The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, December 02, 1941, Page 8, Image 8

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    Place in State Weight Lifting
mXm
" DULL
A- We, who saw the Oregon-Oregon
State game, were not ter
rifically impressed by its action
despite the etherized dramatics
evidently manufactured by As
td' John Carpenter. As
our boss pointed out yesterday,
the larger portion oi the dear
old Pelicans battles this year car
ried far more for the spectator's
dough than Saturday's civil war.
- Oregon, supposedly because of
Tommy Roblin's absence, dem
onstrated an astounding lack of
even a reasonable facsimile of
an attack. But for Curt Mech
era's 53-yard trot in the third
quarter, the Webfoots were ade
quately throttled by the Beavers'
shifting defense and their own
horrible ineptness.
- The Staters looked like an of
fensive ball club just once in
their fourth quarter 60-yard
march for the clinching score.
And then we cannot understand
how Joe Day, at a virtual stand
still at the scrimmage line, man
aged to break away from Tack
ier Val Culwell for his final gal
lop to the goal.
You, Klamath people, are
more fortunate than you realize
in having an average good high
achool team and Chuck Stan
field's tween-halves demonstra
tions to witness throughout the
fall. ..
By the way, Oregon Staters,
none of you who ventured a
guess via this column last Fri
day hit it right on the nose. Jim
Kerns, Jr predicted 12-6 and
Earl Reynolds foresaw 13-7
both within one point
' FROM THE CUFF
- Oregon State's Rose Bowlers
will leave lor Pasadena as soon
aa final exams are over prob
ably about mid-December . . .
Gail Fowler of the AP says
there's a reason why the Beav
ers can. apparently shift from a
first string to a second string
line without loss in efficiency.
Jim Dixon, OSC line coach, told
him that "the players get to
gether in groups before each
game all the left ends, left tac
kles, etc They talk over their
strategy against the next oppo
nent and decide on a plan of ac
tion. So no matter who goes in
at what position, he's going to
play it Just like his predeces
sor '
Oregon Secretary of State Earl
Snell has bet North Carolina
-Secretary Thad Eure a dinner
en the outcome of the Pasadena
tUt.i.,
- .
LIFT DEPT.
Jimmy Hairell, the 123-pound
instructor at Peebler's Condition
ing service who copped second
place in the state weight-lifting
championships at Portland,
has been at it only six months
... Ed Parkhurst, second in the
181-pound class,' is a former
member of the university oi u
lfhOls acrobatic team . . . Lester
. Powell, runnerup in the 148
pound section, has come within
seven pounds of breaking the
world's dead-lift record. Me tried
to better the 567-pound mark at
Portland but couldn't quite pick
it up. Of the Klamath trio, Pow
ell has been at the game long
est . . . It was the first compet
itive effort for any of the three.
TICKETS
Rose Bowl tickets may be pur
chased from Athletic Director
Percy Locey at Oregon State or
from ' the bowl ticket office,
Pasadena, Calif. They cost eith
er $3.30, $4.40, or $5.50 and all
seats are reserved.
'Locey is planning to promote
a special train from Corvallis.
Round trip fare is $16.60 for
adults and $14.40 for students or
children. Address all inquiries
to him.
Beovers Continue -Bowl
Celebration
' CORVALUS, Dec. 2 P)
Celebrations for the Rose-Bowl-Bound
Oregon State college foot
ball team continued here today.
: Faculty members and Corval
lis merchants feted the team and
the. coaching staff at a breakfast.
'. Portland will' honor the team
at. a stag banquet Wednesday
night there. .
f; HE)
iHALBLHL
. STRAIGHT K0URI0N WHISKtV
$!
IftFULL
PINT
MS. IASCUY S CO. UMI1IB. SmiI HlU.b
Gophers Top Final
AP Football Ballot
Duke Second, Notre Dome Third
In Nation's Leading Grid Poll
By BILL BONI
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (P) To the Minnesota football team
and to Sports Editor Ray Kelly of the New York Times go top
honors today in the final Associated Press football ranking poll
of the regular 1941 season.
The Golden Gophers, as had
week in November, finished in
osition accorded them a year
BOWLS
IN
BRIEF
HEW YORK, Dec. 2 (UP)
The bowls in brief:
Rote Bowl, Pasadena. Calif.
Oregon State versus Duke.
