Ui CI-ZCCIX ZtlOdXSIL Cclasa Ortoa. Zwadaj I-Tcxc-z. Vartbzx I, 1SU Tot! Biickey es Badlv PM(ovii;al;eFa Pepni1 pinm&cfc 19 . to (Q) Beaten By Badger Team, 17-7 1 By WILLIAM WEEKS Huskies Beat Beavers, 13-0 (Continued from Page 12) MADISON", Wis Oct. 3 MVUnderdog Wisconsin, arising to gridiron heights, blasted Ohio State Buckeyes from football's number one ranking Saturday. After 60 minutes of hair-raising football, the Badgers trotted off Camp Randall field to the cheers of most of the 45,000 bulg- wg-cyea speciawrs wua a li lO triumph. And the score Just about tells the story. Wisconsin, threat- ened three times, and scored three times. The Buckeyes had one good scoring chance, and cashed it in. The headline makers were big Marlin "Pat" Harder fleet Elroy Birsch and all - American End Dave Schreiner, but it was a bril liant team victory for Wisconsin. Ohio State's vaunted running at tack, which had mauled out tri umphs over Fort Knox, Southern California, . Indiana, Purdue and . Northwestern, piled , up a lot of yardage, but when danger threat ened,;. Badger linemen ; and sec ondary defenders combined to take charge.! When the Badgers had the ball, fierce charging by the, forwards and solid blocking down field gave the backs all the help they needed.' The triumph, which sent Wis consin to the heights, was Wis consin's sixth in seven games. After whipping Camp Grant, Wis consin fought a 7. to 7 tie with No tre Dame, then conquered Mar quette, Missouri, Great Lakes and Purdue, to come up to Saturday's all important test undefeated. St. Martin's IJpset By CWCE, 6 to 0 ELLENSBURG. Wash, Oct 31 CV-Central Washington col lege in Washington Intercollegiate conference football this after noon with a 0-0 victory. The score was set up in the third quarter when Central block ed a St Martin's kick on the 15 yard line, recovered the ball and drove to scoring territory. V Halas Instructs Assistants Before Leaving ball carriers were caught back of the line as they fumbled or jug- giea the bait. .. . One of the costly-fumbles was on the third down after the Bea vers bad reached the Washington 9. After making only one yard on two smashes, Mclnnis momentar ily fumbled and was downed back on the 12. Then a fourth down pass attempt by Everett ' Smith was wide of the arms of Sub End Dick Miller in the end zone. . Oregon State's only other ad vance deep into Washington terri tory came in the second period. The Beavers went after a pass in terception by , Bin Gray, from their own 46 to Washington's 29. They were thrown for 10 yards loss on two plays and had to punt ' " . ? In the dying minutes of -the game Washington put on its strongest power drive of the game, traveling from its own 10 to Ore gon State's 20 with four success ive first downs. A 20-yard run by Robinson was the longest gain. The threat was ended when Rob inson broke through to OSCs 6- yard line, only to lose the ball to Johnny Mandic on a fumble. mi'M ' W"! wi.iy..i.!nini, .m ,u vmi 'i n. jii nniiiiii.iumijnu,iw. m imumniain iijiu..uwuw..'tiiH" "i ji.-j m inn mi mm. ' -' . .: ... . .' '- . ..... "' . v . ' ' "' " ' -:.,y.