Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 21, 1960, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Germany
in Squaw
Klamath Falls Captures
Frosh Wrestling Mantle
Ashland Klamath Falls
rolled up 91 points here yes
terday to win the Southern
Oregon conference freshman
wrestling tournament.
South Grants Pass was sec
ond with 79 and North Grants
Pass third with 75. Other
scores were McLoughlin of
Medford 45, Ashland 22 and
Hedrick of Medford 17.
Klamath Fall gained four
firsts, four seconds and two
fourths. South GP also had
four championships while
North GP took three and Ash
land one.
South had one second, three
Nationalists
NotinGames
San Francisco HIPD Na
tionalist China's Olympic com
mittee complained Saturday
that the International Ski fed
eration caused confusion over
Chinese participation in the
Winter Games at Squaw Val
ley. The federation (FIS) said
last Wednesday that the
Chinese team could not com
pete at Squaw Valley because
it was not a member of the
federation.
The ski federation's edict
"has rendered fruitless our ef
forts to -uphold the cardinal
Olympic concept of participa
tion," said Teng Chuan-Kai,
chairman of the Nationalist
Chinese Olympic Committee
Edges
Stanford
United Press International
UCLA established a 7-2 rec
ord in the Big Five basketball
chase Friday by sneaking by
Stanford 49-48.
West Coast Athletic confer
ence action was hectic as
usual. Pepperdine and Loyola
moved in on idle St. Mary's
6-1.
Fepperaine made its maris
6-2 with an overtime 72-70
win over San Jose State.
Loyola upset cold Santa
Clara, 49-48. Both teams are
thus 5-3 on the year.
USF dumped College of
Pacific, 65-53, in another West
Coast league battle.
Flow-Line Wins
Arcadia, Calif . (UPD - Flow
Line, a colt with a lot of
speed, flashed to a 3Vi length
victory Saturday in the $58,
300 San Felipe Handicap at
Santa Anita Park.
I In just minutes you I
j convert the Volkswagen !
Kombi 3 trucks in 1
I
I
3
Carries any
combination
of both!
$2372
j Come in and get fhe
morse
6th and
wrwMuta
DCAUt
i-oos-s
and Russia Win Gold tie
Valley Competition; U.S.
thirds and four fourths and
North two seconds, four thirds
and two fourths. McLoughlin
collected three second places.
It had two thirds and four
fourths while Ashland gained
one championship and one
second place.
Hedrick collected a runner-
up honor, a third and two
fourths.
Points also were given for
advancing to a next round and
for pinning an opponent,
RESULTS IN FINALS:
88 Dennis Dean, NGP. pinned
Nelson Conner, Ash., 3rd; 98 Rich
ard McBeth, KF. pinned Jerry
tttts. mc.. jra.: iob men mxon,
NGP. won by default from Jack
Stephenson, SGP (bruised shoul
der): 115 Tom Miles, KF. pinned
Sam Crawford, Hed., 3rd.; 123
Dan Herrera, KF, dec. Jack Smeltz,
Mc, 5-2; 130 Dean Jackson, Ash.
pinned Ben Gonzales, KF, 3rd
136 Wayne Wilson. SGP. dec. Ron
Head. KF, 6-2; 141 Ron Hitch
cock, KF, pinned Pat Edeerton
NGP. 1st: 148 Jerry Cooper,
SGP, won by default over Gary
Whittaker. NGP (broken thumb i
157 Andy Graham, NGP, pinned
Bruce Campbell, KF, 2nd; 168
Dan Wytcherly. SGP. def. Thurs,
ton Henzell, KF, 4-3; unlimited
at arown, bUF, pinned ureg
woiie, mc, 3rd.
Troy Trips
OSC 68-62
Corvallis (DPD Southern
California broke out of a
four-game losing streak here
Friday night with a 68-62 win
over Oregon State.
The Trojans broke a 60-60
tie with three minutes left
in the game as Jerry Pimm
hit a jump shot and 30 sec
onds later added two free
throws. Ken Stanley added
two free throws and a lay-up
with 30 seconds left to sew
up the game.
Oregon State made two
more field goals than South
ern California but the Tro
jans hit 24 of 31 gift throws
while Oregon State could
convert on 14 of 24 times.
Pimm topped SC's scoring
with 13 points but had to give
up game scoring honors to
Oregon State's Jay Carty who
had 21 points.
