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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1937)
By RON GEMMELL 9 Maybe 'tisn't as exciting, but It's a lot cleaner fun to be ina position to throw a few kind words t o w a r d a coaching stair rather than pan It. To head Vik ing coach, Har old Hauk, and assistants, Car ney Cranor and Cotter Gould, a lew bouquets are due. Since Hauk took over the reins as athletic tutor at senior high a 1 m o s t two f o o t b all sea sons ago, sports at lhat institu- Boa Ota mell i tion have taken an abrupt rise. Last year's grid team started slow, but it has come a long way; under expert guidance. In fact, the Vik ings are knocking at the? ftont door of a mythical state nign school football championship Bears rm :JL ram Score 3 Times Sei eond Period t ' i .-: - ? - I me if . 0t - i to Win Salem, "Oregon, Sunday Morning, November 14, 1937 PAGE SEVEN Meek Snares Long Pass as Bears Dash Toward Web foots? Goal They've Got It. Wliat Coach HaBk has suc ceeded in doing, besides teach ing a bunch of husky kids the rudiments of football and then showing them how to coordin ate them into a smooth-working machine, is to imbue those lads with a spieit and . tenacity to win. No matter how well they had learned their fundamen tals, the will had to be there in order for them to make the way. And have those kids got it! They Keep It. At Eugene last Thursday, as we've said before, on a football field that would give a mummy the nightmare, those kids main tained their fire from start to fin ish. And the nice thing about it is that they maneuver like the bunch ot "old salts'! for whom they were nicknamed. They present a me thodical fire. Where most high school teams when fired up are apt to be flighty and overanxious resulting in misuses and fum bles Hank's Vikings pour.it on In even tenure. Much of the cre dit for that eoes to Stuart "Butch Nelson, a crunching fullback ot the first water, and the boy who tells who to do what out there. Thursday he was In the height of his clory. Yessir. most any spec tator will tell you that Butch was actuallyi enjoying fiimself In the muck. ' Viking Nelson. The sloppy, messy field held; no terrors for Xelson. And say, can yon think of a better name for the coxswain of a Viking ship than f Xelson? Probably that first guy who stepped on Greenland carried the name of Nelson ya, ya. Batch, accord ing to onr "figgers," packed the pellet no less than 1 times against the Axemen. He was held for no gain just twice in those 19 plunges, and carried for a 61-yard total and a 3.2 average. All 19 were right through the middle and the tackles. - T " - s ; i h H - r M f f V " I " - ? US .J ' 1 i 'I Si kU O i rem" tJrA aLttl A 'V r. .A Nicholson's Kickof f Dash Starts Only Threat of . Oregon Gridstersj ' : L- ' . ! Bv'jOSEPH PIGNEY I PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. The ealifornia football cruiser Rose owl bound fired touch- downacross: the Oregon goal line today almost as rapidly as dreary rain dripped from leaden north west skies. j The Golden Bears, cutting through th slippery, slimy,: slop py, mud w Ave s on Multnomah field with navy-like; precision, scored a direct 26-0 bit against the hapless Webfoots. : The Ducks, who should have felt at home on the gridiron marsh, fluttered wanly and col lapsed before the California broad-1 side. The Bear regulars punched over three quick touchdowns in i the second period. A second team scored another soon after the sec ond half opened. Oregon couldn't make headway against a third eleven in the final quarter. Yardage Shows It If the score didn't convince the 20,000 shivering spectators that I the Bears were on the: verge of a i Pacific coast conference champ ionship, the yardage did. Califor nia ball carriers marched 224 yards from rushing against 63 for Oregon. D. Anderson. California full back, crashed to a ; touchdown from the