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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 20

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El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
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Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pan. 6600. 6600. Sunday, October 24, 1937 EL PASO TIMES El Paso'a HOME Newspaper California 20 Fordham 7 Baylor 13 1 L. S.

U. 6 Rice 14 Arkansas 13 Yale 9 U.C.L.A. 0 I N. Dame 9" Fwestern 0 U.S.C. 6 T.C.U.

6 AiM, 0 Vandy 7 Texas 7 S.M.U. 0 Cornell 0 Wash. State 3 Navy 7 Ohio State 7 Tigers Battle Mesa Jackrabbits To 7 7 Tie Before 3500 Fans Unbeaten Baylor Blasts Aggie Hopes, 13-0 Locals Hold Strong Team Passes Net Touchdowns il. i Clash With Arizona Riders Today or com ii 1 In First Half. HANDING together a one-man searching party, the Bench- warmer sallied forth at the first crack of dawn Saturday to seek out the guy who said the Muckers were going to keep Santa Barbara's Gauchos below the 12-touchdown mark.

Unsuccessful In the quest and with all the county's bloodhounds reposing as hamburger in the sheriff's Ice box, the Patterson Is Victory Star Bears' Smooth Precision Paves Way To Upset Strong Cadets. College Station, Texas, Oct. 23 (AP). Undefeated Baylor put a vaunted Texas A. and M.

team on its casualty list Saturday, 13-0, easily killing at the goal line the only Aggie thrust past midfield. Bullet Bill Patterson, Baylor's blond bomber, loosed two tremendous touchdown passes that dropped to completion beyond the Cadet goal stripe. His first one in the first five minutes of play took the starch out of a befuddled Aggie THE SUMMARY. El Pant KlcVnffs, number Kickotfs, diiUnee 113 Klckoffa, Dial. Bft'd.

15 Pun(, number 10 Fund, distance of 3M Piintu, Dint. Ret'd. 1 Tarda falned, Yarda lost ncrlmmajlnf i First down. Touchdown), number 1 Points after 1 Fumblea, number 4 Own fumbles Penalties, number of A Penalties, diatanee St) Passes No. of 1 Passes No, II) Passes Intercepted lards gained 20 Mesa 1 ir, is 4 145 4S 140 14 lt 1 1 6 a is ii 130 rut 'Sf mly remaining channel through Tech Downs Lobos, 27-0 vhich that astute prognosticator nay be adequately awarded is to xtend him honorary the American Association of Gazers, Local 150, A.

V. T. N. whatever that means. It may as well be confessed that ou could have knocked us over vith a feather whpn the Muckers eleven that got its own machine under way only once.

Victory Gives Raiders Cinch For Tie In Border Loop. Lubbock, Texas, Oct. 23 (AP). Continuing where they left off against University of Arizona last week, the Texas Tech Red Raiders Songs have been written about "that good old Baylor line," and the boys didn't let the songwriters down Saturday. From wing to wing It performed as the best Baylor wall in history, permitting only 49 yards on running plays.

For the five triumphs the Baylors have put on the bonks, that Baylor line has allowed enemy backs to slip through them for only a little better than 25 yards per game. It wasn't just Patterson's passes charged to a 27-0 victory over University of New Mexico here Saturday night before 7500 fans. int only held the heavier Gauchos, ui had them whipped to a frazzle irnil the closing minutes of the hfrd period. It's true that he won man by taking the Miners aid seven points, but made the bet mly after Le Rny Nigra promised ie'd turn the buck over to the Com-nunity Chest after the Gauchos had node the foggy field look the Centucky Derby. Any comment seen or heard about he fracas must of necessity include Cenneth Heinemnn, against whom lat been hurled epithets, adverse riticism, "nertz to him" and after other Mucker encount-rs.

That great clan of Monday norning prophets, who always can ell you who won after a game has ieen played, had Hcinemen branded "the most overrated player in the Jorder Conference" in less compli-nentary terms. i It con only be wondered how Victory gave Tech an undefeated conference season and at least a tie for the championship. Long runs, featuring Elmer Tar- Rams Defeat T.CIL, 7-6 95-Yard March, Booted Ball Give Fordham Classy Win. New York, Oct. 23.

