The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, July 28, 1938, Page 12, Image 12

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    Liy 28, 1938
PAGE TWELVE
THE NEWS AND THE HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Softball League Championship Playoffs Open
FOUR OUTFITS
SEEK PENNANT
Weyerhaeuser, L o w e 1 l's
Established as Slight
Favorites.
FINAL STANDINGS
W. h,
Pet.
Lowell's
Weyerhaeuser
...10
10
1
1
I
1
4
T
8
8
8
8
11
.909
.909
.818
Kesterson .............. 9
Elks 9'
K. of C 7
Signal OM 5
Junior Chamber 4
Southern Pacifle 8
Poatoffice 8
Great Northern 8
Seroco .
Big Lakes 0
.818
.638
.455
.384
.173
.273
.173
.273
.000
The Klamath Softball league
championship playoffs were to get
under way on Cook field Thursday
night with tbe opening gun of the
semi-final elimination series
among the league's four top teams,
Thursday night's doubleheader,
starting at 7:30 o'clock, was to
pit first-place Weyerhaeuser
against third-place Kesterson In
the Initial encounter and second
place Lowell's against fourth-
place Elks In the second contest.
The same procedure will be re
peated Friday night In the same
order and again next Tuesday, In
. event either, series, or both, must
carry to three games.
The semi-final series winners
' will tangle next week In another
two-out-of-three series for the
league championship and the right
to enter the southern Oregon dis
trict playoffs, while the two teams
eliminated In the semi-finals will
battle It out for third and fourth
places.
' Close followers of local Softball
play Thursday accorded a slight
edge to Lowell' and Weyerhaeus
er In the series opening Thursday
. night. They pointed out that Low
ell's had defeated the Elks and
Weyerhaeuser bad nicked Kester
son In their only previous meet
ings. Thqy further cited the faet that
Lowell's and Weyerhaeuser have
been only once defeated during
the course of the 11-game regular
schedule, while the other two
teams have suffered double set
backs. Lowell's lost to Kesterson
and Weyerhaeuser to Lowell's,
while Kesterson has been beaten
by both Weyerhaeuser and Elks,
and the Elks by both Weyerhaeus
er and Lowell's.
1 There was fairly general agree
: ment that, with a maximum of six
I games to play In little more than
: a week, the teams with the best
i equipped pitching staffs would
probably hold an advantage.
In this respect Lowell's and
j Weyerhaeuser again appear to be
j ahead.
! Lowell's boasts two regulars,
', Ramus and Wesley, and has Ber-
nadou, regular third-Backer, avail
: able for mound duty in case of
emergency. Ramus was stopped
only once during the season, and
that was when he dropped a 3-1
decision to Kesterson In the open
ing game of the schedule. Wes
ley never even came close to de
tent. Weyerhaeuser has three reliable
hiiiiers in Ferguson, Heller and
Strong, any one of whom is capable
of starting and usually finishing
a game. Heller and Ferguson will
probably get first call, with Strong
as relief pitcher.
V It was Ferguson who got the
blame for Weyerhaeuser's single
defeat, a 9-5 decision in favor of
Lowell's, but otherwise he went
through the season without a fum
ble. The Elks will probably rely on
Thompson and Nelson, with the
pair alternating as starting pitch
ers and lending each other assis
tance in event assistance is needed.
Kesterson, of the four playoff
MY BADGE
MEANS I AM
TRUE LAGER
BEER!
In stelnies.
full quarts,
half-gallons,
and
24-bottle
cases.
A
... v,
k JilW
WM
8T MEwntY COMPANY VANCOUVW, WASH.
EXTRA! NOW AVAILABLE ALSO IN CANS
Angels Pummel
Extend Lead
By the Associated Press
Rip Russell snapped out of a
batting slump with a run making
bang Wednesday night to pace
the Los Angeles Angels to a 12
to 4 win over the Portland Beav
ers and give the Angola a two
game lead In tbe Coast league
baseball race.
Russell drove In five Los An
geles runs and scored two him
self with a home run and three
singles In tour trips to the plate.
