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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1935)
PAGE TWO MEDFORD if AIL TRTBUN'E, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1935 ------ -n S ""MS f 1 KLAMATHITES 6-1 IN LEAGUE FINAL Th plan of th Medford Rogues to heave a money wrench into the machinery of the Klamath Red Box' pennant chances worked with a vengeance yesterday, as the local nine alommed out a convincing a-1 victory over the lada from over the hump. Bauman, Medlord chucker, pitched one of the greateat games of the year, despite advance dope that a left-handed hurler couldn't hope to hold the Riid Sox bombers. Baumnn walked Brooks, Klamath second bagger, the first man up, and only walked one other man during the whole game. Shlpman bunted Brooks to second, he took third on Bernadou'a hit to left field, and came home on Wheeler's nit to center field, to score the lone run his club made during the aft ernoon. Klamath only got one man as far aa second during the re mainder of the day, while the Rogues were off to a Roman holi day. "Iloosler" Hotfard. grand old gen tleman of the diamond, tore Into three heaves out of four Jaunta to the platter to give hla batting aver age another lift. In the fonrtn frame. Bouchard hammered out a 8-bDggcr with two on to vindicate Hoffard's proud confidence in the youngster's playing ability. Bouch ard la only 18 years old, and already seemingly destined for the "blg tlme." Besides doing a remarkable job in whifrlnff 10 batten. Bauman demonstrated that he could also handle the hickory and tnumpea m.. um hit. nut of three times at bat against Carlstrom, the Klam ath chucker. The Modford win, coupled with the IB to 7 walloping 01 me a" land nine by Grants Pass, puta 'he league back In a two-way tie, with Ashland and Medford gazing help lesaly at each other from the mire of the league cellar, and Klamath and Grants Pass glowering at each other from their tie ai mo Now Ashland and Medford are only two games away from the pennan ihimiAitM nri nnbodv aeems V know what's going to happen next. Hnffnrd at least, doesn't Beem to care, and has signed the Coqullle Loggers for a gnme at Coqullle next Sunday, leaving the league to struggle along as beBt It may with out the Rogues. The Loggers lost to the Rogues earlier In the year, their lone defeat of the season, and they are anxloua to avenge that ao feat Wins Championship Pa via Jr Summary: Rogues Cavelll, as Arnle. ab Welton, lb AB ......... a s 4 Hoffard, cf 4 Donovan, 3b ........ 4 Kenton, rf ... 8 Bouchard, 0 ...... 3 Hess, If I Bauman, p - .... 3 ' Total 30 Rod Box A Brooks, ab 4 Shlpman, rf 3 Bernadou, 3b 4 Wheeler, ss .................. 8 Martin, cf 4 Hnlley. lb 3 Onks, If 4 Ilorth. c ...... ....... 4 Csrlstrom, p 4 Wilson, rf 1 Putman, e a Total 33 I R H E 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 a i o 1 0 0 0 a o 8 1 1 R H B 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 ISO i by CarU- Strom, 0. SI. PAUL OPEN WITH PAR-SMASHING GOIF ST. PAUL. Minn., July 32. (AP Hurry Cooper has emerged from his private roWI mine of golf again with a record strike. The Chicago atar led probably the prentest massed scoring apree In golf yesterday to win trie 8t. Paul open championship and 1.200 first prize money with a record 72 hole total of 271 blows. The aedte smashed par by 17 stroke and the tournament rocord by seven shota. Ills dnw-llng score, framed by sue celve rounds of 68-87-68-68 over the Keller course, won him the championship by a four stroke mar Bin over Morton Smith of Chlcapo and clenr domination over the St. Paul show. In five starts In me tournament, "Ltsht-horae" Harry hss won two fiwta, tied for ana lost another, and won a total or 0933 33 In prize money. The par 72 course was subdued completely by sub-par round by a field that almost duplicated that which comjietcd In the recent nat ional open at Oakmont. Sam Parka, the national open fltle holder, fin ished far out of the money wttn 309. On hi par breaking Journey. Cooper, who holds a tournament average of less than 72 shots a round for five years of competitive play, fell over par on but tx holes. Bhot 22 birdies and one eagle. The Moliammendnn year la a lunar one. about II days shorter than the Christian. The Indian depicted on the 14-cei.t United States pontile aump la Hol low Horn Bfar. Llttla 11-year-old Mary Hoergar of Miami Beach, Fla., ran off with tha hearts of 5000 spectators at the Women'a National swlmlng cham pionships In Manhattan Beach, N. Y. whan she flipped her way to tha three-meters springboard champion ship, beating nationally known com petitors, to become the youngeat champion of the A. A. U. (Asso elated Press Photo) I HOW THEY ct i urv fly the AMoclfUed Press Const W. L. Pet. Ssn Francisco 20 14 .5BB Missions 21 1ft .5U3 Seattle 18 18 ,2 Oakland 18 17 Al Portland - 17 IB .480 Lob Angeles .... 