Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 07, 1943, Page 8, Image 8

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    i
y siodg
NEW YORK, May 7 W) Har
vard's announcement that it
won't play Intercollegiate foot
ball next fall surprised exactly
nobody hereabouts. And, as an
old Princeton grad, we might
comment: "It's not the first time
and we don't mean during
World war one, either."
SPRING PRACTICE
Taking a more serious look at
the football situation, a recent
note from the south points out
that a lot of the colleges down
that way would like to have
teams but may not be able to
support them unless they get
contributions from the state
treasuries . . . Report from the
Big Ten is that Ohio State, Iowa
and Indiana are the hardest hit
by player losses so far, Put a
listing of the Buckeyes who may
be back sounds like a pretty
promising squad from here . .
Colleges in all sections have
been reporting big spring turn
outs, but most of the boys just
wanted to get themselves tough
ened up for military service.
TODAY'S GUEST STAR
Gene Sullivan, St.' Joseph
(Mo.) News: "Lou Novikoff still
is on the west coast demanding
more money before he will re
port to the Cubs, but- practically
nothing has been carried on the
wires about him and the Chicago
papers mention the fact only
casually . . . After all, holding
out in North Africa means some
thing different from holding out
in the National league."
ONE-MINUTE SPORTS PAGE
Toledo golfers, who raised
$1600 last year in a tournament
to buy cigarettes for soldiers, are
planning another big event June
21 for a war prisoners' relief
fund. They hope to hit $2500
this time . . . Jack Hurley, Chi
cago fight promoter, hung
around the railroad station un-
' til 3:30 a. m. the other day wait
ing for Manager George Moore
to arrive so he could put in a
bid for Henry Armstrong's serv-
. ices.
'
SERVICE DEPT.
Pvt. Francis Smith, one of the
army fighters from Carlsbad,
N. M., who took part in the
derby eve show at Louisville, is
in a tough spot if he fails to
'; obey his second's orders. His
second is Col. William Lewis,
commanding officer of the Post
. . . Clinton Wager, six-foot, 6i
inch Chicago Bears end who was
drafted last fall just before the
pro league playoff, has been dis
charged from the army. . They
couldn't find a bunk long enough
for him.
Tulsa Club Sends
Baseballs to
Coast Guard Men
TULSA, Okla., May 7 (P
A quantity of baseballs, new
and' used, have been sent to the
Seattle, Wash., coast guard base
ball team by Don Stewart, presi
dent of the Tulsa club of the in
active Texas league.
The coast guard team, accord
ing to a request reaching Stew
art was out of spheres.
IDAHO TRACKFEST
MOSCOW, Idaho, May 7 (IP)
The central Idaho district high
school track meet will be held
here May 13 as originally sched
uled, J. A. (Babe) Brown of the
University of Idaho coaching
staff announced. Moscow took
the meet last year.
Knuckles
PM4& UP- US WON
i lSJAMes
Coast Teams
Scrap Over
Title Chase
Beavers Lead League, but
Doug Ford of Washington
Drops 'em 2 to 0 Thursday
NORTHERN DIVISION
STANDINGS
By The Associated Press
w
L
Pet.
Oregon State 10
Oregon 7
Washington 5
Wash State 4
3
3
3
8
8
.769
.700
.625
.333
.000
Idaho 0
The Northern division Pacific
coast conference baseball race
today still is pretty much of a
dog fight after yesterday's as
saults by Washington and Wash
ington State against the title bids
of the two Oregon members.
Until yesterday league lead
ing Oregon State had encount
ered smooth sailing on its North
ern invasion, taking two games
each from Washington State and
Idaho. But in Seattle big Doug
Ford set the Beavers down with
four hits in pitching Washington
to a 2 to 0 victory.
At Pullman Oregon failed to
gain any ground by dropping a
13-12 decision to Washington
State, the Webfoots' second de
feat at the hands of the Cougars.
Oregon State and Washington
will take the field again today at
Seattle with Don Cecil, ace
Beaver pitcher, opposing the
Husky from Yakima, Righthand
er Jack Crockett. Oregon goes to
Moscow today to open a two-
game series with Idaho.
