Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 30, 1952, Page 7, Image 7

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    MIUAY, MAY ,'iU, Imi
1IEHALI) AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE SEVEN
2 Americans Heach British Amateur ''.'Semis
ill
1 B tJ A J I, . I d I I f i I A .
5 toy IM
7 154,
NONE WEIGHED LESS than four pounds in (his string
of 14 trout caught in Upper Klamuth Lake hy Doug Wag
hit (left), 4045 Allamonl, and hl.i neighbor, Clyde Kcnn,
4U:tl Altamont. The largest weighed ahout seven. The
A little fellow is Lylc Kcnn and the picture was taken by
'Mrs. Kcnn.
Accuracy Incredible
In Deer-Tabulating
(Second of a acrlea on Calif or
nla drrr problems)
By JIM THOMAS
SAN KHANC'IKCO. lA Two vllal
nnrrnoltlni lor Uie successful man
agement o( deer herds are as ac
curate knowledge an possible ol
llin tKipulntlrm u( the herd IIM1I
nd clone check on (he condition
ol the rnhite the herd uses.
Bporuinrn and outdoors writers
who recently toured the critical
winter mule deer area In North
western Culllornla count leu hud ex
cellent opportunity to ace how thla
Information la lathered by Game
Manaitera o the, Klh and Game
Department.
The first herd on the Inspection
trip waa the California-Oregon In
trratato herd, which winters In tno
The method la almple and ac
curate In obtaining a minimum In
ure on the deer herd. At the lie
Klnnlnv ol the mlkTallon period,
Jeep pulllnii a weighted harrow
with a Hunt behind It la driven
slonu the alnte line where the deer
cross. Then dally, until Ihe, migra
tion la complete, the tracks of deer
crouinii the line are checked,
track or deer that have drifted
back aouth also are checked and
subtracted from the migration
route. An each area la tallied, the
Jeep with Hit harrow and flout
cranca Uie old tracks and leaves
a Ireah atrip for the recording of
new movement.
Waller Oroiar California -tale
hunter and trapper, and Hill Light:
loot, bouineu.il Krglonal Bupervhor
Stranahan,
Ward Face
Carr, Cater
I'flfcSTWICK, Scotland I -Frank
Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio,
aeekliiK hla third title, and vouiik
Hbiviu Ward ol Tarbor. N. c,
Kalnrd the aeml-llnal round of Ihn
llilllnh Amnleur Golf Champion
ihlp Friday with one-sided vie
tonea. Btrunahan walloped Charles Car
tow ol Scotland, and 7, while
r,....,
Z1 I i
p
C ..! i,t1i!v.j..j ;i ..j
Devlla Garden of Modoc county for the Oregon Oame Commission
mai nera lost Between .zoo aim vera working on the track count
S.doo deer In the big dle-olf last i the day the lour vl.nted the area
winter when the anlniela were The tally that day waa ,017 deer
caught In tho anow aouth of Tule. on the northern migration. Llg'u-
iuoi eiumnira mat tne count wan
lake. It In vital that accurate In
formation bo obtained lor Uie man
agement of Uie remainder ol the
herd.
To do Una the men In charge ol
the herd check population and uae
trends a well as varying range
condition!..
The population survey Is made
at the autlc line, where the herd
annually migrated north from Cal
about two-nurds complete. He ex
pecta final llgure to be noinc
where between 14.000 and 15.000
animals left In Uie herd, still a
maximum which the Interstate
herd committee says, the range can
carry. Because Uie count deals with
minimum figures .there will be
more deer than actually counted.
uui mav exact ngure Is uncertain
norma winter ronnes to the sum- probably a small percent
mer range lu Oregon. The mlgra
lion routes are well dellned, per
mitting the game managers to
r lieok the entire movement. (
Jones In
Fastest
1500 Run
LOS ANOELE3 Cfl Credit the
fastest l.SOO-nioler run in the na.
Men to date this year to Hobart
Junes, formerly of Nebraska and
now ci uie u. B. Air Force.
Jnnea ran the distance In S:S3.4
Thursday night to srab lop laurela
In the Southern California District
AAU meet In Ihe Coliseum. The
previous best time was 3:63.8 by
javirr Monies ol lexas western.
Frank Mores. Southern Call
fnrnla, whose distance of 47 feet 10
inches waa the best In the country
In the hop. step and Jump. Im-
. proved the distance by one Inch
47-11.
There were two mild unset
Jack Davis of USd avenged pre
vious losses this year to Craln
Dixon. Loa Angeles A.C. In the
110-meter high hurdles, timed at
14.2.
And Fortune Oordlen, LAAC,
holder of the world discus record,
be.iled Sim Iness of Use. Oordlen
on his last throw hit 173 feet.
mesa had 172 feet 4 It.
