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Show 4 .., . ,. PROVO J(UTAH)- : EVENING HERALD - THURSDAY, OCTOBER- 20, -1938 PAGE THRED PoeM - S 11 j j i (Ml (S8 I n ?r f CO) INVADERS SET TO END B. Y. I). VICTORY STRING If Portland wins over Brlgbam Young university Saturday tt-Will be through the air. The Cougars took it that way today as they went through final heavy scrimmaging oelore tapering taper-ing off for the invaders. Coach Eddie Kimball was stressing pass defense for the third consecutive week. Portland Is rated "the fastest team in the west" and reports from the Northwest indicate they will be concentrating on passes in n effort, to turn back the Big-7" leading Cougars. 20 Passes Per Game In four games up to date the Portlanders have averaged 20 parses per game with a complet-tion complet-tion of 40 per cent. It may be such an attack that will beat Brigham Young the first time in nine .starts - the first , time since the Oregon team handed, them a 13-10 setback last year. Jack Christensen was back in a Cougar suit last night and went through the drills without too much limping. Christensen is expected ex-pected to play very little Saturday Satur-day if the big Blue and White team can get along without him. Coach Kimball wants to save "Slippery" Chris for the homecoming home-coming with Utah Aggies, Nov. 5. Hubert May Start Charlie Roberts, Chris' tailback twin, is running the ball with his old skill and will undoubtedly get the. starting call Saturday. " All the- varsity boys will be at top form with the exception of Chris Mortenson. Mortenson was forced out of practice a week ago with two sprained ankles. A rejuvenated lineup may start haturday. In order to get some more "beef" on the line, Coach Kimball has been experimenting with huge John Weenig at tackle, Odean Hess at center and Rowley Jensen, end. These boys all hit the scale at around 200 pounds and would add to the Cougar forward for-ward wall. Other B. Y. U. starters, as Coach Kimball lined them up today, to-day, include Brink at fullback, Jewkes and Roberts, halfbacks; Soffe. quarter; Waters, end; Captain Cap-tain Bird and Gilbert, tackles ; Lloyd, guard. Brink At Fullback Brink practically sewed up the fullback post with his consistent play against Utah. This boy, although al-though only 150 pounds, is one of the hardest hitting backs on the .-quad. Brink will be the lightest man on the field Saturday. Port- Roberts Boots v One for Courrars - :.--;':x . : : : - : . ':v-:7.::-': ..: r v V . ' ' - ;j , a ' p A !. -ft s: s TV - - u v . - A .',i,,.-,v,,.v.'.'.-.v.'.-,'.-,-.-1-,.v1?1',,.v.i-,v,v ..v.-.-.-.-.-.'. ' . "wx x-i-x-x x-"-:! t ;-. i-r-; v :!::::; :!!:: I Roee&rs - - -:-.-x--v.vT: : . ,v. , . . SPORTSMEN! TliOPHIES and SPECIMENS Mounted True To Life! Russell W. Loaderi Sculpture Taxidermist 25 WEST CENTER ST. Phone 4S5-W land's prize package also plays fullback. Franulovich hits the beams at 153 pounds and it is the boast of his team mates that he is the "lightest fullback in western west-ern football." Coach "Matty" Mathews brings to Provo one of the most colorful teams to ever play on a Utah field. The Portland outfit worrys more about gate receipts than they do about final scores. Get the crowds out and give them some football thrills for their two-dollars-and-ten-cents. That's the kind of sentiment senti-ment that has dropped the huddle and shifting from the Pilots' playing. play-ing. Change of Pace The Portlanders go the usual speed when they're working on their own side of the field. When in enemy territory they turn on the steam, doing from four to six plays per minute two to three times as fast as the average team. Unorthodox is a mild term for the Pilots, passing attack. The team passes on