Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 29, 1959, Image 9

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Lady Margaret, Beau Jack
Queenie Win Trial Stakes
Lady Margaret of Crater
Lake, Queenie of Redding and
Beau Jack of Honey Lake
wert stake winners Friday
and Saturday in the eighth
annual Rogue Valley Retriev
er club field trial.
Lady Margaret, Labrador
female, owned and handled
by Otto L. Lilya, Trail and
Medford, was victor in the
qualifying stake yesterday.
Roland Watt, Redding, Calif.,
nd Queenie, Labrador fe
male, captured amateur all
age laurels on Friday. And, in
the other Friday event, the
derby, first spot was earned
by Beau Jack. The Labrador
male. Is owned by Ed Bailey,
Redding, Calif., who also han
dled the dog in gaining the
honors.
The American Kennel club
licensed trial is being con
ducted in the Camp White
area on game commission
management land and at
Hoover lakes. Completion of
the open all-age stake today
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7
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Example:
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Complete Parts and Service!
jay alleh
Fiat Bo rg ward
1078 Court Street
will wrap up the competition.
One open series was run yes
terday afternoon.
Today's first series is to
start at 8 ajn. at the club
house at Hoover lakes off the
end of McLoughlin dr.
Public Welcome
The public is welcome to
join the gallery at the trial.
Signs, beginning at the Y at
the north edge of Medford
point the way. Trial area may
be reached by driving out
Crater Lake highway. Special
note of the signs should be
taken at the Four Corners.
A concessions booth is oper
ating at the trial site. Pheas
ants shot at the event are be
ing sold and RVRC officials
reported that the birds are
good and fat.
Lady Margaret was one of
33 starters in the qualifying
stake. Nineteen dogs were en
tered in the amateur and 28 in
the derby.
Second in the qualifying af
fair was The Judge of Dublin
Mora fun to ewn, costs half as
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9
Gulch, Labrador male, owned
by Father John P. Kendregan,
Belt, Mont., and handled by
Ed Minoggie, Portland.
Shawn's Golden Boy, golden
male, owned by Mrs. John M.
Preston, Hillsborough, Calif.,
and handled by Marvin Beli
veau, Sonoma, Calif., was
third. Fourth was Peter Dee
of Hawk Home, Labrador
male, owned by Ward Hawk
ins, Garden City, and handled
by Roy Wallace, Garden City.
Reserve Award
Reserve certificate of merit
in the qualifying stake was
given to Ace's Pacer of Winni
way, Labrador male, owned
by Durward Turner, Bothell,
Wash., and handled by Paul
Shoemaker, Issaquah, Wash.
CMs were presented to BI's
Lone Prince of Smudge Lake,
Labrador male, owned and
handled by B. I. Claska, Eu
gene, Mount Joy's Jug Ears,
Chesapeake female, owned by
E. C. Fleischmann, Sebasto
pol, Calif., and handled by
Mrs. Fleischmann and Platte
River Jane, Chesapeake fe
male, owned and handled by
Mrs. Walter Heller, San Ra
fael, Calif.
Four series were run in the
qualifying stake in the game
management area. One was a
two-pigeon retrieve in heavy
cover and one was a blind
retrieveo f a pigeon with a di
version gunner. Three ducks
were retrieved in tules and
pot holes in a third with de
coys used. A two-duck series
with water blind and a diver
sion bird was the fourth.
Tremendo Second
Taking second in the ama
teur was Tremendo of Ques
nel Lake, Labrador male,
owned by Mrs. Bruce Wallace,
Sebastopol, Calif., and han
dled by her husband. Rogue
River Devilkin, Labrador
male, owned and handled by
Claude Miles, Medford, gained
third. Fourth place entry was
My Lady Castlemaine, Labra
dor female, owned and han
dled by E. R. Desrosiers, Eu
reka, Calif.
A second Rolland Watt dog,
Lucinda of Crater Lake, Lab
rador female, was awarded
the reserve certificate of
merit. Amateur stake CMs
went to Atom Bob, Chesa
peake male, owned and han
dled by Dr. John Lundy, of
Boise, Idaho, and to Nodak
Black Target, Labrador male,
owned and handled by L. P.
