Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, November 21, 1938, Image 6

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    Page Six.
TK5 - REGISTER - GUARD. EUGENE. OREGON
.... i
Post
Mortem
By DICK BTRITE
OREGON-WASH. GAME
It in Interesting to note that
Oregon's victorious Webfootii dldn
touch a foot on the practice field
either Wednosdny or Friday of last
week, attended but one chalk talk
and didn't see movies of the Wash
ington team. So Tex Oliver's
planned mental and physical rest
probably had much to do with
Oregon's 3-0 victory over Wash
ington in Portland last Saturday
In spile of the fact that I hail
the best of technical assistance in
covering the Husky game Gene
Murphy, ex-Portland coach, on
one side and Bob Parke, former
Oregon football and javelin great
on the other several important
items were left out of tho game
story.
The first bit of news was the
new color combination of the Web
foot uniforms green trousers with
gold knitting, and lemon-yellow
shirts wilh green numerals. You
can wager the boys will ask to
wear the same combination against
Oregon State In Portland next
Saturday. The second item was
the riot that followed the game.
The announcer's voice had hardly
died away asking that fans re
main off the field following the
gamr because of a high school tilt
scheduled for the evening when
thp final gun sounded and the
"young ones" pounced on the goal
posts and the timbers snapped
only minutes later. But the fight
ing was still in full swing as
Parke and yours truly left the
dressing room a full half hour
after the game.
I.on Sliurr and Jim Dixon or
Oregon State were wide-eyed
press-box spectators at the game.
The Beaver mentors had no state
ment to make, but they certainly
couldn't see a pushover for their
charges next Saturday afternoon
in the 42nd meeting between Ore
gon and Oregon Stale. Also in the
press box doing scouting duty
were italic ilnllingbery and Buck
Bailey of Washington State the
Cougars meeting the Huskies at
Seattle next Saturday. Pittsburgh
had a scout in attenckmcc, too-
the Panthers meet Washington in
the 19.10 opener.
Bend Skyliner Juniors Nose Out Eugene Ski Laufers in Meet
Local Skiers
Lose On Breaks
17 Compete Under Ideal
Conditions Sunday
Seventeen junior skiers repres
enting the Bend Skyliners and the
Eugene Ski Laufers competed in
a ski meet at the Sand Hills Sun
day with the Bend contingent win
ning the slalom and downhill
events by virtue of two first places
scored by Gone Gillis in the
slalom and Art Mosen in the downhill.
The Eugene skiers, however.
scored a second, third and fourth
in the slalom and would have won
the meet if Joe Kecver, who made
the first run in 27 seconds, had not
fallen and taken 52 in the second
run. Scott Wright was a contender
n the event too, negotiating the
first run in 28 seconds and tho sce-
nnd in 31, hut was disqualified in
the first run for missing a flag.
A second inter-club meet- - is
scheduled for next Sunday.
The weather was ideal cold
and clear. Two feet of snow, with
a crust and two inches of snow on
op. gave the competitors excel
lent skiing conditions.
Slalom Won hy Crna CiilllH nrnrt,
A-ZSi; .liminy Donnhor, FiiKrnr. '.LV:i2l
mud; Hltfl Hiilh-Tl, Enema, ;iff' ,.n.T,l
hlrd; J. rvnntnKtmv Kneel-'. (4V;
(mirth: R. Slrwiirt. Band, '.'l.VOl fifth.
Downhill Wnn by Art Mo-rn, RrnH.
I'-il. Srotl Wright, F.nBrne. t.l2i kit.
id: J. Prnnlniltoii. EiiKrnp. (341 Third:
B. Stewart. Bend. t3M fourth; Bud Ifu
bert, Eugene. I35'.al fifth.
TT'S just about a formality when Steve Maronic, 215-pound North
1 Carolina tackle, attempts a point after touchdown or goal from field.
The Tarheel, who Is having the ball held for him by George Stlrn
welss. has made good on 12 out of 12 tries this season.
'rep Grid Curtain
alls This Week
The 11)38 fool hull curtain drop
ped for two of l.ane county's five
high schools last week-end and
will bring the grand finale to
three others Thursday afternoon
in Thanksgiving Day classics.
University high closes its grid
year at Marshfield last Saturday
by holding the strong Coos Bay
team to a 13-13 deadlock to fin
ish with three triumphs, three
losses and a pair of ties.