--.. . y.. v-y. . , ; :v.A:):,rx: li&lS-v.... M.U: ' ;V 1 ' '""J .: V : . - ' 1 GEORGE HALAS (left), ewner-eeaeh ef the Chicago Bears, world champion pre football team, gives instructions: to lent t ngm;, jraaoy iinscou. liunk Aadersen and Lake Johnson, his Mntfft to w" MiMMm f urnea over in reus oc mo team ior um aunuoa. uaias, was accepted Into the navy usi weu u uemieuu conunuoer. Bearcats Bop Eleven Logger (Continued from Page 12) The lineups: OREGON STATE Perry man I. E- WlcKett , u, i WSC Babes Beaten " PpLLMAN, Oct 31 ff , Eastern ' Washington college cap italized on a blocked punt in the third ' quarter Saturday to defeat the Washington State frosh, 7 to 0. Fullback Pete Lolos plunged over from the one-yard line for the tally; three plays ' after the kick was blocked on the 10. Z ielaskowski Gray . Parker Proctor Clement ,., Smith Custafson Day . LG. C JG. JIT. -RE. RH WASHINGTON WeinmeisW mge . Tadicn Harrison Saksa , Friedman , Tracy i Susick Erickson Robinson Brooks Washington 0 6 7 013 Washington scorinc: To Walters fub for Erickson), Robinson. Points after touchdown: Fal (sub tor King) place Jcick). Substitutions: . Oremn State: Ends. Pearmine. Han' die. Miller. Beauchamp; tackles. Os- mowmki. Wilcox: suards. Crane. Even sen. MeRevnolds: center. Panaris: backs. Shelton. Harper, Leichardt. Mc lnnis, Lib bee. Washington: Ends. Hoyt. Barmon; tackles. FaUc. Larson. Decks: guard. Peterson: center, Mcintosh; backs, Walters. Wehde. McCorkle, Redman. "SUSpStS .saiBSpasSH WW j THE mil BEST QUALIFIED TO KNOW OR THE . FALSE CLAIMS OF THE IIXPLOITEHS? . THESE ARE FACTS i 1 Tha 1941 lexcrlOTS pcxssed fe CXDASTAL STREAM BILL by a combined vote of 63 to 22 and it was signed i- by the governor to become a law as an expression of the "will of the people of the State of Oregon, of (heir confidence in a COIZSOVATION measure, ELEVEN MONTHS BEFQRE PEARL HAEBORI 111 ; - ' ' 2. It was not our will hat fhls Issue was forced before the voters as a war-time issue, THE EXPLOITERS HAVE MADE IT SUCH. . 3. THE BILL LXDES NOT AFFECT SALMON FISHING IN THE COLUMBIA RIVErL ;WHERE 90 OF THE SAL MON PACK IS TAKEN. 4. OREGON WILL HOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCE.. - - BE OBLIGED TO IMPORT ANY SALMON BECAUSE OF THE PASSAGE OF THIS MEASURE. , - - -: ; 5. IT WILL BENEFIT THE COMMEHCIAL INTERESTS AS WELL, BY ALLOWING A "GREATER ESCAPEMENT OF SALMON TO NATURAL SPANNING GROUNDS.- ' - i----... B. THE OPPOSITION CHAT.T.C7GS3 THE s PROVEN -SUv ' PERIORITY OF NATURAL TROPAGATION OF FISH OVER PROPAGATION BY ARTIFICIAL.MEANS. ALL KOLOG23T3 AGHEE THAT 11ATCHE3IES CAN NEV E-l DO EETTE3 THAN KOTE-Zl IIATOILE. - ' ' ?'...'. 1 A - - - - . .- V -e . 7. THE EXPLOITERS SHOULD NOrjBZ PHJTTED ,TO 'DEPLETE OUR rAMUU'. lajaz? i aj .ptfli-AMj. w ; YIE WORLD-FAMED r THOUT THE ? STEELHEAD.; OUR BOYS WILL IEED THEM FOR MORALE BUILD- ERS WHEN THEY.RETURIL: FROM.,THIS .BLOODY- -.WAR. :i - .r : t i :- ,to cc:;cziv3: ou-i-TAroua, s ON CTEZLnZAD TEOUT rC3 ALL 07 Owi FZOrLH, . . V7c!l3 SSO- S -c ct-ltz i iu:rnJ J 3 rx:cLiz3 clud ; jstsst U U:t. Pr, Llsrl ZLtlslnlZt. Vlee-rres!',rr.t ins: stoppea on aowns. it was during the ensuing series that Hardy rumbled and CPS got its two points, j The 'Cats manufactured a drive after recovering a CPS fumble In midfield, marched it to the Log ger 11 and then sprung Ogdahl In the clear. He eluded three