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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1957)
TEJf MEDFORD (OREGON) Sacramento, Portland Crowd Front Runners By DON THACKREY grown muscles in the third and Ur.iled Press Sports Writer ; oelted his first home run of the Sacra. nonto and Portland may : season with V.'ilson aboard, not have the horses to win the i Marshall Endges and Milo Pacific Coa-t leaeue race, but Candini teamed up to hold Los they can st:ll crowd some of the Angeles to four hits and b:g front runners into the rail. , Steve Eilko saved the Angels Sacramento wasted about as from a double skunking by hit little energy zs possible Thurs-' his 14tn home ruji of the sea day night dealing Los Aigeles a son in the fourth frame. . double lashing that postponed j Bob Borkowski singled home the Angels hopes of reaching the ! Solly Drake in the eighth inning first division. The Solons scored ! to break a 2-2 tie and give Port only four runs in two games, but iand US third straight over the they gave Los Angeles only : flickering Stars. That hit raised reven hits in the doubleheader , the hand ol Bob Alexander in and wan 1-0 and 3-1. i victory and sent Curt Raydon Portland meanwhile dged down to defeat, third place Hollywood for the , Perfect Records third straight time, this victory ; A couple of perfect records re being a 3-2 one. ! liefers got more so as San Fran Seattle retook the fourth piace Cisco increased its league lead spot by beating Vancouver 2 1 j to two and a half games over while San Francisco was out scoring San Diego 8-7. 'Wilion and Jones Earl Harrist doled out only three hits to the Angels in the first game and bested Bob Dar f.ell when Artie Wilson doubled and Nippy Jones singled for a thir.1 inning run. The same Wilson-Jones com- SY"." I !..r the Solons in the second, game, but it was an insurance tally smce Leo Righelti h-d ; Tables Turn In NW Loop Competition 8 UBITED PRESS Wednesdav night s losers were j . . . , i sports! .Thursday niESl dinners hi Sorthwe.it league action. Turning the tables were Eu gene, now within two James of th lead after thumpine pace ttir,t Yakima, 11-2; Lewiston, . victor over Salem, 8-2; and Tri City's Braves. ho walloped Wenatchee, 13-1. tmerald p i t r Berlyn Hodges hurled two-hit ball whiiaj his teammate were past ing starter Don Orwiler and Lou ehs for 16 Sinji. Lefty Hodges, in winning his fourth giinre against five defeats, walk ed six but stayed out of serious trouble by fanning eight. Big Eugene stickers were ;Zeke King and Don Frailey with thru hits apiece, five Eugene runt were unearned, due large ly to fi Yakima errors. One Mi Co At Slem, Brona pitcher !Tiornton B.ipir was a one-man show h hit solo homer, drove in' two other runs and ef fectively scattered iive hits. He planned nine and walked' five as he won his fifth game against three setbacks. Catcher Ron Xarlon. shortstop Pat Mills and outfielder Ed Kelly also had two ihits for the winners. ; Salem starter Don 'Schaefer lost his second game against two wins. The Senators picked up !two runs in the first on two .singles, two walks and a sacri fice, but Kipper blanked them ' on the hits the rest of the way. Tri-City handed 12 Wenatchee Chiefs a poor going-away pres ent on their home hunting grounds. Tri-City pitcher Ev Aldridge hand-cuffed the Chiefs for six innings while his team mates were collecting 13 runs. :An overthrow at first by the Chiefs' shortstop in the second 'got Tri-City off to six runs, five of them unearned. Rough For Chiefs ; All but one in the Braves' 'lineup hit safely during the game. Even consistent Wenatchee first baseman Herb Anderson ld a rough evening as he saw his 25-g a m e hitting string ;broken on four blanks in four .trips. The dozen Wenatchee players .will move today "to other North- west league teams as Cincinnati Redlegs' . farmhands come up from Clovis. New Mexico. Ron-Farm Jobs Oyer Last Month's Figure Salem Non-farm jobs in Oregon last month were 9.000 ; over the previous month but were 2.000 below the same pe riod a year ago. the Unemploy ment Compensation Commission said today. Non-farm jobs totaled 489. 600. Slow seasonal recovery of lumber and construction work ..; the main reason for lower figures than lat your, the com-; mission said. Also below 1956; figures were fn'd processing, machinery manufacturing and : paper mills. I i.mhrr and logging oo numbered 5S.7U0. or below last year. Plywood mills employed 13.700, for 700 less. " Big SurT Calif. 'l? Dr .Alan Gregg. 