Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 01, 1956, Page 13, Image 13

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    THURSDAY. MARCH 1. 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Sleeper Plays Give Sports
Picture Some Top Chuckles
By JLVIMY BlttsLIN'
, - NE. Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK (NEA) Press
agent claims la the contrary, there
still is some question whether Nan
cy Berg makes more money fall
ing asleep than Bobo Olson.
And while dealing with rest as
a serious topic, the cmcago Black
Hawks have a prize sleeper who
seems entitled to an award from
a top mattress linn. He is Hanlt
Bassen, the goalie, a 22-year-old
from Calgary. Canada.
Playing with the Buffalo Bisons
last year, Bassen toll asleep in
the nets and the Springfield team
knocked 11 goals past him.
Uclcm Coach
Says Nauils
Above Russell
tCS ANGELES UP Coach
Johnny Wooden of UCLA believes
his high-scoring center. Willie
Naulls, is a better all-around
player than Bill Russell of the
University of San Francisco.
"Russell will be on everybody's
All-America team and Player of
the Year and all that," Wooden
said. "He deserves it, but Naulls
is a better all-around player than
P.ussell. Willie can do so many
more things."
Naulls, who is six feet 5 inches,
leads the Pacific Coast Conference
in scoring with 272 points in 12
games for a 22.7 point game
average.
Wooden said that on the Bruins'
eastern swing last December, "the
coaches back there considered
Willie one of the finest pro pros
pects they'd seen."
When USP defeated UCLA. 10
53, in the finals of the Holiday
Festival in Madison Square Gar
den, Naulls outscorcd Russell, 19
points to 17. Both players were
selected on the tournament's all
star team.
Naulls and Russell will tangle
again If the Bruins wirrthe PCC
title as they are expected to do.
UCLA needs only two wins in its
remaining four games to flinch
a tie for the championship. This
Bruins' foe in the opening -NCAA
playoff game would be USF.
Wooden said the 21-year-old
Naulls has improved "immeasur
ably" this season.
"I've never seen a boy so strong
in all oftensive departments,"
Wooden said. "He's an excellent
shooter both Inside and outside.
And he's a tower of strength
under the boards (Naulls leads the
PCC in rebounding)."
It seems that Eassen. in his
eagerness to make good, set a
sleep schedule which called for
14 iiours a night, with a three
hour afternoon nap tossed in. This
allowed him a mere seven hours
in which to rub sleep from his
eyes. He was a bit alow about it
the night of the Springfield game
and he wound up lounging against
the nets, eyes closed.
His performance tint night re
futed, by the way, the journalists'
long-time claims that all shots are
"whistling" or "screaming." Bas
sen neer heard a thintr while
those 11 goals went by him.
Out of this canu a medical opin
ion t iat too much sleep has ruined
as many athletes as loo little.
Lew Jenkins, who was light
weight chaninion for one rioious
period, always believed in this. In
December of 1940. he had a non-
title bout with Fritzie Zivic at
Madison Square Garden, for which
Lew faithfully followed his train
in: ideas.
The Saturday before the fight,
for example, he disappeared from
his training camp. He returned on
Monday with a pocketful of match
books from nearly every saloon in
New Jersey. They proved, of
course, he did not spend his mon
ey foolishly.
Placed in New York. L e-w
promptly went into heavy train
ing. He did not reach his hotel
room until at least tnree each
dawning. On fight day. Friday, he
breezed In at four. When Willie
Ketchum, his trainer, came to
fetch him for the noon weigh-in. he
was Informed by bellhops that
Jenkins had gone ice skating an
hour and a half befors.
Lew arrived at the weigh-in an
hour late, skates dangling over
his shoulder. "Got lost in tne suo
way," he informed the commis
sion. Ketchum took the perpetual mo
tion guy back to the hotel. Jen
kins lit a cigarette, then reclined
TIMEOUT
Build Your Own Boat
BOAT KITS
The Gun Store
714 Main Ph. 3843
on the bed. He was asleep in a
couple of minutes, hat, coat and
cigarette still on.
