The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, December 29, 1941, Page 6, Image 6

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    MONDAY NOTES
Down Now Orleans way
they're taying Endicott Pea-
'body, II, Harvard'! Ail-American
guard, la not the gentleman
the press would have the na
tion believe. One Missouri reg
ular, according to George Kirk
scy, said, "He sure is easy to
move." . . . Bruce Smith, Min
nesota's All-American, is still
favoring gimpy knee and will
not be used except in the East
West tilt except tor passing . . .
Says Dick Hanlcy, ex-North-western
football coach who is
staffing the East team: "Indi
ana's Sophomore Billy Hillen
brand was the greatest back in
the Big Ten last season and for
my money Hillenbrand is a bet
ter back right now than Tommy
Harmon was in his senior year."
... Both J. Louis and B.
Baer will come into Madison
Square Garden ring January 9
at their heaviest in order to
" pack their wallops with as
much dynamite as possible. Joe
will beam 205 pounds, the beef
iest he's been since winning the
title. . . .
. . . East coast and west coast
'reports say Jim Pollard, Stan
ford's 6-foot 4 i -inch sophomore,
forward, answers the Indians'
, prayer for another Luisetti.
Pollard, an Oakland boy, will
mean Coach Everett Dean will
shift from speed and cleverness
to straight power. The Stan
fords average 6 feet 4 inches
in altitude. . . .
The Crater Lake Ski club's
(1500 electric ski lift was suc
cessfully operated Sunday for
the first time this year. Begin
ning at noon, it functioned per
fectly until quitting time. No
sereious Injuries marred a
stormy day. . . .
"BIG TEN''
Buck Rutledge, Maryland
game warden, named his list of
"Big Ten" enemies of game and
fish in the January issue of
Outdoor Life.
He sees 'cm like this:
To brook, brown and rainbow
trout the common water snake
is the chief hazard.
To large - mouth and small
mouth bass the carp, which eats
the spawn, is the deadliest ene
my. To white tail deer in the
east, dogs running at large; in
the west, the cougar.
To wild turkey the fox.
To ruffed grouse the great
horned owl.
To rabbit the common cat.
To quail the comon cat.
To squirrel the goshawk.
To ringneck pheasant the
skunk, by eating eggs and
young.
To wild duck the crow, by
eating eggs and young.
West Fives
Take Pair
From East
By Tht Associated Press
Basketball teams from Oregon
State college and the University
of Washington retrieved some
of the Pacific Coast's fallen ath
letic reputation which suffered
during the football season when
the two quintets defeated eastern
teams Saturday night at Buffalo
and Philadelphia.
At Philadelphia the Huskies
decisively outplayed and out
scored Temple, exhibiting spec
tacular shooting and smooth
floor play that amazed the al
most 6000 spectators to win 64
86. The Temple squad played on
even terms for tha first 15 min
utes but the Huskies pulled away
to lead 36-26 at half time and
increased this to 46-27 before
the Owls found their scoring
eye again.
Chuck Gllmur and Doug Ford,
hooting with either hand, led
scoring with 18 and 10 points
respectively, for the westerners.
Not as decisively victorious
was Oregon State over St. Bona
venture at Buffalo, but the Ore
gonians led throughout, running
up a 16-8 lead midway in the
first half behind the one-handed
shooting of Georgo McNutt and
Paul Valcnti. Scoring rallies
of the Bonnics were nipped and
the western team finished on the
winning end of a 38-33 count.
t Frank Zabowski of St. Bona
venture shared scoring honors
with McNutt with 11 points each.
CHANCE FOR STAINBACK
NEW YORK If the Yankees
cannot make a deal for a right
handed hitting outfielder, they
will probably bring up Tuck
Stnlnhnrk from Kansas Cltv.
ROMANCE
LIPsrltW i
a.m vam Mttlnff i d. m. peck,.. or
a patiionate pucker? Are your lip
J pmiun end your blood prcuurs
oa the down-trade? Does oscula
tion leart you cold...or cooler? If
yoo'ra longing for thai good, old,
swooping, flulterlnf atntatlon...
