PAGE SIX THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON .Innunry 27, 1933 Pelicans Face Two Rivals Here This Week BE ARDED QUINT TO MEET SONS College Contest Wins In terest; Grants Pass, Lakeview Coming. Coach Dutch French's Klam ath high school basketball team mores against two opponents this weekend as the season nears its peak and the Pelicans P re- Dare Tor the stretcn anve in quest of both district and con ference honors. Both games, one Friday and the other Saturday night, will be played on the local high school court. The first, against Lakeview, la acheduled to start at 7 p. m. Friday and will pre cede an 8 o'clock rendetvoua of the Southern Oregon Normal Sons and the Benton Harbor, Mich., House of David quintet. The combination of the two encounters is expected to draw the largest crowd of the year to the high school gymnasium- auditorium, and possibly the largest crowd of all time. Lakevlew's Invasion will mark the first of a series for the championship In the southern half of district 3. The Pelicans are generally expected to stop the Buckaroos and go north to Bend after the full-district title, but stranger things have happened than a Lakeview victory, and Coach French la on guard against possible upset even If he Is having a hard time inducing his charges to take a similar atti tude. The Buckaroos' record for the season to date is more or less of a mystery, about the only tang ible evidence of Lakeview power available being a smashing vic tory over Burns of Harney coun ty last weekend. Reports have It, however, that the Bucks are operating with the Identical lineup or nearly that gave the Pelicans some discom fort hero last winter and oc casioned them a real scare when the aeries moved over to the Lakeview court. The Sons, first oollege team to how hero since the Christmas holidays ot 19SE, will boom into Klamath Falls fresh from a road trip north daring which, in five days' time, they split a double header with the Oregon Normals ot Monmouth and twice sanashed Mt Angel college,' conqueror of me university of Portland. Rapid progress appears to be ine Keynote ot Jean Eberhart's club, which at the atart of the eason hardly held a candle to last year's state AAU champion Quintet, and the prospects are that the House ot Davldltes will have to cast aside tomfoolery for the nonce if they hope to pull ont of town with their long winning streak and all-time rec ord of better than 90 per cent Tictories intact Even strict attention to dnty may not be enough to save the bearded basketeers, themselves an rormer college stars, although the experience gained from nlnv- ing together almost nightly for season after season has made mem so adept at the game that they can practically ring the oucket blindfolded. Grants Pass l dna In iin Saturday night for the firat of three Southern Oregon conference games, with Klamath high, and the Pelicans are honlna- that th Cavemen will afford them an op- vuiiunuy 10 improve their league standing, which currently con- mi I ton,, limit,,, t,., !,, i iMrtuckj StnijM Bourbon WWtij e 95 Prto? NOTICE ! Ton can no longer obtain oar dry cleaning service through the New City Lann. dry. Please call us direct, or give your work to our rcg. alar city drivers or our out-of-town solicitor, Maurice Haupert. STANDARD DYERS & CLEANERS 1409 Esplanade, Phone 820 " I ES. J?. FOR - - - ! i.--?".'!' 1!". I" Tn "re """. 1 Kill."1 ! f "" H". Ln, nail ladder, He.rma, Ulcers, Plica, Neuralajla. Kid. Ha, CoiiBha, IN.rvou.nr.il, Indication, Intrallnnl and llnncl Tronhlc, stomach Ulccra, Rhenina. tl.m, A r thrill., Olaaln,,.. He.dnch?, mJS "I G.mplMM r ' - real. ilt ,tlc s"n Francisco. Established Since li Consultation Free Hsrbs Bold Haaaonahl! CHAN & KONG CHINESE HERB CO. - - - ' ' ' ni-i nuniiii mini n-iTi i u n. hi , in r. undara, 10 A. H. to P. M. slsts of a victory over Ashland and a split with Medford. Coach French doesn't know exactly what to expect of Grants Pass. The Cavemen burned up the Josephine-Jarkson secondary competition early In the season, winning somewhere