While Russell was snapping out
of It at Los Angeles, Relief Pitcher
Paul Gregory pitched a little more
than six innings and limited the
second place Sacramento Solona
to one scratch hit to give Seattle
a 6 to 3 victory. In the eighth In
ning Gregory broke a 3 to 3 dead
lock when he brought a run home
entries, is the most shorthanded
in respect to pitching talent. The
mill team has only Myers avail
able tor mound duty, and while
Myers is possibly the leagues
most brilliant hurler he's the
only man who ever beat Lowell's
or held the Tigers to a single run
Kith, a game on hand every
night m u nave to worn overtime
and reach new heights of pitching
excellence It Kesterson is to wind
up on top.
The scarcity of pitchers on tbe
Kesterson squad is testified to by
the fact that in both of K eater-
sou's regular-season defeats both
11-0 affairs Myers had to stick
it out from start to finish. .
A couple of moderate upsets
marked the final games of the reg
ular schedule, played on Cook
field Wednesday' night.
The first was Great Northern's
13-9 defeat ot Junior Chamber of
Commerce, largely accounted for
by three home runs, a triple, and
a double on the part ot then usual
ly light-hitting G. N. nine.
The second waa Seroco s 11-2
victory over Southern Pacific,
achieved on the strength of 18
hits.
Final standings found Signal
Oil clearly in sixth place, a full
game ahead ot seventh-place Jun
ior Chamber, and four teams tied
for eighth, each with three vic
tories and eight defeats. They
were Southern Pacific, Seroco,
Great Northern and Postottice.
Scores: ,
R. H. E.
Junior Chamber 9 11 6
Great Northern 13 11 2
Gustafson and Shirk; Twohy
and Richey, Larsen.
R. H. E.
Seroco : 11 18 3
Southern Pacific 2 6 5
Murray, and Richardson: Clow
and Sanders.
Silverton Grabs
Second Straight
in Semi-Pro flay
SILVERTON, Ore., July 28
(AP) Silverton was two up on
the Medical Lake, wash., team
today for the regional semi-pro
baseball championship.
The Oregonians won their sec
ond straight game last night a
to 1. when only three Eastern
State hospital players were able
to reach secoud.
Ray Helser allowed only one
hit in the first live innings. ua
Brewer, who took over mound
work for Silverton in the Bixth,
allowed only three hits for the
remainder of tbe contest.
Silverton won the first game,
13 to 2.
Silverton scored In the second
when Bob Bonney crossed the
plate, added two in the third by
Sulsirom and Baker and finished
In the fifth when Baker repeated,
followed by Pesky.
Score: R. H. E.
Medical Lake 1 4 1
Silverton 5 8 3
Harris and Dahlen; Heiser,
Brewer (6) and Moe.
Gridiron Stars
Of fered 75-Day
Trip to Islands
SAN FRANCISCO, July 28
(UP) Francis Brickner, former
St. Mary's college football play
er, today offered Pacific coast
graduate gridiron stars a "foot
ball vacation" In the Hawaiian
islands, with all expenses paid for
a 75-day stay.
Brickner, whoBe home is in
Spokane, said he had been com
missioned to recruit a team to
play In Honolulu's town league
this coming season. He explain
ed that the league needs a fourth
team and a prominent Honolu
iuan was backing the new entry.
The football venture will be
conducted on a strictly amateur
basis, Brickner said.
He reported having received In
quiries already from a number of
graduate players, Including Lewis
of San Jose State and Ncilscn
and Faulkensteln of St. Mary's.
The team must be assembled by
September 1.
DANCE
Sat., July 30
Oregon
Hillbillies
KEN
Ducks, 12-4,
to Two Games
with a two-bagger. ' Seattle scored
two more runs In the ninth.
Portland's early two-run lead
was kicked overboard in the third
Inning after the Angels had scored
one run and Russell boosted one
out of the lot to score a man ahead
of him. After that the Angels
were never headed. In the seventh
inning the Angels slapped down
tour Portland pitchors and scored
eight runs.
Nicking three Oakland pitchers
for 19 hits, the San Francisco
Seals made It two In a row over
the lowly Oaks, 12 to 6.
Lou Tost, promising Hollywood
Stars pitcher, weakened Just long
enough In the last of the ninth
Inning ' to give the San Diego
Padres a 1 to 0 shutout over the
Stars.
