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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1942)
S June 10, 1042 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON fAGE N1N1 Li CI IIVIUWU I lUp IWB Pelicans-Then Navy Co-Manogcr Sees Last Local Action Sun-v-? day, Leaves for Active Duty as 'Avenger' , -I Oun of thn oldest Klnmnth area baseball players In point of service will il u y his last game for the Pelicans Sunday when the local squad liiniiloB with Grants Paiu In a twin bill on Recrea tion field. run I Bcrnadou, co-innnotfor of the 1043 Dlgbllli and for the past nlno y fit in u member of Klamath teams, bearing various names, wrni sworn Into tin- nuvy hint Sunday at one of the "Pearl i.vnarunr- AvptiKvia. im u irava -next bundny night Just a few 71' M iiMxmMm tf oworn in aa one oi iviain- ilh's "Pearl Harbor Avengers," Co-Manager Paul Bernadou of Ihe Pelicans Sunday will leave lor actlre duty In the nary ftor playing hla last gamea for the Whlteblrds they tangle Villi Grant Pans In a twin bill m Ilrcrontlon field. hours after cuinplatlng hit lait name for the duration. A graduate of a Berkeley, Calif., high achool, Bornie came to Klamath Falla In 1034 after playing a season with the Crocket Kaglei in the Berkeley Winter league. In '34 and '38 he performed (or the Ewaqne Tied Sox In the Northern Call' fornia loop. In 1030 the Ewauna nine be came the Klamath Red Sox and fternlo played with 'em ai they retained that name through the summers of '37, '39 and 1939. lie waa a member of the Klanv uth Falla-Durria combined squad in 1040 and taut ieaion held out at third bate and In the outfield for the Klamath Pelicans. Th I year Manager Ernie Bishop named him to aailat In handling the current crop of Whltcblrdi. Through nine yean of Klanv nth ball, Bernle haa aeen action in every position except catcher and pitcher. He a usually been good for .320 or better at tho plate. Married here In 1038, Bornie la now a Klamathlte. Starting Sunday he'll be a Klamathlte In the navy an American In action. 3 NET RESULTS By Alice Marble and Eleanor Tennani Overhead Smash Like Service Swing; Use Continental Grip, Throw Body Weight :7f - r- - ' nj &.IM di' i ,.kt r C4 " 12 , i 1 II km VjfUMtajL v.-' .-I a. - - i . - ' ' -: Alice Marble . , overhead anuuh. Committee Predicts Moderate Increase In Tobacco Taxes WASHINGTON, Juno 10 W5) Members of tho liouso ways and mcnnK committco predicted to day Hint modcrnlo incrcasoa In tho oxcine taxes on clgnri, clg nrottaa and amoklng tobneco probably would be approved. Tobncco-stnto membera were roportcd ready to load a flht against any increases, but ono of them conceded they would lose Ouio the committco nlrcady ITm rnlsed tho excises of liquors, beer and wines. Secretary Morgonlhau asked congress Inst March for In creases on tobneco taxes to pro duce nbout $230,300,000. Tho committco Into yesterday refused to accept a treasury sug gestion that tho present It cont feriorol gnsnllno tax bo doubled, but decided tentatively to In creaso tho lubricating oil lovy from 41 to 8 cents n gallon, Tho Ireasury hnd asked for an In crease to 10 cents. Carney Signed by Hollywood Stars PORTLAND, Juno 10 (P) The Hollywood Stars of tho fjns'l league signed William ,1, 'Qneyj ox-Univcrslly of Ore gon outfielder. Carney was captain of this year's Wcbfoot team. Ho had a threo-ycar batting average of .370. He left for Hollywood at onco. A recent recruit In tho navy's V-7 officer training program, ho does not oxpeel to bo called into service until lato this year. Continental grip la uaed for overhead shots. The overhead imash ll like tho sendee awing, Including iootwork and body action. It la optional whether you use the back awing wind-up. aa in serving, or the front swing, which li lifting the racket up to your head and aropping it back o( your neck, Fewer errors result and' It' li loss effort to us the front awing.' . Tho left foot Is forward, body sideways to the net,, , Mov to the ball, placing your body dl rectly under It as If you were catching a fly In baseball. Let your racket head travel up to the ball and hit into It. A harder hit shot la made with tho feet off the ground, the extra body weight being tnrown into the shot. NEXT: Forehand drive. Seed Acreage in Oregon Increased PORTLAND, June 10 W) Oregon seed acreage la up con siderably, the crop Is In better condition than last year, and per-acra. yields are expected to do mucn neavier, the agrlcul turo department said today. There wore 88,000 acres of Austrian wlntor poas planted In tho nation last year. This year uregon alone will produce 78,000 acres. The national production will be 143,800 acres. Most of the Orogon Increase la In the eastern part of the state. Other crop acreages, all In creased, are: hairy vetch, 125, 000; common votch, 40,000; Wil lamette vetch, 22,000; Hungar ian votch, 23,000; common rye- grass, 84,000; perennial ;. rye grass, J3,5UU. OOINO MY WAYf SPOKANE, Wash, (P) Sher iff Ralph Buckley had given up his search (or a man charged with deserting his family, On the way back to jail Buck' ley picked tip a hitch-hiker. After a few minutes of con vocation, the sheriff took his passenger right on to the jail- It was the man he had been look' Ing for. A Switch in Time PlSJ ESftfrioyeaw lllf AEKY VAU6HAN V SLU60IN6 m . Mfw-7 SWITCHES TO BROOKLYN K -sA AND THIRD BACE lift1- SC0SLIE infiel&' Jimmy Demaret's Best Push Shot Was No. 3 Into Rain and 60-Mile Wind By JIMMY DEMARET Flashiest of Them All A SO lo 80-milo wind and a driving rain were formidable ob stacles during my first round match against Olin Dutra in the National Match Ploy Open at tho San Francisco Country Club In 1938. On tho 13th hole (I was one up at the time) we faced a 3S0- yard test which normally takes a drive and half 0 iron. The wind was dead against us. I was a fow yards closer than Olln Dutra with my drive, al though partly stymied by a tree. The green is well-banked and was very soggy from constant rain. I played a push shot with a No. 3 Iron so the ball would not be affected by the wind, Tho ball never was more than 10 feet off the ground, It hit 20 feet past tho back-splnncd to within ono inch of the cup. . I went on to win my first major tournament. Jimmy Domaret pitches In. NEXT: Jimmy Demaret tells how to hit a push shot. Oregon Sport Notes By FRED HAMPSON Associated Press Staff Writer The most recent batch of mis fortunes to overtake tho Port land Pacific Coast league Beav ers Illustrate poignantly the hard fate of pitchers with a losing or rather inept base ball club. Take the June 4 encounter with San Diego. On that un happy occasion Ad Llska pitched a very trim little aix hltter while his teammates were connecting solidly eight - times, always at tho wrong moment. The defeat, 3-1, was charged against the stout little tinder hand pltchor. At that the June 4 mistreat ment of Llska was nothing com pared to the dirt they did hlmj In tho first gome of a Sunday May 31, doubloheader against the San Francisco Seats, a team considered none too robust It self. Llska pitched two-hit ball that day ' while his mates through a gaudy . succession of lost opportunities managed to lose 1-0. The Beavers' peculiar talents for mistreating their own pitch. era wero boldy etched again the night of Juno 3 when Joe Or rell hurled nn 11-lnnlng game against San Diego, doling out a paltry seven hits to the Padres and fanning eight. - His mates got 10 unproductive hits and Orrell was beaten 3-2. . s Coast league pitchers cooled off a bit last week, but during the previous week tho decep tion was of a high order. There were 12 shutouts: Dllbeck of San Diego . over Hollywood, two hits; Boers of Sacramento o v o r Oakland, vaneum PKIVATt STOCK nvu ariNt TI0KT IYI WNIIKlY PMTS 1.10 ura 2.10 a raoor iofc orfy e,,Ume, feorlo. WIneH . fear v 3 il w 'vri it t Jimmy Demaret pitches in. seven; Donnelly of the Sacs over Oakland, three, Turpin of Seattle over Los Angeles, seven; Joiner, Hollywood, over San Diego, four; Orrell, Portland, over Son Francisco, five; Desso, San Diego, over Hollywood, five; Dobcrnic, Los Angeles, over Seattle, three; Lyons, Sac ramento, over Oakland, four; Joyce, San Francisco, over Portland, six; Seats, San Fran Cisco, over Portland, four, He- bcrt, San Diego, over Holly' wood, six. Thero were 31 games played during, tho week, so that .more than a third were shutouts. In 16 of, them five or fewer hits were permitted by 14 winning pitchers. Llska of Portland and Carl Fischer of Seattle lost two- hitters. BOSTON WOOL BOSTON, June 10 (AP-USDA) Demand for wool continued very quiet on the Boston market and In tha country today. Prices were mostly unchanged for the better classes of fleece wools, with medium three-eighths and one-quarter blood graded bright MARKET PDSTS I L WIDE FRON By VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK, June 10 (IP) Unsettled by a steep fall in American Telephone the stock market posted declines over a wide front today. Losses were moderate In the general run of leaders. Tele phone camo buck a little after an early drop of 4 points or so, Air Hcduction, Wostinghouso, Eastman Kodak, Bethlehem Steel and Philip Morris were down a point or more at the worst. Dealings were approximately 380,000 shares. The weakness of American Telephone was attributed to sell ing inspired by the announce ment after yesterday's close that Western Electric Co., Bell com pany manufacturing subsidiary, had reduced its dividend to 28 cunts from 80 cents In the March quarter and 73 cents In June last year. Telephone owns practical ly all of the stock. Bonds were irregularly lower. Closing quotations: American Can 681 Am Car & Fdy 231 Am Tel & Tel 1171 Anaconda 231 Calif Packing .. 