between 1! and 20 games In a row. Then they ran Into Ashland, a league opponent, last weekend and dropped two games by rel atively close scores. The Pel icans hsd no trouble cleaning the Grlulies when they appeared here three weeks ago. but word from across the mountain Is that the Llthla team has improved tremendously since that time and Is now a better than ever con tender with Medford for the dis trict 9 championship. Meanwhile Grants Pass, con tinuing Its policy of getting ex perience fast by playing when ever or wherever the opportunity presents, smothered St. Mary's parochial school ot Medford Tuesday night. The Grants Pass varsity lineup Is composed of Farrell at forward, Mooers at center and Burden and Dully at guards, with Thomas and Gray alternating at the other forward berth. Two problems have particularly confronted the Pelicans In prac tice this week. The first has been a tendency to over-con fidence, induced mainly by the records which, perhaps falsely, indicate both Lakeview and Grants Pass to be "soft touches.' The second has been the need for greater deception. Last week the Pelicans lost one game to Medford and had to struggle for victory in another because they telegraphed their passes so openlv that a big percentage ot the tosses were Intercepted. Coach French said Thursday that this last difficulty is now apparently pretty wen m hand. Illness of Joe Bellottl has weakend the squad. The sky scraper lorward la suffering from tonsilitls, will be unable to play Friday night and is a doubtful starter Saturday. In his absence. the lineup will probably be com posed of Jack Walts and Vireil Jarrett at forwards, Chet Mussel- man at center and Len Young and Paul Crapo at guards. Saturday night's game will start promptly at 8 o'clock, and it appears unlikely that there will be a preliminary. Friday. In addition to the Pelican-Lakevlew prelim to the House of David-Sons game at 7 p. m., two contests are also on tap for the afternoon. At I p. m. the high school frosh will meet the Keno Bees. Immediately afterward the Vonn first string is scheduled to go osaiuai me mamam Wildcats In a regular Klamath-Siskiyou league affair. The Wildcats are undefeated In conference play to date and the Keno Mountaineers have a record of three wins against one loss. Auker Confident Of Good Season With York's Aid liARBbAAD, Fla., Jan. 27 JP r.iaen AUker, Detroit's veteran submarine ball pitcher, looked forward confidently today to one of his most successful seasons partly because Rudy York will be uemna toe plate. "I like to Ditch to Rnriv " .9rf Auker, who won 17 and lost nine in isjy to lead the Tiger hurlers. "He works hard, he has a high powered arm, he's death on foul pops and his slugging puts him in a class by himself. "He's going to be one of base ball's greatest catchers." Auker said York, who holds the major league record for the most runs in one month, would nollsh np his game this year and reach his peak in another season or so. His opinion is shared by Ger ald Walker, the outfielder traded by Detroit this winter to the Chi cago White Sox. Auker believes both the Tigers and Chicago bene fited by the deal. The pitcher said he thought Al Benton, formerly of the Philadel phia Athletics and late of the minors, would be the surprise package of the training season for the Detroit management. Auker expects the American league pennant race to be closer this year. 'Those Yanks may not know it. but they're going to miss old Tony Lazzerl a lot," he said. "That guy probably didn't get 40 hits last year, but he won a ball game with every one of them. And he kept that infield on Its toes, too." SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 27 JP Fred Apostoli, hard-socking young San Francisco Italian, and the veteran Young Corbett, former world's welterweight champion now attempting a comeback, are slated for a 10-round fight, here the afternoon of February 22. Apostoli, who defeated Middle weight Champion Freddie Steele In Madison Square Garden a couple of weeks ago, is In New York preparing