two-yard line: on the sec ond play of the second quarter. The Bears carried the march from their own 48-yard line. Vic Oregon's goal line was threatened as ! John "Jellybelly" Meek, 210-1 Paul Rowei Oregon fallback; managed to pull him down with a shoe. Bottari, halfback, and Anderson pound California quarterback, took; a long pass from vie uon i cu-iog wcuc, u puwu. and ripped off 49 yards to Oregon 84 stripe m tne nrst quaixer. j i ;; . . V J Mi (til i ik . A Jt W ?T 1 1 M n 1 .a .... Indians Shine Still in Race Make Best ! Showing yet to Down Cougars 23 to 0 After Slow Start made the heavy work appear easy. Bottari ran a punt to the Ore gon 23-yard line to touch off the second drive. Dale Lasselle, Web- foot halfback, had been forced to kick from the end zone after his mates held off the Bears on the two-yard line. Anderson splashed through tackle to the 1 5-yard line. sain Chapman, right halfback, Snowstorm Doesn't! Slow UiCkUC XL J.11SL UUHU UU IliC 111 I CO and then circled the Oregon left side for the touchdown. Bill Stoll, California tackle, set up the third score when he recov ered a slippery ball on the Web- I SEATTLE. Nov. 13 -(IPS- Prov- foot 34. John Meek, the quarter- hng their great scoreless tie Huskies Maintain Jinx Over Uclans Washington Attack as 26-0 Win Recorded Grid Scores Pitt Edses out Over Nebraska Behind With Five Minutes Left, Panthers Score ij With Aid of Break 1 PALO ALTO Calif., Nov. 13- (iiP)-Stan ford's Indians, reaching peak; form after early season de feats and disappointments, crush ed Washington State's Cougars under a 23 (to 0 score here to- aay. ; . The smallest football crowd of the local , season, - some 15.000 fans,! was rewarded with a ham mer and tongs contest In which the superiority of Coach C. E. Thornhlll's red Jerseyed warriors loomed ou'1Tke a beacon atop a mountain peak After a scoreless first period. with 'each team held to yardage gains in its own half of the field. the Stanford attack began click ing, i 1 It 'reached scoring proportions midway of ! the second quarter, when Carl Littlefield, WSC full back, fumbled twice in succes sion to give! Stanford the ball 11 yards fromt scoring turf. Pete Fay. shifty left halfback, sped around end lor the touchdown to give his team a lead which turn ed to a landslide by the time the final fun, barked. Second Half Lively Bv PAUL MICKELSON i , PITTSBURGH, Nov.' 13-P)-.lii a last period surge thatr lifttd 71,000 stunned spectators; off their seats. Pittsburgh's Panthers of football Broke loose again ts day to blast surprising Nebraslia from the ranks of the undefeatei. 13 to 7. ' I : The clock showed nine minutea and 55 second left to play an4 , Nebraska ahead, 7-0, when tlM Panthers clawed out of their eag with a relentless attack jand choice bit of Inck to com from behind to a thrilling conquest far the third time in 3 many; week. First, they marched S,0 yards o 13 playSj mi3ed on a1 placeniest to tie the score, and then graepe a Nebraska fumble to push over the winning score with less tha five- minutes to go. This was the sequence of events in the dramatic struggle i that was billed to be just another Pittsburgh runaway: Third period Cautious jNebrat ka out-slicked the city slickers a Harris Andrews took Bill Stapulii punt on his 40, made three stepa to his ri?ht and then lateralo4 to Jack Dodd. wh cut down the left side of the field for a beaa-i tifuly blocked run of 60 yards i for a touchdown. Lowell English; placekicked perfectly for the - tra point and Nebraska. led, 17-0. 