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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1952)
TUESDAY. AUCUST mtmr2 ll l ! II I III III I II II 1TTT Tl PAGE EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON ! i ! n ! i i si Pelicans Called The call joes out this week lor pelican looinalicia. Coach Bob Hendershott has an nounced tlmt equipment ill be Issued at the Klamath Union High School field house Thursday, 1 p.m. and pyhslcal examinations will be given at 4 p.m. tne same aay, also at the field house. All prospective members of Uie Pelican and Jayvee football teams are to report to Modoc Field. The physical examinations will Be given by ur. kcii Bluet ana Dr. T. F. Farley. Practice sessions will open next Monday, and two drills a day are scheduled all that week at o 3U in the morning and at night under the lights, starttna about 6:30. After school starts the following week the practices will be cut to one a day. First game for Uie Pelicans comes Sept. 13. when Grant High of Portland makes Its annuaj grid ironing trip to Klamath Falls. Coach Hendershott will be as sisted this year by Paul McCall as backfield coach and Len Suites as line coach. Playoff To Cary KANSAS CITY LTU-Carv Middle coff. the Memphis dentist, fol lowed the playoff route to the 115.000 Kansas Cltv Open golf title for Uie second consecutive time yesterday. . , He shot a 6-under-oar 66 the best round of the tournament to beat Jack Burke Jr. of Houston. Tex., by six strokes. The two wound up the regulation 1i holes Bunday with J76 totals. Last year Middlecoff also fin ished in s lie at the end of 72 holes. In a three-way playoff, he took the title by edRine Doug Ford of Harrison, N. Y., and Dave Doug las of Newark. Del. Middlecoff is plavoff conscious. Only last week he lost a playoff to Julius Boros. Mid Pines. N. C. in the 25.000 "World:' Golf Tourna ment at Chicago. For yesterday's victory he poc keted 12.400 plus a share of the day's gate receipts paid by a crowd of 2.000. Burke's 72 brought, him 11.800 in second-place prize irate receipts. Middlecoff's accurate putting was a big factor in the match-plaved over the 6.200-yard Milbum Coun try Club Course. He bad 29 putt to 36 for Burke. He 1-putted four of the first five holes. The Tennessean toured the first nine in a 4-under-par 32 and didn't go over par on any of the 18 holes. 1 A:)J. W;v J - ft K4-iv ' FISHING'S GOOD af La Par, Mexico, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ryter, 2224 Main, can testify. They ware down there. last week, going out three timet and catching these two marlin and a sail fish, plus three other marlin and many small fish. A 100-pound marlin was the largest caught. The sailfish weighs 90 pounds, the marlin 70 and 80. GROUSING AT UMP PHONY Fans Rescue WIL Outfit By The Associated Press The Wena tehee Chiefs lost an other Western International League baseball game Monday NEW YORK Ul A fellow we know says he attended a kid baser ball game the other day and left in disgust after a few innings be cause the little beggars were spending more time beefing et the umpires and generally making themselves obnoxious than they were in playing ball. It's a pain," he said. "They've seen the big leaguers jawing with the umps so much that they think it s part of the game. The mana gers were getting in on the act. too. and the crowd was egging the kids on. I don't see how they get anybody to umpire any more. "Why don't you." he urged, "do what vou can toward telling these silly saps that the big league um pires you know are lust people night but for the Chiefs' supporters the loss was offset by word the club has solved it finan cial problems and will be in the league again next year. The Vancouver Capilanos de feated the Chiefs 5-2 to even the four-game series at Vancouver 2-2. The game made up one postponed earlier' in the season. It was the league's only contest. like anybody else: that they are sensitive, intelligent men who have a real love for the game, and that they are out there doing their best on a mighty hard Job?" The man's remarks are. of course, well taken. The umpire bating phase of the game Is be coming extremely Irksome. . and. though we had intended all along to stay away from kiddies' games, he supplies us with added incen tive to do so. It is bad enough to watch the grown-ups. As he says, big league umpires are good companions off the ball field and when one of them decides you are on the level he is a far more interesting conversationalist than the average player. If they were not bound by the nature of their jobs to keep Quiet in com pany, they would be better under stood by the fans. As thev are onlv human, umnlres ' come to detest certain players who make a practice of riding them. When thev talk of these plavers and of managers who employ spec tacularly filthy language, they sometimes become bitter. But they invariably wind up saying they love the game and couldn't quit it. When we asked Larry Goets of the National League staff when he found himself getting anxious for the next season to begin, he said "on the last day of the season." GREEN STAMPS l with your GOODYEAR TIRES Now on Sale . DON'S SHELL SERVICE 3 Miles North on 97 (Next to Van'i Motel) Ex-Champs Fall Out Of Amateur Golf Go llv IIOH AtYKKS SEAri'l.E i.t The Men's Na tional Amateur Golf Champlonalilu, Ihe ranks Milmied of tin lu.tl two champions, swung Into the second round o( inau-li ulav, Tue.Mlav with the remtumim chnllenuora crowd ing into the mHilliuhi. . Belled to the sidelines In Ihe day's two mo.nt sliiiillng upsets were the defending champion, Ulllv Maxwell Irani Odrma. 