Sugar Bowl, New Orleans
Fordham versus Missouri.
Cotton Bowl, Dallas. Tex..
' Texas Aggies versus Alabama.
Orange BowL Miami. Fla.
Georgia versus unnamed op
ponent. This bid went to Texas but
was declined by the Loaghorn
players.
MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 2 (UP)
Twice-beaten and once-tied
Texas Christian university,
which has conquered seven ma
jor football teams this season,
including Texas, will meet the
University of Georgia in the
Orange Bowl here on New Year's
day, it was announced Monday
night
Bowl President W. G. Ward
made the announcement a few
hours after Texas had declined
a similar bid to play here. Geor
gia accepted the invitition Sat
urday. TCU will be making its fourth
appearance in six years in a bowl
game and has yet to lose a post
season encounter. The Horned
Frogs last appeared in a New
Year's day game in the Sugar
Bowl in 1939, when they trim
med Carnegie Tech, 15-7.
Howard Grubbs, TCU athletic
director, telephoned acceptance
to the Orange Bowl committee
and said .southwest conference
officials had approved the game.
This year TCU a vaunted at
tack, which has clicked only
spasmodically, reached its peak
when it turned back the then
No. 1 team of the nation, Texas,
14-7. In its last start, TCU nosed
out Southern Meth6dist, 15-13.
The Frogs have lost to the Texas
Aggies, 14-0, and Fordham, 28
14. Rice tied them 0-0.
Leading the opposing Geor
gia Bulldog team will be All
American Frankie Sinkwich, the
broken-Jawed halfback who has
led his team to its best record
since 1928. Georgia has lost only
to Alabama, 28-14, and was tied
by Mississippi, 14-14. The Bull
dogs' eight victims have been
Dartmouth, Columbia, Georgia
Tech, Florida, Auburn, South
Carolina, Mercer and Center.
Beside
The Headpin
Sr "LADYBUO"
Just as I predicted, Junior is
on deck feeling pretty chipper
and has some mighty interest
ing dope on Thursday night's
league play. Cummings Fur
Shop, Town Shop, and Daggett
insurance are in a three-way
deadlock for first place each
with 15 wins and 12 -losses.
The O. K. Transfer, Swan
Confectionery and Eddie's Place
are in the same fix for second
place, each with 14 wins and
13 losses.
Interesting? You bet. Junior
also had on his list a new name
Washington Best Coast
Team in 5-Year Average
By GAIL FOWLER
CORVALLIS, Dec. 2 (JP)
Washington, Southern Califor
nia, California and Oregon
State.
$j.is
FULL QUART
appeared likely since the second
first place to retain the No. 1
ago, just as they retained the
western conicrcnce cnampion-
ship they won in 1940. Of the
96 sports experts throughout
the country who took part in
this week's balloting, 84
plunked for Minnesota ajid one
other split his vote between
the Gophers and Duke.
As a result tne Gophers, with
nine second-place votes, an
other for third and one for
fourth, polled a total of 945 H
points out of a perfect 960.
Duke's Blue Devils, Rose-bowl
bound to meet Oregon State,
got 94 for first and 7254
points, and Duquesne, only
other big-time unbeaten and un
tied team in the land, 309 23
points for eighth. Points were
awarded on a basis of 10 for
first, 9 for second, 8 for third,
etc.
In the two biggest bowl
games, the voters make Duke
a heavy favorite over Oregon
State, given only enough points
for twelfth place, while rating
the Fordham-Missouri Sugar
Bowl clash virtually a toss-up.
Fordham got 329 23 points in
sixth place, Missouri 328 in a
seventh. Notre Dame, Texas
and Michigan, in third, fourth
and fifth, and Texas A. and M.
and Navy, in ninth and tenth,
completed the first 10.
Gone from the 1940 honor
roll are Stanford, Boston col
lege, Tennessee, Nebraska, Mis
sissippi State, Northwestern and
Washington. Holdovers, besides
Minnesota, are Michigan and
Texas A. and M.
Kelly, in his ballot, came
closest to the week's ranking.
He named the first three teams
in order, then followed with
Missouri, Fordham, Texas A.
and M., Duquesne, Navy and
Michigan.
LOS ANGELES. Dec. 2 (UP)
Minnesota's mighty Golden
Gophers were placed first in na
tional rankings by Deke Houl
gate, football statistician, in his
final selections Monday night.