tackl era near the north sidelines and crossed over standing up, but the clipping f ould Occurred on the one . .1 - . ! io nui-Luv- vac scure. Touchdown number four came early in the third period agains a team wmcn had oeen tnorougn- ly outclassed in the first half but came back scrappier than ever in the second. A poor CPS punt game Willamette the ball on the Logger 33 and Furno immediately ripped off a 14-yard gain to the 19. Two thrusts by Ogdahl brought another first down on the eight, then the; 'Cat captain pow ered over his own right tackle the remaining distance. Weaver miss ed his try this; tune. Bitter Contest A CPS march again bogged on the 11 after Agdahl fumbled in midfield midway in tha fourth quarter, and after the 'Cats, took over they proceeded to march he 89 yards in 20 'plays. A defensive holding penalty against CPS in midfield helped considerably. The Loggers threw up a stout defense on their own four but with fourth and goal to go from the two, Kelly took the ball from Ogdahl on an end around and ploughed between his right end and tackle for tha final touchdown.' This tirae Gene Schmidt split the uprigHts. The game itself, despite the lop sided scoring binge by the 'Cats, was a hotly-fought fray. One un necessary roughness penalty was slapped on the 'Cats and on num erous other occasions tempers flared mildly. But there was no denying WH lamette Saturday they were hot. lineups: CPS Hutchinson Moles Starger . Tom Beer - R LundvaS retuuer May cumoer Swenaoa McMaster. . Gregory Spencer- CPS WU Pes. -X.T- ! IRQ i , '. l2!Ll JiH. 4BH. L Kelly Ercolinl Barrett White Constable . Rogers Schmidt Jacobaen Hardy Douglas Osdabi -11 11 S S3 Scorinr: CPS. safety oa Hardy. touchdowns by Furno 2. Jacobaen. Og dahl. Kelly. Points after touchdowns. weaver tsuo xortugaatuj z, scnmiau ii'iaceKicn.f . Officials: uim Jones . . 1 oreeoa State) referee: Emu Piluee (MilU- ken). headllneamaa; Al i.gitrr (Ii- xaysnei, wnptn. , PlWLnte Came Shifted PORTLAND, 1 0re-TOct 3L.-4P) The Portland-Pacific - Lutheran football game has been moved up from: Nov. 28 to Nov. 7, B. L. "Matty Mathews. Portland uni versity coach, i said Friday; . The contest wHi be played in Multno mah stadium here. s . , - n C) 0(..lXas. NOA. - - XJZ-L CZZ.--2 Li .. I ..: t-l Kerts l-izr . rti Prlaa1 CerU flertrte C. iiklem a T ,?- aJ I t f erday tmr . t I '"M ta FooibaU Scores PACIFIC COAST. Willamette! 33, CPS 3. . Pacific 0, College of Idaho 0. Linfieid 7,! OCE 0. SWCB 7, WSC Frosh 0. Pacifif 0, Fresno State 13. Occidental 20, Bedlands 0. COAST CONFERENCE Washington 13, Oregon State California 20, Oregon T. Bears Bounce Oregon Team UCLA! 20, Idaho 21, Stanford 7. Montana 0. 47, George- EAST Penn 19, Aamy Boston college town 0.1 William St Mary 33, Dartmouth Fordham 7, St Mary's 0. Colgate 6, Holy Cross 6 (tie) Harvard 19, Princeton 14. Pittsburgh ! 19, Carneigie Tech 6. 