Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1939)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, SUXDY, NOVEMBER 19, 1939. Staters Stage Last Half Rally to Crush California Bears 21 to 0 PAGE TWO FIRST HALF, FINISH Touchdown Drive in Second Half Settles Issue Olson And Kisselburgh Star. Bell Field, CorvalHs, Ore., Nov. 18. (P) Oregon State college put on a savage second half drive to route the Califor nia Bears 21 to 0 today, thereby remaining theoretically in the running for Rose Bowl honors should it win from UCLA next week and should someone knock off unbeaten U.S.C. The Staters had a terrible time getting started before a home coming crowd of 9000. They lost the ball three times on fumbles and once on a blocked kick in the first half. It was a different story In the second half and the determined Beavers drove over one touch down midway in the third per iod and added two more in the fourth. California took advantage J all early game breaks but could not consistently penetrate the Beaver defense. The Bears marched to the one and a half yard line a few minutes after the kickoff after Bob Reinhard recovered Vic Kohler's fumble on the O.S.C. 20 Getting the fumblitis out of their systems in the second half the Staters flashed a great of fensive which soon settled the issue. Poor punting by Cliff Perry, California, started O. S. C. to ward its first touchdown from California's 31. Jim Kissel burgh, who played his best game of the year for the Beavers, made four yards and reversed to M. Kohlcr for 9 and a first down on the 18. Kisselburgh and Bob Olson in three plays made it first on the five from where Kisselburgh scored over left tackle on the third play. The Beavers soon threatened again after Olson completed a long pass from M. Kohler to Cal's 19. There California's line braced and they took over on downs. A short punt set up the second touchdown early in the fourth period when Oregon State started a drive from its own 40 and made a first down on the 27. After an incomplete pass, the first of the day for the Staters, Ken Dow, Kisselburgh's replacement, drove to the 15. Morrie Kohler on a reverse ran to the two and a half yard line but it took four plays before Vic Kohler scored over left tackle. Tony Firpo, California, re turned the next kickoff to the 18 and the Bears suffered a clipping penalty before Firpo's punt went out on his own 38. A pass gave the Staters a first down on the 27 from where Ken Dow blasted through the line, picked up some interfer ence and scored standing up. Leonard Younce made all the conversions from placement. In a last ditch passing attack against the Beaver third team, California rolled up a flock of first downs, driving to the Ore gon State 10 but the threat stopped when Gene Gray inter cepted a pass behind the Ore gon State goal and ran it out to the 17. It was Oregon State's first victory over California in Cor valHs and the first In history aince i:uo. The lineups and summary: California Oregon State Mnthpson ... LE.....' Lcovlch Reinhard ... LT.... Hackcnbruck Plasch LG Schultz Rough C Tsoutsouvas uononue RG Younce Artoe RT Jelsma Semmens ....RE. .... Pcna Whalen Q G. Peters Terry I.H Olson I'Utes RH M. Kohlcr Rlcyuary ...... F Kisselburgh Score by periods: California ...0 0 0 0 0 Oregon State ....0 0 7 1421 Orecon State scoring: Touch downs, Kisselburgh. Dow (Sub stitute for Kisselburgh). Vic Kohler (substitute for Olson); Point from try after touchdown' Younce 3 (place kicks). California substitutions: Ends Stafflcr, Dunn. J. Lewis Am. ling; Tackles Holmes, Andcr-1 largest in Memorial field his lon. Guards McDanlel, Her-! ,or'. rero, Folmer: Centers Saner: i The powerful Ithacans spread Backs Franklin, Flrpo, El- their scoring over every period more, Hohrrg, Youdall. , and even with third stringers in Oret-nn State: Ends Ham- action kept their rivals under men Harris, N. Peters; Tackles control until the final quarter. 