(AP). Into as wild and woolly a game as football ever produced Jumped a bench warmer with a sure toe Saturday to give Fordham University a 7-6 triumph over the Horned Frogs of Texas Christian University Twenty-five thousand fans, fairly drenched by both rain and thrills of a wide open, bent-for-hell game, sat in hushed silence as Wilbur Stanton leaped off the bench and swung his toe at the pigskin. Aided by Angelo Fortunate, who had scored the tying touchdown and held the ball, he booted the oval squarely through the uprights tp give the Rams a hard-earned triumph they'll never forget with only two minutes left to go. The kick from the wet and somewhat slippery field ended a charm that the Horned Frogs From Fort Worth, Texas, held for 58 minutes. Time and again the outwitted Rams piled up to the enemy goal line only to miss with distances of one toot to six yards to go.

And when they finally blasted the spell, they made a 95-yard march by land and air to rush over the tying' touchdown, The thriller was a case of T. C. U. getting the lead at the outset and holding on for dear life the rest of the trip. The game wasn't 10 minutes old when the aerial circus from the Texas plains accomplished what mighty Pittsburgh has failed to do in three successive games a touchdown.

With little Davey O'Brien throwing passes all over the Polo Grounds greensward, the Invaders drove to the Earn 13 where Davey shot a pass into the arms of Don Looney who caught it going over the line for the score. O'Brien's try for the extra point by placement was low and wide and the big tug o' war was on. As their line suddenly strengthened after playing loosely for the first period, the Ram backs drove to within scoring distance three times in the second period, falling on the three yard, two yard and one foot line on as many desperate tries. T. C.

V. Line Holds. In the third period they were stopped on the two yard stripe again and it looked like curtains for Fordham and its Rose Bowl hopes as the Rams found themselves in the fourth period, five minutes to play, on their own five. It was from that five, where they passed in desperation, that the winning drive opened. Along mid-field, it was halted as each side fumbled but off went again with Joe Granskl tossing passes to Captain Johnny Druze and Fortunato to carry the hall to T.

C. six. Fortunato finally took it over on fourth down from the yard line. or the stout work of the line it was the velvety precision with which box and Bobby Holmes, and the blocking of a great line brought touchdowns to Tech in the first, second and third periods, the most sen Baylor executed every play that enabled them to outclass the Aggies. Patterson, Baylor's 105-pound can sational of which was an 85-yard runback of an intercepted pass by Tarbox on the first play of the sec rplS hard-riding quartet from New Mexico Military Institute at Rosu-ell meets the Arizona Vni- versify polo team on Armstrong Field, Fort Bliss, at 2:30 p.

tn. Sunday in their first match of the South- u'esfern Open Polo Tournament. Left to right, they are J. Taylor, 21, of Carrizozo; Jack Shirley, 19, of Grand Canyon, John Bannister, IS, of Phoenix; and Frank Cowden, 20, of Midland, Texas. Seventh Cavalry Beats Eighth, 1L6, In Meet ond quarter.

didate for All-American honors, took care of Baylor's first score almost singlohanded. He intercepted a wild pass Ken Mills flung after the Aggies took the opening kickoff, planted a perfect out-of- Tech scored twice in the third quarter, once after recovering a Lobo fumble on the 18-yard line, again after blocking a punt and recovering on the 17, bounds kick on the Aggie eleven. That rocked them on their heels, and then came along with the scor By JOHNNY WARD Times Sports Editor Outweighed and facing a team that passed as well as it ran, El Paso's battling Bengals played the Mesa Jackrabbits to a 7-7 deadlock before more than 3500 fans in El Paso High School stadium Saturday afternoon and remained in the undefeated column. From the outset, when Mesa's towering forward wall swept down into Tiger territory and Griff en rifled a long pass over the Bengal end zone to Russell for the score, it appeared that the fighting Tigers at last had met a team that would smear them. Tiger Line Holds.

