Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 31

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Telephone 3-1111 Romantic Progressive Arizona The 1941 Edition '(Section Eleven) Page Three ANNUAL BULLDOGS FLAGSTAFF, DRUB 33-1 Football Scores EAST wgnnFiKania 11. ArvnK, 7, TKWe 14- Boston Ol'ejte VifhTean CF. Columbia O. 33- Dartmoulh 19. rouenie 16.

Misissippi State P. BSStoOTi 20. North Carolina State irvrd 23. Brown 7. Manhattan 13.

Holy Cross 13 (tic. rWrate 19. Svraruse 19 ftie. -H5. "Western Man.

land 15. Muhlenbers 7. Tulane 45. New York I niverstty 0. pfnn State 7.

West Virginia P. 2 6. Princeton imburjr 20. I rsmuj 0. SSJiilaeF Tern 21.

Buffalo 6. exas, Stanford Eowl Hopes Fade Arizonian Favored In Net Meet Indians' Rally Tempe Offensive Hits Season Peak In Heated Clash By JERRY McLAXV Assistant Sports Editor rPEMPE, Nov. 15 The Bulldogs of Arizona State Teachers College here, whose bark has been worse than their bite in the Border Conference this year, gained the satisfaction tonight of pleasing their old grads by cutting down the Lumberjacks of Arizona State Teachers College at Flagstaff, 33 to 0, in Tempe's annual home-coming football fracas here tonight. i Traditional rivals of the Bulldogs. A TCU Wrecks Steer Title Drive, 14-7 ntrltinson fi.

Susquehanna P. Drexel SXiVthmore 12. Haverford 7. Fails, Cougars Win By 14-13 pALO ALTO. Nov.

15 (AP) The Washington State Rochester 19. Hohart cheers 32. Connect 7. 55tevan 27. Trinity 0.

Vermont 7. Mionlebury fi -mer 7 I.owell Textile 6. imeriean Internationa! 7. Springfield P. cX-tnn rniversitv u.

aw nampsnue v. A USTIN. Nov. 15 (AP) ri.ft 14 Massachusetts state ia I ion 13. A 32.

Morriville P. East Stroudsburc tTa.) Teachers 37 Cougars, the real giant-killers of the Pacific Coast Confe renre. the Lumberjacks never had a'T. oacx ana, again getting spien ra.n..,iir IN. Teachers 5S.

Trenton Texas Christian played David to Texas' Goliath todav, smashing into 14-to-7 defeat a team which two weeks ago rated No. 1 in the nation and seemed irresistably headed for a major bowl game. Thus curtains fell on the saga of the "invincible Orange chance of winning, but in the fad-i did protection, sent an aerial to Lucian Luckett, end, who took it on the 10. spun away from one TneSvnie Pa.) Teachers 33. Kutztown ing minutes of the third quarter! the battle became so heated that TDavif nd Eikins 41.

Arkansas A and fighting broke out between several epposing players, bringing coaches, police and other players onto the tackier and was spilled on the five. Onofrio picked up one and a half yards through right tackle and then Ybarra swept around left end which, once hailed the greatest Un Thanon Vallev is. Juniata P. Morris Haryev 4fi. Carson-Newman P.

Mount St. Mary's P. versity of Texas team in history gridiron to help break up the scut Pa- Teachers 9. Indiana today made ashes of its Southwest Conference championship hopes New York 43. Brooklyn 13.

wrote one of the nation's great upsets into the football records by-slashing out a 14-to-13 victory over Stanford's Indians today. The fighting Cougars, passing and plunging with a fury that forced the favored Indians to make four goal-line stands, virtually smeared Stanford's Rose Bowl hopes in the turf of their own stadium. They lined up as the short-end-ers but these burly warriors from the North had the T-formation bo.ys on the defensive almost throughout the game. and bowl game dreams. ffillepp-V.

Va.) State 6 Thiel 12. Grove City P. tle. The fray brought George Vukcevich. 190-pound reserve Tempe fullback, a bloody nose and, with another Bulldog and two Lumberjacks, seats on sideline benches.

