Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 31, 1948, Page 8, Image 8

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    PACE EICHT
Pelicans Stay
Out Front By
38-33 Victory
Cavemen Keep Up
By Sliding Past
Tornado, 43 To 40
SUndinm
W h Pet
Klamath Falls S 0 1.000
Oranls Pass 3 3 .600
Ashland 2 3 .400
Medford 0 6 .000
ASHLAND, Jan. 31 Klamath
. Falls' tight-playing Pelicans ad
vanced one good-sized step nearer
the district 4 high school basketball
crown last night by coming out
ahead ol the Ashland Grizzlies 38 to
33 in a see-saw battle on the local
court. The game kept the Klamath
string of conference wins intact and
slid Ashland deeper into the league
standings. Grants Pass, the other
team conceded a chance to win the
district title, beat Medford last
night 43 to 40.
The Ashland-Klamath contest was
a nip-up all the way with the
Grizzlies threatening at almost
every turn to upset the favored
Pelican quintet. In fact, it was mid
way of the fourth period before the
Pels began to surge forward.
Ashland was ahead 6-5 at the
end of the first quarter and 15-14 at
halftlme.
THREE QUICK ONES
For a few moments in the second
canto the Pels took the lead, but
Jerry Mitchell, a Grizzly reserve,
came Into the game to rip in three
consecutive baskets. The first half
was primarily a defensive game on
both ends.
Until the final quarter a two
point margin either way was good,
four points were phenomenal.
Jack Kennett, whose shooting
carved the victory, tied the score at
15-15 with a free toss as the third
period opened, then a few minutes
later scored a basket to put Kla
math ahead 30-19. Big Don Mayfield
retaliated for Ashland, scoring on a
football pass and again on a tap-m.
but Jack Lust and Don Zarosinski
countered with stolen-ball scores to
regain the Klamath lead.
The Pels were hanging tough at
38-27 as the third period closed.
FINAL WRIGGLE
Harry Kannasto broke into the
clear for a lay-in that tied the
count at 29-29 to begin the fourth
period, the last visible Ashland
threat, Klamath's speed and ball
handling solved the problem right
there.
Kennett put the Pels ahead with
a foul shot. Ed Whitney added an
other. Kennett laid la a bucket and
a free throw and Tommy Edwards
flipped in a sidelong score. That
splurge actually broke up the game
by giving the Pels a seven-point
lead. 36-29.
Mayfield and Bill Bissell got
ringers for Ashland and Whitney
one for the Pels in the last three
minutes of play.
Tall (6-foot-6 Mayfield was the
leading Ashland scorer with 10
points, while Kennett was best of
the evening with 11. But neither
could touch the 20 looped in by
Tommy Schubert In the prelim
when the Klamath Frosh defeated
the Ashland junior high, 31-20.
Lineups and scoring:
Klamath (38) Pos. (33) Ashland
Whitney (5) F Carlson
Barnes (2) F 5) Bissell
Lust (61 C (10) Mayfield
Kennett (Hi G (7) Kannasto
Zarosinski (8) G (2 Stames
Pelican reserves Edwards 4i,
Dawes (2i, Stringham, Dorman.
Ashland reserves Mitchell 8),
Ellsworth. Langer. Nelson, Adams,
Richardson.
FIGHTS LAST NIGHT
NEW YORK Gino Buonvino,
397, Bari, Italy, outpointed Jackie
Cranford, 180, Washington. D. C;
Paddy DeMarco, 134, Brooklyn, out
pointed Terry Young, 137, New
York.
HOLLYWOOD Freddy Beshore.
196. El Monte, outpointed George
Milllch, 178, Sacramento, 10.
SAN DIEGO Frankie Angustain,
161, Los Angeles, outpointed Art
Hardy, 158, Pittsburgh, Pa., 10.
