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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1942)
O Fishin's 1 Wk .... By WALTON IZAAK Thl week threatens to be one of those things, no fnr as the "welcomn mul" being out In fishing nrens, The weather In working out Just right und water condition urn n lot belter. Umir In mind the net that with tills high water condition the fish are be ing well foil by nuturc go llmt you will have to work a mil harrier to select a choice lldhll (or the m to -..... i inn um urci In the book looks like oselohnmr (lulling. Rocky olnt and Harrlman lodon on tho UPPER KLAMATH LAKE both look for plenty of excite mcnt. During llie week some of the big boyit have been lured out of their bon. Tho niont ef fective ItircH are JlgKr and Andy lleeker wobblers. , Some of the experimenter have used flush. er and worm to a successful nil. t Tim mouth of SEVEN-MILE and WOOD It lVEHS should bo hot trolling and bait spots with river themselves being a good Kue. If you are considering' fishing in thl aroa the best place to start from is Neptune beach on the old Ucnd highway Just beyond Williamson river. oats are avaliablo here. FISH LAKK fishing I on the upbeat and flub are ure In tunc, Try your bra section for omo flow trolling or, for surefire, an old-fashioned worm dunked In about 12 fret of water hould bring unexpected results. Jig gle slightly and change bnlt often. LITTLE DESCHUTES. Some limit on files In almost all sec tion. The ROGUE RIVER and It tributaries In and around UNION CREEK are showing real signs of life and some good bug hutches are on the water. This should be welcome news for fly fishermen. Grants Pas' ROGUE RIVER urea reports flshlnR very good. EAST LAKE. Bait fishing best to date with some late fly fish ing as second guess. The trullufs are a poor third. PAULINA LAKE. Trolling In tha No. 1 spot with late fly fish ier a very close second. Somo CO of nice size are being taken, ELK LAKE. Trolling nnd bait about a tossup. The road Is now open and In good shape. How about MILLER LAKE? Always good on bait nnd troll ing. Well worth the trip. Should catch fish. Tho country south nnd cast of Klamath tails will got a work- Out this- weekend and fly fish rmen will, I think, do best. On tho forks of the SPRAGUE RIVER cluster eggs are best. DIAMOND LAKE. So fnr this year a disappointment nnd, with less than one fish per fisher man as tho avcrago, Is still on the hnrd-tn-get list. Fishing is. moreover, fulling off from thero, according to reports. If you In tend to fisli hero tnko the works so fnr as tackle, Use flnt fish. . Another thought this share- your-rubber idea looks like a good bet for all of you guys that want fishing and tires, too. You can ride with nnothcr guy this week, thnn take him along with you tho next tlmo out. ''TAKE A BOY FISHING." CDemaret, Ben Hogan Lead in 8th Inverness By FRITZ HOWELL TOLEDO, O., Juno 12 OF) Sixteen ot tho notion's hot-shot professionals nlmed to lny down another birdie bnrrno today In the second round of tho $7050 eighth annual Inverness best ball matches, with 14 of tho play-for-pny boys pursuing those torrid Toxnns, Jimmy Domnrot and Bon Hognn, Iho 1041 win nnvs. Tho Lone Star state lads rip ped six strokes off par yostor tlny, each getting threo birdies, to win n fpur-up decision over Denny Shulo nnd E. J. (Dutch) 6Inrrlson. Thnt put tho dofend lg champions out front, but they meet the second plnce duo,' Henry Plcard nnd Sam Byrd, to day. Plearrt and Byrd scored s two up decision over Herman Keiser nnd Chandler Harper, tho Mi ami four-ball tourney winners, to get the runner-up spot. Hurls Cubs Over Phils Veteran Wlm Ninth, 7-1; Botox Sweep Brownie Seriei On Tobor'i Single, 8-7 MISIOMI LIAOIII W t, l ot. W I, I'rt. N Yi,rl .M U .US St. Uiuli . v tt .HI It'lltmi . .... JV its .Ml Waili'L.u ai U Ml (.'itUnd ..In u ,ti (tiioiio ...in ti ,m Imi.iii -iii ii jn i'i.ii.i, . n m .Bin TfiiiraiUy'l HMittt HI. loilll J, Ko.fnK I ( vlnntf . Ulilli(l"H I. (Only ama) , NATIONAL LIAOUI W I t. Mr I M. nrw.ln r it ,m riMiimnh .; Mt. l.nnlt ...TPlM'.'- llnktOII ?'.