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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1938)
fEDFORT) MATL THTBUyE. fEDFOTTD. rREnoy. SrTDAY. yOTTOrBEft 13. 1938 Staters Register First Victory in History Over Stanford, 6-0 T'AGT. SIX BEAVERS BATTER HECTIC WIN E Players In Near Fights Card Passes At Finish Suffer Penalty. CORVALLIS. Ore., Not. 12. (AP) Another football Jinx of the west wns toppled today when Oregon Bute college whipped Stanford 6-0 In savage game featured by several near clashes between opposing players. It whs OJ9.Cs first win over the Indians in history. Today's game was the 13th between them. The Orangemen of Oregon State snatched tho sole touchdown In the first quarter after their early 40-yard drive ended with Kissel burgh's fum ble on the Stanford 30. Stanford got one first down and after an exchange of punt Vic Koh- ler ran In between Stanford pass ing combination of Lcdcboer and Onllarneau, picked the ball out of the air and scampered 70 yards tor a touchdown. Not an Indian laid hand on him. Hutchlns' kick for point was blocked. From then, on the battle resolved ' Itself Into a bruising offensive by Stanford and an equally ferocious de fense by Oregon State. The wingback attack designed to moke 6 or 6 yards at a crack worked like maglo In mid-field but failed to hold up near scoring dirt, although the Indians in tho second period once penetrated to the Beaver B-yard line, Stanford sustained two second quarter drives for more than 40 yards and In the third quarter appeared hended for a. touchdown when they mado 40 yards in short takes. With Ledeboer, Oallarneau and Paul man carrying the ball, they reached the 10 yard line. There the Beavers rear ed up ftKftln, bonved the charging Cardinals back and took the ball on the 33. Stanford had a wide margin In yardage figures making 388 yards 711 on passes to 108 yards for Oregon Btnte. The Beavers mode nothing on pass- en. The Indians almost salvaged the (tamo In the dying minutes when Hamilton paased to Graff. Graff, tMkled, lnteraled to Gallarnctiu who wns on his way to glory when two Beavers overtook him on the Oregon State 33. All told It was good for 43 yn.ds but the 8 tan fords had to take 16 yard rebuff for clipping. The game ended as the Indiana complet ed another toss far short of the goal, Lineups: Stanford Oregon State Clarke LB Coons Zagar LT Hackenbmck Poole LCI Schulte Calvelll O Orr Donahue RG Hukhln Andereon RT Sterling fitojkovich RE Wondllck Paulina n QB Mercer ldeboer LH V. Kohler Cfnllnrnenu RH ' M. Kohlor Blundlee FB Klaselburgh Srore by periods: Stanford .0 0 0 Oregon State 0 0 0 00 0 Oregon State scoring: Touchdowns, Vic Kohler. MIGHTY PELICANS PLAY BEND A TIE (Hv The A.mi'latrrt Pres.) No ArmWIw marked Oregon high achool gridiron warfare yesterday, but Moral upsets were Jotted Into the core hooka as tram settled down to the final drive for the mythical state championship. Jefferson, Portland s defending champion, has virtually won thla year's tltlr hv defeating Franklin 8 to 0. It wan Franklin's first defeat. McUmihlln High o( Mllton-Frce-waur remained In the charrtplonshlp running with a 35 to is victory over Petnlleton Klamath Falls, the state', scoring lead-r, played llend to a 8-8 tie. North Bend's strong eleven smashed Meihfirid 30 to 8. Hood River trounced Mill Military 41 to 7. PntrrprlV! defeated Wallowa JB to 0 with one of four touchdowns gift because an melted Wallowa peetator Interfered with a runner. University iFugenel and Cottage drove. Independence and Dallas. Newherj and Me.Mlnnvllle. Astoria and Tillumok all played to aeorelev ties. ttoc-evelt downed Commerce In the Portland l-ague, 19 to 0. COASrsCHEDULE TO BE SPLIT, 1939 an FnANc iscoi Nov. ia t An The plavln M-hedltle for the 24. week Ifl.w season of the Pacific Coast tv,sc ball len,.ue will be drown up some time before