1
12 MAIL TRIBUNE, Midfori, Oregon, Thursday, August 7, 1958
. V ..."
'Regional Ski Tourmiey
s Friday at:Gardeiier Lak
Open
Iffiy 9"- ' -
A'StfA , , " v.v . -"-
mm ..'.y.r.yjv. .. .. . . .... ,. --- -f-r-
SKI MEET PARTICIPANT Lon kin
ner, above, is southern Oregon's top
water skier and among leading conten
ders in the men's division in the western
Elliott Takes Little
Time to Celebrate
New Record in Mile
Dublin, Ireland (CPU "With
out any time off to celebrate
his astounding new mile rec
ord of 3:54.5, Australian run
ning machine Herb Elliott
heads right back to the track
tonight for another race, this
time at either a half-mile or
two miles.
Elliott's statement to meet
officials that he's ready for
another top-flight Tace flab-
asted - them . almost as
as his "miracle mile'"
lesday night amazed a
Id that came to root for
RonfDelany and stayed to
cheer Elliott to the echo.
Chances were good that
Elliott would hook up in
another duel with Delany. to
night, especially if the Aussie
elected to run the half-mile.
Yogi Berra Hurt
By Muffed Ball
Baltimore (DPD Well, it
happened Yogi Bera was hit
on the face while trying to
catch a ball in the outfield.
The wags around the Ameri
can league had predicted the
Yankee catcher might be in
jured when he switched to
the outfield last month.
During pre-game practice
Wednesday night, while Berra
was shagging balls in the out
field, a fly ball struck his
gloye and hit his left eyebrow
causing a wide gash.
Three stitches were neces
sary to close the wound.
berj
muJi
We A
crov
Something Better Could
Come Out of PCC Ashes;
Rose Bowl Fund Problem
By HAL WOOD
Portland, Ore. (UPD The
death-knell of the 43-year-old
Pacific Coast conference, will
be sounded here on Saturday
and Sunday but out of the
ashes may arise something
better.
Six schools already have
announced their intention to
withdraw from the dissension
ridden athletic organization
leaving only Oregon,) Oregon
State and Idaho remaining.
And there are indications that
the Oregon schools will join
in the land-slide vote.
The best guess now is that
the eight' teams then will
operate as "independents,"
with Idaho off most of the
schedules.
"As independents," said a
school official who refused to
be quoted, "we still would
play our usual schedule with
most of us meeting five or six
of the others from the PCC
each season.
"This lay-out still could be
used as the basis for picking
a West Coast Rose Bowl rep
resentative. More Eligible!
"And if they played the ex
PCC schools enough games,
such teams as Arizona (Tempe)
State, College of Pacific and
San Jose State thus also
would become eligible for the
post-season game."
The distribution of the big
money involved, however,
would be another problem.
In fact, some of the Rose
Bowl money will be a major
bone of contention at the
meeting this week end.
' v v.' :v-yss.' a s. .- '', '&. .
V x
f-Mt
, Elliott's triumph goes into
the books as the most amazing
rryle race in history since five
runners all broke the four
minute barrier. Four of them
were under the accepted mile
mark of 3:58.0 held by Austra
lian John Landy. Elliott said
today the record was due to
"perfect conditions."
Track Firm
He listed: (1) the track,
which was firm and springy
after a light rain; (2) the pace
"just terrific;" (3) the com
petition; (4) "The wonderful
enthusiasm of the Irish crowd
for their terrific applause on
my last lap."
Officials of the Clonliffee
Harriers and Crusaders Meet
confirmed there was no reason
why Elliott's performance
would be denied recognition
as a new world mark by the
International Amateur Ath
letic federation. There was no
following wind or any other
questionable factor, such as
pacing, involved.,
Aussie Merv Lincoln was
second in 3:55.9, trailing El
liott by about 15 yards, and
Delany was third in 3:57.5,
barely nipping Murray Hal
berg of New Zealand who was
clocked in the same time. Aus
sie Albert Thomas suffered
the strange fate of running a
3:58.6 mile and finishing
f-i-f-t-h.