Wade Sees Rose Bowl Contest
As Mystery; Explosive Duel
Seen as Rams, Missouri Meet
Catcher vs. Passer
Tops East-West Tiff
Aerial Tilt
Forecast for
Orange Bow
MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 29 (UP)
A wide-open passing game was
forecast today for Miami's
Orange Bowl football game on
New Year's day between Geor
gia and the Texas Christian uni
versity. Fireball Frankie Sinkwich,
Georgia's broken jawed half
back, found his mark consistent
ly Saturday with bullet passes to
wingback Lamar Davis.
TCU arrived in Miami Sun
day and will begin workouts im
mediately.
DALLAS, Texas, Dec. 29 (UP)
Alabama and Texas A. and M.,
opposing teams in the sixth an
nual Cotton Bowl, will be in
near top physical condition for
the New Year's game, it ap
peared today.
Down at College Station.
Texas, all the Aggies went
through a second workout since
returning from Christmas holi
days and Coach Homer Norton
admitted they "seem in good
spirits and shape."
Alabama rolled westward 41
strong on the Crimson Tide's
sixth bowl trip and only Paul
Spencer, 195-pound fullback,
was ailing. He has a leg injury.
EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 29 (UP)
Two coaches of leading south
western football teams, who
played side by side as linemen
in their own college days and
coached together the same high
school team, are opponents in
the seventh bowl game and one
of them was pessimistic abou,t
his chances.
Delicate Dell Morgan, the big
230-pounder who guided the
Texas Tech Red Raiders to nine
victories in 10 games this season
and who had an uncanny abil
ity to forecast the scores,: says
his old friend Henry Frnka of
Tulsa university likely will best
him New Year's day.
700 BOWLER
OMAHA, Dec. 29 UP) Chal
lenging his wife to three bowl
ing games was a mistake, Glen
Fratt admitted today.
Mrs. Fratt put together fames
of 255, 211 and 248 for 714 and
became the first woman bowler
here in six years to better 700.
Fratt shot 214, 190 and 179 for
583.
BEVOS GET PLAYER
PORTLAND, Ore.. Dec. 29 UP)
The Portland Beavers bought
Outfielder Pete Hughes last
weekend, the fourth baseball
player purchased from Spokane
of the Western International lea
gue. Price was not disclosed
The coast league team pre
viously had purchased Outfield
er Levi McCormack, Infielder
Henry Martinez and Pitcher Bob
Kinnaman. I
Football Coaches Mull Athletic
Role in War Effort at Conclave
DETROIT, Dec. 29 UP) The
role of collegiate athletics In the
nation's war effort toDned the
agenda today of four administra
tive conferences headed by the
American Football Coaches as
sociation.
Consensus of earlv nrrlinl.
who gathered In hotel lobbies
yesterday was that spring foot
ball practice sessions will be
scnedulcd In 1942 despite the
advancements of June gradua
tion dates at many schools.
D. O. (Tuss) McLaauhrv of
Darmouth, association secretary-
treasurer, said most coaches
would probably start drills earli
er with Indoor workouts.
I 5r ...
if?
By SID FEDER
DURHAM. N. C, Dec. 29 UP)
The governor of North Carolina
may have told the governor of
South Carolina the answer, and
a couple of hundred thousand
Dixie fans probably agree, but
to Coach Wallace Wade this
rambler Rose bowl game is all a
mystery.
In fact, the slim soft-spoken
Sage of the South wouldn't feel
at all hurt right this minute if a
competent Swami gave him the
low-down on the collision of his
Dukes and Oregon State's Beav
ers in Duke stadium Thursday.
To Dixie partisans who figure
Duke goes along with death,
taxes and fried chicken as sure
things, this stand of Coach Wal
lace is just so much of that stuff
you slice thin and put between
two pieces of bread, but Wade
says the whole picture just
doesn't add up.
"I don't see how I can be any
thing else than a mystery," he
pointed out today as the van
guard of a sell-out crowd of 56,
000 poured into Tobacco town.