Floberg, Fargo, N. D.
There were four series in
the amateur. First was a dou
ble pheasant retrieve in the
Hoover lakes area. There was
heavy cover with ridges and
the dogs honored. Second test,
also at Hoover lakes, was a
land blind pheasant event
with about a 100-yard re
trieve, diagonally across ridg
es. Then there was a triple
duck retrieve on water, on
game commission manage
ment land on the north side
of Rogue river. A water blind
with a diagonal retrieve
across the lake and with a di
version made up the fourth
test, and was on the manage
ment property.
Aksarben Gent Runner-Up
Aksarben Gent, Labrador
male, owned and handled by
Roger E. Horton, San Gabriel,
Calif., was derby runner-up
and Techacko's Ranger, Lab
rador male, owned and han
dled by Minoggie, was third.
Fourth place was awarded to
Bellota Clinker, Labrador
male, owned and handled by
Nick C. Peters, Sauk Rapids,
Minn.
Cookie, Labrador female of
Tom Rickard, Medford, re
ceived a reserve certificate of
merit in the derby. CMs were
given to Primo Gringe, Labra
dor maleo f B. I. Claska; Shas
Lassen Biff, Labrador male,
owned by R. G. Watt, Red
ding, Calif., and handled by
Bob Hyatt, Redding, and Mac
Kenzie's Di Dee Doe, Labra
dor female, owned by Bertil
Carlson, Seattle, Wash., and
handled by Shoemaker.
Dogs were run through
three series in the derby. First
was a long single pigeon re
trieve and third was a double
duck test on water. Right duck
was a short retrieve and the
other, across a channel in
tules, was a long one. All
series were on the game man
agement property on the south
side of the river.
James F. Stillwell, Klam
ath Falls, and Siebert Steph
ens, Redding, Calif., judged
the amateur, Stillwell and
Robert Morris. Central Point,
the derby and Stephens and
Morris the qualifying stake.
Stephens and Stillwell are the
open judges.
DEAD BALL
Cincinnati -(UPD- The entire
home run output of the Na
tional league's eight teams in
1902 amounted to only 96.
Poison Oak?
Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL
You must be satisfied or your
money cheerfully refunded. Get a
bottle today at WESTERN THRIFT
WHAT BOXER. HELD
THREE TITLES
AT THE SAME TIME ?
Henry Armstrong was
lighftveight, neftemtight
ancf mio(dl&uje.i'qht
boxing champion at the
same, time !
TOP THIS! To any reader submitting1
contrary proof, Tip Brady will send a,
signed, wallet-siied diploma. Write to:
BEAT THIS, co this paper. Box 575,
Sausalito, Calif. Enclose self -addressed,
stamped envelope.
A McChra n4 SilMH
BASEBALL
FRIDAY EXHIBITION'S:
Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 3
Kansas City 5, New York 3
Cincinnati 12, Philadelphia 1
Portland (PCL) 11, San Diego
(PCL) 6
Seattle (PCL.) 4, Vancouver
(PCL) 2
Fort Worth (AA) 8, Sacramento
(PCL) 7
Spokane (PCL) S. Montreal (IL) 3
SATURDAY EXHIBITIONS
By United Press International
Los Angeles 000 000 000 0 3 0
Cincinnati 400 000 lx 5 9 0
Klippstein, Drysdale (5) and Pig
natano; Nuxhall, Acker (8) and
Dotterer. WP Nuxhall. LP Klip
pstein. HR Thomas.
Chicago (A) 100 001 3005 9 1
Milwaukie 001 010 0002 6 2
Lown. Rudolph (41, Staley (7)
and Romano; Burdette, Nelson 18)
and Crandall. WP Rudolph. LP
Burdette.
Detroit 304 010 0008 10 0
St. Louis 20 1 000 001 4 8 2
Burnside and Wilson; W. Smith,
Miller (3), Luebke 5, Kellner (8)
and H. Smith. WP Burnside. LP
W. HR White, Cunningham.
Kansas City... 101 120 0005 10 1
Philadelphia .. 000 020 0002 4 2
Brunett and Chitti. Meyer, Moore
head (5 1, Short (8) and Lopata.
