (U.R) The ladies PGA
championship. June 21-24. will
be all medal play, officials an
r.ounced. A switch was made
from plans to have the final
round on Sunday match play in
order to allow fans an oppor
tunity to see all the stars on the
final day.
LINE SCORER:
Ttrolt 020 001 000 J S 8
Washington . 000 100 020 0 3 1
Gromek (4-3) and House; Griggs,
Grob lS and Berbcret. .
(Second Game)
Kansas City 000 400 0013 11 3
Baltimore .... 001 Oil 40x 7 7 0
Gorman. Shantz (7i and Thomoson
fornielea. Palica t6. Zuverink (8) and
Smitft.
WHAT ARE YOU PAYING
FOR DAIRY FEED?
CROWN
KOW KANDY
IS ONLY
SC750
WHY PAY MORE?
TRY SOME TODAY!
GIVE DAP THE BIRD FOR
FATHER'S DAY!
PARAKEETS $1.95 Ea.
OUR PARAKEETS ARE YOUNG, LOCALLY RAISED
BIRDS. CAGES ARE PRICED FROM $3.95
PACIFIC FEED fir SEED CO.
4th & FRONT STS. PHONE 2-2413
MEDFORD, OREGON
Patterson Triumphant
In Heavyweight Tiff
By JACK CUDDY
United Press Sports Writer
New York (U.R) Young
Floyd Patterson, who gave Tom
my (Hurricane) Jackson a deci
sive beating Friday night, said
today. -111 lick Archie Moore for
the vacant heavyweight title in
September if my broken right
hand heals in time."
Twenty-one-year old Floyd of
Brooklyn won decisively before
11,255 at Madison Square Gard
en for his 17th straight victory.
But his triumph was tarnished
slightly by a strange split 12
round decision.
Surprising most of the fans
and 13 of 14 writers polled at
the ringside, Referee Harry
Kessler favored lanky Jackson
of Far Rockaway, N.Y., on a
"minute - b y - minute'' scoring
basis. The two judges had Pat
terson well ahead at the end of
the thrilling TV-radio fight.
Rapid-Fire Hooks
Patterson, scaling 178 pounds
to Jackson's 193'. j, had tall Tom
my in trouble from rapid-fire
left hooks and leaping right
leads in eight of the 12 sessions.
Jackson, who bled from the
nose from the third round on,
declared, "This boy's not as
tough as Bob Baker or Dan Buc
ceroni. If he fights Moore ill
September, Archie'll kill him."
Meanwhile Promoter Jim Nor
ris announced, "I'll try to match
Patterson and Moore for a 15
round fight in September, and
I'll try to have it recognized by
all boxing organizations as a
fight for the title left vacant by
Rocky Marciano's retirement."
Patterson and Jackson will re
ceive the largest purses of their
careers, $40,000 each, guaran
teed from the $75,000 TV-radio
fee and from the gross gate of
$68,038.
Patterson, the Olympic mid
dleweight champion of 1952 who
Friday night registered his 30th
victory in 31 professional bouts,
fractured the fourth knuckle of
his right fist in the seventh
round.
Six to Eight Weeks
Dr. Alexander Schlff, who put
the hand in a splint, said, He
will be out of action from six to
eight weeks while the knuckle
heals."
In the voting on a rounds
basis. Referee Kessler favored
Jackson, 6-5-1; but Judge Har-
League Leaders
By VNITED PRESS
(at or rriaayj
V4T10VAI. I.EAfVLE
Plaver It clue c. AB
Lons. Pitt! 4 170
R. H. Pet.
34 69 .382
Bover. St. L 47 1B9 38 7 JM
element fltts. .3 in -"
Bailey. Cin 37 lis
14 38 .328
AMERICAN LEAGIE
Mantle. N Y 49 IBS SO 74 .401
MaxweU. Det. . 36 113 27 43 .381
Vernon, Bo.. 36 127 22 47 .370
Kuenn, Det. 45 11 30 M .364
Berra, N Y 40 151 33 53 .351
Home Runs Mantle. Yanks 21: Ber
ra Yanks 16: Long. Pirates 16; Boyer.
