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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 10

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The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
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Page:
10
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Montana Grizzly a Leading Scorer QTh Sunday Missoulian, Sunday, October 26 ,1 947 Silvertip Grizzlies Claw Cougars Trojans Batter Ca! Bears, 39 to 14, jn Long Step Toward Rose Bowl Berkeley, Oct. 25. Crashing, whirling giants from Southern California charged a long Team in Strong Finish To Claim. Conference Penn Sinks Navy Philadelphia, Orl. 25.

frnnsylvania't pondrrnua foot-ball machine rolled up Imprr-live hunk of yardage and a 21 to 0 victory over the Navy Saturday, but It wasn't until the final quarter that the Quaker moved fast enough to make their fourth straight triumph a certainly. A capacity crowd of 78,205, packing Frnn'f big double-decked Franklin field atadiuni, aw the home team take a 7-0 lead In the first quarter and hold grimly onto It through an unimpressive display of old-fashioned bone crushing: football until the weary Midshipmen crumbled In the last fourth quarter. Shortly afterward they recovered a California fumble on California's 27 but lost the ball the same way eight yards from the goal. The Bears began massing desperately. But it didn't work.

Left End Ernie Tolman Intercepted a blocked Triumph and important lap toward the Rose bowl Saturday by battering California's hitherto unbeaten Bears, 39 to 14, in a football classic before vt jb pass on California's 14. Four plays later, Sub Left Half Jack Klrby went over from the one-yard line. He made both touchdowns in the final period, with many Trojan subi in the lineup. California received the opening kickoff and drove to a touchdown in the first 50 seconds on their first Many of Top Teams Lose Lustre By llROI.I (l.AASSIA New York, Oct. 25, (TV Army and Illinois, which played to a dramatic tie only two weeks ago were scrimmage play.

Pullman. Oct. 25. (fPjAn alert Montana Grizzly football team pounced on two Washington State fumbles and converted the opportunities Into touchdown drives Saturday to upset favored Washington State college 13-12 in a Dads' day game before a Rogers field crowd of 13,000. Danny Radovich, 5 foot 4 inch Grizzly right halfback, scored both of the winners' touchdowns after the Cougars had grabbed a 12-0 lead in the first 12 minutes of t.he nnenine auarter.

The Grizzlies to Be Breakfast Guests Monday Montana' Grizlv team will 1m honored Kiuvts- at the Montana Athletic- association Monday morning qiuulerbatk breakfast at the CofXfP Parlor, Palace hotel, President joe Diuiil announced. All football fans, are united to join with the Montana Athletic association In this breakfast, where the conches will give a report on the a capacity crowd estimated at 80,000 fans. The big Trojans, passing and pounding relentlessly, and snatching at every opportunity, scored two touchdowns in the first period; one each In the second and third quarters and crossed the goal line of a demoralized California eleven twice in the last period, California counted touchdowns in the first and second quarters, but except for these scoring flurries, was outplayed by a team the huge crowd cheered at the end as possible coast conference champions and western representatives in the Rose bowl of New Year's day. Leading 20-7 at hatfUme, the Trojans came back to open the third with the game's great Alert Stops ini, 14-7 IS 41 Lafayette, Oct. 25 fP) An toppled Saturday while Michigan, Notre Dame, California, Baylor, West Virginia.

Wake Forest and Penn all lost some of the lustre they had gathered In college football circles tills fall. Army's skein of 32 games without a defeat was ended abruptly by a daring band of Columbia Lions, who completed 20 of 30 passes while Pullman hostilities which will be of alert Purdue team never made a mistake Saturday and knocked down an Illinois football machine Prmtrars farted into fumbling; general interest. est play a 95-yard klckoff return his that had gone ten games without: by Right Half Don Doll with uncertainty before the Silver-! dJhfnobafit 11 at 8 'dtxlt Mon" tips' heads up, smashing; statP student and With the ball on the 36-yard line, Right Half Jack Swaner skirted left end and, behind good blocking, ran down the sideline for 64 yards before the capacity crowd had hardly settled In the seats. Dick Cullom placekicked the extra tally to give the Bears a 7-0 lead. The Trojans capitalized on a California fumble to tie the court.

California's left half, Billy Main, dropped a quick kick on his own 18 and Left Guard Dick Clark recovered for Southern California, Doll lugged the ball five times in succession to California's one-yard line, from wliere Fullback Berl Llllywhite ran through center. Tommy Walker added the extra point. Southern California drove 54 yards on three passes to set up a 10-yard touchdown run by Left Half Goraon Gray. In the second period the Bears smashed 88 yards for a touchdown, Fullback Jack Jensen going around left end the last five yards. Cullom teammates applying timely blocks drives.