Springfield high ended the sea
son by losing a 7-8 decision to
Rosebiirg high at Springfield Sat
urday afternoon to complete the
year with two wins and four de
feats. Eugene high's Axemen who
walloped Oregon City 25-6 last
Friday, will travel to Tillamook
Thursday when the Cheesemakers
furnish the Turkey Day opposi
tion. It will be Eugene's closing
game.
Junction City, 13-12 victims of
Heerispoti Saturday, will invade
Cnllage Grove Thursday in a
game that will close the season
for both.
Spokane Clippers Lose
To Vancouver Lions 5-4
IHr The A-anr-lateri Prewl
The Vancouver Lions came from
behind In defeat the Spokane Clip
pers 5 to 4 in an overtime period
of a Pacific coast hockey league
game in Spokane Sunday night.
the luckless Clinners stalled u
road trip after tlie game. They
meet the Lions in Vancouver
Monday evening, move to Seattle
Wednesday to tackle the Hawk
and then go against (he It
leading BticUanwif, n rVHiami
1 luirsdny night.
Football . . .
'By IINITKI) PRESSI
I1 S F. : Clmi..,ia 0.
r.lholir it. 14; imo,, Sou,
St. Heneairt 7: KH-khiir-t 0
Scramoii 2.V Ml. St. Maiy 3
Louisiana OUrse 13; ' St. Mar
T,.-.ai 1.
M. Vlnrr,it 21: St. BonavftMurc 1.
Niagara 12. ( anwlii. t.
Tex left all the strategy nf Sat
urday's game to the players. And
believe me, there was some fancy
cussing in the press box In those
last palpitating seconds of the
first half when Jimmy Nicholson
booted that winning field goal
shouting to tho Wrhfnots to take
tlm out tin overy play to slop that
crazy clock from rushing toward
! the buzzer. But Tex sent in subs
thnt answered the same purpose
The quarterback could have called
for one mora "touchdown play
before the field goal but six points
wasn't the necessary margin,
Jimmy Nick was the scoreboard
hero of the game with that thrce
nointrr, hut was almost the goat
too when he fumbled McAdams'
kick and Marx recovered for
Washington on the Oregon 43 with
about 4 minutes of play remain
ing in the game. Boh Smith had
n bad day, repeatedly missing
tackles and blocks in the first
half and netting an average of
minus three yards for the five
times he carried the ball. He
charged In hard, however, and
caused the ball carriers to miss a
few strides.
Credit marks go to Jim Cade
nasso who recovered a Washington
fumble and intercepted a pass, to
Ted (iebluirril who intercepted a
pass and kicked once for yards
out of bounds on the Washington
l'i-.vard line, to Marshall Sten
strom who intercepted two Husky
passes and shared another one
with a Washington player which
was ruled incomplete,
a
Oregon wasn't particularly "hot"
against the Huskies, and haven't
been this season. That's why I'm
looking for them to really click
next Saturday. What would he
sweeter than an Oivgon offense
that rolls like the one last year
against Clonzaga (40-H) and II. C.
1.. A. in 1M4 (2(1-3). The Porks
are really due, and will win for
me one tour-hit luncheon from
Prof. Rudolf Ernst who wagered
at the start of the. season that
Oregon woiild lost more than three
conference games.
The Oregon State tame will he
the san sour; for six Webfools.
uanirly, Nrllo Glovanliil, nuurtl;
Bill Fnskott, tackle; John Yerby.
end; lltnry Nilwn. quintet bark:
Ted Cehharrlt. right or left half
back, and .llnmy Nicholson, left
halfback. C.iov.mlnl and Foskett
both suffered sprained ankles and
may not be able to play, it was
a relief to learn Sunday that Gio
vanini had not broken his ankle,
as first feared.
Cadcnasso. Cere Waiden and Jim
Stuart played the entire 60 min
utes of tho ball game and Ernie
llnkjtrl.nn -....I 11. -. ... . I
wer. .l,"o-mru;. men':" And ' ""-''""" ' had "
they played excellent ball in their lcn,"c father games,
"iron man" stunts. I Before I settled down in the
I luc.ss box to watch T. C. I', against
Jlmnir flu-Ian thought thai ! 1 bad seen Columbia, Yale
(euhardt was greatly responsible Colgate, Oregon, Kordham. Penn
sylvania, Navy, Alabama, Tulanc,
Vandcibilt and Tennessee in ac
tion. Columbia had shown me a
fine passer in l.uckman, Kotdham
a sizzling attack renteting around
Eshmont, Alabama a staunch de
fense, and Tennessee a strong, bal
anced club without any real weak
ness. As a matter of fact, when
1 left Nashville a week aso I felt
that In Tennessee I had seen the
best team in the country, one cap-
Jefferson, McLoughlin Remain
Unbeaten in Prep Grid Circles
Bv WILLARD EBERHARDT
United Press Staff Correspondent
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 21 fU Rl
It was all over today but the
shouting and a few post-season
games that will figure inconspicu
ously in Ihe windtip of Oregon's
prep school football campaign.
