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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1946)
T tui Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1946 HERALD AND NEWS SEVEN luamaui na uuuu uiaiitc ,'.. m mm m . m mmm mm m Uf Malting The Tornado Varsity Game Starts At 8:15 Tonight On KUHS Hardwood; Preliminary At 7 For the first timet In u couulo of huiikhiis thu Klmuiilh Pel lean luivo un odds-nil cliunco of top mng ino lorniuio which tins ormed tha linbll of miiklnu hush of local foolbtill und bus- kellmll offerings. Tonight's LA Bowl Wanted By Pro Grid I .OS ANCKLES. Jan. 10 Ml iVIii'thcr tho i'XihiiihIvu nriclncti if Lou Angeles' Memorial Col !.ieiim will bo thrown open to ?u'ofc.ioiiii foulbiill.i llllll If no o which ones will be; decided )iy tha bin bowl' commissioners , wltliln two weeks, It uppenred lodiiy. I Tho commission took under : lidvlseincut yesterday requests for playing dales next full of ; three playfor-hlro clubs: the fcj.iis Auuulc Hams, of the nil- loiwil pro league, recently trnim- nerren from Cleveland, the local A II-America club end tho Holly BAvood Hears' chmnplon Pacific Cons', league entry. A Applications iiIko wero sub finlltcd by the two college users ,,' llie howl, university 01 south i "ern California and UCLA. It is ii foreiione concluKltm tlint the i Jiitler request, will be granted. f Charles V. Wulhh, Hams' gen :itii1 manager, asked a four-yeur ..jciiso wiin n minimum or. llvo Dlnylnu dnteii yearly and n maxl 'inum of 10. Tho All-America J-und Hollywood lleur applications .no inn specuy (lines, gj WiiI.hIi promlm'd that collegiate 'xehedulcs, calling for Friday 1 liluhl and Saturday games, will )"lu respected, but usked that no Mindny attractions be scheduled .vlietween September 1 and Do jStember 31 until tho Rami' sched Stile Is drawn up. si The universities were not Sleprescntod, siihmitllnK their re : (UiesU In wrltlnK. USC and UCLA each play six home games il 'i . t oKiinq rarrv neia f At Sun Mountain A amnn nf OK mnplnm II lors, Wavci and USO Junior Hostesses went to Sun moun tuin for the USO's weekly ski Ing parly early Sunday morn' lng. Transportation was provided by two murine corps buses and one navy bus, and all skiing equipment was furnished by tho larlno Barracks. Food was cooked over on fgjOpcn flro for the mid-day meal Sand upon the skiers' return to I the USO In tho evening) the .Lions club treated them to a spaghetti dinner, with sauce prepared bv Sgt. Lcc Maxwell Sof the marines. ,! Maryland la known as the fU"Old Lino Stato" because of the distinguished service of the Maryland lino during the Revo- f'Jutlon. LEGAL NOTICES V; NOTICE TO CREOtTUKS f IN T1!K CIHCIMT COWHT or THE f4 STATE OF OUEUON fOR KLAMATH f? COUNTY. JN TUB MATTKR Or THE ESTATE OT MAltlON 1'INKNRY CHOWDKH, ALSO p KNOWN AS l'INK CllOWDKH. t'? Nnllco la hereby given Ihitt the tinder s' (lined has hern duly appointed ad y lnlnlttratrlX of tho eitato of Marion p rinknry Crowder, alio known a Pink 1'. Crowder. All prrion having clalmi tgnlnat alti ontnle ahull preterit the r an me. with voucher attached and veri t $ In the manner provided by taw to L (3 I' I no Tree Building. Klamath Falli, ( Ori-gon, within tlx mnnthi of the date f. dI the pnhllratlon of thlt notlre. r V 11RATHICE H. CHOWDER. t Admlnutratrlx o( the Eitate of I 'A Mnrlnn llnkney Crowder, aUo l'- known aa Pink Crowder. ? 9. i-o-io-a:t-.io No. 2.iu. f "A NOTK'R Notice ! hereby irlven that WTLBON f-:-, corporation, whoie noma office U In ' Klamath ralli. Oregon, duly licensed ), to trnmact a title Ituurance bmlneai In if, aald Stnte of Oregon, haa applied to the r. Jnauranro Commlmiloner of nld atate for I. return of the Becitrltlea drpoalled by V; '-.aald corporation ai a guaranty fund, ' and hni notified in Id Cninmlai Inner of 1 ilta Intention to retire from aald title ,J niu ranee bualneu, and that It has iajnlered Into a contract of re-Insurance , llh COMMONWEALTH. INC., an Ore l con tnrporallnn, whine home office U P in Portland, Oregon, and which Ii duly h-:fcenipd to trnnnnct a title Insurance t.