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Show (rni-- am I'uic'.w : November 10. 1031. Tm-vla- OSEII , SEAS! DEFEAT OF Score Comes in Last Few Minutes of Play When Intercepted Pass is Converted Into Touchdown B. Y. U. Take Three Straight Games From Logan The following well written account of the gam? played in Ogden on Saturday appeared in Sundays Salt Lake Tribune: from doldrums of an$ Indifferent playing season. Brig pnc driving attack after ham Young university eleven rock- - touchdown run of Robison's an of the Rocky attack which netted the Provcans ed the foundation mountain conference here on Sat- - three first downs and about 40 heretofore the Aggies aggregated more urday by spilling the yard undefeated Utah State Agrlcultur- - yarcjs from scrimmage, taking the 8000 before al college team, 8 to 0, galIle M a whole, spectators in the local stadium Aggles totaled 154 yards tc The loss suffered by Coach Dick lhe CouKars- 128 yards from scrim cm knocked t Romneys Farmers mage Pass gaing were about equal from atop the conference standing and aggregate yards and left University of Utah victor offense showed a 26.yard ar. over Colorado col.ege. the only in over thpir sollthern foes. unbeaten eleven In the circuit. The downs were equal, each Battling through three scoreless! oiuh scoring seven, the Counars periods eagerly waiting for a break which appeared the only means to drawing even with the A' gjes r, cncoun-- 1 mainly by their last minute deride the fiercely-fougthe Cougars of Provo leaped for,sSo stout were the defenses of Into the limelight when Bnrle Ro- -, scoring bison, giant right end, intercepted ,ll!" rlval elevens that a pass tossed by Quarterback Ivan chances were few and far between bristled Smith of the Aggies in the lat- - The Aggies, who fairly tors territory in the fourth quar- - 'Hh spirit as the game opened up struck into the B Y. U. scoring ter, and sprinted 42 yards for 70ne n tllp ffr&t 10 minutes. touchdown Uson wb a s,ar' ? UOBISON RAf ES OVER LINE th backffr There was only five minutes 'ed Schaubs twi-t- the game remaining when the Ag and Aland Forgeon surfor Intended called their glcs pounced upon the oval on the B. prise pass from their own 42 yard Y. U. 45 yard line. Fri m there, line and Robison was obliged brilliant runs by Deb Voting, unevade only one tackier when lie til last week the scoring leader streaked down the field lor ''the of the conference, carried the ball winning score. to the B. Y. U. line: Th Crestfallen at the sudden turn scoring threat ended a where of affairs which dealt the Farmers penalty was Inflicted upon the Aga telling blow to their champion- gies when John Vranes was the Loganitcs caught offside and Ivan Smith's ship aspirations, turned on a passing attack in a passes went awry. vain effort to snatch a last minA few moments later in the ute victory. first period, Buddulph. who rePicking eligible receivers. Quar- placed Wilson at halfback for B. terback Ivan Smith flung passes Y. U shot a pass to Ray Merrill right and left, but the darts were from midfield and the Cougar either Just out of reach of the re- quarterback squirmed his way to ceivers or the inspired Cougar de- the marker. The Aggies fensive men were on the job and however, play was called back, the Aggies were unable ti retrieve when B. Y. U. was called for bethe lost ground. ing offside. The triumph was the third in In the second period. Biddulph's succession scored, by Coach Ott return of Forgeon's punt over his his and Cougars Romney gave B. Y. U the ball on, the Agbrother. Coach Dick Romney and gies' 40 yard line, and three the Aggies. The Cougars defeated netted five but plunges the Aggies, 7 to 6, two years ago, the attack was haltedyards, there bv and trounced their northern foes the Aggie stalwart forwards. last season on the same gridiron, 39 t; 14 COUGARS BID FOR SCORE the third period. I HAD IN GAINS Ati.'M-Throughout From the standpoint of scrim- Merrills toe kept a raging Aggie mage gains, the Aggies were far attack out of B. Y. U. territory. Odell During Runs by Deb Young and superior to the Cougars. the first half the Aggies accumu- Thompson carried the ball on two