Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 10, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
'FOR MOUND DUTY
''IN FOURTH GAME
Lanier and Russo to Vi
. Cards Favored to Win
Crucial Game.
St. Louis, Oct 0 (U.R) Bett
ing odds in St. Louis tonight fa
vored the St. Louis Cardinals to
defeat the New York Yankees
in the fourth game at Sports
man s park tomorrow and even
the world series at two games
each. - ,
h; . James J. Carroll, St. Louis
'Betting commissioner, quoted
' the Cards as four to three favor
ites behind Southpaw Max
Lanier. To back the Yankees.
you put up $10 to win $11.
St. Louis, Oct. 8. (U.R) Two
left handers, one trying to live
up to his former brilliance and
the other seeking revenge, were
named tonight to pitch the
fourth game of the 1943 World
Series at bportsmans park to-
morrow,
Joe McCarthy, pilot o'f the
front running New York Yan
kees, felt so confident with
two to one edge that he decided
to gamble with Marlus Ugo
Russo, who has been troubled
with a sore arm for the last two
seasons.
Billy Southworth of the St.
Louis Cardinals, irritable and
desperate, nominated Max
Lanier, who lost the opening
game of the series at Yankee
stadium through his
takes. t
own mis-
The two managers were quite
a contrast as they sent their
teams through tuneup drills this
afternoon. . '
McCarthy was smiling as his
players went through a snappy
hitting and fielding drill. South
worth was fretting and nervous
as he tried to smooth out the
fielding and hitting ills which
cost his club two of the three
games played at Yankee
stadium.
Billy insisted his team was
"all right and will prove It to
morrow" but his actions belied
his words. He criticized his
players as they took their turns
in the batting cage and tried to
insuu me oia uarainai spiru
back in his men as they went
through fielding drill.
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ill. fell!' J
Lanier, who developed slight
fever after the teams arrived
here last night for the remain
ing games of the series, said he
felt fine and was determined to
make up for the opening game
defeat.
McCarthy decided " on Russo
on a hunch, hoping that the fast
sinker ball of the Yankee south
paw would silence the Cardinals
bats as effectively as ha did
those of the Brooklyn Dodgers
on an October afternoon three
years ago when he hurled a
four-hit victory over Freddy
Fitzsimmons and Hugh Casey in
the crucial third game of that
series which the Yankees went
on to win.
McCarthy had little to lose
for should Russo fail he will
have a well-rested Spurgeon
Chandler, the major league's
leading pitcher in earned run
average this year who defeated
Lanier in the opener, for the
fifth game.
Southworth, knowing that
now it was "door-die"- for the
Redblrds, said he would come
back with Morton Cooper, win
ner of the second game, in the
fifth contest. The Cardinals
against Russo were made four
to three favorites.
PENN, YALE, PITT
ALL SCORE WINS
Philadelphia, Oct. 9 (U.R)
The University of Pennsylvania,
fighting stubbornly to keep its
undefeated record Intact, scored
a 7 to 0 victory oyer a strong
Dartmouth eleven today before
45,000 fans at Franklin Field.
Pennsylvania's husky line
stopped Dartmouth twice In the
shadows of its goal line in tne
first period and recovered a fum
ble which led to its winning
touchdown. ,
New York, Oct. 9 U.R) Yale
concentrated all of its scoring in
the second period and defeated
Columbia university to i
here today before 20,000.
Scussel, Yale halfback, and
Klrst combined in the second
Quarter to take advantage of
three misplays by the Columbia
team and won the game for the
Ell. , . ...
Strong Broken
State College, Pa., Oct. 9
(U.R) A string of 17 victories on
Bear Field here for Pennsyl
vania State College came to an
end this afternoon when State
was held to a scoreless tie by the
Colgate Red Raiders.
Pittsburgh. Oct. 9-t4J.R) The
Pitt Panthers won their first vic-
lory unaer uoncn -itu a onuugu-
essy this afternoon by defeating
West Virginia 20 to p before a
sparse crowd.
