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Practice Tilt 65
A five-run sixth inning up-
iure turned the victory trick
iior the Medford Hih ichool
Alack Tsrnado yesterday af
Mernooo in a 6 to 5 practice
(game decision over the South
ern Oregon college baseball
junior varsity.
j Medford lagged I to 5 when
"" ;it came to bat in the frame.
.Dick Ragsdale drew a walk
from raider twirler Al Me
..Kinnis and Ken Jensen was
'hit by a pitch. Then, Lowell
;Dean singled to center field
.'to bring home Ragsdale. Mike
'Parsons hit to blast in both
'Jensen and Dean.
J Quinney hit safely and
Wayne Thompson followed
.with a two-base wallop down
the first base and right field
'line to punch over the tying
land winning counters.
- The other Tornado tally
'had been scored in the first
canto on Ragsdale's walk and
'stolen base and Lowell Dean's
'single.
'' i SOC got ona run in the sec
pnd inning when Mike Conley
.was given a base on balls, ad-
vancpH fn thirH nn TVlflfinnic
fyit and an outfield bobble and
fame home on a bad throw on
an attempted pick-off at third
-base. One-base swats by John
Kopacz, Ray Endicott and Bob
Johnson gained another tally
In the third inning. In the
fourth panel McKinnis tripled
Tornado Trackmen
Face Klamath Here
All five Southern Oregon
conference high schools will
have Saturday afternoon
track and field activity.
Medford will be host to
Klamath Falls and Grants
Pass will entertain Ashland
and Crater.
The meet at the Medford
St. Mary's
Victor Over
Rogue River
. St. Mary's won a dual track
meet, 70 to 52, yesterday from
;Rogue River high.
! f Each team had first places
In seven events in the engage
ment at Rogue River. St.
Mary's was victor on the
strength of nine second spots
ito the Chieftains' four and
eight thirds to five for the
i host school.
Double winners for the af
ternoon were Doug Stewart,
who took the shot put and
'discus for the Chiefs, Dave
v.'Carter, who won the high
jump and high hurdles for RR
and Alex Mete, who captured
both dashes.
St. Mary's swept all places
In the broad jump.
Results:
Shot put Stewart, HR; Call, RR;
Dan Rouhier, SM. 44-4.
Pole vault Johansen, RR; Kai
ser, SM; LeRoy. RR. 11-6.
High jump Carter, RR; D. Evans,
SM: McBerron, RR. 5-9.
Javelin Knutson. SM; B. Evans,
'SM: Calhoun, SM. 171 ft.
i High hurdles C a r t e r, RR; D.
Evans. SM; Johansen, RR. ;16.4.
. 100 Mete. SM; Jones, RR; Wag-
fer. RR. :10.25.
Mile D. Evans. SM; LcRoy, RR;
'Austin, SM. 4:47.7.
Broad jump F. Lucas, SM; Hout,
si; Knutson. m. iH-d.
Discus Stewart, RR: Dan Hou
ier. SM: Lucas. SM. 131-1 1 b.
440 Hout, SM; Carter, RR; Stin-
?on. SM. :33.
Low hurdles Goosey. RR; El
liott. SM; Naumes, SM. :22.5.
f 220 Mete, SM; Hout, SM; Jones.
F.R. 23.
f 880 Wagner, RR: T. Rouhier,
EM: Dave Rouhier, SM. 2:08 9.
Relav St. Marv's (Hout, T. Rou
Bier, D. Evana, Mete). 137.7.
NEED
BOWER
BEARINGS?
CALL SP 2-5227
FAUT"
126 North Front
1 . H !;
m um mm
av, t
GATES OPEN 12:30 RACES AT 2 P.M.
Pradict & Time Trial Saturiy012:3it) til p.m.
ADMISSION $1.00 Ptt CAILOAB
Rofluo "Kait" Spoodoy 0
- n r""
Nabs
and Fred Louk singled tor a
run.
