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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1944)
eld at Quarter Marker ". II I. CtiM rnnilllln. WilL 160,020 Paid Ducats Over Holiday ... tnrtfHAND ,ti,r.d H 8PrM Wr,,,r .hnll ijmwwI Hie quarter 'Kv t"bl0 condition 60 02 h.ilUlny nclmbtslons J ,h box, unci 1 10 Now 9y0k.- SI. Lou Is Ml, still Uio teams to beat. Tnoll 1110 8t- Lou1' ncnioomcd m tl. leading Jri after yeHtorduy's fj doublohcniloH 'featured l"1 ....... runt. The Rod IJ Billy Sontliwoiiit s Card Bi Lf. .nd a hulf. and 5 .7n ffamcn unci n nun, smu closed to within a LiW Melvln Olt of the Now 1 n and led the homo run Eta with threo. upplng his I" 'Vi" Nu Ynrlc trim. rlcnio wlce, 0-6 mid B-4. In , the i !peni)r did tho trick iMtchrr Hurry rcinmim, u Vw I" ,ili h.lnrt Ewn d Vth win with tho of relliiblo Aca Adnm. FHey Kurowskl belted hi I..1.M. rr.nn1 Irlrt. ru7cmd.liodtowhTp noris f t 7 . few YORK, Moy 31 (TP) ball Is nbuut to movo into , ana we assume mui win new meaning to tho "un. thihlps" they II become iirti . . . ensign ai norwiw, nd to work with Kay lout In tho National Baseball krwi, his discovered thnt ffihy Indian, Ezra Gnbbny txcome so interested in obso I that ho wants to sponsor a kul championship . . Du ll Is (waiting a sinned agree ing name Uiiuony as menu's pro 'commissioner una t better nama could you lor the lob? . , . Bnbo Did. bon. whoso husband. George krlai has Just bought tho Diego franchlso in mil love's pro football loaguo, clermlned to becomo the Id's but woman tennis play . , 11 sne succeeds, mo loot- kr likely will tnka to the btloro dodo tries another A ROOKIE A DAY Hwln Camett. White Sox Udder: a versatile ball n ay ind a .300 hitter, what more U you ask? Ed broke In as to it Ponca City, Okla., In p and worked Ills way up to Itle lost season as a pitcher- traacr. sowed down to out. in and was drafted bv tho lit Sox. who didn't Hive him ruble until mid-May, Thoy In to show Improvement p a went in as a regular. '. wun tini xrosky out, car ! serving as first baseman; pelt once belonged to the p ana Braves who probably mty sxm nna mm. ... STODAY'S GUEST STAR Fun u. uoylo, Philadelphia lug Bulletin: "This week's (problem Is to arrange 'he Ithold budsot so tho Dels. ft DQrk annrnnrintlnn won't filwcd when U'a gone." . pi Nova Wins TKO er Jimmy Webb ALVESTON, Tex., Moy 31 -Iou Nova, California weight; needed only seven r w nnisn mo itrst nan of ;k's work. :i " won d technical knockout night When .Ilmmv Wnhh n fes on was unablo to answer M1 for the oighth round. E- who wclahcd 100 to n, fii thus beenme victim ui wova's comeback cam in. Nova finishes out his week by meeting Buddy ftm.Oklahoma City Frldoy. ffifled Ads Bring Results'. 3y llnild Whtikay e SI rmi JS ''i era In and Cant l W p,,due' Naulral IpDHt flSi 1 Unidowna DTilllUrr H""" ' , Cards Still Lead Boston In the second game, 13-3, .v.- i . Jf " nnrews in tho first, 1-0, on Tommy Holmes' homer, Wea Flowers and Hal r.roo got croillt for Brooklyn's double victory over Pittsburgh, 0-8 and 4-J, but Leo Durochor had to cull on the bull pen for holp In both guinea. Fred Ostormuoller, now on his way to Syracuse, .nvod tho first. Curt Duvli Imrf n,,i down a pirate unrlslna In tho ninth of the finale. Dixie Wol kor collected two lilt, in nt bnU, hlfl tweraga leveling off Cincinnati regained second Place ahaad of the Plrt. k dumping the Phils In both games, 4-3 and 7-4. Ed Heuaser whiffet Ron Northey with tho bases full to save the ODAnAr fa a maU Carter. Frank McCormlck nn. loadod four hits. Including a homer and double, to drlvo In four runs In the second. Paul (Dlixy) Trout added in sult to Injury by hitting a homo run In tho ninth Inning, on top of a seven-hit pitching Job, for a ?! edge over New York's Yanks. Hal Newhousor completed De troit's banner homo day of the season before tho day's largest crowd. 