181 Cat Tractor 34 Comm'nw'lth Sc Sou ..L.316 Cicncral Electric 281 General Motors ... 371 Gt Nor Ry pfd 201 Illinois Central Int Harvester Kcnnccott Lockheed Long-Bell "A" Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelv N Y Central : Northern Pacific ... Pac Gas & EI ..... Packard Motor Penna R R Republic Steel Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Scars Roebuck Southern Pacific ... Standard Brands ... Sunshine Mining Trans-America ; Union Oil Calif Union Pacific V S Steel Warner Pictures :.. 2 46 271 161 31 201 5 71 51 191 2 191 14 61 34 521 101 31 -31 . -41 .101 . 68 .'461 51 POTATOES PORTLAND, Ore., June 10 IIP) Potatoes, old - White, local s, $3.30-3.75 cental; Deschutes Gems -) cental; Yakima No. 2 Gems, $2.50 90-lti. bag? Klam ath No. 1 ( ) cental. Potatoes, new Shatter (Cal.) White Rose, 80s, $3.25-3.50. CHICAGO, June 10 (AP- USDA) Potatoes, arrivals 139; on track 320; total US shipments iuhz, supplies moderate,, for California Long White demand moderate, market slightly slow er, for Southern Triumphs, best quality and condition, demand fair, market steady, for off condi tion stock demand slow, market weak; California Long Whites, US No. 1, $3.20-25. WHEAT LEADS RALLY eral supply medium grades, $13.75 down; 230-200 lbs. $12.73 13.80; light lighU mostly $12.75 13.23; good sows 400-600 lbs., $10.00-11.00; lighter weights up ward to $11.73; good to choice feeder pigs quotable, $12.80 to $13.30, or above. . ' , SHEEP; Salabio 600, tuiul 630; market steady to weak; good to choice spring lambs, $13.25 to mostly $13.80; medium grades $12.00-80; few lots feeder lambs, $11.00; grass fat shorn old crop lambs and yearlings, $9.00 25; common grades down to $8.00; few good ewes $4.80-78; common grades down to $2.25. Motorize d snow toboggans powered with 20 h.p. two-cylin der motorcycle engines crulM 30 miles an hour, carry three ti four men or several , hundred pounds of equipment, .' "ili Ha rinfaifriTi H'ltf gfi if m1 1 J MSI! L 21? or. VJn. L TV 4 w 1 Bsi iii t uiia S. F. LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, June 10 W) (Fed. State Market News) CATTLE, salable 75; slow, barely steady; fed steers absent, quoted $12.80-13.80, odd medium grasscrs, $11.00-12.00; few medium 670 lb. heifers, $9.50; package 1090 lb. aged me dium range cows, $8.50; dairy bred sows, $7.00 down; odd bulls, $9.80-10.50. Calves: salable 25. Nominal; choice vealcrs $13.00 50; largely common and medium calves, $9.00-11.00. HOGS, salable 300. . Around 10 cents higher; bulk good, 185 235 lb. barrows and gilts, $14.85; odd good sows, $12.25. SHEEP, salable 300; fully steady; deck closely sorted choice 77 lb. north coast lambs $13.75; straight; deck medium 63 lb. lambs $12.50-60; medium to choice shorn ewes quoted $3.50 to $4.50. CHICACO, June ; 10 (IP). Wheat led one of the strongest rallies in weeks in the grain market today with gains of as much as 2 cents a bushel. House refusal to accept a sen ate provision of the agriculture department appropriation bill to permit sale of 125,000,000 bush els of government wheat at prices below parity touched off the buying but on the upturn the market benefited from support of professional traders who had sold short previously and from other interests. Corn crop com plaints from some sections of Iowa, due to too much rain and hail, attracted attention, Wheat closed IMS cents high er than yesterday, July $1,181-1, September $1.21-1.211; corn 1 lie higher, July 863-Sc; Septem ber 898c;. oats J-lc higher;- soybeans-li-lic up and rye 1-1 ic higher. . PORTLAND LIVESTOCK PORTLAND, Ore., June 10 (AP-USDA) CATTLE: Salable and total 200; calves: salable 50, total .75; market active, steady; medium grass steers, $11.25-75; common grades downward to $10.00; few stockers $10.75 to $11.15: no good fed steers of fers, salable around $12.75-13.75; common to medium beef heifers, $0.25-11.50; canner and cutter cows, $8.25-7.75; fat dairy type cows, $8.00-75; medium to fairly good beet cows, $9.00-10.00; com mon to medium bulls, $8.50 to $10.50, good beef bulls salable up to $11.00-11.25; good vealers, $13.50-14.00, few choice $14.50; culls down to $8.00., HOGS: Salable 750; total 800; market fairly active, , mostly- steady; good to choice driveins, 175-215 lbs., $13.85-14.00, few choice lots $14.10 and $14.15; lib- combing wools quoted at 49-50 cents. Medium mid-west coun try graded wools were quoted at 46-47 cents for average typo, grease basis, delivered. Foreign wools were very quiet on the selling end. IFAI&MHIHS! 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