any prjivocation, or none at all. It doesn't matter what the down . . . Porand will pass. -i- A young. Japanese author, Yu-suke Yu-suke Tsurumi, turns out a full-length full-length novel in less than a month, ad in doing so writes more than 14,000 Japanese characters daily. faj It O When Old Man Winter sends shivers down youx spine and your knees are hitting on. all two it's time to get yourseli buttoned-up in Hanes Heavyweight Heavy-weight Champion 1 Gentlemen, here's a union-suit that really upholsters your hide with warmth ... covers you from neck to ankles in soft, snug. comfort. Knocking knees haven't a chance against HanesI nut that's not all there is to this underwear. Consider Con-sider the way it's cut and knit to fit with full, accurate accu-rate site. . You can bend, stretch, and reach Hakes never binds 1 Buttons, buttonholes.' cuffs.- and seams are sewed to keep the wear in this under wear. See THE ANTt-ntEEZE UNDEI-WEAR UNDEI-WEAR FOR MEN AND BOYS your Hakes Dealer today 1 rrrt UlHtt Wlmlmr It km w- Middleweight nderwear for indoor workers, thewa by small Havre). 55c to 9e the aarmeet. HANES heavy weight Shirts aed Drawers for atee beaie at 59c; Beys tfaioe Seits, etc: MerriehHd Sleepers, - 79c. P. H. Haees Keirtiatf Co.. Wlestoe-Salem, N. C. ID: HANES HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION $1 (tarts ivn) " ether eei Lewis MEN'S and BOYS' WEAK Exclusive Dealer . Coach's Choice By R. L (Iatty)3Iatnews Football Coactf University of Portland Willamette-College of Idaho Willamette rather easily. Oregon State-Washington State Oregon State if their victory at Seattle last week "doesn't make the Beavers feel too important. Pacific-Whitmanabific by several touchdowns. Oregon-Fordham Oregon, if the .field is dry. There may be some sentiment in this selection. Montana State-Carroll Montana Mon-tana State should have little trouble. Washington-California California Cali-fornia should win without much trouble, but Phelan's team may make one of those miraculous comebacks, and make it close. Brigham Yoyng-Portland An extremely close game, but I believe be-lieve my team, profiting, by its mistakes of the last two weeks, will be able to squeeze through for a win If we don't miss the punting of Frank Moloney too badly. Utah-Utah State Utah to win. Montana-North Dakota Montana Mon-tana should win handily. It is improving im-proving steadily. Santa Clara-Arkansas Santa Clara may get a real test in this one. I think they'll win, but they might be upset for the first time since they last faced a really good pitcher Sammy Baitgh, St. Mary's-San Francisco St. PORTLWTEAU SETS SfilL FOB PROVO KWASIUi! PORTLAND, Ore., Oct1J 20 ttlEj (Special) Coach Matty Math-ewe' Math-ewe' r alr-mSaded - University; of Portland football team, took a final ..workout here Wednesday in preparation for its battle with Brigham Young Cougars,, probable champions of the Big Seven conference, con-ference, at Provo Saturday. . .-.:' jlThe Pi!otsi entrained Thursday morning and will -arrive: In. Salt Lake City, Friday morning,, taking a. bus fromi there (to Provo. They expect to work " out briefly..: at Provo Friday, afternoon. , . -,-tZ ;X . ;fecept for . slight .bruiea, the squad is in good ' shape and the best . of., spirits. Al . McBarron 190-poimd center, may not see service because of an ankle injury sustained in the St. Mary's game Sunday, but otherwise all players are ;ready. , Y;,'. Straight '.'power with "Jumping Joe' Enzler, 190-pound fullback, doing" .most of the, work, . helped the Pflota whip Brigham Young; 13 to 10, last year. Enzler, a junior, Js with the team again this Reason, but chances are the Portlandera will show the Cougars a lot more passes than they used last season. . . .' For