RODNEY, THE SAURIAN,
STEALS ARMORY SHOW
Tuffy Truesdale and his alligator
a wicked - looking swamp lizard
named Rodney, stole the wrestling
show last night as a near-capacity
crowd Jammed Into the armory to
watch the Florldian go through his
paces with the six-foot saurian. It
was the first demonstration of its
kind ever held here.
Truesdale lined the ring with
chicken-netting, to keep Rodney
out of the customers' laps, but th?
'gator had other ideas. It took
more than chicken-wire to fence
him in.
A short, pithy talk from the grap
pler (habits of alligators, handling,
feeding, etc.,) paved the way for
the action. Tuffy demonstrated
that Rodney's jaws were of the
ateel-trap variety by tempting him
Into a snap that could be heard all
over the house. Truesdale was cer
tain to yank his hand back In time
to keep the member on his arm.
Given an opportunity, Rod could
have taken It off.
After some more like stunts,
Truesdale proceeded, at the end of a
DO YOU KNOW . . .
The Lundy's are
OPEN AT 4 P. M. ON SUNDAYS?
PELICIOES STEAK. CHICKEN
OPEN 6 P. M. WEEK DAYS.
I0&
JUST FAST THE JUNCTION ON THE ASHLAND HIGHWAY
PHONE 7980
A A A .-
This Season
NEW YUKK, Jan. 31 iNEAi A
year ago practically every name
college football player unit to the
new All-America conference.
Georgia's Charley Trippl to the
Chicago Cardinals and Oklahoma
A. and M.'s Bob Fcmmore to the
Bears were notable exceptions.
It's Just the other way around
this trip.
The Bears have lauded the great
est prize of all, Johnny Lujack,
and his tackle teammate at Notre
Dame, George Connor.
The New York club of the Na
tional league has been braced by
Mississippi's record-breaking pass
ing combination, Charlie Conerly
Medford
Dodgers
Forming
MEDFORD. Jan. 31 The pro
fessional baseball pool in Medford
isn't showing a ripple these winter
days, but is expected to begin to
perk up about February 10 when
Bill Svlllch, business manager of
the Medford entry in the Far West
league, comes back to town from
his visit to minor league conclaves
in the East.
Svilich was appointed business
manager of the Medford Dodgers
some weeks ago when the parent
Brooklyn Dodgers took over a Far
West franchise here. He is a
former minor leaguer who has
hooked on with the Dodger farm
system.
The playing manager of the pros
pective team will be Larry Shepard,
a 28-year-old right handed pitcher
who was with the Pueblo, Colo., out
fit of the Western league last sea
son.
Shepard had a look-in with the
Washington Senators at one time,
but most of his playing has been
done in minor and semi-pro cir
cuits. He also was sent to Med
ford by the Brooklyn club.
Brooklyn owns the Medford team
outright as a farm unit.
No work is being done on the
Fairgrounds, where Alcdford's base
ball is played, although there are
plans for some improvement and
repair on the stands, fence and
playing field. The lights already in
use will be kept for the coming sea
son, but may have to be stepped up
in power later.
Short Enders
Derail Good
Ring Workers
NEW YORK. Jan. 31 &) The
Jackie Cranford boom is as dead
today as Terry Young's hopes for
a lightweight title bout.
Pudgy Gino Buonvino of Bari,
Italy, took the wind out of Cran
ford! sails In a thumping heavy
weight bout last night at Madison
Square Garden. Young's scheduled
February 27 championship bout with
Ike Williams was derailed by 19-year-old
Paddy Demarco, in the
eight-round semi-final.
Both Buorrrino and Demarco were
2 to 1 underdogs with the surpris-
ingly large crowd of 16.247 who paid
$64,836.
Cranford. a tall blond youngster
from Washington, D. C, came out
of the coast guard with bright pros
pects. Early success was followed by i
disaster in 1946 when he was !
knocked out twice. Back on the j
comeback trail, he had a seven-fight j
win streak going when he bumped
into roly poly Gino.
