Studs, Talent, Cave Junction
Victors in Rogue Valley Loop
ROOIT VS.I.1.FV
M AGIC STANDINGS W.
Mixllord
Cave Junction
fitendalt 4
Prt
1 noo
.7.V)
.300
.23S
.123
Talent
Bull rails
Camp Whit
Grant Pass
With another sharp chucking
chore by Jerry Bartow, who also
wielded the most potent
bludgeon of the day, the Med-
ford Cheney Studs cleared a big
hurdle Sunday in their quest for
the Rogue Valhsv league base -
ball championship.
Bartow tossed a three-hitter
s me aiuas cnppea uienaaie
o to o and extended their un
beaten skein to eight games in
the RVL.
Clendale stayed in third place
in the loop despite the loss but
had company at that position
when Ashland-Talent joined the
Loggers by thumping Butte Falls
10 to 3. Cave Junction was more
scure in second spot with an
8 to 4 victory over Grants Pass
in the other Sunday game.
Homer Spoils Shutout ,
Ray Munyon ruined Bartow's
opportunity for a shutout. The
Mcdford thrower held the Log
gers to one safe swat over the
first eight innings. Pinch-hitter
Buddy Smart led off the
ninth with single but was
forced out by Bob Stolz. Then
Wayne Berg received the only
walk Bartow gave up during
the afternoon. Munyon followed
with a three-run homer blast
over the right field wall to ac
count for all the Glendale
scoring.
Collecting a three-bagger and
two doubles in four times at
O Dat, Bartow drove in three runs.
Jerry Droscher put over two of
the Stud markers with a single
and Ed Reinking's sacrifice fly
out produced the other batted in
run. The two other Medford
runs crossed the plate on errors.
John Kovenz was another
heavy slugger for the Studs
with two doubles in four trips
and Larry Perkuii hit two for
five.
Bunt Misfires
Bartow struck out Loggers 12
times. Eleven of the putouts by
the Studs were recorded on
ground fielding chances. Four
of the outs came from three fly
balls, one of which was turned
into a double play when Jack
Snelling popped to Bartow on a
misfired bunt attempt.
Medford clouted Glendale's
starting hurler, Dwayne Miller,
for eight of Its nine hits. Miller
walked only one man and fan
ned four but he hit four Stud
batters with pitches, which
could have had more serious
' consequences. One hit Eldon
Francis on the top of the head
but the reserve Medford catcher
got up almost immediately to
trot out to first base and con
tinue in the game. Another toss
was a painful one on Frank
Rector'i arm.
Francis replaced Manager
Frank Roelandt when he suffer
ed a finger injury in the seventh
inning.
Horn On Error
The Studs scored first in the
second inning on a double by
Kovenz, Roelandt's groundout
and an error. With Kovenz on
third, Miller unleashed a wild
pitch. Munyon retrieved the
ball quickly enough to discour
age Kovenz from a try to come
home but Munyon's throw to
Miller, who had come into the
plate, got away from the pitcher
and Kovenz took advantage of
the chance.
Droscher was hit by a pitch
in the fifth inning and went to
second base on Rector's sacrifice.
Bartow cracked the ball to right
field and was able to get to sec
ond base but Droscher, who had
held up on the fly ball, stopped
after reaching third. An error
on a ball hit by Reinking got
Droscher home.
Kovenz two-based again in the
sixth inning. Ron Owings and
Roelandt were hit by pitches
and Droscher singled for two
runs. A base on balls, two hit
batters, fielder's choice, Bar
tow's double and Reinking's fly
out compiled four runs in the
eighth inning.
Cotton Homers
Talent clubbed out 13 hits
while pitcher Mark Fitch was
limiting Butte Falls to four.
Pete Cotton sparked the hitting
with four safeties in five times
up, including a homer with one
man on in the second inning.
Ron Weinhold hit two for two
and Clyde Smith two for four
including a double.
Big innin? for Talent was the
fifth with three runs., on singles
Crocker, Smith
Take Homestead
Hot Springs, Va. (W Fay
Crocker and Marilynn Smith
saved their lowest bid for the
fourth round and shot an eight
under women's par 66 Sunday to
win the Homestead Women's
Four-Ball golf championship.
