All-Stars Return
For Ladies' State
Softball Tourney
Most of 1958'i all-staters
will appear in action in the
women's tournament of the
Oregon State Softball associ
ation Thursday, Friday, Satur
day and Sunday, August 13,
14, 15 and 16 at Memorial
stadium, Camp White.
Heading the list will be two
players who collected last
year's top individual awards,
Pat Barron, Rogue Valley
Dairy Maids, and Linda Mc
Kay, Eugene McCulloch Chain
Saw. Miss Barron was chosen
outstanding pitcher and Miss
McKay, a catcher, outstanding
player other than pitcher.
Rogue Valley, the defend
ing champ in the tourney,
could have the most all-stars
returning. Diane Wall, third
base, Ellen Callaghan, out
fielder, and Doris Hickson,
first base, were named to the
tournament all-star team here
last season. Miss Hickson has
been in Hawaii and may not
make it to the tourney.
Three Past Champs
Sharon Knight, shortstop,
and Wanda Conner, infielder,
were other Eugene all-staters.
Hillsboro placed Virginia
Hannen, pitcher, and Jean
Delplanche, second base, and
Klamath Falls Basinetts had
Bev Lloyd, outfielder.
Klamath and Forest Grove,
along with the Maids, are
past champons. Forest Grove's
Meadowlarks won in 1957 and
Klamath Falls was state victor
in 1954.
This is the fifth year of the
tournament under the wing of
the Oregon State Softball as
sociation. Previously the tour
ney was held under supervi
sion of the City of Portland
recreation department.
The 1958 tournament field
Includes the Salem Capital
City Shamrocks along with
Rogue Valley, Eugene, Forest
Grove, Klamath Falls and
Hillsboro.
Forest Grove and Klamath
Falls open the double elimi
nation meet at 7:15 pjn.
Thursday. Rogue Valley and
Hillsboro play in the second
game.
Bow Hunters Shoot
For Championships
Oregon Bow Hunters mem
bers will compete for both
free style and instinctive
championships when they vie
in their annual broadhead
tournament on Saturday and
Sunday, August 15 and 16, at
Mill Creek campground near
Union Creek.
Entrants will shoot at 100
cardboard animal targets set
up on a roving course. First
50 target round on the course
will start at 1 p.m. Saturday
and the second 50 at 9 a.m.
Sunday.
Contestants will shoot only
on arrow at each of the tar
gets. One point will be scored
for a hit on any part of a tar
get and an additional one-half
point will be awarded for a
heart shot.
Flight Event
Registration for the event
will be from 7 a.m. to noon
on Saturday. A broadhead ar
row flight event is set for 9
a.m. and a running deer rival
ry from 10 a.m. until noon.
Security Insurance & Realty
w V ? -
ROSEBURG
CATASTROPHE
Many People, Fortunately, Had Proper
Insurance to Cover Themselves and
Their Property . . . SOME DID NOT!
LET US CHECK YOUR
INSURANCE PROGRAM
Ifs Better To Be Safe Than Sorry!
Phone SP 3-7325
All Forms of
48 Hawthorne Ave.
Off Street Parking
Vera Robinson Al Potter John Ripley
Hank Hart Chris Barker
r i
0
o
MAID ALL-STAR Ellen Cal
laghan, above, will be among
1958 all-tourney players ap
pearing in the women's tour
nament of the Oregon State
Softball association Aug 13
16, at Memorial stadium,
Camp White. The Rogue Val
ley Dairy Maid player was
named an all-tourney star as
an outfielder in 1956 as well
as last year. She has done
most of the Maids' pitching
this summer.
SCORE TRACK WINS
Skoevie, Sweden -(UPD- Ray
Norton of San Jose State and
Jim Graham of Tulsa, Okla.,
scored victories for the U. S.
here Monday in an interna
tional track meet. Norton won
the 100-meter dash in 10.4
seconds and Graham the pole
vault by clearing 13 feet, 7V4
inches.
Possibly 200 shooters from
all parts of Oregon are ex
pected for the tournament and
many of them Vill camp at
the' Mill creek site. The camp
ground is about six miles from
Union Creek and two miles
off Crater Lake highway.
