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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1941)
.viSVyt.-i- ;y.j:y ,;.y :;'yy.ir-.--y.. -" y ;y -! vy-yy -v.- -y , y.yyyj.. .,- - ; i ' ' ! . yl . i , f I :-iy y-:. 'yy-y;- :y i ::-y - V-V- ;,;y.'"y: t W:.y,:-. -,-y l y ! WV Returning Heavies Getting inSliape for. First Tilt of Season trelteh Sports Trail ....... v Pat Thitc Tony Fraiola r ' Center Guard -. r; Brooks : Mfficl :M 2 Games It '.t ! 1 ti? tl ""-WHITNEY.:', martin; . ' "' (Special to The Statesman) . ; i NEW YORK, -Aug. 13- It probably is something of gboek1 to; some 6 'foot 2, ' 210-pound - young man to .learn, las be pauses . in , his s tmnnier duties t of lifting anvils into trucks or .serv- : lug as; a jack in some tire- , changing .:' establishment, ' that he is a member of a 1 generation of softies. Frank Leahy, not long i alnce transplanted , from Boston tollege to Notre Dame as footbal i loach, is authority for the class! fi- i ration, the inference being that ht had gone about poking an accus Ing forefinger into the Galentos tf i numerous youths and failed to i find the solid citizens he expected. Leahy's accusation blankets a lot of territory, and won't find much ' support except from elderly cents with ballast In the wrong places who think anythinr that has happened In sports since 1919 Isn't worth mentioning. ,. . In fact, Leahy, only 31 years old, is talking like the turn of the century and anyone who knows what a nice, personable guy fie is will "take his remarks with the proverbial grain of salt. It's too much like condemning a barrel of apples because the one you hap pened to touch felt like a moist sponge, and Leahy is too smart for that. He can look around him and find plenty of evidence to the con trary, and if he checks on army statistical records hell discover that the youth of today is on the average a more rugged specimen than the military candidate of 1917. Such statements with the "good old days" undertone always bring to mind this fact: In sports in which the yard stick or timer's watch form an accurate basis of comparison, sach as track and field, and swimming, the present-day ath letes have It over their dads and grandads six ways from Sunday. - " ' ' In other sports, such as boxing, football, basketball, hockey in fact, any sport of bodily contact, comparison must be left to mem ory, and memory balloon feats of the past far out of .proportion as the years pass. You know how the corner lot you played on as a kid seemed bigger7 than the Yankee stadium, and you were much sur prised in later years to return and find out it was just big enough for an only slightly super gas sta tion. With memory playing such trickgjjtjr folly to try to compare the athletesof a hazy past with the" realistic present, and if you Iry to bring up some iron-man ' feats: of long-faded years or other examples of rugged individualism you can look around and find quite a few in the backyard right now. Tommy Harmon last fall proba mj piayea as mucn root ball as any man, and he always was on the spot Yet the guy never got hurt. A few years ago a cast-iron gent named Pug Lund used to play at Minnesota, and if memory serves (there's that thing again) he thought nothing of a couple of broken bones. Iowa two years ago ' had an unusually successful sea son, yet about 15 men did all the work. ''. ' And as for baseball, the Car dinals and Dodgers play It like ft was first-cousin , to bull flfht And Just a couple of days age we read that Sudy York has keen playing with a broken wrist, and was going to keep on playing now that the season is . ..' nearly over. :; Our .athletes may be soft, but so la a rubber ball, and It takes a lot of bouncing around. Gridsters : EUGENE,:. Sept. lMThe ' .University of Oregon football squad tvas sent through a blis tering two-hour i n t e f squad scrimmage under game condi tions here Saturday; afternoon with the "Green" team scoring a 42-6 victory over the "Reds" in a brilliant exhibition of naming 'and passing attack. s --, : ' ;y Tommy Roblin, veteran left half back, paced the winenrs with three touchdowns and was on the sendirg end of . two other touch down passes. But the man who caught Tex Oliver's eye '.was Tom Oxman, a' phomore halfback who was third-string fullback with the freshman last season,'. Oxman, tn Ontario, Ore youngster com tleted i a jpass .to rRuss-.Nowling, transfer end from Long Beach for the only-Red Touchdown and got off a 58-yard punt; that -put the Crst-strinsers back on their heels. Later, its a member of the Greens, Oxmaji scored twice.""