In shutting out the Beavers
Ford allowed but one extra base
hit. The Huskies took a 1-0 lead
in the first inning by putting two
hits together, and added a clinch
er tally in the eighth on three
singles. Frahler held Washing
ton to six hits.
A single by Bob Rennick In
the 10th, scoring Wally Kramer
from second after two were
away, gave the Cougars their
fourth victory of the season.
WSC held an 8-2 in the third
inning, but Oregon had fought
into a 11-10 lead by the seventh
and added another in the eighth.
Then in the ninth the Cougars
put on some wild base running
and tied the score.
Weekend
Fishing
Prospects
PORTLAND, May 7 (IP) Al
though most Oregon streams
still are running high, fishing
will be better this weekend, the
state game commission forecast
today.
The county-by-county report in
the commission s weekly bul
letin:
Columbia Good catches of
trout being taken.
Lane McKenzie river yield
ing nice trout catches..
, Coos Best catches reported
from Ten Mile lakes and creek.
Curry Very good in southern
part. Spring run of Chinook
salmon continues in Rogue river
and record number of fish being
taken.
Lincoln Alsea and Yaqulna
rivers very good.
Tillamook Prospects good
Some limit catches in big Nes-
tucca. .
Jackson Upper Rogue good,
small streams fan.
Josephine Applegate and II
linois rivers yielding cutthroat
trout and Rogue river some sal
mon.
Deschutes Several limit
catches reported in North Twin
lake.
Down
SOiC OA SUOUSSBOMM
. 4Ve" 7My COWS,
7&e WjeoE&isrc...
iAr season rtj
Ortiz Retains
5 1
? ....... ..-ML. . 'm:ssm
Manuel Ortiz (left) of El Centro, Calif., gets set to land an
other hard punch to the face of his challenger, Lou Cordoia
(right) of Sacramento, Calif., in the fifth round of their bout at
Fort Worth, Tex. Ortii kayoed Cordoia In the sixth and trained
his world's bantamweight boxing crown.
KLAMATil SPORT NOTES
A dual track meet will be
held Wednesday and Thursday,
May 12 and 13, between the
KUHS freshmen and Klamath
Junior high on Modoc field.
There will also be a' grade
school track meet on the high
school track Friday, May 14,
with all grammar schools in the
city competing.
Houston Robison, Fsvirview
grade school physical education
instructor, did a swell job in
coaching his class A and B soft
ball teams. Both his teams walk
ed away as city champs in their
respective divisions.
. Lou and Jim Aiello ex-local
Softball players, were last re
ported in the navy with Lou
stationed somewhere in Aus
tralia, and Jim at Pearl Harbor.
Earl Brooks, former baseball
star for the Klamath Falls Peli
cans and Dorris Lumberjacks,
is reported by his wife to be
stationed somewhere in Iceland
with the navy.
Lee Mayfield, star tackle for
KUHS in 1938, is at present
employed by the city fire de
partment. Lee's keeping in
shape now by taking weight
lifting at a local gymnasium.
LEGION BASEBALL
The American Legion baseball
question is receiving a lot of
attention throughout the state
of Oregon, and it is almost cer
tain that it will be played this
summer. Nearly all the small
towns in the state are for its
continuance war or no war. Mr.
By The Associated Press
COAST LEAGUE
W
L Pet.
3 .800
7 .611
7 .563
8 .500
10 .444
10 .412
11 .353
10 .333 !
Los Angeles 12
San Diego 11
San Francisco 9
Portland 8
Oakland -. 8
Hollywood 7
Sacramento 6
Seattle 5
Results Yesterday
Los Angeles 2, Portland 0 (10
innings).
San Francisco 9, Seattle 1.
Sacramento 5, Oakland 4.
Hollywood 8, San Diego 0.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L
Pet,
New York 11
3
4
5
7
6
9
10
9
.786
.692
.583
.535
.455
.400
.286
.250
Cleveland ... 9
Detroit 7
Washington .......... 8
St. Louis 5
Philadelphia 6
Boston ..... 4
Chicago 3
Results Yesterday
New York 2-5, Boston 1-4.
Philadelphia 7, Washington
St, Louis 1, Detroit 0.