16 18 .471 Hollywood 16 30 .444 Sacramento 14 22 American New York BO 31 .617 Detroit 02 34 .6U6 Chicago 4S 35 .663 Boston - 44 41 .018 Clevelnnd . 41 40 .006 Philadelphia ... 36 44 .450 Washington 36 49 .424 St. Louis 26 06 .317 National New York 03 28 .664 St. Loilla 62 30 .634 Chicago 61 34 .600 Pittsburgh .. 46 41 .620 Brooklyn 88 44 .463 Cincinnati 30 47 .403 Philadelphia - ... 36 47 .434 Boston 21 65 .244 A meteoric climb from the bot tom to the top in the ranks of middleweight wrestling waa told here today by Curly Woods, boyish mat star who learned the game in Med ford. He returned Saturday for a few weeks' atay after an absence oi six years. When Curly, who appears to be not over 20, but la really 28, last trod the canvas In Medford he was a beginner, promising but green. Later he won the Pacific coast mid dleweight championship, a coveted title which takea In western Can ada and Idaho, holding the champ ionship belt untl he was thrown by Ernie Arthur, Canadian grappler, whom he allowed to enter the match s, few pounds overweight. Curly wrestled for three years in Medford, learning the game Irom Sailor Jack Woods, who Impressed upon his youthful student the Im portance of footwork. He waa then an amateur, and It waa not until some time later that he picked up tha professional slants from Has- aen Mohammed, "The Terrible Turk." Since that time he has appeared In approximately 000 matches, wrest ling a string of 02 main events In Centralis, Wash., without losing once. Besides many well known middleweight grapplers, he has also defeated many who weighed In above his 157 pounds. Robin Reed, fam ous middleweight, was thrown by Woods In 5 secondfl, which Reed himself admits la the fastest fall he ever lost. Woods specializes In speed, em ploying most frequently the flying head scissors. Regarding his choice of opponents, he saya "The tougher they are, the better." He Is a drop-klcker of no mean ability, also adept at other leg holds, for he la a great believer In the advantages of leg work. He consid ers Robin Reed and Henry Jones, when in their prime, the best mid dleweight wreatlers of all time. Woods came to Medford to visit an aunt here, and plans to spend part of his time fishing along the Rogue river, which he aald he "knows" almost from one end to the other. He will be seen In action Thursday night In the opener oi the Armory wrestling card. game combined to give the Oaks the series, four games to two. The San Francisco SeoJe celebrated "Joe Dl Magglo day" by dropping both ends of a doubleheader to Port land, but that was no fault of the slugging Dl Magglo who hit saioly In his 26th and 27th consecutive gamea. ST. LOUIS, July 22(AP) The league-leading New York Olanta. rapidly being overhauled by the St. Lou la Cardinals, limped Into town today for a atx-game aeries that will go a long way toward de ciding the winner of the National league pennant race. To fans the meeting Is a repeti tion of the famous "little world aeries" between New York's and St. Louis' American league representa tives the Yankees and the Browns back In 1922. In that year, the Yankees, trailing as the Cardinals now are, beat a faltering Brownie crew, somewhat resembling today's Oiants, and went on to win the pennant by an eye lash. For the opener of the crucial series. Manager Frank Frlsch haa nominated Bill Hallahan, again the "Sweet William" of old. with five successive victories marking his comeback efforts. He will draw Hal Schumacher, the New York ace, as his opponent in the box. GERMANS EVEN SCORE IN DAVIS ZONE SERIES WIMBLEDON, Eng., July 22. (AP) Baron Von Cramm scored a three set victory over Wllmer Allison today and enabled Germany to draw level with the United States at one match all In the lnterzone Davis tennis final. The scores were 8-6, 6-3, 