La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968, October 01, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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    reqon Deer Season
HYDE'S o Island City
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It's a big day for sonic 2V),(KH(
Oregon nimrods tcmie Saturday
morning with the general state
wide 'deer season slati-d to open.
Guns will begin ringing through
the forest and range lands one
half hour before sunrise as hun
ters pull down on fast moving
mule deer end elusive lilacktail
targets.
The general deer season is
scheduled to run through October
25 with sn eitlier-sex season for
permit holders schiduled the last
nine days. Only holders of per
mits may take either -sex der.
with each hunter restricted to the
unit for which the permit was is
sued. General season tag holders
may- hunt for buck d"er through
out the season.
; Futher restrictions are in order
'lor the Silver Lake unit and the
Wehdllng' Hasin within the Mc
Kenzle unit. There two areas arv
" scheduled for either-sex deer
hunting -during the entire season.
Oct. I through 25. but are opvn
I "
Observer, La Grande, Ore.,
H i.;' r - . - Jl:K
k' .. .,.,.. (Z. y.-d-.'-J:--.'..
r. I. p(l
-s- .- -s" V ''.' ".- -
i i i I fi1tTrfcr . tm- i ,
STIFF ARM Jim Corm-tt will starf at onAalfback
spot when the Tigers entertain the Bend Lava Bears
on the high school field. Bend stopped Baker -25-6 last
weekend while the Tigers lost a 6-0 contest to Red
mond. The Tigers will he out to even their Intt-rmount-ain
league record at 1-1 by defeating Bend. Gjinett,
a transfer to La Clrande this year, is a senior. fObserver)
HOWELL TO ALL-STARS
NEW YORK ITU - Bailey
Howell, 6-10 star of Mississippi
State's 1958-59 basketball team,
will play on the college all-star
Our New Phone No. It
WO 3-5203
NICHOLS'
EQUIPMENT CO.
Island City
Alj Barber Shops
IN LA GRANDE
AND ISLAND CITY
CLOSED
' I
SATURDAY
for The Opening
Of Hunting Season
to hunting only to thoso hunters
holding pernios for each respect
ive area. Any hunter holding a
Silver Lake permit may hunt in
the Silver Lake unit, but only 80)
McKenzi" permit holders will be
allowed in the Wendling' Ilasin a!
one lime. The two areas have
been established as experimental
units to dct-rmine the e.'feort of
either sex deer hunting during the
entire season.
Prospects for hunters look excep
tionally good, and if weather co
npprnt's and hunters can score; the
final tally when the season is
over should again be around 100,
ooo animals. If pan success ratios
are any indication, a little over
one-half of the hunters will have
venison in the fre-zer at the sea
sop's end.
The best hunting areas for west
side gunners will undoubtedly be
along the fringe areas adjacent
to the Willamette valley. Hunters
OBSERVIR
Ntil AndorMn
Thurs., Oct. 1, 1959 t Pag 2
a-
Vk
McCOY ACCEPTS INVITATION
PHILADELPHIA d'Pl) Ath
letic director ErneHU '.McCoy ol
Penn State University, 4oday ac
cepted an invitation tt) serve on
the executive eoundl'for the Lib
erty Howl game. Doc: 19. Under
NCAA regulations, executive coun
cils for bowl games' itlust include
an athletic director from on ac
tive NCAA member- . .
team that meets the New York
Knicks in a bcncTil ) game at
Madison Square Garden. Oct. IT.
Howell is a rookie-with; the De
troit Pistons of the. National Bas
ketball Association. -
will do well to search out the
brushy ridges adjacent te agri
cultural lands or the isolated brush
and timber pockets on the vull'-y
Moor. Often a hall-dozen or more
skulking blacktails' will be lou.nd
in these brush patches, miles
away from mountain ridges or
limberlands.
The Tillamook burn is not ex
pected to be a hct spot this year
ul:hough fair numbers of btack
tails will be found throughout,
flood producers, though, include
the oak and coni.er ridges of I'olk
county and the brush and brack"n
fern slopes of the Alsea drainage.
Best bets in the scuth Willamette
include the tree farms adjacent
to Springfield, Eugene, and Cot
tage Grove and the fringe areas
around Fern Kidge reservoir, north
to Marys Peak.
To the south, the Applegate
should produce many blacktails as
should the Green Springs country
and the Butte Falls area. Again,
the brushy bottom lands will pro
Mounties Drill
On Fundamentals
Eastern Oregon Coll"ge's Moun-
taineers went back to f undament-
vlals Tuesday following their 35-6
loss to Co'lege of Idaho. KOC is
piinipiiig ht ineir ureKun e.iii
legiate Conference op-ner against
Oregon Colft-ge of Education Sat
urday. "We stressed fundamentals
Tuesday, things like blocking and
itn'Kiing. uiier viewing tue kuiiiv
movies Monday," said Arch Duns
moor, EOC's head mentor.