There were 20 cigar-j mokmg
guys hanging around the, room,
shouting to be beard. Tits phone
rang next to the fighter's ear. He
never moved till seven o'clock.
"I feel great," he announced
and went out to box a bird draw
witn Zivic
"This was a bout between two
finely conditoned athlete.," a box
ing writer intormed the public the
next day.
Then you have, on the other
hand. Sad Sam Zolrjak. the old
American League huxler.
Jimmy Dykes, the manager, saw
bim for the first time during
spring training with Jhe Philadel
phia Athletics.
Zoldak fired and the ball was
hit to third. It was ttirown to first
and the infield whipped it around.
Zoldak never moved. He put bis
gloved hand on Ids left knee.
Tucxed in his chin and stayed mo
tionless. ,
"Is he sick?" D&'kes asked.
"No," a player answered. "He
is sleeping. He always, does this
between batters.
"Oh," Dykes sajd. He, sat back
and got ready for a long sum
mer. Golfers, as a ruhe, are notorious
ly bad advertisements for the bene
fits of a night's lest. Their social
regime dictates that playing 18
holes in the freish air blows the
cobwebs away, tfnd a shower takes
car- of the resl.
Jimmy Demacret. for example,
offers a novel i-xcuse for his dis
dain of sleep. "I don't know where
the arms go," he says.
'And you, Davis! It would help
t, lot it you'd stop trying; that
behind the back dribbling!"
IT'S A SMALL WORLD
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BASEBALL
CLEVELAND Stockholders of
the Cleveland Indians approved
saie of club to a new company
headed by two financiers and Hank
Greenberg.
TENNIS
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Nation
al indoor champion Ulf Schmidt,
Sweden, defeated Hal Schaus of
Florida State 6-0, 6-1 In the first
round of the Masters Tournament.
MENTON, France Tony Vin
cent. Miami, Fla., stopped Lord
Mexborough, Great Britain, 6-1
6-3 to gain the quarter-finals of
the Mentor-tournament.
ItACINC-
MIAMI, Fla. Guardian 2nd
($178.80) led all the way to score
a two length victory in the $64,500
Hialeah Turf Handicap.
ARCADIA, Calif. Colonel
Maclt ($18.80) triumphed by three
lengths in the $23,250 Fitzgerald
Handicap at Santa Anita.
111
MILD MELLOW
MAGNIFICENT
6 yrt. old Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
86 proof WORTHY OF A GREAT NAME
Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Inc., New York, N. Y.
4S QT.
Ekmht - '
Wkjsry
taicA-i mrt
Klamath Sons.
Townies Win
Tourney Spot
Sandv Miller's Cliiloquin Town-
ies and Elu;ood Miller's Klamath
Sons finishqd the Klamath Indian
Reservation Basketball Tournament
with triumfihs Wednesday night at
Chiloquin as the elimination tour
nament drew to a close.
These two clubs will represent
the locaJ reservation in this
month's ATI-Indian Invitational cage
tourney, which will also be played
at Chiioqialn High School, and like
the elimination action will be spon
sored by the Reservation .laycees.
The Townies whipped Spraguc
River TW5, while the Sons won a
berth by topping the Beatty Lak
ers 52-411.
Spragme River held the high-scoring
Gene Gentry to 16 points Wed
n.srtoir venine. but Vernon Joe and
Clay Miller took up the slack to
pull ttie Townies iiuuusu "
jt,i.-i thipo.Hav tournament.
Joe soored 28 and Miller 14 to lead
the Chiloquin team to their (ri
nmnhJ The Townies took a 50-26
halftime lead and held off a late
game rally by Sprague River for
the win.
Kirk Curran ana ju
pacea the losing sprague ivivc.
