Doddering Dodgers Hang On to Lead Over Raging Redbirds By 3 to 2 Win By JUDSON BAILEY Associated Press Sports Writer The St. Louis Curdinals may be the world's champions but the Brooklyn Dodgers have to be rated as the most dogged, deter mined gang of dichards in the major leagues. This spring the Cardinals have sparked and glittered and won the admiration of all their rivals Jn the National league. The Dodgers haven't looked good, a collection of old geezers with aches and pains. Yet 1".e Dodgers have held first place since the first day of i the season ana noinmg me carai nals have been able to do has been sufficient to dislodge them. Last night they seemed ready to fall. The Cardinals had hu miliated all the Dodgers' strong est, fastest pitchers and were within half a same of taking over the lead. Southworlh had Max Lanier ready, a southpaw who had beaten Brooklyn five times last year and once this spring. Leo Durocher had to take a chance on the only lefthander he Sports Briefs ff ; By Hugh xf",! Fulluton. JrJ J NEW YORK, June 3 (IP) "Speed-up" baseball sounds like a good idea to a lot of folks, but Prexy Will Harridge of the American league doesn't think it will work very well . . . For one thing, the umps' can't do much but hurry the players along be tween innings and if they try to cut short the pitchers' antics on the mound they're liable to hear a lot of pointed, ear-burning questions from the managers about whether they have a date that night ... As for Billy Evans' plan of making Ailinger, who I left on base, go right to the mound without visiting the! bench, Will thinks that when the weather gets really hot, Billy will find the boys need the breathing spell . . . Besides, Har ridge adds, Tve played a night game In an hour and 29 minutes recently and the fans didn't get enough. They had to flick the lights a few times to start them moving out." . ONE-MINUTE SPORTS PAGE Gil Dodds, Boston's triple threat theologian, has it all fig ured out that Gunder Haegg al ready has reached this country and is "out in the woods some where training for his races." . . . Charley Jones, Sammy Angott's manager, reports that he has six promising yearlings on his Gosh en, Ky., hoss farm and one of them, a son of Johnstown, has just the same markings as his pa . . . The next big baseball an nouncement will come from St. Louis probably today. TODAY'S GUEST STAR Kenneth Jones, Peoria (111.) Journal - Transcript: "If track athletes trained as listlessly as ballplayers, we'd hear more about the five-minute mile than the four-minute mile." . THE VOICE ON THE WIRE Jimmy Johnston, (before tak ing off for Chicago where "they're all keyed up I don't know whether it's to bring me in or keep me out.") ... "A guy told me I was crazy the other day when I said I had managed about 30 champions. Well, I put them down and I've managed five men who held eight world titles, Johnny Dundee, Ted Kid Lewis. Harrv Rrnh Polo T.tn and Mike McTigue. Besides that i ve naa tne holders of 24 British and empire titles and 19 Italian and European titles. No such and so in the world can beat that." SERVICE DEPT. Pvt. . Art Passarella, former American league umpire who's now calling them for Camp Grant, 111., says that GI shoes are the best things he's ever found to wear behind the plate H. E. Hauger ' 1330 Main . )webuy"i ) we sell has on his staff, Max Macon, who couldn't dent a custard pie at arm's length and who hadn't pitched a complete ball game all season. Macon still hasn't pitched a complete game, but he beat the Cardinals last night to even their four-game series and restored Brooklyn to a game and a half lead. Tlc score was 3-2 and the raging Redbirds who had made 20 hits the day before, who had obtained Danny Litwhilcr from the Phillies ami installed him as cleanup hitter, were limited to i seven safeties. i Meanwhile, the American j league scramble for first place' became even closer than the Na- lional as the Chicago White Soxj whipped the New York Yankees i 2-1 and the Washington Senators j squelched the Cleveland Indians! 