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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON SUNDAY. JULY 28. 1863 RELAY ENTRY-Jimmy Marshal (in water), Kelly Jensen (about to dive), Rocky Peters and Steve Capsey will be Medford's relay team in the midget division of the upcom ing Oregon Association Junior Olympics Short Course Swimming championships. The meet will take place at Jackson Park pool in Medford Aug. 2 and 3. The midget divi sion, for entrants 10 years of age and under, is one of four in the meet. The others will be the junior (11 and 12 years), intermediate (13 and 14) and senior (15 and 16) divisions. Girls' preliminaries will start at 10 a.m. Aug. 2 with finals at 7 p.m., boys' prelims at 10 a.m. Aug. 3 with finals at 7 p.m. Boys' and girls' diving prelims will start at 5 p.m. Aug. 2 with finals at 5 p.m. Aug. 3. Palmer, Snead Take Over Lead In Western Open Golf Tourney Chicago -IUP1I- Sam Snead and Arnold Palmer charged from behind Saturday to over whelm slumping Fred Haw kins and share first place with 18 holes to play in the $50,000 Western Open golf tourna ment. Snead, who would become the oldest man ever to win a PGA tourney if he can cap ture this one - 51 years and two months - tallied a three under par 68 on the 6,867 yard Beverly course for a 54 hole total of 207, six under par. Palmer, golf's leading mon ey winner with five tourney wins this year, shot a four under par 67 for the same total. Palmer dropped an 18 foot putt for a birdie on the last green to equal the best round of the day and step into the deadlock. Hawkins, a 39-year-old El Paso, Tex., pro who has won only one tournament in 16 years on the tour, set the pace for the first round with a 67 and at tne midway point with a 68 for a 135 card, when Snead was four strokes be hind at 139 and Palmer five strokes off at 140. But Hawkins started giving ground to par on the second hole Saturday and wound up with a five over par 75 for a 54-hole total of 211, four strokes behind the pacemak ers. Hawkins, though, held third place with a one-stroke mar gin over Lionel Hebert who had a 72 for 212, and two strokes on National Open champ Julius Boros, who took a 74 for 213. Only four players - Snead, Palmer, Gardner Dickinson with a 68 and Bobby Nichols with a 67 - were able to break par and only eight matched it. On the first day 16 beat par and Friday 13 players bettered It. Snead had eight one-putt greens and three-putted once, when he took a "bogey five on the 10th hole. But he canned 12-foot putts twice for birdies and his approaches on other holes left him less than four feet from the pin to go under par. Palmer missed only one fairway and turned the back nine in 31 strokes, only one off the course record for that stretch, posting five pars and four birds. He canned a 25-fnnler on the 14th as well as the long on 18. City of Medford NATIONAL LEAGUE w Washington Cubs 15 wasmneton uodaeri 13 Jackson Braves . 11 Griffin Creek Reds S Jefferson Giants . 3 Jefferson Pirates 3 AMERICAN LEAGUE W Howard Angela 13 Howard Colls , 10 Hedrick Sox 10 Wilson Yanks 7 Hawthorne Tigers 3 Hawthorne Hawks 1 Pet. .1138 .813 .688 JI3 .12.1 .123 Pel. .R00 j;i7 .fiti7 467 .333 .067 LAST WEEKS RESULTS ' National league Reds 13 Pirates 8: Cubs ft Giants 4: Dodgers 10 Braves 7: Dodgers 13 Reds 4: Cubs 3 Braves 2. Pi rates 4 Giants 3: Cubs 18 Reds 1: uodgers 4 pirates 1: Braves 10 Giants 6: Braves 7 Reds 3; Dodgers 17 Giants 2: Cubs 7 Pirales 3. American League Sox 9 Yanks 2; Angels 12 Tigers 0: Colts 8 Hawks 4: Hawks 7 Yanks 3: Angels 10 Colts 3; Sox 0 Tigers 3: Angels H Yanks 3; box 14 Hawks 6: Colts 6 Tigers 3. All Star Game American League 10 National League 5. STOP! SWAP! GO! i CAT PARTS RENEWED INSTANTLY OUR GENUINE CATERPILLAR PARTS EXCHANGE SYSTEM PUTS YOU BACK TO WORK QUICKLY . . . CHEAPLY! 