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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1949)
PACE EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TUESDAY, OCT. II, 14 HAH arsis aa Haws Saarts KIM Pigskin Pugilists Touchdowtu and fists tilled the lr on Modoc Held Saturday night when i loaded Southern Oregon col leg team out-platooned Oregon Tech, 55 to 14. It may teem strange to make mention of unnecessary roughness on the heela of a recent column concerning football gradually turn ing Into a cream-pull party. However, hard tackling and blocking la one thing and pil ing on ball-run-nera a 1 1 er the whistle la anoth er. This waa a favorite trick of the Red Raiders the other night and came near causing whole sale rhubarb. Th nar-riota were mentioned " ' " " " only briefly In RED HCRD the account of the game because of lack of apace. Late In the third quarter. Owl Ronald Deal dumped Baldy Poster where he (Poster ait for a 15-yard loss when the ex-Pelican tried unsuccessfully to get off a pass. There was an exchange of blows and player and coaches from both benches swarmed onto the field. With the game's final gun. the rhubarb started again but police ac tion broke it up. Then the city's law-keepers were called out a few minutes later when the fans (In cluding some of the fair sex) got Into a choice hair-pulling wrangle. There's one thing certain: Those who doled out bucks saw a com bination football and rough-and-tumble that waa worth the price of admission, even though the latter waa an unexpected added feature. Back to the game's action I've seen few runs that could equal that reeled off by Ken Miller in the first quarter when the Owl drew first blood. Ken started to his right, ran into mass of would-be tackier, fought his way loose, reversed his field and out-fast-footed the entire SOCK team to the final marker, Dtcr Poem ADokxies to Charles Hess of Bager for delaying the printing of a poem sent in just before deer sea son opened In Oregon. However, It's still timely and I'd like to pass it along. It's called -An Old Hunter's' Lament" and goes like this: A hat of red just for luck And then to crank the flivver. Ill go to hunt the wily buck That Uvea across the river. Alas, alack! the camp is cold. Tie desolate and forlorn. Tor all my pals are dead and gone And left me all alone. There was Sweeney and Dick, Pet and Nick, Prank, Bob and Old McGutre. Their voices echo from the dark Their faces haunt the fire. Tulane Pasting Co nvinces Experts Irish in a Grid Class by Themselves SI ..... I. . iM ul mwkM NEW YORK. Oct. II ( Notre Dame's super performance against a highly rated Tulane team last Saturday apparently has convinced most of the nations ootoau ex pert that the Irish belong in a claaa by themselves. In contrast to last weeg wnen u barely won the No. 1 spot from Army, the country's sports editors and sportacasters voted Notre Dame a solid first choice today In the third weekly Associated Press poll. A week ago the Irish nosed out the Cadeta by 30 point. Today, Notre Dame received nearly 200 points more than the West Pointers. Of the 179 voting experts, lit named the South BeivtT elMKiL first on their ballot. I It's been years slnceVa team pa dominated an AP poll so complete ly. In all. the undeteatedJrlsh at tracted 1745 points by Iheir devas tating 46-7 rout of the Green Wave of New Orleans. Army, which received M first place vote a week ago, got only 10 this time despite Its handy 54-14 romp over Harvard. Those ballots, however, together with numerous seconds, thirds and fourths, gave the Cadet 1551 points to rank right behind Notre Dame and well In front of third place Minnesota. Bernle Blermau's Oophers en hanced their Rose Bowl chances by handing tough Ohio Stale a 17-0 trimming. This one-sided trl- NJ umph brought them eight first .-.. . . . 1 , .