Wilson to Help Kennaston
Seek Revenge Against
Villainous Pair.
The brutal, battering, blood'
curdling and, paradoxically, com
ical sport that Is team wrestling
will be resumed in the Klamath
armory arena next Tuesday night.
Mack LUIard, foreman of local
grappling operations, announced
Thursday.
The faithful who were on hand
tor the armory reopening last
Tuesday have evidently spread the
word with lightning speed among
their friends, Lillard said, for he
has been besieged with calls from
tans who, having skipped the first
tandem tirade, have since learned
that they missed something and
are now demanding a chance to sit
in on similar festivities.
Because Sgt. Bob Kennaston,
who, together with his partner.
Flash Kelly, absorbed a terrific
lacing in the first edition ot lepra
wrestling, is hot for revenge, the
promoter has agreed to let the
Joe Smollnski-Sockeye McDonald
combine stand as one of the two
teams.
McDonald and Smollnskl, act
ing in murderous partnership,
were the lads who effectively fixed
Brother Kennastons wagon tbe
last time out.
The sneering marine told Lil
lard he waa confident he could
even the score against the heavy
hitting pair, were he granted an
other opportunity. He did put in
a demand, however, for a fresh
assistant, and Lillard tilled tbe
request by appointing Benny Wil
son, the lithe young Texan, as sec
ond in command on the challeng
ing team.
Wilson said he had never been
In a team match and was eager
for a chance. He thought he could
do pretty well, he said, and dis
dained to tear tbe threat ot the
s 1 u g g i n g Smollnskl-McDonald
crew.
As for Kennaston, he expressed
his opinion as he left the armory
ring in defeat last Tuesday night.
"Don't you worry about me," he
told jeering ringsiders. "I'm plen
ty good."
As before, the team match will
go for the best four out ot six
tails. Official talis, fnat is. If
next week's imbroglio is anything
like the Initial manifold massacre,
there will be 40 or bo additional
falls that the referee, bis hands
too full, will never see.
Ali pasha, the curdling Kurd,
will attempt to protect his long,
black chin whiskers from assault
by Flash Kelly and, in the mean
time, soften the San Francisco
irishman sufficiently to eke out
a victory.
That will constitute the intro
ductory event, a regulation six
round, two-out-of-three affair.
The world's first macadamized
road Is Ayr-May bole Hoad, Scot
land, where John McAdam first
applied his theories of road mak
ing. His method remains basi
cally sound today, more than 100
years-after his death.
Baby kangaroos are born blind,
and only as large as a man's fin
ger, yet they find tbelr way to
the mothers poucn without as
sistance.
The leaf-nosed bat of tbe West
Indies gets its name from a leaf
like appendage on Its nose. Its
tongue is roughened like a. file
and Is used tor rasping fruit.
Grover Cleveland was the only
president of the United States
who ever "camo back" and served
another term after being out of
office.
El IT
SLATED AGAIN
Chinese Herbs
Herbs nro compounded to meet Iho needs of the Individual.
The use of herbs ror all human ailments are tested and
linndcd through (he ages. They are being used dally."
Come today Consultation free
Prices reasonable.
Y. S. Lee Herb Company
415 S. 9th Street, Klamath Falls
Open Daily 9 a. m. to 6 p, m.
T
State Refuses to Accept
Hostak, Rules Lewis'
Title Vacant .
NEW YORK July 18 IB-Two
fellows who thought thoy were
world champions, John Henry
Lewis, the light heavyweight, and
Al Hostak, the middleweight who
knocked out Freddy Steele Tues
day night, find It "Just ain't so,"
as far as New York state Is con
cerned. The state's athletic commission
met yesterday, and before you
could say "Joe Louis" declared
Lewis' title vacant In this state
and declined to accept Hostak as
tbe middleweight champion of tho
world.
The Lewis declaration was based
on his refusal to meet Tiger Jack
Fox, the elderly Spokane nogro,
In a title bout. The commission
won't recognize Hostak because
Steele, who held the title before
Tuesday's fight. Ignored a chal
lenge by Fred Apostoll ot San
Francisco.