'lex., and the 1M0 kimtnln of (he nation's amateurs. Sum Ursetta of Rochest er! N. Y. TIME OUT! ml J. mi V tv a yvni Buy one GOODYEAR at regular us. k- aT reH is. qet your this same list, ge t second DeLuxeT.refor by foOD1 : th SIZE I FIRST II" cor-sVou v. aat lna 5.90 I 6.40 x 15 I I 6.70 x I 7.10 x IS 1 7.60 x 15 J. 00 x IS i x 1 5 I $20.10 24.80 5.80 ).05t 1J.40t 9.40t ).50t 24 26.1 29.i 30.( 14. is.: i tax wiwi r low a, $15 a week for a PAIR ot m' f C world'5. ., .our th.n ",tiBl price t MARATHON by coodAiar H95H $1395 ' i.lt 1 15 MARATHON Super-Cushion ether sizti proportionately lowl goodyear TRUCK TIRES other f'tei proportonafey lowl MARATHON as low as A Pll Itf 85 '.". 19 aDDlWAnS 8th and Klamath SERVICE STORE Phone 8141 "You never thought about Ita wnrkini both wy when we (ot a home io convenlenl to the course, did you?" Uu"k waa aeltllng over the Rent lie Country I'lub'a urern acres when the luiullliir "uukuoKii," liu 1). OruUer, a line hiitiim. culm young man from rotlMown, INi.. iIimhwoI of Maxwell on tlio iM hole. Karller In Ihe iliiv. Umeltii. wluiAe ail lnilo vlclory ovrr t'rnnk tiiiaiinllun at Mlnneuiiolla in lU.'O nai the IoiikchI overlline innlch III the timrnumriil'a hlMorv, It'll bo lore Marlon (Houmi lllskov. Jl-venr-old iilnver lioni Twin Knllt. Ula. Uiuber. a mere 18 yeaia of ngo and a aouhomoie at Duke, aunk an eight foot pull tor a talrtlle three on Ihe Ul.it lit win. Maxwell hntl inliwied lila putt Horn IS tret out. III.Hkey, a member of North Tex as Stale Collegc'a national col legiate team chiunnloua tin veur, mid lilnho and Utah champion, ended Uraettn's hoiiea Willi a chip .shot dead to the pin for a blidio lour on the IBIli green. Maxwell's defeat carried on a lli-.x like airing lor the chumiiiona dating back to 103ft, No clinnipiuii liaa retained his title aince I'ult lornla'a greul Lawnon Liule mnde it two In a row that year. Tuesday, In contrast to Monday's organUcd conluMon. M mnlehea were on the schedule. Inclmlrd In Ihe field were Ilia survivors of TJ matches, plus til fortunate individ uals who drew flr.it round bvea. MOUNTAIN BURGERS STEAKS CHOPS Oaan 11 A.M. la 10 P.M. Cloitd Tuaiday BRIMMING CUP CAFE V Mile Post Keno : Thrills-Speed-Spills ! Gems Speedvay (Formorly Gomi Baseball Park) itarcl Top Elates Saturday Night Auquit 23 Time Trials ...7:30 P.M. Dayligh First Event 8:15 P.M. Daylight Plenty of Porkinq Spoce Now Avoiloble Come Early fastest growing night entertainment in the West Box Seats, $1.80 Students, 73c Gen. Adm $1.50 Childron, 50c (Tax Included) ,jafci-!3'i- . . . Westchester area in 1941 This part of the Inglewood exchange was mostly open 6clda ten yean ago. rv. Stw.- Westchester today PfA Sfctej ' A tremendous housing devol- fe2?!5'C---rS' g&5f opment brought thounands of f2j5?tc-;2t V ' new telepho cuatomer.. TpMWhMSSM See how Westchester has changed You may find that here is the telephone story of your town,' too 1. Like the rest of the 'West, the Inglewood-WeBtchester area has grown amazingly in the last decade. Population in the area served from the Inglewood telephone exchange has jumped from 42,000 at the beginning of 1942 to over 100,000 today. Much of this growth came in the Westchester com munity, where an entirely new city has been created. Pro viding telephone service to so many new homes and busi nesses has been a real challenge. - J 10 V -J. 1 " j 3. Telephones went in at a record-breaking rate. In 1942 we served about 7,000 telephones from our Inglewood exchange. Today it's well over 34,000. ..the result of an investment of $8 millionEven so, growth in the Inglewood area has been so rapid, we're still not nblo to fill all orders as fast as they come in. Today we're short of many of the critical materials we need... but we'll keep doing all we can to fill nil orders and those which we know still lie ahead. 2. Just as soon as materials were available after the war, telephone construction got underway. Twenty-one thousand feet of floor space was added to the central office building in 1945, more than 12,000 in 1946. Into this building weushed huge quantities of intricate central office equipment more than two and a half million dollars' worth. And, to link now telephones with the central office, we have strung more than 133,000 miles of wire, put up 1;500 poles. Construction has rocently begun on another new three story addition to the Inglewood telephone building toprovide room for even more central office equipment " Pacific Telephone Your telephone is one of today's best bargains Up and down tho West, tho Inglowood-WcnHicBtcr story linn boon told in hundreds of towns, Fast as the population has grown, the telephone hns grown at an even faster rule . . . twice as fast in tho territory we nerve. For nt today's prices, the telephone is so economical more people can afford It... so useful, more peoplo want it.