Roundup
(Continued from Page 8)
Basketball officials associa
tion; C. A. (Dutch) Meyer is
commissioner . . . Dick Mc
Laughlin, Neil Plumley, ex
Meaford high, play for Oregon
State college Rooks against
Dick Copple, ex-Medford, of
Washington State college
freshmen in football . . . Med
ford high beats Grants Pass,
Douglas, in cross-country run
... Ed Bngham, ex-Medford
high, ex-University of Oregon
athlete, at Lacklund Air Force
base, Tex. . . . Paul Eckel, ex
Medford high, stars for Brig
ham Young University in foot
ball . ". . McLoughlin Junior
high ninth grade end grid sea
soil unbeaten for unofficial
Southern Oregon title . . .
NOVEMBER:
Medford high football team
nudges Ashland, ties Grants
Pass in Southern Oregon con
ference title game, voted Dis
trict 6 A-l play-off represent
ative, bows to Beaverton in
state ' quarter-finals: Crater
beats Klamath Falls, Myrtle
Creek loses to Ashland; Ash
land tops Klamath. . .daugh
ter born to Medford high grid
coach Fred Spiegelberg. . .
Medford high ninth in state
A-l cross country. . .Southern
Oregon ties Eastern Oregon to
cinch Oregon Collegiate con
ference grid toga, defeats Se
attle Ramblers, loses to Hum
boldt . . "Medford Crater eight
In Oregon Journal football
poll. . .Groups name presi
dents: Bob Shores, Medford In
dependent Basketball league;
Mrs. Frank Tamney, Rogue
Valley Women's Golf associa
tion; Bill Moffat, Rogue Snow
men; Jim Fawcett, Medford
Junior Rifle club; Lewis Con
ger, Medford Rifle club; Tom
Rickard, Izaak Walton league
. . .Merrill District 5B football
champ. . .Glendale has four,
Eagle Point, Henley, Brook
ings each two. Phoenix one
on Rogue league grid all-star
. . .Dennis Dunham rolls rec
ord of 387 consecutive games
at Medford Bowling lanes. . .
Tag team match headlines
first pro wrestling match here
in two years . . . Medford
YMCA volleyball women sec
ond in Longview jamboree
. . .Jefferson, Roosevelt city
grade school co-football cham
pions; McLoughlin Blacks city
seven grade intramural grid
winners. . Jack Morris, Norm
Chapman, University of Ore
gon, on International News
Service all-coast second team;
Morris on United Press coast
second team; Morris's value
to Ducks stressed in UP story
. . .Jim Funston, Tom Ham
lin, Tom Morris, Tom Merton,
Bob Gee, Medford, Mike
Sparlin, Jim Smith, Wendell
Winterbottom, Jerry Putnam,
Jack Dean, Mike Rose, Grants
Pass, Mail Tribune Southern
Oregon loop grid all-stars;
Funston, Morris named Med
ford outstanding players. . .
Dan Sieg, Hedrick, Al Funs
ton, McLoughlin, vote! top
Medford ninth grade gridders
. . .Medford Rifle club seeks
funds to complete indoor rifle
range. . .Larry Slessler, ex
Medford high, daes well as
College of Idaho footballer
. . .Chuck Dorn wins Rogue
Valley riders motorcycle tur
key run. . .Tom Prothro, Ore
gon State college mentor, ad
dresses Kiwanis. club lunch
eon for Medford high foot
bail squad. . .
DECEMBER:
Howard Morns, Llnfield
college, ex-Crater high, named
to all-Northwest conference,
nited Press Little All-Coast,
HOWARD MORRIS
Little All-American
Associated Press and William
son system Little Ail-American
first teams and NAIA Lit
tle All-American second teams
PBI.I.WI lUWI III
fc f
UnJL
IS
Coming
OREGON
Ki ROSE
By HAL WOOD
Pasadena, Calif. (W Ore
gon, attempting the role of a
giant killer, takes on the na
tion's No. 1 team, Ohio State,
in the Rose Bowl today and
the odds are the Pacific Coast
conference will take its 11th
shellacking in 12 outings
against the Big Ten in the
post-season classic.