Cleveland 6, Chicago 3,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Brooklyn 10 4 .714
Cincinnati 7 8 .538
Pittsburgh 7 6 .538
St. Louis 7 6 .538
Boston 5 5 .500
Chicago 5 8 .385
New York 5 8, .385
Philadelphia : .'. 4 7 .364
Results Yesterday
Philadelphia 3, Brooklyn 2
(11 innings).
Chicago 5, St. Louis 1.
New York at Boston, post
poned.
SPLITS OOUBLEHEADER
McMINNVILLE, Ore., May 7
(VP) Willamette university still
headed the Northwest Confer
ence Baseball league today after
splitting a doubleheadcr yester
day with Llnfield. Linfield took
the first game, 9-4, breaking the
Bearcats' string of seven straight
victories, but Willamette hit ef
fectively and took good advant
age of seven Linfield errors to
take the nightcap 15 to 2.
Bantam Title
.' LaForge, commander of the
Legion here, has received a let
ter from the associate editor
of the Journal in Portland, in
which he states that Legion
baseball will be piayed this
summer in the stale of Oregon.
The Legion here has not
reached a verdict on the ques
tion; but there is still a possi
bility that they may pass on it,
Hundreds of letters are pour
ing into Portland newspaper
sports offices urging continu
ance. The sports editor of the Ore
gonian received one from the
American Legion at Albany
which reads:
"We baseball fans of Al
bany Post 10 stand ready to
back and move to get the
Junior baseball program start
ed this year. We're willing
to wager that the kids who
have been on Junior teams
in years past are now leaders
and spark plugs in Uncle
Sam's army and navy. Com
rade Zed Merrill, chairman of
their resolutions committee
stated that Post 10 had adopt
ed the resolution urging the
continuance of American Le
gion ball this year."
It won't be long now until
the season opens and the Le
gion clubs swing into action.
This is one year of all years
we in Klamath Falls should
have Legion ball since the old
er boys are in the armed forces.
We would appreciate letters like
those received in Portland, and
anyone wanting to plug it should
make it a point to write the
sports editor of the News-Herald.
Boys 17 years and under
will warmly welcome the re
turn of American Legion ball to
this city.
Cellar Room Phillies Perform
inor Miracle Just Having Team
By JUDSON BAILEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
The Philadelphia Phillies, who
have been the butt of many bad
jokes, are now making the bad
jokers say "but . , ."
The Phillies are in the Nation
al league cellar, as expected,
but
Manager Bucky Harris and
owner Bill Cox have succeeded
in collecting a reasonable fac
simile of a baseball club. At least
it looks more like a ball club
than the door mat of recent
years.
They have beaten the first
place Brooklyn Dodgers in three
outs of nine games and, consid
ering the masterminding that
Harris has had to do to even get
a team on the field, this is a
minor miracle.
At any rate the Phillies halved
a four game series just complet
ed in Brooklyn, winning a tight,
ten-inning tussle yesterday 3-2.
John Podgajny held the Dodgers
to five hits and in the tenth
Glen Stewart tripled and came
home with the winning run on a
fly.
Their victim was Buck New
som, who previously had won
two without a setback. He pitch
ed six-hit ball and fanned nine,
but it wasn't good enough. The
Phillies now have won four of
11 games. Last year they won
only three of their first 15.
In the only other National
league game yesterday the St.
Louis Cardinals were cuffed
again by the Chicago Cubs, 5-1,
and lost their exclusive hold on
second place. Hiram Blthorn,
scoring his third victory against
one defeat, pitched seven hit ball
and had a shutout till the ninth.
The New York Yankees sent
the Boston Red Sox away from
Yankee stadium bruised and
Angels Shut
Portlanders,
Seals Go Up
Large Hometown Audience
Sees Boavers Beaten by
Los Angoles Men, 2 to 0
By Th Associated Press
Crowds have ever been dear
to tho hearts of baseball players
and a sturdy opening day throng
of 14,000 Portlanders apparently
was much, to tho liking of tho
Los Angeles Angels,
For today the Angels had
moved into a full two game lead
by virtue of a ten-inning 2 to
0 shutout win over the Portland
Beavers.