37,885, by matching the seven-hitter for a 4-1 nod, Luke Sewoll's Browns were puthit In both numbers by Wash ington, but made them count for 8-4 and 4-2 triumphs behind Nels Potter and Tex Shirley. Both starters renulred hnln h,,t nt credit respectively for wins over Mickey Haefnor and Early Wynn. Chicago stopped Philadelphia's ambitious rise with double decker loss, 8-1 and 2-1, but tho Sox fallod to quit the cellar. Or val Grove rationed the A's to six blows In the second after BUI Dietrich left 12 stranded while acuttorlng U hlta in the opener. Cleveland topped Boston 9-3 and 4-3 behind Ml Harris Chief Roynolds, with Roy Cullon blno showing tho way on four iwu. inciuaing a nomor and two UUUDJCS. si i "nmFWTm uml i a: I P J I ICK1 Br The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. .676 St. Louis .....25 Cincinnati 22 Pittsburgh 10 Brooklyn .....17 New York 17 Boston 18 Philadelphia 14 Chicago 11 12 14 14 20 20 22 10 22 .611 .576 .450 .450 .450 .424 .333 Yesterday's Oames Cincinnati 4-7, Phlladelphlo Boston 1-3, St. Louis 0-13. Now York 6-5, Chicago 5-4. Brooklyn 0-4, Pittsburgh 3-3. AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet New York 20 14 .588 St. Louis 23 18 .801 Washington 10 10 .800 Dotrolt 20 20 .500 Philadelphia ,10 IS . .500 Boston 18 20 .474 Cleveland 18 22 .450 Chicago 16 21 .432 Yesterday's Games St. Louis 6-4. Washington 4-2. Dotrolt 2-4, New York 1-1. Cleveland B-4, Boston 3-3. Chicago 8-2, Philadelphia 1-1 COAST LEAGUE W, L. Seattle . 31 23 Portland 30 23 San Francisco 28 24 Hollywood -...28 25 San Dlogo 28 . 27 Los Angeles 26 26 Oakland 23 20 Sacramento 16 33 Yesterday's Games Seattle 2-10, Portland (first same 8 Innings). Pet. .874 .566 .538 .628 .500 .500 .442 .327 1-3 Hollywood 7-1, Oakland 2-0 (second same 8 innlnss). Los Angeles 5-5, San Francla co 1-4 (second game 11 Innings) San Diego 1-2, Sacramento 5-0 Didya Youth Signed yf Iwf -J i ' - t rfl rf , , , ; y Showing the contract to his mother, Mrs, Marco Rlghetti, is 17-year-old Loo Rlghettl, San Jose, Calif., prep school shortstoo who became property of the Now York Yankees when he was signed to a contract by the Yankee's farm club of Newark, He will report to the International league team after school lets out In June. (Associated Press Photo), Race Fans Jam Track On Holiday By TED MEIER NEW YORK, May 31 (P) Nearly a million sports hungry fans 017,073 Jammed race tracks and bull parks during the threo-duy Memorial Day holiday. Forgetting their wartime cares for a few hours, a total of 431,701 diamond followers turned out on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday for gumes In the major leagues and tho top minor league loops, tho International, American as sociation, Pacific Coast and Eastern. Other thousands saw games in the Southern associa tion, Pony, Interstate and Pied mont circuits. Over tho same span unofficial figures showed attendance of 486.272 at tho 12 race tracks now operating. They tossed more than $22,234,311 Into the parl-mutuel machines, a merry clip that set betting murks at Suffolk Downs. Hawthorne, Delaware park, Bay Meadows, Charlestown, North Randall and Beuloli. Track Winners To Race Sunday CHICAGO, May 31 (P) Two winners of track events at the 1036 Olympic games in Berlin Jesse Owens and Helen Stephens will cngnRo in a 100-yard race Sunday at Wrlgley field. But Owens, the former Ohio Stato track star, will give his op ponent a 10-yard allowance. Their race will feature track events between games of a base ball doubleheador between the Kansas City Monarchs and the Chicago Firemen. Westwood Mill, Town Sale Eyed SUSANVILLE. Calif.. May 31 UP) The Red River Lumber company, operator of a large mill at Westwood, in Lassen county. Is negotiating for sale of the property and tho company town of Westwood. Headquarters of the company are in Minneapolis. PRESENT CEILINGS WASHINGTON, May 31 (P) The office of price administra tion said today any sales of the 1043 apple crop after July 1 will continue under present ceil ing prices. Know? WOMSflS IN ;(TSMAiVS OACki. -9?: LOUIS. LAST HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON by Yankees Flashes of Life By The Associated Press STRANGERS WINSTED, Conn Postofflce authorities here have asked dog owning patrons of the city deliv ery service to keep their animals tied up during mail delivery hours. The postofflce says that. while the dogs are pals of the regular letter carriers, tney ap parently resent the "Intrusion" of substitute carriers and have made things "uncomfortable" for several ot them. - . DEER HUNTER HARTFORD. Conn. John L. Caruso has been an avid and successful deer hunter lor years. The other morning he discovered broken windows, smashed door and other damages amounting to $25 at his gasoline station. There were also tufts of brown hair. Police told him a deer had Jumped into his filling station through one window and out through another. BUSY ELSEWHERE STATE