Club with 16 points apiece. Irw n
Cruine and Vic Bodner tossed In
12 joints apiece ior opru: !";..
die Kiamatn eons gut
scaring etiort irom uim
tliey overcame a Denny y .
quarter lead to win me scuu.m
Invitation tournament berth. Mer
lin Martinet added 11 ior me wa
ning Sons. High for the Lakers
was Jeff Tecumseh with 10. Bun
ny Weiscr tallied nine. The third
quarter bulge favored Beatty, 33-27.
SKIN DIVER OVER 60
TULSA, Okla. I Unlike over 60
fellow bankers, who after a day s
u u niuipr about their gar
dens, N. M. (Mike) Hullngs is apt
to go skin diving or ny
plane Or he may stroke his way
around a golf course, go sailing
or Ice skating or throw himself
n.i., mm civic project I n
which he usually Is engrossad. The
skin diving bug bit him last sum
mer in Florida where he took up
the sport at the mvnanon m
class learning fundamentals. Late
i., t.rHnfr a bank vice president,
took to the air in a light plane, his
first piloting since
K. C. Jones
Draws Seat
On SF Bench
SAN FRANCISCO LP K. C.
Jones draws a seat on the bench
for the first time in two years to
morrow night when the national
champion University of San Fran
cisco Dons go after their 49th
straight basketball triumph.
Jones, Ineligible for National
collegiate Athletic Assn. tourna
ment play, will be replaced in the
starting lineup against Pepper-
dine at Los Angeles by sophomore
Gene Brown, Coach Phil Woolpert
saia toaay. Tne change will give
tans their first look at the club
woolpert will floor at Corvallis.
Ore., March 16-17 when the Dons
open defense of their NCAA title.
How much will Jones' absence
nun USF a chances?
"it s hard to assess. I can't
really say," Woolpert admits. "At
best it's only an hypothesis, but
obviously you can't lose a man of
casey s ability and not feel a
loss.
Jones, 6-2 guard and caotaln
generally is credited by basketball
experts with being the man who
has made the Dons click through
its wins in a row and this despite
the presence of two-time All
J&IKh ZiwE I- II n .orr , ,f the. national
3Lraa-T,?,M6 I J J A yf scoring race.
-:
Ekf 6H10 STATE'S SSa'm .
KmSp s-ii jump shot j - -, 1
DYNAMO f V .flA
RATES 1 INFORMATION
Harold I New.
MARKET PLACE
of Hi
KLAMATH RAdkl
Mild Eaolanadt . B0o fill
CLASSIFIED
On dav
Two dyi"".
I nr days .
Four days .
Flv days .
- per word So
. pr word te
- Pr word 12c
. por word 18e
for your convini.nco. pli Tour 7d
lo run -Until rurUi.r Nolle.? th!S
when you call to cancel yii arl
U M ccni" 'mUm Ch,rW " a
CLASSIFIED PISPLAY
SSTv.? pr column inch
JO inch.l in mnnlh
10 inchea In month'
an im.h i
120 Irn-h.. ln monlh
101
.I
.ail
. .,.. ln monin a-i
Pirkuo Rat. (sam. coor r.,, ,1
(or a aervic. ehara. of IS cntl
DEADLINES
NiuXun''ilJnday 4
-. .. . . ,or ounaay.
noon Saturday for Monday.
ADJUSTMKMTC
mS.. m!",' "'" for Aiuitm.nU
without delay. Th. Herald a. Mawi
reserve, th. rlihl lo ,u.Sh, "TS.i
V"' Ad 'y and will
. nr... 1,1 ,,,.on " publica-
; ,ri rr! wt nnt nnion af
077 Scoring Led By Foster
America Bill Russell in the llnum
Russell is the man who dominates
the Dons' offense and defense with
his 6-10 height, but Jones is the
floor leader and key to the entire
operation.
Woolpert has known since early
In the year that Jones, in his
fourth year of competition, would
he ineligible for the tournament.
But the only action Brown has
seen hp been as Jones' replace
ment after victory was assured.
