PAGE FOUR
MEDFORT) MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKU. OR EG OK SUNDAY, NOTESfBER 24, 1935.
Oregon Gains Northwest Title by 7 to 6 Win Over Washington
PEPPER'S KICK ON
DONNELL'S SCORE
VICTORY MARGIN
Luck Aids Inspired Webfeet
in Upset Husky Threats
Repelled Michek Hurt
WASHINGTON STADIUM, Seattle.
Nov. 23. (AP) Twenty-two tnoua
nd home-coming "grads" were left
pop-eyed and groggy when the uni
versity of Oregon ruined the Uni
versity of Washington's football seas
on by nosing out the Huskies 7 U
it tod a v.
It was Washington's third defeat
of the year, the first by a northern
member of the Pacific coast confer
ence, and It was marked down as
another of football's major upsets,
The thrilling triumph, gained by
the margin of a point after a touch-.
down from the toe of Wlnfred Pep,,
per. a aubstttute guard, gave Oregon
the mythical northern division
championship.
It was the closing conference game
for the Ducks, and It gave them an
undefeated record against northern
opponents.
Oregon was an Inspired ball club
from the start and fought viciously
for Its well-earned victory, but the
Ducks had lady luck very much on
their side.
After both teams scored in the
first period, Washington threatened
time and acaln to put over another
"touchdown" that didn't count and
attempted two field goAla. The sec
ond hit the upright and bounced the
wrong direction.
Although Oregon's main offensive
gun was put out of commission when
Frank Michek was Injured In the
first five minutes, the Ducks were
not to be denied, and they pounded
over the first touchdown.
After an opening exchange of
punts, Frank Ooodln, Robert Brad
dock and Michek carried Oregon from
Its 35 to Washington's 36 and Stan
Word an punted out of bounds on
the Husky 8.
Elmer Logg kicked beck, his poor- i
at boot of the day, and Braddock I
and Michek and Ooodln went to j
work again from the Washington 30. 1
They smashed down to the 7 where
the Oregon fullback wns Injured.
Donnell took Michek's place and
bit for two, Braddock boomed
through to atlck his nose on the
Washington goal line, and Donnell
cored. Popper wns rushed Into the
fracaa to kick the extra point that
later was to decide the battle.
Just before the end of the period.
Washington's touted Byron Haines
put the Huskies Into scoring position
when he ran back one of Rtordan'a
punts 48 yards. Haines aide-stepped
and stiff-armed every Duck that got
In hla way until the Oregon safety,
man hauled him down on the 35-i
yard line. i
Washington hopes were dampened ;
when the Huskies were set back 15 !
yarda for clipping, but a pass from I
Frits Waskowlta to Cnpt. Dan Larar-
vlch regained the loss, and another!
from "Wasky" to Haines was good
for a, touchdown.
Haines hauled down the pigskin
Jn the end rone. Logg failed to kick
the extra point from placement and
the scoring ended.
Washington's great punter, quart
rback Logg, rftel his master today
when Rlordan averaged 30 to Logg'a
86 yards.
Lineups and summary:
Oregon :
Washington:
Markov
MacKemMe
Shper
Wlatrak
Starcevlch
Bond
Tararevlch
Lopg
Waskowlte
Haines
Nowogroskl
....7 0 0 07
. 6 0 0 06
Ulnrdan
BJork
Carter
Moors
Codding
Skinner
Jones
Rflschmsnn
Ooodln
Braddock
Michek
Oregon ,
Washington
I.C
LT
LO
C
na
FT
RK
on
LH
RH
rs
Oregon scoring: touchdowns, Don
nell sub for Michek t . Point from
try after touchdown. Pepper (sub for
Codding), r'acfkick.
Washington scoring: touchdowns,
Haines.
Texas Christians
Hot for Rose Bowl
FORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 33
UP) Twenty thousand Texas Chris
tian university fans were not only
talking but literally shouting "Flow
Bowl" tonight after the T. C. U. foot
ball machine rolled relentlessly over
K helpless Rlre institute team. The
core wss 37 to 6.
Psm Raugh psssed the Rice Owls.
