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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1957)
F yr Braves On National Loop All-Star Team of United Press ''ew York "? Hank Aaron, j PC? Schoer.die.-.? sr.d Warren Srshr.. the three key rr."n in . IV e Milwa Bra vr-s" march tri a world championship. we re ; ivC rr.!v !.n3r.:rrjj selections to- ! (Jav en the Uni'd Pre?5' 1057 : Jia'iTal k-acup Ali-S'ar team. i A f'-i:-h :.T:iva'Jk-e far. : third-baTr.an Ed MVhewy, was : rarr.d to the team wr ich also; included f:rt-b.'!err.an San "u-I dial of the St. Louie Cardinals, j jthorts'op Ernie Rank of the j Chicazo C-;bs. oifielder Willie M;.v? of 'he N'e-.v York Clan's, j ran her Fid Basl'-v arid nut fielder 1 -on o d o: e Ci.ncin.- rrokie pi'ener e Philadelphia on: V.;:- ff-rrr fr by a special 24 baeehall w ri'v in tho !" . n Uod?ers and Pi'ts rq v.' p r p t h p only rr pre-' r.' d on the ;e. .' n e r of was cloe only at 'h.p hard-hitl inc ;!ir k fi ldins Roy hp Benlegs. 10 Tr;p other six Dirk J-rani; '.-, r.a'i P--;-; .lark Sar.fr J'h:: T1:p ';-r l,;'rd FT' rr:"pp of from, ear h 'T: P Rrookl b.rgh P.r; J,iY"r ri't Tip vot: gfor-V.p v Fa.'iks b at M'-M.lian vo'e-; were divided amon f.roat of rhp PiraV-. Al Dark tit ti & Cardinals and Chico Fern- 'ndp7 of fr Phi's. ! Al'ho-'iCh soi.nd defensively. , e team's outstanding attribute if coijld it actually take the field Jn t r e flesh would bp hitting. T' 9 eight regulars walloped no J-'-s than 247 home runs this r'C-'r an average r f 31 per man and five of the stars hit more than moo. Tie top average, of course, was J'lrnpi'cd by the ''( year-old Mu sial. who won his seven'h X.L. b-'ttinr; championship with a .351 mark Other .300-plus hit- . X t ? S ..a r- frr -.y- 4 i ? v iff St."" h GIANTS SIGN RIGNEY Bill Rigney (rightj flashes a big smile as he signs a contract in San Francisco to manage the San Francisco Giants baseball club for two years. At left is Horace Stoneham, president of the club. Haiders bounce i Ash I regon leers ,,;d Southern Oregon; to 12 Saturday niht while OCE college today s'nared the leader ship of the Oregon Collegiate Football conference with Ore gon College of Education. Each ter were ?Iays, .333; Aaron and ! has two wins and no losses after J-'ohinson. .322 each, and Schoen- Saturday triumphs. The Red rf.ent. .300. Mathews hit .292. Raiders" of the Romie drubbed .Banks .235 and Bailey .261. I Orecon Technical institute 33 Medford&Tribuni Phil Moyer Scores TKO Victory Over Ray Phil Mover, Portland tb ration's most promisinK young fr.fddleweishts, scored a technical knockout triumph over Boy P.ey, San Francisco, Satur day r.iht In the main event of a professional boxing card staged Vefire a meager crowd at Hed riek Junier High school gym rtaium. It "was the fifth professional V?C-Ty f"r the Portlander. who is urr.eaten since starting his J.'g'if f-ir-pay career after a suc essf".;l years as an amateur. Cemblnation punching Moyer Jerked Ray at the close of the thrd round and the San Fran cisp? did not answer the bell for the fourth panel. The bout was to have gone eight rounds. Jn the six-round semi-wind-up, LePey Flamor.d, 155. Edmonton, Al'a., recorded a unanimous de els:"" vfr Ron Milne. 152, Se arle. It was the only fight of the four for the evening which went the route. Larson Victor Buggies Larson. 132. Tacoma. Wash., won by TKO over Johnny Davis. 135, Ahland. in the cur tain raiser. Referee Earl Yoak ley called a halt at 2:50 of the fourth an-1? f:nl round. In the i oher match Jerry Hamilton. 150. Portianr?. tor-k , TKO verdict j fr-im Rob Milne. 150. Seattle, j when Milre. twin brother of Ron, j was unable to answer the bell 1 frr the fifth round of a schedule-? six rounder. He suffered rib injuries. j Moyer floored Ray with the i combination of a left hook and a right hook in the third chuk ker cf the main event. Referee Yoakley's toll reached eight : W'hen the bell sounded. Ray was struggling to t to his feet at tHe g"ng but it was a question as to whether h would have , ir.arle it. The bay city pugilist ' was sill woojv 10 minutes after t-e f'ght. Pirst roun of the finale was fairly even but it was apparent even at that stage that Moyer would land more leather. He tossed his punches in flurries ; while Ray appeared to be a one- i at-a-tirr.e glove slinger. The Port- ; lander began to carry the fight ! in the second round by pressing ; and boring in with mainly an attack to the body. i BT Taller j It was a style 'hat offset the j g.