The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 22, 1931, Page 12, Image 12

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    The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning,' November 22, 1931
Temple and Mik
WeMeet to 13 to 6
TROJANS SEIZE
HEWIATGH FIGHT
I
PAGE TWELVE
SMC
CHAMPIONSHIP
TT
OP
ulak
Lead
Victory
BADGERS
TILT
LOOKING UP!
HE'S NEXT
TO BE TUESDAY
i
BY 256 COUNT
SET THURSDAY
E
Oregon Power is Winning
Factor; Uclan's Chances
Muffed; Varnell Travels
By PAUL ZIMMERMAN
OLYMPIC STADIUM, Los Angeles, Nov. 21 (AP) Two
green garbed ghosts of the gridiron, Mark Temple and
Mike Mikulak, swung the' pendulum of victory to Oregon 13
to 6 today after a stirring struggle with the University of
California at Los Angeles.
Fifteen thousand persons, the smallest crowd to witness
II
AT T y
Puts Willamette, Whitman
Back as Finalists for
Third Straight Year
N. W. CONFERENCE
Willamette
Whitman
Pacific
Coll of Idaho
Paget Sound
Linfleld
W. L. Pet.
3 1 .750
2 1 .67
3 2 .600
2 2 .500
2 3 .400
0 3 000
College of Puget Sound's oyer
-whelming defeat of Pacific Satur
day at Forest GroTe, 25 to ft, re
garded by many followers of the
Northwest conference race as the
climax of this season's lengthy
series of shocking upset, put El-
don Jenne's Badgers out of the B.
championship running and , res
tores the campaign to the same
status that has prevailed for in
all major sports for the last three
season A Willamette - Whitman
duel.
ATThe same, time it heightens
Interest in the Willamette-Whitman
game scheduled for'Thanks
glring day at Walla' Walla;
Pacific's defeat means this com
ing game will settle the champion
ship without any question. Wil
lamette has the slight advantage
that would win the champion
ship on a percentage basis in case
of a tie game
The Bearcats were out for prac
tice bright and early Saturday I
morning after beating Albany col- J
lege by a narow margin Friday
night. The showing of players,
who hare not been first string
men in that game, indicates that
several of them will see con
siderable action at Walla Walla.
Baker's Place Kick Beats
Notreame First Time
In Three Seasons
V. Borleske, the "old fox"
of the Northwest conference,
whose Missionaries' await the
invasion of Willamette's Bear
cats at Walla Walla Thanksgiv
fng day. Due to recent npseta,
this game will decide the con
ference championship without
nay question.
ctuiEir
ENTS
CURTIS
FOREST GROVE, Ore., Nov.
21 (AP) College of Puget
Sound scored, a 25 to 6 football
victory over Pacific university
here today and eliminated Pacific
from the northwest conference
championship race.
A fist fight late in the second
Out at the Salem Golf clnb
the members are now provided
with large score cards conven
iently placed on their lockers,
whereon they may record their
scores immediately after com
ing in from the course It's ex
pected to be a big help In re
cording enough scores so that
handicaps may be arrived at
fairly.
By PAUL. MICKELSON
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 21
(AP) Notre Dame's mighty for
tress of football, impregnaDie
against 26 assaults In almost
three years of gridiron warfare,
fell at last today. .
Fluttering over It tonight flew
the maroon and gold battle flag
of the roaring Trojans from
Southern California, who thrilled
the world of football with one 15
minute rush In the last period Df
battle today to win by a margin
of 16 to 14. The final drive came
just when it looked as if the big
Notre Dame guns, Marcny
Schwarts and Steve Banas, seem
ed certain of winning the day.
Trailing by two touchdowns
they entered the final period, the
Trojans could not be denied as
they smashed the Irish wall. They
dashed and passed their way to
one touchdown in four minutes,
rushed over another one to come
within a point of tying the battle
and then triumphed as the fren
zied crowd of 52,000 spectators,
treated to one of the greatest
struggles in the lore of football,
watched Johnny Baker, Trojan
left guard, arch a perfect place
ment kick through the uprights.
Trojans Were Last
To Beat Ramblers
Baker's kick, coming with but
one minute of play remaining was
an ironic touch for old Notre
Dame which has witnessed its
fighting army march through 25
victories in 26 starts. The kick
beat Notre Dame as the "fighting
(Irish" had three times defeated
the Trojans. More ironical was
it that the kick enabled the Tro
jans to be the first and the last to
defeat Notre Dame, as it was the
same invader from the west who
conquered Notre Dame's football
army back in 192$.