'supioitrrs will meet the train marching to a 21 to 20 triumph. That run just about broke the spirit of the They began fumbling defeat, 14 to 7, before an alumni-packed crowd of 42,000 homecoming fans. Illinois, tied by Army but unbeat and had poorly-directed passes in Bill Preuninger place kicked the earryine the Grizzlies on Us arrival (That was first defeat sulfered by extra ioint after touchdown follow- i lrom Spokane at 7 o'clock this me Cadets since the Navy Rame of Ing the second Montana score to morning on the Northern Pacific, 1 1943. Gene Rossidcs was the Co- en since mid-season of 1946, made tercepter'. 11 fin min mm pive the ineir ursi ra- 10 u- nviuriuc iu mc hi umiDia piicner ana jacK wacumun 17 first downs to Purdue's six.

It was the first time since 1929 Purdue's five-man backfield on I that USC had returned a kickoff to defense was calculated to stop Illi-! a touchdown. Russ Saunders turned iuoiuana naoi 10 mm i iimu unc i wm UP renu'inuerea as tne jauei r.ame at Pullman. Originally sched- Wio failed to kick the extra point Dun Radakovich, sawed-off Montana halfback, scored two touchdowns for the Grizzlies in the conference victory from Washington State college Saturday at Pullman, to add to four touchdowns which he had previously made during the season. war veteran from Glasgow high. nois' top passer, Perry Moss, and the trick against Notre JJame.

uled to fly home, the' Grizzlies were that would have given Army its forced to take the train when the cific Cgast conference victory from Washington State in history of the circuit's grid play. Roy Malcolm's effective kicking was another outstanding feature ol Montana's playing, his average well over 40 yards. The savage charging of the Montana line through while it didn't keep him from pass-! A pass interception late in the ing for the one Illini touchdown, it third period gave Southern Call-knocked down most of his other fornia the ball on Its own 37-yard airplanes were dispatched east tarrying fire fighting supplies to Concord, N. H. losses.

i line. ladded the extra tally. Moss reached receivers with 12 1 The Trojans passed and pounded of 23 passes, but the net gain was from there to score early In the only 133 yards, while Bob DeMoss of i Huskies Blast Bobcats Whip ISC 34 to 12 Utah State Aggies Dropped By BYU, 27-12 Stanford The Trojans next rolled 66 yards on two passes by Quarterback Jim Pollard to California's one-yard marker. Fullback Bill Betz crashed center for the touchdown, Walker converted and Southern California left the field at halftime leading 20 to 14. Purdue completed four of five fori 58 yards and set up both of his team's touchdowns.

Apart from DeMoss' timelv passes, Halfbacks Harry Szulborski and Norbert Adams picked up badly needed Purdue yardage on several occasioas, as did Fullback Jack Mi- third tie in the unbeaten string. It was Purdue, the team that gave Notre Dame such a workout on October 11, that bounced Illinois, 14 to 7. The Illini, Big Nine defending champions, hadn't lost since half way through the 1946 season when Indiana did the trick. To the Purdue line goes the credit for fashioning the upset which leaves Michigan as the lone unbeaten, untied outfit in the midwest conference. The Wolverines, however, along with Notre Dame and Pennsylvania lost caste by having to worry for victories over opponents they were expected to handle with ease.

Michigan had to hurry all the way to subdue Minnesota, 13 to 6, while Notre Dame needed a last period touchdown to make its score over Iowa 21 to 0. That also was' the score of the Penn-Navy encounter at Philadelphia where Tony Minisl, Indians, 25-0 Seattle, Oct. 25. (Hi A Univer Razorbacks Stun Mississippi In 19-14 Victory Memphis, Oct. 25 UP) Aroused Arkansas matched the nation's most potent air attack with free-wheeling, strike-throwing Clyde Scott this rainy, miserable afternoon and stunned favored Mississlp- sity of Washington Husky that has FELLER'S TEAM LOSES Mexico City, Oct.

25. (IP) The Pacific Coast stars Friday defeated Bob Feller's all stars, 7-5, evening up tire exhibition series here at Bozeman, Oct, 25. tP) Combining a strong aerial attack with a well-manned running game the Montana State college Bobcats scored in every period to defeat Idaho State college Bengals, 34 to 12, here Saturday. In notching up five touchdowns the Bobcats hit pay dirt twice on long passes and three times on short plunges while Idaho wat making its touchdowns on runs of 8 and 70 lito, Quarterback Kenny Gorgal and Halfback Dick Bushnell. The Purdue line, especially Left Tackle Phil O'Reilly, took root when anywhere near its goal.