WP Brunett. LP Meyer. HR
Herzog.
Pittsburgh 000 010 0001 4 0
Washington 000 000 000 0 6 1
Pepper. Green (5), Perez (8) and
Hall. Griggs, Romonsky (8) and
Porter. WP Peper. LP Griggs.
San Franciso 020 000 001 3 8 2
Chicago (N) 300 300 22x 10 9 1
McCormick. Worthington (6) and
Schmidt; Hillman, Elston (7) and
Neeman. WP Hillman. LP Mc
Cormick. HR Thomson.
Boston 100 001 0002 7 0
Cleveland 120 000 02x 5 11 1
Mofford, Forneles (6) and White;
Score, Perry (6) and Nixon. WP
Score. LP Wofford. HR Jackson.
Oregon Staters
Defeat Idaho
Lewiston, Idaho (UPD Dick
Monte pitched Washington
State college to a 13-1 victory
over Montana State univer
sity here in a Banana Belt
collegiate baseball tourney
game Friday.
In an afternoon game, Ray
Lunde pitched nine innings,
gave up five hits, and walked
four to help Oregon State to a
10-2 win over Idaho.
Grim Mason of Oregon
State got three hits, scored
two runs and knocked in four
more to cinch the Beaver win.
Bolton Again
On NRA Board
D. James Bolton, Medford,
was reelected to the 75-man
board of directors of the Na
tional Rifle Association of
America during the 88th an
nual members' meeting. .
Bolton will serve a three
year term on the board of the
88 - year old - organization
which was founded in New
York state in 1871. The na
tional headquarters are now
located at Washington, D. C.
HEIGHT OF FUTILITY
St. Louis -(UPD- The St.
Louis Browns lost three con
secutive 1-0 baseball games
on April 25, 26 and 27 in
1909.
IRRIGATION
PUMPS
to 60 H.P.
$
29
50
From
up
V H. P. Shallow
Well $ggoo
V4 H.P. DEEP WELL
With 42 Gallon Tank
Air
Charger
I5450
Complete
Siskiyou Hardware
Ph. SP 2-2939 225 W. Main
MEDFORD, OREGON
We Give S&H Green Stamps
MedforbTbibuni
iPdDmnr
Chesox Have Best
Shot at Yankees,
kl Lopez Figures
(This is the 10th dispatch
on the prospects of the ma
jor league clubs in 1959.)
By LEO H. PETERSON
UPI Sports Editor
Tampa, Fla. -4DPD Al Lopez,
who has beaten the Yankees
only once in eight tries, claims
he is going to do it again in
1959.
As manager of the Cleve
land Indians he beat the Yank
ees in 1954. In five other sea
sons with Cleveland, and the
last two years with the Chi
cago White Sox, he always
has finished second.
He thinks his third White
Sox club is going to do the
job.
"I figure we have the best
shot at them, with Detroit
right up there, too," Lopez
reasoned. "One of us is going
to beat the Yankees this year.
I honestly feel we're the club
that is going to do it."
He likes his pitching, his
down-the-middle combination
of Luis Aparicio at shortstop.
Nellie Fox at second and Jim
Landis in centerfield and his
catching, led by the long-ball
hitting Sherman Lollar.
What he doesn't like Is his
first base situation and his
lief pitching.
Some Bullpen Help
"If we could come up with
a big bat at first and a little
bullpen help, Casey Stengel
would finish second for sure,"
Lopez said. "I'm tired of fin
ishing there. Let good old Cas
ey or Bill Norman manager of
the Tigers have that spot. Our
aim is first place and I hon
estlly feel we're going to make
it."
His first base situation1 Is
such that he even is consider
ing moving Lollar to that posi
tion if Earl Battey continues
to improve in his catching and
if veterans Ray Boone and
Earl Torgenson and big Ron
Jackson can't fill the bill on
a full-time basis.
