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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1956)
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. i956 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THIRTEEN i . 1 g ii ii g g i j i iga pelicans peon If Si (M .SgMoflb-SatMirday EtUHS, Grant Tangle timeout Roseburg Defeated In. Jr. Legion National Tourney In Traditional Battle I The 1956 football season o(fi Icially opens here Saturday night !'on Modoc Field as the Klamath Union High School Pelicans and J Grant Generals of Portland tangle 'in their traditional season opener. Game time is 8'oclock. ...;ti ho thp lftih meeting 1 u - ik. ,.;,i;mn fnr the Pelicans : i t0 u.e t ana utfueiaiot : . f rst game in Ian- "-:uiwu, a opening action between GrantjFred Neiinann, a non-lettennan ii .ii, Pniu ihp Portland-1 senior. dIul' bin holes in the Grant s anu iviatiiu," - - - i , - - jers have come out on top nine i forward wall. t mas. wnue ixiaiiittui inner siariers lor luiuuuuwa seven. One game ended in a draw. , , , When the two grid clubs en counter each other Saturday night difficulties in the future may wipe out this long-standing rivalry, which is one of the longest non league strings in Oregon prep cir cles. Led by a pair of 205-pound tack les the Generals are reportedly boasting one of the finest lines produced at Grant in several sea sons. The two big tacKles, uick under the Modoc lights, the Gen i will hi rait in force to re taliate last year's 27-6 win by Klamath Falls. In 1954 Grant won on the long end of a 26-6 margin. The results of past Grant-KU games includes: opener for Grant will be ends Riley Mattson and Scott Camp bell. Mattson is a 198-pound sen ior lelierman, Campbell is a 165 pound senior with one letter award. At guard will be tough Ben Balnie, a 180-pound senior lctterman and Dave Bell a 155 ,,i,nrl sMiiiftr nnn-letlerman. At ..... r- Kn Hanaralc will hp 'Dave Hooper at 150 pounds. Hoop- lW 1 ir h i BISMARCK, N. D. Ifl Un deleated St. Louis takes on New Orleans Friday night for the title in the National American Legion I gonians on 11 strikeouts, S.with the defeat before he went Junior Baseball Tournament. walks and four hits before he was, out In the third frame. ai. i-ouis taxes me line wnn a lull VM IMS 1914 l!iir 1946 1947 194S . Ill 19 1930 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 KUHS GRANT:, js a seni0r letterman. I in thn hnrkflvld will' be three gridders without much varsity ec- I perience. ana one wno ua a ,'dcbt to repay Klamath Falls. The : debt is that carried by Jon Abra .! ham Granls' 160-pound starting t" i left half. Last year, Abraham suf- -Ifered a broken collarbone in the pi Klamath game and missed the 27 i entire season. Saturday night he i will be out to make up for lost time in tne loucnuown stumis .nlnmn Abraham fieui'CS to be "tithe big key for the Generals as .Slthev hone to avenge the Pelican 1 . .Vj win of last year. The Generals will oe loaaeu wiuii----- - - nPh,hiv plenty of experience and weight! The other starters will P"bab as they tangle with the local; be quarterback Bill Walhn, half Whi ebirds tomorrow evening as j back Ken Rothery and fullback the Portland Interscholastic Clarence Gibson. Walhn and Gib League member goes into what j son are and weigh l,0a d coma oe ineir wi " ;",' will w,i,h i 7 15 7 7 7 14 20 12 0 0 7 7 13 6 27 0' 20 Lions Push Ticket Sale Tickets for the first Oregon Tech home football game went on sale today, and the Klamath Falls Lions Club is directing the sale with the help of three downtown business houses. The $1.50 tickets are on sale at Hal's Sport Shop, the Corner Ct nnA n..1 IWc Ctr,i All are lucaiea on main oireeu Service clubs in Klamath Falls are backing ticket sales for each of the five home OTI games. The winner, the club with the biggest game attendance, will be given a trophy. Last vear's winner was the Klamath Falls Lions. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE I Havana 1, Miami 0 no inninusi Larry Klaus of San Antonio, Rochester at Montreal, postponed Tex., is the new head trainer for Only games scheduled j the University of Wyoming teams. New Orleans ousted Roseburg, relieved in the ninth inning. Har Ore., from the double elimination well also tossed the one-hitter event Thursday night, 15-2. aft- that eliminated Yonkers, N.Y., er having itself suffered a 7-3 loss' 2-0, Monday, to St. Louis Wednesday night. j New Orleans amassed 14 hits Jim Harwell, Lanky New Or-1 off a trio of West Coast mounds leans righthander, tamed the Ore-1 men, with Dick Smith charged victory Friday night, otherwise a second game will be played Sat urday Just received new 1956 FALL LINE I flrl your mid I tntftinrt nM nww -t a lU'i, discount ttntll Sfplrmber lttth. Johnson's Tailor Shop 926 Klamath "Call a doctor, Martha! Formby, here, kept giving me nohling but lobs!" TV ANTENNAS FOR Channels 2-5 AND ' Quality Antennas At LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN! "We Give HrK Green Stomps" SMITH AUTO SUPPLY 919 Klamath Ph. TU 4-8413 AFTER THE GAME... TOMORROW NIGHT V.F.W. CLUB Dancinq 10 'til 2, Members and their Guests Welcome, Music by Fred Dallas Trio! DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT! er" against Klamath. Scheduling ;,. cni.hnrk will weigh in at 155 pounds and is the only