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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1914)
t V, i 5! r- i OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE FOOTBALL SQUAD WHICH ENDED THE 1914 SEASON THURSDAY AT TACOMA WITHOUT A DEFEAT A 4 r i Rradlasr Ioi lft to lUfrfct, Row, Left to RUcnt Or. .......................................................' 0. A. C. HELD TIED FOR CHIPIOOIP Remarkable Comeback of Ag gie Team Presages Well r: for Squad's Future. r ALL-STAR ELEVEN CHOSEN Tyrer and Snnttey End, Beckett and Anderson Guards, Hoover Quarter and Miller, Iutz and Parsons Halfback: 8. Northwest Conference Finals. W. U. Pet. W. Lk Pot. - Waah 3 O l.OOOIWti. 8tato .3 8 .400 ' Or. Agglaa 2 0 l.OOO Idaho 1 8 .250 Oregon ....SI .700Whltman 4 .000 T1 gamea. Beacon's Record All Games. W. I T.Pts.Opta. 'Washington a O Ore eon Agffiea ........... o O 241 13 14S 15 113 80 10 7S 12 45 16 71 Oregon A 1 1 AVashiugton Btata 2 4 Idaho 2 S 1 Vultioan O 4 0 , BT ROSCOB FAWCBTT. Thanksgiving day rang down the curtain on one of the most successful ' football campaigns In the Paciflo North west. The University of Washington and the Oregon Agricultural College proved the most consistent teams In the con ference. These two elevens battled to a thrilling 0-0 score on a. neutral field, and, while comparative scores In the other games favor Washington, these two teams are generally accepted as tied for the 1914 Northwest champion ship. Last -year Washington, walloped the Aggies 47-0, so the remarkable im provement in Coach Stewart's team pre sages well for that institution so long as this capable tutor remains at the helm. Washington defeated Oregon on Washington's grounds by a score ol 10-0, but In the main Oregon had a prosper ous season. Her biggest triumph was in holding the Aggies to a 8-3 tie in the state title game at Corvallis. Hugo Bezdek, Oregon coach, faced a tough problem this Fall. He had to build up an almost entirely new line. Two Star Put Oat. Just as his veteran backfield began "to round into a formidable scoring ma chine, injuries sent two stars, Malarkey IVnd Cornell, to the hospital and neither was able to finish the season. Bezdek , does not lose a player next year, and ' can be counted upon as a strong factor. Washington's chief performance was ''in walloping Washington State 45-0 in ' - the final Thanksgiving game at Seattle. , The windup marked Gil Dobie's seventh - consecutive year at Washington with . out a defeat, and only two ties against him. Quite a remarkable chronology, is it not? Not one of the. three colleges east ... of the Cascades Idaho, Washington .State and Whitman hung a defeat on ": the strong Western trio. Washington . State reversed the count with Idaho .,-by winning S-0 in their annual en gagement. Aside from this score, there wasn't an upset in the dope all Fall. Whitman Team Improves, Whitman College, under Archie Hahn, eame forward with a better team than it has had in a couple of years. Whit man held Washington State 7-6 and -Idaho 7-0, but lost to Washington 28-7 -"and to Oregon 29-3. That football in these parts 1b much superior to the brand In Southern Cal ifornia was shown strikingly by the outcome of the Oregon Aggie-University of Southern California game at 'i'aooma Thanksgiving afternoon. The .Vggles won 38-6 before a crowd of 7000 fans. Receipts were donated to the relief of the suffering Belgians. , ' All-star fussers faced a stiff job this C Fall because there was such an abun dance of good material around the con v t erence. Personal Choices Made. Our personal all-star choices would be as follows: Ends Tyrer.- 160. Washington Elate. and Him-y. 163. Or&goa Assies. 'Mil .Lw - i t - 1 6 Fmt Kw Ma Brooke. Steve Sckntrr, Lo ("TnhT") I-aTthf, Edianl (TeW) M. J. Stewart, Head Coaea Stand iaa:), DeWlrt Tcacvr, Georxe ("Admiral") newer, Tackles Beckett, 184, Oregon, -and Anderson, 195, Washington. Guards Moore. 192, Oregon Aggies, and Cook, 195. Oregon. Center Clark, 176, "Washington State. Quarterback Hoover, 180, Whitman. Halves Miller. 