Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1960)
.1 4 .$ f s I i I i Crater High Trims Ashland Hoopsters Wl'THKBN OREGON" CONFERENCE STANDINGS: W I, Medford . 8 o' Klamath Falls 6 2 Grants Pass 3 5 Crater 3 5 Ashland 0 8 Pet. 1.000 .750 .375 .375 .000 Central Point Crater high basketball team outscored Ashland in the first and third quarters and broke even with the Grizzlies in the second and fourth here Saturday- night to capture a Southern Oregon conference victory by 61 to 43. The Comets had four men in double .scoring figures to Ashland's two, had sharper field shooting and had the edge in recovering the ball under the backboards in shap ing their third decision in the circuit and their second win this year over the Grizzlies. Crater with its 3-5 status in the loop gained a knot for third place in the standings with Grants Pass which drop ped a 78 to 69 to verdict at Klamath Falls also on Satur day. Ashland, yet to win a conference fray, suffered its eighth loss as the clubs reach ed the halfway point of the loop. The Central Point conting ent was the opportunistic club in the scuffle here more alert to take advantage of its chances, although they did not always pay off. Earl Cooper and Dennis Edwards each had 13 points for the Comets. Chuck Turn er tallied 11 and Loyal Higin botham put in 10. Steve Gray, making his 1960 starting de but, and Harley Dickerson each sank 11 counters. Turn er controlled 14 rebounds and Edwards nine while Dave Sharp, Cooper, Tom White and Higinbotham each picked up six for agressive Crater's good edge on the boards. Bob Hardy had eight retrieves and Phil Tucker eight for Ash land. The Comets never were good after 2-aIl and 3-all ties, good fater 2-all and 3-all ties. After an 8 to 7 count, they held the Grizzlies scoreless for 3V minutes and gained a 17 to 7 first quarter bulge. Gap was 19 to 7 right after the second quarter began. But Ashland came up to within four points at 20 to 16. Crater got going again and each team had 13 points for the period. Halftime difference was 30 to 20. Victory was really tucked away in the third frame when the Comets pushed through 16 markers while limiting Ashland to eight. In 534 min utes of the period, Crater ran its margin to 18 points at 40 to 22. The Grizzlies narrowed it to 14 at 40 to 26 but by the end of the panel the bulge was 18 ?ain at 48 to 28. The Comet spread up to 20 points at 48 to 28 second into the fourth quarter. It slipped to 15 points at 50 to 35. Then Sharp, Edwards and Turner flipped in field baskets and Cooper two free throws for CLOGSTON'S Metal 7eather Stripping and Screens estimates Gladly Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings V Z7 MAKE YOUIL THFTK 7 Modernize With Tru-Mix Concrete 0 Driveway Patio w Walks ji-eredSP 2-5271 Crater while Dickerson added a goal for Ashland. That made the margin its widest of the night, 21 markers, at 58 to 37. With 22 .field goals, Crater had a .393 firing average. Ash land put in 14 buckets and hit at .259. Comet jayvees employed a zone press to advantage in beating their Ashland counter part 47 to 27 in the prelimin ary. Crater had 11 to 6, 23 to 15 and 34 to 23 quarter gaps. Jim Allen led the Com ets with 16 points. BO Ashl:,i;d FG Tucker, f 9-2 Jacksun, I 0-0 Hauck, c 3-0 Gray, g 12-3 Dickerson ll-4 Hardy 13-2 Stewart 2-1 Harris 4-2 Alley 0-0 FT 6-4 1-0 3- 2 9-5 4- 3 4-1 0- 0 1- 0 0-0 KB 8 2 1 2 s 11 1 3 1 PF TP 4 8 Totals ...54-14 28-15 34 23 43 Crater FG Turner, f ....10-4 E. Cooper, f 9-4 Edwards, f -12-6 White, g 6-3 Sharp, g 9-1 Woods 2-1 B. Anhorn - 1-0 Johnson . 