The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, March 07, 1942, Page 10, Image 10

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    HBBWB
UNLIMITED DUCKS
- Tim lamest breeding stock in
many years is expected to re-
t u r n to Canadian nesting
grounds this spring, Ducks Un
limited offers.
Tlnrlca Unlimited, vou know.
Is the official publication of the
organization ot ine same name,
n organization probably more
responsible than any other sin
gle agency for wildfowl restora
tion and conservation.
The hug return is foreseen
because of last fall's smaller
bags which were due. In most
areas, to extended Indian sum
mers which stymied a million
American wildfowlers. In the
central flyway. gunners wait
ed until Norember 23 for a
freeseup to sweep down from
the northwest and chase
southward a good portion of
the duck flight which had
been dallying on northern
marshes.
In most eastern "states the
main flight was only beginning
when seasons closed. The same
was true in Pacific flyway
areas. "
Abnormal fall rains also con
spired to reflood dry marshes
and cause a wide dispersal of
flights. .
- The first quarter issue of
the wildfowl mag presents an
excellent quartet of main
migration routes as deter
mined by duck banding records.-
Four main flight lanes
wing through the Pacific fly
way from Alaska to South
America. -
'One' follows the coast out
lines in its complete path. A
second branches off the coast
route at Portland, passes through
Klamath and continues down
the Sacramento valley. A third,
on the flyway's eastern fringe,
veers westward from upper
Idaho and hits the Klamath
area. A fourth cuts directly
west from southern Idaho and
hits Klamath before turning
south again.
The southern Oregon high
plateau country is the only
spot on the flyway where three
flights converge.
A Missouri gunner draws
a press from the publication
for bagging three ducks on a
single day which were each
from different Canadian
marsh. One was banded at
Rogina. Sask.. another at Min
lstik lake, Alts- and the third
at Big Grass marsh. Man. . .
. Tnwitv-thnw new DU areas
wen . created in Canada last
year, according to the mag.
They brought the total of prot
ects under waterfowl develop
ment to 960,940 acres.
Training
Camp Briefs
By The Associated Press
"J WANER READY
MIAMI BEACH, Fla, Lloyd
Waner, who played 77 games
with the Pirates, Braves and
Reds last season, is ready to
play 125 games for the Phils
this year. Waner said that when
he signed with the Phils last
winter, he asked that he be used
regularly.
"I would rather be out of
baseball than ride the bench,"
said Lloyd. . " - - ,
NICHOLSON LOPSIDED
AVALON, Calif. When Con
nie Mack gave up on Bill Nich
olson as a prospective big lea
guer, he threw him in with
$25,000 to get Outfielder Dee
Miles from Chattanooga. Kiki
Cuyler, then managing the Look
outs, took Nicholson in hand
and by mid-season had sold him
to the Cubs for $35,000.
But Cuyler, now a Cub coach,
says Nicholson is strictly a fast
ball hitter and, after the pitch
ers hit their stride, Bill is lost.
Last season he batted in 51 runs
in the first 50 games, and 47 in
the last 97 games. Cuyler hopes
to do something about that.
OWEN WINS RACE
HAVANA Catcher Mickey
Owen of the Brooklyn Dodgers
got a lot of satisfaction, as well
as a $25 prize, out of "winning
the mile and a half race which
Manager Leo Durocher pre
scribed for his squad yesterday.
"By winning the race I con
vinced myself that I'm in better
shape than ever," Mickey said.
GORDON CONFERS
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Joe
Gordon, brilliant second base
man of the New York Yankees,
and one of the club's six hold
outs, conferred with officials
again yesterday but failed to
reach an agreement.
