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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1956)
I TWELVE MrOfOHD fORtOOJT) Burd Wk 1 ette Hurls raves Rap ers By FEED DOWN United Prei Sporti Writer Lew Burdette and Bob Buhl form tr.e Na:f:ial !-ag::e's No. 1 pitching comb.nation today and :-.n?pr i:r as the key players m t:.-e Bra vps' battle to win tii'-tr f;r.t p'-jiti&nt in MiKaukee. V.'jth rstrh;ra 11-4 v.un-and-records, the 1-ao right handers have won more games than any pitching duo on the Bra-, es' rivals and they seem to he getting hotter as liie season f'3rs on. Buhl chalked up his l!ih win Monday and Burdette followed villi bis J li H Wednps ri'iv niiiyr when Hie Braves ri i-Anrd tr.c New York Giants, T 3. I ho has v on his last four names limited the Giants! to nht hits and struck out nine as the . Braves supported him with a sevrn-h.it attack that j included a triple, double and single by Hank Aaron. Aaron; rai-cn his average to .32. The victory enabled the Bra is to re-tore their first place lead to two games when tne Brookl; n Dorit-r defeated trie set ond-place Cincinnati Red legs. The Philadelphia Phil lies heat the Chicago Cubs, 6-2 and 6-1, and the St. Louis Card-i mals battled to a 11 tie with the PitNhurgn Pirates in the other National league games. The Dodgers routed nemesis Johnny Klippslein with a four run fu'-t inning and went on to nap the K'-dlegs' four-game win ning streak. Carl Frskme won his fifth straight and seventh de rision "f the year although he needed help from Ciem I.aoine in the seven!:! Sandy Anmros cli maxed the Dodgers' nig first in ning with a two-run homer Robin Roberts won ins 10th game and Curt Simmons his juxth as t'-ie Phillies made it Fight victories in their last 10 iams Roberts yielded 11 hits but left seven men stranded in the openrr while Simmons throttled the Cubs with five hits i.. tu :lit,-jn Imi rii'ppnitrass , i' ,i, r-,.nA rtroYP n n u iiiu.-i in no i-i-vn" f,, ttifi rMiillipc rs..,- r.. rfwi homo Johnny O'Brien in the top of the ninth to earn the Pirates a do ad lock w ith the Cardinals ! coded i,y rain in the ; ion of the lfiih. That rim cost Vinegar Bend MizeU his 10th win after he shut out the Pirates w ith three hits for eight, frames. The game w be replayed as j I 23. Yanks Lose Two In the American league, the Detroit. Tigers snapped the New York Yankees' 11-game winning streak with 8-4 and 4-3 victories. Paul Foytack struck out 10 bat ters to win his seventh game in the opener and Frank Lary beat the Yankees for the fourth time this year in the second game. Mickey Mantle hit his 31st homer in the opener to go nine games ahead of Babe Ruth's record 1927 pace. The Cleveland Indians rolled to an 11-1 victory after homers - bv Pete Runnels. Ed Fitzgerald and Jim Lemon paced the Wash ington Senators to a 7-5 win. Hank Aguirre won his first game of the year in relief of Early Wynn for the Indians. Pedro Ramos won his sixth for Wash ington in the opener. The Baltimore Orioles beat the Chicago White Sox, 4-3. on uoog Fred Hatfield s ninth-inning er- Snead and Walter Btirkemo. two ror with the bases filled and two ; former winners of the title, out. extending their winning moved up in the favorites' brack streak to six games and the Sox ! Pt along with defending cham lnsing skein to 1 1. Morris Martin ' pion Doug Ford today for the got credit for the win and Ellis PGA golf championship which Kinder was tabbed with the loss. ; Mel Parnell spun a seven-hit tor in his first start since pitch- in- a no-hitter last Saturday as i the Boston Red Sox beat the . Kansas Ci'.v Athletics. 