"After all, whatever we know
about Oregon State, and what
ever they know about us is all
second-hand information. We're
both playing a guessing game."
Now this is not a crying towel
act. Coach Wade just can't
make a prediction, although you
can plainly see that if his boys
don't win this one, he's going to
be mighty surprised.
"Yet," he went on, "the Pa
cific Coast champion has beaten
the eastern representative in the
Rose bowl three straight years
now. And I can't see that there's
so much difference this year that
they're making us 1 to 3 favor
ites to change the East's luck.
Be that as it may, no one
around this football-wacky belt
shares Coach Wade's mystifica
tion, and those who saw this
Duke team sweep its season
point out that the chief reason
the Blue Devils are a cinch is
because of their ends. Of course
there's Steve Lach carrying the
mail, but the local experts talk
about the Duke end-around plays
that hit the jackpot and the
enemy defenses in game after
game this year.
BATON ROUGE, La., Dec. 29
OP) The country's leading pig
skin passer plus a player who
holds an all-time record for pass
receiving will form the West all
star's potent aerial combination
matched against the East all
stars in the Shrine charity game
in New Orleans, Jan. 3.
On the throwing end will be
Billy Sewell of Washington State
who completed 88 tosses in 1940
to top the nation. His target will
be tall Hank Stanton, Arizona
end who set a college record in
both number and yardage last
season when he took In 50
heaves for 820 yards.
"There's not a better passer
in the country," is the way Coach
Babe Hollingbery of Washington
State, co-coach of the western
team, describes Sewell.
Stanton, called "Lanky Hanky"
by his teammates, because of his
The National Collegiate Ath
letic association's track group
and members of the American
Association of Track Coaches
were told to prepare for the 1942
Pan-American games at Buenos
Aires.
Dr. Lloyd W. Olds, of Ypsl
lantl, Mich., chairman of the na
tional AAU committee promot
ing the event, said he had re
ceived Instructions from tho New
York office to begin plans for
the event.
The Buenos Aires games, -designed
to supplant Olympiad
competition, have been set for
Nov. 21 to Dec. 6 to coincide
ring in
the
NEW YEAR
on the right
style notel
eaevjj ,
S3!
Joe Again
Wins Ring
Mag Award
NEW YORK, Dec. 29 UP) Joe
Louis, who defends his heavy
weight title for the 21st time
a week from Friday night, Is the
"fighter of the year," an honor
that has been awarded him four
times during the past six years.
Louis won by a 5 to 2 margin
in the balloting of 202 fight
writers from all parts of the
world by Ring Magazine.
The same experts placed
Buddy Baer, Louis' opponent in
the Naval Relief society benefit
in Madison Square Garden on
Jan. f, as the fourth best con
tender in the heavyweight class.
Billy Conn of Pittsburgh, Lem
Franklin of Cleveland and Bob
Pastor. Saratoga Springs, N. Y..
all were ranked ahead of the
younger Baer.
The voters rated the fighters
In all the various divisions, plac
ing only Louis and Chalky
Wright, featherweight boss, in
the championship class.
Four other titleholders light
heavyweight Gus Lcscnlch, mid
dleweight Tony Zalc, welter
weight Fred Cochrane and fly
weight Jackie Paterson of Scot
land were put at the top of
their classes but alongside sev
eral challengers.
In the lightweight and ban
tamweight divisions, the cham
pions didn't even get that much
consideration. Sammy Angott of
Washington, Pa., newly crowned
undisputed holder of the light
weight championship, was
placed behind Bob Montgomery
of Philadelphia, while two leath
er pushers, Kui Kong Young of
Hawaii and Manual Ortiz of Los
Angeles, were graded better than
Louis Salica.
six-foot-three-inch frame, scored
five touchdowns receiving
passes, set up ten others by the
air route, and made three touch
down on end-around plays to
lead the Arizona team in scoring.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY
NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 20 (UP)
Sugar Bowl fans are used to
seeing great offensive duels ev
ery New Year's day but Mis
souri, Big Six champions with
an explosive formation attack,
and Fordham, eastern titlehold
ers with a dazzling aerial game,
promise to set a new scoring
high before 73.000 in Tulanc's
big double-decked stadium
Thursday.