Rogue Archers of Medford
are hosts for the tourney and
have been busy in recent
weeks preparing the area for
the competition. They were
last sponsors for the broad
head meet in 1953.
Stutz Sports Car
Manufacturer Dies
Miami, Fla.-(DPD-Charles E.
Stutz, who helped design and
manufacture the famed Stutz
Bearcat sports car, died here
Monday at the age of 76.
Stutz was one of the earliest
advocates of the sports car. He
helped popularize the fad in
the 1920s by driving his
Bearcat in races.
Insurance!
"!5 i
SPORTS
Hall Leads
PCL Stats
San Francisco -(UPD- Dick
Hall, sensational Salt Lake
Bees' pitcher, tops the Pacific
Coast league hurlers in just
about everything, according
to statistics released today
and including Sunday's games.
Hall has won 13 against
only four losses; he has an
earned-run average of only
1.88 per nine innings of play;
he has the most shut-outs with
six.
Ken Johnson, Portland, has
the most wins with 14; and
Dick Stigman leads the loop
in strike-outs with 135.
Tom Davis of Spokane leads
the hitters with a .338 aver
age and in total hits with 160.
Bobby Prescott of Phoenix
is tops in homers with 21 and
runs-batted-in with 79.
SPORTS
PARADE
OSCAR FRALEY
Sport Writer United Presi
New York-UPD-Time, tide
and the tortures of making
weight Wednesday night well
could spell the end of aicient
Archie Moore's seven-year
reign as light heavyweight
champion of the world.
The muscular marvel from
San Diego won fighter of the
year and fight of the decade
honors last year when he
came off the deck four times
to stop Yvon Durelle. It was
one of the ring's greatest dis
plays of gameness.
But it just may go the other
way at Montreal Wednesday
night despite the 3 to 1 odds
favoring old Arch in this re
match. It isn't so much, according
to veteran fight men, that
Archie is 43 going on 49 or
that Durelle, the fistic fish
erman from Canada, is riding
a rising tide. They see Moore's
eclipse in the fact that once
again he has been forced to
pare his 200 pounds plus
down to the 175-pound limit.
Reducing Takes Toll
"He can hand out all the
bunk he wants to about hav
ing learned a reducing meth
od from an Australian abori
gine," explained one canny
fight manager. "But after a
while, even if the process is
seemingly effortless, that con
stant reducing has to take its
toll."
The feeling is that, even in
a body which has been hard
ened muscularly, such re
ducing must leave a quickly
tiring shell.
"Archie is ready to be
taken," asserted another.
"The time comes for every
body, sooner or later, and
Moore is no exception.
You've got to remember that
Durelle, while he may not be
the best boxer in the world,
or anywhere close to it, is a
lot younger at 29 and is as
strong as a gorilla."
Must Move Up Weight
Making weight has ruined
many a good fighter who in
sisted on going through the
ordeal. Most others, tiring
of the struggle, simply move
up into a heavier weight
class. Ray Robinson for years
struggled to stay in the
welterweight division where
he had a lock on the compe
tition. But after repeated doc
tor's orders that weight mak
ing could be severely injuri
ous to his health, he moved
up into the middleweight
bracket.
Ageless Archie can't be
rapped too readily on the
basis of his age, which re
mains a deeper boxing mys
tery than the names of the
fighters controlled by Frankie
Carbo. He claims he was
born in 1916, which would
make him "only" 43. His
mother set the date as 1913,
which would make him 46.
Others contend that even this
date is about three years short
of the actual mark.
Nobody can contest the
fact, however, that he has
been boxing as a recognized
professional since 1936 - a
mere matter of 23 years. How
many years he laced on
gloves before that in unrec
ognized bootleg bouts is once
again anybody's guess.
The fact is that, in the ring,
he still moves like a young
sprout and it i an admitted
fact that he last thing a boxer
loses is his punch. If Yvon's
chin gets in the way, you can
expect Durelle to go.