7-J, 1 Y r ' a ,","' S,or,lnK' wlu'n a R replacement Czech Guards Howard Kno.l ntwfm ..in. . . iish- ri,.r.i ; " " , .....31.11, om ix'ununii, uuraan, Dow. v. Kohlcr, Gray, Sommerville, Busch. Closing time for loo Late to du ally Ads is rao p m 11" UaU Irll'UuJ nam ad. O.S.C. Statistics CorvalUi, Ore.. Nov. I8.(AP) Statistics of the Oregon filate Callfornla football game: Oregon California State Plret downs. - 12 14 Yards gained by rushing (net) 40 198 Forward paaei attempted 31 ft Forward passes completed 10 4 Yards gained by forward passes 130 80 Yards lost attempted forward paaaea 38 8 Forward passes inter cepted by . , 0 1 Yards gained, run-back Intercepted passes 0 17 Punting average (from scrimmage) 38.1 88.3 'Total yards kicks returned M 80 Opponents fumbles recovered - 4 0 Yards lost by . penalties - 4S II Includm, punts and kickoff. E TO BY DEFEAT A Palo Alto, Cal., Nov. 18. (P) Washington State college show ed a brief spark of life in the first period of its Pacific Coat conference football game with the Stanford Indians today to put over a touchdown and con version to win, 7 to 0. Washington State's score cli maxed a 71-yard drive, the only sustained advance during the en tire game. Starting from its own 29 the Cougars drove through the Indian guards and tackles for healthy chunks of yardage and pushed over the score in 15 plays. Fullback Renfro hit left guard for the touchdown from the one yard Una. Brown, end, kicked the extra point. Stanford, on its first series of downs, gave fans hopes that at last they might get the foot ball victory that has eluded them all season. Left H.ilfback Kmctovlc reeled off 25 yards on the first play to put the ball on the Washington State 36 Then Stanford started losing yardage. Four plays later tne Cougars took over on downs on their own 29 and started off on their touchdown march. Both teams moved Into scor ing territory several times, bul each time their attacks bogged down and the backs began run ning the wrong way. UCLANS HELD TO TIE BYBRONCOS San Francisco, Nov. 18. (,V It was a Mexican standoff to day in Los Angeles as U.C.L.A. and Santa Clara battled to a scoreless tie before 50,000 spec tators in the feature football clash of the far west. The even strencth of the twn teams made it a slow struggle for 59 minutes, but the last 60 seconds were tingled with dra ma as the Bruins reached the Santa Clara four, were penal ized to the 20, then failed in a field goal try in the last five seconds. Santa Clara went on the field with victories over Purdue and Michigan State to Its credit tr, deadlock the Bruins, co-leaders of the Pacific coast conference race with Southern California Although the result had no bearing on the Rose Bowl choice or the Pacific Coast conference race, it showed the strength of U.C.L.A., which meets U S C on Dec. 9. CORffllOPS TH. 35-6 Hanover. N. H., Nov. 18. P Cornell ran and passed for more than a quarter mile as it pro tected Its clean gridiron slate bv overwhelming the Dartmouth Incians 35-8 todav before n overflow crowd nf mono ik. . .... '. - :J?",U i .u nuea good for a first aown on the seven yard line. Only one of the other 11 passes the desperate Indians at tempted was completed and the first of the five that were Inter cepted started the Ithncans on their fust tuuclutuuu march. F to doi MINNESOTA, 13-9 (continued irum page one) Cornell, unbeaten and untied, , threw its full strength against Dartmouth in an important Ivy ; league struggle and swamped the Indians under a 36 6 count. j Princeton, beaten only by Cor nell, had to push over two fourth-quarter touchdowns to stop zaie, I