Don't take my word for it.
That's what the rival coaches,
Don Faurot of Missouri and
Jimmy Crowley of Fordham, and
the players on both clubs all
agree, too. The only thing they
can't get together on is who'll
wind up with the big end of the
score. The betting gentry, how
ever, favor Fordham at 6-5.
Both elevens are loaded with
hard-hitting, fast-stepping backs,
but Missouri seems to have the
edge on the ground with Ford
ham the more potent through the
air. Missouri leads the entire
nation in ground gained rushing
with 2769 yards in nine games.
The Golden Tigers have aver
aged 307.7 yards per game, or
enough ground to make about
four touchdowns per game.
with the 450th anniversary of
the discovery of America.
The NCAA, which began Its
36th annual meeting today, will
hold a Joint session with the
gridiron coaches tomorrow to
discuss the contribution of com
petitive athletics in the war
crisis. Also scheduled to meet
Tuesday Is the College Physician
Education society.
RUPTURED?
After hintfllnf truMtt many ytart
wi ha vi dteldttf tha
Little Doctor
Truss
fa tht h'Mt on tht msrVot, anrt
f tit aniwrr to all niptur uuttur
rra. Nntt linfilf, efficient, no atfl
to runt, no elantle, no preaaiira on
Ilia hack or hlpa, no Jog itrapn,
weljtit 4 onncM. No maltrr how
good your trum la If lntret')
In the newrnt and h!t n thin
on. Fre tiemonatratton. AH work
tinnn auhjert to jour doctor'a ap
(irovaf. IJn1imltil ttn aervlca at
any ona of 200 western AgRiita,
Currin's
for Drugs
Ninth and Main Phena 49
"Tha frUndly Drug Store"
Southern
Eleven
Wins, 16-0
Jack Crain Paces 'Gray'
In Annuol Grid Gamo
By FORREST CASTLEBERRY
MONTGOMERY. Ala., Dec. 2!)
(UP) Tho South, in top form
under the inspired running unci
passing of Texus' Jack Cruin,
whipped the North 10 to 0 here
Saturday in the annual "Blue
and Gray" game between college
stars uf the two sections.
A crowd of 15.50U partisan
fans from this side of the Mason
and Dixon line saw the fourth
annual post-season contest, a
scries In which the standing now
is two victories each.
Crain doniiniitt'd the game
for the gruy-clad southerners,
setting up a field goul chance in
the second period with a 115
yard run, and making a 22 yard
broken field dush in the third
quarter to put the bull in touch
down territory. He climaxed
his day will) un 18-yard puss for
the final touchdown in the lust
period.
Close behind Crain for honors
was little Junic lloviuus of Mis
sissippi. In addition to effective
running and passing he was an
effective tackier.
Costly penalties or intercep
tions cost the northerns their
few scoring chances and the
"Blue" team defense was spotty.
Only once did the North make
a serious threat. In the fourth
period big Jackie Hunt of little
Marshall college gained 24 yards
to the eight on a puss from Andy
Tomasic of Temple. The South
held for three downs and then
Tomasic was thrown for a 20
varri loss bv Georffe Fruits of
Clemson. '
Bosh Phtchard, VMI back,
passed effectively for the South
and his recovery of u fumbled
quick-kick, on the North 37, set
up the final score.
The Southern victory came in
a game which began slowly with
tentative line tries and in the
second half became a wild melee
of passes, fumbles and trick
plays.
Memorial
Day Grind
Cancelled
NEW YORK. Dec. 29 (Sus
pension of the Indianapolis 500
mile automobile race for the
duration of the war was an
nounced today by Capt. Eddie
Rickcnbacker, head of the $100,
000 speed classic.
"Tradition and priorities de
mand that we again voluntarily
abandon the race in the interest
of a full-out victory effort," said
Capt. Rickcnbacker. "The 500-1
mile race calls for the expendi
ture of rubber, fuel, oil and many
intricate motor parts as well as
mechanical brains and wo be
lieve that such an expenditure
of men and motors can better be
applied toward our ultimate vic
tory." The only other interruption In
the Indianapolis race, run each
May 30, occurred in 1917 and
1918 during the first world war.