1 Fourth period Pitt took tbol ball to Nebraska's nine. Fullback j Frank Patrick and Stebbintj smashed through to the two and the posToer trick -ver tor the .cor. back, completed two iof Bottari's passes and reached the Oregon five. The' straight shooting half back's third throw was snapped in for a touchdown by Hank Sparks, substitute end. Nicholson Shines Oregon had its only moment of glory at the start of the third per against the mighty California Bears last week was no fluke, the Washington Huskies lambasted the University of California at Los Angeles Bruins 26 to 0 in the Washington stadium today. Some 10,000 fans braved rain, wind and a second-half snowstorm (By The Associated Press) 'ifnlifnrnln 9ft Orsmn 0. ! Washington 26, UCLA 0. jStanford 23, Washington State Oil Idaho 6, Gonzaga 0. Oregon State 12, Southern Cali fornia 12 (tie). College of Pacific 13, Califor nia Aggies 6. Whitman 26, Albany 0. East Albright 16, Lebanon Valley 0. iBoston college 13, Kentucky 0. . , i ri m ' TT A ti noiy rosa i, muwu v. Backnell 0, Temple 0 (tie). Canisius 6, Western Maryland 0. Columbia 6, Syracuse 6 (tie). Coast Guard Or Connecticut Arkansas 12, Mississippi 6. Washington fc Lee 1. William & Mary 12. Richmond 19, Hampden-Syd- ney 0. Appalachian : 37, Guilford 0. Mississippi State 12, Sewanee 0. Juniata i 26, Brldgewater 0. Randolph-Macon 29, Haverford to see the slippery, skidding mud iod. Jimmy Nicholson, halfback, battle. The turf field was more of J , T u 'V""1 j. v vu a UlUl BL1 mail a(iiuuuu auu m I ty T-....tl. , Drexel 8. Delaware 6. Boots 'Em Good or bad. - li "! 7 When vou stop to remember that Hank's crew, featuring an in- Franklin & Marshall 18, Ge- i neva 6. UrBinus 15, Gettysburg 6. Hamilton 7, Union 0. i Harvard 15. Davidson 0. ; George Washington 33, North Dakota State 0. ! Johns Hopkins 25, American i gridiron ; Oregon 48. The Webfoots march-1 spectators were amazed when the ed! through the second string j Huskies worked beautifully-exe- Bears to the 30 and then Lasselle j cuted passes with the soggy 'ball punted out of bounds on the eigltf. for two of their four touchdowns. Wilbur Ingram, substitute half-1 The Californians must have back, traveled 24 and 19 yards on 1 thought they were playing in 1 successive runs to place the Bears j Alaska when big flakes of snow on the Oregon 18-yard line in the fell throughout the last half, mak- tnira period, r. Anderson and lne it difficult to follow the ball Perry Thomas Dluneed to the tho hn n'i inmrUpH at the thrpe-varri linA where Thnnm I j u.. l. vA f(..t I U:6 6 - " uuwupour, uui .iu0. ... ,s nr. A- Tof- oouncea over ior ine score. i n ot o fnnthnii vama in Seattle """J"" v """e"'- California's r e z u 1 a r : betan i v-oa I ferson 0 tricate array of reverses, spinners, driftine to the clubhouse Jn the v tti ti., ! Muhlenberg 18, Lehigh 7. I I At J v ia xui I ut . . . . basket and forwara passes on a fourth nerlod. The No. 3 team had Rrn. vnt their nreless I Manhattan 15. Mortn caronna stupendously sloppy grid, never no difficulty in SDillina- Oreeon's I -r -ajnf the tt,.vJp rlean State 0. fumbled that oval agate once i dur- fut!ie passing attack. Jay Graybeal whlstle .Thev never serlouslv ij MassachusetU State 13, Rens- Inr the whole fray Thursday nf the Wehfoot hackfielH hart his v.o 1 1 seilaer Polv 0 . .1 ... --III.-- - I i ." , i a.a u iu D vua I ; . -you ve a nanou i iuo vawu. . hands on the wet, crazy hall sev- nne. The closest they got was to mose .ias. i v..c. erai times But It-silDPed from his the ao.Tri Hue in the first Chapman had to take snap-backs eager fingers. The Bears made no period. In the four games played eiion io score again ana loooiea between Ucla and Washington, the ball into Oregon territory each J the Bruins have failed to make a time they gained possession. j single point. from center! while in punt forma tion off the muck. Take 'em he did tho and Bpiraled 'em down the field 45 and ! 