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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1958)
o o o o 27 5ntf ios Tee-Q in Jayceo Golf Twenty-seven off this mornirii fouth ted in th$ first 18-hole roun o th Medford Odwrict Junic Chamber of Commerce junior golf tournt- ment at Rogtpf Vlley Coun try club. Secoado?8 of thi 3-hole medal play event will be on Saturday with tee-offs start ing at 7:30 a.m. Trophies and other swards will be presented t f 7:30 p.m. banquet at the country club. Winnejj and runner up of the local tourney be eligi ble to participate in the state tournament gt Ontario on June 26 0nd 27. Four low scorers in the stgte meet will qualify for the national com petition Aug. 18-23 tt Tucson, Ariz. ntries are Charles Allen, Larry Berg, Larry Brown, Steve Cummins, Bill Collins, Stan Dowson, John Frohn- mayer, Bob Jones, Mike and Tony Monro, Dave Mans field, Lee Mellish Jr., Doug Olson, Don Peek, Pete, Nick and Cris Rasmussen, Jack Richardson, Stewart Schroe- der. David Schott and Lee Wimberly, all of Medford; Wally West, Eagle Point, and Albert Hartwell, and Jimmy and Bert "Wright, Ashland. Salem Man Elected By Oregon Matons ' Portland (UPI) Walter Lansing of Salem was elected most worshipful grand master of 0 Masons in Oregon Thurs day, succeeding the Rev. Clar ence A. Kopp of LaGrande. Other new officers included David VP. Pearson, Portland, deputy grand master; Julius M. Swanson, North Bend, sen ior grand warden, and How ard C. Belton, Canby, junior grand warden, o , miss... WIDE SELKTKXI 0? J30KTfllYS MONTCLAIRS,. STATION VAOmi AMD CQMVI1TBUS We're celebrates I SWliWo'e 10th Anniversary on TV with our biggest iaorjiy-irinj gvtnt of the year. The Mercurys we're o&Vrirjf a tt bifgest, most powerful cars you canuy t low prioes. Sak lasts through month of June oriym tct fast! M mm. a tkp DCAift olt, R3efz Lead econd Round of U.S. Open SPORTS L John NuichCops Kurjnis Links Tournoy Prize John Nuich was low gross With a 79 and Dr. Paul Walk er low net with 80-9 71 Wednesday in the Kiwanis club golf tournament at the Rogue Valley Country club. Bill Clark was second , low gross with an 80 and Fred Sears and Bob Voegtly tied for third with 86s. Dr. Ted Sickels and Club President Bill S,ingler tied for second low net with 91-19 72 each and . Ron Rice followed with 100-2773. Paul Haviland had long drive on No. 10 fairway 300 yards . and Brad Pritchett short drive. Kiwanis officials said the short drive was 8Vi inches after two misses. ' Ray Wise was closest to the pin, 34 inches on No. . 17 green. High gross was Jen nings Pierce with 120. There were 22 entries. Mry Jinseen Eastern Champ Pittsburgh (UPI) Mary Pat Janseen, who plays golf to relax after her secretarial duties, said today winning the Women's Eastern Amateur ti tle "put me at ease." The 32-year-old blonde from Charlottesville, Va., carded a two over par 75 in the final round of the 54-hole event at Allegheny country club Thurs day to post a winning 229 total. - - Joanne Goodwin, slim at tractive golfer from Dart mouth, Mass., failed by four strokes to retain the title. She went around in 76 for the last time after posting a 79 and a 7t. ten't ink U Sullnu't quid IMh Amiivmanr tour Jum 22nd. ti rout community By LEO H. PETERSEN Tulsa, Okla. (UPI) The toughest and one of the most criticized U.S. Open cham pionships of them all saw three veterans of the golfing wars Julius Boros, Tommy Bolt and Dick Metz lead the field into the second rountt today with the Southern Hills course's tough par 70 prov ing more than the nation's best golfers could crack. - Boros, who won the Open in 1952 and who is 38; Bolt, who is 39, and Metz, who is 50, carded one over par 71s in the first round the first time since the Open was held at scorned Oakland Hills at Birmingham, Mich., in 1951, that the field hasn't been able to break par. Back then, Sam Snead, the 5-1 favorite to win this one, shot a 71. Thursday, Snead, whose driver went spur on him, carded a 75. The 95-degree heat, the clutching rough, the 25-mile-an-hour