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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1945)
TWO MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Bunds?. July it. 1943 STOCK RISES AS TROUT New York, July 28 (U.PJ Detroit Tiger American league pennant slock, which had been as unsteady as its pitcher staff on the recent eastern trip, went firmly upward today as Dizzy Trout came through with his first complete game since July 8, an 8 to 3 victory over the Chicago White Sox. Trout has suffered intermit tently from lumbago since (lie start of the season, and when the Tigers went east, he went to a hospital. He rejoined the club in the spring and made two relief appearances. His absence NOW IS THE TIME : : : To get your Fall and Win ter Clothes repaired and Relined for Winter REPAIRING and REUSING On Ladies' and Men's Clothes ALTERATIONS and REMODELING Irvin th. Tailor 128 E. Main hurt badly, but his smooth nine hit Job today indicated that he can take his turn regularly nov Not a Sox runner passed second in the last six innings. Washington fell four games off the pace when the Senators couldn't solve Jim Wilson of the Boston Red Sox and went down, 6 to 2- Cleveland moved into a vir tual tie with St. Louis for sixth place by topping the Browns, 6 to 2. It was the Indians' fifth straight victory and came on a six-hit effort by Allie Reynolds. Philadelphia at New York was rained out. The Chicago Cubs kept up their sizzling pace at the top of the National league by beating Cincinnati for the 11th straight time, 8 to 3, in a game halted in the eight by rain. It was Chicago's. 23rd victory In 27 games. Brooklyn, handed the Boston Braves their seventh consecutive loss, 2 to 1. Boston rallied game ly in the ninth inning and chased Hal Gregg off the mound. ' The New York Giants won two from the Philadelphia Phillies, 2 to 1, and 8 to 2. Ernie Lom bardi's single in the sixth inning drove in the winning run in the first game. New York batted three Phil pitchers for 14 hits in the nightcap.. Washington, July 28 U.R) Dr. Clarence W. (Doc) Spears resigned as University of Mary land football coach today. Spear's resignation came as a complete surprise. His contract had another year to run. Spears said that he was quit ting football for good. He said that he would resume the prac tice of medicine. Spears came to Maryland in 1943 after winning a national reputation in 25 years of coach ing at Dartmouth, Minnesota, Oregon, Wisconsin and Toledo. TALBERT, BETZ IN FINALS Seabrlght, N. J., July 28 U.R) Bill Talbert of Wilmington, Del,, second-ranking nationally among men players, and national women's champion Pauline Betz won semi-final matches, today to advance into Sunday's final of the Scabright invitational tennis tournament. Nil THE REAL THING And beau butter U the real thing, everybody want! It. Butter U the first choice of U Ameri cans ... !a great demand on the war front and on the home front . . . in such demand that for a while we (11 must share and use It wisely. Better than none at all the real thing is al ways better ONLY SUTTER CAN BE BUTURl tlX LOST RIVER DAIRY Producers of Fine Grade A Pasteurized Milk 7 TO 4 IN FINAL CITY LEAGUE GO Final Standings W.. L. Pet. Camp White 5' 2 .714 Littrcll Parts 4 3 .571 Silver Dollar 4 3 -571 Jennings Tire 4 3 .571 MP Battalion 4 3 .571 Ordnance 3 4 .429 Junior Chamber 3 4 .429 State Guard 1 8 .143 The Camp White aggregation with five wins and two losses, heads the final standings while Littrell Parts, Silver Dollar, Jennings Tire and 752nd MP battalion are tied for second place with four wins and three losses. According to Bob Ebel, league president, the five teams will draw Monday at 7:30 p. m. at the Chamber of Commerce, to clear the way for entry in the Shaughnessy playoffs- One team will draw a bye, and will not play in the playoff opener which will be Tuesday at 7:45 p- m. This playoff between the four teams will drop two losing teams. The other two will then draw to see which shall play the first bye team on Thursday at 7:45 p. m. Immediately following the consolation playoff Friday at 7:45 p. m., the championship tilt will be staged. Ebel has asked all team man agers to meet Monday at 7:30 p. m. at the Chamber of Com merce. Scoring five runs in the first inning on a batting spree allow ed by . Camp White Pitcher Schroyer, the 752nd MP batta lion defeated the Agates 7 to 4 last night at the Medford stadium, for its eighth consecu tive victory of the season. The second game ended in an 8 to 5 win for Jennings over Littrell Parts, a home run by Tingley in the 7th bringing in the last three scores. Scores: Camp White 4 7 3 752 MP Battalion 7 5 1 Schroyer. Mahr and Majors: Whipp and Mow. Littrell Parts 5 8 4 Jennings . 