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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1955)
Oregon State Props (Game to UCLA, 38-0 Los Angeles (U.R) UCLA 'crushed hapless Oregon State 38-0 Friday niht as Bruin Coach Henry (Red) Sanders demonstrat ed to his former pupil and as sistant, Beaver Coach Tommy Prothro hog the single wing should be employed. Except for the fourth period, UCLA' struck to the ground and employed running plays to score in every period of the game .-played before 57,664 fans in Me morial Coliseum. Starting UCLA tailback Sam Brown scored twice and sparked the Bruins to a third touchdown. Passing sensation Ronnie Knox opened an aerial attack in the final (period, completing five passes that Included a touchdown throw to fullback Doug Peters for 11 yards. Other Touchdowns In addition to Brown's two touchdowns and Peters' one, the other UCLA touchdowns were scored by Bob Davenport, Gerrh McDougall, and Pete O'Garro. The Bruins converted success fully only twice. UCLA obviously had too much speed, defensive and bench strength for the Beavers. Oregon State penetrated into Bruin ter ritory only once during the en tire game. Otherwise, the Beavers stayed in the hole, most ly because of their own erratic kicking. They frequently kicked on third down and their running attack never got rolling. Beaver Passing Oregon State ran up 80 yards passing to UCLA's 71, but the Bruins dcored twice in the air and Knox made 56 of his team's aerial yardage on his fourth pe- Sports Club Gets Rights For Hunting ' .The Lumberjacks' Sports mens club an organization of Medford Corporation employees, has secured exclusive hunting rights to a large area in the Ag ate desert and along the Rogue river, it was reported last week. An agreement with Dean Ow ens, owner of the property, has been worked out, and the area will be . posted with exclusive hunting right signs during bird season. Duck blinds and other improvements 'including low dams to create three ponds, have been pro vided,.ndjnembers re port the area is on a3 "natural flyway" from the river. 69 Members The 65 members of the non profit group are pledged to pro mote safe hunting practices, and to work for good will with own ers of property where hunting is good, and to contract for hunting and fishing areas. . business and social meetings, including a couple of picnics, a watermelon feed, showing wild life slides of Oregon, the North west and Alaska by William Smith and C. C. Rowan of Med ford, and other gatherings, have been held during the summer. COP Tigers Hand Idaho 20-0 Defeat Moscow, Idaho (U.R) Col lege of Pacific's potent Tigers, stymied on the ground by Ida ho's hard fighting line, took to the air Saturday toscore a 20-0 football victory over the Van dals before 8,500 rainsoaked fans. The COP victory was sparked by Quarterback Bill Jacobs who . passed for one touchdown and intercepted an Idaho pass to set up another. The third tally came on a pass by substitute quarter back Junior Reynosa. Sharing the spotlight was A. D. Williams, the big College of Pacific end who was the prime passing target. He scored the first touchdown, then latteraled for the second score after nab bing another aeijal. Idaho was never able to threat en seriously except for a brief splurge after the second half kickoff, which saw the Vandals penetrate to the Pacific 20 ' where they lost the ball on downs. The first half was a de fensive battle featured by crisp tackling and blocking by both teams. . , . , . riod scoring drive. . The game was the first meet ing between Sanders .and his chief assistant for nine years and it drew the largest crowd in the 20 years the teams have met. It was the seventh shutout scored by UCLA in nine con secutive games. The UCLA string was broken two weeks ago by Maryland and last year by California. Two Hollywood Aces To Report to Pirates Hollywood (U.R) The Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League announced yester day that two of their ace right handed pitchers of 1955, Red Munger and Joe Trimble, will report next spring to the parent Pittsburgh Pirates under a work ing agreement. Munger, the o u t s t a riding pitcher of the PCL this year with a 23-8 record, is returning to the Pirates after three seasons with the Stars. Trimble chalked up a fin 11-4 record, including seven in a row. UNI SIPODDSTS YljCommandments "till of Safety ft i 1 Treat every gun with the respect due a loaded gun. This is the first rule of gun safety. 