DlMty and lAwrenre. and Meyer gave
a great exhibition of being there to
receive the passes.
Harvard Outplays
Yale; Loses 14 to 7
CAMRRTPriK. Mum,. Not 33(AP
A trsllsnt, Hnrvard tenm thst out
plsred Tste by a wide margin during
scoreless opening half, bowed m
defeat became of the sensational
play of Larry Kelley and Tommy
Curtin. The score wns M to 7.
The talkative Kit end Intercepted
ft Harvard pana and raced as yards
for the first score. Curtin com
pleted a aa-yard pn before Heaa
berg scored the winning touchdown.
BOt'LDKR, Colo. Nov. 31. (,
Wto m i na aco rel t he mol at Attune
upeet of the Rocky Mountain confer
ence grid season by beMfng the
leriie-ledln(r CoWudn un!verHy
teajn. a) to 0 tvty. P.ly Hlrks. apeedy
W vom ! n g o m r v r b- k , red t he
tAiKhdown In the third perlrd. skirt
In the end for 30 yarda.
Cw Mall Tribune want ftd.
FOOTBALL
SCORES
(By I'nlted Pit")
Cot ....
Stanford 18; California 0.
Oregon 7; Waahlrurton 6.
University of California at Lo An.
gelea M: Loyola (Calif.) 8.
Idaho it: Nevada a.
Arizona 38; New Mexico.
Colgate 31: Rutgers 0.
Princeton 36; Dartmouth 8.
Army 34; Vermont 0.
Western Maryland IS; North Da'
kota 7.
Maryland 12; Oeorgetown 8.
Vlllanova 31; Temple 14.
Duquesne 13; Detroit 8.
Bucknell 3; Penn. Bute 0.
Northwestern 0; Iowa 0.
Notre Dame 30; Southern Califor
nia 13.
Ohio Stale 38; Michigan 0.
Duke 7; North Carolina State 0.
Boston College 25; Boston Univ. 8
Missouri 7; Kenans State 7.
Southern Methodist 10; Baylor 0.
Mississippi State 38; Sewanee 0.
South Carolina 2; Washn. Lee 0.
Auburn 10; Oeorgla 7.
Georgia Tech 39; Florida 8.
Chicago 7; Illinois 8.
Indiana 7; PuraUe 0.
Mississippi 8; centenary 0.
Minnesota 33; Wisconsin 7.
Columbia 18; Brown 0.
Vale 14; Harvard 7.
AS BOWL CHOICE
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 23. (UP)
Stanford's surprising victory over Cal
ifornia today gave the Cardinals an
even edee In the campaign to repre
sent the west In the New Year's Day
west-east foothall rIajmIc at Pasade
na's famous Rose Bowl.
The Qolden Beara had stood out
as the unanimous choice for the hon
or until Stanford trampled them un
derfoot at Palo Alto this afternoon.
The result foreshadowed a close vote
when the 10 Pacific coast conference
schools hslldt on a selection Monday
morning.
California's 13-0 lata evened the
season's won and lost count with the
Cardinals, but the defeat waa far
more convincing than waa Stanford's
7-6 defeat at the hands of an Inspired
U. C. L. A. team earlier In the seaaon.
As a result, many southern California
observers "predicted that the Cardi
nals would be named In Monday s
bnltotlng.
BURGHER'S ELEVEN
Darwin Burirber'a Boise. Tdaho high
school football machine Friday rolled
over the previously undefeated Twin
Pall aggregation, 81-fl. making the
seventh straight victory for the for
mer Medford mentor. The win gives
Burgher's chargea the undisputed
state championship of Idaho, the Mall
Tribune was Informed Friday night In
a telegram from Dr. J, Moffatt, super
intendent of Boise schools.
Burgher waa for five years the head
man of Medford high school athletics,
departing for the Boise position In
the fall of this year. White mentor
of the local school, Burgher'a teams
amused one mythical state cham
pionship, tied for It another year, and
were runners up in 1033.
The many friends of Burgher In
Medford will be pleased to learn of
his remarkable first year aucceas at
the big Idaho school.
PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 33 (AP)
The speed and spirit of Vlllanova's
smartly-coached outfit proved too
much today Tor both the heavy anow
and the highly-favored Temple uni
versity manpower as the fighting
Wildrnte rallied In a second-half out
burst to turn In a 31-13 victory.
Thirty thousand tans huddled In
Temple stadium to see the arch rivals
wars their eighth annual battle in a
continuous anow.
I
DALLAS Ter., Nov. 33. (API Utile
Bobby Wilson desperately pumped
magic from his hands and nlnihle ftet
tortar and Southern Methodist's un
detected FKy RMders sped on with ft
10-0 triumph over Baylor's stubborn
Hara,
The cunning 147-pound halfback,
bottled and sealed for nearly three
perioda. suddenly broke away on ft
Bd.ywd punt return on the lat play
of the third period and ths game wa
Southern Methodist's,
Oreron H l iberal!
HUOrNR. One . Nov. 33 Mia
CeleMe 9trark. former U. C. L. A stu
dent, told 300 t'niversttT of Oregon
II tor la that "ftpprotlma'ely 500 000
student In AmeTican eollefi snd
untversitie r resdv to uk their
stand ftctinat war."
Meflle 4 tne Jtrhnrtl
BKr.R. Ore . Nov. a .-.4.,An
epidemic of mealen nd !Min
cAuaeri the Durkee a-hool 35 mile
oufclj of here to c4oee.
OVERRATED BEARS PRINCETON BEATS
BOW TO POWER OF DARTMOUTH, 24-6
STANFORD ATTACK ON SNOWY FIELD
California Loses, 13 to 0
First Quarter Drives Spell
Victory Blower Out
shines Grayson.
STANFORD STADIUM. Cftl.. Nov.
23. (UP) Powered by eight "vow
ing aenlora" In a crushing offensive
team. Stanford humbled University
of California 13 to 0 today to regain
Its Rose Bowl hopes and ft tie for
the Pacific coast conference title.
The victory gave the Cardinals a
tie with California, previously un
beaten and untied and University of
California at Los Angeles for the con
ference championship.
Ninety thousand berserk fans
watched the Stanford team rise to
magnificent heights pushing over
two touehdowns In the first quarter
after being rushed Into the shadows
of ita own goal posts.
The Golden Bears, driving In after
tackle LutE recovered ft fumble by
Coffls, Stanford safety, passed and
slashed their way to tne Indians 12
within the ftrat five minutes of play.
Then right end Henry Sparks, big
sophomore getting his baptism of
fire as he replaced the Injured reg
ular wtngman Jack Brlttlngham,
tried a field goal from ft nharp angle.
The ball sailed low and wide of the
uprights.
O raj on Leads March
Bobby Orayaon, all-Amerlcan full-
hack, crashed 35 yards from his own
30 on the next play, The Stanford
March waa on. In exactly five plays
the Indians marched to the Bears
. Then Robert "Bones" Hamilton
and Grayson tenmed to carry the
leather In seven plays to the 20-yard
line.
With one tremendous lunge Gray
son amaahed through the California
line and over the goal Hne. End "Jim
Monk" Moscrlps' try for the extra
point. good.
The score climaxed an 80-yard
march in which the Stanford backs
sifted through the Bear line and
secondary almost at will.
California Crumples
Demoralized by thla sudden rever
sal the Beara lost the hall on their
own 30 a minute later when quarter
back John Meek fumbled and big
Wea Muller, Stanford center, recov
ered. Grayson passed to Coffis, who
lateraled to sophomore quarterback
Bill Paulman to take the ball to the
Bears 12. Coffls grabbed a reverse
from Grayson and apun over the goal
line on the following play to decide
the contest.
Moscrlp missed the try for extra
point.
Five times In the game the Bears
passed and punched their way with
in Stanford's 30-yard line. Once they
hurled seven forward passes In ft des
perate thrust only to have Stan
ford's linesmen and secondary bunt
receivers out of the play, or ride
them out of line for any possible
attempt to take the ball.
Stanford, sluggish In their show
ing prior to today's game, ragged at
times, outfought by certain teams
they snapped back today to exert
pressure that ground California into
the ground and probably out of the
Rose Bowl picture despite nine
atralght victories.
