Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 19, 1946, Page 3, Image 3

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II P MYSTtRY
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I'l.HKI 'MIIKKV THAII.lt"
TONITEI On The Stagol
8:30 p. m.
The Radio Show of
SuPrlio.l
"SHOOT THE WORKS"
Broadcast Over KFJI
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"KIIAIIOHf
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Clnmlflrd Ads Bring Results.
Pelicans Take
50-32 Victory
From Vikings
By HALE SCARBROUGH
Avonglng an oarly-sooson defeat tho Klamath Policons
rompod ovor Salem's vikings at KUHS last night to win 50
to 32 and going away. Tho Pols were out in front by seven
points boloro Salom tallied onco and the visitors never came
within hailing distanco of tho load again.
Jim Palmer topped tho shootors with 15 points and
Loroy Coleman got 10 for Klamath. Roger Dosch hit nine
ond Ceno Mason seven as loading contributors to the Vik
ings. Ball-handling on both sides was shoddy and rarely did
10 consecutive seconds puss
without a ciiii p from u referee a
whistle, slowing tho ifamo al
mom to a wiiik.
Dick Muse, Snlem reserve
forward, sprained un unklu
dodging iiriiuiul ii row of chairs
pulled almost to the foul line
iilongsltlo tint court uud hud to
bo curried oil the floor; Jurry
Tlioriie spill u finger when ho
plowed Into the wiill In the
fourth (iiurter; liob Mcdkcy and
C'urloH llouck weru banished
from tho itiiinc for u hit of
KcruppliiK for possession of tho
hull Unit uppcured to be unin
tentional on tho part of both
boys.
Starling off the Pel went
seven point ahead whllo the
Vikings alined for the basket
mid missed several limes, The
first quarter score was fl-8 for
Klamath. Tho K-men climbed
steadily nil through the second
period, aided by n foul and
technical foul for uncompli
mentary rcmurks on tho floor
which Kvo the Pels thrco
points mid the bull, und the
half ended 24-16.
Right lit tnc start of the third
period tho altitude not the Sa
lem boyH und they used their
fifth time out. Palmer, Hover
and Thorni) udded ulifhl points
while the Vikings wero getting
four, milking the quarter count
34-20.
After pushing the score a bit
further skyward Coach Dutch
Kronen sent his second team
In to deal with the failed Vik
ings In the lust period. In about
four minutes of play Joe Zaro
r.inxkl made six points, tho only
Klamath reserve to score.
Lineups and scoring:
Klamath Pol. Vlklngi
Palmer (15). ...K Bellinger
Mover (8) K (1) Fltzmaurice
Thome (3) ... C (7) Mason
Coleman (10). G 1) Chambcrl'n
Craig (3) G l Dosch
Substitutions: Klamath
Crawford, Zurozinskl (6), Lin
nan, McLean, Hcdkcy and Ed
wards. Salem Muse, Province
(0), Alberts, llouck (2), H. Bel
linger (2) and Hendrie (4). Of
ficials Joe LaCluir and Har
old Douglas.
In a preliminary Rome the
Klamath, Salem
Play Again Tonight
Klamath's Pelicans play tha
last of th two-tilt sorlas with
tha visiting Salam Vlklngi to
night on tha high school
mnpla. Last night tha Pals
whipped Salem 50-32, putting
the season's record at 13 wins
in 15 starts.
The game tonight is sched
uled to begin at 8:15, and a
preliminary between the
Wildcats and Henley takes the
floor at 7 o'clock.
Bakers Take
57-29 Victory
From Merchants
Chiloquin's AB Bakery took a
fast Kami over the Tuleloke
Merchants In a Basin league
game played at Tulelnkc Thurs
day nitfht, 37-20. Huff was high
scorer with 21 points and Or
bach hit 11 for the Merchants.
That win makes four straight
In the league for the Bakers,
against no defeats. Huff has
rung up 77 points in league piny
and HI Hatfield has scored 38,
Lineups and scoring:
Bakers Pos, Merchants
Hall (2) K.(li) J. Urbach
Huff (21) K .. (5) Turnbaugh
Hatfield (18) . C...(10)L. Urboch
Miller (0) G (3) Anderson
Bickers (4) G Street
Substitutions: Chiloquln
Giles (4) and Donovan (1).
CONZAGA WINS
SPOKANE, Jan. 19 (IP) Gon
r.aga university's basketball
team, sparked by big John Pres
ley last night chalked up a 42-33
win over a Whitman college five,
as Presley led the scoring with
17.
Bill Bell paced Whitman with
nine.
