Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 29, 1933, Page 1, Image 1

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    OREGON
UCLANS .
7
0
O. S. C 2
MICHIGAN 28
CHICAGO 0
TROY
WASHINGTON ... 6
STANFORD ..-.,.. 0
DARTIV cJTH 7
HARV. ?D
lai a I farai 9
PITT
N. D.
.14
. 0
.12
., 0
'TaiNI lJ a ' -a il
FROSH 0
FORDHAM .., 2
ALABAMA HT .'? V
BEARS ,.,
. ii r
lXJi'- a a Tal
PURDUE ,..14
WISCONSIN 0
ARMY 21
YALE , 0
OHIO STATE ...
NORTHWEST . .
Medforb Mail Trif t jne
The Weather
Forecast: Occasional rains Sunday,,
Witch th TRIBUNE'S
CLASSIFIED AVi . .
Lot of food Bargain
that nitao genuine
savin ga.
not much change In temperature.
Temperature.
.Highest yesterday 9
.Lone-fct yesterday .. 49,
Twenfy-eijrMh Year
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1933.
No. 1S8.
GRAF BACK AFTER TWO YEARS
T OF PRESS
FILM ACTORS PROTEST NRA CODE
STEEL INDUSTRY
TO PRINT TRUTH
t " " A j.
Br PAUL MALLON
(Copyright, 1933, by Paul Mallon)
Exit
WASHINGTON, Oct. 38. The Tam
many Indiana are folding up their
wlgwama and allently allpptng out
on Mayor O'Brien.
Moat are ateallng Into the McKee
camp, planning to acalp a little pat
ronage If the Independent Democrat
wins.
But the atartllng thing l that
theae defections, even eouplea with
conservative Wall Street aupport of
McKee, may NOT be enough to put
him over.
At least that la the striking aum
mary of the lnalde altuatlon brought
to the Inner circle here by one of
the most astute politicians who ever
phenagled an election.
Pax
This confidential report Indicates
that the foxy norello La Guardla
worked out a winning atrategy be
fore McKee got Into the race.
Apparently La Ouardla circularized
all the loose politicians and received
promisee of aupport. These were
made public before General Parley
brought McKee out.
There Is one thing a politician
cannot do and that la desert a man
be has publicly agreed to aupport.
It he does he la marked for life.
No one would trust him thereafter.
Evan Farley's prestige cannot get
over that hurdle.
Salaries
Plorello also is making the most
of hie record In the house against
pay cut-i. He has promised city em
ployees there will be NO reduction
In salaries. This geta him a aizeable
class of professional voters who never
fall to register-all relatives and
friends of public creployee.
Drift
The popular drift now la supposed
to be in McKee's direction. Whether
It will be strong enough to cut
down La Guardta'a existing lead It
a question. The best political proph
ets doubt It.
The stiletto has been liberally used
in past New York elections. It al
ways create, a preliminary element
cf doubt. Some very popular can
didates have awakened on '"n
day to find It attcking in -
Tou can never tell for sure who
your friends are until the votea are
counted.
Important
The election la of grt national
Importance. '
If La Guardla wins, he will be
come one of the moat Important
figures in the Republican party, in
hi. campaign he ha. made peace
with the conservative Republican
element. That stranee Uason may
rot last long but it wl'i be of Im
portance everywhere aa long aa
"onlesa McKee wins, General Par
ley will probably have to leave town.
His Judgment, prestige and Influence
are virtually at stake.
Rumblings
General Johnson and George Peek
have agreed to let byegoncs be bye
conea. but there la atlll bad blood
underneath between the NRA and
the A. A. A.
The Wallace-Tugwell crowd tm
look, on the Johnaon-Peek Can
non-conformista. and vice versa.
The" situation la not so serious
that It will interfere with efforta
to harmonize the pollclea of the two
eutflta, but It has long range pos
elbllltle. Many Insiders believe the
government service Is not big
enough to hold both clans Indefln-
The betting eeems to favor ulti
mate retention of the Wallace-Tugwell
group They are supposed to
have the Inside track at the White
House.