The record of Jefferson high of
Porlland. considered by manv to
Oe the stale s best eleven, appeared
safe as the Democrats scheduled
a Thanksgiving Day game at
Multnomah stadium with Mil-
waukie, chiunpions of the "No
Name" league.
Because of the ninth-term rul
ing which bars such players from
state teams but allows them to
play in Portland, McLaughlin high
of Millon-Kieewaler negotiated
Londes Posts $20
In Challenge Match
Jimmy Londes, the new mat
husky from Milwaukee, Monday
posted a $20 wager with Pro
moter Herb Owen and the bet
was quickly covered by Sammy
Mans and Jose Hodnqiiez.
Londes. who defeated the Mexi
can in straight falls Ht the armory
last week, bet a 10-spot to both
grapplcrs that he could throw
each of them, one at a time,
within a 30-minute period. Evans,
who acled as Hodtifiuez' second
last week, engaged Londes In a
few fistic flurries.
The match, according to Owen,
will open the card at the armory
this week.
Headlining the program will he
a Pacific Coast middleweight
championship match between
Champion George Wagner and
Challenger Bull Venable. Venable
won last week's battle roval and
challenged either Wagner or Wal
ter Achiu. world iunior liehl.
heavyweight champion, to title
matches. The Chinese hoy refused
and Wagner accepted.
The remainder of the card will
be announced later in the week.
for a game with Medford, instead
of Jefferson.
But it was learned that Coach
Skeet O'Connell refused to cancei
Ashland high school's Turkey Day
game with Medford to allow the
Tigers to tangle with the Pioneers.
so the undefeated Blue Mountain
team will retire for Ihe season.
Milwaukie will be a worthy op-
piuicm 01 .ten, i or inc INo-Namc
champs went through the season
with but a single loss a 20-19
nearlhreakcr to Sa em. Jeffer.
son, however, won the Portland
tine without a defeat.
All the favorites came through
as expected in their games this
week-end. Salem, beaten only once
this year, walked over Silverton,
20-0; Milwaukie look Gresham,
2!i-0; Medford won from Grants
Pass. 21-6; and The Dalles nosed
out Pendleton, 7-6.
Whitman Threat To
Willamette Eleven
(By The Associared Press)
Willamette university, champions
of the northwest college football
conference for four straight years.
meets Whitman colleee at Sn lam
Thursday with an attempt to get
at least a tie for the 1938 title.
Willamette, defeated two weeks
tgo by Pacific university. R tn n
in the league's biggest upset of the
season, can only uc a tie bv de
feating Whitman.
Whitman, off to a poor start Ibis
season now lias rounded out and
two weeks ago downed a strong
and favored Colorado collece elev.
en. 20 to 7.
Willamette's downfall lo Pacific
ended a string of 2H straight con
ference victories. Coach Nig Bor
leske's Walla Walla team will be
trying for a chance at third place
in the conference.
The College of Idaho nierls t,in
fielrl collree at Caldwell. Linfield
hasp I won n conference game ,is
vr'ar. Should it win, I. infield would
go into ;, ln -,ti, )P Cor.gr. of
Pu get Sound for the cellar posi
tion. r
showed great Improvement over
their last Portland appearances
and are sure to see action against
the Beavers next week.
Donovan did a beautiful job
limning the team and Gebhardl
acting as captain. Donovan did
some splendid blocking, but his
generalship was almost perfect.
That pass he called for from Nich
olson on his own 22-yard line was
dangerous, but the element of sur
prise was there and the ball never
came near a Husky.
Penn State, Princeton, Yale Grads
Coach Harvard Freshman Football Team
By NEA Serviie
CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Nov. 21.