Young's title bust may not be as ;
disastrous as it sounds. For the r
veteran from New York's east side j'
now has a good pay day coming I
in a return scrap with Demarco, a i
product of Brooklyn's navy yard j
sector. Paddy will be able to fight ;
10 rounds in this state after his
20th birthday, February 10. They
probably will top a late February
Garden show. In the meantime
Strauss can dig up another foe for
Williams.
five-minute struggle, to flip Rodney
over on the animal's back.
Rodney twice threw spectators In
to consternation by crawling under
the netting and trying to get chum
my with ringslders. But Truesdale
thwarted both attempts with an ef
fective tall-hold.
The cleanies won out again In the
tug-team match, when Jumping Joe
Lynam and Frankie Hart took two
falls to one from the team of Al
Williams and Joe Dorsetti.
Williams copped the first fall in
the one hour time limit classic with
an arm bar, plus slugging, on Ly
nam. Several minutes later Hart
evened up the scoring by taking a
crashing fall out of Williams with
a step-over leg lock of some kind
known only to Hart.
Final fall of the match came In
the closing minutes of the match
when Lynam clamped his famous
grapevine on Dorsetti, to shake him
nearly unconscious before breaking
It up.
Tex Hager and Buck Weaver came
out fall and fall In the four-round
opener.
AN'n spa ni.m mvnu.
MUSIC AT 8 P. M. SUNDAYS
MQ
Best Football Prospects Sought National League Security
i and Barney Poole, mid Columbia's
; Bill bwincki, whose envus catches
of passes so unexncvlcilly snapticd
i Army's unbeaten skein at 32. The
Otants also have Pctisylvama's
Skippy Milii.M.
Washington bobs up with the Ala
bama passing wizard, Harry Gilmer.
After Indicating that he was
headed for the New York Yankees
of the All-America. Wisconsin's Jug
Gtrard up and signed with the
Green Bay Packers.
The Boston Yanks grabbed Gear
gla Tech's All-Aiuerican tackle, Bob
Davis, and Alabama's robust center,
Pancho Maneha.
And so on down the hue.
Herman Wcdemeyer is the only J
Major Status
Seen Coming
DALLAS. Jan. 31 (Ti President
J. Alvin Gardner of the Texas
league sees major leagues both on
the Pacific coast and in the
Southwest.
"Both may not come in my time
but they're coming." he declares.
"There is no way to prevent the
Pacific coast doing it. And the
Southwest Is the fastest-growing
area in the nation. Everything is
pushing down this way. I'd say
we'll have a big league down here
within 10 to 20 years."
The PCL has been turned down
by organized baseball several
times in the past two years.
Fifty Waxed
Slat Riders
Enter Jumps
LEAVENWORTH. Wash.. Jan. 31
(.41 Ski enthusiasts crossed their
fingers tod.iy and breathed a hope
that perfect snow conditions will
remain unchanged for Sunday's an
nual Leavenworth ski Jumping tour
nament. Fifty riders of the waxed-slats
have sent in their entries, and most
were on hand this morning. Head
ing the class A list is Arne Ulland
ol Kongsberg. Norway, who will
make his first appearance in the
Northwest. He will compete against
hi? older brothers. Olav and Reider.
The young Norwegian won the
Norge Ski club meet at Chicago two
weeks ago and tied Art Tokle for
first place in a tournament at Du
buque. Ia., last Sunday.
Two Norwegian exchange stu
dents at the University of Wash
ington. Gustav Raaum and Kjell
Stordalen. are expected to give Ul
lartd his toughest competition.
The hill record of 273 feet was
set in 1941 by the late Torger Tokle.
