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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1937)
PAGE TWO THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON OetoL Belcastro Subdues Wolfe In Furious Battl CLEMENS WINS mmm. Texan Drops Pete Before Fight Opens; Murdock Beats Pogi Pelicans May Need Those Extra Points Klamath taam's apparent ina bility to scora following touchdown likely to bring setbacks in future as in past; Yankees earn more than Giants in salaries. Throe popular victories and at leapt one legitimate one featured last nlKht's wrestling endeavors at the Klamath armory. Pete Belcastro scored the ric tory which was both popular and unquestionably forthright. He won Jt after slightly more than four minutes of the fastest and most furious action which has ever re sounded on the armory floor boards. The victim, of course, was the thoroughly despised Let Wolfe of Texas. (The bell for the start of fie . bom never sounded. When the two antagonists met In nild-riug to get formal instructions from Kcferee Earl Yoakley and while both were still wearing their robes. Wolfe suddenly lashed out with a right that caught Belcas tro square on the chiu and seut him catapulting backward. UelcaMro Vropkirks Leslie the Texan went on from there. Whipping off his dressing gown, he tackled Belcastro with both fists, drove the Italian from the ring, leaped on him again when he returned, punched kneed, strangled and gouged un til Pete was a sorry sight and apparently a hopeless case. At that moment, however, Bel castro mustered his last resources under tbe circumstances, jo body will ever believe he bad been playing possum and let go with a dropkick. Kigbt then things took just about as fast a turn as tbe tides in the Bay of Kundy. Toehold Does Business Another dropkick followed, and then another and another and au other, like ahota from a machine gun. Wolfe never even got up as far as his knees. Finally Belcastro slapped on a toehold the only hold of tbe match, incidentally and slapped It on la a manner which left no doubt aa to his purposes. After a brief while Wolfe gave up. but Per) didn't. He kept on and on with the excruciating maneuver, brushing aside all at tempts of Referee Yoakley separate him from hia victim. Eventually even Belcasiro's hardened heart must have sensed some pity for the Texan's sorrow ful fate, for he untangled him self and made his way to his cor ner, leaving Wolfe In a situation which called for a tin cup and pencils. That was only 3 min utes and 52 seconds after the opening bell should have rung. There was a bit of an after piece, but It was more or less un necessary. Tula postlude lasted exactly 10 seconds, just long enough for Belcastro to seize Wolfe's crippled underpinning and give It a single wrench. f'rankie Clemens had to resort to punches to defeat Glen Stone of Olyiupia, formerly Billy New man of Denver, when it became obvious he stood slim chance of subduing Stone by straight wres tling. In spite of his questionable tactics, Clemens was the loregoue hero of tbe occasion and bis suc cess drew thunderous cheers, f ne bout offered evidence that you can't overcome mob prejudice, because Stone was moderately clean as clean, at any rate, as his opponent and exhibited other hero characteristics such as, for instance, disdaining to edge for the ropes in moments of crisis and releasing bis holds the instant tbe referee cried "break." But the crowd showed that It still remembered Glen Stone as Billy Newman the ruffian, and Stone might just as well resign himself to unpopularity and de spair of ever overcoming the un favorable reputation he establish ed here on previous visits. Clemens captured the first fall In 4:19 of the second round with his Indian "paralyzer." Although he pare up. Stone did not appear to be badly "paralyzed" by tLe hold and spent most of the subse quent minute's rest period dis claiming on the favorite Clemens tactic as a "stranglehold" and declaring that he would show the Indian and the big crowd a thing or two on.