KUHS Prcshmcn defeated Keno
40 to 23. Tho Rooks arc the
only group representing KUHS
that lias not been beaten this
year..
S3 PCD QB TO
Qfotsaaga Grans fett
Vebfoots Moving Back
Into Cage Limelight
Ducks Defeat OSC 53-48; Gale Bishop
Returns To Aid Washington State
By The Associated Press
Oregon and Idaho rambled back Into tho northern division,
Pacific Coast conference title picture last night with all the
dignity of a couple of Sherman tanks, putting slight crimps in
tho flag hopes of Oregon Stato and Washington,
Down In the home wickiup of the OSC Beavers at Corvallis
Oregon's defending champions ground out a 53 to 4U victory in
overtime, handing Oregon Stato its first loss of the division
season,
Rejuvenated Iduho at tho samo time was chalking up its third
straight triumph at Moscow.
outshooting the specdlincd
Washington Huskies for a 30 to
43 decision,
THE STANDINGS
W. L,
Oregon State .,..3 1
Washington 3 2
Idaho 3 3
Oregon 2 2 .
W. S. C 1 4
Whllo alt this was going on,
tall-end Washington State sat
back and smiled. Yesterday the
school announced that Gale
Bishop, who rates as Mr. Bas
ketball in the Pacific north
west, had enrolled and will be
available to the team for Its
next tilt if his army discharge
comes through as scheduled.
Thrills piled up faster than
the minute hand could shrug
them off at Corvallis, with the
score tied four times in tho
first half before Oregon took a
23-24 midgame edge and seven
times in the second period,
which closed with the situation
static at 45 to 45.
There was even a tie at 47
in the overtime session, and
OSC then edged in front on a
free throw by Neal. Seeborg
bucketed a goal to reclaim the
pace position for the Webfeet
and Oregon won going away,
on a field flip by Bray and
charity dunks by Wilkins and
Seeborg.
Bernic McGrath of the losers
set the scoring pace with 16
points, half of them on free
throws. Ken Hays was the Ore
gon leader, with 13, and seven
of his were from the gift line.
FIGHTS LAST NIGHT
NEW YORK Rocky Grazi-
ano, 1551. New York, outpointed
Sonny Home. 156J. Valley
Stream. N. Y., (10). Clint Miller,
274. Elizabeth, N. J., outpointed
Frankie Lcta, 1341, Irvington,
N. J.. (6).
Marines
Trounce
Astoria
Klamath's Marines, visiting
up north, swamped the Astoria,
Ore., Navy Flyers 67-24 at As
toria last night. It was the
Leathernecks' second win in
three games with the navy boys
this season.
Art Verment hung up 18
points for the Marines, eight
field goals and a pair of foul
shots, while Doc Zautcke was
next with 14, a combination of
five goals and our charity
passes.
All the way through the
Leatherneck ball handling and
fast break were excellent . and
the Flyers never had a chance.
Halftime count was 22-12 for the
Marines.
The twh afrvirn fnami maul
again at Astoria tonight.
Wisconsin Vetoes
Husky Grid Offer
SF.ATTr.E .Tn 10 IID mill.
Wisconsin being the latest to
iurn oown ine university of
Washington' nffnr fnr a hnmo.
field fnnthnl'l aamn nnanap lha
Huskies are still without an op
ponent tor tncir urst game of
September 28.
Al ITlhrlr-trcnn aM vnrln.Jm.
- - ....... ou,u vavejua
he had received word from the
accept the invitation because of
Drevinilis nunmilinanlc Minna.
soia naa previously turned down
an Offer fnr iYtn enmn rnacstn
But Ulbrickson still holds
nones fnr an intnrcpptinnnl hnllln
for the season's opener.
Saturday. Jan. 19. 1948 HERALD AND NEWS THRE8
Old Pete Qualifies For Flight Pay
the
Pete Belcastro, the Weed Wildman, sails through the ropes and into the aisle back of
jau.v ciiiiuumuf uiigaiup Buvuun aufiiiq ine secona rouna oi nis bouf with Hurhi
Parks last Tuesday. The extra pair of gams in the picture belong to Parks. The two parties
wondering whether to move or not are Don Dove and John Pennington, KFJI announcers.
uuija r ana dii;uu-d win on DBcs iox mozo anion next 1 ue8aay night..
Rocky's Kayo Streak Ends
NEW YORK, Jan. 19 fP)
Rocky Graziano's sensational
knockout streak is ended today
but in winning a fight the hard
way boxing's current "Golden
Boy" showed that he may be
ready to give Middleweight
Champion Tony Zale plenty of
trouble.