Cards 14: Post. Redlegs. Banks, Cubs
and Bauer. )anks all 13.
Runs Batted In Mantle, Yanks 52:
Cards 48: Lone. Pirates 44; Berra.
Yanks 42. Simpson. Athletic 39.
Runs Mantle. Yanks 50: Bauer.
Yanks 38; Boyer. Cards 38: Blasln
game. Cards 37; Yost. Senators 36.
Hits Mantle. Yanks 74; Kuenn.
Tillers 68; Bover. Cards 67; Long. Pi
rates 65; Ashburn. Phils 57.
Pitching Lawrence. Redlegs 7-0;
nri Sox R-l: MeDaniel. Cards 4-1:
Lemon. Indians. Wilson. White Sox
and Pierce, White Sox all 7-2.
SCHEDULE CHANGED
Portland (U.R1 The Portland-
Los Angeles Pacific Coast League
baseball game scheduled for
Monday at Los Angeles has been
cancelled. Beaver officials an
nounced. The series will open,
instead, with a single game Tues
day afternoon. The cancelled
Monday game will be made up
in a doublehcader Wednesday.
PER TON
F.O.B. Warehouse
MEDF0RDf5JTRIBUra - "
old Barnes had Patterson ahead,
8-4, and Judge Bert Grant also
favored Patterson, 7-5, as did the
United Press, 9-2-1.
Although the Hurricane stalk
ed after smaller Patterson in
every round, he was staggered
in the second, third, fourth, fifth,
sixth, eighth, 11th and 12th.
Tommy almost hit the deck in
the fourth and 12th. But he
continued to fight back persist
ently. His best rounds were the
seventh and ninth.
Seek Solution to
Auiollnemployment
Detroit (U.R) An 18-man
"task force" was set up Friday
to tackle the midwestern s un
employment problems and take
them before President Eisen
hower along with "proposed
solutions."
The "task force" led by Michi
gan's Gov. G. Mennen Williams
and United Auto Workers' Pres
ident Walter P. Reuther, was
formed at the UAW's inter-state
conference on unemployment
attended by 42 mayors, other
city representatives and top un
ion officials.
The group includes Williams,
Reuther, UAW Secretary-Trea
surer Emil Mazey, another un
ion official, and nine mayors
from communities in four Mid
west states hard hit by the
drop in auto production.
An immediate five-point pro
gram stressing improvement in
unemployment compensation and
including tax cuts to consumers
drew indications of general ac
ceptance from the mayors.
The program called for upping
personal income tax exemptions
from $600 to $800 removing
excise taxes on consumer pro-
ducts, federal acton for adequ
ate unemployment compensa
tion, a suspension of home
mortgage payments for laid off
workers, accelerated defense
allotments for stricken areas
and a speed-up of pending pub
lic works program.
Boswell Returned to
Nevada for Trial
Carson City, Nev. (U.R) Bar
tender William E. Boswell, 35,
was returned Saturday to face a
murder charge for the strangu
lation slaying last month of an
attractive young Philadelphia
socialite and heiress.
Boswell, arrested at the home
of his mpther-in-law in Middle-
bury, Vt, was returned by Orms-
by County Sheriff Lester V
Smith and Police Inspector
Erwin Butner.
Although neither was avail
able for comment, they said in
Vermont that the suspect had
denied any connection with the
slaying "on or about May 21"
of Mrs. Annie Harris Van Ryne,
23, in his apartment here.
Regiment Storms
Shores of Iwo Jima
Tokyo (U.R) A U.S. Army
regiment of 2.500 men stormed
the shores of historic Iwo Jima
Saturday in mock atomic war
games.
Fighting men of the famed
Eighth Cavalry Regiment waded
thTough heavy surf from landing
craft to the black sand beaches
of one of the bloodiest battle
grounds of World War II.
A mock atomic explosion sent
all the soldiers into emergency
defense drills before the first
attack wave landed.
An Army dispatch radioed
from the USS Cavalier at sea off
the island said the exercise was
"designed to give intensive train
ing to Army and Navy person
nel in amphibious assault opera
tion under atomic conditions."