1 Michigan State 7, Temple (tie)s i- ;-v - Yale 27, Brown 0. NC Pre-Flight 9, Syracuse 0 West Virginia 24, Penn State I MIDWEST Notre Dame 9, Navy 0. Michigan 23, Illinois 14. Minnesota 19, Northwestern 1 Wisconsin 7, Ohio State 7. Iowa 13, Furdue 7. Iowa pre-llight 28, Indiana 8. Oklahoma 14, Iowa Stat 7. SOUTH Georgia 21,! Alabama 10. Mississippi State 6, Auburn 0. Maryland 13, Florida 0. Georgia Tech 26, Duke 7. Tennessee 28, LSU : 0. Virginia Tech 20, Virginia 14, Great Lakes 17, Missouri 0. Nebraska 14, Kansas ,7. Okie. A&M 20, Creighton 6. Tulane 28, Vanderbnt 2L Miami 32, Furman 13. SOUTHWEST Baylor 10, j Texas Christian 7. Texas. A&M 41, Arkansas 0. Bica 19, Texas Tech 7. Pensacola Naval 6, Corpus ChrisU 18. Mississippi j48, Mephls 0. .. A ROCKY MOUNTAIN Colorado Mines 18, Colorado college 13. , j-.'.-.-' S; Utah 33, Colorado State 14. Colorado 28; Wyoming 7. ! ; I!:zi::D fcx :m w CI!! f EH:ii:3.;10;" rrcr-rl sl Irarttl cotsll erxtlca cf. til corrt rssUers. CstLael and Cotzrteeta tret- caer.t cl all persocs. Eirict Ai trat:sa is C-srrias-a. (Continuedyfrom Page 12) frame. Jurkovichig broke through the line from the one-yard mark er and this time, the placement by Dan McCarthy, quarterback, went through. I Roblin stole the show in the third quarter with his portrayal of a one man team. - t Honors were fairly even in the fourth period punctuated by Rob4 lin's fumble deep in Oregon. ter4 ritory and two pass interceptions on the part of the Bears. Cali fornia made the breaks count, however, by snatching a touch down with a rainute to play. j Tom Mason, , center, set up the stage for the final score by Inter4 cepting a pass i and returning the ball 21 yards to the Oregon seven Jurkovich went over from the one-yard line ; and place-kicked the extra tally to wind ud with scoring honors ior . the day. j Oregon lost Its startin full back, Bill Davis, who was car-1 Peli.ji Povef Nears Football Title Crasp - Sy The Associated Press The Klamath Falls Pelicans' had their beaks clambed on the 1242 Oreg sUte Jugh school football cnampionsnip nag Saturday. J,nex may not gobbler up the whole pennant but they're going to claim a chunk 'of Jf They took care of that Friday night by win ning victory No. 7 for the season, overpowering previously ende- xeatea Grants Pass, 31-0. It was a typlea Elamath Falls win. The Pelicans had gtewer t burn osi the ground, did all right la the air and played hesds-ap defense. Fester tamed late another of his smooth ran hing exhlMtions, this time a 99 yard Unehdowa romp. Evi f esse of the Pelicans alert de fense came In the final touch- when aa interception of a. Grants Pass aerial was eon- verted late a Klamath's title bid looked bet. ter than ever after Friday's state. wide play was over." Albany was toppled from the ranks of the un beaten by Mflwaukie, 7-0, thereby eliminating the Bulldo? for championship consideration. However, West Linn. Newbers? ano xrrmevuie all minor powers. ciung to their undefeated status. West Linn rolled over Tigard, 25 0; Newberg smashed Forest Grove, 28-0, and Prlnevllle drubbed Lakeview, 32-0. Boseburg trounced Cottaare Grove, 26-0, to clinch a tie for the tri-county league title while Leb anon, the only other team in a po sition to question Boseburg's su premacy, took Sweet ' Home in stride, 19-0. - , Salem took iU fifth loss of the with Bend turninr tha trick this time. 13-8, while the Vtkings eame close to ensuring the aateome with a fierce see-ond-hal attackv Baker scored its second win of the season over Pendleton. 