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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1957)
TEN MEDFORD (OREOOW) MAIL TP.IBUNB Milwaukee Moves Into Sanie-And-A-Half Lead By UNITED PRESS Milwaukee moved to a game and a half lad in the National league race Saturday by beating Philadelphia. 1-2, while the Cin cinnati Reds and Brooklyn Dod gers were suffering defeats. An error on a ground ball by Ted Kluszenwski opened the way for seven unearned runs as the New York Giants tripped the necond-place Redlegs, 8-4, and home runs by Del Ennis, Stan Musial and Wally Moon paced the St. Louis Cardinals to a 6 5 v: tory over Brooklyn. Last place Chicago closed in on seven-place Pittsburgh with a 5-1 victory over the Pirates. In the Americaneague. Wash ington trounced the leading Chicago White Sox. 9-1. Balti more beat Cleveland for the first lime this season. 8 3. and Detroit defeated the Boston Red Sox, 3-1. Buhl Pitches Bob - Buhl pitched a teady J four-hitter and was backed by homers by Hank Aaron and Del Rice as Milwaukee shoved the Phils 2'i game: off the pace. Buhl would have had an easy time except he gave eight walks and had baserunners in most in nings. The Cardinals homers got them off to a 4-1 lead but the Dodgers kept pecking away, a run at a time, and Moon's two-run homer in the sixth proved to be the runs St. Louis needed to win. Carl Erskine came on in relief for his first appearance of the" season after recovering from a sore arm. He pitched two score les innings, then allowed Moon's homer, but Roger Craig was the loser. Brooks Lawrence had a three hitter fcr seven innings, but his game blew up in the eighth in ning when Kiuszewski fumbled a grounder with two out. Then came the six singles plus a cou ple of walks and the Giants were ahead to stay. Moe Drabowsky pitched a sev-n-hitcgame as his Cubs moved to within one game of Pittsburgh in the battle to escape the cellar. Chicago smacked four Pirate pitchers fbr 12 hits. " Roy Sievers batted in five runs w ith a homer and two singles as Washington scored its first vic tory over the hite Sox since last August. Russ Kemmerer al lowed at Iest one hit each in ning to Chicago, but never let the Sox get out of hand. A homer by Bob Boyd and triples by Billy Goodman, newly acquired from Boston to give Baltimore ome hitting, and Gus Triandos pced the Orioles vic tory over Cleveland. Billy Loes was the winner, and he added a personal -first" by getting his first hit of the season, a double. He scored on Boyd's homer. Frank House and Reno Bertoia 0 hit mn-producing singles in the seventh inning to give Detroit its victory. Until that inning. Willard Nixon had a one-hitter. Frank Lary allowed 11 hits, but Detroit made four doubleplays to ease the tight spots. I INF.SCORFS: v .iii.n. I I firii, i-hicaso 0 212 OOO S PitT.shtireri H" onu IHIO 1 Dralnmskv and Fanning. Law l R. Smith itii. Swanson 9 o Rand. 12 1 0 King and Cincinnati New York Lawrence .... mm 020 loi lliHl OOI 07x 10 Freeman 'Hi. and Bailev Corner. Worthing! i. Grissom ty :id Westrum. Thomas ti. Ct l o,., 301 002 000 6 11 SroolcKn 001 110 1 10 5 8 J .tones.. Mernt '7". and H Smith. Craig. ;F.rskine '3i. Roebuck l"t. Bes sent (B-, and Walker. Milwaukee . ... 010 020 1127 18 1 Philadelphia Oil ooo 0002 4 1 Buhl and Rice. Haddix. Miller 5. Farrell 2j, Morehead i9. and Lo pata. American League Baltimore 100 120 1038 10 0 Cleveland 001 100 010 3 8 1 Loes. Zuverink l7i. and Triandos. Daley. Pitula i7). Aguirre i8 and Hegan. Naragon 1 8 1. ntroit - 000 ooo 21x 3 7 0 jius'.nn 0110 000 100 1 11 1 Nixon and White; Lary and House .Ishmgton .... 3110 0111 320 9 11 1 Chicago ... 