- . : ' ' The VTelifoots, after a week or heavy drills, looked la fine con-" CM? tor the coming .opener t::'-it l2zfcrd's conference, c i tt Ts.U AUo; Sep- SonofManO'WarBeats Whirly to Cop Narraganset Race PAWTUCKET, RI, Sept. lMVThe ig bell rang again Saturday night on San Riddle's Kentucky farm for another son of Man O'War won Saturday and War Relic did it the hard way by beating the great Whirlaway in the $25,000 Narragansett special. The tremendous final drive that has made Whir ly both whacky and famous failed as the three-year-old War Relic won Gal Golfer Is Impassive in Nabbing Title BROOKLINE, Mass., Sept 13-(vPJ-Women's sports came up with another poker - faced champion Saturday when attractive and im passive Mrs. Betty Hicks Newell of Long Beach, Calif,, missed par by four strokes over a 33-hole stretch at the Country club while defeating Helen Sigel of Phila delphia, 5 and 3, for the national amateur golf, title. The 20-year-old Mrs. Newell, who pounds a golf ball almost as hard and in much the same stoic al fashion her famed fellow Cali- fornian, Helen Wills Moody, did tennis spheroids, was down dur ine only the first two holes of the scheduled 36-hole finale. Although she performed bril liantly this morning;, setting a 77 for her first 18 holes, the new champion had only a one hole martin on the much mere spontaneous 22-year-old Phil adelphia tirl at the half-way mark, after being three-up at the tenth. When Mrs. Newell tossed away half of her lead by taking a rag ged six on the 18th, where she was in the rough with her first two shots, Miss Sigel appeared to be getting set for a mighty clos ing rally. That, however, was nipped in abrupt fashion as Mrs. Newell pulled into a three-hole lead by birdying the first two afternoon holes. She became four up at the 23rd and she had all those holes to her credit when she completed her third nine of the day in 36, one under par. The end came on the 33rd hole when Mrs. Newell, al though I outdriven by at least 25 yards, pounded her second shot to the edge of the green and then dropped a 79-foot chip shot almost dead to the pin. She needed only a halve for the championship but she re- - gained her five-hole margin, which she had built at the 28th and lost on the next hole, when iMiss Sigel missed a 12-foot putt and bowed out Gambol Gaily As OP Man The Oregon backfield forces were weakened, however, by the loss of Roy Dyer, two-year veter an left, right, halfback and full back who found a knee - Injury had not sufficiently healed to al low him to play. He returned to his home at Bend, Ore." It made the second player Oliver had lost in two daysDcv Prentice, -dea-thertonized" ;SC center, pulled out of the Orgon camp. Friday and plans to remain out of school for a year. . . ' . CHEMAWA Coach Doug Olds has 11 lettermen from last year's squad who returned for practice sessions during the past .week for the Chiefs,' who open against Es tacada high school gridders Sep tember 19. . " . ' :A ' So far the .line averages' 150 pounds : and the backfield '. 140 pounds.'" ' A ' , '-. Outstanding . candidates t o r the team have been Preston Da vis, Louis Beaudry, Clarence LaHauque, Bennie Bearchom, Georre Elce, Eddie Nicholson, Elnathan Davis, Herb - Bennett 1 .and Harold Joseph. ... A hew ja&n,' Ybungman, ! i "it v Whacky going away to sweep under the wire four and a half lengths out front to stun the crowd of 50,000, which had made Warren Wright's champion the odds-on favorite. Alf Robertson, who had brought Whirlaway home ahead in his last three outings, said he had no excuses to make Whirly just was beaten "by a better horse Saturday. War Relic's victory, which was worth $22,400 to his owner, evened an old score for he was nosed out by Whirlaway In a much-disputed race a month ago at Saratoga in their only other meeting. " Only four horses were in Sat urday's race and it was pretty much a dual affair that bordered on developing into a solo per formance. - i ' War Belie, which set a steady but not fast pace In covering the mile and three-sixteenths route in 1:57 1-5, led all the way. Howard Wells Equifox came from last at the quarter pole to finish only a length back of Whirlaway. Royce G. Martin's Haltal was last Both Equifox and Halthal are four-year-olds. . War Relic, which had previous ly won the $50,000 added Massa chusetts handicap and the Ken ner stakes, boosted his earnings for the year to $80,485. He did not race as a two-year-old. While a victory would have lifted him to third place among the leading money-winners of all time, Whirlaway did advance a notch to fifth in the list by netting. 