Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 27, 1937, Page 4, Image 4

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    IfEDFORD "MAIL TRTBUXE, MEDFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. JULY 27. 1937.
PAGE TOJJB
Budge Defeats Austin to Complete Rout of British Davis
ers
Cupp
YANKEES REGAIN
TENNIS EMBLEM
AF1ERJ0 YEARS
Parker Clinches Victory in
Straight-Set Win Over
Charles Hare Final
Score 4 Victories to 1
WIMBLEDON. Eng.. July 37. P
Sorrel-topped Don Budge, undefeated
tali year, whipped Henry WWred
(Bunny) Autln today, 8-6, 3-9, 9-4.
.$, u the United States completed
It rout of Great Britain' Davie Cup
toreee and regained the International
tennle trophy lor the first time since
1937.
Budge-! victory came after ai-year-old
Frank-la Parker of Milwaukee
clinched the cup with an astonishing
.tralght-net triumph over Charles
Idgar Hare, 8-3, -. 8-3, thus ma,
in? the final core four victories tor
the United State against one for
oreat Britain' unsuccessful cup de
tender. British Win One.
Greet Britain, losing the cup after
holding It sine 1933 when France
relinquished it U-year monopoly on
the trophy, could win only one match
IB the challenge round, Austin beat
ing Parker In the opening single
match Saturday.
The moment he could get W
clothe on. Parker rushed out of the
tedium to cable new of hi victory
to Mercer Ceasley. hie coach i
jt oot him M.BO. but he instated It
W" might never get another chance
b. explained.
The only thing he was willing to
.ay about the matoh luelf wa that
Hare "didn't play very well."
He possibly wa the mot modett
Davie oup hero on reoord.
Walter Hagen. golfing veteran, who
was an Interested spectator, ald:
Every Stroke oood.
"It looked to me like every other
ball Parker hit was hole In one.
It look like we are taking all tho
eup home thl summer,"
He was referring to the recent
American victory In the Ryder Cup
eolf matches.
Budge'a alngtte triumph over Bare
on Saturday and the double vie
tory he and Mako scored over F. H
D. Wilde and C. R. D. Tuckey yester
day set the stage for Parker and the
.... miiniir took full advan
tage of his dramatlo opportunity to
clinch the oup American
vainly have sought for ten years.
After Parker had handed the tall,
left-handed Hare an astonishing
drubbing, Budge' final match with
Austin became merely an exhibition.
But despite the fact the pressure
was off, the Oakland, Cel., ace was
, m no mood to spoil hi unmarred
reoord. Stroke experimentation cost
him the second set but thereafter he
kept Austin under full control.
Fourth Loss of Year.
Incidentally, that second set was
only the fourth Budge has dropped
all year. He lost one to Parker In
the semi-final of the all-England
championships, and dropped the first
two In his spectacular five-set match
with Baron Gottfried von Cramm In
the Interxone final.
The huge silver trophy, about the
lee of a cart-wheel, was brought out
on the center court and placed on a
table draped In the Star and Stripes
and the Union Jack.
u... v.tnMAM. the Prlnoess Helena
Victoria, stood beside the trophy. A
the crowd rose, the princes lifted
the cup and hannea n o
... ..nMin nf the American team
and then ehook hands with members
of both team.
MAPLE SCOUTING
LOCAL ATHLETES
Howard Maple, newly appointed
fnothsli coach at Wlllsm-
u. unirersitv under Spec Keene. is
.Hrnrrf tyviitv "looklna around.'
. -vrnri Rtate colleae atar
atnlete, who resigned hla freshman
coaching berth at Me alma mater
t0 accept the wmamene uwnwu
Job, arrived last night, and wi'.l
pend today In Ashland and Med
ford In search of eUUttrs, preferably
footbsll linemen, who are undecided
aa to where they will continue with
their higher education.
We ahould have a pretty fair ee.
son this fall." the chunky little
mentor stated, "If we can develop a
atrong line. The backfteld Is all set:
whet we need are tackle and
guards."
Maple is staying with Mike Bslko
vlck. msnsger of the Med ford Craters
and line coach at wtllametto.