In the fifth inning Joe Fun
derberg ihree-baggered and
scored on an error on the
throw in. A walk, fielder's op
tion, sacrifict by Johnson and
single by Earle Tichenor pro
vided another marker in the
same Inning.
Lowell Dean cracked three
hits in three times at bat for
Medford. He tripled in the
third Inning and was called
out at the plate when he at
tempted to score on a wildly
pitched ball.
McKinnis allowed Medford
just six hits while the junior
Raiders were getting eight in
five innings off Medford's
Herb Wheeler. McKinnis
struck out five batters, walk
ed three and hit one. Wheeler
chalked up two strikeouts and
issued two walks. Quinney,
pitching the last two frames
for the Tornado, struck out
the side In the sixth inning.
Batters went out in order in
the top of the seventh on two
flyouts and a groundout.
Only other player other
than Dean with more than one
hit was McKinnis with two.
Medford has a non-league
engagement at Grants Pass on
Saturday afternoon.
LINKSCOKE:
SOC JV Oil 120 05 S 0
Medford 100 003 X 3
McKinnis and Conley; Wheeler,
Quinney iti) and Jensen.
stadium will be a double con
test with the high school var
sities colliding and Hedrick
Junior high ninth grade op
posing the Klamath freshmen
in simultaneous competition.
Meet time here will be 1
p.m. First field event rivalry
is set for that hour and first
running event will be at 1:30
p.m.
Medford cinder mentor
Dean Benson said that hurdler
Walt Ayres wlil miss the dual
because of a sprained back.
Tom Bortis, weight man, and
Phil Humphreys, sprinter,
likely will see only limited
service because of illness this
week. Bortis has had flu and
poison oak and Humphreys a
real bad cold.
Mike Hood, hurdler, high
jumper and broad- jumper,
who missed the in tei class
meet last week end because of
a spike wound, will be back
in action.
Klamath's crew is led by
Allan Phillips, javelin throw
er and broad jumper and by
Bill Sproat, miler and half
miler. The Saturday session will
be the last interscholastic
event of the season for Med
ford high on its home track.
BOWLING
WEDNESDAY KITE TRIO
Slandingi: W.
Medford Lumber 38
Country Club 38
Oregon Tire Service Dept. 32
I,.
22
22
Mansfield Chevron 32 28
Ross Mobil gas 31 lb 28t
Aicuuiion unain aaw .... ai zit
Cascade Electric 31 20
Southern Oregon Bearing 31 29
Sears Store 27lfc 32 ",i
Keith Schultz Garage .... 24 36
Team Five 23 27
Faber's Market 21 30
Results:
Med. Lumber 1 (Ken Pursell 5081
1306; Cascade 3 (Bud Net her land
446) 1589.
Country Club 4 (Marsh Brown
388 1717; Faberi Mkt. 0 (Fred Sut
ton 425) 1508.
Oregon Tire 1 (Bill Richey 508)
1371; sears 3 (Don aunaene 4U7)
1603.
Mansfield 3 (Gary Niksche 510)
1653; SO Bearing 1 (Dick Kuschel
502) 1644.
Ross 3 (Don McCarty 502) 1021
Schultz 1 (Lee Nledermeycr 459)
1579.
Chain Saw 2 (Cal Leather wood
471) 1504; Team Five 2 (Jose Co
rona 488) 1B14.
starfire:
Standings: W. L.
Standard Oil (ProsDectV. 20 15
Ron's Standard Station.. 17',i
I.flrrv's Line-un 28 IB
Tox Nash ..... ; ... 23", 20U
Olson-Ross 23i- 20 5
Home Gas Company ...... 22 ii
Rogue Valley Vending .... 21 23
Jerideloh Brothers ..... 21 23
WpkIck a Orr 20 24
Pinnacle Orchards 19 24 lb
Jackson County Co-op . lo
Ken Hughes Const..- 16 28
Results:
Larry's 2 (Janzen 464) 2661
SPORTS
W :;
BOWLER OF YEAR-Mrs. VI
Corby, above, was voteu
bowler of the year by mem
bers of the Medford Woman's
Bowling association at the or
ganization's breakfast Sunday
at Rogue Valley Country club.