Houlgate placed Navy second,
Alabama third, Duquesne fourth,
Notre Dame, fifth, Michigan,
Mississippi State and Texas tied
for sixth, Duke, the eastern rep
resentative to the Rose bowl,
ninth and Pennsylvania, tenth.
Oregon State, the western
honor-bearer at the Rose bowl,
was rated in a tie for 14th with
Ohio State and Temple.
for lead in high average that
sure-armed, sharp - eyed gal,
Maggie (I mean) Margaret Ma-
honey.
The rest of his info is that
Eddie's Place still holds the
lead for high three-game series
of the season; that Royal Crown
Cola still holds high single
game; that Doris Cheyne still
holds high individual series and
that's 572 (how's that for some
thing to shoot at?); that Marty
McCollum jumped into the lead
for high single game with ' a
215.
Who's next? Well, with things
the way they are and all, Junior
and the rest of us are expect
ing most anything, for Thurs
day night Cummings Fur Shop
and O. K. Transfer are match
ed. Town Shop and Lorenz
Company play their three games
together, Swan Confectionery
and Daggett Insurance roll 'em
out and Eddie's Place and
Royal Crown Cola spill the pins
on the same two alleys.
Junior has been writing let
ters to Santa Claus but I guess
he's keeping it a secret. What
do you suppose he wants? I'll
guess with you.
Those are the four top teams
in the Pacific Coast conference
according to a check of com
posite standings since the round
robin, eight -team football
league was instituted in 1936.
Next year Idaho and Montana
will be included on a full-time
basis and make it a 10-team af
fair. Bud Forrester, publicity man
for the 1941 conference cham
pions at Oregon State, dug up
the. figures. Although USC and
UCLA play this Saturday, the
outcome won't affect the com
posite standings. Here they are:
Won Lost Tied Pet.
Washington ......25 14 3 .641
So. California ...20 13 8 .606
California 24 17- 1 .585
Oregon State ... 21 .15 6 .583
Stanford 19 19 4 .500
UCLA .. 14 21 6 .400
Wash. State ....13 25 8 .351
Oregon 13 20 3 .333
Washington won the cham
pionship in 1936. California
took it in 1937 and tied with
USC In 1938. USC won in 1931),
Stanford last year and OSC
this year.
The three brawny boys above, members of the Peebler's Conditioning Service team of Klam
ath Falls, each took second in their divisions in the Oregon state weight lifting) tourney held
at the Multnomah Athletic club In Portland Saturday night. Left Is Letter Powell, Weyerhaeuser
Timber company employe, who lifted a total of 560 pounds In the 148-pound class. Center Is
Ed Parkhurst. draftsman for the Klamath Iron Works, who copped second In the 111-pound
class with a total lift of 670 pounds. Right. James Hairell. Peebler employe, second In the 123-
pound division with a total lift
940 Duke
Grid
Wade Throws Out Punt and
Prayer System for Points
By JACK GUENTHER
NEW YORK. Dec. 2 (UP) When you settle down to pick the
winners of the coming bowl games, don't mte Duke off the in
formation you've gathered from Blue Devil teams of the past
particularly the one which lost to USC in Pasadena's rose fes
tival three years ago. For times have changed in Durham, N. C,
and so have the football styles.
The authority for this news is a gentleman who should know,
if anybody does. His name is Wallace Wade, he coaches the Duke
team and he has played in more
post-season games than almost
any two other men in his busi
ness. Take it -straight from
Wade. Duke of 1941 is cut from
a different pattern than the
Dukes of 1940. 1939, 1938 and
all the other years.
I buttonholed the Blue Devil
coach in a dark comer of a
West Side restaurant just four
minutes after he had been in
formed that his team had offi
cially been invited west for the
second time in four years, and
he explained the difference in
little more than a sentence
the defense has given way to
the offense at Duke, and the
Blue Devils no longer punt and
pray.
"In 1938 we had a fine punt
er in Eric Tipton and so we just
kicked and kicked and waited
for the breaks," Wade explained
between big bites of venison.
"We didn't play very spectacu
larly, but we did all right. We
were unbeaten, untied and un
scored on until the Trojans put
over a touchdown in the last 40
seconds of the Rose bowl game.
