Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, September 21, 1937, Image 8

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    TlfgS ETgKK.
THE. REGISTER-GUARD,. EUGENE. OREGON
HIGHCLIMBER
By DICK STKITE
f!E!!r 1937.
32 Web foot Gridders Leave For Southern Invasimj
Never have I turned down the
opportunity to make predictions
n unvthlna as long as I'm not
farced to back the prognostica
tions with the stuff it takes to pay
the rent We won't mention the
things missed, but let me point
to a few two to be exact that
have turned out to potential fi
nancial gains. Even though I
picked Columbia to beat Stanford
in the 1934 Rose Bowl game a
10-to-l break and Braddock to
beat Baer for the world heavy
weight crown another 10-to-l
slam.
But in the past two years the
wags up and down Willamette
street have been making all the
dough on my predictions betting
the other way. And so take my
differences with the football ex
perts along the Pacific slope as
you may. The boys who have
stuck their heads into the records
of past seasons considered up
coming material, traditional rival
ry and even predicted on weather
conditions come Thanksgiving Day,
pick California to capture the Pa
cific Coast conference title. South
ern California rates second and
Washington's defending champions
third, followed in order by Oregon
State, U.C.L.A., S'inford, Wash
ington State, and trailed by Ore
gon. Please let me present, even
though it may only provide a
lanfh, the final outcome of
the conference standings:
W. L. T. Pel.
California 5
Washington 5
! U.S.C 4
Oregon 4
Oregon State ..2
Wash. State 2
. U.CX.A 2
Stanford 2
.833
.714
.667
.571
.333
.333
.286
.286
The Bruins of Los Angeles are
Ull talking of that 93-yard pass
and run play that beat Oregon at
Multnomah stadium, Portland, in
the last five seconds of the game
the Uclans won, 12-7. It was in
ihe 1932 season that Oregon, lead
ing 7-8 in the last few seconds,
hurled a pass deep into Bruin ter
ritory the pass was intercepted
nd . downed on the seven-yard
line.
On the next play, the last of
the game, Mike Frankovlch faded
back and chucked a scoring pass
to Ransom Liyesay. The Bruins,
however, seem to have forgotten
a memorable Oregon victory in
the same stadium two years later
when the Webfoots walloped the
Californlans, 26 to 3.
: Placed under the heading
of things I'd like to see: Har
ry Elliott, wrestling referee,
meet either Bob Castle or
Sailor Moran In a match. . . .
Oregon's Webfoots lick the
California football jinx. . . .
' Prink Callison pass conference
opponents dizzy. . . . Tony
Amato grow another beard.
... Bob Pastor knock out
Joe Louis, as he says he can.
... Jim Watts make a go of
It at Roseburg high. . . . Eu
gene high fill one of its open
dates with a Portland high
school eleven. . . . Lane coun-
' ty "B" high schools eliminate
girls basketball from Its an
nual tournament. ... A foot
ball team coached exclusively
' by Eugene's downtown men-
tors. , . . The Oregon alumni
realizing that high school
youths must be sold on a
school . . . that they won't
come to Oregon just because
It's the University of Oregon.
. . . The Eugene chamber of
. commerce actually do some
thing constructive along pro
motional lines . . . Ihe Oregon-Stanford
game, as an ex-amole.
Henry Nilscn and Ernest Robert-
. Sports - through - a - knot-hole: sn, quarterbacks; Steve Ander
English sports writers, after see-j son, Ted Gebhnrdt, Jay Graybeal.
ing movies of the Farr-Louis j Don Kennedy, Dale Lasselle, Jim
fight, accused Referee Art Dono- Nicholson, Bill Rack and Bob
van of hindering Farr's infighting. I Smith, halfbacks; Arleigh Bentley.
. . . Sports history shows thnt the Frank F.mmons and Paul Rowe.
largest number of "cuff" fans on fullbacks, and Manager Leo Mar
record for a major boxing bout , Inntes.
was when 5.069 pass-holders saw
OREGON ELEVEN TO
MEET U. C. LA.