lated 103 yards from scrimmage occasions, but the ground gained 34 was lost when Merrill put suffiplays to the Cougars paltry cient leg drive into his punts to , yards. However, numerous penalties in- propel the ball back 60 yards inflicted upon the Aggies, either for to Aggie territory. The Cougars made a bid for a holding or offsides, kept the Agscore in the third period, when gie attack from materializing. In the second half, the game de- - Biddulph again caught a punt veloped into a punting duel with Biddulph Forgeon of the Aggies and Ray Merrill of the Cougars gain- - sprinted 18 yards to the Aggies' the hefty ing a distinct advantage over Al- 30 yard line . Using and Forgeon of the Aggies. The Ernest Shober as their battering the maigin which the B. Y. U. hooter lam, the Coucars advanced maintained over the Aggie punt- bal! to the Aggies 25 yard line, er and Floyd Biddulphs brilliant but on the fomth down, a pass was returns of the kicks annulled the from Biddulph to Merrill Aggies spasmodic efforts to get blocked by Ivan Smith and Deb their offense under way. Yeung of the Aggies. The fourth period was a continSeveral times Deb Young, tlie mer- uation of the third quarter's puntbrilliant sophomore speed chant of the Aggies, drifted off ing duel, with the rival kickers. but Merrill of B. Y. U. and Forgeon ends for substantial gains, what he gained for his club was of A. C. attempting to produce a equalized by Merrills powerful fumble whichw ould give one or the other team a chance to open punting and Biddulphs runbacks of the oval. up with a scoring drive. Not until the Aggies essayed a PASS GAINS EQUAL In spite of the Cougars sudden pass from their own line, that Robison speared, and followed with his sensational run, did anything exciting develop. - , ef-te- ht - j j i uflf Cifa: fnb rd rd rd , 0 0 ,0 Substitutions: Tli "Eyes PROVES CLOSE the up the game, Summing struggle was fought between two powerful defenses, and what offensive spurts developed were mostly generated by the Aggie machine. The Cougars were stronger in the kicking department, and in the returning of punts. Were the score to have ended in a 0 to 0 tie, fans would have their praised the Cougars for staunch defense and let it go at that. The big break of the game contributed by the alert Robison decided the tussle which seemed destined in a deadlock, with the Aggies having the edge. The heroic roles were played by Burle Robison, Ray Merrill and Floyd Biddulph for B. Y. U. and Deb Young, Pete Wilkins and John Vranes of Utah Aggies. The work of the B. Y. V. ends, Robison and Armand Eggertsen was particularly pleasing. The tackling members of both teams was hard and undeniable, especially on the part of the Aggies. won four The Aggies have games and lost one, while the Cougars are now abreast with the :v GAME 99 have it At last. A radio that perfection to hear and perfection to look at. It obvious that Westinghouae is going to be the pioneer in radio beauty aa well as radio brains. Come in and hear what a "modem radio really meant. to-en- , Westinghouse Radio Pehrson Electric Arimo Block sss ROCKY MOUNTAIN CONFERENCE BOXING v,- - AT 0 0 68 0-- Last Weeks Results Utah 28, Colorado College 6. B. Y. U. 6, Utah Aggies 0. Colorado U. 25, Denver U. 6. Colorado Aggies 26, Wyoming 6. s Open Season Wednesday Schedule (Nov. 11) Colorado Mines vs. Colorado Teachers at Greeley. Montana State vs. Mt. St. Charles at Helena j -- On Pheasants Nrw Closed B. Y. U. vs. ps o.-- 'l Fridays Schedule Wyoming at Provo. REGION ONE STANDING OF TEAMS fills in Pronouncing Latin Thoie Is no authoritative proft Is not nunciation for Latin. liovv it known was pronmtnt-ewhan It was a livinc manage. 