It was tho second lariiost
crowd of tho young season, top
ped on tho const only by the
15,700 more or less who viewed
tho Snn Francisco-Hollywood
debut in Seals stadium.
Another opening of nolo took
place in Scattlo whore San Fran
cisco truniplcd home town prido
by drubbing the Rniniers 9 to 1
before 5000 fans. The Seals,
moving into third place with the
victory, collected 10 hits off four
Seattle pitchers, while Hay Hor
rell poled out eight binglcs, well
scattered. Today Bob Joyco
will take the mound for the
O'Doulmen against tho Seattle
ace right handcr, Farmer Hal
Turpin. .
At Portland the fans saw nino
innings of shutout ball cracked
in the overtime frame by Angel
Outfielder Andy Pafko's long
range two bagger which fell in
the temporary bleachers in left
field. It brought in Bill Schust
er with Pafko scoring tho second
run minutes later on a lofty fly
ball.
Sacramento stopped the Oak
land winning spree 5 to 4 when
Earl Peterson walloped a homo
run over center field fence in
the seventh.
Hollywood humiliated the vis
iting San Diego Padres for the
third straight day, 8 to 0, in their
current upward, ever upward,
campaign. Eddie Erautt con
strained the Padres to seven hits
while the Stars collected 15 off
Al Olsen and Frank Dasso.
Lou Novikoff
In Baseball
Doghouse
CHICAGO, May 7 (IP) Lou
Novikoff, the Chicago Cubs'
.300 hitter last year, moved
farther back into the doghouse
today after Ford Frick, presi
dent of the National league,
placed him on baseball's Inelig
ible list.
Novikoff was automatically
suspended under the code which
calls for a player to report with
in 10 days after the start of
the championship season or face
ineligibility. James T. Gallagh
er, the Cubs general manager,
advised Frick of tho lapse after
the Mad Russian had held out
47 days for a $10,000 contract.
Novikoff the major leagues'
only holdout, reported from his
Long Beach, Calif., quarters yes
terday that he wished the Cubs
would sell or trade him. He
called his offer of $6000 "an
insult."
groggy from four consecutive
one-run defeats. The American
league leaders bagged a double
headcr 2-1 and 5-4 to conclude
the series.
The first game was a duel be
tween Ernie Bonham of the
Yanks and Lefty Oscar Judd,
but Charley Keller settled it on
Bonham's favor with a triple in
the seventh, scoring on a long
fly by Joe Gordon.
However, the nightcap was
nightmare. Rookie Tom Byrne
started on the mound for the
Yanks, faced five men and failed
to get any of them out, Before
Bill Zuber could come to his res'
cue he had forced two runs
across with a walk and Tony Lu
picn singled off Zuber for two
more. This ended the scoring for
tho Sox, who made only four
hits, and the Yanks didn't get a
run till the seventh. But in the
eighth Dick Ncwsome loaded the
bases and all scored, Relief
Pitcher Mace Brown forcing in
the tying run with a walk. A
wild throw by Brown in the
ninth gave the Yanks the decid
ing run.
The St. Louis Browns downed
Detroit for the first time this
season in a classic 1-0 contest in
which the winning run was
scored in the ninth on George
McQuinn's triple and a fly. Den
nis Galchousc of the Browns and
Lefty Hal Ncwhouscr of the Tig
ers each pitched five-hit ball. .
Roger Wolff also hurled a
When In Medford
Stay at
HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modern
Joe and Anne Earlty
Proprietors
i'A(.;e eight
High School
Track Meet
Opens Today
EUGENE, May 7 (?) The
innuul Oregon high school
track tournament opened here
lodny with preliminary ovpnts
this morning and finals this
afternoon,
A total of 109 prop track
men were entered.
The entry list was cut in
halt by elimination of second
placo winners in tho oighth
district meets of lust week.
Seven defending champions,
s record, will bo on hand:
Nlcdormeyer of Modford in
the polo vault, Bocchl of
Klnmnth Falls In tho high
lump, Dlpplo of Medford in
Iho century, Heucock of Sou
lido In tho javelin, Krnuso o(
Cottago Grovo in tho quarter
mile, Dryson of Ontario on
tho low hurdles and Burgher
of Ontario in tho furlong.