the January IT meeting ,e league directors In Seattle. Director decided here to rejieat the Win program, with a 34-wcck atratght cheriHle followed by a poat aeuin , Plavoff of the first four teams for a ' WW. mo purie. The season datea were flxe.l at Ap-I l to Sept. 17. niree. tors snld the arhodule would he ad opted at Seattle In January. r.tpeet announr-mcnt of new 1 MimB'iera f r ine iNwramnito and Oakland ball clubs did not material- ,M" Football Scores By The Associated Press Kast Porliam 0. North Carolina 0, (tie) Carnegie Tech 31, Duqueane 0. Duke 31, Syracuse 0. Penn 7, Penn State 7, (tie). Amherst 41, Williams 0. Navy 14, Columbia 8. Cornell 14, Dartmouth 7. Rutgers fl, La Fayette 0. Oeorgetown 14. West Virginia 0. Harvard 40, Virginia 13. ' Army 34, Chattanooga 18. Princeton 30. Yale 7. George. Washington 0, Kansas T. VUlanova 20, Temple 7. Hartwlck 13, Arnold 0. Swarthmore 43, St. John's (Md.) 0. Maaaachusetta State 37, Renea- sclaer 0. Slippery Rock 14. Thlel IS. Union 31, Hamilton 0. Weeleyan 30, Rochester 13. Olenovllle Teachers 14, Fairmont (W. Vs.) Teacher 0. .Mill nest Ohio State 33, Illinois 14. Michigan State 30, Marquette 14. College of Pacific. 33, Chicago 0. Carroll 30, Klpon 6. Bradley Tech 31, Knox 0. Drake 37, Tulsa 7. DePaul 30, St. Louis B. Ball State 31, Earlham 0. DePauw 7, Wabash 0. Washington (St. Louis) 37, Butler 31. North Dakota State 13, South Da kota State 6. Notre Dame 10, Minnesota 0. Northwestern 0, Michigan 0, (tlo) Detroit Tech 44, Illinois College 7. Miami 37, Case 13. Adrian 7, St. Mary's (Mich.) (tlo). Centre 2B. Ohio Wesleynn 0. Pittsburgh IB, Nebraska 0. Dayton 13, Ohio U. 0. Marshall 37, Cincinnati B. Kansas State 13, Iowa State 13 (tie). Bowling dreen 28. Hiram 7. Transylvania 10, Rio Orande 8 Indians 7, Iowa 3. Augustana 14, Monmouth 7. Carleton 7, Cornell (Ia.) 0. Hnuth Georgia Tech 14, Alabama 14, (tie). uiemson 14. Kentucky 0. Centenary 10. Mississippi state 0. Mississippi 30, Sewanee 0. Tonneasee 14, Vanderbllt 0. Detroit 7. North Carolina State 0 Florida 21. Maryland 7. Virginia Military I. 10. Davidson 8. Washington Jt Lee 37. William A Mary 0. Randolph-Macon 0, Hampden Syd ney 7. South Carolina 27. Purman 0. Emory and Henry 24, High Point 0 Tulane 38. Georgia 8. Auburn 38, Louisiana State 8. Knillhu-est Southern Methodist U 10. Arkan sas 8. Texas A. ic M. 37, Rice 0 Oklahoma 21, Missouri 0. Texas Christian 28, Texaa 8. new Mexico U. 8. New Mexico State 2. Rocky Mountain Colorado 8, Brlgham Young 0. Denver 30, Hawaii 13. Utah IS, Colorado State 0. Wyoming 27. Utah State 12. Fnr West Washington 7, Southern Callfornli Wisconsin 14, u. o. L. A. 7. California 20. Oregon 0. Oregon State 8, Stanford 0. PORTLAND DOWNS 38-6 PORTLAND. Nov 12 I API lltm.- Ing straight power, the University of Portland smothered College of Puet Sound today. 38-8. In a football game fought through cold, anowv weather The final quarter, with Portland far in front, was cut from in m minutes by agreement of both coaches and to the delight of a nivering handful of tana who ner. alsted In sticking It out. Portland opened Its scoring spree n the first quarter, marching from Its own 40 to score In 12 playa with Joe F.nrler going across. Five playa Iter the start of the second period he rtlots drove to a score from their own 43 and a blocked punt provided ne third touchdown, Marty Oilagcn falling on the hall over the Pngt Sound goal. Portland scored twice more In the third period hut Puiict Sound matched the Pilots final last quarter touchdown when a pavs Interference and line plnva put the ball on the Portland 3, from whero Ramsey, right halfback, bucked over. EL TO CARNEGIE 21-0 PTTSDtTROII. N"r. 13 (API Csrnenie Tech. beaten only by Notre Pome, continued its bid for recount tlon In the nation's 1MB football scramble today by lacing Its down town rival, Duqueane, 310. Some :t0.iHH fun saw the Tartans, who de feated Pitt last Saturday, clmh the strel towns "h.