Mrs. Corby has participated
in bowling since 1943 and has
contended in four leagues
during the 1939-1960 season.
Frick Raps
Kefauver
Sport Bill
New York 01PD Sen. Estes
Kefauver's new sports bill has
attracted mixed reactions
from baseball and football
leaders.
Commissioner Ford Frick
led baseball's attack on the
measure, Insisting that con
gressional approval of the
bill would "impede baseball's
healthy and normal develop
ment and confine it to a legis
lative straight jacket."
However, Pete Rozelle,
commissioner of the National
Football league, hailed the
proposed legislation and said
It will be "an aid to pro foot
ball." Other baseball bigwigs, In
cluding President Warren
Giles of the National league
and American league prexy
Joe Cronin, shared Frick's
opinion of the bill but Wil
liam A. Shea, one of the
founders of the new Conti
nental league, greeted it with
enthusiasm.
Kefauver, chairman of the
Senate antitrust and monopo
ly sub-committee, formally in
troduced the bill in Congress
Thursday. The Tennessee
Democrat said the measure
"will correct the inequity
which was created by the
decisions of the Supreme
Court," which twice has
ruled that baseball is exempt
from the antitrust laws.
Frick was especially upset
over a provision of the bill
which would limit to 100 the
number of players a big league
team could control.
Will Pastrano
Fights Johnson
Louisville, Ky. fllPD Willie
Pastrano, an old pro of the
ring at 24, will be out to show
Alonzo Johnson that old pros
don't make the same mistake
twice tonight when they stage
a Derby Eve light heavy
weight 10-rounder.
Pastrano came out of a
four-month layoff here last
July 24 by letting the less ex
perienced Johnson slow him
down with a stiff body attack
in the early going, and wound
up by losing a close though
unanimous decision in a dis
tinct upset.
Nash 2 (Hale 4331 2703. -
Weeks tc Orr 1 (McElhiney 533)
2877; Bon'i 3 (Cooper 525 1 S7B.
Co-op 1 (Butte 472) 2027; Ollon
Rns 3 (Martin 5041 2748.
R. V Vending 2 (Materson 520)
2710; Standard 2 (BaKer 482) 2734
Pinnacle i (Darras 5131 2680;
Home Gal 3'i (Knodel 554) 2772.
Huehes 2 (Graves 320 ) 2712;
.TeHHelnh 2 (Walker 4871 2731.
High games Cooper 200; Knodel
200.
Every
Sunday
Adults . 75c
Students . . . 50c
ChMran mmdm 11
Woods, Wafer, Wildlife
By Hank DeVoss
Thare is going to be quite
a Changs in the lives of those
intrepid rock Jumpers who
Mil tlKr9tjA. liihtrr.-.c-.
whan they go to seek out the
salmon and steelhead of the
Illinois river this coming fall.
Sach year these anglers find
many fish waiting for high
watar so that they may nego
tiate the falls and move up
rivar. For those with patience
and knnwhow, the waiting
fish provide easy sport and
too many are caught due to
lack of enough rain to raise
the river to a falls-jumping
height.
k BOOST AROUND
Th gama commiiiion
bow ha th funds for con
itruction of a ladder with
th purpos of getting th
salmon and stlhad
around th falls and into
th uppr river. Bids will
b called for on May 25 and
th commission plans to
hay th ladder completed
by this coming fall. Th
ladder will be of a vertical
baffle type construction.