Floyd Blower, outstanding left
halfback among California's company
of great backs, waa the outstanding
Individual player of the game. H'
carried the ball 17 times for eighty-
five yarda and an average of 4 3
yarda gained. Grayson got only 85
yarda In 18 times. 35 of them on his
first quarter breakaway. He averaged
3.9 yards per play.
Army Rides Rough
Over Weak Vermont
VTtST POINT, N. T.. Nov. 31.
(UP) Army, pointing for Us annual
battle with Navy next weak, gave
Its reeervea a workout today, aa the
soldiers defeated Vermont. 84 to 0,
before 8000 shivering fana, In Mlehie
stadium.
The Cadet scored two touchdowns
In the opening period and three 1
more in the final. Vermont's t-
tack waa woefully weak, giving the
Mountaineers only two first down
through the entire game.
Sharkey Wins Easy
In Strange Battle
BOSPTON, Nov. 3S. (API Jaek ;
Sharkey was safely past the first !
mllepoat tn hla campaign to regain
the heavyweight title fcvlay. victor (
In ft strange contest which he won
tyr two knockouts.
Tn hla first appearance In Boston
In seven yeara Sharkey bowled over
Kddle (Unknown) Wtnaton, Hartford
nerro. fnr the count of tn twice
in alx mtnutei and tn seconds ot
battling before 13.470 pemona In
Boston Garden last night.
Uclans Have Fight .
To Conquer Loyola
MEMORIAL COUHfTUM. toe Ane
lea. Nor. 31. (UP) University of
California at I-oa Anlea txirned In a
H-Uv-8 football win here tods
asnlnxt a leoyola (I.. A sieves) whirl,
contested every Inch of the way ftrti;
came within snwp of victory.
Heavily favored, the U. C. U A plsv.
era found themselves forced to turn
back the Inspired lnynla team. Twice
Ijovola drove unsuccessfully to the
Bruin five-yard Hne and on another
march gnt to the 30 before a paw.
Interception foiled them.
XMW r-HOTCW
Ho'.ldsv fpe.'!i'.s No!
FEAALEYS ifpoli Holly Tne'
O
PRINCETON, N. J.. Nov. 33. (UP)
A blinding snow storm and the
Dartmouth Indiana s w I r I e d Into
Palmer stadium today, but Princeton
waa too much for both of them,
and mushed through the anow to
give the men of the north a 26 to
6 defeat, their first of the year.
The victory, achieved before 58,000
shivering spectators, and under con
ditions more suited to ft dog sled
derby than football, wiped Dart
mouth off the country'a untied, un
defeated slate, and kept the Tiger
banner flying among those of the
nation's all-conquering elevens.
The men of Dartmouth, bred high
in the hills where the deep snows
fall, and perfectly at home in the
blizzard which lashed the battle
ground at the klckoff, were first to
score. The same waa not five min
utes old when the Indians, placed
deep In Princeton's reservation by
a blocked punt, drove Into the happy
hunting ground for ft score.
Standing on the 30 -yard line.
Frank Nairn took the ball on the
ancient statue of liberty play and
galloped to the one-yard line before
he was brought down. Two plays
later John Handrahan dived through :
the middle for a score, and Dart
mouth seemed headed for Its first
victory over the Tlgera In 33 years.
Moving over the White -blanketed
ground as relentlessly as a snow
plow, the Prfncetonlans banged
serosa a; touchdown late In the first
quarter. Added one more In the sec
ond, and then, rushed across for two
more In the final period.
During the 50 minutes between
Dartmouth score and the end of
the game, the Indiana never had
a chance. The bi Princeton line
poured through to torment their
backs, harass their kickers, and hurry
their passes. The Indiana made but
15 yarda ruahlng all afternoon, and
their vaunted passing attack netted
but 43 yards 36 of which came late
In the game In 11 trie.
