The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, March 09, 1942, Page 7, Image 7

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    nwmid
DISAPPOINTMENT
The Crsler Lika Ski club's
gnnorous goaturo toward thai
city's nktera In sponsoring a bus
to the. lake Sunduy developed
Into little mora than gesture
and strictly gnneroui.
Only nine people rod tha 33
pnuengpr Greyhound. At leant
24 were needed to bring the club
out ot the red.
Tha plan will be tried again
next Sunday. If It doesn't pay,
In all likelihood the whole biuil
nena will be dropped.
To this correspondent, In the
habit of driving hli own car
each weekend on gradually re
reding rubber, tho club's move
l timely and welcome. Ho'a go-
0K to take advantage of It next
cek. Tho 1.75 roundtrlp fee
IK rm liwtl-A Hum tlin .if rlrlu.
i lug and the trip la equally fust,
S probably safer, and saves that
".long drive back home when tho
.4, g muscles begin to scream and
.tin v.Tuitiin yvit i
Ticket this week will be on
sule at Drew's Mnnstore and
Kudy's Men's store until Friday.
Departure time Is 8:30 Sunday
morning. Time of return trip Is
dependent upon the will of the
majority.
SKI DOPE
The Crater ski group loses an
other pair of funs Monday night
when Clarence Hill and Gordon
Wirth are taken by the army.
Hill, brother of Hulph Hill.
Klamath's famed Olympic dis
tance runner, la one of the vcl-u-ans
of banln slut riding and a
aQ-rttnniul competitor In recent
ski club competitions . . . Devel
oping into Klamath's only real
Class A racer Is Cecil Drew,
youngrat of the skiing Drew
family. Bereft of sufficient
tournament activity by this
year's lack of a Crater Lake Ski
club competitive calendar, Cecil
has had to travel from 400 to
HOD miles for meet experience.
Me captured the Zone 3 pre
lims at Crater lake in early Feb
ruary, followed It with double
victory In the Oregon b tourna
ment at Tollgate, and topped
that with I In win In the big
Sun Valley Ski club'a Claw B
downhill and slalom at Sun Vl
ley two weeks ago.
Hacing In a thick fog at Sun
Valley, Cecil completely ran
away with the B class, finished
jtell up In A standings. If the
my doesn't get him, he'll be a
distinct threat In northwest Class
A competition next year ....
Eilertson Wins
Four-Way Title
MOUNT BAKER. Wash..
March DOT)- The Clasa A four
way championship of the Pacific
Northwest Ski association was
won here yesterday by John
Eilertson of the FJold, B. C-, Ski
club when he piled up 322
points In Jumping, down-hill,
slalom and cross country com
petition. Eilertson nosed out Elov Bo
den of Soattle, who had 300
points and Arndt Ofstad, also
of Seattle, with 303.
Sole entry In the open class
was HJalmar Hvam of Portland
until he broke his leg in a fall
Othe downhill run and the re
ilnder of that competition was
called off.
SIMMONS BREAKS MARK
OREGON CITY, March 0 P)
No Name league statistics show
ed Saturday that Dutch Sim
mons, Salem high school for
ward, bettered the league scor
ing record this season with 142
points.
Bob Morrla of Albany estab
lished the previous record of
137 points In 1941.
Bowling
At Klamath naoraatlon Allay
INDUSTRIAL L1A0US
III Oavls Aaaoolatad
unit tor isr su
Ward '" IM 174 .w
Pavla Itl IM (TO
Vi'inn ana IM M0 M
Malaria
l7 171 in MS
Handloap
.IS M St I0
90s Mt Ma tali
Wayarhaauaar
1ST ill m
901 SOt M5
to M0 US M7
" IM l( Ml
1H IM III SM
41 41 41 I3S
B. Martin
B. Owana .
O'll'f A
nickman
ntmnx
Handicap .
g ut Mt two
told loa
ita m tit Ma
I7fi tlO IM M0
.tit m 11 SM
,173 ISO 117 WW
9 7 19 IM
Hanrilfap
44 44 44 III
o;4 oa vie mi
Southern Patina R. R.