-ea'er height and reach of the j s'ender San Franciscan. Mover I counter-punched more than led ; in feeling his way in the first j rourd against r.is more exper ienced foe. Ray landed blows through Mover's defense but they didn't slow him. Flamond punched Ron Milne j to grogginess to take command in the fifth round of the semi. The fight was fairly even up to that time with Flamond seem ing to have a slight edge after one of j the first round. Flamond scored well with both mitts in the third canto. Milne came back as both started fast in the fourth but the Seattle socker lost his steam in the fifth. The Canadian fight er gave Milne a considerable pummoling on the ropes in the sixth hrf'irc the Seattle man fin ally pushed free. The Hamilton-Bob Milne en counter was rather close most of the way with the classy-style Portlandcr's edge showing up mainly in the second and fourth rounds. Three Knockdowns Larson displayed considerably more boxing skill than Davis in the opener but that did not keep him from taking a lot of leather thrown by the Ashland fighter. The Tacoma lad's greater stam ina was what paid off. Larson also had three knockdowns to his credit, one in the second round and two in the fourth before Yoakley called off the action. Davis got through to Larson for a good number of blows in the third and fourth rounds but was short on wind, fell to his knees much and didn't do much damage to the tough Tacoman. Manager Sid Flaherty said that he planned a California series of fights for both Phil Mover and his brother. Denny. Both have national recognition as amateurs but are not known well as pros outside the northwest. clipped Portland State 31 to 6. The Red Raiders were paced by the running of Lee McGill. Eldon Francis and Ron Maurer and the pass throwing of Larry Yarnell. Their defense gave con siderable ground but held often enough in the clutch against the Owls. OTI opened the scoring in the conflict but Southern Oregon came back with second quarter touchdowns for 13 to 6 lead at the half. The Ashland club took a 20 to 6 bulge in the third quar ter. The Owls cut it to 20 to 12 before SOC padded its lead in the final stanza. A 45-yard punt return by Richard Pekala to Southern Ore gon 20 set up the first Owl TD. Belton Oilison went to the last 11 yards. A 75-yard pass interception runback by Ron Maurer in the second quarter was the first SOC score. A 52-yard screen pass play. Yarnell to McGill, a Klamath Falls combination, was good for the second counter and Delmar Brood kicked the bonus. In the third quarter McGill skirted end for the last 11 yards of a 41-yard drive for the third SOC touchdown. George Stavros ran the extra point. OTI marched 72 yards in the lourin quarter ana scored on a 2fi-yard pass play, Charley Gan ter to Bill Edinger. The Raiders came back with a 56-yard drive with Lance Locke going the last 15 to the goal on a bootleg. Locke also kicked the conver sion. A 23-yard pass play, Yar nell to Cy Perkins, was the pay off of a 53-yard surge to a con cluding SOC TD. Southern Oregon ran the Owl ends well but had little luck through the middle. It was the opposite for Oregon Tech which gained 192 yards on the ground. The Owls bettered the Raiders in rushing 192 to 103 in total net yards 218 to 207 and in first downs 10 to six. SOC outpassed OTI 104 to 26. The Klamath Falls club com pleted only one pass against Southern Oregon. It threw only eight and probably was dis couraged from more aerials by three interceptions. Pekala. Oilison and Al Everson were the big gainers for OTI. Actor Errol Flynn, Aclress To Plead On Drunk Charges Hollywood t? Swash buckling Errol Flynn and an Irish-born actress had dntes in court today to plead to charges of being drunk at a gay film land party. The actor and red-haired Maura Fitzgibbor.s, 21. were hustled off to jail Saturday night after an off-duty police officer claimed they stole his badge dur ing the screen publicists' ball at the Riviera Country Club. There were reports that the actcr was mad enough to sue someone over the arrest, but his attorney. Robert Ford, said that , the rumors were ''premature." ''Flynn told me," Ford said, "it was outrageous being arrest ed for nothing and somebody ought to sue these people and get them in line." Officer Object of Anger The object of the actor's anger was officer William Friedman, a Los Angeles vice squad officer hired to keep peace at the party, attended by some of Hollywood's top personalities. Friedman was the officer who took Flynn and Miss Fitzgibbons to jail and charged them with taking his badge after he had asked the actor to autograph a menu for his wife. Flynn insisted he had not been drinking to excess and he took Friedman's badge and hand ed it to Miss Fitzgibbons as a "playful joke." The actor was tossed into the drunk tank and later released on S20 bail. He demanded a "drunk test" but didn't get it. After his release. Flynn im mediately went to the jail where Miss Fitzgobbons was being held and paid her S20 bail on the same charge he was arrested on. Friedman insisted he attempt ed to get the actor to give him back his badge but that Flynn tossed a S5 bill at him and told him to buy himself another one. Monday, October 21, 1957 I WK' 4i, . j L 11, I Hi. Ul"IJ ..-IJJSI.SU1.M4P1 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVTK ,1 FORMAL AFFAIR President Eisenhower is shown with Queen Elizabeth II at a dinner given by the Eisenhowers for the Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, at the White House. Ike is wearing the Order of Merit presented to him by the Queen's father. The Queen is wearing a diamond "tiara given to Queen Alexandra in 1883 and worn by the current Queen when she opened Parliament in New Zealand in 1953. Portland Attorney On Education Board Salem l? Gov. Robert D. Holmes Sunday appointed Port land attorney Allan Hart. 48. to the state board of higher educa tion to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Easter Ore gon rancher and banker Her man Oliver. Hart, a Democrat, is Gov. Holmes' third appointee to the nine-member board which con trols Oregon's eight universities and colleges and general exten sion division. The attorney was former gen eral counsel for Bonneville Power administration and is now a member of the law firm of Hart. Davidson and Veazic. in Portland. Train Crash in Turkey Kills at Least 85 Istanbul. Turkey OP At least 85 persons were killed and 150 injured Sunday when the famed International Simplon Express collided with a local train in Western Turkey, it was reported today. Unofficial reports said the death toll could rise to more than 100. The collision occurred be tween Yarimbugaz and Isparta kule in Turkish Thrace near the border with Greece America's only violin factory is in Columbus, Ohio. FAMILIES FLEE FIRE Oceana, Va. IT A S200.000 fire swept through a block of businesses and apartments here Sunday, routing several families from their homes. Seven fire companies fought for three hours before bringing the flames un der control. There were no injuries. Tropical Hurricane Lashes Mexico Port Mazatlan, Mexico IP A tropical hurricane roared to ward the gulf of Lower Califor nia today lashing this Pacific port city with heavy rains and strong winds. Advance winds of more than 60 miles an hour swept the city Sunday night. The storm was located 90 miles east of Mazat lan at 1 p.m. (edt). All ships were advised to head for port before the center of the storm struck. The city's power plant was temporarily knocked out by daylong torrential rains. Many downtown streets were flooded. A shrimp boat went down three miles south of Mazatlan but all seven crewmen were picked up by another shrimper. Religious Crusade Almost Finished During the last fiscal year sales from national forest tim ber and grazing land rent amounted to more than $102.