winds, the powdery fine sand traps, the mud in the watered fairways, the pin placements and the spike marks on the green had most of the 162 players in the field groaning. Two of them Er rie Ball and Johnny Bulla gave up the ghost and with drew without completing the first round. Believe Course is Fair Not since Oakland Hills, has a course come in for so much complaining. But there was a big difference here, they think the course is tough but fair. They blame the conditions here, except for the heat and wind, on the U.S. Golf asso ciation. The scores bore out their crying wheq 81 players ex actly half the field failed to break 80, which is 10 over par, and five were in the 90s. Never has an Open seen such high scores. The pin placements came in for the most criticism. "What are they trying to do, drive all the young golf ers out of business," asked the 56-year-old Gene Sarazen, competing in his 28th Open. Sarazen carded an 84. Ben Complains Ben Hogan, shooting for an unprecedented fifth Open crown, said the spike marks on the greens late in the aft ernoon made it "impossible to get a true line on a putt." Ed Furgol, the 1954 Open champion, had a ball bury in the mud on the first fairway. A stroke off the pace of the leaders was 43-year-old Lloyd Mangrum, who won this one back in 1946 and 35-year-old Frank Stranahan. At 73, two strokes behind the front run ning trio, were Bruce Cramp ton and grandpaw Jimmy De maret, who is 47. At 74, two-time U.S. ama- tuer champion Harvie Ward, 33; 27-year-old Gene Littler; Smiley Quick, who is 48; and 50-year-old Labron Harris, a teaching pro from Stillwater, Okla. There were 20 at 75. 'Be sides Hogan, Snead and Mid- dlecoff and Harbert, they in cluded Chick Harbert, Pat Schwab, the young bride groom irom uayton, unio; Mike Souchak, former PGA king Walter Burkemo, Mas ters champion and leading money winner, Arnold Palm er, the veteran Freddie Haas and Rosburg. AEC Services Are Available in Area Richland, Wash. Atomic Energy commission offices throughout the United States are acquainting state and local government officials with services the commission and the department of defense have available should an ac cident involving radiation oc cur in their local area. . If a radiation incident, such as a traffic accident involv ing a truck carrying radio active materials, occurs, local officials may seek advice and assistance from the nearest AEC office or military instal lation. Personnel furnished by the commission include scientists, engineers, and physicians who have had training and experi ence in handling radioactive materials. They, are drawn from the staffs of commission offices and its maior con tractors. Poison Oak? Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL You must . b satisfied or your money cheerfully refunded. Get a bottU today at WESTERN THRIFT Golfers Chain Saw, Bureau Win In Softball Bureau of Reclamation and M and W Chain Saw chalked up victories last night as the Jackson County Softball as sociation season opened at the Veterans Administration sta dium at Camp White. The Bureau players won 7 to 1 over the Rogue Valley Dairy Maids, only women's team in the loop, and M and W trimmed Cheney Studs 7 to 5. ' Six-run splurges aided both verdicts. Bureau of Reclama tion got its half-dozen in the sixth inning on four hits. Chain Saw picked up its six in the third. Association play will con tinue at Camp White on Mon day with M and W, the Bu reau, the Dairy Maids and the Medford Junior Chamber of Commerce seeing action. SHORT SCORES: R H E Dairy Maids 16 3 Bur. of Reclamation 7 10 1 Callaghan and Main; Bas com, Booth (4) and Booth (4). R H E M and W .... 7 4 5 Cheney ..... 