Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1958)
r 12 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Ore., Sunday, April 13, 1958 Font I amid SehooEs Lead litest Satrtay aywar Annua Relay Go Tornado Takes 7th, Crater 2nd in 'A' Eugene OB Portland schools led the cinder and track parade in the Metropol itan division of the 21st Hay- ward relays here Saturday ending the long,, domination of Medford in the annual oval carnival. Jefferson of Portland took the championship with 54 points. Washington of Port land followed with 49 points and Beaverton of the big city area was third with 39. Grant of Portland scored 33 for fourth and Grants Pass from Southern Oregon was next with 27. Medford finished seventh with 19 and 5-6, behind Marshfield which had 21 In the -Class relays it was McLouahl in Winner in Cinder Tilt McLoughlin Junior high ninth graders trimmed the Crater Frosh 73 to 49 Friday in a track meet at Central Point and Bulldog seventh and eighth graders won from Central Point Junior high cindermen. Eighth grade score was 68 to 45 and the seventh grade count was 71V2 to 5V4. Mike Hood headed the Bulldog ninth with firsts in the high hurdles, discuss and high jump. His hurdle time was :09.1, a new McLoughlin record. Bob Rix of McLough lin also tied a Bulldog mark with 1:31.1 in the 660-yard Fun. Phil Humphreys was double winner for McLough lin, grabbing the 75-yard dash and the 150. Martin won the low hurdles and javelin for Crater. 10 of 14 ;. McLoughlin won 10 of the 14 ninth grade tussles . In the eighth grade show the Bulldogs won seven events and tied for another, sweeping the 75- yard dash and pole vault. Dexter of McLoughlin in the 75 and javelin and John Champ of Central Point m the high and lowhurdles were double win ners and Champ had a share of another first in the high jump. The Bulldogs claimed all events in the seventh grade meet, sweeping the 75 and 150, the shot and the vault. Comstcck and Dalbec were twin victors. RESULTS: (Ninth Grade) ' High hurdles Hood, M; Martin, C; Burton C. :09.1. 75 Humphreys. M; Reyerson, C; Winetrout, M. :08.4. 1320 Connolly. M; Hogue. C; Denning. C. 3:49.1. 330 Eddy, M; White, C; Rupp, M. :40.2. Low hurdles Martin, C; Burton, C; Charley, M. :13.4. - 150 Humphreys, M: Edwards, C; Ayres, M. :16.3. 660 Rix, M; Ribey, C; Stever, M. 1:31.1. " Pole vault Burton, C; Lingren. M; Romine, C. 10 feet. . Discus Hood, M; Winetrout, M; LaCasse, C. 116-6. Shot Funston, M; Winetrout, M; LaCasse. C. 51-10. Broad jump Edwards, C; Humphreys. M; Lingren, M. 18-11. High jump Hood. M: Avres. M. and Garrison. C, tied second. 5-6'i. - javelin Martin. C: Davis, M; Twedell. C. 130 feet. 440-relay McLoughlin (Funston, pom. v,nariey, numpnrey), (Eighth Grade) - High hurdles Champ, ter. M: Riven. C. :10.8. C; Dex- 75 Dexter, M; Kehoe, M; Mack, M. :utj.t. 330 Lewis. C; Wald, C; Mack, xvi. :.. J. Low hurdles Champ, C; Clich es, M: Rivenburg, C. :13.2. ' 150 Wald. C; Griffin, M; Ke toe. M. :17.2. 660 Guches, M; Cavin, C; Lewis, C. 1:40.2. . Pole vault Plankenhorn, M; ' Lawrence, M: Coghill, M. 9-3. Discus Kimball, C; Krapp, C: Mack, M. 97-9. Shot Clearwater, M; Renner, M; Kimball. C. 49-10. - Broad jump Griffin, M; Clausen. jm; letting, c 16-4 '.2. . Javelin Dexter, M; Muller, C; jawrence, ai. no teet. '. 440-rela McLoughlin (Griffin, Kehoe. Clausen. Dexter). :50.9. ' High jump Plankenhorn and Coghill. M, and Champ, C, tied (Seventh Grade) High jump Calkins, M: Staas eld. M: Van Pelt. M, and Swan Son, C. tied third. 4-10. Low hurdles Dalbec, M; Hunt, M: Johnson. C. :10:5. 75 Van Pelt. M; Comstock, ,M; VaiKins, m: :us.i. . 330 Dalbec, M; Swanson, C; dears. M. :41.6. 