yrFnTFfflyD MATE TRTBTTETE, MEPFORT), "(mEGON". SUNDAY. "NrOYTWrftTCT? T. Y93
Huskies Beat Oregon 7 To 0 : Staters Down Montana 14 To 7
r.VGE SIX
WEBFEET UNABLE
10 SCORE THOUGH
THREATEN OFTEN
Washington Gets 'Break'
For Touchdown Oregon
Held On One-Yard Line
Braddock Shines.
MTTLTNOMAH STADIUM, Portland,
Ot. 81. (AP) The Waahlngton
H :sktes, frightfully bothered by that
relent, trouble .melting Oregon
" nr." skinned throurh to 7 to 0
r. -tory over the Webfoots today end
t re etlll high on the road to i
Folflo const conference championship.
Byron Halnea of Bend, Ore., who
m rushed Into the game after three
nlavs to replace Al Crurer, rambled
around the Oregon right end from
Wis eight-yard line to score In the
opening period. Elmer Logg booted
the goal and from then on the eoaat
Iradera began battling the famoua
Oregon boogy-man the "jini."
Oreo-on didn't threaten lust once;
It threatened many tlmea and at
leaat four of thoae occasions were
amiare on top of the Washington
goal line.
Washington's touchdown came on
a hreak. Bob Braddock, Webfoot
halfback, fumbled on hla own SI
and a purple-ahlrted gang of Huskies
fell Jointly upon the axinenng oau.
Thirty-one thousand fana from alt
ever the Pacific Northweat aaw Jim
Cain. Halnea and Prank Waskowltn.
substitute for halfback Jlmmle John
ton, bleat their way to the Oregon
Irtht. One of thoae playa waa a paaa,
WaekowltB to I-" int. for a flrat down
Jnlde the ten. Then Halnea moved
wide around the end to croea the
gonl near the aldellnea.
Tha Webfoot ln which haa coat
waahlngton mora football gamea than
tt earee to remember swung Into
action In tha aecond period. From
Jhere on It waa a battle completely
dominated by thla oft-licked con
ference underdog.
Draddock aparked tha flrat ruah
with a run to tha Husky 31 from tha
41. Halnea, the only man between
Mm and a touchdown, aaved tha day
with a magnlfleent running tackle.
Jean fjicau and Braddock amaahed
in tha 1(1 and Oregon loat the ball
when a paaa on tha fourth down
waa Incomplete.
Threat number two followed almoat
immediately. Starting on their own
ej4 Oregon paaaed and ran Ita way
back Into Huaky territory. The great-
eat yardage gaining play waa a neavo
from Gammon, half-back, to Johnny
Terby, who replaced Engeimm
which nut tha ball on
Husky 24. A aecond paaa, Oammon to
Bontley. ahlfted the attack to wi
even. Braddock waa lent through
brae tlmea and Ieau once, but the
Huaklea buttoned up the icorlng
niun on tha one-yard line.
Comlne- out for the third period
ftreamn reaumed Ita merry ehaaa
throueh the defending Huaklea,
Onmmon'a throwa to Terby and Hank
Kltsen put Waahlngton back to the
nine. Halnea atepned In again and
Intercepted a paaa behind tha goal
running It out to tha Tour.
At the end of the period the Web
foot were back on the Waahlngton
ten.
A errlea of paaaea at tha opening
at the final period went wrong.
Wsahlneton took possession on Ita
SO after Bradilork'a toaa waa ground
ed In the end none.
There wasn't even the algn of l
Wnnhlngton acorlng opportunity af
ter Halnea' smart run aeven minutes
after the battle etarted.
Vh atatlatlca tell Oregon'a etory
the Wehfoota paaaed and ran to tan
flrat downs agalnat Washington
tour. Oregon marched twice aa far
aa the Huaklei. making a total of
lea from acrlmmage and paaaea while
Washington made but Oil.