Boone has slowed down,
Torgenson is 35 and Jackson
still has to prove he can hit
major league pitching. H e
hasn't been able to thus far
this spring.
Short and second are set, of
course, with Aparicio and Fox
and at third it will be Bubba
Phillips with the veteran Billy
Goodman behind him. Sam
Esposito will be the utility in
fielder and rookie John Ro
mano, who hit .291 at Indian
apolis last season, the third
string catcher. That leaves
Catcher Les Moss in the ex
pendable class.
Going With Callison
In the outfield, Lopez is go
ing with rookie John Callison
in left, Landis in center and
Al Smith, who appears to have
recovered from his leg injury
of last season, in right.
"I'm going all the way with
Callison," Lopez explained.
"Last year I decided to do the
same with Landis. He was hit
ting only .200 in July, but I
stayed with him and he
turned out to be the goods.
I'm going to stay with Calli
son the same way."
Be sure to ask
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Also 20 DISCOUNT on all GOLDEN WEST PAINTS
906 N. Riverside Across from Jack's Drive-In
Callison hit .283 at Indian
apolis in 1958 with 29 home
runs and 93 runs batted in.
For outfield reserves, the
White Sox have the veterans
Jim Rivera and Don Mueller.
Lou Skizas will stay on as a
pinch-hitter and can play
third or the outfield-neither
very well.
Lopez will start out with
Billy Pierce (17-11), Dick Don
ovan (15-14), Early Wynn (14
16), Ray Moore (9-7), Bob
Shaw (5-4) with Detroit and
Chicago and Barry Latman as
his first-line pitchers. Latman
won three games while losing
none for the White Sox late
last season after they called
him up from Indianapolis,
where he had a 9-11 record.
Might Take Some Doing
Turk Lown, the ex-national
leaguer who was 3-3 with
White Sox last season, will be
the No. 1 bullpen man unless
the club makes a deal. The
other hurlers will be veteran
Gerry Staley (4-5), Don Ru
dolph, an 11-game winner at
Indianapolis; Claude Ray
mond, who won only three
games at Wichita last season
but who has impressed Lopez
this spring and rookie Rodolfo
Arias, up from Havana where
he had a 7-7 record. Lopez is
hoping that Arias will give
him the left-handed relief
pitching he lacked last season.
While Lopez is optimistic
and the White Sox have
changed ownership, they don't
appear to have changed too
much on the field. It might
take a lot of doing for them to
finish as high as second again.
Harold Gomes
Scores Upset
Miami Beach, Fla. - (UPD -Harold
Gomes, a one - time
Providence, R. I., sanitation
department employee, looks
ready today to "clean up" in
the world featherweight box
ing division.
The unranked but Indus
trious little Gomes scored a
major upset Friday night
when he gained a unanimous
decision over "Fancy -Dan"
Paul Jorgensen, the No. 2
featherweight contender, in
their nationally-televised 10
round bout. The loss snapped
Jorgensen's unbeaten string
at 31 bouts and automatically
made Gomes a name to con
jure with in the "little men's"
division.
Referee Billy Regan called
the bout for Gomes, 96-95,
judge Carl Gardner scored it
98-95 and judge Fred Aaron
son favored the Providence
boy, 97-95. The United Press
International had Gomes
ahead, 97-95.
SLOWPOKE
Lake Worth, Fla. -(UPD- The
ladies on the professional
golf tour call Kathy Corne
lius "Prontito." It's their ver
sion of the more common
Spanish word "pronto" al
though Kathy's anything but
fast. She is by far the slowest
and most deliberate player on
the circuit.
GOLDEN WEST
PAINT STORE
Tel. SP 3-2906 - Plenty Free Parking
MH Links
Gang Wins
Medford high's golf team
started off its season Saturday
morning with a 428 to 444
verdict over Marshfield at
Rogue Valley Country club.
Mike Monroe, Medford, and
Jim Baker, Marshfield, shared
medalist laurels. Monroe fired
40-40-80 for the Tornado and
Baker 42-38-80 for the Pirates.