Longworth Burns
Everett Course
EVERETT. Wash.. July ST. TV
The Washington state open golf
championships entered the aeoond
hslf today, players and gallery alike
till blinking from Monday'a dealing
performance by Ted Longworth of
Waverly dub. Portland, who toursd
the course twice la 193. 13 under pa.'.
Al Zimmerman. Alderwood club
professions!, also of Portland, tied
for seoond with Jack Westlund of
Everett, with 188.
Longworth wa 1 under par with
ft 66 on hla morning round, and dtp.
ped five from the theoretically per
fect score In the afternoon.
Y
BY
O L ' BOY.
Tessir. Dizzy Dean, Cardinal
hurler, still la going strong. He
bad 12 wins and 7 losses in 19
fames. At the same time last
year he bad 11 victories, 5 defeat.
$110 SUBSCRIBED FOR
BASEBALL SCHOOL; TO
With ItlO In the coffer, official
of the Med ford Athletic association
will continue thu week with their
campaign to raise funds for their
youth's baseball school, held every
morning at the turf high school
field under the coaching of Mike
Bnlkovlck.
This morning, about 30 youngsters
ranging from B to lb years of age
battled through a tough nine Inning
ball game, and wound up by having
their picture taken by Verne Bhan-gl.
Howard Maple, assistant football
coach at Willamette university who
la In Medford today, watched Balko
vlck send the future diamond lumi
naries through their paces, and re
marked that the program was one of
the finest he had ever seen.
Following are the names of donors
to date:
Valentine's Cafe, Walter W. Abbey,
Inc., Skinner's Oarage, Plerce-Allen
Motor Co., Medford Service Station,
Al Plcht, Older Tire Shop, Rinehart
6c Barker, George Hunt, W. E. Thorn
as, Montgomery Ward & Co., Amerl
can Laundry, Jackson Hotel, Brill
Metal Works, yellow Cab Co., Har
old Larson, O. H. Bengtson, Harry
Predette, Western Sales, Dr. Sher
wood, Office Stationery fc Supply Co.,
Marshall-Smlth-Leonard, Inc., Model
Bakery and Jensen & Dalley.
HAMMOND, CLARK
IN FIELD OF 60
PORTLAND. July 27. (01 Sixty
outstanding Oregon golfers competed
today to 111) 15 places In the national
amateur tournament played over the
Alderwood course here, August 33 to
38.
Two former Walker cup stars, Don
Moe, present state champion, and Di.
O. P. Willing, faced stiff opposition
In Rudle wilhi-lm, former Pacific
northwest tttllst. and James Buahong
of Eugene.
Other matches Include:
Loland Clark. Medford, vs. George
r. Will, Portland; Warrane Munro.
Portland, vs, Sidney A. Mlllcgan. EU'
Rene; Henry Coleman Bristol, Port'
land. vs. rtobert Prescott, Eugene; R
It. Hammond, Medford, vs. Douglas
Ntool, Portland, and Byron Wolverton,
Portland, vs. Wilson H. Jowett, Jr.,
Eugene.
REFEREE'S HELP
The Sammy Kohen-Frank 8 to Jack
wrestling and refereelng team last
night won Its second straight vic
tory from the hated Black Dragon,
the pay-off coming In as wild a
climax as has been witnessed In the
local arena In many moons.
Meeting In the main event at the
open-air high school battle ground,
Koben and the Dragon battled
through a tough 26 minutes before
Referee Frankio Stojack decided to
step In and help out me Jewish pal
from New York 'city. His needed aid
consisted of a dropklck blast to the
Dragon's whiskers which ended the
evening's proceedings.