When Illinois reached Purdue's 19-yard line in the fourth quarter, Provo, Utah, Oct. 25. (tP)- Brig-ham Young university's victory-hungry Cougars twice came from behind Saturday to whip Utah State agricultural college, 27 to 12, in a thrilling football game gelore 11,000 homecoming day fans. A Utah State touchdown in the first three minutes of the game on an unbelievable pass interception, a 65-yard touchdown run by. Aggie all-conference Halfback Jay Van Noy, and the magic arm of Cougar Quarterback Rex Olsen, whose passes accounted for three of the four BYU touchdowns and set up the done most of its snarling between Saturdays got its galloping muscles into action Saturday for the homecoming alumni and bowled over the Stanford Indians, 25 to 0, in a foot-tall game played before a crowd of 32,000.

It was the first Pacific coast conference triumph of the season Boilermaker tacklers knocked the ball out of Russ Steger's hands P'. ia t0 14- 'n a thnii-packed con- end O'Reilly took nossession. Piayea oeiore yards. Mississippi's great Charley Coner- Only Dwight Eddleman, the high Bengal left half Bernard La Rue broke loose for a brilliant 70-yard for Washington and left Stanford in the circuit cellar, winless. The dry.

warmish day was Ideal jumper, gained with any consistency for Illinois on the ground, getting 45 yards on eight plays. jaunt over his right tackle on the second half repelled all Coimar threats in the closing period. The Grizzly linemen rushed Cougar passers so fiercely that the Wash a one-time miasnipman, was tne main cog. California, Baylor, West Virginia and Wake Forest all were spilled from the ranks of the unbeaten, an honor retained by Texas by virtue of its 12 to 0 triumph over Rice. For the second straight week the Rice Owls were held scoreless and also for the second straight Saturday Texas surprised by making its important advances via the ground.

Oregon Webfeet Squelch other one, provided the most excitement. The first Utah State score came soon after the kickoff as Johnny Cauto heaved a long pass only to have BYU defenders knock it around several times before Johnny Worley appeared seemingly from nowhere and took the leather unmolested across the goal. ly, the top offensive man in intercollegiate football, gave one of his greatest all-around performances but it wasn't enough to offset the antics of the speedy Razorback halfback who used to star for navy. Twice during the up-and-down battle, Mississippi matched Arkansas touchdowns and went ahead on the proficiency of Bobby Oswalt's point-converting toe. But with six minutes remaining and the Razorbacks trailing, 14 to 12, Scott unleashed a 41-yard pass to End Bud Canada to reach the Idaho's first play in the third quarter for the best play of the contest.

The Bobcats' first two touchdowns came on great passes thrown by Quarterbacks Gene Bourdet and Johnny Gardiner, good for 38 and 32 yards respectively, to right end Milt Clawson and left end Ken Card. Bourciet's touchdown heave was his seventh of the season. Throughout the game the Idaho team failed to cope with th Bob for passing but the Huskies used aerials only as a threat, gobbling up yardage on smashes at the line and long sweeps around the Stanford wings. They moved at a touch-ciown-a-period pace, scoring their first pair on 27-yard canters, the third one on Center Gordy Berlin's 40-yard steam engine drive with an intercepted pass and the last on a blocked kick. Washington tallied the first time Dons, 34 to 7 Olscn, one of the nation's leading pass-makers, flipped a short aerial THE BEST DEAL We Know of to prevent accidents on icy roads a Camel-Back RECAP JOB It Costs Little Saves Much Camel-Back wears to a rough, non-slip surface, giving your tires traction on ice! O.

K. TIRE SHOP Z33 W. Main Phone 6441 Eugene, Oct. 25. (Pi An Walker Hits Bruin Line for SMU's underrated University of Oregon cats 's well-rounded attack.

The Montana eleven made a total of 18 enemy's 26. Then he sailed 23 yards to the three. Stacey Looney plunged over. Kenny Holland kicked the it got hold of the ball, starting from its own 35-yard line alter a Stanford punt. Knifing at the Indian front wall, the Huskies slammed to the Stanford 23 on live plays, Freddie Provo going 12 and Herb Harlow 20 on the two best gainers.

