D. Moyer Defends Crown HONOLULU (UPI) Denny Moyer. reportedly having weight prohlems, makes his first defense of the world junior middleweight title tonight when he faces Hono lulu s Stan Harrington. The state Boxing Commission Monday turned down the Portland i Ore.) champ's request to hold the weigh-in two hours earlier than stipulated in the contract. It is vt for 1 p.m., HST IB p.m EST) today. Moyer had asked to go on the scales at 11 a.m., local time. The limit is 154 pounds. It will be Moyer'.? first defense of the crown sine he won it from the veteran Joey Giamhra last October. Promoter Sam lchenose said he expects a capacity crowd of 5.500 at Civic Auditorium for Hawaii's first championship bout in 10 years. The fight is scheduled to slart at 2 a.m., EST. Moyer is regarded as a clear cut favorite. He has a record of, 38 wins and eight losses, none of the defeats coming via knockout. Harrington, a 20-year-old cam paigner with 58 fights behind him, is noted as a good puncher but lacks Moycr's boxing ability. The challenger will be seeking to go 15 rounds for the first time. He might use his big punch to try and end things earlier. Danny Rodriguez, Mover's trainer, has scoffed at reports of Denny s having trouble with the scales. "He was down to 156 pounds after his final workout and will make the weight easily," Rodri guez said. Bui other reports were that Moyer came to town weighing 160 pounds and had been able to shed only two of them in the gym. He has sparred consistently in heavy sweatsuits despite warm weather here and appeared in a heavy rubber suit for his final workout on Sunday. The bout shaped up as a wide oxn affair. Harrington likes to carry the fight as does Moyer. "We plan to force the action (nr 15 rounds." Rodriguez said. "Denny pressed Giambra nearly the entire distance and plans to do the same here." Ted Kawamura, Harringtons manager, said that his hoxer was in "peak condition" and predict ed a victory. PAGE It HKRALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Tuesday. February If, 1963 7 v f . r. - xV3 mv .... kiii. m. Oregon Get At State, Seattle Large Berths By United Press International Seatlle. Utah State and Oregon State will comprise half the field the NCAA far west regional basketball tournament. The three independent teams were named Monday to join the winner of the Western Athletic Conference, probably Arizona State, 'n a first round double-header. The two games will be played at McArthur Court in Eugene on Monday night, March II, accord ing to H. B. Lee, chairman of the Western selection committee. Ore gon Stale will play Seattle and Utah State the WAC king. The two victors will collide with the kings of the Big Six and West Coast Athletic Conference at Pro vo, Utah, .March 15-16. The winner there heads for the nationals. Seattle's records is now 17-4, Oregon State's is 14-6. and Utah Slate's 19-5. Arizona State has a 20-2 mark. The West Coast Athletic confer ence and Big Six races are still dogfights with three teams in the running bolh loops. USF (641 is at UOP 0-6 in the WCAC tonight, but the big battle is at Oakland Auditorium where the once beaten quintets of St. Mary's and Santa Clara col lide. Pepperdine 12-51 and Loyola FULLMER MAKING READY Former middleweight champ Gene Fullmer is under going interuiv training at the Thunderbird Hotel in Las Vegas for his Saturday at tempt to regain the title from Dick Tiger of Nigeria. Seconds after this photo was taken Monday, Fullmer knocked out sparring partner Eddie Hickman, left, of Lot Angeles, with a right. UPI Telephoto Current Golfers Can't Last Long As Old-Timers Played