W YOU'RE HANDLING Tl f HOW P0VDU KNOW? ( BUT THEN, -0
S THE CAB LIKE A 'J WVE NEVER SEEN I i AVMMS L L
PVl VETERAN ME HANDLE A J GO FOR MEM )
I VIlmXft i hvVETERAN ofexperience) )
BECAUSE THEV KNOW A
CAR FROM
JIM OLSON
MOTORS
DaSOTO-PtYMOUTM
IS EASY ON THE EVE,
THE POCKET0OOKAND
EASY TO RIDE IN.
USED TRUCKS
THAT ARE EASY ON THE POCKETBOOK
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completely rebuilt unit with oil
new 70018 8-ply tiret. Com
binotion removoble I t 0 c k
rack, 7.9.
$1195
1953 Dodgt Vi ton pickup.
An CKtro-cleon, lew-nilffagt
truck with large heater nJ
new red ftniih.
1955 GMC Vi ton pickup with
long box and heavy duty rear
bumper. All new 6-pljr rub
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$1695
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See Our Complete Selection of USED CARS and TRUCKS
r im
Ukes Settinq
New Records
In Flag Drive
LOS ANGETjES (UP) UCLA Is
racing toward the Pacific Coast
Conference basketball champion
ship at a record scoring pace,
statistics from the PCC commis
sioner's office showed today.
The Bruins, paced by their
mighty one-two scoring punch of
center Willie Naulls and guard
Morrie Taft, are undefeated ln 12
conference games. They have aver
aged 81.4 points a game to date,
fur above the old PCC team mark
of 75. points set by UCLA two
years ago.
Naulls leads Individual scorers
with 272 points in 12 games for a
22.7 point game average. Taft' is
second with 248 points and a 20 7
average. Others with more than
200 points are Larry Beck, Wash
ington State, 245; Dave Oambee,
Oregon State, 234; and Bill Bond,
Stanford, 224.
UCLA set a new game scoring
record last weekend when it scored
108 points against Oregon. Oregon's
total of 89 was the highest ever
made by a losing team in PCC
play and the combined total of 197
points was another record.
Ranked behind UCLA in team
scoring are Southern California,
70.8 points a game; Stanford, 66.8.
and California, 66.4.
Defensively, Washington holds a
narrow lead over Southern Califor-
ma, naving allowed 7.7 points a
game to 58.5 for the Trojans.
Washington also leads in field
goal defense, yielding opponents
only 32.4 per cent of thel rfield
goal tries. Southern California also
is second ln that department with
a 32.7 per cent mark.
Southern California ranks first in
field goals shooting percentages.
The Trojans have made 40.2 per
cent oi their field goal attempts,
followed by UCLA, 30.5; California
39.1 and Stanford, 37.4.
ln rebounding. UCLA is lops,
grabbing 523 rebounds to Its op
ponents 454 for a 58 per cent rec
ord. Bob Blake of California has the
best shooting percentage for field
goals with 59 baskets in 127 at
tempts for 46 4 per c ent. Taft is
second with 45 8 and Jack Lovrich
of Southern California third with
45.7.
Doyle Perkins and Ron Patnoe.
both of Washington, ranked one
two In free throw shooting. Perkins
has made good on 38 of 48 for
79.2 per cent and Patnoe has 40
out of 51 for 78.5 per cent.
Jumping Johnny Foster captured
all but two of the scoring honors
during the past Oregon Technical
Institute basketball season as he
headed every statistical column ex
cept the personal fouls and field
goal percentage departments.
In the total season's scoring
Poster tallied 377 points . for an
average of 15.8 points in each of
the 24 games he played ln. Foster
also led ln the field goal and free
throw numbers with 136 shots good
from the field and 105 more from
the charity line.
Other highs for the former all-
state prep star from Portland's
Central Catholic were recorded in
the rebound and free throw shoot
ing departments. Foster's total
number of sweeps off the back
boards figured out to be 269, and
the 6-2 forward's accuracy from
gift shot alley was .803 alter hitting
105 or 139 tosses..
