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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1959)
o O '"J 1 OWIPIl. . '! .W""ljH-'.""J!'!'- I , . , , - -A - ? -i;t - & I -. -j '1 rr'i (0MCHES TO MAIDS-Loulse Mazucca,' above, leading flinger ii the Northwest Women's Major Softball league, will pitch (fcr the Erv Lind Florist this evening when they play the (Jfcgjje Valley Dairy Maids at Camp White. She has pitched 38 straight innings this spring withoutgiving up a hit.Twen ($seven of the frames have been in the NW league. In her jg)rt appearance last Saturday night at Eugene Miss Mazucca tossed five innings, dtriking out 14. The other out was an in eld pop out. The Florist won" that game 6 to. 1. (Monner photo) Middle Grabs Lone CIV Lead; Medford, omp Whitfrs Win iOGUE VALLEY LEAGUE STANDINGS O W. L. Pet Riddle 3 0 1.000 Ashland 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 3 0 2 667 Camp White'. .667 (grants -rasa Medford Glendale , O Butte Falls J500 .500 .000 .000 Riddle defeated Ashland 3 to 2 yesterday to take over lone unbeaten leadership in the Rogue Valley Baseball league. Camp White bopped Glen dale 14 to 7 to pull into a second place tie with Ash land. Medford broke into the semi-pro loop's win column with a 9 to 4 verdict over Grants Pass. fffo details were;r available Jfrit morning concerning Rid gI9ihird league victory. ltdfCf d Bowling lanes ran ft 3ren runs inline fifth ia 8inJ to lick the Grants Pass f fKhnts. Dennis Barr pitch t six-hit ball, fanning 13 &tfftnd walked four. Anderson Triples " The seven run splurge was on Ray Anderson's triple, two hits by John Hansen, singles by Tony Evans and - Larry IJerkins, three walks, a passed ball and an error. Singles by Perkins and Bob Serak, Per kins two stolen bases and an error got the other two runs Pancho Gonzales Masters .Victor Los Angeles - tflPD - Pancho Gonzales won the fourth an nual Masters round robin ten nis tournament Sunday, with a aispiay ot aevasiaung power. ; . Winner of the Jack Kramer pro tour for the' past five years, Gonzales wrapped up the title by whipping Frank Sedgman, 6 to 3, 6. to 4, be fore 2,431 spectators at the Los Angeles Tennis Club. Gonzales had a 5 to 1 rec ord in the . nine-day round robin. Delivered SP 2-5271 con 4 in the eighth panel. Camp White tagged Floyd West for 14 of their 17 hits in West's eight innings on the hill. Jack Turk homered, Wayne Allen, Bob Smith, Vern Parent and Pete Hale tripled. Chuck Mairchant hit two doubles and Parent one. Allen and Parent had three for five, and Smith hit three for six. Tony Prestianni and Ray Munyon each hit three for five for Glendale. r Jim Eggers gave up nine hits" to , Glendale in four in nings Jack Brown took over on the hill for the last five frames and was reached for just two safeties. LINESCORES: Camp White 120 403 02214 17 4 Glendale 114 100 000 7 11 4 Eggers. Brown (5) and Brown. Hale (5): Vest. Prestianni (9) and Munyon. ;: . : " - Medford ... 909 0T8 S0 t 8 S Grnts Warn ..100 020 001 4 S 2 Brr aarf Aatterem. Vawcam (7): jQcobson and Vaterson. Jordan Skipper forecasts KU Portiand-flJPD-Welterweight champion Don Jordan's man ager, Don Nessethv predicted Sunday that the welterweight title fight here with Denny Moyer will end in a knockout over Moyer in the 13th or 14th round. In a telephone talk with the Oregon Journal, Nesseth said: ."I'm predicting right now that the fight will end in a knockout. Not an. early one, but a knockout, about the 13th or 14th round." Nesseth,-speaking from the Jordan camp at Gilman Hot Springs near Enunett, Calif., said Jordan is "hitting like a mule with bothhands." , Nesseth said Jordan is bet ter in his training session than he was at the same time before the Virgil Akins fight. - Early odds on the Jordan- Moyer fight make the cham pion a 3V2 to 1 choice. Tru-Mix Concrete ;. . for EVERY MEED Phone SP 2-5271 for an' estimate 248 E. McANDRIWS RD. UM -Florists Edge Dairy Maids 2-0: Vie Again NORTHWEST WOMEN'S SOFTBALL STANDINGS W. Pet. 1.000 .750 .667 .500 .364 .125 .000 Lind Florists ... Vancouver, B.C. American Linen 9 6 8 4 Seattle Rogue Valley Salem Eugene ,4 1 0 Portland - (WD - American Linen scored three first-inning runs at Normandale park here Sunday and held on for a 3-2 victory over the South Hill Queens of Vancouver, B.C., in Northwest Women's Major Softball league action. American Linen also drop ped the Vancouver team Saturday