0-0 Allen 1-0 J. Anhorn .... 0-0 Higinbotham 6-3 FT 5- 3 10-5 4-1 1-1 0-0 3-2 0- 0 1- 0 2- 1 0-0 6- 4 RB 14 6 9 6 6 2 0 1 0 0 6 PF TP Totals 56-22 32-17 50 18 61 Referees Esselstyn and Zaro sinski. JV LINEUPS: 47 Crater Ashland 27 F 10 Foote Voris F 16 Allen King 2 C Minnick Colwell 4 G 3 J. Anhorn Callahan 7 G M. Pepper Johnson 5 Substitutions For Crater. Hyer son 2. Straus 2. Beman 9, Kimball 3. Debrick, B. Cooper 2; for Ash land, Reymers, Dixon. Everett, Merriman 1, Stults 1. Jones, Kirsch er, Lewis 3. Roberson. Pels Beat GP Quintet Klamath Falls - Klamath Union high widened its hold on second spot in Southern Oregon conference basketball standings to three full games over third position Saturday night by outbombing Grants Pass here 78 to 69. The Pelicans of KF led by a scant 54 to 53 at the end of the third quarter, then had to crack a 57-alI tie before pull ing ahead for keeps. Klamath had advantages of 20 to 13 at the quarter and 40 to 34 at the half. Paul Bishop topped Pelican scoring with 27 points and his teammate. Dean D.unson, pot ted 20. Jim Purkett hemped 21 for the Cavemen and Rex Benner, also of GP, had 19. Klamath had a 29 to 22 mar gin in field goals. Grants Pass shot 25 for 30 from the gift line and the Pels 20 for 28. LINEUPS: 78 Klamath Grants Pass 69 F 14 Patzke Benner 19 F 10 Brickner Janssen 12 C 27 Bishop Hugoboom G 6 Biehn Mclntire 2 G 20 Dunson Purkett 21 Substitutions For Klamath Falls. Eastman 1. Binney. Palm berg; for Grants Pass. Erickson 6, Staley 4, Murray 5, Walker. Prep Basketball SATURDAY GAMES North Bend 77, Cottage Grove 53 Klamath Falls 78. Grants Pass 69 Walla Walla 41. Hermiston 37 Marshfield 53, Springfield 47 South Eugene 43, North Eugene 35 Burns 64, Enterprise 39 Roseburg 60, Willamette 59 La Grande 59. Baker '39 Sherman 56, Sisters 51 Elgin 71, Grant- Union 54 Vale 52, Mac-Hi 45 Pleasant Hill 56. St. Francis 39 Ccquille 68. Siuslaw 36 Reedsport 65. Myrtle Point 50 Crater 61, Ashland 43 Junction City 51, Drain 48 lone 66, Umatilla 48 Echo 57, Heppner 52 Athena 45. Pilot Rock 43 St. Mary's 49. Illinois Valley 48 HOME LOOK W. Ill lrfe CONCRETE C 248 E. McANDREWS RD. COMET FIRES Tom White, Crater high, puts up a shot with Bob Hardy, Ashland, trying to stop him in Southern Oregon con ference game Saturday at Central Point. Ashlander nearest camera is Phil Tucker. BOWLING SATURDAY SENIOR JUNIOR Standings: W. Bauman's 7 Med. Paint & Wallpaper 6 J. W. Copeland 4 K-BOY 4 Med. Auto Dealers Asso. 4 Women of the Moose 3 Junior Cham, of Commerce 2 McLain's Drug Center 2 Results: Med. Auto 3 (J. Bateman 448) 2570: Jaycees 1 (B. distance 513). Copeland 2 (L. Little 520) 2560; K-BOY 2 (G. Falk 430) 2492. McLain's 0 (J. Zimlicka 419) 2376; Med. Paint 4 (L. Jones 495) 2620. Bauman's 4 (T. Bortis 600) 2882; W.O.M. 0 (B. Scruggs 424) 2395. High games Boys. T. Bortis 216, D. Bauman 197. L. Jones 196: girls, J. Bateman 177, B. Champion 147. BARTLETT BELLES Standings: W. First National Bank 19 L 5 Corner Club 19 United Grocers 15 Chrystal Meats 14 Sy's Place 13 Stauffer Reducing Plan 13 Alexander Music 12 Lininger's Rockettes 11 Universal Pump Sales .... 11 Eagles One 11 Eagles Two 11 Pepsi Cola Bottling Co 10 Trowbridge & Flynn 10 Baker Moulding 8 Roethler Shell Station 8 Double Dee Lumber Co, 7 5 9 10 11 11 12 13 13 13 13 14 14 16 16 17 Results: Baker Moulding 1 (Mitchell 454) 2094; Sy's Place 3 (Turtle 501) 2157. Eagles Two 4 (Klatt 463) 2107; Pepsi Cola 0 (Young 429) 1949. Roethier's 3 (Perry 155) 2270; Trowbridge 1 (Doty 491) 2192. Alexander 1 (Tope 432) 2053; Corner Club 3 (Davis 488) 1225. F.N.B. 2 (Ellis 447) 2078; Chrys tal 2 (Hukil! 