But the lithe, slender-hipped Kenneth Terrell evaded the clutches of the huge Mesa linemen, pivoted and darted behind the capable blocking of Stewart, Wiggs and Fellabaum to prove speed is a match for strength. Mitchell, Fox, Borrego, Delgado and Mateus were pillars of granite in the Tiger line, and the Jackrabbits were forced to the air for 130 yards of their gains. On three occasions they flashed a brilliant pass play, one, attempt netting 40 yards. Fumbles cost the Jackrabbits the game, one of them coming when they threatened under the shadow of the Tiger goal posts. Each time they marched deep into Bengal territory, they either fumbled or the ball went over on downs and was kicked out of danger.

George Fellabaum, Tiger fullback, highlighted the game with beautiful punts averaging 39 yards on 10 of them. Some of his kicks were delivered from percarious positions as he stood behind his own" goal line. Excellent blocking in the backfield kept his punts from a block that would have cost the Bengals the game. Tigers Outplayed. Statistics show the Tigers were outplayed, the Jackrabbits making 11 first downs to the Bengals' five and outgaining them more than five to one through the air, but to El Pasoans who saw the contest the valiant youngsters of Coach Jewel Wallace deserved the tie.

The Tigers' tying score came in the second quarter after a display of power and a Mesa fumble had Cougars' Goal Defeats UCLA ing play immediately after Mills kicked back to the Aggie 38. Rice Lassoes Miners Feted In Hollywood Los Angeles Newspapers Proclaim Returning El Paso Team. Steers, 14-7 Deadlock Broken Up In Patterson started out on an ordinary end sweep and then fired a pass while at a dead run that Sam Boyd, Baylor end, bagged across the goal line 40 yards distant. Gernand's try for point was blocked, somewhat of a rarity Itself. It was the first time he had failed this year.

The Aggies came out for the sec umy of the Monday morning quar-jrbacks, standing on their own 35-ard stripe, could have wiggled nrough a field Fprinkled with an-jgonistie players, most of whom over 200 pounds, for a own. How many football teams 'hose playing has been confined to Owls Take Fourth Win Fourth Quarter For 3 To 0 Victory. Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, InFour YearsFrom Luckless Texas. (Special to The Times) Los Angeles, Oct. 23 Tired Oct.

23 (UP). A field goal early in and worn after "seeing all" of Los ond half with intentions of playing cautiously in an effort to bag a Austin, Oct. 23 (AP). Rice Institute's aggressive gridders Sat break in a punting duel, but the plan boomeranged and Baylor got lear, dry weatner ana iirm neiai ould have marched out on a field lat's almost at sea level, soggy with loisture and with a blinding fog lanketing the field und done as rell as the Miners did Friday lght? urday attained "jinx" status over Angeles and Hollywood in one day, Texas College of Mines football players boarded a train here at 8:05 p. m.

Saturday for El Paso. the fourth period Saturday broke a bitter deadlock and gave Washington State College a 3 to 0 victory over the University of California at Los Angeles football team before 20.000 spectators. the break when Marx, slnngbean the University of Texas, triumphing tackle, recovered Shockey's the fourth year in a row, this time by 14-7. fumble on the 29. The Miners were the toast of Los On the old Statue of Liberty play, The team which had not scored a The important three points were Baylor scored.

Gernand took, the point this season picked the luckless Angeles for the clay as coast sports writers sang their praises after their sensational 13-13 with Santa Barbara State Friday night. Steers to heap their wrath upon in snapback, "posed" for a puss, Patterson grabbed it and fired 35 yards a furiously-fought baltle and thus icross the goal line to Frank furnished by Eight Halfback Joe Sienko, who kicked from placement on fourth down after Washington State's running attack had bogged down the UCLA three yard line. Sienko's winning boot was from the Not many of these high and dry rid machines could have completed pass in practice on a field like lat. It's remarkable how the Muck-r did it when Frank Junell, cov-ring the story for The Times, wired iat the fog was so thick it was ard to see the players and the far ielines were indistinguishable. The group was conducted through gloriously Introduced themselves into 1937 Southwest Conference Huessner, the other Baylor end.