night, 5-4. . Salem (UPD The Seattle Ramblers toppled the Salem Shamrocks 7-4 here Sunday in Northwest Women's Major Softball action, making it two in a row over their hosts. Seattle defeated the Sham rocks Saturday night here 10-1. Memorial Stadium, Camp White - Portland's Erv Lind Florists had one-hit pitching from Pearl Pinion and profit ed from single, a sacrifice and four Dairy Maid errors here last night to remain at the top of the Northwest Women's Major Softball league stand ings with their ninth straight victory. The Florists -tripped the Rogue Valley entry in the circuit 2 to 0. . Last night's fracas was the first of a two-game series. Rogue Valley, last year's Ore gon state tourney winners, en tertains, the . defending north west champs here again this evening. Play ball time will be 8 p.m. Sunday victory was the third this season by close score for the Florists over the Maids and Rogue Valley faces a con siderable task in attempting to snap the string this eve ning. For the Erv. Lind club will send Louise Mazzuca to the pitching slab. The 9-year-old Miss Mazzuca, one of , the top twirlers in the country, has not yielded a hit in the 27 innings she has pitched in the league this season. She has four league vic tories. However, the pitching star had to go eight innings against the' Dairy Maids a week ago before her team mates came up with a run for a 1. to .0 nod over the South ern Oregon team. A combination of three overthrow errors in the second inning produced the first Florist run last night. With two out Carolyn Spady hit a bounder. Pitcher Ellen Callaghan made a fine stop on a tough chance but over threw first base. The runner went to second. Then third baseman Diane Wall heaved wide and high over first on a swat by Pinion. Firse baseman Doris Hickson's throw to try to "catch Spady at third was wide of the base and the run ner tallied. - ' Montie Wallis led off the third inning with the first of the scant three safe socks 'the Florists managed off Calla ghan. Carolyn Fitzwater sac rificed, advancing Wallis to second. Then the runner raced in effort to steal third. Catch er Jean Main's throw was to the base but shortstop Bernice Bigham was not there in time to take it. Wallis headed on for home. ' Deloris 'Price and Fitzwater slapped the other Florist hits and Main blasted the clean safety for Rogue Valley. All the hits were singles. Pinion whiffed four batters, walked two and hit one while Calla ghan registered one strike out and gave up three bases on balls. : The Dairy Maids got run ners on base in four innings but only one of them got to second base. LINESCORES: Floristi 011 000 0 8 3 1 Dairy Maids .000 000 0 0 1 4 Pinion and Wallis; Callaghan and Main. Beverly Hanson Sets Golf Pace Minneapolis, Minn.-flJPD-De-termined Beverly Hanson of Fargo, NJJT, carried a two stroke lead over veteran Louise . Suggs into the final round of the second annual American Women's Open golf tournament at the Brookview Country club today. Miss Hanson fashioned a three-under-par 73, for a 54 holes total of 223-five under par-Sunday to break a dead lock With Miss Suggs, the At lanta, Ga., pro who "slipped" to a 75 on Sunday's rain-soaked third round. Still in contention and the hottest player on the course, was Mickey Wright, of San Diego, who posted a four-un-der-par 72, for a 54-hole 226. UNI Tonight MAIDS' INFIELDER - Diane Wall, above, will be in action for the Rogue Valley Dairy Maids when they play the Lind Florist softball nine at 8 o'clock tonight at Camp White. She plays third base and was an all-stater in 1958. Big 8 Schools Gain 161 Points Lincoln, Neb.-DPD-The Big Eight conference today boast ed of 161 points and its first' team title in the National Col legiate Athletic association track and field champion ships. ' - The team trophy went to Kansas, whose sprinters and hurdles gathered 73 points in the NCAA meet that ended Saturday night in Nebraska's Memorial Stadium. The old Pacific Coast con ference and the Big Ten long had dominated the NCAA competition. " The University of Southern California had won 20 team championships since the meet was inaugurat ed in 1921. Illinois, with five titles, was ranked second. In taking the unofficial inter-conference title at the Lin coln meet, Kansas' winning points were added to 31 for Oklahoma, 22 for Oklahoma State, 19 for. Mjssouri, eight for Colorado, five for Kansas State and three for Nebraska to put the Big Eight on top. Members of the now-disbanded PCC-even with USC and UCLA out-scored a total of 56.7 points. Big Ten teams totaled 54.8. The top independent, and second place team in the meet, was San Jose State, with 48.1. The 21st verse of the seventh chapter of Ezra in the Bible contains every letter of the alphabet. 