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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1963)
Ashland, Bedford . AREA 4 STANDINGS taviUHIB V1V1S1011) Klamath Falcons MM4fnri1 W. L. Pel 1 J)UO 7 2 .778 7 3 .700 ' Grant Pass'" VUmatH W ' 2 S 4 .600 Tri-City 2 Aahland 2 .273 .182 .182 'Saturday Gaines K1,raath Palls Falcons S. Grants Pass 1 (league) Roseburg 7, Medford 4 (1st) Roseburg 3. Medford 2 (2nd) Brookings 8, Ashland 3 Sunday Games Ashland 2. Medford 1 (league) Grants Pass 3, Brookings 2 (1st) Grants Pass 5. Brookings 3 (2nd) Central Point 4. Klamath Falls Hawks 2 (1st, league! Central Point. Klamath Falls Hawks 2 (2nd! Klamath Falls Falcons 6. Tri . City 0 (1st, league) Klamath Falls Falcons 8, Tri- City 1 (2nd) Ashland Cellarite Ash land, far out of titular run ( ning in American Legion jun ior baseball's Area 4 Southern division, played the thwarter . role here yesterday by upset , ting Medford 2 to 1 . The Lithians triumph knocked the Medfords IVi . games back of the loop pac ,. ing Klamath Falls Falcons in , the Pear city club's quest for ,,the division mantle. It was Ashland's third win of the ; season its second in league ' play- Medford had gone into the week end sharing the lead with the Klamath team. The Falcons took lone command by whipping Grants Pass 6 to 1 on Saturday and Tri-City 6 to 0 on Sunday. Information on this side of the Cascades had indicated Medford the leader going into the week end action. But, it was learned today that the Falcons had played and beat en the Klamath Hawks ahead of the date shown on the orig inal schedule. The published schedule listed the game for this Wednesday. Barger Pitches Two-Hitter A base on balls and two Medford misplays in the sixth inning yesterday enabled the Lithians to score what proved to be the winning marker. .Two hits and a wild pitch in the opening chukker account ed for a first inning Ashland run. Dave Barger limited Med ford batsmen to two hits while collecting four strikeouts and yielding two bases on balls. Jan Susce galloped home with the first Ashland count er. He singled and raced to second on a wild pitch. John Rhodes hit to drive him over. . Tom Barker tabulated Med ford's run in the fourth frame to knot the contest. He singled 'and made the grand tour on a J stolen base, passed ball and Ashland catcher Bob John son's overthrow error. Throwi Misfire Rhodes walked for the Lith ians with one out in the sixth inning. Tim Voth bunted and pitcher Bill Enyart's throw to second base went into the out field. Rhodes went on to third base and came on home when centerfielder Mike Neath amer's throw to third mis fired. Another run might have scored but Voth, who had gone to third, was caught in a rundown on a play that ap- . peared intended as a squeeze. " Bob Johnson followed by f ly- . ing to deep left field. A fifth inning Ashland bid was wrecked when a third strike squeeze play try back- . fired into a Medford double play. Barger, who had walked ' and gone to third on an error, SEAT BELTS INSTALLATION FRONT WHEEL PACK, $ 29 2 Wheels Only I WHEELS BALANCED 1.40 ZT BRAKE ADJUSTMENT Adjust All 4 Wheels to Kl 1 O Manufacturer's Specifications M I M Check and Add Needed Brake Fluid BRAKE Rellne All 4 Wheels Inspect All Parts of Braking System Add Needed Fluid Repack Front Bearings All Work Guarinteed 1 Day Service SEARS Roseburg In Legion was trapped in a run down after Ross Coldwell went out on strikes. Enyart doubled for the sec ond of Medford's two hits. Voth had a single for Ash land. Enyart in hurling a three-hit game for Medford struck out five, walked two and hit one. Brookings Boats Ashland Brookings defeated Ashland 8 to 5 here on Saturday eve ning. Ashland bounced off to a 5 to 0 first inning lead but Brookings caught up with a run in the second inning and four in the third. The coast team then took command with two fourth inning scores. Ashland runs in the first were on hits by Johnson and Barger, four bases on balls and two errors. Brookings, in its third canto, had singles by McNeely and Evensen