Jeff Today At i$r ts Filty poundi heavier than when he knocked out Bob Fiti simmons lo win world cham pionship. June 9. 1899. James J. Jeffries meets 68th birthday with a big smile and good cigar. Boilermaker Jim keeps busy on Burbank, Calif., farm, where he stages amateur fights in barn. vCoastBall Attendance Skyrockets Pacific Baseball Throngs Laid to Pennant Prospects, Good Weather, More Pay By FRANK KUEST : LOS ANGELES, May 5 VP) More spending money on the west coast than since the days of '49. good weather and pros- pects of a wide-open pennant race are booming attendance in the Pacific Coast league parks. More than 88,000 attended the first week of baseball on the Pacific coast, says President W, C. Tuttle, despite the fact that dimout regulations killed night baseball which used to operate five times a week, Saturday's and Sundays excepted, and pro vide the bulk of the revenue. That first week of prosperity topped last season s by more than 25,000. And last week's paid admissions nudged the 80,- 000 mark, topped by an b-K-u crowd of 11,200 at Hollywood, 11,000 at Oakland, 8000 at San Diego and 5000 at Sacramento. San Francisco's ball park has held the largest crowd, 15,422. Portland and Seattle will ap pear at their home' parks for the first time today and there is no reason to suspect slack attend ance in those two war-boomed towns. Girls' PE Classes To Hold Play-Day Thursday afternoon at 2:30 p. m., the girl's physical educa- tion classes of the city grade schools will hold a softball play. day at Roosevelt school. One hundred and eighty. girls will participate and they will be divided into groups A and B with each teain. representing a different color. This play day tournament will be under the di rection of Mrs. Luela Sanders of Roosevelt and Mrs. Frieda Kem- nitzer of Riverside. Assisting them will be other physical edu cation teachers in other grade schools throughout the city. Willamette Tops Northwest Baseball Championship Race SALEM, Ore., May 5 (IP) Willamette university today is at the top of the heap in the race for the northwest conference baseball title, chalking up "two" in the win column yesterday by playing only one game. Pacific university arrived late for a scheduled doubleheadcr and forfeited the first game. Willamette pounded out a 13-1 decision in the second. Wil lamette Is defending league champion Harvard Gridders Play High School In Spring Battle CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 8 (VP) Because there is no col legiate opposition available and not because of last fall's record of two victories in nine lames Harvard's football squad will close seven weeks of spring practice Friday by playing Med ford high school. The Preps, un defeated eastern Massachusetts lltlcholders last fall, have been drilling tile past two months.'- Sports '"j Briefs F Hugh Fullarton, JrA Ji jF , t.y mM ttmrmM NEW YORK, May 5 (VP) The new major league baseball, which will be distributed to the clubs in a few days, is about as lively as the one the Southern association uses . . . And the Southern league always has in sisted on plenty of pep in the pills so there'd be plenty of guys with big batting averages to sen at the end of each season Lou Coleman of Spalding's says that the production line will be rolling by today so that there's no danger of a shortage the rest of the season. ' CONFESSION When Ex-Heavyweight Champ Chalky Wright, who always thought training was getting aboard a train, turned up at the gym yesterday for the first time m seven weeks, Mike Belloise greeted him: "What are you do ing here, Chalky? Are you sick?" . ,"No," admitted Chalky gravely, "I'm just hungry." CONSOLING THOUGHT When Burnt Cork struggled home last in the Kentucky der by, his owner, Rochester (who probably was the only person there watching the nag) remark- j ed: "He's sure tired, ain't he." , And a friend offered this bit of consolation: "Don't you wor ry, Rochester. They s been more money lost here today on Burnt Cork than was won on Count Fleet." ..'.' SHORTS AND SHELLS A couple of baseball's prize off-season jobs are held by Braves' rookies. Connie Creedon is a detective and Ben Geraghty is superintendent of a cemetery, . . They both-want it under stood that they don't work at those jobs during the summer. The New York boxing commis sion won t name a favored con tender for-Willie Pep's feather weight title until May 20. ' TODAY'S GUEST STAR Alex Shults, Seattle (Wash.) Times:" "Gosh, perhaps the um pires have some friends, after all . . . After insuring its players against accidents or injuries, the Shipyards Baseball league is in vestigating the prospects of tak ing out policies on its arbiters, too." SERVICE DEPT. Broadway Charley Wagner. who owned as many as 42 suits when he played for the Red Sox, gets along with three suits of blues and one of dungarees at the Norfolk naval training sta