for a 10-rounder with Glen Lee of Nebraska there February 4. MAN AILMENTS i iv i Tin Nature'. ureffOB. m. I I STOP AGENCY OUTFIT Perfect Record Saved At Cost of Other; Gien gers Get Scare. WKDXKSDAY'S RKSVLTS Lost River 36, Klamath Agen cy 22. Bly !?. Lamms 16. Glengers 25. Lowells 20. Loreni 44, Safeway 21. Dorris 55, Great Northern 19. Lost Rtver Dairy, which had previously maintained an unde feated record for the Klamath Basin league season .to date by virtue of four victories over the circuit's weaker clubs, demon strated at the Klamath armory Wednesday night that it is also able to cope successfully with the tougher problems. . In brief. Lost River turned back Klamath Agency, which up to that time had also yet to swal low defeat, and turned It back with as much grace and elan as If It had been a less worthy op ponent. Final score was 36 to 22. The Dairymen's success was achieved entirely In the second half. Midway through the game the Agency gang was ahead, 12 11, and it had begun to look as if Lost River, with two of its regu lars missing from the lineup, might have to forfeit Its favorable position in the standings. Then Strohlte, star center, with admirable support from Fisher Hodge and Buck Hammer, the lat ter of whom was dratted in an emergency from the Church league to fill out the quintet, started dropping the ball Into the basket with remarkable dexterity, and the Agency cause was lost. Strobile accumulated 11 points before the evening was over. He was rivalled In this endeavor by Fisher, who also totaled 11, and Hodge, who had 10. G. Pottras, with eight, was the best ot the reservation team's scorers. In a second game at the ar mory Bly came back from a double defeat last week, which dropped It from the top ranks, to trim Lamms, 27-16, and move ahead of the Modoc Point club in the standings. The winning lead waa estab lished largely in the first half, when Bly outscored Lamms, 12-6, but the east county aggregation refused to stop there and went right on piling up points in the closing periods. The point-pillng-up process waa pretty well divided among all the players. Knauss of Lamms, with seven, made more than any single Bly operative. Climaxing the evening's activi ties locally was a 'gruelling per formance involving Lowells and Glengers ot Chiloquin, with Chilo quia managing to snatch victory ont of the fire, 25-20. after trail ing, 11-14, at the half. It was by far the closest call Glengers has experienced to date and a tribute, even In defeat, to a fighting gang of local grocerymen who doggedly stuck to the heels of Cbiloquln's usually high-scoring quintet until baskets were few and far between. Hatfield of Glengers, for whom 25 or 28-polnt individual totals are commonplace, was limited to a meager eight points, no more than were collected by his team mate. Matt, and both J. and F. Larson of Lowells. After a fluttery start, however, Chiloquin Itself gave a pretty fair demonstration of defensive teen nlque. F. Larson was the only Lowelllte able to score In the second half, his three field goals lifting Lowell's total from 14 at the half to 20 at the finish. Meanwhile, In games at Dorris, Dorrfs scored an easy 55-19 vic tory over Great Northern, and Lorenz gave Safeway similar harsh treatment, 44-21. Thursday night at the armory Sons of Italy and Lowells were to meet In the evening's final game, with reputed bad blood between the teams and an almost perfect balance In power combining to make the contest look like a real struggle. The Sons-Lowells affair was to be preceded by clashes between t'opco and Tulelake and between Bly and Dorris. Friday night's schedule at the armory consists of Great North ern vs. Consolidated, Chiloquin vs. Safeway and Lorenz vs. Merrill. Don't Worry Ms Wifh Money Matters ' Nowl Women: Need money of your own? A few dollnrs each month saved here given E X T II A money 1 Htnrt nowl 4' (Current Dividend First Federal Savings and Loan Association OF KLAMATH FALLS 111 No, Dtb St. Phone S7I Member of Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. Wildcats