Lineup and eummarlee:
Waahlngton: oVegon
JWinson .. .. Kngatrom
Markov t.T Blork
Starrevlch 1 Olovanlnl
Krlckaen .C Parrar
Bltvlnskl HO Amato
Bond RT Poakett
Peters RB Nllaen
Logg Q ... Kennedy
rain Ml Oammon
Football Scores
Johnston nit ....
Crtivr F .,
ftrors hy pTlod:
WnfthlnRt-on -
Oregon
Brdt,ock
07
00
AUBURN DEFEATED
BY SANTA CLARA
BAN PRANC1SOO, Oct. II Pr
only eurvivinc undefeated and untied
major team weal of tha Kocktei, Unl
welt? of Santa Clara upheld the
ftneat tradition of weatern football
today with a convincing 13 to 0 tic
tory over an outclassed Alabama
Polytechnic eleven.
Twenty thoueand fana aat In on the
Interaectlonal claaale which aaw
prevloualy unbeaten team, ranked aa
one of tha atrongeat in tha old aouth,
bow to the superior all-around play
of a Santa Clara alevta.
Tha greatest Santa Clara team aver
aaaembled, conquarora of Stanford
earlier In the aeaaon and with only
aeven point acored agalnat it In five
gamea struck eharply twice In the
flrat half to maintain Ita unblemlah
ad record.
A flrat period touchdown followed
an 90-yard emaah, cllmavd by an
end run of 2 yarda by eubatltute
right flanker Norman Plnney,
Ulcsing lime lor ruo Lata to Clas
alfy Ada la 1:10 p. m.
(By tha Aaaoeated Praaa)
Weat
Waahlngton 7, Oregon 0.
Idaho 18, Oonzaga 7.
Waahlngton State 14, California II.
Montana 7, Oregon Stata 14.
Auburn 0, Santa Clara 13.
Stanford IS. U.C.L.A. 8.
Belllngham Normal 0, Pacific Lu
theran 13.
Idaho Southern Branch 0, Montana
Mlnaa 8.
Mld-Weat, Kaat
Mlnneaota X Northwestern 8.
Holy croea 0, Temple 8.
Navy 8. Penn 18.
Mlohlgan Stata 18, Boston College
18 (tie).
Illinois g, Mlohlgan 8.
8yracuae 0, Penn State 18.
Cincinnati 7, Ohio TJnlv. 10.
Colgate 14, Army 7.
Western Maryland 30, West Virginia
S3.
Baldwln-Wallaoe 18, Case 13,
Shenandoah 0, Georgetown TJnlvara-
lty 47.
Randolph Mason 18, Johns Hopkins
7.
Bowdoln 3fi, Bates 8.
Colby 7, Univ. of Main 14.
Dartmouth 11, Tale 7,
N.O. Stata 8, North Carolina 31,
Norwich 6, Vermont 13.
Springfield 10, Providence 0.
Cornell 13, Columbia 30.
Main Junior Collage 8, California
Preahmen 13.
Pittsburgh 0, Pordham 0 (tie).
Vlllanova 0. Bucknell 8.
John Carroll 7, Akron 38.
City College of New York, 7, Man
hattan 38.
Princeton 14, Harvard 14 (tie),
Muhlenberg 3, Franklin 4c Marahall
30.
Purdue 7, Georgia Tech 8.
Lafayette 0, New York U. 48.
Rutgers 0. Lehigh 10.
Western Reserve 10, Dayton 7.
Williams 38, Union 13.
Hobart 31, Rochester II.
Marietta 8, Washington Jeffer
son 35.
Centra 38, Xavler 11.
Miami 0, Ohio Wealeyan 18.
Iowa 8, Indiana 13.
Miami 7, Boston Univ. 1 (tie).
Maryland a, Florida 7.
Hamilton 8, Swarthmora 0.
Missouri 0, Nebraska 30.
Alabama 14, Kentucky 0.
Amherst 18, Mass. Stata 7.
Duke 81, Waahlngton As Lea 0.
South .Dakota 8, South Dakota
Stata 0.
Chicago 7, Wisconsin 8.