2 Guns carried into camp or home, or when otherwise - not in use, must always be unloaded, and taken down or have actions open; guns always should be carried in cases to the shooting area. 3 Always be sure barrel and action are clear of obstruc tions, and that you have only ammunition of the proper size for the gun you are carrying. Remove oil and grease from chamber before firing. 4 . Always carry your gun so that youNcen control the dt rection of the rmhzle, even if you stumble; Veep the safety on until you are ready to shoot. VW. y 5 Be sure of vow target before youpuft the trigger; know the identifying features of the ganje" vbu Intend to Never point a gun at anything you dJntwen to shoot; avoid el horseplay while handling a gurus. 4j ,f tymtlr ' '." " Tiff " guns should be unloededguns and; am,, munition should be stored separately beyonfeaeh of chik 4 dren and careless adults. .VW i' 1 8 Never cKmb a tree o fence or jump a ditch Krith a t loaded gun; never pwH a gun toward you by the muzzle. , 1 7 . Never shoot a bullet at a flat, hard surface, or the sur j face of water; when at target practice, be sufeyour- back-' stop is adequate. ' 10 Avoid alcoholic drinks before or during' shooting. , 7i ! mm '."''RnrinW fro WATCH rlXT;:MUZrLE, kifief t tm q.miiltii to aayoas WitorMto 'm xWdng tU cmm of W- ing and Aootiag Mfety. Sond nqimh to SPORTSMEN'S SERVICE BUREAU. 250 Urt 43rd Stroor. New York 17. N. Y. hunt. 6 Yankees Start On Orient Trip; Stengel To Make Plans For -56 New York U.R) The New York Yankees set out Saturday on the first leg of a trip to the Orient which Manager Casey Steneel says "should help me a lot in making plans for 1956. The party of 64 players, cluo executives arid wives, was sched uled to fly to San Francisco and then depart for Honolulu. After five games in Honolulu the main body of the squad will go n to Manila and Japan. - 'Tm going to play Billy Mar tin at shortstop," Stengel said before the departure. "We had a lot of trouble at shortstop this year and I want to find- out Moore Passes Physical Exam San Diego, Calif. (U.R) Archie Moore, banned from box ing in California because of a suspicion of a heart ailment, has passed a referee's physical examination which will lead to his being reinstated as a boxer, Moore referred one of the top preliminary bouts on last night's card at Hollywood Legion sta dium. " The light heavyweight cham pion from San Diego was ex amined Friday by Dr. Winston Hall on his application for a li cense to referee at the Legion. Dr. Hall said Moore's heart ap peared perfectly normal. The examination Moore passed to referee is the same one given for a license to boxand by pass ing the test he qualified to fight again in California.. iu bpv ' r RADIATES MAXIMUM HEAT ELIMINATES ROOM HEAT LOSS, SAVES 7 FUEL - 7 PROTECTS AGAINST FLYING SPARKS, ASHES. DIRT AND DRAFTS TWIN DOORS OPEN WIDE FOR EASY LOADING OF FUEL , CONTROL DRAFT WITH TWO SLIDING DOORS FOR FAST OR SLOW FIRE SOLID BRASS CONSTRUCTION. BEAUTY UNHEARD OF. THOUSANDS IN USE WINTER AND SUMMER BURN WOOD, COAL OR GAS ' WRITE FOR FRII VALUABLE COLORFUL BOOKLET My fireplace is . Win wp Address- -Citf CORNER 8th & FIR -State- PHONE 2-7166 whether Martin can play it for us next season. "We'll have a lot of fun on the trip but there's also going to be a lot of business." Stengel concluded. Weiss Aboard Aboard the plane when it left New York was General Manager George Weiss, with whom Steng el has been discussing the possi bility of winter trades since the last putout of the World Series last Tuesday. r Martin, who returned to Camp Carson, Colo., after