Besana, Brown Pitch
For PCL All-Stars
Uniid Pratt International
Sacramento and "Vancouver,
front - runners in the tight
, "'any-one-can-still-win it" Pa
cific Coast league, take time
off tonight to join the other
six teams in the league's an
nual North - South All Star
Gamt at San Diego.
Vancouver lefthander Fred
Besana will take the mound
for the North, composed of
players from Spokane, Se
attle, Portland and Vancouv
er and coached by Vancouv
er's Charlie Metro.
The South, leading 9-3 in
the annual game, will send
Sacramento's Winston Brown
to the hill. Players from San
Diego, Phoenix and Salt Lake
City will join Brown and
Sacramento teammates,
coached by San Diego's
George Metkovich.
Solons Blank Salt Lake
- Vancouver and the Solons
tangle Wednesday in the first
of a crucial three-game set at
Sacramento. Both clubs re
ceived top pitching' Sunday
night as the Solons blanked
tough Salt Lake City 3-0, and
Mountie Erv Palica twirled
an eight-hitter to top Seattle
8-4.
In other action, Phoenix
powered past San Diego 9-7,
and Spokane and Portland
split a double header. The In
dians won the opened 8-6, but
dropped the nightcap, 6-2.
Maverick Is
Top Hydro
Coeur D'Alene, Idaho IUPD -
The unlimited hydroplanes
were pulling out today, most
of them for Seattle and the
Gold Cup regatta, following
Sunday s accident - marred
Diamond Cup race here, won
by Bill Waggoner's Maverick
Jack Regas, excitable, pep-
perpot driver of Miss Bardahl
was staying behind. He was
unconscious and in serious
condition at General Hospital
here with injuries ' suffered
when the sleek, green hydro
plane spun out violently in
the third lap of heat 2-A.
Regas, last year's Gold Cup
winner in Hawaii Kai HI, was
suffering from a fractured
skull, three broken ribs, a
broken bone in his right hand
and cuts and bruises.
Maverick, driven by Reno,
Nev. cowboy Bill Stead, was
declared the winner after the
final heat was halted at the
end of the third lap because
Miss Spokane flipped Iier driv
er. Norm Evans of Chelan.
Miss .Thrif tway was second.
Bisons Move
Towards Flag
United Press International
The Buffalo Bisons are pull
ing, away from. the field in
the International League pen
nant race. , A
- Although they split a Sun
day doubleheader with Ro
chester, the Bisons increased
their lead to 5M games when
second-place Miami suffered
. twin defeats at Havana.
Don Erickson allowed only
five hits in blanking the Red
Wings, 9-0, in the opener, at
Buffalo but Rochester clubbed
four Bison hurlers for 16 hits
in winning the second game,
10-1. - . '
DRY RUN '
' Brattleboro, Vt. (UPD - Po
lice said the thieves who
broke into a dozen soft. drink
vending machines apparently
weren't heavy drinkers. They
took no soda; only three dol
lars m change."
CONCRETE C
248 E. Mc Andrews Road
SP 2-5271
Sacramento chased Salt
Lake City ace Dick Hall to the
showers early, peppering five
straight singles in the first
inning with two out to score
their trio of runs. The loss
was Hall's fourth against 11
wins.
Beavers Begin Road Trip
Roger Osenbaugh 8-7 fash
ioned a five-hitter to blank
the third place Bees, now two
full games behind the leaders.
The Portland Beavers begin
a 14-game road trip this week
only two games out of first
place in the Pacific Coast
League pennant race.
Portland salvaged a split in
a doubleheader with Spokane
Sunday, winning the second
game 6-2 after dropping the
opener 8-6. Portland took the
series 3 games to 2.
The PCL clubs tonight take
part in the annual North
South all-star game at San
Diego with Fred Besana of
Vancouver slated to open on
the mound for the North and
Winston Brown of Sacramen
to starting for the south. Play
ers from Vancouver, Port
land, Seattle and Spokane
will oppose those from Phoe
nix, Sacramento, Salt Lake
and San Diego. '
In other Sunday action,
Sacramento blanked Salt
Lake 3-0; Phoenix took San
Diego 9-7 and Vancouver
drubbed Seattle 8-4. Roger
Osenbaugh pitched the shut
out for Sacramento. .