January Leads
In Tucson Open
Tucson, Ariz. (UPD - Don
January slipped into a one-
stroke lead after 54 holes of
the $22,500 Tucson Golf open
Saturday with his second
straight round of 3-under-par
67 and 202 total.
The Denver, Colo., profes
sional -who said he "didn't
play real bad or real good" -
kept one step ahead of E. J.
(Dutch) Harrison, the new
host pro for this Al Rio Coun
try club course. Harrison
turned in the day's best round
-a 65 - for a 54-hole tally of
203.
Dave Marr, honeymooning
36-hole leader from Cedar
hurst, N.Y., was two strokes
back at 204 after going one
over par yesterday with a 71
He could have tied Harrison
for second but missed an 18
inch putt on the final hole
Saturday the same one he
three-putted Friday.
whole story soon! . j
Morons
Ivy, Medford
I
LEO H. PETERSON
UPI Sports Editor
Squaw Valley (DPD Ger
many won two gold medals
and Russia one in the Winter
Olympic Games Saturday
with the United States losing
out in the ladies glamour
event, the downhill ski race.
Heidi Biebl of Germany,
who didn't think she had done
very well, won the nearly 70-
mile-an-hour dash down the 1
mile and 200-yard mountain
KT22. Penny Pitou, the fa
vored among what was con
sidered an especially strong
U.S. group, had to settle for
second place. And none of
the three other U.S. girls
finished in the first six.
The other gold medals went
to Marija Gusakova of Russia
in the ladies' 10-kilometer 6
mile cross country ski race
and Helga Haase of Germany
the ladies' 500 -meter speed
race in which the U.S. took a
surprising third.
Miss Biebl, who was so sure
she was beaten that she storm
ily refused to talk to inter
viewers, had stood at the
starting line while Miss Pitou,
a language student at Middle
bury college, set up a mark
for the rest of the field to
shoot at - 1:38.6.
One Second Faster
Then Miss Biebl hurled her
body down the course one sec
ond faster to win the cham
pionship. Back of Miss Pitou came
Traudl Hacher of A u s t r i a
third, Pia Riva of Italy fourth,
Jerta Schitt of Italy fifth and
Anneliese Meggi of Germany
sixth.
Joan Hannah of Franconia,
N.H., finished 21st, Linda
Meyers of Mammoth Lakes,
Calif. 33rd, and Betsy Snite
of Norwich, Vt., failed to fin
ish after she was injured
shortly after the start.
Miss Gusakova was clocked
in 39 minutes, 46.6 seconds on
the frosty dales of McCinney
Creek.
On the figure skating oval.
favored Carol Heiss of the
United States took an early
lead over her rivals in the
first series of compulsory fig
ures. As is customary, there were
no U.S. entries in the women's
cross - Country, considered
strictly a European event.
The second gold medal of
the day went to Helga Haase
of Germany, who upset the
favored Russians in the 500-
meter speed skating.
The U.S. team picked up a
surprising third for a bronze
medal on the fast finish of
Jeanne Ashworth of Wilming
ton, Mass. The winner was
clocked in 45.9, Natalja Don
chenko of Russia was next in
46 seconds flat.
The Russian gold medal
was the third awarded in the
games. Canada and Sweden
each won one Friday. One
crown went to the pair skat
ing champions, Barbara Wag
ner and Robert Paul of Can
ada. Sweden Wins Medal
The other title went to
Sweden's Sixten Jernberg, a
slender 31-year-old sporting
goods salesman, who won the
30 kilometer (18 mile) cross
country skiing race.
The United States with de-
f enseman John Mayasich of
Green Bay, Wis., and goalie
John McCartan of St. Paul,
leading the way, got off to a
good start in the Olympic
hockey competition,, coming
from behind to whip Czecho
slovakia, 7-5. A four goal
barrage in the third period,
with Mayasich scoring the tie
breaking goal, did the trick.
Canada became the first
team to enter the champion
ship round of the v Olympic
hockey tournament when the
squad from the land where
the game originated, wallop
ed Japan, 19-1. It was Can
ada's second straight victory
and put the Canadians in the
title pool.
The first of the rhubarbs
which always mark inter
national hockey competition
bloomed Saturday in the Win
ter Games, with Sweden pro
testing the interpretation of
rules after its defeat by Can
ada, 5-2, Friday night.
Russia, co - favored, with
Canada for the title, also
won, defeating Germany 1W).
In a letter to the Interna
tional Hockey federation, the
Swedish hockey group com
plained that "international
rules did not seem to have
been fully applied during the
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
Standings: W.