7-4. Jackie : Jensen's one-run single and Don. Rudrim's two-run double w ere I Ihe key blows of the Rod Sox' j four-run CJCOtii HimnS rail;.. ; 1 IMXOKIs. niiTuan League i 1st Camel pPII-01l O'O ons IV 0 8 12 1 New York 100 020 001 4 7 1 Fovtacii 7-6 and House Sturriivant I arsen v ant 6-3 :r.- viaotie 3ist.. S';""" ,, (w4 7 2 New York 02. oio . 3 6 a Lary 8-'.o and Wilson McDermott 2-5 and Howard HR Kaline 14th Kansas City 110011.12 I'M , -' Boston "02 010 04 1 It 2 Hernage Crmiia'i 8 Shant 8 and Ginsberg Parrell 4-2 and While Loser Hernage 1-0 HR Vernon iotn. list Game) Cleveland 003 ooo iois 12 0 Washington 400 l'u 2.x . m o Score McLish 1. Feller 3. Mossi 7. Aguirre 8 and began. Averit! 3 Wies ler Ramos 3 and Fitzgerald Winner Ramos 5-7 Loser Feller 0-2 HR - Runnels rKlh., .1 lenton 1 4 ' h . Fis.'ceraid '2nd'. Wer'.z -Oth 1 and 1 2 1st 1 . ("nd firimr) Oer eland nnn pno ,--'', 1! ,n n Washington 000 000 100 1 7 2 Wynn Aguiree L Lemon 8 and Nar apon H.-e.m 8 Paeual Stone 8 Grob S and Bt-rheret. Fitzgerald 7 Winner Ac in r re Lo-er Pascuai 4-11. UK Strickland '2nd', c:mM;t : n i "'v - 1 7 ' Baltimore t'.n I no om 4 7 I Wilson. Kinder 9 and Lollar. Moss r .i.thrnn Martin 9 and Triandos. Winner Martin 2-0 Loser Kmaer 0-1. HR Gardner tbin . National I eague (tM (-fin Ph:iaae:ph:a .. Pn0 001 41 MAIL TRIBUNE bUD ue Kediegs MEDf0eTRI8UWI Rocketing Angels; Beavers Lose By john Mcdonald United Presi Sports Writer Speed and power collided in San Francisco's spacious Seals stadium Wednesday with tiie verdict going to the fleet Seals whose caring base running and timely hittin ave them a 9-4 triumph over Los Angeles For the Seals it was their six'n win l star's since their last e,sht j loe Gordon, one-: : Cade Shines In Clutch To Save Salem By RAY ANDREWS United Press Sports Writer Jerry Cade of Salem turned : in a cucumber-cool pcrformanc last nisht in a torrid baseball situation that almost matched the mercury. Cade. one of the ho-'est Northwest league pitchers the past several weeks came ;n to face Eugene with the bases load ed and nobody out. He breezed three strikes past i Sliff Dapper, used four to fan John Keller and retired Carl Hut7ler on a weak tap back to the mound. Cade's clutch pitching saved j i a 2-1 Salem victory in the opener j of a doubleheader although EU' gene got even with tory in the nightcap. gene got even with a 7-4 vie . ... The Emeralds got one in the fifth, added four in the sixth and iced it with two more in the eintn on oacK-io-DacK nonters by Bob Gauthier and Jerry Ex- lev. Clubs Divtds Yakima and Wenatchee split.) Wenatchee took a 6-5 decision in the opener thanks to Bob Duret- Duretto had four hits in four trips to the dish. Roy Nixon of Yakima drove in four of Yakima's runs in the opener with two doubles and continued his torrid hitting in the nightcap with a double and single good for three runs as the Bears blanked Wenatchee 5- 0. Ted Herrera picked up the j v ictory allow ing vv enatcnee but j five hits. Spokane topped Tri-City 7-3 with Ed Lrudtke going all the way. Eddie Murphy had a - 1,1 lve trlPs to Pacc the Inc'iails- Snead, Burkemo Favorites in PGA Along With Ford By LEO H. PETERSEN United Press Sports Editor Canton. Mass. 