a season and a half, . the Pilots .have averaged more than 20 aerials per game. In four contests this year, they haye tossed 85 times. , . . Coach Mathews' system calls for a lot of straight power, mixed with an effective ut highly unorthodox un-orthodox passing offensive which is apt to explode at any time for any yard line. His ace passer is Frank Ma-loney, Ma-loney, a Salt Lake City boy, who completed seven out of elht the first time he got in a varsity ballgame. Maloney also punts exceptionally well, and has averaged aver-aged 44.1 yards for the season. Injuries forced him to leave the St. Mary's game in the first quarter, quar-ter, but before retiring he booted boot-ed three for an average of 48 yards. The Utah boy throws most of his passes to two other Irishmen Marty OHagen and Joe Murray, junior ends, both of whom stand well aboxe six feet. Marihuana Peddlfet Arrested in Ogden Spanish: Beats . TT -.s ... IT . iLtncoin HQ i-tn : : - W r ... .-....-V ...'. ..:-' mr , Cavemen Drop One OGDEN, Utah, Oct. 20 (HE) Police and federal agents today prepared to file a complaint against Cirino Chavez, 30, arrested arrest-ed when officers raiding his home found him in possession of 35 marihuana cigarettes and a large quantity of the bulk narcotic. Officers saM they believed" his arrest would aid in stopping a flow of Marihuana between Ogden and southern Idaho cities. Mary's. I don't believe San Francisco Fran-cisco has been really tested. U. C. L. A.-Idaho Idaho 'to win. One touchdown won't be enough, however? STANFORD-U. S. C The TrO-jans. TrO-jans. They're potentially the team California will have to beat to retain re-tain the coast title. - COMING TO THE PARAMOUNT if '4 " V ' Spanish Fork got- the breaks it deserved Wednesday -and beat a fast lusacoln - high ; school ;r" team, 19-0, r ln j the only , Region Three game scheduled for this week. . -' ; In an upset, Mt.' Pleasant turned back the league leading American Fork , eleven, J.9-S, in an important import-ant intersectlonal clash.. : ...v.... Stock Goes XJp v -- f Spanish Fork's stock , went up after. Wednesday's wisx The Spaniards' Span-iards' have been hounded all season, sea-son, by r bad , breaks, v.. Their victory over. Lincoln gives the S BV outfit their second of the season.. against a similar number of losses. . How ever, Coach Fenton : Reeve's, team stin haa. a ; chance for .the playoff-in, the state 'rjdlvisionA loss to . Provo last - week vdoesnt count, againsi opamsiVi as ; xar as state-Competition goes...; Provo is the. only, class A school jCii Region Tiiree;--;;;;', .-"v . The. only other loss this season by , the Dons was suffered' at the hands of the . AmericahV r. Fork eleven, which is out in theXlead of Region Three play. A' tegion loss by the Cavemen could " easily throw Spanish a tie for ".filial honors. . V?'--- . American Fork's loss to Mt. Pleasant puts new hope into Region Re-gion teams, still on the Cavemen's schedule. Provo ...plays host to A F. in a couple of weeks and is expected to make the game a natural drawing card. Bulldogs Meet , . The Bulldogs tangle with Carbon high ifichool ,at Price tomorrow. Whether, they win or lose against the Miners won't alter Provo's state standings. But a loss -to American Fork win automatically eliminate the local team from any state playoffs. Wednesday's summaries follow: Lincoln Spanish Fork Boyce ler Barney Christensen ltr Gardner Ekins. Igr. ..... Twelves Parks c J. Christensen Penrod. rgl Stewart Hunt ttl Isaac Edwards rel Nelson Bassio qb Hardy Johnson. ..... .lhr Bingham Olsen rhl Thomas Smith lb Hales . Score by quarters: t '. . Spanish Fork 7 0 6 6 19 Lincoln 0 0 0 0 0 Touchdowns: Span&h Fork Keele, Hardy, Hales. Oficials: Referee, Collins; umpire. um-pire. Bullock; head linesman, Hill-man. IRISH PlGaED TO BEAWECII 4- 4 BY HARRY 'FEltGUSOJt United Press Sports Editor NEW YORK,1 Oct n 20 (OEJ That jnan Jsr here , again,: ;bruised and bleeding! from last week,, but still leading' with, his chin' and .try-Ing. .try-Ing. to; pick . .Saturday's' foptbcdl winners. 