PSGH5 FOUR
MEDFOED arATTJ TRIBUNE, HrEPFOKD, OKE(3Qy, SUNDAY, 'AUGUST 23, 1938
Record Entry List for U. S. Amateur Golf Meet
TITLE ABDICATED
BY UTILE GOAL
0F1J19PLAYERS
Play Opens Sept. 14 On
Garden City Course
Qualifying Rounds Start
Tuesday.
NEW YORK, Aug. SJ. (UP) ror
tha third time this Mason a United
States Golf association tourney has
broken former records for total en
tries. A field of 1,119 players, the
organization announced today, has
entered the U. 6. amateur tourney
seeking to capture the crown which
was vacated last yesr when Lawaon
Little, two-time winner, turned pro
fessional.
That field la 17 players larger
than the record number of S46 en
trants set last year, Other 1038 tour'
neys which set records were the U. 8,
open and National publto links.
Of the total entries, 310 will be
eligible for championship match play
which Is to be held September M-19
at the Garden city, N. T., Golf club.
Twenty-four of those players are ex
empt from qualifying In sectional
play throughout the country.
Two sectional rounds In which 20
players battled for six places were
beld August 11 at San Francisco and
Los Angeles. The remaining 1,088 en
tranta who must play 30 holea of
qualifying medal play, will awing Into
action on 80 separate fronts next
Tuesday seeking 180 other places.
Ten members of the British Walker
oup squad which plays the American
team September a-8 at the Pine Val
ley, if. J.. .Golf club are exempt from
qualifying along with six other Brltl
ish players and eight former winners
of the title.
The Walker cuppers are Dr. William
Tweddell, H. G. Bentley, J. Morton
Dykes. Cecil Ewlng, a. Aleo Hill, J. D.
Langley, P. B. Lucas, Jack McLean,
Gordon B. Peters and Hector Thomp
son, British amateur champion. Other
British players are T. A. Torrance, A.
B. Attken. Lieut-Col H. A Boyd, H.
E. Taylor, Stanley Morrison and
Henry Longhurst.
The former amateur ohamptons ex
empt from qualifying are George T.
Dunlap, Jr., winner In 1933; Charles
Brans, Jr., 1918 and 1930; Jease P.
Guilford, 1931; S. Davidson Herron,
1919; Max R. Marston, 1938; Prsncls
Oulmet, 1914-1931; Jesse W. Swetxer.
1933, and O. Rosa somervllle of Can
ada, 1933.
The alx players who gained placea
In the west coast qualifying rounds
were James B. McHale, San Gabriel
Calif.; Roger Kelly, Los Angeles;
Wlnfleld 8. Day, Elmhurst, Til.; Ma-
tlaa Palaclo, Ban Francisco; Ernest
Pleper, Jr., and Don Edwards of San
Jose, Calif.
INNING CONTEST
FROM BOSTON, 3-2
NEW YORK, Aug. 33. (AP) Bill
Dickey came through "In the dutch
today with a run-producing single
to break up a 18-lnnlng pitching
duel and give Johnny Broaca and the
Yankees 8 to 3 victory over Lefty
Grove and the Boston Red Sox.
Lou Gehrig's 89th homer, with
none on in the seventh, aided the
Yankees' cause, and Jimmy Foxx
hammered out his 33rd to tie the
score In the ninth.
The winning rally In the 13th was
slow in starting. With one out, Red
Rolfe walked. Dl Magglo'a fly waa
the second out. Gehrig singled Rolfe
along to third, and then, with two
away, Dickey banged a alngle to
right field sending the third-Backer
over with the winning run.
R, n. E
Bostcn 3 7
New York 8
Grove and R. Ferrell; Broaca and
Dickey.
CLEVELAND, Aug. 33, (AP)
Johnny Allen held the St. Louis
Browns to three hits today and mark
ed uo his flftesnth victory of the
season as the Indians defeated the
Browna, to 0. Earl Averlll, Cleve.
land outfielder, knocked out his 31st
home run of the season In the third
Inning.
St. Louts .- 0 3
Cleveland -
Hogeett, Ltebhardt, Klmberlln and
Giuliani; Allen and George.
PHILADELHPIA. Aug. 33. (AP)
The Senators and the Athletics split
doubleheader today, Washington
copping the first game 13 to 8 and
the reviving Mackmen tha second by
a oount of 7 to 8.
First game: R. H. s-
Waahlngton 13 30 3
Philadelphia .' 8 9 1
Cascarella, Weaver, Cohen and Bol.
ton; Rhodes, Giunpert, Flythe and
Hayes. '
Second game: R. n. E.