Never in the 44-year his
tory of the game has there
been such a wide spread in
the odds, which make the
Buckeyes three touchdown
favorites.
Both teams are in good
shape for the clash, with the
kickoff set for 2 p.m. (PST)
and the prospects "90 per
cent" for a warm, sunny day.
The game is televised and ra
dio broadcast nationally
(NBC).
While Ohio State is heavily
favored, Coach Len Casanova
of the Ducks has one good
psychological factor working
for him: In three major post
season games so far this year,
the underdogs have won. De
troit pulverized the Cleve
land Browns, who were three
Pirates Gamble on Klu
For Long Ball
Editor's Note: This i3 the
12th of 16 dispatches on the
off-season outlook of each
major league team, written
by the managers of each
club.
By DANNY MURTAUGH
(Written for United Press)
Woodlyn, Pa. (IP) We've
taken a big gamble of Ted
Kluszewski in an effort to get
another long ball hitter to go
with Frank Thomas.
We're gambling that Klu
can regain the ability he once
hr.d. If we can come up with
a well Kluszewski or a rea
sonable facisimile, we think
we're in much better shape.
We got a lot of base hits last
year, but we were lacking in
the long ball.
Last season our pitching
was strong but thin. We had
three pitchers capable of hold
ing their own with any others
in the league Ron Kline, Bob
Friend and Vera Law. Our
big weakness, from a pitching
standpoint, was the lack of a
good left-hander.
Smilh Bears Watching
A fellow who's going to
bear watching is R. G. Smith,
who opened a lot of people's
eyes in the last four games of
the '56 season. He lostvone
game, 2-1, and then won, 2-1.
We think he'll be ready for a
regular starting assignment
this year.
The Pirates also have three
men coming up from Holly
wood who should help Red
Witt, Benny Daniels and Curt
Raydon, all right-handers.
We're also ' bringing up
Johnny Powers from Colum
bus and he should help on of
fense. He hit some 30 homers
last season and he knocked in
close to 10 runs. We think
he's ready for the big time.
Down the middle, I'd say
the Pirates are as strong as
anv other team in thp leiiffitf
! At short and second we have
Dick Groat and Bill Mazer
oski. In my opinion those two
can do as much to win games
as any other double play com
bination in either league. I
mean defensively, of course.
Virdon Defensive Star
In center, we have the sec
ond best man defensively in
the league. I'll concede the
Giants' Willie Mays is No. 1
but I think Billy Virdon is
only a shade behind him and
in football; Jack Morris, Uni
versity of Oregon, ex-Medford
high, on Pacific Coast
conference all - star second
team. . .Don Hawk, Martin
Clogston Medford Gun club
skeet title winners. . .Medford
beats Crater in wrestling;
Crater wins from Ashland,
loses to Grants Pass. . .Jack
Worthington Rogue Valley
Country club fall golf handi
cap champion. . .Chuck Cran
dall, Phil Sword, Herb Col
ley, Modesto Jiminez, South
ern Oregon, on Oregon Col
legiate conference grid all
star. . .Medford high. Grants
Pass lose to Marshfield, North
Bend, beats Astoria twice in
basketball; Ashland, Crater
top Fortuna, Eureka, Calif.:
Ashland beats Tillamook two
games, loses twice to Red
ding, Calif.; Crater beats Wil
lamette, loses to Oakridge
twice, Coquille once: Grants
Pass beats Roseburg, loses to
Coquille, beats Willamette. . .
Southern Oregon college cag
ers down Humboldt twice in
dedicating new gym, split
with Linfield, Lewis and
Clark. . .Jim Funston, Med
ford high named to Oregon
ian, Oregon " Journal all-state
football teams. . .Larry Cop
ple impresses as Oregon State
college basketball reserve. . .
