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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1955)
mm CITY LEAGUE Crater Electric took the first third of the City Bowling League by defeating Ed's Barber Shop 3 to 1 last night. The rest of the teams remained approximately in the same position. Frank Martin of Ross Lumber company picked up the 6-7-10 split to help his team defeat Norton Lumber company 3 to 1. Hugh Shaw of the MCL team had high game of evening with a 230. Lamports 866 game took high team game for the evening. Next week all teams start out even and have a go at the second round title. Standings: W. L. Crater Electric 33 13 T.ds Barber Shop 29 19 Calif. Oregon Power Co 29 19 MacCartnv. Clark, and Laden 26 22 Central Market 26 22 Lamrjorfs - 24 24 Mogan Lumber Co 24 24 Tru-Mix Construction Co. 23 25 Norton Lumber Co 21 27 Ross Lumber Co 20 23 First National Bank 17 31 Weter & Olsen 16 32 Results:" Crater Electric Ed's Shop 1 C. Heim 497 F. Couch 439 Joe Kantor 434 P. Dorff L. Knapp H. Vallee G. Doyon C. Hampson 4R3 507 545 468 436 D. Harmon 477 John Kantor 495 Handicap 3 2494 2395 Copco 3 B. Schroeder 516 E. Barrv 530 R. Sterton 513 C. Thompson 448 R. Rolls 501 Central Mkt. 1 B. Hayman 449 F. Keierleber 340 E. Sommer 451 J. Keener 458 G. Schulz 498 Handicap 144 2508 2340 Lamport's B. Piche 0 501 M C L E. Blind 4 477 510 343 B. Meyers 473 L. Bex L. Schneider 516 D. Turner S. Van Dyke 454 J. Laden 530 J. Farrar 642 H. snaw 548 246 Handicap 248S 2659 3 565 Tru-Mix 1 Mogan Lbr. C. Snedden 464 V. Allen J. CumminRs 448 N. Henson G. Burroughs 468 R. Barker J. Baize 489 C. Mineer M. Bell - 479 J. Clark Handicap 87 497 371 459 546 2435 2438 3 fiorton Lbr. M. Olsen E .Olsen C. Pinister M. Morse J. Boettcher Handicap Ross Lbr. G. Culy A. Schatz D. Smith F. Martin D. Culy 466 372 358 480 620 87 501 499 427 464 442 2233 2333 F N B O. Kin E. Bennett W. Nissen D. Miller P. Dimick Handicap 1 466 442 Weter-Olsen B. Wilson J. Roberts 3 544 443 512 513 L. Smith 429 M. Brown 520 L. Webster 57 511 521 2531 JtOGUE VALLEY LEAGUE Standings in the Rogue Val ley Bowling league remained the same tonight with one excep tion. City Hall split two and two with Darrell Miller company, but Andy's Jewelers, and Lorenz company each won three games, which dropped City Hall from fifth to seventh place. Lee Gra ham of Star Body Works took all the honors, with a high1 se ries of 537, and high game of 208. Standings: V. L. Seven Up 32 16 Klievers Machine Shop 27 21 Forest Patrol 26 22 Star Body Works 25 23 Andy's Jewelers 25 23 Lorenz Co. 23 25 Citv Hall 22 'i 2512 V. S. National Bank 21 27 Darrell Miller 20 28 Pine Tree Market 16 ',2 3Hi Results: Lorenz Co. 3 Star Body 1 C. McWhorter 459 A. Bohannan 470 D. McCorm'ck 466 B. Thornton 414 W. Gottfried 448 C. Emery 360 B. Tye 493 B. Graham 348 J. Mathes 470 L. Graham 537 Handicap 132 2438 2129 Pine Tree B. Jenkins 3 Klievers 418 W. Eberius 1 422 pi inun!j milium nmmwmm ui, ki.hi 1 111 1111 mmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm GIVE HIM A POWER TOOL ... And . only SH OPSMfTH is See Shopsmith Demonstrated SRQSO sy " Terms COMPLETE TAKE-IT 57-1 ' He'd Live a SHOPSMITH HUBBARD-WRAY CO., INC. ?5 SOUTH RIVERSIDE 420 369 535 I. Isaacs 384 M. Jacokson 501 T. Van Sickle 445 V. Allen 483 531 13 2291 2240 Cltv Hall 2 O. McXeel 466 N. Dow 452 E. McKinstry 336 R. Dull 436 J.Compagnoni 475 Darrell Miller D. Tremblay 377 J. Haven 384 B. Kramer C. Cox J. Roberts Handicap 369 469 449 165 2213 3 490 455 487 342 455 2213 U. S. Bank 1 S. Dotv 439 E. Humphrey 419 G. Rader 344 F. Eastwood 365 P. Shafer 456 Handicap 120 Seven Lp K. Shaw D. Coats H. Duneey J. Morean D. Swan 2143 2259 Andy's B. Pridham D. Kline D. Johnson T. Anderson C. Ericson Handicap 3 321 525 447 393 520 ... W..5 Forest Patrol B. Van Hoy H. Smets B. Moran ' D. Stockton J. Bradish 