-i-kyard" chAinplonhlp In Pitt stadium. RACING PAWTIK'KFTT. HI. Nor. 13 (AD I Sam Riddle s War Admiral captured the 10 iHHi-sudiM Ithotie Island han dicap at Nnrrniuisett tmrk today. ' Beating Mucho Ousto to the wire by I about two and a hif lengths Dusky ' K was third The time fur ti e mile and an cilith lfi3-- WEAK PUNTS GIVE OVER DUCKS, 20-0 Oregon Out gains Bears After Game Won Sten strom Shows Class. By RumpII Newlnnd BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 12. (AP) University of California's Bears, strik ing swiftly In the second and third periods, charged to a 20 to 0 football victory tddny over University of Ore gon's hard ffghtlnR Ducks. The Bears, apparently recovered from the shock of their beating by southern California a week ago, hit touchdown trail midway of the sec onrt period to go 38 yards for the first score. Fullback Anderson went over from the three-yard line. Immediately after the next klckoff, a weak Oregon punt gave the Calt- fornlans the ball 39 yards from scor Ing ground. On the first play, Bot- tari passed 14 yards to Smith and the lnttcr ran 23 yards for the touch down. Bottarl analn scored the point alter touchdown with a dropklck and the Bears left tho field at half time with a 14-0 lead. . Shortly after the third quartet opened, another poor punt by Oregon gave Cal I fornla I he ova 1 30 ya rds irom goal. One pass, good for threo yards, and the balance line smashes put the ball ovor. Halfback Smith rambling the last 13 yards on a cut back through right tackle. Although the statistics were fairly even, with Oregon outgalnlne Call fornla from scrimmage, some 23,000 fans left the stadium convinced the Benrs had shown decided superiority throughout. Before the first touchdown, the Bears once lost the ball on downs on Oregon's one-foot line, after ft 0.5-yard drive, then ml.wed a field goal try a dropklck by Bottarl from the 18 -yard marker. Oregon, beginning late In the third period, outplayed California for the balance of the game. The northerns made their lone scoring bid after taking the ball on their own 31-ynrd line Just before tho third quarter ended, From there they bucked and bat tered 66 yards to California's three- yard lino, early In the fourth, before being thrown for a loss and losing the lenther eight yards from the lest marker. California's second team onenod the game and were relieved by the varsity men after soven minutes of the second quarter. All the scoring was done by the first stringers. Rival fullbacks proved the top ground galnera, with California's An deraon, who started the gnme, ad- ancing 30 yards In 10 trtes and Oregon's Marshall stenstrom, a soph omore from Seattle, leading the visi on with 34 yards In la attempts. Stenstrom waa the only Oregonlnn who gained coiwUtently against the California defense. The lineups and summary: Oregon Pos. California Lance ....... I.E .... Scmmons Fiwkett LT. Stone niovanlnl La .. RM9o Samuelson .......... C Brrwlcn Waldrn RO Wtlson Jensen RT Lang Roglnato . RE A. Regtnnto Nllf.cn QB .... Wlnterbottom Oebhartlt LH Hrpo R. Smith RH Cornell Emmons FB F. Andemm Score by porloda: Oregon 0 0 0 ft 0 California 0 14 6 0 'JO ScorlnR: California touclulowns, O. Anderson ( sub for F. Anderson 1 ; Smith (sub for Cornell) a. Point after touchdown. Bottarl dropklck) 2. T preparations have been made for a nice ultemiitnce at the Medford Clun lvib practice shoot at the nlrport i I this mornlnc. Shooting will com mence nt 10:30 snd continue until 1:30. Both nvuUtlon and akeet tar gets w HI be shot. Next Sunday the club will augumie its first turkey shoot of the sea noii. Turkey, ducks, geese, chicken and grocer Irs will constitute the prires. The shooters will bo dlvldrd Into clauws according to their repec ttve abilities