Wooden Shoe, Roseburg Men
Claim SO Pin Tourney Togas
Business Men's assurance,
Roseburg, and Wooden Shoe,
Medford, claimed the men's and
women's team championships
last night after all top scores of
past weeks successfully with
stood challenge on the final
week end of the annual South
ern Oregon Handicap tourna
ment at Medford Bowling lanes.
The Roseburg men rolled
3039 four sessions back to beat
out Del Norte Feed store, Cres-
,
1SP0RTS
feet game 299, was No. 2 in all
events with 1978. Brown and
Frye in doubles shaded Bill
Bickers and Harold Martin,
Grants Pass, by a single pin.
cent City, Calif., by six pins. Bex Wins Six-Game
Wooden Shoe's 2726 count held , Ann Price, Brookings, won
up for three sessions. Co-runners- women's singles with 634. Sally
up were Alley Kat Drive-in,
Klamath Falls, and Mann's De
partment store, Medford, each
with 2711s.
Bruce Williams, Coos Bay,
captured singles honors with
721. Marshall Brown and Harry
Frye, Medford, were doubles
winners with 1363 and Frye
won all-events with 2062. Frye
was second to Williams in singles
with 715 and Bill Blunt, Phoe
nix, who accomplished the tour
ney's standout feat, a near per-
Moreno, Roseburg, was all-events
victor with 1793, and she and
Anita -Nichols, Roseburg, were
doubles winners with 1215.
Nichols was second in singles
with 628, Vera Cummins and
Maxine McCall, Medford, in
doubles with 1201 and Helen
Carter, Roseburg, in all-events
with 1741.
For the second year in a row,
Lee Bex, Medford, won the
Western Six Game Singles
mantle for 170 average and over
Studs, Talent Chalk
Up Victories Sunday
In Rogue Valley Loop
Medford Cheney Studs will
play Dunsmuir, Calif., at the
fairgrounds field here Wednes
day evening in a non league
semi-pro baseball scrape.
Dunsmuir is a member of the
Northern California league.
ROGUE VALLEY LEAGUE:
Medford
Cave Junction
Clendale .-.
Talent
Bulte Falla
Camp White
Grant! Paai .....
L Prt
0 1000
2 .714
3 .571
4 .429
4 Jfi7
5 ,2H6
8 .143
Winning baseball games with
late inning rallies is almost a
habit with the Medford Studs.
And they were consistent with
that trait yesterday. The Che-
rey Lumber company club
punched over a tying run In the
seventh canto and totalled up
three more in the ninth frame
in a 4 to 1 victory over the cellar-dwelling
but stubborn Grants
Pass Merchants.
Medford's unblemished leader
ship of the Rogue Valley league
was protected by the outcome at
Grants Pass. Glendale nicked
Cave Junction 5 to 4 as both
clubs held to third and second
spots. Ashland-Talent crunched
Camp White 21 to 3 to bust the
tie for fourth position.
The Studs poked out three hits
in the ninth in establishing their
margin of victory. Pitcher Jerry
Bartow helped out his own cause
by driving in what proved to be
the winning run and Third Base
man Frank Rector batted home
the other two.
Mound Duel
Hurlers Larry Cochell of
Grants Pass and Bartow of the
Studs engaged in a stellar duel
over most of the route. Bartow
gave up only two hits over seven
innings and Cochell held the
Studs to a pair of safeties over
six. With tight GP fielding it
was three up and three down
for the Studs in four of the six
stanzas. The Medford tosser fi
nally wound up with a four
hitter game while the Cheneys
tagged Cochell for eight over
eight panels.
First hit yielded by Bartow
was a double by Outfielder Mel
Friend in the first inning. It
drove home Don Jacobson for
the only Merchant run. The third
sacker had drawn a base on
balls.
That was all the scoring until
Cochell weakened in the seventh
for hits by Catcher Frank Roe
landt and Outfielder Ed Rein
king and for bases on balls to
Shortstop Ron Owings and Out
fielder Jerry Droscher. Reinking
drove Owings in for the tally. A
try at squeezing Roelandt in
for another marker failed when
Bartow popped out on the bunt
attempt.
