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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1939)
t PAGE TWO MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1939. Trojan Power Ends Staters Rose Bowl Dream, 1 9-7 -Oregon Wins NORTHERN ELEVEN I IN FIHALRALLY Troy Just Too Much For Cor vallis Sauad On Ground And In Air Score, 19-7 By Russell Newland. Portland, Nov. 4. (AP) Crashing, crushing giants, wear ing the maroon and gold of Southern California battered Oreeon State college Into sub mission, 19-7, today In a football classic that left the winners knocking at the Rose Bowl door as the losers tumbled into the oblivion of defeated teams. It was merely a case, of a good big team bucking up against a bigger and better gridiron op ponent. Trojan ground power, combined with a sharply dirk ing aerial attack, smashed down a stubborn Oregon State to ac count for two touchdowns in the second period and another In the third. The northern eleven, fighting desperately to stave off Its first Pacific Coast conference defeat came back with a last minute drive to count r touchdown and convert the kick. Southern California, undefeat ed In the conference champion ship race but tied In its opening game by Oregon, lined up on the dirt floor of Multnomah sta dium as the favorite. An over flow crowd of 32,611 left the enclosure convinced the odds of 2Vi to 1 were Justified. After a scoreless first quar ter, Southern California's vaunt ed power began to take shape. The Trojans had taken the ball on downs at Oregon State's 48 yard marker Just before they changed sides. Three plunges and three passes followed as the first score was posted on the board. Doyle Nave, one of a brilliant quarterbacklng Trojan trio, whipped the ball to Jim Slatter, substitute right half, from the 12-yard line. The lat ter stepped over the goal for the touchdown. The first half was approaching Its close when Coach Howard Jones hustled in another com bination of ends and backfleld stars. Quarterback Ambrose Schlndler was directing the at tack. . Forty-seven yards from scor ing turf, after 21 yards netted through straight ball packing, Schlndler tossed a pass to Al Krueger, sub left end, who ran 19 yards for the six-point tally. The pass and run was good for 47 yards and the total drive went for 74 yards. Thse strongest U.S.C. team In years continued to control the ball and dominate the play dur ing a third period that saw an other touchdown carved out of the bone-bruising dirt field. An Intercepted pass paved the way. Bob Robertson, starting right half, snatched the oval and was dropped on Oregon State's 23. Grenville Lnndsoll was master minding In the quarterbacklng role this time. He carried the ball for three yards, tossed to Left End Bill Fisk for 14 yards, added three more through tackle and hit the same hole for the finnl score. Bob DeLaucr, sub right tackle, failed on the point conversion, his second missed place-kick of three tries. Outfought and pushed around most of the game, the Beavers came back gamely to snatch a touchdown in the closing min utes of the encounter. From their own 36, they pounded 74 yards on two passes and two plunges, Gene Gray, sub quar terback, smacking left guard for the score from the three-yard line. To open the thrust, he completed a pass to Don Durden, sub right half, which netted ex actuly 57 yards, on the throw and run. Leonard Younce, right guard. converted the extra tally and Oregon State at least had man aged to score on a team which had blanked California, Illinois and Washington State on suc cessive Saturdays after tying Oregon 7-7 In the season's opener. Statistically, the contest was one-sided In Southern Califor nia's favor. The winners chalk ed up 12 first downs against 5 and totaled most of the yardage for the day. Lineups and summary: So. Cal. Ore. Stat Flsk LE