-000.000. HIHTS ON HOW TO FENCE YOUR HO&.E 0 Investigate before you buy fence. "VVnat kind hould I b j? Whatabout qualit? How 1 ong it stay good looking? W tiat about ejection ser icef" These and other auestwns are answered in our illustrated booklet. Just phone and say "Please send me the free booklet that tells how I rn fence mv home." Free esti mate, if you wish. NO DOWN PAYMENT EAST KONTHLT PAYMENTS Phnnp SP 2-54S 131 N". Bartlett St., Medford. Ore ONLY UNITED STATES STEIl COWOMTW MANUFACTURES CYCLONE FENCE A swallow-proof pin for baby diapers was patented in 1956. Santa Fe, N. M. TP Frank Takes Gun has almost finished a religious crusade to legalize the use of peyote holy tranquilizer and "good-food'' of American Indians since pre-Columbus days. Gun, a Montana Crow Indian, is president of the Native Amer ican Church of North America, an adaptation of Christian mor ality to ageless Indian tradition. Recently he watched New Mexico change its anti-peyote laws to legalize the eating of the cactus during solemn Indian religious ceremonies. It was the seventh step in an 11-state campaign to allow the use of the plant as a sacramental ingredient in night-long rites ob served by the sect's 14.000 ad herents among dozens of Indian tribes and groups. Peyote (rhymes with coyote) apparently has drastically dif ferent effects on Indians and palefaces. When the Indian eats the plant in the proper religious setting he becomes more able to reach God and more spiritually recep tive. Gun said. Anthropologists say the Indian may experience RUSSIAN ROULETTE VICTIM Princess Anne, Va. OP Pvt. Norman J. Harshburger, 21, of Wyano. Pa., killed himself in a game of Russian roulette while he and his girl friend watched television here Saturday. Police said Harshburger shot himself as he and the unidentified girl watched TV in a trailer owned bv another soldier. color hallucinations and ln I creased senses of power and i well-being. i But let a white man try it and '. he'll get just plain sick. I "When the white man takes i peyote," Gun said, "he'll start I vomiting and become ill in oth- er ways. But Indians can take it and have been taking it for more than 700 years." Three Cars Collide, No Injuries Result Cars operated by Gertrude Emily Heitkamp, 2929 South Pacific highway, and Neil Rich ardson, 965 Siskiyou blvd., Ash land, and a logging truck driven by Charles Wiley Spence, Trail, i were involved in an accident in front of 2929 South Pacific highway Saturday about 2:20 p.m., according to state police. Police said the logging truck operator, Spence, was cited for following too close. No injuries were recorded in the three-vehicle collision, state police said. The Heitkamp car was wait ing in the lefthand turn lane to make a turn when the logging truck struck it on the fender and shoved it into the north bound lanes and into the path of the Richardson car, state police reports show. 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British Co Iunvi.i 7 Fa-Trn Now V 27. LA F 0 Central Washinefn 2". Pacific Lu theran 0 Hurt.hoM? Pt 2-,. Cal Assies 0 I n;iv::le 33 Davtnn !$ Tcri'.pie !3 Laavrp i2 fh'.rn St 20 Sarrai-ncn'n ? 13 issippi Souir.em 14. Memphis STATISTICS SOC Net yards rushing ir3 Net yards passing m4 Totals 207 First downs fi Punts ' 4.37 2 Penalties 40 Fumbles lost 1 Passes tried 13 Parses completed 3 Passes intercepted hv .. 3 OTt 3 92 2 21R 1(1 6-24 8 30 1 ft 1 1 Civilians Guard East German Border Si. 6 Mid Tenn Williams 1 Woftord St 20. Chattanooea ! vs. Bowdom. cancelled 13. Furman 12. CLEAN THAT GUN5 mm. 3 ; Berlin East German ; ians to the east-west city border ians to the east-wst city border today. Earlier, they detained six j West German postal freight cars j carrying an estimated 90,000 packages, j In defiance of four-power agreement, civilian guards on j the inter-city border were 1 armed with revolvers carried in holsters under their coats. The civilian zuards supple- merited police and custom? offi : cers who searched traveler? in an effort to halt east-west Ger- man mark tradina. West Berlin police had re i ports between 61 and 80 Ber- srers were arrested for smug gling over the week end. .., -V. a f. 3 '4, , ) M I t'-X-- '.V.h -&28e-&: - J- W&C -i- WINNING THE WEST! 'amous Am trie an artist REMINGTON Mule deer antlers always fork ! as they grow out to form a suc cession of "y's" while white tail j deer have all the prongs shoot off the main stem like the teeth ; of a rake. ' ' KtvTtCKTSTMlCHt , ttHI?r"' OLD I BniXDII1 KENTUCKY f ) TRULY AMERICAN fH'WWWiWWi .fmk after the famous Amt . Wil l 'wmM. M i-i iwMSA frederjc A X)Um r . WJ! - i-: H-: fc"? i ' "The Santa Fe Trail" The great bourbon of the Old West is winning new friends everywhere ! The smoothest of fine Kentucky bourbons has the taste, the mildness, the quality that will win you too! 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