to break targets, thus giving the low average shooter the wune chance as the top men. During the jeaon the club will hold a special event for the news paper fraternity, awarding turkev and a second prlre to the pencil pusher. , This has been an annual event for several yewra. The public la invited to all shoot. A well-heated clubhouV s.wires comfortable en tertainment tot all. t'ruah how n Hwt EtrariNE, Nov. 13(API The I'nl vrrsity of Orem rrosh wound up their football senson yesterday with a IS to 7 victory over Orenon State's I Htvika. t'rew lienten Nov. 13 -AP "or.e crew, of sophomore. convAUJ.. Orve,on State Ped chiefly Tie bt three lenji'ha to the lmlerltv of Callfnia today in the first race of the season on the Willamette rler. Member of the 5 in til tret of in, tin mke witi. n of r skin l'hev lv;i ve a ncrr will eat them If they swear falWy. WEED CONQUERED BY TIGERS 20 TO 0 VIA AIR ATTACK Displaying an alert and tight pass defense, and taking to the air themselves, for two touchdowns, Medford high's Tigers smashed the Weed, Cal., high school Cougars In the annual Armistice day classic at the stadium Friday afternoon, 30 to 0. Over 4,000 spectators watched the Tigers score In the ftfst, second and fourth quarters, and hold the vaunted Cougar razzia "dazzle attack to a net Rain of 70 yards. Weed got no closer to the Medford goal line than the 48-yard line and most of the time was deep In Its own territory. It was the first defeat for the Callfornlans in two years and only the second in three seasons. The Cougars were no match for the Tigers, who piled up 204 yards on t he grou nd a nd 165 th rou g h the air for a total of 350 yards gained from scrimmage. Medford made 20 firsts downs to 7 for Weed. Eugene Miller, Mcdford's lanky left end, scored two touchdowns on forward passes from Shorty Camp- bell and Jack Bowman. BUI Caplea, quarterback, tallied the other Tiger six-pointer. The Tornado had its first touch down within six minutes of the opening gun. Al Barrow recovered a Weed fumble on Weed's 15-yard line and after Louie Thurman and Bowman each picked up five yards on line smashes, Caples bucked it across from the five-ynrd line on a fake spinner. He went through a nice hole over his own right guard. Bowman converted from placement. Franklin Jones, guard, recovererf" a Weed fumble for Medford on the Weed 34-yard line In the second period and the Tigers again swung into action. Shorty Campbell shot a forward paas to Bill Piche for 20 yards. After a couple of line plays. Campbell pitched a pass straight over the line which Miller grabbed on the goal line. A pass for the extra point waa Incomplete. bhortly before the third period rrKled, the Tigers maneuvered to their third touchdown. Caples start ed things off bv Intercentinor Weed pass on the Weed 25-yard line. Bowman and Stead carried the ball to the 10-yard stripe whero Bowman flrod a 10-yarder to Miller in the end zone. Wally Ert con verted with a placeklck. The Tigers were driving to another score when the game ended, the ball being on the Weed ll-yard marker. Although the Cougars were her alded as the passing threat. It was Medfond which displayed the aerial fireworks. The Tigers attempted 20 forward pa.tsos and completed 12 of tnem, while Weed was successful only four times out of 11 tries. Tho ga mo was ma rrcd by many fumbles by both teams, the players' hands apparently being too cold for comfort. Next Friday night the Tlera play Grants Pbjw here in a southern Ore Ron conference gnme. Lineups: Mem ford: Weed ' ... Lewis Shontz IJnvlllc Bellottl Miller LER Barrow m.LTR Brewer LOR . Prentice C.... Erl ROU Andreas Howard RTL Meltne Montelth BEL Kegg Caples QB Pnlletta s'ead RHL Fletcher nownian l.HR Ancelo !.. Thurman FB DeBortali Subs: Medford McCurly, piche. Campbell, Newlnnd. Jones, Cooper, CJleiwon. Chtlders, Clute, Hoffman, Wnllts, Hlbert. Young. Weed