1 433 382 387 456 472 39 2245 2130 Teams May Clinch Grid Bowl Spots By JOHN GRIFFIN United Press Sports Writer A head-on collision between Maryland and Clemson will set tle a berth in the Orange Bowl, and upsets also could decide as many as four major bowl berths Saturday on the next-to-last big Saturday of college football this year. If a few. of the underdogs rise up, by nightfall Saturday we could know the identity of both teams in the Rose Bowl, the host team in the Cotton Bowl, of the host team in the Sugar Bowl. We may also know the name of the Ivy league champion, for Yale can win by beating Prince' ton. Yale, unbeaten in four league starts, is a six-point fa vorite to wrap up the crown Saturday. Here's the situation on the major bowls: Rose Bowl Both the Big Ten and Pacific Coast conference representatives could be decid ed by Saturday's games. In the Big Ten: Michigan State (3-1-0) could clinch the bowl bid by winning its final league game as a 20-point favorite over Min nesota, provided Michigan also (4-1-0) is upset by 14-point un derdog Indiana. If both win the bid will hinge on Michigan's fi nal league game next week against Ohio State. Ohio State (4-0-0) leads the league, but is barred from the bowl because it played there last year. UCLA Leading PCC In the Pacific Coast confer ence: League - leading UCLA (4-0-0) can clinch the bowl bid by winning as 28-point favorite over Washington, provided second-place Oregon State (4-1-0) is upset by six-point underdog California. Orange Bowl The clash be tween Maryland (3-0-0) and Clemson (3-0-0) at Clemson, S.C., is the final Atlantic Coast conference game for each. Mary land, the nation's second-ranked team, is a 14-point choice. Cotton Bowl Texas A&M (3-0-1) leads the Southwest con ference but can't go to the bowl because it's under league pro bation. Second - place Texas (3-1-0) could clinch the bowl bid D. Charjman S. Mallon F. Charjman D. Kreer Handicap READY TO PLUG in SHOPSMITH Mark 5 is de livered complete! There ore no hidden extras . . . nothing to assemble ... no compli cated adjustments to make. Simply plug your new SHOP SMITH in and you're ready to go to work! Truly, SHOP SMITH is the first modern ap pliance for men! LAY-AWAY NOW! FROM SANTA... PHONE 2-4011 Califomians Aren't Laughing At Ducks, Beavers This Week By SCOTT BAILLIE San Francisco (U.R) They used to laugh when Oregon State and Oregon came down to play football but the smart boys def initely are worried this week end and for good reason. Oregon State, which dropped eight out of nine games last sea son, meets California at Berke ley and is a seven-point choice to dig deeper into second place in the Pacific Coast Conference. Oregon, bouncing along on a four game winning streak, has been posted a seven-point under dog to Stanford off the Indians' 28-20 upset of Southern Califor nia. Coach Chuck Taylor of the Indians refuses to cheer up, for a change, and regards this game as the greatest test of the year for his in-and-outers. One of the drivewheels in Oregon State's amazing come back under Coach Tommy Pro thro has been left tackle John Witte. Big John actually is a triple threat man. After he gets out of school he wants to play pro football, get on somebody's wrestling troupe and become an undertaker. Brought Secrets Prothro, who came to the Bea vers from UCLA this year and smuggled the secrets of th Bruins' single-wing system out of Los Angeles, rates Witte the best tackle on the coast. "He compares favorably to Jack Ellena, UCLA's Ail-Ameri can tackle of last year," Prothro declares. In the meantime, Corvallis, Ore., once more is nuts over foot ball and King Basketball has been set down a peg. Oregon also is far ahead of expectations and goes into the Stanford game with straight wins over California, Arizona, Idaho and Washington State. Not