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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1958)
A r 10 MAIL TRIBUNE, Meo'tord', Oregon, Wednesday, May 7, 1953 " Portland Subdues Spokane 3-2 Second Straight Might By GENE BRYANT United Press Sports Writer , The Portland Beavers hand ed Spokane a 3-2 defeat for the second straight night Tuesday night, thereby mov ing into a comparatively se cure half game lead over the rest of the field in the Pacific Coast League pennant chase. The Beavers rusted Spo fcane from top spot Monday night by an .007 percentage margin. . Last night's loss dropped the Indians to a fourth place deadlock with Vancouver while Sacramento and Salt Lake City moved into the sec i ond and third positions, re spectively. In other games, the Solons edged San Diego, 5-4, Salt t Lake .dumped Phoenix, 7-5, and Seattle snapped a three ; game losing streak with a 5-2 : victory over Vancouver. Two Games Out Seattle, in last place, is only two games off the pace while Phoenix and San Diego, a ' half game ahead of the Rai njers, are only one and a half games out of first. Portland collected 10 hits off four Spokane pitchers, picking up single runs in the hMl Sf&m Udh-: ASSORTED CHOCOLATES Creams, nuts, fruits, chewies, crunches I lb. box 135 2 lb. box 260 . ; I FT i . e O ""-OK y Out) j THE GIFT BOX Chocolates and butter Ions mib.gift2 2V4 lb. gift 3 The finest, freshest candies you can buy ... exclusively ours ' Central jj&B Drug Reliable Prescriptions Be Ready For rBoirt Pirt Off Needed Kepaars To Your Car! ' See Or Call Us Take As Long As 12 Mos. To Pay! ON APPROVED CREDIT DODGE 315 E. Fifth Next to third, fourth and fifth innings. John Buzhardt pitched seven innings of shutout ball until Jim Baxes of the Indians blasted a pinch homer with Norm Sherry aboard in the eighth. John Jancse was charged with the loss. Seattle scored twice in the first frame on a pair of walks, two singles and a passed ball, then added single runs in the third, sixth and seventh to drop the Mounties. Art Fow ler scattered eight hits and fanned nine in gaining his second win against the same number of losses. Solons Win In Ninth At Sacramento, Don Hunt er singled home Bob Roselli in the ninth for the Solon's victory. The Padres had led off-the eighth frame with four runs, but the Sacs came back with three in their half of the eighth and the winning run in the final inning. Earl Averill homered for the Pads while Kal Segrist hit a roundtripper for the winners. The Solons held a 1-0 lead until Averill unloaded his three-run blast in the' eighth. Phoenix put on a last-half rush at Salt Lake but the Bees hung on for their win. The ...remember Mother with the finest. Mother's Day Sunday, May 11 Main and Central Carefree Driving NOW About . . . o MOTOR OVERHAULS o RADIOS o PAINTING o BODY & FENDER REPAIR o Free Estimates All Makes and Models MOTORS - PLYMOUTH HEADQUARTERS Greyhound Giants scored twice in the eighth and added three more runs in the ninth to give 2,457 Bee fans a scare, but homers by Dick Stuart and Paul Pet tit in the seventh provided the victory margin. Salt Lake had scored five times early in the game with the help of Giant outfield errors. ' LINESCORES: Vancouver 000 001 001 2 8 2 Seattle 201 001 lOx 5 9 0 Heman. Hattenf 7 and White; Fowler and Aylward. Spokane 000 000 020 2 5 3 Portland ..001 110 0003 10 0 Jancse. McMinn 5, Walz (6i, Patrick 8t and Sherry; Buzhardt, Henry (9) and Tornay. San Diego 000 000 0404 6 0 Sacramento 000 100 031 5 9 0 Brodowski. Woodschick (8) and Jones: Watkins, Bridges (9) and Dalrymple. Phoenix .00O 000 023 5 7 1 Salt Lake .130 001 20x 7 5 1 Zanni, Vote (8) and Haller; Trimble. Williams (9), Kildoo T9) and Miley, Paul (9). Bowling VICTORY LEAGUE Hearln L u m b e r company and United States National bank tied in the standings of the Victory Bowling league after the final night of the regular season. They will playoff-this week for the second half crown. Winner will meet Clave Construction, first half victor, on Monday for the league diadem. Standings: Hearin Lumber U. S. Bank Clave Construction . . Earl's Eastside Union Sta. Pioneer Clb Quality Market . . E. H. Mann Davis Transfer Roeue Sportsman W. . 