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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 21

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Los Angeles, California
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21
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NOVEMBER 11, 1928. PART I-a. 5 1'Armand Emanuel Returns to Olympic Tuesday Night as Full-fledged Heavyweight BAY CITY IDOL FACES ARNOLD fighting Lawyer Angling for i World's Championship i TYPIFYING THE SPIRIT OF THE SEASON And Armand Emanuel is big enough now to be a plunging fullback, driving tackle or what have you. Here he is a la crouching start and togged out la the emblem of the Olympic Club cf Ban Francisco, where he held the heavyweight championship of the Coast as an amateur. Armand has grown rapidly in the past few months and scales close to 100 pounds stripped.

He fights Mike Arnold of Denver in a ten-round main event at the Olympic Tuesday night. It will be the fighting barrister's first start In a Los Angeles ring since he went East last spring. GOPHERS NOSE H0RNSBY TO BECOME N7 .0 CUB ON WEDNESDAY 7 ROGERS OUT H00SIERS Minnesota Rings Up Third CHICAGO Local Eleven Scores Upset Over Regis CHICAGO, Nov. 12. (J) Rogers Hornsby wH officially become a member of the Cubs next Wednesday, when he will arrive to talk terms with President William L.

Veeck. The signing, however, is only a formality as the Cubs took over the contract Hornsby had with Boston, which called for an approximate salary cf $40,000 a year. It has two years to run. Conference Win 5 Renter Giant Boasts Strim of Brochmeyer Scores on Long 80-Yard Run McEachen, Von Der Ahe Put Over Scores Knockout Victories pan Franciscan Adds Power Indiana Unleashes Passing Lions Brilliant in Blood Denier Battle Galore to Poundage 1I0RNINCT. Attach at Finish NET MATCHES POSTPONED BY KAT OWE ArmflnH Fmannol.

MINNEAPOLIS (Minn.) Not. 10. Minnesota's much-crjppled Gophers were one touchdown better than Indiana's much- Professional Court Stars Delayed on Trip West; Kozelah to Play Snod grass Due to unforeseen engagements along the route of Vincent Richards and his group of tennis professionals, Karel Kozeluh, Harvey Snodgrass and Howard Klnsey, who are touring the country, will not play here as scheduled until they have completed their program in the northern part of the -State. They are appearing in San Francisco this week-end and will then Journey south, stopping over at Burllngame and then here. According to Rans Abbott, who is handling the tournament here, negotiations were completed yesterday with, officials of Harder hitter and determined to E'uti vu uic gaues 01 me neavy- pionship goes against beef and brawn at the Olympic Tuesday night.

He faces Mike. Arnold, Denver giant, who has scored nineteen knockouts In his last forty battles. The match Is the biggest shot Emanuel has ever had In Los Angeles and Hivnc ki WADHAM9 iKts lien mnnrt.smp Vife mitu t. rates next In wo uucia vtliii Loughran in the East and Mick- viB.er in can rrancisco. Emanuel has been growing Into i heavyweight for some time.

When ie boxed here before he was a tght-heavy. uku lans can note quite a hange in both the physique and nie Walker knockout seemed to If suraignten out the barrister and lieip him make up his mind on the DENVER (Colo.) Nov. 10. Lion tracks, deeply Imprinted all over the Regis Stadium, proved too much an Impediment for the fast Regis backs to hurdle and the Loyola Lions of Los Angeles, administered a 13-7 trimming to the Rangers here Saturday afternoon in fierce and bloody battle before 7000 spectators. The game was slowed up by poor officiating and constant battles between the individuals of the two teams.

The strong local team, going Into the third period leading Loyola, 7-6, caused Us own downfall. Ve? her, hard-running and elusive Ranker back, fumbled on the Regis 27-yard line and the ever alert Von Der Ahe Loyola halfback, scooped rjp the pigskin and raced 27 yards for a touchdown. This gave the Lions an edge that the warriors cculd not overcome. Regis scored in the first period on a straight march down the field that put the ball on Loyola's 24-yard line, from where Douglas, great Regis back, skipped around left end for' a touchdown. Vegher added the extra point by a dropkick.

Loyola came back in the second period and crossed the locals' goal on a 24-yard pass, Hoeffer to McEachen. The fay for point was missed. Then followed as bloody a battle as has been aeen here in many years. Poor officiating that finally drove the Loyola players to desperation, caused a near riot. One of the Lions, after being penalized for disputing a previous penalty, rushed at the referee and succeeded, much to the delight of the crowd, in landing a solid blow on the Jaw.