Elliott's fractional times
were: 58 seconds for the first
quarter; 1:58.0 for the half;
2:59.0 for the three-quarters.
He ran the last quarter in
55.5 seconds.
There is $175,000 in the
PCC coffers, obtained when
UCLA, USC, California and
Washington were "fined" by
having their share of the Rose
Bowl spoils during certain
seasons withheld.
Some claim that the four
schools already have with
drawn from the conference
and therefore the money
should be split among the five
remaining. Some think it
should be split nine ways.
Others that any school that
resigns from the conference
would lose its share.
As things stand now, with
six schools signifying they'll
quit, that would - leave the
whole pot for the three
schools remaining.
Some Hope
While it is a foregone con
clusion that the conference
will collapse completely at
the meeting here, there is
some hope. Coach Len Cas
anova of Oregon Wednesday
issued a plea asking that the
school authorities reconsider
their decisions "because col
lege football would be a fail
ure in the West without a
major conference."
Another guess is that the
four California : schools will
form some sort of a confer
ence; or that they'll join a
transcontinental loop with top
teams from coast to coast.
Still another suggestion is
that the Oregon and Wash
ington schools may join with
College of Pacific, Arizona
(Tempe) State and College of
Pacific.
regional tourney Friday, Saturday and
Sunday at Gardener lake. He also has had
a leading hand in preparations for 'the
meet.
Davis Sets
Record in
400 Meters
Budapest, Hungary (UPD
Glenn Davis' unbroken string
of victories capped by a new
400-meter hurdles world rec
ord established him today as
the top star of the United
States track team's tour of
Europe. .
Davis has won all six indi
vidual events he entered in
meets at ' Moscow, Warsaw
and here, plus other victories
in relay races.
In addition, he's expected to
score another "double" in the
United States vs. Greece meet
at Athens on Saturday and
Sunday. The U.S. squad was
scheduled to leave by plane
today for 'that city, winding
up its brilliant tour in the
country that gave birth to the
Olympic Games.
Davis zoomed to a new
world mark of 49.2 ' seconds
for the 400-meter hurdles
Wednesday. That clipped
three-tenths of a second off
the record of 49.5 seconds that
Davis established during the
tryouts for the 1956 Olympic
Games.
Unofficial Win
It also led the United States
men's team to an unofficial
127-68 victory over the Hun
garian men's team in the two
day competition at Nep-Sta-dium.
No official count of
points was made. In addition,
the U.S. women's team, which
had been butscored both by
the Russians in Moscow and
the Poles in Warsaw, out
pointed the Hungarian girls,
64-54.
U. S. men won 14 of 17
events, U.S. women seven of
12.
Tom Courtney of Living
ston, N.J., won the 800-meter
event but failed in possibly
his last real attempt to break
the world record of 1:45.7
held by Belgium's Roger Mo-
ens. The U.S. Olympic cham
pion won the event easily but
had to settle for a clocking of
1::47.0.
Other records were set by
Margaret Matthews of Atlan
ta, Ga., who established a new
American record for the broad
jump when she won that
event with a leap of 20 feet,
3V4 inches; and Earlene
Brown of Los Angeles, who
set a stadium record in the
women's shot put with a
heave of 52 feet, 1H4 inches,
and Al Hall of Hanson, Mass.,
who won the men's hammer
throw with a heave of 214
feet, 3.4 inches for another
stadium record.
Jones Triumphs
Other U.S. men's victories
were scored by Hayes Jones
of Pontiac, Mich, in the 110
meter high hurdles in 13.6
seconds; Ed Collymore of
Cambridge, Mass., in the 100
meter dash in 20.9 seconds;
Rink Babka of Palo . Alto,.
Calif., in the discus throw
with a heave of 188 feet, 3.96
inches; Charles Dumas of Los
Angeles in the high jump with
a leap of six feet, 10.9 inches
and Ken Floerke of Kansas
City, Kan., in the hop-step-and-jump
with 50 feet, 6.8
inches.