41 . 41 . 39 .39 . 39 . 38 . 36 . 31 . 30 . 29 , 25 . 22 27 27 29 29 29 28 32 37 35 39 39 46 Pick s Apparel ... Arthur Murray's Studio.. Sewing Machine Center.. Results: Hearin Lumber 4 (L. Neeley 5071 2139; Sewing Machine 0 (C. Mar tin 383) 1828. Earl's station 1 (J. PidcocK 431) 1994; Pick's 3 (J. Wilson 567) 2198. V.'S. Bank 3 (C. Pardee 399) 1951: Rogue Sportsman 1 (R. Ed monds, sub. 481) 2047. Quality Mkt. 1 (H. cuiy 533) 2116; Clave Const. 3 (S. Shaffer 540) 2215. Mann Co. 1 (E. Lenz 485) 1947; Pioneer Club 3 (D. 'Harris 448) 1934. Davis Transfer 3 (E. Kedfieia 486) 1974; Arthur Murray 1 (A. Marugg 400) 1893. Sandy snaner, nign game, zuz. Sandy Shaffer, high series, 540. Helen Culy, high games and high series for the year. SENIOR LEAGUE Bauman's Fire Equipment won four points from Lau rine's Carpet House to regain first place and win the second half by two games in the Senior Bowling league. SENIOR LEAGUE Standines: W. L. Bauman's Fire Equipm't 36 16 Laurine's Carpet House.. 34 18 W.O.T.M 31 21 Rainbow Cafe 29 V2 22'2 V.F.W i 22 V2 29i,i Star Body Works 17 V2 J4'z Cummings Insurance .... 17 V2 34 '2 Med. Paint & Wallpaper Results: - Medford Paint 4 (jeroiyn Bur roughs 393, Carol Booth 353) 2063; VJF.W 0 (Jan Bateman 325, George Schuler 421) 1962. Dick Atkins 469) 2476; Laurine's O (ueiores w imams 001, jjuii ljiuhu 347) 1953. W.O.T.M. 4 (Pauline Denyer 458, Butch Tompkins 448) 2970; Cum mings Insurance 0 (Carlene Schup pennies 255, Helen Morrison 261) 1393 (forfeit). Rainbow 3 (Linda Eccelston 361, Gary Williams 471) 2516; Star Body 1 (Sue Harmon 319, Lynn Seger 365) 2489. Girls high game 158, Snirley Berns. Boys high game 178, Dick Atiuns. BEAVERS SPILL PILOTS Corvallis (IP) Oregon State upset the University of Portland's powerful tennis team 4-3 Tuesday to avenge a 5-2 defeat last month. Capt. Jimmie Jackson defeated Bill Rose, ace Portland player, in the key match. This Summer! Phone SP 3-3687 Glendale Captures Subdistrict Title Eagle Point Glendale High school has wrapped up the Rogue league and District 6 A-2 Southern division baseball championship. The Pirates clipped Eagle Point 7 to 0 last night to record their fifth victory against no losses in the cir cuit. Glendale did all its scoring in the early innings, collecting 10 hits while its own pitcher, Moschkau, held the Eagles to five. Cliff Worley homered for the Pirates. Moschkau and Coate each had a triple and a single and Wes Young slapped two singles. Eight of the Glendale hits were off Eagle starting hurler, Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF rVO PRESS AGENTS dear to the hearts of newspapermen are Dick Maney and Jim Moran: Maney for his phenomenal gift of gab, and Moran for the screwball stunts he has dreamed up. Latest Moran gambit was a bellicose belle who climbed on to the stage at a performance of "Look Back in Anger" and belabored an actor over the noggin with a rolled-up newspaper, screaming, "How dare, you treat your wife that way, you miserable cad!" The papers had a fine time re porting the incident, but then a spoil-sport discov ered that Moran, press agent for the show, had coached the gal for the stunt. Other Moran exploits include walking a live bull through a china shop (not even the handle of one teacup was broken), searching for a needle in the biggest (and most-photographed) haystack in history, selling an electric fan to an Eskimo, and announcing a new hair tonic called "Slo-Gro" ("Use it daily and you'll need only one hair cut a year"). Moran thinks this was the ad that convinced Perry Como there was no future for him in the barber business. 