Horse Fans
View Entries
To Preakness
By SID FEDER
BALTIMORE, May 7 (IP) A
field of five horses headed by
Count Fleet and Including one
"surprise package," Radio Mor
ale, who couldn't even como
close in a cheap selling race
was entered today for tomor
row's 53rd running of tho his
toric Preakness at Pimlico.
In addition to Radio Moralo
and Count Fleet, who Is a pro
hibitive choice to follow up his
Kentucky derby win with a
romp in the milc-ond-thrcc-six-tcenths
preakness, the entries
also included Blue Swords, hope
of Allen Simmons of Akron,
Ohio; Vincentive, owned by W.
L. Brann, ., veteran Maryland
breeder, and New Moon, from
the barn of Henry L, Straus of
Reisterstown, Md.
BALTIMORE, May 7 (P)
Radio Morale, owned by the
King ranch of R. J. Kleberg of
Texas and a woeful seventh In a
$2500 claiming race in his last
start, was the first horset entered
today for tomorrow's 53rd run
ning of tho $50,000 added Preak
ness stakes at Pimlico.
The surprise entry of the
three-year-old son of Hllltown,
who did not get to the post as a
two-year-old in 1942 and has
managed to finish as well as
third just once in six starts this
spring, was telephoned to Plm
lico from New York by Trainer
Max Hirsch.
He named Israel Garza, a Tex
as youngster, as the jockey.
Second horse in tho"cntry box
for the mile and thrcc-slxtccnths
classic, for which Count Flcot is
the prohibitive favorite, was the
Maryland Hope, Vincontive,
from tho barn of W. L. Brann,
Maryland breeder.
Fifth, in the entry box was the
Count himself.
shut-out, stopping the Washing
ton Senators 7-0 for the Philadel
phia Athletics.
The Cleveland I n d 1 a n i en
trenched themselves more
strongly In second place by beat
ing the Chicago White Sox 6-3
behind the steady pitching of
Southpaw Al Smith,
California Boxing
Commission To ."
Hold Tournament1
LOS ANGELES, May 7-WV-The
California Boxing commis
sion, going ahead with Its plans
to hold a lightweight elimination
tournament In Los Angeles this
summer, announced today it
would not recognize a proposed
Beau Jack-Juan Zurlta bout here
for tho title.
Los Angeles promoters offered
Jack, recognizee In New York as
the tltleholder, $30,000 to .moot
Zurlta, but he asked for $50,000.
PORTLAND BOXING
PORTLAND, Oro May 7 IP)
Tho National Boxing club's card
tonight will feature a triple main
event with Red Nybcrt, Los An
geles, and young Otto, Portland,
in the heavyweight bout; Joey
Dolnn, Portland, against Buddy
Spencer, Los Angeles, bantam
weights, and Lige Drew, Los An
geles, against Davey Ward, Ta
coma, welterweights. All are 10
rounders. TRUCKS FOR RENT
You Drive Move Yourssll
Save H Long and
Short Trips
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East Main
Muy 7, UMt.
Harvard Out
Of Gridiron
Competition
CAMBRIDGE, Moss., May
VP) Disregarding tho hopeful
latitudes of most of Its tin (II
tional rivals, Harvard, for the
third time in its 69-year-old foot
bull history, today was out of
intercollegiate gridiron conipetl
lion.
Announcement Hint Harvard
has suspended formal football
for tho duration, an action that
hns been expected slnco Head
Conch Dick Harlow, most of his
coaching aides and Athletlo Di
rector Bill Bingham entered tho
armed services months ago, was
murto by Carroll F. Gt'tchcll,
acting manager of the Athletic
association.
Buck In 1885, when college
football was being developed In
uio cast, tho Crimson was order
rd to drop tho gnmo because
tho faculty considered It "too
rough to bo a sport," Tho
second interruption, in 1917-18
resulted from tho first World
war.
BOWLING
Monday evening was tho final
night for tho Booster league
oowiers.
Final standings are as follows
(for team series), Safeway Stores
were first with a 2839 score.
