8 L
SUNDAY,
MEDFORDji-TRIBUNE
SPORTS
Queen's Passes Aid
OSU In 30-6 Win
Over Washington St.
rnnvATMS iPPn fire.
gun State capitalized on the
deadly passing combination of
quarterback Gordon Queen to
end Vern Burke and Washington
State mistakes for a 30-6 home
coming football victory Satur
day. Queen connected for three
touchdowns, two of them to the
rangy Burke, who last season
set an NCAA pass catching
record.
The junior quarterback also
had a 16-yard scoring pass to
little halfback Danny Espalin.
Fullback Bruce Williams got the
other Oregon State touchdown
on a 1-yard plunge and Steve
Clark added the rest of the
points on a 33-yard field goal
and three conversions.
It was the fourth victory in
five starts for the Beavers, who
rebounded from a 34-7 beating
by Washington last week.
Washington State actually had
command in the early going.
The Cougars moved 80 yards to
a touchdown with sophomore
fullback Larry fcumes scoring
it from a yard out.
Eilmes carried the ball nine
times m the drive,
i u uhiiilo1 41-vnrrl kick
Lrciivj ,
rr Atnrn gnri an pxen&nffe 01
Wll ILWIII "
fumblcs gave Oregon State the
ball in Cougar territory ana
Burke hauled in an 8-yard pass
to tie it 6-6.
Washington State then moved
to the Beavers' 5 but was held.
For all intents and purposes, the
Cougars were dead right there.
Tim Osmer's fumble recovery
set up Clark's field goal. Then
a pass interception by Marv
Corwston on the Washington
Slate 39 led to a Quecn-to-Burke
touchdown just before halftime.
This one covered 21 yards and
Burke caught the ball while fall
ing down after it had been de
flected. Burke caught six passes for 77
Us hna nnlv 19 for the
season but six of them have been
for touchdowns. Last year Burke
McLoughlin
Ties Savage
A see-saw game, played most
ly in the middle of the field,
ended in a 0-0 knot Friday. The
adversaries were McLoughlin
and Lincoln Savage ninth grade
football teams.
Both clubs got Into the vicin
ily of the rival 20-yard line a
number of times in the hard
fought scrape. Fumbles hurt
both clubs.
Murk Dippel headed the Mac
defense. Phil Taylor ran hard
but the Bulldogs couldn't mus
ter the punch to make his run
ning pay off.
Boston Thumps
Denver In AFL
1W DICK DEW
UPI Sports Writer
The season Is only half gone
but one American Football
League individual race already
looks pretty well settled.
Veteran Boston Patriot end
Gino Cappelletti did his best to
eliminate the worries of compe
tition Friday night while pacing
his team to a 40-21 conquest of
the Denver Broncos.
Cappelletti person ally ac
counted for 22 Boston points to
more than offset the entire
Bronco total. Since he already
had been league scoring leader,
he came out of the game with a
31-point bulge on nearest chal
lenger Chris Burford of Kansas
City and, more important, a 34
point spread on defending
champion George B 1 a n d a of
Houston.
The game was the first of a
full AKL round in which the
other six teams see action to
day. Kansas City was favored
ov er Western leader San Diego
by six points while Houston
ruled as a five-point choice over
Buffalo and Oakland was a two
point pick over Eastern leader
New York.
gnm - gn
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EXCLUSIVELY
n
Minor or Major Rcpsirt
Factory Units In Stock
100 Financing
Medford Transmission Rebuilriars
1S40 N.c."icitlc Hwv. Phono 779-llM
OCTOBER 20, 1963
caught 69 passes for 1,007 yards,
both NCAA records.
Queen now has 10 touchdown
passes for the season.
The game was played In sun
ny weather before a crowd of
17,810.
osir n in
WSII 6 0
7 730
0 06
SCORINr.:
WSU Eilmes 1 run (kirk fnllprll
OSU Burke 8 paw irom Queen
(kick failed)
OSU FG Clark 33
OSU Burke 21 pass from Queen
(Clark klrkl
OSU Williams 1 run (Clark
kick l
OSU Eapnlln 16 pbsi from
Queen (Clark kick!
Attendance: 17.810.