"This year we aren't operat
ing on the same theory. The
best way I can describe the
present team is that it Is nicely
balanced and it accents the of
fense. Instead of waiting to cap
italize on the other fellow's mis
takes for our touchdowns, we
go right after them now and
keep the ball ourselves. You
can see that in the 331 points
we have scored in nine games."
"Lach has been compared
with Ace Parker by coaches and
newspapermen and pretty favor
ably, too," the Duke coach con
tinued. "All I can say about
that is Lach is a better all
around player than Parker. I
don't mean that he is a better
offensive threat. I mean that
he is as good a blocker as he is
a passer or runner.
"Lach is a natural athlete.
He could probably win the
starting call at every position
on the team except one the
tackle spot held down by Mike
Karmazin, probably our best
lineman. The team In general
Point-Gettin' Teams Dominate
New Year's Bowl Game Choices
By HAROLD CLAASSEN
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (P)
Touchdown conscious elevens
predominate the selections made
for the various New Year'g day
bowl games with only Oregon
State, Rose bowl host, classed as
a defensive unit although Mis
souri's No. 1 Sugar bowl line
hasn't yielded a touchdown all
season.
The west coast school needed
20 hours of discussion before se
lecting Duke, unbeaten and pow
erful enough to collect 311 points
in nine games, as its January 1
guest at Pasadena. The Duke
touchdown-collection Is a record
for tho Blue Devils.
Simultaneous with the Mis
souri acceptance, Sugar bowl of
ficials named Fordham as the
Tiger foe in the New Orleans
classic. In contrast to previous
years, It was a bevy of high
scoring backs rather than a non
yielding line that brought the
New York Rams to the heights.
Even before Frankie Sinkwich
and his Georgia mates had left
the showers Saturday a f t e r
blanking Georgia Tech, '21 to 0,
of 410 pounds.
Blue Devils Alter
Style Stress Attack
Is fairly solid although the re
serves aren't overly strong. I
can't say what our chances
against Oregon State will be,
because I don't know much
about Oregon State."
If you go by the record, the
chances will be pretty good.
Wade has gone to the Rose bowl
five times before, as a player
for Brown, coach for Alabama
Rich Santa Anita "Cap
Draws Horii bf Year, Day
LOS ANGELES, Dec. ST(M-The horse of the year , . . the
horse of a day . . . the horts of 1939-40 . , . nearly 100 horses
looking for gold at the end of the hundred grand gallop have
been nominated for the Sant. Anita handicap.
Nominations closed last;zridnlght for the mile and a quarter
handicap to be run March- 7.' The complete list won't be an
nounced until Friday morning;; to allow time for mailed entries
to arrive. ' W .'
However, there's no need to
wait to assure racing fans that
Whirlaway, Bay View, Challe
don, Meissen, Mioland and Por
ter's Cap, for instance, were
nominated.
Whirlaway, Warren C.
Wright's great winner of nearly
everything offered a 3-year-old,
Is horse of the year.
Bay View, the $118.40 to $2
winner of the $100,000 Anita
'cap last March, is the horse of
a day. Owner Tony Pelleteri
wants to make it two days
both hundred granders.
Horse of 1939-40 was W. L.
Brann's Challcdon, who broke
down last winter but has been
working cut well recently.
Meissen is prepping for his
first North American start. The
big Peruvian champion, import
ed last spring by A. T. Jcrglns
of Long Beach, developed pneu
monia but, since recovering, has
been trying to learn American
ways. They race clockwise in
South America.
The fuel capacity of the 80
ton B-19 bomber is 11,000 gal
Ions, approximately the capacity
of the average railway tank car.
the Orange bowl committee in
Miami selected the Bulldogs as
their southern choice. The equal
ly point-crazy Texas Longhorns
have been chosen, unofficially,
as the opponent.
Texas A Sc M, first Southwest
conference school to share In
three consecutive loop titles, and
a 13 to 12 victor in the Dallas
Cotton bowl a year ago, returns
there. Unbeaten Duquesne, Mis
sissippi State and Penn State are
among the possible foes.
Even though Oregon State Is
listed as the lone defensive bowl
participant, It ran up scores of
27 and 33 against Montana and
Idaho, respectively, and finished
the season with 123 points scored
to 33 permitted.
Halfback Don Durdan is Its
chief touchdown delight while
Center Quentin Greenough bul
warks the line against which
Steve Lach, tho Duke destroyer,
will operate.