Play Keno Varsity Quintet Here By JKItKY OTAI.I.Atill.XX The Klamath Wildcat qutiitot will meet Keno Friday at S o'clock on the local high school court. The Keno squad defeated the Cats In a pre-season game. Slnco that time the Cats have shown marked Improvement. They have won all their games except the one with Keno. Uutte Valley, Henley, MaMn, Merrill and tha Medford Cubs have all fallen to the Cats. The Wildcats will be a much harder team to beat than they were In December. "Buck" Hummer Is proud of his 1938 Wildcats and more so because the bulk ot them aro sophomores. A fine group of baskcttmllors have been gathered togelhor by Hammer this year. Ilu has un covered several boya who will make fine Pelican niatorlnl next season. Bob Lowe has proved himself a fine polnt-gettor. Ho has been high point mnu lu several of the Wildcat encounters. George Cooley. Hill Heltntan and Eldridge Anderson have dis played considerable ball plaving ability. Bear Gridders Questioned By Special Prober BERKELEY. Calif., Jan. 27 (AP) Edwin N. Atherton. for mer department of Justice ngent, continued today to interview Uni versity ot California football players behind closed doors In ItK In I'Mlir, ll.tn nt nlhlaln ..... port in Pacific coast conference scnoois. Atherton, who came hero from southern California where ho in terviewed athletes -at University of Southern California and Uni versity of California at Los Ange les, said he was receiving "100 per cent" cooperation, and planned to remain hero a week. Milt Pollack and Louie Smith, tackle and end. respectively, were among the Golden Rear varsity football players questioned by Atherton yesterday on their sources of Income and why they enrolled at California. From here Atherton said he would go to Stanford and then north to Investigate Oregon and Washington conference schools. SPORT SHORTS McMINNVILLE, Jan. 27 P Oregon Normal school basketbnll players held an early lead to win from Llnfield college, 43 to 27, last night. Purcell of Llnfield and Mohlcr and Gronqulst of Oregon normal tied for high scoring honors with 10 points each. OAKLAND, Calif., Jan. 27 (.-TV-Johnny Erjavcc's game rally In the final round evened up his 10 round fight with Domingo Valln, Hayward, Calif., heavyweight, here last night and the referee called the bout a draw. Valln won by decision when the two fought some months ago. SALEM, Jan. 27 (P) The Devil's Lake Hod and (J nil club assigned the Initial 200 lots to be occupied by cabins of charter members on its lake property yes terday. Dr. M. R. Deter. Portland, chairman of the club's board of governors, said construction of a (30,000 clubhouse, facing the lake, would be started about March 1. Save money on your used car at Locke's. The California Oregon Power Company E Kennaston Meets Leath ers; McDonald, Taylor in Armory Bouts. Sgt. Ron Kennaston and Sock eye Jack McDonald, who danced on ono of the hottest frying pans in armory wrestling history Inst Tuesday night, are now headed nowhere else than Into the pro verbial fire If the opposition Pro moter Maek t.lllard has arranged for them next week lives up to Its promise. Sgt. Dob and Sockeye Jack, you may remember, puumled each oth er into a simultaneous stupor In a brief four minutes ot main event activities last time out. Now the Sargo la scheduled to take on Sml Sam Leathers, who nnsn t even got -a heut up In win ning two matches to date, and Sockeye Is due to meet Frank Taylor, tho husky heavyweight weith the extensive catalog ot leg holds. The Kennaston-Leathers affair Is billed for the lop spot, but that appears to lio merely a fllp-ot-lho-colli ruling, for the Taylor-McDonald melco holds out Just oi much prospect ot bitter foudln and sudden death. Sad Sam and Taylor, of course will both probably have to out up with a mess of unseemly con duct on the part of their respec tive opponents, but they're Just the lads to do It. and do It in fine shape, their previous records In- uicato. The bill will open with Mnr- shall I'urter undertaking oper ations again i,el Knpti. the