Rockabye Rocky s six-fight
flattening record came a cropper
against Sonny Home in Madison
bquare Garden last night but
the slugger from New York's
East Side looked impressive as
he belted out a ten round de
cision victory in Madison Square
Garden.
Despite the fact that Home is
noted for his punch-taking
prowess and had walked off
with seven victories in eight
fights since his release from the
navy, the betting boys had made
Graziano a 1 to 3 choice to win
and a 5 to 8 favorite to stop the
Valley Stream, N. Y., boxer.
A packed house of 18,907
customers who contributed to a
$108,974 gross gate Graziano's
third straight "hundred grand"
gate expected Rocky to make
good the odds in the first round
when he unlimbered his Big Tom
right and staggered Home.
But the former Ohioan weath
ered the storm and although he
took a severe shellacking in a
number of other frames and
seemed on his way out in the
tenth, he was still on his feet at
I the end. As a matter of fact,
Graziano, who feasted mainly on
welterweights during his sleep -producing
run, wasn't able to
floor his blond opponent. And
for the first time in a long spell
Graziano was outweighed
1551 to 1563.
But in gaining the unanimous
verdict and a seven-three edge
on the Associated Press score
card, Rockabye Rocky showed
that veteran , trainer Whitey
Bimstein's schooling and condi
tioning program was showing re
sults. In the old days before he
skyrocketed to fame on the
power of his dynamite-laden
fists, if Rocky didn't get 'em
early his rivals gained to de-
StaxU. SATURDAY MIDNITE!
Aat and wife by Daij,
STRANGERS bij IMSqht !
DOORS OPEN
-11:30 P. M.-
1 1
UNIVERSAL Jjp "'OUt "e -onun
ki -r
. starring
PIRANDELLO'S dramatic classic readies full greatness on the screen!
MERLE OBERON CLAUDE RAINS CHARLES KORVIN
continuous win. CARL ESMOND SUE ENGLAND JESS BARKER
shows RALPH MORGAN FRITZ LEIBER HARRY DAVENPORT
SUNDAY!
From 12:30
ftLrrl MUKUAN f-RlTZ LEIBER HARRY DAVENPORT
N MM. Ii))
. m tnonuiiM nu un w un
Oirected by
WILLIAM DIETERLE
ol "Uv Utters" and
. "I'll Be Seeing You" tame
Moyer Chills
Saurez In
Eight Rounds
PORTLAND, Jan. 19 (IP)
Tommy Moyer, 146i, 1941 na
tional amateur lightweight box
ing champion, today held the
mythical Oregon state welter
weight crown after knocking out
Johnny Suarez. 142i. Portland,
in the second match of Moyer's.
Suarez was leading up to the
sixtn round and had scored a
four-count knockdown in the
first.
Moyer knocked out the little
Mexican at 2:42 of the eighth
stanza with a wicked short left
to the chin. Suarez had just
ducked away from a right cross.
Suarez, who previously scored
a string of eight local wins, held
the advantage through the first
rounds with a dangerous left. He
sent Moyer to the canvas in the
first with a right hook to the
jaw, and dropped him again mo
mentarily a few seconds later.
Bobby Richards, 122, San
Francisco, won a decision over
Snooks Lacey, 126, Portland, in
the 10-round semi-final; Duane
Hoag, 127, Portland, knocked
out Paulie Cook, 1261, Tampa,
Fla., in the second of an eight
rounder; . and Dick Wagner.
1461, Oregon City, scored a
technical knockout over Ralph
Garrison, 148, Hoquiam, in the
third of a four-round opener.
BOSTON Deniis (Pat) Bra
dy. 130i, Hartford, Conn., out
pointed Vannie Vazzo, 1311,
Revere, Mass., (10). Dave An
drews, 140, Lowell, Mass., out
pointed Fred Polowitzer, 138,
Hartford, Conn., (8).
Dance
Sat
Jan. 19
Malm
Dancing 9 till 2
Music by
THE
Chicagoans
Tony Penna Vaults Into
Richmond Golfing Lead
RICHMOND, Calif., Jan. 19
(IP) Smiling Toney Penna, en
joying a three-stroke advantage
gained from a sparkling streak
of sub-par shooting, led a stream
lined field into the third round
of the 72-hole Richmond $10,000
Open today.
By JOHN FOSTER
It's about time I crawled out
of hibernation and gave the men
keglers a bit of publicity. From
now on, space permitting, this
column will be a weekly feature
as it was some time back.
In the Booster- league Pine
Street Market is in first place
with 19 wins and eight losses,
and Weyerhaeuser is second
with 16 wins and 11 ' losses.