TIT
Thirty-two University of Oregon
football players will start on their
first of two invasions of southern
California early Thursday morning
when the Webfoot rolling stock
heads for Los Angeles. The Ore
gon eleven, sprinkled with untried
but potentially brilliant sopho
more talent will lift the lid of the
Pacific coast conference football
season at Los Angeles' Coliseum
Friday night against University of
California at Los Angeles.
The Uclans, victors over the
Oregonians for the past two years
will be heavy favorites among
southern supporters who believe
Coach Bill Spaulding has the great
est array of backfield aces m U.
C. L. A. history. With a question
able line, the Westwood team is
rated a definite darkhorse title
contender.
Rousing Send-Off
Eugene townspeople, headed by
the Eugene Radiators and the
American Legion drum and bugle
corps, and university students al
ready on hand were scheduled to
give the Ducks a rousing sendoff
at 9 p. m. Tuesday at the S. P.
depot.
Oregon supporters, just as confi
dent as their southern rivals, look
toward a return of gridiron for
tunes to the east-side campus. Dur
ing the less than two weeks of pre
paration, the Webfooters have
shown potential gridiron power.
But Monday afternoon's scrimmage
session was the payoff as the ol
fense tossed around everything but
the water buckets, scoring on end
runs, cut-DacKs, Knues inrougn
tackle and forwards, laterals and
even triple laterals.
Dale Lasselle, potentially great
left halfback, broke through the
"questionably strong" opposing
team Monday for three scores. He
displayed a running and driving
stride never seen by the Portland
lad since he was a freshman. Don
Kennedy, right half; Hank Nilsen,
quarterback; Steve Anderson, left
half; Arleigh Bentley and Paul
Rowe, fullbacks, shared in the
smashing attack which Prink Cal
lison hopes will carry the lemon
yellow and green to victory in the
majority of its conference con
tests. In Los Angeles Thursday
A final workout was scheduled
for Tuesday afternoon, the last
drill until the Webfoots stretch out
under the lights in Los Angeles
Thursday night.
While the players will entrain
between 9 and 10 p. m. Tuesday,
the train will not leave Eugene un
til 1:50 a. m. Wednesday, arriving
in Los Angeles early Thursday
morning.
Accompanying the team will be
Head Coach Callison, Line Coach
Gene Shields, Trainer Bill Hay
ward, Athletic Manager Anson B.
Cornell, and Dick Strite, sports
editor of the Register-Guard.
Callison said he would not pick
the traveling squad until after the
Tuesday practice session. The prob
able squad is:
Denny Broaid, Erling Jacobsen
and Vern Moore, centers; Captain
Tony Amato, Chan Berry, Nello
Giovanini, Ronald Husk, Joe Hus
ton and Cecil Wnlden, guards;
Charles Bracher, Bill Estes, Bill
Foskett, Ellroy Jensen, Cliff Mor
I ris, tackles; Larry Lance, Lenonard
iRobertson, Vic Reginati, Rod
Spectzcn and John Yerby, ends;
Who's Who on Oregon Gridiron
CAN YOU PICK THE STARTING ELEVEN?
Win Ducats to Stanford-Webfoot Game, October 2
""S1" wln ti,"7- Lewis will vacate the light-heavy-weight
title '""rkPy,, throne to enier Alike Ja-
h. P ? a ' W,h bs' fight tournament. . .. Coach
has won the P, G. A. crown for i j t t .
the last two years, has been ,e,'I' ' ,lR"'e: ....sayf'
' j standardized with no section hav-
I TT" " . I
This is one of a series of inform
ative stories regarding the football $; '
prowess of candidates for the 1937
Oregon football team. With the
information gained in these yarns,
local Monday morning quarter
backs will be given an opportunity
to pick the starting Webfoot line
up against U. C. L. A. September
24.
