PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1940.
Sport
Graphs
Billy Hulen Says;
Trout Plentiful
In Crater Lk
Reporti Wharton
Rego Hurls Craters to 5 -1
SOUTHPAW FLINGS
WIT BASEBALL:
TEAM BATS WELL
Tourney Win Over Tillamook
Betters Pole Vault Mark
Fishing along the middle
stretches of Rogue river my
be comparatively flow at pres
ent, per Joe Wharton's weekly
bulletin from Grants Pass, but
not so at Crater Lake, where the
trait to the water's edge was
opened the first of the month.
Wharton reports that a con
siderable number of good
catches are being made daily by
trolling with tandem spinner
and bait "As Crater Lake la a
national park, an Oregon ang
ling license is not required to
fish in Crater and many out-of-state
visitors are taking advan
tage of the privilege," Wharton
writes. "On the Fourth of July
244 Rainbows and Silvers were
taken on tandem spinners with
angle worms."
Commenting on trout fishing
in the Rogue, Wharton says,
"The water Is extremely low
and clear and we would advise
using small files and very small
leaders. One disadvantage in us
ing very small flies is hooking
so many fingerling steelhead
and salmon which must be care
fully released without injury If
they are to survive and grow
up. This can be easily accom
plished when caught on flies, as
they are usually lightly hooked
on the edge of the mouth and
can be easily shaken off with
out handling."
Medford Plays Gaston Next
Friday Eve Mantle Club
and B and 0 Victorious
Portland, July 10. ?)
Medford's efficient baseball
crew, a semi-pro tournament fa'
vorlte, tripped the Tillamook
Cheesemakers last night, 9 to 1.
In two other tournament con-
testa at the Vaughn street Pacific
Coast league park. Mantle Club
of Portland stopped Mount An
gel, 8 to 4, and B & O of Port
land swamped Molalla, 10 to 2.
The loss put Mount Angel out of
the running.
Medford backed Jimmy Rego's
four-hit pitching with smart
work in the field and at bat. An
errc. . a wild pitch and a single
gave the southern Oregon team
a starter run In the second in
ning. Single runs in the third,
sixth and seventh innings de
cided the Issue.
The though! strikes us thai
Germany ia tough like Jack
Oempsey was tough. Dempsey
came up the hard wsri he had
! fight tooth and nail and
desperately for his very exis
tence. He was hungry, and
that hunger turned him into
wild-man in the ring. Fight
ers he met, accustomed to
easier wars of living and per
haps softened by years of
plenty, like Jess Wlllard. had
a chance against the Manas
sa Mauler.
So it is with Germany. It has
come up the hard way in the
past 20 years. Its soldiers of to
day, in their youth, had no easy
time of it. They, too, were hun
gry, and when the guy named
Hitler told them a world feast
waited, we see the result. And
like Jess Willard, France was
softened by years of content
ment, and didn't stand a show
against the Nazis.
But here is where Germany
and Dempsey differ: while the
great pugilist could, and did,
reach the end of his fighting
trail and become a civilized, ut
terly respectable human, we
doubt whether Germany, under
Hitler, ever can be the same
sort of nation.
A welcome newcomer to Med
ford, due here this week, is Don
McFadden, former Southern
Oregon Normal and University
of Oregon star baseball player,
and until this week manager of
the Eugene Athletics of the Ore
gon State league. Don has been
transferred by his company, a
trucking concern, from Eugene
to Medford.
Dave Sanderson, writing In
the Eugene Nsws. had this to
say about McFadden the other
day. "Eugene will feel a lots
here through its baseball
team as Don has put the Ath
letics in the thick of the pen
nant scrap for the second half.
The Athletics of 1940 are one
I the finest teams to be
fielded by Eugene in years
and years, and every week
mere and more fans are begin
ning to see this tact. It has
been largely through the ef
forts of Don and Mrs. McFad
den that has put the Athletics
ever with the fans and kept
them going."
Don's pitching helped the
University of Oregon win the
northern division. Pacific Coast
conference championship sever
al years ago, and he has played
on several state championship
semi-pro teams. While he hasn't
done much hurling this season,
confining his efforts to an oc
casional exhibition-game appear
ance, he still can wheel them In
there, and will probably sign
with the Craters.