and worked with three walks and a misplay. Dunn tripled for Brookings and he, McNeely and Evensen each had two safe swats as did Barger for Ashland. Dunn pitched four-hit ball for the coast club. He issued seven walks and fanned the same number. A s h la n d thrower Voth yielded 10 hits and four free passes. He also struck out seven. ROSEBURG WINS TWO Roseburg A six-run romp in the first inning was the victory key in the opening scuffle and a seventh inning run broke up the second fuss here Saturday night as Rose burg Lockwood Motors beat the Medford American Legion junior baseball team 7 to 4 and 3 to 2 in non-league riv alry. Lockwood had hits by Mike Blomberg and Bob Manning, in its big first-game inning. It had the benefit also of six bases on balls and two Med ford misplays. Winning run in the second game came with no one out in the second extra panel. Mike Markham tripled and pitcher Jim Calhoun made a bad throw to first base on Jerry Boucock's grounder. No-Hitter, Grand Slam As Maids Beat Seattle In Softball Doublebill Memorial Field, White City -Pat Barron pitched a no-hit game and a four-hit shutout and Sherry Larson knocked a grand slam home run here Saturday night to highlight a doubleheader sweep by the Rogue Valley Dairy Maids over Seattle, Wash., in the Northwest Women's Major Softball league. - Scores of the conflicts were 3 to 0 and 6 to 1. Rogue Valley made it three victories for the week end when the Maids swamped the Lumber Jills at Roseburg yes terday 15 to 2. Barron, in recording two hurling victories over 14 in nings, in one night, gained her no-hitter in the Saturday second game when Larson's four-run blast also occurred. Scored In Sixth The lone Seattle marker was in the final inning on two errors, a base on balls, a field er's option, a wild pitch and a double steal by Joanne Sundquist and Donna Jensen AUTOMOTIVE SPECIALS Only SPECIAL 18 95 Most American Cart Br Appointment $2 501 E. Jackson 773-6661 Open Mon. & Fri. Till 9 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, Subdue Tussles Medford had a three-run canto the sixth in the first fracas. The tallies were on a three-bagger by Calhoun, singles by Mike Barnes and Stu Young and three errors. Miles In Good Relief First tussle loss came de spite the fact that Medford outhit Roseburg seven to three with the blows among seven players. Dan Miles in S 23 Innings of relief pitch ing for Medford permitted just one hit and one run. He walked five and struck out four. Boucock also whiffed Medford batters four times. He hit one batter but did not allow a base on balls. The Roseburg runs and hits and five of the walks in the first inning were off Dane Smith. Medford scored twice in the first inning of the second ruckus. Bases were filled on a single by Ron Edmonds, a walk to Miles and a fielder's choice blow by Mike Neath amer. Young singled in one run and Tom Barker hit in the other. Roseburg duplicated in the bottom of the first with an Artie McDonald hit, a walk, and a Jim Beamer fielder's op tion blow to fill the sacks. Tom Morrison hit a two run single. Markham had two hits in this encounter. Calhoun walked just one and struck out four in four-hitter for Medford. Julio Gutierrez tossed 6 23 innings in relief for Roseburg, giving up one hit and striking out seven while walking four. LIN ESC ORES: (Sunday Game) Medford 000 100 01 2 4 Ashland 100 001 x 2 3 2 Enyart and Barnes, Barger and Johnson. . (Saturday Games) Medford 100 003 0 4 7 4 Roseburg 010 000 x 7 3 S Smith, Miles (1) and Barnes; Boucock and Beamer, Medford 200 000 02 4 t Roseburg 200 000 1 3 4 2 Calhoun and Phipps; Burnham, Gutierrez (1) and Beamer. Brookings 014 200 18 10 3 Ashland 500 000 0 S 4 3 B. Dunn and McNeely; Voth and Johnson. with Sundquist crossing plate. the All of the Maids runs in the nightcap were in the sixth in' ning. Yvonne Mclvor and Dor is Hickson were safe on er rors and Maureen Larson singled .them home. Becky Glines walked, Barron singled and Sherry Larson followed with her smash to left field. Barron walked and fanned two