Tavdi A an4 f hnsdlnfl n perfect record, moved rteadily aneaa towara me ooutnwest con- 19-0, as Holy Cross, one of the easts few strong outfits, ram med Carnegie Tech, IB 0, with joe usmansKi scoring two touch downs. Ohio State which, like Prince ton has bowed onlv to Cornell found Illinois an easy victim, 21-0. and thus cllnrhpH r.i lpnct a share of the Big Ten title. Notre Dome s second and third stringers led the Irish to a 7-0 conquest of Northwestern. One of the greatest personal duels of the rlav nrrnrraH at Philadelphia where Tom Har mon paced Michigan to a 19-17 victory over Penn, led by Francis Reaean. Tho Met enf. fered still more grief as Detroit buried Manhattan under a 36 13 count and Kentucky took West Virginia over the jumps, 13-6. Marquette won a spec tacular 22-19 decision over Texas Tech. Fordham, Catholic and George Washington were the east's lone winners. Fordham shellacked oft-beaten St. Mary's (Cal.;, 13 0, Catholic buried Loyola (New Orleans), 34-0, and George Wash ington whipped Kansas, 13-6. In the east, Georgetown com pleted Its second successive sea son without defeat by taking advantage of nnnnrhinill o.l bowling over New York uni versity, 14-0. Syracuse sprang an upset in taking Colgate for a nne, y-u, while Nick Kasca's broken-field runnlnp onrrirH vn. lanova to a 12-6 decision over Temple. Army had to come from behind to tie Penn State, 11-14. Georgia Tech remained un beaten in the Southeastern con ference, nipping Alabama, 6-0 while Auburn, finally hitting the form expected of it in pre-seasrn forecasts, buried Louisiana State, 21-7. Georgia and Sewanee gave the Southeastern group a pair of victories over Southern confer ence rivals. Georgia whipped South Gnrollna, 33-7, and Se wanee topped Citadel, 34-7. In Southern conference games Virginia Military topped Mary land, 13-0; William & Mary coiv quercd Washington & Lee, 18 14, and North Carolina State surprised Furman, 12-7. Vir ginia Tech took non-conference Virginia into camp, 13-0. Wisconsin's Badgers almost won their first Big Ten decision but Purdue rallied in the fourth quarter to gain a 7-7 draw. In diana played non - conlerence Michigan State to the same score. Liucagos long scoring drought cnuTO as me JUaroon won from Oberlin, 25-0. Iowa State un expectedly knocked off Kansas State, 10-0, in a Big Six test. In the southwest, Texas came from far behind to whip Texas Christian. 25-10 R.n. cd off Centenary In' a ron-con- ivrence Mluggle, 13-6. All was calm in the Rockv Mountain Big Seven where Utah trounced Colorado State. 42-7; Colorado, the leader, whipped Brigham Young. 12-6, and Utah State won from Wyoming, 20-13. "Machine Gun" Lotos. San Francisco. Nov. 18. (Pi Federal Judge Harold Louder back todrt.v denied the petition of George R. "Machine Gun" Kelly for a writ of halxws cor pus sought to effect his relea.se from Aleatraz prison, where Kelly Is serving a life term for xne SJ'ju.uoo ransom-kidnaping of Charles F. Urschel in 1033. No F.D.R. Comment. Hyde Park, N. Y.. Nov. 18 'P) Hie temporary White ! House today refused to coin ment on a telegraphed request for presidential intervention in the San Francisco waterfront strike because the telesrem was made puolic before it reached President Roosevelt. CONSTIPATION He rellr.ed by out tier ha I rrmrdv f)o mit tir tin. Cmit1tMn. fttnmarh rrmihlf Kiti'iininMm. Ir.iinte Trimble, ricrn Chlhirrni Hcd IWittng. .inhmi. Frmate Trmir.li, pllet. ( hmntr Cttttch. Mich ftlimd Pn-Mire, Vtttrttt. OtlHU. Nfrmineu IunMtil; nmrt. I.'ter. IHMrr Ktilner l-uns. Hlimd. I rlnart iimdrr? HrM will nfim Ur nu rrllrf when othrrt full C. fl C11.W l-'rr ritmiiltiiMnn. in-ljl-s Mnn Tile. Chan & - v en- ChtnoM, M-i1 FOOTBALL (By The Associated Press) East Penn State 14, Arm? 14 tie. Nebraska 14, Pittsburgh 13. Holy Cross 21, Carnegie 0. Georgetown 14, New York U. 0. Cornell 35, Dartmouth 6. Michigan IB, Pennsylvania 17. Princeton 13. Vale 7. . Fordham 13, St. Mary's (Calif.) 