'UP' Sam starts Friday- Ed Furgol. the 1934 U.S. Open champion who shot a practice ers! all 20 ' ' round 63. three under par fori K,lns Batted In Mantle, Yanks the 6.634-yard Blue Hills Coun- U7' Bo'Tr'' CaVd simpson" At try club course, predicted the layout was built for golfers like Snead and Burkemo. "i,'? their kind of a course." Furgol said, "and it wouldn t surprise me if one of them took ' , ... .. o. niovug,. i.i oot usuuiui n og Doug. ' ; Furgol called the course the "best one we've had for match ! play since Oakmont in 1951." It i was there that Snead won the ihird of his three PGA titles. . beating Burkemo in the finals. Cho-ago 2on 020 ooo 4 n 4 in-10 and Lonata Hacker. 2-4 hr Fondy -4th'. , ; R, , Brosnan Brosnan , i 'nd Cim-) i Philadelphia Chicago Simmons 5-6 njn nu una orto ortn inn i r n sriri Semirick Davis, Hi:ches 6 ? Jones 9 and Chiti. Loser Davis 3-4. R-oo'! n . 40n 02'i nno H 12 1 Cinnnnati I on nno ?nn 3 fi 2 F!rs'-;inp. l.Viinf 7 anH Waikfr, Cam nan1'. S Klippein Black 1 . eker F'TPn,ai P and Fa;!"' Winner Frkine 7-; Lpr" - Klipp-rm 7-6 HR Amoros '3th'. Post tltSth'. ((allrd end of 9 innincs. rain) Pitt-sbureh . ono oon nni 3 1 St Louis ono noi ooo t 1 0 Mincer W--s 8. Law 8 and Foiles Mizeii and Katt w Y'1-k o'o nno ;n:-3 r 1 M'i" .T.i-rf 4tin on-. n;- 7 7 0 V';!);nc,ir, I.; trie: ;r'd fi. Wi; eini 8. a-d Sarn.T Rurde'te M-4 ari Ricv Loer Worthmgton 4-11. HR j Thorns 11th.. Use Trihunp Wont Ads FOR RESULTS Thurdar. Ju'r IS. 1S56 11th Victory Giants 7-3; Seals Top ime New York Yankee infield ( flash, took over as manager. During the spurt they rocketed j from seventh place to fourth. j The Seals' Russ Kemmerer j iiad the Angels' power hitting j the long drives for long outs in-' stead of extra bases in the big ooai parK ana .viariv rveougn went wild on the bases with a '"""' ,u pc, iu, munce. Other Result! ' Elmer Sineic tort pitched Se attle to witnin 1'; games of the top beating Sacramento 5-3; poked doubles to break up a scoreless pitcher's battle in the eighth and give Hollywood a 4 tl win over Portland: and San Diego snapped a four-game Van couver wm streak with a 10-6 v ictory in the league's other con- tests. Keoiigh sued in on the front end f a triple steal to highlight a four-run third inning for the Seals In the next frame the .null::: coiof-t moved into scoring position w itii a theft of second and Don Lenhardt drove him 1 home. That gave the Seals a 5-2 j lead and all the cushion they I needed. Singleton, the league's win- nmeest pitcher, picked up his 14tii against five defeats as the Rainiers broke their game open wi,h t' runs in the ninth In Hollywood. Dick Fiedler and the Stars' Ben Wade matched pitch for pitch through seven scoreless frames until the eighth when Bcrnier and Stev ens doubled and four Stars event ually twinkled home. Heart Breaker It was a heart-breaker fori ! Fiedler who gave up only five j ! hits, w hile Wade set the Beav-; I crs rl,. 1 .. i 1 i. i' ll CM. 31.1 . j Homers by Dick Sisler and I Rocky Colavito both with a man i aboard were the margin in San : Diego's win. Spider Jorgenen I .. . t. oi me .uounucs slammed two roundtrippers. I.INESCORES: Los Angeles . 200 000 200 4 San Fran. 104 120 lOv q ? 2 j -rDrr"'',.-Pcrk"wskl 3' P'Tciti R and ch-. --iiinierer ana Sullivan. i Portland ooo nan oon. o Unlli ,H ,.,,.1 ... Fieriier i ,, o ,j -,u.; i and Kraviu ' j ante o i n nvn not 1 1 Saei'Hiiientn I no 002 Olio 1 II Singleton. Kennedy 9 and Avlward Oscnbaugh. Candini 9 and Baich. Vancouver no I 103 010 6 13 1 San Diego . 