Pepsi-Cola second with 2813 and
Pacific Fruit and Produce third
with 2733. High team singlo
game was taken by Klamath
Machine and Locomotive with a
score of 1001, second was Cart
ers Fine Foods with 962 and
Coca-Cola was third with 052
Indlvldunl final high 3-gome
series was taken by Soverson
with 610 and second plnce wni
a tio between Dn liner and
Graves with 969. High singlo
game went to Jncobscn with
276, second was Kllevor with
230 and third was taken by
Haselwood.
BOOITSN LSAOUI
OOM'Oeli
, IAI 111
Itt IIS
IK III
IM
in im
.IM IM
n. Onnlna
McKlmy ...
II. Woluna
B. (Innlon
Flo Kale
llantlkap
Total
(II 790
Itltwlr Slortf
K. HtjtrHnion IM. IM
A. Harriott IM no 19
Urn i.ui lis IM
llrmi 10: IM im
jo rUfk i it
lUnitlctp M 94 94
ToUl
.lit l 191 IM)
Pallfll rrull Co.
IM
Ivtrnrin
Fniln
Ammlftt
llalrlwnotl
lUmllfap .
IW III
IS Itl
l! tOI
.IMI 177
M U
7l Ml 119
Ptpil-Oeli
l l(t HS
t 201 UA
IM IM IJ9
111 91 l7
I7 III
I10 110 110
Tomb!
Arthur
Dilution!
Mtukonf .
TrUnri
lUntlkap
Totil
,.u wt lit u:i
KUmath MwhliM ntf Uoomotln
Klin IM !i Ml
J.oliHO H7 IS7 I7
KIHvfr 1ST 1" l
Mnnli IM " I"
rinlmrr "I IM
llnnilkap !
Total -
R. Cartar
Oravfi
Wrlla
Kaatburn
Soulliwrll
Handicap
Hill. Ml 1091
Oarlar'l Pino fooda
"it 111 t
' l0 IU
109 101 101
.149
III IM
195 III
II7
99
99
.791 111 990 ltd
Holdout Catcher
Joins Hollywood
Baseball Squad .
SAN FRANCISCO, May 7 (IP)
Bill Brenzcl, holdout catcher of
the Hollywood Bnjcball , club,
said todoy.he had agreed to
terms and would-join the team
at Hollywood Saturday. , ,
Bronzcl came to terms after a
telephone conversation with
Charley Root, manager of tho
Stars, last night. Ho is a first
string catcher; expected to add
punch to tho club. Ho has been
working, hero. ' ;
Jessup To Box
Henry Armstrong ,
, .BOSTON, May 7 (II Tommy
Jessup, sensational Springfield
(Mass.) negro welterweight, will
muko his major boxing debut tho
hard way against Hnmmerln'
Henry Armstrong, ring history's
only triple champion, tonight In
a 10-round bout at tho Boston
garden. . ,
DANCE at SKATELAND
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
REGULAR PRICES
PAPPY GORDON'S
HILL BILLY ORCHESTRA
Auspices V.F.W.
Qualifying
Heats Run
At Eugene
Seaside, Hlllsbora Men s
Turn In Bost Times in
Hurdlos at State Prep Go
EUGENE, May 7 (I1) Turner
of Seaside high school and Me
Enlco of Hillsboro turned in best
Unit's this morning in qiiiillfylng
hen In in tho l'JO-yiml and 200
yard high and low hurdles of the
annual state prep track mid fluid
muut.
Withdrawal of one mun euch '
from the 100 and 220 yard dashes '
made qualifying heals luiinitccs-
sury in tluisa events, leaving
only seven niiinors in each,
Turner won tho .first heat lit
the 120-yard high huidlos in 10
seconds flat, Davles of La v
Grando was second In 1(1:02, H.
Plidcly of Hood lilver third 111 -i
1(1:011. Clark of Corvitllls with-"
drow. ta
Husky of Grants Puss won the
second licut In tho same ovvnt
in 17:02. Moon of SllvcrUm
was second in 17:0(1, lliilfivltl of
Myrtle Point third In IU flat.
Gvppman of Mllwiiuklo with
drew. Dyson of Ontario won tho first
heat of tho 200-yiird high hurdles
In 23:04 saconds. Mooro of Co-V
qulllo was second in 23:00. Kuuf- v
man of Mulalla third in 20 .
flul, Brunch of Tuft withdrew.