Candy Spots To Run Today ARCADIA. Calil. (UPI) - The lnng-dclaved winlcr drhut nf tin beaten Candy Spols was scheduled to take place at Santa Anita to d;tv. Although the Hex C. Ellsworth s lahle entered Space Skates along wilh Candy Spots, trainer M. A. Tenney was definite in his assur ance at the time he entered the horses that Candy SKits would start. The debut was scheduled in a $10,000 allowance purse named Ihe Laguna Beach. II drew a lield ol eight for the six-furlong test for 3-year-olds. Ily OSCAR FRAI.EV DPI Sports Writer MIAMI UJPli The current- day stars of golf such as Arnold Palmer, (!arv Player and Jack Nicklaus can't hope to last as long as the old-timers did, for mer PGA president George Jaco bus said today. "It's simply a matter of sup ply against demand," he insisted alter winding up the national baseball players golf champion ship which is one ol his "babies." "There have to be new stars coming over the non.on every year merely because there are so many players today and the purses are so linancially attrac tive." Jacobus should know. For this handsome man wilh Hie blue eyes and the sleel gray hair is remembered as the "fa ther" of professional golf's winter tour. Today they are playing for more than a million dollars prize money. When I took over after being elected president of Ihe PGA in 10.13." he recalls with a smile. 'tliey were playing 10 nr 12 win- ler tournaments for alxiut $.V,000. Today they pay more than twice that much in one tournament and they have one week alter week." linger Than Any Jacobus, as, d.ipier and brisk as he was .10 years ago, was the first U.S. -born president of the PGA and it is a tribute to him that he served longer than any other head of Ihe pros, being PGA president for seven consecu tive years. Another tribute to his bilily and personality is that he has been head professional at the same club in Ridgewood, N.J., for 49 years. Genial George was labeled by the late Granlland Rice as the lirst of the "big hitters" of golf. but he prefers to remember as his chief contribution having been the man who started putting the emphasis on junior goll. "What belter monument could any man ever want than my kids," he said. "For 18 straight years every kid in my club who went lo college has been a mem ber nf his college golf team. The baseball players tourna ment was founded by Jacobus, and the Mrrl. held at Miami Springs Golf Club, was one nf the finest, lint George looks hack fondly on the lieginning when Babe Ruth and Paul Waner were among Ihe top rometilors and fudge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the former baseball commission er, was in annual attendance. Names Greatest Ak Jacobus who were tlie greatest players of all lime on Ohio State Holds Key Cage Position By GARY KALE UPI Sports Writer Ohio State, bearing a two-sea son grudge against top-ranked Cincinnati, held a key position to day in anticipation of a revenge battle with the Bearcats in the 196.1 NCAA college basketball tournament. The Buckeyes, with the help of Gary Bradds' .11 points, remained in a first-place tie with Illinois the Big Ten Conference race by subduing Michigan State, 87-77, Monday night. inois snapped back from a two-game losing streak to defeat Purdue, 87-79, and slay in the running for a tournament berth. Eight at-large teams, including third-ranked Loyola of Illinois, al ready have accepted invitations to next month's NCAA tourney The seven others who entered the 25-team field Monday are New York University, Colorado State, Texas Western. Oklahoma City University, Seatlle, Oregon State and Utah State. Accept NIT Bids The National