1,1 I back yard, the way St. Francis of Assisi told folks to do for the birds Christmas feast? Well, there were about a dozen sparrows there when I peeked around the corner of the house. I called Merry Christmas' softly so's not to disturb them, and they chirped back. Mine worked, too, I guess, said I went and looked on Tommy. the cellar stairs first thing this morning, and every hit of cheese was gone that Id put there for the poor little mice! Myrtle Koon Cherryinan. CAR B LOGAN CAFE DENVER COPEN, Manager Try Our Fresh Candies 101 South Main Street Billys Uncle Across from Interurban Station OWNERS-ATTENTIO- N Do Not Neglect Your Battery of Your Car VULCANIZING Center & Main - il JACOBSEN'S 391 BATTERY SERVICE Logan, Utah It is the Hearf Expert Tire Repairing wm PARCO SERVICE North Main Phone 26 SERVICE WITH A SMILE JACOBSEN PARCO SERVICE STATION Formerly WARD & JACOBSEN is now Under Personal Supervision of J. L. Jacobsen Ef Specials Saturday Decorated and Sauc- Cl Wednesday, November 11th an-O- H. C. Ward and J. L. Jacob jen having dissolved partnership, H. C. Ward is ready for business at the former location, in rear of Blue Light Station No. 3 and .Binghams Cafe. LET ONLY AN EXPERT BATTERY MAN DO YOUR BATTERY REPAIRING We Will Serve a Special Armistice Day Lunch end of the county. Lynn has already performed on tlie lexal mat and makes a good allowing. Finn Oibbs of Brigham City will clavi with Vern Jensen of Providence. There will be two other preliminary bouts put on by tlie pro mot-r- r which he has not as yet the championship is expected to nounced lii his (program that Is be mainly between th-ing circulated. ' third of the games have played to the present time. The popular prices of 50 cents for remainder of the tournament will general admission are being charg- be played off this week. cd which should appeal to those Captains of the teams are: Sen- who like this sort of sports. iors. June White; Juniors. Vaughn Pearl Our Pctt. Inner, Too Sophomore. Harschbargcr; Gertrude Williams: Freshmen, Not Hint nfliletca Work y. end crln h nl lime nnvlhlng In common, hut It is a curious fuel most of nnr pef thnt we Invit-HaSit. of Sun nniiio-- i on there two rlnKiv Moll- - e.il only wlicu in tlie lur t.eriiiii ilino Sun 'I lie winged vnl nr norm since. for ll s month Is moth nevci not iniiile for ruling the winged Ei:y to Le-or ml tilt moth In nn experiment is much like good Fr -- you never notice It much lived for (live wilhont eitling. The male niolh lives nearly twice tintll Its about gone. Akron Beaas long ns the femnle. con Journnl. WARDS TIRE & BATTERY SHOP Fridays Schedule Preston at Boxelder. (Wednesday) Ogden at South Cache. .Weber at oNrth Cache. Diii ip' of ?!. Franny Had the Christina Spirit What do you think? You know scattered those crumbs In the Stan ANNOUNCING (non-regiona- l) Star I be 1 Fridays Results Logan 26, North Cache 6. Boxelder 40, Bear River 0. Weber 25, South Cache 0. Preston 45, Malad 0. rh ing; tll freshman and senior volley ball teams are ahead so far tournament in the Volley Ball which Is being held at the Utah State Agricultural college. These two teams have won two games the sophomore and each from Junior teams and competition for o Not a Fait Proceeding ll a true. salt Uncle I Ton, "il.il every man tons have some faults, toil tin I ain't no eu-- some il.it hapdeliberately clum-in- " n pens to strike voh l,ie "ur,d ie you doing. Tommy 7 asked Mr. Ron land, hearing her little son on the cellar stairs, the day before Christmas. 'Oh, aump'n, answered tha lad, as he hurried up into the kltcban. As It was a time of Christmas secrets, Mrs. Rowland refrained from pressing the point sod soon forgot It When the Christmas tree had been denuded of Its fruit next morning, Tommy's older brother, Rupert, ran outdoors excitedly, returning soon, all aglow, and shout- In the wrestling profo--'or-- four-storie- Wi'-'VY 1 ro5al j i Orvil Call proprietor of the Logan Bowling Courts, in the basement of the Arimo Block, has completed the renovating of his place of business. He Is regularly catering to the bowling trade of the city and some mighty interesting games are being played. There is a lat of interest being manifested in bowling and arrangements are being made for winter tournaments. The Logan Elks Lodge team Is out with a challenge to any bowling team in the valley. Women are showing more interest in the recreation this fall than any time in previous years. Teams are now organizing and as the tournament get under way, bowling will naturally become of general Interest. A free turkey is given away each Saturday night for the high score of the week. Free games and instructions are given to Other attractions Thur-da-y night include son:e extra v.ood wrestling us well as boxing. Jimmie Rn-- has Ibeen pitted against Stan Gibbons ln four rounder and there to . twi-te- Bowling Gets Under Way in Arimo Block Girl Volley Ball Teams In Tourney j The Saturdays Schedule Utah vs. Colorado U. at Salt Lake. Colorado College vs, Denver U. at Denver. Utah Aggies vs. Colorado Aggies at Fort Collins. an-r...