84000 to make his earn ings In two years of racing $324,611. War Relic paid $8.10 and $2.30 and Whirlaway $2.20. There was no show betting. Silverton Golf Tourney Slated SILVERTON The qualifying round in the annual fall golf tour n anient will start on the Silver ton' country club course Sunday. The awards are announced to In clude winner of medal play, win ner of handicap match, and other awards depending upon number who enter. Wesley Williams is chairman of the committee. pressing' veterans for a spot - on the varsity. Lettermen who have not yet re turned t are" Van Pelt Suluskin, Jackson, Shelton and Hellaire. ; Finley, veteran at right end, Is lost to the team for at least three weeks because of an injury, i With 39 men of the Univer sity of Hawaii football team. Coach Luke GOL a Salem hich school and - Oregon State grad uate, passed through Salem Sat Urday afternoon on a north-: bound Southern Pacific train. Several Salem officials. Includ ing Coach Spee Keene of Wil lamette university met the train as it made a abort stop here. Willamette will play: the Uni versity of ' Hawaii at Honolulu sometime in November. .. PORTLAND, Ore., Sept 13,-() -The University of Portland offi cially: admitted Saturday that a couple of those big, strapping chaps on the campus, "unidenti fied' previously, were Atherton ized footballists, ., They are Laurence Carper, ISO pound halfback from the Univer w it Martin Barber, End Bang! Bang! Bronx Bird Season Opens NEW YORK, Sept 13-(P)-Stalklng a pheasant in the Bronx, a young man with a .11 caliber rifle opened the unoffi cial metropolitan hunting sea son. Saturday by plunking two bullets into the thigh of a passing citizen. The youths who fled the scene id an automobile were arrested later. The wounded man was Anton Tanker, 52. Perfection To Organize Table Tennis Organization of a Table Ten nis parlor In the Perfection bowling alleys begins Monday night when a meeting of man agers and sponsors gather at the alleys. The teams in the major league include Reimans, LaDou's, Craigs, Woodbura, Parker's and either Willamette or the YMCA. The management plans for four tables, a spectators' gallery and many other conveniences with play starting October 1. ' Stars won't be lacking at the Perfection parlor this winter what with Bob Ohlsen, Pacific northwest novice champ, Dutch SchneUe, 1940 City champion, and Malcolm Dunbar, 1941 Sa lem titlist Woodburn's third annual table tennis club also promises plenty of talent Racts about the game: Table tennis is one of the big three sports which attracts more partic ipants than any other sport Golf and bowling lead the list, howev er ... A table tennis ball driven by a champion sometimes . will travel 250 miles per hour; Bob Blattner, Sacramento second sack er, once won the world's cham pionship. Alice Marble defeated sity of Oregon, and -Keith Carr, 205-pound center from Washing ton State. Both were barred from compe tition , with ther Pacific Coast conference schools by Edwin M. Atherton, the league's former G man, because of recruiting activi ties in obtaining their services! Casper is from Blaine, Wash.; Carr from Bellingham, Wash. Portland Coach Robert Math ews said he expected to play them against the - University of Ha waii here Sept 20. . - . , - PULOIAN,' Waah, Sept. 13-()-The Washington Stote col lege Cougars, serimmaglng for a full hour Saturday,-appeared ready to resume the aerial pie-, nle v which - carried TIalfback Billy SeweU lnto the Una's row last year as a filacer of foot balls. -- . CoaA Babe Hollingbery's first string today has Sewell in his old, accustomed spot at left half,, with his favorite p&ss-snaggers. close at hand Felix Fletcher at right half, Dale Gentry and Nick Su soeff at end. '. , In the center spot, reputedly a Cougar - weak ' point, was . 