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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1938)
PXGE TWO Oregon WEBFEET UNABLE TO STOP PASSES LI DRIVES USC Too Much for Oliver Crew In Muddy Tilt Only Three First Downs. ' MULTNOMAH FIELD, Portland. Ora., Oct. 39, (P) Southern Califor nia brought the Pacific const con ference'! oldest and moat terrible football Jinx to Multnomah field to day and, Just aa It haa at every meet ing for 21 years, mesmerized the Ore gon Webfoots 81 to 7. Howard Jonea, the Trojan coach, had a magician at every position. The football, waved under the paralyzed Webfoots noses like a sorcerer's wand, charmed five touchdowns out of the mud but there could have been more. The Southern California witchery, mercilessly effective for Oregon even when Impotent against every other rival, just got tired of producing yardage against a team that hod trav eled 7000 miles to three defeats In three weeks. The befuddled Webfoots, seeming ly rigid at the klckoff from the hyp notlc memory of past Trojan trl ttmphs, cracked In two minutes and were helpless In the turflesa sludge. The Trojan victory was Just about as teriiflo aa the copyrighted 33 and M to 0 scores In recent clashes and said In effect, "open the Rose bowl fates, we're on the way, Oregon got small consolation out of a pass. Jimmy Nicholson to Bob Blenklnsop, reserve end, for a touch down In the last 60 seconds from the three yard line. The score had been set up by an interception. Today's passing,' the most sensational seen fcere In a decade, scored a touchdown In about two minutes after Howard Jones' lads laid hand on the ball. Orenvllle Lansdell's psss to Ralph tan ley, ruled good because of In terference, put Troy on the Oregon 18. Three plays after taking the ball lnsdell passed to Boyd Morgan for touchdown. - Lansdell began throwing hts deadly iMssea again a few moments later. One to BUI Sangster, went for 36 yards to the Oregon 13. Sangster got even yarda through line and Lans dell went the rest of the way around the Webfoot left flank. One of the brightest of a score of brilliant passes accounted for 44 wards and a touchdown In the second period. Oliver Day, reserve quarter back, let go a mighty heave to Boyd Stonebarker, end. The Oregon de fense, spread wide and Ineffectively, was far away from fit one barker when he stepped off the remaining few yards for the touchdown. , Southern California showed It cm Id drive as well as pass to a touchdown In the third period. Day and Jack Banta rambled from the Oregon 34 to the one-yard line where Banta cut through tackle to the goal. Twelve thousand persons began to think the only thing the Trojans could nt do was convert after touch down. Ray Wehba, an end, put aside the ctuw for concern by booting a placement after Doyle Nave grabbed Nicholson's punt and sprinted down the sidelines to the touchdown stripes M yards away. ' The crushed Oregon line only epened enough holes to allow it's backs to grab A4 yards and three first downs. The Trojans picked tip a net 138 yards from scrimmage, 181 yards from passes and 11 first downs. The lineups: V. S. O, Oregon Flsk LB B toec h ker L T. ., Yerby jvwkett i Bmtth ,.XO.. Otovanlnl I McNeill o . Tonelll .RO Jacobscn j waiden oeorge RT Jensen I Stanley RE... L. Robertson i Lerudell Q B nwsen; Hoffman LH Morfan -..RK.... Sangster PB Score by periods: Southern Cal ........13 Oregon . 0 Southern California Touchdowns; M o r g a Nicholson ; ueonarat : Fmmons e a 7 3i 0 0 77 s c o r 1 n g n. Lansrtell. Stone bar Iter (Stanley), Bnnta (Sang ster), Nave (Lansdell), Point after touchdown: Wehbi (Flak, from placement. Oregon scoring Touchdowns: Blenklnsop (Yerby). rolnt after touchdown; Nicholson from place ment. MISSOULA, Mont., Oct. M (AP) Idslio deieated Montana state uni versity. 