Tape Four TI1K KVKNINf! IIKKAM). KI.AMATII KAU.S. OKKriON Big Moments in Big Games r?rri IN THE REALM OF nTTl I VS TORS f'uttlt"htl -ry HrtnHn r.pl hnuit.iv t.y Th l-rAl1 rultlUhlng TompMity t It2-L2 houih Klfih nr--f. klMtimth KttHw. rmi. II. MAI.AKKKY U. KNlil.lXII Kdllor ' ItUteltlfka Malinger Fntared aa areonil clnss matter at the p.Mtoffle nt Klnm.ith FH". Orjton, on AiiKUt ao, lsvS, HlKtfr not uf 1'i.iitltf.a, March 3, '! I.-r ! tit Wo. .... ... - M 'l,ltM an.nlha , una Month . ... . .al llr Mull Ona M. nth - t s 1 mcr Mun'ha - 1 Sim il-n.n. ?$ Vfr .. . a ( UTi:ii rni " ini:n wiiik MrviiL.it Ol-- Al lIT IIIBKU ok IH I I.ATIO Member f ffca Asaoetnl- Prraa The A"ncll.-d l'r l i x. liisiv. ly i imil. J ! tl u or rrpuMlcatlon tif all n.a Uisnl. Il-a c.r.dltid to H nr not nthrrwlsa i-rlll.l In this imprr, sand iilio t lt local ur pnl.ll-hed therein. Ml rights of republi cation of at-'Ul dlslwttchca heroin are llo rrscl Vrd. Tuesday, November 29, 1927. Another Railroad Finished ' Strungcly, one of the jrreatest days in Klamath" history almost slipped by unnoticed. Had it not been for a timely Associated Press disaptch, Klamath would not have known for several days that the last link of steel on the Great Northern's line into the Klamath basin was laid today. . The Great Northern has thrust a spearhead into Southern Pacific territory. It has forged its way through endless obstacles and now is in a position to compete for Klamath tonnage a large melon which the S. T. 1 has cut extensively for eleven years. Klamath is the battleground of these two great sys tems a battle for tonnage. Each road will vie with 1 each other in providing service; each road will undoubt- edly be anxious to open up great tracts of timber whose exploitation has been waiting years for spur railroads. With railroad competition will come new industries. these railroad giants will be cnxious to stimulate in-; !artry, to inveijrk operators to construct new yi'ants, U j advertise the Klamr.tii country wide and far r.s 'he cotn- ing agricultural center of the west. One plant is al-. ready assured the direct result of the Great Northern's ' invasion. It is the proposed Weyerhaeuser mill for which the Klamath country has been praying for so ; long and which will be constructed in the near future. ; That plant alone will be nearly twice as large as the biggest mill now in Klamath. Will(the Great Northern, a line with great resources; and known for its aggressive invasion of new tonnage producing territories, stop in Klamath Falls? Was the Bend-Klamath Falls extension the beginning and the j end of their program? ' This paper doubts it. The Northern line is now 140 miles closer to a far bigger melon than Klamath has to' offer, namely, the great tonnage producing state of Cali-' fornia. Years ago Jim Hill, the late president of the Great Northern, started for California,. He built as far as Bend. Hill's spirit "still animates the Great Northern policy. The line from Bend to Klamath Falls was his enterprise, revived after 16 years, and if the Great North ern builds south into California, it will be the spirit of that great railroad magnate which will urge on the pres ent directorate to build on and on and on. Eigteen months ago marked the completion of a line originally projected by the late E. H. Harriman, late president of the Southern Facific the Natron - cut-off, or as it is now labelled,, the Cascade line. . Today marks the completion of the second link of a line originally conceived by Jim Hill the Beiul-Klam-ath extension. Tomorrow will see further construction of these two lines in the desperate fight for the upperhand in the Klamath basin and in central and northern California. t 1 ' c v . 7 V I 1 riZM r 1 c v i ft i V a '.x-yiL --I .-4n..;.ri.:.;,i AT KENO HOMES IllK ntotiiflilN nil culiTii ittl'l i it ii h . tln'ii! I'tuwr; Nhvc, Ar my milittlHiil liui'k, tn'uroH imio ;.