Possibly no other freshman sipind
in the country is being coached by
so many various schools of grid
iron technique as Harvard's year
lings. Head Coach Skip Stahlev comes
from Penn State; Latta '.McCrav
of Yale is line coach; Ed Raw-Is of
Princeton instructs the ends, and
Dave Cohvoll. star of last year's
Yale club, tutors the backs. '
All save Stanley, who is a reg
ular member of the Harvard
coaching staff, hold their positions
temporarily while taking post
graduate courses at Harvard.
Rawls is studying law while ilc
Cray and Cohvoll are taking work
i in business administration. Thev
receive S300 each for their foot
ball services during the season.
"It was fortunate for Harvard
that they enrolled for post-graduate
work." says Bill Bingham
Crimson athletic director. "They
were talented football men so we
merely employed them instead of
seeking elsewhere."
McLemore Picks TCU Top Team
By HENRY McLEMORE
United Press Staff Correspondent
HOUSTON, Tex.. Nov. 21.- IU.R'
In just about the time it takes
to boll two three-minute eggs,
Texas Christian University showed
me more football last Saturday
lor me Oregon victory in fart
tho man who won the game bv his
hard tackles. Speaking of tackles.
Bud Robertson gels riertit for the
most vicious one of the day. In
the third er;od he just about
hroka Bechtol In half and the
Husky back fumbled the ball fall
In out of bounds and would
surely have been an Oregon re
covery. RoberUon and John Yeiby, ends.
able of licking any club.
But T. C. l against Rice
changed what passes for my mind
and changed it m six minutes six
minutes which saw Horned Frogs
make three touchdown marches
of Ii3 yards, HH yards, and 52
y a i ils, respective ly .
These three touchdown forays
followed an opening one that
netted a score when the game
scarcely was underway.
The men handled themselves
with cool assurance. There was
no hurry. No fuss, no kicking of
pants or slapping of backs. They
were workmen, doing a job well.
This poise is the answer to the
team's success, accoidmg to Co.ich
Dutch Meyer.
"We discoui.ige itiMiiratton.il
I
a conference championship. In
fact. That was the year S. M. U.
beat us with what I think was an
inferior team. We hnppod the
boys up for that game and put
them under prevsure even before
they got to the field. As a result,
they lost their balance, played
with their hearts instead of their
heads, so to siieak. and were beat
en. It was the fault of the coach
ing staff and we learned our les
son." In O'Brien, Meyer believes he
has as fine a back as he ever
coached. And that his center. Ky
t.drich. is one of the really great
all-around players in southwest
history.
Oh yes. T. C. U. wants to go to
the Rose Bowl.
And if it does, here's a tip ti
4 Teams Boast
New Gid Titles
Minnesota, Oklahoma,
Duke, Utah Win Places
By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR.
NEW YORK, Nov. 21. UP)
Four sectional football champions
are sporting brand new crowns
that can't be knocked off until
next season; the 1938 campaign is
practically over in some regions
but the big question of which
teams are to be rated the best in
the nation, which two will meet
New Year's Day in the Rose Bowl
and in other post-season games,
still is to be decided.
Most of these problems probably
will be ironed out this week when
the Thanksgiving Day classics and
next Saturday's climax games
bring the season almost to its end
Last Saturday saw the Big Ten
campaign close with Minnesota on
top again; Oklahoma complete its
sweep of Big Six honors; Duke
walk off with the Southern con
ference crown: Utah take the title
in the Rocky Mountain big seven
and California clinch at least
tie for Pacific Coast conference
honors.
Each of these champions has a
claim of some sort to high national
ranking, but there are other claims
which must be considered. The
"major" unbeaten and untied
teams are Georgetown in the east;
Notre Dame and Oklahoma in the
mid west; Texas Christian in the
southwest and Tennessee and
Duke in the south. Texas Tech
and Western Reserve may be as
good as some of these but they
haven't been able to prove it yet.
Villanova, Boston College and
Utah also arc unbeaten but have
been tied one or more times each.
From the sectional and "bowl"
standpoint, the major events on
this week's program are Thurs
day's Southern California-U. C. L.
A. game, the probably decisive
Tennessee-Kentucky and Texas
Christian-Southern Methodist con
tests and the intersectional battle
between Duke and Pittsburgh.
Taking the week's program by
sections, here is how the remain
ing races look.
East
Georgetown rallied to beat
Maryland, 14-7, last Saturday and
wind up as the only major un
beaten and .untied team.
Just as the Yale-Harvard tussle.
which Harvard won, 7-0, on a sin
gle uninterrupted drive after hav
ing been baffled for three periods,
was last week's standout game,
the Army-Navy classic heads this
week's slate.