1 W MEMB VOl ii OUR KllN Vm j SERVICE l Jf y We clean and straighten J Vy I VJ 11 e CJ yur ""N ,nd properly J j I II l VtI mount new tiret. After wlTI L . JVx xixai"- i Billy Casper Triumphant by One Stroke in U By LEO H. PETERSEN UPI Sports Editor Mamaroneck, N.Y. - (UPD -There are two things U.S. Open champion Billy Casper likes to do-eat and play golf. He did both of them mighty well Sunday. .. Rotund Billy, a 29-year-old pro playing put of Apple Val ley, Calif., ate a hearty: lunch at the Winged Foot Golf club and three hours later teed off with Lionel Hebert, leading the Open field by : three strokes., . He wound up winning it by only one. Bob Rosburg, who uses a baseball grip, and burly Mike Souchak, the former football great at Duke, both made a run at Billy. Both came close but not close enough. - Medford Legionaire Nine Beats GP 9-5 Medford American Legion junior, baseball aggregation chalked up five runs in the fifth inning to overcome Grants Pass Mock Ford 9 to 5 in an Area 4 southern divi sion game yesterday afternoon at Camp White. The Medfordites 'reached GP pitcher Bill Cole for nine hits, took advantage of his wildness and capitalized on miscues by other Mock play ers in gaining the victory. Next contention for Med ford will be a non-leaguer, against Myrtle Creek at Camp White on Tuesday evening. Medford goes to Klamath Falls on Wednesday for a southern division mix. Grants Pass picked up four of its runs in the second stan za when Medford throwers Jerry Anderson was plagued by wildness. But, he settled down and permitted Mock only two hits for the .after noon. Singles by Sam Oetinger, Ken Durkee and Ken Jensen, three errors, two bases on balls and a wild pitch were put together in Medford's heavy scoring fifth. Janssen Triples The four markers for GP in the second were on a hit by Larry Holmes, five bases on balls and a hit batter. Medford cut the score to 4 to 3 in the bottom of the second Yost Champion At Royal Oaks Vancouver, Wash.-rtJPD-Dick Yost, Bob Bronson and Mary Leptich, all of Portland, won the championship, junior-sen ior and senior titles, respec tively, here Sunday in the final round of the Royal Oaks Invitational Golf tournament. All three won the same titles two years ago. Yost, ex-walker cup vete ran, carded a 71 Sunday to go with his 69-70 and ended with 210, four strokes ahead of the field. Bronson shot 73-69-74-216 for junior senior honors and Leptich fired a 72-76-83-231 to win- . S. Onen Self Rosburg, who wears glasses "because it helps to see that little white pill" (a golf ball), and Souchak needed birdies on the par four 18th 424-yard hole to tie Casper. Sweated It Out ,Billy was sweating it out in the club house. He was having a sandwich-he had eaten a full course that most people would . call a dinner five hours before. A lot of golf writers were grouped around him at that breakfast and the good-looking carefree Casper commented: "I hope I'll be seeing all of you guys five hours from now." He did-as the new U.S. Open champion. But in those five - hours there was not only his game -a four over par 36-38-74 on singles by Bob Quinney, Dick Ragfedale, Doug Kinney and Durkee and a hit batter. Each team put over one run in the third inning. For Grants Pass Larry Janssen tripled and came home when Anderson had trouble fielding a bounder by Gary Stevens. A single by Thompson nad three bases on balls forced over the Pear city run. Durkee and Jensen, with two each, were the only play ers with more than one safe blow. Oetinger doubles for Medford. Anderson walked eight, hit one batter and struck out seven. Cole in 5 23 innings was responsible for all the runs. He struck out four and walked five, hitting two. Janssen in 113 frames gave up one hit and one base on balls. Medford left three men stranded in two of the in nings.. ' It was the second win for Medford over Grants Pass. Score of a non-loop mix on Friday was 18 to 0. Grants Pas 041 000 0 S 3 Medford 031 050 x 9 10 Cole, Janssen (5) and Stevens; Anderson and Barry. Eugene Thigpin Shoot Leader Eugene Trigpin totaled 