150 Comstock, M; Calkins, M; Smelts. M. :17.9. ' Shot put Comstock, M; Wolf M; Wright, M 32-8 'i. ' Broad jump Dalbec, M; O'Dear, II: Swanson C. 16 feet. Pole Vault Spafford, Van Pelt. Hammond. M. tied first. 7 feet. 440-relay McLoughlin (Griffin, Comstock, Calkins, Van Pelt). 2.6. GIFFIN TO SAN METEO . Oswego OP Cliff Giffin, who resgined as football coach at Lake Oswego high last December, said today he has accepted a coaching job at San Mateo, Calif., college. He will be head swim coach and football line coach. Giffin is a former University of Ore gon tackle. - Springfield, Mass. (IP) Construction of the main building of basketball's Halll of Fame will begin next year on the Springfield College campus. Almost $200,000 al ready has been received -in pledges to aid in the construc- the same song second verse with different scoring. Cot tage Grove's favored Lions roared for 74Vi points, to sue cessfully defend the crown they won last year. Crater with 42 Vz counters repeated as second place team. Red mond was third with 36Vi and Ashland fourth with 34 Corvallis annexed fifth hon ors 32V2. Ashland was third in 1957. Two Jeff Records Medford's reign in the big school division of the Hay- waras concluded alter six successive championships The seventh place was the times entered in the meet. The Tornado has won 15 championships and taken sec onds in the other years. Jefferson set records in the 440 and 880-yard relays and won the shuttle hurdles. Washington smashed the broad jump mark and was first also in the high jump. Grant s third was helped by setting a new standard in the two-mile and by taking the shot put. Two Grants Pass men set new records, Glenn Winning ham in the javelin and Mike Sparlin in the pole vault. Hardy Spurgeon, Mashfield, was discus victor. Seven Firsts For Lions Cleveland won the distance medley relay and North Sa lem the mile. Powerful Cottage Grove won six firsts and tied for another in Class A. The Lions established records in the two mile and shuttle hurdles. It copped the mile, distance medley and shot put. Stan Harris took the discus for CG and Dave Palmer tied with Bill Martin, North Bend, in the pole vault. Crater helped its cause by winning the 880 relay. Os wego won the broad jump, Corvallis the high jump, Lar ry Noland, North Bend, the javelin, and Prineville the 440. METRO RESULTS: Shot put Grant. 145-9 '1: Med ford second 152, Grants Pass third. 135-3 Klamath fifth 132-4. Broad Jump Washington. 64- ei record: Medford sixth 54-8. Discus bpuregon, Marsrmeia, 154; Rose, Grants Pass, fifth. Javelin Winningham. Grants Pass. 197-11. (record). Pole Vault Sparlin. Grants Pass. 12-8 record: Harvey. Medford. tied tor second, 12 feet. High Jump Washington 17-2; Klamath Falls. Medford, Hillsboro, tied for fourth 16-10. 440 Jefferson, :43.8. (record): Grants Pass fifth. Medford sixth. Two-mile Grant, 8:14, (record). 880 Jefferson. 1:30.6, record: Grants Pass, fifth. Distance Medley Cleveland. 10:57.6; Medford fourth. Shuttle Hurdles Jefferson :34.9: Grants Pass third, Klamath Falls sixth. Mile North Salem, 3:29.6. CLASS A RESULTS: Broad lumrj Oswego. 57-103: Crater, fifth, 55- x. Discus Stan Hams. Cottage Grove, 138-9 i; Stubblefield, Ash land, second, 128-1; Mike Martin, Crater, third, 123-8. snot put cottage tirove, uo ll'i: Ashland, third, 125-1. High lump Corvallis. 16-10: Crater, second, 16-2. Javelin Larry Noland, North North Bend, 177 feet, record; John Burns. Crater, fourth, 163-07. Pole Vault Dave Palmer, Cot tage Grove, and Bill Martin, North Bend, tied ll-9i; Jim Eldred, Cra ter, tied for third, 11-3 440 Prineville, 46.4; Crater tied for second Two Mile Cottage Grove. 8:25.3, record; Ashland second. Crater third. 