With the falls standing one apiece.
the Dragon pinning Kohen with a
Boston crab and Kohen about-Iac-
lng to tumble the hated one with i
the same maneuver, the Dragon
started In on Stojack, who last night
was ihlrd man In the ring. Disliking
Stojack a attempts to make him grap
ple clean, the Dragon punched Prank
alongside the head, Frankio did
nothing about It. The Dragon tnen
tore Into Kohen with confident foul
ness, and once more Stojack pulled
him off roughly. Again the Dragon
leveled on the referee, and that was
enough for Frankio. He whipped a
right hand to the Dragon's chin,
knocking him over backwards. Up
came the black beast, and Stojack
launched bis famous dropklck. The
double-leg punch caught the Dragon
square on the button, layed him like
a carpet, and Knhen dove In to pin
him with a body press for the third
and deciding tumble.
Last week it was Kohen, as referee,
who awarded the match to Stojack
following the Dragon's refusal to
break two Boston crab holds. Today,
the Kohen-Stojack team challenges
any wrestler In the local circuit. Two
defeats of the Black Dragon, they
claim, prove their Invincibility.
The squabble was rougher than
rough throughout, with a bottle cap
causing considerable excitement
among the large crowd of customers.
The Dragon secreted the cap In his
trunks, and when the opportunity
arose, hauled It out and raked It
across Kohen 'a eye, with the crowd
going frantic, the Dragon then hid
the cap in his mouth, entirely frus
trating the referee's search for the
painful little weapon. He finally
threw It away, and things were fairly
peaceful from then on.
In the middle event, Pr ankle Clem
ens applied his Indian paralyser to
the thick neck of Carlos Rodriguez
In the fourth round for the match,
The Mexican "hot tamale" took the
initial tumble In the third canto
with a brilliantly executed step-over
toe hold after both boya had dis
played some clean and sensational
grappling.
Clemens came back to clamp on
his neck -squeezer, and as in all other
cases, Podrlguca was unable to con
tinue. The match, clean aa a whis
tle, was nevertheless a bloody aflalr.
The fat-appearing Mexican took an
elbow to the smeller, and for fully
30 minutes, bled like a stuck bull
In his native land. Both wrestlers
were covered with the gore.
Jack La Rue, master of the ham-
merlock, used that maneuver to grab
two straight falls from punchy Dale
Haddock, the tumbles coming In the
second and third rounds. Effective
new of the holds was heightened by
La Rue stomping on Haddock's arm
an action that entirely escaped the
eye of the referee, although It wae
more apparent to everyone else In
the stadium.
Promoter Mack LUlard announced
last night that Danny Savich and
Toots Estes, two big favorites here.
would probably appear on next week's
card.
Padre Outfielder
Holds Batting Top
LOS ANOELE8. July 37. ypj -Rupert
Thompson. San Diego right
fielder, held his place as the leading
coaAt league batter with an un
changed average of Joa this week
Statistician Leo Morlarty reported to
day.
Oeorge Detoro, padre catcher, gain
ed two point to ,847 to oiM Art
Garibaldi. Sscramento thtrd-Mcker,
out of second place. Onrlbaldl lost
nine points to .349.
KAYO ON RAME-Y
LOS ANGELES, July 37. (AP)
Pedro Montanez of Puerto Rico lived
up to his brilliant reputation here
last night when he blasted Wesley
Ramey of Grand Rapids, Mich., out
of the front ranks of the nation's
lightweights In one round.
Exploding a left hook that traveled
hardly a foot, Pedro scored the
knockout 2 minutes and 40 seconds
after the opening gong sounded.
Jack Dempsey, brought here to ref
eree the bout at a reported price of
$3000, never earned an easier dollar.
He tolled off 10 as Ramey tried vainly
to reach hla feet.
A crowd of less than 16.000 a dis
appointment to the promoters sat
glued to their seats at the abruptness
of the bout. A few moments before
they had seen Alberto Love 11, the
scar-faced assassin from Argentina,
lace Clarence (Red) Burman of Balti
more throughout their ten-rounder.
Montanez, 136, and Ramey, 135,
moved out quickly and began tossing
gloves. Pedro dug a couple of hard
punches to the body and Famey
danced away. Montanez caught him
In the center of the ring and let
the knockout punch loose. The fight
was over.
The third main event proved an
upset as Ritchie Fontaine, 129, of
Missoula, Mont., dealt out terrific
body punishment to young Jackie
Wilson, 126, promising young Pitts
burgh Negro, to carry eight out of the
en rounds. .