Tee Pee Plywood 16
Table Rock Lumber 13
Ideal Cement .. 11
Communication Workers 11
L.
4
7
9
9
11
11
11
11
12
Timber Wolves
Hughes & Dodd
Hires Root Beer
Midway Meat
Eagle Point Teachers
Cove Valley Supply
15
Results:
P Teachers 3 (D. Copeland 602)
2799; Midway 1 (J. Korner 576)
2620.
Table Rock 3 (B. Jones 603) 2769:
C W A 1 (C. McDaniels 579) 2660.
Tee Pee 3 (B. Albright 607) 2773;
Hughes & Dodd 1 (D. Carson 646)
2763.
Cove Valley 0 (A. Spain 557)
2371; Timber Wolves 4 (D. Adkins
613) 2772.
Ideal 1 (W. Bailey 638) 2657;
Hires 3 (D. Toomey-573) 2662.
High game J o h n Aeschllman
241.
ROXT ANN CLASSIC
Standings: W.
L.
4
8
9
10
12
13
13
15
Lamport's Sporting Goods 17
Daueherty Lumber
13
12
11
Roxy Ann Lanes
Kim s
Cubby's Drive In
Beck's Morning Fresh .
Clave Construction
Timber Room
9
8
8
6
Results:
Daueherty 3 (F. Anderson 598)
2993; Timber Room 0 (M. Mager
600) 2674.
Lamport's 3 (G. Spaunhorst 572)
2748: Beck's 0 (R. Spain 550) 2602.
Cubby's 3 (W. Howell 616) 2728;
Clave 0 (K. Phipps 570) 2556.
Roxy Ann 2 (J. Gardiner 605)
2695; Kim's 1 (G. Smith 602) 2640.
ROXY ROCKERS
Standings: W.
Snider's Dairy . 16
Medford House Movers 14
Phoenix Chevron 12
Rogue Valley Bank 9
Rogue River Wood Prod. 6
Stage Road Grocery . 3
Results:
Snider's 3 (Nelson 597) 2713;
Stage Rd. Groc. 1 (Den 588) 2707.
Rogue Bank 4 (Hough 623) 2847;
Rogue Wood 0 (R. Brooks 554)
2670.
House Movers 4 (Dalton 634)
2945; Phoenix Chev. 0 (Schleigh
577) 2691.
CITY LEAGUE
Standings: W.
State Farm Insurance 23
Westside Merchants 20
Telephone Employees Assn 19
Johnston Stores 18
CWA 9208 ..
17
17
17
17
16
16
15
13
13
Silver Dollar Stamps
Daueherty Lumber Co.
Tic Toe Time Shop
First National Bank
Ross Lumber Co,
Farmer Brothers Coffee .
Central Market
Weter 8c Olson
California Oreeon Power- 13
Domestic Laundry 12
Rogue( Sportsmen .......: 10
Results:
Tic Toe 2 (Ed Olsen 513) 2751:
Copco 2 (Roy Rolls 521) 2716.
central MKt. 3 (Jonn Keener 554)
2752; T E A A 1 (Howard Hickman
516) 2723.
C W A 3 (Mike Davis 575) 2746:
Ross Lbr. 1 (Gale Culy 511) 2692.
Farmers 1 (Fred Anderson 550)
2737; Rogue 3 (Roy Pruitt 493)
2760.
W & O 0 (Bill Luman 503) 2603:
Domestic 4 (Rick Wallace 557) 2966.
Silver Dollar 0 (Wayne Kyker
560) 2679; Johnston Store 4 (Jack
Milhoan 513) 2824.
JUB o (Arn Bauman 562) ZBZS;
Westside 4 (Clyde Minger 591)
2922.
State Farm 4 (Jim Roberts 531)
2841; Daugherty 0 (Tom Ball 504)
2669.
EARLY BIRD LEAGUE
(End of First Half)
Standings: W, L.
Tally Ho 41 19
Van Lees 33,i 26 12
Niagara Dusters .. 31 29
Kim's One ........... 30 30
Valley Locker 29 31
Kim's Two 15 V 44 ',4
Results:
Valley Locker 2 (K. Franks 485)
2111; Van Lees 2 (V. Navarette 409)
2033
Kim's One 1 (E. Wolfe 354) 1990;
Tally Ho 3 (S. Baylor 416) 2106.
Niagara Dusters 3 (G. Dixon 408)
2018; Kim's Two 1 (M. Price 406)
2015.
