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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1942)
PAC2 nxvzl I . -1 other Topsy-Turvy Saturday For ;PigsM Experts Splashing Along As Chicago's Fall Racing Season Opens Up ' Undefeated Field Narrows but SI CIZCCH CTATE2tt& Cca Ortta. Zz2zj llczz Oda II, 1SU - I 1 Freshman Coaches Doing Okeh mmmn n iiiim i.mn u .111.1 in .n,., . " . ' . . . -.-a-: !: : :".i'.vS:v ' . . : i-Sf . : 1 - . -,:. ' 4 a 1 BAY ELIOT (left), and JIMMY St Martin's college head football coaches respectively, who la their first year ai headmen art tarnln In fine Jobs. Eliot's Ulini created the blgiest Bpset fat Saturday's football frays by beatln Minne sota's Golden Gophers. Ennls' Saints are undefeated. Ho coached Everett, Wash hlch school last Football Coast Conference UCLA 30, Oregon State 7. 1 Washington 15, Oregon 7. Washington State 68, Montana 18. :' . - -: Pacifie Coast St. Mary's Navy Preflight 40, Coast Guard 0. St Martin's 33, Pacific Uni versity 8, , Pacific jutheran 7, Central Washington 8. Portland University 28, Western Washington College 0. , . - Santa Clara 7, California 8. rACDlC COAST (High school) Bremerton 0, Everett 7. -, Roky Mountain ' Brigham Young 12. Utah 7. Wyoming 33, Greeley State 0. " Midwest Illinois 20, Minesota 13. Ohio State fornia 12. 28, Southern Call- Purdue 7, Northwestern 6. Wisconsin 17, Missouri 9. Great Lakes 7 Pittsburgh 6. Iowa Cadets 26, Michigan 14. Michigan State 46, Wayne 6. Ohio University 6, Butler 0. Iowa 33, Camp Grant 16. Notre Dame 27, Stanford 0. Indiana 12, Nebraska 0. Couth .. Vanderbilt 7, Kentucky 6. Georgia Pre-Flight 26, Duke 12 Maryland 27, Rutgers 13. VMI 36, Virginia 18. Tennessee 34, Dayton 6. Virginia Tech 16, Davidson 0. Tulane 18, Rice 7. Georgia 48, Mississippi 13. Alabama 27, Pensacola Fliers 0 Georgia Tech 30, Chattanooga 12 v. The Citadel 14, George Wash ington 2. : Mississippi State 6, .Louisiana State 16. (Southwest Hardin Simmons 7, SMU 6. Arizona 23, Arizona State 0. Baylor 20, Arkansas 7. Texas 7, Oklahoma 0. Texas Christian .'41, Kansas 6. Cornus Christ! 18. Texas A 8c tT FRANHIS X. EIirZLDS- (left), (Stasczzr as , ersoai::ty aai Loriaa a ENNIS. University of Illinois and year. East . Amherst 2), Bowdoin 0. West Maryland 7, Boston U 0. Boston college 14, Clemson 7. Wesleyan 20, Connecticut 7. Brown 28, Columbia 21. Case 24, Carnegie Tech 8. Colgate 27,' Dartmouth 19. Fordham 0, North Carolina 0. Harvard 7, William & Mary 7. Penn State 19, LeHigh S . Princeton 10. Navy 0. West Virginia 13, S. Carolina 0. Vermont IS, Massachussetts State 8. -' Penn" 35, Yale 8. Holy Cross 60, Fort Totten 0. Army 28, Cornell 8. Coast Guard 14. Colby 12. . , Tomlinson Appointed Deputy DA ' T. Harold Tomlinson, Salem at torney with the Willamette Cre dit company, was Saturday named Marion county deputy district at' torney to succeed Talbot Bennett, who has submitted his resignation to become effective Tuesday. - Bennett, appointed by District Attorney Hayden when he en tered the office In January, 1941, has been assigned to the marine base at Quantico, Va.. to train in officers' candidate school there for 20 weeks. He Is a graduate of Willamette university college 6: law and returned to Salem from Hillsboro, where he had served as deputy district attorney in Washington county. ' 'Mrs. Bennett plans to remain in Salem at least temporarily. Tomlinson, also a Willamette graduate, was a Salem high school debater with the team that met Salem, Mass., high school speak ers in the famous cross-continent contest in 1926. He has practiced his profession in Salem since completion of his college work In 1930, became attorney for the cre dit company in 1933 but contin ued his private practice in add! lion to that work. His wife Is the Former Athletic Stars Now In Country's Service H - and PVT. TOSSIx" LOUGHltAN thm farmer a wcu-Bnowa sennts reiirti. undefeated Uiht-besvyweiilit Rapidly as Top By HERB BARKER -'NEW YORK, Oct. 10-(flVAnother, stunning series of up sets left the nation's football and the -experts merely limp. "Topping the list by all odds Gophers, supreme in the big ten rated Illinois outfit, operating un der a new head coach, Ray Eliot Given absolutely no chance against the big men from the north, the Illini, paced by the