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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1946)
feller Aiming For Fan Mark By The Associated Preaa llnbby Feller's nuuiliig record of IIH strikeouts In 107 Innings i lur iti I I t.'.ln Jlit'H tlx- field Unit IiIh sole competition apciirs In In- Ilic dusty record boohs In lliu hull of funic. Kin I y In lh mnhiu it I Cleveland's Clearwater, Kin., Iriiliiinn base, Feller tnlil rcportcra lie liutl only nnu miijnr ulin In 1040 regaining III Hti lkciMil rniwn thill liuil been worn liy llolio New Mini, Allli' H i it 1. 1 n unil Ncwhoiisor since liu went into tliu nuvy. 'I'lir Tribe has wiiii hut II) guinea mill llic Vim Meter, Iowa speed hoy him captured eight, working II complete c'iiit-tn. Tho only tliui' lir failed In no Mm runic, hu was hfli'il lur u )lnch hitler nl Huston I'll i lliiu'it lie Iihh been lilt IiiikI hut In every other Mint lie him luuki'il like Just ulinut tint best pitcher In baseball. Washington Is In a pin llciihuly fine vantage point to sign liny Keller testimonials (or the Scnutois Iiuvo been thu chief contributors In lliu souring strikeout tollll. When he fluid then) lur thi ill nl time Ulin season, May 17, lie whiffed 14 mid lunt - Golf Duel Pairs Set The linnuiil links duel hctwecn gnllrra rt'pri'.KMil lliu the Klks mid Iteaiiics tuki-H to tiic luu'WiiyH Sundiiy morning, foursomes play lug liuil til" losers Murk (or the (I l ii mi 1. I. nut yeur the Iniu'ncy was won hy Ihe IteiuncH gultcrr. mitl the year before by Hie Klkn. I'ries will he awarded for viirimis bogeys. The fiiiir.iniiie, scheduled to ( tee off lit H ii. in. puts l.cs UVright mid liny KuKcr of Klks against Jurk Wcbhcr unil Krmik 1'cylnn of itennieii. Any plnyir nut listed in the followlnK tune kchi'dule enn he assured of a Hume by showing up nt the club house bi'twceii U unil 0 Sunday morning. fairing unil time: i ih. lira lit Jack WrhlMr Crank Peyton f)r M C Ca.efl At II.. us Carl WtMxH Harry I'anulug IH.h Millar Huh Hi. t. mi I llarlay Mull Jolllt lliuiun W TuitffxiMiii Hum Aixlereoti U HU I Wright Hay ItliJfrr riMik Vi.lory Hill Martin 05- I 10- Jhn V.r.t Mtillll I 1ft I to Jim Kim Mill lrlle n IIHI llr.llon lUy l-eunh V. I) Milkman Kail I?rtuh4fl l.a-.i lVl jo- I, M tl.xlttin Motgon , jihnnn ( lair Lint Itotoanl I'crrlit Martin Kwarmtn I'atll Hltarp H Thump'! I 43 r i una Hrrt J hnauti W I. Mm,. J irk lli.h .i Tikii W (ti Waltrra tlntfU t ampttatl I' Itnialathoui Ijtft' Ittepheiia uwu Ankiny Ciena H'HiMar Jark rranklin hill Hfiii lir J Mrrvmn lloli 1 lioiti I 10 Itr Failrv liartvtl Miller Ilr fr.k lliot Mai.tiaH Mai Worrell I U-r, C hintiilrtrry lliu Mhlrnn Mlanlry Miller W MrNaa 20 Tail Mootra O If HufMnf Itm lir Kraiu l)r M C Da via hay Kakniraw llvnry Mix Mllrtirtl TUI'-lirtfl Ifr i Marrymn I ju- miii pinnifan KIUI Hi Ytrrilli KrtulU Chli-aaii :i. New Yiirh 3. t'lmtmrglt 4 ft. Ilrtmklvn .1-T. I'lnrltiiiMtt .1. PhllAftrlplila 0. HI. UiuU S. IliMlnn I. AMI.KII AN I.IAIII r . Pel .7111 .11.10 S.I7 .S.I3 MiMtnn New Yml WNihlMKUHt Drlrfll I'lfv0lnit M. liuls ( lilram I'hlUilclDtila .4:ij ia 2.i .4iu is 34 .:mi it aj .2M YralrrtUt't RratltU New Ynrk 3. t.'hti-aso I. Ilofttfin U HI lniu 4 Drlmlt 3. Phltkitrlphla 0 Cleveland lu, WaOilngtim a. PACII'lt! COAST l.TAOl i: Pet. O.kl.m.l Sun Ktanrlirc !. Angelea Hiii-ramento Snn llleio .... llnllywiKHl .... Srnllle Port land 4:1 2:1 .1112 .42 211 .IIIH III :tn S41 . :i4 xi .411:1 .1:1 :M .47A I at :is .4112 . 