Wayne Allen, Crater high
most valuable player. . .Jack
Greb, ex-Eagle Point high,
top grid scorer for Yuba Jun
ior college.
IN GIANT
BOWL
point favorites; the West,
nine point underdogs, trounc
ed the East in the Shrine
game at San Francisco; and
Tennessee upended favored
Texas A&M in the Gator
Bowl.
"So you have- to admit that
we have a chance." said Cas
MEDFORDjfJTRIBUNE
Orange Bowl Tilt
Opens Grid Fiesta
By JOHN GRIFFIN
United Press Sports Writer
The bowls, seven of em,
were to be overflowing with
almost 400,000 football fans
today when the college grid
iron game ushers in the New
Year with a colorful program
in the nation's sunshine belt.
Football's annual fiesta be-
Swatting
I ahead of all the others. Be
hind the plate, we have Hank
Foiles, who was good enough
to make the National League
All-Star team last year. Foiles
is a first-class ball 'player.
The keynote for the Pirates
this year is versatility. I've
got players I can move
around and I'm going to do it.
Thomas can play three posi
tions; Gene Freese can play
third and the outfield; Bob
Skinner moves from first base
to the outfield without a sec
ond thought.
The top four even five
clubs in our league are going
to be tough to beat. They have
good pitching and 'good hit
ting. If the Redlegs strength
en their pitching, I'd have to
pick them to win.
Folley Picked
Over Sawyer
Washington OB Heavy
weight Zora Folley, a whop
ping 4 to 1 favorite who is
hoping for a title shot this
year, will be after his 17th
straight victory tonight when
he faces Garvin Sawyer of
Cincinnati in a nationally
televised 10-round bout.
Folley is a hard-punching
26-year-old from Chandler,
Ariz., who has not lost a bout
in more than two years and
is ranked second among the
heavyweights.
Sawyer, 22, has not had
nearly as much experience as
Folley. A former national
AAU and International Gol
den Gloves hea vy weight
champion, the young Cincin
nati boxer has fought profes
sionally only 17 times. He
won 13 of those bouts and lost
four.
Knicks, Royals
Victors in NBA
By UNITED PRESS
The Old Year couldn't have
ended on a happier note for
the New York Knickerbock
ers or the Cincinnati Royals.
The Knicks set an all-time
club scoring record Tuesday
night in beating the Minnea
polis Lakers, 142-116, at Madi
son Square Garden perhaps
a good omen for the Knicks
in their rugged battle to earn
a playoff berth in the Eastern
Division.
The Royals came through
with a 130-96 romp over the
Detroit Pistons at Cincinnati
with Maurice Stokes back in
the lineup after missing 11
straight because of an injury,
and took second place in the
Western division.
HOCKEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
By UNITED PRESS
Slowly but surely the De
troit Red Wings are climbing
back into contention in the
National Hockey League, and
an old hand, Gordie Howe, is
leading the way.
Howe fired home a pair of
goals Tuesday night to pace
the Red Wings to a 3-2 victory
over the Chicago Black
Hawks that moved them into
a fourth-place tie with To
ronto. SIMMONS LEADER
Moscow, Idaho OP) Guard
Gary Simmons tops Univer
sity of Idaho scorers as the
Vandals prepare to open their
Pacific Coast conference bas
ketball season. Simmons has
an average of 18.3 points per
game in 10 pre-game confer
ence titlts, eight of which Ida
ho won. Guard Whaylon Cole
man was second with an aver
age of 10 points per game.
Idaho opens its season here
Friday against Stanford and
hosts Southern California
Saturday. "
KILLER
SCUFFLE
with a wry smile. "There
have been upsets before in
the Rose Bowl."
