THE XTOISTZR.OTTARD, ItTOINS. '
TTli ii i I
California Wins Title, Rose Bowl
HIGHCLIMBER
Bid With 13-0 Win Over Stanford
By DICK STRITE
Pat O'Brien, 30, retired middleweight fighter, former
ehamnion of the United States Army, winner of 332 fights.
And this ruddy-faced Irishman was born, raised and lived
most of his life with the exception of the three years he
spent in the army in and around Lane and Douglas coun
ties. Fat is married now ana
PAT O'BRIEN
While O'Brien was stepping into the ring for 342 matches
besides his training work he was never floored once. The
10 matches he lost were all decisions.
Probably Pat's most outstanding triumph was a 9th-round
technical knockout scored over Ace Hudkins in Philadelphia
in 1927.
Fat won the army title In 1928 In Washington, D. C, where
he knocked out "Sailor" Gorman In the third round of a sched
uled 10-round match. lie defended his crown 10 times, knocking
out Ace Bowers In the second round at Philadelphia, scoring
a technical KO over Harry Bergstrom In the fifth round at
Seattle, winning a 10-round decision over Harold Massey In
Baltimore and then repeating with a fifth round KO.
O'Brien la proud of a one-punch, 20-second KO scored over
George Ollnger, Tennessee negro.
After leaving the army, Pat remained In Mesa, Arizona, for a
time and fought three top-notch ring-masters. He knocked out Tommy
Jorgenson of Chicago in the fourth round, declsioned Tiger Fox, and
won from Tommy Drake in one minute 14 seconds of the first round
via KO route.
He moved back to Elkton In 1030, and outside of a three-round
KO of Harry Moore, who weighed 185 pounds, limited his talent to
club fights In Albany, Corvallis, Snlem and Portland.
The Irishman, who scored 116 knockouts in his comparatively
ihort but colorful ring career, admits he fights "Dempsey killer"
style. He attributes his success to his army coach Lt. R. V. Gayle,
former Notre Dnme and West Point football and mitt star.
O'Brien didn't confine his athletic interests to boxing. He
played basketball, baseball and football In the army.
The youthful looking and earnest-mannered"youngster"
would like to fight some worthy opponent on a benefit card
for the proposed community athletio field. He wants 30 days
training, but will be willing to tangle with any middleweight.
Chuck Wlrth, former Eugene Townle second-baseman, was
back In town last week after "summering" in Salinas where he
played baseball "for pay" throughout the season. . . Charlie, a little
more bald-headed than ever, plans to return to San Francisco where
ha will Dlav "winter ball' under
Casciato, back from South America, is also a recent Eugene visitor
. . . Don, a cracker-Jack sports writer, might likely remain on the
campus to direct the activities of his Casclnto all-stars, an intra
mural basketball team (softball In the spring) . . . From the appear.
ance of last week's Helllg bowling scores, Captain Mike Mlkulak
will be back with the team this week ... His severest critic. Bill
Hayward, rolled the Impressive mark of 05 in one game ... It looks
like Oregon City really has a ball club . . . Any team that beats
Eugene 13-0 must be pretty fair . . . University high lost its fifth
amet of the season Frldav to Ashland, but Ray Hendrickson's boys
registered what Is sometimes classed as a moral victory In holding
Ashland to a 14-13 score.
It will be Interesting to aee how opponents rate the Eugene
high team . . . The Reglster-Oiiard all-star ballots will be
coming In soon . . . And after Thursday, when Eugene plays
Medford, Doug Caven, star right halfback for three years with
the Axemen, will be a "free agent" . . . lt Is understood that
Doug can have his pick of roast conference schools ... It is
aald he favors Stanford . . . But he'd be smart to string along
with Oregon . . . Jimmy Stevenson, one of the finest ends ever
developed at the west-side school, also graduates this year
... Jimmy, also a fine hoopsler, may go to Annapolis the
Navy to you.
tf tv .nlH ihx hefnro. ston me!
football men here in Eugene who
football fields on this side of the Cascades will prove unsuccess
ful Th nrro-nt field isn't the first Orcson turf field . . . The
oldttmcrs say that when Hayward
ior two years i 111 the coaches
lt out, giving it up as a poor Job
town who hope to make a profit
letic field, they should be strung
from the city fathers' flag pole.
Louis "Ain't No
Taylor,"
CHICAGO, Nov. 20. () Joe
juouis Is Just Itching to pull on his
fighting togs, after a layoff of ten
weeks, "Just to get the feel of
boxing again."
