Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 06, 1956, Image 9

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    Weston Nips
Dichter T Up
Astoria (U.R) The featured
title in Oregon's 4th annual
Coast golf tournament today
reited in the handi of Harold
Weston of Portland golf club.
The first major title chalked
up by Weston came in a tight
struggle over the Astoria Coun
try club links here yesterday as
he edged out a 1 up win over
medalist Ralph Dichter of As
toria in the under 40 division
of the meet.
The ladies" title went to a vet
eran of the tournament rounds
in the state. Miss Lillian Schas
en of The Dalles scored a 2-up
win over 15-year-old June Rob
inson of Tillamook in the final
play.
Dr. Ed Palmrose of the host
Astoria course captured the
men's 40-50 crown and another
Astoria golfer, Ed Thompson,
took home the senior title.
Dr. Palmrose, who won a title
in this tourney back in 1934. de
feated Ken Fields of Yakima, Z
and 1. for the senior title.
Thompson took a 1-up decis
ion over Jack Tomlinson of East
moreland in the 40-50 bracket.
BERRY 4r CAPTAIN
Moraea. Calif. (U.R Veteran
defensive halfback Rex Berry
has been elected captain. of the
San Francisco Forty Niners for
the 1058 National Football
league season.
SPORTS
Calhoun Battles
Charley Cotton
New York U.R) Unbeaten
Rory Calhoun, the sensational
young Negro middleweight con
tender of White Plains, N.Y.,
goes after his 23rd straight vic
tory tonight in a 10-rounder
with dangerous Charley Cotton
of Toledo, Ohio, at St. Nicholas
arena.
It should prove a thorough
test of Calhoun's ruggedness, for
Cotton is a speedy, skilled boxer
with a knockout punch in eith
er fist. He is one of the slickest
counter-punchers in the 180
pound division. Twenty-two of
his 41 victories have been by
kayoes.
Cotton provided surprises this
year by twice outpointing Joey
Giardello of Philadelphia, for
mer top contender. Both deci
sions were scored at St. Nick's.
LIONS WARN HART
Ypsilanti, Mich. (U.R) The
Detroit Lions have issued an
ultimatum to holdout Leon Hart.
The veteran lineman-fullback
was warned that if he doesn't
report for practice Tuesday, the
Lions will assume that he has
decided to retire.
Bigham, Callaghan of RV Named
On Gals All-State Softball Team
Eagle Point Rogue Valley
girls' softball team placed fourth
in the women's state softball
ii,ramni at Klamath Falls
over the week end. was award
ed the tourney s sportsmansnip
trophy and placed two players
on the all-state team.
Shortstop Bernice Bigham and
Outfielder Ellen Callaghan were
the all-star selections.
Oswego won its fourth state
diadem in six years last night at
Klamath by trimming Oakridge
S to 6. In the afternoon Oak
ridge eliminated Salem 11 to 2.
Rogue Valley, which had
played two games earlier in the
day, was dropped 10 to 1 Satur
day night by the Oakridge club.
Eight runs in the sixth inning
were the big difference. The
scores were accomplished on
two doubles, two singles, three
bases on balls and an error.
The Rogue Valley nine will
play Reno. Nev., in a double
header starting at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at Eagle, Point.
The Dalles
Evens Series
Roseburg U.R) The Dalles
and Roseburg are slated to
square away here tonight in the
third game of the state Ameri
can Legion baseball playoffs.
The two clubs, the same two
that finished one-two last year,
go into tonight's game even up,
each with one win.
The Dalles racked up an 11-2
win at The Dalles Saturday
night to even the series after
Roseburg had won Friday
night'i opener, 3-2.
The remaining games of the
best-of-five series are scheduled
for Roseburg.
Shanty I Gains
Seafair Triumph
Seattle (U.R Lt. Col. Rus
sell Schleeh returned to his rela
tively placid occupation of Air
Force jet pilot today Ater skit
tering Shnty I over the wind
wrinkled water of Lake Wash
ington yesterday to win the
$25,000 Seafair Trophy and na
tional hydroplane champion
ship. ARCARO JOCKEY VICTOR
New York OJ.R) Eddie
Arcaro won the jockey cham
pionship of the 24-day Jamaica
summer meeting by riding 20
winners, one more than Bill Bo
land. 8KEET TOURNEY STARTS
Reno (U.R) The National
Skeet Shooting, tournament
opened today for a six-day stand
with a record number of en
trants expected to participate.