MINNESOTA'S FINEST
MINNEAPOLIS Big Ten
champion Jack DeField in the
polo vault and footballer Bob
Fitch in the shot and discus
make Minnesota strongest in
theso events,
I). Li. I . J)
?.,.,'. , n e..fcS. .... t.,,.MMMmmMclkt tl-lllllir i
Here's the Pelican squad
wins in 21 season contests, take
The squad leaves next Monday for the capital. Front row, left to right. Center Jim Cox, Guard Jim Bocchi, Forward George
Brosterhous, Forward and Captain Gen Lore, Guard Ingvar Swanson. Back row, loft to right, Ralph Foster. Aldo Bllottl. L
Hunter. Mickey Butler and Keith McGilvary. Front. Donny Noel. Pelican mascot, manager and resrv forward. Not in picture,
Don Laird.
Pelicans Drop to OSC Rooks
In Last Home Game, 49-30
Bocchi Tops Klamath
In Scoring With 11
By BOB LEONARD
Nm-HaM Spertt Editor
An Oregon State Rook quintet superior In every department,
overwhelmed Klamath's District 3 champion Pelicans, 49-30, on
the KUHS floor last night.
Topped by the all-around play of blonde Erland Anderson,
big Rook center,, and the one-handed basket weaving of ex-Pelican
Marion Reginato, -the - little Beavers were never in danger. They
led at the quarter, 9-4, were in the van at the half, 24-13, and
paced at the third pole 37-18.
Save for the shooting of Slim Jim Bocchi the leadership of
Captain Gene Love and the occasional sensationalism of tow--headed
Ingvar Swanson the KlamathS were never in the contest.
Bocchi bagged four from the
field and three from the foul line
for 11 points to top the Pelicans.
Big Ingvar opened the tiff
with a paralyzing left-hander
from off to one side and for a
few short minutes It looked like
a game. But Reginato evened
the count with a - southpaw
swisher of his own and Mickey
Brophy and Spike-Johnson com
bined for three points. -
After Cox's short one, black
shocked Ethan Dale canned a
pair of gifts and Anderson
counted a two-pointer as the
quarter ended.
Anderson, Reclge, Johnson and
Finley began to hit as the Rooks
picked up momentum in the sec
ond period. Bocchi's five points
paced the Pelicans as Cox and
Swanson added four more.
During the period the junior
Beavers demonstrated to a good
sized house a beautiful passing
and waiting game that paid off
in setups. The Klamaths, mean
while, were hitting only a min
ute percentage of their at
tempts. A rash of subs poured off the
Rook bench midway in the third
as the Klamaths dropped farther
behind but Dale's six points and
Anderson's half-dozca held the
invaders on their pace. Bocchi.
Swanson and Bellotti bucketed
five for the Pelicans.
In the final period, each side
holed an even dozen. Lee Hunter
inserted in the place of lankv
George Brosterhous, gave the
hometowners an added under-
tbe-basket drive which helped
nullify the visitors' early com
mand of the wicket.
Bocchi added four to his earl
ier seven and Swanson, Hunter,
and Love shoved in another
eight. Dale topped the Rooks
with six during the last quarter.
Throughout the uneven en
counter, the Pelicans were
hampered by the lack of more
than two scoring threats. Bocchi
and Swanson were the only real
dangers to the Oregon Staters
while Love, usually good for
close to ten, holed only one bas
ket in 14 shots.
The Rooks, meanwhile were
firing and hitting from all
angles, corners, and guns. Six
of them canned five points or
more. Only Guard Hal Marten
dale was blanked. Reginato piled
up six on three excellent one
handers despite a badly injured
knee.
The Rooks holed 18 baskets In
50 tries for an average, of .353.
The Klamaths sank only 11 out
of 48 for .229.