We take a good, old-fashioned
bow and smirk for that National
league win over the American
loop all-stars yesterday, 4 to 0
The game bore out our conten
tion that those members of the
New York Yankees, who played
with the American leaguers, had
no business in there, and that
apparently the only reason they
were was on past reputations.
Gordon, Dickey, Keller and
DiMaggio, once great hitters,
went blowlrss against the Ns
tionals, and Red Ruffing, anoth
er erstwhile Yankee star, was
rapped by Max West for a three
run homer that gave the senior
loo pen the victory.
Ce. Mail Tribune went ana.
Jimmy Rego was a surprise
pitching choice for the Craters,
as he hurled nine innings against
Sllverton here Sunday and Man
ager Tom Hawkins, before the
team left for Portland, expressed
his doubt that the lefthander
would feel like working an
other game with only one day
rest. Apparently Rego requested
that he start the game, for Haw
kins planned to send Steve Crip
pen to the mound.
The victory over Tillamook
moved the Craters into a posi
tion for their second game Fri
day night at 8:45 against Gaston
Dairy of Portland. The Dairy
men, in two tournament starts,
have beaten Sauvies Island, 8 to
4, and Canby, 12 to 8.
Bos score:
I :
NO-HIT SOFTBALL
TO TIP CATHOLICS
Medford
McDonald, s
Calvert, I ,
Wray, r
McLean, s
Petenon, m ,
Paehaeo,
Pattraon, t .
Hawkins, e .
Rego. p
Crlppen, 8
. 4
Totals
Tillamook
Rica, m .
Wlrkm.n, 1
Irwin, e . .
Schulmrlch, r
Racette, 1
LaPort,
Butlar. s
fllmeon, S
Mcxjr. n
8wop
LaMaar, I
Putmant
B B O A
Total
. 4 at
Batted for Butlar In Mventh,
t Batted for Moore in seventh.
Medford oil 001 1 !
Tillamook OOO 100 01
(rrors, Calvert, Butler. Slmonaon.
4 hit 1 run off Rego In 1. 8 and 6
off Moor in T. Rune reaponalbl for.
Rego I, Moon . Struck out. Moore
10, Rego Baaea on ball., Moore 8.
Rego a. Stolen baaea, Patterson. Pa-
eheco a, Pettaraon. Two-baae hit.
Wlrkman. Sacrifice. Wray. Run.
batted In, Patteraon, Pacheco a. Re-
cette. Wild pitches. Moor a, Rego 1.
umpirea, Burk and Regele. Time,
l:S8.
BEAVERS DEFEAT
By the Associated Press
This extra-length week in the
Pacific Coast Baseball league
was off to a daffy start today.
The milhtv Rainlrra nf K-tii
went down for a shutout 1 to 0
loss to San Francisco last night.
The basement barons of Port
land turned up In the win list,
beating Hollywood, 9 to 4.
A Sl-hlt melee at Ssn Dlcgo
gave Los Anseles t In ) u-in
over the Padres.
And on Sacramento the i fell
twice. Two players inchidine
Art Garibaldi, til team'a
popular In 1939 were sent from
the league in a shaken p. and
Oakland won a heart-breaking
2 to 1 night game.
The strange Portland Holly
wood affair ended an einht-vame
losing string for the Beavers and
ran the Stars' losses up to six
in a row.
The Stars blew a x n
in the fifth, when Portland put
on a splurge of six runa ell
unearned, because Hollywood
had set the stage for them with
fumbles. The Stars erred five
times in the game.
Cornelius Warmerdam, San Francisco Olympic club star,
already holder of the unofficial world's pole vault record, is
shown here bettering It with a Jump of IS feet l's Inches at the
32nd annual AAU track and field championships at Fresno, Calif.
The meet was held at night. Earlier this season Warmerdam.
Tuolumne. Calif., school teacher, soared to IS feet to better the
listed record of 14 feet. 11 inches. Recognition of that Jump is
awaiting official approval.