Okahoma 7, Iowa stata 7 (tla).
Brlgham Young 0, Utah 18.
Colorado Mlnaa 0, Wyoming 37,
Southern Methodist 14, Texas 7.
Baylor 0, Tens Chrlatlan 38.
George Waahlngton 6, Rica 13.
Arkanaaa 18, Texas A. at M. 0.
Davidson 10, William and Mary 0.
Clemaon 14, Qeorgta Tech II.
Tennessee 48, Georgia 0.
Southwestern 0, Howard 8.
Sewanea 0, Mississippi Stat 88.
Drake 10, Orlnnell 18.
North Dakota U, 14, North Dakota
State 0.
Mississippi 34, Centenary 7.
Virginia 8, V.M.I. 13.
St. Loula Univ. 38. Wichita Univ. 7.
Davidson 13, Furman 14,
Buffalo 0, Clarkson 41.
Loualana Stata 10, Vanderbllt 0.
Louisiana Tech IS. Tulane 33.
Delaware 8, St. John'a 13.
Arlcona 0, Kansaa 0 (tie).
Franklin 0, Butler 84.
Oklahoma Agglea 8, Waahlntgon 80.
Kansaa Slate 7, Tulsa Univ. 10.
areeley State 33, Chadron State 13
Colorado Univ. 7, Colorado College
STATERS OFFSET
T
Last Quarter Rally Nets Firs
Conference Victory
Thrilling Sprint Ties Score
CORVALLIS, Ore., Oct. 31. (AP)
A Frank Merrlwell run almoat netted
tha University of Montana a tla game
today with Oregon State college but
tha Beavers, recovering from the
thrilling performance of Milton Popo-
vlch, amashed across a laat period
touchdown and won their first ma
jor game of the aeason, 14 to 7.
Tha run Popovltch. Montana left
halfback, made will go down In the
history of Bell Field aa one of Ita all
time memories. It came with leas
than a minute or the aecond period
left to play,
Oregon Btata, after battling tha visi
tors Ineffectually with neither aide
acorlng in the first period, got Into
scoring position iBto In the second
period whan Kolberg, fullback, Inter.
cepted a paaa and ran 40 yards to the
Montana 40-yard line. The Staters
smashed to the eight-yard line, from
where Gray acored after Montana
held for three downa. Swanson con
verted. Leas than a minute waa left to play
and the Beavera kicked off. Hutch
ins' high, long punt sailed Into the
arma of Popovlch, atandlng two yarda
behind hla own goal. Behind beauti
ful Interference, ha allpped through
the Oregon State team and awopt 103
yarda down the field for a touchdown.
Whlttlnghlll converted.
Oregon State, battling viciously in
tha second half and running up a
total of 18 flrat downs for tha game
to three for the Grizzlies, broko the
tie early In the fourth period. Start
ing on the Montana 40-yard line, Gray
passed to swanson. who made 31 yarda
on the play. On aecond down, Oraaa
paaaed to Etlere, who dodged one
tackier and allpped acroaa tha goal
Una. Swanaon again kicked goal.
'rne aummary:
Oregon State
Sutherland
Nlhlll
Ramset
Demlng
Hutchlns
Watt
Wandllck
Duncan
Gray
Swanaon
Kolberg
Poa.
LB
LT
LG
O
RG
RT
RP!
Q
LH
RH
P
Score by periods:
Oregon Btate .......
Montana , ,,i
Montana
Swanaon
Noyea
Forte
Matasovlc
Vogel
Coagrove
1 Dolan
Lundberg
Popovltch
Rolston
Laxetlch
r 0 714
r o o 7
UCLANS, 19T0GBY
E
MKMORIAL COLISEUM. Los Ang
eles, Oot. SI. (UP) A Stanford
Unlveralty football team which sud
denly came to life after four unsuc
cessful starts thla aeaaon, turned In
an Impressive 10 to 8 victory today
over the Unlveralty of California at
Lo Angelea.