Leovich Stoeckcr LT Scnrs Smith LG Schultz Dcmpsey C Tsoutsouvas Sohn R G Vounre Caspar RT Jclsma Winslow ....... R E I'ena Lansdell Q G. Peters Hoffman Lll V. Kohlcr Robertson R H M. Kohlcr Peoples ......f . Kisselbuinh I football (By The Associated Press) Cut Holy Crow 4, Providence 0. Notre Dame :4, Army 0. Fordham 13, Rice 7. Princeton 0, Harvard 6. Cornell 13, Columbia 7. Penn 13, Navy 6. Pittsburgh 13, Temple 7. Dartmouth 33, Yale 0. New York university 14, Lafayette 0. Michigan State 14, Syracuse 3. Duquesne 31, Marquette 13. Boston college 13, Auburn 7. Long Island U. 37. West Virginia Wesleyan fl. Brown 64 Tuft 7. Bucknell 33. Western Maryland 0. Georgetown 14, West Virginia 0. Penn State 13, Maryland 0. Manhattan 36, Boston university 0. Cathollo D. 13, Tulsa 7. Rutgers 33, New Hampshire 18. Connecticut 30. Lowell Textile 0. Bowdoln 7, Bates 0. Amherst IS, Mass. State 0. Union 37, Williams 7. St, Lawrence 3, Alfred 0. Trinity 48, Rochester 0. Hofstra 14, Ithaca 6. Springfield 19, Northeastern 13. Renssclner Poly 13, Vermont 8. Albright 38, Westchester (Pa.) Teachers 10. Juniata 30, Drexel 18. Johns Hopklna 18. Allegheny 7. Pennsylvania Military 10, St. Jo seph's 3. Lehlh 30, Haverford 13. Moravian 14, Upsala 14 (tie). -Gettysburg 7, Muhlenberg 0. 8warthmore 0, Hamilton 0. Franklin and Marshall 14, Clark son 13. Colby 7, Maine 8. Dickinson 13, Washington college 7. Bergen Junior 0, Green Mountain Junior 0 (tie). Mtddlebury 0. Hortwick 0 (tie). Lebanon Valley 46, Susquehanna 10. Ohio university 14. Morris Harvey 18. New Britain Conn. Teachers 39, Wagner 0. Panzer 13, Trenton (K.J.) Teachora 0. Rhode Island 7, Worcester Tech 7 (tie). Glenvllle 37, Fairmont 8. Kutztown Pa. Teachers 7, Blooms- burg Pa. Teachers 0. Grove City 10, Calknla Toachcrs 0. St. Francis (Pa.) 6, Mount St. Mary'a 8 (tie). Midwest Northwestern 14, Minnesota, 7. Illinois IS, Mlchl.n 7. Ohio State 34, Indiana 0. Iowa 4, Purdue 0. Missouri 37, Nebraska 13. VUlanova IS, Detroit 8. Lawrence Veen 34, Defiance 0. Michigan Normal 13, Wayne 8. Albion 30. Olivet 0. Washington university 13, Wash ington and Lee 8. Butler 63, Wabash 0. Dcpauw 74, Franklin 0. Ball State 14, Earham 13. Hanover 7, Evansvtlle 6. Toledo 30, John Carroll 0. Bowling Green 34, Kent 8tate 0. Capital 30, Heidelberg 0. Case 6. Baldwin-Wallace 0. Wooster 19, Oberlln Flndlay 28, Kenyon 0. Denlson 3, Wittenberg 0. Marietta 18, Otterbeln 0. Musklngtm 19, Ohio Northern 0. Western Reserve 33. Ohio Wesleyan 8. Hiram 36. Mont Union 13. Detroit Tech 19. Miami U. (0? 7. Akron 24. Washington and Jeffer son 32. Centre 6, Cincinnati university 8 (tie). Wichita 33. St. Benedict's 8. Emporia (Kas.) Teachers 69, Col lege of Emporia 7. . West Texas Teachers 7. Pittsburgh (Kas.) Teachers 0. Beloit 28, Grlnnell 10. Iowa Wesleyan 8, Upper Iowa 0. Adrian 28. St. Mary'a 0. Hillsdale 30, Hope 8. Michigan Tech 12. Grand Rapids 0. Western Kentucky Teachers 20. Western Mich. Teachers 14. Indiana State Teachers 7, Eastern Illinois Teachers 8. Rip 13. Lawrence 0. La Crosse Teachers 82, Stout 7. Whitewater Teachers 8. Central State Teachers 3. Carroll 36, Wheaton 7. Cornell (la.) 8. Knox 0. Illinois colleuo 20. Mllllkln 0. Concordia 7. St. 0:af 7 (tie). Carleton 14, Cos 6. St. John's 40, Hamllne 19. Moorhead Teachers 7, D u 1 u t h Teachers 6. Fort Hays State 48, Southwestern (Kas.) 8. Monmouth 38. Auguatana 6. St. Cloud Teachers 0. Mankato Teachers 0. Northern Illinois Teachers IS. Stuthern Illinois achfrs 0. Mi Kcndreo collide 14. Chllllcothe 13. Lake Forest 33. North Central 0. Parsons 13. Loras 3. New River Teachers 0. Winona Teachers 7. Western Union 30. Eastern Normal 0 Smith MlMlsslpH 14. Vanderbilt 7. Duke 7. Georgia Tech 8. South Carolina 8. Florida 0. Kentucky 7, Alabama 7 (lie). Tennessee 30. Louisiana State 0. Mississippi state 28, Birmingham Southern 0. Chtlttnnooga 