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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Friday, August 7, 1959 Choose From The Pick of the New Fall Styles! I SPORTS I I J WILL DEFEND CROWN - Rogue Valley Dairy Maids, above, will defend their state softball crown next week and will be the hostess team for the second straight year for the women's tournament of the Oregon State Softball association. The tourney will be held Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 13, 14, 15 and 16, at Memorial stadium, Camp White, with Eagle Point Lions club as Junior Batting Champs Named ; Bud Lowery of the Cubs, Jim Calhoun of the Intermed iates, "Randy Corliss of the Wildcat Pee Wees and Steve Boemer of the Tiger Pee Wees were batting champions of Medford baseball teams par ticipating this summer in Southern Oregon Junior league play. Lowery hit .421, Calhoun .466, Corliss .533 and Roemer .412. : The Medford school district's summer baseball program wound up yesterday with a field day. Winners in throw ing competition were George Dames of the Pee Wees and Art Ruhl of the Cubs and In termediates. In sliding Ken Eckel was winner and Mike Farthing runner up for Pee Wees and Danny Miles first and Ruhl second for the older groups. i John Kovenz, who directed j BOWLING CENTENNIAL ROLLERS Standings: Tattlers Pinheads . Goof ers Fifty Niners Three Squares Cotton Pickers Half Wits .. Left Overs .. Near Misses Krazy Kats W. 25 24 19 19 19 16 16 15 15 12 ft 12 17 17 17 20 20 21 21 24 sponsor. Front row, from left, In the picture are Diane Wall, Phyllis Perry, Janet Pfaff, Shirley Hanson, Bernice Bigham, Jan Bateman and Doris Hickson. In the back row, left to right, are coach Elmer Harnish, Tony Owens, Jean Bitterling, Ellen Callaghan, Irma Penwell, Jean Main, Pat Barron and coach Shy Callaghan. The Milk Producers league is sponsor. Rugged Slate Preps Maids for Tourney Results: Tattlers 3 (Blllie Davis 456) 1235; Coofers 2 (Nell Towes 431) 1304. Pinheads 2 (Mary Langston 475) 1408. Fifty Niners 2 (Evelyn Reed 471) 1347. Three Squares 4 (Flossie Coffin 449) 1232; Near Misses 0 (Lucille Corneleous 456) 1123. Cotton Pickers 1 (Norma Larson 460) 1233; Left Overs 3 (Georgia Boardman 368) 1250. Half Wits 3 (Stella Puett 442) 1116; Krazy Kats 1 (Joyce Krous 320) 1007. Splits Stella Puett 6-8, Janet Luckterhand 3-4-6, Norma Larson 3-10, Alice Gidwey 5-7, Judy Bar num 3-10 & 5-7. High Game Lucy Turner 201. High Series Mary Langston 475. the Medford district baseball school, left yesterday on a va cation trip to San Francisco and other points. Rogue Valley Dairy Maids enter the women's tournament of the Oregon State Softball association next week strength ened by the toughest regular season champion in their his tory. A 15-win 17-loss record doesn't sound impressive. But in compiling that mark the Dairy Maids met a number of teams with long experience in strong league play - clubs such as the perennially strong Erv Lind Florists of Portland, the American Linen of Port land, the Seattle Ramblers and the Vancouver, B. C. South Hill Queens. The Maids were 10-14 in their first year in the North west Women's Major league and were 4-3 in other games which included the world champion RaybestoSj .Ameri can Linen, Roseburg and I 02 , : 1 v l ) , Never before such a buy on safer... top-quality ;ki UMl'll tr0l'S' 'rs Qua"ty EASY ! lPEMERAL pay x ) FOR x u U ame your own (L iTOf flNIYf r3 medicine and It) J I LZI unLI LZ W IS we'll go along! No V III ml here's one of the juiciest payments until V .It uys anywhere in TOWN I . . .. ." September 1st! IT YOUR PAIR WHIir THI SUPPLY IASTS! - CARL BISMARK'S Medford, 1112 Court - SP 2-6969 t-3 A l"J II I CI S 0 f 1 Tire Tread Service of Medford & Grants Pass, Inc. Grants Pass, 1149 Hwy. 199 Klamath Falls Rogue Vallly is defending champ as well as hostess for the Oregon tourney which in cludes teams from outside the city of Portland and is a lead ing contender in the meet. The Maids, during the regu lar season played three of the five other clubs which will be In the state meet. They split 2.