Stanford acored early In the flrat
quarter and led 7 to 0 at half time.
U. O. L. A. scored a touchdown In
the third quarter but failed to con
vert. The Btanforda bounded bark
with a fourth quarter amaah to pro
duce two touchdowns and put the
game on toe.
The third Stanford touchdown of
the afternoon waa made by Vlgna.
right halfback, who with Brlgham
and Calvelll, Btanforda twin-motor
ed fullback department, routed U.
C. U A. by powerful running and
unerring forward paasea. Vlgna grab
bed a U. 0. L. A. paaa and raced M
yarda through tha Bruin team to
croaa tha goal Una.
Stanford, greatly underrated and
the underdo In tha betting, took
charge at the atart.
Calvelll started tha march shorllv
after the opening whistle when he
rlflrd a 10-yard pssa to Grant Stone.
end from San Diego, who deposited
the ball on the Bruin 31 -yard line.
A five-yard penalty for U. P. I.. A
offsld and amaahea by Coffli put
the hall on the 10-yard line. Cal-'
relll made five yarda on two amaahes
and Calvelll dropped back to pass.
Finding no recelvera In the open,
the Italian fullback raced around
hla right end to score. Bob Matthews. !
guard, place kicked for the extra
point.
Battling tha Inspired Stanford team i
for two quartera. In an effort to even 1
up nutters the Bruins got their i
chance In tha third quarter when !
Charlea Pike, substitute end. caught
17-yard paaa tossed by Canto.
sophomore halfback, and waa tackled
on tftanford'e four.yard line. On the
flrat play. Cantor alaahed his right
tackle for the touchdown. Wllllama'
Highschool Football
T
WIN OVER BEARS
MEMORIAL STADIUM, Berkeley,
Calif., Oct. 81. (UP) Waahlngton
Stata college saved her 1038 unbeat
en record and Roe Bowl dream to
day by on of the tlghteat of mar
gins football can produce.
The Cougar from tha Palouse
country put over a 14-ls victory
ovr University of California' Golden
Bears In a finish that left weak.
hearted fana faint and strong-hearted
ones weak.
A touchdown by Ed Ooddard, can
didate for all-Amerlcan quarterback.
and a converalon by big George Rows
well, whom Coach Bab Holllngbery
keepa In tha Cougar cage for Juat
such emergencies, turned tht trick
when It aaemed all waa lost.
It came with less than three min
utes to play after a break that would
ba the subject of dispute over Sun
day morning coffee tables. .
Bogged down on California's 18-
yard line, Ooddard threw a deaper-
ata pass. It fell Into Dhe end cone.
but an alert official said he saw
Bob Herwlg, Caliromla center, hold
ing an eligible receiver and the ball
went to Waahlngton State on Call
fornla'a 4-yard Una.
Ooddard amaahed mlghtly Into the
line for two. Roaano hit without
gain and Ooddard waa stopped on
hla aecond try. Then ha gathered all
his speed, flew at tackle, and drove
over the line to cross the goal line
In a horizontal position, held up by
tha prone linemen of both aldea
That made the score 13-13. Then
Roawell trotted to the field, and
kicked the extra point.
It waa the aecond gift touchdown
the boya from Pullman got during
the game. Their flrat break cam In
tha aecond period when California
threw caution to the wind and
tried to run the ball from Its one
yard and Cotton dropped the pigskin
aa he amaahed Into the line, and
John Klumb. tha Cougar right end,
fell on It over the goal line. Ood
dard converted with a placement.
California acored the hard way.
Their Initial touchdown waa the
product of a 33-yard march In the
first period with Cotton making the
acore and Ray Hanford converting.
FIELD GOAL
O'ER TIGER SQUAD
UPSETS
GRANTS PASS, 12-6
Medford Four-Year Victory
Streak Ended Pelicans
Deserve Victory Olsen's
Loss Hurt.
E
TO NORTHWESTERN
Friday (ininca
Corvallla 7, Eugene 48.
The Dalles 6, Hood niver 34.
