o
o
Rhodes Grand Slams
For Phoenix Giants
o
BjPgENS IftTAHT
United Press International
Dusty GRhodes, an ex-San
Francisco Gint who has been
acting like h i homesick,
climaxed notljr tvening of
home run hitting at Phoenix
"Wedrgc!f ith grand-slam-n-
jn 1b9 ninth inning that
Gint a 18-12 vic
$Cf Cvtr Spokane.
BftaSts' blast was but one
Cit?lt hit during the pitch
e$f nifhtmapt, but it was
dWnovg h to steal the spotlight
iroA J0ne isod jemtms,
Doca?hlon
load Hold
By Johnson
Kinsburf, Calif. UPI
GQnt Rrr onnton tnrmea
artjiomown Powd Wednes
day ftt took a first half lead
at th Invitational Decathlon
Tracfc n fitl champion
ships with 4.218 points.
Ttm final events will be run
off todav.
Two Oregon University stu
dents turned in magnificent
debuts and tre close to the
UCLA astar. Dave Elstrom
score 4,194 points and Steve
Anderson tallied 4,092.
It appeared that the sore
knee which has dogged John
son off and on for two years
might prevent him from set
tine a world mark here.
Johnson sizzled in the track
eventsesterday with a mark
of 10.6 seconds in the 100
meter race and one of 48.7 in
the 400-meter. He put the shot
50 feet 5 inches and broad
jumped 23 feet 3 inches for
two more top performances.
But he took just one high
Jump, at 5 feet 2 inches, far
below his top capability. He
apparently did not wish to
risk reinjury to the knee.
Johnson holds the listed
worlcPniark of 7,385. But Rus
sia's Vassily Kuznetsov scored
8,13 points last month " in
Moscow.
Popv Gains...
friumph in
Sh'icIgOr-CUPIV Rory Cal
houn improved his position
gs a pfttential challenger for
the middleweight title with a
fin over Bobby Boyd
t5efinsay night, but Boyd's
manfifier, Bernard Glickman,
cam up 'with a novel alibi
Jbr ft defeat.
"They penalized Boyd to
p3nfilie me," he said, point
ing out that he has received
unifcvorable publicity recent
ly in New York's investiga
tion of boxing.
' "BoyS von the fight," he
ddafi. "She referee, Walter
Brightmore warned Boyd
about fighting on the ropes
and hS) n v r warned the
other guy once and he was
hitting Boyd on the back of
the neck, below the belt, and
on the kidneys in every
round:"
Glickman was infuriated,
particularly because of ' a
knockdown, of Boyd in the
9th round. He charged that
Calhoun hit Boyd with his
forearm instead of the glove
and that instead of receiving
credit for a knockdown, he
should have lost the round
on a foul.
"Instead of a 5-3 round for
'him, it should have been 5-4
for Boyd " he said, "and that
would have given us the
fight'. Boyd won seven of the
10 rounds."
All officials had the bout
scored for Calhoun, who won
his 35th bout in 40 pro out
ings. Referee Brightmore
gave him a 48-42 count, Judge
James McManus 47-43, and
Judge John Bray, 45-44. The
United Press card also was
47-43 for Calhoun.
Calhoun denied he hit Boyd
with his forearm in scoring
his second knockdown of the
bout in the 9th. "I hit him
first with my glove," he said,
"but it slid off a little and it
might have looked like he got
hit with my arm.
CRATER LAKE
MOTORS'
I A
NEW ANGLIA TUDOR
ONLY 5o)(p)00 per month
jO) J 35 Rliles Per Gallon
CRATER LAKE MOTORS
who collected a pair of four
baggers and a single to drive
in five runs. Jenkins had
seven runs-batted-in Tuesday
night on a bases-loaded double
and grand slam homer.
The win gave the Giants a
one and one-half game lead
over second place San Diego.
Vancouver dropped to third
place as the Mounties lost
their second straight to the
red-hot Padres, 3-2.
Salt Lake shaded Portland,
6-5, and Seattle squeaked by
Sacramento, 2-1, in other
games.
A crowd of 8,858, composed
largely of kids whose tickets
were purchased by Phoenix
business interests, watched the
Giants take an early lead for
the second night in a row,
blow it and then come back
with a late-inning splurge for
the win. The Indians had dead
locked it at 12-12 with a four-
run rally in the ninth. Both
clubs had 18 hits.
Jack Dittmer, Jim King and
Tom . Haller contributed a
homer apiece to the Phoenix
cause, while Jim Williams and
Lyle Olsen each put one out
of the park for the Indians
At Vancouver, San Diego's
Padres made it 20 wins out of
their last 24 games as Bud
Podbielan limited the Moun
ties to seven hits while pick
ing up his fourth win against
two losses.