13-1 in a night game. This lump-i ed the Yanks and Senators in a virtual tie for the lead, although New York had the benefit of a few percentage points, .576 to .558. Detroit held onto third place by beating the Philadelphia Ath ' - TSOA By FP.ED HAMPSON Associated Press Staff Writer The scouts are already prefer ring contracts to Donald Johnson of Portland's Jefferson high school, who turned 16 last win ter. Johnson is the prep pitcher who racked up two no-run games this season, two other shutouts, run ning his two-year record in high school to 13 won and three lost. Johnson, thinks Harry Leed ing of the Oregon Journal, is still pretty much in the egg as a major league prospect. But with talent getting scarcer by the hour he may be Induced to take one of the offers from some club of lower classification. He has joined the Albina shipyard team of the War Industries league, where the hitting is somewhat better than in the high school league. If he runs up a string of wins and a low enough runs-per-game record it goes without saying the scouts will bear down, regardless of the fellow's tender years. The lad could hardly help at tracting scouts. In addition to the pitching that the Portland prep baiters found almost un hittable, he Is big, strong and tireless. At 10 he weighs 185 solid pounds and stands six feet, two inches. He has a fast ball that whistles and enough of a curve to fool the schoolboys, which may not be much of a curve, but it doesn't worry the scouts. At 16 akid hasn't really had time to acquire repertoire; of any consequence in league i baseball. Size and strength and speed are enough. They can teach him the rest. Johnson worked 121 innings during his last two years of high school during which he was touched for 66 hits and 23 runs, quite a few unearned, and ra tioned the opposition a scant 11 runs per game. He struck out 149 batters. Leedlng calls him the best pitcher to come out of Portland since Eddie Erautt, now pitching for Hollywood In the Coast lea gue. Pugct Sound newspapers are nominating cither Tacoma or Hey, Rube! Av u rpooai.l,ejr V ?-Cy Oregon Sport Notes letics 7-2 behind five-hit hurling by Frank (Stubby) Overmire and the St. Louis Browns and Boston Red Sox divided another pair of extra inning games. The Browns took the first 7-2 in 12 innings and the Red Sox retaliated in the nightcap 3-2 in 10 innings with Yank Terry pitching four-hit ball. In the four-game series the two teams played 45 innings. In the National league Cin cinnati and Pittsburgh continued in a- tie for third place. The Reds walloped the New York Giants 13-6 with an 18-hlt as sault on five pitchers after the Giants themselves had batted Bucky Walters off the mound with five runs in the first two innings. The Pirates came from behind in a night game to beat the Bos ton Braves 3-2 with three runs in the ninth inning. Two of them came on a homer by Elbie Flet cher. The Phillies nosed out the Chi cago Cubs 6-5 for Schoolboy Rowe and now have beaten the Bruins seven times in eight games. foe && sua . V' 7 r - IHe C4PCXMALS CHAIM WWO.HE BEAT Spokane as successor of Sacra mento in the Coast league, weak est club at the gate. To this Al Lightner of the Salem Statesman says: "Spokane, yes, but Tacoma, hardly. Reports say the San Francisco Seals dropped some $200 by playing their exhibition game with Fort Lewis warriors in Tacoma recently and with the city running over with money-spending war workers, losing $200 on a game such as that just isn't one way of invit ing a coast wheel franchise. "On the other side of tfce Cas cades it's entirely different, how ever. We all know how Spokane literally held the Western Inter national league together with her tremendous drawing power a few years ago and broke two class B league attendance records in so doing. And the fact that a Seattle-Spokane exhibition game at twilight drew some 12,000 in 1940 is a concrete example of how the Inland Empire enthus iasts would cater to Coast league ball if they had a team of their own." COMMANDO CENTER SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., June 3 (P) The former Tan foran race track, first an as sembly center for Japanese being relocated, and later an army cen ter specializing in commando training, is now in the navy's hands. Beginning Friday, it will be used for training personnel de stined for advanced bases, twelfth naval district headquart ers said. !(. CAFE 806 Klamath Opening Sat. A.M. Under New Management Poprletort: Mr. and Mn, Charles Foster PAGE TEN Russian Dressing Lou Novikoff, violent holdout, climbs into Chicago Cub monkey suit. Angel Rookie Leads Coast Men at Bat LOS ANGELES, June 3 (P) Andy Pafko, Los Angeles' sen sational rookie, has forged into the batting leadership of the Pa cific Coast league. In 44 games Pafko has pound ed out 75 hits, more than any other player in the league, and he also has priven In the most runs, 48, for a batting average of .419. Johnny Dickshot, Holly wood outfielder, is ensconced in second place with .410. This pair is far in advance of the rest of the field. Les Scarsclla of Oakland is in third place with .355. George Metkovich, prom ising San Francisco rookie, is fourth with .350. Los Angeles, seven and one half games in front of the field in the league race, games to May 31 included, tops the circuit in team