SWIM MEET TO OPEN
Detroit (U.R) The battle
for 46 berths on the U. S. Olym
pic swimming team start Tues
day at Brennan Pools with more
than 250 of the nation's top
aquatic stars entered.
HOAK APOLOGIZES
New York (U.R) Third Base
man Don Hoak of the Chicago
Cubs has written a letter of apol
ogy to the Philadelphia baseball
fan, who complained that Hoak
and teammate Dee Fondy used
obscene language last week at
Connie Mack stadium.
JENSEN HITTING WELL
Cleveland (U.R) Jackie
Jensen of the Boston Red Sox
has hit safely in 21 of his last
24 games. The blond outfield
c. collected two hits in three
times at bat against Cleveland
Sunday to rais his batting aver
age to .318.
USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS
FOR RESULTS
LINESCORES:
Rogue Valley ..001 000 0 13 2
Oakridge 010 108 x 10 8 0
Barron, Bigham 8, Hickson 6
and Maine; Shepard and Wright.
HOAD CHAMP
Hamburg, Germany U.R)
Wimbledon champion Lew Hoad
of Australia won the German
International Tennis tourna
ment Sunday by defeating Or
lando Sirola of Italy, 8-2, 5-7,
6-4, 8-6.
Standards Urged
For Trailer Courts
Chicago (U.R) The idea that
the trailer court is usually a new
type of slum is a mistake, ac
cording to the American So
ciety of Planning Officials.
But, the organization said,
communities only compound the
mistake when they shunt trailer
courts into fringe areas where
regulation is difficult, or into
industrial or commercial areas
where there is little incentive
to keep up residential stand
ards. The society said cities should
adopt detailed standards for the
zoning, the layout and the loca
tion of trailer courts. It said
trailer courts are part of the na
tion's housing supply and should
not be treated primarily as tour
ist quarters.
Courts for trailers should be
recognized for what they are:
sites for residences that are per
manent even though they are
not stationary, the society said.
Cities recognizing this fact
will be spared the need for jerry
built housing for construction
workers, the society said, and
trailers have spared many com
munities from "ghost town"
areas left when the workers
move on to new jobs in new
places.
A study showed that rolling
homes are being used more and
more as permanent housing, and
may gather moss for as long as a
year or more in a single loca
tion. The study showed that while
in 1937 about half of all trail
ers were used by vacationers, by
1955 this figure had shrunk to
less than one per cent.
Of the three largest groups
of trailer dwellers in 1955, 63
per cent consisted of persons
in mobile or semi-mobile occu
pations such as construction
work. Twenty per cent were
military personnel and 10 per
cent retired persons.
Tulainyo Lake in California
at an elevation of 12.865 feet is
the highest lake in the United
States.
Tarn's First
Place Taken
By Harrison
Chicago (U.R) Dutch Har
rison, pro golf's "Arkansas Trav
eler," cashed a $3,420 pay check
today because he "coasted
home" when the golf course
tory cinched in Tam O'Shanter'i
grapevine told him he had vic
$25,000 "All-America" golf
tourney.
"I wouldn't say I played un
der wraps," he said, "but I play
ed cautiously."
Harrison, at 48 the oldest man
ever to win the tourney, clinch
ed the crown when he toured
the first nine in a four under
par 32.
Harrison finished the 18 with
a five under par 67 for a total
of 278. 10 under par for the 72
holes, and he had a two stroke
bulge on Earl Stewart Jr.
Dallas, Tex., the 54 hole pace
maker, and was three strokes
ahead of Ed Furgol, another pro
from St. Louis, who took third
with 281.
Fursol Third
Stewart won $2,360 while
Furgol grabbed third money of
$2,000. Jim Ferrier was fourth
for $1,700 with 282, and Jack
Burke and Stan Leonard shared
fifth, each winning $1,375, with
284.