- huihiRfls In Oregon, whereby in Id COM :i MONWEALTII, INC. assumra and agrees Win rilBChnrKfl nil the llnhltlllKa n( mvmrv t kind, due and to become due, which I the dnnnalt nf ths lonirltli! nf WILRflM I TITLE Ac ADSTnACT CO. was made to I secure. I Dated at flalem. Orearnn. Dtcimhap V. 11045. RETH B. THOMPSON, Inaurnnce Commissioner. I. 1D-3A; J. 2-0-10-23 -.10; F. 0 No, 231 It's TONITE Cfll-ORE E5arAVnn ga I0MWAV T fOUTM gumo on the KUHS court sees the Pels riding the crest of an ulghl-gumo win streak and ca publo of tnass-substltiitlon with out muterlully diminishing their offensive power. Lost year Medford whipped the Pels four times during the season cage play, then nosed thi'in out again in an overtime till In tho conference tourney. Tho Tornado squad of lust year li Held over virtually In tact for this season and tho ros ter hours a strong resemblance In names to the football lineup that run roughshod over tho K-nicn lust fall. The big Klamath first string Is expected to start ugaln.it Med ford, but In the lust couple of games Coach Dutch French bus been using rcsorves liberally with an eye to huving to run all his tall men in against the Jackson county team. Ills main problem will be get ting control of the rebounds, a spoclolty of Jerry Thorno and dene Hover. Bill McLean, who has been running on the second string, may have a hand In solv ing Unit problem. Also on tonight's slate Is a prelim betweon tho KUHS Wild cats and Medford's Junior var sity quintet. That dual starts at 7 o'clock und the main game will get going about 8:1 8. Ashland Quintet Seeking Matches With Local Teams A blanket challenge to any anu an independent uasketnall teams in Klanvith Fulls Is Issued by the Ashlnnd Elks sound. 13-mun all vcterun team which evidently is completely out of me class or any competition In mot port of me country. The Ashland Elks are willing to play ony team from over here on a homo and home basis each quintet paying their own expenses. Particularly they want a game for Saturday night, February 2, In Ashland, to be played as a preliminary to tile Pelican-Grizzly tilt that night. The Elks have slated a game with the Klarnuth Marines, to bo played In Medford for bene- m of me March of Dimes Jan uary 30. Any independent outfit over hero wanting to arrange a clam bake with the Ashland outfit can get in touch with Eorl C. Schilling, business manager of me Asniana Elks bnskctba 11 team, Ashland, Ore., for the de tails. Washington Might Schedule Wisconsin SEATTLE, Jan. 18 W Husky gridiron fans may vet sec a midwest team tangle with the home eleven in the Univer sity of Washington stadium with mo possibility now the enemy might be Wisconsin'! Badgers. l'rol. Kudolph Nottclman. fac ulty sports chief, said he had conferred with Badger Coach Hurry Stuhldrcher and promised an answer later this month. The September 28 open ing game originally was Dlan- ncd for Minnesota, which sign ed another ODDonent for that data. OUR BOARDING H0USK . . with . . . MAJOR HOOPLI OUT OUR WAY E6AD. AiBELPiKD SORRV TO HfcftK NOUK. HYKNUUU TECHNIQUE 9 RUSTY - X WANTED VOU TO WVPM0TIZE MPiRTrlftTO MAKE HER THINK. X'M VJORINiG AMD CSUIT l'RGlU& ME: TO GET A. 30BUrAf PERHAPS YOU'D LIKE TO BRUSH OP YOUR POWERS Of one of- fne Boys uiucvt AOit vr Ric.tpC BY J. R. WILLIAMS . I'LL PUT THE EYE OCA HllA FOR PRACTICE AMD V0XI SAfJ6 TH6 MISSUS FOR. LATER.' TMOT'S A Repaid - 1 A IF MY HOCUS-POCUS MISSED PIC& OfA TWEr VX ' . t . L . l J'S I fAIS5US IT5 HftVe TO FIGlAT MV VMrV Out op a BLIXZARD OF-PLATES PUT IT LOVER. AMD . k DUCK.: mi 0 Ml.ii l-ltf IsJuSTER NILL 66 THE: GUINEA PIG S GOOD GOSH-- OH, THAT'S YOUR BODY H P LOOKIT THAT BED.' I GETTIrJ' SOME MUCH 1 I HE SLEPT IN IT I NEEDED EXERCISE ( V ALL. NI&HT AM' IT YOU WON'T LET IT IN h,. . . AIN'T EVEN WRINKLED TH' DAYTIME, SO IT I WHy MINE L0OK.S I HAS TO GIT IT WHILE 1 1' V LIKE A HOTEL WASH J YOU'RE UNCONSCIOUS.' I 1 PILED UP WHEN I S ZZZy' V NIGHT SWEATS ...unB.Ti.,. l-ll J.ffWlU.lff.MC, cw m rr Mm mutt Kiimai .w. or r. -4 Gasoline stocks in the United States today stand at more than 3, 880,000,000 gallons, an in creaso of 230,000,000 gallons ovor a