batting with .289 and Holly wood is second with .275. By The Associated Press COAST LEAGUE Team W. L. Pet. Los Angeles .".....33 11 .50 San Francisco 26 17 .605 S.an Diego 25 21 .543 Oakland 23 21 .523 Hollywood 20 26 .435 Portland 18 26 .409 Sacramento ...16 27 .372 Seattle 16 28 .364 Results Yesterday San Francisco 6, San Diego 2. Portland 9, Oakland 2. Hollywood 9-2, Seattle 4-3. Sacramento 3, Los Angeles 2. NATIONAL LEAGUE Team W. L. Pet. Brooklyn 26 14 .650 St. Louis 23 14 .622 Cincinnati 19 18 .514 Pittsburgh 18 17 .514 Philadelphia 18 19 .486 Boston 16 17 .485 New York 15 23 .395 Chicago 12 25 .324 Results Yesterday Cincinnati 13, New York 6. Philadelphia 6, Chicago 5, Brooklyn 3, St. Louis 2. Pittsburgh 3, Boston 2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Team W. L. Pet. New York 19 14 .576 Washington 21 18 .568 Detroit ...18 16 .529 Philadelphia 19 19 .500 Cleveland 18 19 .486 Boston 18 20 .474 Chicago 14 16 .467 St. Louis 12 18 .387 Results Yesterday Chicago 2, New York 1. Detroit 7, Philadelphia 2. St. Louis 7-2, Boston 4-3. Washington 13, Cleveland 1. W'(IW)miJUM..4!'l!'llm.ltj . -I DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT SKATELAND 615 Klamath Ave. Music Pappy Gordon's Oregon Hillbillies Auspices Veterans of Foreign Wan J u mi 3, 1913 Portlanders VallopOaks; Morale High Beavers Only Three Garnet Away From Upper Bracket; Stars, Seattlo Split Tilts By The Associated Prow Confident that they can lick the best of 'em now that a suc cessful series with Los Angeles is behind them, the Portland Beavers continued a powerful drive toward the first division by walloping Oakland 9 to 2 yester day. Portland in sixth place but only three games away from the upper set, looked like an authen tic powerhouse in blasting the of ferings of three Oakland pitch ers for 16 hits. The final Beaver run total might have been even higher if it had not been for some great throwing by the quak outfielder. Jack Dovlncon zi who threw out three men at the plate. Seattle and Hollywood divid ed a doubleheader, the Stars winning the first 9 to 4 and Seat tle taking the seven-inning sec ond game, 3 to 2, Byron Spcccc, veteran Rainier pitcher, lost a shutout "in the second contest when Kenny Richardson's sixth inning home run brought in all the Star runs. Van Elliott and Bob Molitor for Seattle gave up 15 hits be tween them in the first contest, while rookie Ronnie Smith went the route for the Stars, scatter ing nine blows. Seventh place Sacramento whittled Los Angeles' league lead further down to sizo with a 3 to 2 victory. Pitcher John ny Pintar won his own game by laying down a bunt that brought in the third Solon tally. San Francisco moved more se curely into second place by wal loping third place San Diego 6 to 2, with the hf lp of big George Metkovich, who drove In five runs, four of them on a third inning home run. Great Grid Coach, BUI Ingram Dies LOS GATOS. Calif., June 3 (William "Navy Bill" In gram, one of the U. S. naval academy's greatest football play ers and a widely known football coach, is dead. His death was discovered yes terday when he failed to rise for breakfast at his home here. He was 46. , Ingram was a marine corps major in charge of procurement in the San Francisco bay area. Previously he had been a chain store executive. Ingram was best known In football circles, however. Not only did he play great football for Annapolis and the Pacific Fleet teams, but he also was head football coach at one time or another for the naval academy, Indiana and the University of California. He retired from coaching in 1935. Ingram leaves his widow and three children: William A. Jr., 17, recently sworn Into the ma rines by his father; Nancy, 15, and Anne, 10. Old Big Leaguer Hurls Relief for York White Roses YORK, Pa., June 3 fP) Lefty George, 56-year-old former big league pitcher, returned to ac tion last night as a relief hurler for the York While Roses of the Interstate league. George retired the first two batters he faced, ending an in ning and choking off a rally by the Allentown Flcelwings, But the first three men to face him singled in the next inning and he was taken out. York won 8 to 6. When In Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earley Proprietors Mltiourl'i rtmTkbU rtlay Maurice Alcxandtr and Capt, California combination four ytart Hollingbery, VSC Hope of Salary Truce Babe Offered Cut of Fifty Per Cent Which Ha Thinks It Little Too Large PULLMAN, Juno 3 (IP) With both sides apparently eager enough to contlnuo their associa tion, hopes were rising today that some agreement may be reached which will keep Orln E. (Bnbc) Hollingbery in the Wash ington State college athletic de