COLLEGE. Pa. Only 36 males have applied for ad mission to the November iresn man class at Penn State as com. pared with 207 women. The feminine element outnumbers the masculine in the graduating class this June for the iirst lime, ALIAS MILLER OREGON CITY, Ore. Charles D. Miller ran against himself under an alias to win the rural fire district directorship. His name was printed Charles H. Miller on the ballot so he asked voters to write in his name correctly to make it official Charles D, received 20 votes; Charles H., 26. WASHOUT SALT LAKE CITY The opening of the "water follies" at the fairgrounds was postponed. a was rained out, -. HOLIDAY HIPPO CHICAGO Bebe, Brookfleld zoo's 3500-pound hippopotamus, guarded her fifth baby today, a 40-pound hippo which arrived yesterday as the season's largest crowd visited the animal park. Bebe and Toto, the papa hip popotamus, stayed in the zoo pool with their latest offspring and zoo attendants said the baby hippo would remain under water for an indefinite time after birth. They said the birth was about three months behind schedule. . VETERANS' AID NORFOLK. Neb. The annual doddv sale in Norfolk looked like a washout when volunteer sellers were unable to get to the business district, much of it In. undated by flopd waters of the Elkhorn river. But members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars auxiliary at Lin coin offered to help and sold half of Norfolk's allotted 4000 poppies. DANCE Wed. Nite 8:30 to 12i00 Armory Daldy's Band With Mary Mahoney and Poul Swigart Ducks Drop From Coast League Top Seattle Replaces Beaver By Taking Memorial Day Double Tilt, 2-1, 10-3 By The Associated Press The Seattle Rainlcrs replaced the Portland Beavers at the top of the Coast league baseball standings by taking both ends of a Memorial Day doublehead er last night, 2 to 1 and 10 to 3. A total of 13,311 paying cus tomers Jammed into the Seattle park for the twin bill which was played In reverse order with the short contest opening the program. The game went eight Innings before the Rain lcrs could put across the decid ing score. Manager BUI Skiff of Seattle was chased from the park in the opener after a heat ed argument with Umpire John ny Androvlch. Four Portland pitchers failed to stop, the Rain ier in the second game as they converted 12 hits into 10 runs, six of which came in the third inning. Portland dropped Into second place as Los Angeles won two from San Francisco before a crowd of 10.000 at Wrlgley Field. The Seals were out- played in the first, 0 to 1, dui carried the nightcap into 11 in ning before the Angels won, tn 1 Hollywood climbed to within half mm nf the third place Seals by taking two from Oak land before a crowd of Buuu. The Stars gcored all of their vn mm in the second in- nini, in win the oDener. 7 to 2 The second game was scoreless until the eignin wm ni. nt HnTlvwood doubled. moved down to third on a sacri fice and scored on a long uy for the 1 to 0 margin. The San Diego Padres and Sacramento Solons split at San Diego before the smallest crowd of the day, only 3617 attend ing. Sacramento won the first, a tn n hut the Padres took the final, 2 to 0, behind the three- hit pitching of warren wierKie. FIGHTS BUFFALO Lulu Costantino, 133 K, New York, outpointed Joey Peralta, 136, Tamaqua, n- in 1 a. 1 111, GALVESTON, Tex. L.ou Nova, 204, Van Nuys, Calif., stopped Jimmy Webb, 190, Gal veston, 7. Classified Ads Bring Result Beverage of Moderation " When MM OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY, I Stepping Up? ? '! c 1 MMM Assistant Secretary of the Navy Ralph A. Bard, above, is consid ered a likely successor to James V ForrestoL undersecretary re cently nominated to be secre tary of the Navy Bard, former Chicago financier, at present has supervision over Navy shore es tablishments, labor relations and civilian personnel. Katonen-Wagner Match Attracts Fight Interest After last week's surprise cli max, the Paavo Katonen-George Wagner main event in the ar mory this Friday night is attract ing a great deal of interest and conjecture among the local fight fans. Perhaps the most reliable bar ometer of bout-interest is the ticket sale record. Thus far a goodly sized crowd is expected. Katonen s initial disadvantage due to the altitude has now been overcome, and the two boys will enter the match on equal physi cal terms. Katonen will prob ably be a bit more