10, 8ewanee 7. North Carolina 17, North Carolina State 0. Howard 7. Murray (Ky.) Teachers 0 Wake Forest 14. Marshall 13. Virginia Tech 30, Furman 7. Randolph Macon 26. Delaware 0. Virginia Military Institute 0, Rich mon 0 (tie). Eastern Kentucky Teachera S3. Union (Ky college 7. Virginia 47. Chicago 0. Davidson 22. The Citadel 14. Mississippi state Teachera 7, Lou isiana college 0. Medford'i Old (it and Finost Auio Paint Shop Daily's Auto Painting iiirh tt.irllrlt WALLOPS COUGARS! BY RECORD SCORE! WSC Loses 38 to 0 As Web feet Turn on Their Power Before A Small Throng. Hayward Field, Eugene, Ore., Nov. 4. (IP) Tex Oliver tossed three powerhouse University of Oregon football teams at Babe Hollingberry's Washington State Cougars here this afternoon to roll up a 38 to 0 Coast confer ence victory. The Webfoots scored In every period to post the most decisive victory in the 38-year-old ri valry. In the 18 previous games Oregon had never scored more than 13 points against W. S. C. A crowd of 4,200 skeptical fans saw an Oregon team, an gered by last week g loss to UCLA, win its third consecutive game from Pullman aggrega tions. It was the third confer ence triumDh of the season nnH followed defeats at the hands of Gonzaga and UCLA after tying USC and beating Stanford and California. While Oregon scored one touchdown in each the first and second and two in each of the third and fourth periods, Wash ington State threatened serious ly only once late in the third quarter when Bill Rewnll ,,h. stitute left half, intercepted a pass by Steve Anderson, sub left nait. The Cougars took the hull n the WSC 47 and ran to the Ore gon 27. Three plays put the ball one-half vard short r,t a t;t down on the 17 where Oregon neia lor downs. Oregon's dominance was fihnurn in the statistics. The WohfnM rolled up 275 yards from scrim mage against 60 for WSC and gleaned 179 through the air to 18 for the Cougars. Oregon made 22 first downs, 14 from scrimmage, seven from passes and one from penalty as against Washington State three first downs, two from scrimmage and one on a penalty. The lineups and summary: Wash. State Pns. nn Senuty LE .'H. Harris Camara LT Rtunrt Englmann LG Robertson Devine C Cadenasso Gigulere Rfi Roswell RT Jensen Brown RE Resinatn Greeley QB Donovan Emerson LH Berry Ross RH Smith R- Bantz F B Emmons Score by periods: Wash. State 0 0 0 00 Oregon 8 6 14 1238 Oregon scoring: Touchdowns, Berry. Emmons. Smith Anrfnr. son (sub for Berry), Haliskl (sub tor uonovan), Alpaugh (sub for Smith); point from try after touchdown, Anderson 2 (place kicks). Georgetown (Ky.) 14. Louisville 7. Southwestern (La.) 12. Louisiana Tech 8. Emory and Henry 33, Hlwassee 8. Southwest Texas A. & M. 27. Arkansas 0. and that more should be placed Dsyior J7, Texas Christian 0. Soxithern Methodist 10. Texas 0. Oklahoma J8. Iowa State 6. Oklahoma A. & M. 20. New Mexico AjWles 0. Missouri Mines 28. Arkansas A. 4 M. 13. Rocky Monntutna Colorado 31, Utah 14. HrlRham Young 21. Denver 18. Idaho 19, Utah State 7. Colorado state 22, Wyoming 0. Orepon tilth Scho. ls The Dalles 13, Mllton-Freewater 7. Helix 14, Pilot Rock 0. Lexington 36, lone 36 (tie). Tillamook 7. Chemawa 6. Wallowa 22. Unton 0. Monmouth 0, Amity 13. Parma. Idaho 0: Vyssa 38. Mllwaukle 3. Corvallts 8. Rainier 2S. Scappoose 0. Sheridan 20. St. Maris 0. Bend 13. Pendleton 8. Astoria 13. Salem 8. Sweet Home 36, Dallas 7. Toledo 31. Philomath 0. Eureka. Calif. 