880 Crater, 1:36.1. Distance medley Cottage Grove, iu:os.7. Shuttle hurdles Cottage Grove, 25.8, record; Ashland fourth. Cra ter sixth. Mile Cottage Grove, 3 :38.4; Ash land second.' METRO SCORING: Jefferson 54, Washington 48. Beaverton 39. Grant 33, Grants Pass 27, Marshfield 21 Va. Medford 19 56, North Salem 16, Cleveland 14. Roosevelt 13. South Eugene 10, Benson 8. Wilson 8, Klamath Falls o'a. Roseburg 4, Hillsboro 2i. Lincoln 2, bpringfield 1. CLASS A SCORING: Cottage Grove 74 Vi. Crater 42 'i Redmond 36 'i. Ashland 34. Cor vallis 32. Oswego 30. Prineville 30, North Bend 27 Vi. Lebanon 16 2 Bend. Clackamas, Sweet Home, Wil lamette did not score.' Gunderson Cops Golfing Title Phoenix, Ariz. (IP) Na tional amateur champion Jo anne Gunderson captured the southwestern women's golf championship by defeating Blanche Johnson 7 and 6 Sat urday. Miss Gunderson, an Ari zona State freshman from Se attle, Wash., fired a 39-3f3 75 for the first 18 on the Phoenix Country club course where women's par is 7,4. The college freshman had a 53 total on the final 13 holes when Mrs. Johnson, of Albuquerque, N.M., conceded. PRO GETS COACHING JOB Cedar Falls, Iowa (IP) -Stan Sheriff, who played pro football last year with the Cleveland Browns, has been nemed as an assistant football coach at Iowa State Teachers college. Poison Oak? Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL You must be satisfied or your money cheerfully refunded. Get a bottle today at WESTERN THRIFT ITT" " " I iiXi SPINCASTING AT SPORTSFAI R Spincasting is being demonstrated and all types of fishing gear being shown at the first annual Southern Oregon Sportsfair of the Crater Lions club today at the Medford armory. There is casting com petition at a special pond for the younger set. Shown here inspecting some spinning equipment are Tom Rickard, president of Medfof :'fit.s:u7 INDIANS DUST GIANTS Cleveland Indian catcher Dick Brown hits the dirt with a run during exhibition game with the San Francisco Giants in Houston, Tex. Missing the tag is catcher Bob Schmidt of the Giants. Cleveland won, 113-14, in 10th inning of game. Beavers Subdue Mounties 7-1 Sacramento, Calif. (IP) The Portland Beavers defeat ed Vancouver's Mounties, 7- 1, in an exhibition baseball game here Friday night. Portland pitcher Al Lary allowed only one hit in five innings and relif hurler Ted Edmunds gave Vancouver only one more hit as Bevos George Freese and Nini Tor- nay both banged two-run homers. Eagle Point Boy Gets Grand Theft Eagle Point An Eagle Point boy was arrested by state police here Saturday on charges of grand larceny as a suspect in the theft of a car. Police said the vehicle, a 1956 model- station wagon, was taken from the home of James A. Vargo, Butte Falls Star route, about 3:30 a.m. Saturday. The car was recov ered in Eagle Point about 10 a.m. Saturday by state po lice. They said the 16-year-old youth was lodged in the Jack son County Juvenile Deten tion home pending further ac tion by juvenile authorities. SENILITY ON RISE Gainesville, Fla. (IP) Dr. Henry C. Schumacher, a University of Florida psychi atrist, says senility is increas ing among older people be cause of loss of status and prestige. Speaking Friday be fore delegates to a conference on age problems, he said this is due to older persons com ing up against increasing so cial isolation and lack of oc cupational opportunities. BERT'S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE 918 W. McAndrews Rd. Ph. SP 2-4117 P.O. Box 667 Automatic Transmission Rebuilding & Exchange Tribune Salem Observes Blossom Fete Salem (IP) Salem ob serves its 45th annual blos som day Sunday with plenty of soft- billowy blossoms in