It was the last home stand for
the Pelicans who Monday leave
Klamath's District 3 Champions
fersr ---1 ?vA & i A
which started the 1941-42 season
the district 3 championship and
for the annual state tourney at
Salem. It was their fifth loss in
21 starts during the 1941-42 sea
son. KLAMATH FALLS ()
fO FT PF TP
low. f 12 3 4
Hunter, f 0 1 0 t
Brosterboiu. t 0 0 10
B.lk.(tl, I 0 10 1
Coi. c 1 0 I A
BninMi, f 4 0 3 4
Bocchi, 4 3 S II
II
It
OREGON STATE ROOKS
FO FT PF TP
Brophy. f .1 0 t
Johnxin. I I 3 1 7
uate. I
Bowr. f
Arolcnon. o
Rrginato.
tnr1OKm. s
Vmler. I :
Cramer, g
10
14 13
SCORE IV QUARTERS
I I I
Klamath Falla 4 a S
Hooka 15 1
Hollywood Faces
Rainiers Today .
SAN FERNANDO, Calif.,
March 7.(P) In the first clash
between Pacific Coast league
baseball rivals this spring, Holly
wood meets the Champion Se
attle Rainiers in an exhibition
here today.
Both were defeated earlier
this week by the Philadelphia
Athletics. Bill Bevans, Ira
Scribner and Carl Fischer are
slated to pitch for- Seattle, and
Wayne Osborne, Bill Barisoff
and Bud Chandler for the Stars.
Hollywood announced the
signing of 17-year-old Edward
Erautt, Portland, Ore., prep
school pitching star. A club
house boy for two years with
the Portland ball club, he was
given high praise to Oscar Vitt,
Hollywood's manager who pilot
ed Portland last season.
CAPTAIN AND CREW
HAVANA Even though
Dolph Camilli is captain of the
Dodgers, the duty of delivering
the lineup to the umpire-in-chief
before the start of each game
will remain in the hands of
Coach . Chuck Drcsscn. Camilli
wants the arrangement so he
can be the only captain of a
major league team with an as
sistant. ALBERT COACHES RUGBY
STANFORD Frankie Albert,
Stanford All-American quarter
back, is coaching the backs' in
rugby,
IS THIS LUCKY 13? . . ..
NEW YORK Lefty Gomez
has won 183 games in 12 years
with the New York Yankees.
with an easy victory over Yreka. then went on to roll up 18
earn a ticket to Salem's annual
McMinnville
Earns State
Meet Berth
By The Associated Press
McMinnville and Columbia
Prep earned berths in the class
A Oregon high school basketball
tournament Friday night as dis
trict play ncarcd an end.
: 'McMinnville defeated Willa
mina, 43-37, in the finals of dis
trict 8. Columbia Prep scored
a basket in the closing minutes
to nose out its Portland rival,
Central Catholic, 29-27, for the
district 13 championship.
Beaverton thwarted Hillsboro,
33-28, in district 9, and necessi
tated a deciding game tonight.
Hillsboro won in the first play
off game with Beaverton earlier
in the week.
Parkrose continued the favor
ite in the district 14 tourney at
St. Helens by dropping Hill Mili
tary of Portland, 27-21. St. Hel
ens also won, 51-30, over Ver
nonia and will meet Parkrose for
the title tonight, Parkrose down
ed St. Helens earlier and could
clinch the crown tonight. A St.
Helens victory would necessi
tate another game.
Albany and Corvallis also
play tonight in the rubber game
of district 7.
Eilertson Takes
PNSA Cross-Country
MOUNT BAKER, Wash.,
March 7 (f) John Eilerston
Jr., representing Field Ski club
of British Columbia, raced over
an eight-mile Mount Baker cross
country trail in 43 minutes and
25 seconds yesterday.to win the
Class A cross-country race, open
ing event of the three-day Paci
fic Northwest Ski association
championships. Bill Taylor, of
the Washington Ski club, Seattle,
came home first in the B divis
ion, in 45:31; and Hjalmar
Hvam, Portland, lone competitor
in the open division, made the
best time of the day, 42:56.
The cross country was the
first event in the four-way com
petition. Jumping, slalom and
downhill contests arc scheduled
for today and tomorrow.