Shep pard. Catallano, Bervnrdl, Brunello. Toi-7,1. Scoring: Medford (touchdown), Mtller 2, Capias. Extra point. Bow man, Ert (placeklrksi. Score by periods: Mt'dfnrd 7 fl 7 0 20 Weed 0 0 0 0 -0 Officials: Rlney Cook, referee; Bernle Hughes, umpire: Ivan Har rlnfon. head linesman. Statistics: Medford Weed Ysrrts from rushing 204 i ards from passes 1!S5 Total yards gained 350 r'lrst downs (rushing) 11 First downs ( parses) - 0 30 30 13 S 35 Total first downs Panes attempted Pawn completed PftMrs Intercepted by , Yards lost penalties ... Average length punts , 30 Orimt Hi) niter l.oe WAU.A WAM.A. Nov. 13 (API Grant HtKh of Portland defeated the Whitman Freshmen 43 to 33 In a two and a half mile cross-country run through snow. 4 Mnnniiiiillt lletitcn MONMOUTH. Ore, Nov. 13 (APt The Central Washington Colleg of Education. Mvrlng on atraieht line bucks, defeated Oregon Normal, 13 to 8. In an Armistice Day foothall came. CKli.j time for nno Ute to Claa. tlfy ls It I :so p. m. BOWLING KEEP FIT! nlth the finel on of all. ROW I iSii n modern up-to-date tllea It health hil et real run Meet rout friends here. Medford Bowling Alleys Is K Main neat the tlrldie I'tulei mmnrritwnl of tart lm ft? oa TEXAS CHRISTIAN AND NOTRE DAI LEAD GRID RACE Duke's Goal Uncrossed Dartmouth Conquered By Cornell, Old Eli Downs Yale. By Herbert W. Barker NEW YORK. Nov. 13. ( (P) Texas Christian, Notre Dame, Tennessee, Duke and Oklahoma rolled majesti cally along the undefeated and un tied football trail today but the east lost 1U lsst major representative when Dartmouth's Indians were top. pled by Cornell. Texas Christian, ranked In the No I spot In the last Associated Prcai poll, rolled over the Texas Longhorns. 38-6, as Davcy O'Brien continued his amazing passing performance. Notre Dame, meanwhile, shelled Minnesota Into decisive defeat, 19-0.' with Soph omo Bob Sagcu throwing two tol'hdown passes. ! Tennessee, finishing strongly, vir- tnally clinched the Southeastern con ference title with a fourth-perlcd. two-touchdown barrage that sank .....Uv.w..L, uihb, me country s only major team with an uncrossed goal line, outclassed Syracuse from start to finish and won. 21-0. Okla homa, gaining full possession of the Big Six lead, ran up the same score on Missouri. Cornell's line and the smashing play of Brud Holland. all-America end. wero the main factora In the Big rted's 14-7 conquest of Dart mouth. A victory over Penn Thanks giving day will give Cornell the "Ivy league" crown. Along with Dukc'a crushing victory over SsTacuse. North Carolina could point with pride to Its scoreless draw with Fordham hut the east, on the whole, fared well In Interactional fames. Pitt burled Nebraska. 10-0: Harvard ran over Virginia. 40-13; George Washington nipped Kansip. 9-7: Western Maryland scored an unexpected triumph over Wske For est, 20-13. and Army rolled up an expected 34-13 count on Chattanooga. Princeton's Tigers furnished the biggest eastern surprise, stopping Yale, 20-7, mainly on Dave Allerdlro's superb passing. VUlanova. tied but unbeaten, halted Temple. 20-7, and Oeorgetown. playing too light a schedule to figure In national rank ings, remained unbeaten and untied by virtue of a 14-0 victory over West Virginia. Carnegie Tech, one of the section's really powerful squads, had no trouble with Dtiquesne, 21-0. and won the Pittsburgh city crown. Navy spotted Columbia touchdown and a field goal and then won. 14-9. while Penn and Penn state played to a 7-7 draw. Amherst won the "Little Three" title with a 41-0 mut or Williams. Auburn and Georgia Tech cave the deep south Its principal thrills. Au burn finally clicked and romped all over Louisiana State, 38-fl. Geomla Tech grabbed a two-touchdown lead over Alabama but the Crimson Tide. io win, rinally came throuch to tie at H-14. Tulanc routed Georgia, 2fl-6. and Mississippi Crushed Sewanee. 