Max West Hero of All-Star
Game on McKechnie's Hunch
By Harold Claassen
St. Louis, July 10. (JP) At noon it was a hunch noth
ing more that caused Manager Bill McKechnie to insert Max
West of Boston in the starting lineup of the National circuit in
the annual major league all-star baseball game.
Thirteen minutes after the
contest was under way, it was
a brilliant piece of strategy as
West deposited a three-run hom
er in the right field bleachers
and started his mates toward a
4 to 0 triumph over the Ameri
can league.
McKechnie's belief that Mel
Ott of the New York Giants,
listed to start in right field until
shortly before the game time
yesterday, would be of more val
ue in the late Innings when that
garden would be the sun field
prompted the deacon to make
change.
"It was my hunch that Olf
who is older and more experi
enced, would be a bit steadier
in the sun and that is the only
reason for the change," McKech
nie said.
Luke Appling of the Chicago
White Sox, collected a double
and a single and Buck Newsom.
the bellicose Detroit flinger,
cracked a one-baser. Never did
the losers have more than one
runner on the paths and Appling
was the only one to get beyond
second.
It was the White Sox short
stop's double off Derringer in
tne second that brought about
w est s removal. The Boston 1 L OOK
ciouter tried to make a leaping ' Kp'!0
catch and slummed into the con-! McDonald
crete retaining wall. He suf-1 ' ""son
fered a bruised hip but is ex-!Calvert
pected to play again Thursday i k"""'"
wncn action is resumed in the .
big leagues after a three-dav Patterson
layoff. j Pacheco .
I llaynes .
CRIP BATS .467
TO TOP CRATERS
Steve Crlppen, successfully
pinch-hitting Sunday against
Silvcrton, boosted his batting
average to .467 to widen the
mnrgin between him and Al
Wray, in second place among
Medford Crater batsmen with
an average of .418. Crippen's
one single in one trip meant
19 percentage points over his
previous mark.
Wray passed Leonard (Pat)
Patterson for the leadership in
runs scored by tallying twice in
the Silverton series, while Pat
terson failed to dent the plate.
Wray has scored IS times; Pat
terson 14.
Slate league average of Cra
ter players follow:
Wray
AB R H Avg.
.30 9 14 .487
.53 IS 23 .418
.81 11 28 .346
.73 11 23 .315
..24 3 7 .292
.49 7 14 .286
.62 13 16 .258
,.40 10 10 .250
.17 3 4 .235
.61 11 14 .230
..71 14 16 .225
..23 5 4 .174
....1 0 0 .000
Fights Last Night
Minneapolis. July 10 hV) '
Art Doering, 24-year-old Chicago'
youth, started the final 18 holes
of qualifying play in Jhe western !
amateur event today with a one-
stroke lead over the field, with
a two under par 70 for Tuesday.
A stroke bark of Doerinn were
Jim Black of St. Louis, Neil
Croonquist and Ken Young of
Minneapolis. Harry Todd of Dal
las, Tex., defending champion;
Walter Burkemo of Fvanston
HI., and Earl Larson, Minneapo
lis, all had 72 s.
Bud Ward of Spokane, na
tional amateur titlist. had a bad
first 18. posting a "7 for one of
his poorest rounds In years.
By the Associated Press,
New York Ken Overlin.
161, Washington, middleweight
champion in New Yoik and
California, stopped Harry Dal
samo. 170, New York. (Hi.
Detroit Anton Christofori
dis, Greece, outpointed Joe Sut
ka., Wyandotte, Mich., middle
weight, (101.
Fresno. Cal. Shiek Hansel.
15(1, outpointed Bobby Pacho.
155, Los Angeles. (10).
A PAINTER
OF REPUTATION
Daily's Auto Painting
IS teatt run left
Phone
1300
for Towing or
Wrecker Service
Anywhere Anytime
Lewis Super Service
Camas Tonight.
American league: Lost River
Dairy vs. Jennings Tire com
pany. 8 p. m. Inter-City game:
Grants Pass Oregon National
Guards vs. Wooden Box, 9 p.
m. National league: Copco vs.
Elks, 8 p. m.; Eagles vs. Copco,
9 p. m.