High game K. Franks 184, V.
Navarette 179.
MORNING GLORY8
Standings:
Alley Cats
Snap Dragons
W.
11
9', '2
7,i
7
6
L.
1
2i
4,i
5
6
6
7
8
10
10
cream Puffs
Kool Kats
Short Pins .
Doozies .......
Pea Pods
Missing Links :..
2 Hits Ic A Miss
8 Balls ,
6
5
4
2
.2 .
Results:
Alley Cats (Nancy Elcher 440)
1581; Snap Dragons (Georgia
Boardman 424) 1529.
Cream Puffs (Mary Aeschliman
415) 1504; Kool Kats (Merlene
Lawless 479) 1565.
Short Pins (Virgie Kistner 412)
1555; Doo21es (Agdna Marugg 387)
1550.
Pea Pods (Doris Dillon 364) 1425:
Missing Links (Agnes Lindstrom :
405) 1523.
2 Hits & A Miss (Vi Corby 425)
1545; 8 Balls (Loretta Kenner 468)
1492.
High game Nancy Eicher 191,
Merlene Lawless 180, Tomasa Vrieh
171.
FRIDAY FOULERS
Standings:
Powder Puffs
W.
.7
Pin Feathers
..5
In-Laws
..4
Three Bells
-4
game, especially not the rules
concerning boarding and high
Sticking." ..
Today three gold medals
will be decided - in the biath
lon, which combines skiing
and shooting; the men's giant
slalom skiing, and the 60
meter, the ladies 1,500 meter
speed skating.
And the U. S. is expected
to fare even worse in them
than they did in yesterday's
events except for that start
Of the figure skating.
4
dais
Hone
Pin Heads ,
Bopados
Results:
Bopados 0 (D. Rice 360) 1456;
Powder Puffs 4 (N. Bailey 388)
Pin Heads 1 (M. Shaw 379) 1532;
In-Laws 3 (B. Gossman 437) 1585.
Pin Feathers 2 (M. Ames 366)
1521; Three Bells 2 (P. Moyer 356)
High game B. Gossman 171.
ROXY ANN "STAB FIRE"
Standings: W.
Olson-Ross Lbr 32
Rogue Valley Vending .26
Pinnacle Orchards .25
Larry's Lineup .... 25
Ron's Standard Station 25
Stand. Oil Co. (Prospect) 23
Hughes Const. 22
Weeks & Orr , 21 '
Jackson Co. Co-op 18
Jeddeloh Bros. 18
Home-Gas Co. .18
Tex Nash . 11
' L.
12
18
19
19
19
21
22
23
26
2b
26
33
Results:
Olson-Ross 4. Jackson Co. 0.
Stand. Oil Co. 3. Rogue Valley 1
Ron's Standard 4, Weeks & Orr 0.
Hughes 4, Jeddeloh 0.
Pinnacle 3, Home Gas 1.
Larry's 4. Nash 0.
High singles D. Swan 236, B.
Darras 224. . Orr 224.
McCoy Will
Stage Auto
Races Here
Jack McCoy, well-known
Ashland driver, will pro
mote auto races this year at
the track at the former
posse grounds northwest of
Medford.
Johnny H. (Tailspin)
Jones, president of Rogue
Valley Racing association,
made the announcement fol
lowing a Thursday meeting
of the organization.
He said that the first rac
ing program is set tentative
ly for . May 21. Modified
hardtop aulos will compete
and there will be a $1,000
guaranteed purse, Jones re
ported. The posse ground
activity will revive racing
in the Rogu valley after a
season of non-operation. It
will be the first auto racing
at Medford in better than
four years.
Improvement of the track
and repair of the fence are
to begin soon, according to
Jones. He said that new
clay will be added to the
track.
Tiff Won
By Crater
Central Point - Crater High
freshmen scored their second
basketball win of the week
end yesterday when they
drubbed Klamath Falls 67 to
38 here.
Comet bulges were 18 to 6,
41 to 20 and 52 to 32 at the
stanza halts.
Mike Glines was high scor
er with 19 markers for Cra
ter. LINEUPS:
67 Crater
F 11 Jones
F 19 Glines
C 4 Wald
G 13 Alvarez
Klamath 38
Dahn 8
Scott 2
Kelly 7
Walters 12
G 15 Pepper
Horn 6
Substitutions For Crater. Hie-
inbotham, Bransom 3, Gardner 2,
Mason, Minger, Sharp, Rivenberg,
Rosenberger, Askwith; for Klamath
Falls, Piper 3, Pyles, Church, Kerr.