Grants Pass cut Studs' hopes
in the eighth inning with a
double play on Outfielder John
Kovenz's liner to Jacobson at
third after First Baseman Jack
Cooney had singled.
Medford was charged with
five errors during the after
noon but all had quite harmless
results. The only miscue by a
Merchant, however, was part of
the key to the Grants Pass
downfall. All of the runs in the
ninth were unearned. Roelandt
doubled with one out. Droscher
smashed the ball to Shortstop i
Chuck Nevi who bobbled. Rein
king fanned for the second
out. Bartow singled scoring
Roelandt and went to second
base on the throw in as Droscher
went to third. Rector then
smacked a liner over shortstop
to bring home Droscher and
Bartow.
Roelarrdt was the heavy nit-
safe blows in the win' over the
Veterans Administration domi
ciliary nine at Camp White. Big
frame was the fourth when
seven runs were run up on five
singles, two bases on balls and
two errors.
Jim McAbee swatted four for
six with a double and a triple
and Gordy Thoreson four for
five with a double. Clyde Smith
had a solo homer, a two-bagger
and a single in five turns. Ron
Weinhold slapped three for four
and Gene Parent and Pete Cot
ton each three for six in the 22
hit attack.
Bill Seymour homered and
tripled for Camp White in five
times up and Barney Riggs
singled and two-based in five
efforts. John Eggink and Ray
Thiess recorded two hits each.
Parents, throwing a 12-hitter
for Talent, whiffed eight and
walked two.
Camp White had defeated Tal
ent 6 to 0 just last Wednesday.
bowlers. Bex recorded 1379 and
nsvo RnVih Klamath Falls.
totalled 1302.
I Elsie Baker, Medford, took
the women's special three-game
singles .with 702. Fred Geier,
Albany, was winner in the men's
three-game competition with
743 to Bex's 712. Mixed doubles
title went to Ann Gebhart, Med
ford. and Walt Raade, Spokane,
Wash., with 1318.
Members of the Business
Men's assurance quintet are
Charles DeGuire, Parley Dil
worth, Doyle Presnall, Ed Davis
and Bob Edwards. Those on the
championship women's team are
Norma Burroughs, Vi Corby,
Virginia Johnson, Gertie Blir)d
and Rose Barr.
Beck, Young Grab Honors
In Drag Races on Sunday
TOURNAMENT LEADERS:
Uon'c Tim(
R.iunMi Mn'E Assurance. Roseburtf,
3039; Del Norte Feed Store. Crescent
City. Calif., 3033: Viking Sewing Cen
ter Medford 3027- Trail creetc mm.
hr Mfrifnrri 3023- Klamath Tractor,
Klamath Falls. 3022; Crescent City
Lions. 3002; Pacific Supply Co-op.
Grants Pass. 2995; Taylor and Baylor
LoERiniE. Ashland. 2989: Tru Mix Con
crete. Medford. 2979: Griggs Y Mar
ket, Grant Pass. 2975.
Men's Doubles
Marshall Brown and Harry Frye,
Mprifnrri 1383- Bill Bickers and Har
old Martin. Grants Pass. 1362; Bill
Liverniore, and Leon Miller, Crescent
City. 1355: Bill Blunt and Francis
Kirk. Medford. 1335; Dave Robb and
Al HackenwerthY Klamath Falls. 1280;
Lee Bex and Llovd Knapn. Medford
1274: Harold Schroeder and Jack
Gardner Medford. 1263: Ken Bushev
and Marc Blatt. Roseburg. 1267; Ting
F read man and Jonn Anderson, tiose
burg. 1264: Sam Morgan and Bill
Sedar, Roseburg. 1260.