195, Washington; Lutz, 175, Oregon Aggies, and Parsons, 165. Oregon. Fullback Shiel, 185, Washington. This symposium rather does an Injus tice to three or four stars of the con ference. Abraham, fullback on the Oregon Aggies, proved one of the great est plungers In the history of the- In stitution. He would be a credit to any all-star cast. Laythe, of the Oregon Aggies, a husky tackle weighing 190 pounds, and Groninger, 200-pound tackle of the Idaho team, were terrors to every op posing team. Bernard, the tow-headed quarterback of the Washington State team, handled his feet with all the agility of an Eck ersalL Hoover ranked above him only because of superior experience and Judgment. THE DALLES HAS TITLE Ulttfl SCHOOL CLAIMS CHAMPION SHIP OF TWO STATES. Eastern Washington and Northern Cal- 1 lfornla Honors Also Captured and Coast First Place Sought. " THE DALLES, Or.. Nov. 28. (Spe cial.) The Dalles High School football team claims the high school champion ship of Oregon. Idaho, Eastern Wash ington and Northern California. By defeating Ashland High School Thanks giving day. Coach Murray's men cap tured the title of "champions of South ern Oregon and Northern California," with which the Ashland players entered The Dalles. Previously The, Dalles had won the championship of Eastern and Western Oregon. By defeating Walla Walla, 27 to 13, November 20, The Dalles won the championship of East ern Washington. E&ker and Walla Walla played a no-score game Thanks giving day. That tie not only elim inated Baker as an Eastern Oregon contender, it is argued, but gave to The Dalles the Idaho title. Baker hav ing won It from Nimpa, the Idaho champion, 13 to 0. The local team made only one trip during the season, and Superintendent of Schools Warner hope to arrange a trip to California for the boys, in which event Murray's men would go after the California championshir. as well as that of the Pacific Coast. Besides winning the championships. The Dalles team made an excellent record for clean playing throughout the season. Unless the California trip is arranged, no more games will be played by The Dalles this season. Astoria High is eagerly requesting a game, but will not be met. At no. time did Astoria have a claim for the state title. Jef ferson and Lincoln, of Portland, both defeated Astoria, and Vancouver gave a severe walloping to Astoria. TRACK RECORD NEAKXY SET Only New Rule Keeps Runner From Cutting' 10 0-Yard Time. NEW YORK. Nov. 28. The indoor athletic season was ushered In here tonight at Madison Square garden with the annual games of the Irish-American Athletic Club. The principal event, the 1000-yard run. was won by Abel R. Kiviat, of the Illinois Amateur Athletic Club, National mile champion, who cov ered the distance in 2 minutes 15 1-5 seconds, one-fifth of a second viewer than the record by Tom Halpin. Kiviat's time is remarkable in that under the new rule of the International Federation recently adopted, whereby the track is measured 12 Inches from the border instead of 18. he ran 16 feet more than Halpin. Ted Meredith, Meadowbrook Club, Pennsylvania, Olympic 800-meter cham pion; Homer Baker, New York Athletic Club, English half-mile champion; James Powers, Boston Athletic Asso ciation, and William Gordon. Yonkers, finished in the order named. OAMVETiI GOES TO FEDERATES New Xorlc American ntcner Will Perform for Buffalo. CHICAGO, Nov. 28. Ray Caldwell pitcher for the New York Americans. will pitch for the Buffalo Federals next year, according; to Richard Carrlll, THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 29, 1914. ? -i ;;x-:';::-:::-.-;S:.yA: ,i i r;-'V 1 V business manager of the Buffalo club, who arrived here today to attend the Federal League meeting. "Caldwell signed up last August on a three-year contract," said Carroll. "The only thing hanging over him is the reserve clause, and that the courts have held to be Invalid." FEDERAL CIRCUIT TO STICK League Meeting Brings Announce ment Change Not to Be Made. CHICAGO, Nov. 28. There will be no change in the 1915 circuit of the Fed eral League, It was definitely an nounced before club owners of the league, who were called to attend the first session of the league's meeting which opened here today. Gossips circulated the Tumor that Artie Hofman, formerly with th Chicago and Pittsburg clubs of the Na tional League, probably would be the next manager of the Brooklyn club of the Federal League Instead of Lee Magee, who recently was reported to have jumped from the St. Louis Na tionals. President Gllmore announced a few days ago that star players affiliated until recently with the American and American leagues, but who had signed with the Federal League, would be named at this meeting. It developed today, however, that many of tho play ers with whom the various clubs had been negotiating had not signed, and on that account It was intimated that the clubs would withhold the names of their new players until later. ATHLETES AMOXGWAR VICTIMS G. R. Li. Anderson, Hurdler, and A. E. Collins, Cricket Player, Killed. LONDON, Nov. 20. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) The latest list of British killed In France con tains the names of two well - known athletes G. R. L. Anderson, a hurdler, and Lieutenant A. E. J. Collins, a cricket player. Anderson was twice English amateur champion at both high and low hurdles. He broke hurdling records at both Eton and Ox ford and ran for England at the Stock holm Olympic games, where he was defeated by an American, J. J. Eller, Jr. Lieutenant Collins always will hold a place in the history of cricket as the batsman who made the highest indi vidual score on record. He did this while a student at Clifton College, scoring "628 not out" in innings last ing six hours and 60 minutes. VARlNELXi PICKS ALL-STARS Spokane Man Refereed Seven North west College Conference Games. SPOKANE. Nov. 28. George M. Var nell, who refereed seven of the North west College Conference football games this year, today picked all-star confer ence teams as follows: Flrat Team. Position. Clarke. W. S. C C. .. ;ook. Or G . . . . Groniger, Idaho 3. Anderson. Wash. . ...T. ... Layths. O. A. C r.... Hunt. Waah E Second Team. . . . . Rlaley. Or. Moore, O. A C. Johnson, Idahfe . . . . isecxetc, or. . . Leader, Wash. Hei, W. S. C. Huntley. O. A. C. Tyrer. W. S. C. E. . Hoover. Whitman. ... a. . . . Smith, Waaiv, Lutz, O. A. C H3 McOonald, Whit. Parsons, or. H B. .Abraham, O. A. C. Miller. Wash FB Shiel. Waah. Ex-Champion Boxer Is Dead. LONDON, Nov. 17. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) The death is announced here of H. J. Chinner, for many years regarded as the best ama teur boxer in England. He was heavy weight champion three years, retiring from active participation in the sport about 1880. His brother, who died a few years ago, was for several years the amateur champion mil runner of England. Both men were members of the London Stock Exchange. Mornlngstar Beats YamstU. NORFOLK, Va, Nov. 28. Ora Morn ings tar defeated Kojl Yamada 800 to 147 in a Billiard Players' League match here last night. Average and high runs: Mornlngstar, 80, 85. Yamada, 15 7-9; 64. Prisoners Will Be Returned. SALEM, Or.. Nov. 28. (Special.) Governor West today honored requisi tions of the Governor of California for Richard O'Connor and Fred Peterson, wanted in Solano County on a charge of slaying Powell Emlgh. O'Connor is under arrest in Pendleton and Peterson is In jail here. Xo Sod a Thing. Exchange. ' There is no such, thing as a safe bet until yo wta. j.t, . - l 1 Aodrnwo, Psnl ("lltck") Boerllae, C ("Dad") KlnK, Ry Selph. Karl Witeon, Darloa CHmrrr') fnytU, Brewer BlUle, Fiord "reck" limit ley. Herman -.j-. NEARLY ALL AGGIES TO PLAY NEXT YEAR Huntley and Moore, However, Eliminated ' by Four-Year Rule Lutz to Leave. BILLIE KING OUT FOR GOOD Coacli May Expects Equally" Strong Team From Veterans and Regu lar Workers Even Without Aid of Freshman Material. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, Corvallis. Nov. 28. (Special.) In the midst of the rejoicing occasioned among Oregon Agricultural College fans by the string of victories which Dr. Stew art's Aggies have hung up this year. Is heard the voice of the dopester who has looked forward to the time when moleskins again will be donned by Beaver huskies, and who has sized up the situation In the light of informa tion now available. But two members of this year's suc cessful aggregation of players will be eliminated by the four-year rule. These are Huntley, end. and Moore, guard, two valuable men whose places will be hard 'to fill. Both have given four years of hard work for the Aggies. Arthur Lutz, Stewart's most consistent ground-gainer this year, has another year according to the rules, having played two years In the South and one with the Aggies. He will graduate this Spring, however, and at present the ef forts of coaches and fans to Induce him to return for a year of post-graduate work and another shot at the gridiron game have been of no avail. Lutz has a job waiting for him in his home town, and wants to get busy. So Aggie fans are forcing themselves to count him out for next year. He will be missed in a Bcore of ways punting, place kick ing, forward passing, and on offensive and defensive work in scrimmage. "BUlle" Kina- Out for Good. "Billie" King, the end who made his letter in the Pullman game and who was out for the rest of the season with NORTHWEST FOOTBALL HXAL8. University of Washington. Washington Washington Washington "Washington Washington Washington Washington 32! Aberdeen High.. Wash. Park. . Rainier V. A. C Whitman Oregon Aggies. Oregon U . . . . Wash. State Total 251 Total Washington state College. Wash. State O'Montana 10 Wash. State... 