Sammy Snead Cops
Third Florida Win
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.,
March 7 (UP) Sammy Sncad,
shooting a two under par 70 in
the final round, won the 72
hole $5000 St. Petersburg open
golf championship Friday his
third victory in this event in
the past four years,
j Sncad's 72-hole total was 72-69-75-70286,
three strokes bet
ter than his nearest competi
tors, Sammy Byrd, Byron Nel
son and Chick Harbacrt, all of
whom carded 289 to tie for sec
ond place.
BOXING
i By Th Asaoolated Praat
NKW-YOKK-Hmmny Annntt, 139, Wanli
liiKton, Pft.. ontfinliilfl H'tli MontKolnrry,
I3S. lMlnl-l,Mn (12) (nonllllf).
nmXTWOOrr-Maniirl Ortlir, l-mn,, Cali
fornia, won by Icrlinlrnl knockout over
little rnncho, 120, Manila (?).
;i ')
state high school tournament.
JoeDiMag
Thumbs
$40,000
Yank Star Turns Down
$3000 Boost in Salary
NEW YORK, March 7 (UP
President Ed Barrow of the New
York Yankees told the United
Press Friday night that Joe Di
Maggio had refused a $40,000
offer for 1942, and that "this ab
solutely is our last and final
offer."
"I sent him a contract last
Wednesday and he called me
today from Florida and told inc
that he would not sign it," Bar
row said.
'This absolutely is our last
and final offer $40,000."
DiMaggio, a key slugger in
the heavy-hitting lineup of the
world champions, received $37,
000 last season. He supposedly
was holding out for $45,000 in
1942.
The first contract sent him
this year called for the same
pay as last season. Barrow re
vealed today that he had upped
the ante $3000.
Stanford Guns
For Sweep
Against Bears
BERKELEY, Calif., March 7
(A') Stanford, gunning for its
first four-game scries sweep in
all Bear-Indian relations, takes
on California here tonight In
the windup of the 1042 southern
division basketball campaign.
The Indians, southern division
champs, knocked over Califor
nia 59 to 49 at Palo Alto last
night before a pavilion full of
onlookers Including Slats Gill,
coach of the Oregon Stato col
lege team which Stanford meets
in the conference playoff next
weekend.
Stanford took a 25-21 lead by
halftimc and led from then on.
Jim Pollard, lanky forward,
and Ed Voss, center, paced the
Indian scoring with 14 points
apiece. Jim Bailey, guard, led
California with 11.
BEAVERS TAKE EXAMS
PORTLAND, March 7 (rP)
Two members of Oregon Slate
college's Rose bowl football team
took preliminary examinations
yesterday for naval hospital ap
prentices. They wore Joe Day, fullback,
and Bub Dcthman, halfback. Day
said he might apply for navy
air corps training, which would
allow him to complete his col
lege studies and play another
year of football. Dethman Is a
senior.
GALVIN RETURNS
LAFAYETTE John Galvln,
whose football career was cut
short by a facial Injury last fall,
has reported to the Purduo bas
ketball team and may sco action.
Landis Rules
Secret Ball
Pacts N. G.
CHICAGO, Murch 7 (T)
Secret baseball conducts the
kind In which a college busobull
player usuully gets flimncinl as
sistance fur promising to Join the
puyliig club lifter graduation, tiro
legally worthless, siiys Commis
sioner K. M. Landis.
Landis made tlio ruling In a
cn so involving Anthony Kavlch
and tilt) New York Yankees of
tho American league.
In statement uccompunylng
tho ruling, Lundis Mini all club
officiuls know such pucts have
no standing in court but he
wondered if the college players
knew It.
"However, there is and can
be no questiun wliul.souver, that
these legully worthless docu
ments do servo a purpose
first, of deluding many of the
players signing them Into an
erroneous belief that they arc
obligated and second, of estab
lishing a morul obligation to gu
through with the agreement,"
Landis' statement read.