tion . . . Coast Guardsman Henry Bingham, rated as the best mid dleweight prospect to appear in Baltimore in a long tune, learned boxing in Lieut. Jack Dempsey's classes at Manhattan Beach . Add confusion: Colonel Mills (better known as Buster when he was a big league outfielder) now is a lieutenant. But don't call him Lieut. Colonel Mills. Oregon Leads All In War Production Training Classes PORTLAND, May 5 P Ore gon leads the nation in the war production training . Droeram with slightly more than 10 per cent oi tne state's population en rolled in classes. fao reported Director O. T. Paulson to the Oregon advisory wuuiuiiee nere. tie said total enrollment is 113.000. Washing ton is second among states with 8 per cent of the population .en rolled. x n e committee announced new training programs in min ing, transportation and lnmhr. ing, including courses for fallers and buckers. Job instni ptnr classes nave been expanded and now include Roseburg, Medford, Klamath Falls, Grants Pass, Pen- meion ana Tne Dalles. KUHS Trackmen Ready for State Meet This Weekend Two track men, 'Jim Bocchl and Dick Vaillancour will rep resent KUHS at the state high school track meet at Eugene this naay, may v. uoach Deller, Frank Ramsey, Joe Peak and "Baldy" Foster will make the trip and are leaving Thursday night. Preliminaries are to be held Friday morning at 11 a. m., with the regular meet starting promptly at 2 p. m. the same day. ; , . The high school bnxlnff nnrl wrestling team has finished a highly successful year under the instructing of Coach Front Ramsey. The last track meet of th current year will be held Friday, May 14, at Bend, under tho 11. lights at the high school field. LINFIELD BEATEN ' McMINNVILLE. Ore.. Mov n (IP) The University of Portland converted four hits Into three runs yesterday to defeat Linfietd college's baseball team 3. to 1. Linfield got five hits. Lyons -- -rwsrwrMmi,a- Ted Lyons, (left, foreground) his hand with a bayonet in a drill with Capt. Dick Hyland (right), former Stanford university football star at Navy pier In Chicago. Enlisted personnel gets some pointers from the two officers. Lyons went on active duty at the pier with the marine detachment here after being assigned to Chicago from Quantico, Va. ' Mad Russian As Season Goes on Without Him By JUDSON BAILEY Associated Press Sports Writer The most interested non-par ticipating observer of the goings- on in the major leagues these days must be Louis Novikoff, fuming on the front porch of his hacienda at South Gate, Cali fornia. The Mad Russian is a holdout and he's mad. More precisely: He is angry, not crazy--at least not to the extent of overlooking the Chicago Cubs scraping bot tom in the standings of the Na tional league today. The Cubs introduced last year's ball to Chicago for the first time yesterday and 3908 fans, the biggest crowd of the day, saw a game in which there were 25 hits for a total of 36 bases and 14 runs. But fortun ately from the Chicago stand point, 15 of the hits, including a home run by Whitey Kurowski.-l were made by the St. Louis Cardinals, who won 11-3. The Mad Russian probably rushed madly to answer the tele phone every time it rang last night -expecting the operator to say long- distance Chicago call ing." The call seems bound to come soon. Novikoff was one of eight hitters who averaged .300 or bet ter in the National league last year. He was reported to have been paid $5500 and to have been offered a boost of $500 this season. He asked for $10,000 and so far General Manager Jim Gallagher has refused to com promise, insisting that the Cubs could get along without the col orful clouter. The vacancy filled by the Cubs Balls May Be From Baiting NEW YORK, May 5 UP) Comparison of the batting aver ages of the National and Ameri can leagues may or may not re flect the difference between the 1942 official baseball now being used in the former and the new balata ball with which clubs in the latter loop are playing. But it remains that the hitters in the National league, who in previous seasons usually have trailed the marks set by the slug gers in the junior circuit, -now have better marks than those in the American league. The leading hitter In the ma jor leagues at the moment is lit Fairview Drops Pelican to Win B Ball Championship The class B grade school championship was decided last night when Fairview defeated Pelican 15 to 5. The first inning spelled disaster for Pelican as Fairview scored 7 runs. Out side of this spasm a close game was played by both sides. Lead ing hitters for Fairview were Smith, Ossiandcr, T. Thornton and Scott, with each getting two safeties. Pelican's leading hitter was Simons, who drove out a home run in the fifth, for Fair- view, i The lineups: Pelican AB R, H. Russell 4 11 Hotchkin 4 0 0 Clark 4 0 0 Hawkins 3 1 1 Coats 3 0 0 Nunez ...... . 3 1 1 Rose 3 1 1 Muskopf 3 0 0 Bacon 3 0 0 Simons 2 1,1 '-,;:;.'