66. who retired last v,ar .is vice president of the Rockefeller Foundation which, 'ho served for 20 years as chief ' of the division o( medical, sciences, oicd (Wednesday night. J MAIL TRIBUNE Vancouver. Bill Abernathie of the Seals won in relief to make his record 7-0, while Seattle's Bill Kennedy pitched three frames of hitless relief to gain his fourth win without a defeat. San Francisco knocked San Diego out of the first division with a five-run rally off losing pitcher Pete Mesa in the seventh after Mesa had hurled three-hit ball to that point. t. . j,w,cn homered in the second with no- todv aboard and the Pads .,,! twice in the ninth to close the gap but couldn't catch up. Bill Glynn's triple and a sacrifice fly by Dick Alyward gave Kennedy the run he needed in the top of the ninth to insure the Seattle win. I.INESCORKS: fist Kamr) .Sacramento . . 001 000 01 5 0 Lus Anceles mil) ("10 0 0 3 o Harrisl and Barragan; Darnell and Olson, find camel Sac-ramt-TUno 002 000 01O 3 9 0 Lo Aneelrs 000 l"0 00 1 4 1 RnriRev Candini 8 and Barraiian. Adams, Mirkens (8-. Hughes 9i and Tappe Olson settle Vancouv oo ono nn i 13 ooo ooi ooo i fi r Jarnen Kennedy i7 and Aylward Pahca and Atwell. Hollvwood 00 oil oool 8 1 Portland ion 001 Olx 3 8 0 Raydon and Hall; Alexander and Baich San Dieso ... 110 210 0027 14 1 San Francisco 002 010 50x 8 8 2 Mesa, Lonibardi '7i, Kinder (7, Nichols i8i and Averill; Dori?h. Aber nathie l til. Kiely IB i and sadowski. HONEYMOONING in Las Vegas, John Brodie, Stan fords Ail-American quarter back, denies cheating during examinations, which pre vented his graduation last Sunday. (International) Jack Benny Makes Nightclub Debut Las Vegas, Nev. IP Jack Benny Thursday night made his first nightclub appearance of his long entertainment career. He opened a three-week engage ment at the Flamingo Hotel. The veteran comedian for years refused nightclub offers but admitted he couldn't turn down the fabulous offer made by the Flamingo. It was believed that he was offered more than S80.000 for his engagement at the swank resort hotel on the Las Vegas strip. His debut was cheered by a capacity audience. The show in cluded singer Gisele MacKenzie. pQRMER EDITOR DIES ; Savannah Ga. W The Rev. Dr william p. King, 86, 'former editor of the Nashville. Tcnn.. edition of the Christian Advocate and a leading Metho dist minister in the South, died : Thursday. t cr i-. OUSTED by military junta, Daniel Fignole, Haiti's pro visional president, arrives in Miami. (Jniemaiiohal) 1 s& - f? 0MI Friday, June 21. 1957 Theyll Do It Every tjRE304M IS VERy R.4S-W4W VVMENl TELLIM6 480UT WVWT A 100 To AMRCM H5 IS t ' 2 S4y HO FOREIGN W( -525 ENT1MSLEMSNTS.'.' WHY : p SHOULD WE &IVE OUR DOUGH L' j LQ es- 1 TO EVEF2V OTHER COUMTRy ? . ii I'M a ONE HUNDRED J Wi . -f- Den rcKl-r AiAfDr.AM L& Crt a" W7?.r Pv exiys like mv imported wime? ' . iLl I I ! I V OVER WORKED R5R THE J MEETING NEWSMEN in Fairfield, Conn.. Mrs. John Zawesza discusses charges by Husband that "secret weap on," powerful flood lights on tanks in World War II, catied him and others to become sterile or father deformed children. He said Mrs. Zawesza had three miscarriages and child with cleft palate. With her are daughters Nancy (left), 9, and Elise, 6. (International Soundphoto) Reporter Invokes Fifth Amendment in San Francisco Hearin San Francisco W A San Francisco newspaper reporter said today he was not now a member of the Communist Party, but he invoked the Fifth Amendment in refusing to testify regarding past political sympathies or associates. Today's First Witness The reporter was Jack Eshle man, 43. of the San Francisco Examiner. He was the first wit ness at today s session of House Un-American Activities Sub committee hearings which were once again being televised in de fiance of a direct order by Speaker Sam Rayburn. Subcommittee Chairman Fran cis E. Walter (D-Pa.) was not present today, having returned to Pennsylvania after refusing to halt televising of the hearings into alleged Communism in San Francisco Bay Area professional circles. Rep. Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.) House parliamentarian, was re ported to have suggested in Washington that a contempt of Congress proceeding could be instituted against Walter. Answers Under Protest Walter's departure left Repub lican Reps. Gordon H. Scherer of Ohio and Robert J. Mcintosh of Michigan as the only mem bers of the subcommittee still here. Televising of the hearings continued today, with both con gressmen terming the dispute between Rayburn and Walter "a fight among the Democratic leadership." Tile fact that the only two members of the subcommittee still here were Republicans was cited by Eshleman as a reason that the group was "illegally constituted." He said he was an swering questions under protest because, he said. House rules re quire both parties to be repre sented at such committee hear ings. Washington 0? House mem bers speculated today on pos sible punishment of a committee chairman who has defied Speak er Sam Rayburn's ban on tele vised committee hearings. There was a fresh move mean time to upset the ruling, which TEMPLE STAR IN ARMY Philadelphia 'IP Hal Lear, former Temple university bas ketball star, was sworn into the U.S. Army Thursday and left immediately for Ft. Jackson. S C. He led the Eastern Basket ball league in scoring last sea son while playing with Tri Cities. ADMISSIONS INCREASE Columbus. Ohio IF Minor League President George Traut man revealed Thursday that mi nor league baseball has had an increase of 101.957 paid admis sions over the same period one :year ago. Trautman said the sur i vey covered 27 leagues. I Time Then h the next bre4th me BR4S5 350UT4U. MIS OLD-WORLD POSSESSIONS Que wVr fvffiV eat ameRcan cheese.) I-NT NEW FOREIGN SPORTS CAR.' SWITZERLAND HOW DID ' GUYS LIKE My IMPORTED 1 LJST OVER Rayburn imposed in 1932 and reaffirmed in 1955. He said he based the ruling on House rules which make no provision for radio or TV broadcasts. Rep. Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.), the foremost parliamentarian in the House and author of its Of ficial Guide on Procedure, said Chairman Francis E. Walter ID Pa.) of the Un-American Activ ities Committee could face con tempt action for his refusal to halt telecasts of the committee's current sessions in San Francisco. REFUSING TO QUIT afte- policeman-husband was slam in 1945, Mrs. Bemice C. Brady, mother of nine, sup ported family as secretary, continued studies. Children are congratulating her after she receives bachelor of science degree from Chicago's Loyola University after years of night studies. (International Soundphoto) Navy Pilots Die In Plane Collision Moffett Field, Calif. up Two Navy pilots were killed Thursday when their planes col lided and exploded as they crashed near busy U.S. 101. A truck, moving along a side road, was struck by wreckage from one of the planes. The startled driver swerved into the path of an oncoming car, slight ly injuring a passenger in the crash. The planes, a propellor-driven Douglas AD7 and an FJ3 Fury jet, collided at an altitude of about 400 feet. Neither pilot had a chance to bail out. The victims were identified as Lt. Nelson H. Maurer and Ens. Burg H. Barclay Jr. Mineral production was re ported in 1956 from 230 of Texas' 254 counties. SAWDUST Phone SP 3-6297 McGinty Fuel Go. By Jimmy Hatlo -HAVE MV SUITS M4DE IH SCOTL4s'D.' -HATS PROM FRAMCE.'Sftos FQ0 MY D4U6HTER'S IM SCHOOL IN WE HIRED A SWELL CHI WEEK JUST CAN WORKED FOR THI VESUVlAN EMBASSy Brewster Verdict Hoped by Wednesday Washington W The fed eral judge at the contempt of Congress trial of teamsters Vice President Frank W. Brewster hopes to hand down a verdict next Wednesday. The trial of "the Seattle labor leader ended Thursday. Federal Judge John J. Sirica said after the closing arguments that he had wanted to announce his decision at the end of the trial. But, he said, he found he had "some more work ... to do on the case over the week end." Brewster was cited for con tempt of Congress in refusing to answer questions and produce records of the Western Confer ence of Teamsters for the Sen ate Permanent Investigating Subcommittee. Brewster chal lenged the subcommittee's auth ority to question him. Wheat Farmers Vote For Rigid Quotas Washington TO Ameri can wheat farmers have voted overwhelmingly in favor of rigid marketing quotas for their 1958 crop. Preliminary returns from the 36 commercial wheat states showed today that 83.3 per cent of the farmers voting in the referendum favored rigid quotas. It will be the fifth successive year that marketing quotas and acreage allotments have been in effect. The returns tabulated by the Agriculture Department show ed 143.333 growers favored quotas while 28,833 were op posed. Of the major producing states, Minnesota polled the largest per centage of yes votes at 97.1. Champoeg Area Land Offered To State Salem HP! A strip of land ! near Champoeg park was offer ed to the State Highway Depart ment by Marion county today for park purposes. The land is 'located along the Willamette