the series to be formally discharg ed from the Army was scheduled to join the party in San Fran cisco along with infielder Andy Carey and his bride, actress Lucy Marlow. Carey and Miss Marlow were married Thursday night. Pitcher Johnny Kucks and first baseman Ed Robinson, who also were married on Thursday, had their brides aboard. The bachelors making the trip are Bob Grim, Don Larsen, Frank Leja, Bob Wiesler and Martin. Leja, 19-year-old bonus first baseman, is expected to see con siderable action during the tour. He lias shown improvement in special drills with Coach Bill Dickey but probably will be far med out to a high minor league next season. The Mainichi newspapers of Tokyo, are sponsoring the trip, which has the approval of the U. S .State department and the Japanese government. Olson-Robinson To Sign For Bout Chicago (U.R) Middle weight Champion Carl (Bobo) Olson and challenger Ray (Sugar) Robinson will sign Con tracts for their Nov. '4 title bout Friday, Secretary Truman Gib son of the International Boxing Club has announced. Gibson said tickets for the bout, priced at $20, $15, $10 and $5 would go on sale simul taneously. : Olson will train at a Near North Side hotel where a ring will be installed in a. converted ballroom. He lived in the hotel previously when training for his bout here with Kid Gavilan. Their meeting will be the first title bout in the Chicago Sta dium since April, 1954, when Olson beat Gavilan. Webfoots Fumble Way To 3L3-6 Loss To Colorado Buffs Sunday, October 9. 19SS MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBTJKg TH1RTKMI "Eugene, Ore. (U.R) An alert Colorado team, taking ad vantage of eight Oregon fumbles, drove to two first half touch downs to defeat the Webfoots, 13-6, on muddy Hayward field Saturday , in a regionally-televised intersectional football game before 12,500 fans. Colorado grabbed six Oregon fumbles to end three touchdown drives and convert one of them into the first touchdown of the game. Oregon's speedy backs, led by Dick 'James and Jim Shanley, gained 196 yards on the ground and added 170 passing to make their total for the afternoon 366, nearly double the 1'99 total the Buffs picked up on the ground and in the air. Fumble Early The parade of fumbles started on Oregon's first scrimmage play of the game when Shanley drop ped the ball on his own 30 and Don Karnoscak grabbed the ball for the first of four times during the game. It was just one play later when Homer Jenkins circled right end and cut back to the middle to score standing up. He missed the conversion. The Webfoots came right back and drove to the Colorado three, with Tom Cfabtree's 40-yard pass to James the big play. A fumble by Jack Morris stopped the drive. The Webfoots finally scored on the first play of the second period when Shanley, using a fine block by Morris, ran eight yards inside left end to tally. Morris missed the conversion. The steady running of James set up this drive. , Winning Touchdown Colorado took a short kickoff and drove 57 yards in 15 plays Eagle Point Tops Henley Team 19-13 Eagle Point Eagle Point high's gridders blasted back into the victory column Friday after noon by trimming Henley 19 to 13 at Henley. The Eagles ran up a 19 to 0 advantage before the third quar ter was over but were slowed offensively by tumbles r and heavy penalties in the second half. . Jack Grebr Jack Bunker and Ron Nelson scored on long runs for Eagle Point, as the Jackson county club led 6 to 0 at the half and 19 to 6 after three stanzas. Greb shot off tackle for 85 yards in the second quarter for the Eagles' first TD. The conver sion run failed. In the third quar ter Jack -Bunker romped 27 yards, also off tackle for the sec ond score and Greb ran the bonus point. Nelson in the sme canto scooped up a Henley fumble on the Hornet 43 and ran to the goal. The conversion try failed. , -i Henley tallied in the thir quar ter on 45-yard run on a reverse and in the final panel on a 35 yard pass play. Jim Bunker, sophomore guard, played a strong defensive