010 000 0001 12 ) Kemmerer and Berherct: Fischer. Slalev 161. Derrineton 181 and Lollar. N' York 014 040 OOO 9 9 0 Kan-iu Citv 00 100 O10 2 s 2 Turkey and Johnson. Truck Kcll ner i6. Duren '8. and Smith. MOUNTIES. PADRES WIN Miss Brough, four-time Wim- Hollywood 'IP1 Sandy Con bledon champ, beat Mrs. Knode, suegra turned in two inning? , g.o, 1.6, 6-3. in the Priory tour of no-hit relief pitching Satur i nament finals at Birmingham, day as the Vancouver Mounties j in the men's division, Davidson dropped the Hollywood Stars beat Alex Olmedo of Peru and 7-4 in a 10-inning Pacific Coast i the University of Southern Cal- league game at Gilmore field. San Diego. Calif. IP Right hander Ed Casque's four-hil pitching carried the San Diego Padres to a 4 to 1 victory over Los Angeles. I ISf l ORFS: in Innings) Vamomer O'Vl liio I.JO 3 7 14 1 Hoilwnod 1!" I1"! H" 0 11 3 Ferrarre Bamberger .8'. Consueg ra fi. F-ra.:t '!U' and White. Roe Chiur. . Waters 8i. Wade Q'. acd N.tTon Home run Nalon. HYD th. none on Stevens HYD. 7th. none on. Pow.s. Van. 6th. 1 on. l.o A-ikcIc-, OOO 1"0 0O0 1 4 ' S.ITI Dli'CO -10 100 DUX 4 K t Ad.tm. Mu-ken-, R'. and Olson Casque and Averlll. Home run Re pakido. 5-DO. -VTh. none on. Venice !? Americans Budge Patty a::d Hugh Stewart Sati day won the men s doubles in the, Venice International tennis tourney, defeating Australia's Mervyn Ri'?e and Dun Candy, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2, 6-i. MEDPORDtTMBUKE STANDINGS By I'mted Presi NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Prt. GB Milv.auk- 32 21 Mi Cincinnati 32 24 JS7 1 1'3 Brooklyn 3'J 23 2 Philadelphia 2 23 338 2'-2 St Lotm 2H 22 Sr,H 2-3 New York 24 ;i2 42t 9 a Pittsburgh 20 34 370 12 2 Chicago 16 32 J33 13 3 AMERICAN LEAGl E W I, Prt. GB Chicago 34 18 654 New York ...... 32 22 3P3 3 Detroit 31 2.S AS4 3 Cleveland 28 2S .328 Ht Boston 27 29 482 9 Baltimore 24 30 444 12'j Kansas City 23 32 418 12'a Washington 20 38 .345 17 SUNDAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS American League Washington at Chicago 2 gamest Rami 4-5 r and Hyde 2-3 or Clev enger 3-0 vs Wilson 1 6-3 and Harsh man f5-2i New York at Kansas City Kucks (3-Bt vs Truck 5-0i. Boston at Detroit Fornieles (2-6i vs Hoeft '1-3 1 or Bunning 6-Ii. Baltimore at Cleveland (2 Earnest Johnson i.VS and O'Dell U-0 vs. Mossi (4-0) and Wvnn 7-7). National relent Cincinnati at New York Cross (4-3i vs Crone 13-1 1. St. Louis at Brooklyn (2 Karnes) Dickson 3-2t anrt Schmidt iS-li va Drvsdale "S-3i and Koufax ' 4-2 j . or Podres ifi-2. Milwaukee at Philadelphia '2 ffames Burdette .V2 and Phil hps i2-li or Pizarrn 2-5' vs Rnberls 'fi-8i and Miller 1 -1 1 or Simmona .4-3 1. ChicaKo at PttMburch "2 jiamesi Rush iWi and Kaiser i!-4i vs Pur kev i5-4i and Arroyo i2-5.. League Leaders (as of Friday) NATIONAL I. RAGLE Plaver A Club O. AB R. Hodges, Bkn 51 194 31 Musial. St. L: .. 51 209 29 Fond. Peh 47 1SS 24 Groat Peh 32 128 Ifi Aaron Mil 53 226 43 Prt. .366 .359 .356 .352 .332 AMKRIC.AV I.EAfil T. Williams. Bos 49 170 Mantle. N Y 53 179 Cerv. K C 43 1 29 Fox. Chi 52 201 Boyd. Bal. 51 161 65 68 45 70 56 .382 .380 .349 .348 .348 Home Runs National league Aaron. Braves 17: Musial. Cards 12: Alavs. Giants 12: Sauer Giants 11: Moon Cards 11. American league Mantle Yanks 19: Williams. Red Sox 17: Zernial. Ath letics 13: Sievers. Senators 13: Max well. Tigers 12. Runs Batted In National league Aaron. Braves 49: Musial. Cards 45: Hoak. Redlegs 42; Mays. Giants 37: IFour tied with 33 apiece i. American league Mantle. Yanks 42: Sievers. Senators 41: Wertz. Indians 39; Skowron. Yanks 38: Minoso, While Sox 36: Maxwell. Tigers 36. Pitching Sanford Phils 8-1: Shant7. Yanks 7-1: Bunning Tigers 6-1: Schmidt, Cards 3-1: Jackson. Cards 8-2. U. S. Women Win Singles London IF Althea Gibson of New York, Louis Brough of Bev erly