13, Klamath Falls 34. Oranta Pass 13. Central Point 8. Nampa Idaho 33. La Grande 0. In France the poor are as sisted partly through public "bureaux do bienfaisance" and partly by private and rcclesias ileal charity. ARTHRITIS II rrllfved by nm hav Or, runttliMtliin. Sloniiich rronhlr nnriimuiiftnt. rnmime i run nit, i urr W ) tnimrrn t ma "filing. AMhmn, Frmrtir a Jw 1 - . Trim hit?. PHm. Ihronlr I WJT (f 7k Vfl InIIMI; llmrl, l ' FlUfU Lunr l,,,HMl- lf""' will ortrn He vou c. n CM AN t'e ronMiltnllnn. in-u-i s pm Chan & Mun Tile ed OREGONjlLLINOIS UPSETSjTIGERS CONQUER BEATEN BY IOWA (continued irum page one) The mountain states Big Seven race hlew up with a, terrific bang as Utah and Denver both were beaten. Utah bowed to reviving Colorado, 31-14, and Denver was nosed out 31-18 by Brlgham Young. Colorado State stopped Wyoming, 32-0. Utah State lost a non-conference battle to Idaho, 107. Tennessee, first-ranking' team In the Associated Press poll for the last two weeks, stopped Louisiana State's passing team, Leo Bird and Ken Kavanaugn, cold In romping to a 20-0 triumph that left the Vol unteera undefeated, untied and un scored upon. A crowd of 75.000 lammed the Yankee stadium and watched un beaten, untied Notre Dame win handily from Army, 14-0 on touch downs by Harry Stevenson and Steve Bargarus, the latter running 45 yards after Intercepting a pass. Oklahoma, tied by Southern Meth odist but unbeaten, crushed Iowa State, 38-6, to take . nother atrlde toward a second straight Big Six title. Cornell, obviously far off the form the Big Red showed last week in whipping Ohio state, had to block two kicks In order to get past stubborn Columbia, 13-7. The Texas Aggies, Southwest Conference power, rolled up an Impressive 27-0 pnnnt on Arkansas. The east, once more, held an edge In Intersectlonal warfare. As against the Army defeat and Syracuse's 14-3 beating by Michigan State, the At lantic seaboard could point to Ford ham's 13-7 defeat of Rice- nun .,. 31-13 conquest of Marquette after spotting the Milwaukee outfit two first period touchdowns: Boston col lege's sensational 13-7 victory over Auburn on a fourth-period passing barraRe: Vlllanova's 13-6 defeat of Detroit; Penn State's 12-n t.rimnh over Maryland, and Catholic's 13-7 victory over Tulsa. Of these Du quesne and Catholic both boast un- ueuuui, untied records. The Southern conference h,i a pair of victories as Virginia routed hapless Chicago. 47-0. and Wnfcn RVr- ; est won a narrow 14-13 decision over marsnan or the Buckeye conference. Washington 8c Lee, however, was spilled by Washington TTnlvru,. St. Louis,. 13-6. Among the Iw lesoi mouth walloped Yale In shocking style, 33-0, Princeton outpointed Har- vru, -o. and Ponn tripped Navy. 13-6. Pitt broke a two-game losing streak at Temnle's iot while New York university halted ,-yene, ii-v. ueorgetown remained unbeaten by stopping West Virginia, 14-0, and SO did RlltBiM-R lory over New Hampshire. iveniucky, beaten 16 consecutive tlmea bv Alabama. Crimson Tldo this time but had to oe content with a 7-7 draw. Missis sippi won over Vanderbilt. 14-7, in another. Duke, Southern conference power. Just made the grode against v-reorgia Teen, 7-6 and South Caro lina achieved a real unset in a o ' victory over Florida. j worth Carolina's unbeaten Tar-, heels ran ud an kim-iv iri nn srn.K i Carolina State and enftstnH tn iri In the leading Southern conference ."iie. vuvtinia Teen upset Furman. 20-7: Davidson whipped Citadel, 32 14, and Richmond and Virginia Mil itary played a scoreless tie. Southern Methodist was too strong, defensively, for Texas and earned a 10-0 decision. Baylor ran up a 27-0 count on oft-beaten Texas Christian SMALT CROWD SEE I0AH0JAKE WIN Moscow, Idaho, Nov. 4. W) The University of Idaho Van dals turned in their best game of the year today before the smallest home crowd in many seasons, trouncing Utah State 19 to 7 on thrusts in the second third and fourth quarters. Barely 2,500 sat through a ragged game that lagged badly until Idaho, after holding Utah State for downs a yard from the payoff stripe, blasted into ! the lead on passes by Halfback Earl Acuff just before the half time gun. I Salem Loses Astoria. Nov. 4 (.V) Astoria ; perpetrated a major upset In i Oregon