Louise Suggs, Sea Island, Ga.,
won the women's pro division.
James Hiskey, Pocatello, Idaho,
won the men's amateur on his
20th birthday, with a final
round 74 for 296 and Wanda
Sanches, Baton Rouge, La., took
the women's amateur with a 77
for 315.
Nixon Appeals to
Religious Leaders
Ridgecrest, N.C. (U.R)
Vice President Richard M. Nix
on has appealed to the nation's
religious leaders to become "con
ciliators" in the bitter dispute
over segregation.
"Bitterness and tension are
mounting by the hour in the
matter of race relations," Nixon
said. "... I wonder if the forcea
of religion could serve as a conciliator?"
Nixon spoke before the Bap
tist Home Mission Conference,
the Presbyterian Men's Council
of the Synod of Appalachia at
nearby Montreat, N.C, and at
the Methodist Summer Assemb
ly at Lake Junaluska, N.C.
Before each group Nixon urg
ed that religious leaders find
the "area where political policy
and moral ideas converge" and
thereby bring religious and mor
al ideas "before the conscience
of all Americans."
Red China Invites
American Newsmen
Hong Kong (U.R) Commu
nist China, in an unprecedented
raising of the Iron Curtain, to
day invited ' certain American
newsmen to visit the mainland.
Cabled notifications were re
ceived by at least five Ameri
can correspondents . in - Hong
Kong and Tokyo. A French news
agency dispatch from Peiping
said 15 U. S. newsmen had been
cleared for a one-month visit.
The U. S. government has re
fused to permit Americans to
go into Communist China, and
American passports expressly
prohibit use of the passport for
travel to Communist controlled
areas of China.
A spokesman said that the
consulate in Hong Kong would
not stop the newsmen physical
ly from making the China trip.
Faff From Moving Auto
Kills Six-Year-Old Bo
Longview, Wash. U.R) Six-year-old
Robert Orin Kelly was
killed about 10 miles south ef
here Saturday night when he
opened the rear door of his par
ents' moving automobile and
tumbled out onto the highway.
He was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Kelly, Kalama,
Wash.
Use Tribune Want Ada
Low in Cost
Organizes baby-sitting ebb
1 a mjiijjai
Hcigkbcrs ceeperatv st
all an tligiblt t fttt
She mtm while Har neighbor ngmiwm
her neighbor tats while aha reyieiera.
Then they have coffee together wood
diecua. the campaign. They yrewct
their voice in fOT eminent wrthont
iatoHTwwaci or erpenee and they
yet other people' wnwpoimta en tan
election, too. Cooperation tika thn)
give everyone a voice in government
diecuaskim like thin help bring eut
the facta chat keep voters from voting
in the dark. Ak your neighbor if she a
registered if not, velaateec t haka.
Guard yew righta. and yonr neigh
ben' righta register!
Published as a public i
ice in cooperation with The
the Kew&paper Advertis
ing Executives Association.
Ad No. rV-44-100im.
1 Is your name
in the book?
.:; y. ---- ...-
DIATH ON THE WAY A 60-year-old man with only
two cents and a key in his pocket and with no apparent
desire to live, clings by his fingertips to outer steelwork
.of the Manhattan Bridge seconds before plunging 134 .
feet to his death in New York's East River. "When he hit
the water, he kind of crumpled with his head down," said
the mate of a fishing boat passing by at the time.
OSC-Owned Living Space
Corvallis (U.R) Officials
at Oregon State college said to
day that all college owned liv
ing space on the campus has been
contracted for by students plan
ning to attend the fall term this
year.
Spokesmen urged that any
prospective student who had not
Said Taken by Students
already made arrangements for
living quarters should do so at
once.
E. B. Lemon, dean of admin
istration, said that all dormitor
ies, college married student units
and cooperative houses are book
ed completely full for the year
already.
Menday, August 8, Hit
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIB UHE rTOTl
Bike Rider Hurt
In Mishap Sunday
Jerry Bogart, 13-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Bogart,
1310 Sweet rd., Medford, was
reported in serious condition to
day as the result of injuries suf
fered when the bicycle he was
riding was hit by a car near the
Oak Grove school at 11:56 p.m.
Sunday.
State police said driver of the
car involved in the accident was
Theo Gustav Fieudenthaler, 29,
Ashland. Fieudenthaler told of
ficers he didn't see the boy until
just before hitting him. Offic
ers said both the c?r and bicycle
were traveling east on the
side of Highway The report
stated the bicycle was black and
had no fenders, lights or reflec
tors. Jerry was wearing blue
jeans and a plaid shirt.
Officers said there were no
skid marks to indicate the point
of impact. The bicycle was seven
feet from the edge of the pave
ment when it came to rest and
Jerry was lying next to the bi
cycle. He was taken to Rogue
Valley (Community) hospital by
Medford Ambulance service.
Hospital officials said extent
of his injuries had not been de
termined this morning. He was
unconscious when he arrived at
the hospital. Fieudenthaler was
not cited.
Berlin, Conn. (U.R) In court
on a charge of passing a stand
ing school bus, Joseph Kordy
explained he was "preoccupied"
because he was driving to a job
interview. Kordy, who was fined
$15, got the job driving a school
bus. .
Handkerchief Clue To Missing Official
Albuquerque, N.M. U.R) A
handkerchief belonging to Felix
M. Montoya, 32, missing loan
firm vice president, was found
today on a bush south of town,
strengthening the theory he was
forced to open a vault and was
kidnaped.
Sheriff's Deputy Charles
Slaughterbeck said the hand
kerchief bore no signs of blood
or other spots. He said it could
have been thrown from a car.
The disappearance of the bank
official coincided with the theft
of nearly $7,500 from the loan
company's vault. This led au
thorities to believe he had been
kidnaped and was forced to
open the safe.
nTLrmjnjnj-ijnjnjnjnjn
Memo, from
art
' jy 'H A
V hat a grand and glorious feeling to take it easy on .01 dJk
vacation and know that extra money is piling up for yon S fel? V
back home. That's exactly how you'll feel if you're one Sj j
of the W.OOO.OOO Americans who now own over C i i. i
$40,000,000,000 worth of U. S. Savings Bonds. . i l .
Infereet-earning Savings Boncts never take a day off. It
They go on earning money for you day in and day out, I f atfr"
no matter where you are or what you're doing. IE '" i)
This is a money-making proposition you don't want to If i JPt-
miss out on. Your principal invested in Bonds is absolutely ' Lt- - i
safe not subject to market fluctuation. Your returns are m '
sure an average 3 interest compounded semiannually p'- TiJ ',iv
when held to maturity (9 years and 8 months). And Jk. jhSJ3T iTPV
your Bond investment will keep on earning that same CT CHEa 125
fine interest for 10 years longer, if you just hold the Bonds. 1 fllj VJ
. So atari Investing in Savings Bonds today on r LiJUi2
the Payroll Savings Plan where you work or by regular "YvtVrSjf' : I tf f rfTf
purchases at your bank. You'll have more fun and financial I IiW
peac of mind on your next vacation if you do.
Th VS. aoTWwnent dm mt iy lor this UTtrtMlnx. Tht Traajury B?rtmeBt thanks, lor thlr patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and
U. S. National Bank
Leonard Electric Company
Tru-Mix Concrete Company
Robert P. Templcton Lumbar Co.
- Harry and David, Inc.
Lambert-Voegtly Lumber Co.
Trail Creek Lumber Company
Jorf enaen Dairy Product
Hubbard Brot.-Hubbard-Wray
' Reter Fruit Company
First National Bank
California-Pacific Utilities Co.
Rogue Valley State Bank
Medford Corporation
Joe Hearin Logging
W. H. Daugberty, Wbite City Dir.
Nye Sc. Naume Packing Co.
Mann's Department Store
Alley Lumber Company
DeVoe Lumber Sales Co.
Timber Products Company
Rogue River Orchards
Fluhrer's Bakeries
Elk Lumber Company
Cascade Wood Products
Ross Lumber Company
Littrell Parts Company
Barker's Men's Store
Medford Lumber Company
Associated Fruit . Company