They went into the final
round trailing the 54-hole lead
ers. Louise Suggs, Sea Island,
Ga.. and Mickey Wright. San
Diego, Calif., by five strokes.
Miss Crocker of Montevideo,
Uruguay, and Smith of Wichita,
Kans., brought their 72-hole
total to a 15-under women's par
281 with their sensational per
formance Sunday. They finished
four strokes ahead of the second-place
Suggs-Wright combi-natiof?.
SPORTS
Ed Machen
1 L D-l.-
MClnTS 'UuKci
!
AH M OC H n
WW 1 M J
New York W Eddie
Machen and Alex Miteff, two
unbeaten heavyweights, will
risk their perfect records in the
two outstanding fights on this
week's boxing sche'dule.
Machen of San Francisco is
favored at 13-5 to lick big Bob
Baker of Pittsburgh in a ABC
TV 10-rounder at Chicago Sta
dium Wednesday night. Machen,
ranked second among contend
ers, won all his 21 bouts, 14 by
knockouts.
Young Miteff of Argentina
seeks his 11th straight victory
in a nationally televised and
broadcast NBC 10-rounder with
Julio Mederos of Cuba at the
new Capitol Arena, Washington,
D.C.. Friday night. Miteff is
favored at 3-1. Neither Miteff,
Mederos nor Baker are ranked
among the top 10.
The week's boxing schedule
includes:
Monday New York St.
Nick's Bobby Bell vs. Bobby
Courchesne; Bristol, Conn.
Roland Lastarza vs. Al Ander
son; Sydney, Australia Ray
Riojas vs. Russell Sands.
Tuesday Portland, Ore.
Charley Powell vs. Jeff Dyer;
Houston, Tex. Willie Pep vs.
Russ Hague.
Wednesday Chicago Sta
dium Eddie Machen vs. Bob
Baker.
Thursday Los Angeles
Cisco Andrade vs. Wallace (Bud)
Smith; Minneapolis Del Flan
agan vs. Gil Turner; Boston
Tony Vernaias vs. Eddie Prince.
Friday Washington Capitol
Arena Alex Miteff vs. Julio
Mederos. '
Saturday Hollywood, Calif.
Billy Peacock vs. Noel Hum
phreys; Glace Bay, N.S. Yvon
Durelle vs. Chubby Wright.
Hoad Beaten
By Gonzales
Forest Hills, N.Y. (IB
Pancho Gonzales proved again
that he is king of the pro tennis
wdrld and now promoter Jack
Kramer can only hope that big
Pancho doesn't turn out to be a
financial prophet, too.
Gonzales completed a 5-0
clean sweep in Kramer's "Tourn
ament of Champions" Sunday
by whipping Jack's new rookie
gate attraction. Lew Hoad of
Australia, 9-7, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.
That was the third beating in
five matches in the tourney for
fair-haired Hoad. And Kramer
must remember painfully that
Gonzales warned him this might
happen. Pancho didn't want to
play in the tournament because
he thought losses suffered by
Hoad might hurt the gate for
the Gonzales-Hoad world tour
starting next winter.
Bob Atkinson
City Champ
Portland f Bob Atkin
son Jr. defeated Eddie Beck 3
and 2 Saturday to win the Port
land city golf title.
Mrs. Dale Hilts sank a 20-foot
putt to win the women's crown
from Elaine Porritt of Eugene
on the 38th hole.
by Smith, Jim McAbee, Cotton
and Ray Weinhold and a stolen
base by Smith.
Fitch struck out seven and
walked four while Gary
Hueners, hurling for Butte Falls,
whiffed two and issued five
bases on balls.
BOX:
Glendale
Stolz, cf
Berg, lb
AB
. 4
. 3
H PO
Munyon.
4
Prestianni. as .
Harbour, rf 4
Snellings. 3b 3
Va.clinta If 3
Reynolds. 2b . 2
Humphrey!, 2b 1
Miller, p 2
Brown, p 0
-Smart 1
Tolsll 31 3
Singled for Brown
3 24
In 9th.
Medford
Reinking:. If
Perkins. 2b
Cooney. lb
Kovenz. cf .
Owings. as
Roelandt. c .
AB
. 4
. 3
S
4
. 2
. 2
. 0
Pf
0
2
11
1
0
6
S
O
1
1
Francis.