The Oregon coach enjoys
the underdog role. It would
give him a chance to make
history. Biggest upset in Rose
Bowl records took place on
Jan. 1. 1934. wher. Columbia
gan at 10:30 a.m. (PST) when
Oklahoma and Duke kick off
in the Orange Bowl and goes
right on into the moonlight
for the night Tangerine Bowl
at Orlando, Fla.
Prospects for good weather
were generally bright on all
bowl fronts, although in Flor
ida overnight showers might
precede the football action.
The day's largest crowd,
more than 100,000 will watch
Ohio State try to give the Big
Ten its 11th victory in 12
meetings with a Pacific Coast
conference foe in the Rose
Bowl. The national champ
ions, with a rugged ground
attack spearheaded by half
back Don Clark and fullback
Bob White, is the heaviest fa
vorite in the 44-year history
of the Pasadena spectacle.
A capacity crowd of 75,504
was anticipated for the Cot
ton, where Navy quarterback
Tom Forrestal and Rice's
King Hill, were likely to en
gage in a passing duel. Navy
has been jolted by the possi
ble loss of star guard Tony
Stremic, who was injured in
a scrimmage last week. Rice
finished its season in high
gear, winning its last four
games to take the Southwest
conference crown.
Oklahoma was out to atone
for its only loss of the season,
the streak-busting upset, by
Notre Dame, at the expense
of Duke in the Orange Bowl
before about 75,000. The
Sooners also had injury prob
lems, with first string quar
terback Carl Dodd on the
shelf, and Duke is emotional
ly geared for an upset. .
The prospect of good weath
er and impressive workouts
stamped Mississippi the Su
gar Bowl choice over Texas
before about 80,000.
Sport
Parade
New York (IP) Starting
with bowl game victories to
day for Ohio State, Oklahoma
and Navy, here's a peek into
the sports future for 1958 and
some of the things you muscle
buffs can expect to witness:
Boxing
Sugar Ray Robinson will
regain the middleweight
crown by knocking out Car
men Basilio at Chicago Sta
dium in March. Archie Moore
will retain the light heavy
weight crown and Floyd Pat
terson will stiffen a couple of
stiffs.
The heavyweight champ
will get into trouble with
world boxing organizations
because manager Cus D'
Amato will refuse to fight the
top listed contenders on the
theory that they are IBC-con-trolled.
Baseball
Cincinnati' will move to
New York and play in the
Polo Grounds. Milwaukee will
retain the National league
pennant in a stretch battle
with St. Louis while it will
be the Yankees all the way
in the American league as
well as in the World Series.
Willie Mays will regain the
National league batting, hom
er and most valuable player
titles. Ted Williams will re
peat as American league bat
ting champion, Mickey Mantle
will be the home run king and
Gil McDougald finally will
win most valuable recogni
tion. Golf
The old guys will have one
last big year as Cary Middle
coff cops the Masters. Sam
Snead at long last wins the
U.S. Open. We can dream,
can't we? and Doug Ford
If You Wish to Register for This Class
Please Call KE 5-2243
ROLE
TODAY
turned back Stanford, 7-0, In
the mud.
There's a very slim chance
of any mud this time, so Ore
gon will have to make its
own breaks. The Buckeyes
are in disgustedly (to Oregon)
healthy condition and every
man who was expected to be
in shape is available for ac
tion. The consensus is that It
will be a close first half, but
that the superior depth of the
Big Ten team will wear Ore
gon down and result in an
easy victory for the Buck
eyes. Umpqua River
Steelheading
Could Be Good
Portland (IP) The weekly
report on fishing and hunting
conditions prepared by the
State game commission for
United Press:
Southwest: Steelhead fish
ing in the Umpqua expected
to be poor until waters clear.
South coastal streams are
muddy but should be good if
water clears. Elk river best
for still fishing. Coos and
Millicoma rivers fair for steel
head. North fork of Smith
river is fair to good for steel
head. Bobby Morrow
Trophy Winner
New York (IPl Bobby Joe
Morrow, the sprinter who won
three gold medals during the
1956 Olympic Games, today
was named winner of the Na
tional Amateur Athletic un
ion's James E. Sullivan Me
morial trophy for 1957.
