it. Tig ers On Local Gridiron Toniaht Ob rvery La Grande, Ore., OUTDOORS: AROUND-ABOUT MALHEUR ARCHERS EIRE RECORD RATE Archers in the Hart Mountain tnd Malheur refuges had good luck during the short season Scheduled. Thirty-four deer were taken in the Hart Mountain refuge by more than 450 archers who check ed through the refuge. Hunter Success was 7.5 per cent, abeve average for archery hunters. - Malheur archers were red hot taking) 53 deer during the two day season. - Hunter success was I per cent, highest ratio in Ore gon -for bow hunters. " ' Land Slide Takes Ramp A land slide that ' occurred about two weeks ago knocked out the concrete boat ramp at Owy hee reservoir. Anglers arc urg rd not to attempt a boat landing at this site. ' ''Debris franges up to five feet overthe ramp and a large sec tion of -earth and rock droppd out (rom under the ramp. ' '"preliminary surveys indicate permanent damage to the instal lation,' according to f . w. ben beider, state game director. Waterfowl Get Head Start Waterfowl gunners have a three-day head start on the upland- game hunters this year. The duck and goose season opens t noon next Wednesday and up land game season starts at 8 a. m. Oct 10. ' Che season for waterfowl will exiend through Jan. 8 and up laad ' game is scheduld to end Nov. 15." A synopsis of the up land game and waterfowl regula tions, available at all license GET TOGETHER With The FELLOWS & GIRLS for a TASTY SNACK at the HI WAY CAFE East Adams Ave. 'After r naSs The (fy Gome Xy Tonight . . . LA GRANDE DEIID ?Mpk tiger e u Stadium . ' 'l'''"MsWr!gr irr -- ADMISSION Adult, . . . I.Otf Students '. V. Host Lava Bear 11 OBSIRVIR Fri., Oct. 2, 1959 Page 2 agencies, will give hunters the exceptions to the rule.j j Limits Two Dtyt Mr. and Mrs. Knock 5 Morgan Huntington. spent two days last week at I'nity rcseWWf.' The two-days cf angling netted the Morgans limits both nays. The Morgans plan on visiting Mai heur reservoir for 'another try this week. ' Limit Set Back Kmergnty trout bag limits of 30 Iish set early this 'summer at beulah and Warm Springs resr voirs may be set back? to 10 fish a day. 1 ...... Increased limits were allowed when it was learned that exes live drawdowns tor-- irrigation would lower the water level Because ot neavy rains in Northeastern Oregon during the past monlh, irrigation use from these impoundment - was stopped ahead of the anticipated draw down. The game commission's hunt ing and listing report: Steelhead angling continues to be gocd in the Columbia river between Boardman and Arlington both from the bank and boat The lower John Day river is pro ducing a few steelhead. Steel- head angling is picking up in Wallowa county with the lower Wallowa river, the Imnaha and Grande Ronde rivers remaining good. A few silver salmon are be ing caught in the Grande Ronde river at Troy. Unity reservoir is lar to good for rainbow trout Brownlee reservoir remains good for bass angling. Steelhead and salmon angling is excellent at the mouth of Pine creek below Ox bow dam. - HUNTING REPORT Hunters should carry chains as Eastern Oregon has j had much rain and some snow the past weekend. Roads at present are muddy and slick. Hunting con ditions are good, however, due to the rainfall in the area. Bet ter hunting in Umatilla county may be found on the north fork of the John Day river, Pearson' Lookout, Cable creek; Upper Ca mas creek, Jericho creek, Bat tle Mountain, Upper Meacham creek, Upper Umatilla and the Walla Walla river area The lat ter area has some big bucks but is harder to hunt because of lack of reads and the steep terrain. Good deer hunting is anticipat ed in all of Baker and Union counties except in dense stands of timber. Best prospects will be in sagebrush and open 'timber. Hunting above limbcrline will be productive if storms subside for several days. Fresh snow falling during the early part of the week have made roads muddy and hunters must carry rhains in Walluwa county. Better hunting areas in Wallowa 50e Children under 11 . . . JSc By NEIL ANDERSON Observer Staff Writer The La Grande Tigers face their toughest game