Hermlaton 0, MIlton-Frecwater 33
Marshflrld 0, Roscburg 13.
Cottage Orovo 33. Springfield 0.
McMlnnvlllo 8, Tillamook 37.
Tlgard 8. Forest Grove 7.
Scappoose 18. Rainier 0.
Amity 7, Sherwood 38.
Touchet, Wash. 7, Athena 0.
Columbia Prep as, Gresham 0.
Parkrose 8. Mllwaukla 48.
Albany 30, Lebanon 8.
St. Mary's Defeated
By Rose Bowl Team
CHICAGO. Oct. 31. ( AP) The
Rose Uowi hopes of Marqucttea
Oolilen Avalanche bloomed bright to
day. Striking auddenly In tha first
period, with Capt. Raymond (Buzz)
Bulvld pacing their attack, the Mil
waukee hllltoppcra scored two touch
downa and then went on to defeat St.
Mary'a "Galloping Gacla" 30 to 8 be
fore 80.000 apectatora laat night at
flood-lighted Soldier Field.
The victory waa Marquette's fifth
straight this season. Previously the
Milwaukee eleven conquered Wlscon.
aln. 8t. Loula Unlversltv lf..,.n.
Stato and Michigan State. In 1035
Marquotte'a hopes for a Rose Bowl In
vitation were blasted by a lone de
feat at the hands of Temple.
WPA IIimiIs Kiiucht
NEWHr.RO, Ore.. Oct. 31. i API
WPA offlciala aald today a 163,800
project, calling for tha employment
of 300 men In atralghtenlng and
maintaining roads In this vicinity,
will he carried on the next aeven
months.
DYCHE STADIUM, Ivanston, 111.,
Oct. 31. (UP) Mlnnesota'a football
empire ended today In the mud and
rain when Northwestern, the team
that didn't hove a chance, amaahed
the Golden Gopher to the first de
feat they've known In four yeara, by
a acore of 0 to 0.
Steve Toth, a stocky-built Hungarian-born
boy, plunged oft Mlnne
sota'a right tackle on the second play
of the fourth period for the touch
down which gave Northweatern an
astounding triumph.
Toth, driving behind the right side
of tha Wildcats lino Mike Calva.io.
Bob Volgta and John Zltko ripped a
gaping hole In the Qohpera' forward
nail. He needed only a half yard,
but the hole waa so deep that the
103-pound Northweatern fullback fell
mora than four yarda acroaa the tine
without an arm on htm.
Minnesota blocked Toth' attempt
at the extra point, but It didn't mat
ter aa tha Wildcats held their lead
through the waning momenta of a
heart-pounding game played before
48,347 apectatora. t t
When the final shot sounded, the
mud-caked playera trooped off tha
sloppy field, the Golden Gophers'
gridiron dynasty waa over snapped
after 31 atralght trlumpha and a four-year-old
record of no defeats. Once
again an underdog had wrecked a
supposed "super team." Northwest
ern, a 1-3 shot, had toppled the team
that boasted no weakneaaea.
Northweatern had to have two for
tunate breaka to win. but Mlnneaota
had Ita chancea, and couldn't caah
them.
The taama were locked In a defen-
alve battle which seemed likely to end
In a acoreleaa tla when the first break
came which set the atege for North
western'a touchdown.
An Inspired Klamath Falls football
team yesterday, clawing and alam
mlng through 47 minutes of deadlock
battling on the new turf field here
kicked a field goal with 10 sec
onds to go to smash the atate cham
pionship aspirations of the Medford
Tlgera 3-0, and hand the local team
the first set back In four yeara. It
was the flrat Klamath victory alnce
1930.
The victory waa a hard earned but
well deserved one, although atatlatlca
give Medford the edge on first downa.
10 to 6, and yarda gained from scrim
mage, J87 to 145. Prom the opening
whistle to tho dying gun the Pell-
cans fought aa though mad.