Lach was the fulcrum for the
Blue Devil offensive that brought
Coach Wallace Wade his sixth
unbeaten and untied team, ex
clusive of post-season contests,
since he began coaching In IBID.
W HI 'AiH
-'i- ..--j -r . A.'i
and coach for Duke, and he has
been beaten only once then In
the last 40 seconds. And one
thing he told me may be taken
as a tip that In his heart he
doesn't expect to be beaten
again.
"The thing I admire most
about the present Duke team is
its poise and consistency," he
said. "The boys never let down
once in nine straight games al
though every time they were
favored a condition which
makes them prone to careless
ness. And dont think that just
because we ran up big scores
that we played a push-over
schedule.
"Remember that Colgate.
North Carolina State, Tennessee
and those other teams all beat
some pretty fair squads them
selves. And remember that
every time a southern team
goes against Duke it goes
shooting with everything It
has."
Barry, Horrell
Prepping for
Grid Finale
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 3 (TV-
It looks very much as If Coaches
Sam Barry and Babe Horrell
were pepping their charges to
give Angclenos an all-out scoring
spree in their 1941 football finale
Saturday.
Although Southern California
outgalned Washington on the
ground last weekend, Coach Sam
Barry put his Trojans right back
to work . on ground plays and
came up with a few new ones, for
good measure.
Across town. Coach Horrell
sent the University of California
at Los Angeles Bears through
their whole offensive repertoire
'. . . and also pitched in a couple
of new potential touchdown get
ters. For every pilot there are 10
other men in the air corps. For
every man in the air, there are
five on the ground,
It also will be his sixth Rose
bowl visit.
Five of those trips have been
as a coach and one was as guard
of the Brown university eleven
in 1916.
Fordham, famed as the home
of the seven blocks of granite a
few years ago, counters this sea
son with Steve Fillpowlcz, a
pass-throwing fullback; J I m
Blumenstock, a broken field
speedster; a horde of loose-hipped
sophomlrcs, and Jim Lans
ing, an outstanding end.
Tho T-mindcd Missourlans
three times have plowed to more
than 400 yards gained In a sin
gle game and tho "terrible touch
town trio" of Harry Ice, Bob
Steuber and Maurice Wade has
averaged 6.45 yards every time
it touched tho ball. Like Ford
ham, It was defeated once.
When In Medford
Stay
' HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modern
Joe and Anne Eerley
Proprietors ,..
PAGE EIGHT
Bowlers Ready for Final
Invasion of State Meet
Klamath Falls bowling officials were resting today with two
thirds of the state bowling tourney's hurly-burly out of the way
and tho last big weekend coming up Sntunlny.
Records In all men's divisions and all but two of the gals
classifications have so far withstood assaults by trams which
ti.... tmm imm t,nriv virv iirrtlon of tho state ex-
ilVO III,, IUIIVM ..........
cept Portland. The Eddie's Place"
team of Klamath was founa to
have shattered the women
Booster team mark with a 1R86
total. The old record of 1B07
was art by tho Bruno Studio
quintet of Astoria In 1040.
The 810 Booster doubles to
tal racked by Oiilnrs and Prouty
of Astoria In 1040 fell by the
wayside when Mcdford's Colton
and Corwln blasted an 84.1.
Final firing this veekend
brings 11 Portland men's and
four women's teams In addition
to squads from Eugene, Co
quille, Redmond, Mnrshfield,
Reedsport, Astoria, Salem and
Seaside. Among the visiting
keglers will be Don Potilln of
Salem, 1940 open all-events
champion and record-holder.
Also rolling will be Eugene's
Ollle Mercer, 1940 open singles
tltllst.
Among the gala. Portland's
Central Alleys 1940 class A
team champs will be back as
will Flnegan Auto Parts, last
year's class C team winner, and
Scherrr Bulrks, Eugpne's 1940
class B squad champion.
Meanwhile Al Backes, Im
pressarlo of Klamath Recrea
tion alleys, site of male krgllng.
announced the men's prize list
for the 1041 congress.
The list follows:
TtAMl
SUM BM. ttWMli, IMII.