12-8. and continued to challenge La Grande for . the Blue Mountain conference pyppfrmfihin Elsewhere, Astoria ran rough shod over Seaside, 34-6; Eugene spanked Corvallis, 26-6; Milton Freewater defeated Walla Walla, 6-0; Independence squelched Am ity, 20-0; and Dallas trimmed Dayton, 14-0. t. v . ried from the field with a leg in jury on the last play of the first half. Roblin took over his Txsi- tion, however, -and played prob ably, the outstanding game of his career while engineering his team's lone touchdown' drive. Tha victory gave California a standing of two conference wins and two defeats. A crowd of 23, 000 fans sow the game. Vandals Crasli Montana, 21-0 IfZSSOULA, Uont, Oct 11 (a3) Three touchdown passes gave h University olldaho.Van dais J tana university on a mui-'...il:- ed Held Caturdsy. . I Cay Lewis- and IIowsxJ llzn son were behind the aerials which brought a touchdown every period but . the i last Ucntsna finable recovered j by lda - fir down in Grizzly land set v?. the The-- Ih- advt- 20 atuniversiry or, jwano,van- l first an4 third counters, 1 21 to 0;yictorjr over Jqp-er followed "a .45-yard, a "rl ; :1 -". '" I ! ii1 iu ii ! J rtttoii tits i i'. PPLOlIEOri as eosll artanataaf -r mStl J JsMSMiasrlu4lMNralur r t-X away ilip m font, aai rrn - 1 . Teawr s4 gassrt Wo2 airfcaEGOEfb -' - '.''-''! iT-' v; ' (-, ,! - ;.. j. If the arm needs sh.thev wilt get them Just as the?; j.'' have reduced speed lunitt s ntiocted sgsx. U I announces release of 2094 of 1942 pack for dvilLut ' use and another 20 It beinj held that ins sli) t ji released. Don't e fooled. ' : , . ,j ; $. The -Exploiter Is resorting to aa appeal for tt& j ! ' , gloas and patriodc prejudice thai be nay avoid x2 UtioQ, pack more fish snd iwaI sar sry. I Respected newspapers, organksdons and ladlvli usJs- believing In the protection of great natursi' elhesdt Oregon resource and tha conservation of steelhead trout, have endorsed Referendum No. 310 for voce. Amcg them are f j ". . . : ' ',"" : Orcgoa Joarnal, Pctland -. ; Grant! Pass Bulletin, Grants Pass i Sheridan Sun, Sheridan , - BrownsTilie Tunes, Bro-nuviUs Coosge Crore Sentinel, Coctat CfOT Enterpdas Chieftain, Emerpriaf" Gresham Outlook, Greshaos ' . SttnWuaSoa,Sadberiia 1 Curry Coooty Reportei; Gold Beach' . Oregon State Game towmiwloq Oregoo Wildlife Fcdenuioa Isaac Walton League of As-erJcS . Grf Qub ol IkHCtlaad I- x-Got. Chas. H. Martia EarlSneU Lew Wallace Francis Lambert Win. J. South ' Dr. C F. MiUesod Mrs. Mas Rou Walker W. L Finlef Clifford G. Schneiiicr D.B.Chowa i -. , - I Jacob Ksnnf 1 ' CCScbeock : I Mrs. Gentry W. Yates mA r"-"t "' "V 1 D0MT DE FOOLED Get tha Fccta Ccfcrd Ycu Vote. SAVE CUR STEEUIEAD THOUTI :-U -.: 'I i i -- ! "' i Just a Few Day si Remain -1 Tabs Adrc&go cl lid A'r::nnT .!" fe Foil ieaE- Dy I!fl '7 1 (Postal EescUUonj Prohltlt Dc-Itctj try Usil la BsJm CttjT t!r3 Zeat) i , -' , i f- - : - ' .!m7.7i72:s " ,7' t:.-:; i'-v--;-'.v:"- I'm "- -'" ' '' . : '.:-:''." V'l'-.- ;- 1 ." !.-" -I"1 . - -P" ""-" 'I.,' . .''-," . fp$psslit faissat to yea csra cf t!i ircrli 4s3 cf ycsf ccsiri!S czc-i dzjJ Cad la.yocr kzIcsIIz notr, Xlsre yesr fercrlla rfpc C-Hrcrti p-3 cati izj. riiila effcr. eadt la a fear ya I i 1 . (7. ! n - fin 1 n n ' br ta-ll m, ... . r' tv" krtt .-J ' k - 1.. J. ri Air. fie ajbl .. irst f