After Provo was dropped by Indian Halfback George Quist for a four-yard loss, Sammy Robinson jabbed through right tackle into the clear and crossed the Stanford goal. Bob ington State aerial attack was effectively checked. The Cougars scored in the first seven minutes on a drive which started when Halfback Jerry Williams ran the Grizzly klckoff back to his own 32. Advancing on quarterback sneaks by Dean Eggers and reverses to Williams and Don Paul, the Cougars drove to midfield. Then Paul twisted away from a tackier on the WSC 40 and went to Montana's 14.

Eggers, Williams and Paul battered to the three in four plays and Eggers ploughed through center for the score. Bob Doornink's recovery of a Montana fumble on Montana's 33 set up the second touchdown. Williams ran to the 25. Frank Mataya passed 22 yards to Paul and Williams went over from the two on a reverse. Early in the second period Johnny Helding jumped on a Cougar fumble on Montana's 40.

He passed 25 yards to Roy Malcolm who drove in three plays to the Cougar 11. Malcolm then passed to Radakovich on the three and Radakovich went over for the Winning Counter Los Angeles, Oct. 25. OP) Electrifying 64,197 grid fans with a spectacular 86-yard pass play that set the stage for the winning touchdown. Southern Methodist university's Mustangs defeated hard team, displaying the power found downing Washington last week, squelched the San Francisco Dons, pride of the west coast independents, Saturday, 34 to 7.

Oregon unleashed its sharpest ground attack of the year in the upset and kept the Dons pushed back in their own territory through most cf the game. The lone San Francisco score came late in the fourth period against Oregon reserves. The Dons staved off scores in the fit st quarter, but early in the second alert End Dan Garza jumped GLEXniVE WINS Sidney, Oct. 25 (fP) Baker and Baker made a pair of touchdowns apiece to lead Glendive in a 32-7 conquest of Sidney here Saturday night. Leo Baker's first-quarter 85-yard runback of a Sidney punt was the highlight of the game, and started the visitors on the way.

Sidney had to wait until the third period to get its points. miKaison, no maae out one oi live; charging UCLA Saturday, 7 to 0, placement attempts, missed his kick and remained on the nation's se- to Jim Keitzman, Cougar end, in tlw end zone, in the first for the home team's initial score. Don Bushore kicked the extra point. In the second half Van Noy, on the second play from scrimmage raced off left tackle from his own 35-yard stripe and twisted away from one tackier, picked up a blocker and put tne visitors ahead again. Caputo's try for the extra point failed.

Two Olsen passes interspersed with running plays in the third sent the Cougars to the Aggie sav-en-yard line. Lyle Koller ripped through the line for another touchdown. Bushore's kick was good. Fielding Abbott intercepted an Aggie pass after the kickoff and ran to the Aggie 28. Olsen's second pass attempt from that point hit Jay Hamblin on the seven-yard and se went over.

Bushore's kick was again good. Glen Oliverson intercepted a Ca-puto pass and ran to the Aggie 29 to set up the final BYU score. Ol first downs, 14 by rushing, three by passes and one on a penalty while Idaho was only able to make a total of five, three by rushing and two on passes. Stopped once by a fumble after taking the ball on their own 20 following Idaho fullback Orvil Baker's kickoff over the end zone and marching it out to the Bengal 47, the Bobcats scored the next time they got the ball. An Idaho punt was returned to the Bobcat 24 from where Montana scored seven plays later.

BourdetV pass to Clawson climaxed the drive. Taking the ball again after an Idaho punt, This time on their own 20, the Bobcats went 80 yards for their second touchdown. The pay off here was Gardiner's pass to Ken Card who never had to break stride to take the toss on the Idaho 8 and go the rest of the distance un end Washington was in front, 6 to 0. Stanford failed to get out of its own territory in the first half. on a San Francisco fumble on the Icct list of untied and unbeaten elevens.

The climax came in the early moments of the fourth quarter. Backed down to their own 12-yard line, the Ponies' halfback, Gil Johnson, stepped back almost to his goal line, and sailed a pass toward the sidelines to Halfback Paul Page. Page took it on his own 45, and Duke's Folger touchdown. Midway in the third period, Bill HTrips Reynolds recovered Gordy Bruns Dons' 20 and in four plays the Oregon Ducks had a touchdown. Fullback George Bell, a standout for Oregon, scored it on a six-yard end run.