19 to , m a lootbsll nattlo between the "orphans'- of the Pa cific coast conference today. Approslmately 8,000 Montana home-coming tans saw Hsi noise, tow-headed halfback, lead the Van dais to victory with his passing run ninf and kicking 1 A spectacular Montana aerial as sault, during which doirn passes were completed for 177 ysrd. sained the OrlKlles but a strwle touchdown. While Idaho, completing but three passes, scored on two flips from Rote to receivers wattlne, over the oal line. Boise scored the third Vandel touchdown on a running play from the Montana seven ysrd line. The Vandal itar place-klckd one point j after touchdown and mlMcd two : otlvr attempt, Closing time for Too Ute to Clas sify Ad la t :30 p. m. Helpless Before Trojans; Staters Give CALIFORNIA WINSl(;Footba11 Scorei BRUISING BATTLE STATE, 13-7 Fumbles Costly for 0. S. C ' Kisselburg Star of Con testEarly Rush Amazps Bears. BERKELEY. 01.. Oct. M. (AP) Defending conference champion and one of the coast's two contender for the Rote Bowl bid. University of California battered out a 13 to 7 win orer a fighting Oregon State college football team today. Th game, a brulelng battle from tart to flniah. aaw th blocking Bears drive 60 yard to a second per iod touchdown, and 41 yards for a fourth quarter acore to defeat the most formidable opponent they have played thus far. Oregon State, behind In the tally column but far from outclassed, aav ed Itself a shutout with a smashing last period advance good for 73 yards and a touchdown. Some 29.000 fans, sitting through gloomy weather which broke into a drizzle near th end of the contest, watched with amazement as Oregon State dominated the gam In th opening period, and the latter part of the second quarter. Taking the opening klckoff, the northerners rushed 51 yards to Cal ifornia's yard marker, then lost the ball on a fumble five yards from scoring turf. The Bears punted out but a 83-yard return by Morris Kohler. right halfback, put the Bea vers 40 yards from the California goal. They banged down to the 31, where Prescott Hutchlns, left guard, missed a field goal by Inches. The Bears carried the ball for the first time six minutes after the con test opened. Turning Into the second period. California recovered fumble on It own 30-yard Una and pounded nd passed straight to a touchdown. The long march down the field was engineered by left halfback Vic Bottarl. One pass was tried In the aeorlnt march. Bottarl tossed It to right half Lout Smith, and good for 30 yard,. Bottan smashed over for the touchdown, cracking through left tackle for the last five yards. He also added the extra tally with drop kick. Oregon State came back with SO. yard thrust to the California -ynrd line but the scoring threst ended with California taking the ball on downs at the 19-yard marker. For the first half Oregon State gained 114 yards from scrimmage to io yarda for California and had an edpre In downs, eight to seven. The Bears got over th 80-yard mark for the first time, six minutes after the second qusrter started. California outplayed Oregon State In the scoreless third quarter, once ripping off 43 yards before losing the oval on downa on the letter's six-yard line. The points that clinched the game saw Plrpo, sub left hslf, pierce cen ter for a ysrd and the last period touchdown. Most of the second string Bears were In the line-up on the second scoring drive. Just before the touchdown, the Bears had lost the ball on downs on Oregon State's 3-ysrd line after a 39-yard march. Jim KIsselburRh, a Hollywood boy who went north for an education and a football career, sparked the Beavers to their touchdown late In the last quarter. He whipped seven shsrp passes Into receivers hands. the last one from the 30-yard lint lover the goal and Into the hands of Holly Holcomb. sub nusrterbsek Hutchlns. who missed the field anal early In the game, booted the ben accurately this time for the seventh point. Kissel burgh's all around perform ance compared favorably to that of California's Bottarl. In fact he was called upon tor more work than the Bears' itar ball packer. The lineup and summary: Oreson State: California: .. Reglnato Wendllck IX. L. Younce LT . Hutchlns ..t,a. Orr C ... Sohults ro Ilaekcnbniek RT Coons , RR. Mercer qb.. V. Kohler LH.. M. Kohler RH KIsselburRh ........ ra . Score by periods: Oregon ........ California ...., Deuarona ' Plasch i Queen Ray Stone Mathewson i Elmore ... Bottarl L. Smith D. Anderson .. 0 0 0 77 0 7 0 IS Scoring: Oregon state touchdown. Holcomb (sub for Mercer) ; point af ter touchdown, Hutchlns (place kick). California touchdowns, Bottarl. nrpo (sub for Bottarl): point after touchdown, Bottarl (drop kick). Lewis Keeps Crown Before Small Crowd NKW HAVP1N. Conn.. Oct. M. I API John Henry Lewis todsy Is "the winner and still champion" of the world's light heavyweights but he doesn't know what to do wth the title. The phoenlt. Arts, negro, weak from making 174 pounds, success, fully withstood the serious challenge of Al Gainer, New Haven blavk pan ther, four pounds lighter, in a IS round title bout hers Isst night, un cashliw a vicious attack In th fn,i fire rounds to win the unanimous decision nf the two judges and Ref. ?ree Have Pitrterald, Clotirm time for Too Ute to Claa ilfy Ads la l:)0 p. m. MEDFOTCD fATT, (By the Associated Press) East Notre Dame 1, Army 7. Dartmouth 34, Yale 6. Harvard 36, Princeton 7, , Cornell 33, Columbia 7. Navy 0, Penn 0 (tie). Holy Cross 31, Colgste 0. Boston College 33, Florid 0. Brown tt. Tutu 0. Bucknell a, Albright 0. Msnhattan 13. Cantstus 8. City college (N. Y.) 33. Lowell Tex tile 0. ' Bates 31, Bowdoln 0. Amherst 39, Massachusetts State 0. Ohio Stat 83, New York unlvcr. slty 0. La Fayette 99, Urstnus 0. Penn State 33, Syracuse 6. Pittsburgh 34, Pbrdham 13. Hobart 40, Rochester 0. Vermont 30. Norwich . West Virginia. 37, Youngstown 8. Rutgers 13. Lehigh 0. Colby 19, Maine 14. - Dsyton 13. Marshall"?. John Hopkins 7, Havertord . Niagara 14. Clarkson 8. Swarthmore 31, Hamilton 6. Mississippi 39, Oeorge Washing ton 0. West Virginia Wesleyan 7, Waynea bunj 0. Midwest Michigan 14, Illinois 0. Santa. Clara 7, Michigan State 0. Ohio V. 13. Cincinnati 12. Michigan Normal 7, Bowling Oreen 7 (tie). Toledo 39. Wayne U. 30. Wisconsin 8, Indiana 0. Purdue 0, Iowa 0 (tie), Chicago 34, DePauw 14. Iowa State 7. Marquette 0. Carnegie Tech 37, Akron 13. Butler 27, Wabash 0. Hanover 19, Franklin 18. South Alabama 38. Kentucky 8. Tennessee 14, Louisiana State 6 Tulane 37, Mississippi State 0. ' Virginia Tech 7, North Carolina Stat 0. Duke 14, North Carolina 0. Mllllgan 37, Guilford 7., Richmond 8, Washington & Lee 0. Virginia Military Institute 47, Msrylsnd 14. Davidson 13, Purman 13. Virginia 34. William and Mary 0. The Citadel 27. Wofford 0. Hampden Sydney 30, American 0. Western (Ky.) Teecher 13, West ern (Mich.) Teschers 6. Southwest Texas Christian 39: Baylor 7. FROSH DEFEATED BY HUSKY BABES SEATTLE. Oct. 20. (AP) Striking through the sir with s surprise fourth down pass, the University of Washington freshmen scored a third quarter touchdown to defeat the Oregon frosh In their annual en counter today, 6 to 0. It was the fourth down and eight to go on the Oregon 23-yard line when Ernie Steele, clever halfback from High Line, went Into punt for matlon. Instead of kicking, he rifled a 20-yard pass to Ear Younglove, end from Peorta, 111. Younglove fought his way the remaining five yards for the score, rted Olsen, end from Anacortes, missed the attempt ed conversion. The Husky pups had little trouble defending the lead, although Oregon, held In check for three quarters, finally got Into Washington territory In the final period with a belated pawing attack which twice bogod down, once on the 27-yard line and again on the 34. Washington complied seven first downs, to five for Oregon, and netted 110 yards to Oregon's 44. DEFEATS . 18T0 6 Ashland high's Grlxrlles csms from behind to score three touchdowns In the second half and defeat Dunsmulr high at Ashland yesterday afternoon. 