Hills, Calif., Lew Hoad and Mai Anderson of Australia and Sven Davidson of Sweden won singles championships Saturday in English lawn tennis tourna ments leading up to Wimbledon. Loser to Anderson was Herb Flam of Beverly Hills, and loser to Miss Gib.son was Darlene Hard of Montebello, Calif. Miss Brough beat Mrs. Dorothy Knode o of Forest Hills, N.Y., in their fi nal. Miss Gibson, 29-year-old Ne gro who probably will be the women's favorite at Wimbledon, beat 22-yea'r-old Miss Hard for the fourth time in four meetings as she won at Beckenham in the Kent championships, but was carried to three sets for the first time, 6-3, 3-6. 6-4. Anderson took the men's title at Kent in a one-hour, 27-minute battle, 6-2. 4-6. 8-6. Hoad. in winning the West of England title at Bristol, showed himself in top form to defend his Wimbledon crown. He breez ed through It 6-2. 6-3. 6-0 de cision over England's No. 2 play er. Roger Becker, in just 55 min utes ifornia. 6-1. 6-4. At Beckenham, in the men's doubles final: Ramanathan Krishnan and Naresh Kumar. India, beat Mai Anderson. Aus tralia, and Gil Shea, Los An geles. 6-4. 10-8. Women's doubles final: Miss Gibson and Miss Hard. U.S. beat Miss Pat Hird and Mrs. Mary Hawton, Britain. 6-4. 9-7. PEEWEE GAINS LEAD Orlando. Fla. 'if" Charles Laytoji of Waycross. Ga . shot a two-under-par today to gain ; the lead in the first round of the llth annual national Peewee ! golf championship, j The 15-year-old youth turned ! in a 35-33 over tlie 6.240-yard ' Pine Hills country club course. Second in the 13 to 15 year old class was David Boyd of Jack sonville with a 74 and next came i James Foika of Ocaia with a 78. Sunday. June 18, 1957 Millette Cards Score of 152 Harry Millette. Rogue Val ley Country Club, was eight strokes off the pace in cham pionship division play after Saturday's round of the Royal Oaks Invitational Golf tourna ment at Vancouver, Wash. Millette carded a 77-75 152; Clayton Lewis had 89 76 165: and Dr. Paul Walker a 90-90 180 score. Lewis play ed in the championship flight and Dr. Walker in the senior division. Joe Mance. Seattle golfer, led the field with even par 72 72144. Pole Vault Sparks NCAA Texas Meet Austin, Tex. W Bob Gutow ski, the stringy welterweight, stamped himself indelibly as king of the worid's pole vault ers Saturday with a jump of 15 feet. 934 inches that stole the thunder from a record-cracking field in the NCAA track cham pionships. The six foot. 145-pound senior chemistry major from little Oc cidental college hurled himself over the 15 foot mark for the 31st time of his career on the very first try at that figure, but there may be some doubt that it will ever go into the world record books. Whether it does or not. it was such a prodigious feat that the crowd of 9.500 in Texas' Mem orial staduim lost sight of the fast that Villanova took the team championship back to the east for only the second time in the meefs 36-year-history, and that records toppled right and left. Eight meet records went by the boards, including world rec ord bettering performances by Gutowski in the pole vault, Don Bcwden of California in the 880 yard dash and world record ty ing junkets by Bobby Morrow of Abilene Christian in the 100 yard dash and by Ancel Robin son of Fresno State in the 220 yard low- hurdles. Bowden outlegged Irish Olym pic star Ron Delaney of Villa nova by five yards in 1:47.2, Morrow got a 9.3 century dash in the preliminaries enroute to the meet's only double triumph and Robinson spreadeagled his field in 22.2 to equal the year old mark by Duke's Dave Sime. The meet records went to John Fromm of Pacific Lutheran with a javelin toss of 248 feet, 1 inch: Greg Bell of Indiana with a broad jump of 26 feet. 7 inches; Lee Calhoun