41 yards each. Still a third came back in such shape that i he couldn't get it away, so Chapman, in his own cool, capable manner, plucked the pighlde from the quagmire took j nerwig. . . a gander at, me him and plowed The lineups: California Dolman LE. De Varona LT. .LG . . C . Washington scored a touchdown Oregon in the second and third quarters . . , Yeruy 1 and piled up two more in the final . Foskett period. Halfback Merle Miller Giovanini j plunged for one and caught a pass . Moore for another; Jimmy, Johnston I 6J .. Amato romped 36 yards for 'the third; Swarthmore 13, St. John's (An ..i Lsta Dan Yarr grabbed an aerial shot na noils) 0 Moravian 0. Georgetown , New York U Q LaSalle 9, Penh Military 0. Penn State 21, Maryland 14. Michigan 7, Pennsylvania 0. Pittsburgh 13, Nebraska 7. Wesleyan 6, Rochester 0. Ohio U 13, Rutgers 0. St. Lawrence 6, Clarkson 0. New Hampshire; 14, Springfield school football team Generally,! if a play goes contrary to Hoyle ona prep eleven,! everyone stops! and it is too, too bad. Nilsen I final ciiTv J I WUMA UUI Nicholson ,. Lasselle field ahead of stn,Vtnn i ..... nr. over the ahort j otnii pr BW.? .-0j; r"te; ?PnTartI-'----RE--- Rtson for the last one, Just before the were in there blocking tor him too nAtari t .h a thing seldom seen on a high Chao maii .'nil Anderson J. California scoring touchdowns, D. Anderson, Chapman, Sparks, (sub. for Dolman), Thomas (sub. for Chapman). , 1 Point from try after touchdown, Meek, Sparks,- (pi ace kicks). Clint Frank Too Good for Tigers Caven Competent. Eugene's Dong Caven, a mighty sweet halfback, showed the way-to the field Thursday in individual yardage gain. He skirted the ends and ran the tackles 18 times for 03. yards and a 5.3 average per pack. On the footing provided by the an-kle-deep strip of sawdust and mack, that is quite some ball carrying. The kids report one of those spontaneous verbal ex changes that sometimes occur in the heat of the fray between Chapman and Caven after Chapman smacked the Axemen luminary down in the biggest "lake" on the field, Caven had skirted "left end for 16 yards, the longest dash of the game, and would have been away for that ix-point plot if Chapman bad not have made a virions. trae-to-themarlc tackle to bring him down with a splash that looked like the circus fat man taking a belly-flop from the lo- foot tower. Caven, it is said. Minnesota Downs Northwestern 7-0 NEW HAVEN. Conn.. Nov. 13- ()-Yale's great Clint Frank for the second straight Saturday scor ed all his team's touchdowns as the Bulldogs trounced their tradi tional rival, Princeton, 26 to 0, in rain-swept , Yale bowl. To nia three : scoring runs against Brown a week ago, the MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 1 3. -AV shifty, hard-running Eli Leader A Northwestern forward pass that added four more today, two of backfired for a & 3-yard Mlnneso- them on spectacular trips from ta gain set the stage lor a; 7 to 0 past midfield that brought the Golden Gopher victory today, put- sodden crowd of 40,000 : to its ting the latter within one game feet. He didn't play the fourth of undisputed possession; of the quarter, or the damage might have Wayne 23? Buffalo 6. Bowdoin 0, Tufts 0 (tie). Notre Dame 7, Army 0. Middleburv 7. Vermont 0. Hartwlck 19, New York Aggies St. Vincent (Pa.) 0, Waynes- birg 0 (tie). West Virginia 34, Toledo 0. Amherst 13, Williams 6. Yale 2 6t Princeton 0. Sonth Alabama 7, Georgia Tech 0. Vanderbilt 13, Tennessee 7. Clemson 10, Florida 9. North Carolina 14, Duke 6. Virginia Military 27, The Cita del 0. Virginia Tech 14, Virginia 7. Georgia 7, Tulane 6. Louisiana State 9, Auburn 13. Irish Win Over Army Decisive Score Only 7-0 but Upper Hand Held Constantly by Notre Dame Men touchdown and a field goal into the records Iduring the third per iod while the most one-sided vlc- Frank Souchak jumped off the bench to kick the extra point but the ball hit the right upright ana tory of thei season was climaxed "kidded off tha wrong iiide and it by another touchdown in the rm- iUU"Q was -. al quarter, j Alert to everv Stanford's pigskin heroes blocked I it to Nebraska two and Stapulia By ALAN GOULD ! NEW YORK, Nov. 13-()-DiS- playlng no particular signs of wear and tear from- one of the country's most