RATES COMPARED
Washington Birth rate of
the U.S. is 24.7 annually.
Death rate is 9.6.
It pays to buy a car in Medford
Southern Oregon's Auto Shopping Center!
Thirteen Medford new car dealers are now offering the most sensational
buying opportunity of the year! Now in Medford you'll find the biggest
selection . . . the fairest prices . . . and you'll get more for your trade-in,
too! Buy now ... no payments till April.
It's a great Moment!
There's nothing like the day
you drive out in a brand new
car. Let your family enjoy
that magic moment this
week! :
Gel more for your Irada-in buy a
Two Records
Tied In AAU
New York (UPD World
indoor records tumbled like
tenpins in the National A.A.U.
track championships Satur
day night when Irvin (Bo)
Robertson smashed the broad
jump mark, Hal Connolly
blitzed the weight throw rec
ord and the 60 yard dash rec
ord was tied twice.
Robertson, 24 year old
Army second lieutenant,
Ducks Bop
Washington
Eugene -(DPD University of
Oregon Ducks, getting 18
points from guard Chuck
Rask, defeated the University
of Washington 57-41 here Fri
day night in a non-conference
game.
The win gave the Ducks a
15-7 season's mark and kept
them in contention for an
NCAA at-large berth.
Rask sparked a second half
rally that brought Oregon
from a 19-18 half time lead
into a 29-19 bulge with 2V.
minutes played. Rask and 6-7
Glenn Moore combined for
five more points and Oregon
had a 43-28 lead midway
through the second half.
The speedy Rask also stole
the ball six times from the
Huskies.
Charlie Warren scored nine
points to rank behind Rask for
high point honors for the
Ducks. Washington's Roger
Niva had 14 for the Huskies.
Bill Hanson was held to seven
points by the checking of
Moore and Wally Knecht.
Comet 9th
Nabs Tilt
Ashland Basketball teams
from Central Point had a five-
game sweep over Ashland
school quintets Friday.
Prior to the Crater high
varsity and jayvee victories,
the Crater freshmen beat their
Lithia city foe by a slim 44
to 43, Central Point eighth
won 41 to 30 and Pointer sev
enth was winner 32 to 30.
The Comet frosh pulled to
a 33 to 24 gap after a half-
time tie of 21-each. Gale Tep
per had 23 points for the
Grizzly Cubs and Pat Pepper
13 for Crater.
CP eighth graders led at
their quarter halts 12 to 10,
21 to 19 and 33 to 22. Vern
Swanson chalked up 10 tallies
for CP and Sussee eight for
Ashland. The Painter sev
enth gained 18 to 13 halfway
advantage. Larry Glawe scor
ed 14 for CP and Gruber 12
for the Lithia city gang.
FROSH LINEUPS:
44 Crater Ashland 43
F 8 Jones Polk 2
F 8 Glines Cotton 2
C 7 Wald G. Tepper 23
G 8 Alvarez D. Tepper 7
G 13 P. Pepper Hess 9
Substitutions For Crater. Sharp.
Bransom; for Ashland, Hudson,
Johnson.
Mesa, Ariz. -(UPD San Fran
cisco Giants' pitcher Sam
Jones and six of his team
mates took light exercises in
the cool ait Friday and re
laxed in warm mineral
springs. On hand as well as
Jones were catchers Bob
Schmidt and Hobie-Landrith;
pitcher Jack Sanford; infield-
ers Willie McCovey and
Jimmy Davenport; and rookie
catcher Al Stieglitz. The
Giants officially open spring
training Feb. 29.
Broken, One
Track Meet
erased the oldest mark in the
books when he broadjumped
25 feet, 9V inches, a half
inch' more than the mark set
by Jesse Owens exactly 25
years ago.
. Connolly, the human siege
gun from Santa Monica, Calif.,
easily eclipsed the 35 pound
weight throw record with a
heave of 71 feet, 2Va inches.
Paul Winder of Morgan
State college and David James
of the U.S. Army each equal
led the indoor record of 6.1
seconds in winning their semi
final heats in the 60 yard
dash. Winder won the final
in 6.2 seconds while James
finished fourth.
Hayes Jones of Eastern
Michigan equalled the meet
record of 7.1 seconds when he
nipped Olympic champion
Lee Calhoun of Gary, Ind., in
a photo-finish in the 60 yard
hurdles.