of North Carolina college with a 15.6 in the high hurdles, and Iowa's Charles Jones with an 8:57.6 in the two mile. Villanova, as expected, won the team crown by a comfort able 15-point margin over Cali fornia, 47 points to 32, while Fresno State got 23, Kansas 22 13, Stanford 21, Abilene Christian 20. Occidental 16, North Carolina college 16, Mor gan State 15, Manhattan and Indiana 14 each, Texas 13, Iowa 11, Michigan Utah State and Pacific Lutheran 10 each, Ore gon., Southern Methodist and Illinois 9 each, and Minnesota. Colorado. Prairie View, Hayne and Western Michigan 8 each. Gutowski's jump, while it will count in the NCAA books in all likelihood, may not meet the strict standards necessary for world recognition because of a slight wind which blew his pole back across the mythical plane between the uprights after he had clearly cleared the cross bar. Officials caught the pole before it knocked the bar down. MACIAS RETAINS TITLE San Francisco HP Raul (Raton) Macias. toying mercil essly with his victim from the seventh round on; retained his NBA world bantam weight title Saturday night by stopping game Dommy Ursua in the 11th round after taking a trip to the canvas himself in the first ses sion. METAL WORKS NEW LOCATION 2287 WEST MAIN at lozier Lane Commercial Industrial Residential Sheet Metal Work PHONE SP 2-4440 14 Players Will Make Legion Trip Dennis Barr, from Medford high, and Wayne Allen, from Crater high, are probable start- mg pitchers for the Medford ! ienaing cnampion vary luiaaie American Legion junior baseball j coff. a pair of last-ditch fighters team which will nlav a dotihle-! of the fairway, both rammed header this afternoon at Lake view. The two are members of a 14 man squad which was to leave about 8 a.m. for the south cen- tral Oregon town. They were to be taken to Lakeview" by A. E. (Bud) Reinking, who'll manage the club on the field, and Jack ; Sides, business manager. Coach John Kovenz will play for the Cheney Studs here this afternoon but is expected to be with the Legion nine for its other con tests this season. Travel roster of players in cluded Bob Pond. Randy Camp- bell. Torn Laurence, Dick Mon - roe. Ray Konopasek. George Ice, Frank Peterson. Dick Barlow, Dale Shaw, Charlie South, Jerry Fields and Dick Durante. The squad will be fed two meals at Lakeview and will get a free swim in the Lakeview plunge after the games. Camp White Goes To GP Camp White Chilly weath er and the threat of rain resulted in cancellation of the baseball game scheduled between the Vet erans Administration domicili ary and Cave Junction semi-pro teams. It was to have been play ed last night. The Camp White nine goes to Grants Pass this afternoon to play a Rogue Valley league. Manager Keith Johnson indicat ed that he may call on Don San ford as pitcher for the VAD nine. Jim Smth reportedly has been named by Manager Glenn Reese to hurl for Grants Pass. The VAD topped Grants Pass 3 to 1 recently in a non-league tussle. Injury Sidelines Open Contender Toledo, Ohio OPi PGA cham pion Jackie Burke of Kiamesha Lake, N.Y., was forced out of the U. S. Open Golf Champion ship at Inverness by an injured tendon in his right hand. . Burke, who qualfied for Sat urday's two final rounds with a 71-75-146, eight strokes behind the leader, said his hand was so tender that he couldn't possibly play well enough to remain among the leaders. FRIDAY'S RESULTS Pacific C oast League San Francisco 5. Sacramento 4 Vancouver 8, Hollywood 1 San Diego 6. Los Angeles 1 Seattle 8. Portland 6 National League Brooklyn 2. St. Louis 1 (10 innings, nighti Cincinnati 5. New York 4 (nighti Milwaukee 10. Philadelphia 2 might) Chicago 11, Pittsburgh 5 might) American League Chicago 10. Washington 4 (night) Detroit 