Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 13, 1959, Image 10

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    10 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford. Oregon, Friday, February 13. 19S9
Medford Wrestlers
In District Meet
A 26-man Medford High
school wrestling team headed
for Klamath Falls today to
contend in the District 6 A-l
tournament.
Coach Paul Evensen said
that the Tornado squad would
not be disappointed if it did
not qualify men for the state
meet but that it hoped to pull
a few surprises.
Other entrants in the tour-
American Loop
Lessens Spring
Barnstorming
Chicago -(LTD- The Ameri
can league, following the lead
of the National league, de-emphasized
its spring barnstorm
ing exhibition games today
almost to the point of com
plete extinction.
American league clubs will
play a total of 226 exhibition
games this spring, but only
20 of those games will be
played on the way home from
the teams' training camp site
in Florida and Arizona, the
league announced.
National League clubs also
curtailed their small -town
Toad operations this spring so
that they will only play 18
such games of a 179-game ex
hibition total.
ney are Crater, Ashland,
Grants Pass and Klamath
Falls. Grants Pass won last
year and is expected to -battle
it but this week end with
Klamath Falls for leading
team honors.
The 26 wrestlers give Med
ford the allowable two men
for each of the 13 weight
classes. Five ninth grade grap
plers are included in the con
tingent. The Tornado squad has no
state meet entries from 1958.
Jim Funston, Medford's dis
trict champion of last year has
graduated. Gary Heath, who
was a district runner-up, is no
longer in school.
- Medford goes into the
tournament with a 4-3 win-
lloss record for the season.
Tournaments were slated
this afternoon and evening
and will" continue Saturday
morning, afternoon and eve
ning. ,
Ryff, Andrade
In Video Scrap
New York-dTD-Li'ghtweights
Frankie Ryff and Cisco And
rade will try to take a long
step up the comeback trail to
night in their TV fight at
Madison Square Garden.
The fact they are fighting
on Friday-the-13th is not ex
pected to add to the bad luck
each has experienced since
both were rated promising
contenders for the 135-pound
crown four years ago.
HOCKEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
United Press International
The Detroit Red Wings
learn quickly that poor per
formances hurt the purse
strings.
Smarting from a pocket
book lashing imposed by
Coach Sid Abel after Thurs
day week's 5-0 loss to the
Rangers, the Wings white
washed themselves out of the
National Hockey league cel
lar Thursday night with a
1-0 decision over New York.
The Boston Bruins staged
an uphill fight to down the
second place Chicago Black
hawks, 5-4, with two third
period goals in the only other
game played. '
Duck Trackmen
In East Races
University of Oregon, Eugene-Jim
Grelle and Dave
Edstrom, two ' of Oregon's
crack track men, left this
week for three major indoor
meets in Philadelphia and
New York.
The two Webfoots will meet
the stiffest kind of world class
competition at Philadelphia
tonight in the Inquirer Games.
I move on to the New York AC
: games at Madison Square Gar
den on Saturday and then run
in the National AAU cham
pionships the following Sat
urday, Feb. 21, at the Garden.
It will be Grelle's second
appearance in the winter
meets, and he'll face a field
of Ron Delaney of Ireland,
Brian Hewson of England,
Dan Wearn of Sweden and
Zbigniew of Poland in the
first meet. The following eve
ning in New York Delaney is
scheduled for the half mile
and his place will be taken
by Phil Coleman, the veteran
distance man from the Chica
go AC.
Edstrom, making his first
try at the indoor tracks, will
run in the 60-yard high
hurdles against four of the
best men in the world. The
field includes . Lee Calhoun,
the former NCAA champion
from North Carolina college,
Elias Gilbert and Fran Wash
ington of Winston Salem Tea
chers, and .Hayes Jones of
Eastern Michigan.
FIGHTS
Los Angeles (TJPIi Mauro Vas
quer. 133'. Tlaxcala. Mexico,
stopped Ike Chestnut, 132 U. New
York. (4).
Central Point
Tops South GP
Central Point - Central
Point Junior high cagers won
games from South Grants Pass
yesterday with the seventh
grade margin 19 to 15 and the
eighth grade spread 38 to 27.