0 Oregon XT 7 Wash. State... Oregon Aggies.. 7 Wash. State... 3 Idaho 0 Waah. State... 7 Whitman S Wash. State... 0 Washington XJ..45 Total ... 10 Total 7S Oregon Agricultural College. Oregon Aggies. 10Multnomah .... 6 Oregon Aggiea. 64 Willamette 0 Oregon Aggiea. J'Wash. State 0 Oregon Aggies. OjWafihlngton U. . O Oregon Aggiea 2t;Idaho 0 Oregon Aggiea. S;Oregon XJ 3 Oregon Aggiea. 8jU. of So. Cal.... 8 Total .1481 Totals 16 University of Oregon. Oregon I9;Whltman t Oregon 7 Wash. State O Oregon ....... 13'ldaho 0 Oregon 61 j Willamette 0 Oregon ....... OlWashington XT.. 10 Oregon'....... 3Oregon Aggies... 3 Oregon 0 Multnomah 14 ..nil Total Total 30 Whitman College. Whitman tlOregon XJ 29 Whitman Whitman Whitman waanugton u. .2a Waah. State. . Oj Idaho Total 1S Total 71 University of Idaho. Idaho BIGonzaga 3 Idaho ........ 0 Montana Idaho 0 Oregon XJ ..12 Idaho o Idaho 0 Idaho 7 Wash. State 8 Oregon Aggiea. . S6 whitman o Total .. .... 13 Total ....46 X- x 'XT& 4. s i i. X" 4xXo "fct..x' A 2 a cracked shoulder, has played his first and last year of football, iving is tak ing post-graduate work this year. Aggie fans are wishing that he had started to play football in his fresh man year, as his work this year has Deen remarkable, considering his lack of experience. Anderson, center. Is an other who will finish his course this year, but it Is likely that he will re turn for a post-graduate year and an other year of football. Of the men who did not make their letter this year, the two seniors are Dewey and "Dad" King. Dewey made nis letter in football two years ago, and has been a valuable second stringer last year and this. His only appear ance this year was for a few minutes against Idaho. King has played five years of -scrub football at O. A. C. He is known as the "Grand Old Man" of the squad, and is one of the most loyal Beavers that ever put on a suit. If all the men "who are eligible come back next Spring, according to dope. the fpllowlng veterans will be on hand: rioter, hchuster, Laythe, Anderson, Smyth, Abraham, Blllis. Hocrline and Yeager. This is a crowd of good men. and with reinforcements from the scrub and freshmen elevens a good varsity next year should be forthcoming. Aaalatant Coach la Optlmlatlc. Everett May, assistant coach of the Aggie forces, forgot himself yesterday long enough to let slip a statement so optimistic that he has doubtless caused wrath on the part of his superior, the dispenser of gloom stories, "Doc" Stewart. Everett said: "With the veterans back, together with our scrubs - and rooks, we will have a team next year as strong as this year's whether there is a good fresh man next Fall or not. Lutz is the only man we will lose from the backfield. and we will have our tackles back, and that is the most Important factor in building up a line. This ' year we worked up a new backfield; next year Lutz will be the only missing one. He will be hard to replace, but with Abra ham, Billie, Hoerline and Alworth on the Job, we will have a good quartet without him." Some of the men who will figure next year are the following, who did not get a chance for regular work this year owing to the veterans on hand: Alworth, Newman, Groce. Watson. Mil ler, Hulbert, Le Loan. Andorson. Brooke, Wilson, Selph and Knopff. Add to this bunch as good a freshman crowd as came in this year, and Stewart will find things favorable for a big year. Fana Joyful Over -Bis Season. It was back in the days of Carl Wolff and the Coast champlonsAip that victory perched on the Aggie standard as consistently as It has tills year. Aggie fans are happy from the ground up. A record of seven games without a defeat, a tie game with the University of Washington champs and an over whelming defeat of one of Southern California's fastest aggregations are some of the factors contributing to the Joy prevailing on the Corvallis campus. Other morsels of dope that are being relished by the Aggie fans are that the Beaver goal line was never crossed by a conference team, that the only score registered by a conference team were the three points hung up by Hunting ton, of Oregon, last Saturday, and that no team in the conference has had the advantage over the locals in any spe cific phase of the gridiron game. The Aggies close with a percentage of 1.000, with five victories and two tie scores. Including all of the games played this Fall, the Beavers have hung up 148 points to 15 registered against thsm. In conference circles Stewart's team has a total of 36, while her opponents have aggregated but three. 