211 411 ,:iin 1 2.1 41 .2.14 ' Cuts cords 10 to 20 of wood a day on 3 gallons of gal n II Bnci lernoua Malvln Millar W STANDINGS ? .WTIOVAI. LtAOl i: W 1. Prl. llMKikltn an 14 17 SI liul 24 17 .Snl CitirlutiAtl Ill in ..114 t itit'Mfln i iii .31:1 Nw York 211 23 . 47fl llmtnti !H 22 -4VI l'llll,urfh 17 21 .417 rilllailvllihU 13 20 'IT"" a... NEW h Iff WfWL The One -Man Portable Power Saw Fell Timber Cut Limbs May bo loan In operation at Bray, Calif. Write lor Literature $349.50 LANDO STARR, Distributor BRAY, CALIFORNIA iilulit he repealed tho trick with 14 iiddltlonul strike victlma In roimtlnk to IU-1! ili clnion, Btvtn Camat Ahaail lliiHton mid New York iniilii tiilned the Mtiitim quo ill lilt! pcnniint "nice" uh tho Red Sox trimmed tho St. I .mil Druwiia, II 4, mid the Yankee edited out C'liliiiKu, 2 1, Icuvinif Joa Cro nln'ii fiiii( seven full tinmen out front. Detroit prcHcntcd a putchi'd up lineup 1 1 lit t wim (ood enoiiHli to liiinil the I'hlliidclihlii Ath-li-tUu iinotlicr trlinmiiiK, 2 0, on UI.V Trinit ni'ven hit chuck hill. Jimmy Mlooclworth replaced the Injured Kddle Muyo ut Kec- ond banc mid Jlriuuy Outlaw went to center field In place of Hoot Kver.i who broke bin Juw Mouihiy niuht in a collision with Muyn. Cardt Advanca St. l.oula i' 1 1 1 1 1 a bnlf (iiiiic off llrooklyn's Natlomil Icukuc lead hut Mill trailed by i'.i leniitha after trimmliiK llnstoii, 31. In a nllil liiimr. Hurry Hrecheen loaned a neiit four hitter, hla aecond atrulifht com plete Kiimr. to bolater tho aug glnil lied Birds. llrooklyn ulnioat dropied two In I'lttaburkh but they rallied to acore three runa In the ninth InniiiK of the aecond tilt and pull out with a 7-fl "evener" in the lllh. Krllz Oatermueller aouthpawed the Plratea to a 4-3 victory In the opener when lluuli Cuaey threw a bunted bull wildly In the ninth liminK. l.eo Durocher and Kranklc Krlarh tonsed 37 plnycra into the wild and wooly nlnhtcup, linaliy won on a hltlesa run. Kddle Stanky walked, moved around on a aucrlflce and in field out and acored on Dixie Walker outfield fly In the sec ond overtime. Toaaas Throa-Hlttar Kwcll Illackwcll, Cincinnati's rookie mound ace, turned In a Kiiudy three-hit Job on the Phil lies, 5-0, facing only 27 men. It waa a third straight triumph for the aix-foot-flve-uich right hander who loat Ills first two outing. The New York CJIants touched Hooka Wyae and Hum Mecra for I A hits but loat a ball game to Chicago, 3-2. I'cunuts Lowrcy romped home with the tic- breuklng tally In the eighth when he doubled, moved to third on a wild pitch by Junior Thompson and acored on Mury Itickert fly No Move To Abandon Hospital At Astoria ASTORIA. June 5 l-l'l There are no navy plana for Immedi ate abandonment of the DOO-hed naval hospital here, Rep. Wulter Norblud (H-Orc.l has advised civic lenders. The congressman reported he hnd conferred with Vice Ad miral Ross Mclntire, chief of the navy bureau of medicine, after reports were published that the facility would be closed this summer. Hospital authorities reported no official notice to abandon the hospital had been received, and that recently 250 beds had been set aside for disabled vet ernns assigned here by the Vet erans' Administration. HOTELS 0SB0RN HOLLAND rt'CIHNS ORK, MFDFORD Thoroughly Modern Mr. ni Mta, J. K. Earltr aoa Joa Katltr PraprtHara Lowther C-Saw Patented July la, lata Buck Logs Clear Land F.O.B. Chicago Mills Loses By Decision To Opponent LONDON, Juno 5 (!) Bruce Woodcock, British heavyweight boxing champion, and Kreddle Mills, whom he outpointed last n lM Ii t In a 12 round "consola tion" fight three week after their knockouts hy Americana, both looked to the United States