The world's heavyweight cham
pion said so last week, but he
won't have his craving satisfied
unul Monday when he will start
a ten-day span of gymnasium
work. Louis will not fight until
next February when he expects
to make a defense of his title
gainst a challenger In New York,
but he Is anxious to sharpen his
punching eye. after being idle
ince defeating Tommy Farr in
their lS-round bout Aug. 30.
The tltleholder said "he be
lieved" he scaled around 210
pounds at present which Is ten
pounds above his normal boxing
weight He added that he hadn't
bothered to get on the scales for a
couple of weeks and that he had
been eating plenty oi fried chicken
In the meantime.
Since defeating the Welshman,
Louis has traveled nearly 20,000
miles appealing In 40 cities and
town with his negro Softball
team, playing first base himself.
Capacity crowds greeted him
everywhere.
Louis was kept busy before the j
is larming on rouie t, r,ugene,
the Seals management. . . Don
But there are some well-versed
are Inclined to believe thr turf
field was first built there was turf
ana players urea oi ii ana nppea
. . . If there are any Joes In this
selling property for Eugene's ath
up oy ne leu ear ana anngicu
Robert
Opens Training
klieg lights In Hollywood while.
starring In a picture to be entitled
"The Spirit of Youth," which por
trays his life. Making movies was
all right, the Brown Bomber said,
but since finishing the picture, he
has craved practice with the
gloves.
"I guess I ain't no Robert Tay.
lor," Louis mumbled.
Pairings Announced
In Club Golf League
Second-round matches In the
Eiigoiie Country club's mid-winter
golf league were announced Sat'
urdny by Con Dillon, tournament
chairman.
First-round matches are sched
uled to be complete Sunday.
Piny is under a combination of
Nassau and medal system.
Pairings follow:
Valley Printing vs. McDonald
Lumber, Imperial Lunch vs.
Babb's Hardware, McDonald The
atre vs. 1st National Bank, Scher
er Motors vs. New Service Laun
dry, Irish's Stores vs. Eugene
Hotel, Sigwart Electric vs. Baker's
Pharmacy, Electric Cleaners vs.
Standard Oil; Washburne's by.
L
MOSCOW, Idaho, Nov. 20 W
University of Idaho's Vandals,
given but an outside chance at the
best, finished their season in a
blaze of glory today, tumbling the
hitherto unbeaten and untied
Grizzlies from Montana univer
sity, 6 to 0.
Surprisingly, at game Ume, the
gridiron was only slightly soft, de
spite yesterday's heavy rains. Six
thousand fans sat under the
gloomy skies and howled hoarsely
as three, periods passed without a
score. Then in the fourth big
Steve Belko, substitute fullback,
drove through tackle for the lone
tally and the crowd went wild.
The touchdown came at the end
of a 45-yard drive after an ex
change of punts.
Superiority in the line won for
the Vandals as time and again the
Idaho boys broke through to toss
Lazetich for losses in end sweeps
and held the powerful drives of
Szakach dead.
But win or lose, the undoubted
Individual star of the game was
Montana's one and only Popovich,
who twice averted safeties against
his team when he out-maneuvered
driving Vandals behind his own
goal line. Twice penalties against
teammates called him back after
beautiful open field displays, once
after a punt return of nearly 50
yards.
Minnesota Takes
Wisconsin By
13-6 Score
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 20 Mi-
Minnesota's Golden Gophers
clinched the Western Conference
grid title today, defeating the Uni
versity of Wisconsin, 13-6. Mix
ing power plays and deception, the
Gophers pushed over their first
touchdown In the second period,
and counted another In the fourth
after a long march. Wisconsin
scored In the third.
OHIO STATE WINS 11-0
ANN ARBOR, Mich., Nov. 20
OP) Ohio State scored three
touchdowns and a safety today to
conquer Michigan for the fourth
successive year, 21 to 0. Charles
Ream, Buckeye end, tackled Norm
Purucker behind the Michigan
goal for the safety in the second
period. Jim Miller, Ohio State
back, scored two of the touch
downs, and Dick Nardl the third
on a pass from Nick Wasylik.
NEBRASKA BEATS IOWA 28-0
LINCOLN, Neb., Nov. 20 M1)
Nebraska tallied four times against
the Iowa Hawkeyes today and
kept the Iowa threat, Nile Klnnlck,
bottled up thoroughly to emerge
victorious, 28 to 0, before a shiv
ering crowd of 25,000 football
fans.