000000000 0 Tell ui what parts assembly you need . . . stop in and pick it up . . . install it . . . return the worn assembly to us for credit. That's how the PARTS EXCHANGE PLAN works. Saves you time and money. You get a precision rebuilt Cat part for your old one. We rebuild your worn assembly according to Caterpillar specifications and charge you only for the labor and materials necessary to recondition the item. Savings over new parts cost runs from 20 to 50 . . . so STOP ond SWAP! i 1 i YOUR CATERPILLAR DEALER I 2919 North Pacific Hwy. CiUrpltUr tnl ( l art rriirl lraomfkc f Ciltrpillir TrirUr C: Medford Phone 773-7514 THIS WEEKS SCHF.nULK: (Games t 9 i.m, and 1 p.m.) Monday morning (National) Griffin Creek Reds at Jefferson Giants, Jefferson Pirates at Jack son Braves; Washington Dodgers at Washington Cubs. Monday afternoon (American) Howard Colts at Wilson Yanks; Hawthorne Tigers at Hawthorne Hawks; Hoover Angels at Hedrick Sox. Tuesday morning (National Griffin Creek Reds at Jackson Braves; Jefferson Giants at Wash ington Dodgers; Washington Cubt at Jefferson Pirates. Tuesday afternoon (American) Hawthorne Tigers at Wilson Yanks; Howard Colts at Hedrick Sox; Hoover Angels at Hawthorne Hawks. Wednesday morning (National) Griffin Creek Reds at Jefferson Giants: Jefferson Pirates at JacK- son Braves; Washington Dodgers at wasnington l.uds. Wednesday afternoon (American) Wilson Yanks at Hedrick Sox; Hoover Ancels vs. Hawthorne Ti gers at Hedrick; Howard Colts at Hawthorn Hawks. Thursday morning (National) Griffin Creek Reds at Jefferson Pirates: Jefferson Pirates at wash' ington Cubs. Washington Dodgers at Jackson Braves. Thursday afternoon (American) Hawthorne Hawks at Wilson Yanks: Hoover Ancels vs. How ard Colts at Hedrick; Hedrick Sox at Hawthorne Tigers. Friday morning (National) Griffin Creek Reds at Washington Dodgers; Washington Cubs at Jack son Braves; Jefferson Giants at Jefferson Pirates. 1 " ci ---v L "1 Vh f ; p . o its i TRYING IT FOR SIZE-Bclore last week's all-star game between the American and National league of the City ol Medford Rec reation department's Sandblower baseball program, some of the players tried out the new dugouts at the Jackson County Fair grounds ball diamond. The dugouts were completed last week through the efforts of Bricklayers Union No. 9 and other local groups, with materials donated by local businessmen, (Knackstedt photo) Coates Goes From 3-0 To 3-2 Rapidly By DAVE ROWE UPI Sports Writer On Wednesday, Jim Coates, San Diego pitcher, had a per fect 3-0 record. On Thursday his record was 3-1 and Friday it was 3-2. Coates lost his second game in as many nights in a relief role Friday night against Dal las -Ft. Worth. He replaced Sammy Ellis in the ninth in ning with the score tied at 0-0. In the 10th he gave up a home run ball to Jay Ward with two men on base to lose the 3-0 verdict. Ted Sadowski went the route for the Rang ers to gain his eighth victory against as many losses. The low-hit affair saw DhI-las-Ft. Worth collecting but four hits to three for the Padres. In other Friday PCL games, Spokane downed Portland 5-3, Hawaii nipped Tacoma 3-1, Seattle edged Oklahoma City 2-1 and Denver and Salt Lake split a double header, both games being overtime. The Bears won the opener 3-2 in 8 innings and the Bees the nightcap, 7-6 in 12. Junior Enters SOUTHERN ORKOON JUNIOR KASKBALL Junior League W Crater Cubs fi Grants Pass ft Medford 2 CP Mustangs 2 Ashland 1 Intermediate League W Central Ft. Stars ...... 7 Medford Yanks 6 Medford lit ants 4 Phoenix-Talent 3 Central Point Rams 1 Prospect 0 Baseball Final Week St MEETS OLYMPIC TEAM Grand Forks, N. D.-IUPI)-The University of North Dakota hockey team, which edged Denver 5-4 for the NCAA championship In March, will play the U. S. Olympic team as part of its 23-game 1963-64 schedule. The Sioux, members of the Western Hockey asso ciation, will play 14 league contests. Pee Wee League W Central Point Braves 10 Medford Tigers 7 Medford Wildcat! . 