This time Gernand's kick was good. the Warner Brothers, First National studios where the gridsters chatted warfare. Only once in the first half did the 13 yard mark. with the actors and actresses. Aggies surge past midfield, and that A homecoming crowd of 27,000 watched tm evenly-matched elev Lunch was taken in the Universal carried thorn only to the Baylor 46.

Thrills And Spills Mixed In Southwestern Polo Tourney. The Garry Owens outclassed the Eighth Cavalry in the second game of the Southwestern Open Polo Tournament at Armstrong Field Saturday 11 to 6, despite the super playing of Eighth Cavalry, Captain Morton McD. Jones-. The Seventh scored 10 well-earned goals in addition to one awarded by difference in handicaps. The game started with a first period of minor casualties with Captain Yale breaking his mallet just as he was about to score.

Lieutenant Miller's horse stumbled and horse and rider went down and Lieutenant Palmer lost hfs helmet and later his bridle. Another fall brought the grandstand to its feet when Lieutenant Estes in the third period attempted an under-the-neik shot and tripped his horse with his mallet. A more perfect under-the-neck shot was made by four-goal Lieutenant Harry Wilson in the same period just missing the goal posts to go outside. The Eighth Cavalry chalked up a goal when Captain Jones sent a free shot from the 20-yard line through the posts by virtue of a foul by the Seventh. The fourth period was a field day for the Seventh who scored five goals in the seven and one-half minutes allotted.

TW Eighth revived in the fifth and sixth periods against good opposition with Lieutenant Palmer as the high score man for the game in the Eighth. The outstanding shot of the game came when Captain Yale smashed one from the 60 yard line sending the ball through the horses to score goal for the Seventh. Lieutenant Palmer, In the sixth and last period, took the ball from the opposition, car rled It along the sidelines to score for the Eighth. Captain Jones also made a nice play by dribbling the ball one-third the length of the field to score. Captain Yale and Lieutenant The teams battled equally during i dull first half, but Coach Orin Babe" Hillingbery evidently in ens start cautiously, and fail to accomplish anything in the first part WALKING through a neighbor- But in the early stages of the fourth, the Cadets, with Ken Mills heaving passes, fought down to the four-yard line.

Studio cafe that is a portion of a lunch as most of the period was spent in gazing at the motion picture stars who rushed in for hasty lunches. spired his Washington State athletes during the intermission. Af hood considered one of the iendliest. your correspondent re- There Baylor stiffened and held At any rate the Cougars came lrned to the office several days put them on the 12-yard stripe. Terrell arched a high pass over the end zone into Fellabaum's waiting back and dominated the last half.

Hie team attended the Washing the Aggies on the spot on two attempted runs and passes. i go with over-ripe tomatoes erched precariously atop his hat, ton State-UCLA game Saturday afternoon and watched the Cougars ill yolk of tainted eggs coursing arms, Fellabaum's talented, unfailing toe, tied the score in a perfect Inspired Irish chalk up a 3-0 victory. They will Grid Critics Given Lacing By Bo M'Millin kick from placement. arrive in El Paso at 7:45 p. m.

Sunday. Ken Heineman who passed and ran the Miners to their tallies, was a favorite with the sports writers of the opening quarter. Terrific line work smeared attempted drives until Douglas Sullivan hurled one to Jim Nance who was stopped after a short run by Buchell Allinson on the Texas 18, A number of tries by Sullivan, one of Rice's stars, got the ball to the four where the Steer line congealed. The Longhorns scored their lone touchdown in the second after a beautifully-executed forward lateral, Bullet Gray to Johnny Peterson to Beefus Bryan, was called back, officials ruling the lateral had been passed forward. An enraged Hugh Wolfe, Texas' outstanding ground-gainer, then Beat Navy, 9-7 This is not to belittle the Amon-ians.

