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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 1957)
o Waldport Entrants Take Over Leads in Pin Meet Class B Alice Hyder and Bernie Gun derson, Waldport, n Hod a 989 and ean Ltindy, Waldncrt, had a 524 to take over Class B leads In doubles and singles as the third week end of action began In the Oregon State Woman's Bowling association tournament at Medford Bowling lanes. Another Waldport participant, Marie Pletchmy, is the new leader in Class D singles with her 499. They provided the biggest changes as two shifts of dou bles and sflpgles appeared on the lanes Saturday morning and aft ernoon in the 15th annual com petition. Betty Thomas and Bobby Goodson, Portland, rolled 1015 to go into second in Class A dou bles. Leaders are Mary Thomp son and Marion Linville, Klam ath Falls, with 1028. . Two other Waldport duos got in the top 10 in Class B doubles. Dorothy Schirmer and Betty Wilkinson went into fourth with 969 and Anna Siej ani Jean Lundy into sixth with 954. Ber nice Peterman, Waldport, took seventh position with 504 in Class B singles. In Class C Gelene Hills and Dorothy Stearns, Newberg, has second in doubles with 919, trail ing the 941 rolled last week by Juanita Banta and Graces Counts, Sweet Home. June Brusseau and Connie Nelson, Winston, nabbed sixth place with 886. Lorraine Chapman, Grants Pass with 462, took over seventh and Alice Hyder, Waldport, knot ted for ninth with Ruth O'Con nell, Klamath Falls, with 460, in Class C singles. Two Waldport combinations rolled into 10th in Class D dou bles with 761, Louise Paulson and Midge Kelly and Jean Mal com and Alvanita Stouder. Louise Paulson has fourth in singles with 428. Team rolling filled out the aft ernoon and evening at the local lanes yesterday. Seven shifts of doubles go to the maples at two hour intervals beginning at 8 a.m. today. I SPORTS Sportsmen Club Meets On Tuesday First gunural mealing of the naw Oregon Sportsmen Club of Jackson County is sched uled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Feb. 19, at the Moose lodge building, 18 South Newtown Trustees said that all per sons interested are invited to the meeting. General business is on the agenda along with general dis cussion of club projects and program. It is planned to elect officers. i Articles of incorporation re cently were filed by four trus tees, W. H. Pelser, Dave De Armond, John J. Breexe and Jerry McGrew. Aims Told Among aims of the organ isation are conservation, resto ration and management of game, fish and wildlife, pro curing of better fishing and hunting and promotion and maintenance of friendly re lations between landowners and sportsmen. An immediate objective is halt for onn year of doe deer and cow elk hunting seasons in the slate while a study is being made on control of the herds. Officials of the club maintain that there is no need for "slaughter" of the animals in certain areas of the state. They point to waste cf game and depletion of herds. Circulation of petitions on the matter, to have started last week, has been delayed. Washington Huskies Slap Oregon's Webfoots 84-62 Eugene U.R Washing ton's Huskies rolled up a 19 point half time advantage, then didn't give a thing the rest of the way here Friday night as they drubbed Oregon, 84-62, and shoved the Ducks even deeper into the Pacific Coast Confer ence cellar. With Doug Smart and Bruno Boin leading the way, the Husk ies were never headed. Oregon's. only equal status of the night was a 2-2 standoff in the opening minutes. Washing- II Specialist Calls Check Oif "Punch London (U.R) One of Britain's foremost brain special ists Saturday called for a full medical investigation of "punch drunkenness," which he said can cripple boxers for life and lead to "deluiquency." Dr. Macdonal Critchley warn ed in a report in the British Medical Journal that " "punch drunkenness" known to doc tors as "Traumatic Progressive Encephalopathy" is: More comanon among boxers tnan is generally Known; Incurable; s Produces physical and men tal symptoms which can result in delinquency .and cripple a fighter for life. In the first comprehensive medical report ever published on the punch deXuik state. Dr. Critchely made "no plea for or against pugilism." But the report's inmplications, coming after a demand for the banning of boxing by Socialist member of Parliament Dr. Edith Summerskil.Gmade certain that it will become a powerful weap on in the hands of foes of boxing anywhere. Ker Rosewall Makes Ero Tennis Debut New York (U.R) Ken Rose wallQif Australia will make his (jirofqgsional tennis debut in the united States Sunday afternoon ien he and Pancho Gonzales renew their international singles duel in five-set match at Madi son Square Garden. Gonzales, the Los Angeles star who has dominated promoter Jack gamer's pro tour the past three years, holds a 7-4 lead ovejKRosewall. in the 100-match 1957 series. The tour began in Australia. ton rolled from that into a 10-2 lead, a true indication of how the rest of the game was going to go. Washington canned .457 of its shots from the field while Ore gon couldn't buy a basket. Shoot ing average for the Ducks was a dismal .196. Smart led the Washington at tack with 20 points, picking up most of his points on hooks from close in. Boin chipped in with 10. High for Oregon was reserve center Paul Tuchardt with 14. Halftime score favc ington. 45-26. Washington FG Stady. 1 2 Smart, f 6 Greer, f Smith, f 3 Boin. c 4 Sunitch. f 3 Crews, g 2 Dekubber, g 1 Pariseau, g 0 Dorland. K Coaston. g 1 Totals Oregon Franklin, f Morgan, I Moore, f Bingham, f Ronquillo, f Duffy, c Tuchardt, c McHugh, g Hastings, g Lundell. g l-OSTl. g Kuykendall, g , Totals 2- 2 8-0 1- 3 3- 5 2- 7 0-1 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-1 6-6 4-5 1- 4 2- 2 1- 3 2- 4 2-3 6-10 0-0 2-2 2-2 0-0 0-0 Wash- PF TP 2 6 3 20 4 9 3 9 2 10 1 6 1 6 0 2 2 0 0 S 4 8 21 S4 PF TP 3 10 5 7 1 2 0 1 1 8 4 8 4 14 1 0 1 4 0 4 0 4 2 0 22 62 Oregon Staters Slate Michigan Corvallis (U.R) Oregon State will play Michigan for the first time in its history, accord ing to the 1959 football schedule released Friday by school offi cials. Athletic Director R. S. (Spec) Keene, said the game would be played at Ann Arbor. PIMLICO TO BE SOLD Baltimore, Md. (U.R) The Maryland Racing Commission announced Saturday that Pim- lico, the nation's second oldest active track and scene of the $100,000 Preakness stakes, prob ably would be" sold and its meet ing dates shifted to the Laurel Race course. D. Eldred Rinehart, chairman of the commission, said Pimlico and Laurel officials will meet Monday in Baltimore to discuss the merger. HUTOnNSON ORDERS St. Wtersburg, Fla. (U.R) Manager Fred Hutchinson of the St. Louis Cardinals started his first experiment of the spring Friday when he ordered center fielder Mel Nelson, a right-handed 1t. to try hitting left handed. Nelson hit .244 with Rochester in the International league (last season. Jimmy Demaret Takes Two Stroke Golf Lead San Antonio, Tex. (U.R) 'Veteran Jimmy Demaret called upon some of his earliest golf lessons Saturday as he battled tricky winds to take a two-stroke lead at the 54-hole mark in the $20,000 Texas Open golf tourna ment. A four-under par 67 gave De maret a 202 total on a day that saw the veteran campaigners take control of the top spots. Jay Hebert and Ed Furgol were two strokes back and Julius Bor os was at 205. : "-( t i1. irnftiii .; i irii Arnr is mat rffrfrrfifW-r--T MiWWIWWiiili M rpfistivr. trivISH T.1MT. in nnp minnfp 50.3 seconds. Arnie Sowell (right), Pittsburgh, Pa., sets new world record in 800 -meter race at New York. Behind him is Tom Courtney, ex-800 meter king. (International) SKIING CONDITIONS Skiing conditions were re ported fair to good with a corn snow surface late yesterday afternoon at Crater Lake Na tional park. Sixty inches of snow was reported on the ground. Weather was clear with no wind, according to weather officials. Highway 62 is open and chains are not re quired. Maximum temperature there Saturday was 52. The warming hut will be open, weather permitting. Spider Webb Beats Rivers New York U.R) "Three more fights and then a shot at the title," is the schedule for Spider Webb, Chicago's spring steel middleweight contender who Friday night gave Neal Riv ers a bloody, lopsided licking for his 18th straight victory. Increasingly confident after his impressive Madison Square Gar den debut, the lanky Spider said, "My next bout will be at Chica go Stadium, March 13, probably against Joey Giardello. And aft er that we want tiger Jones, then Charley Humez of France to clinch the title shot." Rivers Bleeding Fourth-ranked Webb, weighing 158 pounds to 157 for Rivers of Las Vegas. Nev., had the game Far - Westerner bleeding from both brows and from the mouth and nose. And eighth-ranked Rivers was so groggy and exhausted in the final round that he fell down, without being hit, for a count of nine. Refrer Harry Kessler rul ed it a "knockdown," apparently to give Rivers a respite in stead of stopping the bout, as many of the 2,500 fans were urging. Upstarts Rap Linfield, Willamette By UNITED PRESS The leadership of the North west Conference was in per centage points, not games, after a pair of second division teams rose up Friday night to smack down the front runners. Linfield, in top spot, took a 79-65 drubbing at the hands of College of Idaho and second place Willamette was nosed out, 55-51, by Whitman. The Oregon Collegiate confer ence also lacked form with Port land State Whipping Southern Oregon, 79-66, and Eastern Ore gon edging out a 62-61 win over Oregon College. i Both winners ranked as under dogs going into the night's ac tion. Oregon Tech, already assured of a share of the OCC flag, stepped outside the circuit and came up with a 100-68 win over St. Martins. Founder of Bay Meadows Succumbs San Francisco (U.R) Wil liam P. (Bill) Kyne, founder and general manager of Bay Mead ows, died Saturday as his be loved race track was making 1 final preparations for the open ing of the spring meeting next week. The veteran promoter, 69, had been in a coma since last Tues day at St. Francis hospital where he was confined with a liver ailment. His brothers Tom and Jack Kyne and his wife, Dorothy, were at the bed- side when he succumbed. ! Kyne's death signalled the 1 end of an era in West Coast sports which started in 1904 j wheq the Irishman went to work j at the old Emeryville, Calif., j track as a racing clerk. j During the next 53 years, ' Kyne not only promoted racing 1 from Tijuana to Portland, Ore., ' but also put on boxing bouts, opened the first dog track in California, revived the San Fran cisco City Open golf tournament after the war and staged a flow er show last year. ; But racing was Kyne's first love and he is generally re-: garded as the driving force be hind the legalization of pari mutuel betting in California. Coast Teams Press Bears By UNITED PRESS The foxy University of Calif ornia basketball team was still scampering unmolested through the Pacific Coast conference on Friday but a pair of hound dogs from UCLA and Washington were still yapping right on its heels. Friday night the undefeated Bears won their ninth straight conference victory by swamp ing Idaho, 91-54, while UCLA trimmed Stanford, 86-63 and Washington downed Oregon, 84 to 62. Southern California