formidable foot ball schedules, the fighting Irish rushed up and down a muddy. rain swept gridiron today to give Notre Dame a decisive victory over Army. The final Bcore was 7 to 0 but the soldiers were back on their heels from start to finish Carnegie and outclassed in everything but the bravery of their goal line stands. A crowd of 78,000 saw the Irish capitalize a first period break" to register the game's only touchdown and then miss five additional chances to score. Four times the Irish lacked a scoring punch, twice inside Ar my's five-yard line, but the game was nevertheless a rout from a ground-gaining standpoint. 1 Notre Dame's "show - troot" Mary's hackfield. paced by big Ed Simon- ich at fullback, put across the de ciding points early in the game after a fumble by Army's Jack Ryan was recovered op the Cadet 13 by Joe Beinor, star left tackle of the fighting Irish. Simonich bulled his way over the goal line in four plays, the last: from the four, end .Charley O'Reilly, sec ond string quarterback, place- kicked the extra point. Thereafter Notre Dame, using three full teams, held possession of the slippery pigskin lully 80 per cent of the time and conduct ed a series of forays deep into Army's territory. Stetson - 20, i Lenoir-Rhyne 6 Oglethorpe 12, Mississippi col lege 0. i Chattanooga 33, Union 0. Midwest Ohio State 19, Illinois 0. Purdue j 7, Wisconsin 7. Indiana; 8, Iowa 0. Michigan State 13, Tech 6. Detroit 40. North Dakota 0. Iowa State 3, Marquette 0. t Dayton XI. Miami (Ohio) 7. Mt. Union 7, Ohio Northern 0; Marietta 19;' Muskingum 13. Wooster 12, Denison 6. Western Reserve 41, Ohio Wes leyan 13. Bald win-Wallace 20, Xavier (Cincinnati) 12. Akron 12,- Illinois Wesleyan 7 Lawrence Tech 14, St (Mich.) 7. Albion 6, Hope 0. Detroit Tech 9, Hiram 3. Minnesota 7, Northwestern Chicago 26. Beloit 9. Oklahoma 7, Missouri 0. Kansas State 7, Kansas 0. St. Lous 7,: Creighton 6. Augustana (111.) 0, Monmouth (tie) Tulsa 12, Washington U (St Louis) 7. " , Franklin (. Ball State 6 (tie) DePauw 32 Wabash 0. South Dakota U 13, Iowa Teach ers 0. . : j Rose Ply 61, Oakland City 0 DePaul 44, South Dakota State 7. Carroll (Wis.) 39, Wheaton 13 Bradley Tech 6, Knox 0. Illinois college 27. James Mill! kin 0 Konthwest EUGENE. Nov. 13.-(;P)-Danc- Southern Methodist 13. Baylor ing University of Oregon fresh- 7, j men will pay for removal of paint smeared on Oregon "State college buildings before the annual foot ball feud. Gleeson Payne, The Dalles, freshman class president. said today. ! University officials implicated 30 freshmen in the painting spree, and said $75 of the 3500 damage a nunt on i Halfback Bayne to piungea over ror me winning score f theiri third period touch- touchdown. This time Sourhak die downv Neil, Rasmussen, left end, not miss t&e Ricic ana teat was scooped up ;the ball on the three-J the finish. yard line and stepped across the goal line, j Soon after, quarterback Bill P a u 1 m a n demonstrated new found place kicking ability by booting a 31-yard field goal and three more! points. Stanford lost the ball on Wash Inflnn stnte'n three-vard line thrpugh a .fumble as the fourth Maynard Runs 80 ; Yards quarter opened hut maae up ior the" error a few minutes later when Jimmy Coffis, left half back, intercepted a pass thrown by Quarterback Callow, and ran 66 yards for a touchdown, it was Salem Bees Take Win at Silverton UO Frosh to Pay To Remove Paint Texas Christian 14, Texas 0. Texas, A A M , Rice 6 (tie). Oklahoma A A M 27, Oklahoma j City 7, ! : ' .