- aivvavs 12 Thursday night of this week, Mirl Christensen,' in the role of promoter at Allens arena, will offer a six round glove contest between young Firpo, the Idaho flash and'Pete Hoffman of Denver. Young Firpo has been boxing over the country for the few past and has really traveled in fast company. Hoffman years is a likely chap with the gloves and should give the Spokane lad a good working over. man-uf.rtu- re Con-sidirtn- n. ARENA fill , -0 Calendars of the Jewish which has lliir- day of Tlislrl or AIMS Attractions On Bill al-n- Variations in lil'St month calendar Is Tlii-lty (lavs. The lirst WRESTLING Promoter Bringing Young Firpo Here to Box Pete Hoffman of Denver Other Good Homer C. Referee. Officials: Warner, Utah; umpire, Bert Blas-e- r, Witenberg. Ohio; head lines- the wetem Bai ,s there arc man, A. C. Williams, Colorado ung thousad wool growers. fifty iversity; field Judge. Roy Cahoon. l)e dependents of all these, Utah. loveiher with lh family members of workers employed In other oca maincupations in which wool stay, It can readily be seen that the of tune million persons de. lung tlietr sustenance from :h fleece ts consztvativp. Tne a'.erae annual consumption v. in the United Elates, Cor two days. Saturday and Sun of tarpet wool, Is about sixu day. hunters frt u one end of the Iv.i tired million pounds. The county to the ct ter. we-- c penning ecus, mj.tion of clothing and fields in quest of Chinese pheaswuu'.s is 4j0.af0.000 pounds. con b.stg ants. Two male birds was the legal H.r domestic wool Is nearly all the bag limit. Hundreds of the coveted roosters were shot and with them cl; thing and combing types. a few hens. lists of Korn Persons not expeiiemed in h intf tlie d meVilli tic ing pheasants, didn't fare as well as those used to it. Tlu.se birds a.'j llig gills of tie cciiiilry. tlie women ut.tr tin lieml revering hard to frighten from their hiding oilier tli.m ll.cir Imir uud tils Is more places. They are easily found coll on of ill tlie d when a dog Is used in the hunting. top nf tie lieiol to net ns a pud Lawrence Johnson, care taker at In oriler tint tin v limy Imlnnce the fhh hatchery, believes the hunt ruti.er In .ivy hut). lies upon their was a good thing as it will tend to lie.oK Tin t'U11 nre rarely wit limit Is perchi'il on top scatter the birds. By so doing the lull wlil-lof the skull iiiul tmt intnli of a propoachers will not be so apt to kill so tection. 'I lie ilnncing girls never many of them. appear without an elaborate heada piece, crow n, tapering to the lop. The ffi iff WIDER The use of wont antedates hlstorv. Tile nomad .c tribes that peopled the earth thousands of Sears ago utilized tnelr sllrep flocks for coinage, clothing and food. Cloth wruving was an Important art tn the Roman civilization When the Komana imaded Mrilatn. a cenChrti-ttal y they reared a !s tory at Winchester for the of woolen cloth. Wool, from growing to retailing, affoids a livelihood for fully three million persons in this country Slightly less than two hundred are thousand family brradwinm-remployed In the mills alone. The verv Industries producing garments and other ai iicicj of wool employ another two hundred thousand. In Law. rd 'A .0 B. Y. U. Aggies ell-li- ke rQ O aue I'Hf Nov. 9 to 16 B. Y. U Biddulph for Wilson; Wilkinson for Merrill; Merrill for Vgiktnson; Johnson for Eggertsen. Aggies Adam for Sehaub; Brady for Barker; Barker for Brady: the To'man for Adams; Shields for Emerging - fnn: coi'ntv. utah Week Is From HI WITH PROTO TEAJ n Ki.w. National Wool FIRST AGGIES SUFFER 1.( . .ers Cups - Rose colored drinking glasses each . . 5c Larsen Hardware Where Quality Rules . Packing Crating Long Distance Moving Johnson Cab & Transfer 449 North 2nd E. Logan, Phene 31 1-- "uaii |