Capt. Rickcnbacker, who also
is chairman of the contest board
of the American Automobile as
sociation, said that members of
the board were being polled re
garding other racing on the AAA
circuits.
Beaumont Open Golf
Chick Harbert Cops
BEAUMONT, Tex., Dec. 29 UP)
Chick Harbert, an unknown who
failed even to place among golf
dom's twelve top money win
ners of 1941, ran away from the
veterans and won tho $5000
Beaumont open with a 276, eight
below par for the 72 holes.
The 'youthful Battle Creek,
Mich., pro never was over par.
CVOotoGyser
TnE OMtf THING IN THt-
WORLP THAT SEEMS iMAUtt
AS yOU DRAW NEARER TO '
IT- IS GR6ATNESS
The only thing that
seems important to us it
the confidence of our cus
tomers, at you will dis
cover If you give ut
trial.
LUUJ
Coach Lon Stlner (right) watched with aagle eye aa Goorge Patera (58). Oregon State's
hlnrklnn m, . r t. rhr W . led Fullback J oo Dv (52) through a gaping hole during a icrlmmage
workout on the North Carolina
against Duke at Durham. N. C.
PACK SIX
Reiser Takes N.L
Total-Base Title
Brooklyn Freshman
Camilli for Slugging
NEW YORK. Dec. 21), iL'PI
The story ol bu.scbull s uto:t re
markable rookie hatting splurge
wus complete today, with Un
surprising revelation that VuU
Reiser o( the Dodgers had won
the National U-agiie s total base
slugging championship.
Reiser, first freshman player
ever to win the circuit s bat
ting crown, aikii'd tlir slugging
title with a percentage ol .o5U.
This was two points iiljuw
the .550 registered liy his malt',
hirst Uuscinan Dnlph Camilli.
the leagues must valuable play
er, who topped the circuit in
homers witn 34 and batted in
the most runs, 120.
The 21 -year-old rookie out
fielder made 21)9 total bases in
53(1 times at bat, while Camilli
achieved 294 in 520 trips. Reiser
hit 14 home runs, 20 less than
Camilli, but ho drove out the
most triples, 17, and tied with
Johnny Mi.o of the Cards in
doubles, with 39. Mic was
third in slugging, with .535, fol
lowed by another Dodger, Joe
Medwick.
Rival flingers hit Reiser 11
limes with pitched balls, anil
he headed the circuit in lhul
department. Camilli fanned 115
1941 Grid Scores Larger
By One Point Than in '40
SEATTLE, Dec. 29 !P) If you
thought those 1941 collegiate
football' scores looked larger,
you were right but by loss than
a point after touchdown.
Tho 1941 collegiate average,
with only tho bowl games to go,
was J 3.(1(1 for each team per
gamo, the highest in more than
a decade. The average a year ago,
tho American football statistical
bureau reported in its year-end
analysis today, was 13.32 points.
Tho compilation Involved 238
teams In 3700 games.
Tho tendency toward higher
scores, listed in a sports writers'
poll as the outstanding trend of
the year in athletics, has been
credited to the free substitution
rule and the rule change to al
low an incomplete fourth down
pass Into the end zone without
tho ball going back to the 20
yard line.
The bureau listed another con
I.-
New Year's Eve
DECEMBER 31ST
BROADWAY HALL
MALIN
. DANCING
Adm.l Gontt, $1.10
Oregon Staters Scrimmage
university gridiron In preparation
Now Yoar'a day.
Edges Dolph
Crown
tunes for the undeslrrd strike
out title
Kline Fletcher of the I'iriitrs
rrivivrd the inoAt bases on balls
fur the runscrulh r season, 11U.
Frank MeCorinirk of the Reds
for the second straight year hit
into the mint double plays. 22.
but struck out the least num
brr of tinu's, 13.
Loccy Request
Holts Fitrpatrick
SAN FRANCISCO. Dec 2!)