- , Rocky Mountain Colorado 36, Colorado college 6. Utah 41, Colorado State 0. Denver 21, Wyoming 6. Brigham Young 54, Utah State 0. - New Mexico Aggies 33, Western State (Colo.) 6. Arizona 1 3 New Mexico 0. had to be raised by December 1. t n t n vl . . : 1 With the contest less than five minutes old, Capt. Ray King grab bed a Wildcat forward on his own 30 and raced down the field to the Northwestern k7. Then, the deadly Van Every-to- King passing combination produ ced the only score in a fiercely fought battle that found Minne sota dominating play in all but a lew Instances. been worse. MUl Gtv Downs Stayton Gridmen IUUI tower. it miu, i g--m TV rolled over In the pool, spit out UiemaWa BOXCrS pint or so pi pure sawansr. '"mnd and water, and said Hi, what kind of a stroke do yon nseT' Chapman's reported reply was Oh me, I paddle dog-iasn " Ion." Perry Still "Bend-ingr r'nlifnrtiiu . Prpw viuuAvtmu -v-iavn. i mi,.t pitv l- n.ftia a TV f I n l-Beoreless deadlock for two per- llPtPfltC rmPJlVIn5! iods. Mill City high school's foot "breaks" to defeat Stayton high CORVALLIS,; Not. 13.-(V here Thursday afternoon, 14 to Calif ornia ; mixed Junior varsity 0 i i! oarsmen bucked a six-mile f lood j in the third quarter Brown of current to win by three and a half I Mill City, reserve end, fell on the lengths from; the Oregon State! ball in the end sone for a touch- YS7 a. ""TV . 1 " J varsity crew loaay. ine lime was i down alter a siayion . piayer nu Will at IrOrtlanCl 9:69 minutes for the mile course, j tumbled a punt. In the fourth The shells were even at the i period watchter, right hair, mter- turn. but California sprinted to cepted a forward pass and ran for 36 strokes and won going away. I the second score. The extra points In the Oregon State shell, be ginning at stroke, were B. Smith, CHEMAWA The Indians' mitt- I slingers trekked to Gresham Fri day night and took the measure of the Portland Boxing school's ?rTnt, II J m i. " ' ln.r. in tnnr a f .1 h. LeTourneau, Mobley, Fulton, W. U C. Smith and Coxswain N. An Star Shadow Wins Stan Snite, 118, outpointed Art Perry in the Medford Mail- Gabby, Portland; Irving Dowd, der80n Tribune still insists that "if the ua. aecisionea ueorge wurtam, two sauads tangle? (Salem and Peruana; Koy Fepm, 135. won Bendl. if and when.; there will be from Dale. Bernard. Portland; a eridiron massacre, witn wna Jonn fooeu sieppea inree lasii ssan MATEO. Calif.. Nov. 13.- A"en v. .ra,ih - t wnnM Tua a I rounds to decision , Dan -'Jarvin. I f ak f.nmlnar frAm . hh!ni niiint I Jensen - 1 ahamer-but Salem Is asking for it." Portland; and Frank Cerrney, in the stretch Star Shadow, an Moravec LH LamDrecnt Perry-me-lad, maybe we shall 135, took C h e m a w a a Frauk outsider, won the $10,000- added Wachter i RH .... Joraan - 1 a m a m s a .1 ... warn CV On Air AB see what we shall see. We would snouiaeroiaae ana ac i. tunes, world's lair handicap today in the - r - like to know if Mr. Perry has seen I Portland, scored a technical KO closing feature of the fall meeting i Referee, Brandon; head linesr the Vikings play this year? . . over Vernon Jackson, unemawa. lat Bay Meadowa ?-,.. I inan-, Catherwood were made on passes. Mill City Herron ..J. Richards McDonald Eelly . Wilber Chance RT .RE -Q- ..LE.. LT .LG T" w - Stayton Mielkie . Blum 'Shelton Walters A. Proctor S. Proctor .. McRae Inglis Center Scores to Civ Indiana Win Hazel Green Program HAZEL GREEN The language class of the school gave the fol lowing program: poems, Marie Phillips, Margaret Jenson; piano solo, : Marian Wampler; group iof songs, school; play, "Happy Beg gar," cast: iking, Billy Woelke; nurse, June Johnson; queen, Irepe Wacken; court physician, Andrew Zahara; page, Charles Hayes; guards, Margaret Kralman, Marie Phillips; wise man, Neal Woll; IOWA CITY, la., Nov. 13.-V George Miller. Indiana's burly tnU Pauline Nelson, drop into the backiield to kick a field, goal, thoroughly enjoyed himself today! at he did his fa vorite act; from the 12-yard line to give the Hoosiers a 3 to 0 vic tory oyer a fighting Iowa team. Somewhat less than 10,000 shiv ering spectators sat in suspense as Miller stepped back early in the fourth quarter from "his cus tomary pivot position and booted the ball directly between the goal posts, i i- . ! . 