OSU WSU
First downi IR 14
Rushing yardage lid 113
Paiiing yardage 187 !)7
Pmh 14-24 9-SI
PmiM inlrrpntifl hv .... 3 O
Punls 4-32 4-30
Fumbles lost . I 2
Yards penalized 97 46
Henley Tops
Rogue River
Chiefs 39 0
HENLEY Henley high look
advantage of a late game col
lapse of its opposition here Fri
day night and, scoring four
touchdowns in the final quarter,
trimmed Rogue River's Chief
tains in Rogue league football
39-0.
Score was just 6-0 in Henley's
favor at the half and 12-0 after
three periods.
The Chiefs looked the better
ball club, despite lagging in the
score, before they began to fade.
A Steve Rand to Llton Schiro
pass for 17 yards scored for the
Hornets in the second panel. In
the third Bill Fisher went over
from two yards away.
Hand to Hale
In the fatal fourth, a Rand to
Hale pass for 20 yards tabulated.
Hale scored again from a half
yard out. Fred Rodriguez went
over on a three-yard run and a
Rand to Mike Zagorsky pass for
10 yards ended the TD splurge.
Fisher kicked three extra
points.
Rogue River pushed Henley
over the field in much of the
early going. The Chiefs once got
to the Henley 12-yard line and
fumbled.
The first Hornet score came
on a pass which a Rogue River
defender had deflected.
The Chieftains lost the serv
ices of Larry Craig, offensive
fullback and defensive lineman
in the third quarter when he
turned his ankle.
STATISTICS:
Hen.
107
72
2K!
8-4
19
Yard running 80
i nrna paaaitig . 0
iprlniniDfla i.arrla On
ranHfa tried, completed 13-0
rirsi nnwna fi
Fumble loat 1
Passes Inlercepted by . .. 1
Rodriguez Scores
Impressive Victory
By JACK CUDDY
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) Former
welterweight c h a m pion Luis
Rodriguez of Cuba probably
will get another shot at the 147
pound crown in February be
cause of his impressive victory
over previously unbeaten Wil-
bert (hkeeter) McClurc, middle
weight contender.
Matchmaker Teddy Brenner,
of Madison Square Garden,
where Rodriguez unanimously
beat McClure in their nationally
televised fight Fridny night, said
Saturday:
"I'm pretty sure I can match
Luis and champion Emile Grif
fith for a third title fight in
February."
Rodriguez, who won and lost
in two title fights with Griffith
this year, floored 24-year-old
McClure of Toledo, Ohio once
and gave him a close - quarter
battering before about 4.5(H) in
the Garden's first Friday night
television fight in three years.
- rrrrnTTTD.
COMPLETE
OVERHAUL
Labor At
low Ai ..
$3750
Hedrick 9th
Victor Over
Ashlanders
Hedrick Junior High School
ninth grade Hornets kept their
football record perfect Friday
by defeating the Ashland Cubs
27-7.
It was the fifth win for the
unmarred Hornets. Ashland saw
its first setback. Its record is
now 4-1.
Phil Hackworth was the run
ning power for the Hedrick club
and had a hand in 25 of the 27
points. The Hornets also had
the passing of Bill Atwood, the
receiving of Tom Jackson and
hard running of Doug Johann
son. Russ Ferguson and Mark
Wiegand led defense.
An Atwood to Jackson pass,
good for 40 yards, set up the
first touchdown. This put the
Hornets on uie five-yard line.
Three plays later Hackworth
plunged through for the tally.
John Tomlin's conversion run
was good.
Cubs Roar
The Cubs roared back in the
second quarter to tie the game.
A 36-yard run by Tex Willis to
the Hornet two-yard line set
up the touchdown. Willis scored
on the next play and added the
conversion kick.
The game wasn't a stalemate
very long. Taking advantage of
a fumble by the Cubs, Tom
Titus pounced on the ball, giv
ing Hedrick possession on the
Ashland 38 yard line. A Hack-
worth to Atwood pass brought
the ball to the nine yard line.
Hackworth then fired to Phil
Jahn for six points. Tomlin ran
the conversion over.
Starting the second half, the
Hornets were able to spring
Hackworth loose on the third
play, for a spectacular 58 yard
touchdown run. Hackworth
then ran the extra point.
The Hornets scored once
more in the ball game. This
was an Atwood to Hackworth
pass good for 35 yards.
9 of 10 Passes
Atwood completed nine of 10
passing tries for 134 yards.
