The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 12, 1941, Page 8, Image 8

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    port:
Spaxks
By RON GODIELL
w
:W(nM
M.
PacifiCc,
Santa
Almost
After 21 to 0
. It was no "lucky" win Ash
v land hung up to upset the Med-
lord BiaCK xornaao, i.-tuiuixiK
to the written words of Billy
Hulen, Medf ord Mail Tribune's
sports editor . . . "Earned in
every respect, says Hulen of
the Ashland victory, which
knocked Medford from the unde
, f eated, untied ranks in Oregon
' high school football and tossed the
Southern Oregon conference into
' a three-way tie between Medf ord,
Ashland and Klamath Falls.
Tleld to 12 net yards on the
ground and 20 In the air in the
first half while Medf ord was
rolling up 177 yards from run
ning plays and 12 from passes,
the Grinlles came back to dom
inate the last 24 minute with
90 yards on the ground and 48
in the air to Medford's 51 on
land and 43 In the air," wrote
nulen ... An 87-yard first
, quarter touchdown gallop by
Ashland's Provost, after intercepting-
a Medford pass, Ignited
the spark that sent the Griz
alies on their way, said Hulen.
Spearheads of the Ashland
drive, by the way, were Chuck
Jandreau and Bud Provost, who
!may be remembered here as i
couple of pretty skookum basket
eers when they were performing
under Skeet O'Cohnell in the 1939
state tournament . . . Perhaps
Salem's speed boys, Dutch Sim
i rhons and Rex Hardy, can also
show the Pearpickers a good time
dawn there this Friday.
1 O
Turner, as Usual
As far as yours-a-sitting-here
pecking-this-typewnter can see,
the Leo Turner - Keller Wagner
fight at Salem's sock palace to
night sizes up no different than
other scraps in which Turner has
been the party of the first or sec
ond parts ... In other words.
if Turner, the notorious in-and-outer,
fights the fight he can fight,
it's too bad for Wagner despite the
unholy difference in weight.
For three long years, now, it
has been this corner's contention
that Turner has too much speed
of both hand and foot and too
many punches for any of the
boys trying to pick up a few
kopecks with their fists in this
territory . . . The black boy is
too much9 fighting machine for
the caliber opponents he has
had in the Salem ring Buddy
Peterson, Tony Kahut, Powder
Proctor and Kid Watson not excepted.
And, I ask you, if these young-
sters, all much faster and much
( better boxers than Wagner,
couldn't hit Turner, just how does
the heavier, slower Salem slugger
figure to connect? . . . There's no
Question but what Wagner could
knock Turner's head into section
C.-row D, seat 18 if he connects,
but so could Stalin blow Hitler to
Hades if he could get close enough
to toss a hand grenade in his soup.
Holt for Bevos?
Short takes:
Antelope Al Lightner, prospec
tive, manager of the 1942 Salem
Senators, was notified this week
by Carl Anderson, business mana
ger of the Twin Falls Cowboys,
that he could have his release from
Twin if and when the Salem Job
opens up . . . Otherwise, said
Anderson, no soap.
"Goldie Holt, pilot of the
Yakima Pips for the last two
seasons, recently was closeted
with Ed Schefter regarding the
Portland Job," writes Dan Wal
ton In the Tacoma News-Tribune
. . . "But the best available dope
is ; that when Owner Schefter
gets ready to talk turkey he will
tell it Jo Sweeney, first name
BllL"
Silly football statistical prac
tice: That of charging the passer
With, yardage lost from rushing
when tossed for deficits on pass
attempts . . . Yards lost are almost
never. the fault of the individual
back but are the team's loss .
It's because the passer wasn't pro
tected that men came through to
pill him for the loss . . . Yardage
lost by attempting to pass, there-
lore, should be In a department
f Its own; charged to the team
and not against the gains of the
back-involved.
- Also on this department's beef
list Is the nnstandardixed man-
ner of calling plays, both by
radio announcers and writers
One broadcaster or writer
will eaU the play over the op-
, penent't len ucaie, guard or
eaa. wnue another 'caster or
scribbler will call it over his
wn tackle, guard or wing . .