brilliant play of guard Alex Agase, fought their way to a sensational 20-13 vic tory that turned the big ten con ference race upside down.' -- Purdue and Princeton ac counted for two more big sur prises. Princeton, Itself the vic tim of an upset at the hands of Williams a week ago, uncovered unexpected strength In a 10-6 rent of Navy, at New York. Pnrdue, beaten by Fordham and trounced by Vanderbilt, pulled Itself t together and nipped Northwes tern's Wildcats, con querors of Texas, 7-8. ; : i Much of the day's most spec tacular - action was concentrated in the middle west where Notre Dame and Ohio State successful ly repelled far western Invasions. Notre Dame, with Angelo Bertel- 11 In rare passing form, crushed Stanford, 27-0. Ohio State, a pow erful team on the basis of results thus far, handed Southern Cali fornia a 28-12 beating. Michigan's Wolverines grabbed a 14-0 lead in the first 20 minutes against Bernle Bier man's Iowa pre-FUrht outfit but could not fight off the Ca det's superior reserves and bowed 26-14. It was Michigan's first defeat and Iowa pre Fllght's fouth successive - tri umph Including a 7-6 decision over Minnesota. .- Wisconsin, with Elroy Hirsch in the starring role, i, whipped Mis souri s big six champions Handily, 17-9. Pitt's Panthers put up a fine stand against Great Lakes Naval Station but went down 7-8. Iowa trounced Camp Grant, 33-16, and Marquette ran' up a 34-12 count on Iowa State. In the southwest, Texas A. ad M, obviously only a shad ow of Its former potent self, - fell before Corpus Christ!, 18-7, as Texas barely made the grade against Oklahoma, 7-0; Baylor stopped Arkansas, 20-7, and Texas Christian routed Kansas, 41-8. . : In the east Boston college chalked up a hard-fought inter sectional victory of Clemson, 14 7 as Fordham and North Carolina played a scoreless tie; Harvard battled William & Mary on even terms, 7-7, and West Virginia scored over South Carolina 13-0 Penn trounced Yale, 35-8, in an ivy league fray; Brown led by Hank Margarita, halted Colum bia, 2Z-Z1; Army with Hank Ma zur in the leading role, easily handled Cornell, 28-8, and Col gate, taking advantage of pass in terceptions, whipped Dartmouth, 27-19. Georgia, with Frankle Sink wich operating in high gear, burled Mississippi under a 48 13 count while Vanderbilt eked out a 7-6 verdict over Kentucky, the second such ' one-point loss the Wildcats have suffered In southeastern conference play. Tulane easily defeated Rice of the southwest conference, 18-7, and Georgia's p re-Flight squad, thus far unbeaten, decisively trounced Duke, 26-12. Alabama .and Tennessee won-easily over eomparitively minor opposition. former 'Frances Sande; they have two children. N i champion, ; who are. now doing i bmeios is siauonea at ue xresno, ran Is stationed .at the marine baiie H.H,JS W-I-'"?'KIJ WIH U.LIHUJ JVXl J. v.,JWJ.VW.i'lHilllJMilllL I I.iIJII.P.i.HW.iiIL...iI.'.IjW.H . Hill III. .' - .-- i "v;f" 1 . . - - I s I I 'I ,-,. - l Elevens Taken . fans limp but happy Saturday , ' ' - was the defeat of Minnesota's for two years, by a vastly under ieldffi, Klamath Lead State Prep lis By the Associated Press , Vaunted Marshfield ' remained undefeated In weekend ' Oregon high school football play, but the Pirates' reputation Is marred by a tie. While Grants Pass was check ing the hitherto rampaging Pi rates 7-7 Friday, Klamath Falls 'rode high on its unbroken victory march, thumping Ash land, 26-0. , ' Meanwhile, in the Willamette valley, Albany took the spotlight with a 13-6 victory over Salem, Eugene powered to a 13-0 win over its cross-town rival. Uni versity high, and West Linn trounced Oregon City, 20-0. . The eastern Oregon theater was marked by Pendleton's 6-0 tri umph over Walla Walla and Ba ker's defeat of Milton-Freewater, 12-0. Bend and The Dalles tied, 7-7. ; .. Tillamook protected its un defeated status, drubbing Sea side, 40-6, and Corvallls chalked up Its second straight win, 13-6 over Camas, Wash. Roseburg defeated Cottage Grove, 12-7, and St Helens nosed out Columbia Prep, 6-0. Astoria gained all the yards, but Milwau kee recovered a last-quarter fum ble behind the Fishermen's goal- lino to tie, 7-7. Huskies Hand Webfoots 3rd (Continued from Page 10) line but succumbed to the fourth. principally as a result of a 24-yard