Harmony
Efforta to harmonize the programs
of the two outfit is real bit of
lnalde news.
Several meetings were secretly held
within the laat few day. They
brought no concrete result.
The task U difficult If not Insur
mountable. The two plan have dif
ferent fundamental theorle. The
NRA seeks primarily to ile pur
chasing power by spreading work
and boosting wages, thu raising In
dustrial price. The A. A. A. pri
marily is trying to make the farmer
dollar purchase aa much aa it did
before the war. Every time the
NRA eenda Industrial price up. the
Job of the A. A. A becomes that
much more difficult.
A harmonizing statement may be
Issued in a few days. A master of
words will be needed to compose It
Trmt
Professor Warren never talka. He
I the most mysterious person In
the government. He ha not opened
his mouth In three months for fear
he might sav aomethlng. There are
report that he sleeps with a clothes
pin on hi line.
(Continued on Page Six)
A Wreath for Harding
MARION, O. Oct. 38. 4?l Presi
dent Rooaeve'.l today informed the
Boy Sccut orgsn'.rstlon of the Hard
ing are. thst he would orerve a
White H,-;ir cti:c:n of .e:'d:tw s
erfsfi !n be plA.vtt oil f'.e torn!) V
V.tt late Pev.lf:1.: .::cn t". Hs.a
In oJ the annuel;) of a4 birta.
TO CREATE
Orders For Rails Is Club
Retail Code In Effect
Monday Fixed Gold
Price Boosted Again.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 38. (IP) In
brusque ultlmtum to America teel
Industry to lower It rail prlcea to
139 a ton or open Its books on cost,
the administration moved tcday to
protect a segment of it recovery pro
gram, the creation of Jobs for Idle
railway workera.
Through Joseph B. Eastman, the
federal railroad coordinator the stei l
companies were notified that no ?c
emmental loan would be made tl e
carrlera to buy rail without full ex
amination of their heretofore closed
ledgers unless quotation were re
duced. Eastman laid in hi demand letters
from the ateel-makera fixing a unl
from price of 137.75 a grass ton at
the-mill "bear unmistakable evidence
of prior consultation and colluelon
and absence of competition."
Prior to the Initial overturea by the
government in behalf of financing the
rail purchase., the companlea' quo
tation ranged from 42 to 844 a ton.
The White House considered these too
high and steel hesds were asked by
President Roosevelt to make an offer.
If the bids hsd been acceptable
there was the prospect that the rail
roads might buy 800.00 ton or 23.
000.000 worth within the next few
months.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 38. P Amid
the flurry over Henry Ford atatus
under NRA. the recovery agency went
on today toward it mas mobilization
of Industry by proposing a way for all
tradea to agree upon banishing unfair
competitive pnctlce.
Simultaneously, to get Into opera
tion Monday morning the retail oode.
It biggest alngle one. NRA issued a
series of interpretations, reduced to
simplest term o every storekeeper
might get the requirement of the
compact straight without delay.
Basic Rules
The code propossls to govern com
petition made at NRA today were for
I six basic principles worked out by a
Joint committee of the recovery unit
and the department of commerce fol
lowing a aurvey of the 1.000 proffered
codes; of resolution adopted by trade
associations; of rules approved by the
federal trade commission over 15
yesrs, and of agreements of fair ad
vertising and selling worked out by
newspsper and better bvulnes bu
resus. The six practice tingled out for
banishment were: inaccuracy In ad
vertising and selling; attack, on com
petitors; price discrimination; com
mercial bribery: breach of contract
or Interference with those of othe-;
coercion by blacklist and other do
vlces. WASHINGTON. Oct. 38. D Dis
regarding drop In wotld gold quo
tations, the admtnlatrstlon -again to
day pushed upward Its fixed price for
the domestically mined metal.
While the London quotation was
falling from 131.10 yesterday to 30 57
todsv. the price of RFC purchase
roe from 31.78 to 831 83. Yesterday
it stood at 68 cent above the world
level and today 81 3).