Gus Greenlee, manager ot Lewis,
and Eddie Marino, Hostak's hand
ler, broke Into Impassioned ora
tory when they heard the news.
"I'll sue, that's what I'll do. I've
been waiting for this, and my lnw-
yer says we have a case for naif a
million dollars," sputtorea uroen
lee, who has a liking tor largo,
round figures.
"That gang back there wants
to get control ot boxing," yelled
Marino, when he heard the com
mission wouldn't accept his battler
unless Hostak beats the winner of
an Apostolt-Young Corbett fight.
He and Hostak are willing to fight
Anostolt but not In New York.
Tbe commission linel up an
elimination series tor Lewis' title,
among Fox, who challenged Lewis
February 10; Al Gainer, 32, Now
Haven, Conn.; Melio Bettlna, the
Beacon, N. Y., southpaw, and Gus
Lesnevich of Edgewater, Pi. J.
Lewis, who may fight Adolph
Heusser In Germany In August,
would be on the wrong side ot the
gate.
Mike Jacobs, head ot the potent
20th Century Sporting club, will
attempt to make the matches.
The tournament will be a break
for TIaer Jack Fox. He has been
knocking around for years trying
to get a shot at the title. A ter
rific hitter, he thinks he can slap
anyone In his division stiff.
PROVIDENCE. R. I., July 28
(AP) The National Boxing'
association will recognize Al Hos
tak of Seattle as world middle
weight champion despite the ac
tion of the New York commis
sion in declaring the title vacant,
'said Edward C. Foster, executive
secretary of the NBA, today.
Neither will the NBA pay any
attention to the New York
board's action in taking from
John Henry Lewis the light
heavyweight championship, de
clared Foster.
Trout Fishing
Reported Good
in Crater Lake
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL
PARK, Ore., July 28 (Special)
A report from Superintendent E.
P. Lcavltt's office Indicates that
exceptionally good catches of
rainbow trout and silvcrslde have
been made in Crater lake during
the past week. The catches per
hour per fisherman nave ncen
better during the past week than
at any time during the summer.
On July 21 a party ot two
fished three hours returning with
five flBh, three rainbows and two
silversldes. The smallost, a sll
verside, tipped the scales at 1
pounds; tho largest, a rainbow,
weighed 7 pounds. On July 25
party of four returned rrom
six hours fishing with 26 fish
ranging In weight from 2 to BV4
pounds, the largest being a sll
vorsido. Other good catches have
been reported during the week.
Tho best catches have Been on-
tained by trolling with large
flashers In fairly deep water near
shore, using worms for bait.
Rowboats and tackle may be
rented at, the foot of tbe Lake
trail. A greater number of boats
are available than during any
previous summer. No license Is
neceBsary to fish In Crater lake.
The limit Is 12 fish per day per
person.
WIN FLEET PENNANT
PORTLAND, July 28 (AP)
The repair ship U. S. S. Medusa
defeated the U. S. 8. Indian
apolis, 15 to 0, yesterday to win
the fleet week baseball cham
pionship. Bill Watson, repair ship
hurler, allowed but.ono hit while
his teammates collected 14 blows.
CHIPS OU
IN NEW YORK
Sport Briefs
Ill- KDD1K HltlKTZ
NEW YORK, July 28 UV-BUI
Terry (with his Jlnts hitting the
skids like everything) Is feuding
with the newspaper guys again .
The Advertising olub ot Newark
lias Joined the race to raise a na
tional fuud to buy a plane for poor
Doug Corrlgau, wno had to go out
and fly the Atlantic In a crate. . . ,
Itay Fabianl, the fiddling wrest
ling promoter, has (lapped a $26,'
000 suit on the 20th Century
Sporting club because he says pro
moter Mike Jacobs wouldn't In
stall a cooling avatoni. . . . St. Paul
has upued the cut on Its golf open
from 82500 to 17500, and are the
pros happy? , , , Event starts to
morrow.
Burgess Whitehead has
changed bis tune and his mind
again. . , , Interviewed by Mary
Hopkins, smart reporter ot the
Elisabeth City (N. C.) Advance,
nurgess now says he'll lay oft
hard work the rest ot the season
and make a fresh start next year.