Coutlnar . 104 I7S 1MI M7
Mnl.W , IM I7J Wll M0
Brown !77 107 IM Ml
(lurk , , '" 117 105 4M
Pnttor " l4 tl Ml
Handicap . S3 03 09 U9
KS 0M 370 taoi
When In Medford
Stay at
HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modern
Jea and Anna Eerier
Proprietor
rirlaeoll -
K. I. Bold
ray w.. 1
Fast Trainer
prN?V" j
j. "St ? ' ' '
1 "J 4 A
C m i
Chuck Fsntke. former nation
al mile king, warms up with
plana at backdrop at Randolph
Field. Fenska. rejected by tha
army air corps bacaus of weak
yas. it an assistant physical
trainer at Texas post.
Jersey Kegler
Captures ABC
Singles Lead
COLUMBUS, O. Match 0
(UP) Vincent Cirles. a slightly
built 20 year old accountant
from Ellrabeth. N J., rolled in
to the single leadership of the
42nd American Bowling congress
Saturday with a neat 600 total.
Cries, who weighs only 120
pounds, registered scores of 233.
214 and 243 In his singles shift
to grab the paccscttlng spot from
Louis Lurch, 49-yearold photo
engraver from Teaneck, N. J.
He was the third new singles
leader of the day.
FOPP TAKES HOOD
TIMHF.HLINE LODGE. March
0 til') The Iwo.year-old magic
mllo record on Mt. Hood fell Sat
urday as Martin Fopp, Timber
lino lodge ski Instructor, raced
down the course In 1:13.2 min
utes. Bob Donnldson, Portland,
set the earlier mark of 1:24.
If Legend Is True, The Beavers
Are in as Coast Cage Champs
SAN FRANCISCO, March 9
(P) It's legend In the Pacific
northwest that If Amory T.
"Slats" Gill has seen your bas
ketball team In action, then his
team will beat yours If the two
are ever matched.
Well, Stanford university is
about to meet Gill's Oregon
State college five for the Coast
Conference championship, and
twice at least already Gill has
watched the current Cardinals
play.
He observed their fust-breaking
style and the good use they
make of their tremendous height
in a BB-49 victory over Cali
fornia Friday night.
He sat in again the following
evening when Stanford, advised
of his presence and perhaps
aware of tha tradition, tried to
hide its light under a bushel
and, as a result, barely managed
to extract another 32-30 decision
from the Bears.
Thus the reputed Gill hoodoo
springing largely from the
coach's reputation as a scout
will fall in double measure
across the path of the southern
division champions In the two-out-of-three-giimo
Intor-dl vision
al series opening nt the Palo
Alto pavilion Friday night.
In most other respects, tha
advantage seems to lie with the
host team. It litis won 22 of Its
25 games this season losing
only to Santa Clara, Southern
California and the Athens club
of Oakland. Its conference re-
FOR RENT
TRUCKS and BICYCLES
You Drive Move Yourself
Save W Long and
Bhort Trips.
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East Main
.March 9, 1942
Antlers Lose, 29-24,
In Ashland Finals
Jacksonville Winner; Bray, Monks,
Miller Named to Tourney All-Star
ASHLAND, March 0 UP) Favored Jacksonville overcame a
first-half deficit to nose out Bonanza, 20-24, Saturday night for
the Southern Oregon College of Education Invitational high
school basketball tournament championship.
Bonanza held a 15 )0 lead at the half but fell behind early
In the third quarter as long George Bray, the Antlers' lanky
center, was thrown out on personals.
Chlloauin. runners-un to Bon
Butte Falls
Cops Oregon
B Tournament
EUGENE, March fl (A' The
undefeated Butte Falls Loggers,
boasting the best bnokctball rec
ord In the Mate, wrested tho
Class H Oregon high school bas
ketball tttlu away from the de
fending champions, Wcstport,
30-28, Saturday night.
It wax the 18th consecutive
win for the tall southern Oregon
team.
The Loggers, coached by Bill
Emlgh, trailed by three points
early In tho second quarter, 12
B, but unleashed a whirlwind of
fensive that carried them to a
20-13 halftlmc lead.
Wcstport was h'andicapped In
that period by the loss of Art
Vermcnt, center, who sprained a
thumb.
Vcrmenl returned in the third
period to aid Westport in clos
ing the gap to six points, but by
the end of the quarter the rang
ier liuttc Falls team had boost
ed the advanU.c to 2617.
Westport's Verment and John
ny Kent of Butte Falls were un
animously named to tha all-state
team. Others were Ed Aldous
of Mohawk, Jack Btishnell of
Powers, Buster Clough of Ar
lington and Mervln Tuom of
Wcstport.
Portland Pair Win
Fencing Crowns
PORTLAND, Ore . March 9
tP) Pacific northwest men's and
women's fencing championships
were won here Saturday night
by Mr. and Mrs. Don Naylor,
Portland.
