Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1957)
Milwaukee" Sox Have Good Starts By MILTON RICHMAN Unitod Pri Sports Writtr The Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Braves are off a their best starts in history and - while neither has begun print- ing World Series tickets yet, . both appear to be settling down to a long, cozy stay in first place. The White Sox reeled off their 11th victory in 13 eames and their fifth in a row by licking "Washington, 11-6 Friday. Best previous start by a White Sox dub was 10 out of 13 way back in 1020. And the Braves made it 12 . victories in 14 starts with an 11-inning 8-7 decision over the Pirates Friday night. Up to now, the best season's start by any - Milwaukee club was nine out , of 12 last year. Brooklyn remained two games behind the pace-setting Braves by beating St. Louis, 6-0, at Jer- : aey City Friday night, while Cincinnati defeated the Giants. 11-10, and the Phillies handed the Cubs their eighth straight defeat, 9-6. Yanks Beat A's The Yankees stayed within . 2'i games of the first-place White Sox with an 8-5 decision over the Athletics in the Amer ican League, while Detroit blank- : ed Boston, 6-0. Inclement weath- r caused postponement of the Baltimore-Cleveland game. Wall Takes Golf Lead; Littler Second Fort Worth, Tex. U.R Slender Art Wall pulled his . game together after soaring three over par on the first four holes to post a 37-35-72 and take : over undisputed lead at the half .. way mark of the Colonial Na tional invitation tournament with a 140 Saturday. Wall, who shared the lead with little Gene Littler of Sing- . .ing Hills, Calif., with identical 68s after Thursday's opening ' round, had to fight a wind-blown ; heavy drizzle the l?th straight ;. day f rain here in moving - two strokes out in front. Littler, who holed only one . ' good putt all afternoon, missed seven greens and took six fat bogeys in skidding to a 36-38-74 that left him at 142 with the final 36 holes due to be crammed - into what promises to be another : cool, gusty, rainy day Sunday. . I Harvie Ward, the National : Amateur titlist from San Fran- - eiaco, missed the first seven greens and three others on the back side, but sank birdie putts - of 35 and 20 feet and blasted 60 feet out of a trap for three straight birdies starting with the eighth hole to finish with a 37-36-73 that put him in the 143 category. Mike Souchak, the defending champ from Grossingers, N.Y., had a 35-38-73 to put him In the aame bracket. ; ' ' ' KE1T CARPENTER SIGNS ) '. Regiria, Sask. (U.R) The Saskatchewan Roughriders an nounced today that Ken Carp enter, 6-foot, 1-inch, 205- pound half has signed with them for the 1957 season. Carpenter was voted tha most valuable player in the conference m 1955. SEATTLE HALTS PILOTS Portland U.R) Seattle Uni versity ended University of Port land's seven came winning streak with a 6-2 victory over the Pilots here Friday in the first game of a baseball double-' header. The Pilots came back, however, in the second game to wallop the Chieftains, 10-1. NO FLATS Muskegon, Mich (U.R) The Muskegon Civil Service Commis sion's physical requirements for rookie policemen will bar re cruits with flat feet. The depart ment waived the ban on flat feet during recent years because of a manpower shortage. SPORTS BOWLING ft ' Central Market 18 Southern Oregon Moulding 17 isonon Lumber Co. .. 