The Pointers led 10 to 7 at
the-half and 16 to 8 at the
three quarter mark after GP
had headed 5 to 2 at the quar
ter in the seventh grade tilt.
CP eighth had 13 to 6, 21
to 12 and 33 to 21 period mar
gins. Mike Glines had 14
points for Medford and Shep
ard 13 for Grants Pass. Fifteen
Pointers saw duty in the
seventh grade fracas.
BASKETBALL
THURSDAY GAMES
United Press International
(East)
Manhattan College 71, Syracuse
53
New York U. 72. West Vir. 70
Virginia 85. VMI 66
North Carolina 75, Wake Forest
65
Clemson 73, Furman 64
Houston 71. Loyola (La.) 54
Montana 67. Regis 63
SPORTS
il
St. Petersburg
Lead by Suggs
St. Petersburg, Fla. - IUPD -Louise
Suggs' card of 69 led
a tight field today as the wom
en pros teed off for the sec
ond round of the St. Peters
burg Women's Open, the third
event on the Ladies PGA tour.
Miss Suggs, from Sea Is
land, Ga., won the first round
on expert putting, finishing
one stroke ahead of defending
champion Betsy Rawls of
Spartanburg, S.C.
Mickey Wright of Bonita,
Calif., was next with a 71,
followed by Wiffie Smith, St.
Clair, Mich., 72, and Ruth
Jessen, Seattle, and Marlene
Bauer Hagge, Pittsburgh, with
73s.
5 Titles Played
In Y Leagues
First Baptist topped Metho
dist 32 to 30 last night in a
YMCA senior high church
league basketball game.
First Christian won 35 to
17 from Phoenix Nazarene
and Zion Lutheran whipped
Mt. Pitt Nazarene 38 to 14.
D. Tinseth led Baptist with
14 and B. Oakes had 16 for
Methodist. J. Shaw and G.
Cummings each had 12 for
Zion and T. Monroe 12 for
First Christian.
In the junior high loop,
First Baptist won 33 to 12
over Methodist with Larry
Olson tabulating 14. John
Alansky had eight for First
Christian which downed Pres
byterian 21 to 6. '
The Pile Lighthouse in Ire
land was built by Alexander
Mitchell 113 years ago. He
was an engineer but blind at
I the time.
AIIES
MAR 22
.APR-' 20
KPv 4-14-16-23
124-31-32-901
APR. 2t
MAY 21
lrMl-13-40-43
HJ70-76-79-84I
STAR GAZEE!
GEMINI
MAY 22
R?20-26-30-4a
vy 60-71-72
CANCBt
JUNE 23
JULY 23
2-6- 9-23
23-29-85-8o
LEO
rf JULY 24
fa.. AUG. 23
41-47-491
62-69-74
VIRGO
AUG. 24
37-39-53
55-59-81-891
-j By CLAY R. POLLAN-
Your Daily Activity Guide
According to the Stan.
To develop message for Saturday,
redd words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
LIMA
SEPT. 23
OCT. 23
17-18-19-35ill
4
142-46-87
t Perk
2 Be
3 It's
4 Be
5 Up
6 Prepared
7 Hold
8 For
9 To
10 Your
1 1 Reciprocote
12 Tongue
13 If
l4Reody
15 Deceit
16 With
17 Stick
18 To
19Youi
20 Agreement:
21 Exciting
22 Interesting
23 Putting
24 Replies
25 Deal
26 News
27 Romantic
28 With
29 A
30 Or
(8) Good
31 On 61 With
32 Timely 62 Gets .
33 And 63 And
34 Trouble 64 Elders
35 Guns 65 New
36 Remember 66 You'll
37 That 67 Books
38 Appear 68 Or
39 Fine 69 You
40 You're 70 Beneficiary
! 41 On 71 Give
42 Be 72 Pleasure
43 The 73 Receive
44 YOUR 74 Nowhere
45 Messages 75 Business
46 Firm 76 Of
47 An 77 Chitdren
48 Day 78 Home
49 Act 79 Nice
i 50 Feathers 80 Recreation
51 Change 81 Fine
52 Give 82 Sports
53 Your 83 Pets
54 Attention 84 Gift
55 Don't 85 Questionable
56 To 86 Person
57 Ask 87 Resolute
53 Tune 88 News
59 Moke 89 Birds
60 Could 90 Topics
() Adverse ) Neutral
SCORPIO
OCT. 24
NOV. 22.