-e hostilities resumed. The "thing or two- principally took the form of hanimerlockr, and after 7 minutes and 22 sec onds of writhing under the agon ies of assorted tingle and double hammcrlocks and surfboards Clemens tossed in the towel. Another W ild Our When they returned for more, the Oklahoma Indian realized, aa far as he was concerned. It was a matter of sink or swim. That's when he stnrK-d to deliver the ei bow swipes which, after a minute and two seconds culminated in another "parnlyzcr." The opening bout between Friiukle Murdock and Uorilla I'ogl, officially won by Murdock. nearly equalled the main event in point of wild and gruesome opera tions. .Murdock captured the first tiinibcl with a leg-breaker In 8:64 of the Inltlul round after Ttetcree Yoitkh'.v had Itikcn quite a heat ing, but that was only the be ginning. In the second stanza Pogl tried to drug Murdock around tbe Hi g Three games, one victory, five touchdowns and no extra points. That's the Klamath Pelicans' football record to date this sea son. In every respect but one the record is Improving im proving so rapidly and notably that already there Is talk, crazy talk, about going through the rest of the schedule unde feated, winning the conference championship and such stuff. The Klamath outfit fumbled and stumbled through its first game and lost to Dunsmuir, 12-6. Then it ploughed up and down the field at The Dalles but still couldn't regis ter the yards when yardage counted. The result waa an other defeat, T-S. Last Friday night at Grants Pass the Pelicans finally broke into the win column and did It in such a manner as to leave no doubt as to their power and to give more than a hint of skill. The score was 18-0. and the local rooters immedi ately set up the "on our way" cry. Maybe the optimists are right. Everybody hopes so, anyhow. But just the same it's going to be a pretty tough grind from here on out, and In the meantime, how about those points after touchdown? Inability to convert is a heavy handicap. It means that a team always has to be at least one touchdown better In order not to lose. Ti e situation has already been amply demonstrated in the case of the Pelicans. Their Dunsmuir defeat was a defeat in any case, and their Grants Pass victory was a victory re gardless, but sandwiched in be tween was that loss which might just as well have been a tie the 7- The Dallea af fair. A glance at tbe schedule In dicates that there will be others just like that just as close before the season ends. Ashland, for Instance, which comes here next Friday night. Ashland has had almost as much trouble as Klamath at adding the extra point, and If either team manages to break through Its crossbar Jinx Fri day, that team may well be the victor. Then there's Mcdford. The Pearpickers are at least 60 per cent proficient as ther demonstrated with a six-touch down. 39-7 romp over Rose- burg last week, and a 13-14 loss to Hood River the week before. And Pendleton, which (note the score) beat Baker Friday night. 7-S. And Bend. There are. of course, three dirrerent ways of making points after touchdown, by kicking, running and passing. The Pelicans have stuck to plareklcks, because they're the easiest that Is. they're the easiest. If you can make 'em. You have to give the Peli cans credit for trying. In practice or in actual competi tion practically every member by the nostrils, and that bit of brutality really did raise the young Oklahoman's Ire. In taliation he punched Pogi like hell and wrapped him all around tho ring ropes, but when the round ended the Bull of Buenos Aires had Murdock neatly strangled ana he wouuin t let go. Pojrl Kvrns Score Pogi evened the score in 3:10 of the third round with a crabhold after he4iad pushed .Murdock into the ropes, ducked down and K't Frankle tumble back over him to the mat. In the fourth the South Amer1 can went after Murdock in earn est. He