Droscher. rf 3
Rector. 3b 2
Bartow, p 4
Glendale
Medford
000 000 003 3
010 012 04x 8
Runs batted in Reinking. Droscher
2. Rartow 3. Munyon 3. Two-base hits
Kovenz. 2 Bartdw 2. Three-base hit
Bartow. Home run Munyon. Sac
rifices Rector. Reinking. Stolen base
Kovenz. Double plays Prestianni to
Berg. Bartow to Cooney. Left on bases
Medford 7. Glendale 2. Bases on
balls Off Bartow 1. oft Miller 1.
Strikeouts By Bartow 2. Miller 3.
Eight hits and 8 runs of Miller in T 1 a
innings: 1 hit and no runs off Brown
in 23 of inning. Earned runs Medford
6. Glendale 3. Hit by pitcher Dros
cher. Owings, Roelandt. Francis. Rec
tor (all by Miller i. Wild pitches
Miller 2. Losing pitcher Miller. Um
pires Jones and Lamb.
LINESCORE:
Ash -Talent . 120 230 20010 13 4
Butte Falls 001 000. 110 3 4 3
Fitch and AlcAbee; Hueners and
Conley,
tIS
4 f taJ T3
STARTING first workout
since May 7 when he was hit
in right eye by ball, Herb
Score takes a bead on the
catcher in Cleveland bull
pen. (International)
Dairy Maids
Cop 2 Tilts
At Eugene
Rogue Valley Dairy Maids
Softball team subdued the Sa
lem Shamrocks and Eugene Mc
Culloch Chain Saw yesterday
after tying and losing to the Mc
Culloch women's nine Saturday
in games at Eugene.
Pat Barron chucked a three
hit decision, walking one and
striking out seven and Ellen
Callaghan and Bernice Bigham
slapped two hits each in the 3
to 0 verdict over the Shamrocks.
Six Dairy Maids slapped two
hits in the 11 to 4 victory over
the Eugene team.
Doris Hickson threw a five-
hitter against Eugene while the
Maids collected 13 safe swats.
Susan Heacock smacked a three-
run homer for Eugene.
Tie In Nina
On Saturday the Maids and
Mcculloch halted their opener
after nine innings with the score
2-all. Barron held Eugene to
three hits while Rogue Valley
got seven, including two each by
Misses Callaghan and Bigham,
The girls played five innings
in the nightcap which Eugene
won 6 to 1. An error, two singles,
a walk and Heacock's three-bag
ger helped McCulloch to four
runs in the opening stanza. Pat
Schrocder socked two for three
for the Maids.
The Rogue Valley team meets
Dunsmuir, Calif., at Camp White
on Thursday night and Orland,
Calif., on Saturday night. It
will enter the state tourney, Aug.
8-11, at Eugene.
UNESCORE:
md- amn
Dairy Maids 101 010 03 3
bnamrocKs 000 000 0 0 3
Barron and Maine; Nybakke and
Alan ty la.
Dairy Maids 310 203 211 13
McCulloch 000 040 0 4 5
Hirk"n and Maine; Craig, Heacock
e ana McKay.
Saturday Game
Dairy Maids , 100 000 1002 7 1
McCulloch ....... 000 002 0002 3 3
nirron and Maine; DuPois and Mc-
Dairy Maids 010 001 6 3
McCulloch 402 Ox 6 7 1
Hickson and Maiine; Heacock and
McKay.
SEEKING second straight
title, Herb Flam, Beverly
Hills, Calif., wins two match
es in national clay courts
tennis championships at Riv
er Forest, 111. (International)
Brown Champion
In NW Tennis
Tacoma ftp Noel Brown
of Santa Monica, Calif., won the
Pacific Northwest men's singles
tennis title Sunday by defeating
John Been of Shawnee, Okla.,
6-1, 6-1, 6-1.
TENNIS CHAMP
Travemuende, Germany (W
Istvan Sikorski, self-exiled for
mer Hungarian star, won the
men's singles title in the Inter
national Tennis Tournament by
defeating Abe Segal o South
Africa, 6-2, 6-2, Sunday.
.'wt.i?r r3 Nv . I
J
Medford Legion Nine
Winner in Walkathon
Medford American Legion
junior baseball aggregation won
a walkathon victory over a
United States forestry service
team from the Union Creek dis
trict Saturday night.
