Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 02, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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PACE TWO
Georgia Tech, Eastern
All-Stars Suffer Upsets
In New Year's Day Frays
THEY DOOD ITI
In a slashing, driving spectacu
lar football game, the West All
Stars kicked the old dope bucket
higher than a cat's back by hand
ing their favored eastern rivals a
13 to 7 setback in the 20th an
nual East-West Shrine game at
San Francisco's Kezar stadium.
Bob Watorfipld, UCLA star,
sparked the West attack and his
great kicking
The UCLA flash Jwf
touchdowns via
the aerial route
' and marked up
one tally in per
son. After hav
ing arched a
Siss to Clarence
owell on the
13. Kennedy
HAINES
shot Waterfield a pass to score,
We formally don sackcloth
and ashes after having given
the East the duke to blast the
western lads, but we have the
consolation of knowing that
we are not alone In this garb
- as every bookie In tho nation
is wearing the same attire,
Congratulations to a truly
great western eleven. The best
team wonl
MOST THRILLING
In the most thrilling game of
New Year's Day, the Duke Blue
Devils came from behind to nose
out tne unmson Tide of Ala
bama, 29 to 26, in the Sugar
ovwi Liny ai, new urieans.
We gave the nod to the
'Bama boys in this one, pre
dicting an upset, and we don't
feel badly about the outcome
at all. It is true the Blue Dev
- ils won, but laddies, they real-
jr onow iney naa Been in a
luoiomi geme. top-neavy fa
vorites in the pre-game bet
ting, the Duke eleven was ax
tended to the absolute limit to
eon the bunting.
we twnk that year in and
year out, this Sugar Bowl tilt
has become the most thrilling
and spectacular of all bowl
. lne. exception of the
East-West clambake, even over
shadowing the Rose Bowl classic
as far as fine grid play is con-
So today we doff the old lid
? two, well football teams,
the Duke Blue Devil, and the
Alabama Crimson Tidel
Turner Garners
Draw With Pease
PORTLAND, Jan. 2 (IP) A
i JS enaD1ect Leo "the
xuiiier, loppcnish, Wash,
to earner a Anm '
. c, , ruruana, last night and
save his state middleweight
championship as the rose city
opened its 1945 fight season.
.There were no knockdowns.
"v'S0., one pound
more than his rival,
i I" .Preliminary contests:
, John L. Sullivan, 167, Port
. .1d decisioned Jerry Brown,
hAi.DenYerI in e'bt rounds,
Hespife a last round knockdown
by Brown; Eddie Wharton, 146,
Portland, topped steady Sted-
flo'V52' S.alem' 6- Lil Abner,
WVanport, dropped a decision
to Joel Boone, 146, Seattle, 4
and Johnny Suarez, 142, Port
land, bested Johnny Pancho,
JdB, Longvicw, 4.
with
MADELINE MAHONEY
and
......
PAUL SWIGART
RADIO
1 15551 ffV
I r H 4 it"
By Exnnrf T.l.-i.i.
TprcDBSIocl 0F Mailable
TUBES-BATTERIES-AERIALS
For All Make. f
Quick, Guaronteed Service
116 N. 9th
MontSom.rK
By JACK HAND
NEW YORK, Jan. 2 W It
was Happy New Year for all tho
favorites except ueorgia iccu
nil the East All-Stars in the an
nual January 1 football bowl
deluge played before more than
360.00U fans at tu aitierent sues.
Ranging from G. I. versions in
Marseilles, Fiance, and in Italy
to a customary 91,000 turnout in
NEW YORK, Jan. 2 (IP) Ten
New Year's bowl games, eight
in the United States, one in Italy
and the other in France attract
ed 360,500 football tans. The
Rose Bowl in Paiadtna, Calif.,
drew the biggest crowd, 91,000.
Scores in attendance:
ROSE BOWL AT PASA
DENA, Calif. Southern Califor.
nia 25, Tennessee 0; attendance
31,000.
ORANGE BOWL AT MIAMI
Tulia 26, Georgia Tech 12. At
tendance 30,000.
SUGAR BOWL AT NEW OR
LEANS Duke 29, Alabama 26;
attendance 72,000.
COTTON BOWL AT DALLAS
Oklahoma A. & M. 34, Texas
Chriitian 0. Attendance 37,SHU.
EAST-WEST SHRINE BOWL
AT SAN FRANCISCO West
All-Stars 13, East All-Stars 7. At
tendance 60,000.