Portland plays Phoenix, San
Diego, Salt Lake and Sacra
mento on the road before re
turning home Aug. 3 for a
23-game stand.
T.iVFronp.
Kaftl AAA AAA AJfl J a n
Vancouver 800 010- lOx 8 9 1
freeman, McCall (2) Martin (8)
and Sevan, Jenkins (7); Palica and
t-agiiarom.
Salt Lake 000 000 000 0 S 0
Sacramento 300 000 OOx 3 8 1
Hall, O'Donnell (1) Westerfield
8) and Brocknell, Post (8); Osen
baugh and Dalrymple.
San Tlida-n AAA n, , on, , n
Phoenix 110 106 OOx 9 15 1
Thnmil T7man iR Qtitfman t7
Podbeilan (8) and Retzer; Barclay,
sons in uyman (7) Kentroe (9)
Shipley (9) and Stieglitz.
Spokane ,.005 000 300 8 9 1
Portland ... 000 400 011 6 9 2
Ortega.' Wade (4) and Sherrv:
Pillette. Kutyna (5) Johnson (8)
and Tornay.
2nd Game
Spokane 100 000 1 2 8 1
Portland 000 303 x6 10 0
Patrick, Grob (4) Churn (5) and
Barragan; Gorman and Neal.
Portland Sloop
Near Trophy'
Honolulu IUPD The
schooner Corehaleen, Port
land, sailed toward Diamond
Head today, an apparent sure
thing to. win at leats one
trophy in ' the 21st Transpa
cific Yacht Race.
The trophy, originated this
year, is known as Tauena
Charley" or "Okole Kale" in
Hawaiian. It will be present
ed to the last boat to finish
the San Pedro to Honolulu
run without being disquali
fied.v The Corehaleen was the
only one of the 41 contest
ants in the race which has
not finished. The schooner is
due in Tuesday morning.
The perpetual Governor's
Trophy for the overall win
ner on corrected time will be
pr isented ' to Peter Grant's
sloop Nalu 1, at a dinner on
Wednesday. The perpetual
Transpacific -Yacht Club
plaque for the first yacht
to finish will go to R. E. Lara
bee's 161-foot schooner Good
will of the Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
Skinner Is
Winner In
Ski Meet
- Lon Skinner of Medford
took first place in overall
competition, men's division,
in yesterday's water ski com
petition at Gardener Lake.
Skinner beat out Rod Samp
son of Seattle to regain the
men's Oregon state champion
ship. His margin of victory was
10 points, which is nine points
higher than his victory over
Sampson last year. In 1957
Sampson was the winner over
Skinner.
Medford scorers in other
contests were Sandra Irving,
third place in women's novice
slalom; Bud Farris, first place
in novice tricks; and Art Eker-
son, third in novice tricks.
The event Saturday and
Sunday was" sponsored by the
Gardener Lake Water Ski
club.
Jr. Boy's Slalom
1. Randy Paragary, Sacramento;
z. Gary Abben, Sacramento: 3.
cruce paragary, Sacramento.
Sr. Men's Jump
1. Wally Pal lack, Sunnyvale,
Calif.; 2. Floyd Vance. Sacramento;
3. Nick Nickelson, Concord, Calif.
Men's Slalom
1. Frank Countner, Seattle; 2. Lon
Skinner, Medford; 3. Rod Sampsou,
Seattle.
Women'! Slalom
1. Vickie Vance, Sacramento; 2.
Bee Wineman, Tiburon; 3. Carol
Waltz, Sacramento. -Men's
Jump ... . .
1. Rod Sampson; 2. Frank Count
ner; 3. Bill Conway.
Sr. Men's Tricks
1. Wally Pallack; 2. Eino Nassi,
Lomas, Calif.; 3. Floyd Vance.
Boys Tricks
1. Ken Ritter, Seattle; 2. Phillip
Abben, Sacramento; . 3. Willie
Hearne, Seattle.
Men's Slalom Novice
1. Jim Estes, Lake Oswego; 2.
Dale St. John, Fall River Mills;
3. Bill Conway, Portland.
Women's Slalom Novice
1. Beverly Britton, Sacramento;
2. Babs St. John, Fall River Mills;
3. Sandra Irving, Medford.
Boy's and Men's Novice Jump
1. Jim Estes, Lake Oswego: 2.
Leonard Hearne, Seattle; 3. Dale! St.