183- Tiges Top Yanks Rally in 9 th; Rowe Triples NEW YORK; Sept 3-JP-A field lay Schoolboy Rowe .with ninth inning climaxed a four-run a ,5 to 3 victory over the Yankees season Saturday. The two teams wound up the year with 11 wins apiece. Rowe had relieved starting Pitcher Buck Newsom only the inning before after Buck had AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pctl W L Pet N. York 94 48 .662 Detroit 69 73 .486 Boston 75 66 .5321 St. Louis 61 77 .442 Chicago 73 70 .510! Phiiadel 62 79 .440 Clevelnd 69 71 .493Wash'gtn 59 80 .424 been lifted for a pinch-hitter with the Yanks ahead 3 to 1. Detroit 5 8 2 New York . 3 7 0 Newsom, Rowe (8) and Sulli van; Donald and Dickey, buestxi (5). WASHINGTON, Sept 13-P)-The Washington Senators tied up the ball game in the ninth inning, then went on to defeat Cleve land, 6 to 5, in the 11th Saturday to gain an even break in the four game series with the Indians. With one out tin the 11th, George Case singled to left, took second on Jeff Heath's .error on the play, stole third and came home with the winning run on Roger Cramer's Texas-league sin gle back of second. Cleveland , ..5 12 4 Washington 6 9 0 Dean, Andrews (8), Milnar (9) and Hegan; . Anderson, Sundra (8), Zuber (10) and Evans, Bol ton (10). BOSTON, Sept 13 - (IP) - The Boston Red Sox strengthened their grip on second place in the American league Saturday by de feating the St Louis Browns, . 7 to 2, for their fourth straight vic tory. ' The triumph, coupled with Chi cago's 3-to-l defeat at Philadel phia, stretched Boston's lead to three games. The two teams open a three-game series here Sunday. St Louis J2 8 2 Boston 7 13 0 Auker Trotter (3), Newlin (7) and Ferrell; Wilson and Peacock. PHILADELPHIA, Sept 13P) -Dick Fowler, 20-year-old rookie righthander, pitched the Athletics to a- 3-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox Saturday in his major league debut Chicago I 7 0 Philadelphia r. 3 S 0 Smith and Turner; Fowler and Hayes,; " Ginger Rogers at one time for the Pacific coast women's title. pound Bill Remington, switched from the backfield to bolster the K line. : - " . MOSCOW, Idaho, Sept, 13-W-A varsity fairly well stocked with veterans and a reserve list lack ing in experience was the football picture at the University of Idaho Saturday, as i. Coach Francis Schmidt ran his squad through its first heavy scrimmage. Tom Solinsky and Tony ' As chenbrenner at center gave the pivot spot plenty of experience. And guard and tackle lacked . neither experience : nor heft Lettermen were available for the wing Jobs and as starters in Teach backfield spot- Schmidt ran veterans George Nixon at blocking back, Ray Da vis at left half,. Dale Clark at right , halt and Bill Micklich at fuiL' ' . .; : , " COEVALUS, Ore. Sept 13-(jP-Oregon State college foot ball players drilled on pass de fense Saturday in preparation for a rumored aerial attack by the University of Southern Cal-1 ifornla la the evening Coast eonieresee game at Los Angeles 4 . 5-3 With 4-Run prodigious triple to right center two on base and two out in the rally that gave the Detroit Tigers m their final meeting of the Rainiers Take League Lead On Two Wins COAST LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pctl W L Pet Seattle 98 70 .5831 San Fran 77 90 .461 Sacr'mto 93 69 .5741 Oakland 77 90 .461 S. Diego 94 71 .570, Los Ang 70 91 .435 Hollyw'd 80 85 .485 1 Portland 68 93 .423 SEATTLE, Sept 13-(vP)-The Seattle Rainiers took a firm grip on first place in the Pacific Coast league Saturday night by sweep ing both ends of a doubleheader, defeating the San Francisco Seals, 5-2 and 2-1. ? The Sacramento Senators " and San Diego Padres, who have been contending for first position with the Rainiers, both lost single after noon games. Farmer Hal Turpin recorded his 18th triumph of the season in hold ing the Seals to seven scattered hits in the first game. V Three of the visitors' hits came in the -first inning when singles by Don Trower and Dick Holder and a double by Don White pro duced two runs. The Rainiers knotted the count In their half of this frame on four hits, went out in front in the. fifth and never were headed. First game: San Francisco J. 2 1 1 Seattie 5 9 1 - Ep'perly and Ogrowski; Turpin and Collins. . , 'rSecond game: Sari Francisco . 