1 1 prefer the , opponents, but
would submit to the other if it
was standardised. -
WmfoM$
Clara
- '
19 Edge
0
'
TTT
ii ii
o
9
WST1' lBF0MC
Catch
Passes
ucks
Lead
Newquist's Conversions Enable
Oregons to Emerge the Victors
. By RON GEMMELL
Statesman Sports Editor
MULTNOMAH STADIUM, Portland, Nov. 11 (Special)
Oregon's Ducks were in the saddle, 21-0, here once this
overcast Armistice afternoon, but the Santa Clara Broncos
came nigh to bucking 'em clear out.
Oregon was victorious, 21 to 19, thanks to Jimmy New-
quist's unerring toe on" three conversions from placement
and to Russ Nowling and Val Culwell, who took turns block
ing Bronco conversion trials, but if the game had another
five minutes to go there are probably few of the 15,000 in
the stands but who'd have wagered on a Santa Clara victory
Man, did these Broncs pitch the
football all over this slippery sta
dium in the second half, after
spotting the Oregons a three-
touchdown lead! Just 11 comple
tions in'18 attempts, for 249 yards
and three touchdowns in two
quarters, that's all!
And so well did -the partisan
crowd of Oregonians like what
they .saw from the Broncs, they
were actually cheering for the
Santa Clarans all through the fi
nal period.
In the first half, it was the same
hard - hitting, heads- up Oregon
team which bounced California on
this same gridiron, five weeks ago,
but in most of the second half it
was more like the lackadaisical
Duck outfit which was smeared
by WSC at Eugene ten days ago.
Santa Clara's gallant comeback,
ft" i tflfr
Mr . . : 7..,,. .rml
JIMMY NEWQUIST j
Ducks Rode Broncs, But It Was Oh, So Close I
WBMMBBSBgWBgflsy-SjSSW l I
Morley
For
Bearcats
9
Jesse Freitas (7), Santa Clara's rifle-armed halfback, shoots a pass that Jimmy Newonlst, Oregon's re
serve fullback, intercepts late in the second quarter as the Webfoots stave off a final half Bronco rally
to win their Armistice day clash in Portland, 21-19. Freitas and Newquist sparkled In the wild game,
that saw Oregon build up a 21-0 lead and then almost get caught UN photo.
Page 8
Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, Morning, November 12. 1941
Albany Dumps Corvallis, 26-6
To Give Viks Titular Chance
TOMMY ROBLIN
stle; Jose Balmores, breastroke
and individual medley; Steve
Wozniak, long distance individual
and relay; Earl Clark," both dives
and Takashsi Hirose, two relays.
Nancy Merki of Portland,
Ore., was tabbed as the year's
outstanding woman swimmer
and placed on the All-America
in the 440, 880 and mile free
style events. Gloria Callen was
listed in the backstroke and
medley relays; Branda Helser,
100 yard freestyle and relay;
Helen Crlenkovlch, two dives;
and Ann Hardin, long distance
individual and team.
This was the first time a AH
American women's team has been
selected, although the men's team
is an annual selection.
GAME STATISTICS
S.C.
First downs
Yds. gained, rushing ....
Passes attempted
Passes completed ,,,
Yds gained, passes
Yds lost, passes .
15
. 63
. 25
. 13
.253
.
. 1
Passes Intercepted by
sat gainea, runaaca oi
intercepted passes 29
Punting average ..:.; 38.2
Total yds., kicks; ret. ... 61
Opponnets fumbles recov. "
Yds. lost, penalties ... 55
Includes punts and klckoffs.
Ore.
6
35
12
8
93
2
5
1
4.
177
1
63
Gophers Top Grid Poll; Bulldogs Never
Setup Forecasts Upsets Give Spartans
Opportunity
Batters cEm
Gene
Stewart Top Scorer
Reserves See Major Service for
Keenehien; Badgers IJse Aerials
By KEITH HANSEN
Statesman Sports Writer
Soften 'cm up, then give 'em Morley" seems lo ba
Bearcat Coach Spec Keene's latest strategy slogan.
The burly, 225-pound tackle played two bruising; quar
ters in the forward wall as Willamette waltzed over Pacific
university 40 to 0 on Sweetland Tuesday, and then went
into the 'Cat backfield at fullback to see how effective his
line work had beenuSAnd it was .okeh.
With the stands Shouting "Give it to Morley," Neil hit
the-line for four yards, then five, and five again. Teddy
Ogdahl cracked over for 111 to the Badger nine, and Morley,
after getting held for no gain.
startled fans, , the Badgers and
probably himself by flipping a
neat pass to Gene Stewart, who
breezed into the end zone for Wil
lamette's third of six touchdowns.