Ted Fischer led the Owls in field
goal accuracy and personal fouls.
The Coos Bay freshman hit an even
.500 from the field on 74 of 148
Nam
John Foster
J. McCutcheon
Ted Fischer
Jerry Fasteen
Bob Frost
Bobby Whitman
Richie Perkins
Paul Hatcher
Terry Blair
Calvin Smith
Others
Totals
Opponents
turn
a
li :
FGA-FGM PCT. FTA-FTM
284-138 .479 139-105
197-72 .365 112-84
148-74 .500 82-49
158-62 .392 101-64
127-53 .417 74-45
104-38 .365 74-48
86-31 .360 72-44 ,
81-28 .341 28-17
55-17 .309 25-13
17-5 .294 9-5
255-114 .444 136-83
1581-648 .409 893-584
JOHNNY POSTER
. . Tech's high-pointer
PCT.
.803
.750
.598
.634
.608
.640
.011
.607
.520
.556
.610
.654
tttcmpts, and in the foul column.
."lschcr was charged with 73 as he
won the year's "hatchman' honors
on the Tech squad.
John McCutcheon, 6-3 center
from Eugene's Willamette High,
followed Foster in the total point
list with 149 counters, and was
number two after Foster ln the
number of free throws good with
84. Foster and McCutcheon Were
tied with 49 personals apiece tor
second best In that department,
Fischer's 74 field goals was sec
ond high. McCutcheon held down
the runnerup laurels in two more
departments, free throw accuracy
and rebounds. McCutcheon' s foul
shooting percentage finished at
.750 and ln rebounding, John closed
out the regular season with a total
of 149 snares.
As a team, OTI hit .409 In field
goal shooting as they made 648
of 1581 field goal attempts. In free
throw accuracy, the Tech hoopsters
tallied 584 of 893 tries for a .654
percentage.
The final tabulation of regular
season scoring for the Owls Is:
WANT AD
CLASSIFICATION
DIRECTORY
A DEATH NflTirtc
IB FUNERAL NQTlrr.
A CARD OF THANKS
IN MEMORIAM
C FUNERAL HOMES
w FLORISTS . .
1 MEETING NOTICES
2 LOST AND imiun
4 GENERAL NOTICES
PERSONALS
PUBLIC CHARITY SERVICK
B TRANSPORTATION
10 SERVICES
1 DO-IT-YOURSELF
2 HEALTH
3 EDUCATIONAL
14 HELP WANTED, FEMALI ,
14 HELP WANTED, MALI
18 SITUATIONS WANTED
12 ROOMS FOR RENT
24 APARTMENTS FOR RENT
24 HOUSES FOR RENT
2 REAL ESTATE WANTED
29 REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE
JO RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE
32 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
34 FINANCIAL LOANS
36 BUILDING REMODELING
38 FUEL HEATING
3 FOOD PRODUCE
40 BOATS-PITS-SPORTS-HOBBIIS
41 RADIO TV MUSIC
42 LIVESTOCK POULTRY
44 MACHINERY
45 MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT
44 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
48 MISCELLANEOUS TO IXCH.
51 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALI
35 AUTOMOTIVE
TP PF REB. Aver. G
377 49 269 , 15.5 24
228 49 149 ' 8.7 26
197 73 47 7.4 26
188 37 111 8.5 22
151 48 113 5.8 26
124 27 33 7.7 17
106 24 11 5,1 21
73 44 33 4.9 15
47 20 19 3.6 13
15 3 2 3.0 5
311 58 184 70.0
1827 464 947 70.0 26
1831 70.1 26
New UW Grid Mentor
Ranks High in Salary
SEATTLE in The University sure last month. He was replaced
of Washington will pay $17,000 a by Briggs last week.