6-4. Don Budge of Oakland, Cat., gave Uncle Sam a lead in the aeries Saturday with a four set victory over Helner Hcnkel, a team mate oi Von Cramm's. Started Wrestling Here Admits Killing Father Scores Yesterday Const League Oakland 8-4: Los Angeles 1-4. Portland 4-2; San Fmnolsco 2-1. Missions 6-5; Sacramento 2-0. Hollywood 3-0; Seattle 5-1. National lrajrue At Pittsburgh 7; Boston 0. At Cincinnati 0-0; Philadelphia 4-2. At Chicago 8-U: New York 4-5. First 11 Innings. At St. Loula 13-7; Brooklyn 7-8. American Lenxue At Washington 2; Chicago 4. At Philadelphia 4: Cleveland 6. At Boston 7; Detroit 6. At New York 2-1; St. Louis 0-2. E SLIDE 10 CELLAR (By the Associated Press A playoff series for the 1935 Pacific League baseball champloiu'Mp Is be coming Increasingly probable as the Los Angeles Angels gather momen tum In their current cellar-ward slide. The Angels, last year's tltlehoWers and winners of the first half of the split season by a big margin, last week lost their first aeries in three years to Oakland and skidded Into sixth place In the standings. The Oaks clinched the series vic tory by slamming out a 5-to-l victory In the first game of yesterday's doubleheeder. The second game went Into extra Innings with the score tied at 4 -all and then waa called off In the twelfth to let the Angela oath a train. A 6-3 victory in Saturday's George E. Turnboo (above), of Placerville, Calif., was said by 71-year-old father, C. E. Turnboo, police to have admitted killing his when he sought to shoot the young er man. The elder Turnboo had shot and killed their housekeeper, Mrs. E. M. Ray, 60. (Associated Press Photo ft Wr-v i I k; . - tJ f -' f . 'l - J I Curly Woods (above) was lust seen in action here six years ago as a greenhorn wrestler who waa making Medford his training head quarters. Even then he pave promise for exceptional speed und stamina, which qualities have carried him like a comet through wo inatrhes. In one of which he stripped Marvin Burmckmnn of the belt signifying the Pacific coast middleweight championship. He later lost the belt to Ernfe Arthur of Canndn, whom he allowed to "come In" a few pounds overweight. BELCASTRO, WOLFE LETHERS. STECHER MIX ON NEXT CARD When Promoter Mack Llllacd waa confronted this week with the task of lining up four big-time grapplera who actually demanded appearance Thursday nUht at the Armory, he solved the difficulty by pairing the star musclers in a double main event. Aggressive Pete Belcastro. Italian drop-klcker. Is scheduled to tussle for one hour or two out of three falls with Les Wolfe, limber Texas mat man, In return engagement that promises more of the same type of colorful, exhausting wrestling these two boys dished out when they wrest led to a draw here recently. That match, one of best ever seen here, should be surpassed when Pete and Le meet again. Sad Sam Le there of Texas, supple southerner with the famous educated legs, is billed to meet Al Stecher. vet eran Canadian, In the other half of the main event. Sad Sam tas been on the shelf for the past several weeks, after one of Beloostro'a drop-kicks, in a recent bout at Klamath Falls, but la now back In shape and read to impress local fans with his proweu by trimming the stocky -ex -Can aataa champ. A treat Is in store for the fans In the opening bout, when Curly Woods, 187-pound speedmerchant who learn ed the art of grappling here nine years ago, and Roland Warren, 160 pound Copco engineer from Klamath Falls, tussle for one fell or 20 min utes. Woods returned to Medford over the week end from the north, bring ing with him a reputation for amaz ing agility. He held the belt for tho middleweight champiousrltp of the Pacific coast. WESTERN GOLF TITLE COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.. July 22. (AP) Calling himself "doggone lucky." Charlie Yates. 21-year old long hitter from Atlanta, held tne western amateur golf championship today after three years of trying for It. He shot steadier than his oppon ent, Rodney Bliss of Omaha, and formerly of Cornell university, to win the 36-hole title match. 6 and 3, on the peak-hemmed fairways of Broadmoor yesterday. Oe Mali Tribune want ads. your summer trip 47 MMMIM WW t fiHT V4 Ml IB go directly East and back on your summer round trip (to most points). 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