John. Fall River Mills, Calif.
Boy's and Men's Novice Tricks
1. Bud Farris, Medford; 2. Dale
St. John, 3. Art Ekerson, Medford.
Overall Men's Division
Oregon State Champions, 19S9
1. Lon Skinner; 2. Bod Sampson;
3. Frank Countner.
Women's Division
1. Vicki Vance; 2. Carol Waltz;
3. Bee Wineman.
Jr. Boy's Division ; -'"
1. Randy Paragary: 2. Gary Ab
ben; 3. Bruce Paragary,
Boy's Division
1. Ken Ritter: 2. Phillio Abben:
3. Willie Hearne.
Sr. Men's Division
1. Wally Pallack: 2. Floyd Vance:
3. Eino Nassi. . .
Women's Golf
On Thursday, July 16,
Rogue Valley Country club
lady golfers competed in
'medal' play and winners
were: A group, Mrs. Mahr
Reymers; B group, Mrs. Lee
Flink; C group, Mrs. John
Jensen; D group, Mrs. Rich
ard Schwann; and 9-hole win
ner was Mrs. Galen Sanner.
On Thursday, July 24, the
lady golfers play for the day
will be a "can you take it"
tournament.
First round matches in, the
club championship have been
completed with the following
results:
Champ flight: Mrs. C. B.
Collins def. Mrs. Ray Frisbie;
Mrs. Ranny Smith def. Mrs.
D. M. Lambert; Mrs. Tom
Teutsch def. Mrs. Wm. Clark;
Mrs. Lee Flink def. Mrs. Jack
Eidswick; Mrs. Helen Davies
def. Mrs. E. W. Sickels; Mrs.
Warren Lesseg def. Mrs. Wm.
Blackledge; Mrs. T. A. Cul
bertson def. Mrs. Ken Mc
Hugh; Mrs. Dick Finch def.
Mrs. Fred Conrad
Second flight: Mrs. Richard
Schwann def. Mrs. John Jen
sen; Mrs. Frank Benesh, bye;
Mrs. W. L. Stark def. Mrs.
Robert DeLorme; Mrs. T. J.
Harnsberger, bye; Mrs. Al
Williams def. Mrs. Richard
Knight; Mrs. Lawrence Buor
ocore, bye; Mrs. Lou - Mc
Laughlin def Mrs. Ren Tayl
or; Mrs. Harold Pyle, bye.
Ladies wishing to be paired
please call Mrs. Tom Teutsch,
SP 3-3381. - ' '
JULY 23 PAIRINGS
Mesdames: H. S. Elbert, Bernard
T. Nutting, Frank Benesh; B. D.
Mitchell. Jack Eidswick, William J.
Miller; Ray Frisbie, D. M. Lambert,
Richard Finch; E. W. Sickels, Ken
neth Teeter, L. R. Smith; T. A. Cul
bertson. Noble Vincent, Jerry Ol
son; W. O. Blackledge, Fred Con
rad, William T. Clark; William
Schei. Thomas Teutsch, Frank Tam
fley; Warren Lesseg, H. E. Nulton.
Mesdames: Paul Dix. Glen Fa
brick, Richard Rementeria; Dick
House. George Pearson. Myles Dor
an; Flovd Somers, Robert Morris,
Ken McHugh; Walter Shaylor, Ren
Taylor, W. C. Knope; Reese Alex
ander, Jack Six. Al Williams; B.
E. Heysell, L. T. Anderson, Law
rence Buonocore; Richard Hogan,
John Jensen, Wayne Safley; Rich
ard Schwann, S. V. McQueen, Lou
McLaughlin; John Day, Earl Nel
son, W. L. Stark; Tommy Tubbs,
R. B. Knight, C. H. Barrell; T. J.
Harnsberger, Robert DeLorme, W.
H. Pyle: Ray Sorenson, M. Donald
McGeary. ..
9-Hole Players
Mesdames: Howard Gilmer, Vin
cent Nicoletti. Paul lea; Myers
Jones. Ed Kliever. Jim Nistlen
Robert Elliott, John -Ripley, Doro
thy Dowson; Jim Finegan, Aiva
Perkins. Ray Wise: J. A. Dickey,
Jack Foster, Ray Stewart; George
Lewis. Randall Gifford, William
Tleatheraee: Robert Mclntyre. Ga-
len Sanner, Sylvan Mullin; Ralph
Marlatt, Jerry Gastineau. " John
Nuich; Tom Polk. Paul Haviland,
Glen Branlund; Warren Bayliss,
Clvde Campbell. William Williams:
Rnrdon Tavlor. Sam Harbison.
