Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1961)
Ml? W""'1 "'" V p aTMIrtialfl tfn flil ' READY FOR QUARTERING, ond this man really knows how. Andy Landforce, wildlife management specialist from Oregon State University, is shown with one of his kills be , fore he cut if up.; He will be one of two featured speakers at a county Extension Service demonstration Friday at 8 p.m. in the county's Fairgrounds Community Building. He will tell hunters about field care of killed game, and Mary Fletcher, county home, demonstration agent, will report on how to cook game. ' Landforce Set To Show Field Care Of Venison Fresh flavorful venison for tho table itarta with cool careful treat ment in the field. With the open ing of hunting season, Andrew Landforce, extension wildlife spe cialist at Oregon State University auggests correct procedure for caring for the meat. Landforce will give helpful tips Friday night at 8 o'clock at the Community Building of the Fair grounds. Clean the animal as soon as pos sible and cool deer meat quickly the faster the better. It's ideal, ays Landforce, when the deer can be field dressed and hustled to nearby camp, home or a cold sorago locker to be skinned. But for the many hunters who do not find themselves in such convenient surroundings Landforce continues his instructions. . Skin Animal After cleaning the animal either skin it on the spot or move it back to camp and skin it if the camp isn't too far away. If the dressed deer has to be dragged back to camp or the car, lace the carcass together with a heavy leather shoelace before dragging it over tho ground This helps keep ticks, weeds and dirt away from the meat. To skin, hang it in a tree, split carcass in half leaving the last neck vertebrae connected to help balance the halves while hanging. If no tree is available, remove the hide while the deer is on the ground. Preferably let hang until meat is no longer sticky. Wipe with a dry cloth. This hastens formation of a glaze which helps prevent spoilage and keeps the meat clean. Wrape the meat if it's sunny and unwrap at night to cool. After skin is off, Landforce says, quarter the carcass and put pieces into individual meat sacks. Pack back to camp and hang up at once. Hunters who aren't able to move meat back to camp right away can hang the entire carcass in a tree or upon poles or rocks on the ground. This permits air to circulate around the meat and speed up the cooling process. Keep Away Flies Meat sacks help keep flics and dirt away from the meat. If sacks are not available placing pine boughs over the meat helps keep it cool and clean. Lnances are people who say they don't like venison probably have eaten meat that wasn t prop crly cared for," sayd the special ist. Last year more than 157,000 deer were lulled in Oregon by 350,000 hunters. 6 The News-Review, Roieburg, Or. Thur., Sept. 21, 1961 Maris' Homer Drive Stopped At 59 Mark BALTIMORE, Md. (AP)-Roger Marls' relentless assault on Babe Ruth's hallowed home run record ended in defeat Wednesday night, but in no way could it be inter preted as a failure. Fortune And Flury Picked As Outstanding Prep Grid Stars By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press' Oregon high school football player of the week is Steve Geeren, 163-pound Eagle Point speedster who scored all of his team's points in a 33-0 rout of Cave Junction's Illinois Valley. Geeren returned a kickoff ' 80 yards for a touchdown, ran with an intercepted pass for another score and tallied from scrimmage on runs of 80, 20 and 3 yards. He made all of Eagle Point's con versions. Fortune LUted Thcro were other heavy scorers during the weekend. Glenn Fortune registered 19 points for Glide, Don Elston 18 for Sweet Home, Marv Himmel 18 for West fir, and Tim Casey made three touchdowns for Jesuit ot Beaver-ton. There also were some standout defensive performances. Don Causey, an end, was In on 12 tackles, intercepted a pass, forced a fumble and blocked an extra point try as his North Salem team shaded Klamath falls, 13-1Z Grants Pass coaches credited John Kipper of North Bend with preserving a 7 0 victory over their team. He batted down two passes that could have gone for touch downs and tackled several