Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 28, 1957, Image 13

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    Beavers Shut Out Hollywood
As Borkowski Scores Five,
Helping Team To 11-0 Win
Hollywood Bob Borkowski
batted In five runs on two
doubles, a single and a grand
slam homer Saturday as the
Portland Beavers shutout the
Hollywood Stars, 11-0, in a series
opener at Gilmore field.
Portland collected 18 hits off
three Hollywood pitchers. Each
of the Beaver batters got at
least one hit.
Bob Alexander went all the
way for Portland for his eighth
win of the season, against 11
losses. He allowed only one
walk. The loser was Hollywood
starter Bennie Daniels (12-4).
The Stars threatened to get
on the scoreboard in the ninth
inning, but the rally was nipped
LA Golfer in
Tourney Finals
Colorado Springs, Colo. IW
Defending champion Fred Brown
of Los Angeles, approaching and
putting brilliantly, gained the
finals of the Broadmoor Invi
tational golf tourney Saturday
with a 3 and 1 victory over Jim
English of Denver.
In the other semi-final match,
53-year-old Howard Creel of
Denver won a ragged 2 and 1
decision over Claude Wright of
Denver.
Creel, this year's medalist,
won the Broadmoor champion
ship in 1926 and again in 1938.
Judging from Saturday's form,
he has little chance to win it
from Brown today.
Rudy Hernando
Tennis Champ
Champaign, 111. OPl Little
Rudy Hernando, 17, of Detroit,
time from behind Saturday to
upset top-seeded Chris Crawford
of Piedmont, Calif., 2-1, 6-1,
2-6, 6-1 and 7-5 and thus gain
the western junior tennis cham
pionship. Meanwhile Bobby Siska, 14,
of San Francisco, defended his
1956 western boys title by de
feating Bill Bond of La Jolla,,
Calif., 8-6 and 6-3.
Crawford, top-ranked junior
in the nation, jumped off to. an
impressive start by defeating
Hernando, ninth-seeded in the
tournament, 6-2 in the first set.
quickly. Joe Duhem singled
aboard and went to third on a
double by Bill Hall, but the
threat ended when Pete Naton
hit to third and was out on a
toss to first which ended the
game.
The Beavers scored single
runs in the first, second and
fourth innings, then, widened
their lead with four runs in the
fifth inning on two walks, twq
singles and a double.
Alexander's grand slam homer
came in the eighth inning.
John Carmichael (5-9) and Bob
Thorpe (7-10) will start for the
Beavers in tomorrow's double
header against Bob Garber (8-4)
and Ben Wade (5-7).
Bill Ao-
San Francisco
ernathie allowed only six measly
hits today to lead the Pacific
Coast league leading San Fran
cisco Seals to a 3-1 win over
Vancouver in the opening game
of their series here.
Abernathie now has a 10-1
record for Coast League play this
season. Loser George Bamberger
is 11-6.
The Mounties got their single
tally is in a last minute effort in
the ninth when Buddy Petersen
doubled and Jim Marshall hit
another two bagger to score Pe
terson.
The most astounding moment
of the game came in the fiftn
when Bill Renna hit his 14th
homer of the season. The blast
traveled 570 feet over the clock
in Seals stadium which is 40
feet off the ground. ,
The Seals opened the game
with two runs. Marty Keougn
made first on an error by Peter
son. Albie Pearson doubled down
the right field foul line and
Keough went to third.
Then Grady Hatton singled in
to center field scoring bow
Keough and Pearson.
Tomorrow, the Mounties send
Erv Palica, 10-8, and Charlie
Beamon 8-7 to the mound against
Bill Prout, 3-1, and R. W. Smith,
5-9.
LINESCORE:
Portland .1I0 140 oio 1 1 is l
Hollywood 000 000 000 0 6 1
Alexander and Calderone; Daniels,
Pepper 5, Rowe '8l and Hall. Home
run Borkowski, Por., 8th. three on.
Vancouver -.000 000 001 1 fl 1
San Francisco 200 010 00X 3 10 0
Bamberger. Consuegra (8 and At
well; Abernathie and Sullivan. Home
run Renna, SF.. 5th, none on.
SWOON'S SON UPSET
Chicago IB Manassas, a
bay 4-year-old owned by John
Zitnik, upset Swoon's Son, tine
of the turf's top 10' money win
ners Saturday with a two length
victory in the $125,400 Arling
ton handicap on grass.
Patterson Favored
To Keep Ring Title
New York API Champion
Floyd Patterson and challenger
Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson fin
ished training Saturday, with
Patterson favored at 5-1 for
successful first defense in their
heavyweight title fight at the
Polo Grounds Monday night.
The champ seeks his 19 th
straight victory.