Men's Slnrles
Bruce Williams. Coos Bay. 721;
Frye, 715; Norm Neathamer. Medford,
711; Merle Hanscam. Klamath Falls,
698: Eahardt Blind. Medford. 694;
Frank Knox. Medford. 678: Bob Hos
ley, Brookings, 678; Leonard Nelson,
Medford. 677: M. Brown. 675; Marsh
Kamsby. Medford. 67 3; Kay Adams,
Medford. 673; Blunt, 673.
Men's All-Events
Frye. 2062; Blunt. 1978; Charles
Dawjon, Grants Pass, 1972: Ramsbv,
1967: Hanscam. 1946; L. Miller. 1946;
Gene Piazza. Medford, 1945; B. Wil
liams. 1931; M. Brown, 1927; H. Mar
tin, 1924.
BOX:
Grants pas AB R H PO A
Brickell. 2b . .. 3 0 0 4 2
Nevi. ss 4 0 0 3 3
Jacobson. 3b .. 3 1 0 3 3
Friend, cf 4 0 12 0
Rates. K 4 0 2 1 0
Tloese. lb 4 0 0 7 0
Stewart, rf 4 0 0 0 0
Chnstran, C 3 0 0 6 1
"Tippets 1 0 0 0 0
Cochell. p 3 0 110
Women's Teams
Wooden Shoe. Medford. 2726; Alley
Kat Drive-in. Klamath Falls. 2711:
mann s Department store. Meaiora
2711: Pioneer Cafe. Medford. 2669;
Hots hots. Klamath Falls. Medford and
Roseburg, 2651; Shangrila Cafe, Mad
ras, Z6a0.
Women's Doubles
Anita Nichols and Sally Moreno.
Roseburg. 1215; Vera Cummings and
Maxine McCall, Medford. 1201; Joan
Beard and Clara Beard. Klamath Fails.
1 146; Cleo Rogers and Ann Price.
Broookings. 1144; Ann Gebhart and
Dell Chrlstianson. Medford. 1 139;
Madalyn Waters and Sylvia Anderson.
Roseburg. 1 121; Jean Jtodeers and
Ruby Hawley, Klamatri Falls. 1114;
Lucy Turner and Helen Peulson. Med
ford, I ill; Dena Backes and Mary
Bothwell. Klamath Falls. 1101; Celia
Anthony and Agnes Avey, Redding,
Calif., 1098.
Totals 3J 1 4 27
Struck out for Christean in 9th.
Mrdford AB
Rector. 3b 5
Perkins, 2b 5
Cooney. lb 4
Kovenx, cf . 4
Owings, si ...... 3
Roelandt, e 4
Drnscher. rf 2
Reinking. If 3
Bartow, p 4
PO
0
1
11
2
0
11
0
0
2
..34
Totals
MedTord .. 000 f)O0 103 4
Grants Pass 100 000 000 1
Runs batted In Friend. Reinking,
Bartow. Rector 2. Two base hits
Friend. Roelandt 2. Sacrif.ce Brick
ell. Left on bases Medford 7, Grants
Pass fl Bases on halls Off Cochell 3
off Bartow 2. Strikeouts By Bartow
II. by Cochell 6. Karned runs Med
ford 1. Grants Pass 1. Cochell Hit
by pitcher Droscher 'by Cochell
Brickell (hv Bartow). Double play
Jacobson to Reese. Umpires Cope-
land and warren.
MNFSrORE:
Camp White .... 101 0t0 000 3 12
Ash -Talent .... 224 700 42x 21 22
Kelly. Thiess 4 and Sword; Parent
ana- iMCADee.
Pipeline Planned
For Natural Gas
San Francisco (W Pacific
Gas and Electric company has
announced plans to con
struct a 330 million dollar pipe
line system to transport natural
gas from Canada to California.
Norman R. Sutherland, presi
dent and general manager of
the utility company, said the
international project would con
nect California with the Cana
dian Province of Alberta, thus
adding to supplies from other
sources required to meet the
mounting fuel and energy needs
of California.
Authorization by the Federal
Power commission, California
Public Utilities commission and
Canadian governmental agen
cies will be necessary before
construction can begin, he said.