today for future hopes of fiatlc fume. Mills, the nrltlah light heavy weight titleholder who wua dis charged from the Hoyal Air rorco three months ago after more than a year In the Kar Kaat, and hia manager, Ted Ilroadrlbb, will leave for New York by air Sunday. "We are going to aee the I.oula Conn bout and ull cither good American fighter we can," mi ill Ilroadrlbb, who took Tom my Fair to tliu United Stutes In 1U.I7. "Although we have no fights scheduled, if Mill ia in good enough ahape we may take on a bout or two outside New York. None of the big boya. though. Kreddle is better than he looked aguinat Woodcock. He atlll got India In him." Woodcock, who In beating Milla aubdiied the beat opposi tion available in Britain, haa no immediate plans for returning to Ihe United States but hla man ager, Tom Hurst, aaid he had "aome good offers from Amer ica." Hurst haa little alternative except to take Ihe Doncastcr railroad worker there. "I wan more than satisfied," Hurst said after last night's tri umph, "as this fight and Maurc illo made a 100 per cent battler out of llruce. I realize thoae ee. ond round knockouts he had Ihe last couple of years were wrong." Kahut Draws With Fitzy LOS ANGELES, June 5 iPt Hilton (Kltzy) Kllzpatrlck, the prancing puncher from Oak Hill, w. .va., milled in the second half of a 10-round bout to pull out a draw verdict in a wild, free-swinging melee with Joe Ka hut; Woodburn, Ore., heavy eight, last night. Knhut had a shado the best of it In early rounds. Hia key punch, a Jolting right upper cut in close, rocked Kilzy re- pcineoiy. ritzpntncK opened a cut over Kahut's right eve In the first round. The Orecon I fighter retaliated In the third! by opening an ugly gash above Fit.putrlck's left eye.. The West Virginian let loose in the final stages In a furious attack or fust left Jabs, left hooks und occasional right crosses. In wo previous meetings Ka hut had taken a 10-round deci sion and a seven-round TKO. Kahut weighed 180J, Fltzpat rick, 170. LAW GETS BIT GALESBURCJ. 111.. June 4 l,V Policemen Stombcrg and Born complained to Police Chief I'uul W. Holmes, about a dog they encountered when they ar rested Charles F. Morrison, 49. Stombcrg said Morrison's dog seized him from behind, lost his hold temporarily, and then seized him again on the opposite side of his punts. Holmes said he didn't hetieun the dog was mad but Stombcrg was. Morrison was fined $7.40 on disorderly conduct charges. Stombcrg was out a pair of pants. Hans Norland Fira Insurance. 123 N. Sth St. urU Vhe taste triats Mxvn v winning millions Popular since 1898, William Penn Whiskey has grown steadily ia favor because it offers a big plus ia mellow flavor and fine quality. More than a century of experience ii back of the careful distilling and blending methods that bring out the richness and smoothness of its fine ingredi ents. Try William Penn and see for yourself why millions prefer this distinctive whiskey. Btmki Whithty. 16 Proof Sj Onm Niulrdf Spintt GOODBRIUM WORTS LTD..MORIA.1U, if Hie ft frimJlytavm n'ftil of toniat( Amtntt, tht fdmom H'tthsm Pmn Ubtt mndt for eld ftthientd hetptuhty t itt but. Hostak Totes Starr Three Rounds By GAIL rOWLEH 8EATTI.K. June 5 'I') Kriui I'nrter, curly-headed blond lSfl pounder from Spokane, recovered from a no-count knock down at the end of the third round to lake a bitterly con tested decision from Hoy Kennedy, 100, lielllngham, in the Hay! Wailaiiiliiute! Thut waa the four-round opener, and the best fight of the night. In what was billed as a 10-rotind main event, Al