Jackson caught five passes and
Hackworth carried the ball 10
times for 88 yards.
The defensive line did good
work for Hedrick with guard
Ferguson making 11 tackles and
Wiegand strong at end. Jo
hannson, Bob Kagy and Titus
also were stalwarts.
Willis, John Mitchell and Kent
Carter headed the Ashland ef
fort. Ashland Coach Pierre Rob
erts alternated his quarterbacks
Joe Williamson and Scott Weav
er on every other play.
There were only two penalties
on each club.
Hedrick piled up 264 yards
from scrimmage with 11 first
downs. Ashland netted 108 yards
and six first downs.
Prospect
Overwhelms
Days Creek
PROSPECT Andy M a u r e r
scored seven touchdowns and
passed for two others here Fri
day as the Prospect High Cou
gars buried Days Creek 69-0 in
eight-man football.
The Cougars scored four times
in the first period, three times
in the third and once each in
the other two stanzas.
Mnurer tallied on runs of 77,
65, 30, 35, 30 and two yards and
on a 50 yard pass interception
jaunt. He passed to John Scott
for 25 yards and to Irvin Hall
for 10 yards and scores. Jerry
Wilson ran 30 yards from scrim
mage to the goal and touch
downed on a 45-yard pass steal
run.
Conversions were on a Hall
run, a Mnurer kick and a
Mnurer pass to Art Andresen.
There were four pass inter
ceptions by Prospect.
The Cougars, now 3-3 for the
season meet Canyonville here on
Friday.
STATISTICS:
I'r.
Firat downa 12
Nr-I .Yfllila paaatiiR 1 14
Net yanla ruOitnK :tH7
Net acrtinmaKe varda . .Mil
Paaaes tiled, completed IR-10
IK"
4
131
.1
167
18-7
Mick Mantle's Knee
Surgery Successful
kvw voK iltpii Mirkev
Mantle's knee operation was "a
mii. nnd the New
complete sun ess and ine iew
"
him in tip-top shape again when
he reports to spring training in
February.
Dr. Sidney Gaynor, the Yan
kees' team physician who per
formed surgery for the removal
of cartilage in Mantle's left
knee at Lenox Hill Hospital Fri
dny, said "everything went ac
cording to plan."
COSTS LESS THAN OWNING!
11518
SOUTHERN OREGON LEASE CO.
, Soo Jim CsActnoM so Osr 11 Melon Blot.
6TH & FBt fj (MliyOtm lfi. 773-759J
A1EDFORD
mm
TOUCHDOWN CLOVER Bill (Hoss) Enyart
(41), Medford high's powerful junior fullback,
leaped out of the field "corral" and into "pay
ola pasture" to score the Black Tornado's first
touchdown against the Klamath Union High
School Pelicans Friday night. Medford's initial
counter climaxed a 66-yard drive off the open
ing kickoff. Aiding and abetting the "Hoss" on
his final, frisky two-yarder are fellow Tornado-
Naef Gains Gold
Trunk PE Ranking
Gary Naef, 13, eighth grader
at McLoughlin Junior High
school, will be honored at a
school assembly Tuesday as the
first boy to achieve star ranking
in the Medford Public Schools
physical education program.
He will receive gold trunks
and a trophy at the 10 a.m. as
sembly. Naef earned the trunks by
equalling or bettering star
standards for eighth grade boys
in 10 tests of physical prowess,
education supervisor, William
Esselstyn, described the 151
pound youth as "outstanding"
for his strength. Naef is a B
student.
In the physical education pro
gram now in its second year,
boys cam the right to wear red,
black and gold trunks by meet
ing certain physical standards
which vary accoridng to a
youth's class in school. PE class
members atart in gray trunks.
Red trunks represent the first
level of standards, back the
next and gold the highest.
Performances Listed
The standards for eighth
grade boys and Gary's perform
ances were:
Pullups 12, Gary 15; bar
dips 21, Gary 22; situps in
one minute 53, Gary 58; rope
climb (20 feet) 6.9 seconds,
Gary 6.4; standing broad jump
7 feet 2 inches, Gary 7-2;
600-yard run 1:40, Gary 1:38;
50-yard dash 6.3, Gary 6.2;
potato race 32 seconds, Gary
31.2; Softball throw 200 feet,
Gary 220; carry man equal own
weight 880 yards done by Gary.