16 to 0. The Callfornlans led at the end of the mat hslf. 8 to 0. A 30-yard forward pass. Kenny Harris to End Don nettling, gave the OrluElles their first score In the third period, doing Into the fourth qusrter with the score deadlocked at ""landers sewed up the Willi l.U UIUIV WUVI1UUWUS, Charlie Warren bucking one across and Bostwtck dittolnj for the final tally after he had broken loose for a 38-yard gallop to the one-foot line Re.clnato, halfback, scored Duns mulr's touchdown on a five-yard line smash. MiiMntlnl HoT Ved ROMS. Oct. 39. ,4 Bruno Musw tlnl. second son of Premier Muss-tllnl, was married today to Plftnorlna Oin Rubertl. daughter of Professor Ouldo Rubertt, theater critic and head of the education ministry's division of contemporary art. flolfer Surely Erratic WICHITA, Kas. (t'PI A seller who was none too sure of hit control but had the foresight to be prepared for emergencies was sought by police for the theft of a bu.thel and a half of colt balls from Oeotye Matron's drlvltm tee here. The olfer appar ently didn't need any cluhs Secaiue several new seta er the golf balls hXAIT HKOS. Aerotred Shoes Local Agent P. Arnold Wiley Tit Cedar 9U Medford TTJIBTTSTE. 'MT.DFO'RD. ESOTA LOSES TO NORTHWESTERN PITT DOWNS Negro Back Paces Win Million Fans Se' Grid Games Saturday. NEW YORK, Oct. 39. (AP) The greatest October drive In football history today saw Minnesota's Goph ers knocked off the unbeaten list but left virtually all other top-ranking teams stlli In the chase for the mythical national championship. Attracted by a program that never has been equalled on an October date, nearly a million fans turned out for the two score games that carried the most weight. Minnesota fell victim to a fourth period attack engineered, by North western's Wildcats, paced by Bernle Jefferson, negro back, and dropped a 6-3 decision In a vital Big Ten con ference tussle. Ford ham. Baylor and Oeorge Washington also tasted de feat for the first time but no par ticular element of surprise was In volved In their case. Trailing Ford ham. 7-3, after three periods. Pittsburgh, the nation's No. i 1 ranking team, applied the presure in the fourth and won, 24-13, be fore a crowd of 77,000, biggest that ever saw a sports event in Pitts burgh. Baylor simply was no match for Texas Christian's Horned Frogs who rolled up an amazing 39-7 count. Oeorge Washington likewise was out classed by Mississippi, 25-0. Meanwhile Santa Clara. Dartmouth, Notre Dame, Duke. Tennessee, and Oklahoma protected unbeaten rec ords. A crowd of 80.000 packed the Yan kee stadium and saw Notre Dame, j trailing most of the way, score twice in the fourth quarter for a 19-7 con quest of Army. Santa Clara's margin over Michigan State was a point af ter touchdown, 7-6. While Dartmouth spilled Yale 24-6, before 72,000. Ten nessee's brilliant backfleld rolled over Louisiana State, 14-6 as Oklahoma found Tulsa eosy, 28-0. The east took a beating In Inter sectional warfare for. In addition to the losses suffered by Army and Oeorge Washington, New York uni versity was crushed 32-0 by Ohio State, now tied with Northwestern for the Big Ten lead, and Catholic dropped a 13-0 decision to St. Louis Boston college, however, buried Flor ida, 33-0. Penn State pulled the prize east ern upset in a 33-6 rout of Syra cuse but otherwise play followed form. Torble MacDonald scored touchdowns in Harvard's 26-7 rout of Princeton: Cornell packed to much strength for Columbia and won, 23-7. Holy Cross' fleet bac ran up a 21-0 count on Colgate; Penn and Navy fought to a scoreless draw before 70,000. Michigan and Wisconsin scored Big Ten victories but Purdue was held to a surprising scoreless deadlock of Iowa. Michigan .pushed over Tlllnola. 14-0. and Wisconsin edged out In diana, 6-0. Kansas shocked the Big Six con ference with a 277 victory over Kan sas St a te while Ml saou rl score d at Nebraska's expense, 13-10. Iowa State, the conference leader, maintained its unbeaten, united status by whip ping Marquette. 7-0. In the southwest. Southern Meth odist nosed out Texas. 7-8. and Tcxns A. and M. came from behind to nip Arkansas. 