ESck Haven Teachers P. Man-field Potomac State P. SSeVJa? SiiPPery Rock cFa.) Teach Tempe stunned the Lumberjacks with a 60-yard touchdown pass on Sparked by Quarterback Emory Nix, whose good right arm was deadly on passes, and Dean Bagley, 154-pound tailback who chased 55 yards through the entire Texas team for the first Frog marker, the Christians ripped to shreds the vaunted Longhorn defenses and stifled the formerly irresistable Steer scoring power. their lirst play of the game, sur ers 7. SOTTH Alabama Georgia iech P.

SSth Carolina 2P Furman Virginia 34. Lehigh P. Punt exchanges early in the first period put the Indians in the hole 44. offorrt II. and with the ball 25 yards from Military 27.

Maryland P. behind nice blocking to score. Lackey booted the placement and it was 13 to 0. The Lumberjacks handled the ball only twice after receiving the next kiekoff, fumbling both times and the second time losing the ball to Tempe when Phil Coleman recovered Bob Wing's bobble on the Flagstaff 20. That set up Tempe's third touchdown.

The Bulldogs scored in seven plays, Vitek doing most of the ball toting and Onofrio scoring on two line plunges after Vitek set the ball on the three. Lackey again missed the placement and it was 19 to 0. The Lumberjacks spent the entire second quarter fighting th Bulldogs away from their goal line. They took over once on downs -on their seven, saw the Bulldogs punt them back to their one-half varrl oa kp Forest goal, the Cougars rushed over a Both clubs plaved a raging de touchdown and converted the extra fensive game with ball-carriers fre quently snowed under for losses. Ihe Texas resistance crumpled.

however, in the dying moments of prised even their own backers in the crowd of 5,000 by scoring twice more in the first, and added a touchdown in each of the third and fourth quarters. End runs, slants through tackle, and passing carried the Bulldogs to a victory that was so decisive the Lumberjacks not only never threatened to score but were in possession of the ball in Bulldog territory-only twice during the game. Th3 nearest the Flagstaff crew ever came to a touchdown was when a 15-yard roughing penalty on Tempe set the ball on the Bulldog 35 in the last stanza. The Loggers promptly lost 13 the tilt, and with onlv eight sec onds left, TCU scored the winning Washington" and Lee 13, Davidson 13 Duke 20. North Carolina P.

neoreia 47. Centre 6. Kentucky 33. Southwestern 19. Vanderbilt S.

Louisville P. Auburn 7. Louisiana State (tie). Jnirrav Teachers 34. Middle Tennessee THartin-Si'mmons 13.

Louisiana Tech 0 Eastern Kentucky Teachers 32, More-head Kv. Teachers 13. Memphis State 32. Missisappi CowiTSprlnB H'U 7 Notre Dame 7. Northwestern 6.

tally to lead from then on. At half-time rliey still led. 7 to 0. Stanford hopes soared when the Indians charged 68 yards to score at the beginning of the third quarter but they failed to make the extra point. Frank Albert, Stanford's AH-American quarterback of last season and usually a reliable place-kicker, toed the oval to one side.

marker. The Christian drive started with 33-yard dash off tackle to the Longhorn 33. Then Frank Medan- ch, who frequently- ripped through line in another instance, and twice for sizcahlp pains pnt five and Nix more neia lor downs in that neriod. i added four. After a loss and sev once on their seven, again on their eral incomplete passes.

Nix hurled Each scored touchdowns in the last period and each bagged the extra tally but Stanford still trail yards on the next two plays, one a completed pass. Three swift first-quarter touchdown thrusts, the first on their ed by a point as the hands of the clock ticked off minutes, then sec first play of the game, gave Tempe onds. The game ended just after one lor 19 yards to Van Hall, standing just over the goal line. Phil Roach booted the extra point and ruined the record of a Steer team which had won six games by overwhelming scores before being tied, 7-7, by Baylor last week. Texas' only marker came late in the first period when, after a TCU punt to the Steer 36, the a xa-io-u ieaa at nairtime.

Only once during the first half did the Lumberjacks penetrate Tempe territory, and then the Bulldogs stopped them cold with a pass interception on the Tempe 35. The game was in its opening min i. in tne closing seconds of the half the Bulldogs intercepted the third Flagstaff pass and set the ball in midfield. Bob Sutter, Tempe guard, intercepted Flagstaff's second pass of the third quarter and was nailed on the Lumberjack 34 after he moved forward only a yard. The Bulldogs drove right down field to score in four plays.