The heavyweight bout saw Burman,
Jack Dempsey's heavyweight, willing
to absorb all the blows Lovell could
mete out without going down. Lovell
weighed 192,. Burman 181.
4
OREGON DROPS GAME
IN REGIONAL SERIES
TACOMA, Wash., July 37. (API-
Johnson Paint. Washington semi-pro
baseball champlona, remained In the
running In the regional tournament
today after a 7-to-4 victory over Re
liable of Portland, Oregon champlona.
The two teama meet tonight In the
fourth of a five-game series to de
termine the northwest representative
In the national play-orr at Wichita,
Kas. Oregon won the first two gamea
st nllverton last week.
E
(By the Associated Press)
As the Giants opened a 13 -game
tour of the west and the White Sox
began a 13 -game swing through the
east, the pressure today definitely
was on these second-place teams In
the major league races.
The champion Giants, battling to
regain first place, squared off against
the St. Louis Cardinals with a two-
game gap between them and the
leading Cubs. The Sox, trying man-
luny I or weir urst -punting since
1919, opened a three-gam eserles at
Washington with a five-game chasm
between them and the top -riding
Yanks.
BUI Terry's troupe went Into the
west with a badly patched Une-up.
Mickey Haslln. filling in at short
stop for Dlmond' Dick Bartcll, has
committed fielding Ispses that were
excusable, but hardly helpful, and
has come nowhere near equaling Bar
tell's ability to deliver timely nits.
Harry Dan n lng has wielded a po
tent war club as a filler-Inner for
Catcher Gus Mancuso, but the all
lng Mancuso knows best how to rally
the Terry pitching staff.
Weather.
Northern California: Generally fair
tonight and Wednesday, but fog on
the coast and scattered afternoon
thunder storms In the high moun
tains. Little change In temperature
moderate northwest wind off the
coast
Oregon: Pair northweet and un
settled elsewhere tonight and Wed
nesday with scattered thunder storms
in mountains: overcast on coast, lit
tle change in temperature, light to
moderate northwest wind off the
coast.
SALEM, July 27. (API W. L.
Oosslln. secretary to Governor Martin
was invited today to be parliamen
tarian at the national convention of
Young Democratic clubs at Indiana
polls, August 20 end 31.
Oosslln, first president and one of
the founders of the Oregon Young
Democratic organization, said he did
not know whether he could attend
The Invitation came from Prank
Wlckem, Sioux Palls, S, D., national
president of the ore an teat Ion.
MRS. WADDELL HIGH
IN RIFLE PRACTICE
Mrs. Ivan Waddell topped the snisll
bore riflemen Sunday with a 3(x400
in the regular weekly outdoor match.
Individual scores were aa follows:
dO.yd, lOO.yd.Tol
Mr. Ivan Weddell. 197 ll9 809
C. O. Onll . 107 197 394
Pete Pomeroy 197 107 394
Ivan Waddell 194 109 30S
P.. L. Edwards 107 lea aos
8. M. Tuttle 194 19(1 393
Mrs. O. C. Oall 198 10 991
Mra. 8. M, TutUe . 10 194 390
Hllbert Youne 1!4 194 alia
MERRICK'S
POOL
SWIM
IN DRINKING
WATER
Dally 1 1 p. m to 10 p. m.
Sundays! 10:30 a. m. to 10 p. m
"Everybody's Talking"
"Don't ay a word! We'll fix thing
up with a glass of GOLD SEAL Beer"
U,U,iJl.llJII,JI)JliiJJJi,WWII
MONTGOMERY WARD
jj holds any blanket until 'ffk
fed .
FLOUNCE PANELS
Reg. X.00 value.
Bright and cheery.... Jj Q
KITCHEN CURTAINS
Formerly 1.00. Large "J" ft
cushion dot kitchen JJQ
curtains .