--A piace voiea ana uiist ot " u points, to boost them one notch from fourth to third. Although It rollrd over Kan, 45 it. Oklahoma's power lauVn team fell a notch from third to fourth with 1171 points. California advanced from ninth to filth due to Its 16-10 victory over Southern California. The Ooldrii Bears' point total was 175. nineteen more than North Carolina which stayed In sixth place. Kentucky, eighth a week ago, moved up to seventh with 711 point, Three newcomers graced the top ten list thla week replacing such old stalwart as Michigan. Tulane and southern MrlhodUt. Cornell, by virtue of Ita 41-14 thumping ol previously undefeated Yale, vaulted over six teams Into eighth plare with 345 points. Hire, helped by a 41-27 pasting of SMU. made the biggest gain, a Jump uf IS places. Whereas the Owls were 3311) last week, they I took over ninth spot by a narrow I margin over Texas. The Longliorna alto made a big gain, advancing from 16th to truth. Itlce amassed IDS point to 136 for Texas. The biggest blows were drall lo Michigan and Tulane. The Wolver ines, who lost tlielr second straight when they bowed to Northwestern, 31-30, dropped from seventh lo I3li lop team two weeks ago. Mlrhlgan'a beat ballot was one fifth place vole. The once all-conquering Wolver ine were in the top ten teams of the country for the last 10 yrars escrpt for a frw week In IW1 a" 1IH4. riven III 43. Mlinisan wi.u.. up nlnlh in Hi final poll, and 1st '44 llillMirrt ennui. The awesome iHiundllig by Nolrd nun. nut only knocked Tuiatv ou of the unbeaten class but dropped. i h Hoiiihrinrrs from lourut piac .town lo 30111 on only 31 points. SMU Ml from tenth lo 17th; Southern California ranked Wlj Jul tu'l.A and Orrgou tied fol 36th. YAQUI KID ON ARMORY GRUNT CARD The opener on Wednesday night's wrestling card may steal the show with Yaqul Kid. protege of well known Yaqul Joe. signed to wrestle Pet Bartu, growling Chicago meanle. Oeorgea Dusett who came close to sprawling Oeorgeous Oeorge on hit backsides last week, will brawl with Leon Klrtlenko, scary Russian in the main event. The main go la scheduled for one hour unless one of the grunt-and- groaners ends festivities with two out of three falls before the allotted Urn. The Indian youngster will show for one-halt hour or one fall against Bartu. Last week Bartu, making hla first appearance tn the local ring, dldnt take long to bring down the ire of the crowd with his savage tactics. However, Ous Johnston surfboard put an end to Bartu s maiden bow. In the seml-windup, Bob Cum mtngs of Montana will try to evade Al Sxasa famous whip wrist lock In a 45-mlnute party. Tickets for the wrestling show are on sale at Castleberry's drugs. The armory ticket office opens Wednesday night at 7:30. The opener gets under way at 8:30. THEY CAME THICK AND FAST for these two anglers, Wil liam Rutledge of 4016 Altamont, (left) and his companion, Riley Oldman, 4038 Bisbee. Both men caught the limit of Chinook salmon on the Klamath river this side of Hornbrook and about 45 miles from Klamath Falls recently. Biggest fish of the catch weighed 16V4 pounds. Rutledge and Oldham are maintenance men with Klamath Theatres. WHO"S CASEY STENGEL Waldorf Molds Grid Team With "Nothing BERKELEY. Calif. Oct. 18 WV So you think ol' Casey Stengel can patch and piece? Well, just meet Pappy Waldorf! All he lost from but year's Cali fornia Rose Bowl football team, right oft, was: Jackie Jensen, ace fullback, who preferred to play pro baseball. . . Doug Duncan, one of the best centers on the West coast, who quit school. . . Another see back. Jack Swaner, injured before this season began. . . Happy hunting, dear old pal Heed not my tale of woe Be sure and shoot the biggest buck But never kill s doe. I hunted the rim rocks high and low And many a mile I'd hike Back to the camp I would go And ne'er even saw a spike Sophs Picked for Husky Center Spot SEATTLE. Oct. 18 (iTV-Coach Art McLamey singled two sopho mores out for special attention yes terday from s 33-man squad report ing for the start of the University of Washington basketball campaign. They were Duane Enochs. 