bounties Fight to
Padres Keep Them
Br JIM HEALY
United Preti Sports Writer
Vancouver fought its way
back into second place in the
Pacific Coat league Wednesday
and San Diego, not wanting to
esee anyone lonely, trotted along
to keep the Mounties company.
The Mounties came by their
new position with a 3-1 drub
bing of San Francisco, while
the Pads took the measure of
220 Golfers
Shoot for
$50,
,000 Pot
Chicago rtfl More than 220
golfers began Tarn O'Shanter's
All American Tournament today
with their shots geared more for
next week's lucrative World
than for this week's $25,000
take.
The World will pay the men
pros, of which some 150 played
today, a total of $101,200 with
the top prize a guaranteed $50,
000 cash, the largest single pay-
oii on the pro tour.
Hence, if experimenting this
week could pay off next week,
the pros probably will be willing
to lose a stroke or two in the
$25,000 event if the venture
might save , a stroke or two in
the World.
Already the field has been cut
somewhat in two days of qual
ifying from which the top 72
scorers and ties in the men's pro
division advanced to the 72-hole
four-day tourney. After 36 holes
the field will be reduced further
and only the select top scorers
this week will get into the
World.
Competition will be held
among men pros, women pros,
men amateurs and women ama
teurs. Virtually every "name"
player in the game will be in the
event and most of them were
exempt from the qualifying tests
and will play their first round
today. Among the group was
Masters champion Doug Ford,
also the leading money winner
with earnings of $39,546.55,
Open champion Dick Mayer, and
PGA champion Lionel Hebert 1
Hunting and Fishing
Southern Oregon
By MELREES
About a month ago while fish
ing one of our central Oregon
lakes I observed one of the
strangest, most productive meth
ods of fly fishing that I have
ever seen.
This lake in which fly-fishing
only is permitted, is quite shal
low over much of its area with
the water varying in depth from
approximately four to 15 feet.
It is fed by very cold streams
and is extremely clear.
There are some fairly deep
spots in the lake but the fish
(Eastern Brook) roam over the
shallow parts evidently looking
for food.
Now the usual method for
fly fishing a lake of this type is
to anchor the boat (and there
were many who did) and to
cast a long line, sink the fly
and slowly retrieve it. Of course
if one works the area thorough
ly and doesn't connect it
pays to up the anchor and move
to a new spot. This can be very
time consuming.
Unique Method
The method I saw used was
unique in that it allowed the
angler to cover a large area
without scaring the fish. The
anglers were a boy of about 15
years and his grandpa and
grandma. They had an alumin
um boat and a motor and were
experts at their type of fly fish
ing. They waited until the wind
put a "skiff" or riffle on the
water then running their motor
out into the lake they cut it
off and proceeded to drift to
wards the shore. They only used
about thirty feet of line witii
about a nine foot leader. They
cast this out in front of them,
raised the rod tip until the rod
was vertical and roll-cast the
fly back out in front again. This
was repeated until they neared
the shore when they started the
motor and went back out for
another drift.
Grandpa tied the flies and
most of them resembled nymphs
although there were a couple
of "nightmares"' with a little
gold tinsel wrapped around the
hook and a couple of gold tinsel
streamers. I don't know what it
was supposed to represent but
it worked. '
Effective Method
When this method is analyzed
it can be readily seen why it was
so effective. On the roll-cast the
fly was flipped back over some
water that had not been dis
turbed for the wind had moved
the boat that much. As the fly
hit the water it sank quickly
due to its scant tie and was re
trieved through the water oy
raising the rod tip.
It must have appeared very
Then, to confuse
things even more, Hollywood
was relegated to third place as
a result of a 6-5 loss to a pesky
Portland squad.
Sacramento rounded out the
loop with a 9-8 win over Los
Angeles, but taking 13 hits to
do it.
The win gave Vancouver a
3-2 edge in its abbreviated ser
ies with the Seals Morrie Mar
tin won the contest, going the
distance. Harry Dorish started
and ftst for San Francisco.
The Seals scored their first
and only run in the second.
Vancouver tied it up in the third
then went ahead with tallies in
the seventh and eighth.
Metro Thumbed
Mountie Manager Charlie
Metro
1ST
was heaved from the
game for arguing with Umpire
Emar Sorenson who called a
Martin bunt foul.
The San Diego win belonged
completely to starting and win
ning hurler Dick Brodowski.