The AAU presents the
award annually to the ama
teur athlete "who, by per
formance, example and good
influence did most to advance
the cause of good sportsman
ship during the year."
Morrow, a 22-year-old sen
ior divinityy student at Abi
lene Christian College, was
the first choice on 213 of 586
ballots cast by sports authori
ties who took part in the poll.
CURVE NAMED
St. Moritz, Switzerland Iff)
A bend on the mile-long St
Moritz bobsled run officially
will be named "Portago Cor
ner" Thursday in honor of
Marquis Alfonso de Portago,
the automobile racer and bob
sledder who was killed in the
race last year.
By
OSCAR FRALEY
Sports Writer
United Press
takes the PGA. Harvie Ward
will return from a year in
sackcloth and ashes to take
the Amateur again.
Basketball
The Boston Celtics will mop
up everything in pro basket
ball while Kansas wins the
NCAA championship. Wilt
The Stilt Chamberlain will
be the player of the year.
Chalk eater.
Tennis
Althea Gibson will sweat the
ladies into limbo all over
again while Ashley Cooper of
Australia slams the men. The
Aussies, as usual, will retain
the Davis Cup in a common
canter.
Horse Racing
jia x-ueDio, no reiaxion to
My Old Kentucky Home, will
capture the Kentucky Derby j
by a nose over the favored
Nadir. Willie Hartack will be
the number one jockey j
again. 1
Football j
Natre Dame, which hinted !
at the future by edging Army
and ending Oklahoma's skein,
will bounce back to the top
as mythical national cham
pion. The Cleveland Browns
will get all sorts of revenge
by clobbering Detroit in a
playoff for the NFL pro title.
Hockey
The rocket - powered Mon
treal Canadiens will sweep
through to the National
Hockey league championship
and then add the Stanley Cup.
Track and Field
Nine guys will break four
minutes for the mile and
99 others' will have excuses
why they didn't.
Summary
Short year, huh?
ATTENTION!
New S.O.K.C.
Dog Obedience Class
Starting Jan. 9
Teach Your Dog Soma Manners!
Floridians
Cop Gator
Hoop Toga
By UNITED PRESS
While most everyone else
was out making merry on
New Year's eve, Florida's
basketball team was busy
making the necessary shots to
earn it the Gator Bowl Tour
nament championship for the
third time.
Joe Hobbs was the key man
in Florida's 76-53 victory over
Georgia at Jacksonville, Fla.,
Tuesday night, scoring . 24
points that enable the Flori
dians to avenge a 66-60 defeat
at the hands oft he Bulldogs
earlier this season.
In a consolation game,
Clemson jumped to an early
lead and then coasted to an
85-65 triumph over South Car
olina. Vince Yockel paced
Clemson with 26 points while
Bob Frantz was high man for
South Carolina with 20 points.
Notre Dame made good on
eight free throws in the clos
ing minutes to lick Northwest
ern, 71-66, at Evanston, 111.
Trailed By 15
The Wildcats trailed by 15
points at intermission but bat
tled back to tie the score and
then go ahead, 62-61, with less
than five minutes remaining.
With time running out, how
ever, Northwestern pressed
and fouled repeatedly and
Notre Dame capitalized on the
frc throws in the last three
minutes to clinch the game.
Center Joe Ruklick of
Northwestern was individual
high scorer with 22 points.
John McCarthy led the Irish
with 19 points.
, In other games played last
night guard Dennis Boone reg
istered 23 points to spark Xay
ier, Ohio to an 86-66 win over
Regis; Seton Hall downed
Colby, 67-53, and St. Peters,
N.J. defeated Wittenberg, 54r
41.