16 1 Seattle 2 6 0 3ibson and Partee; Johnson and Collins, Fallon (7). r T winks Slap Sacto9 HOLLYWOOD, Sept 13-V Hollywood knocked Sacramento out of the Pacific Coast league leadership Saturday with a 4-2 victory over the Solons. Pitcher Wayne Osborne got off to a shaky start, allowing the Solons one run on a pair of singles and a Hollywood bobble, but he let the pennant contenders down with a total of; six hits in the game while the Stars touched a pair of hurlers for 10 hits.- Sacramento ; .. 2 6 0 Hollywood -..I.L. 4 10 3 Donnelly, Polly (8) and Klutz; Osborne and Dapper. (Turn to page 9, Cot 6) September 27. . .V U .-U'. -Coach Lon Stiner said pass defense would be stressed throughout the eoming week. PHILADELPHIA, Sept lS-fff) -Before the largest crowd ever to see a ' professional football game in Philadelphia 38,747 the New York Giants spoiled the National league debut I of Philadelphia's new grid Eagles by shoving over three touchdowns' and booting a field goal for a 24 to 0 victory. SEATTLE, Sept-13--Pint ing his charges towards their opening game ot the season , in just two weeks i against Minneso ta, Coach Jimmy Phelan sent the Washington Huskies through' a heavy scrimmage today and at its conclusion barked:.,. ; ' "You haven't seen, ' anything 'yet" .-. Starting tomorrow the squad will start twice-a-day workouts. -"We've got "to start setting up our defenses for the , Gophers,' Phelan said.. "Our offense is Just commencing to roll. A dozen players ' need . i to lose uxight We've got to cover a lot of ground In the next few days." . : By 1-& T&dmiriates Stuinble oii Cooper - t , - '. 1 . . .' -,v t ..-r... : . . ST. LOUIS, Sept, :13Ht7Brooklyn's doubhng Dodgers beat , a fighting Cardinal team 1 to 0 Saturday, behind the superlative 3 -hit pitching of Whitlow Wyatt to bound two games ahead" in the nerve-racking National league-pennant race. , . ' : ' I ' , i ; ! Consecutive two--baggers by Dixie Walker and Billy Herman in the eigfeth-e first hits off stout-hearted Mort Cooper de--cided one ' of . the . most - spine-tingling conteists ever played j hi Sportsman's park. - - V ''. -. i -. ' ' . For seven innigs Cooper held the Dodger sluggers helpless, although three walks in the sixth put him in a spot He pulled out by forcing Lou Riggs to ground out ; , - But his courageous pitching was no greater than that of the Brooklyn ace righthander who notched hisi twentieth ' victory. Wyatt ran into his real tight spot in the fifth when Creepy Crespi's double the first hit for the Cards-rand Pee Wee Reese's error placed" runners on second- and third witfi none out - He struck out Gus Mancuso and Cooper and made Jimmy Brown roll to Dolph Camilli at first ' ; ' '-. :.: -Reese erred When he took Mar ty Marion's grounder and in try ing to catch Crespi at third hit the runner in the back, and the ball bounded crazily toward the Cards' NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pctl W L Pet Brookl'n 90 50 .643 NewYork 64 73 .471 Chicago 64 76 .457 Boston 57 81 .413 Phiiadel 39 87 3t St. Louis 87 51 .30i Cincin'ti 7 62 Ab Pittsb'gh 7 64 43 dugout asilanky Marion sped to second. r . Except for; five passes, not a Brooklyn player reached first on Cooper for seven frames. The righthander who was , out of action more than a month in the heart of the season for a ehiped bone operation seemed headed for the perfect game' . which is every pitcher's dream. Then it faded Quickly. Johnny Hopp, fleetest of the Red Birds, tried hard to nab that long blow to deep center which broke the spelt but it could not be . reached, and when Herman hit to the center field wall it was all over. The game which was watched by 32,691 paying customers who filled nearly every available seat, was equal in excitement to any world series contest The fans were on edge to the very end ,of the 2 hour struggle. ' The box core: BROOKLYN (1) Walker. I Herman, S , Reiser, m . Camilli. 