The Pads', who collected.il
safeties, scored one in the first
and added two more in the
sixth on a double and three
singles.
Max Surkont hurled a bril
liant four-hitter at Seattle as
the Rainiers downed the last
place Sacs. Surkont had a no
hitter going for five and one
third innings, but lost it when
Joe Stanka singled to left. Se
attle scored what proved to
be the winning run when
Bobby Balcena singled to cen
ter in the sixth to score Vida
Pmson.
Stanka, who allowed Seattle
only six hits, was charged
with the loss.
Portland led Salt Lake un
til the final innings when the
Bees erupted for five runs m
the seventh to knot the count
at 5-5, then pushed across a
lone run in the ninth for the
victory. Carlos Bernier scored
the winning run from second
on a single by Jim McDaniel. .
Bernier had walked and stolen
second prior to McDaniel s
blow. McDaniel had led the
Salt Lake uprising in the
seventh with a two-run homer.
LINESCORES:
Sacramento . 000 000 100 1 4 0
Seattle 000 101 OOx 2 6 2
Stanks. Osenbaugh (8) and Dal
rymple; Surkong and Dotterer.
San Diego 100 002 0003 11 0
Vancouver ..000 000 0002 7 0
Podbielan and Jones; CeccarelU,
held and White.
Salt Lake 000 000 501 6 12 0
Portland 001 003 100 5 8 0
Hardison. Williams (7) and Miley,
Peterson (7); Buzhardt, Garber (8)
and Tornay.
Spokane . 022 400 00412 18 1
Phoenix 142 022 01416 18 1
Grob, Page 7). George (9) and
N. Cherry; Bnrnsrde. Fricano (4),
G. Jones (9) and Haller.
Rogue Slow
For Fishing
Portland (UPI) The
weekly report on fishing con
ditions prepared by the State
Game Commission:
Southwest: North Umpqua
and South Umpqua fair to
good; Lemolo only fair; Win
chester bay salmon angling
slow; Tenmile lake good;
Smith river fair for trout;
Coos bar salmon angling slow;
lower Rogue slow for salmon;
main Rogue' also slow for sal
mon and trout. '
Central: Lost lake fair to
good; some blueback being
taken; east fork Hood river
good; Kingsley reservoir fair
to good; Blue lake good; East
and Paulina still good with
still fishing best; Lake Sim
tus fair to good; upper Des
chutes above Bend good on
troll; fishing good at Big Lava
lake on slow troll; Crane
Prairie spotty; Crescent lake
fair in evening trolling spin
ner; Davis lakte fair to good;
Waldo lake road now open
but in rough shape.
Diamond lake excellent on
fly, flatfish, spinner and
worm; Williamson river slow.
SAVE
$250
on English Fords!
bsW:;Tti
STREAKING THROUGH WATER with big spinnaker
ballooning, America's Cup contender Vim, 12-meter class
racer takes practice run off Newport, R. I., in preparation
for trials to determine which will sail against Britain's
entry in September. Vim is 19 years old. (UPI Telephoto)
MEDFORDwsTRIBUNE
MUette
1057 Victor Falls
Astoria (UPI) The de
fending champion and the
medalist were out of the run
ning today for the 1958 men's
Oregon amateur golf title.
Ad Huycke of Oswego, the
defending champion, was
eliminated Wednesday by Sam
Cavalli of Portland, 6 and 5V
Cavaili is playing his first
amateur tourney.
Dr. Ed Palmrose of Astoria,
the medalist, lost out to Don
Kreiger of Portland, 2 and 1.
Cavalli and Krieger were
joined in the quarter finals by
Ralph Dichter of Astoria, Lou
Stafford, Bob Atkinson and
Dick Stearns of Portland;
Keith Gubrud of Eugene, and
Elyin Bowyer of Vancouver,
Wash.
Gracie DeMoss of Corvallis,
the defending women's cham
pion, won her match from
June Robinson of Tillamook,
and 1, to advance to the
semifinals along with Elaine
Porritt of Eugene, and Mrs.
Maude Borst and Molly Mur
phy, of Portland.
Men's quarterfinal matches
matched Krieger and Staf
ford, Atkinson and Stearns,
Cavalli and Gubrud and Bow
yer and Dichter.
Stearns defeated J. J. Ha-
Jacksonville, Central Point,
Yankees Intermediate Winners
Jacksonville, Central Point
and the Medford Yankees got
off to the starts they desired
yesterday in the Intermediate
league of Southern Oregon
junior baseball.
Jacksonville whipped the
Medford Giants, 8 to 3, Cen
tral Point went eight innings
to nip Ashland, 4 to 3, and the
Yanks subdued Lone Pine, 6
to 2, in a conflict on the Vet
erans Administration domicil
iary diamond.