of the still young prep season when they entertain the big, brawny Lava Bears from Bend on the high school field tonight. La Grande will open up its split-T attack in an el fort to push across the touchdowns they missed against Redmond 'ast week. The Tigers' stone wall defense, meanwhile, will be fighting to stop the offensive slants of Robert Bjorvick and the passing of Larry Carter the Bear quarterback. This will be the first m'eling between the two teams and La Grande will want to make the Initial fncounter a victory for the home forces. The Bears at: lied for the league lead with one vic tory against no losses fo'lowing the first week of play in the new Intermcuntain loop. The Tigrs will be striving to even their record at the .500 mark. "We have good team attitude and that will make a difference." commented Tiger coach Franz Haun. The Tigers will, for the first time this year, face a team that outweighs them.'1 La Grande's forward wall lead by Buck Corey '2001 and Gary Vorur '200 will be similar to the outfit that opened th first three games for the Tigers. ' Dennis Spray 170 will be ot the other flanker spot. Don Graham M901 and either Ron Coleman U90 or Lonnie Myers 180' will op?n at the tackle spots. Vcruz will be at center and Laurence Smutz U95) and Greg Bluekman (1751 will be at the guards. - Ray Westcnskow 175 will di rect the Tigers attack from the quarterback spot.' "Jim Cormtl 1 165) will be at the left halfback spot and Dave Carman 175i will operate at the opposite side. Power man in the Tiger offense will be senior fullback Don Smith 175 1 . All four Tiger backs are speedy and West?nskow is fast becoming a master of the roll out on the split-T attack. Corey the top pass matcher for the Tigers will be on the receiving end of most of We stenskow's pass es and the Lava Bears will be wary of letting the big. bruising county are Flora, Paradise. Jo seph creek area, Day Ridge. Harle Butte, Beaver Ridge and Hat Point. Chesnimnus area should be fair. Any area above 5,000 feet will probably have snow the be-ginning-'-of deer eaon5'" Rain in Grant county has made hunting conditions excellent. Deer are out of the heavy brush and well scattered through! the summer ranges. Both large and small bucks are numerous. Best success should be found on main ridges and peaks from Aldrich mountain east through Dry So da' and Logan valley in the Mur derer's creek unit. Baldy and Sheep mountain should produce some good bucks in the Beulah unit. The Northside unit from Dixie mountain West through Camp creek and Long Creek mountain should be good. Vinegar moun tain, Indian Rock and Desolation creek in the Desolation unit should provide good hunting with deer being numerous at medium and higher elevations. If more rain should fall this weekend only main toads in Grant county will be passable. Chains are advised for all vehicles. Deer are scatterd, abundant, and in good condition in Wheeler and Heppner units. Some of the bet ter producing areas will be the breaks of the John Day river and its tributaries, Ditch, Willow and Skookum creeks, Kahior bas in, -the Notch, Kinzua and lands adjacent to alfalfa fields. WATERFOWL HUNTING Waterfowl hunting opens at noon Oct. 7. Good duck hunting should be found in Baker and Un ion counties. Ducks will be avail able on the main John Day river and in- dredge ponds in Grant county. ' A number of geese are also to be found in the Kimberly area. Waterfowl hunting in Gilliam, Morrow and Wheeler counties will be poor until the weather It also happens to be my home becomes adverse and the north- town. ern flights move into the area. Apart from my hitting, I fell NOW! S50 to S15000 in FROZEN FOODS with your purchase of an Admiral Freezer you SAVE on Appliances and Furniture at La Grande Furniiure Warehouse EAST ADAMS runner get too (ar into the second ary. Elsewhere in the conferenc?, Ptndleton 1-0' travels to Prine villc '0-0-1': Baker 0-1 plays host to Redmond ' 1-0 ' ; and Ilerm islon 10-0-D travels to The Da'les 10-11. Big 'Klu' In Clover With Hits (EDITOR'S NOTE: Ted Klus itwtki, who has bean with the Whits Sox only 38 