7 Jacksonville 9 Central Point Indians J Prospect 3 Phoenix-Talent 2 Pet. I.nno .714 .400 .1117 .167 Prt. .7S .750 .971 .333 .143 .000 Pet. .009 .700 .700 .4.15 .333 .300 .200 Thursday Gamt (pee wee) Jacksonville 112 II s .1 2 Phoenix-Talent noo on n l r, Peterson and Holden: Roberts and Yates, Tussle (4). Friday Karnes (pee wee) Phoenix-Talent ....022 It S 4 Prospect 101 327 S 5 Dyson and Tussle; Davis and D. Maurer. (Intermediate) Phoenix-Talent 110 120 0 .1 Prospect 210 000 3 6 ft !i Sparks and Graham; A. Maurer and McElmery. (pee wee) CP Braves 202 02 S 2 3 Wildcats 023 00 ft 1 4 Bailey and D. Miller; Russell and Ness. Skaters Compete In Roller Events B 7 Portland, Ore. (UPD About 1,400 of the best skaters In the United States and Can ada began competition Sat urday in the North American roller skating championships. The eight - day program began Friday with a parade through the city and the "Roll er Spectacular of 1963" at the city's Memorial Coliseum. Final events on the first day of the program include the junior fours, novice men's, intermediate pairs, novice dance and juvenile "B" girl's classes. The senior men's five mile speed event concludes the competition. One of the entries in that race is Ed Pc rales, Torrance, Calif., the de fending men's speed skating champion. World Skating Congress j champions Paul Bochm and ; Pamela Cornwall, Houston, Tex., and Adolph Wacker and Linda Motticc, Canon, Ohio, also are entered here. Boahm and Miss Cornwall won tha senior pain title last fall and Wacker and Miss Mottice won the senior dance champion' ship. IB Gold Ray Fish Count WKKK ENDINO JULY 27 Chinook Salmon 49ft (includes 34.9 per cent Jack salmon.) Summer Run Steelhead 86. FU1.1. SKASOS Chinook Salmon 40.029 (in cludes 16S per cent jack salmon since April 17.) Summer Run Steelhead 508. Stop-O-Mstk Irak lining In stalled en all 4 Wheals WHILi YOU WAIT! Easy tarm. Bkt Speclslitt for 23 yean. Phona 779-1966 NATIONAL BRAKE CENTER 1216 North Court Grants Pass defeated Ash land 6 to 5 in Southern Ore gon Junior baseball last week to its slim hopes in the junior league race. Going into the final week of play this week the Crater Cubs have a 6 and 0 mark while Grants fass is 5 and 2. The two teams meet Wed nesday on the Cubs' home field. Grants Pass will have to beat the Cubs and then hope that the Cubs lose to Ashland Thursday in older to get a lie. Grants Pass plays only the one game this week. Any combination of one Cub win or Grants Pass loss will give the Central Pointers the title. In the lone intermediate game last Friday, Prospect de feated Phoenix - Talent 6 to 5. Friday pee wee league ac tion saw Prospect beat Phoe nix - Talent 7 to 6 and the Central Point Braves, who have clinched the league crown, defeat the Medford Wildcats 6 to 5. The Central Point Stars lead in the Intermediate league by one game over the Medford Yankees. They have clinched at least a tie for the championship of the league. Each team plays one game this week. A Star loss coupled with a Yankee win would knot the lead. Lincscores and this week's schedule; GAMKS THIS WEEK (Junior I.eacue) Wednesday: Ashland at Medford; Grants Pass at crater Cuba 12 p.m.) Thursday: Mustangs at Med ford; Ashland at Crater Cubs 12 p.m.). Medford may play Mus tangs a second time to make up for July 16 postponement. Thursday Is Entry Deadline Entries for the Medford Community Tennis tourna ment, scheduled for Aug. 3 and 4 at the Medford High tennis courts, must be in by this coming Thursday, Aug. 1. First round junior men's singles will begin at 7 a.m., Aug. 3, followed by the first round of women's singles. All players are advised to report to the scorer's ' table at t h e courts on Saturday morning, Aug. 3 to be scheduled. Entries may be made by contacting Ron Singler at 773 1458 or John Root at 773-3155. Entry