ILLINI DRUB CHICAGO 21-0
CHAMPAIGN, 111., Nov. 20 OP)
Held scoreless in the first half
by a stubborn Maroon eleven, Illi
nois pushed over three touch
downs In the second half today to
defeat Chicago 21 to 0 in Memorial
stadium.
PURDUE WINS 1J-T
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 20
OP) p u r d u e's Boilermakers,
arising from the ashes of a medi
ocre season, handed Indiana a 13
to 7 defeat here today before 25,
000 frozen spectators. Cecil Isbell
led the Boilermakers to their vic
tory, the first Purdue conquest of
an Indiana team coached by Bo
McMillln.
Oakway Golf Final
Scheduled Sunday
Final matches in the Oakway
handicap golf tournament are
scheduled to be played over the
local course Sunday, according to
Manager George Babock.
The feature engagement will
bring together "Hap" Wolfard
and George Spicer in the final
18-hole match of the champion
ship flight
MOVIES BECKON CUFF
NEW YORK Ward Cuff, form
er Marquette fullback, whose 42
yard field goal enabled the New
York Giants to tie the Chicago
Bears, is considering an offer for
a screen test.
Saturday's
By HERBERT W. BARKER
Associated Press Sports Writer
California's Golden Bears have
what outfit will get the job of op-
posing Stub Allison's Pacific coast
conference champions at Fasadena
New Year's day.
.Whlle Yale's favored Bulldogs
wr liffi.rln th.lp rt rintoat at
- " - -- --
the hands of Harvard, and Boston
College. Navy, Syracuse, Holy
Cross, Indiana. Kansas State and
Arkansas were cast in the unwant-
form reversals yesterday: Califor-
rua wound up an unbeaten season
movea in as me lar western nose uouams, riusourgh, Fordham, completed an unbeaten season with phers captured the Bi Ten rhm 14"0' mshed third.
Bowl representative but the latest Villanova and Dartmouth. The an easy 27-0 conquest of Columbia, pionship by virtue of a 13-6 vie- victim to Idaho, 6-0.
" "-'i cuniuuaie, j-arayeues ioparas downed torv over Wlvondn AM (... rM-.j ca
shed much additional light on just Alabama, was Idle in
Vic Bottari, Sam Chapman Lead Attack In
Second-Period Drives; Herwig Stars;
Stanford Threatens, But Fails
By RUSSELL
PALO ALTO, Calif., Nov.
juggernaut rolling to a 13-to-0 victory today over Stanford's
Indians, climaxed the finest season in nearly a decade by
charging to the Coast conference championship and the right
to represent the west in the Rose Bowl game, New Year's
day.
Some 85,000 shouting partisans of the great American
college pastime sat throug a
Golden Bears outfought their
successive year and the first
The big game," conceived in
1892 and now one of the notable
pigskin classics of the country,
coaxed out the largest crowd of
the season as the two ancient
gridiron foemen locked grips on a
slippery field and under steady
rain.
Except for two slashing touch
down thrusts in the second period,
the undefeated Bears found the
under-rated Indians formidable
foes, fighting until the gun barked.
Statistically Even
Statistically, California was only
slightly superior. A fairly even
first period saw each team pound
ing from its own territory.
When the California power plant
started spinning at top speed early
in the second period, here s how
the scoring took place: Left Half
Vic Bottari and Fullback Dave An
derson pounded the tackles on
three plays for 13 yards and a first
down on the 36-yard line. Ander
son added four more straight
through the line and Right Half
Sam Chapman broke away on a
thrilling run for. 18 yards and an
other first down, which put the
oval on the 42-yard stripe.
Anderson plunged for 12 and 10
yards for two more first downs
with the ball resting on the 20
yard marker.
Chapman smacked through for
five and Anderson carried it five
yards on two tries for a first down
on the nine-yard stripe. Chapman
slashed off tackle for four, Ander
son added one yard, and from the
four-yard marker, Bottari broke
through for the initial touchdown.
It capped a 77-yard advance.
Indians Desperate
The Bears put the ball into play
on their own 35-yard line after the
kickoff and dipped into Stanford
territory immediately on a 38-yard
pass tossed by Bottari and snagged
by Chapman. The latter cut back
across the field In a brilliant run
that' brought cheers from the
crowd. Line bucks and a five-yard
penalty against Stanford put the
ball three yards from scoring turf.
Chapman raced around right end
to score, and added the extra point
with a placekick. The Bears mov
ed 65 yards on this drive.