1. t
h7-68-7S88vgi
SAGITTARIUS
NOV. 23 A,
DEC 22 f3
cpit
CAPRICORN
DEC. 23
JAN. 20
7-10-12-15O
E3-34-38
US,
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21
FEB 19
3-44-48-5770)
PISCES
FEB 20 YJ
MAR. 21
52 5444iTl
177-78-83 HA
I - limmn'j ) afternoon to Lakeland, Winlerhaven, other cities.
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Morning Chevy panel hustles over causeway to St. Petersburg.
Night a long run to Punta Gorda and points south.
Chevy panel steps lively in Florida... runs day
and night, delivers 19.3 miles per gallon!
This '59 Chevy panel services west
central Florida icith daily on-time
newspaper deliveries. It's on the go
morning, noon and night; covers as
much as 587 miles a day . . . runs so
constantly that its engine never cools
off completely. Yet Mr. Clark Farber,
the Tampa Tribune's circulation man
ager, reports that the truck is deliver
ing 192 miles per gallon! Here's evi
dence of the thrift and stamina th'afs
making Chevy the solid favorite on
tough jobs everywhere.
This year, the light, medium and heavy
trucks of the Task-Force fleet are out
to whip anything that comes their way
and they've got what it takes to do it !
Take the panel pictured above, for
example. Powered by the '59 Thrift
master 6 with new economy-contoured
camshaft, it's building a sensational
economy record, despite the sizzling
pace of its work. That's typical of the
way Chevies of all sizes are tuming-to
on the most challenging jobs in America. '
Every one of them, including the one
for you, comes equipped with the latest
in tough truck components. The way
they're made, they make the hardest
hauls look easy!
If you have a job that puts a truck
on its mettle, seeing your Chevrolet
dealer has never made so much sense.
He's waiting nearby with a new stock
of hauling equipment that can be tai
lored, precisely, to your specifications.
Chevy goes 8 miles off ffie roorf for mam'
moth loads! Not even the deep woods of
southern Louisiana can daunt a Chevy.
This truck, working for the Sabine Lumber
Company of Zwolle, bulls its way as far as
8 miles off the road, over ruts and jagged
stumps; then grinds back out with tower
ing loads of logs. -
No job's too tough for a Chevrolet truck!
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
9th at Bartlett
COURTESY CHEVROLET
MEDFORD
SP 2-6115
1959 General Electric
21" Ultra-Vision
Full console design with casters.
Mahogany finish.
Reg. !319
95
SALE $27500
Foil year warranty on all parts and
all tubes, including the picture tube.
Big 8-inch extended-range speaker
for fine sound.
(If the price looks too low for a G-E
console, well it is! We jyst over-
bought, on this model).
CO.
APPLIANCE
i VL J i I 1 1 iuiij.iji.ia
l "' " x.
Home Appliance Co.'s Centennial Contest
the beard most
like Lincoln's
Contest Rules:
Board owners must come to
Homo Applianeo before 5:30
.m. Saturday, February 14th.
to be photographed.
Photos of the proud beard own
ers .will be displayed at Home
Appliance during the week of
February 1 6 (until noon Satur
day, Feb. 21). Winning photos
will be posted in our store
window.
.The public will judge the winners! Any.
one high school age or older is eligible
to examine the photos on display and
east one vote in each of the six cata-gories.
wins FREE
a brand new
General Electric
MOBILE-MAID
Dishwasher
and a fine 8" x 10" portrait
by Brainerd's
Best Mustache Best Goatee
Best Van Dyke Sorriest Beard
Best Mutton Chops
Each Win $25
in merchandise award to apply to anything in the
store valued at $100 or up. Each winner also get
a fine 8" x 10" portrait by Brainerd's.