days, paced thorn to an 11-4 victory ever the Dcrigsrs in the World Series cpener Thursday with two home runs and a single. He gives his impressions of the game in the following dispatch. By TED KLUSZEWSKI As Told To UPI CHICAGO IPI-That wasn't too bad for a start, but what do 1 do now for an encore? When you've been around the majors as long as I have, you don't feel there are many thrills lett in store for you. This was by far my biggest one, though. Here am I, a guy who has spent practically my entire career in the National League and never dreamed not until a week ago, anyway of ever getting in a World Series anymore. And to start it off like this well, sir, I don't think I can ever top it. I didn't think that first homer of mine was going all the way in the third inning. I thought it was going to come down short. There wasn t any question in my mind about the second one, though. I knew that was gone for good. Happy? Didn't you notice how I 'Vi TED KLUSZEWSKI Gets Five RBl's hot-dogged it around the bases after that fourth inning homer. Boy, I was really in clover trot ting around those bases. The thing that really pleased me was that my wife was out to the park and practically the whole town of Argo. What do you mean you never neard of Argo? It has a population of 10.000 and it hap pens to be right here in Illinois AVENUE sfC'I UO Picked To Whip Cougars (Reg. U.S. Pt. Off.) By OSCAR FKALE Y United Press International LOS ANCtLl S 'LPI'-Fraley's follies and the weekend football "winners" along with a lew ram bling observations on the Na tional League pennant scramble. CAME OF THE WEEK Northwestern over Iowa This is looking for the upset, what with Iowa rated a two-point fa vorite, but Dick Thornton and the Wildcats showed a devastating at tack in walloping Oklahoma de spite that food poison excuse a'.d this could he the team of the year. ' THE EAST Pitt over UCLA It's easy to understand why there was a Na-lio-.al League pennant playoff. Princeton over Columbia Nei ther the Braves nor Dodgers looked as if they wanted to win. Dartmouth over Penn The blue plate special Also: Syracuse over Maryland. Yale over Brown, Penn State over Colgate, Holy Cross over Villa nova, Cornell over Lehigh, Har vard over Bucknell. ' ' THE MIOWEST Army over Illinois J6eDiMag gio would have hit 100 homers in the Coliseum. Michigan State over Michigan - The left field fence is a horror. Indiana over Minnesota It's a very easy nine iron shot. Also: Purdue over Notre Dame. Missouri over Iowa State. Ken tucky over Detroit. Wisconsin over Marquette, Baldwin Wallace over Toledo. THE WEST Ohio State" over VSC The Dodg ers went into the second playoff game as if they had it won.: Nebraska over Oregon State The Braves were a grim-faced lot. Oregon over Washington State They looked like a husband who had just put the best dishes in the clothes washer by mistake. Also: Washington over Utah, Wyoming over Utah State, Idaho over Arizona, Brigham Young over Montana and Colorado State lipver Denver. THE SOUTH LSU over Baylor The World Series attendance record for one game is Cleveland's 86,288 in 1948 Duke over Rice Los Angeles had 3.103 for Campanella night. Miami over Florida State They'd have trouble beating that even In the World Series. Also: Clemson over Georgia i-Tech, Tennessee- over Mississippi Mate, Georgia over South Caro lina, Auburn over Hardin-Sim-mons, West Virginia over George Washington. THE SOUTHWEST Texas over California Win, lose and no draw, the ball players are glad it's almost over'. TCU over Arkansas The losers are sorry for the team that has to expend all that energy in the series. S.MU over Navy As the man said, it's only money. Also: Air Force over Trinity, Oklahoma over Colorado, Texas Tech over Tulsa. Texas Western over New Mexico, rizona State over Montana State. good because I finally got a uni form tailored with the sleeves cut short just like I used to wear when I was with Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. The White Sox didn't have a uniform like that when I came over to them from the Pirates last August 25th. They got me one for