partment. The college athletic council yesterday confirmed the report that Hollingbery, for 17 years an integral part of the school's sports picture, had been offered a salary of $5000 a year repre senting a 50 per cent cut. Hollingbery, one of the best known und most colorful foot ball coaches on the Pacific const, said he recognized that some cut was necessary in nccorclnncc with good business practice, but maintained a 50 per cent cut was unncccssnrlly large. The Babe said, however, that he wanted to remain with the state college, adding "I am part of the Institution." . Tho athletic, council In Its statement said members were unanimous In their desiro that Hollingbery continue his serv ices with the college. A salary cut they said was nec essary, however, In face of pros pects for "little, If any, football." COMPETE IN NATIONAL PORTLAND, June 3 (!) Fred Winter and Stuart Norenc, Oregon State college northern division champions in the pole vault and the half-mile, will com pete in the national collegiate track and field championships at Northwestern university June 11-12, Percy Loccy, athletic di rector, said yesterday. jPkere's bidwies THE BEER THAT MADE MILWAUKEE FAMOUS &,. ami. Track Fast team nets oolng. Ltft to right, Jo Shy. They threaten 440-yard ago. By VIRGIL GROSS According to Bill Hatch, vet eran pitcher and first baseman of tho Bend Elks, army officials at Camp Abbot are very anxi ous to have the Pelicans enter the Central Oregon State league. Camp Abbot, according to pres ent plans, will have two clubs entered In tho league and, not having a homo field, will most likely piny their "homo" games at Bond and Klamath Falls. Tentative entries for tho now circuit are tho aforomontloncd two teams from Camp Abbot, Bend Elks, Redmond alrbnse and Wnrm Springs Indian agen cy. League play is expected to start in two or threo weeks, or as soon as a sclirdulo and other details can be worked out. Pete Lesmelster, acting Pelican busi ness manager, will endeavor to learn further particulars on a trip to Bend this week. Word from 1'acllc university state's that John Mnthls, sopho more from Klnmath Falls, was awarded the Miller basketball trophy Thursday at the univer sity by Coach Oswald D. Gales following a selection last week. The trophy, an annual award established by former Coach Pete Miller, Is given the athlete voted of most value to his team mates. Mnthls played forward on the Pacific varsity. This was quite an honor for John, and furthered achieve ments of Klamath Falls athletes In various colleges throughout the northwest. He also made his letter in baseball, and played local baseball here before enter ing Pacific. Mathis is a gradu ate of KUHS. Ed Burkland, ex-local base ball and City league basketball star, Is now a lieutenant In the army air corps. Ed is stationed somewhere In tho Pacific. i Aldo Bellottl and Jim Bocclil looked good In a game played j against the Pelicans, and they , should be on tho Pelican roster j before the summer Is over. Tho Pelican baseball tea ml ust KLAMATH SPORT NOTES of the hops Tii. Bmehr 0 Milwtuln, Ifh, WIRQUQs Jack Track, Owtn Joggrtt, rtcord of 40.S itt by Southern could bo one of the best semi pro teams In Oregon If a few of tliu better bull players In this city and nearby cities would turn out for the team. Soma of those who lira not out and who would undoubtedly strengthen tho team Include Lou Snuer, former Medford manager and a good defensive player; Ernlo Bishop, last year's Pelican man ager and a smooth second buse mun; Goldio Uoldbur, a home run hitter from Durrls; Homo Crespi, fast-moving shortstop from Mt. Shasta, and Frank Ramsey, high school football coach and u catcher In baseball. These buys on the team, which already consists of at least four or fivo experienced players, should mako tho Pelicans ono of the toughest teams to bent in the state of Oregon. Arrungcnionts have been made for a guno hutweciv the Klamath Fails Pelicans and the Bend Elks of the Central Ore gon league for this coming Sun day at Bend. Tho Bend Elks boast such outstanding stars as Bill Hutch, former Portland uni versity star, and Jack Gordon, brother of the Yankco star, Joe Gordon. Pelican Munager Marshall Eycslono wants u large turnout for practice this Friday night, as he will pick hli traveling squad on that day. 01 MAG CAN HIT SANTA ANA, Calif., June 3 (yp) Joo Dl Magglo, ex-Yankee outfielder, boosted tils consccu-tlvc-gamo hitting streak to 13 as the Santa Ana army base de feated Los Angeles police 10-3 yesterday. Dl Magglo got a single In three trips In the plate.- TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yournalf Sivo ! 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