The "coach" who chooses the
nearest correct starting lineup to
the one Prink Callison fields at
Los Angeles, and the one who
gives the most logical reasons for
his selections in a short letter fol
lowing the completion of this
series, will be awarded a pair of , - "V
ducats to Oregon's initial home l.,4!!
noma on.r'nct Cf.nfnNt U Jg V
ThB series will hn cnmnWeH I
Wednesday, September 22, and all
entries must be delivered to the
Register-Guard office or post
marked before 3 p. m. Friday,
Sept. 24.
ARLEIGH BENTLEY, fullback
and halfback, weighing 185 pounds,
standing 6 feet 1 inch, 22 years
of age and a senior. Arleigh play
ed his first varsity ball last fall
after transferring from Glcndale,
Cal., junior college where he play
ed fullback for two years. His
home is also Glcndale where he
played three years with Herbert
Hoover high, one each at half,
quarter and fullback. He also
handled the weights on the prep
track team. Bentley is as sure a
starter as any of the horde of
backfield men at Prink Callison's
disposal. Probably his best per
formance last year was against
Stanford.
"I'm not making any predictions
regarding our team, but I'll say
that it's going to be plenty tough
for any team to come through the
season undefeated. And any team
that is unbeaten will deserve the
Rose Bowl," Arleigh said.
DETORE CAPTURES
SLUGGING CROWN
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21.
(U.R) George Detore, catcher for
the San Diego Padres, won the
1937 Pacific Coast league batting
championship by collecting 145
hits in 434 trips to the plate, final
figures showed today.
Detore batted .33410, beating by
four-tenths of a point Harlan Pool,
Seattle outfielder who got 153 hits
in 458 tries. Pool's percentage
was .33406.
Sam Gibson, San Francisco Seals'
veteran, again was leading pitcher
with a .704 average, representing
19 wins and 8 defeats.
Mike Hunt, Seattle, led home run
hitters with 39, nine more than he
collected in winning the same title
last year.
Runners-up In hitting averages
were Marvin Gudat, Los Angeles;
Harry Rosenberg and Max West,
Missions; Dado Lodigiani, Oak
land, and Art Garibaldi, Sacra
mento. Runners-up in pitching averages
were Jack Larocca, Oakland; Fay
Thomas, Los Angeles; Tony Frei
tas, Sacramento, and Bill Posedcl,
Portland.
signed as pro at the Miami Bilt
more Country Club in Miami,
Fla. . . . The Reds and Giants
were so sore at each other in
1919 that when Cincinnati play
ers visited the Polo Grounds they
brought their own supply of
bottled drinking water. . . . Baron
Gottfried von Cramm during the
Nationals at Forest Hills said:
"There isn't enough money is
America to lure me into pro ten
nis!" . . . Notre Dame's fall sui
cide march reads like this: Drake,
Illinois. Carnegie. Navy, Minne
sota, Pitt, Army. Northwestern
and Southern California. If the
Irish take the last five they'll
automatically be conceded "the
national championships for 1037,
38, '39 and '40. , . . John Henry
ing a monopoly
teams."
on the best
Guldahl First to Win
U. S., Western Opens
CLEVELAND, Sept. 21. W
Ralph Guldahl, the 25-year-old
Chicagoan, occupied today a new
niche in golfdom's hall of fame as
the first in history to win the Na
tional Open and the Western Open
championships in the same year.
He also was the fourth golfer in
all history to successfully defend
his Western Open championship,
ranking with Willie Anderson,
"Long Jim" Barnes, and Walter
Hagen.
Piluso io Meet Fenton in Homecoming
Wrestling Match Thursday at Armory
Willamette Alumni
, To Honor Roy Keene
' PORTLAND, Sept. 21 im The
alumni and fathers of Willamette
university students will pav their
respects to Roy S. "Speck" Keene,
Bearcat football coach, at a buffet
supper here (Imperial hotel) next
Tuesday evening.