Esselstyn declared that the
standards are tough. He pointed
to the standards as a means of
illustrating a lesson in life:
"You have to work yourself up
in anything you want to do."
The standards provide a little
competition in PE, he said.
Lee Ragsdale, supervisor of
physical education for the Med
ford schools, who will partici
pate in the award presentation,
also emphasized the toughness
of the standards. "We never ex
pected it to happen," Ragsdale
said ot ine goici irurm mmeve
ment. It was not anticipated
that any boy would meet all the
standards.
The high performances in
each event over a two year
period here were set up as the
standards. The marks reached
Dan Carnevale
Given Release
PORTLAND (UPI) Danny
Carnevale has been released as
manager of the Portland club of
the Pacific Coast League by the I
Kansas City Athletics. Beaver
general manager Hub Kittle,
was notified Thursday.
The Athletics did not s a y 1
whether larncvaie would r e -
mam ..mi iuu uifcaiiinuivu
a trouble-shooter.
Carnevale w a s named Port-
lnH manuiiAr .Innn i riMlnr.
i - "!
ine i.es rooen. wno was uren
bv Athletics The Beaver.
j . . '""v
.,a n(1 ost 28 unipr pw1(,n
""
and lost R6.
Kansas City has given no pub
lic indic.it ion whether it plans
to renew its working agreement
with the Beavers next year.
MKl.norHNE U PI) - Kim
no Amarfio. UH'j. Ghana, out
pointed Carlos Agarao, 129 a.
ithe Philippines (12).
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD,
or bettered by Naef, Ragsdale
said, were set by eight or 10
different boys, a fact making
Gary's achievement more re
markable. The PE supervisor reported
that one boy in Medford Sen
ior High school and one in Hed
rick Junior High school are
within one star of gaining gold
trunks.
The gold trunks Gary receives
will have a black star on them
in keeping with McLoughlin
school colors.
IV Downs
Lakeview
LAKEVIEW - Illinois Valley
edged Lakeview 12-0 here Fri
day night. The Rogue Leave
football fray was played on a
field turned into a quagmire
by a hard driving rain.
Ron Thornhill scored for IV
on two and one yard plunges.
IV had a 282 to 90 margin in five of those went for touch
scrimmage yards and led 14 to downs as Idaho built up a 36-0
3 in first downs. halftime bulge.
Yreka High
Trip Crater
Grid Eleven
YREKA, Calif. Yreka High
spotted the Crater Comets a first
quarter touchdown and then
came back with counters in each
remaining period to upset the
Central Point, Ore., school 20-6
in non-league football here on
Friday night.
The Comets barged to a touch
down on their first series with
the ball. Yreka, fired up, con
trolled the ball most of the way
after that. Crater buckled down
in the final quarter and dumped
Miner backs for losses. But the
effort "came too late," accord
ing to Keith Johnson, mentor of
the Comets.
Pitts Recovers
Crater gained the first scoring
chance when Jim Pitts snared
a Miner fumble on the Yreka
34-yard line. A 24-yard run by
Vern Swanson put the ball on
the eight-yard line. Sherm Kiger
scored on a four yard run.
Yreka tabulated off a 70-vnrd
drive in the second quarter with
; Mark Root crossine on a 12
yard run. That made it 6-6 at
half.
in the third quarter the Miners
recovered a fumble on their own
45. Thov scored on a 30-vard
' pass py, Ken Keyes to Jerry ;
i arnprteii. i om vaiio hooted tne
(irst o( lwo sccond na( convcr.
sjons
... ... ...
i rater tumnicd on us 25 in tne
. ? " " " .
ered. Then a penal v put
v
"0 J l?eand lafncTbac
fourth quarter and Yreka recov-
the
lost
gained back to
the 12. Ken Keves then hit
ATTENTION
DEER Cr BIRD
HUNTERS!
ALL WATER SHEDS DRAINING TO RIVER
FROM GOLD REY DAM, 4 MILES UP RIVER
AND 3 MILES DOWN RIVER TO SAMS VALLEY
HIGHWAY.