break-away by Walters, he car ried the ball to the 2-yard line from where fullback Mark Mc- Corkle scored. Washington made six first downs to 10 for the Webfoots and lost only 20 yards on penalties to 50 for Oregon. Punting was spotty on' both sides but a 148-yard aggregate In kick returns by the Huskies actually gave them a tremea dons margin in the too work. Marshf Straight WASHINGTON Pes. OREGON Welnmeister LE Shephard Riggs LT Moshofsky Clark v LC Davis Harrison- C Bodner Saksa RG- ' Rhea Friedman ' RT Kufferman Olson RE Howling Wedhe QB , Dyer Erickson LH Roblin Susick RH Reynold McCorkle FB Davis Score by periods: Washington .0 7 1 Z-15 Oregon Washington scoring: Touchdowns McCorkle, Robinson or Susick) Safety Reynolds. Point after touch' down: Olson (Dlacement). Oregon scorinc: Touchdowns Shep hard; point after touchdown: Rhea (placement). Miss Meyer on Job BRUSH CREEK Miss Althea Meyer, city treasurer at Silver- ton, was able to return to her work' Saturday morning after several ' days spent at ' her home here suffering from Influenza. respective chores for Uncle Sam. uui. air rare center ana AjOszu- at rarris Island, E& , A big opening day crowd at Chicago's Hawthorne race track watches the ponies splash homo through German Children Leave Bomb Areas I BERN, Switzerland, Oct 10-yP) The Basler Arbeiter Zeitung: said Friday that more than 1,000,000 German children have been evac uated from areas subjected to In tense bombing in anticipation of heavy attacks this winter. ! Visits in Eugene RICKREALL J can Smith went to Cottage Grove Thursday to spend the weekend with Mary Pynch. The Pynches moved from here early in September. j Do as KNO7 Before You Go! (SsssssssssssssssssssB?tf " .ihhi.ih .nun m mKmvwmmmiMmmm..i m i ' i Before ";:'V'.V : AV You, -r-r' mm- - an n J jsssssassssBsaaBBSK' . -' BbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbKI , , , y -.- a , , ' . .. '-- . '.- ' ' , ' x . 1 . .' W" , - r "-i '1' T Jr " -vv "i 1 i' i " :i i.,,. J"?i --m fi--'iSHt-p-y v - A.;1-,-sVijv( -, '-' . x v :' r : -i. .. i v., . JF.iTi.'i . i!..- ..:; i,.:-., i;.J.:-:- -. - . - . " K - - ;v A: - WiW' . ; , 1 ---, t - v, 5 ' 7 , -i. 'vVr-.Vir-rv: ..I.. - . ; V-fr i It ,V . - , - : " v - - S - -;. . . X A 1 - ;v '- j ' , . ,1; : -.! . ?-! : ' -1 .- . i - -. .-: - h " ' """" ' immmm- ' ' "'" ssaaj . the mud. Pacific Maid (5) won this Alsab Whips j NEW YORK, Oct." 10-(P)-Alsab ' beat Whirlaway the hard way Saturday coming around the lightning stretch runner in the stretch to take the "rubber" match of their turf world series. Whirly tried to confuse the folks by running right to the front in tne long new York han dicap instead of trailing by a city block,' as usual, but he succeeded in confusing himself most of all. For, he not only lost to Alsab, but was, also beaten to the wire by J. G. Douglas, jr.'s, Obash, an overlooked four - year - old, who ran in claiming company as re cently as mid-September. : ; i CAN SHOP THE ENTIRE CITY WHILE SITTING thousainds of housewivea are doing! Make a complete list of your needs from The States man advertisements and you will find ; that you too, are making one iBhopping trip do the work of By Carefully Shopping heat with Rex-Avis second and Tip whirly The sensation of Belmont's clos ing program, however, was nei ther Alsab in victory nor Whirly in defeat This role went to Count Fleet, from Mrs. John D. Hertz's bam, who fairly flew to victory in the' Champagne stakes to set a world one-mile record for a two-year-old in 1:34 45. 4 IN YOUR LIVING ROOM! ten! -Each - morning this i news paper brings you the only pan orama of the- choicest of ferings of Sa lem business firms! - a i Tour Hat taking third. Income Tax Moneys Being Tabulated 1 ' ' State tax commission officials announced Saturday that the : work of tabulating state Income tax payments for the year 1942 ' : was' now In progress but it prob ably would be two weeks before . th..bukfaleted.;;. The time for paying second half -installments expired October 1. First payments were due April . 1, based on Incomes for the year'1 ' 1941. ! i- . Mt - -OH if.; ". "' Am ;: f ' ' 14 ' J i . ... M . , 30 WnwisbL SPENT READING THIS NEWSPAPER'S ADVERTISEMENTS A SAVING OFi GALLONS OF GASOLINE MILES OF TIRE WEAR HOURS OF TIME PLENTY CF MONEYt t 1