SQUAD WALLOPED
EUOKNT5. Not. S3. (API An In
spired, touchdown-rra University
HlRh school Warn defeated the here
tofore undefeated and untied Eugene
high school eleven. 31 to 13 In a
(tame played on Hayward field here
Friday nleht. Only once did the
powerful Eueene team hold the lead
and that waa for two mlnutea tn
the aerond quarter with the score
13 to 13.
Klick Gives Roth ,
Lesson In Boxing
NEW YORK, Nov. 3.1. (AP)
Prankle Kllck. San Francliwo vete
ran, had bounced back Into the mid
dle of the llghtwelRht picture today
by virtue of a declatve victory over
youthful Al Roth of New York.' Kllck.
old aa riKhtem no. had few atormy
e?lona In Madison Square Garden
last nljht until he called on the
rloi craft he had perfected through
the yeara. He then set out to give
noth a boxing lesson.
Friday Games
By the Associated Prea.
Sllverton 14, Woodburn 6.
The Dalles 40. Salem 6.
Beaverton 0, McMlnnvllle e
Hlllsboro IP. Oregon City 0.
Washington. (Portland) fl, Lin
coln 6.
Forst Orort fl. Pacific U. Frosh 14.
With Financial Independence Every
Day Is Thanksgiving Time!
Medford National Bank
STATERS HELD TO
SCORELESS TIE IN
ID BY MONTANA
MTSSOUIA, Mont., Not. 33. (TJP)
Montana university salvaged ft rem
nant of prestige from a dolorous coast
conference season today by holding
the heavier Oregon State eleven to a
score! e as game.
The teams ended their conference
season on muddy Dornblaaer field
which before the game waa swept
clear of light snow that had fallen
intermittently during the preceding
14 hours, and before a crowd of 4000.
Oregon State, en route to Lincoln,
Neb., to play the Nebraska Corn
huskera on Thanksgiving lay, ap
peared over confident and unable to
organize its offensive. "
Montana used only two subs. The
Grizzly backflelders. Beak ash. Popo
vlch and Bias tic, matched the per
form a ncea of Gray, Mountain and
Kolberg, the Beavers' sparkling soph
omores. Oregon State threatened to score In
the first period when Gray passed
to Cassalerly, end. to ths Montana
18, and a series of line plays carried
the ball to the nine. Montana held
for downs.
Montana failed to capital ice on the
scoring opportunity In the aecond pe
riod, after Popovlch had twisted down
the field 73 yards, returning a punt ,
on the O. S. C. 13. The Beavers atlf- i
fened. Later Scakash Intercepted a
Beaver pass on the Staters' 10, but
could do nothing about It.
LILLARD LINES
UP STRONG CARD
When Mack Li Hard moved the regu
lar Thuarday night wrestling cards to
.Monday night, he promised Medford
fans that he would present talent
Impossible to obtain on Thursday
night. Last week he offered one of
the greatest cards In months, and
thla week he has announced what he
thinks will be hla best offering yet,
with Lea Wolfe and Rex Mobley col
liding In the main event.
Mobley haa not wrestled In Medford
In several years, but Is remembered
for hla flaahy work here when fight
ing aa a lightweight. Known aa the
Alabama Strong Boy," Mobley la con
sidered one of the best drawing cards
in the country, LI Hard says, and it
haa entailed much maneuvering to
sign him for the Medford appearance.
Mobley is said to be a clean but rug
ged gra,ppler. with many tricky holds
In hla repertoire. Wolfe la well known
In Medford, where he haa been taking
bouts for over a year by the Judl-
cioue use of nils tentacle-like legs.
One of the greatest leg-scissor artiste
ever to show in Med lord, Wolfe haa
a strong gallery of fana who will sup
port him against all comers.
In the middle event on tne three-
ply card, Toots Bates, Hawaiian Island
champion, will meet Ken Holllt of
Oklahoma, under the Australian sys
tem of six ten-minute rounds. Little
Is known here of Hollia' ring craft,
but Gates, with his flying sllng-shot
hold and hla scythe -like Son nen bergs,
haa come to be regarded aa one of
the cleverest wrestlers for his weight
tn the game,
tn the curtain raiser Johnny Sooa,
who exhibited a marked taste for the
unusual type of hold last week, will
meet Frankle Peck, waterfront meanle
who haft already promised to do more
things to Sooa than the Italian army
could possibly accomplish tn a month.