Allan B y n o n, ex-Willamette
football and track athlete, will head
the event as chairman.
This year Keene. whose teams
have won the Northwest confer
ence title for three seasons in a
row, starts his 12th coaching sea-top.
Ernie Piluso has been picked by
rromotcr Herb Owen as the "best
available" opponent to greet
"Lightning Rod" Fenton in the
armory ring Thursday night when
the Canadian villain makes his
"homecoming" appearance, the
first for many months.
Fenton will have plenty of com
pany with such meanics as Sailor
Moran, Bob Castle and Tctsura
Iligami appealing on the same
card. It won't be the first time
Piluso and Fenton have met, but
Rod will find Ernie a tougher op
ponent than ever before. Piluso
has been cutting a fancy figure
since his return three weeks ago
with consecutive victories over
Bob Cummings and Tetsura Hi
gami and last week's "fluke" de
feat at the hands of Moran. Fen
ton returns from an invasion of
eastern Canada and the Atlantic
states.
The Fenton-Piluso match, how
ever, is only a supporting match
to the headline attraction-a re
match between Champk; Otis
Clingman and Challenger Sailor
Moran for the Pacific coast middle
weight belt.
Temperamental Mr. Moran, one
of the greatest middleweights in
the business as far as gate power
is concerned Monday refused to
appear in a team match with Bob
Castle against Tetsura Higami and
Don Sugiii, undefeated Japanese
team match. Monday night Owen
destroyed the former contract and
signed him to meet Clingman in a
title go.
The two grapplers with Moran
as champion and Clingman as
challenger staged one of the most
brilliant matches ever seen here.
The bout, fought here several
weeks ago, attracted a record
crowd of nearly 3000 fans.
The preliminary match will be
announced Wednesday.
, t. jig,.
Tribe, Bassler
Stage Annual
Battle
SEATTLE, Sept. 21. (Se
attle's Coast league baseball play
ers were still "in there pitching"
today, although the regular season
was at an end.
The post-season war is one be
tween the Indian athletes and Wil
liam H. Klepper, Seattle presi
dent. Johnny Bassler, manager, was
"fired" by Klepper for what the
president insisted on calling in
subordination. Bassler allowed
Dick Barrett to hurl both games
of Sunday's doubleheader.
Barrett won both games and
earned a $500 bonus, $250 for win
ning 19 games and $250 more for
winning 20 games. Klepper told
Bassler to pitch Rookie Marion
Oppelt in the second game. Bassler
was reported to have shoved Klep
per from the clubhouse.
A Seattle paper said the presi
dent suffered a discolored eye as
the result of a brush with one of
his players. It was also reported
Er Lloyd Nelson, businessman,
stepped into the picture by paying
back salaries and taking over con
tracts of four players as collateral.
SEATTLE 11-5
TACOMA, Wash., Sept. 21. (U.R)
Tacoma's Tigers, Western Inter
national league champions, out-hit
a Seattle Indian Pacific Coast lea
gue team wearing Wenatchee uni
forms, 11 to 5, to win an exhibition
game last night.
William H. Klepper, president of
the Seattle Baseball club, refused
to let the Indians wear their reg
ular uniforms for the game. Suits
were borrowed from Wenatchee,
also a Western International loop
club.
San Jose Tramples
Idaho Coyotes 59-0
SAN JOSE, Cal., Sept. 21. OP)
San Jose State buried College
of Idaho under an avalanche of
touchdowns here last night as they
christened their new arc light sys
tem with a 59-0 victory.
A hard charging line and great
downfield blocking paved the way
for nine touchdowns.
Pat Page's invading Idaho eleven
boasted little more than a unique
signal calling system in which the
entire team barked out the num
bers in unison. The Coyotes never
passed the fifty-yard line.