This means that ach pool
will hav a vertical slot cut
in at one side which will
nabl th iiih to move
from pool' to pool without
jumping. Th total length
o? the ladder will be about
17S feet and it will carry a
minimum flow of SO cubic
feet per second. Th ladder
will begin approximately
30 feat below th falls and
will snake around to and
in a large pool above th
falls against th south lid
of th river.
NO SNAGGING
(Note to the "Illinois Falls
Snagging club.") One innova
tion that may not be appre
ciated by the club is the
method of protecting the fish
while they are in the ladder,
The ladder will be covered its
entire length by a concrete
slab. During extremely high
water the fish could not use
an open type ladder and would
have to fight their way over
the falls. By covering the lad
der the fish are able to use it
during all water conditions
except extreme summer-time
low and will also be protected
from the lawless meat hunter.
(It is hoped the club will now
be disbanded and attempts
made to rehabilitate them -like
teaching them how to
catch fish legally.)
AN OPEN RIVER
The commission hopes
that th ladder will hav th
effect of opening up th
ntlr river to angling pies
sure that was concentrated
below th falls. Ther are
many excellent spots be
tween th falls and th
deadline at Pomeroy dam
that should b fished by th
increasing horde of steal
head fishermen. With fish
no longer being hold up at
the falls, the upper section
should hold fish much
earlier in th season than
formerly.
NEW SEASON
Another Item of change on
the Illinois is the opening of
a season on the fall run of
chlnook. These salmon are in
the river with the silver sal
mon and since many anglers
cannot tell the difference be
tween them the commission
has opened the river to salmon
fishermen until November
30th. The chinook are not the
easiest fish to catch so there
will be no lack of sport as a
result 'of the change in regu
lations. NO FISHING
Th gam commission
look over th Medco pond
on th first d a y f tkia
month and wiihea to iaforaa
th public that tk pond is
i'.nti ta ir. t tsi !! (
ing. As soon as th n iaaru
ing work has been complet
ed th pond will be poises,
d to clear It of all fithlii
and than will b put to uaa
as a raring pand tor mif r.
tory fish. It can't aapaem t
soon to suit us.
THE ANGLER'S LOG
The spring Chinook salmon
situation is such that all sorts
of theories are now In order
to try to explain why we
aren't catching any. The
mouth of the river is produc
ing more fish than they have
seen for five years but the
fish aren't getting here yet.
Hansen's board, which was
doing so well some time ago,
hasn't caught a fish in over a
week. They must be below
Mule creek. We wish they
would hurry.
Fish Lake-Has had very
good fishing. Lots of limits.
Fish running up to I7'.j
inches. Best bet is still fishing
with single eggs. Medium color-giant
size. Some luck troll
ing with FF&worms.
Klamath Rivar-Good catch
es on night crawlers or flies.
There has been a fair bug
hatch and the fish are primed
for feathers. Either California
or Oregon side should do it
Lots of competition.
Squaw Lakes - Has been
good all week. The road is in
good shape. Best bet seems
to be FF& single eggs-fluores
cent red. Green or frog flat
fish also does the business.
Willow Creek Res. - Has
been slow with most catches
consisting of small fish. Still-
fishing with cluster eggs has
been doing the most business.
Met-1 fly does fair on a troll.
Fish are starting to jump and
a few have been taken on a
fly. It should improve in a
couple of weeks when the big
ones finish spawning.
THE OPTIMIST'S CORNER
It is hoped that when and
if th engineers find Lost
creak dam abl to provid
water for - the migratory
fishery that iha valley is
still in accord es te what
kind of a river w want th
Rogue river to b. It will
set quit a precedent for th
government to build a dam
with this as on oi th pri
mary purposes but th
Rogue river is th best rival
for this type of precedent.
Anyone interested in find
ing out how to hunt moos,
grizzlies, or caribou in Can
ada can easily find out this
coming Monday night.
Come to iha Isaak Walton
leagu masting at the Red
Cross building by Haw
thorn park and get th
word from Jay Geiie. Har
old Sexton will be ther
to tell us all th good things
about Agate dam reservoir.