( Ihn tiMirlitUiwnn liy whlrli till CililWH lli'Ht Klllllit ltiik- ii vlvwn In-u at Nw V in k : Iowit. Winner, rriiifi. mi hni-k, kui' over (hit ltnt for .In TlK'T' only lully umiUimI Yitti nt N w IliWi'ii ; tin Kit rami tun k with two U in it io ni in tv rinul ipiuitiT J tn 1 1-U. "ill A V-VTV I I'M r. MA Ll I A EEAT A COCV MAM ?f V.j,k1rJS Jack Delaney Wants Bigger and Beefier Opponents He Would Show "Good Little Man Can Beat Good Big Man," As Ruby Robert Did RonH to Wordcn In Seri ous Condition At Re ft suit Recent Raint litV I .M , 1 'imJHHIi'llt Spofiul to Thf II-ml.lt VOtlii:, Nuv 2H r I y il TuttiiUMi) ul I.ouM uiii. wlin hu (rti In thUMinvv ul WnliliiKtiiii tut h uiilvi'il ill Wnnh'ii to Im III inii'Mt nf hlM ruiMlti, Min. T. J. S.llllll'IM fill' llll Illllnflllllt llllliv I'litutiM'H mi thf 1 1 iii r v tioriliui lain ti havi Iiitii iIiiic, nu K i ihk iini'tl fur tho winter Ml-. jriiMi" c;ruvir vUHimI ut thi htnim n f Mn. I.) In (ini iun nil Tiii"ituv i-vi'iiliiR. Mii M Cny himI miinll rlillit havi (t (r Houilti'rii ( 'iilirnriilu w Ihto Hit')1 w III vilt fur mxiiii tlmi. Ilnnlnll nf Willill'lt tuiHitii In Ki'iio on nii't lliihi'it Ounlon tin liniiio if Mr. Mini tiny mi Hututtl.iy rvo. E JD I TORI A L: S FROM OVER THE NATION ' ; NEW YORK. Nov. 2!.- The j esse of Jaok IX-lancy v. rsis tiie i heavyweishts is furnishluK new t fuel for the aRe-o'.il controversy can a Food Utile man Ink a, Kood big man? As the eeka ko , on Deluuey facos better, not to R-.ention beefier opponents, one finds a rising tide of mawkish I isenumem maxing a iireiii nuua-, Iballoo over the "Hapier of the I North." or ' Bright Kyes." as ho is variously called. ' ' Thumbiue ba k through the ar- j chives of fistiana it seems that' the man who has foresworn tho . liKlit-heavywetRht title to co af ter the heavyweight game exclu sively i not a loifer. nd al-j thouKh he has. lie'Mim. li:alone- Hud tinman. Paolino rxcudun. : Johnny I'.isko and Jaik Itenault ' he has far to g'i to equal the I success of his predivessors. I Joe rhoynfki. Kid M.L'oy. Rob' Fitisimmons. Tommy Hums. Phil adelphia Jack O'Brien. Joe Wal cott and others less famous . knoc k' d many a bigft-r palooka j stiff. Kitisinimons and Burns are the outstanding examples, for each ' achieved success in the task j which Delaney has set for him self that of annexing the heavy weight title. Kitx is the greatest because his opposition was the toughest. Kuby Itohert was little more than a middleweight when he met Maher. Sharkey Jcffrl, f'orhctt. Kuhlin and Dunkht. Kuby. in fact, was not as 1jvy ' as Delaney. Jlahcr. Sharkey, Corliett and Htihlin tipped the scales around ,190. Jeff was a giant and they calicd Duukhorst. "the human freight car.'' but those who mw the latter battle soy Kuby Hubert drove his arm up to the elbow In Dnnkhorst's body with a left hook that flattened him. Kitj met Malier three times, first winning from hi in in a 12 round'T at New Orleans in lS!i. Kour years later Bob stopped Peter in the first round at Lang- try. Texas, and a few diys later they boxed a three-round exhi bition in New York. Sharkey won from Fltz on a foul in the rf'ighth rottnd in San Francisco in Hob's last fight be fore he stopped Corbctt at Carson City with that famous solar plexus blow that made him cham pion. A few years later Fit? stopped Sharkey In two rounds at Coney Island. " Jeff was the one big fellow Rob could not get past, the boil ermaker putting the sftore on him twice, once In 11 rounds and again in eight. Fit stopped Kuhlin in six rounds and Dunk horst in two. the record books show. "I've got the sp"id ami I've got th punch." says Delaney, "and there isn t a heavyweight In the racket today who has that combination. They say I've pulled a boner hy resigning my till' but time will tell. There Is more dough and more action in the heavy ranks and I'm going to stick until I'm stopped. A good little man cr.!i knock over a good big man if he has the khk." So there you are. More food for the fl-bate. perhaps. . as "Bright Kyes" unquestionably has a p'uncb that appears a bit hef tier than Tunt-ey ami his cohorts j but Mous. Delaucy will have to. go some to emulate th scraps of j a certain freckb-d gent named Mr. Fitzsimmons. i ;k.nt ut to n..Y POKTI.AND. Nov. .':. u) Th 1. S. llrant high s. li.wl tooiiiall team, winner of the Portland in terst holane chumpionvhip. will engaged In no post season games this yeaT. Wlllian T. Fletcher, principal, made this nnncunce ment this afternoon, folljwlug a conference of the members of the team, the roaches and officers of the high school. NUT CMCKEK oyJoc Williams Tin Yanki'i utActlum In In Ut (uUrjft-iI f r li.oui) inmu m-uN JttHt niiuihcr llttlt Item Lou ti. ti rlR nmy cull to (Niluni l J.upp'rt' uttuntlnn when t hit tnn nnt to talk ii limit a 1 ! 