Late Cage
Scores
HIGH SCHOOL
Astoria 38. Tillamook 31
North Bend 30, Coquille 29
Marshfield 47. Roseburg 45
Myrtle Point 38, Reedsport 32
Grants Pass 43, Medford 40
West Linn 63, Hiilsboro 42
Woodburn 39, Silverton 31
The Dalles 45, White Salmon,
Wash.. 18
St. Mary's (Eugene) 32, Junction
City 28
Springfield 32, University 19
Beaverton 25. Forest Grove 24
Sacred Heart iSalemi 31, Slay
ton 26
Dallas 45. Eslacada 31
Vernonia 41, Seaside 35
Newpork 50, Sweet Home 29
Lewis it Clark Frosh 41, Camas, i
Wash. 23 I
Lebanon 41, Toledo 28
Parkrose 45. Concordia 15
St. Helens 47. Scappoose 4$
Oregon Frosh 64, Oregon City 49
Albany 46, Corvallis 44
Hood River 29. Central Catho
lic 27
Mt. Angel 37. Molalla 35
Newberg 56, McMinnville 38
Cottage Grove 46. Eugene 27
Klamath Falls 38. Ashland 33
Roosevelt 58, Washington 38
Grant 49, Lincoln 21
Franklin 45, Commerce 42
Jefferson 34. Benson 16
La Grande 53, Pendleton 46
Baker 52, Mac HI 38
COLLEGIATE
Oregon State 71, Washington 63
Willamette 54, Pacific 40
LInfield 49, Lewis & Clark 42
c Southern Oregon 66, Chicago
State 57
British Columbia 64, Portland 54
Seattle College 69, North Idaho
College 67
Eastern Oregon 67, Boise J. C. 57
Gonnaga 46, Farragut 30
Western Washington 63, Whit
worth 57
Stanford 45, College of Pacific 43
Utah 43, Denver 37
Rocky Mountain 64, Carroll
.Mont.) 35
Wyoming 33, Nevada 32
Occidental 47, California Tech 43
Colorado State 70, Colorado
Mines 43
Humboldt State 49, San Francisco
State 46
Montana State 56, Montana Uni
versity 49
Los Angeles Loyola 40, San Diego
State 31
San Francisco 51, St. Mary's 46
San Jose State 56, Fresno State 36
HEADSPACE
CAN BE
DANGEROUS!
I.el us check your military
.10 - 06 or German mm
Mauser. It costs you only
fl.00 to play safe!
CARLIN'S
Gun Service
2221 South 61h Phone 6442
HERALD AND NEWS,
name player to date who has moved
Into the All-America, and In 11X7
the l.os Angeles lXms' catch was
anything but the Hawaiian Hurri
cane he was the two previous cam
paigns with Saint Mary s.
The Baltimore Colts ate making a
valiant effort to snatch Bobby
Ijtyne. but the Texas T-mun will
also talk to George llalas ol the
Bears before making a decision
Tlie National league shows
strength in this right-about-face on
the part of the graduated athletes.
With the professional football war
only two years old. even the college
kids feel they are more secure In the
elder circuit.
Ed MeKccver, feeling his way
Academy
Defeat
Shuffles
STANDINGS
W.
Gilchrist ... 5
Chiloquin 4
Henley 3
Merrill 3
Sacred Heart 3
Bonanza . 1
Malm 0
Bly 0
Pet. .
.000
.800
.7 SO
.600
.600
?50 ;
000,
.000 :
Sacred Heart Academy's lass to j
the Merrill Huskies lost night on !
Altamout court brought about a
shuttling ol the Klamath county
"B" school basketball standings, al- !
though Gilchrist and Chiloquin re- !
mained one-two on the list. '
The Trojans fell before Merrill 47 i
to 27 and are now tied for fourth !
place In Ihe league, with the Hus- i
kie.s. at three wins and two losses, j
Henley had no trouble taking Blv
into camp. 45-15. and rose to third I
place. Clarence Adams o f Henley i
equalled the Bly score personally
15 (mints. " ;
The Chiloquin Panthers easily ,
won over the Bonanza Antlers 46 :
to 33 in a game played on the Chilo
quin hardwood, to stay in second
place. Even though the Panthers
have been beaten by the Gilchrist
Grlzzhes in league play once, the
uiuvuiii w.s aic sun lavorea to
take Gilchrist when the two meet
In the all-county tournament late
in February.
