r
TO DEFEND BOWLING TITLE LaRayne Harris, above, Klam
ath Falls, will defend two crowns during the fifth week end of
the Oregon State Woman's Bowling association tournament at
Medford Bowling lanes! She was the Class A singles champion
in 1956 with a 597 score and she and Mary Bothwell carded a
1094 also last year for the Class A doubles championship. The
two will roll their singles and doubles at 6 p.m. Sunday, March
3. They are members of the Lucca Lounge team of Klamath
which will take its turn during the 7 p.m. shift on Saturday,
March 2.
SPORTS
BOWLING
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE
Medford Mail Tribune dropped
a 1. to 3 decision to Cubby's
Drive In but still maintained
first place to win the second
round of the Commercial Bowl
ing league and gain the play
offs at the end of the season.
Winner of the third round plus
Clave Construction (the winner
of the first round) will also enter
the playoffs. Cubby's and Table
Rock Lumber ended in a second
place tie. George Spaunhorst of
Mail Tribune with 592 and
Marsh Ramsby of Cubby's with
594 had high series of the night.
Paul Dimick of Bates Candy
Co. picked up a 7-10 split.
Standings:
Medford Mail Tribune
Cubby s Drive In
Table Rock Lumber
Bates Candy Co
Clave Construction Co.
Quality Market
Star Bodv Works -
Crater Electric -. -
Alexander and Brown Ins.
Morning Fresh Bread
Crater Lake Motors
Desert Lumber Co.
Star Body
W. L.
. 33'i 14',i
. H 1-
. 29
27
. 28
26
25
19
21
22
22
23
19i 28"i
19 '.i 28 "i
19 29
17'i 30',i
17 31
0 Clave Const.
Christianion 487 V. Allen
Thompson uison
Hunting and Fishing
Southern Oregon
Br MEL REES
' Today marks the close of the
winter steelhead season on all
the streams here in southern
Oregon and northern California
' but the delayed winter rains put
the finale on all fishing by last
Saturday. It was disappointing
finish to an otherwise highly
successful season for the high,
muddy waters found the streams
full of fish.
There doesn't seem to be any
thing to hunt or catch now for
the next month so it has been
suggested that this might be a
good time to pick up the loose
ends and get ready for the trout
season. It is presumed, of course.
that your salmon tackle is in
goc shape for salmon will
be showing in the Rogue along
toward the latter part of March
and, of course, in April the
salmon boards should be busy.
Usually during the active sea
sons there is little time for the
sort of gea, repairing rods and
reels and restocking the creel.
Now is the very best time for
these important functions. The
nights are long and the days
are too rainy to go anywhere
xo a fellow can nave a lot of
Tun lust getting ready.
First, 1 would suggest that
we get out that old fishing coat
and tackle box and sort out
the jumble of hooks, leads, lead-
Waltonians Back
Bill for Study
Of Resources
The Izaak Walton league of
America sees a great boon to
fish, wildlife and outdoor recrea
tion if the Anderson-Aspinall
Bill is enacted by Congress, ac
cording to Hank DeVoss, Pres
ident of the Jackson County
chapter0 of the League.
"The Izaak Walton league
DeVoss said, "has long viewed
with dismay the great inroads
made on outdoor recreation op
portunities due to expanding
cities and industry, highways,
airports, and more intensive
utilization of agricultural and
forest lands. More extensive div
ersions of streams for municipal.
industrial and agricultural con
sumption likewise are reducing
public fishing waters. At the
same time populations soar, with
estimates of 200 million people
in less than 20 years hence.
Moreover, people have more lei
sure and more time to spend in
outdoor activities.
Clear Problem
4V know of course," DeVoss
continued, "that progress cannot
be stopped, nar should it be. But
the problem is clearly there, and
unquestionably we must make
the best and maximum use of
outdoor recreation resources
which will remain."
