" PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1939.
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MlPWS0M
Sport
Graphs
Billy Hulen says:
Hardy Makes Fair
Record In First
Year Of Pro Ball
Bob Hardy, the first contribu
tion Jackson county has made to
professional baseball in many,
many years, didnt' exactly burn
.up the Texas league while pitch
ing for Beaumont the past sum
mer, but neither did he make
the Detroit Tigers sorry they
signed him fresh out of Univer
sity of Oregon last spring.
Hurling for the tnll-end Detroit
farm club, the till Ashland south
paw worked mostly in relief roles.
With Beaumont's Btartlng fllngcrs
getting shelled to cover with grent
consistency, Bob waa able to see serv
ice In 23 games and pitch 79 Inn
ings after Joining the team In late
June. Complete Texas league aver
ages In last week's Sporting News
reveal Hardy was credited with three
victories against five defeats, and an
earnod-run average of 4.33.
Bob waa a little wild, probably
due to hia being over-anxious to
make good in his first fling at or
ganized bfiseball. He walked 45 men
and hit five others. However, he
whiffed 34, which Isn't bad In a loop
of this calibre. (Class A-l, only a
half-step under Coast league rating).
Other vital statistics concerning
Hardy show that he faced 374 bat
tors, allowed 68 runs, 96 hits and
88 earned runs. He pitched only one
complete game. His earned -run aver
age, 4.33, as before mentioned, placed
him B4th from the top In this re
spect. There were six other Beau
mont hurlers with better earned-run
averages, and five with worse figures.
Although always a pretty fair hit
ter, Bob found Texas league pitchers
rather tough. He collected five hits
In 27 trips for a mark of .188. He
batted in two runa and scored one
himself, and two of his five blows
were doubles. He struck out five
times.
It comes to light that Mi
chigan, In that 85 to 0 mas
sacre of poor Chicago last
week, honestly attempted to
keep the score crown, but
CDUian I . . . ,atuo oiibis ui
the A. P. reports that Coach
Frits Crisler volunteered to
cut the last two quarters from
15 to 12 minutes, that be
tween halves the Wolverinos
agreed to concentrate on punt
ing and that Crisler asked the
officials to penalize his crew
every lime it threatened to
score . . .
George Short of the Chat
tanooga News rises to spout:
"When Snakcy Butler finished
his 56-yard touchdown run for
Tennessee, the Alabama team
looked like 11 miles of bad
road" . . . Leo Durocher, the
manager of Brooklyn's Dodgers,
is expected to sign a two-year
contract shortly calling for a
mere 25 grand per . . .
The football wolves are howl
ing for the scalps of Chicago's
IMC'
WW-
TOPS
im1s
A i
sit m. v .-h
k v '""Ljjdj
proof -I- ....ii-y
ta
STRAIGHT RYE tW H I S K E Y
j Clark Shaughnessy and Illinois'
Bob Zuppke, but those two gents
J are not worrying . . . their's
j are the safest coaching jobs in
j football, Shaughnessy being a
full professor and certain of his
I position until the retirement age
i of 70 and Zuppke wielding the
' big stick at Illinois . . . this
looks like the last year for Jim
my Phelan at Washington, un
less things perk up in the Husky
lair ... a loss to Oregon will
about clinch things . . .also on
thin ice is Pop Warner at Stan.
ford, and Stub Allison may be
before the season is over . . .
Some Broadway odds on
next Saturday's grid skirm
ishes find Ohio State 9 to 5
over Cornell, North Carolina
11 to 10 over Penn, Southern
California 11 to 5 over Cali
fornia and Fordham 11 to 10
over Pitt . . . U.C.L.A. spots
Oregon 7 points on the yellow
sheet and Oregon Stale spots
Washington State the same
number . . . Clemson drove
99 yards to a touchdown
against South Carolina last
Saturday, which is believed to
be the longest sustained
march of the season . . .
Klamath Falls may have the
finest lighted football field in
the state but it certainly hasn't
the best turf ... the grass is
green, as it should be, but it's
roots are not deep and the field
is hard and tricky . . . Way last
spring we picked Tennessee as
the nation's number one foot
ball team, and who says we
can't call one once in awhile?
. . , the local group working
for baseball lights here next
summer has decided leanings to
ward the fairgrounds as the lo
cale , . .