river downstream from the park. If approval is given about half of the 69 acres owned by the county would be given to the state. The county said it lacks funds to develop the site as a park. Use M-T Classified Ads Jerry's Union Station 611 N. Central Phone SP 3-9176 U.S. Royal Tire Distributor Tro7 Man Sentenced In District Court Frank J. Schaefer, Trail, was sentenced to one year, in the county jail and fined S105 in district court Thursday after pleading guilty to a charge of drawing a bank check with in sufficient funds to pay same. Judge James Main said Schae-I fer would he elieihlp to annlr 1 ! . - " r r - for parole after serving one month of his jail sentence. Gems, Cash Found On Woman's Body San Rafael, Calif. 'TP The wife of a San Francisco tavern owner was carrying 575,000 in gems and SI, 173 in cash in her girdle when she was killed in an auto collision Sunday, ac cording to Marin County Coro ner Frank J. Keaton. The coroner said the cache of jewels and currency was found on the body of Mrs. Maude Watson. 58, when it was brought to his mortuary. He withheld public mention of it until he checked with police. Keaton said the cash was mostly in large bills. It was stuffed into pockets inside the foundation garment and fastened with safety pins. The jewelry was in 15 pieces also stuffed into a secret pocket. Mrs. Watson, formerly of Oak Par. 111., was the wife of Robert Watson, 53, operator of a tavern in San Francisco's Taraval dis trict. She was killed Sunday when the car she was driving crashed into another on U.S. 101 near here. Third Blood Lilt Saves Tacoma Man Fort Lewis. Wash. 'IPI The third blood lift from Portland to Fort Lewis in less than a week . took place Thursday and phy sicians at Madigan Army Hos pital here said it saved the life of retired Airman l.C. Buell H. Holman, 31, Tacoma. A fighter plane from the Air Force Base at Portland flew 18 pints of rare O-plus blood to Fort Lewis in less than 10 minutes to aid in the treatment of Holman. Eight other pints were drawn from personnel here. Holman was suffering from hemolytic anemia. He spent nearly eight hours in surgery, having an enlarged spleen re moved. Physicians placed him on the "seriously ill" list follow ing the operation. Thirty pints of blood from the Red Cross Center at Portland were flown here on the other two emergency missions. One pa tient died but the other, John j Betts of Fort Lewis, was re ported "doing fine." Too Many Changes Confuse Harriman Donors Syracuse. N. Y. 'IP) Gov ernor Harriman was christened William Averel' Harriman. When he went into govern ment service he dropped the Wil liam and became W. Averell Har riman. After becoming governor, he dropped the initial and became Averell Harriman. On a recent visit, firemen and policemen presented the gover nor a pen and pencil set in ap preciation for his approval of a bill reducing their working hours. The pen was inscribed, "Averell W. Harriman." Students Pool Hobbies To Show Crystal Growth Traverse City, Mich. HPi Two high school juniors here pooled their hobbies to produce a color motion picture showing crystal growth. Al Royce and Norris Ander son produced the movie, "Sym metry in Science," combining the talents of Royce. the photog rapher, and Anderson, the chem ist. The film shows the growth of metallic crystals and the geo metrical shapes of common crys- VACATION With The Greatest of Ease If It's a Question of Vacation Money We Have The Answer! Borrow The . . . American Way LOANS S25 to S1.500 AUTO SALARY FURNITURE For Any Worthwhile Purposo PAYMENTS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! American Finance Corp. Phone SPrinj 2-8836 123 W. Main Medford tK ft I FIRING REVERSED For- mor career diplomat John Stewart Service receives : congratulatory call in his i New York office after his : 1951 loyalty firing was up- set by the U. S. Supreme 1 Court in an 8-0 ruling based i on procedural flaws. The Court did not rule on Serv ice's loyalty. Bids Called on Work In Federal Building Bids have been invited for work on the lower floor of the federal building. corner of Sixth st. and North Riverside ave., to expand the offices of the local Army Reserve Unit. The Oregon Military District at Vancouver Barracks, Wash., is receiving bids on the work until June 26. The remodelling will move the reserve unit ex ecutive wffices downstairs and leave more room on the second floor as a unit training area. OUTBOARD WEEK BIG Y SEED SEE WHAT'S MEW IN OUTBOARDS! 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