Other women's victories
were scored by Lucinda Wil
liams of Tennessee State in
the 200-meter dash in 24.1
seconds,- and Lillian Green of
New York in the 400-meter
run in 58.4 seconds.
COLLEGE STAR SIGNS
New York (DPD The New
York Knickerbockers have
signed San Francisco's Mike
Farmer to a contract. The six-foot-seven
forward was top
choice of the Knicks in this
year's National Basketball as
sociation draft.
Entrants
Seek Spots
In National
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:
Friday
9 ajn. pee wee slalom: 10 a.m.,
junior girls slalom; 11 ajn. junior
boys slalom; 12:30 p.m. women's
slalom; 130 p.m.. veterans slalom;
230 p.m.. pee wee tricks; 330 pjn.
junior girls tricks.
Saturday
9 a.m., women's tricks; 10 a.m..
veterans tricks; 11 a.m.. junior boys
tricks; 1 p.m., men's tricks; 2 p.m.,
junior girls jump; 3 p.m., junior
boys jump; 4 p.m., pee wee jump.
Sunday
9 ajn., women's jump: 10 a.m.,
veterans jump; 11 ajn. and 1 p.m.
men's slalom; 2 p.m.. mix doubles;
230 p.m., men's jump.
Gardener lake northeast of
Medford hummed with a rush
of activity today as a host of
water skiers primed for the
Western Regional tournament.
Quest for championships
and the right to enter the na
tional tournament - of the
American Water Ski associa
tion opens Friday at the pri
vately - owned reservoir on
Yankee creek, a 15-mile drive
from Medford. The tourna
ment will conclude on Sun
day. Competition is billed
throughout the day each of
the three days with exhibition
performance tossed in if time
permits.
The western region covers
11 western states and entries
are listed from as far away as
Denver, Colo. A total of 60 to
70 contestants is expected, in
cluding some of the finest
skiers in the United States.
Among entrants are Chuck
Stearns, Bellflower, Calif.,
and Vicki Van Hook, Long
Beach, Calif., national over
all champions last year in
men's and junior girls divi
sions respectively.
Six Divisions ,
Divisions for the regional in
clude men's, women's, junior
boys, junior girls, veterans
and pee wee. Events incljude
the slalom, jumping and in
dividual and mixed doubles
trick riding. The five top
placers in all except the pee
we class will qualify for the
national Aug. 22-24 at Chip
ley, Ga.
Strict rules of the ASWA
require that regional compe
titions have ratings of expert
in the men's division and of
first class in all other divi
sions. For that reason, a good
number of skiers who aspire
to enter the meet have not
been qualified. They were be
ing offered an opportunity to
day at Gardener lake to gain
the needed ratings. Skiers al
ready eligible for . the meet
were practicing.
The meet is under the spon
sorship of the Crater Lions
club of Medford and the Gar
dener Lake Water Ski club
with Lon Skinner, top local
contender in the men's divi
sion, taking a leading part in
preparations. Competition be
gins each day at 9 a.m. Tick
ets have been on sale at Lam
port's Sporting Goods store,
Barker's Men's store and Pu
rucker Piano house- and will
be available at the gate.
Signs Mark Way
Signs have been posted
from the Big Y at the north
end of Medford marking the
way to the lake. Ski fans are
advised to take Crater Lake
highway to Antelope rd., to
turn right onto Antelope rd.
and follow it to Yankee Creek
rd. which goes directly to the
lake.
A concession stand will be
in operation and families may
make a daylong picnic of
watching the tournament.
. Lions have printed a souve
nir tournament program and
all revenne from it will go to
the Junior Service league's
hard of hearing kindergarten.
Gate receipts will be applied
to meet tournament expenses.
' Bob Littlejohn and Pat Big
ham, Portland, who are asso
ciated with Oregon Centen
nial meeting of the AWSA on
Friday evening at the Med
ford hotel in a bid to take the
western regional meet to Port
land next yearT
Bob Taylor is serving as
harbor master for the ski
meet and Bob Dickey is the
chief assistant.