To get a better understanding
and appraisal of what these out
door recreation resources are,
the League has urged the U. S.
Congress to establish a joint congressional-president
commission
to study the problem, to review
resources as they exist, deter
mine what we shall need to meet
the requirements of greater pop
ulations in the future, and to
make recommendations as to
what government at all levels
can do to help meet future
needs."
"Such legislation has been
introduced in Congress by Sen.
Clintdh p. Anderson (N. M.) and
seven other senators (S-Bill 846)
and by Congressman Wayne N.
Aspinall (Colo.) long with four
othe congressmen (HR-3592)." J
ers and lures. Small plastic box
es can be obtained from your
favorite tackle shop for pennies
and they make excellent con
tainers for hooks, swivels, small
lures etc. Old leaders should be
discarded and new coils pur
chased to replace them.
Rusty hooks on lures should
be replaced and it might be well
to touch up old lures with a
dash of paint.
Now is a good time to clean
and oil the reel. In the case of
the complicated spinning lures
unless you are sure how to
put it together again, it would
be best to take the lure to an
authorized dealer and pay the
small fee he charges for this
work. Most dealers recognize the
frantic look in the eye of the
eager angler when he dashes in
the day before trout season with
a box full of miscellaneous reel
parts and wants to know if he
can have them assembled by 5
o'clock tonight!
Worn, frayed or just plain old
lines on the reels should be re
placed now not after the big
one gets away! The rods should
be carefully inspected for any
breaks in the guidewrapping
These can easily be replaced
with new thread, dabbed with
a couple coats of color preserva
tive, and three coats of varnish
Any sporting goods store will
be happy to instruct you how to
start and tie off the wraps. The
color preservative and varnish
are put on with a small brush
or as is mostly done with the
tip of the little finger. If the
wraps show no signs of break
ing, give them a coat or two
of varnish. This will give them
a protective coat to guard
against damaging the thread.
If the rod happens to be bam
boo, now is a good time to give
the whole rod a coat of varnish
unless, of course, it happens to
be one of those in which the
protective coat is impregnated
right into the wood such as a
Uslan or Orvis, possibly others.
Most commercial bamboo rods
however, are varnished to pre
vent water from working into
the glued joints and this pro
tective coat must be maintain
ed. Hip boots and waders will last
much longer if they are kept
dry especially before storing.
There are two excellent meth
ods of drying out a pair of
boots. One is to stuff them full
of warm newspaper. When the
paper absorbs the dampness, re
place it with dry paper and aft
er a day or two this can be re
moved and the boot stored, re
ferably hanging from the foot
using regular boot hangers but
NEVER folded.
The fastest way to dry a boot
is to attach the hose of the vac
uum cleaner to the exhaust port
and place the end down inside
the foot of the boot. This air
becomes warm in minutes and
the bpot, even a very wet one,
will be bone dry in just a short
time.
For the fly tyers, this is a
great time to get the old hand
back into the groove and hatch
up some favorite oldtimers and
maybe design a couple of new
bugs for the coming season.
While it seems that the trout
season is ages away just re
member how fast January and
February went. Almost before
we know it, someone will call
up and say, "where are you go
ing opening day? and when you
want to know when that is, the
answer will bark, "wake up you
lug, it's tomorrow!"
3ohannon
uranam
Patterson
Cubby's
White
Brooks
Meyers
Schneider
Ramsby
480 Chapman
492 Straus
414 Clave
2297
3 Mail Tribune
473 Spaunhorst
523 Liddell
5( Mathes
468 Monsey
594 Anderson
2566
46!
553
511
453
2499
1
592
435
469
475
522
2493
C. L. Motors
Vessey
Cannon
Coleman
Monroe
Farrar
1
504
480
366
537
501
2388
Desert Lbr. 3
Carr 457
Colley 532
Baker 436
Knox . 552
Leni 469
2446
Table Rock
Gardner
Freeman
O'Connor
Schroeder
Sullivan
3
539
468
445
531
539
2522
Bates Candy 1
Dimick 507
J. Weber 443
D. Weber 395
Garrett 502
Dixon 501
2348
Quality Mkt.