They played an admirable game but the breaks were against them. Fumbles when a touchdown Texas Rancher Will Yell For Navy's Mascot and screen folk. Rlnnminetnn. Oct. 23 (AP).

lowly down the side of his face and Alvin (Bo) McMillin, the- old "Prayin' Colonel" of Centre College who now coaches Indiana University, charged hard Saturday into current critics of college appeared inevitable and fumbles when they were deep in their own territory tell the story. Their strongest and most sensational play was in midfield when Clubb, Lewis, Boyd and Langford cut wide swathes in the Tiger line and the nimble- Oregon Staters Defeat Wchfeet Sonora, Texas, Oct, 23 (AP). If wilted bouquet ana assoriea gaiu clinging to tattered trousers. you happen to see an elderly 'gen Reposing on the desk were scv-rl thousand letters, most which tleman sitting near the sidelines at the Army-Navy game at Philadel Said the graying Bo: "ThPtf dtp hit.inif thfe hand that fooled Griffin, Brockett and Ells i lBBested a steady diet of dead rats phia on Nov. 27 yelling to a billy snagged Gray's lateral and tore to the Rice 13.

Rice lost ground on an offside penalty and Gray plunged to worth scampered through the holes. Tpnie. black mud and 40 years South Bend, Oct. 23 (UP) Dame's inspired Irish, hopelessly beaten for three periods, struck savagely twice in the fourth Saturday and defeated the Navy, 9 to 7, on a snow-swept field. For three disappointing periods, the 45,000 spectators huddled in the pelting snow watched Navy rip through Notre Dame's underpowered line.

Once the Middies scored, again they threatened. Suddenly in the fourth, the Irish found their fight, and scored a touchdown and safety in the final minutes. goat, it will be all right. fed them and are influencing a lot reading "Fundamentals of Soprts It will be B. M.

70, promi Lewis Injured. Lewis, 196-pound guard, was injured in the fourth period, but of people who don know wnat it's all about." T-Tia ftrA waa directed narticularly nent West Texas ranchman, yelling the four, Wolfe ran wide and was pulled over the sideline on the two to "Admiral, the Navy's official mascot. "Admiral" once roamed in Halbert's vast flock. at present-day football stars and by Jake Schuehle. Gray then later-ailed to Bryan who dived over.

Millett, weighing 160 pounds, replaced him and opposing Tiger linemen didn't get the hoped-for rest. writers who have saia me game is on the decline and have accused I'd like a seat down near the Wolfe's perfect boot added the extra point. In short, the Bengals played a ground so I can that goat that 4,000,000 other goats down in Texas bang-up game against a bang-up (Continued on Next rage) Estes were high-score men for the game with four goals each. The Seventh horses seemed in hr-i. are pulling for him to win that Centenary Raps game." -In Five und a Hall fcasy jlcs-)ns." More etupld than usual the enchwarmer flicked a cigar butt ff his shoulders and scratched his tan.

Some of the letters were mns- 1 srpieces of brevity such as this i ne. El Paso Times I ar Benchwarmer: I I B-r-r-r-r-r-up. Sincerely yours, I J. Lookazz," Eventually, letter was reached rhich aerved in a way to explain chaos and debris in which your lorrespondent so unwittingly i fumbled. From Ysleta, It indig-ilantly proclaimed the Indians were tcr condition than thns nt N.M.

Teachers colleges of subsidizing players. McMillin, who gained recognition as one of the game's greatest quarterbacks nearly two decades ago, thinks college football is better and more popular than ever. Hunters Oiling Haywnrd Field, Eugene, Oct. 23 (UP). After knocking at the Oregon goal posts for three periods Saturday, Oregon State finally broke through for two touchdowns in the final period to defeat the Webfeet for the second consecutive year, by a score of 14 to 0, With only Rix minutes of the fourth period remaining, Joe Gray, ace left halfback of the Staters tossed a pass to Bill Duncan from the Oregon 17 and Duncan ran the remaining two yards across the goal unmolested, A few minutes later Regionatol, Oregon sub end, fumbled a pass on the Oregon 24 which was recovered by Oregon State.

On the next play "Gray Ghost" Gray boomed around right end and twisted and sqirmcd his way over the goal line, eluding a half dozen tncklers. Prescott Ilutchins, orango right guard, kicked both conversions. Redlands Tics Arizona, 18-13 Defeat Normal Eighth It would seem from Saturday's performance that the Garry Owens will be strong contenders for the tournament championship. Sunday the University of Arizona will play the New Mexico Military Occidental, 0-0 Guns For Deer (Special to Th Times) Silver City, N. Oct 23.