A public address system is
being set up by Darrell Farn
ham for convenience of con
testants and spectators.
CRATER LAKE f
MOTORS' I
A
NEW AHGLIA TUDOR
ONLY $5(5)00 per month
CRATER LAKE
MedfordTribunb
Milwaukee
Six-Game Margin
BY MILTON RICHMAN
United Press International
Look ma, no race!
Not only in the American
League, but in the National as
well.
It's all the fault of Milwau
kee's business-like Braves, who
have opened up a six-game
lead and just about put an end
to all that popaganda about a
close race in the National
league.
Rookie pitcher Carlton Wil
ley and Hank Aaron helped
widen the gap Wednesday
night when they combined in
a 2-1 victory over the Pirates.
Willey pitched a three-hitter
for his sixth -victory while
Aaron belted his . 25th home
run with one on off Vern Law
in the first inning. Aaron's
blow ended the scoring for
the night after Bill Vir'don
had homered for Pittsburgh in
the top of the first.
- The Cardinals handed the
second - place Giants their
eighth loss in ihe last nine
games, "8-7; Philadelphia
topped Cincinnati, 8-5, and
Los Angeles defeated Chi
cago, 5-2.
STANDINGS
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W .L. Pet. GB
Phoenix " 68 49 .581
Vancouver i 68 50 .576 li
San Diego 65 53 .551 3',i
Salt Lake 59 56 .513 8
Portland 54 61 .470 13
Spokane 53 63 .457 14','2
Sacramento 51 67 .432 17 'i
Seattle 50 69 .420 19
Wednesday's Results . .
Portland 6-2. San Diego 2-5
Sacramento 9, Phoenix 4
Salt Lake 18. Seattle 13
Spokane at Vancouver ppd., rain
How The Series Stand
Portland 4, San Diego 1
Salt Lake 3, Seattle 0
Sacramento 2. Phoenix 1
Spokane 2, Vancouver 0
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
New York 70 36 .660
Boston 53 51 .510 16
Chicago 53 52 .505 16 Vi
Cleveland 52 54 .491 18
Detroit 50 53 .485 18 ,i
Baltimore 47 55 .461 21
Kansas City 47 55 - .461 21
Washington 56 61 .425 25
Wednesday's Results
Boston 8, Washington 2
New York 3, Baltimore 1 (night)
Chicago 4, Kansas City 2 (night)
Cleveland at Detroit (night, ppd.,
rainj
Friday's Games
Chicago at Detroit (night)
Kansas City at Cleveland (night)
Baltimore at Washington (night)
Boston at New York (night)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee ..... 60 42 .583
San Francisco 55 50 .524 6
Pittsburgh 52 51 .505 8
Chicago L 52 55 .486 10
Cincinnati 50 53 .485 10
Philadelphia 48 52 .480 10 Vz
St. Louis 49 54 .476 11
Los Angeles 43 56 .462 12
Wednesday's Results
Los Angeles 6. Chicago 2
Milwaukee 2,Pittsburgh 1 (night)
St. Louis 8, San Francisco 7 (night)
Philadelphia 8, Cincinnati 5
(night)
Thursday's Probable Pitchers
Philadelphia at Cincinnati (night)
Cardwell (0-0) vs. Purkey (13-6).
San Francisco at St. Louis (night)
Gomez (6-9) vs. Jones (8-8).