6 foot 54 lncher up from last season's frosh squad, and Lee Wade, 6 foot 6 inch transfer from Modesto, Calif, Junior college. To one or the other, possibly both, will probably fall the task of filling the center spot left vacant by graduation of Jim Mal- lory last spring. The woods are filled with a bunch of goons Who shoot at a bush's quiver 111 pack my kit and hurriedly get To my home across the river. Family Has Joy, Tragedy Together CAMDEN, N. J, Oct. 18 MMJfe and death came to the Rocco Gam ble family within several hours. Gamble's 21-year-old wife gave birth to their first son Sunday morning. Returning to the home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. Lulu Dickinson, to announce the birth. Gamble was told his oldest child, Charlotte May, 3, had been struck by a truck. The child died shortly after the 21-year-old father returned to the hospital. The Gambles have another daughter, one-year-old Roseann. Parker Inks Pro Contract NEW YORK. Oct. 18 (7P Frank Parker signed a professional con tract yesterday with Promoter Bobby Riggs. formally abandoning the amateur game. Sound Blocking Pays Off in Touchdowns Roosevelt Surprises STANDINGS Team W L T Fklnriew-Rlverslde 1 0 1 Roosevelt 1 0 1 Prem't-Conger-Pel 110 Mills 0 2 0 Pet. 1000 1.000 M0 MO NEW YORK (NEA roolball is predicated on blocking. The sounder the blocking the bel ter the football. The T formation. In conception, was founded on sharp line blocking. Tbe big dillereiice. as Knute Kockne visualised 1 1, was that Instead of the two-on-one block ing. inherent in the single wing. T Assault Earns Rest NEW YORK. Oct. 18 ifi-Assault. one of the gamest and best of mod ern race horses, today was on his way back to the Texas farm where he waa born to complete his days tn the Idleness he richly earned. The crowd's roar, the straining drive to the wire, the sensing of victory all are over for Robert J. Kleberg's little chestnut slx-yrar-old, fourth biggest mnnev-wlnnrr in turf history with 1673,6:10. Two years ago. Assault twice headed the golden list. Trainer Max Hlrsch. himself a Texan, announced yesterday thai his famed charge has been retired pi manently to Kleberg's vast King ranch farm after starting six limes in s comeback campaign this year. The announcement me as no surprise. It became obvious only last Saturday at Jamaica. Assault, far from hi former brilliant self, finished a jaded eighth In the Orey Lag handicap. llnrm.n would handle the blocking chore individually. Thai's why sin gle wing linemen, nurtured on double-teaming an opponent right out of the park, welcomed 111 de tensive assignment ol working over one man instead of two. Studying slow motion movies, T coaches, seeking pay-o!f short-cuts, evolved Uie brush, or high block. This I nothing more than a mo mentary check on a drtensiv line- man by an offensive guard or tackle, if your backs are taster than greyhounds, they can dart through thai open-and-shut hole be fore that basically unsound de fensive lineman recovers his bal ance. There are more bum than good defensive linemen on any given squad, the reason being that there are less good line coaches than head coaches. Why expend energy on a driving shoulder block when you can sucker the meat-head with a brush block? This releases your T line man for down-filled blocking. Such a premise la fin for teams with completely objective linemen rather than highly emotional kids ah -lake up the majority ef high school yea, and college teams. The prime T line of all lime, Ihe Scat Back Billy Main, ruled In eligible. . . John Cunningham, s superb end. ditto. . . Norm Pressley, star end. injured before the season opened. Poor Pappy, everybody said. They forgot that only last spring they said poor ol' Casey had no chance of getting the N. Y. Yankee into the World Series. So what? So Pappy's boys, losing more men to the injury list as the season progresses, go right on win ning. Last time out, with Prank Brunk running 102 yards, the Bears whip Southern California. 