(UP) Tommy Flt.patrlck. vet
eran Oakland football official,
has cameled plans to officiate
at the Oregon State Duke trans
planted Rose Bowl game at l)ur
ham. N. C.
Fit.patriik decided to stay
home after Percy Loccy. Oregon
Stale athletic director, reported
ly requested n change In offi
cials. Edwin Atliorton, Pacific Coast
conference rommii.sionrr, said
I.ocey had not notified him of
his request. Atherton said he
couldn't blame FiUpatrirk for
not traveling to Durham to ref
eree In the face of Lore y's action,
! but added- "I think Filzpalrick
should officiate anyway."
tributing factor. The sure footed
lads who toe the hall after
touchdowns were sharper shoot
ers. The average of conversions
after touchdowns reached a new
high of .(J3II. compared Willi .007
a year ago and .(125 In 11)311.
Despite the holler kicking of
tiy-for points, field goal scoring
dropped off. Head statistician
Homer Cooke Jr., expressed the
belief that they didn't try for so
ninny field goals becauso they
were scoring more touchdowns
and gambling more on fourth
down passes over the goal line.
By major conferences, the
high-scoring southwest loop, like
Abnu Ben Adam, led alt the rest.
Tho nvcragc score per game
by southwest conference teams
was 1(1.57. Others In order were:
Southeastern 17, Big Ten 15.87,
Southern 15.30, Big Six 14.13,
Missouri Valley 13.95, Rocky
Mountain 13.20, rnclfic Coast
12.2.
10:00 to 2:00
Ladies, SSci Tax Inc.
lh-cciniior ".). i;i ii r tVC-. ' j
' - '
t v
X4
lor the Rose Bowl clatate
NEW YORK. Dec. 29 (Wide
World). There's been a lot of
talk about whether a nation
geared fur war will have any
lime for sports . , . Maybe this
yarn will help settle the argu
ment: A couple of weeks ago
Amby Gilligan. Whitehall. N. Y.,
high school eixuh, heard how
two of his former pupil, Francis
illai-kctt) C'oulon and Gerald
(Harney) Ross, who are In the
navy lit llawiin. had helped win
their dtviMmi hiiM-ball champion
ship . . , llig news was that Rosa
had busted up the deciding game
with a triple . . . After the Pearl
Harbor bombing another letter
came through from Ross. It wild:
Well, i in fir-.t bnllle Is over
and Hackett and 1 came nut O.
K. I was only scared for a second
and then it was like some high
school sport'' . . . You can draw
your own conclusions about
what thine kids h-nrncd on tht
playing field of Whitehall. A
... n
MONDAY MATINEE
To selfle any question about
(.man Atherton's salary for
next year, Oregon Slate will
take care of the Pacific Const
conference's usual Rose Bowl
cut, which provides for the com
missioner's salary mid office ex
penses . . . Harold Lambert, Rice
basketball guard, plnyed In
Madison Square Garden last
year, but It was all new to him
when he stepped on the floor
against Fordham Saturday. Ho
developed a fiirm of sleeping
sickness last Miminer and, al
though fully recovered, ho cun t
recall any of his experiences
here , , . Uabe Ruth has reduced
20 pounds so ho lt look like his
old self for tho movie about Lou
Gehrig's life, which goes Into
production soon . . . Publicity
for the Haer Louis fight curries
the sl'igan: "Remember Pearl
Harbor'' . . . The fighters' Idea
probably will be "Remember
Griffith stadium. A
TODAY'S GUEST STAR
John Mooney, Salt I.iiko Tele
gram: "Japan's Premier Tojo,
being something of a baseball
follower ns well as a military
genius, will no doubt reach the
opinion held by seven major
league managers about the first
of July. Towil: There ain't
nuthln' you can do to stop them
Yanks."
HP
:goj
rullerlon. Jr.
Ill&tnjMrtm
0
CXTRAtl An nMrtional raar
ngo e HownvctiARSoio.. ic
yout fivmilt SlialiM Bonbon 1
m i VMq It still ullini it (lit Q
same Popular Piieei I "'