Friday's Games
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (night)
Milwaukee at Philadelphia (night)
St Louis at Chicago
San Fran, at Los Angeles (night)
NORTHWEST LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
Yakima 25 13 .657
Lewiston . 23 16 .588 Z1'
Wenatchee 21 18 ' .538 4'i
Tri-City 20 20 .500 6 '
Eugene 21 21 .500 6
Salem , 9 31 .225 17
Wednesday's Results
Eugene 12, Lewiston 11
Yakima 2, Salem 1
Wenatchee 10, Tri-City 3
TO GO ALL OUT
Oceanside, Calif. (LTD
Heavyweight Champion Floyd
Patterson and talkative Man
ager Cus D'Amato le. it be
known today that the champ
will go "all out" from now
until he winds up drills for
his Aug. 18 meeting with Roy
Harris. Patterson boxed five
rounds Wednesday with two
sparring mates, and D'Amato
insisted there would be no
relaxing of the tempo until
the end of camp preparations.
SAVE
'250
oo
on English Fords!
MOTORS
Main
Fir
Hods
In the American league the
Yankees maintained their 16
game spread over the rest of
the field with a 3-1 win over
the Orioles; the White Sox
beat the Athletics, 4-2; the
Red Sox stopped the Sena
tors, 8-2, and rain washed out
the Detroit - Cleveland con
test. Come From Behind
Stan Musial drove in three
of the Cards' runs and Don
Blasingame two more with
four hits as St. Louis over
came an early five-run deficit
to subdue San Francisco. Re
liever Chuck Stobbs received
his first National League vic
tory since being obtained from
Washington. Willie Kirkland
had a homer, triple and a
double for the Giants.
Ted Kazanski drove in four
runs, three of them with his
third homer, as Robin Roberts
posted his 12th triumph at the
expense of the Redlegs. Rob
erts was nicked for homers by
Bob Thurman, Frank Robin
son and Don Hoak.
Charlie Neal's homer high
lighted a, three-run, sixth-inning
outburst that carried the
Dodgers to their victory over
the Cubs. Neal hit his homer
off loser Johnny Briggs fol
lowing Norm Larker's single.
Orioles Still Losing
Art Dittmar pitched a five
hitter for the Yankees in hand
ing the slump-ridden Orioles
their 10th straight defeat.
Loser Jack Harshman hurled
on even terms with Ditmar
until the sixth when Elston
Howard singled home two
runs.
Left-hander Billy Pierce
doled out six hits as the White
Sox rose above the .500 mark
with thier victory over the
Athletics. Bob Cerv's 29th
homer with one on accounted
for the only runs off Pierce,
who posted his 11th triumph.
Ray Boone hit a two-run
homer off loser Bob Davis. '
Tom Brewer let the Sena
tors down on three hits while
the Red Sox hammered out
12" in rolling to their fourth
straight victory. Jackie Jen
sen hit his 31st homer while
Frank Malzone and Ted Lep
cio also homered for the Red
Sox. Roy Sievers connected
for his 29th and 30th homers
for the Senators.
LINESCORES:
National League
Los Angeles 100 003 001 5 10 1
Chicago 001 001 0002 6 1
- Williams, Labine (6) and Hose
boro. Briggs. Anderson (8) and
Thacker. Winner Williams (8-7).
Loser Briggs (4-2). HR Neal.
San Fran. 230 000 0207 12 0
St. Louis 030 410 OOx 8 12 1
Worthington, Johnson (2), Giel
(4), Grissom (6), Miller (7) and
Schmidt, Thomas (7). Mabe. Wight
(2), Stobbs (3), Paine (8), Brosnan
(9) and Green. Winner Stobbs
(1-3). Loser Johnson (0-1). HR
Kirkland.
PhUadelphia 003 300 0028 13 0
Cincinnati 001 011 002 5 11 1
Roberts, Farrell (9) and Hegan.
Haddix, Acker (4), Jeffcoat (6),
Lawrence (8) and Burgess. Win
ner Roberts (12-9). Loser Haddix
(7-6). HRS Kazanski, Thurman,
Robinson, Hoak.
Pittsburgh 100 000 000 1 3 1
Milwaukee 200 000 OOx 2 6 1
Law, Gross (8) and Kravitz. Wil
ley (6-3) and Crandall. Loser Law
(9-10). HRS Virdon, Aaron.