Onofrio shot through left tackle and spun away from three Loggers to reach the 16. On a reverse Ybarra. picked up four yards at left end. Onofrio flipped a shovel pass to Vitek. who circled right end to the Vitek faked a reverse to Onofrio and banged over right tackle to the Washington State broke up a desperate last-second Stanford passing attack from the latter's 10-yard line.

Although the Rose Bowl hopes of Stanford were practically shattered, the Indians still have a fighting chance. They're tied now in defeats with Oregon State and Washington, eacb twice, beaten. Orecron State, however, holds the FORMER CHAMPION: When tennis stars ranging from youngsters to veterans Rather here from throughout the Southwest and Southern California for the three-day Arizona Open net tourney which opens Friday, Homer Richards, of Phoenix, pictured in action, will be favored to topple Tom Falkenburg of Hollywood, first-ranking junior singles player in the nation and Southwestern champ. Falkenburg defeated Richards in the last Southwestern meet at Albuquerque, N. but the Phoenician forced the Californian to three sets and held a 40-30 advantage in a five-all third set.

only to lose an overhead smash that easily might have been the winning stroke. (Republic Staff Photo.) Longhorns unravelled a brilliant play. Jack Crain lateraled to Pete Layden, who turned on the speed utes and many of the spectators Minnesota :4. ipa Wisconsin 13. Purdue o.

Pittsburgh 14. Nebraska 7. Marouette 34. New Mexico P. Missouri 2S.

Oklahoma P. Butler 40. Washington (Mo 13. Wooster 39. Wittenberg, O.

Sluskingum 13. Mount I men Bowling Green 47. Fmdlay 0. Denison 32. Oberlin 6.

Ohio State 12. Illinois 7 Michigan State 46. Temple 0. Case 7. Ohio Veleyan P.

Otterbein 59. Ashland Toledo 27. Baldwin-V ailace Davton 40. North Dakota 0. Wabash 27.

DePauw 19 Drake 14. Iowa State 13. Kansas 20. Kansas State IB. Oklahoma A and 41.

Arizona 14. Tulsa 20. Bavlor 13. Ohio Northern 10. Heidelberg 8.

Akron 41. Kent State 13. Hanover 7. Manchester P. Southern Illinois Teachers 34.

Tennessee Junior College P. St. Benedict's 7, Emporia State Teachers 'tie Concordia 14. Valparaiso 13. Millikin 51.

Lake Forest 3 Missouri Mines 20. Northeast Missouri Teachers P. Iowa Teachers 34. Omaha 13. Bradley Tech 6, Jefferson Barracks Western Michigan 34, Wayne (Mich.) P.

Grinnell 21. Coe fi. St. Ambrose Ia 2. Detroit Tech 0.

Albion 13. Kalamazoo 6. Pinon 1 fan-oil 3. naraiy had been seated when Ber down a side line and outran the nard Vitek faded back and shot a Frog secondary over the goal. Crain 30 yard pass to Ray Ybarra, who place-kicked the point.

took it on the lagstaff 30. dodged inside lane, having won over both one Lumberjack and went on down the side line to score without a Flagstaff man being near him. Bob It was Bagley, stealing the show from Crain on broken-field wizardry, who tallied the frogs initial score just before the half-time whistle. Starting on his own 45, he tried Lackey's kick failed, but Tempe led. 6 to 0.

Stanford and Washington. OSC came through with a win today over California. Should it defeat Montana and Oregon in its last two games, it undoubtedly would get the Rose Bowl bid. double stripe. Then he booted the placement and it was 26 to 0.

The Lumberjacks fought back. Title Bound Aggies Trounce Rice, 19 To 6 T-JOUSTON, Nov. 15 (AP) Texas A and M's master craftsmen finally taking to the air in an attempt to move down field, and it was the lively Vitek who snatched to pass but couldn't find an open receiver. Then he changed his mind and ran with the ball, zigzagging After Tempe scored the touchdown the Lumberjacks twice again held for downs in their own territory, once takine over on their Purdue Bows the entire route over the goal line. Several times it appeared he was 21, again on their 35.

Northern Illinois Teachers 19, Eastern cranked up their magnificent passing machine today and clinched a tie for the Southwest Conference football title with a 19-6 victory stopped, but he staggered on. It was a magnincent exnioition ox To Wisconsin naro-hanOTnt. tiHo-ctonniru lllMUUie, VMHIII Ifailea US QeienSl pO erS lOO late. stiff-arming. Tne Aggies thus kept perfect their season's record while the LTni- Late in the fourth quarter the Bulldogs again took to the air ior an SO-yard scoring march, which required only nine plays.

