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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1963)
PAGE-ll HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Tuesday, September 9, 1963 Ageless Spahn Wins 18th Game (Continued I rum Page 13) gel, the Mels' 73-year-old manag er, will retire first. "Thai's a tough one," said the Milwaukee manager. "I'll say this, though. It doesn't look like either one is even close to quit ting time. Del Crandall, who has been catching Spahn for almost 15 years, believes the hawk-nosed lefty can continue pitching "as long as he wants to." "He's in the same remarkable condition now that he was 10 or IS years ago," Crandall said. "That arm of his never seems to get tired." Crandall added another reveal ing thought on Spahn's remarka ble major league longevity when he pointed out that "Warren add ed years to his career when he learned to throw the screwball. Spahn is inclined to agree. . "It's no secret that I started to lose my fast ball amost 10 years ago," the Buffalo, N.Y., native de clared, "I couldn't blow the fast one past the hitters any more so 1 came up with the screwball to use against right-handed batters. I began using it in 1954 and I've been using it ever since. Asked if the screwball puts more strain on his aging arm, Spahnie laughed. "Heck, no," he said. "I don't twist my arm the way Carl Hub- bell did. I .throw it off my index ' finger instead of off the middle finger, as you do a curve. At first, ; I could feel it in my shoulder mus cles and I had to take it easy. Now it's no harder on my arm than any other pitch." In addition to his screwball, Spahn still has a good curve that ho throws with varying speeds, a slider, a sinker and a burning desire to keep pitching "until that old arm falls off." Gone Fishin' Antww to Previous Punla EE ACROSS 1 Fishermen'! polo A Fish 0 Good of a strike on a lino 12 Kaill 13 Singing voice 14 Measure of land 19 Ribbed fabric 16 Kchinoderm (2 words) in Built 20 Make amends 21 Born 22 Goddess 24 Mother of Pollux (myth.) 26 Dines 27 Energy (slang) 30 Diapatch boats 32 Fissured 34 Renovates 35 Rub, as with oil 36 Angular (ab.) 37 Kind of Uda 39 Arrow poison 40 Ba undecided 41 Circle part 42 Fishing boat captain will do it 45 Expedient 49 Hapless fisherman li words) si iw many varieties of fikh , 52 Trieste wine measures 53 Kind of gum 54 Negative prefix 55 Hurl 56 One who (suffix) 67 Onager UOWS 1 Some fish are 2 Above 3 Relying 4 Sew lightly 5 Nautical term IVIEIK n i ppl EUoTteAfrtel eIaIseMlEU LMatitel S 1 1 m KJl SgJB i" d g tHm 3BM feB5 BUE! B 2 X A Tien rjeE T R e' plAlLlAblel "Tr eMefr 6 Military range finder 7 French coin fi Circumstances 9 Kevcrberale 10 Ireland 1 1 Unasniraled 17 Dried grape 19 Stop 2'i Leather thong 24 Venezuelan state 25 Level 26 German community 28 Anglo-Saxon theow 29 Masculine nickname 31 Possessors 33 Watered mohall 38 Ingenious 40 Fathers iFr.) 41 Performer 42 Blemish 43 Bull ISp ) 44 Eternities 46 Sea eagle 47 Golf teachers 48 Number (pi.) 27 Peacock flower 50 Pecks lab.) 1 2 13 I U 15 16 17 I 8 14 llO 111 is n u i? '-ft i7" rs 19 rp 21 5F2F 1 -5T -1 2? 28 29 33 31 32 33 3? 33 3S "37 W r 31 40 I pr ' 42 143 144 " 4a W 47 jw 8 50 " 5l 52 33 : 5? 55 56 57 1111 I I I I I I I I 3l A U.S. passport can be ren dered invalid by the simple chang ing or attempted altering of any of its official text. A healthy duckbill platypus can devour 800 earthworms, a hand ful of grubs and a dozen crayfish at a single meal. Teller Raps Ban Treaty WASHINGTON (UPI)-Dr. Ed ward Teller, chief opponent ot the nuclear test ban treaty, believes the United States based its de cision to sign the pact on a "false none of peace. Teller said in a television inter view Sunday the only way to pre serve true world peace is for this country to remain militarily strong as we have done." He appeared on Meet The Press. . . .NBC. The nuclear physicist said the treaty would keep the Umled States from developing an effec tive anti-missile missile. He said "we desperately need to know the effect of a nuclear blast in the atmosphere" on U.S. radar de fenses. The treaty, which bars all nu clear tests except underground blasts, comes tip on the Senate floor for ratification on Sept. 9. It was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 16 to II. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, I)-Conn.. Sunday credited Secretary of Stale Dean Rusk with persuading several skeptics to support the treaty at a closed committee meeting last Wednesday. Dodd. appearing on a television program said he thought Rusk "greatly influenced . . . those who had any doubt." The Connecticut senator specifi rally mentioned Sens. Karl Mundt. USD., Frank La use he. D-Ohio. and Botirke B. llicken loopcr, It-lowa. YOUR HEADQUARTERS For School Supplies and Required WORKBOOKS PRICES EFFECTIVE WED. THUBS. ONLY Minimum Wage Increase Means Hike In Pay For Many WASHINGTON (L'PD-An esti mated 2.6CO,000 workers will get pay increases this week rangingi up to 10 cents an hour. This is bec ause the federal minimum wage goes from $1.15 to $1.25 an hour effective Tuesday The minimum applies to jobs held by nearly 28 million workers involved in interstate commerce but most of them already earn more than the $1.25 hourly rate. The Labor Department est imated that tlie raises would add $365 million to employers' pay rolls in the coming year. Extended Coverage The 44-hour standard week also goes into etfect tomorrow for employes in big retail and serv- Two Killed In Roseburg Track Mishap ItOSEBURG IL'PI) - A racing car left the track and plunged in to a grandstand in front of some 1,000 horrified spectators Saturday night, killing two men and injuring 23 other persons. The accident occurred at t h e speedway five miles south of here during the third lap of a hardtop race. Dead were spectators Orval Bell, 27, and Del Ray Pcirsol, 42, both of nearby Winston. Roger Mills, 18, also of Winston, was in jured critically. None of the others hospitalized was reported in serious condition. Thirlppn were released from hos pitals Sunday or were treated for minor injuries alter tne accident DeSylvia Will Not RettO-n EUGENE (UPD Reserve quarterback Terry DeSylvia will not return to the University ol Oregon this fall. Football coach Len Casanova said Monday DeSylvia has told him he "plans to move to Cali fornia with his father and trans fer to a school in that state. De Sylvia would have been a junior this fall. His father, Tom, former Jeffer son High School and Portland State football coach, has accepted a high school coaching job at San Mateo, Calif. Casanova put his team through two workouts, including a scrim mage session, Monday. and released. Nine others were listed in good condition today. Driver Bruised Marion (Bud Van Osten, 30. Roseburg, driver ol the car. was thrown from the vehicle and suf fered bruises and abrasions. The accident occurred, officials said, when Van Osten's left rear wheel apparently caught the right front wheel of the car driven by Al Welkcr. Van Osten's car flipped over a retaining wall and into the grandstand's third, fourth and fifth rows. Welkcr's car spun but wound up harmlessly in the center of the track. He was not hurt. Local Fans Hurt The injured were from the Rose burg area except for Hilda Ahm- WOULD BAR MARTELLI LONDON (UPD Britain an nounced Monday night it has asked the European Atomic Agen cy (EURATOMl not to renew the employment of Italian scientist Dr. Giuseppe Martelli, who was tried and found innocent of charges of preparing to spy for Russia. Martelli was working on non secret research at a British atom ic station on loan from EURA TOM when arrested and tried as a potential spy. He has been sus pended since his arrest in April. strom, 25, Fremont, Calif., who suffered a leg fracture, and her husband, Alfred, 25. Others who were hospitalized in cluded: Dennis Mills. 52, Winston; Susan Mills, 17, Dillard; Andrea Mills, 21, Winston; Sherman Dav is, 44, Winston; Billie Jean Black, 18, Winston; Pat Lail, 18, Winston, and lna Jean Bell, 20, Winston. Others treated for injuries in cluded Mrs. Virgil Mills, 23, Win ston; Mrs. Harold Marlow, Win ston; Thomas Jones, 20, Roseburg; Pat Harty, 17, Winston; Ralph Christopher, 15, Eugene; Harry Thorn, 22, Roseburg; William Ro bertson, 27 Winston; Frank Davis 13, Winston; Wanda Lee HooDcr 28, Eugene: Rodney Burkhaii. 21, Coquille; Edgar Person, 44. Ross burg, and Harold Keeney, Wi.i ston. ice establishments brought under the law in mi. This means that workers in these categories must be paid time-and-a-half if they work more that 44 hours a week. The wage minimum for this group of work ers is now $1 an hour. Labor Secretary W. Willaid Wirtz recalled that the wage-hour law, formally known as tlie Fair Labor Standards Act, was passed a quarter of a century ago. Stabilizing Effect 'We have come a long way since the legislation was passed with a minimum wa.,e of 25 cents an hour," Wirtz said in a state ment. "Gains since that time have contributed to a higher standard of living and a stabilized national economy." He termed the law "a beacon ol human progress identifiable with the American way of life." Even las the latest step-up in the minimum takes effect, there are calls for another increase to $1.50 and extension of the law's coverage. AFL-CIO Favors Boost The AFL-CIO has gone on rec ord in favor of a boost of 25 cents more in the floor under wages. Leaders of last week's civil rights march on Washington echoed the! demand for a higher minimum. But prospects of Congressional action do not appear blight. Ad ministration spokesmen have sup ported broader coverage of the law to include laundry, hotel and restaurant workers but even this limited goal is not considered likely to be achieved at this session. Raising the minimum Tuesday ..in til fnr a 40-hnur week in jobs covered by the law has re quired some labor unions to change their contracts tor certain low-paid workers. 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