Thus did the fiery-thatched
tackle-fullback provide the big
gest thrill for the some 1500 fans
who saw the Willamettes romp
to their fifth straight home vic
tory of the season, their fourth
Northwest conference victory
without defeat, and their 199th
point to but 14 scored against
them on the home grid.
As football games go, it wasn't
much of a test for Keene's kids.
Bearcat reserves did most of the
toil, and the line held just as it
usually does, allowing Badger
made possible by the sweet pitch
ing of Jesse Freitas and Kenny
Casanega, overshadowed Oregon's
three-touchdown sortie in the first
three, periods, but actually the
Ducks were as much In command
in the first half as were the Broncs
in the second.
After hanginr up their three
touchdowns on Tommy Rob
lin's pass to Tony Crlsh for 28
yards for one, Roblin's 72-yard
raceback of a punt for a second
and another Roblin to Crish
pass for the third the Ducks
went Into a defensive shell that
the Santa Clarans almost
cracked wide open.
Unaided by his stellar running
mate, Curt Mecham, who saw but
two minutes of service because of
a leg injury, Roblin was the lad
who made the Duck machine ram
ble.
The penalty-marred conflict
was but seven minutes along
when Roblin, with the Oregons
taking over on the Santa Clara
43 following a punt, began flipping
the football. He flipped 15 yards
to End Russ Nowling to the 28,
and then feathered one into the
arms of Tony Crish, all by, his
lonesome on the Santa Clara- 12
Crisji dangled on into goal dust
(Continued on Page 9, CoL 5)
NEW YORK, Nov. lMPJ-There's a practically perfect setup
this week for those unexpected happenings that football fans
call upsets.
In the fifty weekly Associated Press ranking poll, 28 teams
were singled out by 122 sports editors and writers throughout the
nation as being worthy of mention for "first ten" ranking. Com
ing out on top of this list in order
were Minnesota, Texas, Duke,
Texas A & M, Notre Dame, Stan-
o r d, Michigan, Northwestern,
Alabama and Duquesne.
Notre Dame and Northwest
ern clash Saturday in a game
that figures to be a tossup no
matter how you look at it. The
other eight leaders run into op
ponents that are likely to forget
aU about being underdogs when
they get out on the field. In
fact, a good many coaches who
think of what happened to such
an overwhelming favorite as
Fordham last week might be
willing to trade for an opponent
with a reputation that would
put their boys on edge.
The pairings send Minnesota,
whose 15 straight victories have
made the Gophers .the first choice
of 99 of the 122 experts, against
Iowa, which has suffered only one
bad beating in five Western con
ference games. Texas, with only
four first-place votes but a total
of 881 points as compared to
Minnesota's 1187, faces Texas
Christian, a team with a record
much like Iowa's. Duke, first
choice of 11 experts for 844 points,
runs into North Carolina, which
would count the season successful
if it could beat the Blue Devils.
Texas A and M, unbeaten and
untied, takes its chances against
Rice, Stanford meets Washington
State, Michigan plays Columbia,
Alabama faces Georgia Tech, and
Coivpoke Ropes j
Buck Deer to
Save Youth
HELENA, Mont., Nov. !!-()-
Fourteen-year-old Ted Schuele
brought a 200-pound buck deer
to earth with a lasso when, trapped
by a riding party, the animal,
charged Marie Nettleton; 10.
Schuele, a Helena high school
sophomore, was riding in Monk
Gulch with Clifford Nettleton, and
Nettleton's two daughters.
"We chased the deer, just for
the fun of it, into a bunch of
rocks," Schuele explained today.
"Then the deer got mean and
charged Marie's horse and the
horse threw her, so I just tossed
my loop over the buck's horns.
Ted held the rope while Nettle
ton ran to a nearby house, bor
rowed a gun, and shot the deer.
Zimmerman Leads
PORTLAND, Nov. ll-()-The
lead among professionals in the
pro-amateur sweepstakes of the
Oregon professional golfers' as
sociation was taken Monday by Al
Zimmerman with a sub-par 69 on
the Tualatin country club course.
By TRAVIS CROSS
Statesman Sports Writer
ALBANY, Nov. ll-(Special)-Tommy
Swanson's Albany Bull
dogs were the No-Name league
giant-killers here Tuesday after
noon when they downed the Cor
vallis Spartans, previously un
beaten in No Name league play,
26 to 6 before an Armistice day
crowd of 3500.