ORANGE BOWL WINNERS
Miami Beach (IP) Blond
Chris Crawford, net rushing
artist from Piedmont, Calif.,
and Brazil's Maria Esther
Bueno today shared top hon
ors in the 11th annual Orange
Bowl junior tennis champion
ships. Crawford staged his
second upset in two days
Tuseday when he ran up a
five-set victory over favored
Earl Buchholz of St. Loiis,
winning the No. 1 singles
title, 3-6, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.
BASKETBALL
TUESDAY COLLEGE SCORES
By UNITED PRESS
Gator Bowl Tournament
Florida 76, Georgia 63 (cham
pionship) Clemson 85, South Carolina 65,
(consolation)
Xavier (Ohio) 86, Regis 66
Seton Hall 67, Colby 53
Notre Dame 71, Northwestern 66
New, Different, Better TAtniver TUES . JAN . 7
FREE LUNCH
SERVED AT OUR STORE
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
By West Side Extension Unit
SEE
-The Most Exciting JOHN DEERE DAY Program
Yet ...
-How "Farming Spreads Its Wing's" with NEW
John Deere Tractor Power and Equipment . . .
-How Your Old Friend Tom Gordon Learns a
New Lesson the Hard Way ... -
-Featuring "The Ace Ranchero."
HUBBARD-WRAY
Wednesday, January 1, 1958
26 Traffic FataflitBes Are
Recorded in County in '57
Jackson county had 26
traffic fatalities during the
year, seven of which oc
curred during August, ac
cording to 1957 traffic sta
tistics. Of the total, four were
in Medford, three were pe
destrians and the other was
the operator or an automo
bile. November was the only
month during the year that
did not have a traffic fatality.
Pedestrians killed within
the city limits were Elias
Henry Vinson, of 144 North
Riverside ave., who was
struck by u car on Riverside
ave. at Fifth st., May 18;
James Alfred McKitrick, 84,
of 819 North Riverside ave.,
who was hit by a vehicle
Aug. 22 on Main st. at Fir
Phoenix Move
Hinted for PCL
Phoenix, Ariz. '(IPl Re
ports that Leslie O'Connor,
president of the Pacific Coast
league, has been looking for
office space produced specu
lation today that PCL head
quarters will be moved here
from San Francisco.
Movement of the New York
Giants to San Francisco and
Brooklyn Dodgers to Los An
geles forced realignment of
the PCL. Phoenix replaced
San Francisco in the Coast
league while Salt Lake City
and Spokane replaced Los
Angeles and Hollywood.
Scheduling, statistics, um
pire assignments and other
PCL matters are handled by
O'Connor's office.
TOPS COUGARS
Pullman (IP) Three Wash
ington State college hoopsters
averaged a bit more than 11
points a game in the Cougars'
10-game pre-conference bas
ketball schedule. Forward
Bill Galbraith scored 117
points to take a slight lead
over guard Jim Ross and cen
ter John Maras. WSC won
four of the 10 games. The
Cougars open their Pacific
Coast conference slate here
Friday against Southern Cal
ifornia and take on Stanford
Saturday.
THREE SIGN
San Francisco HP) Fred
Dugan of Dayton, Charley
Krueger of Texas A&M and
Carley Brueckman of Pitts
burgh signed contracts for
1958 Tuesday with the San
Francisco Forty-Niners of the
National Football league.
, -
Come Stay ALL DAY
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
st.; - and John Arthur Mar
shall, 24, Kalispell, Mont.,
who died Dec. 11 after being
struck on North Pacific high
way near the Richfield sta
tion. Mrs. Violet Zamr-la, 38, of
263 Mace rd., Medtord, died
Aug. 10 after the vehicle she
! was driving was involved in
an accident at Crater Lake
highway and Delta Waters rd.