Balance of
Tuesday Mat
Card Settled
Andre Adurcc, tho tall French
(jruppler. will tangle with Joe
Corbelt, thickset Uostonlnn, and
Pete Belcastro will face Jim
Casey, 220-pound newcomer, In
the first two events on next
Tuesday's mat curd in the arm
ory, Promoter Mack Lillnrd an
nounced Saturday.
Order of the shows will be
determined by u flip ot a coin.
Both will be six 10-minulc
rounds.
They'll precede the main go
between Vincent Lopez, former
world's heavyweight claimant,
and massive Chief Thundcrblrd.
Lillnrd sold that Casey, the
new face, is from a family of
rasslcrs and has been grappling
about the country for some
time. It'll be his first appear
ance In the northwest.
Sam Angott
Plasters
Montgomery
By AUSTIN BEALMEAR
NEW YORK, March 7 (
Sammy Angott, a windmill in
boxing gloves, battered Philadel
phia Bob Montgomery around
the Madison Square garden ring
last night as if somebody had
forgotten to tell him his light
weight title wasn't at stake, ...
The Washington, Pa, battler
scored a lop-sided decision In
the 12-round overweight brawl,
eliminating Montgomery as num
ber one challenger for the 135
pound crown he lifted from Lew
Jenkins.
Montgomery was a 2-to-l fav
orite although ho weighed 1351
pounds to Angott' 130, but
Sammy crossed up the betting
boys, tossed his usual caution
out the window and landed on
the Philadelphia negro with
everything in the books.
It was Angott's second decis
ion over Montgomery In -two
years, and he described this
tussle as easier than the first,
although he fought most of the
way with a swollen left thumb.
Basketball Scores
Prttfay teoraa
HIOH 1CHOOL
Saiytrlon II. HllliDoto II.
Columbia Prap 29, Cantral Catholl 17 hoth
Kornanor.
HcMlnnnll. 41, Wlllamlna 17.
ParnroM 7, Hill Military (.Portland) II.
it. Halam II, Varnonla 10.
Orason Slala floolta 49, Klamath Palla ID,
STATS 0 TOUIINAMINT
Bulla Palla 41, Powara la.
Waatporl II, Marrlaburs 21,
ArllnHton 42, Dayton 14.
Mohawk 4a. CIKin 21.
ASHLAHO INVITATIONAL TOUIINAMINT
Lanmola 21, Hanlay 21.
nosua Rlvar 21, Proapaol 17.
Cantral Point , SI. Mary't (Madford) II.
Talanl 22. Sutharlln 17.
Jackaonvllla 13, Oardinar 24.
Bonanza 25, Ghlloquln 21.
Friday Collaxa Raault
MIOWf.IT
Oklahoma Akxim 17, Uklahoma II
Kanaaa II, Miaaourl 44.
WEST
Slanlord 19, Calllomla 49.
loulhlrn Calllomla tl, UCLA 44,
PniDAY MSULTS
Ntw York (A) I, SI. Loull (H) 1 (II Ire
nlnia).
Brooklyn (N) I, Cuban All Start I 1l In
nlnxa). Loa Ansalaa (PCL) 4, Philadelphia (A) 0.
YORK AT FIRST
LAKELAND, Fla. Unsigned
Rudy York, Tiger first sackcr,
took over the first baso Job in
yesterday's workout and appear
ed to be In much better playing
condition than when he reported
a year ago. York, given a uni
form because other holdouts
have been accorded tho same
treatment, indicated ho would
be in tho fold soon.
GARDEN SETS RECORD
NEW YORK Madison Squnro
Garden workmen set record by
changing tho ico rink Into a
basketball court in two hours.
HOT AT HOME
NEW YORK St. John's has
only lost ono basketball game
In 44 on the school court during
the last fivo seasons.
