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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 9

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Trims learn 7 0 to Grid WHtttier -v i 1 1 MX tsyttptatti! MJHAT TAtfTCS OOW USE TO STOP A RUNAWAV JCWfcf 5 I CoCH HOW JONES' WAS RfcRoTOED To B6 AftE- jiwn3 Railroad switchmen at a iate hour last aught in am effort to find cut how) to stop ERNIE. NEUERS. SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1925. U.S.C. AND STANFORD IN TITANIC BATTLE Whittier, Southern Branch, 0.

Polytechnic Hlh. 13: Hollvwood zw 1 Ml 1 High. 0. Manual Arts, 22: Jefferson High, 7. Lincoln, 26; Franklin'; 0.

Santa Monica 21. Huntington Park 18. San Diego 45, Alhambra 0. South Pasadena 20, Glendale 13. Citrus Union 84, Monrovia 0.

U.S.C. Frosh 58, Sherman Indians 0. Fulleif on 26, Annaheim 0. San Piego Array and Navy 39, 1oyola College 0. Pasadena 0.

Whittler, High 0. Fairfax 0, Harding 0. Kxcelslor 27, Torrani 6. At Riverside La Verne College Riverside Junior College 6. At HelenaMontana Minos 28, Inter-Mountain 3.

Santa Ana, Long Beach, 0. At Rapid City. S. Aberdeen Northern Normal, School of Mines. 2.

as t5 Ml TODAY'S GRID MENU HEASON'S BIGGEST GAME LOCAL U.S.C. vs. Stanford at the i Coll- ON PROGRAM FOR TODAY if POETS UPSET DOPE AND BRANCH'S TITLE HOPES Leo Calland's Eleven Scores Only Touchdown in First Quarter of Hard-Fought Battle BY BRA VEX' DYER Battling with all the indomitable courage and fight which US Football Warriors Ready to Battle With Powerful Cardinal Machine on Coliseum Gridiron BY PAUIi fcOWRY Smarting under a string of four successive defeats at the hands of U.S.C. in past seasons the beefy and belligerent Stanford football eleven is ready to commit battery and assault upon the proficient pigskin boys of Coach Howard Jones in the rum. Pomona at Caltech.

PACIFIC COAST St. Mary's at California. Washington at Nebraska. Idaho at W.S.C. Whitman at Montana.

MIDWEST Northwestern at Chicago. Wabash at Minnesota. Notre Dame at Army. Haskell Indians vs. Bucknell, Illinois at Iowa.

Wisconsin at Michigan. EASTERN Pennsylvania at Yale. Princeton at Navy. Holy Cross at Harvard. Rutgers at Cornell.

Bates at Brown. Marietta at Penn State. Wesleyan at Boston. MatnS at Dartmouth. Gettysburg at Pittsburgh.

Colgate at Lafayette. Syracuse at Indiana. SOUTHERN Grove City at West Virginia. Florida at Georgia. Tech.

Centre at Michigan State. characterized the play of their coach, Leo Calland, when he was a great lineman at U.S.C., the Whittier College football team defeated Southern Branch, 7 to 0, yesterday afternoon at Moore Coliseum this afternoon. Field. The Poet triumph upset grid dope all over the landscape and practically wipes out whatever championship hopes the Grizzlies undoubtedly entertained before the fracas. TED O'HARA VI' IS STOPPED BY O'BRIEN The story of the game is but some guy with a dictionary full of superlatives could It is the battle of the year In Southern California, the game everybody has' been waiting for and speculating upon for the past month.

TROJAXS FAVORED Stanford has an old score to wipe out, but the Trojans are favorites to win, and unless the dope is GALLERY IS NEW KING OF SQUASH write on forever about the dogged Wattle which Calland's ath Seconds Toss Towel Into Ring in Eighth Round of Hollywood Main Event' Shade Defeats Wells Despite Broken Right Hollywood Athletic Club Star Defeats Bill Tilden for National Title letes waged for close to two hours. "Red" Clark, a hard-plunging, line-smashing fullback, scored the lone touchdown of the game in the first quarter, bucking over the middle of the Grizzly line after a brilliant four upset or the big steam roller from Palo Alto Is better than it has shown itself to be this irfi. the "Thundering Herd" from the local campus is very likely to hangup another victory. tlallr, the U.S.C. team Is better than Stanford by a margin of two touch downs.