CLOSED TO HUNTING
. . . Because of Livestock
GOLD REY RANCH & TABLE TOP RANCH
OREGON
men Jeff Hardrath (73) and Steve Toews (89),
plus the unidentified fist-clenching figure in the
foreground. White-jerseyed Pelicans, turned
would-be "bronc busters," are Terry Christian
son (60), Terry Eccles (41), and Steve Camp
bell (68). Played on Modoc field in Klamath
Falls, the second Southern Oregon Conference
football outing for both teams, was won handily
by Medford, 34-0.
Idaho
Smashes
UOP, 64-6
MOSCOW, Idaho (UPI) -Idaho,
seething after consecutive
losses to powerhouses Missouri
and Oregon State, unleashed an
awesome offensive display be
for a homecoming crowd and
mangled little University of Pa
cific under a 64-6 scoring ava
lanche. A crowd of 12,000 looked on
as the Vandals completely out
classed the visiting Tigers to
gain their first victory in the
eight-game series between the
two teams.
The Vandals scored on their
first and last drives of the game
and in between, amassing their
third highest scoring total in
history.
Idaho marched 81 yards in
five plays the first time it got
the ball, with a Gary Mires-to-Bill
Scott pass carrying 51 yards
for the score. Mike Mayne made
good on the first of eight con
version kicks of the afternoon.
The Vandals completed nine of
11 passes in the first half and
Miners
Comet
20-6
Campbell for another touchdown
pass.
Hungry Miners
"They were high and we were
low," remarked Johnson, whose
Comets last week held Medford
to 6-0. "We just didn't do the
job," he said. "Yreka was real
hungry ... It was the worst
game we've played ... I hope
we can come up with it by next
Friday (the Comets play Grants
Pass) .'. . If they (the Comets)
can climb up off the floor after
this, then we know we have a
ball club."
Crater was without the serv
ices of halfback Darryl Summer
field because of head injury
against Medford. Stellar lineman
Denny Rverson hurt his ankle at
the start of the second half and
Swanson also was hobbled by
an ankle injury.
First downs favored Yreka 9
to 6 and net scrimmage yards
176 to 158.
STATISTICS;
Cr, Yreka
6 7
First downs nishini!
nrsi nnwns passing 0 2
Tr-tnl first downs .. 6 f)
Passes ir.ee. . rompltMed 6-2 7-S
Passes intercepted by 1 a
Yards rushing Un 13a
Yards passing . ft 70
Yards lost at serin. fl aa
Net scrimmage yards . 1SR 17H
Penalties and yards 4-33 2-10
F.mhe lnt .3 1
Punts and avergae . 4-31 3-19
ritORK l-:XIM)KI
BALTIMORE (I PI) - A Bal
timore grand jury Saturday
expanded its boxing investiga
tion beyond the death of Ernie
Knox to include Maryland fights
"for a number of years back."
Phoenix
Eagles in
rogue league standings:
Illinois VaUey 4
Phoenix 4
Henley 3
Rogue River 2
St. Mary's 2
Eagle Point 1
0 3.000
o J.ooo
2 joo
2 .soo I
.250
.000
.000
lakevtew 0
Sacred Heart 0
PHOENIX The Phoenix High
School Pirates, top-rated, un
blemished and scored upon only
once this season, recorded their
fifth shut out of the fall Friday
night by overpowering Eagle
Point 46-0 in a Rogue league
football contest.
It was the sixth triumph of
the fall for the Buccaneers and
the fourth within their A-2 cir
cuit. Phoenix touchdowned twice
in each of the first three quar
ters and once again in the
fourth.
Jim Consbruck crossed into
the end zone four times for the
Bucs. He ran the second half
kickoff back 74 yards to the
goal. He had a pair of two
yard TD cracks and one that
went for a yard. Consbruck
went over for the first and for
the last three of the Phoenix
counters.
In between Jon Granby touch-
downed on a three-yard run and
Ron Williams on 16 and 15-yard
plays.
Williams to Dale Sauer passed
provided two conversion points.
Ken Hawkins and Dennis Gren
nan ran for the others.
Phoenix had a 26 to 0 halftime
spread.
340 Yards at Scrimmage
The Pirates rolled up 340
yards from scrimmage to 173
by Eagle Point. EP led in pass
ing 95 yards to 74. Fourteen of
32 aerial tries were completed
by the Eagles.