Medford scores included
Larry Brown 43-41-84, John
Frohnmayer 44-42-86. Bob
Jones 46-43-89 and Harold
Holmes 45-44-89.
For Marshfield Jack Fitz-
patrick had 41-44-85, Ed Mof-
fitt 50-43-93, Gary Robinson
48-45-93 and Dick Long 49-44-93.
The Black Tornado links
men will vie against Mt.
Shasta high in a match at
Weed, Calif., next Saturday,
Coach Paul Evensen reported.
Collegians Edge
Medford Nine
In Scrimmage
Southern Oregon college
baseballers picked up two
runs to Medford's high's none
Saturday in a five - inning
scrimmage in mud and rain
at Ashland.
The Raiders, shut out for
four innings by Medford
hurler Tom Laurance, got a
hit by Eldon Francis and
used a hit batter, wild pitch
es, error and stolen base for
runs in the fifth.
Ken Durkee, Medford, got
the only other hit of the prac
tice, off Dave D'Olivo, who
walked one Medfordite and
fanned one in three innings.
Don Vannice, pitching the
last two innings for SOC,
struck out five and walked
one.
Laurance Issued three bases
on balls. He struck out three,
including the side in the third
inning. Pat McLaughlin twirl
ed the last frame for Med
ford. MIGHTY MITE
Los Angeles -(UPD- When
Jerry Barber used to step up
to the tee and start matching
shots with the professional gi
ants of golf, little men every
where took heart, for the Cal
ifornia mite stands only five
five and weighs 137 pounds.
Jerry retired from the tour
in 1955 to take a job as a pro
at the swank Wilshire Coun
try club here.
EWEY'S
ONE
Ml K
:;;: "AX t. ?rMi;-r(gg -ft J
Side exhaust .limi-K , ,
nates grass clogg.ngj , , , - , SS 7-& 'A
Built-in Mulcher. k " Jfc''? '"'
( ' Wheel adjust to 3 Vi J- $
different cutting ) . ; I M" ' - I . I
heights. XC J rV
SHOP MONDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sunday, March 29, 1959 9
Eagles Trip Butte Falls
Eagle Point - Eagle Point
high broket into 1959 baseball
contention Friday with an 11
to 5 victory over Butte Falls
at Butte Falls.
The two clubs meet again
Tuesday at Eagle Point and
the Eagles will entertain Tal
ent on Wednesday.
A pair of freshmen hit the
big blows for Eagle Point on
Friday. Dick Wilson homered
and Steve Wilson socked a
double and single. Raymond
Abbott tripled in the three
Butte Falls runs in the fourth
inngin. Jerry Cavin's triple
helped in a sixth inning Butte
Falls score. He also doubled
in the game.
Out of Jam
Tom Perdue pitched Eagle
FIRST ARCHERS
New York -(UPD - Dr. Rob
ert P. Elmer, one-time United
States archery champion, isj
authority for the belief that)
the bow and arrow were first j
used by the extinct Aurigna-j
cian race about 25,000 years)
ago. i
''t ''I'1 A
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Yes, "Charlie" gets around these days especially when ft
involves finding the right place to buy ROOFING, FENCING or
get RENTAL TOOLS for a particular job. He knows their ex
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well as money and work. Sea HIGH for all your ROOFING
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SENSATIONAL
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A Small Deposit Will Hold
Yours on Layawayl
Point out of a jam in the
sixth frame after first "walk
ing in a run. He came to the
hill with one run in, the bases
loaded and no one out. After
allowing a base on balls, he
manned a batter, had one hit
into a force play at home and
had another pop up to retire
the side.
Bud Bever's double snd
Dusty Gerbing's single figured
in second inning run produc
tion for Eagle Point. Jim
Nease singled in two makers
in the third frame and Duke
Wild's safety helped in the
fifth. Wilson had his homer
and Geren his double in the
seventh.
LINESCORES:
Eagle Point 033 O30 211 7 J
Butte Falls 000 302 0 5 4 8
Nease, Pfeifer (51. Purdue (6) and
Osborn. Hertager (5); Ellis. Cavin
(5) and Ferguson.
ROMEX
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