Grants Pass runners who were about to score. Flury Brilliant Roieburg't Mike Flury was bril liant both waya in a 7-6 win over Springfield. He gained 95 yards on 23 carries, contributing soma key run In a touchdown drlvt. H alio participated in 11 tackles and Intercepted a past. Fullback Gary Collette was North Salem's offensive star in the Klamath Falls game. He cracked tho lino 29 times for 136 I yards and scoi.'d one touchdown. UMPQUA KENNEL CLUB Sponsors OBEDIENCE CLASSES at Douglas County Fairgrounds EACH MONDAY, 7:00 P.M. For 10 Weeks STARTING MONDAY, SEPT. 25 TO REGISTER PHONE ORchard 2-1552 The left-handed slugger, battling against almost impossible odds, missed matching the immortal Bambino's 60 homers in a 154- game season by the narrowest of margins just one. Trailing by two home runs with Just one more game remaining, playing in a park which had throt tled hiin in all 26 previous efforts, Marris not only walloped his S9tli home run of the season but came breathlessly close to smashing two more. Century's Feat Had tho two he barely missed been fair instead of feet foul, the crew - cut blond from Rayhtown Mo., would have achieved ihe fca! of the century. Only two others had seriously threatened that mark Jimmy row ana name ureenbeerg. The crowd of 21.032. nnlurnllv devoted to Ruth, .a nativo Balti- morean, gave Mans. 27. a stand ing ovation after he had soht a dribbler down the first base line on a checked swing in his last try. Tried 'I tried." he said Inter. "I didn't quite mako it, but I tried." And how Maris tried. In the first inning, facing Milt Pappas, Baltimore's ace reight bander, he drove a screaming lin er to Earl Robinson in deep right. In the third inning, with Pappas still on the mound, he smashed a 21 pitch, a sort of high liner, into tho right field bleachers, about 390 feet from the plate. The homer electrified the audience, which real ized he still had at least two more cracks at homer No. 60. Foul Liner Dick Hall, another right hander, was on the mound when Maris came to bat in the fourth. With an 0-2 count, Roger whacked a liner which landed in the stands, about eight feet foul and some IS feet short of the right field bleach ers. Many in the crowd, on his side by that time, groaned. Again in the seventh. Maris flirted with fame when he hit a long drive deep into the right field bleachers. This one was about 20 to 25 feet foul. Now it was the ninth. There were two out. Hoyt Wilhclm was on the mound. "Just one good swing." Maris muttered grimly to himself. "Just one good swing. That's all 1 want." He never got that "one good swing." County's 'Bf Gridders Set For Weekend (See UVL Roundup, Pages 8 and 9) -A full slate of B games are on tap this weekend for the local teams still only two of the six outings will be league affairs. Camas Valley's Hornets and Canyonville's Tigers will be t h e only teams opening league play this weekend in B action when they host the Prospect Cougars and the Butte Falls Loggers in Southern Oregon B-eight man ac tion. The Hornets and the Cougars will square off at 1:30 p.m. Fri day, while the Tigers and the Log gers will clash at 3:15 p.m. Other Friday games will find Yoncalla's Eagles traveling north to meet perennial power Harris- burg at 2 p.m., Elkton's Elks fac ing Crow at 1:30 p.m. before the home fans and the Powers Cruis ers clashing with A-2 Pacific in an 8 p.m. game at Pacific. Saturday the Days Creek Wolves will battle the Westfir Loggers in a 1 p.m. outing at Canyonville. Local Play The Days Creek Westfir game will be the only other eight-man game other than the two league outings to be played this weekend on the local scene. The Hornets a strong favorite to repeat as league champs will be led by quarterbacks Ted and Ter ry Buel when they take on Pros pect. Jim McGinnis, spint star at Camas Valley, will work from one halfback slot, while Terry Volk man will fill the other. In front of the experienced backs coach Bill Levins will have a veteran line which has helped the Hornets pick up a victory and a tie in two games tins season. Veteran quarterback Fred Grunst will pace the Tigers when they open eight-man league play lor me urst time this year. An other quarterback. Bud Olson, is also