Eagle Point's main threat of
the evening was halted on the
Phoenix half-yard line in a great
line stand and defensive feature
of the night. The Pirates drove
MONTANA STATE WINS
BOZEMAN, Mont. (UPI)
The Montana State Bobcats
pleased a homecoming crowd of
7,500 here Saturday with an easy
28-7 victory over Arizona State
college in an intersectional foot
ball game.
FREE
LADIES'. INSTRUCTIOfLCLASSES
' STARTS EACH TUESDAY
4 LESSONS Tuesday Thru Friday
Starts at 1 P.M. -Ends 2:30 P.M.
REGISTER NOW
Instructor Wanda Booth, Leading So. Ore. Bowler
ROXY ANN
BOWLING LANES
1 '
The Marine Corps is es
tentially a volunteer outfit,
world-famous for its pres
tige and traditions. Learn
for yourself what it is that
makes Marine training so
thorough why every Ma
rine is proud to be a Marine.
Find out before you enlist!
You know Marines serve
on land, at sea and in the
air, but do you know that
Marine Corps schools teach
more than 400 trade skills.
Before you volunteer for any
service, you owe it to your
self to find out about the
Marines.
i
Pirates Overpower
Rogue Loop Tilt
fr0m there 99V4 yards to then
CUt uniuiuuFU w, mih..
Consbruck netted 87 yards on
13 carries, Williams 106 on eight
nd Granbv 58 on seven. Wil-
liams threw six oi the rnoenix
passes and had the three com
pletions.
For Eagle Point Bob Colpitis
and Bob Corliss had seven pass
completions each for 47 and 48
yards, respectively. Corless had
eight carries for a net of 16
yards and Mike House seven
for 16.
Pirates Rick Dorman, Paul
Diederich and Lex Hamilton in
tercepted Eagle passes with
Viks Favored
Over LA Rams
By JOE ST. AMANT
United Press International
LOS ANGELES (UPD-Coach
Norm Van Brocklin sends his
surprisingly sturdy Minnesota
Vikings against the winless Los
Angeles Rams today at Mem
orial Coliseum and his young
quarterback Frank Tarkenton is
expected to steer the visitors to
a victory.
The Vikings have a 2-3 record
and missed beating the Green
Bay Packers last Sunday only
by a blocked field goal. So the
hand-writing is on the wall for
the Rams' sixth consecutive loss
of the season.
Tarkenton is the National
Football League's seventh-ranking
passer with a 55.1 comple
tion percentage and has tossed
six td passes.
The Rams have been using
three quarterbacks this year
and only one of them has
thrown a touchdown pass Zeke
Bratkowski has three to his
credit.
Coach H a r 1 a n d Svare will
start second-year man Roman
Gabriel against the Vikings with
Bratkowski and Terry Baker in
reserve.
COLTS RESTORE OWENS
BALTIMORE (UPI) - The
Baltimore Colts restored offen
sive end R. C. Owens to their
active roster today.
BOWLING!
MiaH LEARN
cr A
MAIL THIS FORM TODAY!
I would like to know more about
the United States Marine Corps.
NAME
ADDRESS ,
cm
I'lfaat
SEND TO
us. Merino Corp. Re,
""in - WmMsjI
Hamilton racing 55 yards before
being caught from behind. Gary
McGarity recovered an t-agie
fumble. Phoenix lost the ball on
fumbles twice with Colpitis mak
ing one of the recoveries.
STATISTICS
Ph.
, 266
Net yards rushing
79
94
173
5
.
1
10
32-14
0
3-25
t
wet yaras passing
Net scrimmage yards .... 340
First downs rushing 10
First downs passing 3
First downs penalties .... 0
Total first downs 13
Passes tried, completed 7-3
Passes intercepted by .... 3
Penalties and yards 4-50
Fumbles lost a.... 1
SOMETHING
NEW
Has Been Added
Bob Lewis
IS BACK
AS OUR
SERVICE
MANAGER
In addition to our regu
lar mechanical service
in Domestic & Imported
Cars we are now equipt
to work on , . .
RENAULT
VOLKSWAGEN
MERCEDES BENZ
And All Makes
of Imports
STEVENS
AUTO SALES
505 N. Central Ave.
773-3655
Free Coffee
FREE BABY
SITTING SERVICE
Phone
772-7171
nie
If IIHI IHE
MARINE CORPS
OFFERS YOU
PRINT PLAINLY!
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sUsig. .
Foil gicionr Sorvic
Medford Mail Tribune
e