fees must be payed be fore the first match is played. Fees are as follows; men's singles, $2; men's doubles, $3; junior men's singles, $1.50; women s singles, $1.50, wom en's doubles, $2; and mixed doubles, $3. (Intermediate League) Monday: Yankees at Rams; Phoe nix-Talent at Giants. (2 p.m.). lucsaay: trnspeci at Hams iini lowinc pee wee same at in a.m.) Thursday; Prospect at Giants (10 a.m.) Stars will play Rams once more on date to be decided. (pee wee League) Tuesday. Linns at Indians; Phne nix Talent at Wildcats; Tigers at jacKsonvuie. ini a.m.i. Thursday: Wildcats at Indians; Lions at Tigers; Braves at Phoenix Talent. (2 p.m.). ROUGH COMPETITION Chapel Hill, N. C.-(UPH-Op poncnts Kentucky, Indiana Notre Dame, and New York University top the .1963-64 basketball schedule of the University of North Carolina Coach Dean Smith's Tar Heels will have eight lcttermen re turning from last year's club which posted a record of 15-6. The Advantages of LEASING A New Car or Truck From Courtesy Chevrolet Let ut esplsln tha poilibla advintaajet of leasing a car or truck. Coma in soonl It coirs nothine, to Invoitigatt our low cost tltxibla least plan. Remember when you leato from t Now Car Doaltr you havo tha protection ot Now Car Dollar Sorvlco plug Factory Waiunty. Courtesy Chevrolet 9th and Bartlett Sti. Phono 772-6115 Terrell Decisions Folley At Garden By JACK CUDDY UPI Sports Writer New York -IUPD- Heavy- weight contender Ernie Ter rell, Chicago giant, speared veteran Zora Folley with long left jabs and shook him with rights Saturday night in their nationally televised fight at Madison Square Garden for a unanimous 10-round deci sion and his eighth straight victory. The bout was so onr-sided that many of the 2.200 fans booed in the seventh round and at the finish. Terrell carrying 204 pounds on a six-font-scven frame, threatened lo put away 31- year-old Folley of Chandler, Ariz., in the second and fourth rounds when long left jabs and whistling rights to the head had the seventh ranking contender staggering briefly. Folley, 203'1i, looked like a small boy fighting a man in many of the sessions be cause of Ernie's towering height. Terrell, 24, not only landed by far the most punches but he also leaned over his six-foot-one opponent and strap ped his long arms about Zora and tied him up tightly at close quarters. Terrell, ranked cil'hlh among contenders, was hurt only once. That was in the eighth round when Folley landed his best punch of the night, left hook near the end of the session and knock ed big Ernie Into a sideways lurch. Despite that punch, Terrell won the round on two of three score sheets. There were no knockdowns but Folley suffered a cut at the corner of his right eye in the seventh round. They went Into the ring at "even money" in the betting; but the ring officials favored Terrell on a rounds basis as follows: referee Zack Clayton, 7-2-1; judge Bill Recht, 7-1-2; judge Artie Aidala, 7-3. The United Press International had Ernie ahead 7-2-1. It was Folley's seventh de feat in 73 fights and Terrell'8 31st victory In 35. The lopsided triumph mov ed Terrell a long step toward a possible title fight - perhaps with champion Sonny Lislon, who abhors Ernie and hij hit a n d-hold style. Liston has stated definitely, he wants no part of Terrell because of that unpopular style. BRILL METAL WORKS Com mtrcial Industrial Rldntil Sheet Metal Work Stainless, GaWanfied and Copper Fabrication 2287 West Main PH0NC 772-4440 1 SUMMER SWIMWEAR CLEARAN CE saiMSWoWMMMsWBsaaa MEN'S and BOYS' L r OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FAMOUS MAKE MEN'S AND BOYS' SWIMSUITS . . . BOXER STYLES IN ALL COTTON OR DACRON COTTON BLEND. POPULAR MID-THIGH LENGTH SNUG FITS . . . SHORT -LEG HIP RIDERS . . . EVERY STYLE, EVERY COLOR, EVERY MODEL . . . Boys', reg. 2.50 to 5.00, Men' reg. 2.98 to 7.95. ALL V3 OFF 215 E. MAIN 773-7484