Morris Steiner hurled no
hit softball game for the Clar
ence English All-Stars against
the Catholic All-Stars at the
stadium last night, but lost a
shutout in the seventh and final
inning on a walk, an error and
a long fly to the outfield. The
score was 3 to 1.
Joe Peccla, imported from
Portland, hurled for the Cath
olics and gave up five blows
singles by Piche, White, Hof
fard and Caples. and a double
by Prichard. He displayed a
sizzling fast ball and a nice
change of pace.
Peccia pitched a doubleheader
last night. Working for Wood
en Box in the first game, he
gave up five hits to defeat Elks
of the National league, 9 to 7,
in an exhibition clash. Camp
bell tripled for the winners and
Peterson and Boyle doubled,
while Kecvan doubled for the
losers.
In the National league, Fa
ber's edged out Casco, 6 to S,
with a two-run burst In the
eighth frame, and Elks downed
Bear Creek, 7 to S. Webster
crashed to homers and R. Pink
ham tripled for Faber's. Jack
son belted a homer for Gasco.
Scores: R. H. E.
Catholic All-Stars.... 1 0 1
English All-Stars.... 3 9 I
Peccia and J. Smith; Stainer
and Wilson.
R. H. E.
Elks 7 5 4
Wooden Box 9 9 2
Bean and Archer; Paccla,
Applegnte and D'Arcy.
R. H. E.
Gasco 5 8 4
Fabers 6 10 4
Shlmoda and Kyker; L. Pink
ham and A. Pinkham.
R. H. E.
Elks 7 7 2
Bear Creek 5 7 4
C. Stclle and Archer; Curry,
Wright and Wooten.
tiowniEV
STAND &
Seattle
Oakland
Los Angeles. .
San Diego
Sacramento
San Francisco....
Hollywood .
Portland
W. L.
. 63 .15
Pet.
.643
58 45 .563
. 62 48 .520
51 50 .505
. 50 54
. 48 52
48 55 .466
... 33 64 .340
.481
,4R0
Major leagues unchanged.
Scores Yesterday
LIVESTOCK
Portland
Portland. July 10 (AP-USDA)
Haga: 80: 35 e 3&c lower than Tues
day; ood -choice iss to ila-ib. drrre
1ns 87.28 a)T.40; e early to 87.80:
ISO to MO-lb. 88.74; tew M M; light
Uinta and elaughter pis as.J4eS.7S:
packing sows 84.78 a; 6.a; lightweights
6.90: feeder pla scarce. salable
6.50 and above.
Cattle: 160; calves, SS: slow, steady;
scattering plain steers Including
etockera as 00 a 7 26: few craas fat
swan as 00 BOO; good dry (ed ateers
quotable to Monday's top of 110.50:
common-medium halters SS.367.76:
canner to common cows 43.76 ft 4.50;
odd heavy Bolatalna 46.00; medium
food beef cowa M.oost6.76; medium
good bulla -25a7-35; good -choice
vealers S8.00; common-medium M OO
8 30.
Sheep: 3.000; active, steady: good
choice eprtng tamba aaoo8.23; few
common $6-50 a 7 25; odd jearllnga
5.50: fat ewea S3 76.
ordinary 7Se; 11 per eent 74e: U
per cent 76c; IS per cent 78c; 14
per eent SOc. Hard whlte-baart: 12
per eent 78c; IS per cent SOc; 14 per
cent 83c.
Today's ear receipts: Wheat 17;
barley 4; flour 9; corn 1.
South Kan Pranclace
South San Pranclaco, July 10 (A.P
CSDA) Hogs: 400: around steady,
one load 184-lb. Oreaona 87 W; ex
treme top: bulk 185 to 335-lb. Cali
fornia 7.85: few 336 to 300-lb. 47.36:
packing sows steady, mostly S6.2S
down.
Cattle: 60; steers steady; on load
1,110-lb. graaa atera 88.25: few me
dium S80 to l.O40-lb. 88.00 to feed
lot; fed ateera absent: medium to
good grass helfera scarce, odd head
87.60; good young cows quoted 88.36
9 0.76: few aged medium range cowa
6.60 6.76: cannera and cuttera large
ly 63 804)4.36: odd llht bulla 88 50;
calves, none; nominal; good to choice
vealera quoted 8 10. 00 9 11.00: slaugh
ter calves 88.60 9 9.80.