school football last night when the much-defeated Fisher men trimmed Salem, 12 to 8. Budge Wins j Portland. Nov. 4 (IP) Don Budge of Oakland, national pro tennis champ, won an impromp tu two-set match from Ehvood Cooke of Portland vesterdav, 6-2, 6-3. herbal rrnintv Do tod rnuch. Illch It I nod V. v HlmMrr Klilnrv ffv? T mief nhrn other fall ft M. NO Chan H.1 f Msln E OFFICIALS' HELP Axmen Toppled 20 to 6 Locals Penalized as Much As Over-Touted Foes Gain By Billy Hulen Eugene, Nov. 4. (Spl) Be tween penalties to the tune of 95 yards, for everything from alleged unsportsmanlike conduct to failing to apologize after a tackle, apparently, Medford's Black Tornado roared to three touchdowns and a 20 to 8 con quest of the Eugene high Axmen here Friday night before 4,000 spectators. The victory for Medford, gained after probably the most bitterly-fought battle of the past three years, catapulted the tigers Into a commanding posi tion as the state's number one prep grid machine. It was the first defeat suffered by Eugene, in Oregon, this year and was Medford's sixth 1939 game with out a loss. The Tornado, blowing full force for perhaps the first time this season, smashed over touch downs in the first, second and fourth quarters. Billy Piche, right halfback, tallied twice, and Ike Orr, sophomore sub full back, got the other. But for the nine penalties called on the bat tling Tigers the score mignt have been two touchdowns sweeter. Eugene's lone tally came In the second period, and It was aided by one of those 15-yard penalties against the Medfords assertedly for unsportsman like conduct (talking back to the referee). This penalty placed the ball on Medford's 27-yard line, from where Bill Shear belted over Medford's left tackle for 14 yards and a first down on the Tiger 13. From this point Shear and Pierce carried it to the one-foot line and Shear hit over left guard for the touchdown. That was the sum total of the Axmen scoring potency, as the Tiger line broke through time after time to smear the Eugene plays for substantial losses or hold the Eugene laddies at the line of scrimmage. The rampaging Tigers march ed 70 yards for their first score, putting together three first downs and winding up with Piche hauling in a 10-yard pass I from Bob Newland in the right flat and racing 20 more yards for the touchdown. It was a great run Piche made he dodged four Eugene tacklers and crossed the goal line stand ing up. A 17-yard run by John Saulsberry and several shorter gains by the same man set up the play. Piche converted with a placekick. After Eugene collected its touchdown in the second quar ter, making the score 7 to 6, Medford, the Tigers came back for another six-pointer to leave the field at halftime with a 13 to 6 lead. A booming 47-yard punt by Newland led up to the Tiger score, for on the return kick Eugene's Shear, booting from his own two-yard line, hoisted one out of bounds on the Eu-i gene 12 good for only 10 ' yards. Newland went eight on a ' spinner, but Medford was pen-1 alized 15 yards for alleged hold ing. Not to be denied, Newland made eight again at right tackle, j ana urr punched tor six over right guard and a touchdown. A pass from Piche to Leonard was incomplete for the extra point. The third heat was scoreless and uneventful, but in the final quarter Medford generated an other 70-yard touchdown drive. After Shear punted to Medford's 30, Orr hammered through cen ter for 12 yards, then picked up 10 more yards on straight line bucks. From the Eugene 45-yard line occurred the most spectacular play of the game. Piche, taking a deep reverse from Newland. WRESTLING MEDFORD ARMORY Pete Belcastro Dude Chick King Kong Clayton s Hans Schulz Ernie Piluso vs. Di'ke Pettigrove Eugene Statistics Medford Eugene Ydg. (scrimmage) 163 67 Ydg. (passes) 48 38 Total yardage 310 88 1st downs (scrimmage).. 