1 Collide With Train SILVERTON A party of four people ot Molalla' collided late Thursday: night with a logging train coming j Into Silverton. The accident occurred by the Morjey crossing east of Silverton. Only one person in the automobile, a Miss Reeves, was reported injured and she was said not be injured jseriously.l Hugh Gottwald of Mo lalla was driving the car. J Dr.CIianLara CHINESE MEDICINE CO. Natural t remedies for disorders bt liv er, stomach, glands. akin, and nrinar system of ' men and r Y V? 1 ? women. Remedies ior cons upaiion, i asthma, ;rthrltla.vjj snsar dlabetia and 1 T. . rhenmaUsm. - , T'Z'Z 20 years in bus! ness. Natnropathic Dhrrklana. ; Coart BU Corner Liberty. Oft flee open Saturdays 10 A. BJ. to 1 P. M. and Tuesdays only Vr i i 3 P. I. to 7. Con V-A sulUtion Blood f j pressure and urine 6)ldi Calsi tMt tn f - K. D-- charge. ( on Kickof f Return With Perfect Blocking Maynard. left half for the Ra the most thrilling run of the lem high Bees, picked up the game, wnn corns weaving ia and out and finally outrunning the Cougar safety man, Callow. Tha victory, enabled Stanford to i clina- to second position in the coast conference race. German Cyclists Win Six-Day Race kickofr that opened the second half on hi own 20 yard line and. aided by blocking that would have done credit to' the Viking variety," dashed 80 yards to touchdown that clinched tho Bees' 13 to 0 victory over tbo Silverton high 3 squad at Silver- ton Saturday. Salem's second touchdown also was engineered by Maynard when he heaved a pass to Benson goos for 25 yards and the scerf. May-- nard aUo carried the ball ; ever ' CHICAGO. Nov. 13-PV-The for the extra point. German, team . of . Gustav Killan I Allport in the back field aad and Heins! Vopel won the 3 8th j Cliff Stewart at end were eome International six-day vicycle race I other standouts ia the Salem line- by I a hair-raising finish . before I np. The Bees are coached by 16.000 spectators at the Chicago I Cotter Gould, sUdium tonight I The Bees' line u p Included Three other teams were tied I King, center: Yada and E. Jar; with the Germans in mileage and 1 vis, guards; McRae and Gosser, lans. but the Germans led in 1 ends: C. JarvU and Steiger, tack- points, piling up 1444 in the lies; Reeves.: quarter; Ma j nard sprints. The French riders, Emile I and Swindle, halves; ! Allport, Diot and Emile Ignal, finished I full. second with 1012 points, with the! Substitutes who saw action Peden brothers, -Torchy and were Henderson, tackle; I A Smith, Doug of Vancouver, B. C., third guard; Stewart, end; Bensoa, with .958. jThe Belgian-American j halt; Leedy. full. team of Gerard Debaets and Bob by; Thomas, Kenosha, Wis., was fourth with 556. Seven of the original 13 teams finished. Whitman Defeats Albany With Ease WALLA WALLA, Nov: 13-UP) -Whitman college found its own offensive efforts futile through nearly one-half of today's game with Albany college, then capi talized on the Pirates noor Bunt ing in their own territory to score- two I touchdowns in the second quarter anjd intercept a pass for a 40-yard return In the third. Whitman made Its" fourth touchdown of a 26-0 victory by a pass to Comeaux in the . same period. . - i . - Open Saturday Night t'ntU " oXlock ' ! D ON' Throw Your i ji ; i Watch Away; We Can Fix Them When Others. CaiCi j Guaranteed Watch Repairing Also Fine Jewelry Repalrtag "Watches, Diamonds, Silverware The Jewel Box CREDIT JEWELERS I ! 443 i Between High State 1 and Liberty- Open Saturday Evening Until W LI E 1 it' S IL H NG Bulldog Jackson V.-; . ' ' .vs. f" ' . j i Harry Elliott ' 1 Hour ' ROD FENTOX sandy Mcdonald 4S Minutes OT& (XINGMAN vs. BARON VON HOFFMAN j i gQ Minutes t Salem Armory, 8:30 Lower floor 60c, Balcony 40c, Reserved Seats 75c (No ;Tax) r-.-" . -j ...v - . StudcnU 25rt Ladies 25c ". r ' - I Tickets! Cliff Parker's and Lytle's . Auspices American Legion j Herb Owen, Matchmaker -'v : ' ' " If I i-: n .