Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 07, 1958, Image 9

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    onovan Hurls 7 Scoreless
Gnnings In White Sox Victory
By MILTON BICHMAW
United Press Sporis Writer
The bell rings in another
week and some of the real
"pros" like Dick Donovan of
the White Sox, already have
indicated they'll come out
fighting.
Donovan, a 16-game winner
last year, had been taking his
lumps lately and didn't like
it. The Phillies raked him for
six runs in three innings on
March 27 and he blew a six
run lead against the Yankees
last week.
"Worried?" someone asked
Al Lopez.
"Not yet," replied the
White Sox skipper.
But Donovan was concern
ed and said so.
"Darn right I'm worried,"
he said, "and I'm going to
Burleson Runs Mile
Fastest In Oregon
Prep Track History
Salem OP) A Cottage
Grove high school senior, 17-
year-old Dyrol Burleson high
lighted the eighth annual Wil
lamette relays bere Saturday
by running the fastest prep
mile in Oregon history in
4:16.9.
The prepper finished 20
yards ahead of Oregon's Dick
Miller, who was running un
attached. The mark was only
eight-tenths of a second over
the nationally recognized
Lion Auxiliary
To Have Booth
At Sportsfair
Members of Crater Lions
club auxiliary will help their
husbands with a fund-raising
project of their own at the
first annual Sportsfair.
The women will operate a
food concessions booth at the
fair on Saturday and Sunday,
April 12 and 13, at the Med
ford armory.
Heading the committee for
the booth are Mrs. C. D. Lar
son, Mrs. Dan Dwyer, Mrs.
Hugh Friel and Mrs. Murrey
Dumas.
Auxiliary members have a
number of projects through
the year, including donations
to various sight and blind en
deavors. They contribute to
the state blind institute held
each summer at Salem to
train parents of blind young
sters and to the Walter Dry
fund for training teachers of
the blind.
The Lady Lions have
"adopted" a youngster at the
state blind school and pro
vide clothing and other arti
cles for the child. Their funds
also have aided two needy
Medford families during the
winter with purchases of
clothing, food and birihday
and Christmas gifts.
prep mile record set by
James Bowers of Villanova
Prep.
College trackmen shattered
six other records in the meet.
St. Mary's of Medford, one
of 18 schools entered in the
race, won its distance medley
heat Saturday in the high
school division of the Wil
lamette relays at Salem. Mem
bers of the crew were Dick
Thieral, Roger Hout, Jerry
Kerr and Dick . Evans. Alex
Mete was first in one of the
100-yard dash heats and
Dick Hayes was second in
another.
Crusader two - mile realy
crew, Dave Rouhier, George
Lucas, Kerr and Evans, was
sixth among 15 schools in one
heat. A bad baton pass hurt
the St. Mary's J880-yard relay
efforts.
Neil Pulmley, ex-Medford
high athlete now at Oregon
State college, won the college
novice shot put with 45 feet
5 inches. Phil Paquin, Uni
versity of Oregon and ex
Grants Pass high took the
novice pole vault with 13-8,
which was four inches better
than the senior division top
height. Gary Smith, George
Fox, ex-Crater high, was sec
ond in the college novice jav
elin, and Jay Mullen, Univer
sity of Oregon and ex-Medford,
was a member of the
winning Oregon Frosh sprint
medley team.
OSC Splits
At Linfield
McMinnville (IP) Ore
gon State college overwhelm
ed Linfield, 23-3, in the first
game of a non-conference
baseball double-header Satur
day and then lost the second
game, a four-inning contest,
4-0.
Women's Golf
Rogue Valley Country club
lady golfers play for Thurs
day, April 10, will be four,
five, six and sevens.
Winners of the first invita
tional on Thursday, April 3,
were Mesdames Rose Bunch,
overall gross 91; T. A. Cul
bertson Jr., overall net 79;
Bernice Ivey, Bayside, net 85;
Yvonne Speer, Crescent City,
net 86; William Schei, A
group, net 86; Dick Finch, B
erouc net 83: Frank Benesh,
C group, net 82; Ray Soren-
son, D group, net 88; Howard
Scroggins, nine-hole, net 45..
Thursday, April 10, will be
the last day to qualify for the
spring handicap. First round
matches will start April 15.