Mangrum,
Bolt In
wGolf Tie -
' 8T. LOUIS Is! Lloyd "Man
Brum of Chicago and Tommy Bolt
of Durham, N.C., each with a two
, tinder-pur 68, held the lead Friday
. in mc sum western upen gou tour
nament. Bui no one Is ready to
pick the winner In tho 73-liolc, 118,
000 competition,
The two old pros, and newcomer
i'.n r i wiide or kock island, 111.,
with a 6, were the only mem
bers of tho 120-mnn field to win
tho first round encounter with
Westwood Country Club's long nnd
iroublosome par 70 course Thurs
day. Most of the entries settled for
scores In the low and middle 70s.
They Included Sam Snead, the
White Sulphur springs, W. Va
Invoiite. Snead, with sovcn olhnis,
wound up with n 73, good onlv for
an eighth place tie after is holes.
KFJI Revives
Game of Day
Radio Station KFJI Is bringing
back the Game of the Day by
populor ren.uo.it,
ine top gume in the Maior
Leagues will be aired Mondy
through Friday, 2:30 to 4 p.m.
Saturday's broadcast will open In
the monitor the time depondlng
on the alte of the game.
Announoers are Al Helfor. Dizzy
Dottn and Buddy Ulattner.
nillv Wells. Iinlfback on Mlehl
Bute's football team, won tho
lntor-fraternltv diving champion,
ship on hla first aerlous try at the
(Wort.
l ater. William William Damnnnn
camarilla Or me Maanger In
charge of dcer herd studies, showed
tne group the, mcUiod of atrip
ciici-auiB range use ana use trends
In the Devils Oarden.
More than 400 strips were meas
ured out with 100 loot tapes at
regular Intervals throughout the
winie range. Along each strip, the
ircii-cmBgo oj lorage consumed.
Ihe type of foraae In the strin mid
the concentrations of deer pellets
a mt-oiucu. ttecnecas oi we strips
show whether the percentage of
use Is lnresslng or decresslng,
whether the deer concentrations in
tho area are changing and whether
use Is due prlamrlly to deer or
livestock, since Uiey are not on
Uie range at the sume time.
Averaging Uie results of the 400
or more strips over the range
provides Uie managers with an ac
curate Picture Of What Is hnnnenlmr
on the range. These, added lo rpg-
umr ooaervauons iiy uie trained
men, provide the guides for mail'
aging the herds.
33
mm
EARL SCHNEITER, Reames
Country Club pro, is in his
second year at ' the local
links, doing a highly satis
factory job.
FRANK STRANAHAN
... in golf semi-finals
Ward prevailed over fellow country-
mun Jim McHale of Philadelphia,
i and 6.
Stranahan and Ward were sched
uled to play again In the afternoon
for the right to compete In Satur
day's 39-hole finals.
Wurd faced Joe Carr. veteran
IrlNh Walker Cup ace, who elim
inated Scotland sensational MaJ.
David Blslr. 8 and 4.
It was Blair who provided the
lourntment with two stunning up
.wts Thursday when he defeated
defenolna champion Dick Chapman
oi rinenursi, n. v.. ana amy Max
well of Odessa, Tex., the U. S.
t: 1 1 1st.
Sironshnn. winner In 1948 and
1060. opposed Robin Cater of Scot
land, who defeated Keppel Enderby
of Australia. 2 and 1.
The auarler-flnal matches were
played In sunny but chilly weather
over the 0,631-yard, par 72 Prest
wlck course.
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGL'K
W L
New York 28
Brooklyn 24
Chicago 21
Cincinnati - 19
Philadelphia 16
St. Louis 17
Boston 13
Pittsburgh 8
Ihursday s Results
Philadelphia 0 New York i
Brooklyn 7 Boston 3
Pittsburgh 4 Cincinnati 2
Only games scheduled
AMERICAN LEAGL'K
W
Cleveland 26
Boston 21
Washington 20
New York 18
Chicago 19
HI. Louis 19
Philadelphia 13
Detroit U
Thursday's Results
Cleveland II Detroit 4
New York 3 Philadelphia 2
Boston 1 Washington 0
Only games scheduled.
Pel.
.743
.700
MH
.514
.471
.447
.394
.200
h Pit.
15 .625
.M3
MS
Mi
.500
.452
.400
.314
Reds' Boy Bandit Found on Softball Lot
nr..:-.'Ti
v ... -
,- 'ft...
roy McMillan
. frustrates batters
By PAT HARMON
NBA Special orreapoodent
CINCINNATI (NEA) Roy Mc
Millan Is rapidly earning a repu
tation as a boy bandit.