5. Boston 4 i nighti Cleveland 7. Baltimore 2 (nighti New York 10, Kan. City 1 (night) Northwest League Tri-City 7. Wenatchee 4 Lewiston 7. Yakima 4 Salem at Eugene, postponed, rain INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Rochester 5-3. Richmond 0-5 Toronto 6. Havana 0 Columbus 2-4. Buffalo 1-11 Montreal 7, Miami 0 SiNKAY'S GAMES National League St. Louis at Brooklyn (2i Cincinnati at New York Milwaukee at Philadelphia (2j Chicago at Pittsburgh (2) American League Washington at Chicago (2) Boston at Detroit Baltimore af Cleveland f2 New York at Kansas City Baseball Scores Dick Williams, Billy Goodman Right at Home With New Clubs By UNITED PRESS Dick Williams of the Cleve land Indians and Billy Goodman of the Baltimore Orioles didn't take long to make themselves at home with their new ball clubs. Williams, acquired from the Orioles Fridav for center fielder Jim Busby, hit a home run, a i double and a single to lead the Indians to a 7-2 victory over his old mates Friday night. Goodman hit his first homer of the current campaign in the same game only hours after the Orioles- picked him up from the Boston Red Sox in a straight player deal for pitcher Mike Fornieles. The Orioles also purchased rrn D Padgett Auto Parts 345 North Central STORE HOURS 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Daily Including Saturday and Sunday. IS Mayer, Middlecoff Must Go Play-off Round for Open Title By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer Toledo, O. IP Hollywood handsome Dick Mayer and de- home birdies on the final hole Saturday to finish in a tie a: 282 for the U.S. Open Golf championship. Mayer, trying to get even lor ; three years of frustration since ' the day he blew the Open on j the last hole at Baltusrol, sank a 10-foot birdie putt for a par 36-34 70 to finish one shot ' ahead of broken hearted Jimmy , Demaret Then he stood helplessly by s the wire-thin Middlecoff brought an ear-piercing roar from the record Inverness gal lery of 15.500 fans by matching ; that 10-foot birdie putt on the , final hole for a two under par : 34-34 68 and matching 282. It was a day of thrills and pathos as the 34-year-old May er took his shot at joining the golfing immortals with that chips down putt. The tap of that putter broke the heart of golfing grandfather whose last round 72 a short time earlier had carried the Texas Rain bow home with his 283. But then Middlecoff "made his run at the lead needing bird ies on two of the last three holes to tie. Cary got one on the 16th hole by calmly stroking home a 15-foot putt. "Go in one time, putt, go in ' he shouted, and the ball took his orders. Short on 17th On the 17th he was short with his approach and chipped to within a foot for his par and then the slender dentist stood on the final tee needing a birdie three. "I sure wish they had made this fairway wider," he grimac ed. But Cary threaded the needle, 1 hitting the longest drive he ever uncorked on that 330-yard hole It flew down the alley just 70 yards short of the green and Middlecoff wedged it 10 feet wide of the pin. Cary measured it intermin ably. There wasn't a sound from that packed mass of humanity Shepard, Hansen Lead Trapshoot Bend L. A. Shepard, Opir. and Harry Hansen, Eugene, led the field at 100 out of 100 in the first half of the Oregon state sin gles championship. Pacific Inter national Trapshooting associa tion, here Saturday. W. J. Fisher. Wetherburn, fol lowed with 99 out of 100. Second half of the 16-yard event will be staged today. John Simpson, Portland, broke 195 out of 200 Friday for top honors in Class AA 16-yard j championship competition. In class A three men tied at 195. : They were Marshall Hunt, Bend. Roy Yashui, Hood River, and Lawrence Jones Jr., Condon. j Other high were John Hilli- ard. Sandy. 