Ha wal:an. No nintter whether tin Islander elects to go wild, as hi uia insi Tuesday, or stick to stralght-forwnrd grappling, as he did in his first appearance, the .Missouri wrestling maestro Is go ing to have his hands full. Basketball iiitiii school Woodhurn 32, Chemawa 27. Sllvorton 41, Canby 17, Dallas 27, Molalla 20.' Independence 27, West Linn 29. Cottage Grove 33, Junction City 21. Grass Valley 25. Moro 20. Srnppoose 27, Heavcrlon 17. Wnrrenton 32. Jewell 16. Astoria 22, Westport 18. Illllsboro 24. Kainler 20. Mnrshfleld 25, North Ilend 21. Myrtle Point 23. Coqullle 19. Astoria 22, Hoqulam (Wash.) z-i. Purkdale 15, The Dalloa 13. When relief measures extend beyond a stop-gap period they In evitably tend to destroy the self respect and the Initiative ot the men and women dependent upon them. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. HELP KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY Doctori ny your kMneyt enntain 15 milM of tiny lubm or tiliera which blp to purify tha blooi avn'l krrp you hmUthy. Mutt pop paa ftlraut 3 pi ota ft day or about 3 pourvi of wwie, Kreiu-nt or aranty paaaac ith a marling and burninf ahema tlm may b omtnhinf wrong with your kit)ny or bladder. An ei-tan of aHda or poisona in your Wood, when tin to functional kidney disorder, may b the raue of nagging backarbe, rheutnatif pniru. Iff paina, luu of pep and frttrgy, fit ting ui night, awrlling, puffinras under ttin pyrD, hfadarhra and diiilncna. Don't waitl Ak your dniKgint for Doan't PilU, ufd aurcM-fiifly by milliona fnr over 40 yrara. i nry give nappy rnioi and will help In 11 rnilr-a of kidney tuhea fluah out poisonous waaatai IIVUS J WWa USWU. VJW aSUtaH TUlSa BETTER HURRY TOUGHIESFAC MAJOR RIVALS UP AND GET AN AUTOMATIC WATER HEATER7'! Gal Golf Tillist Even Keeps Eye On Rival's Ball PUNTA OORIU, Kill., Jan. 27 (A) Kathryn Hemphill said to day alio applies golf's primary rulo "keep your eye on tho bull" oven when lior opponent Is playing. It's a safeguard, she explained, SKnlnst a tendency to copy other players' swings. The chances are the Columbia, S. C girl would be Ilia loser should she pick ;.ny of America's tupfllKht players for a model. Known as a stylist, shu has a sound g.uno which ranks her among the half-doien best In the land. Miss Hemphill believes form counts heavily. "Kverybody has his own way of hitting the ball," she declared, "but you ciiu count on the fact Hint most good players have good swings." Medalist in the championship of champions tournamuiii here, .Miss Hemphill said there hud been a great Improvement In women's golf slnco she entered competition seven years ago, Judging from the scoros. Poughkeepsie Chiefs Won't Cut Distance NEW YOltlC. Jan. 27 I AP) The longest inllo of all for oars men, the fourth In the vnrslty rueo of the I'ouichkec pule remit ta, will rontlmio ns a part of tho classic for 1338. The board of stewards of the Intercollegiate ItonlnK aoein tion yesterdnv flatly refected a proposal of the rowing coaches to shorten the'rnre from four miles to three fur thin year's re gatta whlrh will he rowed Mon. dny, June 2 7. In ii n a n I in n ii s I y dei-liling against tho conches' suggestion, the stewards took Into consider ation the possibility that the I'nlrersity of Pennsylvania may he back at the regatta In 1931). A yenr ago Penn withdrew be cause It could not rebenrse the! four-mile distance on h, Schuyl kill river roursc. Washington. California. Wis-1 consln. Princeton and Massichu-1 setts Institute of Technology woro invuea to this yenr regatta. SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 27 (jp, An nttnek of food polnonlng suf fered early this week by world's Featherweight Champion Henry Armstrong forced postponement tonight of his non-titlo fight with Al Cltrlno of Pan Francisco. Tho bout will bo held February 12. (Sail? NOTE Our Standard "Chicago CAR HEATER List Price $13.95, Cut to Complete and Installed FREE Pay Only A gm Down Balance 1 Per OUR "SUPER 70" CAR HEATER The Aristocrat of all Car Heaters Regular List Price $22.95 