evidence. This year's route is the same as last year. Donald Doerfler, chairman of the event, said the route is clear ly marked and trees in full bloom. Salem Cherrians, sponsors of the day, will give out bro chures downtown describing the scenic drive which starts' in west Salem. Plastic Divining Rod Finds Water Norwood, Ohio (IP) Tom Anderson, sometimes farmer, railroader, laborer, and water dowser, claims his plastic di vining rod is better than the old fashioned peach twig for finding underground springs. Anderson, 71, who can't re member bringing in a dry well since he started dowsing for water during World War I, uses a Y-shaped plastic stick with a small vial of wa ter clipped to the tip. Holding each of the two short ends in his hands, he walks back and forth . with the stick's tip pointing sky ward. When the tip suddenly pulls toward the earth, he knows he has struck water. In his earlier years, Ander son experimented with wire forks, peach branches and hazel twigs, but he, now says the plastic stick is best be cause it cannot be affected by any other underground substance. the Jackson County chapter of the Izaak Walton league, Ron Gandee Jr. and Ken neth Wise, Hedrick Junior High school students, and Pappy Coleman, television sports personality. The fair runs today from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Boats are empha sized. But a variety of sports equipment and activities will be displayed and demonstrated. Reservations Should Be Made For Golf Dinner Rogue Valley Country club has issued a reminder for men members to turn in res ervations for the special golf ers buffet supper on Friday night, April 18. The dinner will be a fare well occasion for Al Williams, who has resigned as club golf professional. In addition a drawing for partners for the club two-ball tournament will be held. A social hour is set for 7 p.m. with the dinner at 8 p.m. Golfers are asked to sign up at the pro shop for entry in the two-ball. At the draw ing high handicappers will be paired with low ' handicap partners. Eurekans Net Victors Eureka High school tennis team blanked Medford 7 to 0 Friday in matches here. The Loggers won all but one match in straight sets. Henry Olson won the only set for Medford when Gary Hunt downed him 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. Other singles scraps saw George Hunt trip John Root 6-1, 6-4, Charles Goodwin beat Gary Cummings 6-1, 6-1, Mike Moore won from John Shaw 6-0, 6-0 and Mike Palm er defeated Paul Ryn 6-1, 6-4. In doubles Hunt and Good win dropped Root and Cum mings 6-2, 6-2 and Moore and Palmer beat Ryn and Shaw 6-1, 6-2. , SOC Netrers Drop Match at Humboldt State Areata Humboldt State college lost, 6-3, to Southern Oregon college in a tennis match here Friday afternoon. The Red Raiders were play ing without their number one man, Bill Isaacs, in winning their first match in four starts. RESULTS: John Russell (SOC) lost to Art Daliane (HSC) 6-1. 6-1. Bob Gouley (SOC) los to Bob Weddell (HSC) 6-0, 6-2. Bruce Merrill (SOC) beat Boyd Dron (HSC) 6-2, 2-6, 6-3. Jack Jacobson (SOC) beat Loc Karstensson (HSC) 6-3, 6-0. Oris Thetford (SOC) beat Jack Richardson (HSC) 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. Dick Clark (SOC) beat Bruce Paige (HSC) 6-4, 7-5. Doubles: Russell and Gouley (SOC) lost to Daliane and WeddeU 6-3. 