the World Series, though. Am I going to wear the same one today? Are you kidding? You Will Enjoy Eating at the HI WAY CAFE! i ... . Good Food 24 Hours! Whatever your hours for eating early, late, in-between we can take care of youl WE SERVE A COMPLETE MENU, EXPERTLY PREPARED AND SERVED SPECIAL HUNTERS' BREAKFAST Around the Clock! HI WAY CAFE Operated by Bill E0C Opens Slate Against Eastern Oregon colli ge op?n its 1959 Oregon Ccllegiate Con fer! nee stason tomorrow night against th Wolves of O.egon College. The two teams will kick off the OCC schedule at Monmouth with an under the lights encounter schidulid for 8 p.m. The Mountaineers wi'l be putting :h ir first p'acc standing in con ference team rushing en the block against a scrappy OCS outfit that last week held powerful Humbolt to an 18-6 margin. F.OC for the iirs'. time in thrre years leads the OCC 'in team rush ing, according to statistics t leased yesterday. Arch Dunsmoor's Mountaineers have rushed for L average of 155 yards pr game to edge the first week's leader. Oregon Tech, by one yard. Tech continues to hold the total offense lead while Southern Ore gon still lads in the team passing department. The Wolves survived their meet ing with Humbolt without injuries and will be .at full str?ngth for the opener. EOC, meanwhile, has Jim Nece and George Aliverti serviceable but handicapped by minor injuries. Coach Bill McArthur's charges still must find an offensive back field that can add to the scoring punch and some defensive second ary men to contain passing attacks more effectively. A trio of sophomores will lead the inexperienced Wolves against the Mountaineers. Defensive end Frank Colburn and linebackers Den HabeL and Francis Tresler will be out to stop Jerry Williams. Wallowa To Host' Bobcats WALLOWA (Special) "Nobody can tell what will happen in the games that are still to be played but we have a good start. 1 can say that we have good material. We have speed, weight and our reserves are deep. I'll tell you more about it after the game." commented Wallowa coach, Don Wilson. The first game, a non-confer ence tilt, resulted in a 26-0 win over Enterprise. Last week Wal lowa blanked Pilot Rock, 34-0. Today Enterprise tangles with Union in an afternoon game at Wallcwa. "Union has always given us a, tough time," said Wilson. North Powder Gains Last Minute Win NORTH POWDER (Special) The North Powder Badgers wrung out a 13-8 victory over previously unbeaten Richland last Friday. The two teams battled to a 0-0 standoff at halftime before the Badgers jumped into the lead. Barry Gekeler tcok a Richland kickoff and ran it back 60 yards for the Badger's first score. Den nis Patterson kicked the extra point. Richland went ahead following a TD by Rick Malone and a run ning play good for two points and an 8 7 lead. Dennis Patterson dodged across the goal line with 1:43 left in the game for a 13-8 victory. HUNTERS MEALS & SHORT ORDERS NIGHT SNACKS FOR ' EARLY STARTERS) Plenty Of Free Parking Space East Adam Avenue & Neomi Avery Wolves ihe Mounties top ground gainer, and Jon Honk, who ranks filth in conference passing statistics. Top ground gainer for the Wolves is Bob Gates, a hard running junior haltback, who picked up 57 yards in 18 rushes against Hum- bolt. Gates ranks sixth in con ference rushing behind Williams who is third. Williams has carried the ball 26 times for a not gain uf 115 yards and a 4.4 average per carry. Jchn Willmarth will attempt to up his punting average from its present 30.2- after a bad week against th wind and the College ol Idaho. The Mountaineer squad will leave La Grande today bound for Portland and an over nieht stav. The team will travel to Monmouth for the game Saturday night and return to La Grande Sunday. Top Teams Square-Off In LA United Press International Southern California and Ohio State, a pair of top-ranked college football powers, will kick off an other week end of major intersec tional -skirmishes Friday night when they "collide at the Los An geles Coliseum. The sixth-ranked Trojans, who trounced Oregon State and Pitts burgh in their first two games, are