Portland champion for two
years. Naylor defeated Dave
White, another Portlander, 8-3.
In the women's finals Mrs. Nay
lor bested the defending champ
ion. Katherine Modrell of the
Seattle YWCA. 4-2.
cord wai 11 victories against a
single defeat, and for the first
time in history it swept Its four
game scries with California.
From another statistical as
pect, the Cardinals held their
conference opponents to an aver
age of less than 36 points a game,
four fewer than Oregon State's
40. Their own average score of
43 plus nearly matched OSC'a
44.
Even Coach Gill did not hesi
tate to grant that his club had
Gun Club Shoot
18 Yds. . Hdcp.
Drlscoll .23 2848 16 2137
N. Reed 25 28 50 22 2143
Watters 23 2447 23 2144
Baum 22 2343 22 2143
Puckett 25 2348 19 1837
West ...23 2548 19 2039
Dalton 18 1838 14 1832
S. Reed 23 2043
Donovan - 13
J. Adams 20 1939 20 2141
Houston 21
C. Martin 24 2347 21 2041
Woodard 20 2242 20
C. A. Dunn 25 18 2442
Ledingham 24 2448 18
P. Hilton 22 22 2042
Garich '. 24 2246
Bewley 22
I yL' .Me 1
1 iT il everyone
fTCiiaiiyisiii
PAGE SEVEN
anza in the Klamath County B
league, won tnlrd place over
Gardiner, 25-19. and Talent won
fourth from Central Point, 22
10. Selected on the all-star team
were Sulsor of Gardiner, and
Monks of Chlloquin, forwards;
Bray of Bonanza, center, Smith
of Jacksonville and Miller of
Chlloquin, guards.
Frank Grohs of Bonanza was
picked on the all-star second
team and Jim Conroy of Chllo
quin awarded honorable men
tion. Bonanza summary:
Soninn (14) ( iliekaoiullla
Hun
r...
7. Crnlth
HarMntng, 0
tlnhncn
S-aryck
10. Hart,
Hmr.
C...
lrn. I .
Il'.rflr, I
FUrVu, 0 S
Urdu. I 8
State League
Slates Two
Games Per Week
PORTLAND, March 9 OP)
State baseball league teams will
play two games a week this sea
son, managers decided last
weekend.
Willamette valley teams will
play Wednesday night and Sun
day afternoon. Medford will
play Saturday night and Sunday
afternoon.
Albany, Silverton, Eugene and
Medford have entered the
league, and teams from Corval
lis. Bend and Portland may ap
ply later.
Northwest Golf
Tourney Cancelled
SEATTLE, March 9 UP) The
annual Pacific Northwest Golf
association tournament, sched
uled to be held in June at the
Capilano Golf course in Van
couver. B. C, was called off
Saturday first time in the as
sociation's 44-year history no
tournament will be held.
"The war" was blamed.
Capilano retains priority on
the tournament, which, directors
decided at their spring meeting
here, should be "deferred" for
a year.
something of problem to con
front. "They're the best team of big
men I've ever seen," he said of
the Cards.
"They're all pretty fast and
quick with their hands and good
shots. I've got to do a lot of
figuring before we can expect
to beat them. Maybe I'll have
to bench my two small guards,
Don Durdan and Lew Beck, to
get some comparable height in
there."
Dbls.
22
20 1838
19
13
16
18
19
18 1838
24 1
23 17
Big 10 Gears
Sports to
War Plan
Boosts Grid Shed to Ten
Games, Permits Freshmen
To Compete on Varsity
By TOMMY DEVINE
CHICAGO, March 9 (UP)
Five sweeping concessions in the
Big Ten athletic code were made
by faculty representatives Satur
day to gear the conference
sporta program for war-time.
Without altering the confer
ence constitution, faculty offi
cials waived restrictions because
of the emergency, mainly to ac
commodate service teams.
The major changes will:
1. Increase the 1942 football
schedule from eight to 10
games, at least two of which
must be with army or navy
teams.
2. Lift the ban on grid games
after the Saturday preceding
Thanksgiving, in effect extend
ing the season a week at both
ends to provide for the two ex
tra contests.
3. Permit intercollegiate
freshmen competition for the
duration of the war and six
months thereafter. The yearling
teams are to be limited to three
football games, these not to be
played until at least four weeks
after the start of the fall term.