. , . At that, he's doing a pretty
good Job with a semi-pro team a
couple ot times a woek, and polo
grounders wish he d hurry back
. . . Don't laugh this off, tor Jim
my Braddock may try that long
reported comeback. . . , Business
over at the "store" Isn't what it
ought to be, and besides Mike
Jacobt needs heavies like nobody's
business.... Here's another
fight tip; Lou Ambers Is looking
hotter than he ever did In his
life. . . . Terry has retired from
the Giants' third base coaching
line probably because It Just didn't
do much good. . . . Those who
know Max nishop sny the Navy
didn't miss by signing him to a
three-year contract as coach of its
diamond forces.
Whnt we want to know Is how
old Is Fred Johnson, the pitcher
the Browns Imported from tbe
American association? . . . Record
books say he's 38, but some ot his
pals Insist you can add three
years to that and still be right. . . .
In which event Fred probably Is
the oldest regular In either major.
. . . No matter how many summers
he's seen slip by, he went the
route against the Yankees yestor
day (when they were not hot but
torrid) and that's something. . . .
Beat line of the week In this book
was Prof. Paul (A. P.) Mlckelson's
"those Tcrryble alants."
STANDINGS
COAST I.
EAGCE
W. L.
.....70 60
-...US 52
....83 48
....83 67
....81 80
68 63
66 65
.....44 77
Pet.
.683
.667
.629
.525
.504
.471
.458
.364
Pet.
.646
.630
.693
.611
.477
.473
.392
.301
Pet.
.638
.687
.568
.645
.466
.458
.4.15
.310
Lns Angeles ...
Sacramento
Seattle ..
San Diego
San Francisco
Portland .......
Hollywood ,
Oakland
AMERICAN
New York ......
Cleveland ............
Boston
Washington
Detroit .. ...f.
Chicago '
Philadelphia ..
St. Louis
NATIONAL
Pittsburgh
LKAGl B
W. L.
...53 29
-..51 30
...4 8 33
...46 44
...42 46
-..36 39
...31 48
...25 68
LEAGUE
W. L.
...61 31
New York ...
Chicago
Cincinnati ...
Brooklyn ..:
Boston .......
St. Louis
61 38
.....60 38
.....48 40
41 47
38 45
.....37 48
.....26 68
Philadelphia ......
Baseball
Wednesday's Results
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
R H E
Hollywood .... 0 7 1
San Diego 16 0
Tost and Brenzel: Chaplin ana
Hogan.
Portland 4 9 1
Los Angeles 12 12 1
Darrow, Douglas, Llska and
Cronln; Salveson, Bush and Col
lins. Seattle 13 1
Sacramento 8 8 2
Plckrell, Gregory and Splndel;
Newsome, Walker and Franks.,
San Francisco 12 19 ' ' 2
Oakland 6 15 1
Hlutz and Sprlnz; Van Fleet,
Olds, Llndoll and Conroy.
FAMED FISHERMAN'3 WHARF . . ,;, , ln.
lit . . unloading of tbt dny'i iuh hum biindtii
t;i . . . If, til ml liw Hoiki torn "bom,"
vU quaint tabl, tat,
FIRST in
oh Jrahcfocc
Gil DEFENSE
T
Terrymen, Flaying Worse
Than Phillies, Lose
Fifth in Row.
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS ,
Nntlonnl Iioague
Chicago 3, Brooklyn 8 (night
game),
Bt. Louis 7. New York 0.
Cincinnati 0-1, Boston 1-5.
Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia t.
American league
New York 7. St. Louis I. '
Boston at Chlcngo, rain.
Philadelphia 11, Cleveland II.
Washington 4. Detroit 9.
By the Associated Press
Thoy said It can't happen here.
They said no mutter how bad those
Giants looked with bats In tbolr
hands, their dofense would al
ways hold them up. They said
strictly on pitching and fielding
alone, thoso Giants would always
got along.
' But, aftor llstsnlng to all that
for years, you can take a look at
the latest developments In the Na
tional loague raco, and (shades of
John Mcllraw!) there's tho vory
thing they said couldn l happon
happening all over the place.