The outcome throws the league
leadership into three-way tie be
tween Salem, Corvallis and Al
bany. Holding the Bulldogs scoreless
for the first quarter only, it was a
tired bunch of Spartans who were
completely outfought today. First
downs read 12 to.7, Albany.
On the second play of the sec
ond period Big John Schlegal
headed for the sidelines and
drove 22 yards for the initial
touchdown and then booted .
home the extra point.
After a Bulldog kickoff was
taken on the Corvallis 40, the
Spartans, headed by Bob Reiman
and Karan McDonald, marched
straight downfield. With seven
minutes to go in the half and the
Spartans pounding on the Albany
eight, McDonald passed to Tom
Shaw for the score. McDonald's
placement was wide. The half
ended 7-6.
The complete Bulldog backfield
led a third quarter sustained
drive, begun on their own 40, be
fore Schlegal went over from the
half-yard line. Schlegal missed
the conversion.
The final period saw a brace
GAME STATISTICS
Will. Pac.
Flrrt down . 17 8
vyd!. g lined raihinf 291 Tl
Ydi. lost rashlnc JS J
Pisses attempted 14 2S
Passes completed S 13
Yds. gained passes J9 139
Yds. lost, ate passes 11 U
Passes Intercepted by . 1 S
Yds. sained, runback
passes r7
Punting average ti.S M
Total yds. kicks ret 22 15
Opponents ( ambles
recovered I
Yds. lost penalties
Includes punts and kickoff s.
...
KEN JACOBSON
backs lust 24 net yards on the
ground. But it was a bloody, hard
foueht affair in which Pacific
never once gave up.
But Pacific filled the air with
hoghides in tossing 25 passes and
completing 13 of them. The 'Cats
seemed unable to solve the an'
cient lateral-forward flip,- and
seven of Pacific's eight first downs
were from the aerial route.
The Bearcats did a bit of pass
heaving themselves, and collected
169 yards on eight completed
tosses.
Gene Stewart played a whale
of a rame at halfback and was
top 'Cat scorer with twa touch
downs and a conversion from
placement. Teddy Ogdahl nab
bed two slx.polnt tallies, while
Chock Fnrno and Bill Reder
hit pay dirt once each.
Willamette's first marker came
on Buddy Reynolds' toss from the
Pacific 20-yard line late in the
opening stanza after Al Walden
and Ted Ogdahl had packed the
ball from the Willamette 47 in
three tries. Bill Reder booted the
extra point.
The second quarter saw a com
plete new outfit on the field for
Willamette. Midway through,
(Continued on Page 9, CoL 4)
r.t.. - .
V- w l -?'' U
11. v t-
, 1 "-v., , ' ", 1
Leahy of Irish Gets Martin's JVod for Fine
Coaching Job With Mediocre Material
Duquesne encounters Mississippi I . . -w ... W ill! P
State, which split one fireplace " i", IT innil SCOTeS
vote with ,t vis 1 vwmina; irom a pass, ocmegat
--1 iwyys , HUU aVUU
TlamedPpb
iJi-Amencan
By WHITNEY MARTIN
NEW YORK, Nov. ll-(Special
to The Statesman)-It's ' a little
early to considers the. candidates
for coach of the year, as a team
going with the
wind rightr now
might be gone
with it before
the 'season ends,,
but if Frank
Leahy doesn't
look out he's go
ing to' receive
lot, ef write - in
votes for.the
honors A
No w t h a X
we've cut the
whammy on him, it might be well
to list a few qualifications he has
shown to date.
.
:
'"'..-:..
A- "
: f
Whitney llartta
NEW YORK. Nov. ll-VAll - To begin with, he came In cold
America swimming teams for both I to one of .the touehest coachinc
rr.cn and women were ;nominated Jobs -in the country. -Notre Dame
by committees of the amateur ath-
UCs union Tuesday, tubject to
accertance by "the 4S3rd annual
:i cf the AAU. Men
wvt: har.S named ior
fee-style, and on
. thi the -events
y were named, in
I '.h, " 17-year-old
3 i:.l 4 ID freestyle
ir: Adolph Kiefer,
ccT.vcr.
tcr.'.i r
tl.e i:
t
Set '
- y z v
. '
: .h th
;,vsi..".n, .