narrow two-point favorites over the Big Ten Conference in vaders. Ohio Stale shared 10th place with Notre Dame in this week's I'PI ratings and hopes to move up a couple of notches by defeat ing USC. The Buckeyes opened their season last Saturday by edging Duke, 14-13. It will mark the first night game ever played by an Ohio State team. - West Virginia is a six-point fav orite over George Washington and Kentucky is a seven-point choice over Detroit in other major Fri day night games. The biggest attractions on Sat urday's card are Northwestern vs Iowa and Notre Dame vs Purdue. Northwestern was ranked sec ond in the nation following its 45-13 victory over once-mighty Ok lahoma last Saturday but is a one point underdog against Iowa, which opened its season by clob bering California, 42-12. Purdue, although ifnranked among the top ten, is a three point favorite to hand Notre Dame its first defeat under new coach Joe Kuharich. The Irish romped to a 28-8 triumph over North Car olina last ' Saturday while Purdue battled UCLA to a scoreless tie in its opener. Top-ranked Louisiana State is a 21-point favorite over Baylor. Fourth-ranked Army is a 10 point choice over Illinois but seventh-ranked Clemson is a one point underdog for its meeting with Georgia Tech. In other games, fifth-r a n k e d Mississippi is an "out" favorite against Memphis State, eighth ranked Texas is a 10-point choice over California and ninth-ranked Wisconsin is picked to defeat Marquette. Bo yra still ban "Hani Crank" auto iniura&eiT Now is the time for modem, Msmm money-saving Safeco Ten can save important money, if you qualify as a safe drive with the tieamlined SAFECO auto meunncai SAFECO esea hoe talacted neks with the lataat advances in uorwhtiag, mk end aocountiaf to cut ineanmos eoaks. etter ertetie eoau-te-ooeet, and i full the mneny Ex-Marine Leads In I Centennial POiiTLAND, Ore. (UPI Nearly 100 golf professionals set out on the second round of the $2).000 Portland Centennial Open ; today in pursuit of a young ex marine. Tony Lerna. 25, of San Leandro, 1 Calif., broke out of a summer long slump Thursday to show the,: field his heels with a seven-under- oar BS on tne velvety fairways and greens of the Portland Golf Club. He hal a two stroke lead over the field in his quest for $2,800 first money, and $100 already in his pocket in first day lap money, jj Sjonsors o( the tournament, 20 young Portland business men who f hope to make Portland a regulari; stop on the Professional Golfers Association schedule, posted the daily purse unique this year among PGA tournaments. They also offered $50 for holes in one, a td a hometowner, Harvey llixon, promptly earned it with the first ace of his life on the 13'J-yard fourth hole. Lema Slumped This Year Lema, who made his first pro tour last year and won more than $15,000. slumped badly this year after a winter operation and has won little more than $5,000. His highest finish was a tie for 10th in the Texas Ooen. He suffered two bogeys Thurs day with three-putt greens, but countered them with a five-foot putt for an eagle on the 523-yard fifth hole, and fashioned seven birdies. His finest shot was a chip on the 18th which stopped two inches from the cup. Closest to Lema at 67 were Jay Hebert, Sanford, Fla., and Jim Ferree, Crystal River, Fla. Seven were tied for fourth with 68's Al Besselink, Grossinger, N.Y., Ray Honsberger, Seattle; Bob Du den, Oswego, Ore., Bill Maxwell, ; Odessan Tex.; Smiley Quick, Los Angeles; Dick Knight, San Diego; and Frank Stranahan, Crystal riv- 1 er. Fla. ' Casper In Contention U. S. Open Champion Billy Casper Jr., of Apple Valley, Calif.,' and PGA champion Bob Rosburg, Palo Alto, Calif., were in conten tion with a 09 and a 70, respec tively. Don January, Denver, and Ma-ty Furgol, Cog Hill, III., also shot 69 s. NOW THRU SAT. rf '1 liti lh SUttin 7i ; CAROL LYNLCY 1 BRANDON d WILDS H MAC DONALD CAfttY I OnemaScopE n own ft Ncwm PLUS GEO. MONTGOMERV "BADMAN'S COUNTRY" eoenx M-feour chums serrica. by your ewa aHqiewleal ia CM the bets bow ea SAROO noney-aaviaj auto I e. REYNOLDS Insurance Agency REYNOLDS BUiLDINO