39-0. In nth-r southeastern games Florida stopped Maryland, 31-7. and Clemson won over Kentuckv. 14-0 Virginia Military retained an outr side chance to risure In the South ern conference title, apparently safe for Duke, by winning over Davidson. 19-6. North Carolina State lost an other Intersections! verdict, bowing. 7-0. to Detroit. With Minnesota and Wiseon5ln, the leaders, bot h enlaced outside t he conference, the Big Ten race re mained virtually unchanged whn two other leading contenders. Mich igan and Northwestern, played to a bitter 0-0 tie before a crowd of 80.000. Ohio State's Buckeyes had a field day at Illinois' expense, 32-14. while In diana pushed over Iowa, 7-3. Sta.:g's College of Pacific thoroughly battered , Chicago. 32-0. Iowa State's perfect record In and out. of the Big six went by the boards when the Cyclones barely got a 13.13 draw with Kansas Stntc. Pinget led a last-period rally that enabled Michigan State to win ovei Marquette. 30-14. While Trxrts Christian maintained Its Southwest conference lend. South em Methodist, also undefeated within the conference, bowled over Arkamns. ttt-6. Texas Ag3.es routed Rice. 37-0. Wisconsin scored a surprise 14-7 victory over IT. C. L. A., getting the Jump on the Bruins in the early ta;:es of the game. Utah remained on top of the Rocky Mountain Big Seven conference by a 13-0 conquest of Colorado State. Oen. Robert E. le started the first clnws In Journalism In the United Slates. Closing Ime for Too Lstt to Clea lfy Ads is 1:30 p ra. ' SUITS and TOP COATS to your measure $24.95 up VPSTAIRS UCLANS MISCUES GIVE WISCONSIIN 14 TO 7 TRIUMPH UOa ANOELE8, Nov. 12 (AP) Wisconsin, turning on two scoring blasts ol power behind a hard charg ing forward wall, dumped the Bruins of university of California at Los Angeles. 14 to 7. In an InWraectlonal grid battle today before 50.000 specta tors. Surrendering only In the fading momenta of the game to a desperate passing attack that brought the lone Bruin touchdown, Wisconsin turned two uclan mlscues Into touchdown drives and handed the locals their first hometown defeat of the season. In the first half both teams fail ed to capitalize on numerous fumbles and pass Interceptions. Then late In tho second period. Wisconsin grab bed one of the Uclan passes deep in Bruin territory. Jack Murray making the interception. The Badgers from the big ten. their Howie Weiss and hta backfleld mates stopped up to this point, began to click and went over the goal line In three plays. Weiss made nothing on tho first play, but Bill Schmttz, left halfback, broke through the right side of the Bruin lino and went 22 yards to the 7 on the next. Weiss cracked through the line for the rcore, and Hovland converted In the third quarter, after Ucla had gotten In a hole on u pass try ruled a fumble. Wslconsln started from the Bruin 38. Schmltz passed 12 yards to Cllle. Weiss picked up 7. York made 7 more and Oavrec. on a sneak, darted off his left end to the one. Two plays later York crashed off right end for the touchdown and Hovland again kicked the extra point. Throughout the game the Bruins running and passing star. Kenny Washington, was unable to get loose as the Bruin line crumpled before the Wisconsin forwards, but Kenny and quartoback Merle Hnrls started a spectacular passing attack with less than three mlnufes of the game to go. L BATTLE SOCKEYE T Probably the most seriously bitter wrestling feud ever to develop in Mod ford will be resumed Monday night In the armory, when Pete Bcl castro and Sckcye Jack McDonald collide in the one-hour moln event. It will be the third time they have clashed on the mat. In both pre vious matches the winner was Bel cast ro. However. McDonald has one victory over Belcnstro to his credit a boxing continent whloh pnrlpri In tho aArnnH ! r.mnri whrn ni sw,-. v, fists smashed