0. Syracuse 7, Colgate 0. Tulane 35, Columbia 0. VUlanova 12, Temple 6. Harvard 46, New Hampshire 0. Brown 41, Connecticut 0. Rutgers 17, Springfield 7. Boston College IB, Boston U. 0. Catholic U. 34, Loyola (New Or leans) 0. Franklin and Marshall 19, Al bright ie. Penn Military 8, Westerchester (Pa.) Teachera a tie. Williams 16, Amherst I. Norwich 19, Lowell Textile 0. Lebanon Valley 33, Juniata 0. Union 6, Hamilton 0. Bowdoln 15, Tufts 6. Hobart 33, Rochester 0. Swarthmore 58, American U. 0. St. Anselra 13, Provldenie 0. Susquehanna 20, Allegheny 0. Wesleyan 27, Trinity 13. Buckneli 25, Muhlenberg 3, St. Joseph's (Philadelphia) 30, City College New Tork 13. Vermont 21, Mlddlebury 0. Lafayette 13, Washington and Jef ferson 0. Rensselaer Poly 7. Mass. State 7 tie. Mt. St. Mary's 28, Upsala 8. Lehigh 39, Delaware T. Gettysburg 43, Uralnua 7. Bergen Junior 20, Arnold 6. Blue Ridge 12, Shepherd 7. Lock Haven (Pa.) Teachera 21. East Stroudsburg (Pa.) Teachers 12. Kutztown (Pa.) Teachers 21. Mll- lersvllle (Pa.) Teachers 0. Panzer 13, Bloomsburg (Pa.) Teach ers 6. Western Maryland 20, Dickinson 0 south Tennessee 13, Vanderbllt 0. Georgia Tech 6, Alabama 0. Georgia 33, South Carolina 7. Kentucky 13. West Virginia 8. Mississippi 46, West Tennessee Teachers 7. Mississippi State 40. Mlllsap 0. Swanee 14, The Citadel 7. Virginia Military 13, Maryland 0. Duke 13, North Carolina 3. Clemson 21. Southwestern (Tenn.) 8. North Carolina State 13, Furman 7. Louisville 20, Hanover (Ind.) 0. Virginia Tech 13. Virginia 0. Richmond 28. Hampden-Sydney 7. William and Mary 18. Washington and Lee 14. Davidson 32, Ersklne 6. Presbyterian 12. Wotford 13 tie. Mississippi College 30, Louisiana College 7. Newport News Apprentice 31, Fore River Apprentice 6. Midwest Notre Dame 7, Northwestern 0. Ohio State 21, Illinois 0. Iowa 13, Minnesota 9. Michigan State 7, Indiana 7 tie. Wisconsin 7, Purdue 7 tie. Chicago 25, Oberlin 0. Detroit 36, Manhattan 13. Iowa State 10, Kansas Stnte 0. Long Island University 13, Tole do 13. Depauw 7, Wabash 0. Eastern Kentucky 28. Indiana State 7. Bowling Green 33. Michigan Nor mal 13. Lawrence Tech 13. Assumption 6. Ohio University 13, Western (Mich.) Teachers 8. Dotrolt Tech 89. Heidelberg 0. Wittenberg 46. Mount Unton 7. Denlson 40, Wooster 6. Marshall 20, Xavier 6. Dayton 20. Miami (Ohio) 0. John Carroll 8, Western Reserve 0. Akron 13, West Liberty (W. Va.) Teachers 7. Cincinnati U. 13. South Dakota U. 0. Voungstown 48. Westminster (Pa.) 0. Missouri 7, Oklahoma 6. Oklahoma A. & M. 0. Wichita U. 0, tie St. Louis U. 0, Tulsa 0. tie. Sonthwest Marquette 33, Texas Tech 19. Texas Mines 37, Louisiana Tech 0. Texas A. M. 19. Rice 0. Texsa 23. Texas Christian 19. Oklahoma Baptist 14, Northwestern State 0. Arkansas State Teachera 19, Delta Teachers 0. Rocky Mountain Utah 42. Colorado State 7. Colorado 13. Brigham Young 8. Utah state 30. Wyoming 13. Colorado Mines 33, Kearney (Neb.) Teachers 0. York College 8, Regis 0. Friday Games West Linn 46. Lebanon 0. Sllverton 39. Independence 0. Columbia Prep (Portland) 34. Scap poose 0. The Dalles 14. Pendleton 7. Mllwatikle 13. Eugene 13 (tie). Newberg 7. Greaham 20. Franklin 40. Roosevelt 8 (both Portland!. Corvallls 0, Mi-Mlnnvllle 0 (tie). Rainier 12, Astoria 12 (tie). Bend 13. jelera 7. Molalla 7. Chemawe 7 (tie). Woodburn 13, Dallas 0. To Trap Elk. Portland. Nov. 18. (.'Pi A number of Douglas county elk will be trapped by the 'game commission and liberated In Clackamns county, the commis sion decided yesterday. S M. NO Chan t.1.1 F. Main Medford I Co MISSOURI EOGES KIES, SEEKS Columbia. Mn.. Nov tfl fm