ERNIE PILUSO
Defeats Bob Castle
Eric Merrell
Cmthe, tor Men and Boys
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 21. UP)
Bob Castle, 168, Kansas City,
middleweight, lost to Ernie Piluso,
167, Portland mat favorite here
last night. Bobby Burns, 161, Flor
ida, won on a foul from Rod Fen
ton, 165, Canada, in the semi-final.
J
USE CHINESE HERBS
WHEN OTHERS FAIL
Charlla Chin
Chines Herbs
Remedies
are non poison
ous, their healing
virtue hat been
tested hundred!
ear In following
chronlo ailments:
sinusitis, catarrh,
aathmr, ehronlo
cough, stomach, gall atone, co
litis, constipation, diabetes, kid
neys, bladder, heart, blood,
nerve, neuralgia, rheumatism,
high blood pressure, gland, kln
ores, male, female and children
disorder.
8. B. Fong, 8 year practice In
China. Herb Specialist, give re
lief after other fall. 708 Wll
matte St.. Eugene, Ore. Office
hour 1:30 to 6:30 Sunday and
Wednesday only.
S. B. Fong
nose, throat
ears, lungs.
BOB SMITH, halfback, weigh
ing 185 pounds, standing 6 feet, 21
years of age and a sophomore. Bob
fills a long-felt need in the Ore
gon offense a southpaw pigskin
pitcher. His long, floating passes
were sensational last season when
the Frosh went through a tough
schedule undefeated. He is just
another halfback, however, and
may or may not be a starter. Bob
comes from Medford where he was
a three-year letterman in football,
basketball and baseball. Bob is
probably the best-liked member of
the Oregon squad and should see
plenty of action during the 1937
campaign.
'Its pretty hard to tell what
kind of season we will have, never
having played conference ball, but
I m sure we all have lots of confi
dence," Bob said.
Baseball Standings
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
, NATIONAL
W L
New York 85 53
Chicago 84 57
St. Louis 75 64
Pittsburgh 75 66
Boston 70 70
Brooklyn 61 80
Philadelphia 55 85
Cincinnati 54 84
AMERICAN
W L
New York 94 45
Detroit 83 57
Chicago 78 62
Cleveland 74 66
Boston 72 64
Washington 67 73
Philadelphia - 47 91
St. Louis 42 99
Pet.
.616
.596
.540
.532
.500
.433
.393
.383
Pet.
.676
.593
.557
.529
.529
.479
.341
.298
Plans Completed For
Oregon Field Trials
. HARRISBURG, Sept. 21. (Spe
cial). A representative from the
Oregon Field Trial association
was here a few days ago laying out
courses for the field meet and mak
ing other preliminary arrange
ments for Friday and Saturday.
The association has liberated be
tween 300 and 400 birds on the
grounds and is planning to free
more ' soon. The association ex
tends a welcome to all visitors who
wish to attend. It will be possible
for visitors to drive to the ground
in their cars, park in the road and
sit in their cars and watch the
whole field-meet. They can thus
see the dogs perform almost as
well as if they were on a stage.
8-TEAR-OLD
Hurt On Sandldt Grid
OREGON CITY, Sept. 21. CP)
Verne Cross, 8, suffered a basal
skull fracture and ruptured ear
drum in Oregon City's first "sand
lot" football injury of the season
when he fell on a "pavement.
VITJIL THREE
E
L
NEW YORK, Sept. 21.
The National league pennant race
approaches a climax Tuesday in
Chicago, where the league-leading
Giants open a 3-game series against
the second-place Cubs.
With a 2 '2 game lead the Giants
can't drop back unless they lose
three straight to the Cubs. In
that event the Cubs would be on
top by .001.
All the Giants need to keep on
their pennant course is to take one
game in Chicago.
Subway Series
With only 10 games left for Chi
cago after the New York series,
the odds will be heavily against
them overtaking the Giants unless
they can sweep the current series.
A sweep for New York would
clinch another . "subway" world
series.