1958, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Feature Syndicate. ' Americans Building Up Bank Accounts, Statistics Reveal By ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Editor New York OP! The art of saving, it is said, is becoming quite as respectable as it was in the days of B en j a m i n Franklin. Books are being written about it. And the statistics show that Americans are building up their bank Elmer Walzer accounts. Donald I. Rogers has just written a book about saving money and investing it to make the necessary nest egg for eventual retirement. The new volume published by Henry Holt and company is entitled "Make Your In come Count." Having shown how to ac cumulate some money, Rogers proceeds to show where to put it. He explains the values of common stocks, extols the value of dollar averaging, delves into the many mutual funds and their variety of in vestment, warns against the pitfalls of penny stocks, re veals the extent of the over-the-counter market, and gives a lesson in puts, calls, shorts and warrants. Wrong Idea In a chapter entitled "Do-It-Yourself Investing," he scotches the idea that Wall Street plays stocks as horse enthusiasts play races. "Scratch a Wall Streeter in one of his more relaxed mo ments," he suggests, "and you might think you've found a human player a man who likes his odds long and makes his living by conjuring with occult harbingers like sun spots and pigeon flights in Central park. "Mostly, though, this kind of patter is confined to the bright attitudinizing you find at cocktail parties. Though old hands do develop a 'sixth sense' about the market, they readily confess that making money on Wall Street is pri marily a matter of common sense. That and experience." Rogers, who' is financial and business editor of the New York Herald Tribune, thereupon gives the novice some sound advice in lan guage he can understand. Fund Required He suggests investing until you have a fund. Then you might do a bit of speculating. He devotes considerable space to growth stocks and warns that many of them offer pit falls for the investor. A study conducted by Cun ningham & Walsh, an adver tising agency, shows that newspaper readership is un affected by TV in the home. In fact, in 1957, U.S. news paper circulation reached a new all-time high of 58,000, 000 copies purchased daily. Jim Nease. Bill Turner en tered the game in the third in ning with no outs and a man on third base. That runner failed to make home and Glendale went scoreless over the remaining three frames Turner was on the hill. Moschau struck out seven and walked three batters. Glendale combined four singles, a walk, an error and two groundouts for its four runs in the first inning. Eagle Point meets Butte Falls today in a non-league game. LINESCORES: Eagle Point ..000 000 0 0 5 Rlpnriale . 412 000 X 7 10 Nease, Turner (3) and Tresham; Moschkau and bmart. He lists five check-points for the investor in selecting his stocks pre-tax profit margins as a percentage of sales; net return on invested capital; sales and earnings growth; financial strength; and dividend payout. "Over the years, the com pany that shows up best on all of them1 is the one that will make money for you," he says. Rogers also delves into the problems of insurance, buy ing a house, buying a car, bor rowing money, making a will, making your spare time pay, and budgeting your income. Finally, he gives advice on re tirement. His object is to show how to make money for one's in dependence. "It can be done," he con cludes. "It's not hard. It re quires diligence and discip line. But the rewards are worth the modest sacrifices. Money itself will not buy hap piness, but independence and freedom from worry can make happiness more easily attainable. It s -yours for the taking." WHY IS ' ; The) answer's sasy Hermitage Is, fine Kentucky bourbon at a surprisingly moderate pries... one of the first whiskies across the plains and Into the Westl OLD kentuckystraightibourbon iTHE OLD HERMITAGE CO.. LOUISVILLE, KY DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY, SS JR0QF SPORTS Oregonian Clubs Drop NWL Frays By UNITED PRESS A pair of 10-inning games featured action in the North west League Tuesday night and in each game the Oregon teams came out on the losing end. Lewiston topped Salem 6-5 in 10 frames and Tri-City nicked Eugene 6-4 in an extra inning. The Lewiston victory enabled the Broncs to hold their first place lead by one game over Wenatchee which handed Yakima an 11-4 de feat. Lewiston got its run in the tenth when Tony. Santino beat out a bunt. He was forced at second by Arnie Hallgren but Hallgren crossed when Bruce Mcintosh and Hillis Lane bopped singles. Tri-City got two runs in the tenth to take Eugene. Two errors, a single and a sacri fice fly by Dick Minice sent .the Braves' runs across. Joe Drotar received credit for his third win of the sea son when he replaced Jim Vogelsang in the sixth and went the rest of the route. Wenatchee crashed through with four runs in the first frame and was never headed in its victory over Yakima. Larry Helms belted a three run triple in the big inning. Reliefer Duane Richards took over for starter Dave Skaug stad in the third. Richards al lowed one run -.in the frame but then strung out six score less innings as Wenatchee coasted in. 128 Disease Cases Reported Last Week A total of 128 cases of com municable diseases were re ported to the Jackson county health department last week, according to Dr. A. Erin Merkel, public health phy sician. Of the total, there were 41 mumps cases and 37 cases of German measles. Twenty-four cases of mumps were report ed in Medford, 9 in Central Point, 2 in Ashland, Rogue River and Sams Valley, and 1 each in Talent and Elk-Trail. Ashland reported 15 cases of German measles, and Elk Trail reported 10. Other Ger man measles cases were re ported from Central Point, 7; Medford, 4; and Eagle Point, 1. There were 20 cases of regu lar measles reported. Nine of them were in Medford, 8 in Ashland and 3 in Central Point. Other diseases reported in clude chicken pox, Ashland, 4, Medford, 3, and Jacksonville and Central Point, 1; Trench mouth, Ashland 1; pink eye, Ashland 3 Medford 2; infect ious mononucleosis, Medford 1; pneumonia, Medford M; Jacksonville 1; and influenza, Medford 8, Ashland 1. You can buy a full-page newspaper ad, to run in every daily newspaper in the Unit ed, for about a penny a copy. OLD HERMITAGE POPULAR IN OREGON ? 80 i PL $135 District Tennis Tourney Friday; Medford Winner 4-3 in Ashland Scuffle Medford high tennis com pleted its regular season yes terday with a 4 to 3 nod oyer Ashland and prepared today for the District 4 tournament which will be played on Med Red Blanket Bids High for Timber In Rogue Forest Red Blanket Lumber com pany of Prospect was high bidder May 5 for 21,900 M board feet of timber in the Red Blanket creek sale, in Prospect ranger district of the Rogue River National forest, according to Forest Supervisor C. E. Brown. On Friday, May 2, the same company was high bidder for an estimated 7,200 M board feet in the Dead Soldier unit of the Union Creek district of the national forest. The company's high bid for the 21,900 M board feet was $414,320 based on $20.20 per M for 13,300 M of Douglas fir, $29.30 per M for 3,800 M of pine species, and $7.15 per M for 4,800 M of white fir and other species. This was a raise of 29 per cent over the appraised price of $320,- 120. Oregon Veneer company of White City Was next highest bidder. Other bidders were Ross Lumber company of White City and Continental Timber company of Medford. To Build Roads The purchaser of the large tract is to build 11.8 miles of standard permanent forest road into the timber. Accord ing to Brown, the estimated cost of the required road con struction is $162,300. The company will have four years in which to build the road and log" out the timber designated for cutting. Bidding on the smaller sale of May 2 was much more ac tive. The timber in this