L-uDDers
Huston
Atkins
Henderson
Wise
S28
470
536
514
485
M. F. Bread
Beck
Barry
Abs.
Spain
Sacchi
Crater Elee.
H. Allen
Dorff
McCormack
Vallee
L. Kapp
493
472
449
573
2474
A-B
Speer
Boone
Berrey
Green
J. Knapp
0
420
411
456
469
466
2222
24
536
460
454
512
512
2474
CRATER LAKE LEAGUE
CliiiHInfc- W.
Ellis Market 4
Vfprifnrrt Pnt Office 4
Ton m Twelve 4
O. K. Market 4
Haupert Tractor
flleaiora annne iuo o
Your Office Boy 1
Medford Auto Upholstery 1
Barco Surjrjlv 0
Desert Service 0
Prospect Shopping center u
mecnanics uiunary "
Results:
Ellis Mkt.
B. Ellis
R. Kline
R. Hart
4
479
481
488
Barco Supply 0
W. Judy 489
L. Pendergast 389
O. Nordstrom 495
rl. ElilS 940
H. Wyatt
R. Swan
G. Ault
Handicap
2489
Post O If Ice
L. Nelson
B. Kline
W. Herman
L. Hubler .
R. Adams
Handicap
4
452
465
471
436
568
114
2506
Mech. Laundry
K. Shockley 358
E. Oldham
R. Travis
C. Wieskamp
H. Tonn
Handicap
365
456
459
30
2188
Desert Service
W. Beard 424
G. Ouinnev 461
L. Kula 435
F. Kirk 478
M. Hadley 429
354
347
426
419
177
2227
Team Twelve 4
Absentee 387
R. Eastgate 509
R. Speer 476
C. Erikson 475
D. Johnson 393
2079
O. K. Market
R. Mete
Absentee
H. Mitchel
J. Niehaus
R. Anderson
Handicap
4
388
381
444
416
500
141
2270
2240
Prospectors 0
J. Hollenbeck 366
D. Moore 331
J. Slack 488
D. Bevena 468
H. Goods 44B
2101
Office Boys 1
W. Meyers 502
F. Conrad 483
T. Groomes 441
R. Sterton 453
D. Lambert 483
Haunert Tractor 3
D. Fosbury 476
C. Owsley A
W. Newland I
H. Newland A
G. Haupert A
Handicap
2362
2384
Shrine Club
0. Hanson
1. Allen
G. Schuler
R. VoegUy
R. Rice
3
478
464
454
411
549
Auto Vphelst'ry 1
B. Kastner 415
A. Harris 393
R. Farrell 422
R Albright 339
W. Schroeder 361
Handicap 213
2143
Heart Attack
Ends Career
Phoenix, Ariz. (U.R)
While Bill Sarni lay seriously
ill in a local hospital his base
ball career ended the faew
York Giants today re-opened
trade negotiations with the Cin
cinnati Redlegs in the hope of
acquiring a replacement for the
hard-luck catcher.
Sarni suffered what was be
lieved to be only "muscular
spasms" of the chest during a
workout at the Giants' training
camp here Monday. However,
the ailment was diagnosed offic
ially as a "moderate coronary"
Wednesday by his physician, Dr.
Leslie Smith..
Similar to Ikes
The 29-year-old backstop
must remain in the hospital "for
at least four or five more
weeks," Dr. Smith said. The
physician added Sami's heart at
tack was similar to that suffer
ed by President Eisenhower in
19o5.
"It is a moderate attack, but
he will not be able to play
again, Dr. Smith revealed.