Before the second period ended,
California again dipped deep into
Stanford ground. It paved the way
for a field goal try, but Chapman's
boot from the 33-yard line and on
a sharp angle, wobbled to one side
of the uprights.
Bob Herwig ail-American center
played a brilliant defensive game.
For the last two periods, Stan
ford made desperate sorties into
the California side of the field,
outplayed the Bears yet could not
score.
Fordhara or Alabama
As soon as the game ended,
TT Tr(wr,
irrmLE It doesn't attract much attention nationally, the Border Conference, comprising schools of West
i ' Texas, Arliona and New Mexico, has Its share of Sammy Bauchs and Tlirrril Ttr Tt, h. ...
slope, of Mount Franklin near El Paso, rise in the backound the" TexaT Colfcgf oT M?nea o7e"
m"4 defe.d.nn20S-0. """" Colordo State Te:her f Greeley, Colo, whom ? the
Games Fail To Help
with a 13-0 conquest of Stanford, bicirest score In the hlstorv nf ih.
KTwlS! th.SGnoi0dren
Bears were the unbeaten eastern
preparation
for its Thanksgiving day clash
with Vanderbilt.
Pitt, with its great backfield
aces, Goldberg. Ca.fsiano. Stebbm,
and Patrick, running wild, crushed
Pnn Stnt. Iw . fl7
- . - - -.' owie nuu
now needs to stop Duke next Sat-
urday to wind of a season marred
only by a scoreless tie with Ford-
ham.
Fordham vai le
a 6-0 victory over St. Mary's Gaels,
Unbeaten ViUanov. ran up the
J. NEWLAND
20. (AP) Calfornla's football
first-half downpour as the
oldest rivals for a second
conference title since 1928.
E
BEND, Nov. 20 C4 Bend and
Oregon City, major untied, un
defeated high school football
teams, will play here Thanksgiv
ing for the mythical state cham
pionship. Bend canceled an invitation Is
sued yesterday to the San Rafael,
Cal., squad.
Oregon City was selected after
it defeated Eugene 13 to 0. Salem,
also undefeated In Oregon, was
eliminated because of a Camas,
Wash., defeat and a tight game
with Silverton.
Gonzaga, Portland
Elevens Vie Sunday
PORTLAND, Nov. 20. OP)
Coach R. L. "Matty" Mathews de
clined to predict victory for his
University of Portland football
team over Gonzaga here Sunday
as the Pilots took a final workout
Friday.
He conceded the Bulldogs would
know they were in a game "if my
boys are right."
The final drill was confined to
offense.
ERB CALLED BEST
PULLMAN, Wash., . Nov. 20
Babe Hollingbery, Washingon
State college coach, says that
Charley Erb was the greatest
quarterback he ever saw on the
Pacific coast Erb helped to keep
California unbeaten from 1919 to
21.
even while California students
were tearing down the goal posts
and engaging in serpentine dances
over the field, speculation started
as to the team the Bears will in
vite to oppose them at Pasadena,
January first
It was fairly definitely estab
lished the visiting team would
come from the eastern side of
the Mississippi river. Kenneth
Priestley, graduate manager of
California, indicated this but de
clined to go into details.
It was believed Priestly would
contract several available col
leges Immediately with Fordham
and Alabama thought to be the
first choices. Selection of the
visiting team will be In Priestley's
hands but he would make no
commitments, he said, until he
has lined up an opponent.
gSS
Temple Owls, 33-0. Dartmouth
their traditional rivals' lhih't
Engineer. 6. to n,W. .
,0 marked bv neither rtP w ,
tie
Yale, led as usual by the Irre-
m-esslble Clint Frank, nv. Hr.
. i . .,: r.-n u... il .! j ..
tmu a aun iiui uui 111 me ena me
crowd of 58.000 saw the Crimson
win out 13-6. .
Unbeaten Holy Cross was held
to its second immlm Hnl
K r-..- tv, n.'' C"
gest form reversal of the day over-
took Navj'i Tars who were thor-
SI liS 2613
BEATING TO UCLA
MEMORIAL COLISEUM, Lof
Angeles, . Nov. 20 OP) Southern
Methodist University pitched its
aerial circus in the coliseum to
day and played a brilliant 26 to
13 performance for the benefit of
the Bruins of University of Cali
fornia at Los Angeles and 35,000
spectators. "
Outplayed and completely over
shadowed at the outset by the
Bruins' dusky combination of
Kenny Washington and Woodrow
Wilson Strode, the Mustangs from
Texas began exploding late in the
second period and didn't stop until
the third.