5 4 1 Brittsan and Garner; Cook, Alberton (4), Tonn (5) and Carrigan. Officers Installed By Lions Club Cave Junction Approxi mately luO guests attended the Illinois Valley Lions club annual banquet and installa tion of officers Tuesday-night at the Eagles hall in Kerby. Robert Cherry was installed president; Wait Colpitts, Mar shall Burrows and Claude Reinoehl, vice presidents; Dick Rians, secretary-treasurer; Ted Rogers, tail twist er; Jack owens, lion tamer; Howard Bearss, Wes Peters, Will Benjamine and Vernon Larson, directors. Dr. Joseph Meyers, outgo ing president, gave a sum mary of the past year's achievements and was pre seated with a past -president's pin by Bob Cherry. At the close of the cere monies, moving pictures of "Skimming Low," the Lions club recent extravaganza, were shown. Routine Test Flight Of Thor Successful Cape Canaveral, Fla. (UPI) A big Thor intermediate range missile, which the Air Force will use as the main stage of its moon rockets, roared up from Cape Can averal today on a "routine" test flight. The towering Thor, some 65 feet tall and five or six feet thick at its base, was launched without the two additional high-power stages it will have mounted atop it for the moon shots. , ' The firing appeared to be successful. We've Rounded ID CCD 3D 0 1 1IG-68 Cletrac O 1 Vac Case .r- O John Deer Model "L" O John Deer Model LA O John Deer Model B O John Deer Model BO Crawler -Also Several o Plomrs Mowers o Disc Harrows immm A 25 South Riverside :-:w-v-V"vi-:i:-:::v:-:v: LEAPFROG Trying for a record 5th Open win, Ben Hogan appears to be leaping for the crown as he comes up from a sighting of his ball on the seventh green dur ing a practice round at the Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. Hogan will compete along with 161 other golfers when the first round of the 58th U. S. t)pen starts. Cheney Studs Nick GP Legion Nine; Play Lakeview Dennis Pfaff batted in Loy al Higinbotham with the lone run here last night for a 1 to 0 Central Point Cheney Stud victory over the Grants Pass American Legion junior base ball team. The marker in the non-district action came just in time to prevent the contest from going into extra frames. It was scored in the bottom of the seventh inning of the fast played encounter. No one was out at the time. Higinbotham led off the Studs' final batting turn by drawing a base on balls from pitcher Dick Hayes. Bill An horn, the Central Point hurl er, helped his own cause with a bunt single. Harley Dicker son bunted and was safe, on first baseman Frank Sprin kle's fielding miscue. That loaded the sacks. Then, on the fourth pitch to him, Pfaff knocked an infield bounder. Higinbotham beat the throw to the plate on the fielder's option ending the game. Start League Play The verdict carries the Cen tral Point club into their opening Legion district ruck us with a 2-win, lloss pre loop record. Central Point will be host to Lakeview at 8 p.m. at Cheney field on Sat urday night in the Studs' dis trict starter. Lakeview will be in its second counting fray and, since the Lake County club lost 3 to 15 to Grants Pass last Sunday, the Cheney crew enters tomorrow's action as favorite. Medford's Legion nine goes to Klamath Falls Sunday for a district starter while Lake view moves over to Grants Pass. In last night's battle the batters were limited to just two hits on each side. Harley Dickerson laid down a fine bunt in the first inning for the Studs first safety. Marvin Up Some Good Used Farm GENT 'BCSSAItt ozd Good, Used- WRflY Saturday Chandler and Dennis Walker picked up the ' singles for Grants Pass in the fifth in ning. ' Winning f linger Anhorn struck out batters five times and issued five bases on balls over seven innings. Hayes whiffed 10 batsmen and walk ed six. Grants Pass had the Cheneys in tough spots in the third, fourth and fifth panels. A walk and error put men on first and third with one out but a runner was thrown out at the plate and Anhorn struck out a man to retire the side. GP loaded the bases with two out in the fourth and again a strikeout ended the threat. In the fifth the Climate city crew had the bases full with none out. A runner was forced out at the plate, a batter fanned and an other grounded out. Central Point had men on second and third with no one down in the first inning but two whiffs and a groundout put out the fire. Only two batted balls reach- the outfield, on flyouts by John Fox and Jerry Patterson of Grants Pass. The game re quired just one hour and 45 minutes. ' , . For Central Point .on Sat urday night Pete Stemple may be the starting pitcher with Bob Johnson available for re lief work. Jerry Korbol or Gary Anhorn may take over at the third base slot held down by Dennis Johnson last night. Bob Johnson should start at first base, Dickerson at second and Higinbotham at shortstop with Dave Brown and Pfaff in outfield places. 