Harry Note; Royal Bebb, Paul
Joreensen. Melvin McGrew: Bill
Cowning. Ed Nave. Jerry Laus-
mann; Dick Watson. David Lowry;
Richard Alley, William urooKS.
TROUBLE BREWING
Williston, Vt. (DPD - Earl
Stygles . had his beer and li
quor' license suspended after
Medford Wins Legion,
Plays Roseburg Tonight
LEGION AREA 4
Southern Division
Final Standings
W
. 7
. 6
. 5
. 2
. 0
Pet
Medford
Klamath Falls .
Central Point .
Grants Pass
Lakeview
.875
.750
.625
.250
.000
Medford meets Roseburg at
8 o'clock tonight at Camp
White in the first play-off
game in southern division
American Legion baseball.
Wednesday night at Roseburg
will see the second game of
the 2-out-of-3 series, with a
third game to follow there
the same night if necessary.
Roseburg is the northern
division winner of area 4.
The game will be broadcast
tonight on KYJC starting "at
7:50.
Beat Lakeview
Medford took last - place
Lakeview Saturday night by
a score of 13 to 5 to guarantee
first-place spot with a record
of 7 wins and one loss.
Zack Wheat
Inducted In
Hall of Fame
Cooperstown, N.Y. - (UPD -
Zack Wheat, one-time south
paw slugger who still holds
six all-time Dodger records,
was to be officially inducted
into baseball's Hall of Fame
today in annual ceremonies
at the hall .here.
The day's program also in
cluded the annual Hall of
Fame exhibition game, this
year between the Pittsburgh
Pirates and the Kansas City
Athletics.
Wheat, 71, former native
of Hamilton, Mo., who now
lives in Sunrise Beach, Mo.,
was on hand for the cere
monies. Baseball Commission
er Ford Frick and Hall of
Famer Ty Cobb headed the
list of dignitaries who were
to take part in the program.
Wheat was purchased by
the Brooklyn team, then call
ed the Superbas, from Mobile
late in the 1908 season for
$1,200. He played with
Brooklyn from 1909 through
1926 and still holds the club
record for total hits 2,804,
most at-bats, 8,859, most sin
gles 2,048, most doubles, 464
and most triples, 161. He had
a lifetime batting average of
.317 and was a unanimous se
lection for the Hall of Fame
last Feb. 1 by the 11-man base
ball "Committee on Veter
ans.
Wright Wins
Rich Prize
United Press International
Alliance, Ohio - (UPD -Blond
belter Mickey Wright eyed
the $15,500 Mount Prospect
Open today with prospects of
landing two of the richest
tournaments on the women's
summer tour.
Miss Wright, of San Diego;
two-time Women s Open win
ner, annexed another prize
Sunday the $12,500 Alli
ance International women's
golf tournament here.
She picked up $2,200 in
edging by one stroke Marlene
Bauer Hagge of Pittsburg and
Murle MacKenzie of St. Pet.
ersburg, Fla., in the richest
stop on the women's tour to
date. The; Mount Prospect
meet starting in Illinois this
Thursday makes the two rich
est tournaments of the year
played within two weeks.
Miss Wright's Alliance
check brought to about $11,
000 her bankroll gathered on
the tournament trail this sum
mer. It was her third tourna
ment victory.
Heavies Top
Boxing Card
New York - (DPD - Two tele
vised heavyweight bouts and
a no-TV fight for the revived
junior lighteweight title stand
out on this week's boxing
schedule.
A change in Friday night's
10-rounder at Louisville, Ky.,
matches heavyweight contend
ers Willie Pastrano and Al
onzo Johnson. It wuT be tele
vised and broadcast by NBC.
Wednesday's 10-rOunder at
Portland, Ore., brings togeth
er heavyweights Eddie Ma
chen and Reuben Vargas for
a return bout. It will be tele
vised by ABC. Machen out
pointed Vargas at San Fran
cisco, May 20. . i
The week's boxing schedule
includes:
Monday Providence, R X Har
old Gomes vs. Paul Jorgensen Jr.,
lightweight title. New Orleans
Ralph Dupas.vs. Frankie Ryff.