punched him to a pulp, strangled him and kicked him from the ring with complete aban don. The last time Murdock groped his way back In, dazed. damaged ajd weak, Pogl again attempted nis push-dump-tumbel trick. -Murdock, however, worked In a duck of his own, caught Pogi around the middle with a body scissors and momentarily held the Argentinian's shoulders to the mat. That moment was long enough for Referee Yoakley, who for five minutes had been trying to award the match to Murdock on a fou'. and he proclaimed the Oklahomun winner. Pogl Immediately leaped to his feet protesting and took a random poishot or two at both Yoakley and Murdock. His efforts, of course, had no effect on the de cision, and eventually he traipsed off to the showers, shaking his fist at the crowd. Young Danny McShaln, about 12, and Young Wild Red Barry. about 13, put on an exhibition bout before the regular card, Wild Red. won the single fall with a shoulder press after two and a half minutes of furious hal- Ulng of the first siring has at some time or other taken a crack at splitting the upi'lalus. all with more or less uniform Inconsist ency. Indeed, you have to give the Pelicans credit for trlug. After the first touchdown In the Grants Pass game and after having mulled the lour previous opportunities for ex tra point tli.it the season up to that lime had produced, they tried for a field goal A field goal, mind you. Not from the 2-yard line, but from away out there somewhere. The kick was blocked, and the score remained at 6-1). Klanialb mude two more touch, downs after that, with tiio vanini missing one of the sub sequent kicks and Itauios the other, while the Cavemen con tinued to go scoreless. Con sequently, neither nig failure to score the field goal nor the complete b'ank drawn on the conversion attempts nui.lo any difference. But, just the same . . After a slow start, during which Grants Pass ran up two first downs while the lo cal talent could do no more than receive, plug and punt, the Pelicans completely hand cuffed the Cavemen Friday night, meanwhile cavorting In a manner heretofore foreign to a Klamath team. They outpowered Grants Pass, assuredly, but they also oulmaneuvered and outtrickt'd the opposition until the Cave men were dizzy. Passes click ed and laterals worked, and Pelican reverses and double reverses out of fake punk for mation had even the officials fooled, according to newspaper reports from the Rogue river tourist center. One Klamath player, inci dentally, was deprived of due honor in the Associated Press account of the game which j The Herald-News carried last weekend. That man was Paul I Crapo. Pelican end. left half and general factotum, who acored one of the two touch downa credited to Pete Green in the "wire" story. " What amounts to a blood feud will have Its inaugural Friday night when Skeet O'Connell brings his Grizzlies oyer from Ashland to play the Pelicans here In the second conference encounter for both teams. O'Connell of Ashland and Snowy Gustafson and Buck Hammer, the Klamath topmen, were all teammates at Oregon Stale college five years or so ago. and now their respective outfits are scheduled to col lide. The "inside information" Is that O'Connell, after scouting the Dunsmuir tangle, carried word back to Ashland that the Pelicans looked like "a lousy bunch of apes." The Pelicans have come a long way slnre then, but the Ashlanders have made com parative advances since their early season defeat by Weed, so that neither coach will know Jut what to expect next Friday. The world series Is over; the Yankees hive been hailed as baseball history's greatest team and, simultaneously, a detriment to both major leagues because of t h-ir over whelming superiority; the world champs have pocketed something over J6nui) apiece; the losing Ginn's hr.ve found some solace In their t to" odd Individual cuts, and the na tional pastime has final.y passed Into Its brief annual period of hibernation. A backward glance