Dispatches from Denver and San
Pranclaco reported a tremendous out
burst of activity among the miners,
eager to take advantage of the n-w
price, and of hiwe deliveries to the
mints In those cities.
Through raising and pegging the
prlceof gold, President Roosevelt
hopes to Induce a rise In the price
of commodities, on the theory thit
gold and commodity price, are close
ly related and automatically adjust
themselvea to each other.
LOS ANOE1.E3. Oct. iS ;.?
trail of deaths, originally ascribed
In part to heart ailment, and re
porta of poisoned buttermilk, were
j under Investigation today by the dts
i trlct attorney's office, lta tnveatlga
! tora satd today, In the cae of Alfred
L. CUns, Insurance man of Olendale,
Calif.
CUne. arrested a week ago, la be
ing held In the county Jail at San
Bernardino, on charge o( grand
theft, in connection with the re
ported druggtnd and robbery of a
Loa Angeles man. Martin Frame, aged
60.
Quantities of a hypnotic drug and
I also of a swift acting pouon were
found In the possession of C Ine when
he was arrested, San Bernardino
county officers said.
The deaths which are under In
relitigation include that of CUne
trite.
Broker tail.
i SAN FRANCISCO. CVt. 314"
.lorir Thomas, investment bankrr.
T!'.ed vc'.'.intarT p-t.veed:n:s !n hant
rup v in ff-lfra! cou-t !:J.v l.T
:r.e : :.l:fs of 1.200. :;. sr.d a&je'.a
I of H 83J.
ft
E! i jit
. ' fr'
The Graf Zeppelin, veteran monarch of the skyways, returns tothi
United States after a two-year absence, touching at Miami, Florida,
enrouta to the Century of Progress Exposition at Chicago, III. The
youngest passenger ever carried was Billy Munson (below at left).
Il-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Munson, American reaidents
at Rio de Janeiro, who Is getting a look with the aid of another young,
shipmate. Dr. Hugo Eckener, Intrepid commander of the Graf, smiles
a greetlna to his American frlsrda. (Associated Press Photos)
E
Jewish Immigration Gain
Arouses Nomads Troops
Ready To Suppress Mob
Violent -Riots Hurt 35.
JERUSALEM, Oct. 38. (AP) The
Holy Land was In s ferment today
as a result of Arab agitation against
an increase in Jewish Immigration
and unrest spread rapidly not only
through Palestine but to Transjor
danla and even to Syria.
In two new clashes In Half be
tween police and Arabs one person
waa killed an 85 Injured after vio
lent rioting.
A mob was reported to have storm
ed a prison In Nablus, Palestine,
30 mile north of Jerusalem, tonight
and released prisoners; the tense
situation waa made worse by the
declaration of a general strike by
Araba.
Troops were held In readiness and
Royal Air Force plana left Cairo.
Egypt, for Palestine, where they can
be employed If necessary. .
Sections of Haifa today resembled
a war tone. A mob of Infuriated
men. screaming Invective against
the British administration, attacked
both the railway station and the
police station.
In both Instance police fired on
the rioters and wounded a num
ber. No actual dlaturbsncea occurred
In Jerusalem but 'suthorltle msde
arrest aa a precaution against out
breaks. Sullen, embittered crowds wstched
funeral processions In Paffa for
those killed in demonstrations yes
terday. Officials were alert, although
there were no disturbance, fearing
the unrest would flare up there.
In strategic point throughout Psl
estlne British troops and police were
mobilized, ready for further outbreak
such aa occurred In four main cltle
yesterday, in which scores were kill
ed and wounded.
Hr wldespresd and well organized
j the Arab movement is can hardly
be gauged, for few Europeans under
stand the ways of the east. There
were indlcsttons. however, thst Arabs
;n s wide temtory were sympathetic.