Huskies Cain Easy
' Win Over Gonzaga
Spokane, Wash., Oct. 8 (U.R)
Rose - Bowl-bound University
of .Washington ran merrily over
the Spokane Air Service Com
mandos to hang up a languid
47-12 football victory at Gonza
ga stadium here today.
The game sagged in the cen
ter like the Irish washerwoman s
clothes line, with high points
at beginning and end. Washing
ton did its heavy scoring in the
second and third periods, mak
lng six uninteresting touch
downs and converting five for a
total of 41 points during that
time.
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MEDFORD MAIL
Football Scores
(By United Press)
College of Pacific 12, Cali
fornia 6.
Franklin Marshal 12, Buck-
nell 8.
Brainbridge Naval 87, Fort
Monroe 0.
Pennsylvania 7, Dartmouth 6.
Penn State 0, Colgate 0.
Pittsburgh 20, West .Vir
ginia 0.
Swarthmore 14, Muhlenberg 13.
Camp Lejeune 26, North Caro
line "B" 0.
Yale 20, Columbia 7.
Army 81, Temple 0. "- .
Brown 35, Tufts 6.
Maryland 19, Richmond AJr
Base 6. . -
Richmond' 16, Virginia 7.
Illinois 25, Wisconsin 7.
Iowa Seahawks 25, Iowa 0.
Great Lakes N. T. S. 13, Ohio
State 6.
Case 36, Carnegie Tech 13.
Worcester Tech 13, Harvard 0,
Notre Dame 35, Michigan 12,
Indiana 54, Nebraska 13.
Purdue 19, Camp Grant 0,
Rochester 26, Rennse 1 a e r
Poly 0.
Illinois Normal 7, Wabash 7.
North Carolina 23, Jackson
ville Naval 0.
Camp Davis 27, North Caro
lina State 0.
Cornell 30, Princeton 0.
V. M. I. 12, Clemson 7.
Texas 13, Oklahoma 7.
Rice 0, Tulane 33.
Depauw 39, Indiana State 6,
Western Michigan 60, Xavier
Kansas 6, Iowa State 13.
Georgia Tech 5, Georgia Fre-
flight 7.
. Iowa State 13, Kansas 6.
Morris Brown O, Tuskegee 0.
Oberlin 26, Bethany 6.
Texas 13, Oklahoma'7.
Fourth Air .Force 47,
ULANS 0.
T
Lafayette, Ind., Oct. 8 (U.R)
Purdue University defeated a
Camp Grant army team today,
19 to 0, before a crowd of 15,000.
It was Purdue's fourth
straight triumph over major op
position, and the Boilermakers
hung up the victory in convin
cing fashion.
Iowa City, la., Oct. 9 (U.R)
The lowly Navy Pre-flight Sea
hawks today took to the air
lanes to score three of their four
touchdowns and defeated Iowa
University 25 to 0 before a
crowd of 8,000.
Madison; Wis., Oct. 8 (U.R)
Illinois crumbled the University
of Wisconsin's defense In tne
opening period today and rolled
on to a 25 to 7 triumph before
17,000 fans In Camp Randall
stadium.
' TEAMS USE GLIDERS
Camp Mackall, N. C, Oct. 9
(U.R) For the. first, time, two
football teams were transported
to the site of . their game today
in gliders.
The junior varsity teams of
Duke University and the Navy
Pre-flight school at the Univer
sity of North Carolina traveled
in the army troop carrier gliders
from Chapel Hill to this para
trooper training base where they
played this afternoon.
Closing (Una lot Classified ads 9
a. m. Too late to Clasally 13:30
O5.to$io
ARTHUR D. HESS
TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
MT MICHIGAN -BY
35-12 SCORE
Bertelll and Miller Star For
Third Win In Row Rec
ord Crowd.'