Brodowski allowed Seattle only
two hits during the contest,
He retired the sides in order
in every frame except the fourth
when Seattle tied it 3-3. But the
Paris mm hark to take the
j game with an unearned run in
the eighth frame.
Al Jones homered for San
Diego, " opening the scoring in
the second.
The Beavers, bent on revenge
for. the .double loss they took
Tuesday, jumped all over Holly-
Canadian
Clubs Arrive
Portland HP) The Edmonton
Eskimos, champions of Canadian
professional football, arrive to
day for their game Friday night
against the British Columbia
Lions at Multnomah stadium.
The Lions will fly to Portland
Friday.
The Canadian teams play on
a field 110 yards long and 65
yards wide. Canadian teams are
allowed only three downs in
stead of four as in American
football.
Both teams are well stocked
with former American stars.
lifelike to the fish for they real
ly ate it up.
I gave it a good try with ex
cellent success using a number
of different ties of flies, ie.,
Tied Down Caddis, Brown Hack
le Yellow and a weird bucktail
creation with no name but com
posed of some deer hair for the
tail, a yellow chenille body and
wings of deer'hair swept straight
back. It had a lifelike action in
the water and produced even
without a name.
I don't fee! that this method
would work too well except in
a more or less shallow lake for
when, as in most lakes, one is
fishing the shores in the eve
ning there wouldn't be enough
water to drift. If, however, you
find a fairly extensive feeding
area it is a very good bet.
Latest Reports on Fishing Front
Fish Lake Fishing has been
good during the past week and
is expected to continue good
over the week end. Best lure
is flatfish. Many fish are being
taken on worms and eggs'.
Klamath Lake Bob Sloan
of Harriman's Resort says that
things are really great there
now. The 4-pound-or-better club
is growing and Bob lists recent
initiates as follows: Leo A. Han
Ion, Van Nuys. Calif. 9 lbs;
Pat Lee, Sun Valley, Calif. 4 Vi;
Roland Gum. Modesto, Calif. ri.
9H, 43i, 44; Dave Clover,
Ashland, 5', 4; Roy Swanson,
Van Nuys, Calif. 94, 4V2: Hope
Palmer, Grants Pass, 4; Gordon
Russell, Portland, 634, 5, 4U;
Vince Rutherford, Portland, 4;
Harold and Kay O'Conner, New
man, Calif. 4, S'.i; Winnie Grif
fin, Portland, 6; Charles Ham
mond, Portland, 4Vi; Leroy
O'Conner, Newman, Calif. 4;
Ralph Griffin, Portland. 8' 4,
4?4- More than 60 per cent of
the fish are hitting flatfish Andy
Reekers next. This fishing will
continue to be good long after
the kids have gone back to
schools and their dads back to
work, according to Sloan. Some
excellent fishing can be had
here in September but most
anglers have turned their atten
tion to hunting by that time.
Gold Beach Johnny Wolf
reports that the salmon fishing
at the mouth of the Rogue is
fair both from shore using -pinners
and from boats with bait.
Steelhead are starting to hit
above tidewater nothing
startling, but a good start.
Chetco Johnny Hewitt of,
Hewitt's Anchorage at Harbor,
Oregon says fishing here is slow.
Smelt were in by the thousands
the early part of the week but
this can't be depended on.
Scanty reports from Diamond
Lake indicate that the fishing
there is slow.
Seattle, 4-3.
Second,
Company
, tfood starting pitcher Hugh
yepper in ,me intra ior i i v e
runs. Hollywood came back
with two in the third and two
in the seventh, but Portland
managed to stay ahead through
out the evening.
Two For Pettit
Paul Pettit, a dangerous
clutch hitter, banged a two run
homer for the Stars in the third
and another in the ninth with
none on. Solly Drake and Frank
Craswell slammed out round
trippers for Portland.
The only thing surprising in
Sacramento was the score. With
18 hits, at least one of every
man. in the lineup but two of
the relief pitchers, the Solons
should have breezed through the
contest.
As' it was Al Heist won the
game in the seventh when he
doubled to drive in a skin-ot
the-teeth tie creaking run.
Steve Bilko hit his 33rd hom
er of the year for Los Angeles,
and the Angles used five pitch
ers during the battle.
Heist hit three time during
the night, batting in three Sac
ramento runs. Jerry Hartsfield
collected two runs off two hits
for the losers.
THE LINESCORES:
Vancouver 001 000 110 3 11
San Francisco .. 010 000 000 1 6
Martin and Atwell; Dorish, iKely (8)
ana banaowsKi.