Against the Braves, McMillan,
the Reds' 21-year-old shortstop,
ran toward third base, leaped and
made a one-hand Interception of
Walker Cooper's line drive.
McMillan did the same-thing to
Forrest Burgess, the PhUles' catch
er. This time he moved toward
the second-base aide. Jumped and
caught a liner.
In the aame game he burglarized
Richie Ashburn, one of the fastest
hase - runners. Ashburn had ad
dressed a sharp, low-bounding rol
ler toward second base. Just be
fore McMillan raced to the ball,
It took a strange high hop.
Many Inflelders would have
missed this, and the ball would
have gone as a hit. McMillan's re
flexes are so quick, however, that
he switched to the high hop and
threw out Ashburn.
"You should have seen the one
In Pittsburgh," puts In Luke Se
well. "Ralph Klner drove the ball
past third base. McMillan ran
over behind Bobby Adams to pick
It. un. It was so hard It almost
turned McMillan around. There was
a man on first, and McMillan
turned It Into a double play."
McMillan Is a converted Softball
player who had never palyed a
nlne-lnnlng baseball game before
he signed his first professional con
tract. He had never seen a major
league game until he played in
one. He hadn't had has hands on
a real baseball more than two days
In two years when he was asked
to take a contract with the Reds'
farm system.
In hla home town, Bonham, Tex.,
there was no baseball team. This
seems Incredulous, for Bonham la
a town of 6000 people.
"We had nothing no profession
al team, no semi-pro team, no Jun
ior legion, no knothole gang, no
school teams none of the things
boys elsewhere have,' says Mc
Millan. "So I played soltball."
When the Cincinnati club adver
tized a tryout camp In nearby Mc
Klnney, Tex., McMillan, 18, decid-
I'AtlUC COAST LF.AGIE
W
San Diego
Hollywood
Oakland
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Portland
Seattle
Sacramento
Thuraday's
37
32
30
29
28
24
23
23
Reaulta
'el.
.038
.571
.545
.518
.450
.444
.418
Tyees Smack Spokane
For 9th Straight Win
Portland 3 San Diego 2, 13 Innings
Los Angeles 7 San Francisco 1
Oakland 4 Hollywood 1
Seattle 4 Sacramento 0
Western International League
By The Associated Press
W L Frt.
Victoria 28 9 .743
Spokune 22 18 .579
Vancouver 17 u
Lt-wlrlon 18 19
Wrnatchce 17 20
Salem 17 22
Yakima 15 23
Tn-Clly 14 24
Thursday a Kesutts
Vancouver 8 Lewlston 2
Trl-Clty 1 Sslem 0
Victoria 11 Spokane 2
Yakima 3 Wcnatchee 1
By The Associated Tress
It will be the Salem Senators'
turn Memorial Day to trv to slop
Victoria's rampaging Tyees.
Nine games along on a Western
International League winning
streak that has propelled them b i
'4M ramcs in front of second-place Spo-
folic, wic ijccb V: ii m jcw .......
Fridcy at Salem, the last team to
beat them.
The Senators dropped the Ca
nadian team In the first game of
n ooublehcader at Victoria May
22. The Tj ecs won tne second
squeeze bunt sending Tom Marler
across the plate with the lone tally
of the contest.
Vancouver scored Its first vic
tory of the three-game series with
a scoring splurge In the 11th In
ning. Lewlston'a Artie Wilson tied
Uie game 2-2 in the bottom of the
nir.m with a home run. Bob Du
retto's single in the last frame
scored Edo Vannl and Gordy
urunswick. Jack Kltchey followed
with a two-on homer
Frank Dasso pitched four-hit
ball for Wenatchee but Yakima
cashed in on four on errors and
sixth loss of the season. Only one
o x aaima s tnree runs was earned.
I 1 n.Un TV1.
atv tour timS. Vancouver once Dfo, waa marked down for his
and Spokane three tunes.
Vlctorv No. S was racked up
i-neeJ aTCa, M, St"
.395
.308
lrvln, recently with Portland in
the Poclllc Coast League, twirled
a three-hitter while his teammates
reached three Spokane pitchers for
a total of 13 safeties.
In other games, Trl-Clty shut
out Ealem 1-0, Vancouver clipped
Leriston 8-2 and Yakima downed
Wenatchee 3-1.
Memorial Dav doublcheaders. in
r.ddltlcn to Victoria at Balem. are
Wenatchee at Lewlston. Vancou
ver at Trl-Clty and Yakima at
Spokane.