Of course all golfers are hon- if ever a football team deserved
est about their scores, but we I to win, it was Coach Howard
wonder if some aren t a bit I Jones and his cardinal and gold
period cost each team one of its
a. t - . , . , vvvUUd la, cuuic saaaa
ar piayers ana n inspire ""re ,, now and then. But if shirted giants from the west to-
a wnian rna i viirirarw srms-saai i a .-
one should haDDen to forget a 1 day. They rocked the ?otre
counle of strokes now and then I Dame citidel recklessly and con
to imnress his associates with his sistently. i nree times tney
skill, he would be hurting his threatened before success came
handicap at the same time.
in which the Loggers scored
three touchdowns in the second
half toppled Pacific.
The first half ended 6 to 6 but
Pacific was still the favorite, hav
ing made nine first downs to nd
forst downs for the Loggers.
Puget Sound's touchdown came
on the first play of the game. En
nls, left half, took the Pacific
kickoff on his own 15 and raced
85 yards, protected by a perfect
wedge of interference, to the Pa
cific goal line. Sterling missed the
try for point
Pacific warmed up quickly and
Al Weinel got away for 26 yards
and a touchdown. They missed the
goal point.
' Pacific marched the ball to Pa-
- get Sound's one-yard line again
There Weinel fumbled and recov
ered but the Loggers held for
downs.
As Puget Sound punted from
behind her goal line, Albert Lem-
cke. Pacific tackle, and Ennis en
And now we have the- new
ball, all official and every-'
thing. But if anybody wants to
keep on using the 1031 ball,
he can because only the maxi
mum weight Is prescribed, ac
cording to the wording of the
new P. G. A. A. rule. That will
please the "world's worst golf
er" whom we quoted a while
back.
In the first period, they smash
ed their way to Notre Dame s
three yard line only to lose their
precious chance for the first score
on Jimmy Musick's fumble. Two
minutes later, they rammed to the
enemy eleven yard line only to be
stopped by inches and once again,
in the third period, they found
themselves beaten back with 10
yards to go. But what looked like
the saddest break of all came af
ter they had scored their first
touchdown when Baker s kick tor
gaged in a hot but short fist fight ers at the beach courses between
and both were sent off the grid
iron.
Lemcke had been the backbone
of the Badgers' attack and'defense
and after his loss they were un
able to hold the Loggers.
The Loggers opened the third
period with a 70-rard march to
the goal line. Sterling kicked
roaL
The Loggers scored twice in the
fourth, once when Brusch inter
cepted a Pacific pass and raced I
23 yards and again when John-
eon intercepted a pass on the 1
Pacific 35. The plays put the ball
over.
Graham Sharkey came back tra Pp A,0fB,V
m a recent tour of Oregon they couldn ' b denled after that
Bears Smash
Out Victory
Over Indians
from a recent tour of Oregon
coast golf courses with word that
the game is growing in patron
age by leaps and bounds down
there. It hadn't been, up to the
time of his visit, wet enough to
handicap play. Most of the play-
Devil's Lake and Agate
live in the Willamette
from Salem to Eugene.
Beach
valley
Independent
Grid Squads
Clash Today
The Salem Heights independent
football team, an eleven composed
mostly of former high school play
ers, will tangle with the Chemawa
Indian stars on the latter's field
this afternoon.
,.Two .weeks .ago - the Chemawa
athlete took a 14 to 13.. victory
from the local squad in a. game
lb at was played -in a heavy rain
,on a field covered with mud. The
fiery little Indians well deserved
their victory because they were
i outweighed considerably; and
withstood a merciless pounding
- from the heavy Salem backs.
Wayne Blaco former Salem
nigh baek field ace, will be the
principal, ball carrier for the Sa
lem' Heights team in today's
game. He will. bo supported in
the backfield .by Clyde Landry, ex
LaGrande high player, at the oth
er half. Kenneth "Swede" Lewis
' will play fullback while Kenneth
Dalton will do the quarterback
ing. On the Salem Heights line will
be Eldon Jory and Toney Shoen
beckler at tackles, Roy Hunt and
Bob ' Carpenter, ends, Carl Trick
and Blaine Chapman, guards, and
Duke Maestretti, center.
There was a thin scum of
ice on the lake at the Salem
course Saturday, and ft it
freezes over solid, we plan to
go out and play the fourth In
par.