7 7 1st downs (passes) - I 1 1st downs (penalties).. 0 1 Total 1st downs. 8 S Passes attempted .. 7 11 Passes completed 3 3 Passes Intercepted by.. 3 1 Number of punts 5 6 Av. length punts 36 87.3 Yds lost penalties 95 10 turned his own left end and raced the 45 yards into footba'l heaven. A terrific block on the Eugene safety man by Dale Howard paved the way, and Piche tallied on his feet, with out a hand molesting him. The fourth quarter got posi tively violent, as both clubs dug in and hammered away. The officials time and again warned the pugnacious players and more than once opposing grld ders squared off only to be sep arated by teammates and the white-jersied "blind Thomases." After the game Russ Acheson, Medford assistant coach and Fritz Cramer, Eugene head man, bristled at each other, but no damage was done. All in all it was a large evening. The Tigers led by a wide mar gin in yards gained from scrim mage, piling up 162 net to Eu gene's 51. Medford completed three passes out of seven at tempts for 48 yards, and the Axmen hit two out of 11 for 39 yards. Lineups and summary: Medford: Eugene: Moyer ., REL Skirvin Clute RTL.... Blatehley Howard RGL Fendell H. Thurman ....C Dawson Hibbert LGR Ball Barrow LTR Skillern Winter LER Stewart L. Thurman ....QB Skeens Newland ..LHR Walker Piche RHL Pierce Saulsberry FB Shear Subs: Medford, Gunnette, Mil ler, Wall, Wallis, James, Orr; Eugene, Smith, Carter, Faubion, Peckham. Scoring: Medford (touch downs), Piche 2,i Orr; Eugene, Shear. Points after touchdown, Piche 2 (placekicks). Officials: Lee Webber, ref eree; Skeet Manerude, umpire; Al Dietz, head linesman. irn niiiuiiinr L Seattle, Nov. 4 (IP) A heav ier University of Washington eleven wore down a game gang of Grizzlies from Montana Uni versity today to score a 9 to 0 victory before a crowd of 16.000 fans which included thousands of "kids" admitted free. Washington was unable to score until the second quarter and had to use its regulars most of the way, although it was a couple of substitutes who made the scores. Elmer Berg, a quarterback, subbed for a guard in the sec ond period to boot a field goal on fourth down after the Husk ies had reached an impasse at the Montana 8-yard line. Berg place kicked from the 17-yard j mark. Washington marched 63 yards in the final quarter for its touch-1 down. Balked at fourth down on the Montana 14-yard line. Full back Don Jones whirled a clever shovel pass to substitute End Earl Younglove who twisted his way over the Montana left guard for 14 yards to score standing up. Jones' attempt at the extra point was low and wide. Washington missed three touchdown opportunities, being halted on the eight and 13-yard lines in the first half and at the 11 yard line in the third quarter. Card Ace Wins Palo Alto, Calif., Nov. 4 UP) Benjamin Eastman, former Stanford University track star who still holds several worlds records for middle distance run ning events, was honeymooning today witli his bride, the former Miss Alice Edwina Ellis of Los Altos, Calif. Use Msll moune want ads. Monday night, 8:00 p. m. VAI.rNTINr.K CAFF. Tel lit Stall on tale at HHOHVS. lei. IDl Ladlr' Mtht aMMBMHBlir1' I I Los Angeles, Nov. 4. (IP) , The University of California at Los Angeles continued along the victory trail today, walloping the oft-beaten but proud Golden Bears of California 20 to 7, be fore a "home coming day" throng of 55,000. Once again it was the spec tacular running and passing of Kenny Washington, negro half back, who carried the blue and gold of the Uclans to victory and kept them in the undefeated ranks of the Pacific Coast con ference. The lanky Washington scored one touchdown on a brilliant 35-yard end run and fired two touchdown passes to his team mates for the other two Bruin tallies. It was the worst licking U. C. L. A. has been able to hand its "cousins" from the Berkeley campus in the brief span of their grid relations. With Washington's backfield sidekick, Jackie Robinson, sit ting on the sidelines, where he stayed all afternoon, Kenny soon tied the score at 7-7. In the second quarter U. C. L. A. went into the lead, march ing 80 yards for the tally. Washington added one more touchdown strike in the third. U.C.L.A. made 15 first downs to California's nine, and of the 219 yards gained by rushing, Washington accounted for 147 yards. He carried the ball 22 times for an average of better than six yards per crack. RENEW Hie FEUD IN What has nroved. In rerent years, as probably the most bit ter grappling feud In these parts win oe renewed Monday night in the armory when Cowboy Dude Chick, airplane-spinning ex-junior heavyweight champ ion, collides with Pete Belcastro in the main event of a dandy ladies nieht m-ouram startlna at 8 o'clock, instead of 8:30. Chick and Belcastro, deadly enemies and as widely separated in their grappling tactics as any two wrestlers could be. will or, for one hour or until one or the other garners two falls. Chick, a clean matman, will bring into play his lariat spin and other legitimate maneuvers against eeicastro s off -color tactics. Pete is confident of Victorv fnllnwlnu his defeat of Hans Schulz last Monday. For the exDected crowd of ladies nitditers. Promo ter Lillard has lined up a fine preliminary card to the main event. King Kong Clayton, flashy Negro cleanie, will tangle with Schulz in the middle event, ana uuKe Pettigrove will meet Ernie Piluso, Pacific Coast light heavyweiaht chamninn in' ih opener. Both these matches will be six rounders, or the best two out of three falls. San Jose Tramples Hopes of Willamette Salem, Nov. 4 (IP) San Jose State remained unbeaten last night by whipping Willamette, 15-0. Willamette made a valiant de fensive fight in the first half and held the visitors scoreless but San Jose broke the Ice in the third period. A blocked punt gave the Spartans the ball on the Willamette 10 yard line and Cook, guard, booted a field goal. Cse Msll moune want ada. KEATING PROFITS PAYABLE To YOU YOU SAVE IF YOU BURN . DRY SLABVOOD FACTORY BLOCKS BUNDLED KINDLING Timbe?PR0WJS Company Phone " CAROS HO MATCH Palo Alto, Calif., Nov. 4 lip, Stanford University's new fancy pants didn't help a bit and Santa Clara University won their football battle here today 27 to 7. The bright silver britches were the only flashy thing about the performance of the Stanford Indians who have lost four games and tied one. Santa Clara's net yardage gain in the game was 225 yards compared with 11 yards for Stanford. Santa Clara made two touch downs in the second period and two in the last. Stanford's strong moment came In the third per. iod. Santa Clara worked to with in 2 yards of the Stanford goal line at the end of the first quar ter and three plays later Full, back Jack Roche scored stand, ing up and Half Back James Johnson converted to make the score Santa Slara 7, Stanford 0. BEND FLARES OP, Bend, Nov. 4 (IP) The twice-defeated Bend Lava Bears ' flashed back into early season form last night to trim Pendle ton High School's football team 13 to 6. Bend led 13 to 0 until near the end of the fourth period when Ferneau, backfield star, fumbled and Pendleton recov ered on the Bend five-yard line. Duncan, Buckaroo halfback, ran the end for a touchdown. Jim Byers made Bend's scores. The Bears ran up 324 yards from scrimmage and passes compared with 82 for Pendle ton and gained 18 first downs against five for the losers. Use Man Tribune wanfads. KEEP WAKM IN DOWN PAJAMAS Face chilly mornings with a smile by wearing B.V. D.'i handsome new "Down's" pajamasl Even though the temperature is dropping down to toro, you'll be warm and com fortable. S- S5 s CLOTHES SHOP 42 South Central DOWNS PENDLETON I f lirtf s i