.-:; 32 4 '"' 5 Tries Pitching With former White Sox pitcher now Gets Madder, and the Giants In the National league basement was left by the Philadelphia Phillies, who vault ed pretentiously into sixth place by beating the Brooklyn Dodgers 3-1 in a twilight game. Jack Kraus, the rookie south paw whom the Dodgers sent to the Phillies a few weeks ago. pitched five-hit ball for his sec ond -success against Brooklyn In rebuttal Rube Melton, the former Philly ace, pitched a no hitter for six stanzas, but Earl Naylor spoiled it with a home run, his second of the season, to open the seventh. The Giants were shipped 5-3 by the Boston Braves as Jim Tobin pitched six-hit ball and batted in three runs with a pair of singles. Rookie Charley Work man helped out with a two-run homer. Pittsburgh was outhit by Cin cinnati 13-9, but nevertheless beat the Reds 8-3 as Rookie Xavler Rescigno worked his way out of continual jams. Vince Di Maggio contributed a home run with one on. In the American league the New York Yankees kept half a step ahead of Cleveland by beat ing the Boston Red Sox 4-3. Spud Chandler allowed only six hits and one earned run for his second win. : The Indians squeezed out a 2-1 decision over the White Sox in a tight game for Jim Bagby's third triumph. He allowed just five hits and no scoring after the first frame. Virgil Trucks of Detroit also achieved his third victory with out a defeat as the.Tigers stopped Compared Averages tle Lonnie Frey of the Cincinnati Reds with an average of .467. His lifetime mark in 10 years in the National league before this season is .272. Danny Litwhller of the Phil lies, with .409, anoClyde Kluttz of the Boston Braves are also in the .400 class among players who have been at bat 20 or more times. Kluttz' average is even .400. Top man In the American Is Vernon Stephens of the St. Louis Browns with .448 and the only other hitter in the .400 bracket Is Pinky Higglns of Detroit, with .414. Fairview , AB R. H. Bowers 2 1 1 Schoentheler 4 2 1 Smith 5 2 2 Joplin 4 2 2 Ossiander 5 2 2 Whitney 5 2 1 T. Thornton, 3 2-2 J. Thornton ................ 4 2 1 W. Scott 3 0 2 Ring- 10 0 Meyers 0 0 0 34 15 13 Box score: Fairview 7 0 3 1 4 0 015 Pelican 0 2 10 1105 Tonight on the high school field, Roosevelt will play Fair view for the championship of class A division, t TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yourself Save Is Long and Short Trips STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 East Main Bayonet a lieutenant In the marines, tries Madder. the St. Louis Browns 4-3, but he had to have hitless rescue work for 1 23 innings by Dizzy Trout to weather a belated offensive by the Browns. The Philadelphia Athletics matched the Phils and also climbed to sixth place, the Mack men defeating the Washington Senators, 3 to 1, behind the three-hit pitching of their Mex ican rookie, Jesse Flores. Flores now has worked 32 23 innings and allowed only 11 blows and three runs. OSC Track Team Meets Washington CORVALLIS, May 5 (P) Oregon State college's 1943 track team, victor over Oregon 6 to 2 in the annual relays two weeks ago, will meet the Wash ington cindermon here Saturday in the first regulation dual meet for OSC. Best race is expected to be the 880-yard canter which will pit Gene Swanzey, husky captain and defending coast champion against OSC's Bill Shinn and Stu Norene. Shinn is a junior lctterman who was outstanding as a sophomore last spring. Nor ene is a sophomore from last years rook squad. - Chief threat of the Beavers Is Capt. Don Findlay, Coast confer ence broadjump champ. Last year he won both the broad and high jump in the Washington meet. He also may run the 100- yard dash. By The Associated Press PACIFIC COAST W L Pet. Los Angeles 11 3 .786 San Diego 11 9 .688 Portland 8 7 .533 San Francisco .... 8 7 .533 Oakland 7 9 .438 Seattle 5 9 .357 Hollywood 5 10 .333 Sacramento 5 10 .333 Yesterday's Results Oakland 5, Sacramento 2. Hollywood 10, San Diego 9. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE W' L 3 4 3 5 6 6 8 ,8 Pet. Brooklyn '. . 9 .750 .636 .625 .583 .500 .333 .273 .273 St. Louis 7 Boston .. 5 Pittsburgh 7 Cincinnati 6 Philadelphia 3 Chicago 3 New York 3 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 3, Brooklyn 1 St. Louis 11, Chicago 3. Pittsburgh 8, Cincinnati 3. Boston 5, New York 3. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. Now York 8 3 .727 Cleveland 7 3 .700 Detroit 6 4 .600 Washington 7 6 .538 St. Louis 4 5 .444 Philadelphia 5 8 .385 Boston 4 7 .364 Chicago 2 7 .222 Yesterday's Results New York 4, Boston 3. Cleveland 2, Chicago 1. Philadelphia 3, Washington 1. Detroit 4, St. Louis 3. When in Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earloy Proprietors . North Coast Teams Open Home Stand Portland, Soattlo Ploy Today; Ducks Rido Third Place; Chances Good By The Associated Press ' Portland and Seattle will open their first homo stands toduy in the young Pacific Const leuguo season, and for northern funs tho piutui'o seems considerably askew. Portland, not ovcrflush with baseball prosperity In season's past, Is riding serenely along In third place with a great chimco to Improve tholr position, before tho homo town fans, against thu league lending Angols. Howover tho ftalnlors, for many seasons right in the discus sion when tho championship was being argued, are clear down In sixth plnco and a not too secure sixth place at that. Manager Bill Skiff of Soattlo will send Joe Dcmornn to tho mound today against tho San Francisco Seals and the rod-hot Rainier fans aro praying tho newcomer can start tho club on tho long trail back up. Demoran lost three straight games In tho south by one run margins, while turning In the team's best earned run perform ance. Ills defeats were a plain case- of tho Rulntors not being uble to get those base hits when they meant runs. Ray Hurrell will start for tho Seals and spe cial guests in the stands will be tho governor general of Can ada, the Earl of Athlone, and his wife, Princess Alice. At Portland, Jack Wilson who pitched for tho Boston Red Sox last year, will be on the mound In on attempt to keep the Beav ers baseball fortunes riding high. Against him tho Angels will pit Paul Gehrman. In games yesterday Hollywood defeated San Diego 10 to 9 to give the idle Angels a full game lead. A triple by pinch hitter Babe Herman in tho last of the ninth gave the Stars their vic tory. . . ,' Sacramento, in the only other game, sank into a tie for cellar honors with Hollywood by drop ping a 5-2 decision to Oakland. GRANT EKES WIN PORTLAND, May S (IP) Franklin high school's long string of victories ended yester day as Grant high eked out a 3-2 baseball win to take over the lead of the Portland Intcrscholostlc league. Franklin's consecutive wins included 7 In football, 16 in basketball and 20 In baseball. ...You can spot it every time TT THETHER In a sport or anything else, you can VV always pot the fellow Just to drink ice-cold Coca-Cola is to understand why it is the best-liked soft drink on earth. Many make soft drinks. Only The Coca-Cola Company produces Coca-Cola. The finished art of long experience gives it exceptional goodness. This delicious drink offers More than just quenching thirst, it adds refreshment . . . refreshment that goes into energy. The only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself. You've found that out already, haven't you? It's natural for popular names to acquire friendly abbreviations. , That's why you hear Coca-Cola called Coke. Both mean the same thing.,. "coming from a single source, end well known to the community". rxft. SOmtD UN01K AUTHORITY Of THI COCA-COU COMPANY tV COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS BBS Spring St. Phone 8632 I'AGli 101GIIT Ducks Open Campaign in Palouse Hills OSC's Four Straight- Wins Over Men From North Glvo Oregon Men High Rosolvos NORTHERN DIVISION W. Oregon : 7 Oregon Stnto ...10 Washington 4 Wash, Stnto 2 Idaho 0 The University of Oregon opens It.i I'lilou.to Hills northern division baseball campaign to day 0Kaln.it Washington State and tho Webfoots havo some thing to shoot at in tho record of the Oregon Stnto Beavers who yesterday left for Seattle with four straight victories ovor WSC and Idaho. Oregon lakes on tho Cougnrs today and tomorrow and meets Idaho Friday and Saturday. Ore gon State closes out its northern trip against Washington tomor row, and Oregon can afford no slips on Its northern excursion In withstanding tho challenge of the rampaging Delivers, who yes terday downed Idaho, 5 to 4, Every Oregon Stater got at least one hit, but tho runs were sprend over four Innings. Tho only extra bnso blows were doubles by Roclnndt of Oregon Stnto and Pyno of Idaho. Frnzer limited Idaho to six lilts and was ahead all the way, striking out the final Idaho bntler In the ninth with tho tying run on second. Should YOU Drive the Car in Your Garage 7 AFTER JUNE 1 You may be requlrod to PROVE Financial Responsibility IF YOU HAVE AN AUTO ACCIDENT Do You Know How the New Oregon Financial Responsibility Act Will Affect YOU? We Will Be Glad To Explain It Simply and Fully WALTON 408 Main who has the edge. a taste all its own No ntsd to tighten up over studies. A pause now end then for Ice-cold Coke relaxes the tension brings you bock to the task refreshed. 5 0 4 The best is always the better buy! May r, 1013 Tough Luck 7 V' 1' r a .571 w.rZr- J. 1 b .200 1 0 .000 F i'-W I Mm' Him Hj& iy " ii- Clyde McCulloufjh, above, broke bone In his loft ankle sliding Into second on stolonC base as Pittsburgh chaied Paul Derringer and blanked Chicago Cubs, 6-0. Cub catcher will be out month. INSURANCE AGENCY Phone 6331 Y r I P .viiii'VrtV .,l(i'lll'l''lliii,iliV.lhlpi...i.i. in ! Ill' -'.If .'.ItlLI'ililltil'