apnlnst the Belcnstro chin. Sweet aa that victory waa, Mc- , Donald Is still unsatisfied because he I bri eves he can wallop pete at the ! Supple business. Willi MeDminlfl flrnH a-lfh flmhitlnn to prove he cim whip Pete at wrestl ing. end the Ma IUillnn aflame with desire to get revengo for that prize fight defeat, the match Is expected to prove one of the most sensational ever seen here. Red Lyons, the villainous Joplln Ohost who defeated McDonald last week, will claah with Frankle Schroll In the middle event. Cecil McGlll and Bobby Wngner open the progriim in a remotch from their great exhibition of legitimate tactics last Monday. Willamette Toppled By Pacific U., 6-0 SALEM, Nov. 12 (API A Wil lamette unlver.Mty fotball team which observers for the past week had nrc- dieted was ready to be toppled from Us loftv northwest conference perch lost to Pacific university 6 to 0 yes- terday Willamette, unbeaten In conference piny since 1P33. had plied up 36 con ,ecutive conference victories and four straight championships. Pacific asm red Itself of at least a tie for the conference crown In Playing Willamette Into the mud. The lone touchdown came late in thf second quarter when halfback Len Oilman pasted his way 80 yard-. Rncette made the touchdown. Football Team Crashes BFI.LK PLA1NE, Minn.. Nov. I lAP) A bus driver and a IwU.ill 1 ptnver were killed, a coach waa crlrl ea'.ly Injured, and a doren other mcmbera of the team were bruls-'d and cut when the bus carrying the Oustavus Adolphus collece teiun of St. Potcr crashed the rear of a truck early today. Cse Mall Tribune Want Ada GOAL KICK GIVES OVER TROY. 7 TO 6 By Prank O. Oorrle SEATTLE, Nov. 12. (AP) Thoso University of Washington Huskies, who couldn't beat up a sweat a few weeks ao, tripped up the mighty championship-bound Southern Call fornla football team 7-6 on a slip pery turf field here today before 18. COO fans. The Huskies triumph waa Just as convincing as It was amazing, and sent the Trojans spinning Into tie with the California Bears for the conference title. It waa Southern California's fifth successive loss to the Huskies. Tlie Trojans never did get their vaunted power Into high gear. Both touchdowns were made on long, electrifying dashes, the first t 52-yard ramble by Johnston, Wash ington halfback, in the" opening period : the other a 72-yard punt return by Lansdell, TJSC quarterback Washington's margin of victory came on a perfectly booted place-kick for the extra point by Jones. Southern California's attempt to tie the count fl7,zled when Phil Gr.s. par's effort from placement after Lansdcll's sensational run, skidded off one side of his foot, and was low and wide. After Jones split the uprights with what proved to be the winning point, Washington came over so close to two moro touchdowns In the first period. Immediately following the Wash ington klckoff, Lansdell tried a pass from the U. S. C. 32 but Marx raced In, deflected the heave upward, then picked It out of the air and set sail itoalwnrd. He brushed off a couple of tacklers but finally waa spilled on the U. S. C. four-yard line. ( The desperate Callfornlans dug In on their goal Hue. caused Gleason to fumble and lose four, held John ston to two, broke up" a pass and then burled Johnston's nose In the mud one yard short of a touchdown on the fourth down. The Huskies came rushing right back with aerial maneuvers, Gleason whipping passes to Marx and Newton to reach the U. S. C. 18, but the Trojans managed to hftlt the offen sive aaln, this time on their 14. After a minute of play In the second quarter. Lansdell hauled down a long punt from Johnston on the U. S. C. 28 and the Trojan quarter back pranced and squirmed through a maze of tncklcrs to reach the Husky iioal line 72 yards away.. Washington rolled up 10 first downs to U. S. C.'s three, rushed off 167 yards to 77 for the