Bob Hinman, ex-Tiger grid-
der who has started every game
for Willamette University's grid
ders, is being called one of the
best ends in the Pacific North
west conference; also, one of
the finest pass-receivers to grace
the Bearcat gridiron in several
years . . . Floyd Baker, anoth
er former Tornado star, turned
in a sparkling exhibition for
Willamette against Portland
University two weeks ago . . .
he is a regular guard . . .
Nope, Bernie Hughes didn't
tear off a yarn for the Mail
Tribune this week, he having
been out of town last Friday
and not seeing any football . . .
Bernie'll come up with another
next week, probably on the
Med ford-Bend game. , . what's
this about Bill Sweeney, mana
ger of the Portland Beavers,
shifting to Hollywood? . . .
Fights Last Night
By the Associated Press
Oakland, Calif. Eddie Mad-
er, 189, New York, outpointed
Harold Blnckshcar, 101, Monter
ey, Calif., (10).
New York Andy Holland,
181, New York, outpointed Irish
Pnt Durbin, 161, Cincinnati (6).
Providence Larry Bolvin,
12 3, Providence, outpointed
Sammy Crocetti, 127, Amster
dam, N. Y. (8).
New York Julie Kogan. 133,
Connecticut, outpointed Jesse
Torres, 134, Puerto Rico, (8).
- .HMOOH TA
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EXTRA BLEACHERS
10 BE AVAILABLE
FOR BEND BATTLE
With the largest crowd of the
season expected to turn out for
the Bend game here tomorrow
night, Medford high school has
obtained temporary bleachers
from the Southern Oregon Col
lege of Education capable of
seating 900 additional specta
tors, Principal Leonard Mayfield
announced today.
The bleachers, which will be
erected on the east side of the
field flanking those already
available, will boost the seating
capacity of the stadium to al
most 3,400. The covered grand
stand seats 1,260 in comfort, al
though 1,400 can crowd in, and
the present bleachers can take
care of 1,200.
The new electrically - operated
scoreboard, donated to the school
by Fluhrer's bakery, will be in
operation for the first time. It
will be placed high above the
bleachers on the east side of the
field, in plain view of everyone
in the stadium.
Also in use for the first time
will be a high-fidelity public
address system presented to the
school by the Gates Groceterias.
Officials named for the clash
are George Harrington, referee;
Bernie Hughes, umpire, and
George Robertson, head lines
man. PETE, NAZI TO
E
Pete Belcastro will get his
third crack at Hans Schulz in
Medford's grappling arena next
Monday night, but unlike their
other two matches, both won
by the German, this will be
staged without a referee in the
ring to hinder the nefarious ac
tivities of the two badmen.
Promoter Muck Lillard an
nounced today he had completed
arrangements for the fracas, fol
lowing Belcastro's proposition
along those lines. The promoter
said Schulz agreed to the match
and that the local boxing and
wrestling commission placed its
sanction on the no-referee angle.
The official will be stationed
outside the ring only to declare
falls when one or the other
wrestler hollers "when," and to
keep both boys inside the
squared circle.
El Pulpo and Cowboy Dude
Chick have been signed for the
six-round middle event and
Duke Pettigrove, a rough boy
from New Orleans who has been
here before, will meet King
Kong Clayton, great Negro mat
man, in the opener.
STATERS PLAN AERIAL
ATTACK AGAINST WSC
Corvnllis, Oct. 26. (API
Coach Lon Stincr had a pass
ing session scheduled for his
Oregon State college gridders
today, indicating the Beavers,
who have depended on their
ground attack most of the year,
will take to the air here Sat
urday against Washington State
college.
The Staters tossed the ball
around plenty in yesterday's
practice session.
Prep Lead Tied
Portland, Oct. 26 -(AP)
Grant and Roosevelt were tied
today for the leadership of the
Portland interscholastic football
league, thanks to Grant's 6 to 0
victory over Roosevelt yester
day. It was the Roughrider's
first defeat in league play.
Use Mall Tribune want ads
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BOWLING
In Commercial lesgue bowling
matches tn the Medford slleys last
night, Plche Sport's and Mall Tri
bune esch took two points, Rollln'
Pin beat McDonald C&ndy company.
3 to 1; Monarch Seed and Peed beat
Llttrelt Parts, 3 to 1, and Uttrell
Parts got even with a 4 to 0 vie
tory over the same team In a post
poned match. Scores follow:
Mall Trlliune
Handicap .. 2S 2S
as 75
Ollstrap
Greene ......