in her no-hitter. In the first game she struck out 10 and issued no walks but hit a batter. Sundquist went the 12 inning two-game pitching route for Seattle, permitting four safe blows in each game. In the first she whiffed four and walked one. In the second she allowed two free passes and struck out one. Maureen Larson had two hits for the Maids in the first game with nicely executed bunts. Sharon Moore hit safe ly twice for Seattle. Three Hits Each Rogue Valley used three er rors and a Jan Bateman sacri fice for a fourth inning mark er in the first game and hits by Barron, Maureen Larson and Mclvor and a fielder's choice blow by Bateman in the fifth inning for. two runs. Glines and Carol Huber each belted three hits for the Maids against Roseburg yes terday. Glines doubled twice. Sue Conway, Hickson and Janet Pfaff had two hits each. Conway tripled and Hickson doubled. Joan Heeter pound ed a two-run homer. Hickson, pitching for the Maids, gave up two hits and a walk and struck out five. Lila Voth, from Ashland, made her first apearance with the Dairy Maids on Sunday, handling the catching chores. Roseburg will meet the Jills again on Thursday evening at Memorial field. 1.1NESCORKS: (Saturday Nllhl) Seattle 000 000 0 0 4 J Roogue Valley 000 120 x 3 4 0 Sundquist and Marlow; Barron and S. Larson. Seattle 000 000 11 0 3 Rogue Valley . . 000 006 x 4 i Sundquist and Marlow; Barron and S. Larson. (Sunday Oime) . . Roseburg 000 200 0 2 2 12 Hickson and Voth; Solnlcka, Wolford 131 and Crenshsw. WTT.HORN TAKES MILE Portland - fCTO - Charles r.rnriA nf Seattle's O'Dea High School won the 100-yard dash in 9.7 and the 220 in 21.7 in inecial track events held as nart of thi Highland Games at Lewis and Clark college i Saturday. In the other events, j Dave Wilborn of Albany High ! srhnnl won the mile in 4:27.2 ! and Jere Van Dyke of Hud- ; son s Bay Hign scnool at van 1 couver. Wash., captured the 440-vard dash in 49.4. Jim 1 Price and Bob McAlpine of South Salem high ran second and third behind Wilborn In MEDFORD, OREGON GP Defeats Brookings; Falls to KF Grants Pass - Grants Pass Mock Ford turned back Brookings twice In non-league American Legion junior base ball games yesterday after dropping a Saturday night de cision to the Klamath Falls Falcons in the Southern di vision of Area 4. Mock Ford trimmed the coast club here 3 to 2 and 5 to 3. Klamath's Falcons were 6 to 1 victors at Klamath Falls. The setback kept Grants Pass (7-3) in third place in the division standings. Yesterday the Falcons (9-1) assured hold on lone first place in the cir cuit by beating Tri-City 6 to 0 in the first game of a dou bleheader. Klamath's Gary Benson chucked a three-hitter at the Fords on Saturday while the Falcons were getting eight safe blows. LeVoy Young and John Parisotto had two hits each for the Falcons. Benson tripled and Young and Guyer each two-baggered. Grants Pass had to rally for both victories yesterday. The Fords fought from be hind in the first game with two runs with two out in the bottom of the seventh in ning. Bob Peters homered for the first GP marker. Brook ings piled up all of its runs in the second game during first inning. LINESCOKE: Grants Pass 001 000 0 1 3 2 KF Falcons 200 301 x 6 8 1 Mccormack. sturza 151 and Pe ters; Benson and Paxton. Medford, Central Point Contend at In Legion Mix Tonight Medford and Central Point Cheney Studs American Le gion junior baseball teams play this evening at 8 o'clock at the fairgrounds baseball park here. This will be a non-league game and will be a makeup for a rained out scuffle. The teams have met twice so far this season with Med ford winning 3 to 0 and 2 to 0. YOUNG, PEPPER PITCH Stew Young pitched a per fect game for Medford against ENGLEHORN WINS Sutton, Mass.