Each tappered off with , light
limbering exercises on the
road and In the gymnasium
for the first independently pro
moted heavyweight champion
ship bout since the late Mike
Jacobs staged Jim Braddock vs.
Joe Louis 20 years ago.
MEDFORDiTRIBUNE
siPdDfflnrs
LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON Rarely photographed Joe
DiMaggio Jr., son of the Yankee baseball star, is pictured
having fun vacationing with his mother, actress Dorothy
Arnold, at the Hotel Tropicana in Las Vegas, Nev. The
15-year-old youngster follows in his father's footsteps,
graduating from Black Fox Military Academy in Los An
geles as a four-letter man in sports. He excelled in base
ball, football, track and basketball.
Their 15-rounder will be tele
vised and broadcast nationally
by NBC at 10 p.m. (EDT) except
The 15-round world heary
weight championship boxing
.match between Floyd Patter
ion and - Tommy (Hurricane)
Jackson will be heard over
radio station KMED (1440 kc)
at 6 p.m. Monday.
for a 75-mile TV blackout In the
New York area.
They are scheduled to break
camp tomorrow and motor into
New York Patterson from
Greenwood Lake, N.Y., and
Jackson from Columbia, N.J.,
where they've been condition
ing since the match was made,
May 24.
It's a return encounter. Before
22-year-old Patterson of Mount
Vernon, N. Y., became the
youngest heavyweight ruler in
history, he won a split 12-round
decision over the eccentric Hur
ricane of St. Albans, N. Y., at
Madison Square Garden," June 8,
1956.
Promoter Emil Lence, the dap
per, five-foot-four dress manu
facturer, who like a little
David is challenging goliath
Jim Norris of the International
Boxing club, expects at least
25,000 and $235,000 for what
may be the last fight in the his
toric Polo grounds.
Sunday. July 28, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN
Eaton Blazes
Into 54-Hole Lead
In Utah Tournament
TO SHARE STUDENT AID
Cambridge, Mass. (IB Al
most half of Harvard Univer
sity's 4,430 undergraduate stu
dents will share in $1.9 million
in student aid this year.
Father Counts Noses
But One left Behind
Ventura API George
Shoemaker, Arcadia, drove off
and left his 8-year-old daugh
ter at a service station Satur
day all because he counted
heads without thinking, police
reported.
Shoemaker had stopped at
the station to gas up. He count
ed four heads presumably
his wife, two children and his
own but forgot that he had a
friend of the children along.
Police reunited the stranded
girl, Judy, with her parents
after notifying the California
Highway Patrol and having it
stop the Shoemakers ai the
outskirts of town. '
Dove Hunting To Be
Permitted in County
. A dove hunting season will be
held in Jackson county in Sep
tember. Yielding to hunter sentiment,
the Oregon state game commis
sion Friday reversed the tenta
- tive decision it made two weeks
ago. Dove shooting will be Sept.
1-22 throughout Oregon. Bag
limit is 10 per day or 10 in
possession.
In formulating tentative regu
lations, the commission had
voted to keep dove hunting
closed in Jackson county while
permitting it elsewhere in the
the state.
Final hunting regulations for
1957 were established by com
missioners at the Friday session.
General deer season will be
Sept. 28-Oct. 18 as determined
in the tentative rules and hunt
er's choice season was kept at
Oct. 19-21, despite some opposi
tion to having any either sex
hunting at all.
Week Added for Elk
Commissioners added a week
to the elk season as temporarily
set up. Final regulations call for
the season to open on Oct. 26.
It will continue through Nov. 11
in the west coast region and
through Nov. 24 in the northeast
and southeast. Hunts are slated
Aug. 24-28 in three southeastern
Oregon sections.
Archery hunts in 11 areas at
varied times will be held as .pre
viously projected. They include
a Dec. 7-22 season in the Rogue
river valley.
Pheasant hunting was set a
weelt ahead of the tentative date.
It will be Oct. 19-Nov. 4. open
ing at 8 a.m. Bag for western
Oregon is two per day and 12
for the season and for eastern
Oregon three per day with 12
in the season.
Valley Quail plans have been
changed to allow hunting in
Jackson and Josephine counties.
Season will be the same dates as
for pheasants with hunting in
eastern Oregon and only in the
two counties in western Oregon.
The commission said that a late
count showed sufficient quail
population in Jackson and Jose- I
phine. Limit is five per day and ;
not more than 10 in possession. ;
Pigeons Sept. 1-30 j
Pigeon hunting will be Sept. ;
1-30 with limit o. six birds per j
day and limit of 30 a season. I
Only buck deer with forked
horns or more can be killed in j
the general season west of the
Cascade summit. East of the Cas-'.
cade crest deer with visible ant-1
lers can be taken. Either sex i
hunting Oct. 19-21 will be al-i
lowed for hunters with, unused j
deer tags. Shooting will be al
lowed in most of Oregon east of
Highway 97 and a part west of
that route. There are exceptions
in central Oregon. Killing is per
mitted within one mile of agri
cultural lands.