'Coach Stewart Given Credit. One big thing stands out at the end of the season: Coach Stewart, of the Oregon Aggies, has made good, and with a vengeance. Things went badly for Stewart in some ways last year, and h9 was subjected to criticism at the beginning -of this Fall's work. Aggie fans who handled the hammer the first of this year are now ready to back down. The season has been too good to permit of criticism. There has besn nothing but harmony on the squad. The men have given their coach their best, with the result that the Aggies have a hand -on the conference flag. The Beavers have outplayed opponents who in the past have had the edge; they have backed up Dobie's team of cham pionship holders to a tie score, and there is not an Aggie fan who will not agree by thi time that "Doc" Stewart as a coach "has the stuff." That he will do even greater things next year is expected confidently. Only 13 Men Wla Letters. Only 13 men made their letters at O. A. C. this yeara remarkably small number when it is remembered that the Aggies' schedule was a long one. Only conference games are allowed to couut toward a letter, however, and a player is required to play four entire auartera O, -A, jplajed, 16 g,uarera - "' 4- Vt WW' 4,, fl. W. O. ("RIIIIc") KiBK. Frank Miller, Captain Gloomr Gaa") Hofr. Back CAfce") Abraham, Albert ("Aarorln") Aaaam. Kavtmee (Haatr) firoee. of conference ball. The men who will receive letters thia year are the fol lowing: Captain Hofer. Huntley, Smyth, Schuster, Moors, Laythe. Ander son, "Billie" King, Abrams. Lutz, Billie, Hoerline and Yeager. Huntley and Moore will be given sweaters with four stripes on the sleeves. Indicating four years of varsity ball. Hofer and An derson have three stripes and Abraham, Laythe and Billie have two. Smyth Schuster, King, Lutz, Hoerlin and Yeager made their letters for the first time this year. B. V. D. TEAM IS XOT KXOWX Penn Player Also Believes P. D. Q. Is Western Eleven. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 28. There is only one bright spot In the University of Pennsylvania's black football sea son. That is Mike Dorlzas, the Greek Hercules, who broke in as right guard. Just before taking the field re cently Blondy Wallace, a Penn coach, reminisced of the trip to Michigan, when Dorizas was the life of the party. Wallace was discussing the various football teams of the country, using letters to designate them. "V. P. L is one of the strongest of the Southern teams," he told Mike, "and tomorrow we play U. of M." To show that letters did not puzzle him Dorizas came back with: "W. and J. must be tough. They beat Yale." "Yes," replied Wallace, "but they're not as tough as B. V. D. or P. D. Q." "I don't know them," said Dorizas. "They must be Western teams." Wapato Defeats Prosser 31 to 6. WAPATO. Wash., Nov. 2S. (Special.) The Wapato high school team closed Its season yesterday, defeating the Prosser high school team here, SI to 6. The contest was hard-fought, the teams being evenly matched as to weight. Woodburn 60, Canby 0. WOODBURN, Or.. Nov. 28. (Spe cial.) Woodburn High School defeated Canby High School eleven at Canby to day in a one-sided game by a score of 60 to 0. Beck and Harper starred for the Woodburn team. Probst Goes 10 Miles In 57 Mirmtes. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 28. John Probst, running under the colors of the Chicago Athletic Club, won the 10-mlle mara thon of the Missouri Athletlo Associa tion here today in 67 minutes. Bugville Forfeits Game THERE was surely somethln' doln" In a wild, excltin' way. More than Jlmtown had experienced fur many an' many a day. An the bets the Bugvllles posted was quick gobbeled up on call. Fur we belt our team infallible in playin" classy bail. We'd a pitcher with some puzzlers in the way o' curves we'd swear Would compel the bats o' rlvala to collide with only air. An' we thought we'd make their rooters shut up silentler than clams When the Bugville Holy Terrors came to play the Tuba Dams. Jea to sort o cinch square dealln it was muchully agreed That we'd work a pair o umpires, an' we named Kentucky Heed, Whilst they thought xur square decisions one they called Missouri Lam, Beln' a expert In baaeballln', was quite good enough fur theru. It was fun to ceo the Terrors as they come In turn to bat Txyln' to aolve the troublln problem where the cussed ball was at. An' the faces o' their rooters showed anxiety an' doubt As they saw their top-notch sluggers In suc cession stricken out. Soon their umpire made a roar to ourn, hla temper out o'gear. That we'd run in a professional to twirl tho flyin' sphere That his players was the victims of a low down, sneakin