San Diego -.L It 100 010 4
Seattle . 000 300 000 3
Brodowski and Jones; Rabe.
nedy 19 and Alyward.
9 0
2 3
Ken-
Portland 005 000 001 B 10 1
Hollywood 002 000 201 5 9 4
Alexander. Shore m and Bottler:
Pepper. Garner (3). Churn (7), Waters
j ana iaion.
Los Angeles 202 004 0008 8 1
Sacramento 201 300 30x 9 18 1
Birrer. Mickens 14). George (6),
nugnes (hi, iaaoraa ibi ana reed;
Bowman, Coen 6, Candini (8, Watkins
r8) and Neal.
GROTH REJOINS
Detroit Hfl Johnny Groth, a
sensation when first breaking in
to nfejor league baseball in 1948
with the Detroit Tigers, rejoins
the Bengals today at Boston in
a mgve to boost the injury-riddled
Detroit outfield.
Groth, 31,. an outfielder, was
purchased Wednesday from the
Kansas City Athletics for an un
disclosed price but apparently
over the $10,000 waiver amount.
BELGIAN TOPS CHAMP
Oslo, Norvay (IP) World rec
ord holder Roger Moens of Bel
gium failed to better his own
mark in the 800-meter event
here Wednesday, but he man
aged to beat America's Olympic
England's Derek Johnson in
1:46.0. Moens holds the world
mafic of 1:45.7. Courtney was
timed in 1:46.2, while Johnson
clocked 1:46.9.
The first presentation at New
York's Metropolitan Opera
House was on Oct. 22, 1883.
Gounod's "Foust" was the attraction.
to'
TAKING TIME OUT to line up for photographers, these college all -stars are busy these
days drilling at Evanston, 111. for gami with New York Giants Aug. 9. From left first row:
Ron Kramer, Earl Leggett, Jim Parker, Jerry TubSs. Back row: Jim Brown, Del Schaff
ner, Don Bossier, John Brodie, Paul Hornung, Len Dawson and Jon AmetUInternational)
City of Pythagoras Being
Reborn After 2,500 Years
Taranto, Italy nn One of
the richest ancient Greek cities
on the Italian mainland, destroy
ed 2,500 years ago by earth
quakes, invasions and malaria,
is gradually returning to life
thanks to modern insect poisons.
It is the city of Metaponto,
some 35 miles southeast of this
Adriatic naval base the city of
philosopher and mathematician
Pythagoras, which six centuries
before the birth of Christ had a
population of 40,000 and im
mense wealth.
Until the end of World War II
the site of the once-thriving city
was a dead desert, broken only
by fragments of ancient struc
tures jutting from the sun
drenched layer of reddish earth.
Only a few shepherds ventured
there with their flocks, defying
the malaria-bearing anopheles
mosquitoes.
The rebirth of Metaponto as
an inhabited community began
when the Allied health services
introduced insect-killing chemi
cals. Mosquitoes miraculously
disappeared, and land-hungry
peasants settled in to farm an
area which for 25 centuries had
lain idle and unproductive.
The new Metaponto is both
modern and ancient. As the
ploughs cut through the arid
land, priceless remnants of the
PROVING BIG ONES don't alwetTrS
Blakeslee stands beside a 320-pound sea bass he caught in
gulf of Lower California near La Paz, e&o.f International)
MedfordWTribune
SIPaDIETrS
Studs Pitchers Yield
No Hits in Defeating
Talent-Ashland 3-1
A pair of Medford pitchers
left Talent-Ashland without a
hit in a tight non-league game
which the Studs won 3 to 1 at
the fairgrounds last night.
Jerry. Sides faced 21 batters
in six innings for the Studs,
striking out six. He was relieved
by Jerry Bartown in the sixth
who whiffed seven of 10 batters.
Both men .allowed one walk
apiece.
Gene Parenfwent the distance
for Talent-Ashland. The smooth
moundsman allowed 11 hits,
struck out seven, and walked
two.
The Talent team made the
scoring column first.
Opening Frame
In the opening frame am
Welch got on on a fielder s
choice, and went to third when
Clyde Smith bounced one to
third base which the baseman
overthrew.
. Welch scored when first base
man jacK cooney s raraw on
a base line tap by McAbee was
late.