O
The Willamette griddets were
mostly at Forest Grove Saturday,
watching Puget Sound and Pa
cific play. Foolish question No.
134693: Whom were they pull
ing for? The report we get is
that Pacific was pretty cocky be-!
fore the game. But we're not as
surprised as some people appear
to be, at the outcome.
During, the first quarter of.
the Albany game Friday night,
Olson, massive Bearcat full
back, bit through the line 15
yards before any one touched
him And then went five more
after he was tackled. Several
similar plays during the game
proved that the reserve line
can rip holes In the opposing
forward wall.
LIBERTY LOSES S
LIBERTY, Nov.j 21. -The Ub-
eriy scnooi boys, who have been
practicing:: basketball only two
.weeks. Journeyed to Stayton" Frl
. day afternoon for their first same
and did very well, losing by only
: an eight-point mara-in . 1 n a-
Mr. Meyers, who is coaching the
uwa, ua so lar not made p his
first team, but expects to have a
gooa one arte aiore practice.
The showing by the Willamette
line was Indeed creditable as the
v irates' forward wall was the
heavier,. Albany made only three
first downs from scrimmapA
By RUSSELL NEWLAND
STANFORD STADIUM, Palo
Alto, Cal., Nov. 21 (AP)
While 90,000 fans thrilled to a
titanic struggle, California's Bears
humbled an ancient gridiron foe
today, with a brilliant 6-0 victory
over Stanford that ended the sev
en-year reign of the Indians in
this classic of the west
Led by stocky Hank Schaldach,
the -Bears smashed over a touch
down in the second period and
threatened on two other occasions
that saw the ball lost on downs
within the shadow of the goal
line.
Gridiron strategy that marked
the play of earlier California
teams, namely, "kick and wait for
the breaks," worked to the advan
tage of the 1931 Bears.
In the first quarter Schaldach
booted the oval with such place
ment and weight that Stanford's
safety man. Hardy, was dropped
In his tracks on his own three
yard line,
Rantala got off a bad punt and
California put the, ball In play on
Stanford's 36-yard line. The game
turned into the second quarter.
Schaldach punched at the line
four times in A row for a total
gain of 12 yards and then passed
to Waterbury for another dozen
through: those scrappy eaerves. 1 J1"0" I0J otner aoxen
The starting crew realized ita Inn- i t". ... . - '
portunity to show its stuff and
made the most of it.
One of the gratifying tea
turea or that game waa the
work: of Bill
here heralded
star, Ross has felt a little "un
necesarj" aa injuries prevent
ed him from showing much of
anything until the Albany
game.
mark it was Schaldach five and
one and five and over.
His dropkick on the try for
point was blocked
natlng in a line plunging spree
made possible Oregon's second
touchdown. The pair seemed un
stoppable, and while Temple's
pass to Orville Bailey was good
for 17 yards to the forty-yard
stripe, it was sheer power which
brought the score. Mikulak
crashed through from the one-
yard line and Temple converted
with a placement.
a facinc coast conierence garner
here this season, saw these two !
Webfooted backs pound their way
through a rugged Bruin line in
the first and third periods to
shut their opponents out of the
win column In their third season
as members of the conference.
Twenty penatlies marred the
game, and gave George Varnell,
the referee from Seattle, the
largest individual yardage of the
way. He stepped off 109 yards
at the expense of the beaten Bru
ins and 75 yards against Coach
Clarence Spears' eleven.
Temple scored in the opening
quarter on the third opportunity
presented the Webfeet. Charles
Wlshard, Oregon end, rushed in
to block Bobby Decker's punt on
the 45 yard line. The ball rolled
to the edge of the field and
Wlshard picked it up to race to
the 9 yard line before he was
tackled.
A five yard penalty for offside,
after Temple had cracked center
for two yards put the ball on
the two yard line, and the half
back plunged through on the
next play. His kick was wide.
Fumble Paves way
For Cclans' Score
Lloyd McMillan paved the way
for the Bruins' only score in the
second period when he recovered
Don Watts' fumble on the Ore
gon 35 yard line. Two tries at
the line and a 16 yard penalty
for unnecessary roughness made
it first down on the Web foot 10
yard line.
Two crashes at center put the
ball on the five yard strip, from
which point Captain Norman
Duncan passed to Dick Mulhaupt
over the goal line for the score.
Duncan's placement was wide.