Hunter's choice in Jackson
and Josephine counties in the
three-day season will be con
fined to a strip two miles wide
on each side of Rogue river from
two miles above Shady Cove to
two miles below Robertson
bridge.
Information on six controlled
deer hunts will be available
when the synopsis is published.
Bull Elk Regulations
In elk hunting in the west
coast section killing of bulls with
antlers longer than ears will be
permitted in Coos, Curry and
Josephine counties and Douglas
county west of Highway 99
Bulls with three points or better
can be shot elsewhere in the
area. Northeast Oregon limit is
a bull with antlers longer than
ears and in southeast Oregon an
elk of either sex can be taken.
Two-hundred permits in each
of the three antelope areas are
scheduled. Deer and elk hunting
will be permitted in five of the
11 archery areas.
Archery area in the Rogue
valley will be the same as for
last year's extended deer season.
One boundary will extend along
Table Rock rd. from a point two
miles north of Bybee bridge to
Medford. The line will follow
Highway 238 to the Applegate
river at Applegate and will go
northwest to Rogue river and
northwesterly down the Apple
gate river to Rogue river and
northwesterly down the Rogue
to Robertson bridge (13 miles
from Grants Pass). Boundary
will run easterly two miles then
easterly along a line parallel and
two miles from Rogue river and
back to Bybee bridge.
Definite shooting hours for
waterfowl and upland game will
be printed in the hunting regulations.
? n - f k i' ' Xt2
THROWING SMASHING RIGHT to jaw of Bob Baker, Eddie Machen, Redding, Calif,
heavyweight shows ease with which he was able to hit opponent in Chicago 10 rounder.
Judges gave Machen decision at end of bout featured by Baker's ineptness.fnferwittonay
Bendix Trophy Race
Scheduled for Today
Chicago (IP) Six sleek, su
personic jet interceptors will
streak today from Chicago to
Washington, D.C., in the Bendix
Trophy race, hopeful of flying
the first supersonic race ever
held in the United States.
Within an hour after leaving
the air force base at O'Hare in
ternational airport outside Chi
cago, the fan-winged jets will
scream by pylons at Andrews
Air Force base at Washington,
D.C.
The F-102 Delta Dagger Inter
ceptors were to take off from
O'Hare at five-minute intervals,
beginning at 9 a.m. (PST) and
zoom to the nation's capital in
about 50 minutes.
No one is predicting speeds
of the planes, which will fly at
altitudes of 35,000 to 40,000
feet under the control of pilots
from the Air Force Continental
Defense Command.
Experts, however, figure the
existing Bendix record of 666
miles per hour will be topped.
Capt. Manuel J (Pete) Fernan
dez set that mark last year in
a 100-minute flight from George
Air Force base in California to
Oklanihoa City. !
UNDINE"
LET'S GO OCEAN FISHING .
On the II
Blue Boat
Salmon Trolling Bottom Fishing
TWO TRIPS DAILY 7:30 A.M. and 1:30 P.M.
or ALL DAY CHARTER
TOMMY'S SPORT FISHING
Entrance to Citizen's Dock
Kt. 1, Box 972 Crescent City Phone 4561
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when you see the amount of obstruction-free space
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and slash up to 47 per cent off your building budget:
And Butler buildings can be erected in days instead
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What's more, with Butler buildings on the job; you
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Before you build, let us show you how a Butler
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MEDFORD
BLOW PIPE CO., hc
240 E. McAndrews Rd.
Ph. SP 3-6294
By MURRAY M. MOLER
United Press Sports Writer
Salt Lake City HP) Zell
Eaton of Pamona, Calif., his
putter as hot as the bright shirt
he wore, blazed his way into
the 54-hole lead of the $7500
Utah Open golf tournament Sat
urday by shooting a two under
par 68 for a three-quarter mark
total of 206.
Eaton's steady play gave him
a one stroke lead over Smiley
Quick of Downey, Calif., and
Don Collett of San Diego. Quick
had held the leadership in the
tournament for the first two
days despite the handicap of
having to post a $200 bond.
Promises Forfeit
He promised to forfeit the
bond if his conduct was as bad
this year as it has been in pre
vious Utah Opens.
Saturday, he shot a one over
par 71 when his chip shots be
gan fading. Collett, a 31-year-old
Chief Petty Officer in the
Navy's Public Information Of
fice at San Diego, was the Haz
ing star most of the way. After
eight holes, Collett, a native of
Midvale, Utah, was four under
par, but his luck faded on the
way home and he wound up
with a 69 just one under regu
lation figures.