192 in Class B, Ken ny Jones. Condon, 192 in Class C and Wanda Blum, Tillamook, 178 in Class D. Runners up in cluded Bert Peck, Central Point, with 177 in Class D. Top out-of-state shooters were S-Dan Orlich, Reno, Nev., 199, and Don McKay, Seattle, 197. Walton Chapter Calls Off Diamond Lake Trip Jackson County chapter of the Izaak Walton league has post poned its picnic which had been r' -ned for today at Diamond Inclement weather is the i. No date has been set as r the event. southpaw Ken Lehman from the Brooklyn Dodgers for the waiver price of 510,000. To make room for Lehman, Baltimore plans to ship young outfielder Bob Nel son to Knoxville of the Sally League when his bonus status expires Sunday. In addition to the Lehman : sale, the Dodgers called up catcher-first baseman John Rose boro from Montreal of the Inter national league and pitcher Danny McDevitt from St. Paul of the American Association. Catcher Joe Pignatano was sold , to Montreal. Trading deadline in the major j leagues was at midnight last j night. I D (CE huddled around the grassv littli bowl in front of the Inverness clubhouse as he hovered over the little white ball. Finally, at long last, the clubhead swun1; back and swept forward and the ball rolled truly into the hole for his tying birdie as the crowd loosed a tremendous roar. It was. in a way, another bit of heartbreak for Mayer al though he will got another chance tomorrow in 18-hole playoff against the nerveless southerners Three years ago, the collar ad blond came up to the final hole at Baltusrol and banged his drive into an unplayable lie which cost him a double bogey and lost this same title to lame- I armed Ed Furgol Saturday, Mayer strode up to the final hole at Inverness with the memories of that collapse still fresh in his mind and canned that tricky, downhill 10 footer for the birdie which, even if it didn't win, kept him alive for another and extra day. 'Just Relaxed' "I remember that day at Bal tusrol," he said smilingly. "And I had made up my mind never to be that tense again. So I took a deep breath, relaxed and she just rolled, right into the cup." Middlecoff had seemed almost out of the running after shoot ing 71 and 75 on the first two days for a total of 146. But he got as hot as the burning Ohio sun Saturday with a pair of flaming 68's which carried him home to his deadlock. Mayer had been better eff, with the opening rounds of 70 and 68 But he faltered in this morning's third round with a 74 and then matched par this afternoon. Walt Burkemo of Detroit shot Mitchell, Harrington Head Golf Tourney Ivan Harrington and Jack Mitchell will serve as co-chairmen of the 29th annual South ern Oregon Golf tournament at Rogue Valley Country club. The tourney, one of Oregon s major amateur links events and possibly the most popular, will open on Aug. 27 and will run through Sept. 2, Labor day. Both men's and women's champion ships will be determined. There will be competition in numer ous flights. Dr. Paul Walker and Ray Mencke, who have headed tour ney committees in past years, have been chosen as honorary chairmen. Sub-committee heads include Dick Knight, registration; Jerry Paulus and Ron Gandee, public ity; Glen Fabrick and Al Wil : JgM BIG Yi n MfofAvfc TLA The TRA1L-A-BAIT lure ts called the complete lure because every known feature to catch fish hat been built into it. It'i a Rube Goldberg fish getter. Actually, TRAIL-A-BAIT is five luret in one. It has a luminoui . body, rapid swimming action, flexible insect legs, a hollow channel for roe or smelly bait, a noisy gurgle, a belly flasher and will trail another bait. A fisherman who had tried it recently wrote the TRAIL-A-BAIT