The Mountaineers worked on
basic line blocking and offensive
charge as Uunsmoor and his
assistant, Don Campbell, hope to
eliminate the problems that hurt
them against the Coyotes.
Dunsmoor and Campbell are
experimenting with personnel
Centennial
Open Tees
Off Today
PORTLAND. Ore. H'PI) -Mos'
of the touring professionals and
a host of Pacific Northwest pros
and amateurs teed off in nippy
fall weather today in the $20,000
Oregon Centennial 0en over the
lush Portland Golf Club layout.
U. S. l)en champion Billy Cas-
..... nf A ....I- 1-..II.,., r..i;t on,1
PGA champ Bob Hosburg of' Palo !
Alto. Calif , shared the favorites'
role with 25 year-old Mason Hu -
dolph of Clarksville. Tenn
Rudolph Came Still Hot i
Rudolph arrived here "walking
on air after winning the S4O.000
olden Gate championship in San
'rancisco Sunday. He finished in
the money in 12 out of 13 tourna
ments this summer, and his game
still was hot in a practice round
here Tuesday when he shot a 68.
Casiier and Kosburg took it easy
until Wednesday's $3,000 pro
amateur tournament. The money
was put up by the 20 Portland
business men sponsoring the Cen
tennial Open.
A hot local (avor.te was Bob
Dudes of Portland's Rose City
municipal course, who tied for
20th in the Golden Gate tourney
and turned in a practice round of
67 Tuesday. Duclen holds the Ore
gon and Northwest Open titles.
The field will be cut to the low
60 and ties plus the lending ama
teurs after 18-hole rounds today
and Friday.
LAST LAUGHS
i
Htnryl You don't have to show
off just bwt you ffot nw
shoes from La Grande Shoe
Storel
LA GRANDE
SHOE STORE
1214 Adams
duce bouncing blacktails for those
hunters who give the fringe arejs
a try.
The interstate looks like a hot
spot in south central Oregon, as
counts this spring show the inter
state mule deer herd up consider
ably from a year ago. The con
sistent Klamath country will also
be a lopnotch producer.
Popular mid - central Oregon
should be tbout on a par with
last y ar with the better locales
around the Fort Rock urea, the
Maury mountains, Ochocos, and
cn north into Grizzly and Wheeler.
Hunting pressure will undoubtedly
be heavy in th;s popular hunting
country, but individual hunter
success will probably be lower
than anywhere else in the state.
Sled Springs and the Chesnimnus
in northeastern Oregon should pro
duce some excellent buck hunting,
although Wallowa county through
out should be cne of the top pro
ducers. Farther to the south, the
Keating. Baker, and Beulah areasj
changes in addition to the funda
mental drills in an effort to im
prove the Mclmlainver's offen
sive blocking. Part of the changes
are being designed with the idea
in mind to give Jim Neece and
Butch Corey, th guards, a little
rest and help. Neece has been
playing with a bruised leg and
Dunsmoor feels that rest will be
the fastest cure.
Dunsmoor indicated that other
changes will be made to bolster
the line and to try and increase
the weight up front.
George Aliverti, who sprained an
ank'e in the first weeks of prac
tice, is still bothered by swelling
and the inability to drive off the
limb. Gene McKinney, a quarter
back against tho Coyotes, will be
tried at the running back posi
tion. McKinney is a hard running,
rugged back but isn't exception
ally fast.
The Mountaineers will go 'into
the OCE game 'blind." Duns
moor has no scouting report on
the Wolves but feels th?y are a
strong outfit if past scores are
unv indication.
"They are always a tough,
scrappy outfit. You can bet they
are no pushover playing Humho't
to an 18-6 game, "Dunsmoor stated.
The Mountaineers will try to
sharpen their offensive passing
attack for the after dark en
counter in Monmouth. Dunsmoor
pointed out that both Linfield and
"llm"1! P35 over ,and ,hru;h.
,he"' yardage and scores,
Dunsmoor is optimistic about
his club's chances for a win in
their first tXX game o: the season.
We'll be back in our own ele
ment now and ready," Dunsmcor
addrd.
BUTLER RETURNS
GREEN BAY it'PD A Paris
court today hears a libel suit
brought by International Olympic
Committee President Avery Brun
dage against the French weekly
"Sports Mirror. The suit was
filed last Dec. 29 after the paper
culled the Olympic flag "a sym
bol of lies in sport." The article
claimed the Olympic oath actual
ly is taken by professional ath
letes and that Brundage "is clos
ing his eyes in order not to see
this flagrant scandal."