The Medfordites did prac
tically all the hiking on the base
paths and chalked up a 26 to 7
margin. Only eight hits were
whammed out by the Legion
naires but they were recipients
of 29 free passes to. the bases
off the three chuckers for the
Rogue River forest men.
Short on practice and with a
squad of only nine players, the
Union Creek club, just organ
ized, was making its debut in
competition.
Medford ran up 11 of its runs
in the sixth and final turn at
bat on a total of 11 bases on
balls and four hits including a
triple by Ron Peery, a double
by Bob Pond and singles by
Wayne Allen and Ray Kono
pasek. Seventeen would be Med
ford hitters faced Union Creek
pitchers in the frame.
Six Runs Without Hit
In the third inning Medford
got six runs without a hit. There
were three bases on balls and
four errors. Two runs crossed
the plate on Dick Monroe's sac
rifice bunt. Five Medford runs
were recorded in the fifth in
ning on six walks, a hit batter,
two errors and singles by Jerry
Fields and George Ice.
Biggest Union Creek inning
was the fourth when Mike
O'Brien, Bill Tarr and Bob Bry
an singled and there were two
miscues in accounting for three
runs.
Tarr was the game's leading
swatter with a double and four
Crock Hunter
Lou Kurz in Hardtop Main
Crock Hunter, in his 15-X
overtook Lou Kurz on the final
stretch and won by about a
wheel Saturday night in the
main event of the hardtop auto
races at Valley View speedway.
Kurz m M-7 has led the pack
for 10 laps or better. Elmer Sise-
more, M-43, was third and Bob
McGilvray, V-50, took fourth.
In the special 10 lap special
race, Wayne Lemley, A-57, track
point leader, defeated challenger
Ray Asher, C-I, and now has a
challenge from Sisemore.
Lemley with 22:03 in the
Cyclists Cop
Dreg Honors
Two members of Rogue Val
ley Riders Motorcycle club rode
Triumph machines to victory
Sunday in separate drag races.
At Aurora, Ore., Charles BecK,
Rogue River, took Pat Franzen's
bike first place in the over 40
inch class with 107.96 miles per
hour. Beck also got a first in
the under 40 division with 99.87.
Homer Howell, riding a 30
inch machine in the 30-50 class,
won the cycle competition at
Redding, Calif., his clocking was
not reported.
Childers High
In Rifle Match
Tom Childers was high with
199 out of apossible 210 yester
day as the VFW Rifle and Pis
tol club of Medford held its
third big bore rifle shoot of the
season.
Fifteen members fired the
qualification course "C." Nor
man Parker, M. D. Childers, Ray
Rhoades and Eugene Thigpin
followed in that order. Their
scores were not reported. An
other shoot will be held soon.
Two new members were added
Sunday.
Eight Foot Cherry
Pie Dedicates Town
George, Wash. an This town
newest in the state and cur
rently with a population of 20
was dedicated July 4 with a
cherry pie eight feet square and
cherry punch.
The town's promoter, Charles
E. Brown, said the pie required
200 gallons of cherries and was
baked in a specially constructed
oven.
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singles in five trips to bat.
O'Brien hit two for three. Perry
was the only Medford batter
with more than one hit with
two for three.
Union Creek collected a total
of nine safeties off Medford
pitchers put the locals were not
so liberal with bases on balls.
Issues 17 Walks
Tom Laurence pitched three
innings for the Legion, yielding
four hits, walking one and strik
ing out eight. Wayne Allen went
two innings on the hill, giving
up four hits and three walks
and fanning three. Dennis Barr
was charged with one hit and
one run and walked two and
struck out five in two innings.
Fred Niederinghaus, the Un
ion Creek starting moundsman,
issued 17 bases on balls, allowed
four hits and whiffed four in
4 2 3 innings. Over one inning
Don Minnick gave nine free
passes and three hits and fanned
two. Tarr walked three and gave
up one hit in the last third of
an Inning.
The Union Creek club is made
up of young men, most of them
from out of state, who have sum
mer jobs with the forest service.
It was reported that none of the
nine is on a fire suppression
crew. Kansas, Minnesota, Cali
fornia and Hawaii are repre
sented on the team.