1 Riggs, 3 WasdelL r , Reese, s , . . Franks, c . , , , , Wyatt, p Totals ; - B R H O A E 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 3 I 3 -2 1 1 10 1 I 0 s 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 11 0 0 3 27 ST. LOUIS () Brown, 3 - Hopp. m " -Padgett, 1 ; Mize, 1 . . Crabtree, r Crespi, 3 Marion, s Mancuso, e Slaughter M. Cooper, p R H OA 0 12 3 Totals 3 27 Batted for Mancuso in 8th. Brooklyn St. Louis 000 000 0101 000 000 QOO-0 Runs batted in, Herman. Two-base hits, Crespi, Walker, Herman. Double nlay. Brown to Mize. Hit by pitcher, by Wyatt (Crabtree): by M. Cooper (Wasdell). Passed ball. Franks. Base on balls, off M. Cooper S. off Wyatt 3. Struckout by Wyatt 9. by M. Cooper S. Left on bases. St Louis 8. Brook lyn . Umpires. Pine Hi. Barlick, Klem dfcd Ballahfant. Attendance, 32,691 Time 2:37. CHICAGO, Sept 13-P)-Aft-er tying the score twice Sat urday, the j Chicago Cubs de feated the Philadelphia Phillies, S to 4, in the 11th Inning when Kufns Melton walked Bill Nich olson with the bases loaded and nobody out j It was the Cubs eighth win in their last ten games. Philadelphia 4 10 0 Chicago 5 14 2 . Podgajny, Melton (ID and Liv ingston: Eaves, Raffensberger (2), Presshell (7), Passeau (10) and Scheff ing. CINCINNATI, Sept 13 - W -The Reds took the rubber game of the series from the New York Giants Saturday, 6 to 4, winding up their rivalry for the season with il5 victories against 1 for the Terrymen. - , y New York .r.,;..:, :.. .;... 4 :12 0 Cincinnati .... ,, 8 r East Wittig (8) . and Blaemire Starr, Thompson (8) and Lom bard!, West (9). : - PITTSBURGH, Sept" 13-(P)-Nick Strincevich cam e through for the Pittsburgh Pirates Satur day, giving up only four hits aft er he replaced Dick Conger in the second, .to shut out, the Bos ton Braves 1-0. - -' ; ' V ' Boston ' 0: 6 :0 Pittsburgh 'i...,....,,.."..... ,;.,l,y:8 3 Salvo and Berres, Montgomery (7); Conger, Strincevich (3), and Lopez. - ': La Grande Wins 20-0 LA GRANDE, Sept. 13-;p)-La Grande's 1941 version of its high school grid team that was a state title claimant last year; . opened the season here Friday night with a 20-0 win over Union. I ! I I M I I . , '. New and Used Outboard Motors for Trolling $20.00 Up SALE?! EOATIIOUSir - - 1C3. Chemcketa- Victou-y - I, ; i. gram up ic Golf Finals ATLANTIC CITY, NJ, Sept. 13 -CP)-Twenty-six year old Lloyd Mangrum, youngest member of the Monterey Beach, Calif., golf ing family, loomed as the man to beat Saturd. as the second round of the $,000 greater Atlan tic City "oi tournament ended. . After a dazzling 65 which put him in the lead Friday, he fol lowed, through with a 69, three under par, today to retain the lead w th a 134 total. . Mangrum clipped the three strokes off p?r on the first nine and was even coming in. He. had birdies on the second, seventh and ninth holes. His card: Par out .544 345 53437 Mangrum out 534 345 433 34 Par in 434 354 43572 Mangrum in -.434 354 444 35 Meanwhile most of the field found conditions tougher Satur day. Ten pros bettered 70 in the first round, but only six cracked the mark today, while others felt the effect of a stiff wind in the afternoon. Lawson Little, former Ameri can and British open champion from San Francisco, moved into a second place deadlock with Jack Petroni, an outsider from Man chester, Vt, each with 138. Little added a 70 to 'lis first round 68 while Petroni tied a 97 to his pre vious 71. j There was a five-way tie for next position among Terl John son of Norristown, Pa.; Vie Ghezzi, PGA champion from Deal, NJ.; Ben Hogan, of Her shey. Pa.; Joe Turnesa, of Rockville Centre, NY; and Hor ton Smith, of Pinehurst NC, all had 139's. Smith, who held second spot with a 66 Friday, fell off today and came in with a one over par 73. Hogan, who turned in a first round score of 67, just managed to tie par of 72. Corp. Ed Oliver, on leave from Fort Dix, NJ, dropped down to a 27 Saturday. This added to his first round score of 68 and gave him a 140. Dempseys Reunited HIGH POINT, NC, Sept 13-( -The Jack Dempseys, including their children, Joan, 7, and Bar bara, 5; were together again Sat urday night Dempsey, former heavyweight boxing champion, and his wife, Hannah Williams, announced some time ago that they had reconciled their differ ences and would go back together. nd SAVING MONEY" Every home owner can male hit own contribution to fK Government Fuel Savings. Pro grim this winter, and, af tho tarn time, tavo money lor his - own pocket. We can prove the truth of this statement by show. -ing you our letest equipment - d waned to bring you and your . family comfort nd hearth tM winter long With minimum we of fuel. . J Dealers in t . NORGE Oil Burners MUELLER Gas and OH f . Furnaces '"i:.' "" ' EASTMAN Wood and T . Sawdust Furnaces Mcpherson i Gas. on, ; Wood or Sawdust Fur- naces. ----- ,r, " ,.CG0?2n , :-; : and son 840--:; . t ; Dial Hood St t .... . . 3663 I .ML kt II. Heatywell Conlrof (ikU&aS OirenoUicnt lvian In Atlant r