Medford waited until the
fourth inning. Then John Ko-
venz slapped his second double
of the evening, and Ron Owings
followed with a triple down first
base foul line. A sacrifice fly
by Frank Rector brought Ow-
old city came to light. So inter
esting were the first discoveries
that the superintendent of art
for the Apulia region placed
some areas under strict off-limits
rules and ordered a series of
systematic excavations.
The archeological work is now
being carried out under the di
rection of Prof. Nevio Degrassi,
and the area is rapidly becom
ing a "must" for the world's art
students.
There are already many inter
esting things to be seen of the
ancient city, but Degrassi is in
no hurry to bring more to light.
He does not care to start new
excavations and leave them half
completed for lack of funds.
As in the region north of
Rome, where clandestine dig
gers loot the tombs of the fabu
lous Etruscans, so in Metaponto
clandestine diggers set out by
the dozen ea,ch time a new spot
of interest is discovered by arch
eologists. The 'Clandestini." as they are
called, are not interested in the
columns of the lost temples, but
in the easily saleable art objects
which undoubtedly abound
especially in the lost treasure
of Metaponto.
According to legend, the in
habitants of the Greek city bur
ied their gold and jewels 'vhen
1
o
with run
ings
across
number
two.
A security run was collected
by the Studs in the eighth in
ning. Jerry Droscher poked out
a single and stole second. Rector
got another RBI with a solid
double to left field.
Outstanding Play
The outstanding field play of
the evening followed, when with
Rector in scoring position on sec
ond, Jerry Bartow shot a high
line drive that looked as if it
would skim the glove of Talent
second sacker Bill Welch.
Instead, Welch leaped and
stretched, snagged the drive, and
tossed to Pete Cotton covering
the base to double Rector:
For Medford, Kovenz hit three
for four: Jack Cooney did the
same with two singles and a
double: Reinking got a double
and single: Owings picked up
a triDle: Rector got a double
and Droscher a single.
Next games in the Rogue Val
ley league are scheduled for this
Sunday. Medford goes to Butte
Falls, Glendale to Talent, ana
Grants Pass to Cap White.
Ann 5TTTT)!! 2 CO
SPTS
I ivrcrmiR- R H E
Tatnt-Arhland 100 000 000 1 0 2
Medford Studs 000 200 Olx 3 11 3
Gene Parent and Jim McAbee: Jer
ry Sides, Jerry Bartow (6) and Eldon
Francis. o
COMMANDER DIES !
Lafayette, Calif. flPt Maj. .
Gen. James L. Bradley, U. S. A. :
(ret.), 65, who commanded the ,
96th Infantry Division in the Pa-I
cific during World War II, in- j
eluding the Okinawan campaign,,
died Tuesday. o
Spartacus, the gladiator who re-!
volted against Rome, attacked ;
Metaponto with his rebellious ,
hordes and destroyed most of i
it. !
The diggers are also search- j
ing for two equestrian statues ,
which, according to Roman, hist-;
ortians, were elected in honor of !
Euphemus and Euritus. !
The deeds of these two ancient
citizens of .Metaponto inspired
the French popular novel, "The
Two Sergeants," and its film
version. Euphemus was a follow
er of Pythagoras, hostile to Di
onysus the Tyrant. Dionysus '
sentenced him to death, but Eu-1
phemus obtained a three-month j
stay of execution in order to go
to the island of Samos and settle '
his interests. His friend, Eur-'
itus, offered himself as hostage, j
A tempest delayed the return :
of Euphemus. When Euritus was j
on the point of being executed,
his friend returned after going
through all sorts of hardships, j
Dionysus was touched by his j
tale and set both free. The in- j
habitants of Metaponto remind- j
ed posterity of this story by the I
two statues. 1
Thursday. August I, 1957
Softball Games
At Camp White Memorial
field tonight, first game.
Parsons Motors against Na
tional' Guard. Second game.
M and W Chain Saw against
Rogue Valley Dairy Maids.
First game begins at 7 p.m.
Intermediate
Games End
Season
SOVTHERV OREGON
JIMOR BASEBALL
Intermediate League
(Final standings)
. . W L
Medford 6 0
Central Point 4 2
Ashland 1 4
Talent 0 5
Pet.
1.000
.666
.200
,0C0
Two lopsided games finished
out the sea.;on for the quartet of
teams in the Southern Oregon
Junior Baseball intermediate
league yesterday.
" Medford whipped Talent 18 to
1 here in the afternoon, and Cen
tral Point blanked Ashland 15
to 0 at the Camp White field last
night. . .