The fighting Missouri Tigers removed UKiannma from h list of the nation's undefeated teams and estnhlishpri iham selves the defending Ricr s,v chamDlons before 26 nnn In Memorial stadium todav. The victory, virtually assnr. ing tne Tigers the Big Six crown, was scored on tho ncnu ery of a blocked punt In the mira period ot a bruising con test. Bob Orf. tnw.h end. s termed over the OWlnh goal line after catching the ball mat nad pounced 30 feet in the air. Ronald King, a reserve back and outstanding nlnvpr nn the field for the day, place kicked tne deciding point. Oklahoma. fiercely drove 71 varrt fn touchdown in the final period ana twice again threatened to pun tne game out of the fire. But a missed Dlacement trv for extra point by Dick Favor proved fatal to their national championship aspirations. Paul Christman Mlcmnrl', all-Amerlcan candidate, was just another ball player in this game. He spent much of the muddy afternoon sitting on the seat of his pants. But while the Sooners were busy hamstringing the glamor boy they were tak ing a beating from his less fat mous teammates. With onlv one eamp remain. ing against Weak Kansas nnl. versity, Missouri now has a vir tual headlock on thp Rio Siv crown, and they are understood to be very receptive to a "bowl' bid. TO HE BY AXEMEN Milwaukie, Ore., Nov. 18. iP Eugene threw a brick through Milwaukie high school's perfect football record last night by holding the undefeated and usu ally high-scoring Maroons to e 13-13 tie. The outcome left the two teams deadlocked for thp no-name league championship ana established Coquille, Coos eleven, as the last remaining untied, unbeaten nrpn fparr, in Oregon. Astoria. Nov. 18. (P) As toria's revived Fishermen held the strong Columbia leaaue lunrf- er, Rainier, to a 12-12 tie Fri day night, but the Rainiers sup puea tno tireworks. After As toria had taken a 12-0 half-time lead, Francis Girt of Rainier climaxed a 70-varrf nnh ,nu a pass to Proctor for a touch down. In the last two minutes Girt returned an Astoria punt yaras ior tne tying touch down. PRESilTfOCn Hvde Park. N V v, n (P) President Roosevelt d I s- ciosed somewhat sheepishly to day that he had bogged his car down to the running boards when he drove into a swamp while "exploring" a remote por tion of his estate. It took three of the workmen on the estate and a detail of secret service men to pull the president's light touring car from the muck. Mr. Roosevelt got stuck yes terday while trying to get into a 40-acre corner purchased re cently. He had never seen it because there was no road through it. Undaunted by his experience, the president went back today to see what could be done about getting around the swamp and putting a road through the tract, for use as a firebreak as well as a pathway. IN MUD ON TRIPi WRESTLING MEDFORD ARMORY Paul Bozell Monday night, 8:oo p. m. Bob Kenaston Hans Schulz vs. Ernie Piluso Herb Parks vs. King Kong Clayton IN KENASTON GO Paul Bozell makes his second start in the Medford armory in two years tomorrow night and the boys on Main street have established him a slight vocal favorite to tie the can to Sgt. Bob Kenaston of Gold Hill, ex junior heavyweight champ of tne universe, who hasn t been around these parts for several months. The two grappling hus kies will match headlocks and crab-holds, etc., in the one-hour main event. Although It won't be ladles' night again, another capacity crowd Is expected to bulge the armory walls, for the triple decked program has all the ear marks of being even better than the two previous cards. Firing will start at 8 o'clock sharp. In the number two spot on the all-star lineup will be Hans (Hitler) Schulz, defeated in his last three brawls and frothinc at the mouth for a victory, ver sus brnte Piluso. the