Refreshments will b
served.
GOOD LUCKI
WIFFI TAKES LEAD
Spartanburg, S. C. (OTD
Wiffi Smith today carried a
two-stroke lead into the sec
ond round of the Peach Blos-som-Eotsy
Rawls golf tourna
ment. The husky, freckle
faced youngster from St.
Clair, Mich., who won this
tournament the last two years,
fashioned a three under men's
par 69 Thursday to go ahead
of Patty Berg, Marilyn Smith
and Beverly Hanson.
On Feb. 8, 1779, France be
came the first nation to recog
nize the independence of the
United States.
Reiu.ts listed
Fof Elementary
School Meets
Toward took top points in
all divisions of a three-way
trade school track meet yes
terday. Turt utc t'.VO C3P.t?'al
in Class A who each won two
firsts and tied for another.
Lloyd Zacharias won the high
jump and broad jump for
Howard and tied in the 680-
yard run with Mike Allen of
Lincoln. Allen took the 150.
yard dash and the baseball
throw.
Scores were:
Class A-Howard 43 1'3,
Lincoln 31 16, Lone Pine
15ls; Class B-Howard 432,
Lincoln 26, Lone Pine 15Vs;
Class C-Howard 35, Lone Pine
24, Lincoln IS.
Jackson piled up 100 points
to 87 by Hoover by taking all
classes yesterday in a grade
school dual track tussle.
Ken Tropple won the shot
put and 60 and 150-yard races
for Hoover in Class A. For
Jackson in Class C Bobby
Longan was victor in the two
dashes and the pole vault.
Hoover took firsts In nine
field events rivalries and
firsts in three races. Jackson
claimed No. 1 points in six
field tests and six running
events. 1
Scores were:
Class A-Jackson 37',4, Hoover
29Vi; Class B-Jackson 35,
Hoover 33; Class C-Jackson
27Vs, Hoover 24.
Glen Gilman, Jacksonville,
won the 60 and 150-yard dash,
es and the basball throw yes
terday in a triangular grade
school track mix which saw
West Side head all divisions.
Scores were:
Class A West Side 384,
Jacksonville, 33V4, Ruch 13;
Class B West Side 48, Jack,
sonville 36, Ruch no entry;
Class C-West Side 34, Jack
sonville 32 V4, Ruch 7.
BASEBALL MEETING
A meeting of all players
of th Madford Bowling
lanes semi -pro baseball
team has been called for
6:30 p.m. today by Manager
Pet Hal. Th meeting will
be at Cheney Held. The
Medford club will play a
practice gam at Dunsmulr,
Calif., en Sunday.
Parents Irked Over
Paddling of Children
Knoxvlle, Tenn. (UPS Par
ents of 20 seventh grade pu
pils threatened today to file
charges against a science
teacher who paddled their
children, unless he Is trans
ferred to another school.
The parents charged that
David Wetsel paddled pupils
in his science class at Carter
Elementary School last week
because of an uproar caused
when boys removed snakes
from an exhibit causing girls
in the class to scream.
Ik A
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1st quality
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new I960 LOW PROFILE Tin.
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won't see repeated. Event if your present tires see only partly worn, it will pay
yon to take advantage of this special CieK-eot nk liene'i 1st line MsIon 0
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las s
Spokane Keept tmr n
O
By Twinbill Split
By PETE COLEMAN
U sited Press Inlernatioaa!
You can get close to the
Spokane Indians, but you
can't pass 'em.
Three Mentors
To Be Inducted
into Fame Hall
Portland - Roy S. (Spec)
Keene, Henry Lever, and E.
Robert Quinn will be induct
ed Into the District 2 NAIA
Hall of Fame at the group's
first annual awards banquet
at the Portland State College
Center May 21.