Invitation Tourna ment (NIT) corralled three schools for post-season play Mi llie fairways and he'll quickly name Walter Hagcn, Bobby Jones and Ben Hogan. And he has glow ing words for three of his pro teges, namely Byron Nelson, Jug McSpaden and Jimmy Thomson. "But you can't ever come right out and say that anybody of any one particular era was the best of them all," he argues. "I feel that a champion of any era could have hit the top in any other. In olhcr words. Hagen or Hogan or Jones would have been sensa-l A IS) sV M I tinnal today while Palmer would 1AD W lYlCCT have been a show-stopper hack then, too." The pros score better today be cause of more finely gloomed courses, lielter equipment and longer ball and yet "you have to consider frame of mind and the 'touch' a man has at one given moment, he concludes. But he does hold that Palmer and his playmates of the moment can't hope to match Ihe loneevitv of Ihe Hagens, Joneses and Ho gans. Because it is the opinion of Jacobus that golf still is in its infancy and. with a continua tion of the rising national econ omy, there is no telling how high in the sky is the limit. S 4 .' 4 ' ' r ,., ...... .... . ' . . ' - V X v r 1 College Scores College Basketball Itesulls Bv United Press International FAST Upsala 87 St. Peter's 86 Boston Coll. 59 Northeastern 5.1 Huston U. 72 Tufts 51 Iiyola i 111. i 70 SI. John's "N.V.i 47 St. Anselm's 88 Merrimack 62 Carnegie Tech 55 Mt. Union 51 Rider 86 Wilkes 57 SOUTH lnoir Rhyne 84 Wofloid 66 Mercer 45 Erskine 44 iibtun 6.1 Tulane 6t Hellarmine 84 Marian 71 ItetlK'ook. 104 Savannah St 9.1 Manama 75 Iniisiana St. 71 Vanderbilt 6!t Kentucky 67 Morgan SI 72 Hampton 69 Spring Hill Mississippi 72 Florida 61 Flotida Southern 96 Rollins 78 Furman 70 Virginia Tech 64 Mississippi St. 86 Georgia 75 IxHiiviana Coll. 9t Howard i.Ma.) 78 MIDWEST inois 87 Purdue 7W Entering Fourth Day BUFFALO, N.Y. lUPH The 60th annual American Bowling Congress Tournament went into its fourth day of activity today as teams moved in from nol-too- distant points, each intent on up setting the leaders. After Ihe brisk opening weekend nf ceremonies and with Frank llokas nf Gary, Ind.. crowned 'Joe Rowler." Ihe tournament settles down to the work at hand determining the 1963 champions. Shakily occupying the various leaderships today are: Team Miller llish Life nf Liv onia. Mich.. 2907. Singles Dick Hughes. Raltimore. Md , 674. Doubles Olio Krueger and Jerry quinlan. Findlay, Ohio. 1250. All Events Dick Ward, Carey, Ohio, IBM). Booster learns Short T.V., Corn ing. N Y., 26.10. 13-61 also play in Los Angeles in a fight between a pair of WCAC also rans. The Big Six may not produce a winner until the final day or it might even take a post-season playoff. Stanford (5-.1) hosts UCL 3-3 Friday and the Bruins meet spoil er Cal Saturday. Washington (6-4) has no official conference action. Both Stanford and Washington close out their seasons on the road, while the Bruins are at home. Meanwhile, latest unofficial Big Six scoring statistics showed a threo-man battle raging. Gordy Martin of USC has hooped 169 points in eight games for a 21.1 average, Walt Hazzard of UCLA was second with 121 in six for a 20.2 pace and Stanford's Tom Dose third with 158 for eight and 19.7. Rounding out the top five are Washington's Ed Correll (15.7) and a tie between Washing ton's Dale Easley and California's Camden Wall (14.7). In Ihe latest West Coast Ath letic Conference Statistics, Steve Grary of St. Mary's continues to roll. He has hit 145 in six games for a 24.2 mark. Far behind trail Pepperdine's Harry Dinnel (18.91 USF's Ollie Johnsoit (16.5), Pep perdine's Bob Warlick (16.01, and Santa Clara's Joe Weiss ( 15.0 1 Latest UPI ratings showed that so many of the nation's top 10 were beaten , over the weekend that Stanford's split with Califor nia did not harm the Cards' status. Stanford, now 14-6, wound up tied with Ohio State for seventh place. The Cards were eighth last week. But Oregon State, which also split, was dropped from 10th to 13th. The Beavers also have a 14-6 record. The UCLA Bruins mysteriously skidded from 15th to 19th. They have a 15-S record andi were idle last weekend. In a Coast game Monday night it was Whitman 73 Linfield 71 in a Northwest Conference game, Mickoski Leads WHL Scorers ami (Fla.), Providence and Canf sius. Loyola starts tourney play at Evanston, III., March 11 against either the Mid-American or Ohio Valley Conference champion, while NYU faces another eastern at-large selection in a triplehead er at Philadelphia March 11. Colorado State, Texas Western and Oklahoma City, as well as the Southwest Conference titlist, play in a doubleheader at Lub bock, Tex., March 9. Seattle, Ore gon Stale and Utah State, along with the Western Athletic Confer ence champion, are grouped for doubleheader. Date and site will be announced later. Providence won the NIT in 1961. Almost Counted Out Ohio State had almost been counted out as a potential rival for Cincinnati, which surprised the Buckeyes and Jerry Lucas in the NCAA championship round the last two years. And now that. Cincinnati . has had a 37-game winning streak snapped, the; Bucks eagerly await a chance for a return match. Bradds has kept the spark alive as the conference's leading scorer and the two Illini losses enabled Ohio State to deadlock tor Ihe league lead. Bill Small tallied 32 points for Illinois against Purdue. His 20 points in the second half helped overcome a 4.1-:i8 Purdue lead at intermission and seal litlh-ranked Illinois' 14lh victory in 18 starts A stubborn Minnesota team stayed a half-game back of the Big Ten leaders as the Gophers received a 22-point performance liom Mel Northway in beating Wisconsin, 72-48. Loyola Snaps Back Third-ranked Ixivnla bounced back from a Saturday loss that cracked the Ramblers' unbeaten streak at 21 games by whipping St. John's of New York, 70-47, but ninth-ranked Colorado was knocked out of the Big Eight Con ference lead when the Bulls were surprised by Missouri, 60-58. l.oyola. held to its lowest score nf the year, hit 28 of .19 foul shots in defeating SI. John's. Ron Mil ler tallied 16 points for the Ram blers, and Jerry Harkness, the team's leading scorer, noiols. Oklahoma Stale look over sole clockcn 41 4 seconas ann nuooipn possession of the Bis Eight load was urnea at sp""s. boui when Colorado lost lh e.ime nnlhave done much better time. !a basket by Missouri's Rav Bob Rudolph felt the Russians had Icarey wilh seven seconds re lan advantage over him and most giaimng. Carey scored 19 points i"' fie other skaters from Amcri lor Missouri, while Ken Charlton. ca and Europe at the Hakone I w ho had tied the came at 58 all meet "Thry went up there ahead ol everybody and got the feel of the track and the atmosphere," he said. "They also were not both ered by tlie high altitude. They have been trSining at a very high altitude in Russia and their lungs have become much more accli mated ." I Rudolph came up to Kannzawa irnore than a week ago to get in some practice skating. But it was so crowded with Japanese skaters I that he went to nearby ljkc iSuwa instead I "About all this, v V J ONLY HURTS FOR LITTLE WHILE And you think you got troubles. This pained expression appeared at high school