8 8 4 Vandergriff and Guinotte: Rav Singler and Coghill. Rain Halts Plav In Tarn O Shanter Meet Chicago, July 28 (U.PJ A thunderinir rain struck at 2:30 P. M flooded the lam o bhanter country club course today, forcing postpone ment of the S60.000 AII.AitipH. can golf tournaments until to morrow. Eighty txolfers. manv of thim snlashlne thrnimh th ruin hurl completed their third rounds wncn piay was halted and pro moter Georse S. Mav rnlrri (not a fresh start would be made with none of today's scores counting, -mat made the lead ers in each of the three tourna ments the men's open, the amateur and the women's open, the same as they were yesterday at the end of 36 holes in the 72 hole medal play. RACING Chicago, July 28 U.R Spy Song broke on top in the $71,300 Arlington futurity today and led all the way to win by two and a hnlf lengths. The victory made Spy Song one of the hottest bidders for the two-year-old championship. Trucks On War Out Norman. Okla., July 28 (U.PJ Virgil (Fire) Trucks, Detroit Tiger pitcher inducted into the navy two years ago, was under observation at a naval hospital tonight for possible medical dis charge. Closlnsr tlrt tor Sunday Too Late to Clntttry 4.00 Saturday afternoon. Plmne rrmembtr mm RECAP BEFORE the fabric shows thru DANGER of blowout, and Irreparable condition threatens, when you rido on your tires long enough to wear through o the fabric! Better drive in here for recapping as soon as your treads wear smooth! HOME OF FEAR-PROOF RECAPPING OLDER TIRE EXCHANGE 8th and Riverside Stammen on Keystone Mat " ' Or - v 3 M i i 7 ' t ft., '-, "5- .'V , '" "V- Freddie Stammen, up from high school ranks, will play second base for Medford Craters when they oppose Central Point in a Southern Oregon league game at the Fairgrounds Park this afternoon, begin ning at 2:30. Besides being an outstanding performer at the key stone bag, Stammen is one of the club's leading hitters. 1 X " Vt 'I -; - I ERI CRATERS TG FACE Southern Oregon league play this weekend finds main interest centered on the Central Point Craters game being played at the Medford fairgrounds park, starting at 2:30 p. m. Other league contests match Butte Falls with the Klamath Falls marines at Klamath, and navy will travel to Ashland. Both Paul Freer, manager of the Craters, and Bill Askwith of the Central Point aggregation declined to announce starting pitchers before game time. Bit ter rivalry between the two teams promises to make it a hard-fought battle, Freer sum- "ming up his team's sentiments in the statement, "Id rather beat Central Point than any other team in the state of Oregon." TO DEFEAT OAKS San Francisco, July 28 (U.R) San Francisco snapped back today after last night's gift game to defeat the Oakland Acorns, 3-2, in a contest in which they were able to collect only five hits off Oakland Hurlcrs Lotz and Raimondl. Oakland 2 12 0 San Francisco 3 5 3 LoU, A. Raimondl (7) and B. Raimondi; Barthclson and Ogro NEW STOCKTON COACH Stockton, Calif., July 28 U.P.) Garrett Arbelbide, former All American end for the University of Southern California, today was named assistant football coach and head baseball coach at Stockton high school. Catcher Discharged Parris Island, S. C. July 28 (U.R TSRt. Gene DcSautcls. 38 vear old former catcher for the Cleveland Indians, was honor ably discharged from the marine corps today. EDITOR DIES Seattle. July 28 (U.R) Fun. cral arrangements were pending today for Thomas D. Potwm. Sr., 64, one of the Northwest's best known newspapermen, who died In Seattle yesterday of a heart attack. Potwin had been editor of the Yakima, Wash., Republic and Yakima Herald since 1940. He formerly worked on the Al bany, Ore., Democrat Herald; Portland Oregonian and Aber deen, S. D., News, BASEBALL By United Press National New York 2 10 0 Philadelphia 17 0 Mungo, Adams and Lombardi; Kraus, Karl and Seminick, Man cuso. Second game New York 8 14 0 Philadelphia 2 10 3 Brewer and Kluttz; Mauney, Monteagudo, Leon and Spindel. Boston' 18 1 Brooklyn 2 6 2 Tobin and Hofferth; Gregg, Lombardi, Buker and Sandlock- Cincinnati 3 9 1 Chicago 8 13 0 Carter, Lisenbee and Lake man; Derringer, Erickson and Williams. (Game called end eight innings account rain.) (Eight innings). American Washington 2 3 0 Boston 6 6 1 Pieretti, Carrasquel, Ullrich and Gucrra; Wilson and Holm. Chicago 3 9 0 Detroit . 8 17 . 