Pittsburgh prepared for a decis
ive test against Duke by routing
Penn State, 26-0. Penn and Cor
nell both idle last week, wind up
tne "ivy league" schedule Thurs
day with Cornell favored to take
the title.
Middle West
Minnesota retained its Big Ten
tine hy running over Wisconsin
a likely-looking candidate for the
honor, 21-0, while Michigan knock
ed Ohio State out of the picture.
IH-ll. Purdue downed Indiana,
13-6, and Illinois routed Chicago,
34-0. in other final conference
games.
Notre Dame got past Northwest
ern. 9-7. The Irish can rest on
their very green laurels until they
wind up against Southern Califor
nia Dec. 3.
By conquering a stubborn Iowa
Stale team, 10-n, Oklahoma's
Sooners took the Big Six crown
and only a pair of games with Ok
lahoma Aggies and Washington
State college stand between them
and an unbeaten season.
South
Duke completed its Southern
conference title campaign by
downing North Carolina State. 7-0
The Blue Devils now are out to
prove they belong among the na
tion's best teams when meet Pitt
The betting is the Panthers will
spoil Dukes unscored-on record
and probably win.
Unbeaten Tennessee can clinch
the Southeastern conference crown
by beating Kentucky Thursday al
though the Vols have to meet Mis
sissippi the following week. Ala
bama, Tulane and Ole Miss, with
one defeat each, are in range if
lennessee should slip up.
Rocky Mountain
Utah, after swamping Wyoming.
jy-u, to take the conference title,
takes on Idaho, the Pacific coast
orphan," Thursday.
Sutton, Brown
Post 69 Cards
The New Service Laundry team,
composed of last year's defending
champions. Whit Arey and Ed
Siegmund, lost a 2-1 decision to
Clarence Sutton and Walder of
Perry and Walder Sunday in Laur-
elwood s mid-winter golf league,
Sutton posted a sub-par 69 to
pace the Perry and Walder team.
but was tied for medalist honors
by Leonard Brown of Western
Auto wo was also three under par
Werschkul of Penny-Wise Drug,
who shot a par 72, was the. only
other golfer to come in even or
better than par figures.
Electric Cleaners (Carl Draper 83. Dar
rel Draper 79 beat University Pharmacy
ttossen 74, fenneii uvi 3 to o.
Western Auto i Brown 69. Urev A3
beat Montgomery Ward Sporting Goods
tuavis sz, wuneirn 92 1 3 to 0.
Medo-Land Creamery iSp.llman 88.
Carter 77 1 beat Montgomery Ward Tjres
it-opping 94. smith 881 3 to 0.
Rex Theatre lEarling Omlid 75. Les
Omlld 79) beat Scott's Siberian (Scott
78. Taylor 79i. 3 to 0.
Prrry At Wnlrlen (Sutton flfl. Taylor WJ)
beat New Service Laundry i Arcy 77,
Siegmund 80) 2 and 1.
The Falcon (Goodwin 81, Van Duyn 79)
beat Hart Larsen's 'Near 78, Elliott
3 to 0.
Penny-Wise 'Saunders 88, Werschkul
it i oeai Keie s jewelry luibson si,
CurUs 82) 3 to 0.
ooUm.1, Meyer tuUI mt "mid Ihe tarn that i rh.n i ..
fwi.-va (-,mi- t. mi i iv viiu.rm iii- turn i
Vic Bottari Retains
Coast Scoring Lead
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 21. (J)
Vic Bottari stayed in front of
all Pacific Coast Conference scor
ers over the week-end although
he did not get credit for the only
six points the University of Cali
fornia team made in beating Stan
ford. His total of 54 points in 10 games
was 10 botler than that of his
teammate. Firpo. who was second
w ith 44. Other hirh scorers were
Washington. UCLA. 42: L. Smith.
California, 42; Lansdell, U. S. C,
30: Nicholson, Oregon, 19: Higgins.
Oregon State. IS; Gebhardt. Ore
gon. 18; Johnston. Washington. 18
Hirshon. UCLA. 18.
Ml I.TNOMAH (M R I.OSKS
IVRTLAND. Nov. 21 yP The
S. F. U. Defeats
Gonzaga,8ToO
SPOKANE, Nov. 21. (P) The
Dons of the University of San
Francisco closed the Spokane foot
ball season yesterday by adminis
tering an 8-to-0 beating to the
Gonzaga university Bulldogs in a
hard-fought game that was won
by superior head work.
