SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE -
Joe Chez
Medfordite
Chosen for
Third Team
Jo Chez, Medford. pUeber
for Stanford university, was
named to the third team in the
1952 collegiate ail-American
baseball selections made by
the American Association of
College Baseball Officials.
Chez, who has completed his
eligibility at Stanford and is
eyeing professional offers, had
a record of seven wins and one
loss for the Indians this year.
He made the all-star first
teams of the California Inter
collegiate Baseball association
and National Collegiate Ath
letic association district No. 8.
Duane Helbig, Oregon Stale
college outfielder landed a
berth in the all-American sec
ond team.
East Lansing, Mich. (U.PJ
Duke and Missouri shared top
honors Wednesday in the 1952
All-America collegiate baseball
team selected by the American
Association of College Baseball
Officials. John H. Kobs, chair
man of the Coaches' All-Ameri
ca Committee and baseball coach
at Michigan State college, an
nounced selection of three 10
man teams for the mythical
squad.
Groat Named
The All-America selections:
William Werber Jr., Duke, IB,
College Park, Md.
Hal Charnofsky, USC, 2B, Los
Angeles.
Harvey Kuehn, Wisconsin, SS,
Milwaukee.
Dick Groat, Duke, 3B, Swiss-
dale, Pa.
Tom Keough, California, LF,
Pomona, Calif.
Junior Wren, Missouri, CF,
Kansas City, Mo.
James Monahan, Rutgers, RF,
west Haven, Conn.
Larry Isbell, Baylor, C, Hou
ston, Tex.
Jim O'Neil, Holy Cross, P, Co
lumbus, Ohio.
Don Boenker, Missouri, P, St.
Louis.
Standings
PACiriC COAST
W. I. Pet. GB
Hollywood
San Diego
...54 36
..52 38
49 39
.600
.578 2
.557 4
.500 9
oaKiana
Los Angeles ...45 45
Seattle 41 43 .488 1314
Portland 38 47 .447 13 li
Sacramento ...38 53 .418 16 y2
oan .rrancuco 37 sa .411 17
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L.
Pet.
.727
.673
.551
.534
.448
.443
.386
.264
GB
Brooklyn
New York ..
Chicago
St. Louis ....
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
Boston
Pittsburgh ..
48 18
45 22
38 31
39 34
30 37
31 39
27 43
19 53
3',i
ll'.i
12 '.i
181,
19
23
32
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L
New York .4o' 28
Washington .36 30
Cleveland 38 32
Boston .3? 32
Chicago ,.38 33
St. Louis .32 38
Philadelphia .27 34
Detroit 23 46
Pet.
.608
345
.543
336
.535
.457
.443
.333
GB
4
4
4 '.'2
4',i
10
104
18
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL
W. L.
Pet.
.652
.556
.548
.493
.478
.457
.429
.403
GB
6
7
10i,i
m,
13
15
17
Victoria
Spokane .,
Vancouver
Lewiston
Salem
Wenatchee
Tri-City
Yakima ..
43 23
..40 32
...34 28
33 34
.,33 36
..3i 38
..30 40
29 43
BASEBALL
TUESDAY'S RESULTS:
Coast League
Oakland 6. Hollywood 1
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 2
Sacramento 10, Seattle 5
San Diego 6. Portland 2
National League
Brooklyn 4. Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh 3. Chicago 2
New York 6, Boston 3 (night)
St. Louis 8. Cincinnati 3 (night)
American League
Detroit 6. Chicago 4
New York 3, Boston 2 (night)
Cleveland 4, St. Louis 3 (night, 19
innings.
Washington 6. Philadelphia 5 (night)
Western International
Yakima 7-5. Vancouver 3-1
Victoria 11-1. Wenatchee 0-3
Salem 6. Spokane 0
Trt-Clty 7. Lewiston 1
English is the most widely
used language in the world.
Traders long ago made it the
language of commerce and it has
overtaken German in science
and French in diplomacy.
canoar
VC AMU1CU HSTIlliM tft. UK, Kill, BL MISKY
NOTICE!
Construction Co.
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FrL & Sat., July 4th & 5th
Named All-American Hurler
MEDFORDJTRIBUNI
Marathon,
100th RBI
Major Loop Games
By UNITED PRESS
What a night it was in the
majors!
A 19-inning victory for the
Indians over the Browns, 4 to
3, as Satchel Paige finally met
his match in the third marathon
relief jab he had been involved
in in less than a month. A fist
fieht in Boston between Earl
Torgeson of the Braves and Sal
Yvars of the Giants. And a
proud new entry in the record
books for a great competitor.