Portland streak of liehtnlns. Onenino thp evening will be King Kong Clay- ion, sweet-wrestling Negro, ver sus Herb Parks of Vancouver, B. C, a clean newcomer who is considered one of the north west's better workmen. The Bozell . Kenastnn lnch should turn into a battle of crab maneuvers, with each of the boys laboring to slan on his respective payoff. Bozell, erst- wnile Black Dragon who now performs without his lies one one of the game's most effective Boston crabs. It was this hold which hrnimht Rn-,.,11 a victory over Schulz last Mnn. day evening. Kenaston's main offensive weapon is a crab of annthpr va riety tho Gold Hill crustacean ana witn it tne ex-marine ser geant has beaten inmi nf thn nation's leading pram' pva 1i Ib just as potent as Bozell's Boston crao ana pernaps slightly easier to apply. The Piluso-SchiiW m u j i . event may develop into some thing of a erudce fiaht Rrnio made a public statement to the enect mat he believed the Ger man horror was too slow and awkward to nrOVP nvprlv Innnh to lick, and Schulz imme liatelv resented 'them thar words." He countered with the assertion that Piluso had looked good aeainsl Pettigrove, strictly a second rater, but that when the Port lander faced a wnrthv fno h would be easy stuff. CONN WINS, MAY ES New York, Nov. 18. (P) A shanty Irish kid who always says mister and sir to sports writers an outside middleweight who weighed 171H pounds in do fending his light heavyweight championship that Is Billy Conn, the Pittsburgh Adonis you'll soon see battling among the heavyweights and eventually against Cnamp Joe Louis. By winning a 15-round de cision over Gus Lesnevlch in Madison Square Garden last night. Conn just about mopped up all the suitable talent in his class and Manager Johnny Ray is remaining in town to talk business with Uncle Mike Ja cobs. Their talk may touch upon many things, but they're bound to come upon a possible heavy, weight bout with bicycling Bob Pastor sooner or later because Conn himself wants it. And it's a logical step toward the heavyweight weights that Conn and his manager have in mind. Stanford PoloisU Win. Palo Alto, Call., Nov. 18. A1 The Stanford university polo team evened its scries with Utah today, winning 3 to 2 after Utah threatened to overcome an early lead by scoring twice in the final chukker. Utah won Thursday, 8-6. Dse Mall moune want ada. VALENTINE'S CAFE. Tel. 279 Seats en tale at Brown's. Tel. 101. Ladies' Niohl PORTLAND STILL BULLETIN ' FOR DEL2 GAME Tiger-Coquille Contest Here Will Be Deciding Factor In State Title Race. Portland, Nov. 18. 0J.R) Only one major high school foot ball team in Oregon retained its unbeaten and untied status to day following Eugene high's up set 13-13 tie with Milwaukie last night. Coquille, commander of the Coos league, has no blemishes on its record, and probably can make a legitimate claim to the state high school championship should it win the Thanksgiving Day playoff with unbeaten but tied Medtord high. Portland interscholastic league officials who invited Milwau kie to play in Multnomah sta dium against the Rose City win ner, December 2 said the Ma roons' tie will not result in withdrawal of the invitation. It had been believed earlier the winner of the Medford-Coquil'.c game might be asked. "Our agreement with Milwau kie provided the invitation would stand unless the Maroons were beaten," Eldon Jenne, Portland athletic director, said. "As far as the tie goes, our leading team Jefferson has been tied." Despitj the Portland dfcision, the Friday night deadlock def initely shifted the spotlight to the Medford-Coquille tilt, large ly because Medford whipped Eu gene, 20 to 6, to establish a com parative scores edge over the Maroons. TO HOCKEY LEAD Toronto, Nov. 18. (VP) The Toronto Maple Leafs