A 74 yard drive in 13 plays
with Temple and Mikulak alter-
Booth Kicks
For Victory
In Last Tilt
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. Nov. 21
(AP) Alble Booth. Yale's Lit
tie Boy Blue, broke the Crimson
spell today and drop-kicked the
Ell's to a spectacular victory over
Harvard, 3 to 0, in his last game
against the Crimson.
The climax to a bitterly waxed
battle, scoreless for 57 minutes as
each team lost golden opportuni
ties to break through, came with
barely three minutes to go. It was
fourth down, three to do, on Har
vard s four-yard line. Once before,
in the second quarter, Booth had
tried a drop-kick under similar
circumstances and missed by
narrow margin.
Here was the last big chance
for Little Boy Blue and ha re
sponded with a beautiful boot.
When two Clovis. N. M., golf
teams met for 18 holes of play the
total scores were 2626 and 2627
for the 54 men and 10 women par
ticipating.
Catching Ova! Tossed From
Airplane Will be Stunt
Just Before Game
Unique and comprehensive prep
arations are under way to make
tne Thanksgitvng day football
game here between Salem high
and Chemawa the most colorful
athletic event ever held between
me iwo scnoois.
Vernon Gllmore. track and "B
basketball coach of Salem high,.
win attempt to catch a football
tossed from an airplane to Olinger
field Just before the start of the
game. Aa far as is known here.
this stunt has never keen tried be
fore any place in the United
States.
The game is called for 2
o'clock. Just before that time an
Eyerly plane will cut Its droning
motor for a swoop to within 30
feet of the ground. Amid cries of
down, Gllmore, down," Verne n
will attaempt to ensnare the lowly
pigskin which had such a high
catling.
Gllmore was a track man at
Oregon State college and is also a
great soccer player. Any work
which he might have had In
astronomy while he was in school
will also come to his assistance.
At any rate he will make a real
effort to keep that aforemention
ed pigskin from returning directly
to its original habitat, the dirt.
Movies of Attempt
May be Filmed
Fletcher Johnson, manager of
Salem high athletics, is arranging
the details and states that perhaps
a Fox movietone recorder may be
here from Portland to record the
unique performance. However,
this point will not be settled def
initely until Monday, said John
son. The Salem high band will play
at the game and special prepara
tion for organized rooting will be
made. It Is expected that the
freshmen will build a bonfire on
Olinger field for a Wednesday
night rally.
The Chemawa game is a real
story book climax to Salem's me-
Alps vs. Andes ta Crash!!
By HARDIN BURNLEY
ross. coming Nebraska Wins
a. a probable .
Big six l iue
The turnout of Salem people
ai me aaiem-Aibany game Sat
MEMORIAL STADIUM, - LIN
COLN, Neb., Not. 21 (AP)
Flashing an offense marked by
both power and versatiality the
university of Nebraska trounced
the cyclones of Iowa State Col
urday was little short nf au- iae cclone 101r Blw
grace'. .15 JiVi. VZ V t0 Vt0 WlD
Albany rooters than bom. pepYe SK,
The cornhusker victory was a
' complete rout for the Iowans. 4
We mentioned on
blance of the Cherriana to No
tre Dame's eleven yesterday.
Pete McCaffery, who bobbed
up aa a dark horse star in that
game. Is another. Except that
the "Irish" don't appear to
nave any fighting Irishmen in
their backfield. .
mm -THE giants wBmkmSim0k
I BABE HUAJT
f i lMPEL(TAIO 1
I .camera.. " J c3)
! 1 y WLm,,i vsVS
" .,mr. " '
v'rf. -fA --..J, - i .
i-.j.-f-.' J. . "
.vjt : . - j c -. - .- -
'
r- '
Hanson and Buskirk Seeking
To Settle old Quarrel
In Armory Arena
VERNON GILMORB
diocre season, as it will likely be
the toughest contest of the year
for the Cherriana. Last year Sa
lem high won 24 to 0, but as far
as actual playing was concerned,
the teams were as even as could
be imagined. One Indian dropped
a pasB which was right in his
hands when he was behind the
Salem safety and in the open.
On another play Chemawa lack
ed Inches of making first and goal
on the fourth down, while Salem
made it by inches on a similar
occasion and a score resulted.
Cougar Revert
To Power, Beat
Gonzaga Eleven
SPOKANE. Nov. 21 (AP)
Washington State College, beaten
In an aerial attack by Goniaga
University's Crafty grldmen, went
back to its 1930 championship
system today, and steam rollered
a 13 to 6 victory.