Two swift passes by Olea. the first to Cam-polo, then to Ybarra, moved the ball from Flagstaff's 35 to the four. Ybarra sailed around left end, then cut back through tackle to the two- Statisticallv Texas Christian A n-in nunen Oregon State Spanks Bears DERKELEY, Nov. 15 (UP) Oregon State College today kept its Rose Bowl hopes alive by winning a dull 6-0 football game from University of California before a crowd of 20.000 in California Memorial Stadium. With one ear cocked to the scores from Palo Alto, where Washington State College was upsetting Stanford, the Beavers rolled on the ground to a touchdown in the third period and let it go at that.

Joe Day, chunky Oregon State fullback, did the heavy work as thf Beavers crunched their way 35 yards to their touchdown. The game's only score was set up when Bob Reinhard, California's "TADISON, Nov. 15 (AP) -LJ- Wisconsin turned in two se sen a Lumberjack pass as he fell on his own 35. The Bulldogs didn't tarry. On second down Al Onofrio, on a reverse from Vitek, rambled 22 yards through left tackle to the Lumberjack 45.

He picked up another five yards through right tackle. When Tempe was penalized five yards for offside on the next play Vitek regained that ground on a slant off right tackle. From the Flagstaff 40 Vitek beyond hope of resurrection by sational fourth-period scoring plays Ohio State Nips Illini shone the Longhorns. gaining 147 yards on the ground to the Steers' 119 and annexing 59 by air to the losers' 29. Both teams completed six passes, the Frogs trying 17 to Texas' 19.

foot line, from where Camoolo Illinois Teachers P. Monmouth 20. Knov P. North Central 21. Illinois College P.

Illinois Wesievan 7. Illinois Normal 0. Wheaton 13. Eureka 7. SOrTHWFST Texas A and 19.

Rice Texas Christian 14. Texas 7. Oklahoma Citv 2S. Sterling 13. Southern Methodist 14.

Arkansas 7. Texas Tech 46. St. Louis 6. West Texas 40.

Texas Mines 7. KOCKT MOrNTAIN t'tah 2. Colorado State 13. Colorado 13. Brigham Youni 13 (tie).

Denver 41. Colorado Mines o. Wyoming 12. State 6. Montana 16.

Idaho 0. FAR WEST State K. California Washington State 14. Stanford 13. College of Puget Sound 6, College of Idaho p.

UCLA 29. Camp Haan 0. scored on a quarterback sneak, and iacKey hooted the placement. lexas Christian, 14-. Heading toward a howl bid.

the marauding Aggies rushod over three touchdowns in the first half to sew up the outcome. The victory was the AcEies 28th of their last 211 contests. The clash was 12 minutes old when A and first tallied. Whit-lock Zander, Rice fullback, fum- hloH nn th Dvvl 47 and Rill Sih- pOLUMBUS. Nov.

Ohio State moved 15 (AP into a sec New exico Gallon and threw up an airtight aeiense to defeat Purdue, 13 to 0, in a Western Conference football game witnessed today by 25,000 spectators. Dave Schrciner, right end, accounted for the first score, and Pat Harder, brilliant sophomore fullback, went over for the other. Schreiner scored two minutes after the final quarter started. He blocked the kick of Purdue's substitute quarterback. Bob Hajzyk.

in the end zone, and fell on the ball for a touchdown. Harder kicked the extra point. This came 30 seconds after the Badgers had blown one of several BYU Ties olor ad ond-place tie with Michigan in the Western Conference football race today, but only after coming from behind to subdue a valiant and ever-fighting Illinois team. 12 to 7. Loses, 34-0 Vlev.

Aggie center, pounced on the "DROVO, Utah, Nov. 15 (AP- Rice was penalized for defensive MILWAUKEE. Nov. 15 (AP) A crowd of 41,554 home-coming fans, smallest of the campaign, sat stunned as the underdog Illini, Brieham louns University holding, and JJerace Closer shot a Marquette had little trouble dispos first title-challeneine: football team 14-yard pass to End Jim Sterling punting tackle, fluffed one weakly-out of bounds on his own 35, an 11-yard kick. Day blasted the line to the 23, bucked to a first down on the 11.