.1 ere re'
is Notre Dame, and Notre Dame
meant football to .the nation at
large, no matter "how high the
South Bend school may rank scho-
lasucaily, ... .v--;;-v, -rrA
The Rocknes ,andf the GIpps
and the Foar Horsemen built
u a tradition which called for
victorious teamfand a follow
lng.cf synthetic alumni who de
manded themi'. j
' Had Leahy found himself tossed
Into a mass of fine material this
ZZl i-lvk and mile free little eulogy would not be neces-
i - ' '- -' '
sary. In fact, it would be distinct
ly out of order.
But he found himself in no such
comfortable predicament We re
call his rather plaintive statement
of last June, after spring practice
had uncovered glaring weaknesses
and painted an immediate future
none too bright. v
"Many of the-best boys have
graduated,'; he $aid.."In fact, there
are only four starting players re
turning next fan.n top of that
the weakest freshman-team in the
h i s t o r y of .the mlversity has
summed iip to it "very 'small num
ber of candidates for .the .varsity.
w o uu uih nave aepu m -any
position' on the. team.f ; :"- ,.
He also remarked that he had
two speedy backs Dippy Evans
andv Steve Juzwik who could
makeyam-hody'aJeantf
Duui lacs oi-speea in ine
line, particularly , at the" guards.
mat ne reared these fine half
backs might go to waste. ,
Now Leahy's eoachlnr system
has a very personal touch, lie Is
close to his boys,' and - has an
uncanny Instinct -for placing . a
player in a position for which'
he Is best fitted. lie also has
assistants, who teach by demon
stration; who can get out there
land show the boys just how It
should be done.
Fully aware of the line weak'
nesa and the consequent Improb-
111 16 points for 13th place.
In the "second-ten" rroun.
Fordham, Navy and Mississippi
nave no games scheduled this
week but Pennsylvania (No. 14)
plays Army (No. 19), Missouri
(16) meets Oklahoma, mention
ed for 1 points, Harvard (17)
piays Brown, Boston eoUere
(18)faces its Sugar Bowl rival
of last January, Tennessee, and
Ohio State (20) meets Illinois.
This week's voting put Minne
sota in an even more command
ing, position than it held at the
same stage last season. Then the
Gophers were given a total of 1314 Ziegier
points but were hard pressed by 0'
wnieu uiaanus a ana ia. stan- ipwter
ford, Michigan, Notre Dame and ISKanS:
ability 61 winning games along the
ground, Leahy took the only way
out He had to develop a passer.
He made one of his young as
sistants, Ed McKeever, vice presi
dent in charge of passing. McKee
ver took four or five promising
youngsters and started working
with them. The list finally dwin
dled down, to one Angelo Bertel-
11, a blond Italian youth from
Springfield, Mass.
Hour after hour McKeever
played catch with BertellL He
taught him to make: a snapjthrow Northwestern ; also were ranked Knu
Bob Jacobson. Schlegal again
failed to convert The second
pay dirt scamper came, im
mediately following the-Albany
kickoff, when Archie Hayes In
tercepted Bobby Knoll's pass
and wait ted 40 yards to a
touchdown. Denny Miller kick
ed the extra point
The Albany second team, which
played the final five minutes.
pushed the faltering Spartans
back to their own four yard stripe
before the gun ended the game.
CORVALLIS ()
Webster .:T,E
Clark '., ,iLr.
2) ALBANY
, Miller
w -
. RO
- " T
with his wrist, like a catcher pick
ing a man off first base, and l!e
fore long Bertelli could knock caps
off of milk bottles at 30 paces.-
xnat tms tedious attention . to
the one. thing which might be the
difference between a winning team
in the first ten for the correspond-'
ing week oi 1940.
Myrtl
j. Hayes
J.O ; . . Chandler
.Lomey
Hermans
MacHuxh
R. Hassman
-Q " ' ,. Wardehofl
T .W . Jimhann
Powell ; JH,; , ,.. A. Hayes
Reiman r Schlee-al
Substitutions Corvallis A. - Ander.
son, McDonald. Nelson. B. Anderson.
Adams. . . Albany Sorenaon. nir.
Anderson. Wilson. KeUey, Kelt?. Hect
or, Ambrooek. 1 Hassman, Cow rill,
Moencn, Merrill, Draper, Swing, Byers
and fiiMncr ..
Otnctaia: Referee, John Oravec: um-i
Welsgerber; bead linesman.
COLLEGE
Willamette 40, Pacific t.