Las jiisiiuue at Armstrong Field at 2:30 Los Angeles, Oct. 23 (UP) m. Score bv ceriods: Vegas Normal was administered a 7 to 0 defeat by a hard-fightine cidental College and Redlands Uni versity battled to a scoreless tie in (Special to Th Tlmesl T.n ri-ufPH. N. Oct.

23. Deer LOt OUt OI me jlhsujuii i-uui juit their football game before 4000 per Tucson, Oct. 23 (UP) Staving off a last-period Arizona threat, Centenary held a 18-13 win at the final gun of their football game here Saturday night. The visitors held desperately after James Jackson tore around end for Arizona's touchdown and then kicked the point to bring the home team Into a threatening position in the last period. Centenary had led 18-6 at the start of the final session.

Silver City Teachers eleven In a homecoming game here Saturday afternoon before a large crowd. 7th Cay.lry jd 3rd 4th Sth 6lh Total Capt. 2 1 a Lt- E'te till 4 U. i Lt. Miller i i nilinff ud their rifles in sons at Patterson Field on the Oc Las Cruces as they prepare for an cidental College campus here Satur had apparently been asumea Dy sorts writers in their ravings in the ublic prints.

The writer went on to diminish le defeat handed the Lower Valley The Mustangs scored early after day. By handicap invasion of mountain recesses in nnr nf deer which are usually Redlands came within scoring dis plentiful in the mountains here. tance on passes twice in the first ibe by Austin's Panthers a week the opening whistle, on a series of lateral passes. Purvines, star sophomore back, plunged over the pay-dirt for the touchdown. St.

John's kick from placement was good. 8th Cavalry rapt. Neal 11 1st and 3rd 4th Sth Sth Total 1 lis half but Occidental came back in the second to dominate the play. Lt. The bear hunting season openeu October 1 and extends to December 10.

with the limit one bear to Igo and added in no uncertain terms iat Ysleta was gunning for El Pmo tigh School and with such a vie- Capt, Jones 1 1 2 tapt. Reardon During the remainder of the game, John Cannona, 145-pound center, tried a field goal in the la-t period each hunter. Only one bear has both teams battled on even terms Tulsa U. Defeats ry would be on even terms in me istrict race provided, of course, from Redlands' 15-yard line but was with the Cowboys displaying an as unsuccessful. sortment of tricky-plays which had ie Tigers beat Austin.

Oklahoma Aggies Flagstaff Teachers Beat the Mustangs baffled for several His conjecture obviously is irue. Stanford University Tulsa, Oct. 23 (AP). Tulsa ut sports writers those lowest of minutes. The Cowboys in an effort to tie the score, started tossing long Nebraska Ekes 7-0 Win From Missouri Columbia.

Oct. 23 hard-fighting University of Missouri football team battled Nebraska, Ue conqueror of mighty Minnesota, to a standstill most of the game Saturday, but lost 7-0 when Nebraska converted a long pass into a touchdown. It was Missouri's best showing of the year. They cained seven first downs to Nebraska's but the Cornhtiskers out rushed Missouri by a seven-yard margin. Princeton Scores Early, University's Golden Hurricane sped over the ground and sailed through 11 newspapermen with tne exeep-on of oolice reporters ere of a Remember Defeats Washington Washington Stadium, Seattle, Oct.

passes losing more yards than they gained. ne-track mind, granting that they the Name: the air to four touchdowns that counted and two more that didn't The Cowboys failed to penetrate 23 (UP). Stanford University's powerful running attack crushed into the enemy territory during tha Saturday and handed Oklahoma A. ave minds. Including this tact diagnosis of comment on local ijotball.

It is fair to say that the University of Washington Saturday, tussle. The game ending with buvei Si M. a 27 to 0 shellacking, Tempe Professors, 7 ToO Tempe, Oct. 23 (UP). Led by chunky Butch Sals-brenner, gridiron representatives of the Flagstaff, Teachers shouldered (he Tempe Teachera all over the field be-fore winning 7-0 here Saturday night.