Gilchrist remained undefeated in
conference play last night bv top
ping the Malln Mustangs 43 to 30.
Astoria Goes
Into Tourney
PORTLAND. Jan. 31 Astoria
perennial entry in the state Inch
school basketball tournament, again
leads the state as the first team to
qualify for this year's championship
playoff at Eugene.
The Fishermen cinched district 10
honors by downing Tillamook last
night, 38-31. "
The state tournament this year
will be held March 16-20 on the
University of Oregon campus.
Other districts will not nut th
finger on a tltllst until late Febru
ary or early March, but strong teams
are beginning to emerge. Some of
the probable tournament entrants
will be Marshfield. district 5: ft lam.
ath Falls, district 4; Springfield, dis-
idric;8Albany-dl,trict7:
a.. red :
Hawkins Counts
9th Round TKO
I ...v,v..,,. ji llri K0y Haw
, kins. 192. of Tacoma. scored a nimh
round technical knockout over Doc
Edwards. 180. of San Francisco. In
meir scheduled 10-round
main j
event of a fight enrd here last night
it was Hawkins first ring appear
ance sipce he broke his right hand
eiRht months ago.
In the preliminaries. Eddie Helms,
138, of Vancouver B. C, was award
ed a TKO In the sixth In his bout
with Red Garrison. 140. of Spo
kane, and Gordon McCrlndle. 141,
Vancouver. B. C drew with Curly
Quails. 148, McChord field 4.
TACOMA Roy Hawkins, 192, Ta- I
coma, TKO Dec Edwards. 180. San
Francisco, 9.
"IF WE PLAN HOW...
We'll have our irrigation completed by Spring!"
Come into the Klamath Concrete Pipe Co. for all your
irrigation luppliei. Check this list for all your needs:
IRRIGATION PIPE
TURNOUTS
HEAD GATES
DRAIN TILE
FLOOD VALVES
Klamath Concrete Pipe Co.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
about as Iho new coach of Ihe
Chicago Dockets, which are to be
kepi in Ihe All-Ai-ieriea by fresh
bankroll men. suiight to do pack
age Job at Notre Dame that would
Include Lujack, but Ihe Atlilrle-ol-the-Year
chose Hut steadying In
fluence uf the Hrais.
Gilmer said he was offered more
by the All-America than the Itcil
sklns gave him. but felt lied be
belter oil m the long run as the
understudy of and eventual suc
cessor to Sammy liuugh.
Lujack being given a four-year
contract at I'Jo.lXK) by the Bears is,
however, a (urthrr Illustration of
how much the new league helped
the combatant.
Herb Pennock
Services Set
KENNKTT SQUARE. Pa., Jan.
31 ifl Baseball pays Its last resin-eta
Monday to one of the
game's greatest pitching stars and
most beloved executives South
paw Herbert P. Pcimock.
The 53-year-uld general mana
ger of the National league s Pltlla
deplua Phillies died yesterday In
New York ol a cerebral hem
orrhage. He will be burled down
In the farm country of Chester
county.
It was Mere that the former
portslde ace -if the Philadelphia
Athletics, Boston Red Sox and
New York Yankees was born
February 10. 1R4. Here he ac
quired the familiar title of "Squire
of Kennett Square" for his non
baseball pastimes of hunting and
riding the hounds.
Two Sub-Par
Pounds Put
Skip In Lead
TUCSON. Arlr... Jim. 31 i,v Be
spectacled Stewart "Skip" Alexan
der. Midplnes. N. C. will be shoot
lug for his first major pro tourna-
, third round of the $10,000 Tnc-
son Open today with a one-stroke
! advantage.
Waiting to snatch the lead If the
youthful ex-Duke university player
, falters In the sub-par pace of 67
j 63139 he has set for the first 36
holes are most of golfclom's biggest
j names.