-3? n (Jlnrliii'atl 14 .MO niliago ... vavi.i-.k Xith .,U 16 -MY 1'Mla.M. .... in A ,-iH Ttiimday'l llMiilll PMIaiMrhla I, thk4i I By JUDBON BAILEY Associated Prei Sport Writer The Chicago C'uli hud Itlll Lea and Claude Passenu, their veteran 'pitchers, on the block Inst winter and It is scarcely more than luck that this pair still wour those odd suits the Hrulns use for baseball unl forms. Yet today Passeau and Lee between them have accounted for 17 of tho Cubs' 25 victor- jf&Ssh I... .1... . J I8- i iiuuui inuKUOifl t 'liJifll, end ona won A A ucia wncre win,, rm alxlh place Chi n ' r ' cago Cub would j - -ms oe ii euner orp riij. both of theset.i.1-(,.,'w b I g rlghthand 1 ors had bsenV 1 us traded. ' Leo won hl Dth game Wed. 7 tmum rasscnu ncsdny and Passeau followed with his ninth yesterday In tin shape of a five-hit 7-1 triumph over the Philadelphia Phils The only tally the tallenders made resulted from a fumble by Bill Nicholson In the second In. nlng nfter Nick Ettcn had sln gled. The only other National lea. sue encounter scheduled was be. tween tho Brooklyn Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals and for the third day In a row weather kept these feudists Idle. The Boston Red Sox com pleted "a sweep of their three. game series with tho St. Louis Browns by winning 8-7 on a ninth-Inning run which Jim To bor singled homo. Each team used three pitcher nnd St. Louis made 13 hits, two more than Boston and Including homers by George McQuinn, Frank Hayes and Tony Criscola. Cleveland also completed a sweep of its series at Washing. ton by rallying for four sms In the ninth inning to beat tha Sen a tors 6-6. Alice Marble Says Firmer Grip Is Needed on -Backhand Drive By ALICE MARBLE afd ELEANOR TENNANT Use the Contlnentnl grip for the bnckhnnd drive. Court posi tion and bockswlng take place when tho ball leaves your op ponent's racket. Hold tho rocket a little firmer thnn for the forehand drive. Keep It above the hnnd In your bnck swing with nrm hugging the chest. Place your body sldewnys to the net at a 00-degrce angle. TTF 1 rit Y " RV.vl:VlW ... rf, iV rt ' AUc; Marble illustrates fuetorsTnf ct well Extension Course Enrollment Up 10 Percent, Report Shows EUGENE, Ore., June 12 (Spe clnl) Tho general extension division of tho state system of higher educntion tins enrolled 11,000 students In clnsscs offer ed by tho division during the past two yenrs, It Is rovcnled in tho biennial report of Dean V. V. Cnldwoll which. has just, boon received by Fredorlck M. Hun ter, chancellor of tho system. Although the registration at the Portland center has do- When In Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modem Joe and Anna Earley Proprlatora ' Cl lyW Midland June 12, 1042 Seals Climb Close To Suds With 3-2 Win Hollywood Twinki Wallop Portland, 3-2; Solons Win, 6-4; Padres Lose, 2-1 PAOISIO 00 IT LIAOUI w 1 to. w i. to. lai Aniilit 19 l .Vrt ln r. V) It lit licrurmtto I'i 3'j .art Oaklind -.Jl IS .410 Sin tiliio -40 10 .S'l lollri4 U " JmIIH U .ill ForlUnl . 1 to Ml Thurldiy'l RMuMl Sattl f, Bn rrtndito I. li Ani'lei 4. Rinamnti S OiklMnd t. Sun 0110 I. r..fUiii i, K.i;-wd i. By Th Associated Pri Tha San Francisco Seals pull ed to within a percentage point of fourth place Eeattla last night when they defeated tha IlHlnlers. 3-2, In a Pacific Coast leaguo - baseball game at San Francisco. The win left the Seals In a tie with tho Rainiert for the upper division spot on the basis of games behind tho leading club. All of San Francisco's scores were unearned as Dick Barrett, trying for tho second time for his thirteenth victory of the sea son, blew up to walk tho Seals for a tally In the third and then overthrew third base In the fourth to allow two additional scores. Another five-hitter was pitch ed by John Bittncr for Holly wood as tha Twinks walloped Portland, 8-2. Roy Hclser was Cromwell Sees Trojan Win As NCAA Tourney Opens LINCOLN. Neb., June 12 VP) Coach Dean Cromwell of South ern California Is confident of an eighth straight NCAA track championship In the annual meet opening at 4:30 p. m. (PWT) tonight, yet Is respectful of his team's opposition. "You've got to be a champion to finish last in this meet," he commented as his squad of 17 took the field for a workout. Ho said Leroy Weed, co-captain of the Troy squad, could give Lcs MncMitchell, NYU, "all he wants" In the mile. . "But," said Cromwell, "I'm downright sorry that Lcs got beat last week, for he Is liubln