4. Make athletes Including
transfer students, eligible for
varsity competition upon con
clusion of an academic rather
than a calendar year.as is now
the case. Although inapplicable
for the coming spring, the rule
would permit this spring's enrol
lees to play varsity basketball
next winter.
6. Allow conference schools
to fulfill existing contracts with
schools using freshmen on the
varsity. This permits Michigan
to meet Harvard and Illinois to
meet Butler of Indianapolis.
Harvard and Butler both use
freshmen on the varsity.
Training
Camp Briefs
BEVOS LOOK TO NORBERT
SAN JOSE. Calif.. March 9
(jp) Portland of the Pacific
Coast league, twice beaten in
weekend exhibition games,
looked today to the arrival of
Ted Norbert to strengthen its
showing in future appearances.
The veteran player, valued
for his batting ability, checked
into training camp yesterday
from Puerto Rico, but not be
fore the Beavers had lost to San.
ta Clara university, 3-2. The
previous day they were defeated
by their fellow coast leaguers,
the San Francisco Seals, 15-8.
SEALS WIN, 1-0
SONOMA, Calif., March 9 MP)
Two fielding lapses by their op
ponents gave the San Francisco
Seals a 1-0 victory over trie cjaK-
land Acorns yesterday In one of
the Coast league training sea.
son's most tightly played base
ball games.
Bill Lillard, San Francisco
shortstop, stretched a third-in
ning single to three bases when
Mel Duzabou failed to come up
with the ball. Then Fred Tauby
dropped Joe Sprinz' fly to left
field, and Lillard reored.
MAJORS WIN. 3-2
LOS ANGELES. March 9 UP)
Taft Wright, Chicago White Sox
outfielder, supplied tha home-
run punch yesterday that gave
major league stars a 3-2 victory
over a picked Coast league out
fit Lou Novlkoff of the Chicago
Cubs was on base In the second
inning when Wright teed off
against Dick Barrett, Seattle
pitcher. Lou Stringer. Chicago
Cub infielder, scored what
proved to be the winning run in
the third on Novlkoff s single.
The major leaguers collected
11 hits and their six pitchers,
Red Ruffing, Hi Bithorn, Jack
Knott, Ken Heintzelman, Ed
Welland and Luke Hamlin, gave
the Coasters only five hits.
EAST LANSING. Mich. No
tre Dame won mile relay at
Central collegiate indoor track
meet and beat Michigan State
for team title by three points.
YOUUUKI ftfljffl
k The In crossing popularity el
relay's lUaloht atotubo Whis
key . . iaa. big laeter In the tread
towinU flnavUght-kedlad whlalrj.
ruu
QUART
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4 I V. I till . . V- L ; y- b :
A Spraaue River basketball
schedule during tha past season, nevertheless proved an impressive entrant in tha recent Klamath-Lake
tourney. Tha boys finished in a tie for. third place In tha meat. During the year, the
Warriors won 11 games and dropped eight, piling up 453 points to their opponents 410. Above,
front row, Lomer Detweiler, William Wolford, Claude Parrish, Forrest Seright. Back tow. Man
ager Bob Nelson. Elwyn Hall,
Pelicans Leave for Salem Meet,
Face McMinnville Wednesday
A Pelican basketball squad of ten men and Coach Dutch
French left Klamath Falls Monday morning for Salem where the
Bigbills enter the State basketball toumey Wednesday.
French said the tall Pelicans were in excellent physical
shape for the rigorous tourney schedule which pits them against
McMinnville in the opening fracas Wednesday night.
Making the trip are Captain
Gene Love, Ingvar Swanson,
Jim Bocchi, Jim Cox, George
Brosterhous, Aldo BellotU, Don
Laird. Ralph Foster, Lee Hunt
er, tiny Donny Noel and French.
SALEM, March 9 UP) Oregon
high school basketball teams be
gan arriving here today for the
annual state tournament open
ing tomorrow night on the Wil
lamette university floor.
Two more teams, HUlsboro
and CorvaUis, qualified for the
tournament Saturday night, leav
ing only district 14 unrepresent
ed. -
That district's champion will
be determined tonight in a
game between Parkrose, the de
fending titlist. and St. Helens.
Each holds one victory over the
other.
CorvaUis gained entry by de
feating Albany. 31-23, at Salem,
where the rubber game of a dis
trict 7 tie was played. HUlsboro
upset Beaverton, Tualatin, Yam
hill Valley league champion,
44-27, for the District 9 crown.