indicates that the Yanks, for their sea son's efforts, drew J:it about one-third more in waK's than the Giants. This fact is offered wit limit thought of draw ini; conclusions, alfhoueh at least two are pos sible: (1) that the more money you pay, the better team you get: and f 2 money doesn't mean everything, because the Giants won their league pen nant even though their ngzm- News from West Coast Gridirons 0 TOPS KI'GKNK. Ore.. Oct. IS (AIM Coach Prink Callison credited the I'titveraity of Oregon's 40-6 vic tory over Gnnzaga Saturday with uncovering another potential star Steve Anderson, 156-pound sophomore from Raymond, Wash. Andorson'a kicking and passing mude Ins backfleld performance impressive even in comparison with those of Rowe, Graybeal, l.as-clle and Smith. The Webfoots came out of the fracas practically unharmed, all participants working at top speed ill Monday's practice In preparation for Saturdays game with I SC. F ODTBALL LSI Easterners Rated Above California by Veteran Statistician. CORVALI.I3, Ore.. Oct. 1J (API A large turnout of tans to watch the Oregon State col lege grid team practice Monday evidenced a Jump in the Beaver "box office" value resulting from the surprise 6-3 win over the l iiiversity of Washington Satur day. The Heavers, all on hand and minus Injuries, concentrated on passing drill, with two scrim mages scheduled during the week In preparation for the I'CLA game tills weekend. The freshman team will out llruin play against the vived Orange varsity today. try Pl'LLM AN'. Wash.. Oct 12 (API Without an alibi for the !7-0 shellacking at the hands of California. Washington State's Cougars wiped the slate clean to day and started pointing for the really "Important" game of the season against Washington here Saturday. MOSCOW. Idaho. Oct. 12 (AP) Coach Ted Bank started combing gate pay amounted to less, not only than that drawn by the Yanks, but also that hand ed out to the Chicago Cubs and one or two other clubs In both leagues. Here, for what interest they may have, are the salary fig ures, as supplied by Harry Grayson of the News Enter prise assoetatlon, for 23 Yanks and 22 Giants: YANKEK8 Joe McCarthy 35.000 Gomez .-. 16.000 Ruffing 16.000 Pearson 12.500 Hndley 11.000 Murphy 10.000 Malone 10.000 Andrews 7,500 Wicker 4. 500 Dickey 15,000 Jorgens 7.500 Glenn 5,500 Gehrig 36.000 I.azzerl 18.000 Hfffner 6,500 Roife 10.000 Crosettl 14.000 SaPgaver 7,000 MMuskIo 13.000 Selkirk 12.000 ... 11.000 ... 10.000 ... 10,000 fil.l.NTS ...1300,000 $27,500 IS, 000 Powell Hong ... Hcnrich Total Terrv ... Hubhell Schumacher 12.000 Castlcman 8.000 Smith 8,01)0 Melton 6.000 Guribcrt 6.000 Coffninn 6,noo Manctiso 11,000 Panning 4.500 Madjeskl 2.500 McCarthy 5.000 Leslie 8.0M0 Whitehead 7.600 Oft 16.000 Hartell 14.000 Ryan 4.500 Merger 14.000 Moore . 12,000 l.eiber 7,500 Ripple 7,000 Chiozza 6,500 Total $211,500 fi Lrtafl v. fXf&r&a LOS ANlI KI.KS, Oct. 12 U'l'l Cornell held a substantial leud In jlhe race toward a myitiic.il iih Itlonal football title In coniplln ' lions released today by Deke lloulgnte. veteran Pacific coa.t statistician, for tho week ended October . The Dig Red team, which blau- keied Princeton Saturday, was given first place over 107 teams, amassing 21 points, three in ore than given California and Louisi ana Slate, which tied for second. I'nder the lloulgnte system, which rates teams according to the decisiveness of their victories and the strength of their oppon ents. North Carolina and Temple lied for fourth, with 15.6 points, Pittsburgh was sixth with 15. and Tennessee seventh wilh 14 5. The largest slump and gain from the previous week were re corded on the coast, where Wash ington dropped from a tie fi.r first to a tie for twentieth, and Stanford rose from 103rd to a tie for 61st. Other key scores were Texas Aggies and Wisconsin, eighth. Duke, tenth; Alabama, Navy, Ne braska. Santa Clara and Yander- bllt, eleventh: Notre Dame, twen ty-second; Yale, twenty-eighth; and