game for the Eagles. TOM GOLA SIGNS . Philadelphia (U.R) Tom Gola, the "glamour boy of the college courts in 1954," has sign ed for an estimated $11,000 with the Philadelphia Warriors and will make his first appearance with the team in an exhibition game against the Boston Celtics Monday night at Bangor, Maine. Football FRIDAY COLLEGE GAMES By UNITED PRESS Houston 7, Detroit 0 Notre Dame 14. Miami (Fla.), 0 Citadel 14. Richmond 12 Southern Methodist 13. Mo. 6 UCLA 38. Oregon State 0 to get the winning touchdown with Sam Maphis sneaking for the final yard. Jenkins added the extra point. The key play In the drive was a third-down pass good for 14 yards from Dick Hyson to Dick Clarke which carried to the Ore gon 24. , Oregon drove to the Colorado 21 in the third . period before James fumbled. The Webfoots stopped themselves with two more bobbles in the same period while the Buffs could not get an attack underway. Oregon again drove to the five in the fourth period only to have Tom Crabtree's pitchout go astray with the Buffs again pick ing it up to halt the threat. . Washington Upsets 10th Ranked USC Seattle, Wash. U.R) A sensational 80-yard play com bining a pass, a lateraly and a 50 yard run by End Corky Lew is gave Washington a 7-0 win over Southern California before 35,500 fans Saturday. By knocking off 10th ranked USC, Washington's Huskies serv ed notice that they intended to go to the Rose bowl this year. The touchdown play, and un rehearsed extravaganza, was something to behold, but it was Washington's magnificent de fense that kept the Trojans from the end zone. TD in Final The touchdown came midway in the final period when quarter back Steve Roake passed 20 yards to Right End Jim Houston. Houston, field in the clutches of a Trojan tackier, lateraled to Lewis on the Washington 45 and he went all the way. Dean Der by kicked the extra point. Washington was a 7-point un derdog at game time. Lewis' run was the best of the day on a turf made soggy and slippery by a continuous downpour of rain. Halfback Jon Arnett tried for all he was worth to keep USC in the contest but nothing could cut down the Huskies. USC pass ed and ran to Washington's 48 and then halfback Mike Monroe intercepted halfback Ernie Zam- pese's pass on the Washington 12 and the Huskies controlled the ball until the final seconds, McLoughlin Loses 7-0 Crater high freshmen turned a pass interception and a fumble into touchdowns in the second half to bounce McLoughlin jun ior high ninth grade 13 to 7 here yesterday. All the scoring in the hassle was in the second half. A 50- yard ramble to the end zone by Gerry Lyons im the first half for McLoughlin was nullified by a clipping penalty. Crater's ninth scored first in the third quarter after Jerome McQuade intercepted a Bulldog heave thrown from the Mc Loughlin 40-yard line. He went to the 20 and a few plays later took a pitch out and circled right end to counter. Kerman Bennett sneaked the extra point. Wallace Scores ' Bill Wallace broke away to the goal on a 55-yard run for McLoughlin at the start of the fourth quarter. The bonus was bucked across. They pay-off fumble gave the Comet Frosh the ball on the 30-yard line and McQuade went around the right wing again from about 20 yards out to make it to the goal. The McLoughlin club showed well on defense despite the loss. But offense was disorganized and the Bulldogs couldn't get their attack moving. Coach Mel Boldenow said that the Mc Loughlin gang was "fairly good in spots." . NEED f lLstaples? VrKep'Call as fir TimiMdiati sinrice NEED A STAPLER? f i tun tkt ciepriti fiMiflOO-MST Tickm I Sulirt NEED HELP on a Stapling Job? f'ftltTIMTTfct- RtlkUtlUtl u 2-6189 n Hubbard Bros., Inc. W Will ' ' ujiffv J nnrmomn n MAIN and RIVERSIDE 1 ' . CONCRETE1. ' Phone 2-5336 or 2-5897 M. C. LININGER & SONS CUBS BUY HURLERS Los Angeles U.fJ The Chi cago Cubs have purchased four pitchers from their Los Angeles farm team of the Pacific Coast League. Sold by the Angels were Turk Lown (12-5), who previous ly had been with Chicago four