Tom Gallery of the Hollywood Athletic Club yesterday defeated Bill Tilden in the final match of Leo Tommy O'Brien, who possesses a terrific wallop and an ambition to become the world's lightweight champion, displaced Ace Hudkins as the fair-haired lightweight In these parts last night when he battered Teddy O'Hara of Oakland out of the plctur in the eighth round of the Hollywood main event. O'Hara's seconds tos.sed in the towel after Teddy had been dropped two times in that wild eiphth and was reeling around helplessly before the crushing punches of O'Brien. A capacity crowd, the house be-Ing all sold out an hour and a half before the first preliminary started, saw the slam-bang battle between HOWARD JONES teen-yard run by Joe Bonnett had placed the pigskin in the shadow of the goal posts. Ray Denny booted the goal and all the scoring of the day was completed. CREDIT TO QUAKERS While overconfldence of Bill Spaulding's charges was In some measure responsible for the defeat of his team, no one can take an iota of credit away from the battling Quakers.

Minus the services of their veteran center. Word, and tKXCMJaiVE DISPATCH DETROIT. Oct. 16. His right hand broke nln the second round, Dave Shade, the Californian, went out and left handed his way to a decision over Billy Wells, of England, here tonight.

In the midst of the engagement. Shade, in an-rwer to boos from the crowd, Informed Referee Billy Rooks of the injury at the time declaring that he was willing to have the hand by a doctor at the conclusion of the bout. The examination was held and disclosed the fracture. Shade was making a desperate effort with his left, and drove it to Wells's body and head with much power when he could reach the swaying target in front of him. But It was not his right hand and did not do the harm the othr hand would have done.

UTAH ELEVEN WINS OVER ARIZONA TEAM he national A. A.V. squash tou rnament, and thus became national champion. Gallery won in two straight games, 21-15, 21-8. He showed keen form and was undeniably better than the national tennis champ.

The present tournament was Til-den's first attempt at the Stanford is bound to score, but this Cards' method of scoring is much slower than that of U.S.C. In many respects the battle today looks like another Notre Dame-Stanford struggle all over again. With Ernie Nevers as the main cog In their battering-ram attack. (Continued on Page 10, Column S) (Continued on Page 11, Column 3) playing all but two minutes of the! squash game, but he made a great showing, sailing through four clev er opponents to enter the final round. Both Tilden and Gallery nlaved second half without Denny the life of the team the Poets Just naturally battled and battled until the gun barked and gave them one of the hardest-earned victories in the history of Southern Conference football.

With two exceptions rvery break of the game and there were plenty of 'em went against the Quakers, but they always came back with a fit more fight than before and stemmed off excellently yesterday, but the local AC bAV' star was in the beet form he has yet displayed and produced a nifty serve that had Tilden completely baftted. In the semifinals in the doubles two I the Grizzly onslaught during BY A. P. NIGHT WIEBJ TUCSON (Ariz.) Oct 16. The University of Utah defeated the University of Arizona.

9 to 0, here today, a field goal and a touchdown in the last period winning for the Utahans in the last period. Arizona held the Utah invaders scoreless for three and a half periods. long and nerve-wracking quarters, match a startling upset occurred Leo Calland can have anything when Kenneth Albright and Sandy he wants In Whittier today and i Wilson won In straight games from fJeorge I Eastman and Bill (Continued on Page 11, Column 3) Thompson by scores of 21-16, 21-17. The injured foot which kept Eastman out of the singles play severely handicapped him. Semi-Brogues for Knickers A sturdy Scotch grain oxford In Russet which fills the bill for smart wear with the popular knlcker suit of Fall.

Walk-Over quality and the famous pear-shaped heel give that unbeatable combination of fine appearance, snug, easy clinging fit and long wear. JESBEaUjS IPalk'Ouer Shops 6l8S.Broadn9 359S.SpruujSt 3AS 8. Sprint Opea Saterda? BveniBS 1 HI JONES AND HIS GRID STARS Here are Howard Jones, U.S.C. roach, and his Trojan football athletes, ready for the big test with Stanford today. They're a good-looking bunch of gridders and also look good while playing the great collegiate game.