Minnesota, thlriy-nluili. NEW YORK, Oct. 12 (AP) -It already has been pretty well established that Cornell's football fortunes, under the couching of Carl Suavely, have made a great comeback In two seasons. This week the gridiron fans probably will learn whether Har vard, another college which start ed out to recover a few seasons back by hiring a new coach, has been as successful In its effort. Dick Harlow took over the Job at Cambridge a year befoie Suavely moved in at Cornell. Ilo'.h had about as fur to go from the depths football had reached at the two institutions to tho heights the alumni hoped they would at tain and. If Harlow has been slower, it probably was because he didn't have as guod material. In two preparatory g utiles, trie crimson team has looked as If It might be as good as Cornell al ready has turned out to be. Har vard hasn't tackled any oppo-,1-lion like Penn State, Colgate and Princeton yet. hut it wallop.-a Springfield, 14-0, and a ilrown team that looks a lot better than the Bruins of the past few years. 34-7. Next Saturday Harvard tacalis Navy, which also has been prom ising to be one of the best teams in the east. The Midshipmen score 117 points to 13 again:;: William and Mury, the Citadel and Virginia. Navy has an edge In size user the crimson squad but it's a ques tion whether Navy will be the same without Bill Ingram, who is on its Injured list and out of the Harvard game. Harvard haj practically all the players who made such a fine showing In hold ing Yale to a 14-13 victory laid I November, 1 Cornell, meanwhile. Is slaled 10 ruu up against another of those j comeback-bound teams Saturday Svracuse. which placed lis; In Solem at the helm this year In 1111 effort In regain lost ground. It may mean Irouhlo lor Suaveh a big red team, lor Syracuse- hn been coming along rapidly and would like nothing heller than 'o take a tall out of lis upslale 1 1 vi. f . Cornell has lo think about Yala the following week ami cuu t de volo loo much attention to this game. These two games come close lo being lops lu the "Ivy league." which has gone a long nay tit ward regaining its old time grid iron fame III tho past two .vi-uri. but another pair nie almost us at tractive lo the cash customer. Y ulis and Army rlusli In their tra ditional butlle at New llavi-u and from this may etncice out tctnit that will outshine both Cornell and Harvard before the nci.-moi ends. Penn and Columbia, who fell before the Kits and Ibe Ca dets lust week, havo a "consul. 1 liou" game. Yale, feattirlng Clint Frank, looked very good ill walloping Penn 27-7 last .Salillday. Army, although badly disturbed at llinil by Sht I.iickniun's passing, c.it::e 4tlirouKli 2 1 -1 S against l'oltiinliii. I Princeton, another member of tbe informal Ivy circuit, goes wi-.l 10 face Chicago while llarlmouili gets its first test against HroMii. IIPOSTIJll TO MEET STEELE Non-Title Ffcht Between Ranking Mul.lloweighU Set November 12. NKW YlMCK, Oct -1 IT) KrviMiV Sli'clrt ami Frr, A,mv loll, Ihum two I'aclllc cuuM rhiliitHiiln if thfl world mMill.'-nt-lKht i-hiiiiiploiifihlii luilny wi'rt matt hr( for 1-' rnu ml linn. Hi l omit at Mjictinon Hqunrv (nidi'ii Novi'iiihrr 1 I'roiii'ihT M Ik Jiii'ottn mill : TMh will ho tho hvnt mid. II.--ui-iKlit Hi-nii utiittitt In New Yolk Him-.- Il u rv ;ifli ami Mh-k.-y Wiilk-r f on i; lit l-n.-k In 1 f 1! ft . Il u tin ptrttwiiHt 'imtutitr tn uny illvl hii " Jiirtili'n r Ik It I him 'I ttuin, Mill Funi!" worth, w ho hint Uwn iii'itnt IiiMmk tho mutch alum Apon l.'ll HtopMil Marr.-l TliU of Kr.im-1' mi S)',)!' in her 111, ru .Unfit. "It will (H'M out l hn (inr tlm for a jcmnn cut nf IjS.imm, M. .. ami A"Mli will pllt &u per (ill of th lu'l." Si It. tin hrown - hulrat1 iiiiiul.