17 Westside Merchants First National Bank Ross Lumber Co. State Farm Insurance Copco independent Order For. Daugherty Lumber Co. . Results: Barber's Fischer Vallee Hamer Shultz Speer LT. GEN. F. L. PARKS Rifle Executive Coming NRA Official To Be Here On Tuesday National Rifle Association of America members of southern Oregon and northern California will meet with their national executive director at Phoenix on Tuesday evening. May 7. He is Lt. Gen. Floyd L. Parks, Ret., former Department of the Army chief of information. Ge i eral Parks will come here with Col. E. F. (Tod) Sloan, San Car los, Calif., western representa tive of the NRA. The meeting will be at 8 p.m. at the Phoenix Community hall. Members of the NRA from as far south in California as Willows and from such Oregon points as Roseburg, Coos Bay, Bend and Klamath Falls have been invited to the session. General Parks accepted the NRA post a year ago after 38 years of military service. He was commander of the 2nd Army just prior to retirement.' Twice appointed chief of the War De partment's information division, his title became chief of infor mation on reorganization of the Department of the Army. He al so has served as deputy com mander of the Army in the Pa cific. During World War II Parks was ground forces chief of staff of the 1st Allied Airborne Army. When the war ended he became commanding general of the U.S. 1st Airborne Army and of the United States sector, Berlin district. . Being designated chief com mander of the Kommandatura shortly after its first meeting, he was responsible for the inaugur ation of policies and procedures which materially aided in fos tering cordial relations between the several occupation forces concerned thereby speeding mat ters of administration and sup ply so that in a relatively short period an utterly devastated me tropolic was able to resume op eration of essential civil govern ment, police and public utilities He has received numerous dec orations including the distin guished service medal with oak leaf cluster. VICKS VICTORS ' Monmouth U.R) Portland Sta I i trounced - Oregon College of Education, 16V4-H4, in a dual golf match Friday at the Salem Golf Club. SuNi - Kawtols FoMfn VHKl CHAIRS Open Sundays and Holidays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m." HUDSON'S PHARMACY 613 I MAIN PH. SP 3-5345 1 Block East of Hawthorne Park Cleah Up All Your Bills With a L.0.AD from COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL FINANCE CORP. Phone if 3-4564 Sparta Bldg. Medford Loans From $25 to $253 ON AUTOMOBILE FUR NITURE OR SALARY Repay On Monthly Installments Fitted To Your Budget CITY LEAGl'K Standings Medford Barber's Weter and Olson W. . 21 19 17 IS IS 14 14 12 ir 1 Ross Lbx. 446 Culy 478 Schatz 446 Oswald 513 Martin 458 Forrest Handicap 2341 State Farm CoUey Neathamer Withrow Lanaytton Mcwhorter 1 43S 459 522 444 516 Norton Lbr. E. Olsen M. Olsen Mager Morse Boettcher Handicap Handicap 2378 L. 11 13 14 15 15 15 16 18 18. 18 20 21 3 485 518 449 435 442 54 2403 3 428 435 508 503 523 108 108 2323 naoKherty, Lbr. 0 Allen 509 D. Chapman 405 F. Chapman 507 Barker Clark 372 488 3281 Central Mkt. 4 Hayman 481 Kantor , 444 Sommer 378 Keener 429 Schultz 641 Handicap 75 2448 Copes Schroeder Hanson Harper Buseman Thompson Handicap r. n. b. La Bar De Groot Bauman Nissen Dimick Handicap - 487 403 426 460 485 87 2348 S. O. Mldf. Bex Turner Brooks Minger Knapp 4 weter-OIson 495 Brown 509 Roberta 496 Smith 478 Luman . 507 Webster 39 2524 4 498 491 521 422 570 2302 A 361 458 487 455 470 I. O. Foresters 2 Wettsida Morrison 420 Paschke Lubbers 462 Orr Simmonds 451 Landia Porter 460 Abs. Vessey 431 Blind Handicap 2244 2441 2 414 385 489 456 450 36 2230 Areata Women Nab Golf Honors Areata, Calif., golfers ' went home with the overall ' prizes Thursday in the women's invi tational match at Bogue Valley Country club. 1 Mrs. Freda - Peters was low gross with 89 and Laura Mari had low net .with 74. Participants came from Area ta, Eureka and Crescent . City, Calif., and Klamath Falls. Medford winners were Mrs. Ray Frisbie with a net 80 in A group; Mrs. Richard Finch, B group, net 82; Mrs. Wm. Ruffner, C group, net 78; Mrs. Frank Be nesh, D group, net 90. Mrs. Rob ert DeLorme won the host group"s nine-hole play with a net 39. San Francisco (U.R) Char lie (Boots) Erb, former Univer sity of . California quarterback, won his first round match Sat urday in the National AAU handball championships by de feating Val Cosper