Salzbrenner scored the only touchdown on a line plunge lit the second period. The flat-staff team piled up 20 first mm City in possession of the ball on the It simply was a case of one team to in a Pacific Coast Confer ence football game. aborts scribes were sure the ligers been killed in this immediate vicinity so far. However, they are reported very plentiful. The deer season opens November 1.

A Forest Service survey last year indicated that there are more than 1300 bears on forest lands in the state. The bear kill last year, however, totaled only 75. Substitute On Field Robs Penn Of Victory Philadelphia, Oct. 28 substitute who walked on the field without reporting to the official cost Pennsylvania a victory Saturday as an inspired Georgetown eleven held the Red Bnd Blue to a scoreless tie before 20,000 fans at Franklin Field. With 30 seconds to play, Ed Field-en, substitute end, dropped back for trv from the 26.

on a being far too good for the other. The defeat was the second of the The Aggies tried hard, staged season for last year's champions. Las Vegas one-yard stripe. SCHREINER WINS. Corpus Christi.

Oct. 23 tk-tt-The Schreiner Institute Mountain' some back to the wall stands to The Cardmnl team scored in the flould win the district race without 1 liuch challenge and no other pos1-. lilltjr was considered. I By the same token, It's reaonable 'liat Austin has far belter chance If winnins the district race than stave off more scores and threat Remember the Price: Downs Rutgers, 6 To 0 second and third quarters. Washing ton scored in the third.

ened a time or two on their own account but they were a badly Princeton, N. Oct. 23 (AP). Scoring only in the first period, op. uowns ia live for their ponrnts.

eers, two touchdowns behind at half time, came back in the final two quarters to beat the Texas A. ti I. Javelinas here Saturday tm Ysleta and Bowie has an equal TECH FROSII WIN. wnippea team ai Hie iinlsh. COPS l'ORKTOWN RACE.

1 5 bane with the Lower Valley iads, I Even a blind baseball umpire Princeton defeated Rutgers, 0-0, for its 34th successive victory over its oldest gridiron rival before a crowd of about 33,000 in Palmer Stadium FIRPO'S ARREST nsnrarn New York, Oct. 23 puld see, however, that the Tigers Buenos Aires, 04. 23 (AP). Luis Angel Firpo, 38, heavyweight fight night, 13 to 12. PLAY 6-6 TIE.

Nacogdoches, Texas, Oct. 23 (AP) Byers' Thorson closed stiong Satur "It'i a rvatdgatP Saturday, 2 difficult angle. He met the ball day to win the 57500 Yorktow er, was ordered arrested by the Lubbock, Texas, Oct. 23 (AP). Coach Berl Huffman's Texas Tech freshman football ttam, which outweighs and quite frequently out-plays the Matador varsity, turned on offensive and defensive steam in the second half of its Rame with the Cameron Aggies of Lawton, to win a 19 tc 1 victory, going away.

lvt peen far more impressive litlr games than Bowie, whom they Vat; than Austin, who almost ended 1 a scoreless tie with Carlsbad who Handicap, feature event of the card criminal court of appeals. N. M. SHOOTERS VIE. Santa Fe, Oct.

23 (AP), Albu squarely, and it stalled straight ana true over tht goal posts, but the Nhru AMried a Penn substitute at Empire City. Thorson won by He was charged with complicity The North Texas Teachers College Eagles and the Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks played a 6 to 6 tie Saturday in a Lone Star Conference Distributed by: Carter Tobacco Co, El Paso. Carlsbad and Albuquerqtre Walter-Smith Co, Peer, a nose in photo finish with Mrs tum was beaten 25 to 0 by P.owie; querciuo and Santa Fc riflemen will iian Ysleta, held to a 13 to 0 count P. D.

Watts' Busy IC Danger Point standing on tht field, and the score in an allegedly fraudulent purchase of a ranch in Cordoba Province which he bought in 1832. meet here Sunday in the opening was cancelled. i rabens. owned by J. D.

Noma, wis wira event of a series of matches. game..

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