The Medford Legion is await
ing the outcome of district play
off games today and Tuesday. It
will play the winner of the
Roseburg-North Bend series.
LINESCORE:
Union Creek.. 101 310 1 7 II 8
Medford 126 15(11) x 26 8 6
Niederinghaus. Minnick 5. Tarr 6
and O'Brien; Laurence. Allen 4, Barr
6 and Pond. Campbell 3.
Overtakes
trials had fast time of the night.
Sisemore claimed the A trophy
dash prize and Rusty Phillips,
C-10, the B hardware. Trophies
were awarded by Hawkinson
Tire Tread service.
Heat Races
Heat race winners were Blackie
Blackwell, M-16, the first; Phil
lips, the second; Kurz, the third,
and Bob Wilcox, M-3, the fourth.
Ted Sletten, M-97, won the
semi-main, followed by Phillips
and Blackwell in that order.
Sletten was second in the first
heat and Chuck Davis, A-77,
third. Warren Rose, C-52, was
runner - up in the second heat
with Ray Murray, 001, next. Mc
Gilvray trailed Kurz in the third
heat with Bob Jenkins, M-4, in
the third place car. Hunter
claimed the place position in the
fourth heat race and Asher the
show.
CHAMP FORM Wimble
don champion Althea Gib
son of New York returns the
ball to Lois Smith of Glen
view, El. during her first
round match in the National
Clay Court tournament at
the River Forest, DL Tennis
Club. Top-seeded Miss Gib
son defeated Miss Smith,
6-0, 6-0.
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Monday, Julj 22, 1957
McCarthy, Crawford Enter
Baseball's Hall of Fame
Cooperstown, N.Y. (TP)
Ex-Yankee manager Joe Mc
Carthy and former Tiger out
fielder Sam (Wahoo) Crawford
today receive the highest honor
baseball can bestow induction
into the Hall of Fame.
Shortly after McCarthy and
Crawford made their acceptance
speeches and plaques of them
are placed in the shrine, the
Chicago White Sox and St. Louis
Stone Wins Four
Outboard Firsts
Pasco, Wash. (IB Rocky
Stone, Willamina, Ore., collect
ed four first place trophies to
dominate the 15-event North
west regional boat racing cham
pionships on the Columbia river
here Saturday and Sunday in
a field of about 250 entries.
Stone took the B-racing run
about class, the C-service and
outboard hydroplane and the D
service hydroplane divisions.
Ned Collette, Eugene, Ore.,
took the crown in both the C
utility runabout class and the
D-stock hydro.
nnw
Many old friends of Old
will especially welcome
VX "HA iBT
f7t v
loiira
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of the original old bottle
in which Old Quaker first
became famous.
PLEDGE
OF QUALITY
We hereby pledge that
the whiskey in this bottle
Is absolutely and exactly
the same fine Old
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previous bottle.
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Cardinals were listed for a ball
game before a sellout crowd on
picturesque Doubleday field.
The 70-year-old McCarthy,
who quit baseball in 1950 to re
tire to his farm in Amherst, N.Y.
not far from Buffalo, gained
most of his fame while man
aging the Yankees from 1931 to
1946, winning eight pennants
and seven world series during
that span.
A mediocre minor league in
fielder who never played in the
majors, McCarthy made his maj
or league managerial debut with
the Chicago Cubs, whom he
piloted from 1926 to 1930. After
leaving the Yankees, he also
managed the Boston Red Sox
from 1948 to 1950.
Crawford, who was dubbed
"Wahoo" because he came from
Wahoo, Neb., played in the maj
ors 19 years, four years with
Cincinnati and 15 with Detroit.
Now 77 years old, the former
outfilder had a lifetime batting
average of .309 with a total of
2,964 hits.
One of Crawford's former De
troit teammates, Ty Cobb, will
be among the Hall of Famers on
hand for today's ceremonies.
BomriLE
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vtm
B (D HD R BO DJ
Bit' 4 ...-.,, f -a , , v .y H
low i 48 EM
Quaker
the Mnew"
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE HIKE
Others scheduled to attend ar
Carl Hubbell, Ray Schalk, Horn
Run Baker and Frankie Frlsch.
McCarthy and Crawford will re
ceive special plaques from Base
ball Commissioner Ford C.
Frick.
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