de feated Washington State, 73-68, in a private skirmish far back in the pack. The standings after Friday games were: California 9-0, UCLA 8-1, Washington 9-2, Southern California 4-3, Stan ford 6-5, Washington State 3-8, Oregon State 2-8, Idaho 2-9, and Oregon 1-9. A total of 32,017 farmers and ranchers are cooperating in soil conservation districts in South Dakota. AAU Tourney Alignment Rests On GP Loop Tiffs Line-up of the four Grants Pass learns that will vie in the AAU sub-district basketball tournament is still to be de termined, it was reported yes terday. The tourney is set to open on Tuesday evening, Feb. 19, with four games on cross courts at Eagle Point high gymnasium. Other games in single elimination play will be Wednesday and Thursday at Grants Pass Junior high. Medford Independent Bas ketball league will have four clubs also in the affair. Mu tual of Omaha will meet the No. A team from Grants Pass. Hawkinson Tire Tread the No. 3, Lea Motors the No. 2 and Company A of the Nation al Guard the No. 1. With three Monday games yet on the slate in the GP circuit Kelt Chevrolet and Larry's drive-in have 9-1 rec ords each, Wimer and Rogue River are 5-5 and Glendale is still in the runing for a tour ney berth with 4-6. The Mon day frays are Caveman drive in versus Rogue River, Glen dale versus Kelt and Wimer versus Larry's. Lea took over the MIBL third position on a flip of a coin with Company A. They tied for third in the local loop. Bert Peck Named Again Medford Gun club board -of directors has re-elected Bert Peck president. Martin Clogston was named vice-president but the directors postponed choice of a secretary treasurer. The membership has chosen Everett Gibson, Gene Hunt and John Deaver new directors. Holdover directors include the president, vice president, Paul Culbertson, Ray Coleman, Har ry Elden and Weldon Kline. Cal Eaton Hearing' Is Recessed Los Angeles (U.R) A state athletic commission hearing in to alleged irregularities by Olympic Auditorium promoter Cal Eaton was recessed Saturday to an undetermined future date after hearing testimony from Willie Ketchum, Eastern man ager for lightweight Jimmy Car ter. The three-day hearing has been probing into charges that Eaton failed to pay fighters the contracted amounts of their purses. He has denied the charges. Ketchum admitted he took a $700 overpayment on a fight be tween Carter and Joe Miceli on March 24,' 1956. Ketchum said he took out ex penses "off the top." He ex plained tht he had a lot of ex penses to cover, including trans portation and food and hotel bills. Other witnesses Saturday In cluded booking agent John J. Doyle, who told of his activities as a former partner of Eaton, and Clayton Frye, assistant secretary of the commission. Sunday, February 17, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Linningers took three games from Communications Workers to hold their three game lead in the Industrial Bowling league. With one more week of the sec ond round, the lead can still be taken by any of the top four teams. Cleo Eppo turned in high series of 569, and Jim Sheldon had a 22 for high game. STANDINGS: Linningers Ready Mix Red Blanket Lumber Co. Richfield Oil Co. Domestic Laundry , Jorgensens Dairy . i-uy nan Donna Timber Product! Picard Jewelers Jaycees Snoboys Rail Rogues . Won 25 22 , 22 22 ' 21 20i 20', 19 19 14 14 Lost 15 17", 18 18 19 19 19',, 21 21 26 26 CITY HALL McNeel Duff McKinstry Daw Compagnoni 0 Domestic Lndry 4 523 Cov 414 Coats 353 Liddeil 435 Langston 518 Knox Handicap 2243 SVOBOYS Russell Mager Davidson Frohreich Couch C.W.A. Brown Martineau Graham Thornton Eads PICARD S Bohannan Picard Baker Absentee Graham 455 520 536 515 563 S 2598 4 488 387 557 432 500 9 2373 3 363 424 480 459 490 87 2293 1 RICHFIELD OIL 3 0 JAYCEES 431 Foster 434 DeHeart 390 Sheldon 452 Bernardi 526 Holmes Handicap 2233 1 LINNINGERS 505 Milhoan 405 Kincaid 431 Mitcheltree 446 McGuire 402 Ross Handicap 2188 437 Kennedy 444 Kunz 477 Dickinson 533 Kreer Handicap 234 455 456 486 533 559 36 2545 JORGENSEN'S .. 