In one explosive shot he powered through for nine vards and ing of New Mexico in an intersec-tional football game before 12.000 moved to a touchdown in the first five minutes and then hung on to Cavalry Beats Arizona Riders TUCSON, Nov. 15 fAP Uni in two decades of gridiron warfare which put the hall on the 14. On BLUFLAME tans today, scoring in every period the lead until midway through the got up off the grass in the waning tne next piay. Aioser iouna no re- minutes and battled Colorado Uni- to grind out a 34-to-0 victory. cei-er and sped to the four.

Then he dove to the one-foot line, and scoring opportunities by passing directly into the hands of Walter then picked up the last two yards versity of Arizona's roughridin? Cook, substitute Puroue dbck, wno third period. The inspired Illini took advantage of a short punt which went out of hounds on Ohio's 28 to punch home their touchdown. versity's Golden Buffaloes to a 13- 13 tie today. The game left the Cougars tied with I tah University for the mountain states Big Seven lead. Each has one more con was standing on tne goai line.

Harder had set up this chance by- Dennis Andricks, fullback, plowed over. Jack Webster kicked goal. The second period had just opened when Leo Daniels, great little sophomore Aggie back, sprinted 31 yards with a Rice punt, stop poio team met its third defeat of the season this afternoon, losing 6 to 5. to the Fifth Cavalry team from Fort Bliss, in a fast, hard-played game. A second game will Quarterback Dick Good passed A handy economical heat The Golden Avalanche used forward passes and a ground attack with equal effectiveness, scoring through the air on three occasions and plunging for scores on two others.

S'ew Mexico never threatened and was in Marquette territory only once. Marquette marched 45 yards in the first period for its first score. Bob McCahill, left halfback, sparked the drive and went over for the fo End Milosevich and Halfback ference game to play, and un Don Griffin to reach the 30. Half ping on the Owl 21. Daniels fired a pass on the next play to Rog MARTIN'S "BLU FLAME" KEROSENE a clean, odorless fuel of high heating back Jimmy Smith plunged to the one-foot line, and Good sneaked it over.

Guard Bob Wilson booted the intercepting a Boilermaker pass. Schreiner's touehdpwn appar-Schriner's touchdown apparently was the spark needed to ijrnite the Badjrrrs. who previously had tried without success to penetrate Purdue's stout defense. As the game drew fo a close, Harder knifed through center, paused to pick up interference, then romned throusrh the entire on a line duck, warren Simas attempted conversion was blocked. The Beavers missed several other scoring changes inside the California SO, including one that went to the California one-yard line in the second period.

A roughing penalty gave OSO the ball on the California 33. and the Beaters made first down on the 23. Halfback Don Duran ran end to the two-yard line and Halfback Bob Deth-man plunced to the one. but Fullback Lewis Shelton fumbled in the end zone and Hank Zacharias recovered for California. California's biggest threat came ers for the second touchdown.

Less than a minute remained in the first half when Webster shot a 45-yard pass to Sterling on the six. Daniels then chucked to Rogers again for the last score. Rice drove 59 yards in the final quarter for its tally. Passes from score from the one-yard line. He and Harold Eigner, a substitute less the upset jinx asserts Itself again, the two teams will finish deadlocked for the championship, which Utah is defending.

The Cougars stopped Colorado's first-period surge on the 13, then forged ahead when Center Reed Nilsen intercepted a pass and swept down the sidelines for 40 yards and a touchdown. Dee Chipman placement was wide. Colorado muffed several chances to score, but unlimbered its big guns in earnest in the third period. Paul McClung, Colorado's ace back, carried a punt 12 yards to the Purdue eleven for 54 yarns ana a touchdown. His try for the extra oe played tomorrow afternoon.

Sporting three former Wildcat players the Army four did all its scoring in the first four chukkers to lead the university team, 6 to 2. Arizona rallied, scoring two goals in the fifth and another in the sixth, but strong defense work bv the cavalry warded off other goa attempts. For the Fifth Cavalrv It as Lt Jimmy Taylor, who teamed with Bill Dent to give the university the Southwestern polo championship here last year. Lt. Vic Smith, another former university player, and Lt.