letterman in the Grant backfield. Bob Douglas of Willamette Uni versity is in his second season as head coach of the Generals. This year he is assisted by Hon Pheis tcr, former University of Oregon football great, and Denny Sulli- nnnlW II l O eraduate. ! Php'isier will be remembered for Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS his tootball playing days at Grant Onlv two one-tbousandlhs of a'lliyh in the late liMOs as a team : percentage point separated the 'mate with George Shaw, presently " Yakima Bears from the North--' starring with the Baltimore Colts 'west League pennani rriui'.v. ; m uie ml. The Rears, who whacked sec- nnfl-nlace Salem for the second Yaks Near NW Pennant; Nudge Salem Coach John McGinnis reported this week that be would senci Butch Kimplon to the .quarter back's spot for the opening kick er ,i,ii l oo Mrf.ill and Rich ard Humphrey will be starting at the halfback positions, rrans d,u i i i,,nlf Irnncfpr will be working from the fullback slot in the first Pelican ollensive moe of the season in n,o linp n.irrvl Rusth Is ovnAPtoH In nnen at one end, but the other wing post is up in the air. Anyone ol six loomauers maj be the choice at game-time to- r,iohi At the tackle oosi- ,,!! hi. n.nve Rilev and Paul niin'ni with Alan Seiener and Tarey Schell working from guard. Cal Tichenor, the neaviesi ren straight time Thursday night, need only to win one of their lour remaining games one with Sa lem and three with Lewiston to fly the felt over Parker Field. Yakima still isn't out of the woods, however. Should the Bears drop their last four games. Sa lem would take the second half title and force Yakima, winner of the first half, into a playoff. The Bears put across one run in the top of the ninth Thursday night In shunl the Senators aside 2-1. P.ob Wilson doubled and scored on i'ny Wilcox' single. In other games. Spokane drubbed the Lewislon Broncs, 8-4. and the Wenatchee Chiefs took a 12-inninz thriller from Tri-City, 4-2. ' clortnr at 900 DOUnds. will .lack Allman of Yakima and , th KU line at center Salem s .lerrv Cade Ditched score- - less ball for five innings before the Bears broke loose for the first, run of the contesl. in 'he sixlh.l Kd Zander and Vince Moreci sin-1 gird. Zander scored on a wildj pitch. Russ Rosburg tied it up, with a homer for Salem in the! Senators' half of the sixth. I Don Lundberg's second homer; of the same, with Ron Foisyj aboard, won it for the Chiefs in the .last of the 12th. Lundbcrg, clouied his first circuit smash inj the second frame with one aboard.: The Indians scahied the Broncs j with six runs in the fifth inning nn four walks, three singles audi Ron .Jackson's double. Joe Riney got a homer for the Broncs. who; couldn't bunch their eight hits. Bill Bottler go the win. Salem winds up its schedule Fri-j day nisht with another contest, wiih Yakima. Snokane again enter-1 tains Lewiston and Wenatchee hosts Tri-City. K.uqenc is idle. OTTO WHITE ARCH-EASE BOOTS Packer . Stitchdowns . Oil resistant composition sole 33 50 3 6 00 39 Size 5 to 13 Width A to EEEE Also Available Caulked DREWS Manstore 733 Main 50 ' ' 1 52 ' TO THE MUSIC OF ike SicudiqhhM ARMORY SATURDAY NIGHT SEPT. 8th Gen. Admission $1.00 Tax Inc. Dancing 9 to 1 For big jobs, small jobs, all jobs paO r CO s " 'o"-5? wnna m i ii itmi-iiiiifrf ' m 'V- - ,'4-' 1 " I "1 earn as much as $.10 a day wore because my Frtrd T-800 ,,,, I jif tandem job can carry more payload than compuriible trucks," Fl II I Fw FirA Bays timber-hauler Clarence Land wing. uracils -p f (a31 C'S IJ 1 g38Wl!l'9llll!j M?GXJS&timpsSt ' "Low cost, dcpcndabillly, toughness that's what I get in I VrtJR'k jtitMO0tS0XmmTt xmlflSh'',m'm'' ' I'"ortl trucks," siivs John Karks. "Ford's power takes ma I j iJ ''"m 1 " throut!'1 touK' K01"K l"11 would Bto)p many another truck." 1 'i I .t? t Vil'V' modem Short Stroke design in both Six and V-8! T Alt a "' m,ii mummm Ford's low initial prices mean real savings, to be sure. But the on-the-job savings you get in Ford trucks count even more! Take running costs; they're downright low. Because Ford and only Ford -gives you the gas and oil economy of modern Short Stroke power in every truck. Only Ford has a Short Stroke Six and seven Short Stroke V-S's-backed by over 5 billion miles of on-the-job experience. Upkeep costs are low became Ford tracks are built extra strong. They outlast all other leading makes -a fact certified by inde pendent insurance experts. That same stand-up mggedness means greater dependability, too, And when it comes time to trade -you'll gain from Ford's traditionally high resale value, too. You'll find that, from start to finish, Ford trucks cost leas. THE BIG FLEETS BUY MORE FORD TRUCKS THAN ANY OTHER MAKE w y .0 mi. -I iM W "When you fiKUfe low running and upkeep costs, high trade-in and low price, we feel that nothing can beat Kord trucks (or value." Charles Soter, president of I. Hart & Co. Ford Trucks foppQy last longer 3 VnU& "r ' mmmmmmmfiJk n-im rBW' , U'.m Utesl reistrtion dull on 10,M?.3M txucvi. life inwnncc tiperl'. prove Ford (rucks lilt lonr. "Ford's Short Stroke engine design and rugged chassis mean low operating and maintenance costs," says John Coleman, hosc firm operates 45 Kord C-750's. BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Main at Esplanade Klamath Foil, Oregon