2 Grove, Ross, Johnson and Tresh; Trout and Swift. St. Louis 2 6 1 Cleveland ' 6 15 2 Kramer, Zoldak and' Hay worth; Reynolds and Hayes. Army Sleeping Test For Co's Is Success Pasadena, Cal., July 28 (U.R A dozen young men snapped back today to their normal rou tine after nine hours of sound slumber that fnllnwoH IIS ful hours for the benefit of the army s study of fatigue. As part of the test, the 12, all conscientious obieetors in mil;. tary service, were sent back to mcir camp near uicndora, Cai., to resume their normal activities to see whether they had "snap- ned back after a night s sleep BIRTHS COOK To Mr. and Mrs. Ger ald, Route 4, box 314-C. July 27. 1945, a girl, seven pounds at Osteopathic Clinic. BENTLEY To Mr. and Mrs. C. W., 539 Palm street, July 28 1945, a girl, 5Vi pounds, at Osteopathic Clinic. In San Francisco in 1944, 106 boys were born to every 100 girls. Use Mnll Tribune Want Ads. SEASON SET SEPT.29T00CT.28 Portland, Ore., July 28 (U.R) The State Game board has an nounced regulations governing hunting and fishing and has closed the Tillamook burn area to hunters and the Wilson river and tributary streams to fishing. The deer season will be open from Sept. 29 to Oct. 28 for blacktail or mule deer- Eight hundred tags will be issued for the taking of does in the Fort Rock-Silver Lake area from Dec. 1 to 5- In eastern and southeastern Oregon the season for antlered bull elk will run from Nov. 3 to 25, while in Clatsop, Coos and Douglas counties the season will be from Nov. 3 to 18. Buck antelope of at least ear- j length antlers can be bagged from Sept. 22 to 30. . For pheasants, the season runs from Oct. 13 to 28 in Jackson, Josephine, Douglas, Hood River, Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam, Mor row, Grant, Klamath, Crook, Harney, Lake and Wheeler coun ties. The limit is four birds a day and not more than eight for the season. Oct. 13 to Nov. 4 will be open for pheasant hunt ing in Malheur, Umatilla, Baker, Union and Wallowa counties with the same bag limit Elsewhere in Oregon, the bag limit has been set at two males a day and not more than four per season. Open season will be from Oct- 13 to 17 in Clatsop, t-oiumoia, Washington, Clacka mas, Multnomah counties, and from Oct. 13 to 21 in Polk, ! Marion, Benton, Linn, Lane and Coos counties. i Manila, July 28 (U.R) The B-32 Consolidated Dominator, another super heavy bomber and the equal of the B-29 Boeing Superfortress, has flown 12 mis sions from Fifth Air force bases in the Philippines against the Japanese, It may be disclosed today. Lifting a security blackout on the presence of the new and deadly war weapon in the Far Eastern theater, the War depart ment permitted correspondents to disclose that virtually all bugs have been ironed out in shake down assaults against Formosa, northern Luzon, the China coast and Hainan island. About 1,400 Maine men have been killed in action. Use Mail Tribune Want Ads. T Washington. Julv 28 U.R) Gen. Jiro Minami, president of the Japan political association, admitted today that his country might be "overwhelmed by arm ed force" if it rejected the three power surrender proclamation issued at Potsdam Thursday. Minami spoke in double-talk I which indicated Japan was re-i jecting the surrender demand, ; yet fell shori of rejecting it. He declared that Japan would be "ready to ' talk peace only when the whole of East Asia isi freed from Anglo-American co- j lonial explotation and when ; Japan and other nations in the j woria are assured or a peacetui life based on justice and equal. ity." American Tourists Flocking to Mexico Mexico City, July 28 (U.R) Leading hotels in the oity today reported that hundreds of North American tourists are being turned away without lodging be cause of the season's exception ally heavy tourist trade. It was estimated that there are 10,000 North Americans vacationing here at present, including 2000 students taking courses at the I National University of Mexico summer school. ta v'zm fnra They've Got What It Takes... THE boys of the Navy really have what it takes" to drive the Japs back to their home islands. And the nation ally-famous lines of quality apparel fdr men, here at Utz's, really "have what it takes," too the superior styling and craftsmanship, the up-to-the-minute dash and snap, the long wearing qualities that make every suit, coat or hat an excep tional value. Choose from Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Curlee clothes, Stetson and Lee ' hats, Van Heusen shirts and liter ally scores of lines you've seen advertised nationally and that have won enthusiastic acceptance wherever fine merchandise is sold. Yes, indeed! Utz's apparel "has what it takes" to please you now and for a long time to come and it is easy on your pocketbook! o GLENN H. 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