Washington ......................... 8 9 1
Philadelphia I t 3
Whltehlll and Millies, Bolton; Fink
and Hayes.
BEAVERS REVIVE
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 33. (AP)
ra-uana revived Its hold on the Pa
clflo Coast league leadership today by
routing ijoe Angeiea, 13 to 8;
George Caster pitched his 32nd vic
tory of the season.
Heavy . hitting Portland batsmen
knocked Jack Salveson, Los Angeiea
pitcmng ace, out of the box In the
third Inning and two more home
hurlers were unable to stem the as
sault. P. Coscarart, Portland second
baseman, got a home run, bringing
In three runs.
Los Angeiea. however, hss won four
of tha six games In the aerlea so
far. A double header will wind up
the series tomorrow.
At Oakland:
Missions ,
Oakland
Stewart and Outen:
Servantl and Hartje.
At Los Angeles:
Portland
H. E.
14 0
1
Could,
R.
..12
, 8
Loa Angeiea
Caster and Brueker; Salveson, Joyce,
Btrusa and Bottarlnl.
At San Francisco:
first game: r. h.
Seattle 7 a
San Francisco w o 6
oregory and Bsssler; Cole
Woodall.
(Second gams 7 Innings).
R.
Seattle l
San Francisco ......., 1
E.
0
0
and
Koupel and
Monro.
Splndal; Daglla and
DETROIT, Aug. 33(AP) Vernon
Kennedy chalked up his 17th vlotory
of the season today aa Chicago even
ed the current series with Detroit by
winning 9 to 8.
R. H. E.
Chicago 9 16 1
Detroit 8
Kennedy, Brown and Bewail; Auker,
Lawaon, Sullivan and Cochrane, Hay-
worth. , ,
E
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 33. (AP) With
the New York Glanta Idle because of
rain, the St. Louis Cardinals were
able to increase their National league
lead to one full game today when
they nosed out the Pittsburgh Pirates
to a.
Jim Wlnford held the Pirates to
six hits, allowing only two of them up
k ine eigntn inning, when Pitts
burgh scored Its trio of runs. He
had enough In reserve to check the
rally and finish out the game a victor.
R. H. E.
Pittsburgh 8 8 3
St. Loula . ... 4 6 0
Swift, Brown and Padden; Wlnford
and Ogrodowskl.
CHICAGO, Aug. 33 (AP) Good
relief pitching by Ray Davis, plua
bomera by Lew Rlggs and Babe Her
man and a eixth-lnnlng, two-run
pinch double by QUly Campbell, gave
Cincinnati a 6-to-4 victory over the
Cubs before 18,793 fans today.
It was the fading National league
champions' ninth defeat In their last
13 games.
Oabby Hartnett homered for the
Cuba, who got 10 hits.
Chlcago'a observance of the Na
tional league'a 60th anniversary pre
ceded the game.
R. H. B.
Cincinnati 6 13 3
Chicago 4 10 1
Derringer, R. Davla and Lombard!;
Carleton, Henshaw, Bryant and Hart
nett, ODea.
BROOKLYN. Aug. 23. (AP) The
Dodgers belted three Phllllea pitchers
for 17 hits and a 13-to-a victory to
day in the opener of their current
series. The defeat dropped the
Phils deeper Into the National league
cellar.
R. H. E.
Philadelphia 8 10 0
Brooklyn - 13 17 1
Passeau, Benge, Kowallk and At-
wood; Brandt and Phelps.
New York at Boston postponed
wet grounds.
T
The Medford baseball team tangles
at 3:30 this afternoon with the
highly touted Grants Pass Merchants
at the Senior high school field. In
the first gnmo with a Southern Ore
gon league team for the year.
Grants Pass finished second to
Glendale In the league scramble, on
game that waa tied 3-3 In the
!. ath Inning. At that point in
game a dispute arose, and
cording to the Climate City team
membere, the Glendale aquad, fol
lowed by the referee, stalked from
the field. Grants Pass charge that
Glendale then asserted that It had
been Grant Pass that had left the
field, and ao told the league presi
dent who awarded the game to Glen
dale by default.
It waa announced yesterday that
Hardy, clever young southpaw, would
start on the mound for the vls
ltors. but It ws not yet known here
who would work the rubber for the
locals, although It waa considered
likely that Tungate would start with
Erlckaon held In reserve for relief
duty.