Jim Spurrier also were outstanding. Taylor and Spurrier took scoring Honors with two goals each Pete Bideza-n extra point, and Illinois was out front. The Bucks, completely bottled up the first period and with their ground attack crumpling against the Illinois forward wall, used an Illinois pass and one of their own to strike late in the second period. Illinois was on Ohio's 15, after pounding from the 48. when Fullback Jack Gref snagged one of nnint from nlacement was wide.

Purdue completed only two of 11 aerials for ll yarns, ana was vaiue. Easy to handle and easy to use for quick, early-in-the-morning or evening heat. When It's Martin's "Btf-Flame" it burns with a clear Blue Flame A TRLL WILL CONVINCE YOU Martin's FRIENDLY Service Stations held to 89 yards rushing. fullback, had carried the brunt of; the attack. Johnny Goodyear's placement added the point.

I Marquette added two touchdowns in the second period, using forward, passes. Jimmy Richardson passed: .29 yards to John Harrington, sub-; stitute, for one of the markers. McCahill tossed another, good for 49 yards, to John Hildebrandt, a sub-; for the other. Charles' Beyer's conversion kick was good' early in the third period when the game was still scoreless. Starting on their 43.

the Golden Bears started passing. McQuary passed to Whalen on the OSC 45, then Rein- Smith's aerials on the five and raced back to the 27. Cougar 40, McClung and Vern Miller rushed to the 19. thn McClung Kaihah Yields 26-Point Deer FLAGSTAFF. Nov.

15 (AP) hard passed twice to Dunn to go On the next play. Halfback Dick Fisher passed to End Bob Shaw, passed to End Stan Hendrickson after the second score but he missed to the UisC lour, ihe Beavers rose up and smashed back the challenge for a touchdown. Robert Knowles year's Cowboy squad, scored three the first try. In the third period, McCahill pass-: catching the Illinois backfield flat-footed. Shaw took the ball on the Illinois 35 and ran untouched to to lead Arizona scoring.

John i placement gave the Buffs a 7-6 three times, and Merlo's attempted field goal was short. A 26-point deer, believed by state fish and game officials to be the lnrcest hanged in Arizona this sea lead. u.wiason ana Dee Woodell each scored one. East Van Buren at 18th St. ed to Ray Carlson, right, end, for; 19 yards to add to the Marquette! margin.

Carlson had caught a passM score standing up on the 73-yard advance. Dick Dwelle to bander and Bill Blackburn, sophomore back and center, lofted the Owls to the Aggie 31. Little Barron Ellis churned 11 yards to the 20; Dewelle picked up three and Bob Brum-ley. Rice's ace who had been out of action the last couple of weeks, plowed over after three line smashes. His touchdown bias came from the four.

The biggest crowd in Rice Stadium's history- 30,000 persons, including the cadet corps of 6,000 watched Moser and Daniels send the Aggies away to a fast start. Rice totaled 108 yards on the ground to A and 36, but the Aggies recorded 119 by passes to the Owls' 85. Rice scored 13 first downs, and Texas A and seven. Pin Tournament Slated Tonight Some of Phoenix ranking bowl son! is the prize Kaibab trophy of Grand Ave. at 6 Points W.

Wilson, a druggist ot fcen, a few moments earlier for a 28-yard i Encanto Links 7 Calif. Beyer again added the point. gain The Bucks didn't catch up, however, as End Leon Schoen-htum's place kick was wide. Illinois stayed out front 7-fi The animal, which weighed iyj pounds, was killed on Little moun nals Slated Encanto Park golfers will wind until late in the third period Within five minutes, Colorado drove to Brigham 13 but lost the ball on downs. Olenn Hedgecock stole a Cougar pass on the BYU 34 and raced to the five.

Hedgecock smashed right tackle to score on third down. Know les placement was blocked. Booming right back in the closing minutes, the Cougars pushed to the Buff 25 and on fourth down Grant Mulleneaux dropped a fine pass into the waiting arms ot up their November tourney firing today and then add a Thanksgiving tain near Moquitcn camp. me checking station at Moquitch camp gave the spread of the horns as 36H inches. There were 26 antlers with a diameter at the base of 2.4 inches.

Kansas Upsets Kansas State Kan- 15-haii 4 An "nderdog Kansas foot- fP.arked fcy a speedy sub-2 halfback. Denzel Gibbens. ln tne final Vroi to Sx Same today. dJashefl 83 'arfls one iromRajph Miller, writhed through yards to score the 'inrher Vaughan Kimball on the goal-line. With a tie of defeat hinging on the outcome.