wrestling tournament at Waverly. The boy won dering how he got into this situation is Roy Crandall of Oelwein. He lost the match. UPI Telephoto American Skater Ready KARUIZAWA. Japan iUPH -A speedy American sprinter from Illinois hopes to use tips picked up from Russia's world champion speed skater, Evgcny Grishin, to wrest the 500 meters speed skat ing crown Irom tlie Russian in the world championships here this week. "We're just two-tenths of a sec ond apart, really." said Edward Rudolph Jr., Northhrook, III.. an interview with United Press International. Rudolph and Grishin are old foes on Hie track hut "good friends" olf the ire. having com peted against each other in three1 previous meets. Grishin look first place in an international meet at Hakone. .la- put in 15iPan- lavl wecscnu mm uuuuipu jlinished second. The Russian Brosnan Holding Out On Cincinnati By FRED DOWN UPI Sports Writer It looks like Jim Brosnan, who made headlines a few years back with "the long season." is going to make 'em again with "the long wait." The big Cincinnati relief pitcher made many a face in baseball turn red when he published "The Long Season," an inside look at the game, in 1960. Jim has fore- saken the Shakespearean bit this winter but now he's making throats gulp in the Cincinnati front office because of his con ception of what a pitcher with a 4-4 record should earn. It looks like Jim is going to be our tough man," said General Manager Bill Dewitt of the Reds Monday alter announcing the signing of 21-game winner Joey Jay. "He definitely doesn't like the contract we sent him. Brosnan had a 10-4 record in 1961, when Ihe Reds won the Na tional League pennant, and prc- sumbaly was cut $.000 or $4,000 on the basis of his inferior show ing in 1962. Jay, ace of the Cincinnati pitch ing staff for Ihe last two years, signed for an estimated $5,000. He said he thought he could achieve a third straight 20-viclory season and added, "On paper it looks as if the club has improved itself especially with the addi tion of Al Worthington." Larry Sherry, another relief star whose .work fell off a bit in 1962, accepted a small pay cut from the Los Angeles Dodgers. Sherry, tlie Dodgers' 1959 World Series hero, was in 58 games w ith a 7-3 record and 3.20 earned run average last season. He signed for around $22,000. The Milwaukee Braves announced the signing of pitcher Ron Piches, a 27-year-old right hander who was 3-2 with the Braves before being shipped to Toronto where he finished 9-4. HOLIDAY LEAGUE Klamath Hflrrfwonrf A M ?D Pfflce Amtxilanct S M KC "'J 34' i Thoma Lumber Co. S31 1 3' i Dvii Flviifl A 4 0 . Snack Coi'ee Snn fl Klamath Hardwoort ft K Klamalh Fain Creamery ' , y j Aralum Window H .Si Canvas Cushion Shoo 3.1 ' j S4' nJ F FaO Fre.qht J Ai C Floor Covering 7 4 Feb. 11 results: Thomas Lumber Co.-KC ? J KC Floor Cov.-KF FaO Ft 5 1 KF Creamery-Canvas Cushion 3 1 Peace Ambulance-Snack cotiee 1 3 Aralum-Kt. Hardwood A l 3 Davit Flying A-KI. Hardwood R 1 1 High team Qame. Kiamam Harnwona b hiqh team series. Klamath Hard wood A ItV: high ind. game, Don flnrtqe righ ind. series, Don Bridge Si. INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Klamath Gun Club Holds Sunday Meet Tlie Klamath Gun Club held its weekly shoot Sunday at the Wocus Flat club grounds. They shot 50 rounds at 16 yards with John Lichtenstern and E. H. Cahoon tied at 49. They then shot for the Handicap Trophy with Lichtenstern finishing the day with a total of 98. The next target was the Back- ers-Up and Continental for steaks with Nelson Reed, Miller and Lich tenstern winning the steaks. The shooters will be