The results left Medford at the
top of the league with a six
ought undefeated season record;
Central Point, Ashland and Tal
ent in that order rounded out the
standings. A make-up game be
tween Talent and Ashland was
not played.
In yesterday's encounters, Jim
Dexter homered for Medford,
and knocked two more singles to
get three for four. Larry Ham
mack went two for two at the
plate for the same team.
At the Camp White field in
the evening, Bill Anhorn and
Dennis Fisher combined mound
duties to keep Ashland hitless.
Fisher struck out three, Anhorn
six.
Dennis Tfaff, Central Point
catcher, blasted a home run
with two on in : the third and
John Anhorn clouted a round
tripper with one on the follow
ing inning.
I.INESCORES: R H K
Talent 000 01 1 3 11
Medford 467 lx 18 12 4
Or Jacobs and M. Jacobs; Bud Low
ery and Jim Beery.
Ashland 000 00 0 0 3
Central Point 417 3x 15 10 2
Wilson. King (4) and Johnson: Bill
Anhorn, Dennis Fisher (5) and Dennis
Pfaff.
ROOKIES QUIT
Baltimore OH Apparently
professional football or the
training phase of it isn't all
that it's cracked up to be. Rook
ies Ted Schwanger and Terry
Sweeney of Tennessee Wednes
day quit the Baltimore Colts
training camp, making it four
rookie Colts who have left the
game in two days. Halfbacks
Joe Guido and John Lee quit
the squad on Tuesday.
FISHING REPORT GIVEN
FOR WESTERN OREGON
Portland (IP) The weekly
report on fishing conditions pre
pared by the State Game Com
mission: . Northwest: Salmon fishing
good off mouth of Columbia riv
er; searun cutthroat fishing im
proving in north coast streams;
planting has improved Nestucca,
Little Nestucca, Wilson and
Three Rivers; Devils lake trout
fishing slow'to fair; Yaquina bay
offshore salmon .fishing slow:
Alsea sea-run cutthroat fishing
fair in tidewater; Clackamas
should be good from Estacada
to Austin Hot Springs along the
Clackamas; Williamette and
tributaries in Oakridee area
should be excellent; fish also
being taken from Dexter dam
down to Eugene on Williamette;
McKenzie and tributaries fair
to good; McKenzie pass lakes
fair.
n
UCK'S
838 W. McAndrews Rd.-Phone SP 3-1666
WE GIVE NORTHERN STAMPS
Beginning Monday
N3lleyS Cream Flake Best Food '
Potato Chips Shortening Salad Oil (V
IQjPnTL Reg. 39c I 3-pounds. ... ' Pint..
kOMSi .Special
VPOnwi Laura l fZZl Cider f7SH7?n
mm IW Scudder AlEjC Vinegar 0C
flqj''iB' Mm M Mayonnaise iJi qt. Gal. Vi
Jim's Meats
BEEF
ROASTS
Pound
431 sl69-
FRESH GROUND
BEEF.
BEEF
Vi or Whole
41 lb-
Hind
Quarter
51 lb-
Sport
Parade
New York- Wl Congress,
the governor of the state of
Washington and the National
Boxing association are on. trial
today in the case of amateur
boxer Pete Rademacher.
Rademacher is the Olympic
heavyweight champion. But
Rademacher, who is scheduled
to fight heavyweight champion
Floyd Patterson at Seattle on
Aug. 22, is a comparative novice
who never has gone more than
three rounds and never had a
professional bout.
He is a potential corpse.
Just as the police stop people
from destroying themselves, so
with the evidence at hand
should those with the power
Congress, Washington's govern
or or the NBA step in and pre
vent this dangerous farce.
"I want to get the feel of one
good pro fight," Rademacher
said recently.
Should See Jackson
He could get it first hand to
day from a man named Tommy
Jackson. Jackson had 35 pro
fights before he faced Patter
son's .sledging fists Monday
night. Against Patterson, a pun
ishing puncher, he was a hu
man shock absorber whose kid
neys collapsed . in painful pre
test. "They tell me I can make
$10,000 out of this fight," said
Rademacher several weeks ago.
Gold Cup Makes Seattle
City With Boats in Belfry
By RAY ANDREWS
United Press Sports Writer
Seattle, Wash. IIT) This city
has boats in its belfrey.