(Photos by W. E. Snyder. Times staff photographer; Behrendt and Gorrell by Ward. (J Shoe 1 0XY TIGERS NEARLY UPSET Redlands Eleven Springs Surprise by Holding Bengals to H-to-6 Score, Nearly Winning Fighting with unexpected "strength and ferocity.

Redlands University yesterday sprang a surprise on Occidental, favorites for the conference football title, and were only nosed out, 1 4 to 6. after a bitter battle In which the with five minutes to go, were leading by a single point. The Tigers -got a touchdown in the second period and Redlands retaliated with one In the fourth but McGllbra missed the try for goal. A belated burst of speed by the Tigers 'in the few remaining moments gave them the score which put the game on Ice. The first half was largely given Baptists got the ball and hung on approved styles always! sound quality ALWAYS HOW THEY LINE UP TODAY over to long gains by the Tiger backs, which were offset by almost U.S.C.

No. Weight position AVelght No. STANFORD Adams (20) 175 IKR. ISO J4) Walker Friend 207 L.T.R. 10 (25) Harris Taylor (46) 102 183 (SS) Armour Cravath () 170 C.

10 (15) McCrrary Gorrell (13) 211 R.CX. 190 (7) Swan Behrendt (49) 187 R.T.U 194 (4) Poolson Badgro (30) 175 REX. 17 (14) Shlpke Kaer (7) 158 Q. 167 (IS) Mitchell Earle (28) 183 R.H.U 188 (22) Bogue Drnry (2) 184 LOUR. 174 (II) Murphy IM (37) 167 F.

200 (1) Nevers (c) Knicker to It the entire third period, which ended with the ball in their possession oh the Tiger 30-yard line. Coach Nichols, who had been holding out some of his regulars, began to warm them up. snd when Ked lands slammed through for a first down on Oxy's 6-yard line, he replaced the entire center trio. Three plunges into the line net-ted Redlands yards, but the Tigers were penalized to within one yard of their line. Here they held the Baptists for one down and on the next try Redlands fumbled and Oxy recovered, but the Tigers were again offside so the Baptists had four more tries coming up with a yard to go.

The Tisers hM them once, but on the r.ext play Wiley slipped through tackle tor a score. With a rare chsnce to tie things up, Chief McUMbra equally long gains made by the referee In penalizing the Tigers. Finally, however, Solly Mlshkin and Norm Smith crashed the ball down near the Redlands goal Una and Full-back Fusoo slammed right through heart of Baptist line for tha first touch, down of the III 'lioqe 15.0011 OliEeftf fstom modeb of tsa RuaU or bUA Vdcing el. JLI it's time for Fall Oxforch WETHERBY-ZKAYSER "CLUBBY MEN'S SHOPS 416-418 West Seventh St. 727 South Bra dway 476 E.

Colorado Sl, Pasadena 6334 Hollywood Blvd. Mi i line average U.S-C. 182; Stanford. 183. Backfleld average U.S.C, 170; Stanford, 183.

Team average CSjC, 178; Stanford, 183. SUBSTITUTES U.S.C. IjrfrbTT (1.) iAranetta (3.) Sahlbrrg (10.) Cook (II.) la Monte (12.) Baldiidge (17.) C. Weerou (24.) Cos (31.) noren (35,) Sobering (36.) Ilersberger (3.) Stark (40.) l.UUxt (45.) Inward (22.) Stanford Hyland (2.) Hunt (3.) Simmon (5.) Price (6,) Van Hook (S.) Hill (,) 8. Port (10.) Raffeto (12.) Solomon (13,) Moore (16.) GreUwr (17.) E.

Poet (It.) Roheskl (1U MUldleton (23.) Herth (34.) Ganlwall (27J Hoffman (34.) Freemaa (10.) B-A-S-E-B-A-L-L WRIGLEY FIELD TODAY VERNON vs. LOS ANGELES GAME CALLED AT 2:30 game. Soily Uishkln added the extra point. In the second half, however. things were exactly reversed.

The (Continued oa Paga 11. Column 1) 1.

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