In tho second heat McEnleo of ,
Hlllsbora covered tho distance.
and obstacles in 2-1:1)11 seconds. t
Lathrop of Grunts Pass wus oc-(
oik! lu 25, Anderson of Cmiby .
third In 23:00 and Puddy of,
Hood River fourth in 20. ,'
Finn lists In tho high hurdles
are Turner, uavies, ruddy,
Husky, Moon and Hatfield; in.
tha low hurdles Dyson, Moore, !
McEntee, Luthrop, Andcrunf
and cither Kaufman or Puddy.''
The times of the latter two were .
tho same and (hey will draw "
for tho sixth position.
It was announced that Mulone '
of Hnrrlsburg had withdrawn
from the 100-yurd dnsh and Slier-
rell of Hood River from the
220, making diminutions im-1
necessary In those evonts. '
Fleet's Jockey :
Now a ,New Father
NEW YORK. May 7 (P) Mrs. ;.
Hazel Longden, 10-ycar-old wife I
of Jockey Johnny Longden who f
rode Count Fleet to victory In
tho Kontucky derby Inst Sutur-s
day, gave birth to a nine pound, 4
nine ounco boy In Mury Im-1
maculnto hospital Into lust night, l
Twenty-five minutes before ItUSf
son was born, Longden had ta -,
catch a train for Baltimore
where he will ride the Count
In the preakness Saturday. '
Always roud tho classified ads.
rOMI'ANV ot rrancleee. Ift ft
Inurnct v-mmi""i-i - .
' "' ".. a a. aa. M
all ' 4
lawal
Mat ptamlumi racalvad SW
IM Iba aar
.IMII.IIl.t '
Intaraat, .IHdilaiiaa ana r.m. - ,
raealvaA aurini ma .. - 4
loooma (10m omar aoutcta
racatvaa aunns r'r
11.111. IS
T.lal Inaom H,H4.l7a.W .
IHakianvmtlltt
Hat loaa paid durlnf ma a
xaar Ineluams anjuaiman"
aiDanaaa .
p.M.nt and Mlirl,,
paid during ma jmmr ... 1,.--.
Tasaa, llcanaaa and laaa paid
dullm ma jraar "
DlvlJtnda paid M aa.pltl
ateek during tha Taar .. IH.ICI.O,
Amount ot all olhar aapandl-
luraa '
Tot ill
ipflfrlltiirM ll,ll,H0.O
Art milted AmiM
ViW f real (! owned .
(ntftrket thud TiT.tv.-
Lone on mortgftiei I
Ultra,, ett ti.iis.n
Value of bondi owned (amor-
Miert) 1,141, llf.H A
Value of e toe he owned (mar-
ket va ue TIMM.ee
Caett tn ban Ite and on hand lii.ttl.O
Framlume In oouree of eol
leetlon written el nee Hep
Umber 10. 1141 ITM1T.M -T
Intereat and rente due and i
accrued II, III. U ..
Other aiaeti (net) Ift.l4i.ll
Total admltlarl aaaala
l.lalilllllra
Oroaa alalma lor loaaaa us-
paid I lli.TII.M
Amount of tinaarnad pramt-
uma on all outatannlnt
rlak 1, 111.191.
"0
Qua fnr eommlailon and bra
karaita 11.060.11 :
All otliar llablllll 179.tll.1T a
Total Ilablllllta. aioapt
capital Il.lll.lll.il ,i
Qtpltal paid up It. 000.000. Oft
Surplua ovar all llablllllai , 1,171, Til. IT "
,"
Surplua aa raiarda poller-
noldar Il.l7l.7ll.tr
""V i. ll.HT.IJO.il l
lllia Raa In nrnn Inr Ilia V
Nat prntnhima racalvad dur
lnf tha yaar a i, aia aa
Nat loaaaa paid durlm Ilia ' v-
yaar aa tai ai
Namo of Company, Tha Callfornl in- k
aurnnca Gimnin,.
Nama of I'raahlant, J. O. nunyan. &
Nama of Socralary, William Mnllar.
Statutory raaldant ,nAPn.. . ........ 9.
Ik
... .w,ii,,Baianar.
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