SUN BOWL AT EL PASO,
Texas Southwestern U. of Tex
as 35; U. of Mexico O. Attend'
a nee 18,000.
VULCAN BOWL AT BIR
MINGHAM. Ala. Tennessee
State 13, Tuskegee 0. Attend'
ance 5000.
FLOWER BOWL AT JACK
SONVILLE, Fla Tyler, Tex.,
college 18, Greensboro (NO A'
and T., 9. Attendance 5000.
RIVIERA BOWL AT MAR
SEILLES, France Railroaders
37, Army All-Stars 0. Attend
ance 18,000.
SPAGHETTI BOWL IN
ITALY Fifth Army 20, 12th
Air Force 0. Attendance 25,000,
Pasadena's Rose Bowl, the gen
eral pattern ran pretty much
true to form on team ana indi
vidual performances.
Southern California stretched
its Rose Bowl win string to eight
by handing Tennessee a 25-0 set
back, its first of the season,
and completing an unbeaten,
though twice tied campaign. Jim
Hardy threw two scoring tor
wards and sneaked over another
on the hidden ball play.
Oklahoma Aggies, paced by
All-America Bob Fenimore who
scored twice, smothered Texas
Christian. 34-0. before 37.500 at
Dallas' Cotton Bowl, but Duke
had to come hard in the closing
minutes before catching Ala
bama, 29-26, for a Sugar Bowl
triumpn that tnriuea vz.uuu cus
tomers, lne running of Tom ua
vis and George Clark finally
overcame the brilliant passing of
iresnman Marry unmer oi
Bama.
Georgia Tech ran into trouble
m its Orange Bowl date with
Tulsa as the golden hurricane
startled 30,000 fans by striking
tor a two-touendown lead in the
first period and never letting up
before earning a Zb-12 decision
f rank Broylcs kept the ngl
neers in the game on his second
half tosses. But Freshman Perry
Moss was the Tulsa ace.
The Western All-Stars, spark
ed by the chucking of UCLA's
coo watcrneid, shoved over two
last quarter scores to shade the
East, 13-7, in San Francisco's
Shrine charity game that drew
60,000 persons. Frank Dance
wicz of Notre Dame had pitched
to jacK Meaa oi Wisconsin for
the Eastern T.D. in the first 10
minutes.
Southwestern of Texas set a
scoring record in the Sun Bowl.
crushing an out-matched Univer
sity of Mexico squad. 3o-0. as ex
pected by the turnout of 13,000.
Corp. John Moody, former
Morris Brown fullback, spark
led for the fifth armv in Its 20-fl
shellacking of the 12th air force
in the Italian Spaghetti Bowl be
fore 25,000 G.I. Joes. Mid-game
features included a USO per
formance by Ella Logan and
crowning of two bowl queens.
The soldiers in France subbed
a Riviera Bowl for last year's
Arab Bowl classic in Africa and
18,000 turned out at Marseilles
to watch the railway shop bat
ty ion unit smother the Army
All-Stars, 37-0.
Texas college of Tyler, Tex.,
tripped up Greensboro (N.C.) A.
and T. 18-0, in the negro Flow-
! ouw coniest at Jacksonville,
Fla., with Center Willie Green
f?,ringttfmiCe a?,d selting "P the
third. William Bass led Tennes
see State to a 13-0 edge over
Tuskegee Institute in the Vulcan
Bowl negro game at Birming-
TRUCKS FOR RENT
Vou DriTe Move Yourself
oava h Long and
Short Trins
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East M.i
REPAIR
Airs
Ward en Ho,thS?h7522
Junior Loop
Breaks Few
Marks in '44
By JERRY LISKA
CHICAGO, Jan. 2 (P) The
American league was more occu
pied with a slam-bang pennant
race than breaking records lost
season, according to official fig
ures released Saturday.
The St. Louis Browns, who
finally shook off Detroit and
New York for the pennant, made
three entries in the record book,
while . batting champion Lou
Boudreau of the Cleveland In
dians and Frank Hayes of Phila
delphia each hung up two new
individual marks.
Hayes, in contributing two of
the eight new major league rec
ords registered by the Junior
circuit, caught 155 games for
the most consecutive contests
and most games played by a
catcher in one season. Hayes
tied Catcher Ray Mueller of Cuv
cinnatl and set a similar Na,
tional league record.