I'ACJifi TKN
Bonanza Again Tips
Panthers, in Finals
Antlers Face Jacksonville Tonight
For Ashland Invitational Crown
Uuuuiuu's luii'd flghling troupe
took their county rivals, Chilu
quln, aguln Friday night in tho
Southern Oregon College of Edu
cation 11 school tourney and ad
vanced to tho finals. After a sec
saw match the Klamath county
chumps took tho count 23 to 23
with Frank Groin slapping In
tho winning basket.
Sattirtluy night Uonuiua will
meet Jacksonville, fur tho chain
pliinslilp. This Is tho second ttmo of the
season that tho favored I'tmthcr
hud dropped to tlio County
chumps. At h u I f 1 1 m o Friday
night Chlltuiuin wus trailing 10
to 12 and only during the flnul
stanza did they tie the score but
with a well placed shot by Gruhs
of Bonanza the ball gumo wus
over.
Oruy took high point mini po
sition with 1 1 and Monks of the
Panthers dropped In B.
Summaries:
BONANZA (II) (U) 0NIL0DUIN
llirirl), 4 ..-..T . t. l uitroy
lluiuv, 0 K I. Monki
llr. II ' . a. Wmttli
lifnh,. I O 4. MIIW
Itaraui. I li . .... 0, Kulicrlum
ASHLAND, Murch 7 0P)
Jucksonvilla and Ilonnnza will
meet tonight for tho champion
ship of tho ISth annual South
Butte Falls,
West port
In Finals
EUGENE, March 7 W) West
port and Butte Falls, from the
extreme, north and south dis
tricts of Oregon, will meet to
night for the second annual state
class B high school basketball
championship,
Westport, the defending cham
pion from the Coluniblu river,
trailed a smooth-working Hur
rlsburg team through most of
lust night's semi-final game, but
rallied behind Center Art Ver
mont In the final quarter to win,
31-20.
Vermont scored the winning
basket In tho last 13 seconds and
was high point man with 14 tal
lies. ; The Butte Falls Honkers
chalked up their 17lh straight
victory In defeating Powers, 42
28, Powers made a battle of it
through tho first half but faded
In the final periods. Score at
Intermission was 18 all.
Oregon AAU
Tourney Murk
Still Unclear
PORTLAND, March 7 (PI
Protests continue to cloud the
Oregon AAU basketball tour
nament today but from the
looks of things hero Bradford
Clothcrs and Signal Oil, both
Portland teams, wcro In the
final.
However, the Latter Duy
Saints quintet still claimed a
look-in on the basis of its pro
test against use ot two Univer
sity of Oregon players by the
Rubcnstcln Orcgonians of Eu
gene. Yesterday afternoon Larry
Hilairc, AAU chairman for the
tournament, ruled that tho Rub
cnstcln tcum hud violated u
compromise agreement by using
both Archie Murshlk and I'uul
Jackson, U, ot O. players,
against the Saints. Ho ordered
the team withdrawn from the
tournumcnt. Tho Itubcs claimed
use of the players was permis
sible. Later, however, tho ruling
was withdrawn and the Rubes
entered the semi-finals against
Bradford's last night. Bradford's
cleared up ut least part of the
muddlo by defeating tho Eu
gene team, 68-40.
VERNON CLEANUP
ORLANDO, Fla. Bucky
Harris picked First Baseman
Micky Vernon, a .300 hitter, as
cleanup man in tho tentative
1942 batting order of tho Sen
ators. The list: George Case, left
field; Stan Spence, ccnterfield:
Bruco Campbell, right field;
Vernon, first base; Juke Early,
catcher; Bob Repass, shortstop;
Stan Gallc, third base; Frank
Crouchcr, second base.
CAMACHO IS GOLFER
MEXICO CITY President
Manuel Avila Cnmncho of Mexi
co has retained AI Espinosn as
his golf tutor and cnlargod his
prlvato course from 6 holes to
18.