14-10. Already, against Pappy's wishes, there is a scent of roses over Berke ley. Previously the Bears defeated Santa Clara 21-7. St. Marys 29-T, Oregon Stat 41-0. and Wisconsin 35-20. Still on the slate are con ference opponents, Washington. university of California r: Los An geles (UCLA). Washington State, Oregon and Stanford. Pappy spent last season building up a reserve reservoir and he's sure glad of it now. He's had to use so much of It. The Roosevelt eleven upset a favored Fremont Conger Pelican squad Saturday morning. 7 to 6. to gain a tie in the grade school league. In the opening quarter. Scott Hartley. PCP back, got oft a bad punt deep tn his own territory and Roosevelt recovered on the four- yard stripe. Richard Clark cracked ofl tackle for the score and Everett Leach, quarterback, sneaked through the line for the extra point. Hartley scored on a 66-yard scamper in the third quarter but the try for point failed. The clock stopped a late-game rally by the PCP team. In the other game on Modoc prac tice field. ralrvtew-Riverside up erded Mills, 28 to 8. Scoring opened In the first quarter when Patrview. Riverside scored on a safety when a Mills player was caught behind the goalllne. Lloyd Kooken crashed over from the eight-yard line for the first PR score in the second quarter. Jesse Fleming added the second touch down in the third on a 10-yard line smash. Raymond Dugas rambled U yards on a double reverse for the third score and Larry Yarnell finished scoring with a 60-yard scamper. Lynton Oppegard scored Mills' enly touchdown in the fourth quar tet when he broke away for a 5S- yard gallop. Saturday's games are Fremont-Conger-Pelican vs. Falrvlew-River-slde at S:30 a.m.: Roosevelt and Mills mix at 10:30. POWERS, HAUFF OUT ANNAPOLIS. Md.. Oct. 18 in Navy's two top ball carriers. Half backs Bill Powers and Frankie Hauff, were sidelined by Injuries today. They were not expected to be ready for the Pennsylvania game Saturday. They both suffered ankle Injuries a! Madison. Wis. last week-end when Navy was whipped by Wis consin. 48-IS. Chirage Bear of IS40-4I Je tilvdahar, tieorg Musso, Bulldog Turner, Danny r'artmann, Kay llray, (irori Wilson, etc. look malevolent, If clinical, pride In their work. If a defensive lineman shot the gap and Jammed a Hear play, Ih entire Hear line one Ion !... landed on the poor slob on Ihe net! play. A mile or lea in un necessary roue hues penalties meant nothing I I how parity, derma. Like good missionaries, they ere spreading Ihe tteorge llls gospel of Ihe T and Its attendant witchcraft. Pa-:-hllling T trims which spring backs with a modlrurr ol straight shoulder blocking are quick to rea lise that an Innocent elbow, pro pelled by a z2S-pouiid human trurk. Is as efficient as a blarkjack, some how more sporting and practlrully undetectable by a myopic ollicial. T trams which haven't forgotten, or even knew Ihe meaning of Ihe honest gut or shoulder block, are precious few. Texas, Armv. N'ulre Dame, Oklahoma and Ha spilt T de liver what amounts to Inile-alni blocking In terms of Imparl. Most of Ihe rest don't even know the meaning of an honest-to-good- ness nulling gam In term sound bilking. Alter all. the T Is basically a pass Ing offense. 