1! H cuu t rn t u n I I thi rnut of all rvtl. Ilnrlii'lt tran-in'ti'it Siititlav. ItMUtll.t vIkIkiI ut Mm. Itin llllIK Tin Niniitl 'i lilltl nr Mr. ami Mm. Tftl Mllhr h rrportrtl an 111 tit tho fatnllv hnniH MtflM JimiiiIi' (iioifp ntut Kalh I'M-ti .NniNf NtK'itt '1 linittHt.Vinj In Klutimih K ,i I I t w ith MIm (.rnvi-r'n Hin'!it" 'I' J Sit u l 4 nf Wnltli Q it iimiiv iK.ifil iii t'i,,winK hu (H'li wiilolt Jin In k -in lie rmlf tor Ihn 'i)iifttiiiK o( putntnfi In till' l-.llly prlMK, Tin I U p l i n( tlm Wnrd' tl lien) inioi it In iff iiriiKrntn i Wi'illlfodll V llttl'l MUOIt linn lUv nuitui tcil IhihIh'" n( Dintl- I ii hi wi-ck. ri-tiiiiiltia luunn vr tin Wfi'k fiiil Tin mail iM twi'i-ii Ki'tin nmt utrnn r'pri'1 n vry mtitidy afti-r I tu r i" Till hnvy mint l.i i k i;ri((liti M rti;ul-.l Thin! Mltti'iti'. if toiirv. Ikii'I thi fir.- I hull pluv r ti ht Ititi-r iil (! In hiii tlk si II nt 1miI nf I lie ' i:atfmun OhHie Uiez to kivi up n, runn lo ih.t kliul that urn hHkkHpinK. Tun mm h tttinln 1 uuwli rntlirr than kept. in the hattini: v. CrtffUh 1 . Ihottht. .. In tni'iitinn rxrw. mvm t ai t ( ou t he luldiiiK tua- Tad Jonim U lavliiK VuIh t til year uttvr ptittinK nut one ct tlii best teams tho lilue has hail In furit. ( haiiKlnie tho III uf to the llluci and icIvlnK hin critii a dark brow a lat Jink ,sluukiy'i lii)urott hand wun u triuiiipli f r uu'dirliM'. uiiy how. A Jlo.tton dud or found a HWidltiiK ii ud a .hv Yoik Tho llattN o( th. Many tVn- ; rroitkcr dturovori d n frai tuto. iiitry Not'H mdrd In a draw . ' K' driiH km nothliiK und H mp-' t pon r'iifUiiK tho hodltu .hvy kopt hU 3.1. whU Ii I " Ki-arim Tak htand. " Mr Ik til-- to-1 draw that Ja k fwr.O'liciiftjr hnt mmncki'd that ho foUKht. just know ho would. Colds tonuivr.- r.i.tn et pvitt"i t m j r4 Ail.- ir ti I in Pt a r I J,i.t wka MATUat'S Kl NJ.PY-M Tl-i.-al ! r tt i.Mtii rar a.ij I. aait r li Il l innra ilor...itfh In aiids at I t.r llu-ff than M.tlnr'l i Try . MilJ,4je, fturcN icijriiiMr lie Kcommndcd and Sold bf All Hi K l.iin.11 h Fulls DriiBPtlsts Where to Hunt V.AKSITV 1.1 FK IV KI';KXK properly labelled, limited and ".. , chaperoned by guardians of the Students of the I nlvernty of . , , ,k ... . . , , mw. 'he eagle eye of the police Oregon will not have auy Thanks- . , , ... , ' is now supervising the terpslc- givtng vacation this year, savs . ... the Salem Capital Journal. The ' horean a "vlti of '"e tampna. presence of a few isolated cases At recent sophomore dance of infantile paralysis In various ! chaperoned by the faculty, lights parts of the state and the pos-jwere provided to carry out the sibillty that returning studentRj color scheme of the decorations, might contract the disease at But there Is nothing aesthetic or home Is given as the reason by romantic about the Kugene university authorities. Students are required to attend classes Wednesday and Friday on pen alty of not being allowed to take the final examinations In sub jects missed. police, who ordered the colored globes taken out arid replaced with glaring white ones, thereby spoiling the dance. Colored lights rank along with Holiday movies and serenade . as sinful To he consistent the university j things in Kugene, w here tin slar nnd Kugene authorities should I tyranny flourishes, quarantine Kugene and prevent I The Kmerald, the slud.