Mike Pecarovich's Gonzagans
took the cougars for an air line
ride, beating them in the pass at
tack of the first three periods.
The desperate Cougars finally
quit the trick stuff, clawed across
a touchdown, dug in and held un
til the final gun.
I
O-
GR1D SCORES
Johnny Hanson, the Portland
newsboy, will meet Brownie Bus
kirk. the Pendleton Cowboy In a
rematch at the armory Tuesday
n'ght on Promoter Harry Plant's
fight card.
Hanson is one of the classiest
sluggers seen here. While Bus
kirk can not be called classy or
finished, he is one of the most ag
gressive sluggers ever to perform
here and more wallops were ex
changed in the brief time he and
Hanson fought, tian are often
seen in a 10 round mix which goes
the : full route.
Kid Nelson of Portland will be
here to engage Buddy Ambrose in
a six round semi-windup. Buddy
is one of the promising young pu
gilists of Salem and won his last
match here by a knockout. How
ever he was not then fighting
Nelson, but a substitute who re
placed him because the Portland
boy's ,hand - was , broken. .
Ambrose-McDonald (
Clash of Interest
Bobby Ambrose will have a four
round go with Shrimp McDonald,
the sturdy Corvallls boxer who
has won 27 starts by knockouts.'
Bobby has not won a great many
fights by that route, but has won
a number of decisions and is a
heady fighter.
Spike Gorman, a newcomer to
Salem who plans to make this his
home, will meet Bill Poole, the
pride of Stayton in a four round
match. Poole was formerly a Sa
lem; fighter and appeared in a six
round semi-windup the last time
he fought here.
Gorman lives in Salem now with
his parents who have a farm at
Liberty. His trainer Phil Bayes
has great hopes for him and states
that Gorman is in the pink of con
dition. Spike is a brother of Naila
Gorman, a fighter well known in
the northwest. This will be the
first fight in Salem for Spike, but
he has been here for about two
months.
D
Football relatione between Iowa
State and the University, of Mis
souri have been more frequent and
continuous than between any oth
er two schools in the Big Six. -
A cat owned by U B. Cady of
Orena, Nov., has . nursed - a wild?
rabbit and several fox puppies.
Cleveland -Indian managers axe
expecting Steve Sundra, recruit
from the sandlot champions, to
prove as well with Cincinnati as
did Joe Vosttlk thia yean r---
READNAUGHTS Xos. 1 and
1 in "Old Roman" Mol
doon's new category, of
ring mammoths are scheduled to
battle each other for fifteen rounds
in New York City Friday night. It
looks now like the hottest heavy
card in years with Prhao Camera
and Vittorio Campolo staking their
all en the outcome of this pictur
esque Combat of the High C's.
Sapristi, but the Vast Venetian
and the Arcentine Italian should
pack 'em in to suffocation point
despite the times. The very thought
x a 4? whas saA4w'sV rRftV-WAwi Pwma
va, Mra wAwyif"vt a v v srv uu a iuuv
exchanging. .wallops with the 6-foot-7,
240-pound "Vic" is enough
to stir even the most unemotional
of fight fans. ,
, . "Cams" is xnnnosed . ta have
vttkening sock in his right. As te
"Preem," if he cant take it,
neither can the Marines! Further
more, Camera will be shooting at
a target even taller than he Is, this
time, and not at the much smaller
and masterly Sharkey or the ring
wise and mobile Maloney. "Preem"
had to punch down at those fel
lows. This time, he can aim
straight or up at the towering
gaucho and the latter has the same
advantare. n-itner or oota ought to
he dropped hardnot enee but
several, usrea.
If "Camn' eomes tearinr Into
Carnera aa he did against Tommy
Loughran he may tumble Treem"
harder than Sharkey did, but If he
fails to score an carry iL O- the
Ambling Alp' battering ram .left
should level the tall. son of the
Andes about the middle of the bout
aa Ernie Schaaf did in the seventh
last Jnlyi For the Impression la
strong that Campolo lacks some
what in stsmina, whereas Carnera
Droved in loainr hia first fifteen-
round boot te Sharkey, who was at
his best, that he can absorb pun
ishment in extraordinary fashion.
."Freem" has worked hard te
perfect a right uppercut. That. too.
is one ef the Argentine'! best
weapons, if it becomes a test of
those chin-lifting smashes,' there
snouid be so much-faction the
fans!! think. Friday nirht. that
Popeye has transplanted his "sweet
peas" specialty from the eemie
pages te Madison -Square, Garden.