-IUPu-You can be sure that Shirley Englehorn of Los Angeles won't miss next year's Lady Carling East ern Open golf tournament. The $10,000 tournament won first place in her heart Sun day as she sank a five-foot putt on the 18th hole to cap ture the championship for the second consecutive year. The final putt give her a one-under-par 71. Her 54-hole score was a five -under -par 221, two strokes better than three-time National Amateur champio njo Anne Gunderson of Providence, R. I. CICRICH CHAMPION Coos Bay-MPD-George Cic- rich of Portland posted a 4 and 3 victory over Dick Han en of Coos Bay to win the 19th annual Southwestern Oregon amateur golf tourna ment Sunday afternoon. Cic rich, who also won the tour ney in 1959, defeated defend ing champion Jim Whitty Jr. of Coos Bay 2 and 1 while Hanen topped Gary Snclgrove of Coos Bay 5 and 4 in the morning semifinals. JSyl MEDFORDtfiTRIBUNI Central Point Studs Sweep Doubleheader From Klamath Nine Klamath Falls Central Point Cheney Studs fortified their hold on fourth place in the Area 4 Southern division American Legion junior base ball standings here yesterday by whipping the Klamath Falls Hawks 4 to 2. Then the Studs made it a doublebill sweep by licking the Hawks 6 to 2 in an non league second contest. MOWLDS VICTOR Prineville -(UPD- Jerry Mowlds of Portland captured the Prineville Pro-Amateur Gold Tournament by firing a two-under-par 63 Sunday. Ron Weber of Prineville and Boots Porterfield of Grants Pass shot 64s to tie for second place. Four players knotted for first spot in the amateur division with 67s. They were Millard Porter of Madras, Bob Hogan of Prineville, Joe Ahem of Portland and Ralph Swan of Vancouver, Wash. Porterfield teamed with Sandy Panner of Bend for best-ball honors with 58. Fairgrounds the Studs the last time out last Monday. Coach Cliff Mc Lean has reported that Young will open on the mound this evening but indicated that he did not plan to have him go the full route. Manager Bill Askwilh has named Larry Pepper to pilch for the Cen tral Pointers. The Medford-Central Point rivalry is a long standing, in tense one and good baseball has been the rule. Medford will entertain Grants Pass in a Tuesday night game at the fairgrounds. This non-leaguer is set for p.m. also. Central Point will take on Tri-City on Wednes day evening in an Area Southern division scrape at Memorial field. White City. Rowland Fires Perfect1 Score In Trap Event A perfect handicap score of 25 of 25 was shot by Keith Rowland who also gained a 24 of 25 in the 16-yard trap event at the Medford Gun club, Sunday, July 7. Shooting in the same event with 24 of 25 were Merve Colvin and Ray Coleman. Loyd Langsten, Bernard Hen ry, Floyd Young and Donn Gail scored 23 of 25. Jim Morava, Howard Mey ers, Bill Poff, Henry Cawkcr, Percy Bearden and Bill Bry ant all shot 24 of 25 with Charles Bendcl and Bob Mc- Intyre scoring 49 of 50. In skeet shooting events, Max Weston shot 23 of 25, Bernard Henry gained 21 of 25, and Drs. A. S. Anderson and Charles Lcmcry along with Loren Laughton all shot 20 of 25. The next shoot will be held next Sunday, July 14. 01 I Central Point is now 6-4 in the circuit, a game back of third place Grants Pass (7-3). The Hawks are 3-8. Bob Corliss chucked a seven-hitter for the Studs and Pat Pepper collected two hits in the first game win. . Three Wild Pitches Central Point picked up its opening tut runs over tour innings. One scored in the first inning on singles by Luis Alvarez, Pepper and Darryl Summerficld. Pepper singled in the third inning and three wild pitches got him home. In the fifth inning a base on balls, a wild pitch and singles by Neil Rivenburg and Wayne Clay gained the mark ers with Clay driving in both scores. The Hawks, for one run in the first inning, employed two walks, a wild pitch and a sin gle by Marv Cunningham. In the second for the other tally, there were two bases on balls and hits by Bob Woldt and Rich Bath. Cunningham had two hits for the Hawks. Corliss walked six and whiffed seven. Klamath pit cher Steve Young recorded seven bases on balls and seven strikeouts. Two In Second Central Point put together three walks, a wild pitch and hits by Rivenburg and Larry Mason for two runs in the sec ond inning of the second fray. Two more tabulated in tne third inning on hits by Sum merficld, Clay and Bob Stroh. A walk, error and Pepper hit got a run in the fourth in ning. In the fifth a Riven burg single, an error and a Mike Anhorn sacrifice added a counter. Rivenburg hit two for three in the mix. Starting pitcher Mason is sued five bases on balls and struck out three and gave up the four hits to KF. Clay fanned five and walked four in finishing the fracas. Jon Pilgrim in a seven-hitter for the Hawks, struck out six and free-passed four. The Studs oppose Medford at 8 o'clock this evening at the county fairgrounds at Medford in a non-league game. MNKSCORKS! Central Point .... 