020 004 22x 10 9 3 Harrison, Hooper 6. Drummond 6 Raivewski 8 and Romano. Mesa. Hall 7 and Astroth. League Leaders ; Bv l nited Press ' N VI ION l I EAC.l E I'laver A. ( lub (i B R H Pet isailev, ( ini-i. 64 L'nr, 35 68 30 Aaron. ..Tilw .. 78 3(1 I Musi.,1 St L 84 31 48 104 "-3 i-nnd-.t N 1 .. 58 204 27 66 .Buyer. Si. L . 61 337 60 107 .324 .318 MI RK S.N CAGIE Plavrr A: ( lub ii A B R H Mantle, NY .. 82 303 77 110 Maxwell. Det .. 75 251 31 87 Ktienii. Dct. 76 200 45 100 Kell. Ball! . . 67 250 28 75 Vernon, Bust 66 234 35 "6 Pi t. .363 .345 .326 Hume Runs Mantle Yank 31; Klusevi ski. Rrdlees 23: Banks Cubs if2 - w". Indians 21. Robinson. Red- ! 'etu-s. Kaline. Tigers, and Lemon, Sen. ators all 61 Runs Mantle Yanks 77- VnEt senators 63 Robinson. Redle'gs 62-' , I" Sv! 1T ; Cards l7: Musial. Cards 164- Ash- I bu.r, Pn,ls ln2: "ark. Cards 101. j Pitrhins Lawrence, Redlegs 13-0: ; oi ew er. rten sox 12-3: Kucks, Yank 14-4: Freeman Redlecs Pierce, White Sox 13-4. Early Wynn Hurt By Line Drive Washington (U.R) X-rays of Cleveland will be taken j pitcher Early Wynn's iniured ;aw ,odav to'delermine if it has : brrn broken. Tiie veteran hurier was struck j by a line drive during Wednes day night's second game of a twi-night doubleheader with the Washington Senators and 16 stitches were taken in the left FICTURE TUBES REJUVENATED Is your picture tube dull and weak? Most picture tubes can be restored ro original brightness at only traction of the cost ot replacement. For turther information CALL Electronic Service 18 N. GRAPE PH. 3-197 Bv I nilerl Press PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE ' ' L Pet. GB I Los Angele fi3 40 .fi!2 j Seattle CI 41 .598 1 'a i Hollywood ... 53 47 .530 fi 3 San Francisco .. 4tJ 32 435 Kt Portland 47 S3 470 14 , j Saeramen'o .... 4fi S3 ,4fiS 13 i San Dieso 4 S 451 is:, , i Vancouver 39 62 .356 23 Wednesdays Resulri San Francisco 9. Los Angeles 4 Seattle 3, Sacramento 3 Hollywood 4 Portland 0 I San Diego 10. Vancouver 6 Hi Series stand San Francisco 1 Los Angeles P Seattle 2, Sacramento 0 Portland t. Hollyuood 1 San Diego 1. Vancouver 1 . ... . ..,.,. ,,.,. i Los Angeles. Red Aoam. 3-2 at San Francisco. Ft. W. Smith 8-6 Seattle, Howie Jndsnn. 7-7 or Don Fracchia 8-3. at Sacramento, Gene m arnen -i .... Portland. Bill Werle 10-9. at Holly- j uun iniinei ui uic ajuvicis. ai uood. Luis Arroyo i-l . j readv is through for the vear. Vancouver. Bill Fischer -0, at San ; 1 Diego. Lddie Erautt 6-13. NATIONAL LEAGIE w I. Pet GB Milwaukee 40 31 .613 Cincinnati 48 34 .585 2 Brooklyn 45 37 540 5 St Louis 41 42 494 Pittsburgh 38 43 ..o 1 1 t, Philadelphia .... 30 45 464 12 ChicaEO 35 46 .433 14'.. ; New York 31 48 .302 17 2 Wfdnesday s Results Philadelphia 6 Chicaco 4 -Istj Philadelphia 6 Chicago 1 igndi Brooklyn 6 Cincinnati 3 ought! Milwaukee 7. New York 3 t night i Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 1 might. Thursday's Probable Pitchers Brooklyn at Cincinnati inlghti Maglie 2-2 vs Jeffcoat 1-1. Friday's Games Pittsburgh at Cincinnati i night i Philadelphia at Milwaukee might) New York at Chicago Brooklyn at St. Lotus mighti AMERICAN I.EAGIE I H I. rvt. GB I New York 58 28 .674 I Cleveland 47 36 .560 9'. j Boston 47 37 .560 10 Chicago ..'. 43 38 .531 12' I Baltimore 40 44 .476 17 j Detroit 38 46 .542 19 j Washington 34 54 .386 25 j Kansas City . . 