13-7. Rice, without the services of Ernie Lain, trounced Au burn, 14-0. Southeastern conference games saw Alabama run up a 36-6 count on Kentucky; TuUne bury Mississippi State, 27-0. and Vnnderbilt turn bark Georgia Tech. 13-7. The southern conference race probably was definitely decided when Duke's undefeated Blue Devils blank ed North Carolina. 14-0- I'nlled. I'nheaten ELLENSDima. Oct. 29. (API Western Washington College of Ed ucation remained the only unbeaten, untied Pacific northwest college team todsy by defeating the Central Wash ington college eleven, 13 to 6. SC Frnsh Win PULLMAN. Wssh.. Oct. 29 (AP) In a game marred by 30 fumbles. Washington State's freshman football eleven downed the University of Ida ho frosh. 14 to 6. here today on a muddy field. WIRESTLHN MEDFORD ARMORY MONDAY NIGHT Jack McDonald Paul Murdock Pete Belcastro v. Monte LaDue Buddy Knox vs. Frankie Schroll OTTCCOS. SUNDAY. OCTOUE? 30. 1028. SOCKEYE Paul Murdock, the handsome Texan with the devastating thunderbolt hold, puts his undefeated wrestling record on the block tomorrow night In the Medford armory against Sock eye Jack .McDonald, the bout being an encore of last Monday's spectac ular go In which McDonald finished on the short end. It's laidles' night again, and the fourth straight ca pacity crowd Ls expected to be on hand for the all-star program, top ped, by the Murdock-McDonald oue hour main event. All the fireworks won't be exploded In the peak match. In the center squabble, Mad Italian Pete Belcastro and Monte La Due. French terror. ! collide In an embroglio earmarked for one of those alley-cat brawls, with nothing barred. Mississippi Buddy Knox and Frank le Schroll. both blessed with sparkling wrestling abil ity, open the card. Defeated by Murdock tn a tough, slam-bang match last Monday, Mc Donald asked Paui and Promoter Mack LI Hard for a rematch. Both were agreeable to the request and the bout was arranged after Murdock got his release from a southern Cal ifornia contract that would have taken him out of Medford last week, McDonald, although admitting he was beaten on the up and up and offering no alibis, sincerely believes he can even the score, while Mur dock., who never says much, is just as certain he can make it two In a row over the husky, ex-Seattle log ger. Their first match was unusually clean, with .McDonald resorting to head and body-punching only a few times and Murdock. as usual, stay ing pure throughout. Whether Mc Donald will toss his legitimate tac tics overboard and revert to his usual system of simply slugging his oppon ent Into a stupor will not be known until the boys are In the ring, but many close observers believe that ls the only way he can hope to beat Murdock, one of the finest wrestlers ever to appear here. STANFORD LOSES TO UGLANS; 6 TO 0 By ROBERT MYERS LOS ANGELES, Oct. 29. (AP) The University of California at Los Angeles, staving off a last minute aerial attack that had the Bruin rooters hair standing on end, knock ed over Stanford for the first time since 1935 today by a score of 8 to 0 Eliminating the red-shlrted war riors from the north from vlrtuslly all considerstlon for Pacific coast conference chsmplonshlp hopes, the belligerent Bruins socked the Indlsns all over the place, but were unable :o score only once, on a second quar ter drive led by Halfback Kenny Washington and Fullback Butter Sutherland. 1 Stanford, grabbing the ball on a fumble, passed 31 yards In 45 sec onds before the final gun, the lsst pass by Fred Ledeboer to Johnny Brenner, a substitute halfback, bring ing the ball to the Brutn 10 as the game ended. , Johnny Ryland. slashing center for UCLA, turned In one of the most brilliant defensive games seen In Memorial Coliseum In ages. He brought roar after roar of applause from the Uclan "home coming day" throng of 37.000. Fighting for their coach. William H. Spaultllng. who flew to Melrose. Wis, two days ago at the death of his mother, the UCLANS turned a Stanford fumble Into a