Down the line are Montgomery
Ward, Moose, Balsiger's, Great
Northern Goats and the Team
sters. Last Tuesday four out of eight
teams bowling took all three
games. Pine Street Market, Bal
siger's, Montgomery Ward and
Weyerhaeuser all swept series.
Geiger hit a sizzling 250 game
and topped off the evening with
a 654 series.
On Wednesday night the Com
mercial league kegled with these
results: Marines took three from
Louie's food store, Watters drop
ped Hibbs for two, Edwards
Richfield toppled Bill Davis'
boys a couple and Bonanza stuck
Dick Reeder's. Southwell and
Pastega each Tolled a 215 and
Bray hit high series of the. eve
ning, 601.
One team, Hibbs', has already
been to the state meet in Port
land and is. back with slim
hopes. A couple of good games
were rolled but at the time it
just didn't look too. good.
Lee Danzer was the only
member of the team in Portland
who had much luck. He placed
first one evening with . a 588
series that still holds fourth
place to date. Two more men's
teams, Elks Lodge and the Bill
Davis gang, are going up-this
weekend.
Chevrolets Win
From Firemen
Ashley's Chevrolet downed
the Merrill Firemen 34 to 29
Thursday night at Merrill in a
Basin cage loop meeting. At. the
half Merrill was ahead 13-12. '
Hunnicutt was high scorer for
the Firemen, getting 11 points,
while Lowell led for the Motors
with 10. Tuesday night Ash
ley's play the Bonanza Merch
ants at 8 o'clock in the Altamont
junior high gym. . . .
Clearance Sale
. In Progress! .
Special Value!
Men's T Shirts
Reg. $1.00 . , Q
Now OTt
The GUN STORE
714 Main St.
Penna, the accordion-playing
professional golfer from Dayton,
Ohio, teed off with 134 for tha
first half of the tournament.
The little fellow . with " the '
smooth swing tossed a six-under-par
score at the rest yesterday
to vault from a second f lace tie
into first position. His 33-32 65
against par 36-3!) 71 was only a
stroke behind the competitive
course record set a year ago by
Harold McSpaden of Sanford,
Me. McSpaden, incidentally,
was far back today among tha
sixty pros and sixteen amateurs
left in the field teeing off.
Penna carded a 69 for his
opening round. He had to coma
through with an urrasual per.
formance to grab the lead, as an
amateur unknown to major
tournament competition until
this winter was knocking at the
door of fame. ; '
The simon pure was Charles
Stolhand from Ponca City, Okla.
He landed in second place was
teeing off from that bracket to
day as the result of two previous
rounds of 69 and 68 total 137
that shoved some of the greatest
names of professional golf Into
the background.
Until he showed up for the''
Los Angeles Open three weeks
ago Stolhand, employed by a
gas distillation plant in Ponca
City, had never matched shots
with the bigwigs of the game.
Off his present showing he ranks
as one of the outstanding am
ateur prospects of the country.
Merchants Win
From Woolens,
Lose To Tule
BONANZA The Bonanza
Merchants defeated Oregon
Woolen 23-19 here Thursday
night but then lost to the Tule
lake Flying A squad 33-12 in a
pair of Basin'loop cage games.
The first game ended in a five,
minute overtime period that saw
Wesley Hankins score six points
against two by Sollinger of the
Woolens to win the game.
McClure and Spidle each had
six points for the Woolens and
Hankins was high for the Mer
chants with 13.
The Tulelake bunch proved to
be the smoothest quintet to ap
pear on the Bonanza court this
season in taking the second
game.; Schreiber had 11 points
and Porterfield eight for the win
ners and Ross tried to keep the
Merchants in the game with
eight.
Cage Results
By The Associated Press .
Franklin 28, Grant 16.
Commerce 25, Roosevelt 23.
Jefferson ,48, Lincoln 44, over
time. . "
. Washington 67. Sabin 27.
Grants Pass 44, Ashland 34.
. Central Catholic (Portland)
41, Milwaukie 36.
. Parkrose 47.- HU1 . Military
(Portland) 30. .
Gresham 47, Columbia Prep
(Portland) 31. ,
Eugene 35, Roseburg 27.
- University High 47,- Spring
field 32. '. .
Sandy 45, Estacada 28.
Baker 38, Pendleton 27. ,
Lebanon 40, Toledo-30.
Scapoose 41, St. Helens 27.
The Dalles 38, Hood River 34
, Hillsboro 40, Newberg,24. .
Molalla 52, Mt. Angel 28.
,4