to come out here plenty mad and make it tough on every body." Summing up his squad's chances, Cromwell commented "we Just happen to have the boys." The squad Is the largest NET By Alice Marble and Eleanor Tennani Look at the ball over the right shoulder. Step with the right foot toward the left side of the court and slightly toward the net. When you hit the ball, the weight is on the right foot. The left heel comes up slightly after the moment of Impact. There Is a little body rotation. Keep tha ball about three feet w Art v At t backlinml. left to right: Racket above Hand; hilling up on ball; rack- open at Impact: racket above nana creased since the outbreak of the war, this figure represents an Increase of 10 per cent In en rollment. Registration In the correspondence nnd statewide classes has Incrcnscd, making the total enrollment greater thnn In nny previous yenr. Extension clnsscs are now given in 19 centers In tho slnte, which InchMes ono nt Klnmnth FnlLs, an Increase of five over tho previous hlnnnlum, In the 400 classes offered In the Port- TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yourself Sava Ji. Long and , Short Trips STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 lEast Main Itmplrt PAGE ELEVEN the victim of a 13-hlt attack from" Twlnk itlckmen. Tha Beavers were shut out until the last frame when two hits and an error were good for two runs. Sacramento and San Diego baseball fans should be In a state ot nervous collapse from watching their respective fa vorites bounce in and out of the second place in the league stand ings. Last night the Solons won their first game of the week's leries from Los Angeles, 8 to 4, to take over second position from the Padres who dropped a game to Oakland, 1 to 2, for their first loss to the Oaks this week. For Die second time In three days, the Padres and tha Solons are three percentage points apart and each club is two games be hind the Angels. Stan Corbett. voting Oak twirl cr, worked n five-hitter and his teammates collected nine timely blngles off Frankie Dasso, Padre speedball hurler. Customers at Sacramento saw Eddie Lake, Solon shortstop, double to score two runners In tho scventli to break a tie and win the see-sawing game from tho Angels. entered by any school Eagerly awaited are the times of Hal Davis, California, and Barney Ewell, Penn State, In the 100, which fans figure to be the outstanding race, with the mile, in the finals. Ewcll Is defending champion, havlrrg won the last two years, and Davis had a time of 9.4, equalling the world mark, on the west coast. FIT TO SWIM BLOOMINGTON, Ind.- Tom Judge, Indiana middle distance runner. Is keeping in trim as a life guard at the Bloomlngton Country club swimming pool. WICKED IN BEANTOWN CHICAGO Since Whitlow Wyatt Joined the Brooklyn Dod gers in August, 1839, he has pitched 87 innings against the Braves 83 of them scoreless. RESULTS from the body to allow for reach, as In the forehand. On the 'backhand drive, hit up to allow for a three-toot net clearance. Rnckct should be well above the net when completing the stroke. NEXTi Volleys. bi iiinsii. Innd extension center and In the statewide classes, a total ot 7339 students have been enrolled dur ing the 1040-1942 bicnnlum, 70 per cent of whom registered for college credit. HIGH STAKES NEW YORK Nine stakes car rying $02,500 In added money aro offered during the three week meeting at Aqueduct race track. i Forty-two young women are giving instruction to young man In the Civilinn Pilot Training program. OXFORD tviir ioom with Tin I Mown ON! ts O.SO rcasoN J. it. 2. TWO O.SO a ennn ho a coccuit touNsf flHHIfi.'f mm Whiteblrds Favored to Cop 2 Tiffs Loeali Matt GronU Pan In DoubU Bill Sunday; Paul Bernadou Laavei for Navy OMQON.OAUPOBIIIA LIAOUI W I tel. W I fet. ll.m. rail 4 1 Ml MidfoM ,..! I Ml Ilwrll 4 I Ml Olioli fin I IM Thll Wltk'l Itntduli Sunday. Jun 14 Ortnt pais ti glhmtth flllii DllIU At Mrtlnd. floth itMMv ht4trt). Rankings In the Oregon-California baseball loop are expect ed to present vory much dif ferent' picture following this weekend's contets which will match the Klamath Falls Pel icans against the winless Grants Pass Merchnnts here while the Dorrls Lumberjacks will make their first trip to tha valley to engage the Medford