Leading the contenders, a single
I stroke behind, is the veteran Ryder
j cup player limmy nines of Chicago
; and Tucson. His rounds of 65-66
j an- nine strokes better than par.
Big Vic Ghezzl. former PGA
Open champ from Kansas City.
might have led the parade
' rjrcfPt for an errant puuer. As It
' ne ,,n" "'ird Place to himself
' with 67-651.12.
Starting oft only three strokes
" ,nc P"ce ls ll,p quartet of Bobby
; Locke, the golden golfer from Jo-
! hannesburg. South Afrlra. who
! overcame early trouble with his
1 driver. Ed Furgol. the Ponttac.
' Mich., sharpshooter. Dave Douglas.
ycuiMT Wilmington. Del., profession
al who led the field In the first
rcund with a 63, and ex-serviceman
Chandler Harper of Portsmouth.
Va.
KU Matmen Win
Over Cave Crew
Klnmath Union high school wres
tlers last night whitewashed a grap
ple team from Grants Pass on the
KU court, winning bv a point score
of 48-0.
Of the 10 matches for tcHtn play,
nine went to Klamath on falls and
the other by decision. In addition
there w-ere a down exhibition
matrhrt
! Coach Dutch Simons said the Pel
I wrestlers would get their real test
next week in traveling bouts with
' Salem and Springfield.
CRUIS ALONG
CRUISERS
Link River Boat Works
9.10 FRONT STKKKT
While a couple o( clubs allowed
substantial Increases In attendance,
the Ali-Ameiica coulerriice as a
whole dropped another million dol
lars in 11)47. The first year cost two
million.
Only Ihe Cleveland lliowns and
possibly the Yankees llnlshril III the
black in 11)47.
The Chicago ami Brooklyn fran
chises are all messed up.
Meanwhile, seven of the 10 Na
tional league clubs made money,
How long the pro football war will
continue depends entirely on how
long the present All-America angels
cfftl take It and how much tresh
money can be dug up.
Norway
Skater
Victor
ST. MOItlTZ, Swllzrilullil. Jail.
31 tl'( Norway and Sweden won the
first gold itiedaU In the cllssenslmi
plagurd fifth winter Olympics today
as the bitter hockey war continued
to rage.
Despite an international Olympic
commuter order cancelling the
sgiort, the hockey touruamcul con
tinued and the Amateur Hockey
association team of America, beaten
in Its opening start yesterday.
swamiH'd Poland. 23 to 4.
Twenty-one-year-old Finn Heine
sou of Oslo. Norway, captured the
500-meter 347 yards) speed skating
title III 43.1 seconds, cracking the
! Olympic mark by three-tenths of a
second.
i Two United Slates skaters-Hubert
Kittttrrald and Kenneth Hur-
tholoiuew, both of Minneapolis
I also bettered the record of :43.4 in
j lieiiig Thomas llyberg of Norway for
second place. Their time was :43.2.
Sweden's Mitrtlu Liindstrueni won
; the gruelling 18-kilomeler ia Utile
I more than 10 miles) cross-cuuiitry
i ski race in one hour, 13 minutes and
50 seconds. The rvenl was domi
I uated by Swedish and Norwegian
1 skiers.
: A 4B-year-ol(l London rrhiKcmtor
dealer. H. K. A. llotl. captured the
handicap event III suicidal Crestu
. bobsled run with a mark of 2 min
utes, 58 8 second for three courses
down the 1320-yard, treacherously
j sleep track.
Christopher Flshbacher of tiwlt
' ci land won the o)en Crestu even in
! three minutes, six seconds. Jack
! Ilea ton of New Haven. Conn., Olyin
' pic skeleton bobsled champion in
I 1928, finished second In three min
utes. 2 3 seconds.
March Of Dimes
Benefit Games
A March of Dimes benefit basket
ball card l.i on schedule for tonight
al Klamath Union high school gym.
i between teums representing Kluin
! ath high and Malm.