Only once In the first half did the
Tlgera threaten, when Giovannis
fumble on hla own 13 yard line was
recovered by Root, Medford end. Sa
kralda made one yard on a buck but
on the next play Medford waa penal
ized is yards for holding ana the
threat begged down when on the fol
lowing play Wilson took Sakralda'
forward paaa and attempted to lateral
It to Ettlnger, Klamath recovering
tne wild lateral on their own 33.
Just before the end of the third
quarter the Medford offense started
sparking for the flrat time In the
game and reveraca by Ettlnger, Sa
kralda and Bayltaa carried tha ball
from their own 20 to the Klamath 35,
where Sakrnlda's paaa to Wilson was
Intercepted by Myers Just after the
change of direction at the etart of
the fourth quarter.
Shortly after the start of the laat
quarter Huff got off a long kick that
rolled past Lewis, Injured Medford
half who was attempting to play
aafety, and the bell was recovered on
the Medford eight. Bucks carried the
ball out' to the 33 where Ettlnger
fumbled but recovered, on tho. 35. On
the next play a bad paas from conter
was fumbled and recovered on the
Medford 33 by Huff, Klamath'a
punting end. Crashca at the
line by Green and Myera car
ried the ball to the 10!4 yard line
where the flrat field goal was at
tempted. Green's kick waa wide and
Medford took the ball on their own
30. In two plays Medford made 10
ysrda but on the next Sakralda pass
waa Intercepted by Yancy, for the
Pelicans, on 'Medrord s 30. In two
playa Green carried tho oval back to
the Medford 30 for a lat and 10'. and I
in two more play the same ball car
rier plowed hla way to the Tiger 13.
Carnlnl, In two bucks, carried the
ball from there to the 10 for a first-and-ten,
and Hcdney alaehed to the
aeven. There Klamath drew a flvo
yard penalty for off -aldea, putting the
ball on the 13. from where the auc
cessful place kick by Green neatly
divided the upright with 10 seconds
left In the game.
Medford lined up to receive, the
ball went to Campbell who cut for
the aldellnea and fumbled on the 34,
recovering aa the gun ended the
ffnm.
Nobody In the city' begrudged the
Pellcana their victors'. They played
hard, alert, heads-up football, capi
talized on the breaks, blocked and
tackled hard, and In every way made
a record to be proud of.
The Tlgera had r.o excuse to offer
for their defeat laat night.
Medford. however, did enter the
game crippled. Lewis, star halfback
returning for the first time alnce the
Eureka game when he waa forced out
with a torn ankle, played only a pan,
of the first half until hi ankle waa
again Injured. Coach Bowerman sent
In a dav merited vrit.Yi fenfhnu ,,
sets from coast to coast, the Ashland
high achool Joined the Klamath Falls
squad In the spirit of the occasion,
and duplicated Klamath'a surprise
win over Medford by soundly trouno
ing the favored Grants Paas Cavemen
12-8, on the Ashland field.
Only a meager crowd saw the fray,
which went scoreless for almost three
qaartera. Ashland scored flrat when
Lee raced 17 yards on a double re
verse to the one yard line and Fowler
bucked It over on t.he vf. nin .re
conversion wss blocked. Near the mld-
a:e or the laat quarter a alx yard pass
from Fowler to n. wnrrwri
pleted In the end zone to give Ash-
iiuia a 12-0 lead.
Granta Paaa um. ft lira in th. t...
few mlnutea of the game and opened
a dazzling aerial attack with Madden
doing the pitching. His last pssa was
completed on the two-yard atTlpe,
and he bucked the touchdown on the
next play.
The game had no efrct. am
enoe atandlnga, Granta Paas having
earner conierence game '6-0.
Eunice Evers. " vonthfui u-,
Pla, net star, captured aoven trophies
In eastern and northern tourney nlav
tills year.
E
SUFFER REVERSES
SQUADS
Continue on Pa 8vn.)
V-a-i- V1 L
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaafcasi '-, r Has lassjaaaa
Clarence Pankey
DEMOCRATIC
CANDIDATE
for
CLERK OF
JACKSON CO.