4.; i'r"'.?Kft-.-MH?:'--' : 1" Alabama-Sewanee-tarting.;bff with an easy one, Alabama by two or three touchdowns. Lfev t- Fordham-Oregon ''Tha-trau. gets rougher; . Fordham by no more than you can get under your little fingernail. , ;ts JHaryard-Dartmouth Dart' mouth, - will, have to commit hari-kari hari-kari to idse this one. UlinoisrNorthwestern Unbeat en Northwestern stays that way. Michigan.!: State-Syracuse A weak ' vote :for , Syracuse on the strength of what . they did to Cor nell .last. week. Notre Dame-Carnegie Tech Espionage says Carnegie Tech is loaded for the Irish. It looks like Notre , Dame on past performance. . Ohio State-Chicago Ohio : State 20,- Chicago 0. .'...;' Oklahoma-Nebraska-klahoma is plenty , tough, but Nebraska is about .due.' t; : , .Oregon State-Washington State Oregon State because It plays on home territory for one thing.. Pittsburgh-Southern Methodist Well, Pitt's got to beat somebody some-body every Saturday. Purdue-Wisconsin A flip of a nickel says Purdue. Santa Clara-Arkansas Football Foot-ball pickers are never let off anything. any-thing. Santa Clara but don't ask why. Stanford-Southern California Southern California by a touchdown. touch-down. Army-Boston U.- The soldiers. Navy-Princeton A tie? No? Well, Navy them Washington-California" Who could pick. against California? Yale-Michigan The west jgivea the east a football-lesson. AGGIES.AMITr : INVASION :: OF ; UTES SATURDAY . SALT LAKE CITY, Oct 20 (RE) The? scrap for the BJ& Seven conference football title, already centered in. Utah, will be concentrated concen-trated Saturday at Logan where the . up-and-coming Utah Indians take, on. the question-mark Utah State Aggies. ; - , Although r the fans favor the Utes.. to, win, it is by a slight margin.- Memories of. the Aggies 20: to 0 licking of a strong Colorado Colo-rado team persist in r&lng before a,!.7?7t 0 licking last week , at the;, hands of j Denver U., heretofore hereto-fore believed to have been, an inoffensive in-offensive crew. . Coach' Ike ' Armstrong, Ute mentor is puzzled but pleased a he tries to make up his, mind who win , get starting posts in his backfield. Armstrong finds himself, him-self, inj the enviable posiUon of havinsr. to pick one of three good men ,t( , start at fullback, and haying to choose one of', five - to start the game at tailback. Cooper Recovers ; At fullback he has to start either Ray Peterson, Irv Gran-dall Gran-dall or Church Turner, whJle at the tailback- post he may start Tom Pace, Clarence Gehrke, Gene Cooper, Dale Sorensen or Ben Browning. Cooper, a regular last year, ..has recovered from injuries only to find very serious competition competi-tion for his job. Utah State probably w21 depend de-pend on Seth Maughan, brilliant quarterback who attended personally, person-ally, to scoring two touchdowns by being on the tossing end of two bullet-like ' passes, to spark the Aggies' offense. Other conference games are: Colorado at Colorado State and Denver at Wyoming. Br&ham Young university, comfortably com-fortably atop present conference standings, goes outside the circuit cir-cuit for competition, meeting Portland Port-land U. at Provo. siderably by tleing Wyoming and Denver XI, and winning from a strong Mines team, to remain un-defeated,wh3e un-defeated,wh3e C U. was losir-S three in a row. . - Since 1925 AggieC. U. games have been going in streaks. Tho Buffs . : have ' -won the last f cur. PJorao that,. State took three in a row, for the preceding" three years the Buffs ; won, and the three games before that were captured cap-tured by the Aggies. State fans are hoping, strongly t that Coach Hughes eleven W31 start a winning win-ning streak of its own Saturday. 