Trailing 13 to nothing, Coach
Madison Bell's galloping herd cut
loose with a tally in the second
and rang up three more in the
third before the befuddled Bruins
could calm the visitors down. ,
The Uclans scored first on a long
pass from halfback Washington to
his end Strode, 33 yards away on
the goal line. The next came on a
sustained 82-yard drive with Gen
eral Washington leading the way
until he gave the ball to Billy
Bob Williams, sub fullback, to
score from the one-yard line. En-
route Washington passed 26 yards
to Walt Schell to set up the scor
ing thrust.
Then the Mustangs started the
aerial attack that 1 e d to four
scores.
PINEHURST, N. C, Nov. 20
OP) E. J. "Dutch" Harrison of
Little Rock, Ark., scored a birdie
three on the home hole today to
edge out Henry Clay Poe, Dur
ham, N. C, youngster, in a play
off for first place in the mid
south golf tournament.
They ended the 36-hole tour
nament yesterday with scores of
142.
Laurelwood League
To End 1st Round
First-round matches in the mid
winter golf league at the Laurel
wood course are scheduled to be
completed Sunday with second
round engagements opening Mon
day. Fourteen teams are competing
under the regulation Nassau sys
tem, points awarded on each nine
holes and the 18. Prizes will be
awarded the winning two-man
teams after the completion of the
round-robin schedule.
STEADY EMPLOYMENT
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 Lou
Oshins of Brooklyn College has
held his Job longer than any other
football coach in the metropolitan
area. Lou has been at Brooklyn
11 years.
Pick Cal's Bowl Foe
nw v.. tw- . . .... . n
by
n,,.i,. .....j ';"".:".!.
,ri"!2-!
" " v,"urjr M,cnl
v',. r t , i .
tlJlJ.
Z J. ..11 Yl' l"u.cn:
goiiic in a I-U aeieai
or Northwestern' WiMrntc
Rice's drive toward i th. ,
ii ." ?. ward So.u.th-
rude Vwi t2Z Til.-i
u j .
V Irl g5.' Pacea uaveT
Stanford fim'he secoinX
Pacific ccit race m Oregon State
In thA mriuact linnA(n. rn
BOB HERWIG, ail-American center, who led ft.
California in m. nhlnr Who
Palo Alto where the Golden Bears captured ttl T?i.'"wP
nd the west's bid to the Rose BowL ut
Grayless Oregon State
Loses 7-0 To Coug
BELL FIELD. CORVALLIS. Ore.. Nov. 5nin ... . . I
brilliant runnine and Eddie Bavne'a ndm .-JTZr. 'if
.jtaw w v . ... .u. j winy uvci wi cuu oiate in a fimerinJj
a swampy gridiron before 12,000 Homecoming fani The 3
loss, their second conference defeat, cost them second olace tb3
Driving rain fell until the start of the fourth quartt2!
Littlefield, Cougar fullback, went 32 yards through tacklt 2
the visitors in scoring position on the Beaver 18-yard lint i
FOOTBALL
Coast
Willamette 20, Whitman 6.
Washington State 7, O. S. C. 0.
California 13, Stanford 0.
Montana 0, Idaho 6.
Loyola 13, Baylor 27.
Kansas 7, Arizona 9.
Oregon 0, Washington 14.
S. M. U. 26, UCLA 13.
San Jose S. 25, Arizona State 6.
Occidental 13, Pomona 0.
S' Diego S. 13; San' Barbara 0.
East
Boston U. 13, Boston College 6.
Dartmouth 27, Columbia 0.
Fordham 6, St. Mary's 0.
Maryland 12. Georgetown 2.
Harvard 13, Yale 6.
Carnegie Tech 0, Holy Cross 0.
Lebanon Valley 16, Juniata 0.
Lafayette 6, Lehigh 0.
Manhattan 13, Niagara 7.
Dickinson 19, Muhlenberg 12.
Conn. State 76, Norwich 0.
Pittsburgh 28, Perm. State 7.
Princeton 26, Navy 6.
Rensselaer 13, Buffalo 12.
St. Anselm 7, Springfield 0.
Villanova 33, Temple 0.
Army 47, St. John's 6.
W. Maryland 26, Mt St Mary 0.
Tufts 7, Mass. State. 0.
Susquehanna 6, Haverford 6.
Washington C. 16, Deleware 13.
Swarthmore 20, Drexel 12.