Sutherland said initial de
liveries of 400 million cubic feet
per day are planned for 1960.
Porflander To Take
Command of Planes
Portland W Maj. Gen. Ches
ter E. McCarty of Portland is
scheduled to take command later
this summer of all tactical air
command fighter and fighter
hnmW hawc lArect nf Th lVTic-
ter of the day with two doubles sisippi riveri it was announced
Womfn'i Singles
A. Price. 634: A. Nichols. 623:
Thelma Ault. Klamath Falls. 622: S.
Anderson. 607; S. Moreno. 605; Helen
Carter. RoseburK. 603: Dell Mix. Rose
burg. S96; J. Rodeers. 503; Sally Had
den. Grants Pass. 571: Anna Dale
Bohannon. Medford. 567.
Women's Alt-Events
Moreno. 1793; Carter. 1741; Price.
1738; Mix. 1721; Eldina Greenwood,
Klamath Falls. 1720: J. Rodeers. 1701;
Ault. 1677; Cummings, 1672; Nichols,
lfifiB; Lee Livermore, Crescent City,
1665.
Charles Beck, riding his Tri
umph 40 motorcycle at a speed
of 96.77 miles per hour, was top
eliminator yesterday in South
ern Oregon Timing association
drag races at Camp White strip.
Floyd Young Jr., riding a
BSA, had fast time with 9 9,6 3
mph.
Eighty contestants contended
Sunday in one of SOTA's most
closely matched drag races. All
times turned in in each class
were within one mph. of each
other. There were several dead
heat contests.
New Roadster
A new roadster appeared on
the scene Sunday. The machine,
powered by a full Oldsmobile
engine turned in a best time of
95.81 mph. It was built by Jack
Women's 3-Game Singles
Elsie Baker,' Medford. 702: Marge
Dedman, Beaverton, 673: Ruth Bono,
Klamath Falls. 661; Betty Hartzig,
o i tin u, rass. ozb.
Men's 3-Game singles
Tred Geier. Albany. 743: Bex, 712:
Walt Raade. Spokane. Wash.. 711:
Ralph Clough. Klamath Falls, 708;
Fred Lake, Bremerton, Wash., 706.
3-Game Mixed Doubles
Ann Gebhart and Walt Raade, 1318:
Mable Clark and Lee Bex. Medford,
1298; Dorothy Wolff and Groyer Mc
Dowell. Medford. 1289: Helene Culy.
Medford. and Raade. 1288: Dell Mix
and Bob Edwards, Roseburg, 1283.
Ex-Woodburn Head
Takes Job in East
Harrisburg, Pa. IW The
Pennsylvania State Welfare De
partment said Saturday it has
hired James Lamb of Woodburn,
Ore., to be superintendent of the
Pennsylvania state training
school for boys at Morganza.
Lamb was for seven years
superintendent of the MacLaren
School for Boys at Woodburn.
State Welfare Secretary Harry
Shapiro said Lamb was "one
of the top training school admin
istrators in the country" and
lauded his "treatment-oriented
philosophy."
Lamb will take over his new
duties about Sept. at a salary
believed to be in the $9,400 to
$12,000 bracket. He resigned
several weeks ago as head of
the Oregon school. .
Spanish Children To
Entertain Skelton Boy
Madrid HP) One hundred
thousand children will help en
tertain the ailings on of comed
ian Red Skelton during their
visit to Spain, a Catholic chil
dren's magazine said today.
The magazine "Tres Amigos"
(Three Friends) said it will make
sure together with its readers
that Richard Skelton's stay in
Spain is enjoyable.
The Skeltons are showing
their nine-year-old son the ma
jor sights of the world. He is
suffering from leukemia.
and sincle in four batting turns
Bartow had two for four and
Monty Bates dittoed for Grants
Pass.
Cochell walked three and
struck out six and Bartow gave
two bases on balls and fanned
31. Each hit a batter with a
pitch. '
Six of the Ashland-Talent
players chalked up a least three
Sunday
McCarty, a Portland attorney
and former state senator, is head
of the 18th Air Force which will
lose its transport planes. Heavy
transport wings have been trans
ferred to the Military Air Trans
port Service.
