Monday, October n, 198B Sage Eight EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON BOXING 24 Rounds T u e s d a y October 20th Scandinavian Hall, 8:30 P. M. Main Even 10 Rounds Kid Starkey vs. Mike De Pinto Klamath Fulls Knockout Artist vs. Portland Italian Flash. Sure to be a thriller and sure to end In a knockout. This will be a flsht you will remember and one you'll want to toll your friends about. Don't miss It. 6 - Round Semi Windup Chuck Sams vs. Earl Stolz Lots of action assured both boys have reputations and both want to keep them. Special Event W. Harrington vs. Kid Alcorn A surprise is in store for you. Extra Event Slim Masters vs. Kid Solomon Action Every Minute See it Sure! JOHNNY SYLVESTER Matchmaker t Auspices Klamath Falls Boxing Commission Tickets on Sale at the Mecca Waldorf Smoke It Always Pays To buy jendcr, Avell cured merits. Meat that is T tough is costly at five cents a pound. We have only meats that are well cured, tender and delicious. MILLER'S MARKET Gus Miller, Prop. Main Near Eighth Phones 750 and 751 Four Deliveries Daily Boxers Ready For Big Bout Real Battles Carded For Scandy Hall To morrow Eve OREGON TRAINS All of the box-fighters are In the I well known "pink" and waiting for ! the tap of the gong that will herald the resumption of boxtug In Klam- nth for the fall and winter months. Mike Do Pinto, who meets Kid Starkey in the 10-round main event Impresesd a erowd of funs with 1U I fast workout yesterday, and every ! body who saw hint in neiion pre j dieted this would bo a whale of a I battle, with Starkey a slight favor i ite. Tho fans are willing to trull ; along with the loeal carpenter be I cause they have seen him In action before ami know he Is every inen a fighter. The Chuck Sams-Karl Stols go for six rounds or less will be a knockout. It la freely predicted, as both boys can sock and neither knows what it means to quit. Wilbur Harrington and Kid Al corn will furnish plenty of action in their special event, while the cur tain raiser also will provide the us ual thrills, as curtain raisers a) often have a habit of doing. The first bout will start promptly at S:30, and Matchmaker Johnnie Sylvester gives assurance that there will be no delays. As soon as one bout is over the boys In tho next will be ready to crawl through the ropes. Tho card will be staged In the Scandinavian hall. FOR NEXT CI E Sport Briefs An unkind fate which trailed Frankie Erlsch of the- Xew York Giants with injuries has pursued him to the semi-pro diamond. He had a chance to be a hero In Hackensack, N. J., wben he came to bnt In the ninth with two on bases. He struck out. Honus Wagner, famed shortstop of the Pittsburgh Pirates in bygone ,;.'.--. fared much better, playing first base for his all-stars in New York. He garnered two singles and scored a run- His team won, 3 to 2, Georges Carpcntler. most popular European fighter ever to visit these shores, cannot stay away. According to California boxing promoters, the Trench war hero has signed articles to fight Jimmy DeLaney of Los An geles In January. Babe Huth, deep In the Maine woods, stalking deer, hasn't yet been heard from regarding the new home run clouting record of Tony Lazerre in the Pacific coast league. Tony I surpassed Ruth's mark by a single I circuit blow when he made his six-1 tleth homer yesterday. Wnmnn pnlfom nrn nlnnnlni. to nr.' gnnize their own national association and Mary E. Browne, wizard of I courts and links. Is one of the spon sors of the Idea. Tho U. S. G. A. Is willing. State University Will Play California at Portland Next Saturday Kl'UKN'K, tire. Oct. 111. Willi the dawn of a new week, grim deter mlnntlon today settled down over the University of Oregon ulhlellc field where football warriors are In training for the tilt Saturday In Port land, with the I'nlverslty of Califor nia. Kor several weeks the players have been keeping California In mind ih they trained, but with actual arrival of the week in which tho game will occur, a new feeling crept