We Have
Portland Wins Over
Phoenix To Stay
Ahead In PCL Race
United Press International
The Portland Beavers were
a full game and a half out in
front today in the race for
the Pacific Coast league pen
nant. Portland's hopes to bring
home the title in the state's
Centennial year were bright
ened Monday night as the
Beavers edged Phoenix 4-3.
Vancouver took over sec
ond place with a 5-1 win over
Salt Lake City; Spokane
clobbered San Diego 9-3 and
Seattle downed Sacramento
6-5 in 10 innings.
Fifth Loss
It was the fifth straight loss
for Sacramento which led the
league for a large part of the
season. Sacramento is at Port
land for a series opener to
night. Portland got its runs early
against Phoenix Monday
night, scoring twice in the
second and once each in the
third and fourth. Phoenix
scored in the fifth on Owen
Friend's 15th. homer and
twice in the seventh on three
hits including a triple by Sal
Tar omina.
George Brunet, Portland
southpaw, was the winner al
though he had to have relief
help from Glenn McMinn in
the seventh.
Won Series
Portland, which had a bad
time with Phoenix last year,
won its series from the Giants
this season 14-8.
Frank Howard and Tommy
Davis, future Los Angeles
Dodger hopefuls, each pow
ered a pair of homers to lead
Spokane's win over San Di
ego. Davis and Howard, proper
ty of the talent-rich Dodgers,
each socked one of their hom
ers over the 411 foot sign in
centerfield to become only
the third and fourth players
to perform that trick in Spo
kane's Fairgrounds Park.
Grid Teams
Schedule
Exhibitions
United Press International
The Pittsburgh Steelers,
who would rather beat the
Cleveland Browns than any
other team, play host to the
Browns Tuesday night in the
first of five exhibition games
this week involving National
Football league teams.
The College All-Stars, made
up of this year's leading NFL
draft choices, tangle with the
champion Baltimore Colts in
Chicago Friday night in the
26th annual All-Star game.
Three night games are
carded for Saturday. The
New York Giants play the
Philadelphia Eagler at Hersh
ey, Pa.; the Detroit Lions
play the Chicago Cardinals at
Norman, Okla.; and the Green
Bay Packers meet the Chicago
Bears at Milwaukee.
High Hopes
The Steelers have high
hopes this year in the Eastern
division race because they
wound up the 1958 season as
the hottest team in the NFL.
Pittsburgh finally got rolling
after obtaining Bobby Layne,
winning six of its last seven
games. The other wound up
in a tie.
Cleveland Is coming back
from one of its most bitter
disappointments. .Tust when
the Browns appeared to have
the Eastern title wrapped up,
they dropped two in a row to
the Giants, the last in a play
off. The Browns are 16-2 in the
league against the Steelers
and 3-0 in exhibition play.
They shut out the Steelers in
their first exhibition game
last year, 10-0.
NW League Idle,
Games Tonight
There were no games in the
Northwest league Monday
night.
Tonight's schedule has Yak
ima at Wenatchee, Eugene at
Tri-City and Salem at Lewis
ton. Yakima leads the second
half league race by a game
and a half over Eugene and
Lewiston. Tri-City, in. the
basement, is only 4Vi games
from the top.
First commercial produc
tion of penicillin in the United
States was in 194Q.
1
MOVE
to
1005 East Main Street
DON STATHOS
Insurer
PHONE SP 3-6658
Howard, who has been with
the Indians for the past month
and a half after a stint at Vic
toria in the Texas league and
a cup of coffee with the Dodg
ers, is hitting around .315 and
has 10 homers in 44 games.
Davis is leading the league in
hitting with a .338 mark and
he has 14 homers.
George Bamberger was in
command all the way as he
pitched Vancouver to its win
over Salt Lake.-The veteran
righthander scattered 10 hits
and was aided by sound de
fensive support.
Lou Skizas homered in the
top of the tenth to give the
red-hot Seattle Rainiers a
sweep of their five game
series with Sacramento.
LINESCORES:
Sal Tjik hnn nnn n i n .
' vJ Viv t iu i
Vancouver ...020 012 OOx 5 9 0
rrancis, uuonneu (71 and Brock
ell; Bamberger and Zimmerman.