"Sami's normal life should not
be affected, just his athletic j
career." I
Thursday- February 28. 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL THIBUV-3$90e$
BUTTE FALLS FIVE MEETS MAUN
IN 5 B MIX; IRWINS SPURS LOGGERS
Butte Falls When the Butte
Falls high basketball aggrega
tion encounters Malin starting
this evening in the District 5B
championship play-offs. Logger
success could depend much on
the ability of Bill and Jim Irwin
to maintain the scoring pace they
held to during the regular sea
son. Malin and Butte Falls meet
tonight and Friday night at Ore
gon Tech gym at Klamath Falls
in their two-out-of three series.
If a third game is needed, it
will be on Saturday at Ashland
high.
Bill Irwin has collected 263
of the Loggers' 870 points in a
16-game season and his brother,
Jim, has totaled 202. Pat Conley
with 134 and Don Ellis with 104
are the only other Butte Falls
players over the 11 mark.
The four were the scoring
sparks as the Loggers chalked
up a 9-3 record in counting Jack
son County B league competi
tion. Butte Falls won out in play
which saw five of the county's
six teams in contention for sub
district honors. Malin squeaked
through in the Klamath county
tournament after finishing sec
ond to Sacred Heart of Klamath
Falls in regular conference
games.
Coach Art Backlund is expect
ed to call upon the two Irwins,
Don Ellis and Pat and Mike
Conley as starters this evening.
For the Mustangs coach Jack
McGoldrick may name Alien
Myer, Dale Rick, Stu Miller, Rol
and Harmon and Bill Rajnus or
Lean Dobry.
Rick is 6-3, Myer 6-2 and Raj
nus and Dobry 6-footers while
none of the .Butte Falls regulars
are listed at better than 5-11.
Raymond Abbott, freshman re
serve, is 6-3.
Backlund listed the following
on the Logger traveling squad:
Bill and Jim Irwin, Pat and
Mike Conley, Ellis, Jerry Dillen,
Ronnie Remsen, Larry Cavin,
Raymond Abbott and Dean
Smith.
BUTTE FALLS SCORING:
FG FTA FTM
Bill Irwin
Jim Irwin ,
Pat Conley
Don Ellis
Mike Conley
Jerry Dillen
Jerry Mattern
Ronnie Remsen
Gene Henshaw
Jim Sheppard
Dean Smith.
Totals
111
81
53
38
30
17 26
8 22
8 6
1 3
0 2
0 1
PF TP
35 263
202
134
104
77
46
24
17
2
1
0
345 299 189 198 870
Arch Moore
To Defend
Detroit (U.R) Promoter
Nick Londes announced today
Archie Moore will defend his
world's light heavyweight cham
pionship at Olympia Stadium on
June 7 against the winner of the
April 5 Chuck Spieser - Tony
Anthony 12-round bout here.
Londes said the title bout, the
first in Detroit in more than six
years, will be sponsored with
the International Boxing club.
IBC, Gillette
Renew TV Pact
New York U.R) Friday
night boxing bouts promoted by
the International Boxing club
will continue to be nationally
televised and broadcast for two
years under a new $10,400,000
contract announced Wednesday.
The pact between the IBC and
the shaving razor company Gil
lette which sponsors the shows
will begin on June 1 and the
shows will again be carried over
the NBC networks.
HUNGARIAN SEEKS FOES
Rome (U.R) Assen Ivanov,
39-year-old seven-foot Hungari
an refugee, announced here
Wednesday he is ready to go to
America "or anywhere else in
the free world" to take on all
comers in boxing or wrestling.
Ivanov, who fled from his
strife-torn country, said, "there
was nobody who had guts
enough to face up to me in East
ern Europe I hope I won't have
the same problem in the West."
Jayne Mansfield
Suffers Poison Oak
Hollywood (U.R) Actress
Jayne Mansfield was suffering
today from a case of poison oak
contacted in a "too realistic" mo
vie scene in the shooting of John
Steinbeck's "The Wayward Bus."