Hostak, carrying less hair, 30 years and I OH pounds, toyed witli 100 pound Koman Kturr of Okluhoma City until after 40 seconds of the fourth round, when he gave Starr a ecleatial reading which could have come any time earlier. It was the first postwar fight for the two-time NBA middleweight champion and ho seemed content to let Starr rain powder puff punches at him for three rounds while he tested hia footwork and timing aguinat tho copiously tattooed Oklahoman. In the fourth Hostak applied the finishing tatoos an over hand right thut saw Starr taking a nine count reclining on his stomach, and a repeater a few seconds after he regained hit. fi'i't which lolled Homun over on his breadbasket for good. Other results: Mike Stankovlch, 143, Kresr.o, Calif., hung a kayo on Billy Fritz., 142, Spokane, in 1:28 of the first round of their ached uled six-rounder. Krnnkie Ray, 144, Seattle, outpointed but didn't outgamo Chief "Samosctte" Mike Kinley, Missoula Indian, In a six-round crowd-plcascr. Bernie Reynolds, 167 'i, hard punching Hcllingham southpaw, took a technical kayo over Tiger Jack Biddle, 145, Norfolk, Va., in the aecond heat of their four-rounder utter scoring two earlier knockdowns. Kran Porter, curly-headed blond 158-pounder from Spo kane . , . but that's where we came in. Sunday Stops Jones By Second-HeatTKO By HALE 8CARBROUGH i Failure to bring along any-1 thing resembling a guurd cost Johnny Jones his first start in the local squared circle last night as he went down before Cluloquin's popular Billy Sun day halfway through the third heat of their main event bout. Jones guined points in the first round by managing to hit Sunday aeveral times with his sweeping left, once knotting him up In the ropes, but Billy took the second round with clever In-fighting. Several close-in punches to the face floored Jones for a nine count Just be fore the end of that round, and his mouth was bloody. Then in the third Sunday caught Jones ducking und plant ed a hooking upward right into hia mouth. Johnny sprawled to the canvas and Referee Wally Moss stopped the fight without counting, a middleweight TKO for Sunday. Willie Knock outlasted Jack Dodge In the other five-rounder to take a unanimous decision in the liveliest scrap of the eve ning. He had Dodge on the ropes for several punches in the third and fifth rounds, but was un able to get up steam enough for a knockout. Knock gained an edge in the first round in the test-fighting, then Dodge won a round in the second by connecting body punches. Knock's first good chance for a kayo come in the third when he got Dodge into till rmvc lnntf ennutjh fnr at lenst 10 solid nnnrhra hut thn lanky ex-sailor kept to his feet and reversed the odds in the next round. Willie's margin came in the final canto. Teddy Roosevelt used an ex tra three inches of left-handed reach to advantage in outpoint ing jonnny nun in a four-round special that was an even match up until Roosevelt's flicking left kept Johnny on the defensive in the final round. Rudy Carlson, welterweight, scored a TKO over Charlie Hill in the fourth round of their prc- 11111 auer oaucring ine game In- aion boy for three heats. Hill's fnce was cut and he had a gash over his left eye when he went down under a swinging right In me. lourin ior a count ot eight men a moment later he went down again and the referee stop ped the fight. In the lightweight opener Don TRUCKS AND PICKUPS FOR RENT Ton DriTc-Loag, Short Trips Mot Yoursoli Sbt H STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phont) 8304 1201 East Main -a . tanrrJ siam O oai.inl IkMJ Reynolds and Paul Wilson kept a respectful distance from each oilier and went to a draw. Rey nolds took the first round and Wilson scored points In the third. The scheduled main event light heavy bout between Roger Vanderhoff und LcHoy Barkley failed to materialize because the latlc-r wore off several square inches of skin in a bicycle mis hap during training. Circuits Okay Diamond Pact CHICAGO, June 5 UP) All is hunky-dory between the major and minor baseball leagues on the subject of a new agreement between the two groups under the rule of Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler. A special committee, repre senting both factions, met here yesterday and sanctioned a rough droft of a major-minor pact which replaces the agreement under which the late Commis sioner R. M. Landis ruled base ball with an iron hand. The new agreement must be approved by the full bodies of the majors and minors at their winter meetings. Following the death of Landis on Nov. 25, 1944, the majors, at their meeting here last December, extended the cur rent agreement one year. j PAYS FOR PLAY I CHICAGO, June 5 P) A mar-: riagc was broken up because the wife dubbed a play in a pinochle game. Mrs. Rosemary O'Malley, 21, i obtained a divorce yesterday after telling the superior court i her husband, John, 21, struck ' her following the misplay. I lir.HTS LAST MOHT I llv Tbe Ataoeialed Prefta 1 LOS ANGELES Joe Kahut. lao1!. j Woodburn. Ore., and Hilton "FlUy" rtupatrlck. 170, Oak Hill, W. Va. drew. 10 SEATTLE Al HoaUk. 1SS. Seattle, knoekad out Roman Starr, 169, Okla- 1 noma City. 4. I HARTKOBD. Conn. George "Red" : Doty. 1S4. Hartford. TKO Floyd "Bat" ; Sim. id. 1SS. Tampa. 1. NEW YORK 'Park Arenal Irvln( ; Palefky. 147. New York, knocked out Ralph Walton. 144, Montreal. 2. GUNS All types of domestic guns wanted. Top prices paid. The Gun Store 714 Main Phone 3863 WRESTLING Excitement Thrills . ,.:f afca. i. .. .i atraiiiii aW"aaBasfjBfaa"""sv This tangle of struggling brawn turned out to be Martin Angelo and Georges Dusette, laat week at the Armory. This week Angelo meets Ernie Piluso. world's light heavy weight champ in a 6-rounder. Dusette meets Paavo Katonen; and Bob Keneston takes on Mad Mike Nasarian both 4 tounders. Be there for the battlol THURSDAY NIGHT 8:30 P. M. Armory Arena SEAT RESERVATIONS Phone or Call at Castloberry's for Sections A, B and C 530 Main Phone 3333. Klamath Billiards for Section D 630 Main Phone 9167 Seals Blast Acorns Into 13-1 Jitter By The Aisociattd Praaa The battered and bowed heads of the Oakland Acorns were still above water today, with a two-game lead in the Pacific Coast Baseball league, but they knew the path leading toward a pennant was a rugged one. Just when the Oakland loyals began drcumlng of their first chumpionship team since 1935, the challenging San Francisco Seals stepped up last night and smacked the mighty Oaks down to little acorn size with a 13-1 blast. The opening of a seven-game series Which might go a long way toward settling the rivalry between the only clubs to roost atop the standings for more than a day was billed as a pitching duel between the Seals' veteran Cliff Melton and Oakland's fire- bailer, rrancis Shea. Cliff Melton's 1 1th Melton yielded six hits in marking up his 11th win of the campaign ogainst three losses. San Francisco chased Shea in the fourth and kept working on Bryan Stephens, Gene Bearden and Bo Pa lira for a total of nine hits. The Oaks did themselves almost as much damage as the Seals did, committing five er rors and