The second score came minutes later with Halfback Jake Leicht culminating a 59-yard drive by running end six yards to a touchdown. The half ended, 13-0. In the third quarter Oregon could do no wrong, the Ducks picked up one fumble on the San Francisco 5 and Bell bucked over for a score. Garza intercepted a pass on the San wick's fumble on the Washington Wake Forest tore down the side stripe, UCLA's Benny Reiges, who just a moment before had seen his field goal try blocked, managed to fell the flying touched. Against the Bobcat reserves the PLEASE FELLOWS don't shoot those hens OUR FUTURE HUNTING DEPENDS ON THEM! sen tossed to Liverson in the end Idaho eleven took the Montana kickoff and went straight down the zone.

Bushore's kick was blocked. Wake Forest, N. Oct. 25. (TV- i Page on the Bruin two yard line.

Fred Folger, a triple threat! Twice Bill Moxley hit the sturdy field to score. Quarterback Robert back, led undefeated but once-tied Bruin line, which once before had State 35. Running plays and a 17-yard pass from Helding to Roy Bauer took the ball to the Cougar 12. Helding went four more yards, then reversed to Radakovich who went on for the touchdown In an eight-yard dash. Bill Preuninger, substitute tackle, kicked the only good placement of the day to provide the victory margin.

After Montana's second touchdown Washington State drove Francisco 31 and went straight Sherman went around his right end, for eight yards to make the 14 to 6, early in the second period. Starting on their own 26 after the Duke university to a 13-to-6 victory Saturday over previously unbeaten Wake Forest in a Southern conference football game played before 25,000 fans. Although he did not score, Fol- Texas Knocks Baylor From Unbeaten Ranks repelled a scoring thrust for four downs inside the three, and failed to get anywhere. Then little Doak Walker who had failed in those four previous whacks into the line bounced off his right tackle for the winning touchdown. Far from beaten, the Uclans, loser to SMU in three intersectional games with the boys from Dallas, Idaho kickoff, the Bobcats made another drive for their third touchdown.

Fullback John Heine powered over from the one-yard stripe. Score by periods: Mont. State 7 13 7 734 Idaho State 0 6 6 012 downfield to the Montana 20-vard' 811(1 P8- MU 33-line, where a furious stand stopped Hls nins rancd from a fpw furious stand stopped ranged ti it on tne the Couears. Later a lone nnss. vluub --rt Jaui; downfield for another touchdown.

The final Oregon tally came as the entire line rushed Quarterback Donald Panclera on a pass attempt. End Darrell Robinson simply lifted the ball from Panciera's hand and continued 28 yards to the end zone without a hand laid on him. Leicht kicked four of the five conversion attempts for Oregon. The Dons score came with two minutes remaining on a 34-yard pass from Halfback Fred Kleme-nock to End Al Pietkiewicz. Halfback Marin Willis converted.

Lippincott to Williams, threatened last play 01 the 8amc College Station, Tex'as, Oct. (PI Texas A. M. bounced 25. back Scoring Touchdowns Montana: viciously from three straight de-Clawson.

Card, Zupan, Heine and feats Saturday to knock Bavlor out Miles: Idaho: La Rue and Sher set up a passing-running march i that swept them down to the SMU six yard line with less than three minutes to go. I Skip Rowland fumbled and I again but Roy Malcolm nabbed the ball on the eight and kicked far down field. The last minutes Montana was down in Washington State territory. Montana (13) Pos. Wash State (12) Selstad LE Bacoka GAELS DEFEAT LION'S Los Angeles.

Oct. 25. Lovola university stepped out of its class! Friday night and took an unmerci- fill 57-7 trouncing by the Gaels of, St. Mary's in the eighth renewal i SMU's Page recovered. Forri Pirrv I looi uau series, uvermatcnea Gorton Ln KnmWnnt plia outweighed, from stem to stern.

of the nation's unbeaten ranks, with a convincing 24-0 decision that kept the AgRies in the Southwest conference championship race. The passing of Buryl Baty, the running of Ed Dusek and the magnificent punting of Stan Hollmig were too much for a hard-fighting but fumbling Baylor team. Ten tunes Hollmig punted and seven times the ball went out of bounds mside the Baylor 12-yard line. Loyola held the visitors to a 21-7 HPLEDGED MM 0BEY THE I l2 game laws vol Lecper Lazor KuniDUriS RG Peterson thalft man. Points after touchdown Montana: Berger, Rumberger, Gor-rilla.

Summary: scrimmage, yardage net Mont. State 329, Idaho 140. Passing: Montana attempted 6, completed 5 for 142 yards; Idaho attempted 14, completed 6 for 75 yards. Punting: Montana averaged 35 yards on 3 punts; Idaho averaged 37 on 7. Fumbles: Montana 2, 1 recovered; Idaho 4, 3 recovered.