The voluptuous, blonde star
was excluded from close-ups
Wednesday because of skin erup
tions which appeared after a
scene with actor Dan Dailey at
the 20th Century-Fox ranch at
nearby Malibu.
Miss Mansfield said the scene
called for Dailey to break a blos
som from a branch, hand it to
her and say, "I hope these aren't
poison ivy or something."
"No, they're wild lilacs," was
her reply.
"I guess Dan's line was clos
er to the truth than mine," the
actress said.
Four-Day Work Week
Due in Plywood Mills
Portland (U.R) A reduced
market demand was blamed to
day for at least three major ply
wood producers announcing
plans for a four-day week, Mon
day through Thursday work
week.
A total of 13 plants In Ore
gon, Washington and California
were involved in the announce
ments made by Simpson Log
ging company. United States
Plywood Corporation and Co
quille plywood.
Other companies were report
ed considering curtailed produc
tion. Industry sources said lagging
orders because of the slump In
building were responsible.
A spokesman for U. S. Ply
wood said he had no indicatiton
how long the reduced work
week would last.
Six Simpson - M&M plants
were affected in the region.
Several operations in the Al
bany area also were curtailed.
Two Youths Fined for
Illegal Possession
Two 19-year-old youths were
fined $15 each in district court
Tuesday on charges of illegal
possession of beer. Fined were
Donald Irving Hunter, 18 Elm st.,
Medford, and Richard Lee Bell,
944 South Ivy st., Medford. The
boys were arrested Saturday
evening in Eagle Point by Ore
gon state police.
Kow's The Time To Prepare Fc
SPRING PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
Com metrical or Residential
ACE PAINTING CO.
PHONE 2-S740
II
Senior High
Saturday League
Basketball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Misfits
Pond's Pounders
Doug s Mugs
Hound Dogs
Unholy Five
Bob's Cobs .
Dennis Menaces
Road Hogs
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sheika .
Hangin' Five
Red Doggers
JKie Joes
W. L
1 4 1
4 1
1 3
ces 1 4
0 4
W. L
3 1
2 3
O 4
Pet.
.800
.800
.800
.600
.400
.250
.200
.000
Pet
.800
.750
.400
.000
FEB. 23 RESULTS
National League
Unholy Five 17, Hound Dogs 15
(overtime)
Misfits 20. Pounders 17
Doug's Mugs 28. Road Hogs 26
(double- overtime)
Bob's Cobs won by forfeit from
Dennis' Menaces.
American League
Shieks won by forfeit from Red
Doggers.
MARCH 2 GAMES
9 a.m. Dennis' Menaces vs. Mis
fits
10 a.m. Doug's Mugs vs. Pond's
Pounders
11 a.m. Hound Dogs vs. Road Hogs
1 p.m. Bob's Cobs vs. Unholy Five
2 p.m. Hangin' Five vs. Okie Joes
Basinski, Werle
Sign Contracts
Portland (U.R) -Two mem
bers of last year's Portland
Beaver basebal Iteam returned
their signed contracts for the
1957 season yesterday.
Bill Werle, southpaw pitcher
who compiled a 16-15 record for
the Beavers last season and vet
eran utility infielder Eddie Ba
sinski came to terms.
Carol Heiss
Nears Title
. Colorado Springs (U.R)
Carol Heiss of Ozone Park, N.Y.,
was expected to sweep to her
second world's figure skating
championship tonight at the
Broadmoor Ice palace with ease.
The 17-year-old, elfin-faced
Miss Heiss stood head and
shoulders above Europe's best
women skaters after the com
pulsory figures which count for
60 per cent in the final judg
ing were completed Wednes
day, i
She was 46 points ahead of
the 1955 European champion, In
grid Wendl of Austria, and had
seven ordinal placings to 16 for
Miss Wendl. The lower the num
ber of ordinals given a skater,
the higher she ranked with in
dividual judges.
lone Host Quint
For AAU Tourney
Hermiston 'U.R)' Four teams
open play here Saturday night
for the 1957 Oregon AAU bas
ketball championship.