Chipman's placement cleared the bar safely. ers were represented on the entrv list for the Gold Spot Alley's Thanksgiving singles bow ling tournament, slated to be rolled at 8 o'clock tonight. Among the entries before the when the Rucks drove from their own 33 to score. The entire distance was made on the ground, with Fisher and Graf doing the plunging, until the Bucks reached the five. There Tony Butkovich stole the ball from Fisher, and the Illini backed against their own goal line, elected to run instead of kicking.

Smith fumbled. however, and Tackle Jim Daniell recovered for Ohio. Fisher plunged to the three, and Graf rushed it over. Again Schocnbaum missed the kick. SOFTBALL GAME BILLED Thr Pepsi-Cola girls will meet thr Chiroprac tors in a girls winter softha'l league game on the Phoenix Softball Park diamond at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon.

Phyllis Donald and Charlotte Armstrong will be mound opponents. flavor to the proceedings. Jeff Wilson, who defeated Bob Warren, 1 up in 19 holes yesterday, will meet Tom Lambie in the first-flight finals at 9:30 o'clock this morning. Jack Freund and Jack Chiate will mix in a second-flight semifinal at 9 o'clock, with the winner meeting John Cohill. in the finals.

Cohill defeated Barr, 4 and 3, in a semifinal match yesterday. F. T. Bangs and D. B.

Wiley will plav in the third-flight finals at 9:30 o'clock, and E. C. Thomas and! Fred Smith will meet in the fourth-fight finals, with the time not definitely set. Three turkeys will be offered as; A wide selection of all I domestic and foreign I FAST FREE DELIVERY I Phone 3-0718 fiashey Meets Corral In Wrestling Feature 0 the many villains prominent on Phoenix Madison Square matrt jf3rdsKins KonK Kashey will he promoted to the climax Corral Seventh avenue arena tomorrow night, with Alberto Kash rrovide opposition, victorv earned the windup match by scoring a rough-and-tumble I prizes. dead line was reached last night, were Joe Pond, Neil Swerengcn, George Stewart.

U. H. Ben Stiffler, Red Hopkins, Cotlon Yockey. Dr. Charles Van Epps, Dr E.

Payne Palmor, Bill Bennett, Earle Furst, Ed Sheffield, Loren Stevenson, Dick Dvorak. Don Davis, Pat Hargraves, Freddie Bockman, Cappy Ricks, Jack Sho-well and Fred Steele. Sweepida Takes Tanforan Race SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 15 (APJ With a thrilling stretch run, Sweepida, owned by H.

C. Hill of Stockton, won the $2,500 addd King's Mountain Handicap at Tanforan today. Bulwark, which ran second, also showed a plucky drive to beat out No Competition. The winner paid 55.20. 53.20 and $2.60.

Bulwark, an A. G. Tarn entry, paid $4.20 and S3, and No former foVu Kruskamp. than er' somewhat tougher the cleve Corra1 is onp of nTfSerity C3St hlSPJ1? lH'en Pretty solid-ven by th galleryites he', Krapplers. So KrtUn, to fair- rin.iyi", DaTv5s- I Ace Stapling Machines Guaranteed Jam Proof $1.25 Up h.

M. Clark OFFICE SUPPLY CO. 123 North 2nd' Ave. may have a loss chalked up against him tonight. Stein is a grapplcr of the rough-and-ready school ant-should be able to absorb a lot of punishment.

That Stein likes the going rough was proven last week when he was disqualified for wrestling in the aisles. Both main events are scheduled for two of three falls, one hour time limit. Dick O'Connor and Bill Thompson will meet in the one-fall, 45-minute time-limit opener. The card will begin at o'clock. Every Sunday 2:30 P.

M. (STARTING SUNDAY, NOV. 23rd) FEATURING COAST CARS WEEKLY Phoenix Midget Speedway 17th Ave. West Garfield i 2 double main evpnt ts 'ii tin? wore l.i the Garden the les. mor.

Victoi ctorles than Competition, third, $3.60. ilKe to remember but he.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Arizona Republic
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Arizona Republic Archive

Pages Available:
5,583,855
Years Available:
1890-2024