GRAF ZEP HEADS
OVER ATLANTIC
NEW YOnK. 0t. S (API Oer
manya Graf Zeppelin, globe-trotter
of the air. waa well out to sea tor
night wlti America behind her and
her silver noas headed toward Se
ville, Spam, the only port of "!! on
her return trip to medrlchschafen.
Weather bureau officials at Wash
ington, where Dr. Huffo Bckner clr-
i cled hi ahlp In a farewell salute thu
afternoon, predicted favorable weath
er for the giant craft and her 34
pAsrncers Tlie Oral . ro i'e lies
rr south M the only '.orm on the
' Atlantic tonlj&t. 1
FEDERAL FINGER
Control Of Liquor At Source
Urged To Thwart New
Dry Move, And Limit
New Stills.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 28. (AP) A
proposed marketing for the distilling
Industry may serve as a vehicle for
federal control of liquor In the event
of prohibition repeal waa filed todsy
at the farm adjustment administra
tion. In 1U present form, the pact would
provide only a limited amount of
federal regulation, but officials con
template amendment to provide wide
powers of supervision.
Conferences continued today on
plan to use the proposed marketing
agreement, if the 18th amendment
la discarded, as a means for control
of liquor at lta source during the
period between repeal and enact
ment of new legislation by congreas.
Tie distilleries themselves were
represented as favoring strict federal
supervision during this period to pre
vent the return of abuse which
might give Impetus to another pro
hibition movement.
Through a marketing agreement,
the farm adjustment administration
could limit the number of new dis
tilleries which might be built in
states where laws allow tieir opera
tion. A code would be written also
which would Impose strict standards
for those engaged In the business.
The agreement filed today would
prevent distillers from owning any
interest In a saloon or other retail
establishments which aell liquor.
CELL FOR MURDER
SENATOBIA, Miss.. Oct. 38 VP
Mrs. Eula Rose. 60. accused of killing
her husband in a quarrel over a p.e.r
of pie that disappeared from a pan
try ahe.f, was convicted of man
slaughter today and tonight awalUd
pronouncement of sentence.
Mrs. Rose contended she shot her
ruuiband when he threatened her
while armed with a pistol. The state
ehargrd nhe shot him in the ba-k a.
a climax of a quarrel over a quarter
of a pie.
TALY REJOICES
T
ROMT. Oct. 38. -i AP) Hon e cele
brated the Uth unnivrrMry todr of
the fascist regime with speech i, rft,r
t!?.! displays ar.1 the inauguratltn
of public works with Premier Musao
lint htnwlf taltina; a leading role
:n manyactivltles.
In an address to 20 000 war veter
ans m Med before nta office II Duce
tffr:ared he wished "to give the Ital
ian nTt.n hM'rt but n.nmif n-nt
twkn. thut of obrpir.tnfi; primacy on
tartn ana la tns ikiea.'V
Chicago Editor Publisher
Opposes Johnson's Ideas
On Press Freedom Beck
Sounds Warning To
Subordinates.
MT. VERNON. N. Y., Oct. 28.
(AP) American Journalism celebrat
ed the 200th anniversary of John
Peter Zenger's reporting of a colo
nial assembly election, an event
founding the principle that news
papers may print the truth without
fear of suppression.
It waa In St.- Paul's church In
East .Cheater that the election waa
held. Here, too, waa Zenger's trial
on charges that his account was se
ditious libel to colonial authorities
Zenger was acquitted. His defense
waa that he reported the truth. The
church still stands, a monument to
freedom of the press.
Several .hundred editors and pub
lishers, and descendants of colonial
families who settled this Hudson
river countryside, gathered on the
church green, heard Col. Robert R.
McCormlck of the Chtcago Tribune
urge the press of America to follow
in Zenger's steps.
Linking the right of free press
with the forthcoming NRA code for
newspapers, the Chicago editor and
publisher declared the newspapers
have been contending "for the pres
ervation of the right of the freedom
of the press as provided In the con
stitution and upheld by the courts.