The three coaches were se
lected as charter members of
the Hall for long and out
standing service to member
institutions of District 2. A
group of five players, all ac
tive before 1940, will also be
Inducted into the Hall at the
banquet. Present plans call
for additional Inductions into
the select group in futuro
years.
Keene, currently the ath
letic director at Oregon State
college, was football coach
and athletic director at Wil
lamette university from 1926
to 1941 and during that time
earned prominence as ona of
the most successful coaches
in the area. Spec, since leav
ing Willamette, has built the
OSC athletic program into
one of the nation's finest, and
is respected and admired by
sports fans everywhere.
Lever served as football
coach and athletic director at
Linfield college for It years,
from 1930 to 1948, and per
sonally constructed an excel
lent athletio program for that
college.
Quinn, who Is active as
athletic director and basket
ball and baseball coach, has
been the guiding light for
Eastern Oregon's athletic
program for the past 31 years.
The Mounties have had only
ono AD since the school was
founded in 1029 and It has
been the popular Quinn.
Ike Will Spend
Week End at Farm
Washington (UPD Presi
dent Eisenhower planned
toll
fly to Gettysburg, pa., today
to spend the week end at his
farm.
The President arranged to
fly to the farm by helicopter
from the National Guard ar
- mory after opening the AFL
CIO Union Industries show.
The show's 373 exhibit fea
ture such displays as a model
post office run by members
of postal unions, a newspaper
produced by printing trades
unionists and a meat cutting
demonstration by union!
butchers. I
e.
Mil 7
tKWtW$ m-im tea a frlMv Ten tn yee etc
lire
BwHhlft
At least that's the way it's
been in the Pacific Coast
league so far this season.
The Indians, who have
owned all or part of tirst place
since opening day, have had
their backs against the wall
every night this week, but
come morning, they're still on
top.
Sacramento twice since
Tuosday had opportunities to
move Into the PCL penthouse,
but the Solons couldn't beat
Seattle and Spokane, although
beaten once and rained out
two times, stayed in front.
Sacramento finally got by
the Rainiers Thursday night,
4-0, and when the Indians lost
the first game of a double
header to Tacoma. 3-1, it
looked like the California
team would take over.
Errors Hurt
But the Indians opened un
with their howitzers in the
nightcap, buried the Giants,
12-2, and this morning, there
they were in first place by
half a gama.
In other action, Salt Lake
and Portland battled for four
hours and 43 minutes before
the Bees won in the 15th, 8-5,
and San Diego blanked Van
couver, 4-0.
Two 15th inning errors cost
Portland the ball game against
Salt Lake when Bee's catcher
Chuck Brockell reached first
on a miscue and Don Rowo
came in as a pinch runner.
Another flub by the Beavers
led Row home with what
proved to be the winning run.
Sam Miley added two more
for Salt Lake when he cleared
the bases with a triple. Dave
Jiminez, the fifth pitcher for
the Bees, was given the win.
Chuck Buheller had two hom
ers for Salt Lake and Chuck
King another.
Prospect Letterman's Club
TRAP SHOOT
AU EVENTS SHOOT
Merchandise, Money and Prizes
ALU DAY LONG
PROSPECT GUN CLUB
mp GROUttDS
-
-
- 1
I
All proceeds will b
Athletic
TAtllA
n
iff zl v y v x
liictbifop
Solons Bust Hex
But Lose Two
United Press International
Salem's Senators b o k
their "first inning Jinx"
Thursday night bui i" aidn i
do them any good.
For the first time this sea
son, Salem shut out Eugene
In the first inning of both
double header games, but still
lost both contests 3-2 and 6-4.
Salem has now lost sis
straight to Eugene.
The pair of wins moved
the league-leading Emeralds
a game and a half ahead of
Yakima and Lcwiston In
Northwest league standings.
Yakima beat Tri-City. 8-4,
and Lewiston downed Wenat
chea 6-4 in the final games of
their series.
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at BIG Discount)
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$2285
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