SIME SETS RECORD
Sanger, Calif. (U.R) Dave
Sime, Duke University's sizzling
dash man, set a world record of
20 seconds flat in the 220-yard
dash Saturday, after equalling
the world mark in the 100-yard
dash earlier In the evening.
l?s Mail Tribune Want Ada
Dead line Sunday Classified la at
at noon Saturday.
PERSONALIZED
AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIRS
BRAKE & TUNE UP
SPECIALISTS
Free Estimates Any trouble 30
years experience. General Motors
& Hudson Motor cars. Your
trouble my trouble!
LEO COOKE
t Beatom Front & Jackson
Phone 2-7327
Search Starts for
Suspected Killer
In Rape-Slaying
Pasadena, Calif. (U.R) Au
thorities conducted a wide
spread search Saturday for a
28-year-old suspected murderer
in connection with the rape-
slaying of a pretty blonde Sun
day school teacher.
Marilyn Marie Fink. 19-year-
old secretary, was found mur
dered in her bedroom Friday.
Her grandfather, Fred C. Mark,
discovered the body when he
entered the room to awaken the
girl for work.
Police said Miss Fink had been
raped and stabbed several times.
Officers said her right breast
was severed by a knife. Local
authorities immediately issued
an all points bulletin for the ar
rest of Kenneth Pashby, 26,
brother of a son-in-law of the
victim's grandparents.
Spends Night
Miss Fink had been living
with her grandparents and ac
cording to police Pashby spent
the night at the Mark home.
Mark said he found the victim
on the floor near her bed after
Miss Fink's boy friend phoned
the residence to inquire if the
secretary wanted ride to a bus
stop.
The boy friend, Albert Gra
ham, said he brought Miss Fink
home around 1 a.m. after an
evening of bowling at nearby
Monrovia.
Graham, who told officers he
planned to mary Miss Fink,
said he noticed a strange car
in the rear of the Mark home
when he drove his sweetheart
home. Police believed the car
belonged to Pashby.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark described
Pashby, a machinist, as a "drift
er." They said he was unem
ployed and had been evicted
from his apartment only last
Thursday.
Just
It's graduation time! And this happy
gentleman appropriately enough has
just gone through some important gradua
tion exercises of his own.
It was just a few minutes ago, in fact,
that he stood in his dealer's showroom
and accepted the keys to his first Cadillac.
But even though he now holds his final
degree, so to speak, in motor car owner
ship, his education in all the good things
of motordom is only beginning.
Take performance, for instance. The
car is so smooth and powerful, and so
nimble and obedient that it automatically
Airman Confesses
Spokane Shooting
Spokane (U.R) Andrew
Taylor, a 20 year old airman
from Fairchild Air Force base,
confessed to police here Satur
day the fatal shooting of Joseph
Banks, 56, in a downtown hotel.
Taylor was booked by Depu
ty Prosecuting Attorney Bill
Grant for further investigation.
It is expected that Taylor will
be recharged in the near future.
Police detectives picked up
Taylor this morning at Fair
child. Taylor then admitted to
them he shot Banks following
an argument in the hotel.
Banks was a state witness in
a recent trial In which Lewis T.
Anderson was sentenced to life
imprisonment for the Jan. 6
shotgun slaying of boxer Oscar
Gould. Ironically, Banks was
shot in the same hotel involv
ed in the Gould killing, and, po
lice report, the time was ap
proximately tne same for both
murders.
Police Hold Man Who
Threatened President
Hartford, Conn. (U.R) Po
lice held a jobless Massachusetts
man in lieu of S5.000 bond Sat
urday for sending threatening
letters to President Eisenhower.
Charles R. Hoye, 51, of Chel
sea, a male nurse, was said to
have threatened to "eliminate"
the President because Hoye
couldn't get treatment in a vet
erans hospital.