touchdown on a drive that begin on the Indians' J4-yard line. Sutherland crashed over after alternating with Washington In carrying the pigskin, Frawley missed the conversion. Closing lime for Too Late to C slfy Ads Is 1:30 p. m. Ore and Bullion Purchased LitMMd try Stat M Ctrtfofw WUUObRO BROS. SMELTING REFINING CO. vuxMi mum 3c.,3n rrancuc . Plnti South San Fmivwo eats on sale at BHOVtVS. Tel lot viiim im s r rt. ll i WITH MURDOCK MCE RAMSiARMORY FEATURE DOWN RENIATGHiMEDFORD SCORESiGOUGARS EKE AT BEND. 12-6 Tigers Come From Behind Lava Bears Score in First Quarter. Medford high's fighting Tigers, scoring twicer m the fourth quarter after trailing for three periods, com pletely avenged last year's crushing 32 to 7 defeat by whipping Bend high's Lava Bears at Bend Friday ntsht. 12 to 8, before 1500 spectators. Noted for their ability to come from behind and play their best ball In the "clutch," the Tigers lived up to that reputstlon by deadlocking the rough and tough ball game on the first play of the final period when Left Halfback Jack Bowman catapulted off tackle and raced 74 yarda to a touchdown. A few minutes later the Black Tornado had lta winning points, pro duced when Wild Bill Caples blasted through the line to block a Bend punt on the Bend 10 yard line, send ing the pigskin hurtling back across the goal line where Dale Howard, big tackle, rell on It for a touchdown. Bowman's great run which tied the score was made possible by the fine blocking of Quarterback Don Gilles pie, who took out the defensive Bend fullback, then went on to smack down a defensive halfback. Bowman, sprung through the line, cut back and outraced the remaining second ary defenders. The Lava Bears, which had lost only one' game previously this season, shot their bolt In the first quarter, and from then on were rocked back on their heels by the hard-hitting Medford forward wall. Redden tal lied the Bend touchdown after a sustained drive "of 60 yards, during which the Lava Bear backs made consistent yardage through Medford's first string tackles, BUI Clute end Al Barrow. Redden completed the march by plunging across from the five-yard line. It was a knock -down-and-drag-out ball game, one of the hardest-fought yet played by the Tigers. Numerous penalties were called against both teams, with the Tigers drawing no less than five 15-yarders. Those set backs halted several potential Med ford scoring marches. After the first quarter, the Tigers w-cre masters of the situation, but It wasn't until the last stanza that they were able to smash Into pay dirt. Medford made 10 first downs to seven for Bend. The Tigers rolled up 170 yards from rushing and 60 from passes for a total of 230 yards gained. Bend moved 100 yards on the ground and 20 through the air for a 120 yard total. Dale Howard and Alden Hlbert, substitute tackles, turned In out standing performances in the Tiger line, while Don Montelth played his ususl fine game at end and the other linemen produced notable exhibi tions. In the backfleld, Caples, Bow man and Shorty Campbell sparkled. Next Friday night. Medford meets the Eugene high Axmen at the stadium. lSS;k" r l GOODRICH ""81" I ' x Wd-4r I CAR HEATER 3 'kX'.fEsiX Vv yVTVl H,',' ht lor everyone ir. 3 rJU t 'N S 1 T0ur car "" or back! J, Vn.Qjjil NtVX I Twin ,CM "h6at condition' ! kL1 12 4 y" ear, oiv. quick flow I r ri r-, - ya wiih dw. sfyys i ;Un na on your own conv.ni.m iW n j rnr "Tt H hf Sij rVl . Ho red lap. or delays. flaljM'lll-l Lewis Super SERVICE STATION F0RDS0N SALES and SERVICE 8th and Front. We Never Close Phone 1300 California Battle FINISHiWIN OVER GONZAGA SONS SPOKANE. Wash, Oct. 20. (AP) The Cougars of Washington State eked out a 15 to IS victory over the Oonzaga university Bulldogs here today In a see-saw game which saw the state college come from be hind with sn eight-point drive In the flnsl period. The ' Cougars broke a four-year Oonzaga Jinx and Into the win col umns for the first time this year when a blocked punt