Jim Berry was the batting
standout for the Yankees. He
drove in Medford's first two
markers with a double. He
homered and singles also in
four times at the plate. Craig
Lawrence also smacked a
roundtripper for Medford,
while Bob Quinney doubled
and singled and Nick Lingren
tripled.
Mike Barnes tossed a four
hitter for the Yankees. He and
Bud Lowrey, Lone Pine fling
er, each struck out nine and
walked four.
Champ Drives In Run
Central Point won with a
lone out in the bottom of the
eighth . when Mike Glines
walked and stole second base
and John Champ two-bagger-ed.
Doug, with two singles,
drove in the Pointers' first
two runs and the tying run
AVAILABLE AT ALL
Code No.
181 B '
AND
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KENTUCKY BOURBON
SINCE 1810
16 Proof
5 WATEtflU AMD FUZ1EI OISTILUIT
Loses Dun
gan of Waverly, 3 and 2; Staf
ford defeated Bob Harris, Se
attle, 5 and 3; Gubrud defeat
ed fellow University of Ore
gon player Tom Shaw of Mil-
waukie, 3 and 2; Bowyer got
a 2 and 1 win over Harry Mil
lette of Medford; Dichter de
feated Ron Weber of Prine-
ville 3 and 2 and Atkinson
handed Portland's Dick Estey
a 4 and 3 defeat.
Mrs. Borst got a 1-up vie
tory over Shirley Siegmund
of Eugene - by chipping in a
40-foot shot on the 18th hole
In the other women's matches
Miss Porritt defeated Susan
Rafferty of Astoria 5 and 4,
and Miss Murphy won from
Mrs. Tom Georges Jr., Tula-
tin, 5 and 4.
Pittsburgh (UPI) Pitcher
Rodger R. Irvine, Miami, and
infielder, Gerald J. Taylor,
Sacramento, Calif., have been
signed to minor league con
tracts by the Pittsburgh Pi
rates. Irvine, 17-year-old right
hander, was assigned to
Salem, Va., in the Rookie Ap
palachian league, and Taylor,
18, who plays shortstop and
third base, was assigned to
Las Vegas in the Class C Cal
ifornia league.
in the sixth inning. Champ
had tripled ahead of Pfaff's
second safety.
Mike Pepper threw a four-
walk, eight-strikeout, three-
hitter for CP, and Eddie Al
len held the Pointers to five
hits, walking six and whif
fing six. Joe McCalvy got
CP out of a bases-loaded jam
in the fifth inning when he
fielded a grounder, stepped
on third base and heaved to
first for a double play.
Five runs in the fifth inning
gave Jacksonville its margin
of triumph. They came on
two walks, two stolen bases,
two fielder's options, three
errors and a double by Long
White, who pitched to all but
the last two batters, gave up
the only Medford hit to Doug
Robertson. He walked five
and struck out three. Wilson
walked one and fanned one.
LINESCORES:
Jacksonville 021 05 8 4
Medford Giants 000 21 3 1
White. Wilson (5) and Wilson,
White (5): Ray, Steele (3) and
Robertson.
Ashland 002 001 003 3 0
Central Point 200 001 014 5 2
E. Allen and Robertson; M. Pep
per and Jeff Anhorn.
Medford Yankees
201 210 06 9 2
Lone Pine 020 000 0 2 4 3
Harrison.
STATE STORES
OF
COMMIT. UIDSIOWI. KUI1C0
5.
6
W - - - srnjCD - -
A I I
vs U
hunting
Southern dkegoin)
By MEL REES
Br MEL REESE
The fishing news this past
week was filled with the
weather and much of it was
bad. Electric, thunder, hail,
and plain and fancy degrees
of downpours sent many
camper scurrying for tent,
trailer or home. Rain in the
valley made irrigation un
necessary so with the gates
closed and water pouring in
from the higher elevations the
lakes such as Fish lake filled
up and made fishing very
poor.
Reports from Fish lake say
that the lake is at its peak ca
pacity and with an abundance
of food the fish just aren't
interested. Willow Creek re
servoir reports a few fair to
good catches but has slowed
also.
This reporter has had no
luck in phoning Harriman'c
Resort on Upper Klamath
lake and suspects that the
storm has taken the lines
down. At last reports the
fishing was good there but
storms probably have
slowed this area lo some ex
lent. At least, if it doesn't
slow the fishing it slows the
fishermen and there aren't
too many fish taken.
DIAMOND HOT SPOT
Hot spot for the week has
been Diamond lake. Some of
the most fabulous catches of
big fish have been taken
there. The large fish are
through their spawning and
are brightening rapidly so
that in two or three weeks
Pin Clinic
At Alleys
Here Friday
A "Stars of Tomorrow"
clinic will be held Friday af
ternoon and evening at Med
ford Bowling lanes.