FLOUNCE PANELS
Reg. ?9c. Iteduced
for this sale jHH
PRISOILLAS
neg. 79c value
Limited stock
59c
V KITCHEN CURTAINS
Reg. 78c value. sQ
4sst. colors 05JG
PRISCILLAS
Reg. 79c value.. ma
Light fluffy curtain njljC
for summer
KITCHEN CURTAINS
Reg. 79c value. Jt A
Limited supply. 4jC
Hurry! Have! ..,
FLOUNCE PANELS -
Reg. 69o val. Lower thun the
' ; regular low prlco In s
this sensational sale. aJjSQ
KITCHEN CURTAINS
Reg. 59c values. Just nn
the thing for sum- 5wC
mer cottage. .
PRINTS AND SHEERS
, REDUCED
Formerly . sold for 25c yd.
Mutllns, Voiles, Ulmlty, Flax-
tsri 19c
MEN'S ALL WOOL
SUITS
An ull wool hummer ftult for
dios or business. Triced to
sell up to 23.U5. 4 f
1 9.93
TROPICAL WORSTEDS
A Sanforized Wash suit for
summer. 1 ( f
Reg. 13.95 value UaUU
GIRLS' SHEER
DRESSES
eg. 1.00 value. aei Q
Slies 1-6-7-14. ' Jj Q
GIRLS' TUBFAST
DRESSES
Reduced from Q
30c to ....... c3C
' Others reduced from 59c to 390
WOMEN'S WHITE
PURSES
Reg. 1.98 value. Novelty purses
t for dress or . j jm
street 1 .4
WOMEN'S DRESS
SHOES
' Values up to SI. 75. tVhlte. col-
9lres 3H to S. ... 1 M93
STUNNING SANDALS
Reg. 1.98 value, porthole. cut
Sires 31,4 to a. "1 .49
Plaid Pairs
at last year9s price
Pr.
Worth $2.59 next fall! S wool blended
with top grade China cotton (next to
wool in warmth). Full bed size 70x80
inches. Full standard weight, 3J4 lbs.
3-inch sateen binding. Pastels on snowy
white grounds (only available in fine
quality blankets. 50c holds any blanket I
"Fleecydown" Doubles 108
Fall price, $1.39! 7oi80 inchee. JL pr,
72x84 In. All Wool. t i
Fall price, $7,981 Taffeta bound. J ,
MOTIIPROO
wit
ith 5-yr. Guarantee
. 791
Fall price, $8.98! New panel
border. 100 wool. 70x80 in.
Mothproofing does not clean
or wash out. New colors. 3
lbs. pre-shrunk. 4" taffeta
bound. -
8.98 3V4 lb. wool Blankets,
large ilie72x84ln
13.98-5 lb. wool Blankets, 1 )84
72x90 in. txtra size, weight. .M.mt
j
WOMEN'S SPORT
SHOES
Values up to t.9.
Tie, sandal, oxfords i
2.49
EXTRA
SAVINGS
Yon always wve money
when you buy at Wrd,
nd you tare time too
when you buy through
tho Catnloc Order Dept.
Just telephone your or
der on anything ta the
catalog you iee at be
fore you buy. Or, if you
prefer. Jutt ttop at the
catalog order desk next
time you are In the store.
f JJ l Broadcloth I
1 W SHORTS
f "fk x;j,? Cool Cotton I
a jMj SHIRTS
I ' VC1 Mako yjur n,oney ,g long way! '
t Vv VV VS.l .Thw eo?or broadcloth shorts
N FV V vVn H V0&. ar cut for comfort plenty of room h
tl 1 VAU YVUYnXVX in the seat. New patterns. Wards
M Pi" V''HMW Athletic Shirts absorbent, well- p
v VvTS mde' ! '
II wAVfKV I U'Y'f Mod, Just LiUDad't
80 YS' SHIRTS, SHORTS
II SpecVy priced! Fast col-
I'J ' " or broadcloth thorn; cot- I 11 C t
fel VaP ton thins. Full sue range. I
li. -v.... i . , 1 1 i - i in. ii , i i i , i in r
Cloning time for Too Late to CI as
alfg AU 1 i:M p. Eft.
It-
17 OrtriTU PPMTO AT "
117 SOUTH CENTRAL
IELEPH0NI 2M