I The opening game at 7 p. m. will
! put the Klamath Frosh against the
i Malln Frosh, and the KU Wildcats
j will play the Malm sophomore team
in me nuerpiece.
The KU Junior varsity leum is due
to play tonight In a preliminary till
to the Pellran-GrlZ7.ly feature game
at Ashland.
FORT WORTH. Tex.. Jan. 31 'II
Hoss Dollarhldc of Lnkevlew, Ore.,
won the saddle bronc riding conlest
yesterday at the opening of the S'.'nd
annual 10-day southwestern fat
stock show and exposition. Bill
Llnderman of Billings. Mont., took
burcback bronc riding honors.
i
15
EH5
March of Dimes
Music by
MORRISON
McDONALD ORCHESTRA
KLAMATH
ARMORY
Beavers Regain Lead
m m
In Northern Division
T.Tf' " ,.,. .ruined Ihe lead li
rnltVAII.IM. Jan. 31 il'i Oregon Htate resume.. . :
northern division of Hie Pacific Coast 'Z Z Zi
the first of n ..sMlilc "uiake-oi -break foiir-gaine aeilia nm
W" Thewlnveoieiim Hta.e s l.e n four w. I
Washington has won four and lost three, deadlock with
The Heavers look a slrong lead by bin kl a " 1
a flurrv of bankets midway III Ihe first Hall while clicking Husky
scoring with a modllled mun-lo-
man defense They ran Ihe couiil l !
37-X1 at halltliue.
The Huskies posed one lineal III
the last half as both stilt t In ;
reserves 3' nilniites bel.ne Ihe
end at a tune when Oregon Hlate
held a 66-63 lead. The Washington
subs played n better brand of ball
and closed Ihe gup to tin-ill ue.o.e
the Heavers rrcoverrd and fattened
the milium again.
Norm Carey led Ihe scoring with
2J points for Oregon Hlate. Mm
Jack Nichols, who was bottled up
most of the evening on Held shois.
was awarded eight free Ih.ows and
counted a total ol III lo pace Wash
ington. The Heavers and Huskies renew
their rivalry here tonight and llieu
move to Scuttle next week-end lor
two more games. Washington Hlate
rutrrtulns Idaho III the maid s oilier
conference encounter.
Classified Ads lliiiig Kesulls
7
'WWW W V
AT THE
GUN STORE
Regular 16.!i)
SKIS
lllrkury , , uirtul rilsrtl.
Now $ I 95
ItmiUr :;).. '.0
SKIS
k Fttmitti Shi SHirl. I.amlimd'd A
. , , nirini Pdxru , , . luinory,
Now $995
liecular
SKI PANTS
lOfl'r Wool.
Now $250
"GUN STORE
714 MAIN HTIIIIKT
There's aways a good
time waiting at the
Moose Dances
So
the Sports Association is put
ting on the affair. Activities
start at nine. Refreshments
later in the evening.
Come on down.
Make This Your
March of Dimes Dance!
r5A
SATURDAY, JAN. 31, 14
' - w T .... ...... ...
Cummings' RfKvl
Toxidormy Studio kMApJ
Gomo Hoodi V 'J
Tonning I C
Birdi Ruat I
I'h. JIlMt r' Main f uV.
AVAILABLE NOW FOR
LAWN, FLOWER
Regular foedlng should b
numbor one on your leaioial
lawn car program. If you load
your lawn in eatlv iprlng and
again In early fall . , . roieod
btuo ipoti ai they dovelop with
good gran iood you'll have a
lawn to admit , , . on that
give ptldo and comlort.
For lawni, and lor ilowota.
thrubi and lri, too. Us
VIGOnO. It'i Iho complel
plant Iood mad by Swift &
Company. It tuppllci all of lh
many plant food elemonli all
plant rqutr from lh soil.
V COMPUTE PLANT FOOD.
&.LL
n
Saturday
JAN. 31st
Dancing
9:00 to 1:00
Admission
$2.00 Couple
805 Market
Phone 4265