6-2. Merrill and Jacobson (SOC) beat Dron and Karstensson 6-4, 6-2. Thetford and Clark (SOC) beat Richardson and Paige 6-3, 6-8, 7-5. An inch of topsoil takes three to 10 centuries to build, but it can wash away in a single storm, the National Geographical Society says. Vegetation breaks the force of rains, prevents splash erosion, and retards run-off. Available to Everyone O SPORTSFAIR O At Our Low, Low Admission Charges Skowron, Banks Set Torrid Pace By MILTON RICHMAN United Press Sports Writer If they handed out most valuable player awards for the spring training period, Bill Skowron of the Yankees and Ernie Banks of the Cubs would walk off with the plaques hands down. Some players, realizing that spring training perform ances don't count, merely go through the motions, but Skowron and Banks are ripping enemy pitchers as if a World Series share is at stake. Skowron, whose three-run homer helped the Yankees to a 14-2 victory over their Rich mond farm hands Friday, .has collected 33 hits in 76 times up this spring for a sizzling 434 average. He leads the Yanks with 11 homers and 36 runs batted in. , Banks Beats Dodgers Banks has been equally hot for the Cubs. His 11th inning homei beat the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-3, Friday and rais ed his spring total to 14 hom ers and 42 runs batted in. jjanics connected tor lus cir- cuit off Carl Erskine after Duke Snider homered to tie the score at 3-all in the top of the 11th. Banks' blow sent the Dodgers down to their fifth straight defeat. But if the Dodgers think they have troubles, they ought to confer with the Detroit Tigers, who dropped their seventh game in a row at Den ver, Colo. The world cham pion Milwaukee Braves pounded Detroit ace Jim Bun- mng for seven runs in the first three innings and then romped to a 14-6 triumph. A brilliant eight - inning pitching performance by right-hander Dick Donovan led the Chicago White Sox to a 3-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals at Omaha, Neb. Rookie outfielder Don Taussig's 10th inning single scored Whitey Lockman with the run that gave the San Francisco Giants a 2-1 tri umph over the Cleveland In dians at Tulsa, Okla. Ted Williams, appearing in a pinch hitting role, got his first hit of the spring a sin gle as the Boston Red Sox defeated their Raleigh, N.C., farm hands of the Carolina League, 6-0. Fa I staffs Brilliant ' Syracuse, N. Y. (IP) The fabulous Falstaffs from St. Louis completed the greatest all-around bowling perform ance in 55 years of American Bowling congress champion ship competition Friday. Individual members of the Missouri squad took command in two more divisions after helping gain the open team division lead the night before. Their combined all-events score of 9608, turned in by regulars Steve Nagy, Billy Welu, Buzz Fazio, Carl Rich ard and Harry Smith, plus sub Woody Hulsey, surpassed by 102 pins the previous team all-events high of 9506 set by the Detroit Strohs in 1951. Nagy Heads All-Events The veteran Nagy had doubles and singles efforts of 614 and 690 to go with his team score of 729 to take the individual all-events lead with 2033. Welu, 26, and Hulsey, 27, the two youngest members of the Fulstaffs, took the doubles ; lead with a tremendous 1313 production that Welu paced with 714. Welu also wound up only four pins behind Nagy in all-events and snared sec ond place with 2029. Carl Richard totaled 1935 foi third in all-events. It was only the fourth time in 55 years that three members of one team bowled 1900 or more in an ABC. George Bernard Shaw join ed the Fabian Society in 1884. Adults - 50c Children 6 to 12... 