HOT PROSPECT
NEW ORLEANS According
to freshmen coach Bobby Kel
logg, Tuiano is coming up. with
tho best . football prospect .In
years In Joo Rcnfro, 203-pound
Halfback. I
March 7. 1042
cm Oregon college of Kdmntluo
high school liusketbull tmnns
meiit. Jacksonville, nut yet pressed
In the tourney, defeated Gardi
ner. 33-24, lust night, while Bon
anza fuiighl olf a stout Clillo
qulu challenge, 23 23.
Clilluqiilti and Gardiner wllj
play fur third place.
Talent downed Siltlierlln, 2 IP
17, and will via fur funrtli place
with Central Point, winner over
St. Mury's of Medford, 21110.
In thn consolation bracket
Lunglois scored two wins, 29-13
over Kerliy and 27-2(1 over Hen
ley, to remain in the running for
fifth place. I.unglols will piny
Rogue River, 22-17 winner over
Prospect. t
Today's schedule:
4 p. in. Talent vs. Central
rolnt.
7 p. in. I.unglols vs. Rogu
River.
8 p. m. Gardiner vs. Chllei
qtiin.
I) p. m Jacksonville vs. Child
quln. CHAR LOTTESVILLE, V
March 7 This Is probably th
only town where college boxing
carries a real tradition, and th
folks are finding the eastern
tournament, which starts today,
a poor substitute for tho olcV
time southern conference gatlv
erlng. . . . That always was old
homo week for everyone who
ever wore mitt In southern
college fights. . . . Still you can
hear some good yarns, such as
Bobby Goldstein, the Murylaiff)
couch, telling how he becauW
the "highest paid amateur" by
collecting $1400 for a three
round scrap against Normenl
Quarles In Richmond. . . . Then
there's the one about the Vir
ginia scrapper whose eyes b
came crossed when he whs belt
ed one. The referee stopped tha
fight, turned and discovered th
other guy had been knocked
cold by the final punch. . , .
They'll tell you, though, that
the place to hear some real bur
bcrlng is at the basketball tour
nament in Raleigh.
SIDELINE COACHINO
Lon Stiner, who guided th
Oregon Stato football team to
the rtuiubler Rose Bowl gums,
admits that there's once when
player guvc Instructions bettor
than ho could du It. . . . Against
Washington, the Beavers wcr
nursing a 1) 0 lead when son
one tossed u reckless Jaleru
Lon beckoned to a boy on the
bench . . . One of the officials
who noticed the move asked!
"What's tho matter, Lon? Afraid
of losing your Job?" Stiner mere
ly went un Instructing the kid
to tell the boys to play It suf
and stop tossing tho ball around.
The sub dashed on tho field, re
ported and a moment Inter th
whole team hurst out laughing.
"Tlio couch nays," ho had shout
ed, "for you guys to quit throw
ing his Job around."
TODAY'S GUEST STAR
Springer Gibson, Chattanooga
Evening Times: "Syrucusa bus
signed a couple of Cuban ball
players. Looks as if they've
planted a fifth column In tho
Washington Senator offices."
Bill Jurges Okays q
N. Y. Giant Terms .
CORAL GABLES, Flu., Murch
7 (UP) Manager Mel Ott an
nounced Friday night that
Shortstop, Billy, Jurges the
last New York Glunt holdout
had coma to salary terms for
1042. Ott, who bundled the
final negotiations with Jurges,
said they reached a compromise,
Jurges, who had the second
best year of his career last sea
son with a .2li:i batting average,
immediately wus named captain.
Ott held the post three years
before being numcd playing
manager. Meanwhile, there win
"no change" in the condition ot
First Baseman Johnny Mlzo, who
displaced a tendon in his right
shoulder yostcrdny. 1
20
TIK-TOK'S
IPS0IAL
FRIED CHICKEN
with linaiirini ' . a?HW
Poiatoil 0UC -
Smith SI i III SI,
1 Sports itpj
rulUrton. Jr.; -r