Cork RT Dooming nuortably seated in the Tiaoer PR Suun.n,, 101 000 at coliseum, saw the Lions 1 fans, comlortablv 186 GAMES AGAIN Los Angeles, Oct. 25. () Directors of the Pacific Coast baseball league, after a lengthy discussion, adopted Saturday a 1948 schedule like this year's 186 games played over a span of 26 weeks. The season will open Tuesday, March 30, and close the last Sunday in collapse entirely as the Gaels rang up a total of touchdowns, Helding QB Eggers Malcolm LH Williams WILLIAMS STARS Starkville, Oct. 25.

i.V) Mississippi state's great tail back, Shorty McWilliams. paced the Maroons to a 27-7 victory over a stubborn Hardin-Simmons team before a crowd of 9,000 Saturday. McWilliams' first of two touchdowns was the culmination of a 49-yard drive with Shorty going over from the fcur yard His second touchdown was a beautiful 60-yard punt return shortly aTier the start of the second half. Labrador is a dependency of New- i foundland. seven conversions and a safety.

Halfback Herman Weriemeyer was the pate attraction, and scored two touchdowns and passed 40 yards for a third. Radakovich RH Paul Stmt FB Brunswick Montana 0 6 7 013 W. S. C. 12 0 0 0-12 Montana scoring: Touchdowns, Radakovich 2, point after touchdown, Preuninger ifor Cork.

Washington State scoring: Touchdowns, Epgers, Williams. Montana Substitutes Malone, Roberts, Jourdonnais, Kaliach, 1KX.XS IIX II UK ATS DKNVEK Denver. Oct. 25 iVi Fred I met a man the other day Who lives his life the ALSCO way More time on his hands, Brown's right arm and the legs of unarms Reynolds and Zac Henderson turned a liit-half football game into a second-half runaway Hammerness, D. Leaphart, C.

Leap More pride in his home 5 hart. Kemanvkv Pif.iiniiit.Pi- 11111 oownea Denver, 117.000 NATIVE TROUT Livingston, Oct. 25. Forest service and state fish and game men released more than 117.000 native trout in lakes and streams of the Gallatin national forest Yellowstone district this summer. The work included traveling 250 miles over mountain trails.

The men carried the fish in 10-gallon milk cans to some of the 15 principal fishing areas. Rejloele. Doyle, Korn. Washing- ton State substitute.s-LippincoU, 'T-" b'eJl" right 8t Baker, Niemi. Berg.

Rumberg. Pols- No longer does he play golf alone. For others have learned how to save a day By equipping their homes the ALSCO way 4 Smith ttom-oo Mi loot, Mataya, Lee Johnson, Terry, Kofler, Godfrev on with Bob Hazclhurst plunging the final yard after Vern Cochran's long pass to Chuck Moorer had gone for 38 yards and a first down on the one. Statiftics of the Washington State-Montana game: Mont, WSC 250 men have signed the pledge as shown on this emblem they want to stop violations instead of having to report them. C3 EASTERN MONTANA WINS Billings.

Oct. 25 Out slav ing Black Hills Teachers collece in every department. Eastern Montana Normal school blanked the invaders 12 to 0 Saturday to win its first intercollegiate football came of the season. The Yrllowjacket.s lot little time taking the lead in the Dakota-Montana conference fracas, scoring in the first and second quarters. ALSCO, America's Outstanding aluminum Combination Storm Windows and Doors do not require painting or upkeep.

You change from winter to spring and spring to winter from the inside of the house. For free sample demonstration call 4966. STARNER BUILDING SERVICE 1310 Schilling Missoula, Montana First downs 8 13 Net yards gained rushing 91 155 Forward passes attempted 11 14 Forward passes completed 6 4 Yards gained on passes. 123 76 Forward passes intercepted by 1 3 Yards gained run-back interceptions 1 50 Punting average 41 42 Total yards all kicks returned 43 60 Opponent's fumbled recovered 5 3 Yards lost by 30 85 Stordock's CABINET SHOP Kitchen Cabinets Built-ins "Made to Order STORE FIXTURES 326 S. Av.

W. Phen 586 Bat Violations will be Reported as signified by the Wildlife Commission of the Western Montana Fish and Game Association. Roger Bacon was arrested for performing black magic because he performed experiments involving electricity..

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Years Available:
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