issuing nine bases on balls. The Sacramento Solons vied with San francisco for high- scoring honors, lambasting the cellarite Portland Beavers, 11 to l. At smith, Sacramento south paw, gave up 12 hits but held the Beavers away from the home plate until their seventh-inning tally. The Solons piled up their 1 1 runs in the first four innings. Sacs Move Ahead Smith's victory was his eighth against one defeat. It moved the Solons into the first division The San Diego Padres shut out 7 to 0 by the Seattle Rain lers, dropped from fourth place into the lower company of the second division. Lou Tost turn ed in a seven-hit pitching per formance for the Rainiers, who assaulted two San Diego mounds men for 15 safeties. The Hollywood Stars play the third-place Angels at Los An geles in a doubleheader opening of their series today. The teams were idle last night. It's CAD ORE TONITE Cfli-ORE HIGHWAY IT SOUTH .iaaf HERALD MKW, Klamalk Fella, Ort. SEPCBTO 50-7 Shot Takes Derby EPSOM. England. June 5 (PI Airborne, a 50-to-l ahot who won only one prcvloua race in his career, won the 103rd run ning of the Derby today on a rain-soaked course before a crowd estimated at 120,000, in cluding the royal family. The dark - horse long shot closed with a great rush in the last 100 yards to overhaul Gulf Stream, the favorite and hope of 82-year-old Lord Derby for his fourth Derby triumph, and finish a length in front. A furlong from home. Gulf Stream looked like the winner when the grey Airborne turned loose his finishing kick to sweep to the wire and nirlr on thu 32,062 winner's purse. Running on a soft track, Air borne posted one of the slowest times for the mile and 885 yards 2:44 35. It was far off the Epsom Downs Derby record of 2:33 45 which the gray Mah moud chalked up in 1936, ana A POPPING FIRE KANSAS CITY, June 4 IJP . Fire broke out in the home of i Leslie E. White Jr., spare-time hunter. j Neighbor Eugene H o 1 m a n rushed to it with his garden hose. ; When firemen arrived they . found the fire nearly out. All of White's shotgun and rifle am- munition he had 1100 rounds stored in the basement explod-; ed, and Holman busy spraying i among the flying bullets and shots. ! "I heard a lot of funny pop ping and puffing noises, report ed Holman, "but I was too busy to wonder very much about it." X UaMlkmBrl&CStf..t.T. MOT t PRIORITY DELIVERY ON NEW TIRES! Guarantees you priority delivery ef new Genera!... m, a- Keeps your present tires safe with KRAFT SYSTEM Balanced Recapping . . . and . . , When your new Generals are delivered, ' fcuy back your unvttd mieaeef Htadquarttrs for KRAFT SYSTEM RECAPPING MONARCH 301 So. 6th Bob Newell WSDNkSDAT. Jam S, IMS. rata Iteea was the slowest since Lord Wool- vlngton's 2:47 45 In 1922. Behind the two leaders at the wire was Tom Lllley's Radio therapy, an 8-to-l shot. Another outsider, Lord Durham's White Jacket, was fourth. Airborne Is owned by J. t. Ferguson, a plastic manufac turer with a small stable. The colt Is trained by R. Perryman who won the St. Leger last year with Chamossaire, and was rid den by T. Lowrey, each chalk ing up his first Derby triumph. FOLDING COTS Very sturdy construction. Made of heary PA 12-oi. canvas Oa3U SLEEPING BAGS All new wool interiors. Also included in our large stock are DOUBLE BAGS IT OC and SETS up The Gun Store 714 Mala 0& AGntf 1 IXlilSsj - . IIM . .l TOOf tftOttltmmj GENERAL'S PURCHASE PUN The proved way to end tire worries today! GENERAL TIRE J! stances recees like new lire ... no shimmy . , t to 25 mere mileage. TIRE SERVICE B. K. Teed Phone 7071 I