Boudreau set a new major
league record for double plays
at snonsiop in a season, ui,
and his .978 average was a new
league high for infielding by
shortstop.
The Browns tied two major
league records when they won
nine straight games at the sea
son's outset and took the flag
with the low percentage of .578
Luke Sewcll's lads also set a
league record for grounding into
tne fewest infield double plays,
93.
Five other new major league
marks included most years lead
ing league in home runs. New
York,. 25; most double plays at
iirst oase in a season, rluuy
York of Detroit. 163: fewest uiv
played games in one season
none in five years: three succes.
sive errors at third base in one
inning, Oscar Grimes of New
York, and most years without
no-nit game, it. .
Teammates ueorge Myatt and
Stan S p e n c e of Washington
equalled' the major league mark
of six-for-six at bat. while Bos,
ton's Bobby Doerr and Bob
Johnson each hit the cycle. Other
league records tied were the
single game high of four two-
baggers, by Johnny Lindell of
New York, and five double plays
at shortstop, by- John Sullivan
of Washington.
George McQuinn and Don
Gutteridgc of the Browns had a
hand in two of the five new
league marks, each figuring in
five double plays in a single
game at first and second, respec
tively. Reliefer Joe Heving of
Cleveland set a loop mark of
most consecutive games pitched
and none completed, witn ej.
League records were tied
when George Metkovich of Bos
ton scored five runs in a single
game: Cleveland (16) and Detroit
(19) used 35 players in a single
game; and Edgar Busch of Phila
delphia committed three errors
at shortstop in one inning.
It was the fifth time in Ameri
can league history that there
were no unplayed games on the
schedule.
Plungers Break
Betting Records
At Tropical Park
MIAMI. Fla.. Jan. 2 (PI The
siaccaio cncKing oi tne turn
stiles and betting machines
sounded today like anything ex
cept a funeral dirge for racing.
But the sport is dead, after
midnight, as the result of a gov
ernment request that all tracks
close because of a war-time
emergency.
In the banner crowds and rec
ord wagering at Tropical Park's
current meeting, horsemen saw
the hope of a brilliant revival
once the emergency is ended and
uie worio returns to normal.
. ror tne third time in eight
nays yesterdav. hettnrc hrnbA
iropicais one-day parimutucl
record. The 14,745 spectators
lurnea out tor a morning
program bet $777,674.
Only Saturriav Iho i,t.mini.
p ungers had run the betting
AlI-WooI, Forest Green I X- . J I I 1 I 1 I bt bridltd . . . Out f how U
WHIPCORD Po"'""n, Pr.,. , I y i f X ' i" ,k cilel lUiledl
pants & nut m bfeliii m
, . wuan-wwmg, 80od Iookina I MJW atn L- -Mi Wffrts ... MW- :-. . -ftaS"" -t4 , : V ;,,..'' '.-'i ay
ii. ii xflr-sv. -ic Tw,"" -mr-' n r - r .1 ; ,1 v- j m
i . K" Utquhirt fcii t0lk 1 I 1 1 ll I V H foil A lllll'N'l " '
611 Klamath Phone S45$ I MMn WiB-L, ' lX lUU 111 H I) J J I J V i V'fl
Contmirci,, 0 BONO CEOflCE W HATES M.rc
sALrS;,CE M mm MM HIS ELISABETH RISDOI 00 OflUfiUS . A ( ,
fl J'H - . wr . ; v aiC: . ., t),t,L,: lm y j j-
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, 0RECON
Sets Sugar
Harry Gilmer paces passers and is
fT, "V"
I
Drafting of 4-Fs Would
Be Driver-Blow at Golf
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 2 (.'Pi
Proposed drafting of 4-F's would
be a driver-blow at golf, hitting
such stars as Byron Nelson and
Harold (Jug) McSpaden.
War Mobilization Director
James F. Byrnes suggested in
Washington yesterday that 4-F's
Winter Sports
Get Underway
At Barracks
Winter sports may get under
way at tho Marine Barracks
shortly, according to the recrea
tion office, and the newly-dug
ice skating rink is now b c i n e
flooded. 1
A temperature dron to freeze
the rink over solidlv is all that is
needed to start the skating off.
ine recreation office has on
hand a number of pairs of skates
which have been donated to the
marines, and more nre heine, nr.
uureu.