over. To hold California down Is a hard (ask for any team, ami the Oregon men are determined that they will bo the ones to do It If nay can. Oregon won Saturday from Pa cific university by a small score of 13 to 0, In a slow and uninteresting game. When California faces the Web footers Saturday, she will face every Oregon player. In good condition, ac cording to the present outlook. Tho biggest cause of worry has been big I.yun Jones, fullback, who has been carrying a badly damaged wrist since the Idaho gnme. Hi' will be back In the line-up. however, tho trainers say. When the gnme Is called, prote ges of two Smiths will face each other. Coach Andy Smith Is of Cali fornia. Coach Dick Smith Is of Ore gon. There trill be no brotherly feeling, however, for they are not related. FARMER'S CAR STOLEN SUNDAY F. A. Olemeyer of Merrill Fails to Find Car Parked on 9th Street Somewhere, somebody Is driving a Kord touring car tint don't bolon; to him. Down in the Merrill coun try, i A. Olemeyer, a well kn;w: ranchqr of that section;. Is walking and will contlnuo to walk until authorities get a lino on his cai which was stolen Sunday nlgbt from where It was parked on NtBtll street. Tho sheriff's offlco is Investigat ing tho caso and has sent the usual information on the stolen car to different police departments and sheriff's offices throughout tho state. t t Y t i ? The Store for Men Wo may have tho smallest Men's store in the city, but wo also have tho smallest overhead of any men's store in town, and are riving the biggest values on men's work anil dross clothes of any place in tho state. We have a complete outfit for ovoryman in every job, to fit every purae. Men's Heavy Work Shoes Chippoawa and Red Wine;, $2.75, $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 Hi Tops, $0(60, $11.50. and $12.50. Winter Underwear III all weights, in cotton, cotton and wool mixed and all wool. $1.15, $1., $2.50 up to $0.50. Overall $1.50 and $2.00 Work Pants Work Shirts $1.00, $1.25 In cotton, corduroy and Heavy wool mixed $2.35 wool at $2.S5, $8, $4, & $5 Moleskin Glavcs , Work S.ox .... ..... 1 hat are made lor work, at We have a complete line in iws th;lt ,.,, le8g than y0ll all grades from 20c to $2.50 wtHlU 0X1,lTl. Wtih 10 below peeking round the corner, you need protection, at the same time we are protecting your back with good warm serviceable underclothes, shoes, shirts, leather coats, etc., we W' protecting your purse from undue strain. Our prices aro smallest, our values are largest. It Pays to Buy at Beck's Next Door to Bluebird yiecfoittarutcre, HL AH AT ti riis-wooov.off(. 517 Main LOS ANGELES. The body of an ( NAN I MO, B. C Sentences 61 sjintdentificd young man, believed eight years in the penitentiary and slain, was found in a dry river bed ; twenty lashes each were imposed Bear Los Angeles. A bullet hole was bund In his chest, but there was upon three men who pleaded guilty to the robbery of (42,000 from the Bono in the coat and shirt buttoned I Nanaimo branch of the Itoyal Bank 'above It. . of Canada. - - ZZZZZ Sunny, pleasant rooms. Dependable nursing care. A good place to convalesce In illness nnd after surgical operations. Rates are reasonable. Ambulance for stretcher cases. Resident pharmacist. Prescriptions and medicine may be obtained at all times day or night. All Physicians Cordially Welcome Klamath Valley Hospital PINE AT FOURTH STREET KLAJLVTH FALLS, ORE. Cor. 4th and Pine Telephone 497 George Broeffle , Buried Tomorrow Funeral services for George Broef fle, aged IS logger employed at the Pelican Bay Lumber camp No. 2, will be held tomorrow afternoon a( Whltlock's mortuary at 3:30 o'clock. The Rev. T. D. Yarnes, pastor of tho Methodist Episcopal church will officiate at the ceremony. The body will be Interred In Llnkvlllo ceme tery. Broeffle was killed Saturday morning when a log fell and struck him in the abdomen causing Inter nal Injuries that resulted In his death one hour later. He is sur vived by a sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Dixon of Kirk and a mother, Mrs. Ida. Broeffle, of Ontario, Canada. He had been working for the lumber company a month. WALLACE, Idaho. One hundred persons were made homeless by a fire which swept through tho little mining settlement of Black Bear, near Wallace. Thirty houses, or vir tually half of the residential dis trict, were destroyed. SPOKANE, Wash. A Spokane congregation heard a sermon preach ed In Boston, 3500 miles away and transmitted over 4700 miles of tele phone wires. Dr. Royal D, Dlsbea spoke to his former congregation at 8t. Paul's Methodist church from Boston where he now is. Highest Klamath Traffic Census Reported Today A high mark for traffic over Kalmath state highways was sat yesterday when a state highway census taken on The Dnllcs-Callfor-nla highway at the northern city limits revealed that 1434 vehicles utilized the road between the bouts of 6 a. m. and 10 p. m, The high mark on any Klamath highway before yesterday's census was 1350. Only two lone horses slowly put! ed wagons on the road yesterday, and but one motorcyclo putt-puttod its way over the macadam. But there were 1181 Oregon cara; 1G3 freight car."; GO small truck-i and 21 large trucks. Travel over tho road has been accelerated owing to the re-surfn ing project between the city limits and Modoc Point. IlIIINEISUC'K, N. V. -Vincent A". tor had a railroad constructed to show guests around his estate. !t is half a mllo long, a six foot loco motive drawing a passenger car built for two. A cccenUy patoncd tube for tooth paste is equipped with a brush holder and a loop of metal by which t'to two can bo hung up together. Of English Invention Is a pocket mlcrose-cpe with which obpects cdn be magnified and hr.-asure.l in hun dredths of an Imch at the same time. After many attempts thnl ended In falure; w'iieat has been sue tfossfrully raised Ira Paraguay. CORDOVA. Alaska. A terrific gale moved a building six feet, wrecked n baseball grandstand and blew down scaffolding on a new high school building, Masons Attention TONIGHT M.M. Degree Banquet, 7 :30 p.m. Mcdford I o (I k e confer ring dcp;rce5, Visitors welcome. No visitors examined af- -- Thor Electric Ironer Genuine Thor Product I'm- trial in your home. You can't iijipnuiaie the " 1 Imi Ironer" until you have tried it, yourself. ion really can ( afford to In- without one. Uhlig's Electric Store 1026 Main Phone 234 FULLERS, BURKE Jl ON TRIAL TODAY IS Alleged Assailants cf E. X. Kendall in Court on Serious Charge Throe mon went on trial this morning on a serious charge, that of attempting to take a human life. They are Charles Fuller, Ed ward Fuller and Jim Burke, who are, charged with shooting Ed Ken dall, at that time a deputy sheriff and now a Justice of the peaco. Late this morning but eleven tentative Jurors had been selected. The defense had exorcised seven of Its 12 peremptory challenges and tho stnte one of Its six challenges. When It appeared that the Jury panel was exhausted, Judge A. I. Leavltt issued a special venire for 12 additional jurymen and ad journed court until 2:30 thlfl after noon to allow the sheriff's office time to nerve the subpoenas. Tentative Jurors selected wore Lawrence Arnott, Antone C.'ncka, J. W. Hasklns, J. A. Thompson, Howard Abbey, W. H. Hlmmel wrlght, Frnnk Kestcr, W. L. Kraln. Alfred (Jastoll, F. E. Mnsten nnd O. W. Houston, The case Is one arising out of the wounding of Ed Kendall In the arm June 15 of this year near Olene. Kendnll was severely hurt and unable to assume, his duties as deputy for several months. Italian Ship Is Asking for Help NEW YORK, Oct. ID. (P) The United Hlates lines today received from the steamship President Hard ing, In mid-ocean, a wireless re porting that It was responding to an "8 O H" from the Hteamshlp Ignnclo Florin. KELLY SPRINGFIELD FLEXIBLE s CORD The only balloon tire that will not tumble when driven on closed cars at high speeds : Hub Tire Shop 502 South Sixth - Phone 616 flllllllllllllllllllllllWIIIHli I: a I y-r