Ann Arbdr, Mich.: Oct. 9
(U.R) Notre Dame's powerful
and versatile team blasted one
of the 1943 football seasons
great myths today and simulta
neously sent its own grid stock
soaring as it hammered Michi
gan into submission 35 to 12 be
fore a record-breaking crowd of
ua.uuu tans. -
Michigan, hailed as a "super
team" in early season estimates
because of its great supply of
navy ana marine trainees, wilt
ed before the onslaught of the
Irish, who chalked up their third
consecutive victory and roared
another step onward toward
their first undefeated and untied
season since 1930.
The - one-sided triumph
stunned the biggest crowd in
Michigan football history and
was the most decisive scored by
either team in the 12-game series
dating back to 1887.
Notre Dame ripped Michigan's
vaunted line to shreds. With
Angelo Bertelli doing the pass
ing, it caught tne Wolverine sec
ondary flatfooted and out of
position repeatedly to make the
rout complete.
The Irish scored once in the
first quarter! twice in the second
and twice in a third period that
added a "Zany" touch to the
contest when the electric timer
stretched the play to 23 minutes
instead of the regulation 15. The
fourth quarter then was cut to
seven minutes.
This Notre Dame team,
ranked by veteran observers as
among the greatest ever pro
duced in the collegiate football
capital, literally blasted Michi
gan, out of the contest with its
long-range striking' power and
its explosive speed.
Notre Dame s triumph wag a
team affair, but in it two per
formers stood out with unusual
brilliance Bertelli for his great
passing and shrewd direction
and Creighton Miller for his sen
sational running.
Bertelli threw two touchdown
passes, set up another with one
of his aerial tosses, scored one
marker and .kicked the points
after each of the five touch
downs. Miller scored twice, once
on a dazzling 66-yard run and
again after taking a 17-yard pass
from Bertelli.
The manner in which Notre
Dame scored its five touchdowns
was a perfect demonstration of
its play througn-out the contest.
TROJANS DEFEAT
ST,WS,13-0
Los Angeles, Oct. 9 U.R)
Stopping the running and pass
ing of all-American Bruce Smith,
the University of Southern Cal
ifornia Trojans won their third
straight game today with a 13
to 0 win over St. Mary's Navy
Pre-flight before 30,000 fans in
Memorial coliseum,
. Former' Mlnnesota all-Amer
lean Smith, who joined the navy
team the first of the week, was
harried and rushed by the heavy
USC line which forced him to
throw hurriedly for a succession
of incompleted and Intercepted
tosses. He ran with some suc
cess in the first quarter but
confined his talents to passes
throughout the rest of the game
Buckeyts Beaten
Great Lakes, 111., Oct. 9 (U.R)
Ohio State's plucky young
Buckeyes finally cracked unde:
Incessant pounding by the Great
Lakes Bluejackets today and the
sailors .carried off their fourth
victory in five games 13 to 6,
on two second half touchdowns.
GREEN PINE
SLABS
300 CUBIC
FT. LOAD
Timber p
OREGON, SUNDAY,
PODESTO'S HEAVES
BRING PACIFIC
WIN OVER BEARS
Berkeley, CaU Oct. 8 U.R
Unbeaten College of Pacific,
combinlna the football wizardry
of 81-year-old Coach Amos Aion-
ZO Stagg ana passing .lonnny
Podesto of Modesto, defeated
favored University of California
12 to 8 . today before 25,000
fans .in memorial stadium.
Pacific marched 48 and 39
yards for early first period
scores, then staved off a spec
tacular California attack in the
final five minutes of the game
which netted Coach Stub Alli
son's outplayed outfit one touch
down and left them within three
yards of another as the gun
went off.
California went Into the game
as a 20 to 1 favorite, despite
Pacific's wins over the Alameda
Coast Guard, St. Mary's Navy
Pre-flight and UCLA. But-the
Bears were scared to death
of Podesto's passing arm and
showed their alarm immediately
after the' opening kickoff when
they scrambled back to stop
aerial thrusts and let the lanky
Podesto run through them on
the ground.