-nt pap t lie traveling public from, enter-; er says that "rouge and prjwder Ing tho community, lest they j on the feminine element, intend carry the germs of the disease, ed for dance floor lights, glowed The students run no more risk' and shone In the searc hlight visiting their homes than they ; beams". Itut rouge and powder do mingling wlih the people that' must also he devices of the devil comu and go constantly. . It is ' in Kugene and the police were apparent that the university' an-1 merely (txposing sin. thorltles have succumbed to the' popular hysteria for community !' The same Hludent paper con nd school quarantine that has 'tins the stntement Hun "all the swept southern Oregon, which Is beer, pri'lznls and other provls In many ways reminiscent of the Ions marshalled fo feed the rial hy ordeal to prove guilt. ! hungry alums on Ilfimerxmilng Closlug schools to check epl-;have been devourl." What demlcs is obsolete for the closing I beer? And in Kugnne? Is it does not prevent the pupils from i possible that the stmlcnts have associating with each other. The : out-wltted the watclirul police accepted method Is lo give pupils i and violated the, sacj-ed ennons dally inspection so that the dls- ' Xr. Volstead? No wonder the ease may he detected In Its first I police, like Satan relinking sin, suspicious symptoms, p r o p e r j think the student body is liell treatinent given and those un-! hound. Anyway this Is proof der suspicion gnu run lined with ' enough that tho police are not their families. jinking all the joy in fc, out of 'vurslty life In Kugene. The moral gnardinnshlp nnd j supervision that tho police au-j A Wisconsin nnlvursity profes thorllles exercise over Hie tinlver-; sor says success Is not duo to slly student body Is again Injhrnliis. but luck and outside In evldence. Not content with no-' fluences. It seonn that Intelll llre reculnllno of student sen-nnd-i gence hat been overemphasized, Ing to see that the singors aretou. 1 Yellow-legs and plover have he come so scarce that hey have been placed under federal ban this fall. It is in violation of the federal law to kill either. 1 Surely the "dumb Dora" of blrddora Is the yellowleg. It can literally he whistled down a gun barrel. I have seen more of them In Labrador and Newfoundland than any oilier place. They are known , in the former country as "land-' sarees," In the latter as "twil llcks." ' These birds bred rapidly and if the federal regulation is obey ed both the yellowleg and plover should "come back" in Increasing numbers. GEORGE JCOTT, STATE COLLEGE STAR, IMPROVES f'OHVAM.IS. Ore., Nov. 2I. (A. P.) tleorge Scott, hnlfhack of the Oregon Slate Agricultural college football team, 111 with pneumonia since Thanksgiving, was on the way to recovery to day having passed the crisis. This was announced by Dr. It. L. Ilosworth, team physician, this morning. TWIKI. lifts icfi.ksi:i NKW YOllK. Nov. 29. Mi Walter (Hutch) Ituether and Itohert J. S h a w k e y, veteran ; pitchers of the New York Yan kees, were unconditionally ro- ! leased today. i Now comes a llelglan lieavy 1 weight champion to our midst. Chrlslmns is coining, hoys, und let's all be kind. tjenn Tunney writes that fight ers trying to come back are a plt llul sight. Hut not half so plll-i ful us a referee who ttutters. U Go in leatea caxs of World's Greatest 4 Motor Coach System departures daily San FruncUco, Sacramento, Oakland $14.60 Hound Trip lill.;IO I'ltOTKCTION assured by a great responsible company, serving all California cities, mil going east to St. I.ouls and Chicago. Finest coaches ( deep-cushioned reclining -balls I best terminal facili ties, most dally schedules. Our agents will help plan your trip, arrange r.top overs, make reservations. Los Angeles 2r,.4:i; It. T. l (. Kl Paso 1 19.93; K. T. $S9.I0. St. Louis - 178.20; II. T. 1139. 95. Leave for these and a thou ii ml wnv points--7:1.1, lll:Oil a. m.: I: IK) nnd 4:Ml p. nt, STAGE DEPOT (11.1 .Mil I ll St. Flume (llll) ' M EDDIE TRYON All-American Football Star, ivrilcs: "Football 'demands steady nerves and flashing action Between halves 1 usu ally smoke a Lucky or two It's the smoothest cigarette of them all, and they sure are kind to your throat no cough." J'hotu by 1,' ruler wood & t'ridcrwoud You, too, will find that LUCKY STRIKES give the greatest pleasure Mild and Mellow, the finest ciga rettes you ever smoked. Made of the choicest tobaccos, properly aged and blended with great skill, and there is an extra process "IT'S TOASTED" no harshness, not a bit of bite. MADE OF THE CREAM OF THE TOBACCO CROP It's toasted No Throat Irritation-No Cough.