Tuesday SeatUe, Wash Pat
McMurtry vs. Earl AtUey. Phila
delphia Von Caly vs. Clarence
Hinnant. Fort Erie, Ont. Rocky
Fummerle vs. Teddy Roosevelt. San
Jose. Calif. Baby Brown vs. Frank
Duarte. Fresno, Calif. Phil Moyer
vs. Auguaune Kosaies.
Wednesday Portland. Ore. Ed
die Machen vs. Reuben Vargas.
TV)1
Thursday Erie, Pa. Tony
Christy vs. Dick White.
Friday Louisville. Ky. Willie
Pastrano vs. Alonxo Johnson. (TV).
Saturday Hollywood. Calif.
Reybon Stubbs vs. Tombstone
Smith,
Maryland's state parks and
forests cover an area of 120,-
Medford scored 14 runs in
the first three innings to ice
the ball game. Jerry Ander
son was the big slugger with
four hits at five times at bat,
including a double and a
triple. He drove in three runs.
Calvin and Lowell Dean
each got two hits.
Klamath Falls in Second
In a game yesterday, Klam
ath Falls took Central Point,
11-3, to gain second-place in
the final standings and knock
the Studs down to third. A
second, non - counting game
followed, in which the Klam
ath Falls team scored 4 to
Central Point's 3.
Grants Pass, with a 2 won
and 6 lost record, ended up
in fourth place and Lakeview
(0-8) anchored the division.
The winner of the play-off
series will meet the coastal
division champs this week
end.
LINE SCORE:
Medford 167 100 015 13 1
Lakeview 101 001 4 7 5 5
Wheeler, Kimey is). Calvin Dean
(7) and Barry; Cossey, Parkinson
(3) and Peters.
Archie Moore Asks For
'Bum1 Remark Apology
Montreal (DPD -Archie
Moore, equally at home
throwing a left hook or a
sharp barb, today demanded
that New York trainer Char
lie Goldman "make a public
apology for calling me a
bum."
The world light - heavy
weight referred to remarks
Aussies Near
Second Round .
Net Eliminations
Mexico City (DPD - Australia
needed only an even split
in singles today to clinch a
first-round triumph over Mex
ico and qualify to meet Cana
da in the second round , of
American Zone Davis Cup
tennis eliminations.
Southpaw Neale'Fraser of
the Aussies faced Mexican ace
Mario Llamas and red-headed
Rod Laver of Australia, runner-up
in this year's Wimble
don championships, opposed
Antonio Palafox in the other.
The Aussies took a 2-1 lead
in the best-of-five series with
Fraser and Roy Emerson beat
Llamas and Gustavo Palafox
in doubles Sunday, 6-3, 6-2,
7-5.
DAVIS CUPPERS NAMED
. River Forest, 111.-(UPD -Six
promising young players were
named today to the U. S.
Davis Cup squad for experi
ence. They were R. Dennis
Ralston, Bakersfield, Calif.;
Paul Palmer, Phoenix, Ariz.;
William Bond, LVA Jolla,
Calif.; Ramsey Earnhart, Ven
tura, Calif.; Charles McKin-
ley, St. Louis,1 and Marty
Reissen, Rirsdale, 111.
Inglewood, Calif.-WPD-Noble
Noor, a 25-1 longshot, won the
$163,850 Juvenile Champion
ship Stakes at Hollywood
Park Saturday.
for EXTRA fun
Mi K
mm.
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China May
Compete
In Olympics
Philadelphia- (UPD -Chances
of Nationalist China compet
ing in the 1960 summer Olym
pic games in Rome were given
a boost today by Avery Brun
dage, president of the Inter
national Olympic Committee.
Brundage, of Chicago, said
here Sunday he will "recom
mend and support" recogni
tion of the Nationalist Chi
nese as Olympic competitors
under the name of "The
Oympic Committee of the Re
public of China."
The statement by Brun
dage came as something of a
surprise in sports circles, for
he has been criticized in va
rious quarters ever since May
28 of this year when the ICC
voted at its meeting in
Munich to cease recognition
of the Nationalists under the
naem "China".,
The IOC ruled that the Na
tionalists do not control sports
throughout China and should
reapply for recognition under
a name indicating they repre
sented only Formosa.