The San Franciscans scored a
touchdown midway in the first
period and collected a safety late
in the fourth. Otherwise the game
was scoreless and even, neither
team being able to gain , through
the opposing line. .
The lone touchdown was the
result of a well - maneuvered
lateral on a Gonzaga punt return.
Peter Visentin took the punt on
his own 24 and advanced to the
30, slanting sharply to the right
of the field and pulling the Gon
zaga team toward him.
As he reached the 30. A1 Rrapa.
Don halfback, took the ball and
sped away to the clear side and
down to the Gonzaga three before
he was knocked out of Bounds
by Tony Canadeo, Gonzaga half
back. Only one other tackier
touched Braga and ho failed to
hold on. Visentin scored three
plays later and Fisk failed in his
try for the extra point.
in the fourth Deriod an v-
change of punts put the Bull
dogs back on their own nine-vard
mark. On the second play Miato
vich, Don tackle, crashed through
to down Hamacher. C.
substitute halfback behind his own
goal.
Gonzaga made but one real as
sault on the San Francisco goal,
when in the third quarter a Don
mmnip was recovered nn the
S. F. U. 22 and a pass and three
line piays carried it to the 11
yard mark. Braga ended the dan
ger by intercepting a Gongaza
pass on his own one-yard mark
arid running It out to the 18.
Priestley Gives
California Title
USC-UCLA Clash Not
Considered Important
80 TONS OF ICE
SAN FRANCISCO Eighty tons
ui puiverizea ice will be tossed on
a 460-foot runway for the inter
nal ional ski jumping championship
starting opening day, Feb. 18, at
Ihe 1939 California world's fair.
WOULD EXPAND
NEW YORK. Long Island Uni
versity students, who already
have one of the nation's outstand
ing collegiate basketball teams, are
petitioning Dean Tristram Walker
Metcalfe for a football team.
By JAMES A. SULLIVAN
United Press Staff Correspondent
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 21 (U B
So far as Ken Priestly, Univer
sity of California graduate man
ager of athletics, is concerned,
California's Golden Bears are in
the Rose Bowl already.
"We're the champions, aren't
we?" Priestly said after California
had beaten Stanford, 6-0, to finish
its Pacific Coast Conference foot
ball campaign with six wins r,rf
one defeat, and its regular season
schedule with nine victories and
one setback.
That isn't good enough, the CaJ.
ifornia grad manager says.
In the prize ring, he pointed out,
the champion keens his title if the
bout is a draw.
Tracing the same reasoning in
the gridiron, Priestlv insists that
California, 1937 champion and
Rose Bowl winner, should eo to
the Pasadena classic New Year's
Day again because no team was
able to do better than tie the
Golden Bears' record this year.
ut course Priestly has only one
ote in Ihe 10 that will he cast
Monday, Nov. 28. in sclectine the
far western representative for the
game which. puts at least $100,000
in the athletic treasury of the con
ference team chosen.
Other Votes to Come
Other votes will come from TI.
S. C, U. C. L. A., Stanford, Wash
ington, Washington State, Oregon,
Oregon State, Idaho and Montana.
There will be much jockeying and
much political maneuvering, most
sources believe, between the close
of the U. S. C.-U. C. L. A. game
and the telegraphi vote.
.Stanford, with a record of two
wins and five defeats in conference
play, finishes its poorest season
in years against Dartmouth from
the east in one of Saturday's three
big games.
Priestly insists it doesn't make
any difference what happens in
Thursday's biggest far western
Thanksgiving Day game, when
University of Southern California
and U. C. L. A. square off at Los
Angeles.
May fcnd In Tic
U. S. C, by winning, can tie
California in the conference stand
ing with a record of six wins over
conference foes and one setback.
Washington and Washington
State will tangle at Seattle and
Oregon and Oregon State will play
another "state championship" game
at Portland. Oregon's stork rose
last Saturday when the Webfoots
trimmed Uashington, 3-0, on Jim
iNicnoisons field goal.
The heaviest firing this week
will come Thursday. The main
games present U. S. C.-U. C. L. A.;
Utah, big seven champion by vir
tue of a 49-0 win over Wyoming:
and Arizona, surprise 20-12 win
ner over Marquette, against Mon
tana. Santa Clara comes back to the
wars Sunday against Detroit in
Sacramento, while Gonzaga, beaten
8-0 by University of San Francisco
yesterday, plays Loyola, which
Hardin-Simmons beat, 19-0.