Other cold-weather snorts nre
still in the future. A bobsled run
is being built and should be com
pleted in about two week Tho
snoo runs from the water tank
near the main gate, through the
fire breaks back of officers
quarters, and winds on near iho
amines a run ot approximately
three-quarters of a mile.
A ski run down the sirln nf
one oi ine adjacent hills is under
consideration, but the location
has not been decided upon.
The winter sports facilities arc
primarily for recreation, but will
also be used as nart nf thn rn...
jar training program. Lights are
being installed so they can be
used at night, and nn :n-ifi,i
dates marines may bring guests
out to take part in tho sports.
All cauiDmcnt will h f.,r.
nished by the recreation office.
ana most oi it has been
by people of this vicinity.
it has been donated I
mum
Box Office Opens 1:30-6:45
li :
fa - fcm ;K wVi'J ,,,r
Bowl Record
1 iv
Alabama's Iradlnt ground-gainer.
now deferred for physical rea
sons be inducted for limited
service or for assignment lo war
industry if existing manpower
controls prove Insufficient.
Nelson. McSpaden and other
leading golfers are hero for the :
VJ-nolo Los Angeles Open tour
nament which starts Friday.
Nelson, . 32-year-old Toledo,
Ohioan and former U. S. Open
and Professional Golfers associa
tion national champion, has a 4-F
classification because ot hemo
philia. It's defined as "a condi
tion, usually hereditary, charac
terized by a tendency to profuse
j an uncontrollable hemorrhage
even irom tne slightest wounds."
Nelson won S4G.766 in war
bonds during 1944 tournaments.
McSpaden. 34. of Philadelphia,
who was the second high monev
winner of 1944 with $28,700 In
bonds, is a 4-F because pf hay
fever.
Other standout golfers, now
here, who would be affected bv
the proposal include Leonard i
Dodson, Kansas Cltv, Mo.; Leon-1
9,ii r,t T-Mn..n. j .
... v., urnvi-i, Ana L,eorge hen
nciter of Salt Lake City. Utnh
semi-finalist in the national PGA
championship last summer in
Spokane.
Two New Records Set
In Sugar Bowl Game
NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 2 OVi
Two Sugar Bowl records fell in
Dukes 20-2G victory over Ala
bama here yesterday:
The 8for-8 forward passing
performance of 18.vcar-old
freshman Harry Gilmer, reprc
senling all of Alabama's aerial
efforts, sot a new bowl mark of
100 per cent completions.
The total score of tho game
55 points was another record
topping the H8 total made by
Georgia Tech and Tulsa last
year.
BuddV YoilllB. snrnrlv nn,
back, carried the pigskin nine
h tackier Were ma e' M
Hackett, All-American guard.
,now,
X "Wll X
Whirlaway
Proud Papa
Of Bay Colt
Bv KYLE VANCE
LEXINGTON, K.v.. Jan. 2 J
Whii laway Is thr niuiul "I
u hmini'inis buy ivlt.
Calumet Farm, home of t
chestnut clmiuiiim immey wln
ning race horse ol ull tune, Sal
urday annmimrH the arrival al
most' four months afUT he win
fo.ilrd auilil Mum' lfn! nr
I'unislanrcs, Whlrly's first son p 1 1 y
rnouiih has been numril First
Whirl. Ills mother Is Mary V.
rovallv bred daughter o( 1 1 1 till
Time. Mother ami son now tie.
long to Charles K. I'lsher. unto
niohlli' hoily nmnnulo and owner
of Uixlana Farm iwnr here.
The strapiiuiii baby tliorouuh
hied oanie lulo the world lour
inonlhs altei' the fouling season
had closed, but Calumet Spoki's
men explnlned it this way:
Whii laway s (ir.st crop of sons
and daughters was not expei'ted
until ItHS. lip was not rellrid
from raring to the stud until
June. 194.1, and it was July be.
fore he arrived nt thv rolling
b 1 u e g r a 9 s iiero of Warren
Wright's Calunu'l (arm,
At that time, it was difficult
IsJIllfflij
Continuous Show Dally
Box Office Oponi 12:30
-STARTS-TODAY
2 Big Hits!
"No Han
Of Her Own"
-STARRING-
Clark Gable
Carole Lombard
SECOND HIT
"Thrill of
A Lifetime"
-STARRING-
Betty
Grable
Dorothy Lamour
I I I ' ' m mt r j--
immt -and.