The Oliint pitching, excopt tor
King Carl Hubboll who s carrying
the entire burden again, Is about
as useful as a hot water bottle at
the equator. Te air-tight Holding
Is up around the strntOBphoro. And
the Terrlblo Terry Torrlcrs of '36
and 37 are wallowing around a
half game ahead of third placo,
five games back of tho Pittsburgh
Plrntes and looking moro like the
Phillies than the Phillies do them
selves.
They've lost five games In a
row. the latest a 7-0 four-hit
whitewashing applied by Long Lon
Warnoko and tho Cardinals Wed
nesday. They've dropped eight of
tbolr last 10, and In their lust 68
games since their early season
streak ot 18 victories and throe
setbacks, In fact they've played
under .600 ball.
Thoy woro only holding second
place Thursday because the re
vived Chicago Cubs developed a
case ot butter-fingers Wednesday
night and let tho Dodgors score
three times In the ninth Inning
tor a 3-2 ifronaiyn win.
BUI Terry is frantically switch-
SAVE TIME
Travel while
you sleep!
Leave In the evening. Next
morning you're in Portland or
San Fnnciico, trfrtibid and
ready for work or pleasure,
slier a good night's sleep.
You'll isve s lot of time. Train
fares are low. For example:
SAN FRANCISCO
On-wiy Srandirff
Tourist Fare 89.90 $18.85
Lower Berth 2.00 4.00
In Coaches 8.81 16.7S
PORTLAND
One vir ftmn-ltrit
Tourist Fsre $7.92 $15.08
Lower Berth 1.S0 3.00
In Coaches 7.04 10.65
For detailed Information on
train schedules, just phonei
Southern Pacific
Ticket Office
Phono 2000
FALLING APAR
So that your visit may lack nothing comt and
lay al the Sir Francis Drake Hotel I
, If plcasure-bem, start sight-seeing from this
central headquarters. Come home at nightfall (or
cock-crow) to a haven of supreme luxury with
out extravagance.
If on business join other business folk here at
the heart of tht city!
Dance to famous hands In the exotic Persian
Room I Enjoy delicious food in the Coffee Room,
at popular prices.
1939 '
nr,: ..82.
Ini his 1 1 n imp trying lo got a wlu
ii I n K combination, but mulling
sovms to be working, Tito Cards
did nil thnlr scoring In ouo Inning
Wednesday bocause the defense
oame apart at tho sou ins. Dick
llnrtull'a orror put Unman on bnsa,
and Johnny McCarthy's fuinblo
should have boon tho third out.
Thau Iho root full in.
Since Pop Young had himself a
big day, driving In four runs to
pace the Pirates to a 4-3 wlu over
tne i'liiiiiea, mo lines woro left
five games out In front, Deacon
Danny MncKaydou and Lou Fetto
tossed a pair of flve-hlttnrs and
Iho notion Hoes boltod the Cin
cinnati Rods twice, l-o, and 6-1,
Ovor In tho; American louguo,
the Ysnkous hold their gniuo-uud-a-hnlt
edge on the Clovelaud In
diana, but the spotlight remained
focused on Haukus-Pnnkus Ui'oon
borg, Detroit's dynamiter In chief,
who bolted a pair of humors tor
the second straight duy to lead
the Tigers to a 9-4 win over tho
Senators and boost the Dotrolts
back Into fifth place.
The two round-trippors wore
Hunk's 32nd and 33rd of the year
and put him sevou guinea up, fur
this date, on Babe Hutu's record
1937 campnlgii.
Hooklo itullef Hurler Steve San
dra plu-hod 3 2-3 Innings ot lilt
loss bull, hit a homer and a run-
producing atiiglo and gave the
Yanks a 7-5 duclslon over tho St.
Louis Browns. The second gumo
ot what was to have been a double
bill was rained out. Tho Indiana
nipped tho Athletics, 12-11, In n
funcy slugfcat. The Itml Sux-Whlto
Sox twin bill was washed out.
Chystmnsse, Crestoiimus, Kyrsu.
mas, Xtemns, and Chrystynmsse
are early spellings of Christinas.