439) 2039 Stauffer 4 (Cornelius 515) 2160; D.D. Lumber 0 iHuber 451) 2011. Lininger's 0 (Ross 441) 2018; United Grocers 4 (Krous 489) 2069. Universal Pump 2 (Smith 453) 2037; Eagles One 2 (Hedges 396) 2112. High games Krous. Nicodemus 193, Smith 190, Botefur 189. NIGHT HAWKS LEAGUE Standings: W. Hamilton Manage. Corp. 22 BAR 21',i 14 141 17 Barco Supply Co 19 Mitchell Bro. Truck Line lSVi 17',i Triangle Food Market 18 18 Mechanics Laundry 17 19 Guy Hays Real Estate 15 21 Team No. 5 13 23 Results: Triangle Mkt. 3 (Bob Foster 495) 1721; Barco 1 (Bob Bigger 502) 16C2. Mitchell Bros. 3 (Pink O'Connor 507) 1645; Hays 1 (Don Crawford 428) 1570. Team Five 3 (Alden Moyer 446) 1553; Hamilton Mgmt. 1 (David Baylor 456) 1487. Mechanics Lndry. 3 (Vince Lob dell 450) 1666; BAR 1 (Ray Stewart 453) 1648. High game Bib Bigger 199. INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Standings: W. Jubilee Club 28 Snoboys 27 Gates Furniture 26 Standard Oil 26 Red Blanket Lbr. Co. 23 li Eagles .. 21 National Guard 20 Fyr Fyters 18 Phoenix Auto Repair .... 14'i Huffman Auto Parts 14 Whitelaw Candy 12 Neeley Nebon Lbr. Co. 10 L. 12 13 14 14 1615 19 20 22 2515 26 28 30 Results: Neeley Nelson 1 (Gates 499) 2625; Jubilee Club 3 (Jim Cabler 545) 2750. Snoboys 4 (Wilson 555) ' 2893; Huffman's 0 (Lewis & Moser 456) 2593. Fyr Fyters 2 (Monroe 542) 2770: Standard Oil 2 (Ellison 553) 2848. National Guard 3 (Bateman 490) 2667; Red Blanket 1 (Longan 487) 2607. Phcnix Auto Rep. 4 (Burns 463) 2702: Eagles 0 (Weber 534) 2638. Whiteiaw Candv 1 (Caster & Champion 492) 2682: Gates Furni ture 3 (Weber 584) 2744. Souchak Cops San Diego Open San Diego - The slimmer he becomes, the fatter his bank roll gets. That's Iron Mike Souchak, the heavy-hitting golfer from Grossinger, N.Y., by way of Duke university where he played quite a bit of football. Mike came from one-stroke behind Sunday to win top prize of $2,800 in the 72 -hole San Diego Open, beating out young Johnny Pott, the form er Louisiana State collegian who led at the end of three rounds. Souchak's 72-hole total of 269 was a record for the San Diego Open as was Pott's 270. The old record was 271. SPORTS California Whips OSC Berkeley -(UPD - Oregon State threw a scare into Cali fornia Saturday night by run ning up an early lead, but the Bears notched lip their 18th consecutive heme-court victory with a 67-4 j margin at the final whistle Oregon State has never won a game here. The visitors gained their early advantage through a spread offense and fast ball passing. Accurate shooting from outer court by Jim Woodland paced the Oregon State attack." ' Darrell Imhoff moved the Bears ahead at 21-20 after 13V minutes of play. The lead never changed again although it was midway into the second half before the game was sewed up. Dave Stafford, who came in for Bill McClintock in the second half, proved a valu able substitute by sinking 13 points in quick succession. He had 16 for the game, whicn was high for California and the same total as Woodland had for the visitors. Jim Grelle Cops Mile New York - (LTD - John Thomas, the space age's self propelled human rocket, ap pears to have an all-expenses-paid trip to F.ome this sum mer clinched if he can avoid such man-made lifts as ele vators. Thomas produced the top