rolled over the Gonnga goal line and was scored as a safety for W.S.C. rin. 7 t a at the half, the I W.S.C. squad went behind on the opening play oi tne second pcnuu when Tony Canadeo, sparkplug of the Bulldog attack took the klckoff behind his own goal and went 103 yards for a touchdown ' without a hand touching him. It was Canadeo's second 100-yard sprint for a count this year. Blocked punts, snd a touchdown run that was called back spelled tho doom of the Gonzagans. The first WS.C. touchdown was set up by a blocked punt and one Gonzaga goal march was called back on a holding penalty. The winter pear control commit tee established under the federal marketing agreement Is now func tioning with headquarters In roem 407, Liberty building at West Main and Grape streets, it was announced yesterday. Ralph O. Bardwell ls com mittee manager. Pull Information regarding proce dure, exemptions and other matters pertaining to the marketing agree ment may be procured from Mr. Bardwell at his Liberty building of fice. Committee officers are Capt, S. M Tuttle of Medford. chairman. B. A. Perham of Yslcima. first Tlce chair man. Ed?ar Jac&son of Santa Clara, second Tlce chairman. Ralph G. Bardwell of Medford, secretary, and D. R. Wood of Medford. treasurer. Members of the exemption com mittee In the Medford district are Captain Tuttle, with Raymond R. Reter as slternate, representing handlers, and Mr. Wood, with Chester Pitch as alternate, representing grow ers. Taxi polltnesB Decreed SALINAS. Cal. (UP) Politeness : from taxlcab drivers or revocation of license ls the edict of the city ! council here. I BOWLIMa KEEP FIT with the MneH sport of all. BOWL ING! 8 modern, up-to-datr altera it' healthful yet real Tun. Meet yow friends here. Medford Bowling Alleys 41S E. Mam near the Bridie Under management of Carl Sims PEAR COMMITTEE NOW FUNCTIONING i WE OUT MONMOUTH 6-0 DEFEAT Oregon Normal school'a glgantlo football machine scored 6 to 0 Yle tory ovor Southern Oregon Normal Friday night In Ashland In th SONS annual home-coming gmme. Bending substitute halfback Jim Da. vies over the goal line on an 'eight yard end run five mlnutea before the final gun. The scoring play was tat up when Monmouth's Mason Intercepted a SONS forward pass on the SONS 12 yard line. From there, the Wolves powered their way In three plays to the end zone. It was a hammer and tonga ball game, even up In almost every re spect. With the exception of Mon mouth's touchdown, the Wolves were held at bay by a fighting SONS line, while the nearest the Ashland teach ers came to pay dirt waa Just bs fore the first half ended. DlSordl shot a 27-yard forward paas to Bul lion, who made a great catch, to put the ball on Monmouth's 17-yard line, but the half-time gun popped before the SONS could run another play. Although the Wolvea gained seven first downs to six for the SONS, the Ashlanders rolled up 144 yards from scrimmage to 122 for the vis itors. Sixty-six of those SONS yarda came from passes, while Monmouth failed to gain through the air. CORVALLIS. Oct. 29. (APt Ore gon State Rooks and Portland uni versity Frosh fought to a 12-13 tie today. Gene Gray, second member of the Gray family to wear Oregon State livery, accounted for both Rook touchdowns with long accurate passes to McAllister late In the third quarter. Portland took an early lead after recovering a Rook fumble on the 10 yard line. Kore made the touchdown. The Pilot babes' second acore waa a product of the fourth quarter. A power drive endf?d with a scoring lateral pas. YEAR 'ROUND ALL-PURPOSE TOPCOAT Kidgora fabric ij a scientific blend of Kid Angora and Pure Virgin Wool. Warmth without weight Wind-proof Shower-proof Wrinkle-proof Balmaraan, Raglan and get-In Sleeve styles. All newest folor and pattern. 0 Vote rfcuir. i aa v-L-i-. - uv nurrcs. Mid in in, lty(i m ttlM Tutored ttit W1 m mtm with say ipsa,, nunt tultti nci win Imprns Sthirt mi P'Satl you. t Pew priest. J27 J32 J37 s42 PORTLAND FROSH TIE WITH ROOKS $285-0