years; George Piktuzis (7-13): Jim Brosnan, (17-10) and Don Elston (17-6). Brosnan and Els ton both were sold to Los An geles by the Cubs at the start of the 1955 season. Al Williams Posts 144 AtPendleton Pendleton Harold West of Eugene added a three-under-par 67 to his par. 70 of Friday to take the lead in the Pendleton Open Golf tournament here yes terday. He has a total of 137 for the two days. Following West going into to day's final round is Joe Greer of Yakima, Wash., with a 68-71 139, and Ray Hornsbarger, who also posted a 139. Al Feldman of Tacoma, Wash., with a 71-69 is" in third place with a 140 total. Ocie Eliason of Walla Walla, Dave Killan of Portland arid Tom Boucher, also of Walla Wala, all finished second round play with 142's. Medford's Al Williams, who posted a 74 yesterday, had a two-day total of 144. . Others competing include Bob Duden of Portland, 145; Bob Mc Kendrick, Portland, 148 and Wendel Wood, Eugene, 149.- Cougars, Cal Battle To 20-20 Tie Berkeley, Calif. (U.R) Wash ington State and the University of California, a couple of the Pa cific coast conferences' 1955 weak sisters, parlayed a battle of fumbles, penalties and pass in terceptions into a 20-20 tie Satur day before 33,000 fans in Me morial stadium. In a contest of miscues the underdog Cougars led most of the way. It wasn't until three minutes before the end of the game that Cal was able to pull into a tie. Before that time, California fumbled seven times and lost the ball to the Cougars four times, twice setting up touchdowns. Washington State fumbled five times and lost the ball to Cal three times. It was a moral victory for a Cougar squad which has lost three straight this year and has been defeated by the Golden Bears every year since 1945 when they also tied. Garden Cage Tourney Pairings Announced Iew York (U.R) Seeding! and first-round pairings for the Holiday Festival Basketball Tournament, which will be held at Madison Square Garden, Dec 26, 28, and 29, have been an nounced by the Eastern College Athletic Conference. Seedincs were: 1. San Fratv. Cisco NCAA champion; 2. UCLA; 6. JJuquesne defending cham pion; and 4. Syracuse. First round pairings: Dec. 26 afternoon? Smmu. Holy Cross, San Francisco-La saiie. GORDON RELEASE PLANNED New York (U.R) The New York Giants have asked waivers on 37-year old Sid Gordon "in order to grant the veteran in-fielder-outfielder his uncondi tional release." Gordon, who originally played for the Giants between 1941 and 1949, was pur chased by them in June this year from the Pittsburgh Pirates. PENN DROPS ANOTHER Philadelphia (U.R) Tommy Morris, a slim sophomore from Columbus, O., who couldn't make the three-deep sheet, was a ball of fire on a 60-yard march Saturday and then scored the only touchdown as Princeton de feated Pennsylvania, 7-0, for the Quakers' 12th straight loss over two seasons. , BROWN WINS. 7-0 Providence, R. I. U.R), Brown shackled the vaunted Dartmouth passing attack Satur day while uncorking a combin ation running-aerial onslaught of its own to overcome the Indians 7-0 before 15,000 homecoming fans at Brown Stadium. DEAN OWENS PROPERTY AftM District Wt of Camp White s 0 Hunting Rights Reserved for LUMBERJACK SPORTSMEN Area Posted! Dead line Sunday Classified is at noon Saturday: 10 a m Monday for Monday; other days 5 J30 previous day i HIGHEST ; TRADE-IN ' old saw, new saw, any saw, every saw... bring 'cm in NOW for a top-dollar trade-in on a beautiful, brand-new McCuIlocfa. Trade NOW, during our big record-breaking, history malungSawSelUbration. . 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ABSOLUTELY NO TOOLS REQUIRED CHECK THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES V Aluminum Alloy Construction V 200 Pounds Total Weight V Weatherstripped Compartments V Bone dry, Waterproofed Tent V Dual Stop and Tail Lights ' V Dual Bumper Hitches ' K TRAILERS ) D r 3 U U L5 See the sensation of the sport shows at your dealers today! nORSE TJOTORS 1201 North Riverside Dial 2-7254 Q SMITH-DYNGE LUMBER CO. Use Mail Tribune Want Ads 9