25c Children CDCC, under 6 inCCe All proceeds to Sight and Blind. Grants Pass Trips Bedford, 5-4, 6-3 SOUTHERN OREGON CONFERENCE STANDINGS W. L. Grants Pass 2 0 Ashland ' 1 l Crater 1 l Klamath Falls 0 1 Medford 1 l Pet. 1.000 .500 .500 .000 .000 First baseman Pete Proc tor drove home the tying and winning runs in the sixth in ning and Pitcher Jim Smith bore down in the two closing frames to retire six men in order to give the Grants Pass high baseball team a 5 to 4 Southern Oregon conference victory over Medford here Friday. By the victory, the Cave men assumed lone possession of the conference leadership. Grants Pass, unblemished in two loop frays, got help from Crater which handed Ashland its first league loss 7 to 2 also on Friday. Making a clean sweep of its afternoon rivalry, Grants Pass was winner by 6 to 3 in the non-counting second scrap of the doubleheader. The Black Tornado outhit the Cavemen in each game but didn't get sufficient extra aids like bases on balls, errors and sacrifices to help put runs across. And Medford's defense did not match its effectiveness of previous games. GP was errorless. Bad Hop Single Grants Pass lagged 3 to ,4 going into the sixth inning of the league struggle. First man up, Smith, drew a base on balls. Lee Holmes laid down a bunt and was safe on Pitch er Dennis Barr's poor throw to first base. Both runners ad vanced on Dick Hayes's ground out and Proctor slashed a bad hop single through shortstop territory to score both runners. After Barr yielded another safety to Gary Honeycutt, he was relieved on the hill by Tom Laurance. The ' reliever walked one batter to fill the bases but fanned the next two to retire the side. George Ice, first batter to face Smith in the sixth canto, grounded out. Then Smith struck out the next two Tor nadoes and followed up with three straight whiffs in the seventh. Smith had 14 strikeouts and walked one and hit one bat ter in the tussle. Jensen Triples The Cavemen got their first marker in the game in the sec ond inning without a hit on two bases on balls, a hit bat ter, a sacrifice and a sacrifice error combination. Medford tied the score in the second. Ron Peery singled, stole sec ond and went to third base on a passed ball . Ken Jensen poked a fly into right field. It hit fair and got a long roll for a triple, scoring Peery. GP went on top 3 to 1 with runs in the fourth inning. The Cavemen utilized a hit batter, base on balls, single by Dan Wolke, a fielder's choice, an error and a sacrifice flyout by Proctor. Medford compiled three runs in the fifth inning. Ray Konopasek was hit by a pitch and moved to second on Ken Durkee's single. Lowell Dean hit to score Konopasek. Then Peery slammed a long fly which bounded to the tennis courts for a three-bagger. Lowell Dean with two sin gles and Peery were the only THIS MONTH 0M.Y ON ALL FORDS and L1ERCURYS 15,000 Mile Fordomatic & Mercury Transmission Service GRATER Main & Fir Sts. 'WHERE GOOD SERVICE IS players with more than one hit. Medford got seven hits in the game while the Cavemen tagged Barr :nd Laurance for six. Nine Hits To Four In the second session the Tornado got nine hits off Den nis Barlow while GP got to Larry B r o w n f or three and to Jerry Anderson for one. But Barlow gave up only one base on balls to Medford" and it didn't figure in the scoring. Brown walked five and four Medford errors hurt. Grants Pass picked up three runs in the .first inning on hits by Reed Daugherity and Marvin Chandler, a sacrifice fly by jack Williams, a walk and three errors. Its other three were in the third panels on four walks, a hit by Wolke, a sacrifice and an error. The Tornado tallied twice in the second stanza on sin gles by Ice and Jerry Fields and a double by Jensen. The other run was in the fourth on hits by' Ice, Ray Konopasek and Durkee. Konopasek, Peery and Ice each had two hits, Perry an infield double. Anderson was effective in relief. John Fox, who singled, was the only Caveman to get on base against him. He struck out four. 1ST. GAME BOX: Grants Pass AB R H Holmes, 2b 111 PO 1 2 9 8 1 0 - 0 0 1 0 Hayes, ss 5 3 4 1 3 2 3 1 2 Proctor, lb . Honeycutt, c Jacquette cf Benner, 3b . Sprinkle, rf Wolke. If Chandler, If Smith, p Totals . Medford Konopasek. 