of San Fran cisco's Olympic club, 21-4-21-2. Advice Ups Bat Average New York U.R Don Hoak of the Cincinnati Redlegs, with all his old hustle and a league-leading .396 batting aver age to boot, is thankful he heed ed manager Birdie Tebbett's ad vice to "stop trying to hit like a big man." Tebbetts convinced Hoak in spring training that he should cut down on his swing and shoot for singles and doubles instead of making those futile lunges for home runs which seldom came. Hoak took Birdie's advice and switched to a new batting stance which he credits for his excel lent season's start. Figures bear out Hoak's suc cess with his new stance. His 19 hits include two home runs and five doubles, he has driven in 13 runs, he's walked 13 times and struck out only five times. LINFIELD TAKES MEET McMinnville ftJ.R) Linfield defeated Lewis and Clark, 76-54, here Friday in a Northwest Con ference dual track and field meet. The loSs ended a string of dual meet victories for the Pioneers. INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Standings: W. Jaycees ; 29 Jorgenson's 22 Domestic Laundry 22 'i City Hall 22 Snoboys 21 Richfield Oil Co. 19 Communications Workers .. 18 Lininger's Ready-Mix 16 Red Blanket Lumber Co 15 Donna Timber 10 Rail Rogues 8 Kesnits: Jorgensen'l 3 Schrein 468 Ivie Althens Bauman Ellis Lininger Kincaid 426 Milhoan 506 McGuire 502 Mitcheltre 508 Ross Handicap 2410 Domestic Coy Coa's Casey Whitney Knox " Liddell Handicap 4 City Hall 419 McKinstry 455 Duff 454 McNeel 561 Compagnonl 531 Dow . 38 L. 7 13 "a 13 '.a 14 15 17 18 . 20 21 26 28 3 418 436 397 430 472 136 2288 1 423 530 Sol 537 529 2438 Red Blanket Murrey Epps Stewart Fuller Patterson 2390 4 Donna Timber 0 439 Lue 377 Harris 437 Brooks '. 539 Monroe 458 Kessler Handicap 2250 Richfield Nelson Findley Dickinson Kreer Andersen 1 467 427 522 439 428 2283 Snoboyi Allen Davidson Mager Frohreich Couch' Handicap 378 389 473 414 450 39 2143 1 448 455 479 465 480 . 57 2284 C.W.A. 1 Picard'f ' Graham 449 Baker 513 Brown 382 Picard . 415 Martineau 442 Bohannan 436 Eads 484 Christianson 504 Thornton 387 Absentee 477 Handicap 99 2243 . 2347 layceei 4 Rail Xognet Walsh 408 OeHeart 441 Holmes 457 3ernardi 49 FORFEIT) Foster 4i7 ' ilol ' Sunday, Mar S, 1S57 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE HILTS Measles Plaque Schools By MRS. M. F. CAVIN Hilts German, or three-day measles, have been causing a number of Hilts children to be be absent from school lately. Fri day the second and third grade teacher, Mrs. L. Wesner, of Mon tague, was unable to . teach be cause she also has the measles. Mrs. C. Davenport is substitute teacher. Mr. and Mrs. Al Powers, Mrs. Ethel Bernheisel and daughter and Charles Powers, of Redding, visited friends and relatives here this weekend. Mr. and, Mrs. Perry Johnson and family were weekend visi tors in Logan, Utah, recently. Mrs. Joe Vieira was an over night guest of her aunt, Mrs. Edith Newcomb, in Ashland Thursday., At a picnic on Klamath lake Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilcox and family, Mr. and Mrs. M. Marin and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brannon and daughter. Mrs. Bob De Avilla and chil dren, Billy and Sharon, and Mrs. Bob Jorgensen and children, Debra and Ryan, spent Tuesday at the home of their parents Mr. and Mrs. Frank Graves. Norman Bernheisel and daugh ter, Shelley, and Mrs. Ozie Bern heisel, left Monday for . a two weeks' vacation with relatives in Washington; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest De Avilla and sons, of Yreka, visited at the Don Wilcox home Thursday eve ning. Mr. and Mrs. Roy ' Brannon and daughter, Earline, left Thurs day evening to visit with Bran non's mother in Fresno, Calif. Brannon suffered a severely' cut hand Tuesday morning and will be unable to work for ; several days. . . . Mrs. Fred Haymes was a pa tient at the Ashland General hos pital Sunday-and Monday and returned to her