'Byron Dooley may start on the hill for Lakeview with Jerry Parkinson in reserve. LINESCORES: Grants Pass 000 000 0 0 Central Point ..0OO 000 1 1 Hayes and Huneycutt; B. horn and Tucker. 2 3 2 2 An- Be Sure to Attend the Phoenix Festival Saturday, June 14th CO Medford 1,500 Seniors to Get At U. of O. in Eugene Sunday Eugene Nearly 1,500 sen - iors and graduate students are candidates for baccalaureate and advanced degrees at the University of Oregon's 80th annual Commencement exer cises Sunday, June 15. A total of 1,492 candidates will be eligible for the sev eral degrees from the college of liberal arts and the profes sonal schools, if they success fully complete the require ments. Candidates include 1,110 for baccalaureate de grees, 323 for masters degrees, and 42 doctorates, wich in cludes 18 doctor of education degrees. There are 16 candi dates for the bachelor of laws degree and one for the pro fessional degree of doctor of jurisprudence. ' Open Air Exercises The Commencement serv ices will be open-air exer cises, eld at 2:30 p.m. on Hayward field. Speaker at the exercises will be University President O. Meredith Wilson. Degree candidates from Medford include: Bachelor of arts, Richard Dellmann Kirby, son of Mrs. Florence H. Kirby, 38 North Oakdale ave.; R. Craig Phil ips, son of Dr. S. E. Philips, 1455 North Riverside ave.; Stella Wirth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wieskamp, 625 South Ivy st. Bachelor of business admin istration, Clarence Albert Lewis, son of Mrs. Ruth Or man, route 1, box 387; George Blake Maddox, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Maddox, 340 South Groveland ave.; Wil liam Edward Neely, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Neely, 411 Oak ave.; Curtis Robert Riclj mond, son of Mrs. Mildred Richmond, 622 Park place. Bachelor oi Science ' Bachelor of science, Joy Lynn Beardsley, daughter of Mr. i and Mrs. George R. Adams, 2917 Fairview place; Darrell David Best, son of Glen E. Best, route 1, box 22C, Jacksonville; Celia Gert rude Clogston, daughter of Mrs. Frank Clogston, 1840 South Stage road; Jack Rus sell Coffin, son of Mrs. Mary F. Coffin, 527 Franquette st.; Ralph E. Ettel, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Ettel, 231 South Ivy st.; Frederick Lee Griffith, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Griffith, 303 West Clark st.; Robert W. Hays, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Hays, 1471 Kings highway; Marilyn A. Miller Hodges, daughter of Mf.-and Mrs. Earl Miller, 617 Park ave.; Carl Roger Hogstrom, son of Mrs. Helga Hogstrom, 525 Palm st.; Margaret Lee Meyers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyers, 181 Black Oak dr.; Carolyn Lois Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Miller, 2200 Ruhl Way; Jack Moad, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Moad, 1012 East Main st.; Jack E. Morris, son of A. C. Morris, 1118 Madison st., Topeka, Kan.; Howard Maxwell Peirce, 37 Valley View dr., Your very first taste of Twin Seal tells you i ll truly great ii CJ i Si 'SbourbonW' - - . I 1 1 the son of D. M. Christianson of Oakland;' James Allan Perry, son of A. F. Perry, 105 Geneva ave.; Barbara Carol Ream, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Ream of Bend; William F. Smith, 5643 South Pacific highway, son of T. T. Smith of Stockton, Pickets Continue To March at Bend Bend (UPI) There was no end in sight today in the strike of about 80 employees of the Bend plant of Oregon Woodwork, Ltd. Pickets have marched at the Bend branch of the' Portland firm since