2b . Durkee, 3b ..... C. Dean, ss L. Dean, 3b Peery, cf Fields rf Peterson, If Ice rf . . Jensen, c Barr. p Laurance, p Totals 25 AB 3 4 3 3 - 3 3 2 1 3 2 1 5 6 21 R H PO 28 4 7 21 6 3 Grants Pass Medford . 010 2025 010 030 4 Runs batted In Holmes, Proctor 3, L Dean, Perry 2, Jensen. Three base hits Hayes, Peery, Jensen. Stolen bases Smith, Peery. Sacri fice bunts Holmes, Benner, Sprinkle. Sacrifice fly Proctor. Left on base Grants Pass 12. Med ford 5. Bases on balls Off Barr 4, off Laurance 3, off Smith 1. Strike outs By Barr 6, by Laurance 2. by Smith 13. Six hits and 5 runs off Barr in 5 innings; no hits and no runs off Laurance in innings. Hit batters Sprinkle and Smith (by Barr), Konopasek (by Smith). Passed balls by Honey cutt 2. Losing pitcher Barr. 2ND GAME LINESCORE: Grants Pass 303 00 6 4 0 Medtord 020 10 3 9 5 Barlow and Daugherity; Brown, Anderson (3) and Jensen. LC Tracksters Cop Triangular Portland (IP) Lewis and Clark won its own Invitation al track meet Friday piling up 64 points to 38 for Port land State, 28 for Clark Jun ior College, 21 for Portland and 8 for George Fox. CONDUCTOR INJURED Figueras, Spain (IP) Austrian orchestra conduct or Felix Prohaska was in se rious condition in Santa Cruz hospital Saturday as a result of a highway accident. His car went out of control Fri day night and overturned. INCLUDES: 10 Quarts of Tranmission Oil Remove Transmission Pan and Clean . Adjust Transmission Bands Adjust Transmission Linkage Adjust Shift Linkage Drain & Refill Torque Converter LMI ggp) Phone SP 3-4547 Busso Halts Boardrnan Boston OP) Tough Johnny Busso looked for bigger game today after providing to 620 ringside fans and a national television audience that his win over one-time lightweight contender Larry Boardrnan 10 months ago was no fluke. Busso, 23, of Astoria, N. Y., sent Boardrnan to the deck seven times at ancient Me chanics Building Friday night before stopping the Marlboro, Conn., lad at 2:59 of the ninth in a scheduled 10-rounder. Busso took a lopsided de cision win from Boardrnan last June 28. He was subbing Friday night for Gale Kerwin, who withdrew several weeks ago. Busso Down Too The lOth-ranked Busso was down for a four-count him self in the sixth but dealt the 22-year-old Boardrnan a ter rific licking before and after. In his first bout since a seven-week hitch in the Army, Busso nearly ended it in the opening stanza when he knocked Boardrnan down twice within the first min ute. He had Boardrnan down three times in the fifth and twice in the ninth. 'Im interested in Ralph Dupas next if he'll give me a shot," Busso said, referring to the third-ranked contender from New Orleans. The win gave Busso a 32-5-1 record. Boardrnan suffered his seventh defeat against 36 victories. Abiline, Tex. (IP) Olym pic champ Bobby Morow of Abiline Christian ran behind teammate Bill Woodhouse in the 100-yard dash for the sec ond time in two weeks Fri day in a traingular track meet Baylor and North Texas State. Bolen Mustang TILLER The Power Way To Better Gardening TILL - WEED - MULCH CULTIVATEI Selecr-O-Width Tines let you vary rilling swath Powerful 4 cycle engine Simple clutch end throttle controls Adjustable depth control TILLERS PRICED FROM $15100 to $22500 NOW IN STOCKI 110V Push Button ELECTRIC STARTERS For All Small $4A50 Engines up Big Y Supply 1948 Pacific Hiway North PHONE SP 3-3160 All This for ONLY $1195 This is a recommended auto matic transmission service to keep transmission in top work ing condition. A MUST" ML MOTORS