home Tuesday, where she is convalescing. Among those seeing the show "Giant," at the Varsity theatre in Ashland this weekend, were Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith and family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Laustalot and sons, Mr. and Mrs. M..F. Cavin and daughter, Janet, and Carleen De Clerck. Mrs. Laurine Kent, of Med ford, is visiting in the home of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gwinn. Mrs. Harvey Frye and son left Saturday for Susanville to visit with relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. John De Avilla and son, Steven,, were fishing at Klamath Jake Sunday. . . , ... Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Johnson were weekend visitors in Ne vada recently. - - Housewife Named io Welfare Commission Salem 4U.fi) Mrs. Frank W. Johnson, Klamath Falls house wife, was appointed by Gov. Rob ert D. Holmes Friday to the Klamath County Welfare com mission. Mrs. Johnson succeeds E.' B. Hall, who asked to be relieved from the commission because Of impaired hearing. Mrs. Johnson, wife of a Klam ath Falls physician, is a grad uate in sociology of the Univer sity of Chicago and served as librarian for the university. She was in charge of social admit tance for the Chicago lying-in hospital before coming to Klam ath Falls in 1949. Boy Scouts Lone Pine Pack 44 Bobcat pins were awarded to Gary Redfield, Bhilip Jan and Kent Clark. Billy Leever qual ified or his wolf badge. Ronnie Christner received his webalow award and was accepted into troop 7 by Scoutmaster Bob Hawkins. ; After the meeting, pack members adjourned to the ball field to see the comet and other stars of interest. S. - E. Brill lent his eight-inch telescope for the occasion. The eight - inch guns of a heavy cruiser can hurl a 280 pound shell more than 13 miles. (SOTX Next Winter's Fuel Bill With Big Double Leads . Select Green Fir Slabs . Order Now Summer Prices MEDFORD FUEL CO. Teleph one SP 2-21 11 Court A McAndrews n REGISTER NOT7,: THE ORIGINAL . C" 1 ' - vm q i t ' f Htm h mm- T.yi o buy eWoma wet twdMduet mill aim & rlS-lf V ; V far yawr Mac at M, or balow Mat, through our Map Cluh. lath anal . I A tKf V evary aww sfaaM dhi a OMoW at a very low prim. Ttttr Ma fe , , 3 I ' ? . oMga awy ) CMdentt, or any ofhar wfdwwfao. egiHr Wpwt I K K We this wiam for tho Monthly DMdand aoVwtlsowont. Savt ... I llf' I "THE CAPE COD" KEROSENE I j if 18"TJUl-AUTHEWTK;CBmRPC!!lM. ESEL ! ' P NET, WORSDfO TTICX TT BUFtNtR -i- rV S ' A ROMANTICIZE YOUR PARLOR, PATIO, $F" S 6 DINING ROOM, DEN . Jtes C,. e A PERFXCT EMERGENCY LAMP BURNS ' VARI -COLORED, ODORLESS KEROSENE f 3 If To f ouaWy lafcay aawuMy aaa Oufe Ohloarah hv rtolslariao. Vao ail J tti v Q a iid a ataoaa Ouai nuMl'suMp card amMuif yen turthsr nnwrMy tWi iaaarl ' " 1 J asvrnga. Mapat Oi tmmbmn win ba noitrM by maH in asVatMa aadt f 7 nsw raanfraV Ohntsiial. This is no a "glewHcfc" r tra no ht JJ ctiarM. Tot m ttmm Jj ft ail'iajaiiliio ard is yaar nmxi of tont)uino ssvingt through tha Mspla Club. ' I "isjf X ? I swartz y&at y I i MAPLE SHOP kmJ How to give Mother two months of leisure every year... u D 0 D 0 D Wouldn't you spend 23c a day to eliminate dishwashing for Mom? i ' It's easy . . . and it isn't expensive. . She now spends an hour a day wash ing dishes, and that's unpleasant work. It adds up to oyer two months of 40-hour weeks every year. What , . can you do atout it? The answer is simple. GIrE HER A GENERAL ELECTRIC MOBILE MAID AU TOMATIC 'DISHVASHER FOR MOTHER'S DAY, May 12. 7 Needs tip plumbing or , wiring installation. ' Washes everything even pots and pans with no pre-rinsing. treasure , wiin no prenni I I Give Mom this gift she'U for the rest of her life. n i r At t-Vs(M !v: LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS Vj'.i't- i - I Phone SP 3-5395 APPLIANCE CO. L SAME VALUE AT OUR ASHLAND STORE AND BARGAIN STORE IN MEDFORD ?. w il J CALL SF-3-4564 COLLECT