30 54 .357 27 Wednesday's Rpsults Detroit 8 New York i i!' Detroit 4 New York 3 2iul' Boston 7 Kansas Cny 4 Washington 7 Cleveland 5 list, twi light . Cleveland 1 Washington 1 C mghl ' Baltimore 4 Chicaeo 3 'mghti lluirsd.ivs 1'rnhnble 1'itiherv ( Iceland at Washington n:glv O.iM'M ti-8 vs Stohbs 7-7. Chicago at Baltimore i night. Pierce 13-4 Fornicles 2-2 rridav-s Games Chicago at Washington nighti Cleveland at Baltimore mighti Kansas City at New Y'ork, tnightl Detroit at Boston might) NORTHWEST Ll.AGlK W I FV GB I Spokane 5 ? 714 Salem 8 5 615 Wenatchee 7 6 .538 1 Yakima 7 6 .538 1 Tri-City 3 4 .428 2 Eugene 5 9 357 31. Levviston .. . 3 6 .333 3 Wednesday's Kesulls Spokane 7 Tn-Cily 5 Salem 2 Eugene 1 its' Eamei Fugene 7 Salem 4 i2nd garnet i Wenatchee 6 Yakima 5 list gamei ; Yakima 5 Wenatchee 0 i2nd game Putts Ball Into Fuji Crater Tokyo lU.R Newspaperman Don Schuck claimed two new world golf records todav: He negotiated a somewhat rough Icourse in onl 1.275 strokes for , , , , . ci solvit: iiujc. ciovi iiivn 3icini 2 j nied a 12,395-foot drive. Schuck. who works on the copy dcsk ot lhp paciic stars , j and Stripes, staged the golfing exniDition up tne steep slopes of sacred Mount Fuji to pay off a baseball bet. The Clearwater. Fla., golfer started out at the foot of the mountain armed only with a pitching iron. Eleven hours. 1.275 strokes and 27 lost balls later, and eight pounds lighter, he reached the top. Brushed Stones Aside r-amiuiiy i nnea up me Ptt." ha said. "I dared not rim tne cup or oversnooi. Dome stones were in the way. I brushed them aside. My guide fellow worker Lee Torliatt of Santa Rosa, Calif., motioned other climbers into silence. I steeled myself, placed the club, wiggled, then slammed the ball into the crater of Mount Fuji." After sinking his putt. Schuck set another record "to rock the golfing world, a 12.395-foot drive over the side of the moun tain. The newspaperman said he passed Japanese mountain climbers who didn't even give him a second look. "They apparently expected to see an American driving a ball up Mount Fuji." he said. 'CM ALUMINUM LOCK SHINGLES jvow Roof your home for the last time! Call 2-7500 for your Free Estimate' To Critical Danger Point In Major League Baseball By MILTON RICHMAN New York U.R) Base bail's "'battle of the bean ball'' is rapidly approaching the same critical danger point today that brought about the national pas time's greatest tragedy 36 years ago. The age-old cry of "brush hint back" an angry entreaty for the pitcher to knock the batter down echoes from virtually every dugout in both major leagues. One of this season's victims, I n ..f n4n..P 1 perhaps done with baseball. An other victim, Hank Thompson of the Giants, goes around with a nagging, constant buzzing in his head. Pitchers consider the "brush back pitch." which is only a po lite name for a bean ball, part of their "bread and butter." They only mean to intimidate the batters, not kill them. Oc casionally, however, something goes wrong. One of those times was a mild August day in 1920. the kind of day it fell good to be alive. Carl Mays, a submarine ball pitcher for the Yankees, got one in too close to Cleveland short stop R.ay Chapman. The ball hit Chapman on the side of the head and he sprawled grotesque ly in the dust near home plate. Muddy Ruel, who was catch ing for the Yankees that day, re members the episode vividly. j "The ball hit Chapman so i hard that it rolled out