1 RED BLANKET 3 467 480 569 478 512 15 Ratty irie Schrein Altheiu Ellis 485 Fuller 458 Stewart 426 Epps 533 Murrey 543 Patterson Handicap MINOR LEAGUE K-Boy Keglers and Lininger's Rockettes both took four games in the Minor Bowling league to hold their tie for first place. High series was rolled by Vir ginia Wilson with a 492 and the high game by Lucy Turner with a 184. Other high series were rolled by Audrey Mitcheltree, 482, Lucy Turner 474, Maxine Janzen 458, Eve Sessions 449 and Bernice Hazlet, 447. STANDINGS: K-Boy Keglers . Linningers's Rockettes Cummin's Diesel - MaUack's Winnies Style Solon Security Insurance Firestone Stores Ekerson's MaUack's . S. Coulter D. Webster H. Poulson Handicap Won . 18 . 18 , 12 . . II la , 9 8 8 3 Security 429 M. Janzen 438 W. Booth 417 I. Shelton 39 1323 Cummtni E. Goods N. Jones N. Larson K. Boy P. Smith V. Wilson B. Wilson 1 Winnie's 365 B. Mathews 414 F. Coffin 361 J. Sapp Handicap 1140 Lost 6 6 12 12 'i 12i, 15 16 16 1 458 418 362 3 379 355 394 69 1197 Llninger'i 4 Firestone A. Mitcheltree 482 E. Sessions A. Rogers 390 E. Crismon B. Hazlett 447 L. Turner Handicap 60 1384 449 320 474 One cord of wood contains 128 cubic feet. 4 Ekerson's 6 S43 T. Ault 374 492 V. Harris 341 422 M. Trautman 377 Handicap 78 1257 1170 NEED MONEY For Medical Expense? To Help Meet A Crisis? Let Us Help You! LOANS TO $1,500 Salary Aute Furniture Crater Finance CORPORATION 135 Pine St. Central Point Phone NO 4-1273 Frank Wilkinson,' Mgr. RAIL ROGUES . Donna Gates Hughes Harnsberger Hjelm Toomey Handicap 421 Harris 412 Kessler 267 Monroe 442 Lue 345 Absentee 138 2025 Timber 4 : 445 ! 456 495 I 409 429 2234 FISK QUITS USC . - Los Angeles (U.R) Bill Fisk, for the last eight years Southern California's end coach, retired Friday to accept a sales and public relations position. Dear John: I wish you could have seen the smile on my wife's face when I brought that new Golden Rocket 88 home last night. She gave me about four big kisses and be lieve it or not, I didn't even have to get up first and build the fire this morning. The thing that really sur prised me was the cost of the car. Darrell Miller gave me a terrific allowance on my old '52 and when the deal was all figured out the payments were $1.29 less per month than I was going to pay for that low priced car I almost bought. ' We went for a nice long ride last night and I let my wife drive. She got a big thrill out of driving in traffic because H handles so easy. If every thing goes well we will see you at the picnic next Sunday. Sincerely yours, Harvey DUCK SWIMMER WINS Corvallis' (U.R) Oregon State's varsity swim team de-! feated Washington State 72-191 Friday for its sixth victory in a row. HARTACK WINNER Miami (U.R) Willie Har tack uncorked Calumet Farm's Gen. Duke in the Hialeah stretch Saturday to pin a stunning de feat on Classy Bold Ruler in the S30.350 Everglades Stakes be fore a wildly screaming crowd of 26,276. POISON OAK? Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL You must be satisfied or your rtonei cheerfully refunded. Get a bottle to day at WESTERN THRIFT. ONE LABORATORY TEST IS WORTH 100 EXPERT OPINIONS! BETTER CONCRETE Can Be Made By Using ... CLEAN Sand and Gravel LININGER'S READY-MIX CONCRETE Is BETTER because It Is made with Gravel that Is washed and rewashed to remove all mud and Foreign matter before being placed in the Mixer Trucks ... ASK TO SEE THE RESULTS OF LABORATORY TESTS MADE ON . . . LININGER'S READY-MIX CONCRETE . . . . 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