shooting for the Nelson Reed Handicap Trophy next Sunday. Non-mem- liers arc invited to come out to Ihe gun club on Wocus Flats Sun day at 10 a.m. and participate in the trap shoot. I with a free throw, paced Colo rado with 20 points. an 1AST NIGHT Du'M Equal MAR Mrk Oregon Food Market Ba' Score tor the day; I Lichtenstern E Cahoon i Osvi. 3. Green E Kent P W a thews W.nter Wilier V. MOflre N. Reed J. Catalnnn R. Smith L. Hamilton J. Wiessenback J. Hilton P. Zahniser M. Hanscom i-vdi. Hdcp. U-7i T4-JS 77S H-74 71-23 77-7 77-70 77-73 73?.l J 1-3.1 Tc?n 20-7.1 77-n 73-7 J371 70-77 73 J 77 -'.'3 Tt-7 97 33-21 ? 73-7J H 30-21 $1 71-70 m 71-72 m 1-71 11 13-1 7 71 41 Kerr Wtrth Kerr Fredrick 77-30 3'-M 17 el Ruse: K Amimrnl Laurat Beauty Far WOTM I accomplished by Zl cTW he said, "was to pick up a "mo lm A I Kv I nitrd Prm International Nick Mickoski of San Francisco held nolo hi Wftclorn Hnrkcv 7 Christian Rim. 72'ri)1!w wl)rlnB ,,a( ,(Xav, hut look out for Vancouver's Phil Malnney. Malnney was setting an all-time record pai-o when he was side- I lined by an miurv. He returned I S.W JOSf., Cam. HPH-Davey 'last week and picked up two! Moore. Springfield. Ohio. assists in four c.imes uppra n i-.s mi- - --- t - noo , I I.... .... i . i. i. . i.i'celrs is load cold I went to the hospital miMn l-..n.....l... ,11. ."nil..,!.. ......it. ...r,, ; in - m.l t.A vnmi mwlii'inP t p' C . ,,i,.iti, .,,iiiH' ,i, .l,H' CS. fW ........ .. ..K -rt .1. ,n ni.i f 1.1.W U1I II 'III IIO IV "'. Xavier lOhw 9 Villa Madonna a ,. .. .- .t Mum i.w UaOtinctnn nWumned I wasn't leelinc Ihe greatest at - l'.iiiii m mi-a I .irinu-iiaf-i n - - ... Howling (iieen 67 Noire Dame 58 l, ,j -...i. vu.M-r nl it'larence James. 158 Ohio St 87 Michigan St. 77 !c..'i. ...... ...j .. a ..iCaiif. liv. iilh 6.1 points in 4:1 games I Fielder's 54 assists easily top lh.it department while Mtckiki's X coals aKo led tlie league ; Portland ciwlie IVn Head is tlie nnlv n..!m,,W tlw. Urn with! lTIIU'V V V 1 PI '-I Irfrnd. , ,v " nntlcr a 50 m.irk and lie has a inc champion Ken Rosewall of ''tinr 259 iwniil. I Australia has taken ocr Ihe lead 4.' 5R Com! 10 COttll Sl(lr 4.1 4S KlnmAth Rrick & T.lr 47 44 PsciliC Motor Triir,nq 40', 47', ConOlidAted Frtiqht J41 i AV : Ppb IB rnulln Oreqon Food Varl SsiVpl I ft Kl Brlr-P wo'or Tryrh. 4 ft Duf's-Comt to C04it stor 4 0 Conoidlt! r-rnoht.VSV Vtit I J High team g4mt. Oregon Pood Sigrt tfm wnei. Oreaon Food J01S. h,Oh Ind qom. Chuck Kimhol Jtl, high Mid. stnei. Jim Wfhb fttl. MOOSE M LEIIU( W Indiana 72 Iowa 71 Omaha 67 SI Benedict's iK.in.i 58 Missouri 60 Colorado 58 Northwestern fi.1 Michic.in 62 tigsliurs 77 SI John's iMinn Minnesota 72 Wisconsin 48 SOl'THWKST Oklahoma 84 Nebraska 77 Dallas I'. 69 St F.dward's tlV' Texas West 84 W Texas St Abilene Christian 68 Valand West Whitman 7.1 l.inlield 71 l Rosewall Leads Tennis Tour in Suwa. and look some melicine Richmond.! the Hakone meet. But I (eel pret j tv ctHid now ." Rudolph said his Russian com petitor has helped me xerV much" "How'.'' he was asked. j "Well, he has helped me on the: corners. That's were I seem to he weakest and he is ery good at thai He has been very help-: lul." 1 S3 SI 'rto-Lad Lsu'a ufy Me Car Wfl 4. rtOTv fi 4. Nvhachl Closer F.r r. 3. Amidont t, Rutell Ciat VuMC 1 . K Amusement J Hqh tearr game. E i'mf I'ti. Eant P 0me. Wedo-Lar-d 7(1 V fao-La"d 7707 hmh i.rjh BANTARa GIRLS LEAGUI pro-1 JAM AR V MOVKS I P IM NKl!. Kla I IM' -Jrfnuarv h,is nitnrd into Kr.ink i notl f Ism Anjjolrs twi.iy m this tir 5 .Wnty svnl a kihk! dral of timo in llw fpssional tennis tour. vtully ho ,i -t wM'k to up hist Uoscwlldetoiitixl