178 124 148 4S0
106 121 152379
Hsgen, Al 178 168 110 456
Kraus 160 132 122464
Hagen, Bill 112 167 183 462
Totals 769 737 790 2286
PlcUe Sports
Irwin 149 110 128 387
White, W 162 176 190628
McKeown 161 193 164608
Tollelson . 161 196 127 473
Boone 142 179 163 484
Totalli 756 853 722 2380
McDonald
Candy Co.
150 174 167491
125 138 160423
151 136 134420
164 117 133414
114 133 1C4 141
704 697 788 2189
Long
Johnson
Slead
Shorty Morse
Plsher
Totals
Kolll
In' Pin
Vuhovlsh
331 197 119547
140 141 163453
178 198 157633
120 130 138388
133 154 113 400
811 820 690 2321
Dickinson ...
Strode ........
Kent
H. Kroschel
Totals
Llttrcll Parts
Sims 159 123
Uttrell .. 130 I"6
Swearlngen .......... 165 130
Heirholzer 151 189
Stromberg 198 168
180 462
165 441
127422
178618
165631
806 2374
Totals 803 766
Monarch Seed and
Feed
Handicap 28 28
Antle 153 126
Ray Mlksche 109 106
28 84
161440
93308
177840
150 434
164421
773 2227
Kynn 202 161
Webster 128 156
Bob Miltsche 124 133
Totals 744 710
Uttrell Purts
Sims 163 1C7 123 412
Uttrell 151 173 123 448
Swearlngen 163 124 158 435
Heirholzer 153 159 158 470
Stromberg 161 '18 157 436
Totals 771 710 718 2199
Monarch Seed and Feed
Handicap 3 3 3 9
Antle 177 156 119462
Bob Mlksche ..... 135 191 170 496
Ryan . 124 165 183 462
Webster 157 151 139 447
Wilkinson 131 148 133412
Totals 727 804 747 2278
Captain Anderson's team defeated
Captain V. Strang's team, 4 to 0,
In an Elki, club bowling tournament
game lat,t night. Cad Bowman of
the Anderson team was high scorer
with 584. Scores follow:
Anderson '68 150 145463
Reaney 125 151 166 442
R. Williams 131 114 112357
Tollefson 146 146 146 435
Bowman 144 204 187 636
Handicap 198 198 10B 594
Totals 911 962 953 2826
V. Strang 150 134 168 451
Guenther 153 153 153459
Holmea 120 169 119 408
Irwin 111 116 140367
Lantls 135 146 178 459
Handicap 150 150 160 450
Totals P28 858 908 2594
TO
ON ARCS IN 1940
New York, Oct. 26. (AF)
Despite the longstanding ob
jections of Manager Bill Terry,
the New York Giants have de
cided to install a bang-up light
ing system in tne Polo grounds
and play a full quota of night
games next summer.
The Giants thus become the
last of the big league clubs to
haul down their sunlit banner
and succumb to the arcs. Up
to now Terry stubbornly has re
fused to expose his athletes to
the night air, but he evidently
has been overruled at last. An
official announcement will be
made in about a week.
This will leave the Yankee
stadium alone of the three local
ball plants without a lighting
system. Brooklyn made a mint
of money with its night games
at Ehbets field the past season.
Company
Inter -League Competition
MacPhairs Latest Scheme
By Judson Bailey
New York, Oct. 28. (AP) Startled out of a sound off season
slumber by the alarm of Brooklyn's early rising Leland Stan
ford MacPhail, who wants to supplement the world series with
games between the other clubs, most of the major league mag
nates are cautious.
Some of them have been burn
ed before by their own criticism
of the redhead's red-hot schemes
such as night baseball and
are willing to give his latest
brainchild a hearing.
This is what MacPhail said he
intended to have anyway at the
annual meetings at Cincinnati in
December, when he will propose
that the first place clubs play
each other, as now, and the sec
ond, third, fourth, fifth, sixth,
seventh and eighth place clubs
also meet.
"Interleague c o m p e t i tion
should not be confined to two
clubs. A series of inter-league
games in which all clubs par
ticipate would fairly determine
the question of supremacy each
season," argued MacPhail.
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WEBF00TS FIRE UP IN
WORKOUTS FOR UCLA
Eugene, Oct. 26. (AP The
Oregon football team, gloom
ridden, after losing to Gonzaga,
regained some of its fiery spirit
in the final workout yesterday
before leaving for the U.C.L.A.
game at Los Angeles Saturday.
Coach Tex. Oliver commented
"they didn't look so bad out
there on several plays."
WEARYcbUGARSDR!LL
AGAINST BEAVER PLAYS
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Medford. Oreaon