30 or 35 passes a gamsj now bring the rule. Haskeluall play rs continue tn do It better. Seerey, Goodwin Released ciiicaoo. Oct. is (i rW Ht-rrcy. much- traveled outfleUyr who played with five different teams last season, and Pitcher J I re. I Ooodwin today were released out. I in. lit by the Chicago White Box la thr Memphis Chicks of the Bouthi ern association. Goodwin, a Irft-hnnder, waa on, option In Memphis last season: fashioning a 7-8 record. neerev, ifniuira swiiiNrr onjmrva, by thr Hox from the Cleveland In dians last year, plaved with thj Hox. Loa Anitelr. Kansas CltvJ Nrwaik and Man Anlonlo last i son. LADY BI'G LEAC.t's- , Team Won Lost Rlioop Ac Schule Anhaeuser-Busch Fluhrer Town Shop Team Number S .. Nesbilt's . Rogers Jewelry . .. Houston's After the third week of krgllng, 8hoop and Schulxe and Anhaeuser Busch top the league with -l rec ords In the Lady Bug loop. Shoop and Schulse Jumped Into tht deadlock last Thursday night when they blanked the Rogers Jewelry crew. Nesbitt's Lee Riley racked up torrid 304 score tor high Individual honors of the evening. High single series were rung up by Bernlce Brltt, Shoop and Schulse. and Agnes , Oeddes of Rogers. Both girls scored 4M series. High tesm game and series went t Nesbitt's Orange with J7 and 2554. Nesbitt's and Fluhrer's split, 2-2: Anharuaer-Bush beat Town Shop 3-1. and Team Number 8 blanked Houston's, 4-0. Chicago Cubs Slice 5 Farms CHICAGO. Oct. 18 (4n The Chl-J CkBo Cubs, having failed to harvest! much from their farm system, have cut affiliations with five clubs. They drnpiied working agreement! with Macon. Cls . of the clasa Aj Southern Atlantic league: SelmaJ Ala., of Ih clasa B Southeastern; league: Clinton. Is., of the class Oi Central association, and two rlaaa B clubs. St. Augustine of th Flor-j Ida Slat Iraeue and Lumberlon,: N C. of Ih Tobacco Slat league.) Farm Director Jack Bheehan said ttta alaih V - Riafla afl Ih CUB I could concentrate on "fewer and belter" playing prospects. New Orleans Maxl Docuson, ; 13J. New Orleans, TKO'd Jaekl) I Wevrr. 133. Pawlurket, R. I.. . GORDON VS. PETERSON PORTLAND. Oct 18 (Hard rock Gordon of Roseburg. Ore. and Bill Peterson. Seattle, clash over the 12-round distance tonight in a main event bout billed for the Northwest heavyweight boxing title. Man and Sea Lion Get Close Shaves SANTA MONICA. Calif.. Oct. 18 UP Orvllle Grim, 61, saved a man and a baby sea lion from a couple of close shaves, but couldn't get one himself. En route to buy razor blades. Grim plunged into the ocean and rescued a struggling swimmer 80 feet offshore. A little later he plunged in again, this time to res cue the little sea. lion being bat tered on rocks. Oasped the dripping Grim: "There must be an easier way to get a shave." Duck Cagers Open Drills EUGENE, Ore. Oct. 18 IIP) Coach John Warren threw two all veteran teams into action yesterday a the Oregon basketball drills ot under way. The Duck turnout at tracted 36 candidates, including eight Junior college transfers and six men up from last season's frosh squad. Sydney, Australia Harold Dade, 121, Los Angeles. Calif, outpointed Elley Bennett, 119'.j, Australia, (12). FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Brooklyn. N. Y. Bill Daley, 15 Brookline. Mass.. outpointed Henry Jordsn. 145'4, Brooklyn, N. Y. (Si. Newark. N. J Joe Baksi, 215 Kulpmont, Pa. outpointed Jimmy Holden, 189. Elizabeth, N. J. (10i J 5 Min. from Town L to raffls "-ssr" SHOTGUNS on CONTRACT Easy Terms The GUN STORE 1 i 4 J i i 4 4 4 4 GUESTS WELCOME BETTER TASTE! 8 714 Main St. Smart hosts everywhere have switched to Calvert because Calvert Reserve . tastes better. Calvert reserve Blended Whiskey -M l Proof- Oram Neutral Spirits. Calvert Distillers Corp.. New York City O POOLE'S O FOR SHOTGUN SHELLS 12ga.250 Hga.0 20ga.225 BUY YOUR SHOTGUN ON 11 TERMS! Remington Automatic 12 ga. S99.9S Remington Pomp S84.95 Model 25 Win chester Pump... Btevena Doubl $57.95 (Walnut stock). Steven 41 Ga. 25.95 (Bolt action). Single Shot $18-95 Stvent 2 ga. ... $23.95 (Bolt action). 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