The Giants slugged their way
yesterday to their second straight
win over the Cardinals,-10-3, coir
lecting 17 hits and driving Bob
Weiland to cover in the first in
ning. The Cubs had a close call with
Brooklyn, winning, 5-4, after stop
ping a Dodger rally one run short
of tying the game in the ninth. "
Yankees Need 4
The New York Yankees need
only four more victories to clinch
the American league pennant. Lefty
Gomez won his 20th game when
he held the Detroit Tigers to four
hits for his sixth shutout, 5-0.
The Boston Red Sox dropped
into a fourth place tie with Cleve
land by dividing a doubleheader
with St. Louis Browns. St. Louis
won the opener, 8-6, while Bobby
Doerr's homer with a man on en
abled the Red Sox to win the sec
ond game, 7-5.
No other games were scheduled.
COAST LEAGUE III
PLAYOFF SERIES
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Four teams, Pacific Coast base
ball league leaders, sought heavy
money and the 1937 circuit cham
pionship today in opening games
of the Shaughnessy playoffs.
Sacramento's Senators, winners
of first place and $2,500 in the
regular season's schedule, enter
tained third-place . San ' Diego.
Portland's Beavers, 1936 cham
pions, who barely squeezed into
the first division by winning a
doubleheader Sunday, opposed sec
ond-place San Francisco-Seals at
San Francisco.
Victory by Sacramento in both
semi-finals and finals will give
players of the team $5,500 to di
vide including the $2,500 already
won. The most any other club
can win will be $3,000 while any
team getting into the finals, .win
or lose, will get at least $2,000.
After playing three games, the
Beavers and Seals go to Portland
and the Padres and Senators move
to San Diego. The winners of
the semi-finals play seven games
or less for the title.
5 Oregon Elevens ViV
For Independent TitlJ
(Bv The A,'.i.j -
Five good-sized schools battle this vefr f-
First Mule, Black
. Tail Deer Reported
It didn't take Ed Baldwin long
to bag his first deer of the season.
The Eugene hunter packed in a
150-pound black-tail at 3 p. m.
Monday afternoon. The dressed
animal, shot nine miles from Co
burg, was brought to the Troeh
sporting goods store.
One hour later Charles Gray
reported to the Troeh store with
the first mule deer of the season,
a 162-pounder from the Ochoco
country.
AUSTRAL
NEW ZEALAND
Exceptionally low round trip fires ire now effective
on the "Sunibme Raiu" to the land of the Southern
Croj...cruise to Austrilii and New Zealand, the world
of chinge, where the seisons ire reversed. See the
wonderful 150th Anniversary Celebrations which will
tike plice during Australii's summer, from Jinuuy to
April. Sail from Vancouver or Victorii, B. C, on the
modernized Atranii or the Siaiara, First, Cabin or
Third Class. Stop at Hiwaii....and Suva, in the Fiii
islands, enroute. Ask your own Travel Aeent about
AU-txptw i ours, and all details. ..or out local offices
W H CVicon. Gen'f A Piu'f Der . H26S.
Broad-!, Am Bnk. Bid. BR. 06)7, Portland
m1 w
TT 1
t lusn. t IrpOVin XT...
State, Oregon St , H
Perhaps Eastern OreVmSL'f!
Lmfield ventures to?0 SJ
pendent lists ,,, ... ' r,,"18 aid
pects" since Henry Lev, m
coach. Thi,-t !ver 'Kan
orthefi;srwid7w
schedule includes Chen.,
St Martin's, Oregonfi'
UK Lutheran, vZ.
odn rrancisco State a.J
Bellineham. le Kl
ioiot. Z.u.n . .'" year lor th ij. .
wiampionsrup ol Oregon. Not nn """Wndent
less important because no conference title i, .?gards thTb,?d
Linfield Colleee. form-- Zui. Ve..ls " stake. '
joins the independent shuffle
gon Normal school, Eastern Oregon Normal ,lMivsity.v.
iNormai. southern fW
The Portland Pilots, rapidly extendinE their .