sale was mostly Shasta red fir and white fir appraised at $3.30 tier M. It was bid in at $15 per M. Total sale value was increased by the bidding from $28,385 to $106,775. Next highest bidder was Ross Lumber company. Other bidders were Timber Conser vation company of Central Point, B. F. Nork.of Shady Cove. Burrill Lumber com pany of White City, Double Dee Lumber company of Cen tral Point, and Continental Timber company of Medford, Brown pointed out that 25 per cent of the stumpage re turn from the sales, as from all national forest timber sales, will be returned from the federal treasury througn the 'state to the counties with in which the Rogue River Na tional forest is located. DISEASES COINCIDE Geneva, Switzerland (ffl Cholera and small pox have hit the top of their epidemic cycles simultaneously this year in both India and Pakis tan, World Health Organiza tion experts reported today. Hundreds of persons have died of the diseases in recent months. Hermil i over Oregon ' Kentucky I VsQT. ford courts on Friday. The win over Ashland gave the Black Tornado a break even season of eight victories and eight defeats. Tornado wins in singles yes terday were Gary Cummings over Gerald Troxel 6-1, 7-5, Paul Ryn over Rex Clark, 6-1, 9-7 and Dave Ryn over Floyd Grimes, 6-3, 6-0. For Ashland Jerry Joy trimmed John Root 6-3, 6-0 and Hank Hampton beat John Shaw 6-8, 7-5, 6-2. In doubles Joy and Hamp ton downed Root and Dave Ryn 6-1, 7-5 and Cummings and Paul Ryn beat Troxel and Clerk 6-3, 6-4. There are 18 singles and eight doubles entries so far in the district tournament with participants from Klamath Falls, Grants Pass, Ashland, Medford, Jacksonville and Eagle Point. Klamath Falls, which won the Southern Oregon confer ence dual meet title, is the district favorite. Luciano To Tell All To Judge Again Naples, Italy (ff) Charles (Lucky) Luciano, former New York vice king, will have to explain all over again to an Italian magistrate how he makes a living. The Naples district attor ney appealed a March 18 mag istrate's ruling which dis missed a police request for restrictions on the activities of the former white slaver. The commission in effect ac cepted Luciano's plea that he was an "honest businessman" making a comfortable living out of land transactions and receiving some money from "dear friends in America." No date was set for the new hearing. A new feed for dairy cattle is made of dried potato pulp, a by-product of the manufac ture of starch. Asthmatics! We give $5 trade-in allowance for your old neb (even if broken) on a new Breatheasy set precision pyrex nebulizer; bottle of inhalant; zipper carry ing case. Money-back guarantee. At Your Druggist ing QilXMlMiiiS Everylh So. Oregon Equipment Cos Big CLOSE-, Continues! Buy PRICES SLASHED! These Won't Last Long at These Prices! Reg. $5.50 Breast Reg. $6.95 DRILLS PLANES QQ $1199 At Only J j At Only U JOHNSTON LAWN MOWERS 18" Deluxe 18" Economy Reel Llover Rotary Mower sftQ95 U M 1 Only 21" Self Propelled 4 Cycle Briggs & Stratten Rotary Mower Engine ' Close Out Prices on 18" Reg. 160.00 Cf 050 Special Reel and 21" De- inAi lf' luxe Reel Mowers also! "UVY I Ail LlcCULLOCI! ALL MODELS Prices Cut for Many More Bargains S. OREGON E(QUOIPMEOT CO; 3540 N. Pacific Hiway Pilots Batter Portland State Portland (IP) Portland"! Pilots won their 13th straight baseball victory Tuesday by overwhelming Portland State 28-4 on 21 hits and eight Vik ing errors. The Pilots got 10 runs in the ninth inning. Irving Berlin made 33 cents on the first song he wrote. Dreaming of a VACATION? for your summer fun at m PACIFIC . inDUSTRIAIr" 16 S. Central Ph. SP 3-5308 DICK HANS, Manager SEE THE Only 7 Moving Parti In tti Engine Up to 35 Miles Per Galloa . Front Wheel Drive COMPARE k Roominess ic Economy Initial Cost Looks ; Keith Schulz Garage 116 N. Front - Ph. SP 2-475 Musi Go! Now . . . Save! 1 CHAIN SAWS ALL SIZES This Close-Out! Come Out and See Them! Phone SP 3-3633 Get mm