Secret Service Agent Robert
Hastings said Hoyle admitted to
sending four letters and had a
fifth in his possession when ar
rested. Hoyle said he slipped on
ice in Chelsea last March and
hurt his foot and head but
couldn't gain admittance to a
veteran's hospital. Hastings said
"Hoyle was preparing to head
for Washington and see the Pres
ident and apparently carry out
his threats.
z s M &' iltfiflJr. n ' fall
Graduated .. .To
Sunday, June 10, 1938
Rogue Wonderland
Group Organized .
Shady Cove-Trail The Rogue
Wonderland association, a group
that will promote improvement
of tourist facilities and other
projects to benefit communities
and business along Highway 62,
was organized Tuesday at a
meeting of Upper Rogue area
business people.
Chairman of the association
will be J6hn Dunlap. Trail, Un
canny Canyon; secretary. Mrs.
Witt, Trail, Sunset-on-the-Rouge;
and treasurer. C. P. Yundt, Trail,
rl e.
CONCEDES Senator Estes
Kefauver is a picture of de
jection in Los Angeles after
conceding to his Democratic
opponent in the California
primary election as Adlai
Stevenson polled a margin
of two to one votes over him.
i
ff i
revises a man's standards of performance.
Consider comfort. Rolling along the
broadest boulevard or taking the roughest
bylane, the car is incredibly smooth and
level in ride.
And think about pride and satisfaction.
What an extraordinary feeling it is to sit
in command of the "car of cars" and
find yourself the subject of admiring
glances on every hand.
Have you ever considered how wonder
ful it would be to "graduate" to Cadillac?
Certainly, it's the perfect season for
enjoying a new Cadillac. The day are
SKINNER'S GARAGE
143 South Riverside Medford Phone 2-6264
Zhukov Reported in
III Health This Week
Moscow (U.R) Soviet Defense
Minister Marshal Georgi M. Zhu
kov, P r e s i d e nt Eisenhower's
World War II comrade-in-arms,
has been ill, it was learned Sat
urday. The illness is not serious.
Zhukov led the Soviet armed
forces in World War II and has
maintained friendly personal re-
Riffles-on-the Rouge.
Those attending discussed sev
eral tourist promotion projects
and gave special attention to
the Points of Interest leaflet
scheduled to be given to the
printers last Friday. The leaflet
is expected to be ready for dis
tribution soon at the business
places in the area.
State Representative Al Lit
trell and E. H. Mann were in
troduced to the group and gave
talks on distribution of high
way funds. Petitions are now be
ing circulated for repair of. High
way 62.
Representatives of 23 business
houses along the highway were
in attendance at Tuesday's session.
Announcing . . .
U. J. "Bud" Hornbuckle
Now
NEW MANAGER
.of
RICHFIELD STATION
707 West Main
Extending a cordial Invitation for you to
Drop in and get acquainted! You'll find:
QUALITY PRODUCTS EXCELLENT SERVICI
NORTHERN STAMPS
a Cadillac !
bright and long . . . the roads are beautiful
and inviting . . . and there are wonderful
places to go and exciting things to do.
And certainly, it has never been easier to
sign your name to the title. We are, happily,
in a position to offer you prompt delivery
on your favorite model and we know you
will be pleased to learn how practical
Cadillac ownership has now become.
Why not pay us a visit soon and spend
an hour at the wheel?
It's a wonderful season and a wonderful
car and a wonderful opportunity to
enjoy them both I
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
lations with Mr. Eisenhower
since. The two have exchanged
letters for years.
Zuhkov's absence at official
social functions for Marshal Tito
has been noted by correspond
ents. Tito arrived in Moscow last
Saturday.
The marshal made his last
public appearance at a recep
tion in the Argentine embassy
Correspondents missed Zhu
kov especially at the Kremlin
reception for Tito last Wednes
day. They had wanted his re
action to Mr. Eisenhower's
statement that he might invite
Zhukov to Washington if the
Soviets asked U. S. Secretary
of Defense Charles E. Wilson to
visit Russia.
WOOL and MOHAIR
We are now advancing
70c on Mohair
45 e on Wool
Ship to
PACIFIC
WOOL GROWERS
734 N.W. 14th Ave.
Portland, Oregon