Title Fight
Hopes Aired
New York (UPD Roy M.
Cohen's boxing group, inspir
ed by its brand new promot
ing license, hopes to have a
ceremonial signing in early
March for the return Inger
mar Johansson-Floyd Patter
son title fight at the Polo
Grounds, June 22. .
Thomas A. Bolan, treasurer
of Cohn's Feature Sports, Inc.,
said yesterday "The license
granted us Friday by the state
athletic commission will help
us clean up quickly the status
rights to television, movies
and radio of the fight, and
draw up a new contract satis
factory to all."
Commission Chairman Mel
vin L. Krulewitch announced
that the license had been
granted by a unanimous vote.
Quintets Picked
For NCAA Meet
New York -(DPD The Evans
ville (Ind.) Purple Aces, de
fending NCAA college divi
sion basketball champions,
and 10 other "at-large" teams
have been selected for next
month's 32-team tournament.
Twenty-three at-large teams
and nine conference cham
pions will clash in eight re
gional tournaments early in
March. The eight survivors
will compete for the NCAA
small college title at Evans-
ville March 9-10-11.
Evansville (18-3), the No.
1 team in United Press Inter
national's national ratings of
small college teams, Will play
host in the Mid-East regional
March 3-4.
Kentucky Wesleyan (12-8),
Austin (18-4) and Belmont
Abbey (16-5) were selected
for the South-Central region
al at Owensboro, Ky., March
4-5. Wheaton (13-8) and the
University of Wisconsin's
branch at Milwaukee (17-2)
were named for the Great
Lakes regional March 4-5 at
Wheaton, 111.
Wartburg (15-4) was picked
for the Midwest regional, Ab
ilene Christian (11-11) for the
Southwest regional and Chap
man (17-5) and Regis (9-7) for
the Pacific Coast regional.
The sites of these three re-
eionafs will be announced
later. Colorado college (13-2)
also was named but the re
gional in which it will com
pete has not yet been selected.
nsn cer Ron!
BASKETBALL
FRIDAY COLLEGE GAMES
United Press International
St. Joseph's 78. St. Francis 69
Cornell S4. Yale 72
Harvard 61. Pennsvlvania 58
Brown 59. Columbia 52
Colgate 84. Penn State 75 (o.t.)
Princeton 76. Dartmouth 69
North Carolina 85, Clemson 80
South Carolina 68, No. Car. St. 66
Brigham Young 75. Wyoming 70
Southern Cal. 68, Oregon St. 62
Humboldt St. 63. Sacramento 48
Colorado St. 68, Utah St. 60
Oregon 57. Washington 41
Puget Sound 69, West. Wash. 61
UCLA 49, Stanford 48
St. Fran. St. 71. Cal Aggies 45
S. Francisco 65 COP 53
Pepperdine 72. San Jose St. 70
Nevada 83, Chico St. 60
Gonzaga 55. Portland 54
Loyola 49. Santa Clara 48
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
Friday Games
Boston 136. Detroit 116
Minneapolis 111. St Louis 101
Linfield Goes
Ahead in NW
United Press International
Linfield's Wildcats moved
back on top of the Northwest
conference Friday night with
a 58-51 win over Whitman
The win gave Linfield a one-
naii game edge over Wil
lamette which lost to College
of Idaho, 64-62 in overtime.
ATTENTION
FHS3 OWNERS
COME IN AND GET
OUR WINTER
Look What You Get For...,
Install new "Genuine" Ford ignition points
and condenser
Inspect, clean and re-gap spark plugs
Adjust carburetor
Test and adjust generator regulator
Test and inspect battery, cables and carrier
Test generator charge output
Check thermostat and hoses
This month only at . . .
(DRATER LAKE
Your Medford Ford Dealer
MAIN AT FIR . SP 3-4547
MAIL TRIBUNE, MeJtW, Or. lO
Sunday, Feb. 21, 1960 A
Suggs Leads
Women's Open
Lake Worth, Fla. - (DM -
Louise Suggs fired another
one-under-par 69 Saturday to
take a five-stroke lead after
the third round of the Lake
Worth Women's Golf tourna
ment. Miss Suggs, who suffered
from a stiff neck earlier in
the tournament, played con
sistently well. She went over
par on a hole only once
when she missed a short putt
-and scored two birdies.
17 Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Draie Tile
Bricks, Ham
727
VY. McAndrawi
Phone Sr 3-4575 $ 2-41 7
Still plenty
Of Winter
driving days
ahead
W5