Job That the pitcher we'd put up was mebbe Mathewson or Cobb. s His unjust suspicion won fur him a stinger on the Jaw, An' In leaa than half a minute the astonished bleachers saw An' amazin' battle royal 'tween the rival teams, a tight Or a pugilistic mixup that was sure a start. lln' sight. But tho right was aure to triumph, an' wo got 'em on the run. An without necessltatin' of the pullln' of a gun. An' wo chased 'em down tho canyon horae de combat, as it were. Whilst our yells o- vlcfry tangled up the wam in toe air. Guess they didn't put no brakes on till they'a raDDit-iootea aown Seven miles o' rocky goin' to the suburbs o" their town. An' the stakes was handed over to us fel lers on the claim Without cause or provereation Bugtown's team haa quit the game. JAMES BARTON ADAMS. A'aaoouvsr, JYah i ? s -a x x X U TEAM ALL VETERANS Oregon Loses None of Her Seasoned Players. SEASON'S WORK REVIEWED 'Year Good One," Coacli Says, "b)': Injuries Cost Champion.sliip." Cornell and Cook Candi dates for Captain. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Eugene. Nov. 28. (Special.) The 1914 football squad will meet for the last time Mon day, when the official varsity picture will be taken and the captain for 1913 probably elected. "Anse" Cornell and Sam Cook are the two candidates for varsity leadership. Both are Juniors In college and tnree-year men on the team. Cook is a 195 pounder from Coeur d'Alene, who is completing his third season on the lemon-yellow eleven by holding down an all-star berth at right guard. Cook started out as a fullback on his high school eleven and played that position during his Drst season at Eugene. Last year Bezdek waa in need of a good l'inemnn and Sam was put in at tackle. He is a strong defensive player who can be depended on at all stages of the game. Oregon Lows No Veterans. Cornell, the other captaincy candi date, calls the signals and occasionally slips around the end for a long quarter back run. This Fall he injured his knee and has been unable to get in shape for the big conference games. His knee got so bad toward the end of the season that he was forced to turn In his suit a couple of days before the Corvallis contest. He Is a graduate of Washington High School, where he was an lnterscholastlc all-star on Coach Earl's championship eleven. Oregon will not lose a man this year because of graduation. Every letter man will be elegible for the 1915 varsity. Captain Parsons Is the only four-year man on the squad, and he was recovering from an attack of typhoid fever during his first year and did not make the team as a regular. Eighteen men have earned the offi cial "O" this Fall and will form the squad from which Bezdek will pick his 1916 championship contenders. The men who have made their letters are: Parsons. Beckett, Malarkey. Philbin, Cook. Weist. Garrett, Cornell, Bryant. Cornwall, Snyder, Risley, Crowell. Huntington, Powrie, Sharp, Bigbee and Cossman. Parsons is a regular at right half, this year's captain, and the halfback choice of a majority of the pickers of the All-Northwest team. His specialty is -picking his way through a broken field for long gains, though he has been hampered this year by the defense that all the Northwest coaches have built up to stop his ground-gaining runs. Cossman and Risley have been tend ing to the passing. Risley Is a first year man, who was put in at the cen ter of the line after Dick Nelson dropped out of college at the first of the season. He is a steady passer and a fighting, defensive player, but three days before the Oregon Agricultural College game his cheek began to swell and Jake was quarantined to his room with mumps. Cossman was recruited from the scrubs and played the two final games. Backfield Shifts Frequent. Malarkey started the year In his old place at left half, but received a kick over the eye in the Moscow game which put him on the hospital list for the rest of the season. Lyle Bigbee took his place In the Washington game, but three days later was himself In the hospital with blood poisoning. For the second time Bezdek was forced to shift his backfield lineup, and Crowell. "a former high school teammate of Big bee, was put in at half. In spite of illness and freauent in juries that have disorganized the team. Bezdek has molded his recruits and five veterans into a fighting machine that has h;id its goal line crossed only once tins season, and that on a forward paps. "Tlie reason li;is been a :40ud one. In juries cost Oregon a championship," said tht coach, in reviewing the ceason Nix. if ' ' ' X x V - I I v i - xt. i i x x . 4 vsv -x J t