180 out of a possible 210 in the qualifying course of big bore rifle shooting by VFW Rifle and Pistol club Saturday at the Camp White range. Scores in this first big bore shoot of the season showed that members were a bit rus ty in the high power shooting. Other marks were M. D. Childers 166, Stan Sears 161, W., O. Burnette 153, Sam Crawford 132, Terry Burnette 127, Pink Burnette 125, and Dave Hoffer 114. Hoffer is a new member who joined at the range Sat urday. Another high power shoot is set for July 19. Members who have not qualified par ticularly are asked to be on hand. Because of the holiday conflict there will be no reg ular meeting on Wednesday, July i.- Whether You Are Buying Tiret for a Logging Truck, Farm Tractor or Passenger Car- which gave him a total of 282 -but Rosburg and Souchak as well standing between him and victory, First it was Souchak who had a chance to tie him. But burly Mike, needing a birdie, pushed his drive on the last hole off into the rough behind a tree, played a miracle shot to hit the green and then watched disgustedly as the ball rolled into the back fringe. From 50 feet he chipped weakly and the ball was 10 feet short. He even missed that putt. Iron Sinks Rosburg Then it was Rosburg, also needing a birdie on that 18th to tie. His tee shot was RV Tennis Meet Set June 27-28 First annual Rogue Valley Invitational Tennis tourna ment is scheduled for June 27 and 28. The event .will be contest ed on the Medford Senior High school courts under the sponsorship of Rogue Valley Tennis club. The tourney could b the biggest of its kind held in the valley. It will be one of a circuit of meets. Players are expected from Redding and Eureka, Calif., and from Klamath Falls. All amateurs interested may compete in the tourna ment. Local players particu larly are invited. Trophies willbe awarded in men's sin gles and doubles, junior men's sineles, women's singles .and mixed doubles. Rogue Valley club players plan to enter the tourneys in Eureka, Redding ana Kiam ath Falls. Eddie Arca.ro'' Recuperating New York - (UPD Eddie Ar caro, racing's No. 1 jockey who suffered a near fatal spill Saturday, was back on his feet again today, looking hopefully to an early hospi tal discharge probably within a few days. The 43 -year -old Arcaro, thrown from his mount, Black Hills, in the Belmont Stakes, was ; allowed to take a few stens today in his room at Physicians hospital, and he told friends that he expected to continue riding. However, he was a bit wob bly and dizzy from ttie after effects of a mild concussion suffered in his spectacular spill, and his personal physi cian, Dr; Alexander Kaye, said that he would not dis charge Arcaro until he was sure the famed jockey was over his dizziness. A crowd of 38,105 and a na- t i o n a 1 television audience thought Arcaro was killed when Black Hills broke his right shin bone while battling for the lead in the Triple Crown classic at Belmont park won by the Brookmeade stable's Sword Dancer. 0) mil Ell With 1st Line Quality Tires at Prices You Can Afford! Be sure you're safe with tires that LAST! Get extra-high allow ance for your trade-ins. Receive full value for etch tira, not just a token allowance, when you trade for Take Advantage of Our Low Sale Priceff " You'll Save Time, Trouble and Money! 229 NORTH RIVERSIDE Scran straight, but his approach iron was weak. It hit 60 feet short ! of the pin on the lower slop ing level of the green and died there. v 'That's when I knew I had it," said Casper, watching the play on television. Casper's victory put $12,000 in his pocket. Rosburg, who got down In two for a par four on that 18th, wound up second, winning $6,600. Souchak earned $3,600 for tying with home pro Claude Harmon for third place at 284. Former Masters champions Doug Focd and Arnold Palm er, along with Ernie Vossler, were next in line at 286. Then came the two great est names in golf-Ben Hogan and Sammy Snead, both at 287. Hogan was three strokes be hind Casper going into the fourth round Sunday - but blew to a 37-39-76, six over par. Bantam Ben was seeking his fifth Open title and now at 46, it looks like he won't make it. As for Snead-this is the only big one in golf he never has won-and he was four strokes behind Casper going into Sunday's windy round. After Hogan shot that 76, the 47-year-old Snead wound up with a 37-38-75. 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