Instructors will be Ellen
Forsland and Bobby Watson,
a pair of topnotch keglers
from Portland.
Proprietor Fred Anderson
said that they will be in ses
sion from 1 to 3 p.m. and from
7 to 11 p.m. The instruction is
being offered by Medford
lanes and offered without
charge to its patrons. Ander
son stated that anyone in
terested in picking up point
ers on the sport is welcome.
Both Portlanders are Qual
ified instructors.
Champion Performers
The lady teacher was Ore
gon match game titlist last
year and was a member of the
northwest women's title team.
In 1956 she was Seattle Star
all-events chamn and the Dre-
vioys season won the doubles
in tne same tourney. S.he was
on the all-coast champion
team in 1953 and in 1952 was
Portland city all-events vic
tor.
Watson is assistant editor of
a new periodical, the "Oregon
Bowler." He has instructed at
several Portland alleys and
currently has a 198 per game
average. He has rolled four
perfect, or 300, games and has
a high series of 767. His high
season average is 201. He was
1955 Colorado match game
champion, averaging 200 for
64 games.
Japan's export of automo
biles in 1957 were estimated
at 6,600 cars, compared with
1,300 in 1956.
SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!
On All Purchases of $50.00 or
More From Brooks . . . You Buy At
PC51CES!
This is our BRAND NEW PRICE POLICY that is in effect
right now and will be in effect from now on. There are
no gimmicks . . . this is NOT a salel When you buy at
Brooks ... you buy at WHOLESALEI
All Famous National Standard Brands That Carry the
Manufacturer's Label and Standard Warranty!
AMERICAN STANDARD WESTINGHOUSE
BRIGGS CRANE' NUTONE OTHERS
Choose From Samples In Our Showroom
Delivery In From 1 to 3 Days!
Ekooks tElecfriic
andl -Plumbing;
1116 N. Riverside Ave.1
& IFisDflimig
they should be prime again
This has had no effect how-
ever on the two-year-old fish
that range in the 13-16 inch
class. There have been plenty
of these in the deeper portions
of the lake.
Last Sunday Dick Lamont,
Medford, Don Dillingham,
Grants' Pass, and I journeyed
to Diamond to investigate
some very interesting reports
that had to do with not being
able to take fish there under
12 inches. After all, a 12-inch
fish is quite a prize these days
and it seemed incredible that
one could fish and not hook
many small fry.
We arrived at the lake
about 11 ajn. which is the
"dog time" of day to fish-
usually. In three hours time
besides getting soaked by a
downpour (our jackets were
in the car) we had a dozen
fish the smalles of which was
13 inches and the largest 20!
We took off some time to
lunch, loaf and dry out, then
in the evening Johnny Koch,
manager of the resort,
"showed" us the lake and we
filled our limits on flies.
There must be some smaller
fish in the lake but I can now
testify that I never saw them
nor did we hook any. In talk
ing with Johnny I learned that
in a short time the last year
plants should start to hit and
these fish will range around
the 11-inch mark. At the pres
ent time with the limit set at
five fish over -12 inches and
five fish under 12 the limit
is five! you don't hook any
thing under!
RAINBOW HIT HARD
Over the past too-many
years. I have had fish hit
my flies from Canada to
Mexico and in all the five
western, states. I have seen
Canadian Rainbows walk
. water on their tails, gray
ling whirl and smash at a
floating bug, and the cut
throat of Wyoming hesitate
then smash a drifting fly. I
have felt the steelhead of
the Rogue when they "set
into" a retrieved fly but un
til last Sunday I have never
before felt such a savage,
pole-shuddering strike as
these Diamond lake rain
bows can give when they
hit a fly.
In the evening as we
drifted along I cast to a
swirl made , by a feeding
fish. The fly dropped down
into the ring there was a
moment's hesitation, then I
saw a silver flash in the
dark water down deep
and then it came the sur
face exploded and that fish
went into the air taking my
tapered line right off the
water not once but three
times and he only meas
ured 14 inches!
I made the statement
then and I'll make it again
that I know dozens of fly
fisheAnen who will gladly
fish two hours lo get one
neve tingling, rod smashing
strike such as that.
DIAMOND COMING BACK
Well, before I get carried
away there it is right in our
back yard ole Diamond is
coming back in fact, it's
here. I saw trollers with good
catches, I saw still fishermen
with long strings of fish, kids
and grandmas. I don't say
everybody is going to catch
the limit every time, but they
are there and they can be
caught and Diamond may
once more become the Queen
of the Cascades.
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