Catholic institutions, take the T field thTsSeaSon ,ation "Wib
of Coach R. L. "Matty" Mathews, former menL n?e,r, fte
and elsewhere. The pilots bite off sLTtouTh cnm ' K'
university Willamottn -i-..! ii . luSn COmpetlt nn i nTM
lege of Puget Sound, San Francio,' Gonial YUng'
a aacK 01 Daciuieia material out
an abundance of linemen charac
terized the opening practice with a
squad of 40 men. Paul McGinnis,
quarterback, and Dan Crowley,
halfback, are the regulars return
ing to ball carrier combinations.
There is a veteran available for
virtually every line job.
Pilots Wide Open
Looking back over Mathews'
reputation, Portland will be a pass
ing, open-playing eleven.
Coach Bob Quinn's Eastern Ore
gon men at La Grande don't know
their own strength yet because
practice didn't start until last
Thursday. They open against Ore
gon Tech on Sept. 24 and then
find lots of competition from the
Idaho country meeting Gooding
college, Albion Normal, College of
Idaho, Whitworth college, Oregon
freshmen, Lewiston and Boise jun
ior college.
Coach Al Cox, Oregon Normal,
Monmouth; expects nine lettermen
and 21 new men to go through a
tough schedule successfully. The
team tackles Pacific university,
Humboldt State college, Linfield,
the Oregon State Rooks, Albany,
Southern Oregon "Normal, Pacific
Lutheran, Ellensburg and St. Mar
tin's. Linfield Makes Bid
Although several stars have
moved to the big time in the Coast
conference, Coach Cox will find
power in Harold Lewis, end; Ted
Walberg and Joe Buckley, tackles;
Ray Corbett, guard; Jayson Miller,
center; Dave Howard and Raymond
Corbett, halves, and Floyd Mc
Glinn, fullback. The Corbett boys
are twins.
Practice didn't open at Southern
Oregon, Ashland, until Monday
but Coach Jean Eberhart looks to
ten lettermen to give him an effec
tive first string. The coach expects
some good high school talent to en
roll from Klamath Falls, Med
ford, Ashland and Eugene. The
guards and the center offer prob
lems and only two lettermen re
turn to the backfield. Ashland
plays Albany; Humboldt, Oregon
KAY STHMMER5
NET UPSET II!
LOS ANGELES. SeDt21f.
Play in the 11th annual Paci3
southwest tennis tournament ml
ed into the third round tnHa. .J
most of the seeded stars loofcl
----- w,11HclluW uian onsen'
eis leu, iney a get.
Top seeded in the men's smjl J
iuu Duugc ana Baron Uottttid
von Cramm of Germany, hsadJ
into comparatively easv mstrtd
and the same seemed true in til
women s singles.
The face of England's Kay Sto
mers was missing from the sing:!
play. Comely Kay went out in i
upset yesterday before Los Aj
geles' own comely entry, Mrs. Rub
r:-u r,:..i , n a
dauup Di.xier, 0-i, -0, 0-Z,
Portland Frosh Book
Eight-Game Schedull
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 21. Ml
Plans for eight games were aid
nounced here by George Philbrooij
newly appointed Portland fresh
man football mentor.
Philbrook said games ere b
ed with Oregon State Rooks, Hull
nomah college and Vancouvi
Barracks.
FOUR MONTH WORLD CRUISE
FROM NEW YORK JANUARY 8, 1934
II PORTS
COUNTRIES
Goes South With The .
DUCKSl
O Dick Strite, sport editor of
the Eugene Register-Guard
entrains with the Univer
sity of Oregon football
team and will accompany
them to Los Angeles. He
will send back his person
al observations of the
Stanford, U.C.L.A., U.S.C.
and California teams.
Read these informative articles
starting Wednesday, in the