expected to see plenty of ac tion against the Loggers as coach Dick Pettcrson will be capitalizing on nis speed, up front the Tigers have a strong line, though inex perience is expected to prove de trimental. Last week the Tieers opened the season by losing to Westfir. Face Harrisburg The Eagles of Yoncalla will hava their work cut our for them as they face Harrisburg. The Eagles will be led by quarterback Dwight Pontius, who will be surrounded by a combination of backs chosen from Bill Thompson, Bill Wilson, Guy Palmer and Red Wiley. The Eagles currently have a 1-1 season mark, having lost to A-2 Riddle and beating Crow. Elkton's Elks who battled to a 6-8 tie last week with Camas Val ley will be out to get in the win ners circle Friday at the expense of Crow. The Elks are stronger this year due to the return of many lettermen and the largest turnout in recent years. Leading the hard-running backs will be Tom Soleim, Kenny Adams, Steve niaaison, Darren McNeil, Chuck Swinchart and Joe Swinehart. Third Try Powers has had trouble at the hands of A-2 schools so far this year, but will try for a third time Friday at Pacific. Tho Cruisers, winners oi me mco-B li . man crown last year, will have Dennis Grctchell engineering the drives with his passing. Gctchell will have plenty of targets as the Cruis crs are strong on veteran ends. Tho lone game in B action Sat urday will be a non-league affair featuring the Wolves of Days Creek and the Westfir Loggers. uays crcok has some good run ning power in backs Dannv Kin ney, Fred Van Norman, Alan Hel- vcy aim uick Bonney, but sports a green line which had trouble plugging the holes last week as the Days Creek squad opened on the snort end o a 40-12 score. FOOTBALL FOLLIES Highlighting this week's "Football Follies" will be the guessperts" pick of the major collegiate games featuring west coast teams. The top games of locol interest are the Syracuse-Oregon State and the Idaho-Oregon outings. Oregon seems to be a strong favorite, while Oregon State will go into its opener as an underdog. On -the prep scene Roseburg is f favored to down North Eugene, and Glide, Riddle, Sutherlin and Drain seem to be the favorite A-2's. Golf's Porky Oliver Succumbs To Cancer WILMINGTON, Del. (AP)-Ed (Porky) Oliver, who started out as a caddy at Ihe age of 11 and went on io become one of the leading professional golfers dur ing the last two decades, died Wednesday of cancer. He was 46 His wife, Clara, was at his bed side in Memorial Hospital when he died. Oliver had been in and out of the hospital since leaving the pro circuit nearly two years ago. lie had undergone two opcr ations. Don Hoqedorn Dan Hill George Castillo! Jerry Cornell j Bill Gould I Niel Cellers Visitors Home 11-9-1 11-9-1 I 15-5-1 I 14-6-1 1 16-4-1 I 18-2-1 Roseburg No. Eugene Roseburg Roseburg Roseburg Roseburg Roseburg Roseburg Marshfield Grants Pass Marshfield Marshfield Morshfield I GrontsPoss Morshfield TMorShfield 1 I Springfield North Bend North Bend North Bend Springfield Springfield I North Bend Springfield Glide Glendale Glide Glide , 1 Glide Glide Glide Glide I I Riddle Douglas I Riddle I Douglas I Riddle I Riddle I Riddle I Riddle I j Oakland Sutherlin j Sutherlin Sutherlin Sutherlin I Oakland I Sutherlin Sutherlin Bandon Myrtle Ck. Bandon Bondon Bondon Myrtle Creek I Bondon I Bondon JWestfir Days Creek Westfir Westfir j Westfir I Westfir I Westfir Westfir Crow Elkton Crow Elkton Elkton I Elkton I Crow I Elkron "Prospect Comas Valley Comas Volley Prospect I Comas Valle'y Prospect I Comas Volley Camas Valley Drain Junction City , Drain 1 1 Junction City Junction City Drain Drain Droin ""Butte Falls Conyonville Canyonville Canyonville Butte Falls Canyonville Butte Falls Butte Falls 1 Yoncalla Harrisburg Harrisburg Yoncalla Harrisburg Yoncalla I Harrisburg "TrHorrisburg Syracuse OSU I Syracuse Syracuse OSU Syracuse I Syracuse Syracuse Idaho Oregon Oregon Oregon - Oregon Oregon Oregon I Oregon j L & C Portland St. j Lewis & Clork Lewis & Clork Portland State Portland Stote 1 Lewis & Clark Portland St. Linfield So. Oregon Linfield Linfield Linfield So. Oregon I Linfield I So. Oregon Willamette Pudget Sd. Willamette Pudget Sound Willamette Pudget Sound I Willamette Willamette I Navy Penn St. Penn St. Penn St. Penn St. I Penn St. Penn St. Penn St. Washington St.-Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri I Missouri Purdue Washington Washington Washington Washington Purdue Lfi!u Washington UCLA Air Force UCLA UCLA JJCLA. I UCLA UCLA UCLA j Tulane Stanford ' Tulane Stonford Tulane Tulane Tulone Stanford Texas California Texas Californio Texas I Texas I Texas I Texas JCOP Son Jose St. Son Jose St. San Jose St. I San Jose St. San Jose St. San Jose St. Son Jose St. Georgia Tech USC Georgia Tech Georgio Tech USC I USC I Georgia Tech USC ,. ll i m Sports Calendar Friday Football Midwestern League Roseburg Indians vs. North Eu gene Highlanders, 8 p.m., Civic Stadium, Eugene. Springfield Millers vs. North Bend Bulldogs, 8 p.m.. North Bend. Lane A-l Willamette Wolverines vs. Thurs ton Colts, 8 p.m., Springfield. Umpqua Valley League Oakland Oakers vs. Sutherlin Bulldogs, 8 p.m., Sutherlin. Glide Wildcats vs. Glendale Pi rates, 8 p.m., Glendale. bmerald League Drain Warriors vs. Junction City Tigers, 8 p.m., Junction City. a Eight-Man League Prosnect Cougars vs. Camas Val ley Hornets, 1:30 p.m., Camas Val ley. Butte Falls Loggers vs. Canyon ville Tigers, 3:15 p.m., Canyonville. Non-League Marshfield Pirates vs. Grants Pass Cavemen, 8 p.m., Grants Pass. Bandon vs. Myrtle Creek Vikings, 8 p.m., Myrtle Creek. Crow vs. Elkton juks, i:au p.m., Elkton. Powers Cruisers vs. . Pacific, s p.m., racuic. Yoncalla Eagles vs. Harrisburg, 2 p.m., Harrisburg. - Cincinnati Edges Pittsburgh By Run By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Those amazing Cincinnati Reds, questionable product in the Na tional League race when the sea son began, have gone methodical ly about the business of trying to nail down their first pennant in 21 years with a potent patent on winning one-run games. The Reds did it again Wednes day night, edging the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-z on wauy rosis iwo- run homer in the eighth inning for their eighth victory in the last nine games and a 34-14 won-lost record in one-run games. The victory went to right-nana- er Joey Jay (21-8), the only NL pitcher with 20 wins, ana rcaucea the Reds' magic pennant-clinching number to four over second-place Los Angeles. The Dodgers also won by a single run, nipping Chi cago 3-2 in 13 innings. In The Majors Wednesday's Results American League New York 4, Baltimore 2 Chicago 3, Boston 1 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2 Detroit 6, Los Angeles 3 Minnesota at Washington, post poned, rain National League Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2 Los Angeles 3, Chicago 2 (13 in nings) Philadelphia 6. St. Louis 1 Milwaukee 7. San Francisco 4 ROKO HORSE SMW LIVESTOCK EXPOSITION MAKE A DATE TRY Mixed Bowling Trial. . . . Planted . . OiMillt. Mia, wima 1HUI. II Ml., - PM uticoMi. , . cm oi liui.oi Sll UI FOUR WINDS BOWL SUTHERLIN. .12 Minute Drive yi fr2& A HUGH O'BRIANl IMf' Tv',"wv'ttE"p" V PbLP m n 'MAIL ORDERS NCW FOR RESERVED SEATS HOfiS SHOW - RODEO H16HT1 4 SUN MM 11 f, OO. 15 f SATVtDAY MATINIf. 00. 14 I 11 lit 4 ewi Unititmd Utt VJ SO -300 - 1H I OO SATVtDAY MATIN It, OCT. 14 I ?1 Bo St 3S0 Ht 4 Rowt . 3 00 Unrtitiv4 Stt 2 00 'S"4 Mil 4tr with iif-4druMdt f-i , Nvrtfe 9iiu4. Ort. Sptcify tt nd porfornwe ROSEBURG SURPLUS sal; ES CHECK YOUR LIST! Gun Shells Gun Cose Knife Deer Bag Elk Bag Cast Iron Skillet Thermos Bottle Ice Chest Sleeping Bag Air Mattress Warm Coat Tent Hats-Red, Yellow Wool Socks Sweatshirts Wool Shirts Boots Lantern Stove Dutch Oven INSULATED RUBBER BOOTS Gloves Flannel Shirts Pack Sacks Tarps Deer Hoist x ,,, Gas Cans Shell Case Flash Light Compass Hunting License Deer Tag Hatchet Hand Warmer Insulated Un-wear Batteries Pack Boards Gun Racks $088 NAME BRAND WOOL SHIRTS Reg. 12.95 ... $098 INSULATED SHIRTS and $ DRAWERS Ea. 1 69 INSULATED UNDERWEAR, 100 $M88 Dacron, Reg. 24.95 . I n CREW NECK SWEAT SHIRTS $4 88 I Thermo Knit Insulated UNION SUITS $366 GET YOUR HERE! Open Until p.m. Monday Sept. 25 thru Friday, Sept. 29 GUNS & AMMUNITION-At Prices You Like Roseburg Surplus Sales 629 S. E. CASS Regular Store Hours 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. DIAL OR 2-1512 I