-r from Tummn, WmmIi,, who I t ivoKtilz , m iho I'nltiMl S(t nn world in k holder, lii"!ilr up on ii non-til l tilt ht.'Aii hti Ht 111 hn.i m-urly fiv niniitha ! way hi w h I r h tu l'f'tnt the crown. II' tnml. hi U"l drfriift'' about h ix w m its mo w hn h knorkrd out Kwi Ovrrlln of Itlthmoinl. Vft., at Scutllr. A champion In ri'(iilril lo aVfoml only one r y tlx mom ! Sit'i'Ii won t hi title from Hit Im ItiHko at 8- a Ml on July 1 1. Apoxtull. S'in KrancUro 'm ti;it- th full mint:! ti.-iiii- tllni! hfllhop. tn rcnic nli'M ua 17(1 which Camp Illy will l'l 'hiiin..oii I" KtiMipt? y noil i Klepner, ,,',,, ' 'I. Cu ,'': dull tin ,,,.. ." niiiiiBK, I,,,-,,, ." t.l '' . t lors mil. i,,.,. ," tvl t last ,(,' """ Thl. enriier : ,rw Yakima hat "l'orutal, an. Kid, . "'"'"lo l 1 ''l Iu, lfillnii ... . i n .. ""fltlo. ti-i... .. " ' 4 " Ul. or. Krnupn wi ll hi" pun I Ortolit.r ;"j NEW ENROLLEES AT CAMP BLY READY FOR WINTER WORK DI.Y f'nniit my received 80 new enrollees .Sumluy, October 10, from Portland and vicinity, and was to receive no more from Klamath Kalis, Tuesday, Oeiob.-r 12. This brings the enrollment lo 15 a rnu n (I attain when Ciimp Cutiier, located near Kllgene. anil whlah Is ills banding, send half of Its enrolled here. up virtue ( his technical kii)0 over Thll. Apostnll claims he can beat i Steele, although the Taeouiu Captain Rohner Is vcrv nroml 1 slugger won a tenth round tech of tho achievements of his hos I itical knockout over the Cslltor and reports that Camp Illy h.ia ' i.i Italian on April 1. I'Jia. received the flag again for l!;c Apotoli evplulns that he was highest ruling in all endeavors ; nbead on pnlnls In (hat bout, of any of the 24 camps In tlm ' win n he sulfered a badly gashed brow causing the bout tn be .Medford district The Medford district which now has 24 camps plans to consolidate soon and take lu a part of tbe Iteildlug district which will make 34 cutnps. some of which a:e located in Nevadu. The program on projects for the CCC boys this winter Is varied. I'art of the enrollees will work, n the ranger station here In II I v . landscaping, etc. About 1:' hois will establish a side cump ul I'alsley where a ranger station Is under construction. About Ilu bo;.s will establish another side ramp at Lakeview where a ranger sta tion Is to he constructed. Then there Is a possibility that a sl ' camp may be established at I.k lake. Recreational work lo be car ried on will be camp ground d. -velopment on Hairy creek as well us a road crew and telephone con struction crew which will work Iti this vicinity. . halted. "Ilesldes. that was one of my earl) fights." After con-tiilt-ralile bickering over l. rtlis. Mill Miller. Steele's tnaiulKer, and Larry bile, w ho I pilots Apostoli, aitreed on their j en. Is Monrlay. Iloth managers are in town, sa are the fighters. Atostoll re, named In .New York after the Thll fitht. and Steele I arrived just before the world series slsrtcd. I ilecaii:e ll is a non title bout. I the piinrlpals have agreed to 'enter the ring scaling between I 111 I ami If,:, pnnnils. The middle weight limit is I en his liiiversity of Idaho football squad today for possible line re placements. Kaciug a hard game against Utah Statu at Hu.se Saturday, Hank said four of the smiad were crippled, although not badly. The casually list: Stonko i'avkov. tackle, and I.yle Smith, center, limping with ankle Injuries: Ken neth Carherry, guard. hadly bruised rili; Harold Durham, re serve fullback, shoulder Inlurv. i MOTHPROOF Dry Cleaning Every Garment Mothproofed at No Ettra Cost. STANDARD DYERS & CLEANERS 1400 Esplanade, rhona Htn mm anil eie, ear, nose and lliroal disorders are best treated b) ill iiulcs, non-surgical methods, e 1 1 m I nntliiK hospitalization, general anaesthetics, loss ol work lime, and dangers of In feciinn or hemorrhage. See Or. II. fassrl. 4e, Kar. Nose, and Throat Specialist, at Cassel Brothers Chiropractic Clinic S2H u. 7th St., hlamnlh rails. Ore. Phone 420 sfl.V i , Thla Aajaj... L.nof, Off art MlKllrr Itftts I'ltia Ounraniaaij I ' cj; I.OO blurt, Jou, First Federal and Loan Asik iV KM MATH . in No. mb m. K Member nf Ttim& nnn ixan Imsr.! 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