toward I Hie infield and most everybody thought he had bunted it." Rucl savs. was a sicKcuins Mum. : seeing poor Ray laying there m thc dlrt' Chapman Dies Less than 72 hours later Chap- man was dead. Dow n through the history of baseball, there have been other similar occurrences but none, fortunately, have resulted in death. Detroit catcher Mickey Coch rane had his career abruptly i halted when he suffered a frac tured skull after being hit by a pitch thrown by Bump Hadlcy of the Yankees in 1937 . . . White Sox outfielder Minnie Minoso landed in a hospital when he was hit by a pitch last sum mer . . . And last year former Giant second baseman Davey Williams became the innocent victim of a "brush back" duel involving Sal Maglie. then with the Giants, and Jackie Robinson of the Dodgers. Robinson, seeking to retaliate at Maglie for a duster, bunted down the first base line in an effort to get at Maglie. but the Giant pitcher fielded the ball and threw to Williams, covering first. Robinson barreled into Williams like a runaway loco motive and Williams had to re tire from baseball shortly be cause of a back injury he re ceived during the play. This season, the battle of the bean ball has flared up with renewed violence. Last Tuesday night, big Joe Adcock of the Braves, incensed at being hit by a fast ball, chased Giant pitcher Ruben Gomez fronl the mound into the dug- i oul in a wild scene that almost precipitated a full-scale riot. Newcombe Removed And only Jast Sunday, Don Newcombe of Brooklyn and Warren Hacker of the Cubs en gaged in a bean ball vendetta that was climaxed when Dodger Gene Fullmer To Watch Tiger Jones in Bout Portland .U.R An inter ested spectator when Ralph ("Tiger") Jones and Jesse Turner fight here July 30 will be Gene Fullmer, one of the top contend ers for the middleweight title now held by Sugar Ray Robin son. Fullmer announced yesterday that he will travel to Portland to see Jones in action. Jones is one of Fullmer's chief rivals for a shot at Robinson's title. Both men have been dickering with Robinson for a title shot later this year. USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS f4 Manager Walt Alston removed j N'ewcombe to keep him from be ing suspended. Earlier this year. Bill Bruton of Milwaukee charged out to the mound with a bat in his hands to get at Russ Meyer of the Cubs, whom he charged threw at him. And a few weeks ajgo. Bob Grim of the Yankees and Dave Philley of the White Sox started a fist fight over an al leged dusting attempt. Wearing helmets has become mandatory in the National league this season and most play ers wear them in the American league but the war between pitchers and batters goes on un abated. "I ain't looking to hurt any body," says one American league veteran pitcher, "but at the same time I'm not going to let anyone take my bread and butter away." To which a hitter answers, "They got their jobs and we got ours. Nobody's ever going to settle this thing." Someone had better before there's another Mays-Chapman disaster. Pat's Game Coming Back Huntington, W. Ya. (U.R) Defending champion Pat Lesser, who has not shot a birdie dur ing thj first three days of the 56th Women's Western Ama teur Golf tournament, said to day "my game is coming back" as she entered the quarter-final : round. j The Seattle. Wash., champion. , who alsQ von the 193g National j Amateur- todav was to g0 ! againt Louise Camentz. Louis- j viIlc