Two Die in Crashes
.Three of the automobile
accidents in the county
claimed the lives of two per
sons each. March 31, Pfc. Lee
Roy Riggs, 19, Ft. Lewis,
Wash., and Mrs. Lila Mae
Gunter Riggs, 23, were killed
in an automobile - truck col
lision on Highway 99 about a
mile south of Medford. Oscar
E. Wilson, 79, Portland, and
James ; . David jr Montgomery,
74, Rogue River, were killed
May T21 when the car in
which they were riding went
off a wood bridge on Evans
Creek north of Wimer.
Melvin Carl Hancock, 63,
and his wife, Ethel A. Han
cock, 54, Gold Hill, were
killed in that city, Aug. 2,1
when their car hit a parked
lumber truck.'
Four of the county traffic
deaths were pedestrians, re
ports show.
Killed were Paul Byron
Shanlain, 6, of Kent, Wash.,
on Highway 99 about a mile
south of Rogue River, June
18; Edd B. Johnson, 83, Eagle
Point, when hit by a truck on
Highway 62 near Eagle Point
Aug. 6; Joseph V. Heines, 66,
Camp White, who was killed
Sept. 1 while walking along
Highway 62 near Four ' Cor
ners; and Agnes M. Pinne,
68, of 936 Grant st., who was
struck by a car Dec. 18 near
Piggly Wiggly market on
Stewart ave.
Others in County
Other county traffic fatal
ities included Jack Everett
Engler, 25, Seattle, Wash.,
who was killed March 24
when struck by a car as he
was pushing his stalled auto
mobile north on Highway 99
at Talent; Mrs. Leona Pearl
Eskue, 39, Olympia, Wash.,
killed Feb. 4, on Highway 238
in an automobile accident
west of Medford; Charles J.
Howe, 60, Grants Pass, killed
when his car left Highway 99
and plunged into the Rogue
river near Miller's Gulch on
Jan. 31.
Also killed during the year
were Charlie N. Kelly, 44, of
118 East MeAndrews rd., who
died April 23 of injuries re-
i ceived in a two-car accident
on Highway 99 near Beal
Farmers and Their Families!
110 TICKETS NEEDED
FREE Show Starts
1:30 P.M.
MOVIES IN COLOR
AT THE
t T V 1 I
H1iIIII4i1IiIM
Following Lunch
As Guests of
CO., Inc.
25
lane April 21; Mrs. William
Donovan, 28, of 13 Newtown
st., and her unborn son, who
died of injuries after the car
she was driving was hit by a
train at the Stewart ave.
crossing, May 8; Garland Dale
Winkle, 26. Shady Cove, who
died June 16 when the car in
which he was riding left
Highway 62 one mile north
of Shady Cove. Miss Jewell
Valline Robertson, 24, Gold
Hill, Was killed Sept. 28 in a .
one car acident east of Sav
age Rapids dam.
Fatally injured in a logging
truck accident on Dead In
dian rd. July 11 was Gerald
L. Hamann, 20, Crescent City.
Killed in an accident on Hill
crest rd. at North Phoenix:
rd. Aug. 1 was Gary Dean
Holman, 17, Ashland, and also
killed during August was
Charles Embree Lawson, 29,
Lake Tahoe, when his truck
left Highway 62 a mile south
of Shady Cove.
Willard Ratliff, Los An
geles, was killed Oct. 13, on
Highway 66 near Emigrant
lake, when the car in which
he was riding was involved
in a three car accident. Last
fatality in the year was Ted
Low Hewlett, 35, Jackson
ville, who died Dec. 23, when
his car skidded on an icy
highway at Bybee corner dur- -ing
fog.
During the year March and
December had three traffic -fatalities
each while June and
September had two each. May
ran second to August's seven
deaths with four deaths while
January, February, April,
July, and October had one
each.
SEE THE
Only 7 Moving Parti in Engine
Up to 35 Miles Per Gallon
Front Wheel Drive
COMPARE
k INITIAL COST LOOKS
ROOMINESS ECONOMY
Keith Schulz Garage
116 No. Front Phone SP 2-4756
JAN.
7
At Our Store!
So. Riverside Are.
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