American League
Washington .000 001 0012 3 0
Boston . 203 020 Olx 8 12 2
Ramos, Valentinetti (4), Albanese
,(8) and Korcheck. Brewer (6-10)
and White. Loser Ramos (10-10).
HRS Malbone, Jensen, Sievers 2,
Lepcio.
New York 000 002 1003 T 1
Baltimore 000 000 100 1 5 0
Ditmar (8-2) and Howard. Harsh
man (8-10) and Triandos.
Chicago 000 220 000 4 10 0
Kansas City . 200 000 0002 6 0
Pierce (11-8) and Battey. Davis,
Daley (5), Herbert (6) and Chiti.
Loser Davis (0-3). HRS Cerv,
Boone.
49 to '53
Models
SATURDAY,
SEE THE THRILLING
POWDER PUFF DERBY
, - Featuring
DAREDEVIL WOMEN of
The Rogue Valley .
VALLEY VIEW SPEEDWAY
One Mile North of Ashland on Highway 99
CLIP THIS
IIIBrk,r wwwrw"IHHMIIBlB"
S(RW and THIS COUPONS
vg Admits One Adult"
Solons Shave Giant
Lead in. Coast Loop
By GENE BRYANT
United Press International
Sacramento shaved the
league-leading Phoenix Giants'
margin over Vancouver to a
half game Wednesday night
as Bob Roselli came up with
his second and third home
runs of the series to pace the
Solons to a 9-4 victory.
Roselli, a .218 hitter when
the three-game set opened;
slammed a two-run homer in
the second inning and a solo
blast in the fourth to lead a
12-hit Solon . attack on, five
Phoenix pitchers. Nippy Jones
led off a four-run Sacramento
burst in the ninth with a solo
four-bagger.
Andre Rodgers lined out
his 28th' homer of the year
for the Giants in the first in
ning, but starter and winner
Roger Osenbaugh closed the
door until the eighth when
the lasers broke loose for
three more tallies. Pete Mesa
came on for the Sacs in the
eighth, striking out Tom
Haller and Bill Wilson to end
the Giants' last threat. The
win gave Sacramento the
series, two games to one.
Tough On Pitchers -
Salt Lake outlasted Seattle,
18-13, in J3l lengthy slugging
match at the Utah city, and
Portland and Sah Diego split
a pair in other games. The
Beavers won the seven-inning
opener, 6-2, J their ' fourth
straight over San Diego, but
the Padres came back for a
5-3 decision in the nightcap.
The Vancouver-Spokane con
test was rained out.
Seattle took an early 8-1
lead over Salt Lake, but the
Bees lowered the boom by
scoring five runs hi each of
the fifth, sixth and seventh
innings to sweep the three
game series. The Rainiers
threw six hurlers into the
Hunt Drawings
To Be Monday
Portland (UPD Drawings
for four early season: big
game hunts will be held at
10 ajn. Monday at the Port
land office of the Oregon
State Game commission at
1634 Southwest Alder street,
Drawings will be held to
determine participants for the
antelope hunts, and the Wal
lowa, Hart mountain and
Snake river controlled deer
hunts.
The antelope season is
scheduled for Aug. 23-27 in
all three antelope areas of
southeastern Oregon. The
Wallowa controlled deer sea
son will be held Aug. 30-Sept,
3: The Hart, mountain con
trolled hunt Sept. 27-28; and
the Snake river pack area,
Oct. 4-26.
Successful applicants in the
drawings will be mailed their
tags by Aug. 15. In those
areas where the quota was not
filled by the filing deadline,
no drawing will be held and
all applicants will receive
tags. '
Cranston Scores
Another Upset
South Orange, N. J. (DPD
John Cranston, the left-handed
"giant killer" from San
Marino, Calif., went gunning
for his third major upset in as
many days today when he op
posed Ham Richardson in the
quarter-final round of the
Eastern grass courts tennis
championships.