Goldman made recently while
predicting, what his current
protege, Canadian challenger
Yvon Durelle, would do. to
Moore when the .two meet in
a title rematch at the Mon
treal Forum July 29.' Gold
man allegedly called Moore a
bum in recalling how , "we
(Goldman and his former pu
pil Rocky Marciano) beat the
bum."
I have no fault to find
with reminding me that I lost
the fight but I demand that
he make a public apology
when he calls me a bum."
said Moore.
Secret Training
"I know that a lot of the
New York fight people call
everybody a bum but I'm not
from New York," he added.
Moore, who just finished
four days of secret training
behind what his manager
Jack Doc Kearns referred to
as "the leather curtain,"
laughed in derision when ask
ed to comment on other pre
dictions by Goldman.
The bespectacled little
trainer disclosed recently that
Durelle's new strategy would
be to concentrate hitting
Moore's arm during the early
rounds to force the champion
to drop his near impregnable
guard.
Postponement
"That's been tried before,"
said Moore. "In fact, Mar
ciano tried it and it didn't
work."
Moore, who got off the
floor four times to knock out
Durelle in the 11th round of
their wild fight last Dec. 10
at the Forum, obtained a two
weeks postponement for. the
rematch when he came up
with a stone bruise on his
foot. It was widely reported
that the elder statesman of
the ring was having trouble
paring down but Archie de
nied it.
Cm I MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS
Ta6a 24 20 12 6
pmrmts psymtt tfwttt PJtt
SIM S 5.90 S 6.72 $10.05 $18.46
2M 11.81 13.44 20.09 36.92
300 17.71 20.16 30.14 558
500 28.86 32.97 49.64 91.66
100 53.89 62.21 95.64 179.56
1500 77.87 90.38 140.57 126636
HtmstkoUS ckm is Urn tmmtUy n tf 3 aa
Maf art of a talrnma sat nrmdint 1300. 2 M
last pari of talaacf acta of X30O M aat
amrfiat HOP. 1 T t iUw.
Lightweights
Mix Tonight
East Providence, R.I. -flJPD-Harold
Gomes of Providence,
world's third-ranked feather
weight, takes on Paul Jorgen
sen of Port Arthur, Tex., for
the world junior'lighteweight
championship tonight at the
Pierce Memorial Field.
Some 9,000 fans are expect
ed to jam the stadium for the
first world title matech held
in Rhode Island since 1943.
The 25-year-old Gomes de
feated Jorgensen by a unan
imous decision in their first
fight, in Miami, March 27.
. Gomes has a record of 43
wins and 4 losses, three of his
defeats coming at the hands
of Tommy Tibbs who out
weighed him on each occas
ion. The contestants tonight
must weight 130 pounds or
less.
Jorgensen, 24, one of box
ing's busiest performers, has
sought a return match with
Gomes since his loss to the
Providence fighter. That loss
was his first in 32 fights. His
record as a pro is 77-5-4. -
The reactivated junior light
weight title has been held by
such boxers as Johnny Dun
dee, Ben Bass and Kid Choco
late. It was founded by the
late Tex Rickard in 1921 to
make a champ of Dundee.
Maids Lose
Two More
The American Linen Whirl
winds of Portland took the
Rogue Valley Dairy Maids,
6 to 0, Sunday night with the
help of no-hit pitching by Dor
is Barrett. i
In Saturday night's game
the Maids dropped a close
one, 5-4, to the Whirlwinds.
In a non-counting game Fri
day night the Whirlwinds
won over the Maids, 1 to 0.
The Dairy Maids now have
a 3 won and 5 lost record,
good enough to hang on in
third place in the league.
They will play Roseburg
Thursday night at Camp
White.
In Saturday's game it was
tied up, 4-4, but a run in the
bottom of the last inning won
it for the Whirlwinds. Big in
ning for the Maids was the
third, when a triple by Di
ane Wall drove in three runs.
LINESCORES:
Saturday Night
Dairy Maids .....003 000 1 4 8
Amer. Linen 100 120 1 5 4
Hickson, Barron (S), Callaghan
(6) ana Main; Hellberg and bparKs
Sunday Night
Dairy Maids 000 000 00 0
Amer. Linen .. 302 001 x 8 4
Callaghan and Main; Barrett and
bparics.