stepped into first place in the National Hockey league tonight by blank ing the Detroit Red Wings 3 to 0 on the strength of a late drive. The shutout was Turk Broda's third in four games, the Toronto goalie allowing only one goal to get past him since the season opened three weeks ago. A neat goal by Jack Church, rookie defense man, late in the second period broke thp on.nl famine and started the Leafs on their march to victory. Svl Anna added a second tally early in tne mira while Gordie Drillon tacked on another on a freak play some minutes later. Church had just stepped on the ice after serving a penalty when he joined Bob Davidson in a rush which ended in thp Toronto defenseman taking a pass and picking the far side of the net with a whistling drive. "No Outside Coach" Palo Alto, Calif., Nov. 18 No outside track and field coach will be brought In at Stanford to fill the position va cated recently by Robert Ly man "Dink"' Templeton, the Stanford board of athletic con trol has decided. Sweet Men. Sutton, W. Va., Nov. 18. UP) Seventeen prisoners and the turnkey of the Braxton county jail were under indictment to day on charges ranging from adultery to conspiracy to kill and rob. . i Highway Fire Delays. St. Helens, Nov. 18. (,P) Burning oil in a freight truck blocked the Lower Columbia River highway for three hours and blacked out Columbia Citv for four hours last night. TORONTO SURGES A Penny Saved IS A PENNY EARNED J Buy This Cheap, Efficient Fuel DRY PINE SLABWOOD $6.00 DRY FACTORY BLOCKS $5.50 BUNDLED KINDLING $5.00 Delivered In City Limits Or fill your ear or trailer it our fuel yard on the corner of North Central Ave. and MeAndrews Road Timber PRODfiffS company - V w V 1 V V. Phont 7 Hood River, Ore., Nov. 18 (IP) Hood River high school footballers defeated Lakeside ot Seattle, 15-13, here tonight. Durham, N. C, Nov. 10 (tp) Duke university's football team exploded in the third quarter to blast North Carolina into the ranks of the defeated and to take a long stride toward at least a tie for the Southern con ference crown. The 13 to 3 score was a pretty fair gauge of the relative merits of two teams, and 50,800 fans who packed every cranny of Duke stadium and bulged into temporary stands, straggled away convinced the better team had won. It took a blocked punt to send the Blue Devils into the lead and to eventual victory. At the half they were a worried, frus trated team, trailing by three points. In the third period. North Carolina had the ball deep in its own territory. George Stirn weiss' quick kick boomed into Ruffa's chest and bounded to ward the end zone. Bill Bailey, Duke end, smothered '.t as he" rolled into the zone for the touchdown. The Tarheels came back with an attack which bordered on frenzy, but the Blue Devils in tercepted or knocked down passes, smothered the ball car riers, and then launched a coun ter attack which clinched the game with six more points. The victory left Duke with a one-point defeat by Pitt the only blot on its record. CULPRITS PLEAD Moscow, Idaho, Nov. 18. (JP) Deputy Sheriff J. H. .Tnrrian said today a damp cap attached to two sticks of dynamite failed to explode and ruined a Hallo we'en prank for Herschel Camp bell, 19, of Harvard, and a 16 year old companion. The boys Dleaded miiltv n probate court today to malicious destruction of property and Judge L. G. Peterson Campbell sum ne wouia pronounce sen tence Monday. Jordan said the dynamite was placed beneath an nuthnilHino near the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Gallup of Harvard. -4 Dae Mall Tribune want ads. 18 North Front St. Nov. 19 to Nov. 23 PORTLAND'S Most Distinctive Hotel Invites Yon . . . Frlendlt Serrlre llnme-l.tke Kntims Wonderful Food Sen.lMe Rate, Hotel (?h Benson Brnndwa at OnU Portland