Cranston turned in his sec
ond straight unset Wednesday
when he defeated Sammy Gi-
ammalva of Houston, Tex.,
6-3, 0-6, 6-4. The lanky Cali
fornian achieved the biggest
upset of the tourney so far on
Tuesday when he eliminated
Wimbledon and Australian
champion Ashley Cooper.
THRILLS
CHILLS
SPILLS
AUGUST 2
Tim Trials
at 7:30 p.m.
RACES at 8 p.m.
COUPON,
breach while tearing into five
Bee pitchers.
The Suds had the only hom
ers of the wild contest, two
run blasts by Eddie Basinski
and Jack Ditusa, but the Bees
came out on the long end in
the hitting department, 16-14.
Salt Lake committed five
errors to Seattle's two. A total
of 14 walks were issued in the
losely-played game.
Padres Finally Win
San Diego battered two
Portland hurlers for 11 hits
in the nightcap at Multnomah
Stadium to win their only tilt
of the five-game series. Gene
Lary held the losers to six
safeties while picking up his
seventh win against six losses.
The Victory moved the Pads
to within 3V2 games of Phoe
nix.
Ed Winceniak belted a
bases-loaded triple and scored
two other runs to lead Port
land to victory in the first
game. The Beavers won it in
the sixth with a four-run blast
off loser Bill Werle, who was
charged with his seventh loss
against nine wins. Duane Pil
lette picked up his fifth tri
umph against nine defeats for
the winners.
LINESCORES:
(1st game)
San Diego 002 000 0 2 9 0
Portland 010 104 x 6 7 0
Werle and Jones; Pillette and
Torney.
(2nd game) ' v
San Diego 000 220 010 5 11 0
PorUand 001 100 100 3 6 0
G. Lary and Naragon; Jansen,
Gray (8) and Neal.
Sacramento 021 101 004 9 12 1
Phoenix 100 000 030 4 13 3
Osenbaugh, Mesa (8) and Roselli;
Burnside, Shipley (4), Fricano (8),
Jones (9), McMinn (9) and Jialler.
Seattle ..102 231 40013 14 2
Salt Lake ....001 055 52x 18 16 5
Osteen, Churn (5). Kennedy (6),
Davis (7). Surkont (7). Martin (8)
and Dotterer; Trimble, i Hardison
(7). Kildoo (7), Green (8) and Ma-ton.
MM '
That's no Gin like
G01D0HS
100 HEUTRAL SPIRITS D1STH1EP BOM CHAW, 88 PROOF. tOTOOITS OCT EM CO.. UP.. tlfflEH. II. 1 1
Distributors: Porrott & Co., San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Searlt
cs-
tim closer
the elephant
' From close up, an elephant looks a lot larger
than he does a block away.
It's the same with news: the nearer home
something happens, the bigger its interest is.
United Press International covers the state as
thoroughly as it does the rest of the world,
delivers the big regional news
along with the global.
Read U-Pi. dispatches in
Medford Mail Tribune
Game Men Tell
Fishing Outlook
Portland (DPD The week
ly forecast of fishing condi
tions prepared by the Ore
gon State Game commission
by regions:
Southwest: Trout angling
in the North Umpqua is only
fair; in the Lemolo reservoir
it is poor to fair. Summer
steelhead angling in the
North Uumqua is fair to good.
Salmon angling at Winches
ter bay is very good. Striped
bass angling in forks of Coos
river is good.
Central: Deschutes river is
fair in the Maupin area for
trout. Steelhead fishing at
the mouth of the Deschutes is
slow. Kloan area has been
good.
Trout fishing on east fork
Hood river very good. East
and Paulina lakes fair. Crane
Prairie reservoir very good
with rainbows from 12 to 15
inches, eastern brook up to
20 inches and many kokanee
being taken. Fly fishing at
Blue lake good in the early
morning and late evening.
The Deschutes above Bend
good for trolling. Fly fish
ing in the evening exception
ally good. North Twin lake
fair for bait and fly. Davis
lake is fair.
Buy
At
Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Briekt, Flues,
Drain Tils
727
W. MeAndrews
Ph. SP 2-4107
I