Our Sale Price Now Only .... $95 Pay Only $J95 Down Balance $J00 Per Week No Carrying Charge No Interest No Installation Charge Still We Give You a Big Discount Stock Limited - Buy Now and Save JACK'S THEE 316 S. 6th "A Tire Sport Briefs ity l-:inll-: nitiKT. NKW YOUK. Jan. 37 (II Thai roll r ot mite, you henr from 1 i i M -wood Is not l,eo, (ho linn, doing Ills stuff lu tint movies, hut mere ly that skoolln', shoollu' movln cowboy, Lou (lohrlii, who has Just read Ills 11138 cotitiael. . . , Hut don't get nlaruied Meln llerr lias roared thnt way before. , . . (Un official reports from the coast say the flsten are the aiiiiin us lunl year's which la Rd Harrow's Idea of n sturlor). . . . What hap pened to SeiihlHi-ut? , , , lly (lie way, Virginia Poly wants to be known as Virginia Tech from now on. Despite all I lint stuff you rend in history uhutit the blue-eyed Vikings, etc., Hnnjn Henle Is a lno n-eyeil liahy. ... A year ago, with I he filing of Hunk Anilernon still holllng, only nine men re ported for spring football prac tice at No rlh Carolina Stnte. . . . Yesterday 67 turned out, which inny well be written In the records ns trlhutu to Coach Don Newton, who turned In one of the bent couching Jons lu tho country hint year. . . . .Marsliall (liilillierg (who still has nuotlier year at 1'lttl has hail no leas than hulf a doten roarhliiii offers. . . . Ills popper, the more or leas Illustrious Sol. doean't know whether to tell "lllg glo" (o take one of 'em or go Into business. . . . What do you say? . . . Address 8ol Goldberg. Klklnn. W. Vn. Buch la fninu. ... A year ago Sonja Henle, now the tonst of liroadway, tried to beg her way on the radio program Just to plug her show. , . . I.aat night she turned down nn offer of JJIiOU to appeal flvo uillillles oil the Kate Smith pi em urn. . . . Had newa for seven American league managers: Joe Mi-funny siiis hla 1'J.IS Yauka will he alrouger t Ii nn ever. . . . He thinks Cleveland and Detroit will fiirill.li the sternest nppoal Hon. . . , yfonnt Plenannt high of Hcheiioriuily (N. Y.) hna won 166 of Its last 174 basketball games. . . . And you can tie that? First sign of spring: Ncwareet shola allowing Profs. Van Mllligo ANNUAL President's Birthday Ball At Matin SATURDAY, JANUARY 29TH M usic by Oregon Hill Bit I res Kfeaftefi THE BIG SAVINGS! $1195 List Price $19.95, Now Cut to FREE Pay Only Balance Week E. E. "Jack" Benner for Every Use and Every Pocketbook" mill Jon Tluhnr lutoi'luii the, ho) I down nt Jim Httiip's baseball school al Orlando, Fin. ... If you null this riii-iier, Jon Williams, (who a Uu bulla from Meiuphla) Hint of poineil II buck lulu Will il til Terry lu lunl nlcht a N. V, World. TolfKTiiiu. . . . This miner picked llrnitiloi'li In win by a decision (mill hei on Ii 1 1 it , but our per sonal opinion Im l-'arr should have got no win.,, iliaii a diaw. Hawks Slaughter Vacouver Lions SKATTI.K, Jan. 27 t.n-The Kenllle Senhawkn literally went to town la.t uli:bt, defeating ihe Vancouver Mnnn. 7-2. to move further away from the field In the Pacific CimhI llnekey league race. The Hawk, have been iiiulefealeit In eight slialKht guinea. A capacity crowd of -KillO duell ed fans saw the hoiim team afore twice III encb of Ihn first two periods and add three mum In ilia third. Vancouver meeta Portland at Portland tonight. The beat uaeil truck btiya In town nl l.iicke'a. CATHARTICS A BAD HABIT If ynu liavt common wn fttlnitllotl. due lu Inrk of hulk til tho dirt, the itrrnl oltrrthn to pills nud IHiiKuOvrn In thnt they only IK-rjM'tuntc tho irnultlf Why not mrournica f lliutiiuttou Willi a unltirAl luxnttvp fKKl -with Kil loKtf s All'lirnn U ulrwirtui luoUturr mid noftrun hkr ft UpoliKd. Till W&trr-nof- tmrtt mnu ciwU rlimitm tl"ti. Al Mm nunc Unit 11 Intptmr IntrMinal tmiO brcnitw KcltirUK'a AU!Ua mntuthft th" Intestinal tonic wiamlti it,. Kat All-tirtm as n rrrfal or tmkrtt in nuiinnn And drink plt-nty uf water. Marin by KrllotfK nl Unitl Crcrk. Our Deluxe "Chicago CAR HEATER $1795 Installation $195 V Dow 1 Down $1 Per Week 'SHOP Phone 167