Monday. ' The local of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers, union said the dispute was over fail ure of the company to grant Bend workers the same pay increases as those granted workers at the Portland plant. L. K. Scott, attorney for the employers, said the pay dif ferential . reflected different types of work done at the two plants. Iri some cases, he said, Bend scales were higher. Kansas Alerted For Tornadoes Topek'a, Kan. (UPI) Weather Bureau warnings of possible 'tornadoes for the fourth straight day kept rain soaked Kansas on the alert today. ..Mopping-up operations and repairs to damaged buildings already wee under way from three days of tornadoes, pelt ing hail storms and heavy rains. Twisters skipped across Kansas landscape Thursday from Dodge City and Hill City to Topeka. Damages were thought to be relatively light and no injuries were report ed. . Meteor Discovered Near Sweet Home Sweet Home (UPI) A meteorite, measuring 2V& feet in diameter, was found Thurs day 'embedded in an old log ging road about 20 miles east of Sweet Home. The object was discovered by John McWade, assistant warden of the Linn County Fire Patrol. He said the me teorite was in a hole about two feet deep. Pieces were scattered in the brush. One piece, about two feet long, was found 100 yards down hill from where the meteorite was embedded. The meteorite was whitish in color and McWade said the edges appeared to have been burned. you've discovered a o nrraiVTrnKT 5 Year 'Old Straight Bqurbon Whiskey $4105 I $360 Cod No. 148-B I Code No. 148-C 86 PROOF STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 5 YEARS I OLD HIRAM WALKER & SONS, INC, PEORIA, ILL. I Degrees route , 1, box (70A.; Harvey Owen Thompson, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Thompson, route 2, box 232; and Robert V. Walker, son of Verl G. Walker, post office bofc 1586. Master of education, Bruce Edward Nelson, 128 Corona ave., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Nelson, Woodburn. Bachelor of Laws Bachelor -of laws, Gregory T. Tornecker, son of Ted Hornecker, post office box 1541, and Ronald L. Juniper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Juniper, 1020 South Peach st. Doctor of education, Leon ard B. Mayfield, superintend ent of schools, Medford. Degree candidates from Jacksonville include: Alyce Joy Atherton Gustafson, daughter of Mrs. Dorothy Dut ton, box 24. Miss Gustafson is a candidate for a bachelor of science degree. Candidates for degrees from Gold Hill include: Calvin L. Malone, son of William C. Ma lone, route 1, box ' 495; and Dave W. Newland, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Newland, post office box 597. Both are can didates for bachelor of science degrees, o . Candidates for degrees from Talent are: Larry Dale Quack enbush, son Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Quackenbush, 5643 Pa cific Highway, south; and William R. Williams. Quack enbush is a candidate for the bachelor o science degree and Williams is scheduled to receive a master of education degree. Openings Available For YMCA Day Camp Fifteen openings are still available for boys ages 7 to 11 for the first week of the YMCA Day camp which starts' Monday, June 16, and con tinues h. r o.u g h Saturday evening. The day camp program in cludes chapel, hiking, craft work, games, outdoor cooking, archery, nature study, sing ing, and cooking. The group, will go to the camp site in a school bus leav ing the YMCA at 9 a.m. and return to Medford at 5 pjn. Monday through Thursday. On Friday they will stay over night. Each boy most take his own sack lunch each day, the YMCA furnishes free milk. The campsite is on the Apple gate rivex about two miles above McKee bridge. - Petition To Call for Teachers in Legislature Portland (UPI) Cecil Posey, secretary of the Ore gon Education Association, said a petition would be filed in the secretary of state's of fice in Salem today calling for an initiative measure which could permit teachers to serve in the Legislature. bourbon mm a v