Pairings for Thursday, April
10, follow with the first lady
listed in each group requested
to contact the other two la
dies. Those unable to arrange
a game telephone Mrs. W. O.
Blackledge (SPring 2-5990).
PAIRINGS:
Mmes. Ed W. Stevens. Fred Con
rad. Lee Flink: Noble Vincent. Sam
Colton L R. Smith; Frank Tam
nev. William Clark, Dick Finch;
Robert Templeton, Ray Frisbie,
Thomas Teutsch; William Schei.
Alton Hart. T. C. Groomes; Anna
belle Schenck. Ed Milne. D. M.
Lambert: Rose Jane Bunch. Ber
nard Nutting. Robert Lockwood;
Leslie Schneider. E. W. Sickels,
Mahr Revmers; Warren Lessee. Ed
win Radzweit. William Ruffner; T:
Culbertson Jr.. W. L. Stark. L.
Paul Walker; H. E. Nulton, W. L.
Stark. W O. Blackledge.
Mmes. Reese Alexander, R. B.
Knight, L. T. Anderson; Parker
Woods, T. J. Harnsberger. Wayne
Saflev; Jerry Olson, W. F. Cown
ing R R- Parsons; R. M. Soren
son' Frank Benesh. Jack Six: Ira
Smith Ralph Barclay. W. C. Knope;
C E. Gordon, Floyd Somers. E. C.
Hall- J- W. Barnard. Lou Mc
Laughlin, M. D. McGeary; R. E.
Hevsell. C. H. Barrell, B. D.
Mitchell.
Nine Hole Play
Mmes. Richard Hogan. L. Buono
core: William Deatherage. Richard
Rementeria: John Raapke. Jerry
Lausman; Ray Wise. Richard Al
lev; Robert Morris, Paul Dix: Ed
Kliever. Royal Bebb; Vincent Nico
letti. John" Bunker; Robert Ren
Tavlor, Galen Sanner: Paul Havi
larid. Thomas McFadden; Vern
Watrud. Tom Polk; Virgil House.
W. H. Pyle: David Lowry, S. V. Mc
Queen: Joseph Moore. Dorothy
Dow-son; Ralph Anderson, Earl
Kelson.
Lung Cancer Test
Highly Accurate
San Francisco flP) Univer
sity of California researchers
have developed a highly accu
rate test for lung cancer.
The test, which has proved
90 per cent effective in de
tecting lung cancer, will soon
get a massive trial at two
state prisons to make sure of
its accuracy.
Dr. Seymour M. Farber, as
sociate clinical professor of
medicine, and Dr. David A.
Wood, director of the Cancer
Research Institute at UC, de
scribed the new test Sunday.
The method involves micro
scopic examination of cells
shed by the tissue in the po
tentially cancerous area. For
lung tests, the cells are
coughed out of the body in
sputum.
Farber said examination of
minute tissue cells from the
bronchial tubes of lungs re
veals the structural changes
that foretell cancer.
Farber and Wood examined
more than 5000 patients at
San Francisco hospital with
this new test. They said it was
90 per cent accurate.
They said they are now try
ing out the test at San Fran
cisco hospital and Fort Miley
Veterans hospital. They will
begin a five-year continuing
examination of inmates at
San Quentin and Folsom pris
ons next year.
do something about it in a
hurry."
Does Something
He did Sunday with a fine
seven-inning scoreless stint
against the St. Louis Cardin
als that paid off in a 4-1 vic
tory at Houston, Tex.
Just to add a little icing,
Donovan slammed a homer
and a single that accounted
for two of Chicago's runs.
A pair of Red Sox pitchers
Frank Sullivan and Tom
Brewer, also gave evidence
they are ready for the start
of the season by combining
in a five-hit 3-0 triumph over
the slumping Tigers. It was
Boston's 12th victory in the
last 13 games and Detroit's
sixth straight loss.
Roberto Clemente's grand
slam homer in the eighth in
ning off Jack Urban powered
the Pirates to a 5-2 win over
the Athletics. Vern Law went
the distance for Pittsburgh
and gave up. eight hits, in
cluding a homer by "slugger"
Billy Hunter.
Dave Philley, the Phillies'
fill-in first baseman, unload
ed a 12th inning home run
over the right field wall that
produced a 3-2 decision over
the Yankees at Columbia, S.C.