Enos Slaughter of the Cardinals,
who drove in his 1,000th run
in an 8 to 3 victory over the
Reds at St. Louis.
Paige, who pitched 10 shut
out innings against the Indians,
had victory over Cleveland re
liever Lou Brissie within his
grasp when he finally wore out
in the bottom of the 19th and
yielded two runs on a single by
Bobby Avila, a double by Al
Rosen, and a pinch-single by
Hank Mjeski. Just before, Bris
sie had yielded a run that put
St. Louis ahead, 3 to 2, on a
walk to Dick Kryhoski, a sacri
fice by Bob Nieman, and a
single by Jim Delsing.
Just Misses Curfew
The game just missed being
a curfew-halted tie by one min
ute. The 18th inning wound up
at 12:49 a.m. The new major
league rules prohibit any inning
starting in a night game after
Yakima Nabs
Pair From
Vancouver
By UNITED PRESS
Dario Lodigiani's Yakima
Bears may not win the Western
International league pennant
this year, but the current cellar-
dwellers suddenly have come to
life and are making it miserable
for other members of the loop.
The Vancouver Capilanos
were the Bears' latest victims.
The Canadians skidded to seven
full games off the pace Tuesday
night by dropping both ends of
a double-header, 7-5 and 5-1.
Victoria Splits
Pace-setting Victoria split
with Wenatchee, winning the
first 11-0, but losing the wind
up, 3-1. In single bills, Salem
blanked Spokane, 7-0, and Tri
City clubbed Lewiston, 7-1.
Bill Stites of Wenatchee and
Cal Mclrvin of Victoria dueled
until the ninth inning of the sec
ond game when two singles, a
walk and a bunt gave the Chiefs
their winning runs. Mclrvin was
returned temporarily from the
parent Portland Beavers after
Bob Drilling refused to report
to the class A club.
Jack Hemphill hurled a neat
six-hit shutout as Salem whipped
Spokane. Tri-City took advan
tage of loose fielding and bunch
ed its seven hits to roll over
Lewiston.
Southern Oregon
Junior Baseball
Grants Pass defeated Med
ford 7 to 1 and Ashland beat
Jacksonville 17 to 7 Tuesday
night in Southern Oregon Jun
ior Baseball league cub divi
sion games. Grants Pass downed
Medford 9 to 3 Monday in a pee
wee fray.
An ostrich egg weighs about
three pounds and holds approxi
mately as much as a dozen and
one-half chicken eggs.
ed ccud
ram
A SUM M flOOf il SUM IBITUl ffltJtt
Concrete
S Wednesday. July 2. 1952
Scuffle,
Feature
12:50 a.m. The Browns sent the
game into extra innings when
they tied the score off starter
Bob Feller in the ninth on a
pinch-single by Gene Bearden,
a sacrifice and Jim Rivera's
single.
Brissie gave up six hits as
he worked from the 10th to the
finish, while. Paige yielded eight
hits from the ninth on. The
19-inning marathon tied the rec
ord for length for an extra
inning major league night
game.
Paige,-June 20, pitched score
less ball for nine innings in a
curfew-called 5 to 5 tie against
Washington and on June 3, also
against the Nats, pitched six
scoreless innings to gain a 3 to
2 victory in 17 innings.
Dugout Scrap
At Boston, as the Giants
made it three straight over the
Braves, 6 to 3, Torgeson flat
tened Yvars in a dugout Jirawl
in which the Giant catcher got
a three - stitch cut over his
eye. The argument developed
when Yvars broke Torgeson's
bat after complaining the
Braves' first baseman stood too
deep in the batter's box at the
plate.
Slaughter, who despite his 36
years is having one of his great
est seasons, went past the 1,000
RBI mark when he drove in five
tallies with two homers. He
joined Bob Elliott of the Giants
as the only other active Nation
al leaguer who has hit that mag
ic level. His total now is 1,001.
The Dodgers stayed 3A
games in front of the pursuing
Giants by winning a 4 to 3 de
cision from the Phils on a pinch
single by Peewee Reese that pro
duced the winning run in the
ninth. The Pirates topped the
Cubs, 3 to 2.
The Yankees restored their
first place margin to iour games
with an uphill 3 to 2 victory over
the Red Sox, while Washington
also came from behind to beat
the Athletics, 6 to 5, and regain
second place. The Tigers push
ed Chicago into fifth with a 6 to
4 victory-
117 South Central
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OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9
Long Ball
Hitters Aid
Oaks Cause
San Francisco U.P.) Two
guys, hired by Oakland to hit
the long ball, offered a hope
Wednesday that their bats may
pry Hollywood from its hold on
the Pacific Coast league lead.