Right now when you use
your car more than at any other
season of the year when you
wane and need -greater
protection against blowouts,
punctures and skidding
Firestone provides this three
way safety at NEW LOW
PRICES. Now that it costs to
Utile to make your car TIRE.
SAFE car owners cverywhera
should reptac dangerously
worn tires with NEW, SAFE
Firestone Gum. Dipped Tires,
built with these patented anil
exclusive construction fraturesi
Cum-Dlpplng, the Firestone
patented process by which
every fiber of every cord In
very ply Is saturated with
liquid rubber, counteracts lire
destroying Internal friction and
heat which ordinsrlly causo
blowouts Nine extra pounds
of rubber sre added to every
100 pounds of cord.
Two Extra Layers of Cum
Dipped Cords under the tread,
another patented Firestone
construction feature, protect
against punctures.
Scientifically Designed
Non-Skid Tread made of tough
slow-wearing' rubber, sssures
safer stops and longer non-skid
mileage.
With the low first cost, the
extra safety and the long mileage
of Firestone Convoy tires, you
can no longer afford to take
chsnces on unsafe tires, Join
the Firestone Save-A-LIfy
Csmpslgn today by equipping
your car with a set of new
Firestone Convoy Tires the
safest tires that money can buy
at these low prices.
LIFETIME
GUARANTEE
Bvtrr tire of our manufacture, ttmrlnn
our name nJ aerial numliei, Ja
Rift rant ted by ui to Im free from t fccla
i worhmaniiilp and materials without
limit at lo lima or mlleajfCi anil to give
latlatacior aervlce under normal
opera linn condition!. Hour examination
how that any lire haa failed under lite
term of lltla ttuaranicei we will cither
repair lite tire or make an allowance on
the purchaaa of m new lire.
Listen
run yoic
IC Of riRIITONS
itlay avanlna over th
N. B. C. Red N.twork. J
Ttjry won
nailoawM
J. W.
734 South Sixth
1
Hostak Demands i
Early Battle in '
Defense of Title
BKATTLK, July 18 (AP) Al
Hosluk of Senttle, nilddlewolgh
boxing champion of the world -
otttsldo of Now York clamored;
for notion today so he could b
a "fighting champion," while lha
Now York state boslng enmuils
Ion decided lo delay recognition
"for Iho prosenl."
Iloaltik won the ehamplonshl
In one minute and 43 secondly
lmro Tuesday night, belling out
Knuldlo Steele of Tncntna on the)
Inst of four knockdowns. .
Tho action ot Iho New York)
ring dtikoa brought a blast from
Jnck Iieiiipsny, the former heavy,
weight champion who In two nls
tempts hero lias nnvor rofoioed
bout liiHtlng a full round,
"It's Ihti moat ridiculous thing
I ever heard of," Dnmpaey mild
before Inking a plane back to Ills
New York city restaurant.
"Championship change hnndl
In tho ring and not In any boxlnc
nimmlssiiiii'a office. This kid
lliiittiik Is on ot tho grnalosl
fighters I have ever seen In ao
tluti, and when tho New York
conuulsalonors mnka such a slat
iiient a they nr crodllod with,
they iihI hold themselves up to)
ridicule and scorn from the en
tire spuria world."
So because Htonle was latd up
with a frnctured breast bone tor.
ernl months and couldn't rhaU
leiiKO til" rliiillengiir, Apostoll,
who has linen luld up from an
iippvudtMrliiry, 1 1 out nk Is put In
itio position of being the "whip
I lim buy" for the New York com
iiiliudonora, Kddio Mnrlno, his
imiiiiiKor, mi Id.
k x. I nCTsVTTi
Look at these
LOW PRICES
FIRESTONE CONVOY"
FOR CARS AND TRUCKS
4- 50 21 $7.0
4.75-19 8.1 S
5.00-19 ' 8,80
s-2517 e.as
5- 25-18 fJ.6S
5-50-17 10.4S
6.00-16,. 11.80
625-16 D.1S
6.50-16...., 14.50
Tlrta lor Truck, and kuin
f mpoMl.n.Uly Low prlcta
to
IJ?J J"!.,,TOM VOICl Of Til
rAHSI--lwlce weekly during Ihsstooa
hour. Consult your local paptf.
KERNS
Phone 1053