Gen. McCarty will move from
Ponaldson AFB in South Caro
lina to Waco, Tex.
Buy
At
Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Bricks, Flues,
Drain Tile
727
W. HcAndrews
Ph. SP 8-4107
Pope Warns World
01 Own Destruction
In Pleasure Search
Vatican City OB Pope Pius
XII warned the world Saturday
it is running "headlong towards
its .own destruction" in its "un
restrained" cearch for money,
pleasure and comfort.
In an encyclical issued in con
nection with the forthcoming
100th anniversary of the Shrine
of Our Lady of Lourdes in
France, the Pontiff sternly de
nounced materialism which ex
presses itself in the "cult of the
body, the exaggerated search for
comfort" and the callous "dis
posal of human life." The ency
clical jvas entitled "The Pil
grimage of Lourdes."
He said materialism was ramp
ant both in the communist and
nqn-communist nations.
The encyclical, written in
French, was a 5,000-word Papal
warning against a modern so
ciety which dares to challenge
God himself and which "would
want to gain the universe at the
price of its soul."
"The World," he said, "is In
the grip of a terrible temptation
of materialism, frequently de
nounced by our predecessors
and us."
The materialism is shown not
only in that "condemned philoso
phy" of communism, he said.
It also manifests itself in the
greed for money whose ravages
spread in ration to the size of
modern undertakings."
Weighing on Lives
He charged that money has
become "the determining factor
of so many deliberations weigh
ing on the lives of people."
Materialism expresses .itself
in the cult of the body, in the
exaggerated search for comfort,
and in the removing of all traces
of austerity from daily life."
It "ends in the disposal of
human life even to the point of
destroying it before it sees the
light."
The encyclical urged Roman
Catholic Bishops and Priests to
instill a zealous devotion to God
and things spiritual among pil
grims making the trip to Lourdes
for the Centennial Celebration
from Feb. 11, 1958, to Feb 11,
1959.
Tax Agent Shot;
Revenge Hinted
Portland IW Otis Hanstad,
40, remained in "very critical"
condition in a local hospital to
day after he was shot twice in
the back-at Longview Saturday
night in an apparent "revenge"
shotgun shooting.
Hanstad is manager of the
Washington state tax commis
sion office in Longview. Hospital-attendants
said that Han
sted, a former Kelso policeman,
probably will never walk again.
Held in the Cowlitz county.
Wash., jail at Kelso on an open
charge in connection with the
shooting was Matt Hintsala, 47.
Hintsala was taken into cus
tody at his home after sheriff's
officers surrounded the place.
Hanstad was wounded as he
stepped from a Finnish steam
bath from a distance of about
15 feet.
The sheriff's office said it was
told that Hintsala had berated
Hanstad about an hour before
the shootings for warnings about
traffic violations which Hanstad
had given Hintsala several years
ago. .
About 10 species of the sun
fish or Centrarchidae, family are
common to Minnesota. In addi
tion to the largemouth and imall
mouth bass, there are five species
of sunfish, two species of crap-
pies and the rock bass.
Daily's U-Drive
Medford Airport
Gault and Bub Hewitt and
driven by them. They were in
such a hurry to participate they
didn't have time 1 to lock the
rear end but did well indeed for
the first time out.
There were several disappoint
ments. Roger Welch's Chevrolet
took leave of three rods by way
of the block. Bill Steeve's blown
DeSoto powered comp. coupe
snapped a valve stem in the
starting line. It was force out of
the entire meet.
E stock, Eddie Sanders. 50 Ford.
69.17; D stock. Dick McNcrnay, 53
Olds. 77.23 C stock. Denny Hume. 56
Pont.. 82.49: A stock. Howard Taylor.