Saccharin is several hun
dred times sweater than the
conventional varieties of the
cane or beet sugar.
The Great
UNNY
OjT 'iwii -n vrrwnav ar
V
75JJ
SATISFIES DOTH GREAT
siKZ 736-
BROOK
Swim Meet
Marks Fall
Redding, Calif (DPD - It's on
to Lansing, Mich., and try
outs for the Pan-American
Games for the country's rec
ord - smashing feminine mer
maids today.
Fresh from conquering the1
warm waters of the Lake Red
ding Pool in the National
A.A.U. Championships, the
girls will move next to Michi
gan State University for the
Pan-Am try-outs on Aug. 8-9
and 11-12.
The star of the four-day
meet here was Chris von
Saltza, a 15-year-old- platinum
blond from San Jose, Calif.,
daughter of a radiologist.
The jet-propelled miss cap
tured three crowns - the 100
yard, 220-yard and 440-yard
freestyle events. She smashed
the American record in each
event.
The mermaids, gathered
from all sections of the coun
try, smashed four world, 11
American and 14 meet records
during the four day of com
petition. Rains Slow
Net Finals
River Forest, 111. (DPD - The
finals in the 49th Annual Na
tional Clay Courts Tennis
Championships will get under
way today at the River Forest
Tennis Club.
Rain swept the area Sun
day and forced a 24-hour post
ponement of the final round.
The rains hit shortly after
midday and stopped after a
brief fall. Tourney officials
decided to open play in semi
final matches of the men's
doubles. But rain started
again during the first set of
the Bill Bond - Dennis Ral
ston and Chris Crawford
Marty Riessen match, and of
ficials promptly canceled play
for the day.
In the men's singles final,
defending champion Bernard
Bartzen of Dallas, Tex., meets
Whitney Reed, the National
Collegiate Athlete Assn.
champ. In the women's singles
Sandra Reynolds, a pretty
South African girl meets Sally
Moore, Bakersfield, .Calif.,
for the title.
50 YEARS AT THE JOB
Lenox, Mass. (DPD - Oscar
R. Hutchinson can boast the
longest active service as a fire
chief in New England. He was
named chief of the depart
ment here in 1909 after a fire
burned the center of the town
and killed six persons.
STRIKES HOME
Rapids, N. Y. (DPD A $30,-
000 fire completely gutted the
headquarters of the Rapid Vol
unteer Fire Dept. before its
32 members could extinguish
it.
Whiskey of the
BttOOK FROM KENTUCKY
WHISKEY TASTES
Some people like Blended Whiskey, some
prefer Straight Bourbon. Sunny Brook, the
great whiskey of the Old West, offers you
both. Choose the round bottle Blend or the
square bottle Straight - each is the best of
its kind... every drop Kentucky-whiskey!
STRAIGHT
$000 j
460
a at.
00
Pint
W
OLD SUNNY BROOK CO.. lOUlSVIUE. KY., KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY
90 PROOF KENTUCKY BLENDED-WHISKEY, 86 PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS,
MAIL TRIBUNE, MsdrorJ, Or.
Monday, July 20, 1959
Littler Wins
Open Golf
Wethersfield, Conn. - (DPD -Gene
Littler celebrated hii
29th birthday two days early
with a front-running. victory
in the Insurance City Open
golf tournament.
The plucky pro from Sinr-
ing Hills, Calif., led from the
start of the 72-hole tourna
ment but he needed a birdie
two on the 17th hole of the
final round Sunday to edge
Tom Nieporte of Bronxville,
N. Y., by one stroke.
Littler finished with a one-
under-par 70 for a total of 272
while Nieporte posted a 69 in
the final round for a 273.
Doug Ford of Crystal River.
posted the day's best round-
a 66-to gam third money with
a 274 while Jackie Burke of
Kiamesha Lake, N. Y., and
Fred Hawkins of 1 Paso,
Texas, finished with 276 each.
Burke had a 68 in the final
round and Hawkins turned in
a 69.
How pineapples, which are
native to South America,
reached Hawaii is a botanical
mystery. N
BA? Builders Supply
QUALITY
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W. McAndrews
Phone Sr 3-4575 er SP 2-4107
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214 South Riverside Ave.
Phone SP 2-7119
Old West
AMERICAN
ILEND
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pint HiQt.
s
2 - v, I
he traded a case of beer for a
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000 acres.