South
Auburn O.Cfeorgia 0.
Georgia Tech 12, Florida 0.
Duke 20, N. Carolina S. 7.
S. Carolina 64, Presbyterian 0.
Centre 7, Southwestern 6.
Mississippi 12, Millsaps. 0.
Tulane 33, Sewanee 7.
Citadel 46, Erskine 7.
Midwest
Notre Dame 7, Northwestern 0.
Minnesota 13, Wisconsin 6.
Ohio State 21, Michigan 0.
Illinois 21, Chicago 0.
Nebraska 28, Iowa 0.
Purdue 13, Indiana 7.
Marquette 13, Duquesne 8.
Missouri 3, Washington U. 0.
Iowa State 13, Kansas State 7.
Ohio U. 20, Ohio Wesleyan 6.
Marshall 7, Dayton 0.
Wst Reserve 20, John Carroll 0.
DeFaul 12, Michigan Teachers 0.
Wayne 65, HiUsdale 0.
Hanover 6, Evansville 0.
St Louis 27, Grinnell 7.
Drake 31, Coe 2.
Southwest
Tex. A.&I. 26, U. of Mexico 12.
Tex. Teach. 14, Sam Houston 6.
Texas Christian 7, Rice 2.
South
Louisiana S. 52, Louisiana N. 0.
Louisiana C. 13, Louisiana T. 12.
Texas Tech 7, Centenary 2.
Southwest
Baylor 27, Loyola 13.
Geo. Washington 0, Arkansas 0.
Oklahoma 16, Okla. A. ic M. 0.
Arizona 9, Kansas 7.
Rocky Mountain
Colorado S. 6, Colorado C. 0.
Brigham Young 19, Mont S. 0.
Greeley State S2, Colorado M. 6.
Washington, bowling over Oregon,
Montana fell
? !
on over w.or.u .
f"eg "Snni T j
huw staie over tne jumps,
!5? "! e3LSt.ate Cl0r-
"""
"
Eric Merrell
Clothes for Men and Beyt
M
.oayne, loa-pounil haliback
also sparkled In the Coujirfn
ning attack, passed 20 jirir
Charles Holmes, sub end ted
deep in the end zone, for the ta
down. Halfback Sienko'i pUtai
split the uprighfi
Holmes Gnbi ha
Holmes seized an aimed iqe
sible chance, snaring the bill fa
his shoestrings from a hut
Beavers who were almost oo t
of him.
The fine kicking of Bill Dum
Beaver quarterback, gavehuaa
advantage that possiMj odd 1
score down.
The only other icortaj fci
came in the third period what
Cougars marched from their or
42 to the Beaver nine, theadra
featuring a 43-yard run oil Ua
by Littlefield. After being stoftt
for three downs, Sienko attend
a field goal. but his kick vis n
The Cougar win tied up tt !
year-old rivalry between the a
schools at 13 victories each.
Coach Lon Stiner sent iijtri
Joe Gray, brilliant Beaver hi!
back, into the game at the end i
the third quarter, but Washiifs
State smothered hla threita
aerial attack.
Gray's leg was hurt two mi
ago, and he could do but SB
running.
Cougars Dominate BV
The Cougars made 14 flrstdon
to one for the Beavers, that can
late in the game when Gnypi"
20 yards to Holcomb, lubsto
halfback.
Washington State mi
yards from scrimmage to
the Beavers, and 24 ytia W
passes to the Beaverf .
unto.'!" "
Mm iii! boued early n n
game by two 15-yard eBppj(?J
alties.. The winners lost m
from penalties, while the Bert
had a clean slate. j
t-it, overused 42 riroM
kicks, and Bayne'J punting Pt
was 35.
. ciat line
ine uresuu . - j
i. j tha COUJW H
ugruenea - -
near wi - ,..
BaynetotossoneotWsown
passes for tne score.
y ,,, .l, state receW
b-ak near ; the end o
stosUnkoputthebJl.
the oan on uuw.- R
smouieniis w- ----
For
Coast Police
LOS ANGELES,
EariJ. Miller of theUB
man of the Pacinc :
ence committee
organization of offi
commissioner of auu
last week no candidate n
selected. miie
Thirty-five
consideration for the J
sald- j first oM!!
the committee was w ,
low, wnitu Qa,
.i ...u,irfiMtion oi ww
OL SUWi"'
TRAP
SHOOT
BAN OB SB
Sunday, K.T.W
Bod and Gun
Dexter, Ore.
r.