San Diego .000 001 101 3 7 1
Spokane 112 112 Ox 9 13 0
Heman, Schaeffer (2), Podbielan
(3), Wojey (5). Thomas (8) and
Jones, Retzer (7); Nicolosi and Har
ragan. Phoenix ....000 010 200 3 13 0
Portland 021 100 OOx 4 10 0
i-noaie, siasKo (7). Shipley (8)
anH MrfTarriffll Ttrnnat tn
. ; i .'...'"nil 1 1
and Tornay.
(10 innings)
Sac 000 003 002 0 5 11 0
Seattle 200 001 020 1 6 12 1
Usenbaugh. Davis (9) and Queen
Dalrymple (9); Osteen, Martin (9
and Bevan.
Wii ' I MMMMyjWI TMITMpMMMMM IIMIIH n " n
tatttaiM ...'SiA., Av-iai ,, ...v,...v,..iiv.v.---.fc..v. ,i. J
I've built this business over the last 10 years. My com
pany has hauled all kinds of cars from the factories
to dealers. I've had a ringside seat on the auto business.
When I read news reports about the new smaller cars
others plan to bring out, I say to myself "Rambler
already has what the others are merely talking about.'
I see where the rest of the industry is going to copy
Rambler's way of building cars when they rush out
their smaller models.
IN JET JUICIAFT, STIUCTUUl MEMOS AND
IN lAHILEt, STIUCTUIAL HEMBEIS AND I0DT
OIDINAIT CONSTIUCTIOI DSED IT OTHEt CAtS-IODT IS I01TED ON SEFAIATE
RAME UKE THE OLD-f ASHIONED WAGON.
Rambler calls it Single Unit Construction body
and frame welded into one strong unit like airplanes.
Stronger, safer . . . more room with less bulk. No body
bolt rattles. It's the only way a real Compart Car
should be built Up until recently, the others have done
it the old oxcart way bolting together separate body
and frame.
Sure, Rambler has pointed the way for the others.
But there's one big thing that can't be copied, and that's
The Compact Rambler. . . America's No.l Success Car
High Court
Gets Chavez
Appeal
Washington-flJPD-An appeal
of a California Supreme Court
decision which approved
transfer of ground in the
Chavez Ravine area from the
city of Los Aneeles to the Los
Angeles Dodgers baseball
team has been filed with the
U. S. Supreme Court.
The appeal was filed Mon
day by attorney Phill Silver
on behalf of Louis Kirshbaum
of Los Angeles. However, the
Supreme Court currently is in
its summer recess and no ac
tion will be taken on the ar-
peal until the fall.
Silver filed a brief earlier
this year with the court, but
had been directed by Justice
Hugo L. Black to submit addi
tional material.
Principal Issue
In the supplementary brief,
Silver declared that federal
questions involved in the case
are "substantial." He said a
principal issue was whether
the contract between the city
and the ball club was for "a
public purpose" or a "private
purpose."
Silver said that approval of
the transfer of 315 acres to
the Dodgers for a new sta
dium site would, if allowed to
stand by the courts, "open
wide the way to raids on pub
lic treasuries in all the states,
cities, towns, and counties of
the country."
1 ; ' '
"It'll be the most imitated
car in America next year!"
FUSELAGE Alt ONE AND THE SAUL
All ONE AND THE SAME.
Trademark
Jack Sharkey Named
As Third Man In
Moore-Durelle Bout
By JOHN POWER
Montreal (UPD Former
heavyweight champion Jack
Sharkey again will referee
the light heavyweight title
fight between champion Ar
chie Moore and Canadian
Yvon Durelle Wednesday
night at the Montreal Forum.
Leopold Pigeon, chairman
of the Montreal Athletic Com
mission, announced today that
Sharkey had been picked to
referee Wednesday's return
15-rounder because the com
mission thought he had done
"an excellent job" in the first
Moore-Durelle bout last Dec.
10.
Pigeon said tne three judges
will not be announced until
five minutes before the fight
starts at 7 p.m. (p.d.t.). In
Montreal, three judges instead
of two preside and only they
can vote on the decision. The
referee has no vote. .