Sheep: 700: generally steady; wooled
tamba abaent; 4 recks 70 to 76-lb.
shorn lamba as 00 p B AO: with 8 per
cent trim, latter top; about three
decks anorn ewes 61.50 3 36.
Chicago
Chicago. July lO-(AP-USDA)
Hoga: 31. COO: top SO 85 freely: bulk
good and choice 300 to 370-lb. 89 25
t 05: 270 to 300-lb. largely S.00
6.35; packing aowa sso-lb. doan:
mostly 85.25 e6.65; few 65.75; heavier
klnda S4.60e6.15.
Cattle: 13.000; calves. 1,000: 61150
bid on atrlctly choice steera and
around 812.60 on prime Nebraska
apeclaltlea: beat ateer yearllnga 611.10
scaling 1.000 lea.; helfera steady to
35c lower; best fed belters early
610.65; cowa alow, ateady; bulla atrong
to 16c hlKher; heavy sausage offerlhga
67.40: vealers steady at 810.26 down;
few 610.50.
Sheep: 8.000; practically no trad
ing; bidding 25c or more lower or
around 610.00 on spring lambs ltghtly
sorted or straight; still holding beat
sorted lamba 810.38 and above.
Portland Produce
Portlind. July 10. P Buttr:
Prints A gnvde sic lb. In p-rehment
wrapper. 33c in cKitons; B frd
30c In parchment wrapper. 910 In
carton.
Butt rf at: First quality, maximum
of .0 of 1 per ernt acidity, delltered
In Portland, 376 38c lb.; premium
quality (minimum of .35 of 1 per
cent acidity) 2Ma9'ac; valley routes
and country points 3o less or UBc;
second quality, 3c under first or 6c.
Cheese, egss unchanged.
Country Meats: Selling price to
retailer. Country-killed hogs, best
butchers 135 to 150-lb. 8't, -a 10c;
vealers fancy 13', 14c lb.: llgbt thin
10 13c; heavy lOirllc; lambs spring
1515ljC; yearlings 10 13c; ewes
4 7c lb.; good cutter cows 9c lb.;
oanner cows 9c lb.; bulls 11. a 12c lb.
Live poultry, dressed turkeys, peas.
onions unchanged.
New potatoes : Eastern Oregon,
Washington 160.t3.00 cwt.
Hay unchanged.
Major Ungues Id Is.
Pacific Coast League.
San Francisco 1, Seattle 0.
Oakland 2, Sacramento 1.
Portland 9, Hollvwood 4.
Los Angeles 6, San Diego 5.
Closing time tea Too Late to Clas
sify Adi ti 1 JO p. m.
Css Mail rnbune want aos.
Portland Wheat
Portland. July 10, (API Grain:
Wheat: Open High Low Close
Sept. .74 .74 .74 .74
Caah grain:
Oate No. 3, S8-lb. white 631.00.
Barley rfo. 3. 46-lb. B. W. 61838.
Corn No. 2, S. T. shipments 830.50.
nai No. 1. 61.64.
Caah wheat (bid):
Soft white 73c; weetern whit T3c:
western red 73c. Hard red winter:
UGIT-DUIYWUCK
wmmtm GAS
MILEAGE
TNI TtUCK VAIUI
So other truck has the kind f
mtine voti gt in a CMC. Mi leaf
Meter Tests are provinff etery day
that CMC 51PFR-DITY Engines
are the met economical of all. It
will pay you to investigate CMC
t9 44j. -), rttssMrgft (Xef VMAC
levetrf ereee'e fa
SKINNER'S GARAGE
143 South Riveritds Phon 102
Chicago Wheat
Chicago. July 10 (AP)
Wheat: Open Hlh Low Close
July .74 H .75 '4 .74 .74
Sept. .75"i .75H .74i .78H
Dec. .76 i .77(4 -'8 .76 S
iTAGE
BLASTS
AND FIRE,
Wall St. Reports
New York, July 10. (JP)
Some utility holding company
shares moved forward while air-
crafts sagged in a mixed stock
market today.