This bout will also be under the Aus
tralian rules, and promises to be the
doughtst of the evening. Medford
fans have always flocked to aes mean
lea wreatle, and already advance
ticket aales are brisk, LUlard reports-
Make your Thank(rlvlng Dinner
complete-by serving Hueona' Neesel
rode Puddlnft loe Cream.
v km)? t
MEDFORD DEFEATS
TEAM IN MUD, 19-0
SUcklng to straight football en
& muddy, slippery field, the Medford
high school eleven yesterday re
mained one of the four undefeated
and untied football teams tn the
state fty virtue of a battering 190
defeat administered to Grants Pass
in the Climate City.
Outweighed at least 10 pounda to
the man, the Tigers had to stick to
line plays and end runs, and at
tempted only one lateral pass In Che
entire game. On the first play of
the game. Sakralda, Medford full
back, carried the ball SO yards to
the Grants Paas 30 on an off-tackle
play, and then passed a high one
that' Smith leaped hard to take, to
put the ball on the l?-yard line.
On the next play Smith fumbled on
a quick plunge, and the Cavemen
recovered.
After having been thrown for a
one-yard loss of their first play.
Grants Paas kicked to the 41. Smith
picked up nine on a reverse, Sa
kralda went Into the line for one.
and then Smith paaaed to Kunmian
on the 30. and the Medford wing-
man dodged and slid his way across
the goal, only to have the ball called
back to the 14, when the referee
ruled he had stepped out there. A
reverse, with Sakralda throwing
lateral to Lewis, was good for a 10
yard loss when the paas waa wide,
and "on the next play the loss was
made back when Smith's pass to
Lewis on the 12 was completed. !
Smith picked up three on a buck,
and on fourth down he rifled a paas
down the center to Ttunrman. but
the ball waa knocked out of Kunz-
man's hands In the end asone. and
Grants Pass kicked out of danger.
It waan't until the beginning ot
the second quarter, with the ball
on the eight-yard line, that Med
ford waa able to break into the scor
ing column, when they sent Bob
F.tttntrer over center on a sneak play
for six points. Smith faked a drop
kick, and threw a flat pass to Trn
ley for the extra point.
After Medford'a first score, they
were unable to reach pay dirt again,
btit outgalned their adversaries con
sistently. Long runs time and again
advanced the ball Into dangerous
territory, only to have the next plays
bog down in the hog-pen mire.
Orants Pass threatened to score
on two different occasions, first In
the second quarter when Osborn
kicked out of bounds on the Med
ford five, and Smith was forced to
punt from behind his own goal, the
ball going to the SI. from where It
was carried on line playa and passes
to the 10. where play was halted by
the half-time gun.
They again threatened tn the third
quarter when they advanced the
bal! from Medford'a' 38 to their own
S3, and Lannlng's paas waa good on
the 18. Two line plays failed to gain,
a paas wa incompleted, and on
fourth down -Lannlng ahot 'another
pass, wide, that looked aa though
It were going to ha completed on
the five-yard line, but Smith, rac
ing across the field, leaped wildly
and deflected the fall with his fin
gertips. Med ford 'a aecond score came tn
the third quarter, in ft drive that
started with the kick-off at half
time. Fraley took the ball on the
30. and on the first play Smith cut
back over guard to romp to the
Caveman 80. where he slipped In the
oone and went down with only one
man between him and the goal.
Sakraldft hit right guard for two
yards. Smith's next pass to Lewis
waa Incomplete, and Medford got
five yarda more territory when Orants
Pass waa penaltaed for bain off
side. Sakralda waa thrown for
two-yard loss, but on the next play
Smith cut back over center and rip
ped snd tore his way 35 yards to
score, with tacklers bouncing off him
(Continued on Pace Nina)
Another milestone !
Another Thanksgiving
together, in comfort,
independent of my out
sider 'i support! People
who have established
savings as a regular
, habit in their lives
need never want.