Defending champion Dick
Lundahl of Pasadena posted a 68
over the long, narrow blazing
hot Fort Douglas course to take
third place at 208.
Bud Ward of San Mateo, had
an even par 70, for a three-quarter
total of 210. If Ward had not
been penalized two strokes, for
dropping a ball wrong on some
repaired ground yesterday, he
would have been in a tie with
Lundahl. ,
Youthful Tony Lema of Elko,
Nevada, a former Oakland and
San Francisco pro, was in fifth
place at 211.
Beat Nine Holes -
The best nine holes of the
third round were turned In by
Marlowe Quick, assistant pro at
Salt Lake City's Bonneville
course, who made a 67. ' This
gave him a tie at 212 with Cliff
Whittle of Twin Falls, Idaho.
Also tied at 212 were Billy
Johnston of Provo, Utah, Walt
Harris of Salt Lake City and
Al Feldman of Tacoma, Wash.
Tommy Williams of Ogden,
Utah and Eddie. Hamilton of
Oceanside, Calif., were next in
line with 213.
At 214 were J. D. Taylor "of
Denver and Ockie Eliason of
Tacoma.
The top amateurs were Babe
Hiskey of Pocatello, Idaho and
Lou North of Salt Lake City
with 215's. They were tied with
pros Jim Haynes of Tuscon,
Ariz., and Billy Korns of Cald
well, Idaho.
Mike Demassey of Stockton,
Calif., had a 36-37 73 Saturday
for a third round total of 216
and a tie with John Zontek of
Perkins, Calif., and Jack Mann
of Los Serranos, Calif.
Etaton said he had only one
bad shot out of his 68 total to
day and felt he played about as
perfect golf as I can. He added
he hoped he would be paired
tomorrow with both .Quick and
Ward, neither of whom has any
love for Eaton.
"If there's any fighting to be
done we might as well do it out
here on the course with the
clubs," Eaton said with a laugh.
MOWING HAZARD
Valparaiso, Ind. (ID C. V.
Adams, 63, was knocked down
by a passing car which hit his
elbow as he swung his lawn
mower around, extending his
right arm out over the street.
Angels Lead .
Score 3-0 Win
Sacramento, Calif., July 27
IW John Jancse scattered five
hits Saturday night to lead Los
Angeles to a 3-0 win over Sacra;
mento in a Pacific Coast league
series opener.
Los Angeles 8 0
Sacramento - 0 S 0
Jancse and Teed; Watlrlns. Coen (91
and N'eal. Home run Hamrlc, La.,
4th, none on. '
Forty-Niners
Start Drilling
Moraga, Calif., July 27 (OT i
The San Francisco Forty Niners
of the National Football league
opened training at St. Mary'
college Saturday with 32 rookies
and 9 veterans answering the
first roll call.
Coach Frankie Albert said the
balance of the squad 24 old
hands was scheduled to re
port for duty next Saturday.
One rookie was cut from the
squad when he failed to pass a
physical examination. Doctors
said Bill Yelverton, all south
eastern conference lineman from
Mississippi, had not recovered
sufficiently from surgery to cor
rect a knee injury to permit
him to play this year.
REMOTE MUSIC
Boston UPl Boston Uni
versity staged six performances
of Bizet's opera, "Carmen,"
without an orchestra in the
theater The orchestra played in
another building because the BU
theater has no pit for musicians,
and the singers heard the music
by a loudspeaker system.
The large white sea bird call
ed the gannet is related to the
pelican. L
IPLAYyGOLF!
OAK KNOLL ffj PUBLIC
GOLF COURSE
East of Ashland Highway 66
NO monthly dues! NO initiation fees
Season Tickets: $35 Single $50 Family
Weekly Rates $1 .00 for 9 Holes-$ 1 .50 for 1 8 Holes
Week Ends $2.00 All Day
Golf Clubi and Carts Rentals C.L. Sullivan, P.G.A. Professional
MINOR TUNE-UP
THIS MONTH ONLY
'49 to '57 Ford Passenger Cars and Light Trucks
We Will Check COMPRESSION
YOU'LL GET BACK
THAT NEW CAR
WITH THIS
FORD
ENGINE TUNE-UP
FIRST -then if OK
9 Install New Points and Condenser
Scope Distributor
9 Set Timing
9 Adjust and Clean Plugs
Adjust Carburetor
Clean Fuel Pump Bowl
Adjust and Check Fan and Generator Belts
Check Battery and Cables
ALL
THIS
FOR
ONLY
Use Our Easy Budget Plan
$joj45
CRATER LAKE MOTORS
Main & FirSts. KsZWlD Phone SP 3-4547
"WHERE GOOD SERVICE IS A MUST"