In most groups, the trading
was too small to make any ap
preciable change In prices, deal
ings approximated only 290.000
shares. Many usually active is
sues failed to appear on the tape.
Today'a closing prices lor 32 se
lected atocks follow:
Al. Chem. & Dye ! 148
Am. Can 5V4
unquoted
158 V,
UVi
18
27
Am. 81 Pgn. Power...
A. T. at T.
Anaconda
AU-h. T. Si S. P.
Bendlx Avla.
Bethlehem Steel .
Caterpillar Tract.
Chrysler
Coral. Solventa -.
Curtlss-Wrlght
DuPont
Oen. Electric .
Oen. Poods ...
Oen. Motors
Int. Harvester
I. T. T.
Johna-Manvllle .
Monty Ward
North Amer.
Penney (J. C.).
Phllllpa Pet.
Radio
Southern Pacific
Std. Brands
Std. Oil Cal.
Std. Oil N. J.
Tranaamerlca
Union Carbide
United Aircraft .
U. 8. Steel
75
45
64
87,
67,
158
3!
431,
43H
43
as
57
38 1;
son
73fi
31U
4S
B'4
41,
18 '4
84H
8
88
32 S
en;
San Bernardino. Cal., July 4.
(P) Disclosing that a United
States reclamation service ware,
house at Parker Dam had been
destroyed by explosions and a
fire Juno 28, Sheriff E. L. Shay
said here that an investigation
had been started into possible
subversive activities In the en
tire Parker dam area.
Shay said the fire destroyed
$100,000 worth of equipment
for power lines linking Parker
dam to the Boulder dam power
house up-river and for tunnel
drilling crews piping water Into
Arizona.
In the ruins of the ware
house, said Shay, searchers
found parts of what may have
been a timing, device for an
Infernal machine. He added
that when firemen attempted
to use fire nozzles they discov
ered that the equipment had
been plugged with iron bolts.
The firo apparently followed
a series of explosions.
Ons-Man Job
Columbia, S. C. (JP) In the
University of South Carolina li
brary is a book written, set in
type, made up for publication
and published by one man. It
is "Red Shirts Remembered,"
narrative of the reconstruction
era following the Civil war in
South Carolina. Its author is
Williams Arthur Sheppard of
Spartanburg, S. C.
blow. It continued to sound un
til a friend, investigating the
sound, found Spits and sum
moned aid.
PATTY BERG TO PLAY
GOLF FOR DO-RE-MI
Chicago, July 10. UP) Patty
Berg of Minneapolis, women's1
national golf champion in 1938, 1
turned professional today by1
signing a six-year contract with
a Chicago sporting goods com
pany.
Lit. Sav.d
St. Louis (U.R) Willard Snips
was saved from dpath by his auto
horn. Seated at the wheel of his
car. Spies was overcome by car
bon monoxide fumes and
slumped over the steering
wheel, causing the horn to
Pay Less Drsss Better
BOY'S WHITE
DRESS OXFORDS
Value. Jo $2.45 $ J qq
Your choice I iwO
M. M. Dept. Store, Inc.
'
MOTORISTS ATTENTION
It jour motor heats or
radiator leaks, see or call
HOOPER'S
RADIATOR SERVICE
33 a. Bartlett Phone 487
'
1
Studebmer
Champion
AVERAGED 29.19 MILES
dpd n a 1 1 nro nrciriAiiv
Th;.
Cunningly ,Mcdl mpion i,
i" economy in tL?'"!
Com. in rl .M,,0n Wth OVxrM.
ment-ev c.I.t. dow" P"
RIVERSIDE MOTORS
207 South Riv.nid.
Phont 1315
GASOLINE
Hot.l
Cornelius
SJ 8.W. Far
reman
Feel at Home in
"The Heart of Portland"
Ciwnrort Contenlenm
raortej Servlr.
Attractive autre:
nea(ke4 katn i on Bf
nn nalh ll.V) of
"ill full
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ri o. ommjoi, Mr.
IN THE HEART OF THE CITY
Park Ave.
Hotel
811 P VT. Part
FortUM
CMC TRUCKS0-'
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DIESEL