OHIO
38 TOO;
GAINS
BIG 10 TIE
AWN ARBOR, Mich., Nov. 38. (UP)
The scarlet and gray pennant of Ohio
State was hoisted back to the top of
the Big Ten masthead today when the
Buckeyes crushed Michigan under
neath a 38-to-0 score, largest total
ever amassed on the Wolverines by an
Ohio State team.
A crowd of 60.000 watched Ohio
State, striking with relentless power
on the ground and with dazrllng pre
cision through the air. roll up six
touchdowns and gain a tie with Min
nesota for the western conference
football title. It was the first time
since 1030 that Ohio State haa shared
In Big Ten gridiron laurels.
It was one of the saddest days In
58 years of Michigan football history
for the Maize and Blue. Combined
with Minnesota's 40-0 rout of Michi
gan last week, today's massacre
plunged the Wolverlens to the lowest
gridiron depths ever experienced by
them. Never before haa a Michigan
team been beaten by such top-heavy
scores on successive Saturdays.
Michigan was pitiful before the
merciless attack of the Buekeyes
which kept the Wolverines almost on
their own goal line all day.
MEMORIAL STADIUM, MINNEAP
OLIS. Nov. 23. IIP) Minnesota's
crushing Gophers defeated a stubborn
Wisconsin eleven 33 to 7 berore 43.
000 spectators today. It was the 17th
atralght win and the 24th without
a loss for Minnesota.
Belse. Gopher fullback, made two
touchdowns and Uram. Roscoe and
Gmltro one each. Peax took a paiw
from Tommerson for Wisconsin's lone
score.
BLOOMINOTON. Ind., Nov. 28.
'AP) Indiana university defeated
Purduj,, 7 to 0, before 36.000 fans
here today on an 18-yard pass from
Wendell Walker to Vernon Huffman,
who plucked It out of the air and ran
42 yards to score. Heed Kelso place
kicked the extra point to Insure cus
tody of the old oaken bucket for an
other year.
EVANSTON,' III., Nov. 23. (API
Iowa and Northwestern battled '
through their Big Ten football finale j
today to a scoreless tie before a crowd ;
of 30.000. The Wildcata threatened :
In the aecond period, while Iowa, led
by Dick, Crayne, was halted short of
the goal twice In the final quarter.
LAWRENCE. Kas., Nov. 23. (AP) i
Well-drllled Iowa State college foot
bal team, aharpshootlng from land '
and air and defending It, goal like 1
it waa standing on Ita last dime
handed a favored University of Kan
saa eleven a 31-to-12 defeat today.
The best Hot Chocolate In town at
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Phone 642. We'll haul away yout
feuari. City Sanitary Service.
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20-13 WIN
GAME TROY
SOUTH BEND, Ind.. NOT. S3. (OT)
The full fury of Wally Promhart,
Notre Dame's senior quarterback, waa
unloosed against Southern California
today to give the Irish a 20-W-13 vic
tory over the Trojans from the west.
H caught a pass for his team's
first touchdown and kicked the extra
point which gave It a lead of 7 to 8.
He threw a pass which resulted In
the second Irish touchdown, and
booted another extra point. He ran
82 yarda with two minutes left to
play to put ths ball In position for
the flnsl touchdown.
The game was another of those
thrilling "anything may happen"
games which Notre Dame and South,
em California have played during
their rivalry-
A crowd of 60.000 shivered under
freezing temperatures to watch the
Irish win their sixth game out of ten
from U. S. C. Today waa the first
time Notre Dame had ever beaten Its
west coast rival In the Irish stadium.
The Trojans, kicked around the Pa
cific coast conference this year, were
a grand football machine today and
had their star quarterback. Glenn
Thompson, been able to play through
out, the result might have been dif
ferent. Idaho Runs Wild
Over Nevada 26-6
BOISE. Idaho. Nov. 23 (AP The
University of IrlRho VandRls broke out
In a touchdown rash to overwhelm
University of Nevada today, punctur
ing the Wolves' defense for four
touchdowns and a 26-to-6 victory.
A late first-quarter dash from Ne
vada's 46-yard line by the flashy
Theron Ward pave Idaho Its first
touchdown. The kick for point waa
wide.
TODAY
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