Trojans, and collected 45 more through the air while the Callfornlans failed to com plete a single pass. g rv ..f .22. ' t.MftJi AIR CORPS CHIEF MaJ. Gen. II. H. Arnold (above), aj successor to Ihe late Oscar Wrslnver who died In a plane crash, will have post four years ? A 'af if 4 s t -TV '1 J il WRESTLHNG MEDFORD ARMORY MONDAY NIGHT Jack McDonald Pete Belcastro Red Lyons Frankie Schroll Bobby Wagner Cecil McGM COUGARS DEFEAT MOSCOW. Idaho. Not. H. (AP) An Idaho mistake and a break gar the Washington State Cougar a U to 0 victory over ths Vandals today In the 44th annual, contest between the Palouse country rivals. A crowd of leas than 8.000. most of whom because of slippery roads missed the first half, watched the two teams slip and slide and fumble In six Inches of slush and snow which fell this morning on the frozen gridiron. The mistake, which gave W.S.O. Its first score, occurred with but two minutes to go In the first halt, when Rolse, Idaho signal caller, elected to pass on hie own 36-yard line. Bud Oigulere. substitute W.S.C. fullback, Intercepted the pass and ran for a touchdown without hind rance. Bowswell, substitute tackle, failed to convert. In the final quarter, the Cougars got their break and second score. End Johnny Klumb blocked Rolse's punt on the Idaho 41 and ran it back to the Idaho 13 where he was downed. In their only sustained ground play of the day, W-S.C.'a Emerson, substitute halfback, went over the line after W.B.C. had counted Ita first first-down of the game. Tragedy for the players In the llrst period as they slipped nd churned seeking a footing turned to comedy for " the spectators as every four or five playa brought lost yardage either through a fumble or a player's falling as he attempt ed to run. Idaho missed a chance to score in the fourth when a Vandal punt was downed on the W.S.C. one-yard line. But they couldn't put It over and W.S.C. kicked to safety. The Vandals dominated the field In the second half, but never could keep drives functioning Inside the Cougar 30-yard mark. HORSES ARE STILL fAP Feature Servlco) WASHINGTON. The mschlna enthusiast have heen rtrHI.Hno " t-...,...0 that the airplane, the machine gun, . me lans una gas will anve tne army horse to the military boneyard. But Just suggest to the arms ex perts that the cavalry Is on Its last legs and you'll get a polite horse laugh. And 32.000 horses and mules in the streamlined U. S. army of 165,000 men will Join In tho derisive chorus. The experts sav that a lmur .a there la movement In u-nr ann - ting there fustest with the mostest" la what counts, the superior mobil ity of cavalry to other ground forces In rough country will remain Indis pensable. They back up thla contention with lessons of the value of cavalry In the current Spanish and Slno-JBpanese conflict as well aa the World war. Marshal Poch. Kimrems rnmmanrfa. of the Allied troops which defeated me uerman army on the western front. aUd: 'The next war will begin as the last war ended with move ment." Men and munition. k. brought into battle, action v. ran. Idly with motor cara If networks of gooa rosas are available. But off the paved highways, there are woods, hills, streams, ravines and swamps to oppose the progress of motor ve hicles. And then the horse cornea In mignty nandyl Tho airplane, of counu. h. ly expanded the range and Increased the aneed of Srmitinff tmnn menta. Yet when visibility Is bad the cavalry comes to the rescue. Said General Von Seeckt. !at mm.n der-ln-chlef of the Ocrman army: ine aviator has come to aid not to replace the ravalrvm.n mnu reconnaissance la left to the cavalry man whose vision is not dimmed by clouded skies." The Lincoln highway, connecting Nrw York and San Francisco. Is 3,384 mllea long. Closing time for Too Lat to Clas sify Ads la 1 :30 p m. ti on sale t BRortva, Tel. 101 Hl.tSTIM S TAI L Tel tt