year ago. Player Flood Returning To NL Baseball NEW YORK, Jan. 18 W) Baseball players arc coming out of the service faster than they were being Inducted a year ago when tho future of the game hung by a thread. More than 180 former GI's hove returned to their National league clubs sinco tho close of the 1D49 sea son. Heading the list arc such well-known stars as Terry Moore, Max Lanier and Harry Walker, of the St. Louis Curdi nuls, J o il n n v Mize and Hal Schumacher of the New York Giants, Johnny Vondermcor and Ray Mueller of the Cincin nati Reds, Ron Northcy of the Phillies, Bumn Rowcll and Johnny McCarthy of tho Boston Braves, Elble Fletcher of Pitts burgh and Pete Reiser, Pee Wee Reese and Billy Herman of Brooklyn. A survey of current National league rosters by Charles Se gar, newly appointed league publicist, showed the names of 338 players who had been in service. Some returned during the 1945 season but a majority of them donned civvies since the world scries. Huge Coif Favored At Santa Anita ARCADIA. Calif.. Jan. 18 UP) Gnlla DamJon, a huge Bait colt. IB Hands, three Inches tall, was established today as the solid favorite for Saturday's $25,000 San Felipe stakes at Santa Anita. The strapping three-year-old yesterday skipped six furlongs In 1:10 15. best time so far at Santa Anita, while carrying 122 pounds. He thrashed Eiffel Tow er, the L. B. Mayer sprinter, by two lengths, and Jay Pa Icy s Inroc by six. Lynam Gets Default Win From Brutal Buck Lipscomb Ablo Joe Lyman won last night's main event rassling bout from Buck Lipscomb by dis qualification but that didn't put an end to the fighting at all, Referee Wnlly Moss had a strug gle on his hands to make Buck quit and another one to make Joe accept me win mat way. Moss awarded the fight to Lyman after Surly Jack had re peatedly ignored warnings about unfair tactics, slugging, biting, choke holds and the like. At the particular time the disquali fication came Jack was stomp ing on Lyman s outstretched arm after Wally tried to break a hold in the lourln round. Both Joe and Buck already had a fall each. Lipscomb got his In tnc second canto with a nan crab and Lyman's came in the third when Joe worked Lips comb over with a little bit of everything and finished off with a rockins chair. Herbie Parks launched a son nenberg off the ropes to run full speed Into one of Pete Bel- castro s wild haymakers to end the semi-final. Belcastro took the first fall with an uppercut and a press and Parks got one on a spreadeagln press after llooring Pete.wltn a butt. Moss had to continually threat en Belcastro with a trip to the showers in this bout and they once came to blows over some thing Pete called on the high heavens to witness he didn't do. ' A pleasant and unexpected surprise for the fans in the opener was the appearance of Tough Tony Ross, pinch hitting for Earl Malone in a bout with Joe Smolinski. Four years In the army ap parently had not made any cleaner a grappler out of Smo linski and he battered the popu lar Tony while the crowd jeered Jess Moor of the Mecca Announces tha MECCA CAFE IS NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT HELEN ALLSTOTT MARY ANN LYMAN You'll Like Our Food! before getting the first flop with a half crab. Ross came back like a whirl wind in the third round to lay Smolinski out flat with a cou ple of sonnenbergs and a press for the drawing fall. Smolinski at 203, outweighed Tony by 20 pounds and his weight gave him an advantage in the in-fighting. Mikan Regains Scoring Lead NEW YORK, Jan. 16 (IP) Running wild for 51 points in his last two games against West ern Kentucky and Murray (Ky.) Teachers, big George Mikan of DcPaul's Blue Demons has re gained the lead m the national collegiate individual high scor ing race, an Associated Press tabulation showed today. Mlkan's splurge gave him 288 points to oust Marshall's Bill Hall who took over first place wnn iu points a ween ago. Hall connected for 38 points in two games since then, but slip ped to second at 281. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By The Associated Press BOSTON Al (Red) Priest, 155, Cambridge, Mass., outpoint ed Fritzie Zivic, 151 i, Pitts- Philadelphia, knocked out Ted Christie. 136, Detroit, (2). SALhM, Mass. Lw Jenkins, 139 J, Sweetwater, Tex., knocked out Jerrv-Zullo. 140. Chelsea. Mass., (2). Johnny Marra, 155, isoston, Knocked out Jimmy Da vis, 160, USN (3). NEW YORK Lennv (Boom Boom) Mancini, 148, Youngs town, O., outpointed Torpedo Reed, 143, Los Angeles, (8). Dan ny Carabello, 121, Puerto Rico, outpointed Mike Konners, 129, New York, (8). OSC Moves Into Lead As Cougars Defeat Huskies PULLMAN, Wash., Jan. 16 (P) The Washington State Cougars defeated the University of Wash ington basketball team 48 to 37 last night, after having bowed twice to Washington previously on the Huskies home court. The Cougars jumped into the lead at the start and were never on the short end. Once they held a 15-point lead, with the score 40-25. Last year's national top-scor ing Hanson spilled 24 points in to the Husky basket last night for high scorer. The WSC victory pushed the University of Washington out of first place In the northern di vision and unbeaten Oregon State v th three wins takes over the nu..iber one spot. Washing- ton is in second place with two wins and one defeat. Washing ton State, despite its victory, re mains on the bottom oi the pile. FREE TOSS WINS MORAGA, Calif., Jan. 18 (P) Cadet Rod Cox of Lincoln. Neb., with two free throws at his disposal in me last 11 seconds, came through for a 61-60 victory by the St. Mary's Navy Pre Flight team last night over Camp Shoemaker's Fleet City quintet in a service basketball game. NEW YORK Joey Dolan, 128, Spokane, Wash., outpointed Benny May. 125. Montreal. (8). Julie Bort, 1341, Brooklyn, out pointed Lou Prince, 1311, Prince- ion, N. J., IB). 1J lute Statf SKI TOGS SUGARMAN'S Ut sad MjUb forPieasaivt OMEIWS Friend calls lo friend, "Il't PM Ume-Ut'$ go" end a million Pleasant Moments twinkle forth across tha luil! High time for thai Perfectly Marrelons , PM flavor in Old.Faahloned, Manhattan or Highball. So miraculously smooth, so periatlrely mellow... FM goes dote and the tmiles ooraa up again I 1 jsd !Nllon.lI)l.llll-sIdnct.O)rp.,N.Y.51SlightWUUy,49Giin Nenlral Spirits IT" NOW! 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Hillsboro 38, Forest Grove 30. Lebanon 46, Albany 31. Corvallis 44, Eugene 29. At Portland Washington 54, Jefferson 35. Commerce 34, Lincoln 15. Grant 43, Roosevelt 24. Benson 41, Franklin 30. Doc Blanchard Gets Amateur Award W t f fl" Huskies Take 32-20 Game From Mustangs Merrill's Huskies defeated the Malin Mustangs 32 to 20 last night at Merrill, making tha ninth win of the season against one loss for tho Huskies. Half time score was 18-10. In the B game Malln defeated Merrill 29 to 24. Lineups and scoring: Merrill poi. Malin Kandra (6) F ... (10) Victorln Noonan (8) F (2) EUil Fothering- ham (8) C (2) Field Hammond (6) G (2) Spolekj Walker (2) .. G .. (3) McKeon Substitutions: Merrill Hunnl cutt (1) and Johnson (1). Malin Cantrall, Libolt, McCall and Lindsay (1). Classified Ads 'Bring Results. High NEW YORK. Jan. 16 UP) Felix (Doc) Blanchard, Army's great fullback and two-time All American who has been show ered with virtually every con ceivable trophy for gridiron prowess, today became the first football player to hold amateur sport's highest honor the James E. Sullivan award. Voted annually as the ama teur athlete who has done the most to advance the cause of sportsmanship during the year, the 20-year-old grid ace from Bishopville, S. C, walked off with the 1945 prize with a total of 923 points in the poll conduct ed by the National AAU. TRUCKS AND PICKUPS FOR RENT Ton Drive-Long. Short Trips Move Yourself Save H STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 East Main Sweaters All wool. 2 and 3 stripe, sixes 34 to 44. Medium heavy 1) QA weight IJ.OW Extra heavy C EE weight ..-m 999 RUDY'S 600 Main CITY Delivery Service We pick Up and Deliver PARCELS BAGGAGE PRES-TO-LOGS MESSENGER SERVICE SPECIAL DELIVERIES Phone 8417 9:00 A. M. to Midnight Willis M. Robinson 0car W. 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