The gsme Is expected to be fast.
with Grant Pane having the edge
in the betting due to their exper
lenc and a fart and flashy Infield.
as well as pitching atreneth.
Merrick's Pool
"Swim in Drinking
Water"
Dallyi I n. ra. to 10 n. m.
Sundays: 10:30 a.m. In to p.m.
ellAMST TO miYIHIhO?
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IN IAN riANCISCO
HOTEL
New la drew, beautifully Rnbked rooms, with colored
W baths and thowtn, loci led on San Francisco's famous
Powell Street oppoiftt Union Square Restaurant Coffee
Shop Cocktail Room Clrcalatlag lea Wstar.
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"MEET ME AT THE MANX
CRONIN EXPLAINS
TERRELL OUSTER
NEW YORK, Aug. 33. (P) Joe
Cronln, mensger of the Boston Red
Sox, asserted today the 81,000 fine
he Imposed on Weslsy Ferrell for
wslklng out of the pitcher's box yes
terday stands but denied there had
been any previous rift between him
and the club's ace right-handed hurl-
er.
"Aa to the suspension, Ferrell will
come back whenever the club thinks
he is ready," said Cronln. "But If the
suspension last more than 10 days,
then he'll have to appeal for roln-
statement to Commissioner Landls.
"It la not truo that Ferrell walk
ed out on me before. Thero's also
nothing to this story about rVrrell
thinking I waved him off the mcund.
He knowa I don't wave my pitchers
off. If that were true, there wouldn't
be anything to It and the case would
be olosed."
Action of the kind that made the
old Bowery in New York and the
Barbary Coast In Ban Francisco fa
mous, and action that has nothing
to oo wun clean lighting, la ex
pected at the Armory Monday night
with the greatest assortment of back
street fighters that Promoter Mack
Llllard could assemble.
The main event features two prim
itive souls who seem to enjoy slug
ging and kicking with a few bites
thrown in. with Bob Montgomery
meeting the Indlsn. Cherokee Ike.
Mongomery has won all his matches
here In four starts, and Ike ha lost
all his despite the fact that he is by
far the more vicious of .the two.
Montgomery la a little more subtle
in hla gouging than the aborigine,
doing most of hla punching while
tne referee is not looking. Ike Is
less scrupulous and slugs at any and
an opportunities.
Pat O'Brien, big Irish meanie, meet
Joe Hubka, ex-footballer from Ne
braska, In the middle event. Hubka
Is not a meanie, but has a splendid
reputation for taking the atarch out
of those who are, and If the Hiber
nian starts any rough play It seems
likely the Nebraskan will retaliate,
since he alwaya has under such treat
ment. Hubka'a lashing flying tackle
have subdued many a hard-boiled
Rent who waa deceived by curly
blond hair and light blue eyes. The
cornhusker Blso packs an Impressive
right-hand wallop that he unveils
upon occasion.
. George Craig, the Tulsa Blacksmith,
has drawn the task of taming the
bullying Johnny Boos of Indiana in the
opening torso twister. He beleves his
anvil flip apd a few other holds
that he did not have to use last
week will be more than enough to
calm the hot blood of Boos, and If
they aren't he ha announced his
determination to resort to Soos' own
dirty attack. The two have appar
ently met before, for Craig has no
respect whatever for the bowlegged
Drute. boos is one of the most un
popular of mean men to show here
In months, Judging by the wholesale
vituperation unleashed against his
name.
CALIFORNIA.NET
STARS FIRST IN
IS
Faber to Take Over
Albany Job Sept. 14
ALBANY. Aug. 22. (jpy Don Faber,
former Willamette University athlete.
new director of athletics at Albany
college, will take over his post Bept.
14.
Faber haa taught and coached for
the past four years at Ashland hlirh
school. During that period, he turned
out three aouthern Oregon champion
ship baskotball teams and four top
place baseball teama.
He la the son of Mr. and Mrs. E.
O. Faber of Central Point.
Closing time for Too Late to Clae
slfy Ads is 1:30 p. m.
Skeet Shoot Will
Be Coming Sunday
There will be no skeet shoot at
the Medford Gun club today, aa waa
announced In Friday's Mall Tribune.
The big ahoot will be held on Sun
day, August '30. one week from to
day. A few shooters will probably
be on the grounds this morning for
regular trap shooting practice but
there will be no official club ahoot.
It wsa atated.
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center, yet sway from the noise of traffic.