Sub-Par Gntt
In Club Eyem
club's mid-wlnte'fe
Sunday when PeS11'-
advanced into j H
First Federal in V ' e,.Wlttl
ngs with T outV?
J. K. Pra tea Sgj
The savings mlfp
Black and Shelby .Mcc00YT'
m the running bv d.ftT '
gene Hotel, 3 to 1
shot a 74 to 75 for h. i. """a-
Perial Cafe, J GerotTj3
Wintler, had a .7.."?.
Joe Richards, Burned IwS'
had even par a 72
Results:
Penny-Wise -LmI r4i ., .
i?zr Furni,ure wSiSi's
t 'Garol-WtaUer Til k
." - 'i7"-"lkl" Mi , la u
Imperial rf- (n .
Wachhi.rn.'. .rr."U,U'
2lj to lU,
Irish-, s,or
Pacific Tir.t FHn-il iMrlvj
E,,H,ltllHJ(,
: '41
Texas Plans Big
Football Carnival
is Sanford, capitalisl-prom
the Dallas Cotton Bowl, v
vealed to the United PreS h
Roosevelt and confirmed bTsii.
ford today and involves a tinaZ
?ve"tstnat includes two tort
football games within a periodoj
three days between four outstad.
ing American elevens.
The program hinges on Hit ri.
suit of the final game of link
feated Texas Christian univenJtr'i
schedule. If the great Horarf
Frog team emerges from a hard
season stil undefeated, machinm
will be put into motion immedi
ately to carry through. Invitation
will be sent to President Ron,
velt, governors of 11 southern
states and to the four outstandioj
football elevens.
Two of the teams will bt T. C.
U. and Texas Tech. The other
two will be selected from Teih
nessee, Oklahoma, Duke, Pitts,
burgh, Notre Dame, Carnegie Tech
and others. TCU now ranks set.
ond to Notre Dame in the national
ratings. Texas Tech, also lade,
feated, has whizzed like a meteor-
across the football horizon dur
ing the last few years and will be
the selection to pay the first of
the two games on Saturday pre
ceding New Year's Day while
TCU will be invited lo play pfl
Monday following. Both games
will be played in the Dallas Cot
ton Bowl, which will be enlarged
for the double event to seat be
tween 60,000 and 70.000 fans.
Further to focus the eyest of
the sports world oh Texas, char
tered airliners, starting from Bos
ton, Seattle and Chicago will pick
up football writers and sports edi
tors from principal newspapers of
the nation and bring them to
Dallas and Fort Worth at the ex
pense of the Texans. For a weft
prior to the game they will be
guests of the two cities. After the
two games have been playrl
Roosevelt plans a national hoofe
up which will feature a secret
vole of the writers on which f
the two winning teams is
titled to national recognition
the 1938 champion eleven.
By JACQUES D'ARMAND
Uniled Press Staff Correspondent
FORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 21.
'UP Texas today announce a
huge-scale bid for first place in
the annual football "bowl" compe
tition, long held by the Rose Bowl
at Pasadena.
, This bid headed by Elliott
Roosevelt, Forth Worth radio ex
ecutive and son of President ! :
Franklin D. Roosevelt, and J. Cur- .1
. YOU can whip our cream, H
vott can't beat our milk. ch
Hollow Dairy. Ph. 2935-J-2. "
Step t'p Your Appearance
I Cut Down the Cost
I WSA falVI ai a! ! 4 11
When you say "QUALITY"
youfirf toirfwtfcroi tt .
Title Pa..
i WW
DO
KELSON
IS?
WILL Jlrv ,.,. .T
sir you pvtZEZ
NATIONAL'S
'LIS
WHISKEY
YOU OUfOI TO
' oooe IIQUOKJ
"M" ,111V V, Ilinfl-T -IW II . t.., a . , .
r.vii out of signmenu. We u-cd ; ha.-is. Kvau-e vou m1Kht hV c o 1 , J . ?n 'm
to t.y and kev the Ih.vs up. but! walk home , 48 46 vr;,,'dav
'" ' ."k. I. oiKc ,,, u, (Copy,,,,',, by rml.,, riess) j..; ' CmeSl a'"nS,
Copyright I9;-8 National Distillers Products Corp.,
New York City-90 Prool'-40Ci American straight
whiskey, 60 American grain neutral spirits.
QUART
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