Host team will be lone. Others
include Portland Outdoor Store,
Great West Life Insurance of
Klamath Falls and the Arlington
PCC To Discuss
Legislation at
Portland Session
Pullman, Wash. (U.R) Pa
cific Coast conference President
Emmett B. Moore said today that
legislation concerning financial
assistance and academic require
ments for student athletes will
be discussed at a special PCC
meeting at Portland this week
end.
The PCC will attempt to solid
ify proposals made at a' confer
ence last January and perhaps
draw up a code, Moore said.
At the January meeting, the
conference adopted "in princi
ple" a qualitative academic re
quirement of a "C" average and
an increase in the quantitative
rule which now requires an ath
lete to pass 24 semester or 36
quarter hours between seasons
of competition.
NW Loop Extra
May Be Needed
Forest Grove J.R) Pacific
university learned yesterday
that should it lose to Willamette
Saturday night it will play at
Linfield next Tuesday for a
berth in the small college NCAA
basketball tournament.
Earlier officials had believed
faculty representatives would se
lect the team should Pacific lose
and wind up in a tie with the
Wildcats. The Northwest confer
ence entry also will travel south
to meet the California entry on
March 9, it was learned.
It's No Jok
Red Heads Billed
It's no joke son the Red
Heads are coming to town. The
Red Heads, son, are one of the
greatest gal teams in the ftstory
of basketball, and they play
men and, son, they won 121
games in the 1955 season.
So let's be out at the Hed
rick Junior High gym on
Wednesday, Mfirch 6, and see
these titian haired terrors go
against the Medford grade school '
teachers men's quint.
Son, it's not just the game it's
the pranks, the antics, the
finesse and son it is one of the
best basketball exhibitions you'll
see. Those Red Heads that give
you a mighty fine, wholesome,
and hilarious entertainment
tight in the middle of a highly
competitive and furiously con
tested ball game.
Let's be there son. Wouldn't
miss it for nothing.
CHARLES D.
HOLBROOK
TAX
SERVICE
Jackson Horel Building
PHONE 2-5969
Evenings by Appointment
Phone 2-8840 Eva.
VIKING SIDELINED
Portland (U.R) Portland
State's hopes for a repeat cham
pionship of the district NAIA
tourney which opens at Milwau
kie Monday night suffered a set
back yesterday when Johnny
Winters was hospitalized with
bronchitis.
9
o
After having leased Stan's Y Club for 13 months,
Stan and Verle Peters wish to announce that they
have sold the Club to Mr. and Mrs. Colpitis, John
DeManby, and Fred Baggenstos. We wish to thank
the people of Medford for their patronage during
the time we were managing the Club (March 1,
1953 to Feb. 1, 1956) and hope everyone will con
tinue to patronize the new "21 -Club" under the
new owners. Come out Friday, March 1st and meet
the new crewl
STAN AND VERLE PETERS
L.'' '-. ' " ' - -
lli Hi, Champ! Jl-
i You deserve I , : I " T -
f- Champion jftw
1 Bourbon K " 1
",., I ' y f "- -
for winning (or losing) with l' 4 , vt , , , '"M '
smile j asaSj&i f' ' ' $ ?'?-"
for being the bel .Jivut replacer t" Bffit jW
W ,4 vgt...;3ri
ipjjj tc eni th Champion of ill " M iJljs . g P1! '
: 8-veai-old champion soubhom. ' g1" ItffSxL vt' & Sy$L v h
vl'i&ii- ' CSStJ; XT""""'""","1 If f ilpV!
1 mi!" 58-" 'eSA-1 A
IOEMMPICIM BOUMON -ichaiiq jj
51-A1GHT BOURBON WHISY. 84 PROOF. SCHENtfT DISTIUESS CO.. N.1T.C.
O