Durelle, who balked Mon
day at signing a return bout
pact, was expected to sign the
pact today.
The fighting fisherman
from Baie Ste. Ann, N.B., said
at first he wouldn't accept the j
offered return bout terms -
Rambler's 20 years of experience with Single Unit Con
struction. It stands to reason nobody else is going to
get that "know how" overnight
RAMBLER SIZE IMITATED
Reports out of Detroit say that the new crop of smaller
cars will be about the same wheelbase as Rambler, but
what I want to know is will the others be able to
match Rambler's inside space? Ease of entry? If the
others can't beat Rambler's room and comfort with
their oversized cars, how are they going to do it with
smaller ones?
ALL OUT FOR GASOLINE ECONOMY
Everyone knows that Rambler is the economy leader.
And economy is what most motorists want today. So,
it's only natural that the others would try to imitate
Rambler economy. But can they match Rambler's per
formance? At least one of the small cars is planning to put the
engine in the rear. Through the years, I've hauled a lot
of the American Motors experimental cars from the
factory to the Proving Grounds . . . watched them tested
. . . talked to the engineers. So I know Rambler has
American Motors
in the event he beats Moore -of
30 per cent of the net re
ceipts for each fighter. He
said he wanted "at least $100,-
000 for defending against
Moore."
But Truman Gibson, presi
dent of National Boxing En
terprises, arrived by plane
from Paris and went into an
immediate huddle with Dur
elle and his manager, Chris
Shaban. He emerged with
word that Durelle would sign
today and for the originally
offered 30-30 split.
Durelle, 29, claims to be
more confident of victory this
time than he was last Decem
ber. His new-found source of
strength is trainer Charlie
Goldman, the man who
groomed Rocky Marciano on
the Brockton blockbuster's
march to the heavyweight
championship.
"Charlie has given me a
good left hand to go with my
right," said Durelle. "He has
stopped me from hitting with
a loose left arm."
Although ancient Archie
has in the past drilled right
down to the day of the fight,
he knocked off stiff training
What Rambler's Sudfess
Means To Every Motorist
weighed the pros and cons of all types of engines ...
liquid and air-cooled ... all types of cylinder combina
tions. And, Rambler decided the engine belongs in
front The greater safety and better handling of the
front-engine design is what convinced them.
CAN'T IMITATE BASIC EXCELLENCE
There's one thing the others can't even begin to imitate
... Rambler's basic excellence. That's the all-round
"balance" of quality, economy, maneuverability, room,
comfort and performance that Rambler has.
It's this balance the proper combination of every
thing motorists want that is the secret of Rambler's
basic excellence. And it's something no quick imitation
can duplicate.
No wonder I'm hauling more than twice as many
Ramblers from the factory this year. Fact is, in June,
Rambler was 3rd in sales in the U.S.A.
Sure, Rambler will be the most imitated car in Amer
ica next year. But who wants an imitation when you
can get the original?
AMERICAN MOTORS CORPORATION
RAMBLER KELVINATOR METROPOLITAN ,
.MAIL TRIBUNE. M.dfonL Or. A
Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1939
Shriners
Work Out
Portland-IOPD-Rival coaches
were vieing today for the un
derdog role in the 12th an
nual Shriners' hospital all
star football game Saturday
night in Multnomah stadium.
"Where do they get that
'even stuff?" asked Coach
Fred Spiegelberg of the State
all-stars.
"They've got everything,"
moaned Coach Tom DeSylvia
of the Metros. 'They (State)
should be the favorites.
Sideline observers contin
ued to insist, however, that
the game stacks even.
Bot 27-man squads worked
hard Monday morning and af
ternoon following their Sun
day holiday, and double work
outs were scheduled for again
Tuesday.
The Metros concentrated
on their passing attack again,
with Quarterback Terry Bak
er of Jefferson in the key
throwing role. Baker hailed
as the best prep passer to
come out of Oregon since
George Shaw, connected con
sistently on long and short
tosses.
here two days ago - an indi
cation that he thinks he is
at his peak form. The cham
pion had a one-hour light
workout Monday, finishing
just in time to greet his wife
who arrived from California.