For A Delightful Treat In
ICE CREAM
Try Meadow Gold
Rancho Pecan Ice Cream
glCEEAM
TREAT THE WHOLE FAMILY
Get Tha Half-Gallon Container
AT YOUR GROCER'S
aturday
are expected to be good. This
country and the Wallowas con
sistently produce the highest hunt
jer success of anywhere in the
slate.
The high desert lands of the
southeast include some of the best
mule deer country in the state.
The Malheur, Owyhee, Steens, and
Whitehorse areas all have an
abundance of mule deer with lop
buck hunting prospects in store for
those who travel the high desert
mesas. Hot spots in these areas
include the Malheur drainage, the
Mahogany mountains rimming the
Owyee reservoir, the Stens moun
tains both on the east and west
sides, and the Pueblo. Trout Creek,
and Whitehorse ranges within the
Whitehorse unit.
It's a long jaunt into this coun
try, but it will pay handsome
dividends for those hunters who
spend the time and ef.ort in the
rim-rocked desert canyons. Buck
deer, big and b?nch-legged, are
the rule rather than the exception.
Young Lass
Tops Rifle
Club Jrs.
Karen Fitzgerald fired a 358
to pace the La Grande Rifle Club
lunicrs in a meet Tuesday night.
Fitzgerald edged runnerup
George Altenberg by three points
as Altenburg scored 353 points.
Carroll Bruce was third with
326.
Firing from a prone position,!
Miss Fitzgerald shot 99 to match
Altenberg who also fired a 99.
Altenberg went five points a-
head in the sitting position when
he fired a 97 to Fitzgerald's 92.
Miss Fitzgerald wiped cut the
margin by firing an 89 in the
kneeling pesition to Altenberg's
80 and picking up another point
standing. 78-77.
Tom Long competing in only
prone and sitting positions shot
97. 93 and Merf Karns 85, 91.
Eleven other juniors competed
in prcne position firing with
Jim Havdcck topping the list at
fif. Other shooters, wtth theirt
scofes were: David Anderson (83);
Don Hall (83); Steve Masroe (81);
Steve Reader (70); John McClay
(59); Mike Monhany (57); Kerry
Fitzgerald 55; Dennis Caldwell
(52); Ted Vandenburg (51); Al
len Strong (39).
- (frahatfa-
NOW THRU SAT.
B!HE
CAROL LVNLEV
Brandon da wilds
MAC DO N AID CAR IV
OnmScOP M owuei now
v PLUS
GEO. MONTGOMERY
"BADMAN'S COUNTRY"
1 .jltol'U liU tit Ultliu
NesKe's or Herthey's
GIA1IT
Chocolate
BARS
2 FOR
HJB
Coffee
73l1.45
Lb.
4-LB. PILLSBURY
Pancake Flour
24-OZ. TALL TIMBER
SYRUP
3 JL00
Maid Q'Clover
BUTTER
153'
LB.
Giant FAB
s5
HYDE'S MEATS
CARSTEN'S HALF OR WHOLE NO 1 GRADE
FULLY COOKED SWEET. m . t Ma,
HAMS lb. 49' POTATOES. 2 lbs. 35
GRADE GOOD CRISP STALK
R0aItC BEEF.-.i1,. CELEBY lb. 1QC
FIRST OF THE SEASON
C0RNED yiftr FRESH-s 00,
BEEF.. lb. 9 c CRANBERRIES lb. 29
END CUT PORK a, ft PINK l - 0 ' 00 r
LOIN ROAST lb. 49C GrapeIrjjil3 for 39
7:00 A.M. to 6:30
ClAl
BEEF STEIV
S & W Oven Baked Beans
lToZ.' TINS -5 for
28-0Z.e TINS 3 for 89
5540.' TINS 2 for 99C
40-OZ. DENNISOM'S M !
Chili Con Carne.... tin IDS)
WYANDOTTE PITTED - $ QQ
Ripe Olives.... 3 tins 21
Nabisco
3-LB. TIN CRISCO
Shortening.
PMix
Match.
FAIRLANE FROZEN FOODS
Assorted
VEGETABLES
lO-oi. Coastal
BREADED SHRIMP
Reg. 29e Pr.
Men's, Women's
JERSEY
GLOVES
2 PAIR
49c
HYDE'S
STORE HOURS : f
PM. Wtekdays; 8..00 AM. to
24-oz. Tin
FOR
Cookies
2
11-OZ. OREO CREME
FIG NEWTONS
VANILLA WAFERS
LORNA DOONE
t
3$TSoo
pkgs. a ..:
tin
6 Pkgs. T
pkg.
Sizes 8-12, 13-3
CHILDREN'S
RUBBER
BOOTS
Rtg. 2.98
1.99
PRODUCE
1KX) PM. Sunday