TROL'T STEPS
HUNGRY HORSE. Mont. WTo
build a mountain highway, a creek
was guided into a culvert but it
was too sleep for spawning trout
to make the grade up Flathead Riv
er's South Fork. Steps were built
along the 138-foot culver for the
trout to climb. Five series of three
sheet metal baffles In each series
provide slack water, from which
the trout can leap.
year one of the top salaries In the
football coaching profession lo tne
coach selected to help cure the
Huskies' grid ailments and, they
hope put them on the Rose Bowl
trail.
A four-year contract calling for
that amount was approved
Wednesday by the Student Board
of Control for 31-year-old Darrell
Royal, Mississippi State coach.
Royal was named Tuesday to re
place the fired Johnny Cherberg
as director of Husky football for
tunes. The contract was the longest
and largest ever signed by the
school for a coach and makes Roy
al one of the highest paid in his
profession.
While it is topped by the 18.500
UCLA reportedly pays Red Sand
ers, It exceeds by $2,000 the sal
ary given Bud Wilkinson, who was
Royals' coach when the latter was
a star quarterback for the Okla
homa Sooners.
Other comparative salaries In-1
elude the $18,200 paid Jim Talum
while coach at Maryland.
To earn the pay. Royal, working
with George Briggs, Washington's
new athletic director, must work
to restore harmony to a football
team and campus split by dis
sension since the end of the 1955
season.
The Huskies troubles started
when a group of players, protest
ing what they called Cherberg's
called for the firing of the coach,
"tyrannical" coaching methods,
Cherberg. who had worked three
years at $13,000 a year, was re
hired conditionally by the Board of
Regents for 1954 but was sacked
In January by athletic director
Harvey Cassill on grounds he had
failed to restore harmony.
The firing stirred a new rumpus
and Cassill resigned under pres-
During the controversy preced
ing rja.sslll s departure, the exist
ence of a "downtown fund" sup
ported by alumni and businessmen
for Washington athletes was made
public.
Both Royal and Briggs have de
clined comment on the fund, say
ingas newcomers I hey know
nothing of It or Its uses.
As another preliminary to re
organization, Briggs Wcdncsdny
announced Jim Piltman, 29, will
come to Washington with Royal
Pittman has been line coach at
Mississippi State and will have the
same Job at Washington.
Royal hns said he will have three
or four other assistants but will
not name them until later.
Sports Notes
Former Yankees Spud Chandler
and Hube Dahlgren are scouting
lor the Kansas City Athletics.
If Bob Boyd falls to stick with
the Baltimore Orioles tills spring
nc will get a chance with Van
couver, B.C., In the Pacific Coast
League. Vancouver has put ln a
claim for the ex-White Sox first
baseman.
Bill Volsellc. who appeared ln
72 International League games for
Richmond. Va . last season, will
pitch for the Virginians again this
year.
Swaps, winner of the 1955 Ken
lucky Derby, has been nominated
for tlw March 17 limning of the
s.'iO.OOO Gulfstrcam Park Handicap
at Hallandale, Fla.
Bob Borglieranl, San Jose Slate
basketball and baseball alar, for
merly pitched both right handed
and left handed.
IB FUNERAL NOTICES
KrrTrR Alvln BaxtSr Kftr.
February S. Huhant of Mabel. Tul
lak., C.lifornla. Brother of Olan. Miri.
r"".- Oreon. Francla and Gilbert. Y.ll
vlll.. Arranai. runeral aervlcrs rrl
"y. March a. Ward1. Klamath Fun.r.l
Home. 2X1 u.m V.ult .ntooibm.nt,
Klamath Memorial Park.
S.MrT.H T"". February in. Mother
of Ceor. J.. C.mobell. Minnesota.
Blrhjrd c Porlla-d. Orefon, Jaeob.
Seoul Korea and Dr. Jarkaon Smith.
Seattle, Wi. hint-ton. Mrt. Tarkell
Tweet and Mre. Olaf Auttad. Klamalh
Fall!. Mrt Rnhart rul. ,,.!