Ff. Benning Mates
Discover Bowerman
Was Football Hero
The football-playing fame of
Bill Bowerman, ex-Medford high
and University of Oregon star
who coached the Black Tornado
prior to his entering the serv
ice, has followed him Into the
army.
From Fort Bennlng, Ga.,
where Bowerman is attending
the officers advanced course at
the infantry school as a mem
ber of the 1st student training
regiment, comes the following
news release: .
"Football fans in the 16th
Company, 1st Student Training
Regiment, were discussing grid
iron schedules during a rest
period when they discovered
that one of their classmates,
Capt. William J. Bowerman, had
himself made football, head
lines. .
"Bowerman had his day of
glory on the grid field some
dozen years . ago when he
knocked the props ' out' from
under the Rose Bowl hopes of
the University of -Washington
Huskies, unbeaten 'till then. As
a blocking back for his under
dog University of Oregon team,
Bowerman surprised thousands
of spectators as well as himself
by intercepting a wasnington
pass and running 96 yards for
a touchdown, mat won tne
game." ' '
OPEN TO HUNTERS
Portland, Ore., Oct. 9 U.R)
Three sections in the - central
Oregon army, maneuver area
were reopened for hunting oy
action of the' state game com
mission today.
A willingness expressed D7
army authorities to nave cer
tain closed portions reopened
prompted the action at todays
commission meeting here.
The Summer Lake area will
be opened Oct. 20, including
Summer lake, Silver lake, Sum
mer rim, Chewaucan marsh, Sy
can butte and -the Thompson
reservoir.
Two other sections will open
Oct. 10.' One includes the north
eastern part of the maneuver
area, taking in parts of eastern
Crook, northwestern Harney
and southeastern Grant coun
ties. The other is a small sec
tion south of the Summer Lake
area.
Dm Mall TrlbuM Want Ads.
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COWPANY
MOM
OCTOBER 10, 1948-
PLAY TO 6-6 TIE.
Medford high's Black Tornado
will go Into the "big game" with
Klamath Falls at Klamath next
Friday night with an undefeated
record but with a tie marring
its escutcheon.
The tie was fought at Eureka,
Calif., Saturday afternoon, when
Coach Lorne Arnold's eleven
battled the Loggers to a 6 to
6 deadlock to snap its string of
two straight victories.
Doug Plumley, Medford full
back, tallied the Tornado touch
down in the second period, and
the extra point was not made.
Frank Massero, Eureka's "one
man passing and running at
tack," scored for the Loggers in
the third quarter after he had
tossed an aerial that took the
ball to the Tornado 10-yard line.
Eureka's extra point also failed.
Medford. battling to go Into
the Klamath game with an un
beaten and untied slate, just
missed a touchdown when they
lost the i ball on downs on the
three-inch line as the game
ended. Once before, in the
third heat, the Tigers drove to
the Eureka eight-yard stripe,
only to lose the ball on downs. .
The game was featured by
Medford's long power drives
which, through lack of goal-line
punch and fumbles, failed to pay
off, and Massero's many passes.
The latter .tossed some 35
aerials, many of which con
nected. DUKE NOSED OUT
BYNAVY, 14-T3
Baltimore, Oct. 9. (U.R) Hal
Hamberg and his buggy whip
right arm powered mighty Navy
to a 14-13 victory over hither
to unbeaten Duke before 55,600
ttnight in a game which saw
Duke's last ditch bid for a tie
denied by a missed converslpn.
The triumph, fashioned by
Hamberg's two bullet touch
down passes in the second period
kept Navy rolling along the
road to national football honors.
For Duke, the heart-breaking
defeat dumped the Blue Devils
out of the ranks of the nation's
undefeated elevens.
ARMY VICTORIOUS
OVERTENIPO-O
West Point, N. Y., Oct: 9 U.B)
Army's potent football team
outclassed Temple 51 to 0 today,
paying tribute to a game op
ponent In the final momenta by
grounding a toucnaown ana
kicking a field goal Instead.
The Cadets In winning tneir
third straight without being
scored upon, enhanced their
reputation as the top team In
the east, both offensively and
defensively.