Philley struck his blow off
Bob Grim, who relieved start
er Tom Sturdivant in the
ninth.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
teed off on World Series hero
Lew Burdette for six runs in
the first inning and then
coasted to an 11-5 victory
over the Milwaukee Braves
at Fort Worth, Tex.
The San Francisco Giants
beat the Cleveland Indians,
9-7, at San Antonio, Tex.; the
Baltimore Orioles pounded
out 15 hits to defeat the Chi
cago Cubs, 7-3; and Washing
ton hit Brooks Lawrence and
Hersh Freeman liberally in
defeating Cincinnati, 8-3, at
Nashville, Tenn.
MDFORDTRIBUNE
srPdDiffiTrs
:.. . J
BREAKING AMERICAN RECORD in breast stroke during
practice session," Manuel Sanguilty, Cuba, is expected to
take event at national AAU indoor championships, being
held at Yale University, New Haven, Conn. (International)
T.WESCORES:
Detroit (A) .. 000 000 -000 0 S 3
Boston (A) .. 000 101 lOx 3 7 3
Hoeft, Valentinetti 8 and Thomp
son. F. Sullivan. Brewer 7 and
Daley. Winner F. Sullivan. Loser
Hoeft.
K. C. (A) .... 010 000 0102 8 2
Pitts. (Nl .... 010 000 04x 5 9 2
Urban and H. Smith. Law and
Peterson. HRs Hunter, Clemente.
Ship Obstruction
In Channel Cleared
Campbell River, B.C. (IP)
The waters of Seymour nar
rows lay quietly oVer broken
prongs of Ripple rock today
in the wake of a record non
nuclear blast Saturday morn
ing that ended the obstruc
tion's career of shipwrecking.
The twin submerged peaks
of the rock, situated in the
middle of the busy British
Columbia coastal waterway,
were shaved a low-tide clear
ance of at least 47 feet in the
great detonation, under the
pulverizing impact of 2,700,
000 pounds of a lethal explo
sive named nitromex 2H.
Short of war, it was the
greatest man-made explosion
of a non-atomic nature the
world has ever seen.
It drew hundreds of news
men, scientists, official ob
servers and just plain curious
to this sports-fishing commu
nity of 3500 on the east coast
of Vancouver island.
HARDESTY VICTOR
Portland ilPi Portland's
Harold Hardesty took the 50
lap main event Sunday as the
hard-tops racing season open
ed at the Portland speedway.
Cinci. (N) .... 010 000 200 3 8 1
Wash lA) 001 113 llx 8 11 1
Lawrence. Freeman 6 Schmidt 8
and Burgess. Dotter 7. Griggs,
Cleveneer 7 and Korcheck. Winner
Griggs. Loser Lawrence. HR
Lemon.
Chgo. (N) .... 010 002 000 3 10 5
Balti. (A) .... 012 011 20x 7 15 1
Hillman. Elston 4. Mayer 6. Fodge
1 T mi.n O anrl S Tavlnr TMpmaTl
6'. Johnson. Lehman 6 and Triandos.
Winner Johnson. Loser muman.
HR Gardner.
(12 Innings)
N.Y. (A) .. 000 100 001 000 2 4 2
Pha. (Nt .. 000 000 200 001 3 9 3
Sturdivant, Grim 9 and Howard,
Johnson 4. Semproch, Miller 8,
Hacker 11 and Lopata. Winner
Hacker. Loser Grim. HRs Lopata,
Philley.
(10 Innings)
S.F. (N) .. 140 100 100 29 14 3
Cleve. (A) 200 000 230 07 7 2
Monzant, Giel 8. Constable 8,
Crone 10 and Thomas, Schmidt 10.
Mossi. Tomanek 2, Wilhelm 5, Mc
I.ish 8. Thomas 9. Woodeschick 10
and Naragon, Brown 9. Winner
Constable, looser i nomas, nns
Mays, Doby, Kirkland.
rhn ii nil nn ooo 4 6 1
Ct T. INI 000 000 010 1 6 0
Donovan, Howell 8, Staley 9 and
T T. Jarlrftn Mllffett 7.
Clark 9 and Landrith. Winner
Donovan. Loser L. Jackson. HRs
Beard, Donovan, Torgeson, xt. i.
Smith.