The belters, both outfielders,
are gentleman Sam Chapman
and Johnny Ostrowski. Chap
man, the class of the league in
cenierfield, has mildly disap
pointed some who expected him
to rip holes in the PCL's most
distant fences.
Seven Homers
Down by his own request from
more than a decade of service
with the Philadelphia A's and
Cleveland, Chap has clipped out
seven homers, batted in 42 runs
and hit better than .260 in his
85 games as an Acorn. He miss
ed spring training but overcame
that handicap by playing himself
into condition.
His manager, Mel Ott, and
owner, Brick Laws, are delight
ed with Sam's servicei. Laws
says Chapman has won "eight or
nine games" for the Oaks on his
professional outfielding alone.
Ostrowski, a veteran Coast
leaguer, was obtained from Sac
ramento in a straight trade for
Len Attyd. Since joining the
Oaklanders, Ostrowski has belt
ed five of his 13 homers and he's
hitting about .250 with 43 RBI's.
Lead Trimmed
Both Chapman and Ostrowski
ripped four-masters Tuesday
night to pace Oakland's 6-1 vic
tory over Hollywood. The loss
trimmed the Stars lead to two
games over second-place San
Diego, who whipped Portland,
6-2. Oakland, in third place, is
four games behind Hollywood.
Los Angeles, though out-hit al
most Iwo-to-one, whipped San
Francisco, 6-2, and Sacramento
overwhelmed Seattle, 10-5.
Ostrowski had three hits and
Chapman two, bolstering Allen
Gettel's six-hit pitching against
the Stars.
GENE SMITH FAVORED
Washington U.R) Gene
Smith of Washington, seeking
his 32nd straight victory, was a
slight favorite to score a repeat
triumph over Glen Flanagan of
St. Paul, Minn., Wednesday
night, in a televised 10-round
bout at Griffith Stadium. The
bout is regarded as one in a se
ries to determine an "interim
champion" while Featherweight
Champion Sammy Saddler is in
the Army.
Phone 2-6241
Gasmen, Eagle Point
Post Softball Wins
The Crater Liens are sched
uled against YMCA and Mo
bilgas against the National
Guard in Medford Softball
association men's contest on
Thursday.
The Lions and YMCA are to
Tie at 7:30 p-m. with the oth
er fracas to follow al the sen
ior high stadium.
National Guard will make
Its first appearance on the
Medford field. Guardsmen
lost an earlier game to Camp
White on the veterans domi
ciliary, field.
Mobilgas and Eagle Point won
hassles in the Medford Softball
association men's league last
night.
Mobilgas gained a tie with
Central Point and Camp White
in the loop standings by bounc
ing Trowbridge and Flynn 12 to
4. Eagle Point chalked up its
first win against one setback by
topping Andy's Jewelers 10 to 6.
The Gasmen, making it two
wins against one loss, pushed
over six runs in the first stanza,
four in the second and two in
the fourth.
Three hits, five walks, an
error, stolen base and passed
ball figured in first inning scor
ing and three hits, an error, two
stolen bases and three walks in
the second inning surge. Bill
Werner tripled in the second
frame. In the fourth Werner
singled and Carl Reich socked
the second homer of the loop
season.
All in Fourth
Trowbridge and Flynn tallied
all its runs in the fifth canto.
Bill Royce singled and two
walks filled the bases. John Mc
Cormick pushed the runners
around with a triple and romped
home, himself, on an error.
The game was halted after
five innings because of the
Mobilgas lead.
Eagle Point also had a six run
first inning. Five hits, three er
rors and two walks were util
ized. Andy's got a run in the
first inning on a hit by Bob
Steele, double by Ned Landers
and an error and one in the sec
ond on three walks and a flyout
by John Niles.
k TIP
CONTRIBUTED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY THE
MedlfiaDM Mail TTHMnnne
Margin Cut
In the fourth frame the Jewel
ers got three markers to cut the
margin to 6 to 5. Three hits, a
fielder's choice and a walk were
employed. Eagle Point got a
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fifth Inning run on a hit, two
walks and fielder's choice for a
7 to 5 lead. Andy's in the sixth
gained a tally on a hit, two
walks and an error to cut the
gap to 7 to 6.
Eagle Point in the seventh
frame, however, padded its mar
gin with three runs on five
walks, an error and a fielder's
option.
L1XESCORES:
Mobilgas 640 20 13 8 1
Trowbridge. Flynn 000 00 4 5
B. Sinfler and Ear!nd: Cory end
Ettinger.
Eagle Point ....600 010 3 10 6 3
Andy's Jewelers 110 301 0 6 9 6
Waldron. Baker 4i and Clave; T.
Landers. H. WUlUms and Steele.
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