that these teams are worldbeaters, but things are a lot rosier than Coach Len Casanova had dared to dream. What happened? All seemed lost after George Shaw, the all purpose man, left after last sea son. But Tom Crabtree's savvy at quarterback mixed with the speed of halfbacks Jack Morris and Jim Shanley have replaced Shaw's passing. The Webfoots are making terrific mileage over land. Washington's reeling Huskies, who were bopped 20-6 by unsung California last week, are slated to take it on the chin again from UCLA in Los Angeles where the Bruins are 28-point favorites. Washington has been held to one touchdown in each of its last five games. Southern California and Col lege of the Pacific get the day off. Down at the bottom of the by beating third-place Texas Christian (2-1-0) because then it will have beaten the only teams that can tie for second. But Texas Christian is favored to win by six points. Sugar Bowl Only a long shot chance of the Southeastern conference race being settled. It would happen only if four teams lost Auburn, Mississippi State, Georgia Tech, and Ten nessee. This would give the berth to league-leading Missis sippi, which plays an outside game this week. Last Major Obstacle Another team shooting for a bowl berth Saturday is West Virginia, a three-point choice over Pittsburgh. The Mountain eers, who already have clinched the Southern conference cham pionship, are hopeful of a Sugar Bowl invitation if they get by Pitt a team figured as the last major obstacle to a perfect sea son. Oklahoma, the nation's No. 1 team which already has nailed down the Orange Bowl berth from the Big Seven conference, is a 35-point favorite to chalk up its 27th straight victory Sat urday over Iowa State. The vic tory would give the Sooners the Big Seven crown, provided co leader Nebraska loses as pre dicted, to Colorado. Colorado is a six-point favorite. The week end starts on an in tersectional note tonight with Detroit a 13-point favorite over Villanova, and Miami, Fla., a heavy favorite over Bucknell. Other leading games tonight include Furman-Florida State, and Omaha-Idaho State. Notre Dame, the highest ranked independent team in the nation at No. 5, is a 27-point fa vorite over North Carolina in a leading intersectional tilt Satur day, while similar affairs find Holy Cross six points over Mar quette and Mississippi 19 over Houston. Daily's U-Drivs Medford Airport barrel, Washington State 1-6-1 plays sharp San Jose at , Pull man, Wash., while Idaho! 0-7, meets distressed Brigham Young at Provo, Utah. Fresno State and Cal Poly play at San Luis Obispo tonight NEA Telephoto BACK BREAKER Pennsylvania's Stan Chaplin (30) bends over backwards to intercept this pass thrown by Notre Dame's Don Schaefer and intended for Jim Morse (17) who clutches nothing but thin air in the first quarter at Philadelphia. The Irish, how ever, went on to overpower Penn, 46-14. . Bearcat Seniors End Grid Careers Salem (U.R) Six seniors will close out their Willamette university football careers in the season's final game, against Lin field college Saturday night at McMinnville. They are Halfback Bobby Zo elch, Portland; Tackle Dave An- GRIDDER ACCEPTS BID College Station, Tex. !U.R) Hugh Pitts, Texas Christian's center and co-captain, has ac cepted a bid to play in the Hula bowl football game in Hawaii, Jan. 8. Bids for other post-season games have been received by other Frog seniors but all are tentative pending the outcome of the hot Southwest conference race. why Ancient Age can say: f I it U o All we distill is Kentucky straight bourbon. We know that bourbon of the finest quality requires choice grains. That's all we use. We know it calls for the greatest skill in distilling. The men who guide the making of Ancient Age are the most experienced in the indus try. And it takes lots of time. That's why we wait six full years for careful aging to bring the quality ingredients to their peak of maturity. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 6 YEARS OLD 86 proof - 1955 ancient in a California Collegiate Ath letic Association game and Whit worth of Spokane, Wash, goes after its 16th straight victory over a three year span when it meets Eastern Washington on Saturday. derson, Portland; End Jerry Kangas, Clatskanie; Fullback Tom Carr, San Carlos, Calif.; Guard Gordon Change, Hawaii, and Quarterback Wes Malcolm, Cottage Grove. Another senior, star end Dean Benson, Bend, already has ended his WU grid career because of a shoulder injury suffered two weeks ago. CANADIENS SELL GAMBLE Montreal '(U.R) The Mon treal Canadiens sold left winger Dick Gamble to the Quebec Aces of the Quebec Hockey league Thursday after securing waivers from the five other teams in the National Hockey league. y fifinpa PilflPloOr And to safeguard the uniform qual ity of Ancient Age, we distill it at one place only ... at the Ancient Age dis tillery in Frankfort, Kentucky ... the heart of the bourbon country. Nothing has been spared to make Ancient Age the greatest bourbon of them all. We invite you to try it to night. After one taste, you'll under stand why we can make the challenge: "If you can find a better bourbon . . . buy it!" Friday, November 11, 1955 TAKING OPENING KICKOFF, Frank Riepl of Pennsyl vania skoots 108 yards to score against Notre Dame in battle at Philadelphia. Notre Dame wins game, 46-14.( International) Boat Speed Try Halted by Winds Las Vegas U.R) Winds of 20 to 30 miles an hour whipped across Lake Mead today forcing British boat race driver Don Campbell to postpone his record-smashing attempt until next Monday. The speedboat ace had tenta tively scheduled another at tempt for earlier today to break his own world record in the jet propelled Bluebird II following four tries on Lake Mead yester day. Ed Yost Signs Senator Contract Washington U.R) Eddie Yost, usually one of the tough est players in the American league . to sign, became the Washington Senators first regu lar to agree to terms today when he accepted a "little de duction" from his $21,500 sal ary of 1955. Yost, who hit .248 in 122 games last season, is believed to have accepted a $19,000 fig ure for 1956. It was the earliest he had come to terms since he joined the club in 1944 at the age of 17. FOOTBALL LEARNS Los Angeles (U.R) Jim Decker, former University of Southern California fullback, learned Thursday how hazard ous it is to be a football coach nowadays. Decker coached girls from the north side of sorority row who lost to the south side 12-0. Result: Decker was hanged in effigy from a telephone pole. SOX BILL DODGERS Boston '(U.R) The Boston Red Sox will open a 34-game spring training schedule against the world champion Brooklyn Dodgers in Miami, March 10. Twenty-four of the Sox's games will be played in Florida with the remainder scheduled for the northward trek to Fenway park in Boston. age distilling CO., frankfort, ky. MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THIRTEEN THURSDAY FOOTBALL Roseburg 20, North Bend 6 Silverton 38, Serra of Salem 14 Salem Academy 33, Sherwood 8 be aweI RAIN -MUD : :SNOW I fSfa UNCONDITIONAL (SJjr ' S G&r Rofld Hazard f?'rs:.. j: ::. . "::- jtjJ --r -;.;.-t E usna un co.T ' (!$kk P"onled safety disc be ll &S5SW tween ribs guard againtt H ggS5ffijare9 ? ou of 10 Mrs failun AND Special Savings! Special Allowances! o GET OUR LOW TRADE-IN PRICES AVAILABLE AT ALL As Identified by Phone 2-5336 .C. LININGER & SONS PAINT WITH MEDFORD PAINT & WALLPAPER STORE Formerly Burgess Paint and Wallpaper Store Corner 6th & Holly, Diagonally Across from the Post Office We Give S&H Green Stamps PHONE 2-9321 ARMSTRONG DEALERS the Armstrong Sign ri or 2-5897 s 0 uiiyj.il 11,111 iifn 1