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NEWPORT, R. I.. Aug. 32, (UP)
A trio or Callfornlans swept the finals
01 me newport invitation men's ten
nis tournament today when Robert
Rlgga of Los Angeles scored an upaet
victory In the singles and the Davis
cup pair, Donald Budge of Oakland
Calif., and Gene Mako of Loa Angeles
won tne aouDiea trophy.
Rlgga, national clay court cham
pion and seeded No. in the tourney,
upset the favored Frankle Parker of
Spring Lake, N. J., in five sets, 8-8,
8-4. 8-10. 3-6, 8-1.
Then Budge and Mako downed Par
ker and Gregory Mangln of Newark,
N. J, in straight sets. 6-1, 8-3, 8-4.
Rlggs played strategic tennis to
beat young Parker. The Callfornlan
remained In the back court most of
the time and depended upon long
rallies to wear down Parker and
Jockey him Into errors.
In pinches It waa the Callfornjan who
came through with flawless play,
rather than the No. 8 seeded Parker.
Rlgga beat the New Jersey player at
tne latter own game. Parker spe
cializes In the back-court game. Sev
eral times Rlggs left blm flat-footed
with smashing kills and bullet-like
cross-court placement.
In the doubles match, Budge and
Mako had no trouble In disposing of
Parker and Mangln. The ease and
certainty of their victory indicated
that the wlnnera will be heavy favor
ites for the national title In the
tourney at Longwood next week They
played with machtne-ltke certitude,
never giving their opponents a
chance.
PORTLAND, Aug. 22. (P) Grey
hound racing will end for 1038 at
Multnomah stadium tonight. Five rec
ords were broken during the 60 day
season.
ON SEPTEMBER 17
Medford Elks will Inaugurate lodge
activities for the fall and winter sea
son with a big picnic and ring show
to be held at the Elks' picnic grounds
Thursday evening, September 17, with
Walter W. Abbey, general chairman In
charge of the affair.
According to J. F. Ertckson, chair
man of the flghta committee, the
ring card win be divided Into two
sections, comprising both boxing and
wrestling. CCC amateur fighters,
under the direction of Csptain Ryan,
win start the ball rolling with a
aeries of at least four three-round
bouts; the first of a series of elimi
nation contests which will be held
this winter to crown a district cham
pion In each weight division. CCC
fighters are well-known to Elka and
their friends, having put on many
slashing bout under auspices of the
lodge. The boys are carefully matched
according to experience and ability,
as well as weight, and always pack
their carda with plenty of action.
Captain Ryan win have many old
favorites to draw from, and with
a number of new boys clamoring for
crack at CCC tltlea, promise to
stage a red-hot opening show.
Later In the evening Mack Llllard,
local wrestling promoter, will stage
two wrestling matches featuring the
oest men available for that date.
Llllard will draw upon the regular
wreatllng circuit for his talent, and
promises a show that will satisfy
even the most blood-thirsty addict
of the grant and groan art.
The feed committee, under the
chairmanship of P. C. Blgham,
will deviate from the old reliable
hot-dogs, and will serve a real old-
fashioned barbecue lunch, with
plenty of free beer to wash down the
spit-roasted tld-blt. I
According to Mr. Abbey, every ef
fort will be made to make this faU
plcnlo equal, If not surpass, the
regular spring outdoor rronca, wno
have proven ao popular in tha past.
Other committee chairmen charged
with the success of tha affair are:
Russell Seman, assistant general
chairman; Leon B. Haaklna, conces
sions; Wilson Walt, band; E. W.
Winkle, game; W. E. Morris, park
ing: R. R. Ebel, tickets, and George
T. Prey, finance.
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Aug. 22. UP)
-Al Jolson, paying $10,000 to play
real-life role of a boxing manager. Is
headed for New York today te clinch
a fight with Tony Canzonerl for his
new feather-weight, Henry Armstrong.
St. Louis negro,
' The atage and movie singer an
nounced, "I'll offer (28,000 for tha
bout and try to atage It In Hollywood,
In November for the motion picture
relief fund."
Armstrong's contract waa bought
laat night from Wirt Roe for 810,000,
jolson said. The negro won recogni
tion as callfo'nla champion this
month by outpointing Baby Arlzmen
dl of Mexico.
WILSON'S
STORE
FOR MEN
32 North Front
Open Evenings
MEDFORD ARMORY
Monday Mite
Bob Montgomery
vs.
Cherokee Ike
Joe Hubka
vs.
Pat O'Brien
Johnny Sooa
vs.
Geo. Craig
Seats on tale at BROWN'S, Phone 101
VALENTINE'S CAFE, Phone 279
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