Ky a vjrtuat unknown w ho scored the only upset 1 Wednesday. : i Ruth Jessen Loses While Miss Lesser was car ried 18 holes in downing pretty Barbara Mclntire, Toledo, Ohio, 1-up, in the second round of match play. Miss Camentz came through with a 3-2 win over fa vorite Ruth Jessen. Kcnmore. Wash,, who was third in the Miami Open last winter. Medalist Ann Quast. Everett, Wash., met Ohio State champion Ann Richardson and former na tional champion Mrs. Mark Por ter. Philadelphia, took on Mary Patten Janssen, Charlottesville, a., runnerup in this year's British amateur. ACE SCORED Canton. Mass. rU.Ri Terl Johnson, the pro at the DuPont Country club at Wilmington, Del., shot a hole in one with a No. 4 iron on the 190-yard fourth hole during a practice round for the PGA championship which starts Friday. GET THAT "BIRD:" ...then get yourself some fine bourbon.. '(AGED S YEAR8 OLD HERMITAGE BRAND ' OLD HERMITAGE CO., OIV. OF NATIONAL i . KENTUCKY STRAIGHT "M BOURBON WHISKEY MW3K I Tm Oid Hermitage Comtat ig m- it B',i- Spider Webb Beats Mims Chicago UR) Spider Webb, la hard - punching middleweight iwi'lh dnlv Iff n m finU consideration for a "Top Ten" ranking today, even though his first major victory, over Holly Mims, was over "a tired old man.'' Webb, weighing 157 pounds to Mims' 157, punched out a con vincing 10 round decision in the television battle from the Chi cago Stadium, even though it was the first time he has gone that distance. "I never got tired," Webb said, "I thought I would and I guess it was a mental block all through the fight, but I never did. He never had me in trouble and I learned a lot." Mims discounted the result, chiefly because he complained that "I was tired from the first round on." Philadelphia (U.R) Mike Jarmoluk. one of the Philadel phia Eagles' famed "Suicide Seven," called it a career today because of the pressure of busi ness affairs. Jarmoluk. a tackle on the club's crack defensive line, began his professional foot ball career in 1946 with the Chi cago Bears and come to the Eagles in 1949. He lives at Broadaxe. Pa. AND ST0C 1 AT 13 Valley View Speedway 1 Mile North of Ashland on 99 $100 FOR STOCK CARS Special Invitation to Roseburg and Klamath Falls Clubs to Attend This Week Time Trials 6 :30 Races 8 :00 a..- i 4 S years 80 PT. D1ST. PROD. COR P., FRANKFORT, KV.KENTUCKYSTRA'GHTBOUR EON V.'HICKEY, 5 PROOF. Form Sneet Holds in Net Tournament River Forest. 111. (U.R) The form sheet continued to hold in the National Clay Court Tennis championships which moved into the round of 16 today with Art Larsen and Shirley Fry still the players to beat in their respective divisions. Top seeded Larsen. San Lean dro. Calif., toyed with fellow Californian George Stoesser of Monterey in the opening set and then got down to business to whip him, 6-4. 6-2. Come From Behind Two of the lesser seeded play ers had to come from behind, however, to stay in the running in the tourney which ends Sun day. Allen Morris Jr., Atlanta, seeded eighth, lost the opening set to Jack Frost, Monterey, be fore rallying to beat him, 4-b", 7-5. 6-3. Tenth seeded Whitney Reed, Alameda, Calif., gave a set to Chris Crawford, Piedmont, Calif., and then went on to win 6-8. 6-2, 6-3. In the women's singles divi sion, top seded Miss Fry. Wim bledon champ from St. Peters burg, Fla., scored an easy 6-0, 6-2 victory over Beverly Tolan, St. Louis. k CAR PUf! iVVI2 ' ? BRAND WW old , 5 QT. n i V sH,