By The Associated Press Trl - Cltys Kaipn rtomero posi-
n.i.in. tra-r,. simnmn Indian ed his uiird snutout oi me year
Battered Detroit pitching for four as he four-hlttd Salem at Trl
hlts. Included bases-loaded borne .City Thursday. It was his sixth win
run. In 11-4 Cleveland win. ocainst two losses, and It ran his
Pitching, Maury McDermott, string of ecoreless innings to 21
Red 8ox Shut out Washington iStrnlRht.
with one hit, a single by Mel Hod-1 Trl- City won"1he game in the
erlcin in 1.0 vlctorv. fourth Inning. Olney Pattersons
graduate at Hamline University.
The Cincinnati Reds finished
second to the New York Giants In
pitching In 1951. The Red staff
compiled a 3.70 earned-run aver
age.
Dizzy Trout In 14 seasons with
the Tigers has pitched two open
ing day -games, in 1944 and 1952.
He lost both.
Yam a to,
Von Pop
Signed
Temperamental Tol Yamato has
agreed lo meet Georges Dusette
the match the fans want but first
the Jananesa aleener exnert wants
a crack at luirt von foppenneim.
promoter Mack Liuara, wno nas
been trying to land the Dusette
Yamato match for several, weeks,
agreed to Tol's terms yesterday.
Actually. both Lillard and
Yamato are over a barrel. Yamato
wants Von Poo but won t get him
unless ne agrees to tace uuset;e.
Lillard wants the Dusette
Yamato match but can't get It
unless he gives Yamato Von Pop-
penhelm first.
WIIII'I'KD
The Yomato-Von Poppenhelm
feud broke out Wednesday night
after the nefarious -pair were whip
ped by Frankie Stojack and Buck
Davidson.
Von Ponnenhelin inlurcd his
shoulder In the fray and refused
to continue wrestling. Tills in
furiated Yamato and the two en-
laged In some unexpected scull
ing. Yamato agreed win. lose or
draw that he would meet Dusette
the following week.
DOUBLE MAIN
The match will share main event
billing with one putting Dusette
aaalnst Steve (Tiger) Ncnofl. a
newcomer here but a sensation In
various Northwest arenas.
Both are down for one hour or
the best two of three falls.
Glno Nlcolini and Frenchv Rny
will open Uie show In a half-hour
scuffle.
Kentucky annually produces an
estimated one-third of the entire
thoroughbred racing crop in the
country.
GEORGES DUSETTE, shown here handing Bill Melby fits
with a wristlock, returns to the Armory Wednesday night
against Steve (Tiger) Nenoff, sensational Bulgarian wrestler.
New Shipment!
COWBOY BOOTS
Juit In! The new crept 10I0 HYER boot. Setter
yours from over 400 different styles now In
stock. Buy now for tht 4th ct
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Ito MAIN TILIPM0HI 44
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Ends SATURDAY, MAY 31
LEON'S GREAT
IIIIVIII
nmii
AND THE FABULOUS
for 1 SHOE SALE
'Definitely Ends ;
Saturday -May 31
525 Moin
LEONS 525 Main
BUILD BETTER FOR IBS
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BUILDING BLOCKS
mtraoos
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f SeVMSUlATIN
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COSTS TOUUSS
P
EYT0N&
3S MARKCT T.
Beavers, USC
Open Title Set
CORVALLIS. Ore. lin Oregon
State end Southern California base
ball teams met here Friday In the
opening game of the best-of-three
series for Uie Pacific Coast Con
ference championship.
UEC, the defending champion,
was a slight favorite.
Southpaw Don White was slated
to start on the mound for Oregon
State against (JSC's Tom Lovrlch,
a righthander.
The teams will play a second
game and a third, if necessary,
Saturday.
ed to go.
He played several Innings of tws
camp games and. waa algned. Ho
went through the minors in four
years at Balltnger, Tex.: Tyler,
Tex.; Columbia, S. C: and Tulsa.
Last season, his first in the majors,
he apeared In 85 games back of
Virgil Stallcup.
McMillan believes his precocious
path through the minors may
count for some of hla trouble at
the plate. He Is not a robust hit
ter. At one time this season bis
average dwindled to .038.
Roy has nerve, big hands, shsrp
eyes and remarkable speed, His
hands are much larger than ones
usually carried by a man of live
feet 11 inches, 170 pounds.
"When I was In high school, I
could pick up a basketball with
one hand on the top of it," be
remembers.
'His eyes are sharpened by hunt
ing.
He ran loo yards in 10 seconds
flat for Bonham High School. This
was In addition to winning letters
In football, basketball and tennis.
McMillan finished high school at,
18, was ready to go back to work
in the ice house, his old Summer
job. when he signed the baseball
contract. His father. Robert M.
McMillan, Is a barber.
He put In a semester at Texas
A and M.
Roy McMillan has stolen many
base hits from National League
batters. But does he know how he
makes the batter feel?
"I sure do," he exclaims. "When
someone robs me. It feels terrible."
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i 1 . : ; .
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