The administrator, X have understood,
has been Insisting upon lta elimina
tion The recovery program was cited by
Representative James M. Beck of
Pennsylvania, who said that "If In
the execution of the vast recovery
program there have at tlmea been
injudicious effort to discipline the
press, or even, as was gravely sug
gested, to go back to the days of
the star chan ber bv licensing the
press under such a code, such has
not been the purpose or the spirit
of our president, who nobly stated
the true attitude of a free govern
ment to press criticism in a speech
to newspaper men."
Some of the president's "over-zeal
ous subordinates could profitably
ponder his words," Beck declared.
F
KLAMATH PALLS, Ore., Oct. 28.
(AP) A marital shake-up In the
Beasonette family of Klamath Falls
waa a surprise to M. O. Bessonette,
a brother of William E. and Charles
L., who were Involved in a divorce
arid marriage at Reno yesterday.
. The Bessonette here said he had
been uninformed that William had
divorced his wife, Ada Mae, or that
his second brother, Charles, had
immediately married her. He was
not acquainted with Ruby Alta
Smith, who married William after
hla divorce.
"Sounds like a mistake to me,1
Bessonette said.
4
Mr. and Mrs. John Barneburg luf
fered slight injuries Saturday even
ing about 7 o'clock when they were
struck down by an automobile which
J. T. Davis was driving. Mr. and
Mrs. Barneburg were walking across
the street at Sixth and Central, ac
cording to the report on file with
Vie city police.
Arthur Esnar, 45. was knocked
down by a automobile last evening
about 8 45 o'clock as he crossed the
street at Front and Main streets. Mia.
Jane Sollnsky, 15. was driving the
automobile. E?nay waa not Injured,
the accident report sta.e.
4
RUNNERS BATTLE
SAM FRANCISCO, Oct. 28 (AP,
Two federal prohibition agent were
wounded, one seriously, y rum run
ners on the Mendocino county coast
of California today, authorities were
notified here.
The scent were ahot. Oeorire R.
' Edman, acting prohibition adminis
trator, said a t'.ipy attempted to ar
j rest the rum mnnert at Bowena
( Landii.if. near P"- Rom. shortly after
mlrtrngM.
Norman D. Austin tu shot In the
j chest and left arm. Re wa taken
j to a Santa Roea hospital, where Ms
cpnd(ticn was announced as aerlous
The v I-t aren.!-. Sim Bvrd, wa
.);::-; iv t ouncied aa a bullet grazed
hi be M.
Eddie Cantor, president of the newly organized Screen Actora
Guild, shown with the telegram sent to President Roosevelt from
Hollywood carrying protests of writers and actors against adoption of
the proposed motion picture code. (Associated Press Phto)
SEABROOKE SAVES
SELF
L
BY
Quick Thinking Enables
Table Rock Farmer Les
sen Rushes Then Qrab
Limb Of Tree Until Aid
Comes.
Telling a thrilling atory of narrow
eacape from death, when attacked by
an enraged Jersey bull at hi ranch In
th Table Roc district, A. L. Sea
brooke w In Medford yeaterday for
treatment of three brlken ribs, re
ceived Id the attack.
Gathering fruit from an apple tree
In hi field laat week, Seabrooke sud
denly realized the bull, previously
friendly, waa on the rampage. It was
too late to eacape hi lunge and the
rancher wa forced to the ground.
Doubling himself up into a knot, he
remained on the ground while the in
furiated beat charged at him aaln
and again, hla feet and nose striking
him on the aide and hips. Keeping
the earn poaltlon. Seabrooke was able
to protect hi chest and stomach from
the animal, a he wa literally rolled
over the ground by the bull. Then the
bull approached him from the Inside
and he wa able to grab the ring in
It nose.
Hs wa lifted Into the air by the
ame and managed to grab a limb of
the apple tree and to awing up into
it branches. There he remained, wnn
the bull beneath, until E. O. Wilson
and son from the neighboring farm
oame to hi rescue with gun.
"But thev didn't shoot the bull,
thst Is not then." Seabrooke explain
ed yesterday.. "At my request. I hal
lust hsd enough for one aay, tne
rancher added, explaining that the
bull calmed down when the men ar
rived and thst he waa able to get out
of the tree and away, while the
Wilson kept their gun on the beast.