I, ins ;n nf t.ital lo U inimtlos, or hotlrr Chili. R-.l. Monday nmht to tn- th.ui tun fu!! eanics, of fnivi;iTas his tour record lo six vic- -Mdolmo timr 'tnrirs and luo luos onr vutnrv 1 Thnp moit no fc.imo Monday hrttt-r than I hp m.irk of Many Kl'iiK.NK l!M' The ute s iVn nicht SjHikar is at Vam-otivpr Mai-Kay of PaUon. Oho, who Inst top two hifih . hool haskcthall filth. and Portland at Cakarv lomchl (to Kail Hiuhhol. M-9 tisims. North and South Kiucne. Top Cage Teams Z Meet Tonight LwC.V H LO'ttjr UnttrthaMe Odd Pain Ueu'5 M 7. U"S'r, I. Old 0. L LEGAL NOTICE PRORATE NO H7-H1 rJOTICe TO CPEDITOOS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP T ME STATE OP OREGON POR THE COUNTY Of- K L AM ATM IN THE MATTER OP THE ESTATF OP JOHN FORGTV. Deceased Notice is hereby aven tht the w6r '0"ed h ber aDOOinted ewecutw nf the Estate of John Forqty. deteawj. the Circuit Court f Klamath Countv. Oregon, and that all person having claim agint ad estate are herehe notified to oreseit the same to aid eec utor t the o"'C of Varvienbero a"1 Coe. Suite ?ci U"dervood Buitdirtej, Klamath Fait, Oreqon. toqether with orooer vouchers, within m months of the date of the first publication of thit notice, wh.ch n the 79th day of January, 1163. PAV'0 1 VANDENiPRG, JR. E ecutor VandenberQ and Cr tforrtevs at Law SlJ'te ?OJ UnderwrWt Bu'ldir-g Kiamaih Fans. O-on No 1M, Ja" 7. Fes 5. tj. 19 no -t3 pPOBair NOTICE TO CREDITOR' IN THE CIRCUIT COURT O THE STATE OF OREGON FOR KLAMATH COUNTY I" the Matter 0( h Eit1 ot WILLIAM d Clark. Oeteaed, Notice is hereby g.ven that I a heen arjoomfed Eecutri of the Este'e it W.Hiam O Oa-d. deceied A'l oe--stMis haying c'aims aaairtt iad ea'a are required to O'es n1 them to me, with o"or vouchers, at WYi van S'-ee'. K iamah Paitf. O-egon. w-thm mnntm f'Om Jar. J Ifl) h-ch is th 0l M first publication of 'hi. not ce f'M F C'ar, Eiecut'n AHn f, f.tft(h,fr A(tor-,f tnr E ecu-iw NO KJ, jr, ;t, Fb S, ij, it tem gamf frt-Kf Waits 70 RK lJl RKS Ml M'l.K NOTICE ANN -s h t an O''1 Oc ELECTION L V E E T i N " us ai;kij ' i pi said Miindav JUST BEFORE THE WINNER With oigM t.condi left, nit a S8-58 dtidfock At Colum- Miiiouft Univeriity'i Riy Bob Crtrflv Qett tt to link qame winninn baikitt to braril bia, Mo., Monday ntght At thu Mmouri Tigein uptot Big Eight Uddtir and ipvsnth nationally rankfld Colorado, 60-58. Milt Mul!fr (131 tries desperation block. Carey got 19 points against Buffi. (JPI Telephoto plrti-c amoiK Dm I'.W P(.. n.w i IVrlland rntrn the week' ac-J Uor. pand !am ama- (n'.ltdf timht in a came expected Anielo Uiker mnors by vulue of ht M.SiiO ti it:r to pnts ahead ot Sanjteur thampmn of '. as firm- to riiaw Biw tn tnnun fan( to t.'wt tar ctwrd nrsl-pl.u-e nnih in tlie m-ent Krainiv-n and up on Ujly m control ail the way in He- Mt Arthur Court. re-ir.jured a pulled ham-trim; Tuoon 0Mn loumamrnt. Janu-1 Xncele n the hrvlic Smthrnjfcahni AihIit Cttmenrt nf Spam,; s,uth won an eai lire tame 'nniM e in hi let! cz und.n ary now ha, earnol com-'DiMon S-.V in the other .mi!e matin g, but the Hichlandem 'later re-1 when he -dipped while hitins one pflred with h- top wiimin! of i Vattle hoM.- a two-poiiU eUejRoMa;! and Liver won the! earned ton Mvt in the roaches :nf h's children at home West ha tfl.Tip r ha Iked up by Uary Play-j-n Va-tMixef in the Northern idonhles nrr C.meno and a.po!! and hoat a IV record The-mi.vd the la.t eizht Iwiker fr 'Uwp jt4-12 ! Axemen ae J.V.t for the season :?mr hetause of the !nnir e V8"lav r-e V .1'a"d C-'-r)e Mail, ai t,rrm T.ie r ate ( ho.3.9 "-e aua' f-.-v icr' esi " " T', 0 im,, H(.r, 'ei-f)- ."0 terr hO'd'"-8 ef et-i efl bv J-1