high jump in track history i Saturday night - indoors or out - when he cleared seven feet, IV2 inches at the Mill rose Games. The "leapers" stole the Millrose show. Don (Tarzan) Bragg, who won the pole vault by clearing 15 feet, 4 inches, barely missed becom ing the first man to clear 16 feet when he brushed off .the bar in his last try at that height. In other features,. Jim Grelle of Oregon won the Wanamaker Mile in 4:06.4, Hayes Jones of Eastern Mich igan equaled the world record by winning the 60-yard high hurdles in seven seconds, Frank Budd of Villanova won the 60-yard dash in 6.2 sec onds, Mai Spence of Arizona State and Jamaica, B.W.I., won the 600 -yard race in 1:11.5, Tom Murphy of New York won the 880 in 1:53, and Al Lawrence, an Australian attending the University of Houston, was only a second off the world indoor mark in taking the three-mile run in 13:88. Lawrence set a meet mark. 9' Beyond him is Crater's Dick Woods. Other players are Harley Dickerson, (35) Ashland, and Dave Sharp, (14), Crater. The Comets won 61 to 43. FN Bankers Hold Lead In Bowling First National Bank with 2936 in Class A and White law Candy company with 2964 in Class B took team leads in the first week end of contention in the annual Medford Bowling association tourney. Additional team rolling is set for next Saturday and Sunday. Bulk of the doubles and singles competition is set for Feb. 13 and 14 and for Feb. 20 and 21. . In some advance Class A doubles Bill York and Orville James carded 1212 and Roger Weiss and Don. Hunter 1183. York posted a 626 singles with handicap score and Paul Bell a 612. James has 1792 in all events and York 1783. . Ray Adams got himself off to a good start in the all events chase with a 265 game and 656 series,, both scratch, in his play for Team Nine. Other Class team scores over the week end intruded Ashland Travelers 2920, FAM Bearing 2895, Timber Room 2859, Rogue Valley Drilling company 2857 and Sewing Machine center 2845. Among Class B counts were Big Y Market 2916, Team Nine 2907, Rogue Valley Vending 2905, Hapco Service 2871, Tele phone Employees association 2870, Prospect Shopping cen ter 2868 and Medford Steel company 2860. Olympic Torch Put on Plane Oslo, Norway - (UPD The torch with the Olympic flame from the cradle of Norwegian skiing was placed aboard a plane Sunday night for an over the North Pole trip to Los Angeles and Squaw Val ley, Calif. The torch, ignited in impres sive ceremonies at Norgedal, Telemark, Sunday was ex pected to arrive at Los Angeles at 11:15 a.m. p.s.t. from where it was to be carried to Squaw Valley by 600 relay runners to burn during the 13th Olym pic Winter Games later this month. Portland State Keeps OCC Lead United Press International Portland State widened its Oregon Collegiate conference lead Saturday night with an 87-58 win over Eastern Ore gon. Oregon Tech bounced Oregon College 79-53 in the other conference game. The Vikings have a league record of 5-2. Oregon Tech moved into second place with its win and has a record of 5-3. Southern Oregon, which was idle over the weekend has a 4-4 mark. Red Raiders Oppose San Francisco Glub Ashland - Revenge is on the minds of the varsity hoopmen at Southern Oregon college as they prepare to take on San Francisco State college Tues day at 8:15 p.m. in the Raid er basketball castle. SOC's junior Raiders will host the high scoring Hawk- Hawkinson, Big Y Nab SOIBL Tilts SOIBL STANDINGS: W. L. Pet. Hawkinson Tire Tread 8 0 1.000 SO College JV 6 Andy's Jewelers 4 Butte Falls 4 Big Y Markets 3 National Guard .. 2 Glendale 1 .800 .571 .444 .333 .286 .125 A Southern Oregon Inde pendent Basketball league doublebill will be played at McLoughlin gym here this evening. National Guard meets Andy's Jewelers in the 7 p.m. game and Big Y Mar kets encounters Glendale in the second. Tuesday play will have Hawkinsori's at Southern Ore gon college junior varsity at Ashland at 6:30 p.m. Nation al Guard is to be guest of Southern Oregon JV on Wed nesday and Andy's and Big Y play that night at McLoughlin court. National Guard action bill ed at Butte Falls for yesterday was postponed. Big Y Markets, helped by a goal by an opposing player, nicked Butte Falls 68 to 67 Saturday night in the South ern Oregon Independent Bas ketball league. Hawkinson Tire Tread, unmarred in the loop, overpowered Glendale 84 to 45 yesterday. The Marketeers lagged 54 to 40 at halftime but caught up just after the start cf the second half. They kept the lead the last five minutes. Bill Irwin of Butte , Falls put a shot through the Big Y hoop about midway through the nip and tuck last half. Don Reese collected 25 points and Vera Steward 18 for Big Y and Al McCorquo dale 18 and Irwin and Darwin Moore each 17 for Butte Falls. Hawkinson's (8-0) topped 43 to 21 at halftime. Dave D'Olivo had 23 points for the Tiremen. Bud Smart totaled 15 and Jess Munyon 16 for Glendale. - ; LINEUPS: 68 Big Y Butte Falls 67 F 25 Reese Irwin 17 F 4 Robertson Moore 17 C 4 Nolan McCorquodale 18 G 15 Kile D. Smith 4 G 12 Weddle Veach 11 Substitutions For Big Y, Yar nell 5. Bertrand 3; for Butte Falls. Nelson, Ferguson. 84 Hawkinson's Gleniale 45 F 23 D'Olivo Smiling 4 F 6 Hollingsworth . Jimenez 2 C 5 Newton Smart 15 G 10 McAbee Munyon 16 G 14 Johnson Reynolds 3 Substitutions For Hawkinson's, Vannice 2. Steward 18, Van Dolah 8; for Glendale, Yoder 1, Densley. Oakland Has AFL Berth Oakland, Calif. -(UPD- Oak land, now certain of a spot in the new American Football league, started hunting today for such necessary items as a coach, general manager, home field ?nd some players. "Things are very indefinite right now," said Chet Soda, one of the team's well-heeled backers following Saturday's surprise decision by the new loop at its Dallas meeting. The big stumbling block is the team's lack of a home stadium. There is none in Oakland, although Soda thinks that the city will pass a 15-million-dollar bond issue in June to build one. CLOSED ALL DAY TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY inson's team from Medford who set an Independent league record by scoring 117 points last week. Game time for the junior affair is 6:30 p.m. Coach Ted Schopf's Red Raiders will be fresh for the encounter after a week of rest. The visiting Gators will have played three games in the past five days. SFS tan gled with the University of San Francisco Thursday and lost 70-51 before traveling to Areata. Calif, for a two-game week end series with Hum boldt State. The battle with Humboldt was for the Far Western con ference lead which the Gators held prior to the series. SOC will go with its usual lineup of high scoring Gordy Carrigan and Brad Flanary at guards, Glen Peterson at cen ter, and John Payne and Don Vannice at forwards. San Francisco plans to start the Caranica twins, Jim and Nick, at guard, Bill Purcell and John Christgau at for ward, and Mahlon Harmon at center. Jim Caranica at 5-8 is the top scorer on the club with over 200 points in 16 games. Center Harmon is the leading rebounder and these two play ers are the main Gator threats. Caranica is a deadly driver and has a jump shot which makes up for his lack of height. The back door play is the other threat Schopf is having to teach his club to be ready for as it was one of the main weapons that sunk the men of SOC last year ' in a single game in the Bay area. This is where the guard drives the corner and the offensive for ward hesitates just before moving quickly for the bas ket to take a pass from the guard. Following this non-conference encounter, the Raiders will play two games with Eastern Oregon college here in Ashland next Friday and Saturday. Raider scoring for 16 games: FG FT 92 55 68 27 37 26 32 35 TP AVE. RB 103 150 145 100 39 66 57 33 17 23 2 Carrigan Payne ... Peterson Smith ... 239 14.9 163 100 10.2 5.5 5.4 6.8 4.5 3.7 2.7 2.9 1.3 1.0 99 82 72 55 41 32 17 2 Flanary 28 26 Vannice 27 Bernet 23 Puhl 12 Lillebo 14 18 9 17 4 3 0 Gardner 7 White 1 Skate Title Captured By Jenkins Seattle - (UPD - Cute Carol Heiss and dynamic David Jenkins, both a pair of four time national winners, set their sights today on an Olym pic Games figure skating gold medal. Miss Heiss, 20, of New York City, easily wrapped up her fourth title in senior ladies competition in the four-day National Figure Skating Meet. Jenkins, a 23-year-old medi cal student from Colorado Springs, Colo., climaxed the tournament here Saturday with a spectacular display of free style skating. It enabled the 5-6, 135 pound dynamo to overtake Tim Brown of Los Angeles in the senior men's division. Brown held a narrow lead over Jenkins after completion of the school figures which account for 60 per cent of a contestant's total. Nancy and Ronald Luding ton, a terrific husband -wife duo from Boston, also won an Olympic bid with a victory in senior pairs as did second place Maribel Owen and Dud ley Richards, Boston, and the third place team, Ila Ray and Ray Hadley, Jr., Seattle. MAIN AT CENTRAL St. Mary's Nudges IV Two Jackson County B league basketball frays are set for Tuesday evening. Talent high plays St. Mary's at Medford and Butte Falls vies at Prospect. That phrase, "the skin of its teeth," applied twice this week end to the St. Mary's high basketball team. Roger Hout dropped in the tying and winning points on separate trips to the free line Saturday night as thr Cru saders nosed out Illinois Val ley 49 to 48 in a non-league game at Cave Junction. On Friday night St. Mary's had barely nicked Butte Falls 46 to 45 on a last second goal. Hout put in his second shot of a two-shot chance with five seconds left for the winning marker at Cave Junction. IV. which had trailed 33 to 40 af the third quarter rest, went ahead of the Medford team 48 to 47 in the closing mo ments. Then a Hout gifter tied it at 48-all. IV headed 15 to 10 at the quarter and St. Mary's 27 to 24 at the half of the rough game. Dick Evans had 17 points for SM and Doug Lewis 13 for the Cougars. The Crusaders put in only seven of 21 free tries to IV's 12 of 20 but beat the Cougars from the field 21 to 18. St. Mary's is now 1 1-2 in win loss record for the season. LINEUPS: 49 St. Mary's 111. Valley 48 F 7 Hout Buckhaults 2 F 17 D. Evans M. Hanby 12 C 13 Yates T. Johnson 7 G 8 B. Evans Lewis 14 G 4 Dalev Turner 5 Substitutions For St. Mary's, Calhoun, Shasky; for IV. Baird 8. Hill. Chieftains Take Freshman Mix Rogue River-Howard Tom linson collected 20 points and Jack Saltcrs 16 Saturday night in a Rogue River high freshman 49 to 40 basketball win over Glendale. Bowen had 17 for the Glendale club. Rogue River had quarter leads of 11 to 5, 25 to 16 and 40 to 26. A varsity game between Rogue River and Canyonvllle, originally set for last Satur day night, has been resched uled for Feb. 23. BASKETBALL SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES United Press International CCNY 90. Brooklyn Col. 87 (ot) Seton Hall 83. Fordham 73 St. Bonaventure 93. Marshall 30 North Carolina St. 90. Clemson 69 Florida St. 78. Morehead St. 75 Illinois 71, Notre Dame 67 Idaho St. 71, Regis 56 UCLA 76. Air Force Acad. 75 So. Cal. 90. Hickam Field A-S 53 Seattle Pacific 79. Chapman 67 Pasadena Nazarene 88, Occiden tal 49 Chico St. 66. Sacramento St. Fresno St. 71, Long Beach 70 (ot) S.F. State 55. Humboldt 51 S J State 57, S. D. State 52 Creighton 40. Gonzaga 38 Whitworth 75. G. Wash. 69 Santa Barbara 66. Cal Aggies 53 Portland St. 87, E. Oregon 58 Willamette 106. Lewis & Clark 87 Linfield 75. Pacific 57 Oregon Tech 79, OCE 53 Worried About the High Cost of Auto Repairs? Allstate' s "Disappearing Deductible" Pays up to Twice as Much as Ordinary Collision Coverage Most Collision insurance has a fixed deduct ible amount, regardless of the size of the accident. But with Allstate's $50 Disappearing Deductible, the higher the bill, the less you pay. If the bill is $100 (or over), you pay nothing . . . Allstate pays your repair bill in full. Look how it works to save you money: QIDIMtT SSi DEDUni.Lt -8SS 1,,, -mount Tm (tnpinv Tm AIIKott tf biH f tf fop tf Poys $o0 $50 $15 $40 $20 $75 $50 $?S $25 $50 $100 ! $50 $53 Nothing Entirt bill Over $100 j $50 lem-indtr of bid Nothing Entire biH For all the facts aboat Allstate's broad pro tection . . . money-saving low rates . . . and "on-the-spot" claim service, call today. AGENTS: JOHN FRANTZ, DOUG HINESLY AND BERNIE SEARS SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. BLDG. 501 Ei Jackson Blvd., Medford, Oregoa Phone: SPring 3-4722 You're In AUTO PROPERTY ACCIDENT and SICKNESS LIPB Horn OITIot: Skotlt, IHinolt MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Of. C Monday, Feb. 1, 1960 . Stanford Clips Ducks Stanford. Calif.- (UPD -Stanford put on its biggest scor ing spree of the season to de feat Oregon 77-61 Saturday night. The win pushed the Indians above the .500 mark for the season. They have a 9-8 record. John Arrillaga, who sat out the first half with an ankle injury, scored 13 points in the second half to transform a close game into a near-rout. High scorer in the game was sophomore John Windsor with 20 points. Windsor scored 18 points in the first half and was largely responsible for Stanford's 35-30 lead at the intermission. Oregon, which dropped its sixth game in 19 starts, was never closer than five points after Arrillaga hit a pair of jump shots early in the third quarter. Oregon next meets Oregon State at Eugene Friday night and at Corvallis Saturday night. TAKE FOUR-BALL Hollywood, Fla. -0.TII- Jo anne Goodwin and Doris Phil lips held the women's Inter national Four-ball Golf cham pionship today and for Miss Goodwin the victory was doubly sweet. She and Miss Phillips defeated Judy Bell and Barbara Mclntire 2 and 1 to win the championship Sunday. good hands with Hop To It! iSave On Your New Chevrolet- During 'OPPORTUNITY DAYS" 2nd Big Week 1 . - . . - M 47 ar four volume ueaie? gr St. 11 mm ta vaam II U UUUHItM ;j (( CHEVROLET )) 9TH t BARTLETT 11 - See our ad in classified IlNIUHNCI COMPANIES