BY WILLAMETTE
Salem, Ore., Oct. 9 (U.R)
Willamette university's power
ful line stopped Whitman col
lege 20 to 0 today in Oregon's
only scheduled collegiate foot
ball game played at Sweetland
field before 1,500 fans.
Both schools were top-heavy
with navy trainees but Willam
ette ' scored touchdowns in the
second, third and fourth periods.
INVEST in a
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121 East Mala Upstairs
WINS REGISTERED
BY BOTH KLAMATH
(By United Press) -'
- Oregon high school .football
teams Saturday were credited
with a vigorous showing on
assorted gridirons after scores
of rivals met on the turf and
under the lights.
At Eugene, the North Bend
Bulldogs blanked the Eugene
Axmen 12-2 before a crowd ot
2,500, . the hometowners being
somewhat handicapped through
absence of two backfield aces.
Sparkplug of the Bulldogs was
Halfback Dick Elllngs, who
scored a touchdown early in
the second quarter and heaved
to Monk Fry, frosh "half, in the
fourth quarter for the .final
tally.
At Tillamook,' Astoria went
down to a 12-6 defeat before
the Tillamook Cheeiemakers.
A 86-yard run by Don Sutton
In the first period gave Tilla
mook, its first score and Bob
Berkey went over from the one-
yard, line in the second, Astoria
sporing in the final quarter.
Other results: Central Catho
lic 53, Lebanon 0; St. Helens 6,
Columbia Prep 0; Klamath Falls
71, Oregon City 0; Prineville 14,
John Day 7; Milwaukle 20, Cor
vallls 0; Parkrose 6, Estacada 0;
West Linn 16, Gresham 6; Grants
Pass 13, Marshfield 0; LaGrande
io, me Dalies 6; University
High (Eugene) 7,. Roseburg 0;
Springfield 18, Junction City (I;
Mllton-Freewater 22.- Baker '
Forest Grove 42. McMinnville fl:
Toledo 18, Siletz 0; Newberg 13,
ueaverton 0: Hiilsboro 27. Ti-
gard 6; Canby 19, Sandy 0; Cot
tage Grove 39, Sweet Home 0;
Walla Walla 20, Pendleton 7.
and Salem 7, Albany 0.
SAN DIEGO WINS
San Dieffn. net. Pfll PI T..
by the line plungiog of Halfback
Bill CaHpnViiaH -fai-mm- Ala.
bama freshman star who scored
three touchdowns, the San Diego
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Buy N o w and Sa ve
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HART SCHAFFNER &
MARX and CURLEE
SUITS and O'COATS
Wartime It the time to make a point '
of "investment" buying! That's what
our tale overcoats and tuitt are an in- " .
vestment In quality fabric, fit and cut
that will last for teaiont to cornel
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our fine collection
Closing Week Days 6 p. m?
Saturdays 8:30 p.m.
GLENN H UTZ
MEN'S WEAR
Naval Training Station ever
powered an outclassed Pomona
vruijuiitc um. 1117 warn HQ
to 2 here, today.
M'Spaden Leads In
By Byrd 6 Strokes
Nllen. 111.. Opt. 0 mm Is
old (Jug) McSpaden heid a six-"
scroice ieaa tomgnt over Sammy
Byrd at the end of the first 18
holes of their "world champion
ship" golf match at Tam O'Shan.
ter Country club. The second
round will be played tomorrow
McSpaden, winner of this year's
all-American tournament ot tv
O'Shanter, shot steady golf. His
piay was nignilghted by superb
Duttinff and thai ainlrlnff n a nki.
shot on the fourth hole.
CAN SITE PURCHASED
Salem. Ore.. Oct. a (IIP)
The American : Can company
has purchased a 28-acre tract
here on which to build a plant
to supply cans to northern Call-.
fornia and most of Oregon, the
company's Pacific coast engi
neer, J. F. Abbey, disclosed
tonight.
to Olaaally. 5.30 Saturday afternoon
trsiuunuw.
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