Craters- The Merchant, lacking both batting punch and effective pit ching, have suffered three shut outs In losing all tlx of their league tilts to date. Manager Ernie Bishop's Pelicans may, however, encounter considerable difficulty downing tha visitors who played their best ball of the season lost week against the Craters, losing one gam by a 9-4 margin. Sunday's contests at Recrea tion field, dedicated to the fare well appaaranca, trnporarily st least, of Co-manager Paul Bern, adou, probably will draw a large audience from pre-game reports. The doubleheader, scheduled to get underway at 1:30 p. m., will see Bernadou at one of the out field posts. Ha Is to leave for active duty In the United States navy Sunday night. Batting averages of the Pel ican baseballers covering the six league games reveal that First Baseman Paul Crapo, clean, up hitter In the Klamath lineup, is out In front among the reg ulars with a .367 mark as a re sult of eight safe blows in 22 tries. Close behind are Ernie Bishop with a .333 average garnered by seven hits n 21 of ficial trips to the plate and Hi Hatfield with seven bingles in 22 attempts for a .318 figure Two pitchers, Frank Van Driesche and Leo Soran, actual ly top the list of locals in the offensive department with aver ages of .500 and .429, respective ly, but neither can be classed in the lead because of so few times at bat. Pelican batting for six league games lotiow: , v AS K H Ave. Via DrUMhi lot J&s Son , 1 I I .l cr!K ,, ... TJ 7 I JIT Hlihup s T Ml I'Mlllpi 10 1 41 rtatmid . Yaney Hampton . i'llaa Hfrnadon . Dlion Uaynel 7 J1S 7 & i .rvi !l I .trs -it l I .lis -a S 4 .! li 0 I .167 -14 I 1 .071 t o .ooo c Front Runners By Th AtmUtMf PrtM Arris?! tin Lcicm Bttlnr-Do4rr, Boiton, M9i Oor. Krr York. .M. un WtlliMa, BoftoB, tti D. DIMafffto. Botton. it. Hom Rubbv WlllUmi, Botton, U; Torlc, Detroit, IS. Pitching Bafntt, Cbtcr, 5-0; Brow7, New York. 4-0. National Lufoa BttlBf B-tr, BrMklyn. .465; Ltuino, Ciidnoatl, JSi. Ban OU, Kew York, tad Xtliar, Brook Itti. M. Bomft RuBkw-F. McCoralck. CtnrtnDiM, ; Mrthsll. New York, and Cimlllt, Brook lyn. . P1tfh(Dwrrarh. Brookrjm, 4-0; ttvrit. Brooklyn. M. College Links Tourney Draws Huge Entry EVANSTON, 111., June 12 (JP) The trains still are running, the automobile tires still are holding out, so the golfers are coming from all over the country for the national collegiate meet, June 22-27, at Chain o' Lakes course at South Bend, Ind. That was the picture gleaned from the entry list today by Ted Payseur, Northwestern univer sity's golf coach and secretary of the NCAA golf committee, who saw In a bulging file. Justl. ftcatlon of the collegians' insist ence on going ahead with their 1942 tournament despite war time conditions. Stanford, defending team champion, will head western schools along with the Unlveri sity of Washington and Southern California. Louisiana State, whose Earl Stewart la defending individual tltleholder, will send a team from the south as will Texas and Duke. The Duke squad Is captained by Grover Poole, southern intercollegiate champion. AUTO RADIOS v4 off Fret Installation Hurry! Limited Quantity Montgomery Wrd Unstated Action Li' h"v.n4' ...y..,, ,. ;t t..,.',.;. While teammate, umplra f : i, "!;i4''4."i,'''"l,,!.f ' tfrKf left, Saattla Halnlars' aeeond baseman, and Gilly Campbell, formar Rainier eatehar, new with Les Angel, trade punch during a game at Seattle. Th unchdulad contait lasted It inlatltac Big Chief, Pete On Topper McDonald, Corral Billed On Next Grapple Card Unpretty Peter Belcastro, Tuesday's wild winna over Bos ton Joe Corbett, will share top billing on next week's armory frapple card with big Chiei hunderbird. Promoter Mack Lillard said today. - To fans hoping (or another chance to hiss Wisconsin Cliff Olsen, the bad boy who made a Sipash hit in this week's open ing bout, Lillard said he regret ted the Swede was not available. He said, however, that he hoped to have him back in the near future. Sockeye Jack McDonald, Tues day winner over Thunderbird, will tackle Alberto Corral, pop ular Mexican rossler in the semi wlndup on the coming card. Cor ral grappled here several weeks ago. ; Prince Daki Mihalakls, the Arabian organist billed here the last time as Nihalakis, will re turn to meet