vicious in his attack after taking a lesson from Wagner last week when he lost by a freak out-of-the-ropes end ing. Another item in the big Finn's favor is the fact that if he loses this match he will be honor bound to put up his belt at the next match. He's not going to do this If he can get out of it. SPOONERS LOCKED IN MEDFORD, May 31 (P) Sheriff Syd I. Brown said prac tical Jokers locked the main gate of the Odd Fellows' ceme tery on a pair of automobile spooners and they had to , cut their way out through a wire fence. it's time out for refreshment... THOSE REST PERIODS between watV activities are being tuned to th simple things that home and neighbors offer'. . . a game of horseshoes, a victory garden. Re-discover these simple pleasures made more enjoyable with a glass of friendly Olympia, the light refreshing beverage of moderation. Vrr tfirpf rrpnpratinnc th fllvmhia RrAwiniv rYimnanv tine AtAitektA it heart, its head and its resources to cihe brewing of Olympia The Original Light Table Beer of traditionally fine quality. uItb the Water" , The Original Light Table Beef CPORTC Streamliner kJ: By RUSS NEWLAND SAN FRANCISCO, May 31 HP) Plpelinesl This may or may not arch the eyebrows of' faculty athletic representatives of the Pacific coast conference but we have Information there is, and has been for some time, a small rebellion brewing within the ranks . . . It may not.come to a head and we are not predicting it wiU but the graduate man aeers. athletic directors and coaches on the one side, feel the balance of power is too unevenly distributed with the faculty men lugging tne big stick . , . A survey at the conference meeting at Hood River, Ore., June 16. may produce wholesale denials on the part of the have nots, nevertheless our informant, who requested his name not be used, has sat fairly high in the councils of the conference . . . We know he knows what he is talking about v .v ' The faculty men now compose what amounts to a supreme court In the conference . They have the last, as well as the first, say . . . There is no appeal from their decisions, virtually, unless some one chooses to take a case to the president of a university and he in turn lines up all of the other prexies, a possibUity too far fetched to consider . . . In the past year or so there has been a tendency on the part of the faculty men to take the others more "Into their confi dence, tocthe point the graduate managers have been permitted to sit in a Joint session with the former ... The coaches, how ever, and we refer to the foot ball phase of the conference, still are very much out in the cold . . . They make recommendations, then sit back and await re sults ; . . " The ideal set-up, our inform ant points out, would be joint sessions with the managers, ath letic directors and coaches meet ing: with the faculty men in every discussion, where' the voices of every branch could be heard, and the problems thresh ed out .then and - there ... the coaches,. incidentally,. are Just as. . When in Medford ;;: -.'.... stay Bt HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earley Proprietors OLYki PI A, WASHINGTON, PACE SEVEN interested in eligibility case a tne faculty group ... Representation by a single in- i dividual is less deslrnble than by ' every school . '. . The same goes I for the managers, who are closer to the athletic picture than the faculty men ... ' The majority group has much . less power than the minority ;. . . ' U is a case of tho tall wagging the dog . . , Wo mnke no recom- . mendatlons in the matter but ' our source says something Is i cooking even If it never come to the boiling point. Harry Jeffra Faces "Aeia Test" In Ring Against Cleo Shans BALTIMORE, May 31 (P) . Harry Jeffra, slender Baltimore boxing master who has held the bantamweight and featherweight boxing crowns, will put his comeback aspirations to the acid test tonight against Cleo Shans, rough and tough Los Angeles negro. The 10-round scran headlines the first outdoor boxing bout of the Baltimore season at Oriole baseball park. About 150 miles of highway in Alaska are classed as auto mobile roads. TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yourseli Save H Long and Short Trips STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 , 1201 East Main US&& Cfll-OflE 5T4IVRn HIGHWAY er COUTH It SPECD VICTORY WITH WAR BONDS U. S. A.'1 TONITE V .u . I : 1 ' I ,