1. lit
i. M i
a. i ia m
1. tl St
L II ! II
IINOLSt
pttM Omm Omwh'1. SM.
i. ! in w
t, ?M 1
s. M n i
4. ir it u
. ii u i
. ItM II
7. 10 II
i, 10
I. Tit 4
II. I I
II. I 4
IS. J I I
IS. 4 I
II. I I I
II. 4
II. I I
IT. , I 4
II. I I -II.
I -
10. 4 -
11. I
n. i
si. i I
n. i -
it. i ;
u. i i
:. -eousi.ii
SliM cmm
t. i i
t. m rr
i. a n
1.
4. II f
I. It II II
7. 15 II II
I. It
I. II I
10. I l -
II. -
11. I
is . . r-
Briefs
r
Hugh
FulUrtea, Jr,
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (Wide
World) Looks aa If Bob Feller
doesn't intend to wait -for the
draft to get him. Latest report,
following his visit to Washington
last week, Is that Bob may get a
second lieutenant's rating in the
army air cqrps and will be as
signed to Wright field at Dayton,
Ohio . . . Unable to get Chuck
Dressen away from his dad,
Larry MacPhall Jr Is consider
ing Boily Grimes as manager for
his Toronto ball club. He's look
for a playing pilot first . . . Did
you notice that five field goals
were kicked In the Canadian
football championship final Sat
urday? ... Star of the winning
Winnipeg team was Fritz Han
son, who has played seven sea
sons with the Blue Bombers after
finishing at South Dakota State
.. , . Philadelphia's Schuylkill
navy held a cross-country run- the
other day. Water must have been
very low,
TODAY'S GUEST STAR
Jay Simon, Coffeyvllle (Kas.)
Journal: "Minnesota finished its
season with a record of , 17
straight victories. Coffeyvllle
Junior college's Ravens wound
up with an unbroken string of
18 triumphs. Up around Min
neapolis the fans are Raven
about the Gophers; down here
they really Gopher the Ravens."
mi
Docembor 2, 1941
Duke Cops
Honors on
All-South
By BARTON PATTIE
RICHMOND. Vs., Dec. 2 (
Duke university's Roo bowl
bound football squad carried off
top honors In the 1041 all-Southern
conference tram poll con
ducted by Tho Associated Press,
the participating sports writers
and coaches placing a quartet of
Blue Devils on the first team
and two more In reierve on the
second eleven.
Twice-beaten Clemson, 1940
leader which yielded the loop
championship this season to
Duke, was awarded three first
team berths: William and Mary
. I 1 . k. - II n .
Hill. ..UMkll , villi 1 1 V,
Wake Forest one each.
Heading the all-star lineup Is
rrpeatrr Steve I.ach, Duke's sen
ior wlngback from A 1 toons, Pa.
Only one of tho 81 ballots re
ceived from the Carolines, Vir
ginia, Maryland and the District
of Columbia failed to list the
190-pound Lach, regarded as one
of the best backs ever produced
at a school which has turned out
such players as Ac Parker,
George McAfee and Erlo Tipton.
The heaviest vote among th
linesmen went to Joe Rlalock,
180-pound Clcniion end from
Charleston, S. C, who has held
the all-star post for three season.
East Stars
Accept Bid
From Shrine
The East-West Shrine committee
Monday night announced 11
more eastern and mldwestern
stars had 'accepted Invitations to
play In the annual Shrine char.
Ity football gam here New
Year's day.
The new acceptances brought
th East team total to 19, leaving
only three more players to be
chosen. The West team will be
announced later.
The acceptances came from
BUI DcCorrevont, Northwestern
halfback: Krause, Penn State,
back; Wood, Columbia, back;
Coupee, Iowa, back; Daniell,
Penn State, tacklo; Odion, Min
nesota, tackle; Peabody and Me
Klnney, Harvard, guards; rife,
Pitt, guard; Gervalis, Pitt, end,
and Ringer, Illinois.
Players who accepted prev
iously were Bob Westfall, Michi
gan, fullback: Geyer. Colgate,
back; Bruce Smith, Minnesota,
oacx; out amaitz, penn state
uwin. oiovv juiw h. noire ummm.
back; Bob Ingalls, Michigan, cen
ter; B a u m a n, Northwestern,
tackle; and Blandln, Tulane,
tackle.
"You will be famed
among hosts, Oh My
Mastsr. if you re
member: The very .
best BUY Is the
whiskey thafs DRY
...PAUL JONES!"
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Jones
$135 A pm
.,-1 12.55 A OT
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