5 Aggies athletic officials expect the largest crowd Saturdav which j has attended a 'tMe game in Fort Collins in KveNtyears. - r C. U. to Battle Colorado State American Fork Bateman , .le. Ovard , .It. Strasburg .lg. , Mt. Pleasant Jensen Cheney . . B. SBey .... Draper Wright M. Peterson . L. Peterson . Rasmussen . . . J. Seeley . . . Anderson Tucker isauey .c. Chad Wick rg. . Meyers. .... ... .rt. . Durraift. re. . Ellison. qb. . Chipman rhb. . Beck.. lhb.. Holmstead. .... .fb. . Score by quarters: American Fork... $ 0 0 0 8 Mt.;. Pleasant. ... 606 7-19 , Scoring touchdown American Fork, Holmstead; place kick, Holmstead. Mt. Pleaasnt Touchdowns. 3. Seeley ?, Tucker; point after touchdown, J. Seeley. ettement Hear In Charlie Rugglesand Bobby Breen have leading roles in:, the musical happiness hit, "Breaking the Ice,r which will be seen at the Paramount Para-mount Friday and Saturday. ': D.V-U: FG3TTD ALL -,GflB SETTS M : ,r:s-:i, ;see theminouu, window?. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 20 ttlR) Paul C. Smith, , newspaper ex-executive, ex-executive, called , into act as outside out-side mediator,!: early ptoday . announced an-nounced CIO warehousemen and warehouse operators had .- reached "full r accord oh all points" ih ?a dispute which has.vtied . up .more than ? 130 warehouses ; here and in Oakland for, fottr niohths. Terms of, , .the' Settlement .were not announced bnt; Smith v said, it would be submitted . to . member- Distributors' association' and the Warehousemeifs , Union; with the recommendation of negotiators on both asides that it "be accepted. "If, the agreement j Is t ratified it is probable that the; work can be resumed in the warehouses by next "Monday," Smith said. - u A. statue of .-President', Monroe was made for the Venezuelan re public 40 ears ago, but a. revo luuon prevented its oeuvery ana the monument finally was erected in Virginia, at Is that; state's .first s.tatue of erj famous, son. v; r - SERVING SENTENCE Lee Thomas, Spanish Fork, is serving a 30-day' jail sentence imposed im-posed by City Judge A. L." Booth after he was. found guilty of. battery bat-tery committed against his- father Morgan of Spanish Fork October 2. He began serving the sentence Wednesday.. -;-., -f; ' 1 TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION ; " r "v; -v , , .;, s FOR ; SAX-MEtLANEOtJS GOOD 1930, Chevrolet coupe, a bargain. 387 m-3; East. . o23 PICtSXING cucumbers,, winter pears, tomatoes. Pb. 013J1. o23 FOR RENT UNFURNISHED 4 LIGHT airy rms. and bath, heat and hot water, newly decorated, :NJE. "location. 387 E. 3 No. Ph. 1143J. ; -M- 026 FORTtXriX5rNCirEP One of the oldest and most color ful gridiron rivalries in the Rocky Mountain region will be renewed here Saturday, afternoon when Colorado university meets Colo rado State , at 2:30 o'clock on Colorado field. It win be the fortieth contest in a series which started in 1893. The fact that the Aggies are conceded a chance to win.-. the forthcoming game has added greatly to Its interest . . Doped earlier in the season to be several touchdowns : weaker than the Buffaloes, Harry Hughes charges have modified .this forecast con- ENDS TONIGHTi rrn tin s PAUL KELLY RITS KAYWORTIf FRANK1E CARR0 And Also EVELYN VEX ABLE in - -"FEMALE FUOimX" FRIDAY & SATURDAY! Two Big Feat ores! ' i L - w rri r"y nr 2 o Thrills That .Come Fast and' Furious! FT: tscanic. iSlIOIJA UBS !, Clll lf "FLASH GORDON'S ; . 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