Buy a 59 - cent package of
frankfurters and with it you get
a picture of a speedboat. Fifty
cents and the labels from two
frozen food packages, or reason
able facsimiles, brings you pho
tos of 16 hydroplanes.
Here kids line up to gel auto
graphs of speedboat pilots and
one Jack Regas, Bill Muncey,
Miio Slovak or Col. Rust Schlee
is worth ten Mickey Mantles. -
Hundreds of boat owners shell
out up to $40 a crack to anchor
their boats at a gigantic log
boom skirting the east straight
away of the course.
It's been that way ever since
1950 when the Slo-Mo-Shun IV,
owned by the late Stan Sayres,
returned from Detroit with the
Gold Cup.
It promises to hit its whack
iest peak Aug. 11 when the cup
Seuthwest Summer steel
head angling on the North XJmp
qua has picked up. Fish wre be
ing taken all the way from 3
miles above Rock Creek to
Steamboat. Trout angling con
tinues only fair in North Ump
qua river and is fair to good
in Lemolo and Tokatee reser
voirs. Salmon angling at Winchester-Bay
is good. The bar
has been rough.
Coos Bay salmon fishing is
generally good. Trout fishing in
Coos-Coquille area is poor tc
fair. Salmon fishing on the
lower Rogue has been fair to
good. Trout fishing in the
Grants Pass section of the Rogue
remains slow. The upper Rogue
is still producing good catches
on single eggs or small lures
from morning to mid-day and
on flies during late afternoon or
evening.
PI
ivii
This Store Will Be Open
GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS,
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
SHORT RIBS to braise
or Bar-B-Q
3
S j 00
Lbs. I
TASTY JQ
LUNCH MEATS Lb.
Front
Quarter
Z7t ft.
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
OSCAR FRALEY
$ ports Writer
United1 Press
He might ask young Courch
asne, a veteran of 50 profession
al bouts, how much that money
is worth when you lie in a hos
pital bed fighting for your life
after a delicate brain operation.
Courchesne's experience did
not save him in a fight against
Bobby Bell last week.
Rademacher is 29, a part
time amateur who didn't even
make the 1952 Olympic team
and whose victory in 1956 was
a distinct upset. He can punch
but he is an unprotected target
for a man of Patterson's punish
ing skills.
11 Killed Last Year
They talk of the possibility
that he could win with one
"lucky" punch. They forget that
Patterson, for six years, daily
has been studying the grim art
of destroying the man who
stands in front of him.
Eleven men were killed in
the ring last year.
Ten died of beatings the year
before.
In 1953 there were 22 men
slain just as surely as if they
had been battered with an iron
pipe.
Putting Rademacher against
Patterson is a disgrace even to
a bestial industry which long
has masqueraded as a sport. If
it goes through, it may be time
to outlaw this bloody business
once again.
goes up for grabs for .the 50th
time. It will have to go some to
beat past years, however.
Last year, for example, a Se
attle man' found himself in Port
land, Ore., while the $25,000
Seafair Race was being run on
Seattle's Lake Washington.
To his dismay, he discovered
Portland radio and television
stations were not carrying the
race. He took a cab to the air
port, caught the first plane and
arrived in Seattle in time for
the final two heats.
An amateur cameraman try
ing to film the race couldn't find
room to set up shop. He rolled
up his pant legs, took off his
shoes and socks ttnd waded out
into the lake. There he set up
his tripod in a foot of water and
ground away happily.
So many fans clamor for
passes to the pit area during the
qualifying trials that last year
counterfeit passes were printed
and sold on downtown streets.
Business was brisk until the local
gendarmes moved in.
Although officially frowned
upon, more than 5,000 speedboat
fans broke out sleeping bags and
camped out on the shores of the
lake the night before the Sea
fair Race.
However, they were only
pikers compared with Mrs. Earl
Moore of Bellingham and Mrs.
Leonard Bishop of nearby
Mountlake Terrace.
The two women, along with
six children, tented out on the
shores of the lake nine days be
fore the race. Everything went
fine until the law arrived and
allowed as how camping out on
the lake front was against a city
ordinance. .
"All right," said Mrs. Moore.
'We'll take down the tent and
send back our gasoline stove
and most of our food. But we're
staying right here until the
race." They did, too.
The University club of New
York City is believed to be the
oldest organization of its kind
functioning in the U. S. It was
founded in 1865.
Open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Closed Sundays
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
J5'
........ Lb.
ARRET
FAMILY BUDGET ORDER
24 lbs. $10.00