-2 with the Salem Capi tal City Shamrocks, tabbed by some as the team to beat; they had the edge 3-1 against Eugene McCulloch Chain Saw and were 2-1 against Klamath Falls Basinettes. Callaghan Head Hitting Ellen Callaghan led Maid batting for the full season with a .314 record, while Na dine Brood hit .258, Doris Hickson .238 and Shirley Han son .205. As a team the Slaids averaged .191 for the season in hitting. The state tussle opens Thursday night, Aug. 13, at Memorial stadium, Camp White, with Forest Grove play ing- - Klamath Falls and the Dairy Maids facing Hillsboro. Eugene and Salem make their debuts in the meet on Friday night, Aug. 14, prior to a game between the Thursday win ners. Action will conclude on Sunday in the double elimin ation competition. At least 10 and possibly "11 games . will be played in the four days. All of the clubs except Forest Grove were In the state tourney last year. Forest Grove was host for the region al tournament and automatic ally contended in that tour ney. The Meadowlarks were participants last year in the world meet, taking second in the regional and going to Stratford, Conn., when the northwest champion Lind Florists declined to make the trip. Eagle Point Lions are sfate tournament sponsors again.- - There are no advance tick et' sales. INDIVIDUAL BATTING: AB E. Callaghan 86 N. Brood 31 D. Hickson 63 J. Bitterling . 9 S. Hanson 88 J. Main 93 P. Perry : 11 J. Bateman 68 D. Wall 88 B. Bigham 93 I. Penwell . 40 P. Barron 42 J. Pfaff 56 T. Owens 10 Pet. .314 .258 .238 .222 .205 .183 .182 .177 .170 .151 .150 .143 .125 .100 IN PAN-AM TENNIS New York-UPfl-The U. S. Olympic Committee has chos en Althea. Gibson of New York, 1957 and 1958 Wimble don women's champion, to head a four-girl tennis squad in the Pan-American Games at Chicago,. Aug. 27-Sept. 7. The others are Dorothy Knode of Forest Hills, N. Y., Mimi Arnold of Redwood City, Calif., and Karol Fageros of Miami, Fla. 13 in Race For Seattle Gold Cup Seattle -IDPD- Only a few stragglers ! were left today with a field of 13 of the world's fastest boats already qualified for the 52nd running of the Gold Cup on -Lake Washington Sunday. A Detroit boat. Miss U.S., qualified at 115.056 miles per hour Thursday with Don Wil son at the controls. It was the fastest qualifying time yet turned in by any of the un limited hydroplanes. The Detroit boat qualified shortly after the Seattle boat KOL-Roy got in with a speed of 95.462 mph. A speed of at least 95 mph over three laps of the three-mile course is needed to qualify. Still left in the pits was the Coral Reef of Tacoma which is expected to give it a whirl today. Out of Mothballs Miss Seattle, a former Gold Cup winner under the iiame of Slo-Mo-Shun V, has been in mothballs but her owners, the same camp that owns Miss Pay 'n' Save have decided to give her a try after quali fying easily with the Miss Pay 'n' Save. . There was a possibility that the Miss Bardahl would be entered. The Seattle boat is ready and all that stands in the way t is a nod from her owner, Ole Bardahl. He pull ed out of speedboat racing when his driver, Jack Regas, was seriously injured last month on Lake Coeur d'Alene in Idaho. Already in are Miss Pay 'n' Save, Wahoo, Thriftyway Too and Miss Thriftway, all Seat tle; Gale V and Gale VI, De troit; Breathless n, Lake Ta hoe; Hawaii Kai, Bellevue, Wash.; Maverick, Lake Mead; Miss Spokane, Spokane, and Nitrogen, Washington, D.C. Seeded Players Out of Tourney South Orange, N. J.-OIPD-Wimbledon champion Alex Olmedo faced Yale University star Don Dell today in the quarter-final round of men's singles in the Eastern Grass Courts tennis championships' with folks asking where the upset lightning will strike next. Second-seeded Bernard (Tut) Bartzen of Dallas,' Tex.,-, and third-seeded Dick 'Savitt of South Orange both were shunted to the sidelines Thurs day in three-set upsets scored by young rivals. Mike Green, 22-year-old UCLA senior from Miami Beach, Fla., surprised Bart zen, the National Clay Courts champion, 3-6, 11-9, 6-4, while young Chuck McKinley of St. Ann, Mo., disposed of ex-Wimbledon champion Savitt, 6-4, 6-8, 6-4. l' Junior Golfers Bill 2 Rounds Stanford, Calif. (DPD The USGA National Junior Golf tournament, featuring the na tion's finest shot - m a Je e r s under the age of 18, resumed firing with 16 men going to the tee today. But when night falls only four competitors will remain. . With' most of the favorites on the sidelines, little Fred Leffingwell, Jr., a 17-year-old, 115-pound precisionist from Miami Beach, Fla., took over the role of "man to beat." Leffingwell reached the po sition by upsetting favored Labron Harris Jr., Stillwater, Okla., Thursday in the tird round on the 21st hole. Harris went to the sidelines when he drove his tee shot on the par three 21st into the trap. The winner was one-over-par for the distance. Brazil exported 241,800,000 pounds of cocoa beans in 1957, a decrease of 12.8 per cent from the year before. Engin Buffer Structun rz r i ii i (1 $494 Down $49.50 per Month DICK KNIGHT CO. Plymouth Desoto Simca 33 SOUTH RIVERSIDE PHONE SP 3-6247 Now For Back to School! See All The New Bulky Knit Styles at ROBINSON fJiJ&U A small deposit will PN ( I &&&jpp-f$ hold the sweater of y-aJ r yur choic until J. "1 1 wkt& THE TOP-SCORING - urn ISA MAN Because only Catalina sweaters have the winning look! Colors that com mand, designs that are dauntless, weaves and textures that set the pace. Sizes small to extra large. Left to fight: TOP level shawl-collared pall over, with bib placket inset... $12.95; Wimbledon new cardigan in die popular cable knit.. .$19-95; davis CUP new cable knit pullover, con tinental V-neck... $ 16.95; CITATION all wool blazer of unrestrained stripes. ..$17.95 " . . - For Your Enthusiastic Approval Of Our New' Varsity 10D n ... and we wish to offer our con gratulations to the winners of the various prizes offered during our grand opening celebration. Here Are The Winners! TOWNE AND KlNO'S Full-zipper jacket Real warmth for raw weather; real great for many-purpose wear-a new convertible turtle neck with smart collar styling. Close, heavy knit, fine quality worsted yarn, with two-color striped trim, as Shown. Six color combinations: sizes: IV s the greatest! New bulky pullover with roll collar by Towne and King. ltd. A favorite on Continental ski slopes, the collar does it I Just try this sweater on and every mirror will say "buy itl" When you feel its heft, you'll take its pure wool, wide ribbed warmth for granted. Contrasting trim on collar and cuffs John Winton Eagle Point Ron Wiedman-Eagle Point Carl Cacho Eagle Point R.L. Jones Central Point Lockhart Central Point " Vance Russell Central Point A. R. Johnson Central Point Jody Heath Ashland Calvin Nidever Kerby B. Serolamon Gold Kill David Dudley Phoenix Warren Cole Medford Tom Donahoe Medford , Dorothy Jones Medford David Caldwell Medford ' L.M. Forbes-Medford David' Andrews Medford C. H. Bell-Medford Ewaldson Medford R. A. Schmldf-Medford Billy Overturf-Medford Hugh Judd-Medford Earl Martin-Medford C. C. Conrad Medford Mary Beatty Medford Donald Day Medford H. L. Gilbert-Medford M. O. Nordstrum Medford Ruth Marks-Medford Jerry Dillon Medford David Hendrix-Medford Irene Tizekker Medford Jim Stiger Medford R. D. Coffin P. M. Stiehl-Medford C. L. Graham Medford Steve Swartsley Medford Lots of FREE Parking Space! puni SO N II !0i THE BUDS FOR QUALITY DUDS Next to Pick's Apparel Medford, Oregon OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.