Milw. (N) .. 103 000 100 5 9. 3
L.A. (N) .... 600 301 Olx 11 13 0
T3..iHatt. Trnwhriripp 1 Rnhin-
son 7 and Rice. Newcombe, Erskine
5 and Pignatano. Winner. Loser
... . . I T T 1
juraeue. xms vj-ray, xxetiic.
HOCKEY
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston (IP) The Boston
Bruins trimmed the New York
Rangers, 8-2, Saturday to ad
vance to the finals of tne
Stanley Cup hockey playoffs.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
By United Press
The amazing Springfield In
dians and the slumping Cleve
land Barons will get together
for the final game of their
best-of-seven semi-final series
in the American Hockey
Leagueon Tuesday, the win
ner to meet the Hershey Bears
for the Calder Cup champion
ship. Springfield, which had beat
en the Barons only four times
in 14 regular season contests,
evened its series at three
games each Sunday night with
a 3-0 triumph. The deciding
contest will be played in
Cleveland. Hershey gained the
final round by besting Provi
dence, 6-3, Saturday night, to
win their series four games
to one.
Train Hits Auto;
It Persons Killed
Sherbrooke, Que. HP)
Canadian Pacific Railway
diesel train slammed into a
crowded auto at a level cross
ing near here during a driv
ing rainstorm last night, kill
ing 11 persons.
The victims, including
seven children, were all pass
engers in the auto returning
from an Easter Sunday visit
to relatives.
The accident occurred at a
village some 22 miles west of
here around 6:45 p.m. (EST).
The victims were members of
two families and were all re
lated.
Relay Track
Meet Won
By Oregon
Corvallis (IP) The Uni
versity of Oregon won first
place in the first annual North
ern Division relays here Sat
urday by amassing 69 Vz points
and taking six of the 15
events.
Washington State was sec
ond with 50 23 points. Wash
ington was third with 46 13
points, Oregon State fourth
with 15 13, and Idaho last
with 12 16 points.
No records were broken and
there were no double winners.
The 100-yard dash was worn
by Gary Mapes of Washing
ton who outraced Jack Morris
of Oregon to win in 9:6.10.
Johannesburg, South Africa
(IP) Sandra Reynolds and
Renee Schuurman of South
Africa won the women's dou
bles titles in the South Afri
can tennis championships Sun
day by beating Louise Brough
of Beverly Hills, Calif., and
Shirley Bloomer of England,
4-6, 8-6, 6-3.
Portland Plays
Vancouver at
Klamath Falls
Riverside, Calif. (IP)
Portland was slated to meet
Vancouver here today in an
exhibition game.
The Beavers concluded
their spring training stay at
Brawley Sunday with a 13-6
shellacking of the Mounties.
The two clubs will travel
north together after today's
game, playing at Bakersfield,
Sacramento, Redding, and at
Klamath Falls, Ore.
BULLPEN COACH
Houston, Tex. (IP) George
(Good Kid) Susce joined the
Milwaukee Braves as bullpen
coach today, thereby complet
ing a full turnover in the
club's coaching staff since the
World Series. Susce, 40, re
placed Bob Keely, who re
signed for "personal reasons"
on March 13.
SIME VICTOR
Big Spring, Tex. (IP) Dave
Sime won the 100-yard dash
at the ABC relays, with Bobby
Morrow finishing third.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Monday, April 7, 1958
PHOENIX BEATS PADRES
Deland, Fla. HP) The
Phoenix Giants collected a
single home run in the third
inning and four more in the
fifth Sunday to defeat the San
Diego Padres, 11-8.
OLD FORT
Charlestown, N. M., HP)
A campaign is underway to
raise $40,000 to reconstruct
old Fort Number Four, a bas
tion built prior to the Ameri
can Revolution to protect set
tlers against Indian attacks.
41?
PRIDE OF GERMANY HERE NOW!
Come in for a
Demonstration
Ride
See it today at,,'
SKINNER - BUICK - CADILLAC
143 South Riverside
117 S. CENTRAL
PHONE SP 2-6241
9:30 to 5:30
MONDAYS TIL 9
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OPEN TONIGHT 'TIL 9
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MONTGOMERY WARD
Mow's She Sime So
RING YiyiK RM- EAR TO LnJARS J(S
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45
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No Payments Till June
NEW 1958 GARDEN MARK
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PA WITH YOUR OLD
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