"I Pledgs An Efficient and
Courteous Administration"
General Election, November 3rd
1M raid. adv.
RALPH G.
JENNINGS
Democratic Candidate
for County Commissioner
B:a.7vs u 4
If elected I will make every
effort to reduce the con
stantly increasing taxes.
PJld Adv.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Oct. SI. (API
-Off to a quick lead, through the
flrat period touchdown and field
goal, Penn'a rugged Quakers scored
their first victory In four yeara over
Navy today, defeating tha Midship
men, IS to 6, before 85,000 apec
tatora MICHE STADIUM. WEST POINT.
Oct. 31. (AP) Colgate, badly beaten
In the first half, came from behind
with a great display of It football
hokus-pocus today to topple Army
from th ranks of the undefeated
with an unexpected 14-to-7 victory
All the Colgate points came In the
final half.
before a 88,000 crowd today at the
stadium.
Both Harvard touchdowns, the
flrat (cored against Princeton lines
1930. resulted from long forward
paaaea
Rohert stlllwell. South Carolina
grldder, spent the ummet working
in a mortuary, ne wante w n i ru
neral director upon graduation.
Walter Jacobson, beginning his 31n
year as football coach at Presbyterian
college, la recognized aa the dean of
southern coachea.
YALE BOWL, NEW HAVEN. Conn.
Oct. 31. (AP) Dartmouth acored hr
aecond atralght football victory over
Yale today, winning, 11 to 7, a the
Hanover Greenlee acquired their
weird score on two safetlea and a
touchdown, whlla Larry Kelley caught
paaa In the end zona to save Yale
from a ahutout.
CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Oct. 31. (AP)
Harvard 'a greatly Improved football
team got the Jump on the great but
alugglsh Princeton Tlgera and battled
toe and nail for a glorious 14-14 tls
NOTICE TO
Duck Hunters
Honker geese and mallard
duclu are plentiful on Upper
Klamath Lake. Ilarrlmon Lodge
on Pelican Bay la equipped to
accommodate hunters. For rei
errations phone or write
GUS G. JOHNSON
Hani man Lodge
Rocky Point. Oregon
Lost River
BUTTER
EXPERIENCE COUNTS!
Yes sir I For the past third of a century we have faithfully served the people
of thiB community . . , given generous measure of value for every dollar
spent here , . . offered authentic style advice and featured friendly, courteous,
personal service that have built an enviable reputation for this long-established
Medford institution . . . Experience in KNOWING what southern Oregon
pfople want experience in serving their every want certainly COUNTS!
Just ask the man who makes The Toggery his apparel headquarters 1
FINER
THAN
EVER!
MANHATTAN
SHIRTS
In every single detail of workmanship and style, Man
hattan Shirts set a high standard ... For long, satis
factory wear and outstanding style excellencechoose
Manhattan !
Every Alan
Admires Them!
$2 00
AND
$2.50
kctv
l i hSfl Dobb
.7vjy $coo
They're TOPS'
GENUINE
DOBS and
STETSON
HATS
Men of tate thoae oho ree
ocnlr.r ine economy of buying
Ql' A I.I TV choose one of these
really fine brands
$ Hats Priced
to
$750
f
etson $6.50 to $8.50
Interwoven
Socks
Hosiery one of the
most noticed details
of dress merits care
ful selection. Inter
woven Hose affords
Iht most In quality
the ereatest In service
the maximum of
value for your moner.
Pair and Up
STAUNCHLEY
SUITS
Their distinctive style.,
that's the first feature
that wins admiration.
Then the rare individu
ality of the exclusive pat
terns. And you'll easily
recognize the fabric as
a notably fine, long
wearing worsted of luxu
rious texture. The val
ue, too, is outstanding.
40
NUNN-BUSH
POPULAR PRICED
FINE SHOES
The TOGGERY
For Thirty - three Years Style Headquarters For Southern Oregon
kirk waa blocked.
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