Only four new teams have
qualified for the tourney, al
though St. Helens might be a
fifth. They are Milton-Free-water,
which upset Hood River
in District 2; Medford in District
4: HUlsboro, and Mt. Angel,
state Catholic school champion,
in District 11. Ail others were
in last year's event
Four teams rule as favorites.
Astoria, the defending champion,
winner in 20 of 24 games this
season, heads the list. An equal
ly impressive "record is that of
Baker, winner of 25 of 30 east
ern Oregon games, including
four straight over Milton-Free-
water and two over Vale, the
District 15 representative.
North Bend, victor in 18 of
20 contests, will be back for
the fourth consecutive year.
Four members of the team that
finished fourth last season are
in the lineup, including Rudy
Ruppe, speedy forward, who has
TIK-TOK'S
SPECIAL
FRIED CHICKEN
With lhoatrtn
Potatow
50c
South Slltn St.
l iiitiar a eo. umtio, a..i lm. ,i
Warriors
team not competing In the regular Klamath county basketball
Eilfred Barkley, Bob CarninI, Leon
more than made up for the loss
of Sam Crowell.
Crowell set a Coos county
scoring record, an Individual
record of 31 points in one game
at the state tourney, and faUed
to crack the all-time tournament
mark by one point.
Ruppe scored 153 points In
county play this year, bettering
Crowell's mark by 12 points.
Saiem, host team and the first
champion of the No Name league
to complete the loop - schedule
undefeated, is the other favorite.
The opening games pit Vale
against Mt Angel at 7:30 p. m.
and Salem against CorvaUis at
8:45 p. m.
Play scheduled Wednesday:
1 p. m., Medford vs. Milton
Freewater. 2:15 p. m. HUlsboro vs. Park-
rose or St. Helens.
3:30 p. m., Columbia Prep vs.
North Bend.
4:45 p. m.. Baker vs. Oregon
City. ,
7:30 p. m., Eugene vs. Astoria.
8:45 p. m., McMinnville vs.
CUTHBERT WINS B SKI
TAHOE CITY, Calif., March 9
(UP) BiU Cuthbert, Yosemite.
won the Class B downhill race
in the California state champion
ships Saturday, finishing in 59.2
seconds.
BUI Bechdolt, Lake Tahoe,
was second in 59.3, and Bob
Plumb, Yosemite, was third in 1
minute 6 seconds.
CHICAGO Ohio State won
Big Ten Indoor track meet in
which Bob Ufer of Michigan set
new American 440-yard. Indoor
record of 48.1 seconds. Confer
ence faculty representatives ap
proved 10-game football sched
ules providing two contests are
with service elevens.
Airmory
PHONE FOB TICKBT BESEHVATIONS
Th. Bialto ... Phon. 77
Castleb.rry's ... i Phon." 3333
Th. Waldorf Phon. 6S11
wra'.Maajii
it. t-.'T- i "-. . . v --
George, Coach George Hpbbe.
BASEBALL
EXHIBITION .
TODAY'S OAMES
At It. Pataratwi-J, FJl. I Glavaland (A) V.
St. Inula (N).
At OrUmW, ria.i WtaMnfton A) . Na
York A.
At AiuMlm, Cain, i ptHlidalphls (A) M,
Lm Ansaln (PCL.
SUNDAY RESULTS ...
St. Louto (N) 4, Haw York (A) t
Brooklyn N M, Cuban All Stan S-t. '
Cloraland (A) S, OlnolnrMtl N) 4. :
Naw York (N) 11. Boaton (A) t.
San Dlago (PCD 1, PMIadalphJs A 4
SATURDAY . .
Naw York (A) a, St. Uula (N) t.
Cuban All atari 4, Brooklyn NJ B . '
Boston (A) I. Nax York (N) x.
San Olaso (PCL) t, Philadelphia (A) a.
CLEARWATER, Fla. MUt
Naymlck, 6-foot,8 inch right
hander, has ' been optioned by
Cleveland to Wilkes Barre of
the' Eastern league.
H NOBODY 10VES YOU .
MEBBE VOUR OWN .
HEARTSTRINGS NEED
A LITTLE -TUN1NS UP
A business usually acquires
the- sort of reputation it
deserves and we are proud
of the good nam our
pleased patrons have built
up for us in the time la
which we have been serv
ing theml
- Tuesday
8:30
P.M.
i
I
i
war art ltili
wmmmmutbKKViimA