"We got rid of him later, tnougn.
h finished, starting on down the
street with a alight limp.
LONE TOUCHDOWN
E
KLAMATH FA IAS. Ore.. Oct. 3S-
I fAP Led by Elmer Brown, former
Oregon vamty or, wmwirui
gon Normal defeated the University
of Oregon Frosh, 7 to 0, here today.
The lone touchdown came In the
second period when Brown pawed
to McFadden from the 15-yard line.
McFadden caught the ball on the
5-yard stripe and meed the remain
ing distance to score. The try for
extm point was good.
The Froah failed to threaten ser
I loualy throughout the game, al
though Borden ir.d Nve, halfbacks.
; were consistent ground gainers for
th tiPitora.
I Deaplte a steady dowppour of rain
! throuchout the conteat, 2.000 Klam
: ath Falls fan aat In the exposed
: stand to aee the city's first college
football contest.
Youth and .iivllrie
KLAMATH FAIJA Ore, Oct. 28
Oral Chapman, S3, wn lnstant
! ly killed tn an autonobi com Mo n
' here lat night. Oeorgf Dean, Id, h:
' companion, received a fractured sk..;i
Bot'.i yoijth w p'.s.-idiPff on t: e
runn;pg board of a ' aht coupt d.'.v
ita by harry fif .ccr, sa.
Gophers Now In Big Ten
Race Army Crushes
Yale Arkansas Climbs
Up And Kansas Loses.
By the Associated Presa
Minnesota's Oophers, for the aec-
ah rfc In ftiirrMulnn. ruined a
rival' championship aspiration aa
favorites generally nung up vicwu
in yesterday' nation-wide football
program.
Seven dayi after they had wrecked
Pltt'a national championship con
tender!, th Oopnera upaet lowa'a
sensational Hawkeyea, 19-7 and got
Into the thick of the running for
the Ble Ten title along with Mich
igan, Illinois and Purdue.
Stepping along th unbeaten path
with Purdue were Pordham, Army,
Hniv Trout and Princeton in the
east, Duke and Oeorgla In the south,
Michigan and Nebraska in tne mid
west and Oregon, Oregon State and
Southern California In the far west.
There were scattering upset uch
a th score lea ties Colgat played
with Lafayette and Carnegl Tech
with Washington & Jefferson
well as Michigan State's aurprlalng
rout of Syracuse, 37-3 and Stan
ford defeat by Washington but
play followed form more closely
than on any prevlou Saturday of
the season.
Whll MlnnesoU' conquest 01
inv, enriinff the Hawkeye victory
string, was the moat Important Big
Ten result. Micnigan wnimu
ahow of almost unlimited power In
submerging Chicago, 38-0 while Pur
due was etopping Wisconsin. 14-0.
Ohio State took advantage of two
breaks to down Northwestern, 1S-0.
In the fore-front of the Intersec
tions! competition, rordham' unde
feated array turned back Alabama,
southern power, a-0. outplaying the
crimson tide all the way. Pitt, ral
lying after lta defeat by Minnesota,
easily spilled Notre Dam'e'a hapleaa
Ramblers, 14-0 while Oeorgla was
enjoying a field day at the expense
of New York University, 35-0.
Army' under-rated eleven gave
one of the greatest exhibitions of
the day In rolling over Yale, 21-0
In a battle that never waa even
close. Princeton was hard-preaaed to
top Washington At Lee gallant Gen
eral 8-0. but Holy Cross used It
tremendoua weight to good adantage
:n toppling Brown. 10-7.
Duke a 14 to 7. a triumph over
Kentucky, featured the southern pro-
(Continued on Page Four.)
Wall St. Report
NEW YORK, Oct. 28. Stocks
rescted moderately today In very dull
week end trading. Commodities were
somewhat mixed with the trend down
ward while stock exchange waa in ses
sion; wheat later reduced its extreme
loiwea. Sa a totaled only 376.390
ah a re ao the days performan' was
lTiconcliiniTe.