Santa Clara It, Oregon SL
Albion Normal 2C, Lewis ton
Normal 7.
Montant SUte 11. U of Jdahe
South 13.
Greeley State 7, Colored col
lege 2L
Boise Junior 14, Gowen Field
Air Base &
Trinidad Junior I, Mesa Jan
lor 25. ,t
Colby 14. Bates 7.
Salem , W. Ylrg. Tech 20.
U ef Utah Reserves IS. Weber
toiler t.
Jefferson Barracks XI, Miasauri vZuZ
vallev eouere IS.' . , 1 1 ceorc
MARSHALL. BARBOUR
WoodburnBoDS
Cheraawa, 32-0;
Stays in Race
WOOD BURN Woodburn's
Bulldogs defeated the Chemawa
Indians, 32 to 0, here Armistice
day before a capacity crowd, to
stay in the running for the Big
Nine league championship.
Quarterback Al Halter scored
the first touchdown in the initial
period, . racing 40 yards. He con
verted from scrimmage. Bill Bent
ley hit pay dirt from five yards
out in the second period. His con
version attempt failed.
Bentlcy scored again in the
second quarter after a passing
attack carried the ball dawn
field. He converted fram scrim
age. Eugene Pelts raced 50 yards
following a "dead man" play pull
ed by Hammond. Al Halter scored
the final touchdown in the last
period, going over from the four
yard stripe.
CHEMAWA (I)
Van Pelt
Waitford
(32) WOODBCBLN
T Hammond
J-T Martu.
-LO rubtn
Baldwin
Ryan
C Austin
RT
and an also-ran has paid dividends! A g r, iiv ; nni rl? n.We
is shown by the record. BJgM
w seems. Angeio serteiu is tnei v - . r . I rt i -
CUQU1IL. NOV. n-ffuTTn.inillllimiFV .IHTPH
T r . V wm- .-; w . S1
Notre Dame offense.
; Needless to say, Leahy is pop-,
war at Notre Dame, The rrum-
bling resulting when he barred
spectators from practice has fad
ed out and aa long aa he keeps
winning he could hold practice
in a tool shed with shades drawn
and nobody would say a word.
We think he has done a7 fine
wounT up ; its reguar- schedule 1 ttrlteY ollOOt -t
a S3 to 8 football ; ' - T - ' k
Tuesday with
victory- over CoquHle. .
Coach Pat Rickard Immediately
challenged The- Dalles, also tin-!
j defeated, to a post-season game to
be played in either city.
by
.--A-' turkey' shoot sponsored
the Sublimity Games Conservation
league is slated at the Sublimity
oau park November. 10. ; .
This will be the second turkey
shoot of the season.. At the. first
Myrtle. Point showed increasing
Job, and just to make us look good I strength 'in. its final games, to-1 shoot awards of bacon slabs were
his Irish probably will go out and I day's , victory being over a club I given and those who did not wish
get their ears knocked off by I that earlier was downed by a slim J to shoot for them were awarded
Northwestern next Saturday,.! 13iVtor6smargin. Icasb,.,- . :..;,;.'.,,
Cottage Grove 14, University 7.
North Bend t, Manhfleld .
Myrtle Point 13, CvaBU L
- Ontario 33, Nyssa C
Grants Pass 13. Xasebmrg t.
- Nehalem 25, Wheeler t. . .
Milton-Freewater 2L Pendle
ton 7.
. Sandy I, Parkrose ."
-Bandon 21, Eeedspart C
Klamath Falls If, Bend 7.
Woodbvrn 22, Chemawa .'
. Rainier IS, Clatskanie . -Newport
21, Toledo I. j .
Taft If, Florence . :
Independence C, Dallas t.
Hood River S3, Columbia Prtp
(Portland) 7.,
: . Springfield I, Lebanon I, -
, Junction City 21, PhUemath f.
; Albany tS, CervalUs C ..
Baker. 7, LaGrande C
l.PrinevWe 7, Redmond t. .
Amity 27. Sherldaa 7." ;'
Riee
Baluskin
L. Beaudry
wuuina
' Dun ton
" Halter
, G una (son
Pehx
W - FLn1-
Sub WflBdhum; . RnrMnk-n n if
A. HufUl. Grim. J. Hugill. Adamson.
Moahberfer. Sorenaon. Fry. Leten
malr. B. Austin. Crosby. Jensen.
Officials: Hunt Clark and Bill Beard.
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