Telephone 4567
Box Office Opens 1:30.6:45
to find a mine In condition In lie
bred alncp tho noiiunl hrredlnu
season had linen ovrr nearly a
month. ,
Kvontually, though In Ovlo-
her Nnvv V, then owned by
Tllford WIlMin, wna found lo be
in tollable fetlle.
.So lllllr Klisl Whirl inippety
and hmlthy di-splto It nil now
finds himself tu tho strange po
sition of becoming a year old
when he urtually will be only
(oui-months old. The unlvrinal
hli'lluhiy for all thoioiiKhhntilii
Ls January 1 each year.
This places the buy huliy In a
problematical disadvantage, be
cntiw when he ln its Ills rui'lng
riirei'i' he will run atfalnsl hoisen
several inonlhs older than he,
Tile present plan l tu rturt
hhu in Ill-Ill, ofln ially us a two.
year-old, and If he proves his
blue blood he will lie nonilnuteil
for tho Keiitui ky DerUv In 1 047,
a rueo his (aiuous dadoy won hi
IU-II, M'ttlng a tr.uk record and
thrilling thoiiMiuds o Derby
rooters wllh his great lultli,
Joe llrennan, (onncr iro(es
sioual ba.-'kelbiill sliu, Is eoueli,
lug ilrooklyn's Ml, Kiuneln col
lege quintet (or the fourlh tea.
sou.
l.es llollunan is thr only Long
Island university baskelliiill reg
ular hticlc fi-iim lut srtinoit. I
lmio
-giilliL!jJli!l"l
Box Office Opens 6:45 P. M.
NEW TODAY
I
! ; T: -,i 1 corio m
' t (i BUTTERWORTH To R
li M 1 CfX Tim,Ryan
I I liSi"' 1 I -:- , k of com n
1 It n w&fahtfi'
. S ( i J57 N Heade
- f V'l ''" v' "' A'ilvjf Socond coni"
I .S' 1 jzzt JijHs . " IpSiiScp
fct J . i rfXi'A I Vj Mi. I Ihe com
if w mi w VW b"""n, te.o
-- After
NOW PLAYING
Tunrloy, Jgnuory 2,
Belcastro Will
Rassle Johnson IFFI
In 4rr,A f il l I
Friday nluhi i ,i. ...
Winch lili-na. I'. i,, n.,,. r.l,IHui
ween uMisin, wm unit- j.
inr gri;nng wars l.v Ian h.!" -
K!,,rnmu ,,wu
JoluiMin has had ,lk rt
cess on . iiorlhet ,n1,,'i(' 'Til.,r
cult will, his puweim i, .C' 'E
ssir ",,ic
llvlculru will i.-iv . Io
faiuejl suilhuanl ,, ,J W W
;"h. "d as Johnson , 7.B D
exnonent o( t h , ni,,i.,i Ki A?'
Uu; two m.,,,,1,. ,',,, Kd Ml
evenly matched ,.,. ' lL
Popular hn e, will enl, i-'tl". rt' . JW
the senlluienlal favorli, ,
Johnson, Hlhouul, unWctl7j'',t.
lur li a mlgl.lv (, guv S'''
Promoter Mttrk 1-llh.rrt .ffi l,
inakhiK ananueinenls i mi 'caIi
mi- mm, ami inr si-lnl.wliHi.fc ,
will le nnunuiierd t,,,,,,,, rilw TJ,
Man o' War in the unly'liouP ,w
with u bunk account In 1 1. Tbl. i"
nunie. 1 It M
Llhtoml LOVES
A Lircm-H'Arcm corned
rcm-Crtrcm ccnicdy.
romo.Kc! V'f
,l'a"
ireneri
over Chi
In con
schools
when a
dents nn
Infiuenz,
there wn
imons r
, or, soholi
Found
Set fo
?Tht a
banquet
Junior i
iviis ict l
Jlng nt
Mcarris 1
Jresldonl
Annou
f tho uii
n civic
ot the v
iro of tl
Arrnnt
vent w I
lylthln n
Kiwan
Box Office Opona tt4S
uinnei
: ThKI
lold Its i
lor at tin
1 n n I . 1 I
Hailed.
Ma; will
F fereor J
lie oomni
' Ueidc
noun
nam
IDRVO
mile ii
pee la
Wen
ink
ke wli
dv id.
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Jun wo
Ins a lu
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