City. California. Funeral eervlcei Sat
urday. March 3. Warn". Klamath Fu
neril Heme, II a.m. Interment Klam
ath Memorial Park.
C FUNERAL HOMES
OHAIRS Memnrlal Chiml. Klamath
Falla. Or., phon. 34SS.
jyj" Jflannlli Funeral Rome. t3
Hleh S, Phon. MM
1 MEETING NOTICES
Crater Lake Lodge No.
211, A.F. & A.M. will
hold a stated communi
cation at the Scottish
Rite Temple, Thurs
day Evening. March 1.
at 8:00. Visiting brethren welcome.
tteiresnments.
John C. Ferrell, W.M.
KLAMATH LODGE NO. 77 A.F. cV
A.M. will hold a special
communication Friday
evening March a, at
7:30 p.m. Work In the
E.A. Degree. Visitors
and members are cordially Invited.
Geo. A. Boudon, W.M.
2 losTandf6und
LOST R.d toy male P.klnffeM, an
were to "Runty." Reward. Phnn. Mrt.
Kelly Robinetta, 0363 dayi: 2-13H after
RALPH'S GUN SHOP
BAUSCH and LOMB SCOPE DEALER
Cuff Compintator Sole! and Initollotion
Teekalcal A4tIc AbMl CBeaee Barrel est Chanbf W.ra
Klamath's Leading Gun Shop Aik Anyone!
IU H. Bread Neii Dear te I If. Hall. a
i I :iy
4 h?7Tf'S" -
"SOW"
2
LOST GLASSES idvtrtUed trM Dr.
Wm T Hodnon. T15Mln.
LOST. SATUHDAY afternoon, vicinity
of HomerUI nd -FVtMol, one-ytir-o.fi
Golden Labrador. White eheal, nck
hair cllnpd. tbw vhlt n on hind
fool. Reward. Call 3276, Luce Caft.
or 4B22 Homed).
STRAYFD from anS Jefferson, blar
hradnr female. 1D3S l cena No. Iio
Phone A0:i0.
REWARD offered for return of mltv
In Beagle hound, font alnre Sunday
I'm from smppinfion Addition. iaii
2-41083.
PAIR OF rhild'a eiaiiei toit near
fair-view Sfhool Mirnon framea in
"reen allljiator cut. Call 3-1437 after
7.
nr.WA.nn Ln.t. 1art black Labra
dor retriever wearing illver chain col-
iar. raoien la no, 307113. namea
m, I. att ieen on Eait Main.
Phone 3-IA13 with any Information.
ajtl
HUDDLE Johnny Vaught, left, Mnnmippi coach, and Navy'i
Eddie Erdelatz take time out from duck hunting hard by Morton,
Ark , to diM-uss football. Thev are experts on subject of decoys.
Legal Notice
NOTICE Or LANDOWNERS
MEETINO KLAMATH
ORAINACiC DISTRICT
Notlr. I. hereby elven that the reau-
Iar annual tneetlnc of the Landowner!
of the Klemalh Dratnaae Dlilrlrt will
ne neia el tne oriir. or tne uniriet
No. 13 Melhae Bide. Klamath TalU.
Oreffnn, at 1:30 o'clock PH. on Sat
urday. Marcn 31. ib.vi. wnicn mceuna
le held for the purpoee of elertlnl one
Supervisor to lerve for a term of
three yeera nd for th. transection of
uch other builneia as may com. b
for. th. m.etln.
C. L L,-a.let. Serr.laiy.
Ne. SOt March 1. t and IS. ISM.
1IOO WILD
CHARLESTON, W. Vs. I The
man said his dogs had trailed an
animal for more than 10 minutes,
but when he rearhed the dogs only
the head was left. The hunter sent
the head lo the Conservation De
partment to find out what It was.
Oame Chief C. O. Handley told
him: the Jaw of a pig. "Apparent
ly your dogs picked It up along
the trail and quit the hunt to eat
It," Handley explained.
'