57 Chev., 86.53; SS super stock, Mar
tin Clark. 57 Chev., 92.78; E gas, Larry
Ryden. Stude Ford, 71.00; D gas, Larry
Clement. 53 Chev.. 87.87; C gas. Glen
Cave, 53 Stude. 84.03: B gas. Howard
Roberta. 40 OldsFord. 90.90.
A gas. Smitty Crosby. Olds 'Ford.
83.33: B S roadster, Deren Dibble. 54
Corvette. 94 73; A Sroadster, James
Campbell. 29 Ford. 86.92: A cycle.
Charles Beck. 40" Triumph, 96.77: B
cycle. Jack White. 30" Triumph. 92.30;
B roadster. Gault and Hewitt,
OldsFord, 95.81; Caltercd. Ron Rob
ertaon, 32 Ford. 78.19; C sports, Don
Korni. 57 Metro. 62.50.
Monday, July IS. 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE KIKE
Northwest
Win Hurled
By Moreci
By UNITED PRESS
Vince Moreci came in out of
his regular centerfield post Sun
day night and twirled his first
baseball game. He was success
ful, and the Yakima Bears dump
ed Salem, 6-3, in the nightcap
of a Northwest; league double
header. The win, coupled with a 4-0
shutout hurled by Don Orwiler
in the opener, boosted the Bears
out of the league cellar into a
fourth place tie with Lewiston'.
In the other Sunday NW ac
tion, Eugene and Lewiston split
a pair. The Broncs took the op
ener, 4-1, on Jack McQuade's
neat three hitter, and Eugene
got the nightcap, 4-3, with Ollie
Brantley getting his 17th win in
a relief role. Brantley was
charged with the first game loss.
Tri-City and league-leading Wen-
Raventos Lost
To Oregon Eleven
Eugene (W John Raven
tos, standout tackle on the Un
iversity of Oregon football team
will be lost for the 1957 season
because of a shoulder injury.
Coach Len Casanova said today.
Raventos missed part of last
season with the injury and doc
tors have decided he would risk
permanent injury should he play
again next fall. His loss leaves
Oregon with Jim Linden and
Jerry Kershner as the only two
experienced tackles.
COLTS TO REPORT
Baltimore, Md. HP The
Baltimore Colts announced to
day that 28 players, most of them
rookies, will report to the club's
training camp at Westminster,
Md., July 25 for preliminary
classroom work prior to the of
ficial opening of training July
29.
a tehee played just one contest,
the Chiefs coming out on top
of a slugfest, 12-8.
MONEY
At Crater Finance you may
borrow for any worthwhile
purpose on your
FURNITURE - AUTO
SALARY
and repay In monthly Install
ments. You may choose the
terms most suitable ts you
up to 24 months.
Loam may be paid in ad
vance ar in full at any time.
Crater Finance
CORPORATION
135 Pine St. - Central Po'it
Phone NO 4-1 273
Frank Wilkinson, Mgr.
Convenient Parkins
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Thny had nnver flown before. But early one morning Zdnek
Machilner, 19, and Karel Kucara, iiu, DM up a zecn guaro im
wobbled to the safety of West Germany in a stolen plane.
Mcfthor could fly.
bull1 flboy soloed to freedom
ThM two escaped -but 70 million others re
main captive behind the Iron Curtain. And these
are the people at whom Radio Free Europe beams
its daily broadcasts. Escape is not its aim. Radio
Free Europe penetrates the Iron Curtain to spread
truth ... to strengthen hope and resistance.
Said the youths above, It (Radio Free Europe)
added courage and strength to strained nerves."
"It offered us ... a hope for a better future,"
said a young nurse who fled to the West
"Everybody is listening even the Communists,"
said an escaped Czech skating champion.
From 29 powerful transmitters, Radio Free
Europe broadcasts up to 20 hours of truth a day
to five key satellite countries Poland, Czecho
slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria. And
how the Communist bosses fear it I
Each dollar you contribute sponsors a Minute
of Truth on Radio Free Europe. How
many minutes will you give?
Support Radio Froo Europe $nd your Truth Dollars to: CRUSADE
for
FREEDOM
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE