t
Eastern Oregonian
Quintet Tops SOC
United Press Inlernational
Oregon Tech's Owls dump
ed Portland State from first
place in the Oregon Collegiate
conference Friday night with
a 65-54 victory.
The Owls moved into first
place with a record of 6-3
compared to Portland State's
5-4.
Ashland - Eastern Oregon
college utilized a fast break
in the final 10 minutes of
play to down Southern Ore
gon college 58-51 in an Ore
gon Collegiate conference bas
ketball game here Friday
night
Mel Holmes and Frank
Chase shared high point hon
ors for Eastern with 15 points
each.
Dick (Hughie) Smith was
high for the losing Red Raid
ers with 12 points and a sea
son record total of 19 re
bounds. He came in midway
in the first half and played
the rest of the game.
- SOC outrebounded the
Mounties of EOC 50-37 but
the visitors hit 35 per cent
from the field and 80 per cent
from the gift line to the Raid
ers 31 from the field and 50
from the line.
Trailed the Route
The Raiders were behind
all the way and at one time
in the first stanza the Moun
ties held a 20-5 lead. The men
of SOC whittled the gap to
30-23 by half time.
SOC got fired up near the
halfway point in the second
half. They pulled within one
point at 39-38. Smith hit nine
South GP
Takes Tilt
South Grants Pass nosed
Hedrick 33 to 30 in ninth
grade hoop contention at GP
but the eighth and seventh
Krade clubs from Medford
were victors 30 to 27 and 29
to 24, respectively.
Hedrick's ninth had canto
margins of 14 to 3, 22 to 15
. and 28 to 25 but the Hornet
cause was hurt when .Gib
Mitchell . fouled out in the
third quarter. South domi
nated the boards during the
whole game and shot twice as
much as the Medford five in
narrowing the difference and
overtaking the Hornets in the
second half.
The Hedrick eighth had 10
to 5, 21 to 11 and 29 to 14
intermission advantages. La-'
Tandresse scored 14 points for
the Trojans and Rich Knight
seven for Hedrick.
Hornet seventh graders
went on top 23 to 21 in the
third quarter after trailing 6
to 8 and 15 to 18 at the other
halts. Due he in added 12
markers for GP and Gary
Smith 11 for Hedrick.
LINEUPS:
33 South GP Hedrick 30
T 5 Benner Anderson 8
T 6 Wade Ross 7
C 5 Gibson Mitchell 10
G S Keisacker Miles o
G Keller Stockton
Substitutions For South. Pippin
6. White 6: for Hedrick, Gilbertson.
Rail ton.
of the Raiders' 13 points In
the splurge.
Chase suffered a broken
tooth while fighting for a re
bound. He continued the game
with the roots still embedded.
SCORING: EOC - Chase 15,
Olinger 4, Arritola 13, Holmes
15, Hunt 4, Jones 2, Barnhart
5; SOC - Vannice 4, Payne 9,
Peterson, Flanary 11, Carri
gan 6, Bernet 9, Smith 12.
St. Mary's
Cinches B
Loop Toga
JACKSOV COUNTY
B LEAGUE STANDINGS
W. L.
St. Mary's 7 0
Prospect 4 3
Butte Falls 2 5
Talent 1 8
Pet
1.000
.571
.286
.143
St. Mary's of Medford sur
vived a scare and went on to
edge Prospect high 32 to 27
on the Crusader basketball
court Friday night and
cinched the county B toga.
Leadership changed hands
14 times and the game was
deadlocked on , seven occa
sions. Quarter scores were 7
to 6, 16 to 14, and 20 to 22,
all in favor of the Crusaders.
In the first half, cold shoot
ing and poor passing ham
pered the Crusaders, yet the
Cougars were unable to take
advantage of the Crusader lag.
Prospect used a four man
zone defense with one man
playing man. to nian against
high scoring Crusader Bob
Evans. Ron Daley's outside
shooting' beat the zone as he
dropped in 10 points.
Daley -put the Crusaders
into the last tie of the game
on ajlong set, Bob followed
with a long jumper and Daley
added another' jumper to put
the-Crusaders;.' in,to the lead
for good. i. 1-
Each team hit TO field goals
but the Crusaders hit 12 of
15 foul shots while the Cou
gars put in 7 of 14.
McLoughlin
Cops Three
McLoughlin Junior High
school won all three games
with Ashland Friday after
noon on the Bulldog basket
ball court.
Scores of the games were 44
to 31 in the ninth grade con
flict, 42 to 21 in the eighth
grade scuffle, and 36 to 9 in
the seventh.
In the ninth grade game the
Bulldogs used a fast break
and full court press to good
advantage as they picked up
several cripples. On offense
they worked the ball well and
took good shots.
Quarter scores for the Bull
dogs were 9 to 7, 18 to 11, 33
to 19. Mike Neathamer tallied
15 and Dick Deffley added 11.
The two led the fast break
and press. Gale Tepper hit for
14 points for the losers.
In the eighth grade conflict
Mike Barnes dropped in 12
points to lead the Bulldogs.
Period scores were for Mc
Loughlin 12 to 5, 25 to 7, 29
to 16. Dean Samuelson had
nine points for Ashland.
Larry Stockman dropped in
22 points in the seventh grade
rout.
LINEUPS:
44 McLouehlin
Lowery
Farnsworth
Sanders
Neathamer
Tn rf T ....
Substitution!
Parts afas. Bell
F 3
F 3
C 9
G IS
G 11
Ashland 31
Rolk 2
Watts
Tepper G. 14
Hess 9
Tepper 6
For McLoughlin,
saiyers, btiger.
Talent - Butte Falls high
used a 20 to 6 advantage at
the free toss line Friday night
to clip Talent 54 to 48 in Jack
son County B league basket-
ban. ' ,
Talent's .Bulldogs had a 21
to 17 edge from the field.
The Loggers of Butte Falls
were ahead at the intermis
sions 11" to 8, 23 to 21 and
37 to 34. Talent caught up in
the last quarter but BF broke
a deadlock with free markers
in the last couple, of minutes
of play.
Talent won the junior var
sity mix 42 to 19.
32 St. Mary's Prosoect 27
F 4 D. Evans Chapman 2
F 8 B. Evans Gardner 4
C 6 Yates Williams 2
G 2 Hout ; Fitch 6
G 10 Daley . Scaife 9
Substitutions For St. Marys:
Shasky, Calhoun; for Prospect:
Sweat. Gardner.
LINEUPS:
54 Butte Falls Talent 48
F 7 Baker Seaver 18
F 13 A. Ellis Dickenson 12
C 13 Abbott Bradford 12
G 14 Remsen M. Jacobs
G 6 Ellefson Johnson 2
Substitutions F o r Butte Falls.
N. Ellis 1: for Talent. Skundrick.
Combs, Burnette, Davis 4.
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This is the
E
MEDFORD
801 N. Riverside
GRANTS PASS
237 Hiwy 99-S
9 a.m. 6 p.m. Week Days
land, Catton, DeKarte.' Hudson
Langer, Johnson, Hamilton, Lewis
BOWLEG
CITY LEAGUE
Standings:
State Farm Insurance...
Telephone Employees
Farmers Brothers Coffee-
Silver Dollar Stamps
Westside Merchants
Tic Toe Time Shop
Ross Lumber Co
Daugherty Lumber Co
C W A No. 9208
First National Bank
Weter & Olson
Johnston Stores
Central Market
California Oregon Power
Domestic Laundry
Rogue Sportsmen :
Results:
CWA 0 (Doug Williams 551)
2688; Silver Dollar 4 (Wayne Kyker
572 2813.
Johnston 4 (Del Ross 621) 2794;
Ross Lbr. 0 (Gale Culy 516) 2631.
Copco 1 (Bud Schroeder 530)
2697; T E A A 3 (Howard Hickman
518) 2653.
Weter & Olson 3 (Bill Luman
(268 game) 616) 2910; Daugherty 1
(Vint Pope 507) 2763.
Farmers 3 (Fred Anderson 579)
2764; Westside 1 (Carl Landis 510)
2686.
Tic Toe 4 (Wallv Kanfer iit
oo4; central iviki. u (Unas. Mc
Whorter 519) 2646.
St. Farm 3 IA1 Miller ssm
Dmestic 1 (Howard Blew 507) 2726
Rogue 0 (Mao McDonald aat.
r vt j3 lArnoia Jdauman
570) 2752.
W. L.
17 7
16 8
14 10
14 10
14 10
14 10
13 11
13 11
12 12
12 12
12 12
11 13
9 15
9 15
8 16
4 20
sipaDiHnrs
Black Tornado Chalks Up
First Mat Win Over Pels
MedTord high wrestling var
sity is celebrating the first
Black Tornado mat victory in
history over Klamath Falls.
Tornado grapplers defeated
the Pelicans 23 to 21 here
yesterday.
The triumph went into the
record when Chuck Shaw,
Medford's unlimited weight
participant, pinned Klamath's
Charleton Currin in the third
round of the concluding
match. Shaw was leading 5
to 0 at the time but if he'd
won by a decision the team
match would have ended ia a
21-each tie.
Klamath led 21 to 18 after
11 bouts.
Five Each
Each school took five in
dividual scuffles and two
bouts were draws. Medford
margin overall was on the
strength of two pins to the
Pelicans' one.
Shaw scored his fall with
50 seconds left in the last
round. Just before that,
Chuck Holt had won by a pin
for Medford in the 178-pound
class. He put the Tornado
within striking distance by
breaking a 1-1 tie with a take
down and then a pin in the
last 30 seconds.
Gary Head, Klamath, gain
ed a decision over Jim Spitz,
98, Medford, with a reversal
-i i , . ,t
wiui one second io go in uie
opening varsity match.
Klamath edged Medford 35
to 34 in the jayvee skirmishes.
VARSITY RESULTS:
98 Gary Head, K, dec. Jim
Spitz, M. 2-0; 106 Milo Crumnne,
K. dec. Clay Varney. M. 6-1; 115
Dennis Pugmire. M, dec. Ross
Griggs, K, 3-0; 123 Dave Baker,
M, drew with Sherd Duncan, K,
3-3; 130 Dan Eddy. M, dec. Tren
ton Douglas. K, 3-0; 136 Wayne
Fields. M, dec. Dan Ross, K, 10-5;
141 Ray Smith, M, drew with
Dave Gonzales, K, 1-1: 148 Larry
Wlshart, K, pinned Larry Gunn,
M. 2nd: 157 Billy O'Neil. K. dec.
Bill Charley, M, 4-0: 168 Art
Mills. K. dec. Bob Rix. 2-0; 178
Chuck Holt, M, pinned Sam Hen
zel, K, 3rd: Unlimited Chuck
snaw, M. pinnea uiarieton i-ur-
nn, it, 3rd
JV MATCHES:
106 Gary Fields. M. dec. John
cole, K. 3-1; 115 Larry uidds, K,
dec. Jim Berg. M, 2-0; 123 Gary
Leavitt. K. dec. Bill Owens, M
7-0; 123 Gary Bishop. K. pinned
Bill Dames. M, 1st; 130 Bob Mit
chell. K. dec. Sonny Leffler, M,
10-8; 130 Bob Burnett, K, dec.
Doug Robertson. M, 2-0; 130 Don
weter, jyl, pmnea, uean metcau,
K. 1st: 140 Dale Crumrine. K.
pinned Hiram Martin, M. 3rd; 148
John de Place, M, dec. Gary
Netzer. K. 9-2: 148 Tim White.
M. dec. Ron Reinmiller, K, 4-3:
Joe Keller, M, drew with Henry
Swisegood, K. 6-6; 148 Paul Gar
ren, M, "jinned Lynn McKune, K,
3rd: 157 Steve Shults. K. pinned
Russ Robertson, M, 1st; 178 Al
Funston, M, dec. Loran Ambers. K.
7-2; 178 Les Husted, K. dec. Brent
Mitchell. M, 2-0; 191 Terry O'Sul-
livan, M, pinned Jerry Benson, K,
2nd; 191 Monte Jones, M, pinned
Rick Currin, K, 2nd; 167 Duane
Fitzsimmons, K, dec. Gary Max
son, M, l-O.
Russell Sets New
Rebound Record
United Press International
. Big Bill Russell isn't taking
any chances on Wilt Chamber
lain also snaring his individ
ual game rebounding record.
The Boston basket climber
set a new National Basketball
association mark of 51 re
bounds in a single contest
Friday night as the Celtics
clobbered the Syracuse Na
tionals, 124-100.
In the only other action,
the St. Louis Hawks handed
Minneapolis its fifth straight
loss, 114-96.
Marshall Tops
Portland Five
Huntington, W. Va. (DPD
A smaller, but speedier Mar
shall college basketball team
out shot and out .- ran rangy
University of Portland Friday
night to gain an easy 72-60
win.
The Big Green, in evening
its record at 9-9, had four
players in double figures. Lou
Mott, Bob Burgess and John
Milhoan had 18 points each
and Tex Williams had 10 for
the winners.
Marshall took the lead after
nine minutes of play and mov
ed into a 39-27 margin at the
intermission.
Oregon Webfoots Victors
63-53 Over OSC Beavers
Eugene-(UPD-Oregon's Ducks
broke a three-game losing
streak here Friday night, by
beating arch - rival Oregon
State 63-53.
EP Moves
Into Second
In League
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
Stand inire id t
Tee Pee Plywood 12 0
Ideal Cement 9 3
Communication Workers 7 5
Table Rock Lumber 6 6
riuenes & Dodd 5 1
Cove Valley Supply 5 7
Midway Meats 5 7
Hires Root Beer 5 7
Timber Wolves 3 9
Eagle Point Teachers 3 9
Results:
Table Rock 2 (B. Jones 571) 2806:
Hlghes & Dodd 2 (B. Essary 576)
2740.
Wolves 2 (B. Tone 5751 2770-
CWA 2 (C. McDaniels 607) 2717.
Midway 3 (J. Korner 609) 2696;
Cove Valley 1 (D. Spain 573) 2675.
ineai 1 ia. Vincent -5B2 251s:
EP Teachers 3 (B. Hall 609) 2600.
xee fee 4 j. Turk 604) 2699;
Hires 0 (D. Toomey 524) 2570.
High game Jack Turk 253.
TRIO LEAGUE
Standings: w.
Sears Store ... 1
Keith Schultz Garage 6
Team Five 6
Ross Mobilgas 5
McCulloch Chain Saw 5
Southern Oregon Bearing ... 4
Cascade Electric 4
Medford Lumber 4
Mansfield Chevron 3
Oregon Tire Service Dept 2
Country Club 2
Oregon Tire Cap Shop 0
Results:
Cascade 3 (D. Brertort 520) 1701;
Oregon Tire 1 (D. Newman 501)
1632.
Medford Lumber 1 (A. Ayres
470) 1594; Mansfield's 3 (D. Cook
567) 1659. -
Schultz's 4 (K. Shultz 469) 1614;
Country Club 0 (G. Parker 461)
1492.
Ross Mobilgas 3 (D. - McCarty
512) 1633; McCulloch Saw 1 (B.
Moore 587) 1581.
Team Five 4 (J. Coroma ' 496)
1587: Oregon Tire Cap Shop 0 (for
feiture). S O Bearing 1 (D. Kuschel 497)
1664; Sean 3 (P. Jersen 550) 1672.
EARLY BIRD LEAGUE
Standings:
Tally no
Van Lees
Kims No. 1 .
Valley Locker .
Niagara Dusters
Kim's Two
W.
35
28 'a
L.
17
23 'i
28 24
26 26
25 27
1314 38
Results:
Niagara Dusters 2 (S. Brooks
365) 2055; Kims Two 2 (G. Smith
390) 2073.
Tally Ho 3 (C. Baylor 465) 2065;
Van Lees 1 (B. St. Clair 428) 1953.
Kims Two 0 (M. Price 385) 2027;
Valley Locker 4 (J. Richardson
413) 2093.
High game C. Baylor 211.
BALL AND CHAIN LEAGUE
Standings: W.
Mix Uppers 14
Woodchoppers 1 1
The Pills 10
Four Strikes 9
The Convicts 3
Big C's 8
The Toppers 8
K-Medleys 8
ROGUE LEAGUE STANDINGS:
W. L. Pet.
Phoenix , , ,, .,, 4 1
Eagle Point 4 2
Glendale 3 2
Illinois Valley 3 3
Rogue River 0 6
1.000
.667
.600
.500
.000
Eagle Point high moved in
to second place in the Rogue
league basketball standings
Friday night by lashing Rogue
River 46 to 27 while Illinois
Valley nudged Glendale 59 to
57.
In a non-league tussle Hen
ley tripped Rogue leader
Phoenix 42 to 39.
The Eagles utilized hotter
shooting, their hustle and
their height to drub the
league's cellarite. EP leads
were 11 to 6, 27 to 12 and 40
to 21. Points were well dis
tributed among the victors
with Dick Wilson's nine top
ping the list.
Mike Hanby flipped in two
free throws with seven sec
onds remaining for the Illi
nois. Valley margin. The Cou
gars won out after Glendale
spreads of 30 to 24 at the half
and 42 to 41 after three pe
riods. IV had a 14 to 8 first
quarter gap.
At Henley the Hornets took
the lead for good in the first
canto but headed just 32 to 30
after three sessions. Henley
stayed on top also through
the final quarter but three
free points by Mike - Cons
bruck for Phoenix cut the
lead to 40 to 39 with 45 sec
onds left. Bob Chapman pad
ded it for the Hornets with
two gifters with 15 seconds
to go.
Quarter differences were
13 to 9, 22 to 17 and 32 to 30.
While Henley fired more
accurately from the field,
Phoenix led in field goals 14
to 13. The Hornets put in 16
free markers and Phoenix 11.
Eagle Point took its junior
varsity scuffle 65 to 38 with
Neil Cooper scoring 16 points.
Ben Stalker had 14 for Rogue
River. Henley junior varsity
downed Phoenix 42 to 37
After an early game 5-5 tie
Oregon reeled off nine
straight points to take a 14-5
lead and Oregon State never
seriously threatened after
that.
Oregon built a 33-22 half
time bulge and at one time
in the second half had a 15
point lead at 45-30. With five
minutes left the Ducks had a
57-42 bulge.
Oregon State's Jim Wood
land kept the Beavers in con
tention in the second half as
he hit for 17 points. But it
wasn't enough to overcome
the shooting of Glenn Moore,
Chuck Rask and Charlie War
ren. Moore topped Oregon's
scoring with 18 points. Rask
had 14 and Warren 15 al
though being thumbed from
the game with over five min
utes to play for a scuffle with
OSC's Bob Niles. .
The win gave Oregon a 14-6
season record. Oregon State
is 10-7.
BASKETBALL
SATURDAY RESULTS
' Indiana 97, Wisconsin 85
Colorado 65, Kansas St. 50
Notre Dame 87, Army 55
Duke 58, Navy 48
Ohio St. 77, Northwestern 58
Pennsylvania 58, Brown 57 (o.t.)
Dartmouth 83. Cornell 79
Purdue 68. Michigan St. 65
. Wake Forest 65. Maryland 64
Georgia Tech 74, Tulane 55
' Georgia Tech 74, Tulane 55
Princeton 69, Yale 60
Manhattan 62, Syracuse 61
Kentucky 61. Mississippi 43
Ohio U. 86, Marshall 82
Cincinnati 67, Houston 55
West Virginia 101, George .Wash
ington 10
Illinois 75, Michigan 61
Toledo 61, Detroit 59
William & Mary 101, Furman 68
Seton Hall 93. Lafayette 68
Clemson 74, Virginia 56
with Herringshaw getting 13.
LINEUPS:
46 Eagle Point
F 8 Ayres
F 9 Wilson
C 7 Jorde
G 4 Geren
4 Palm
Rogue River 27
Kite 4
6
6
1
2
Frantz
LeRoy
Phil Archer
Van Dorn
Substitutions For Eagle Point,
Chamberlain, Greb 8, Cooper 2,
Berryman 2, Perdue, West 2; for
Rogue River, Olympius, Simer 6,
Allison. Gail 2.
Glendale 57
Allen 15
Blevins 8
Thompson 9
59 111. Valley
F 6 Baird
F 17 BuckhaulU
C 13 Lewis
G 6 Johnson
G 13 M. Hanby ...
Berline 14
Humphreys 7
Substitutions For Illinois Val
ley, Turner 2, Hill 2; for Glendale,
Fox 4, Vaughn.
42 Henley
F 7 Allbritton .
F 6 Chapman .
C 2 Gooding
G 18 Jackson
G 5 Kendall
Phoenix 39
Consbruck 5
Sloper" 5
Atchison- 8
; . Reese 2
Floyd 9
Substitutions F o r Phoenix. O.
Rickey 3, Bakr 2, Hemmingway
5; for Henley, Reiling 4, Blofsky.
Pea Pickers
Chuck & Orr's
Four Blows
Rock & Rollers
Four Spares
Rinky-Dinks
Results:
Four Blows 4 (R. Vowell 492)
1659; Rinky-Dinks 0 (T. Nolan 506)
1485.
Mix Uppers 3 (Vi Corby 495)
1996; Four Spares 1 (J. Farrar 606)
2019.
Chuck & Orrs 2 (Ruth Shama
459) 1691; The Toppers 2 (C. Eng
land 484) 1716.
Pea Pickers 0 (P. Coggins 526)
1689; Four Strikes 4 (L. Howe 525)
1816. '
Rock & Rollers 3 (Thelma Tolles
545) 1938; Wood Choppers i (C.
Exicson 550) 1885.
K-Medleys 1 (T. Thompson 541)
1760; The Pills 3 (F. Salyers 552)
2140.
Big C'c 3 (Maxine McCall 546)
1998; The Convicts 1 (J. Burroughs
603) 1980.
Populations of the United
States increased by 3?.4 per
cent between the yearn from
1800 to 1810.
BARGAIN GRADE
2x48'
$a00 Per M'
Chenev Slud Mill
AT
Central Point
Palmer Leads
Palm Classic
Palm Springs, Calif. (DPD
Provo, Utah golf pro Billy
Johnston fired a five-under-par
67 Saturday in the fourth
round of the $100,000 Palm
Desert Golf classic.
J o h n s 1 6 n remained two
strokes off the pace, and in a
three-way tie for third place.
John Palmer, Tulsa, Okla.,
led the pack after yesterday's
play with a 272. In the runner-up
slot was Arnold Palm
er, Logonier, Pa., with a 273.
ARCHER DIES
Salem - (DPD - Harry D. Hob
son, Salem, once holder of the
National Archery distance rec
ord, died Friday. He was 71.
A hurricane can lift two bil
lson tons of water from the
ocean and hurl them back as
torrential rains within a day.
Canada's first hospital, the
Hotel Dieu at Quebec, was
opened by a French religious
order in 1639.
Public Receives
Distorted Image
Of Drug Industry
Washington, (Science Serv-ice)-Charges
of overpricing
among manufacturers of tran
quilizers have drawn fire
from one representative of
that industry here.
The public is getting a
"distorted image" of the drug
industry from the current
hearings on drug pricing. The
Senate hearings are also seri
ously disturbing public confi
dence in the medical care
provided in the United States,
he charged.
The drug industry wel
comes scrutiny. Dr. Austin
Smith, president of the
Pharmaceutical Manufactur
ers Association, claimed. How
ever, it does not welcome in
vestigations that result in
"scare" headlines.
He emphasized that seek
ing the facts, presumably of
drug pricing practices, is
"laudable." But to prejudge
or to err by depending in
part on what he termed
"meaningless or questionable"
figures is unfortunate.
Commenting upon recent
allegations that the cost of
some tranquilizers was at
least 1,000 per cent more than
cost, Dr. Smith said in an
editorial in the American
Professional Pharmacist mag
azine: "Who in the news field
would not be interested in
the suggestiveness of charges
of several thousand per cent
markup? But are such fig
ures meaningful? Of course
not, if the base is computed
on the cost of raw materials."
He then mentioned labor,
overhead, selling and qual
ity control costs as influen
tial factors in determining
the price of a drug.
He cited figures, which he
claimed were gathered by as
sociates, that showed profits
for the drug industry in the
boom years 1951 through 1955
averaged only 10.2 per cent.
They have averaged 12.3 per
cent for the past decade.
Although company profits
in the drug industry are high
er than in some other indus
tries, without naming the
"other" industries, they fall
well within the normal range
of industrial profits, he maintained.
CRIME COSTS
Washington - Crime In the
U.S. at present rates costs
more than $15 billion a year.
RAILROAD CENTER
Chicago-This major city is
known as the railway cross
roads of the United States.
POLICE DATE
Ottawa -The Royal Canadi
an Mounted Police were, or
ganized for service in 1873.
The average scalp has be
tween 120,000 and 140,000
hairs, according to the Pub
lic Health Education Commit
tee of the Minnesota State
Medical Association.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medforb", Or. 1 J
Sunday, Feb. 7, 1960 '
More than 1,000 divorce de
crees were granted each day
last year in the United States.
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and cabin accommodation. You are snug and
warm, even during the early season fishing
weather. It's fast and smooth for the water skiing
enthusiast, it's easy to launch and load at any
water, with a Mastercraft trailer. Your car will
hardly know that a boat is following. For just a
little more then the price of an ordinary boat
outfit, you can enjoy the economy, the prestige,
the luxury of owning a Dorsett "Catalina" live-aboard
cruiser." Visif our boat show now, with the
family and look at the boats.
"You will like the way we do business!"
Just Arrived . . . Df's a iomb!
The ANTHONY 1960 JETSTAR 15
Holds the World's Speed Record, hydroplane Ski-boat
112 SOUTH RIVERSIDE