101 020 04 0 KF Hawks 110 000 02 7 1 Corliss and Summerficld; Young and Narremore. Central Point 022 110 7 1 KF Hawks .. 110 002 4 3 Mason. Clay (4) and bummer- field: Pilgrim and Petrlck. I IS THIS THE I I 'P MILE TIRE? I I The New General JETAIR 30 More Mileage Tdual treads 1 gg AT TMt iMI LOW KICK I ,0r ,UP" t'0(1 H , . I and stability 5? ? We drovs the new Jet-Air 62,415 miles on our lest track Sfs and it still had tread left. r., xl I NYGEN CORD S We also tortured it on cut-cinder road and wore it out at 20,000 milos. We believe you should get somewhere between the two. The miracle Mileage of Duragen ... the terrific traction of Dual Treads ... the added blowout protection of cool-running Nygen Cords all add 30 more mileage to new Jet-Airs. You'll probably trade your car before you wear them out. Convenient Terms . Take Months To FRONT Stop shimmy Drive safe, alignment. InteKtton intf of tlHiinf Afliwitmtnt of and toe-out Cornet caster GENERAL Falcon Has No-Hitter Merrill Rich Grow pit ched a no-hit, no-run victory here Sunday as the Klamath Falls Falcons bolstered their American Legion junior base ball loop leadership by beat ing Tri-City Gems 6 to 0. The win gave the Falcons a 9 and 1 stap ling in the South ern division of Area 4. Tri City was shoved into a cellar share with Ashland at 2 and 9. Klamath also won the sec ond mix 8 to 1. Grow struck out batters seven times. He walked three and hit one. He was in a jam in the seventh inning when the bases were loaded. Death Calls Doc Kearns By CHARLES TAYLOR Miami, Fla. - IUPD - Through out the boxing world today the bell was mournfully toll ing "ten" for Jack (Doc) Kearns, the fight game's most fabulous manager, who died here early Sunday in his sleep. Jack Dcmpsey and others among the eight world cham pions who had been manaecd by 80-ycar-old Doc phoned or messaged their condolences to members of the family. Dempsey, 68, who teamed with Kearns and the late pro moter, Tex Rickard, in the Roaring Twenties to produce the first million-dollar fight gate, assured over the phone from New York: "I'll fly into Miami Tuesday afternoon." Services Wednosday Services were tentatively scheduled for the Philbrick Funeral home in nearby Coral Gables, Fla., at 10 a.m. Wed nesday. Kearns recently estimated that ne had managed more than 500 professional boxers and that "since nearly all of my boys were good earners, I figure their total purses must have exceeded $40 million, and that my share was about $13 million." He paused then and added, And you'd never believe a man could go through that much money." GRID STAR DIES Steubcnville, Ohio-IUPII -Dr T. Bradley Sullivan, 46, Little All-America lineman at Western Reserve in 1938 and 1937 and later football captain at Michigan Slate, died Sun day at his home of cancer. BREAKS WORLD MARK Morgan Cily, La.-flPB-Ben Trumo of Miami, piloting his Second Mortgage around the five milo Lake Palourde course at 65.336 miles per hour, broke his own world's record in wining the American Power Boat asociation s E- service runabout eastern divi sional championship Sunday. END ALIGNMENT and shake . . . uneven tire wear. stop straight with this precision Includes: rot AIL U.S. CARS adiuilmint toe - ft an ctmbtr Service of Medford MONDAY, JULY 8. Rhubarb Over No-Hit PCL Game By DAVE ROWE UPI Sports Writer The Pacific Coast League all-star game is scheduled to night at Spokane but all of the talk in the league is about the controverisal no-hit, no run game