factory, "It's the hottest lure I've ever tied on a leader. Where; can I buy some more?" the second hottest round in Open history, a 33-32 65. to tie Julius Boros for fourth place at 284 after the 1952 champ ion closed with a 70. Only the 64 by Lee Mackey at Merion in 1950 surpassed Burkemo's round although Jimmy McHale shot a 65 at St. Louis in 1947. Dairy Maids Play Eugene Camp White Rogue Valley Dairy Maids are hostesses at Ricker field here today for a soft ball twinbill with McCullough Chain Saw team from Eugene. A seven-inning game was to start at 1:30 p.m. Second mix will be five innings. The clubs were to have met at the Veterans Administration domiciliary field here also last night. Catherine Holtz Coach Of Volleyball Champs Fort Dix. N.J. WAC 1st Lt. Catherine Holtz. 2121 Jack son blvd., Medford, Ore., was coach of the Fort Dix's WAC volleyball championship team in the First Army competition The lieutenant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Holtz of the Medford address, is a grad uate of Ladysmith High school Wisconsin, and attended the University of Wisconsin in Mad ison where she received her bachelor of arts degree in French. Another athletic sport in which she fgrmerly participated in was tennis. She was a win ner of the Fort Dix singles, doubles, and also winner of the First Army doubles, in 1956. Committee liams, pairings; Lee Flink and Bob Corbin, starting; Tom Mac Leod and Roy Smith, scoring; Charley Brown, Williams and Jim Dunlevy, greens, and Larry Butler, Leland Clark and Justin Smith Sr., rules. Parking will be administered by Ray Sorenson and Bill Peek, Paul Smith heads the public ad dress system committee and Bob Hart and Dick Travis are chair men of the gallery and marshal ling committee. Other chairmen are Jack Creager, telephone; Williams, Mitchell, Dunlevy, Harrington, Mencke and Alan Holmes, tro phies; Irv Mirick and Abbie Green, entertainment: and Col. and Mrs. Fred Green, Mr. and ' Mrs. B. B. Hughes and Mr. and Mrs. Omar Palmer, hospitality. . . the f ish-catchingest lure to hit the market in '57! Gome to the store and SEE IT SWIM! Monday and Tuesday Jun 17 and 18 We have a transparent tank in the store which demonstrates tht terrific action of this lure that swims tfke 4 fish and looks like erawdad. Come in and see th TRAIL-X-BAIT action. Buy it and you'll catch fish! G Y Supermarket Provost, Kncpe Champs in 2 Ball Dom ProTost Jr. and Bill Knopa are the two-ball part nership golf champions of Rogue Valley Country club. They defeated Dave Brown and Eddie Simmons yesterday) in 18 hole finals. The match ended 2 and 1. Giants Trade Schoendienst New' York -'W The New York Giants Saturday traded star second baseman Red Scho endienst to the Milwaukee Braves for pitcher Ray Crone, infielder Danny O'Connell and outfielder Bobby Thomson. The deal for the 34-year-old Schoendienst. a member of the National league All-Star team eight times, fulfilled the Braves' desperate need for an outstand ing second baseman. Milwaukee, which has a game and one-half lead in the Nation al league race after Saturday's games, now must be rated the; standout choice for the 1957 pen nant. Schoendienst, in additio to being an accomplished field er, has a .307 batting average. Thomson. 33. thus returned to the club for w-hom he struck one of the most dramatic blows in baseball history back in 1951. As a member of the Giants. Thomson hit the memorable ninth-inning home run in the third playoff game against the Brooklyn Dodgers, clinching the pennant for New York. Visit SSgf. Harold fWts Room 200 Post Office. En list now for 2-3 or 4 ysgsrs. Sponsored by Bessonerte Constructing Ce. General Contractors P.O. Box 70 Medford, Oregon 5 lures ! in one: '1 fe. -vl v "xT