V. S. St.ee! and Bethlehem aaged
aoout a point each. Allied Chemical
and National DUtll.er.ea product acre
down slightly more than 2 points
each. New York Central, SanU, Ft,
American Tobacco "B Wetinghoue,
Watern Union, Mclntyre Porcupint
and Sears Roebuck were down one or
thereabouts while American Smelting
yielded r.'arly 2. American Telephon
General MoVr. duyfr. Interna
'fnal N.kl. O -.;.-.;! F'e-l; snd
rnrJj.an;s etaed Xraciioi.
7-0
Lone Touchdown Scored On
Pass And Vantage Held
By Parke's Punts
Losers Best Gamers-
L06 ANGELES? Cal., Oct. 38. (AP)
Oregon' green-garbed grldstera
grabbed a 7-to-0 victory from t.ha
University of California at Lo An
geles today, scoring their lone touch
down on the only pss the Webfoot
attempted all afternoon.
Th victory for Oregon kept It In
the unbeaten or untied column and
at the head of the Pacific coast con
ference list.
Many of the 35.000 who failed to
make much of a showing In the .huge
Memorial coliseum, were not yet In
their seat when Mark Temple threw
a low. short pas from the 13-yard
line.. Although three members of
the Bruin econdary were within
reaching distance of the ball, Bud
Pozzo clutched it to hla breast aa
slipped to the turf In the end zona
for the touchdown.
Coach Prince calllson rushed John
Mllllgan Into the Webfoot backfleld
and he kicked the goal from place
ment, ending the scoring for the
afternoon, although the first quarter
waa less than five minutes old.
A 33-yard run by Temple, co-cap-
taln, had placed the ball In acorlng
territory on the 14-ya t line, but the
lumous Iron Mike Mlkulak and Tem
ple in three drive a the line had
failed to pick up more than two
yards. Then enme Oregon's Ion
aerial effort, which meant the ball
game.
Oregon had received the kick-off,
by choice, and after falling to gain
from the 40-yard line, to which point
Mlkulak .had returned the kick, Parke
punted.
A penalty for holding ehoved tha
Bruin back to their 35-yard lln
after a 13-yard gain, and then Cha.
Cheshire punted 15 short yards out
of bounds on hi own 43. It waa
from thia point that the scoring pa
rade started.
Content with their advantage, th
Webfoota resorted to a punting gam
through the second period, with
Parke'a excellent kicks leaving U.
C. L. A. well In it own territory
through th first half.
Coach Bill Spauldlng'a team got
it offense to rolling In th second
half with Cheshire and Joe Keeble
leading the attack. Early In the
third, with the ball on the Oregon
13-yard line, Cheshire paased to Ran
som Llvesay over the goal line, but
Llvesay caught the ball beyond th
end zone, nullifying a touchdown,
tie, when the carried the ball down
(Continued on Page Pour)
P
Oregon: Rain tonight and Sunday;
moderate temperature; occasionally
southern galea, offshore.
The outlook: for the coming weea
tnr fr vMtm at at la eenerallT
unsettled and mild with rain In all
sections at beginning of week, con
tinuing at Intervals thereafter in
Oregon, Washington and northern
Idaho.
Will
ROGERS
ays:
. BEVKRLY HILiLS, Ca!., Oct.
27. All the Western states
held a convention here in Los
Angeles the other day on taxa
tion to see what the running of
the various states was costing
'em. Well they found it was
costing 'em so much that they
ire talking now about letting
Mexico have them back.
It's taken since (I believe it
was 1812) for us to realize Mex
ico won that war, but like all
conventions, it did nothing but
hold business meeting and
pass some resolutions, then hold
banquet and the waiters
passed some cocktails, then they
all went home and got ready to
vote for the same politicians
that yul the last tax raise on
'cm, but h g'tod time was had
by all. I'lcase pass the gravy,
1 lll MWiaM tratlui. la