Even If it should become a mere
mauling match, . the 2 size and
strength of the arincipals should .
provide more than routine thrills. ;
Pacific Coast
Oregon 13; U. C. L. A. C.
California 6. Stanford 0.
W. S. C. 13, Gontaga
San Francisco 40, Nevada 0.
Puget Sound 25, Pacific .
Southern Oregon Normal 20
Columbia 7.
Oregon Normal 37. Eastern
Oregon Normal 6.
Eastern
Yale 3. Harvard 0. .
Army 54, Ursinus .
Southern Methodist 13, Navy C
Brown 19, New Hampshire 13
Columbia 0, Syracuse 0.
Bucknel 14. Fordham 13.
Wash. & Jeff. 27. Western Re
serve 7.
Dickinson 14, Muhlenberg C.
Boston College 18, Boston U.
Lafayette 13, Lehigh 7.
Holy Cross 16, Loyola 14.
St. Joseph 20, Washington 0.
Massachusetts Aggies 7. Tufts 7
W. Va. Wesleyan 38, Alleghe
ny t.
Georgetown 13, illanova .
Hobart 13, Rochester 7.
Springfield1 78, Vermont 0.
St. Johns 13, Lynchburg 0.
Catholic U. 13, Providence .
Delaware 31, Haverford 0.
Mlddlewest
U. S. C. 1, Notre Dame 14.
Michigan I, Minnesota 0.
Northwestern 19, Iowa 0.
Wisconsin 12, Chicago 7.
Ohio State 40, Illinois 0.
Detroit 20, Michigan State 19.
Detroit C.!C. 0, Wilmington 0.
Wooster. 12, Dennlson 0.
Duquesne 13, North' Dakota 7.
Kent 7,'Hiram 0.
Haskell 31, Oglethorpe .
Wittenberg 21, Dayton t.
Kansas State 19, N. Dakota 1
State ft.
Marquette 7, Creighton 0.
North Central 14, Kalamazoo 7.
Purdue 19, Indiana 0.
Nebraska 23, Iowa State 0.
ML Union 32, Oberlin .
.DePauw 13, Wabash 7.
Drake C, Grlnnell 0.
Kansas 14, Missouri 0.
Oklahoma Aggies 14, Wichita 6.
Monmouth 19, Galesburg 0.
Southern
Tulane 40, Sewanee 0.
West Virginia 19, Penn State 0.
Georgia 12, Auburn ff. v
Duke 0, North Carolina I.
Maryland 113, Wash, ft Lee 7.
Western Maryland 20, ML St.
Marys 0.
Randolph Macon 21, Ameri
can 0.
S. 'Carolina 21, No Carolina
State 0. "
Tuskegee 32, Alabama Tech 7.
Wilberforce 14, Lincoln I.
Georgia Tech 23, Florida 0.
Southwestern 54, Union IS.
Howard 7, Birmingham South
ern t. I
Centre 75, Louisville 0.
Rocky Mountain
Temple 18, Denver. 0.
Colorado 17. Colorado Col
lege 7.
Santa Clara ft, Wyoming ft.
- Southwest
- Rice 2 ft, Arkansas 12.
Texas Christian 19, Baylor ft.
High School
Salem 21, Albany ft.
: Vancouver ft, Olympia ft. ' : 'l
Northern Arizona Teaeh'ersj
Frosh ft. New Mexico Frosh 19.
MacLoughlln ft, Baker ft.
, North, Bend 13, Reedsport t. .
Hill MUita-ty 0, Astoria If. .
. Parrish Junior high (Salem)
0, Roosevelt Junior high It. "
Ashland Normal
Beats Columbia
(AP) The southern Oregon nor
mal school of Ashland defeated
Columbia University, Portland, 2 o
to 7, in a football game today.
The game was rough and mar
red by frequent dispute over the
referee's decisions.
t51
CARLA OF
SALEM SAVS
your
be many
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The Market Drug . Store
This Week's
specials
tt.0 BOX VOGAX'S
CIOOOLATES
DOLLAR
MINTS, 1 Lb. . .,
120 SAL
HEPATTCA ..
tlJ80 BROMO
SELTZER
75c TICK'S
VAPORUB ...
1.00 BOTTLE
LISTERINE T . .
79c
29 c
79c
79c
49c
69c
OOC UrAHA . 0t
-TOOTH PASTK,.. LVC
AB Tow' Want -Xo Limit
N. COMMERCIAL:
- SALEM. OkEUON- i
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