thrown Saturday night by Spokane pitcher Bob Radovich. The 24-year-old rookie right-hander threw the no-no game-his first complete game of the year-striking out six and facing only 29 batters, two over the minimum. The controversy arose when Islander Ron Samford walked in the ninth and his pinch runner, Stan Palys, apparent ly let a grounder hit by Brown Taylor hit him on the leg. The rule book states that Palys should be called out, ending the game, and Taylor be given a single, ruining the no-hitter. Ruling By Soriano League President Dewey Soriano, attending the game, ruled that Palys had inten tionally let the ball hit him and declared the game a no hitter. Tonight's all-star tilt will feature a team of top players voted on by the PCL Baseball Writers' Association. They'll meet the Spokane Indians. The stars will be managed by Grady Hatton, of Oklahoma City. The game starts at 8 p.m. Golfers Qualifying In PNG A Tourney Spokane, Wash. - IUP0 - A field of 206 men teed off to day in the first qualifying round of the week-long Pa cific Northwest Golf associa tion tournament at the Spo kane Country Club. Across town at the Manlto Golf and Country Club, 133 women were teeing off in the feminine division of the re gional amateur competition. ROOKIE SENT DOWN New York-(l)PD-The New York Mcts shipped bonus rookie Ed Kranepool to Buff alo of the International league Sunday and recalled pitcher Grover Powell, whose record was 5-5 with Raleigh In the Carolina league. Kranepool, the 18-ycar-old local product whom the Mcts signed for an estimated $85,000 last year, was hitting only .189. QUALIFY FOR TOURNEY Sacramento, Calif.-OJPD-Men from the nation's muncipal courscs-who make up the ma' jority of the country's golfers- tee off today In the final qualifying rounds of the Na tional Public Links tourney. They play 18 holes today, an other 18 Tuesday, and then the field of 150 will be whittled down to 64 for match play starting Wednesday, BRAKE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL! 1 Lot your General Tirt dealer precision-adjust mi ucmcAN caas jour uranti on All wnIS 10 tMieu iuirnci, uon i teuit hazard work. Injure safe stopping xprt adjustment . . . this week TO 1112 Court Street Phone 773-825S i mi "' expert adiustmtnt ... this waak onlv Ki 1463 B Rainy Weather Damages Crops Portland - UIPD - Atrricul. tural agents in ' Multnomah, Clackamas, and Washington counties reported today that rainy weather in northwest ern Oregon has caused some damage to strawberry and cherry crops. Most of the berries had been harvested before tha rainy period began but the end of the crop has been af fected. J. Fremont Sprowls, Mult nomah county agent, said rot has destroyed as much as a third of the yield in some unpicked berry fields, but probably less than 25 per cent of the total crop was hurt. In Washington county the strawberry crop was 25 pep cent below normal, according to agent Palmer Torvend. Ha said that unfavorable weath er had reduced the cherry, peach, and prune potential 20 to 25 per cent. Joan Kennedy Home ' Following Surgery Hyannis, Mass. - IUPD - Mrs. Joan Kennedy, 26-year-old wife of Sen. Edward M. Ken nedy, (D-Mass.) was recuper ating at their summer home on nearby Squaw Island today after throat surgery to relieve an abscess. Mrs. Kennedy was released Sunday from Cape Cod Hos pital. She underwent the op eration Thursday. THEY AREN'T? Eton, England - (DPI) - Claude Taylor, a classics teacher who will move from the all-boy Eton School to the all-girl North Foreland Lodge School next year, got off to a dubious start today when he said he expects no difficulty in the switch because "girls are ne different from boys." StsD-O-Matlc Brake Lining I I srall.d en all 4 Wheals WHILE YOU WAITf Easy fermi. Irake Specialist for 23 run. Phone 779-1966 I I Tssal ft TsV 1 ii r i in i k. I tik NATMAL I (v J BRAKE CENTER j A 1216 North Court , . v lor cooi-runntng j I blowout protection DURAGEN RUBBER I lor new, sate ft I miracle mileage g Pay! 1 factory ior nap- m W M x with this only . j the mile.