an unnamed oppon ent in the opener, Lillard said. Iron Shot in Wind Cruickshank's Best Br BOBBY CRUIKSHANK Th We Bcot Best shot I ever made was my second on the last hole of the 1823 National Open at Inwood, L. I. The shot was made with a No. 2 iron. There was a fresh breeze blow ing from left to right and imme diately in front of the green was an 18-foot water hazard. I needed a three to tie and had a 185-yard shot left. The ball sailed to the left of the pin where the wind drifted it seven feet from the cup. I holed the putt, lost to Bobby Jones in the playoff. The shot was made with the ball more toward my right foot, slightly open stance. I kept my head down, weight forward and was perfectly balanced. I was slow at the top of the backswlng to assure perfect tim ing and full use ot the hands. NEXTi Corp. Ed Oliver get out of "impossible" lie. SPOKANE GETS GOLF CHICAGO Mahito club, Spo kane, gets the Western amateur, July 7-12, it is 'announced by T. C. Butz, president of the Western Golf association. COLLEGIATE COMERS NEW YORK New York Gi ants are interested in Outfielder Sam Mele and Third Baseman John Simmons of New York unl versity. The first enclosed cabin air plane was built in 1912 by Bler- iot, and was flown by Legag- neux. and Entertain merit P. dmJ . ':.:WE.7w..ali--.i and manager itond around and Blind Splint Stables Alsab For Month By AUSTIN BEALMEAR NEW YORK, June 13 UP) Those roses that Alsab missed in the Kentucky derby would be highly appreciated today by Mrs. Albert Sabath's wonder colt, who will be confined to quarters for at least a month with the first serious ailment of his color ful and profitable career. A blind splint, that bony growth on the side of the splint bone discernible only by x-ray, was discovered yesterday on one of Alsab's forelegs, making Shut Out's principal rival strictly a shut in. . ' , Trainer Sarge Swenke said Al sab carried the injury into the Belmont stakes last Saturday when he wound up a well-beaten second to Shut Out, Mrs. Payne Whitney's chocolate charger who also topped him in the derby. COMPULSORY INTRAMURAL BROOKLYN Long Island university inaugurated compul sory intramural competition in basketball, handball, indoor baseball and horseshoe pitching. "4 1 ' it Bobby Crutckshank . . . strong with an iron. . CAMDEN READY JULY 8 CAMDEN, N. J. New Gar den State Park track at Cam. den should be ready for horses, July 6. it opens July 18. PENSACOLA Les Stanczyk, Columbia fullback from 193S to '38, has received his navy flying wings.. vho jf i tiV , If -urns - on the Diamond k "let tham go. to it," Al KUralMi Navy May Grab Jim Lawson New Stanford Coath May Be Replaced by Schwab . PALO ALTO, Calif.. Jun 1 OP) Jim Lawson, who ueed ed Clark Shaugbnessy a ha4 football coach at Stanford uat versity three months agt, Is pecting to be called . into tha navy. ; . He called members of th J" dian football squad together f terday and announced h had ap plied for a commission lnth4 navy under Lieut. Comdr. TWI Hamilton's pro-flight ' ttsiifti program. ' St. Mary's college, one of four schools taken over by the navy for the program to condltton prospective flying cadets, opeatd its doors to the first training class yesterday and Lawscn Indi cated he would like on of th jobs at the Moraga school. - The former All-Amerlcan and ' from Stanford said that the train ing class for which he had ap plied begins work neJrt Mojiday at the Annapolis naval' aeadanvr and that he expected traveling' orders before the weekend. ' '-! Marchie Schwartz and Harry -Shipkey remain on the Stanford coaching staff, and Scfiwarti was considered a likely succes sor for the head coaching Job. , Portland Will ; " Honor War Heroes " v PORTLAND, June 12 Plans for the biggest parade avef held in Portland were going far ward Thursday as civic commit tees mapped details of tha re ception for 15 British and Amr- -lean war heroes due here June 26. The io British and S American heroes are on a nation-wide tour to further war bond sale. -' CLARK IN SERVICE PENSACOLA, Fla. -. Lieut. ' Comm. George (Potsy) Clark, former professional football coach, has taken over duties a athletic officer at the "Annapoli ' of the Air" here, r O years old S2.40OT. t.2Srr cistusy DisriuiNtf co noi,r 1A VMfla ..f.- " To ' u. Il l