Play was at last resumed and the Individuals battled among themselves for the remainder of the contest. Loyola put over the winning touchdown In the third period, but was threatened several times before the gun brought an end to the orgy. Nolan added the entra point after Loyolas second touchdown. Regis outgalned the Lions from scrimmage, but the Coast eleven manufactured the most first downs. Dolan was easily the star of the fracas, and played a brilliant game at end against the slashing Loyola backs.

Hoeffer afforded local fans a fine exhibition of running. Although the quarrel left a bad taste in the mouths of the fans, they will not cease singing the praises of the shifty Loyola backs who held the ranger backs on even terms, the first team to do so in three years. i rf 1. iifiiia pllllllll! 1 Ordinarily when a man takes the ount he turns toward some other ine of business. With Emanuel it Pflpt.prl Hifffii'ontlB Tf nnlw tnbHa Mm more determined.

ine Jewish fighter was trickea rom the time he made the match Wn1Vo tinil Via innflH inM UVC WW he ring on a padding of felt which us nis speea aown to notning. Snpprf t.ho thine ho hn1 r.riinf.pfl to baffle the rushes of Walker impossiDie tne ring wrucn a nlr TTaa Vi a A rwrwrXA a A rT Via I flair. Too late to protest, Eman-l I el was whipped before the fight tarted. the Los Angeles Tennis Club and the amateur and professional tennis associations to hold the matches at the club on the 17th and 18th Inst. Local fans are anxiously awaiting the matches to see their own local star, Harvey Snodgrass, professional of the Palomar KARIL KOI rinh.

comnete against the best talent the entire tunrM can offer. Snodgrass, who was undergoing Intensive training prior to his trip to new yorit ior me national professional tournament is now playing the best tennis of his career and is doped to give the the thrill of the matches when he meets the famous Czecho-Slovaklan. Karel Kozeluh at the Los Angeles Tennis Club. It will be remembered that Snodgrass defeated Richards last vear at the Palomar club in ex hibition matches and Richards is the only man who has beaten the wizard Kozeluh in seven years. It will be marvelous tennis no matter who wins.

In New York and Boston in recent matches, the famous champion thrilled and awed the packed stadiums with his smasnmg drives, accurate placements and uncanny skill in playing his opponents to utter defeat and exhaustion. Seats will be on sale at all the leading clubs and sporting-goods stores in Southern California. Pennsylvania Beats Harvard CAMBRIDGE, (Mass.) Nov. 10. (Exclusive) The gods of football grinned broadly on Penn today and the blue-6hlrted sons of William Penn proved themselves well worthy of the attention.

Scoring in the first two or three minutes of their game with Harvard, Penn outplayed and outstayed the frantically fighting Harvard team to turn in a victory at 7 to 0, the end of the dreams of Harvard for a clean sheet through the rest of the season. While 50.000 people sat In the steep walls of the Harvard stadium Penn grabbed a Harvard fumble on the first play of the game, converted it into a touchdown and then spent the rest of the afternoon making those seven points look bigger with each passing minute. Harvard, set back on its heels right at the start, fought superbly and with a rare courage all through a rough, hard game, but the breaks refused to come to them. Pennsylvania today was a winning team and there was no beating them. The line-up: MAT KING PREPARES FOR BOUT Strangler Leivis Will be in Fine Shape for Go With Paul Jones When Ed (Strangler) Lewis, world's mat monarch, faces Faul Jones, the hook body-scissor ex pert from Houston, in a best two out of three-fall finish title match at the Olympic the night of the 21st he expects to be in as good condition as he was for his battle with Joe Stecher in St.

Louis last February, according to reports from his training camp. The match was originally scheduled for Wednesday night, but was put oft nntil a week from Wednesday because Lewis, who has wrestled Jones in three hard and bitterly contested bouts already, demanded the additional time la which to get in perfect condition. Lewis, according to Billy Sandow, his manager, Is getting ready for the Jones bout as he did for the one with Stecher. The defense that was perfected for the Nebraskan's body scissors, is being polished up for use to ward off the Texan's honk scissor. Sandow stated.

The champion is also taking off several pounds in weight to increase his speed for this match. The only difference in the training sched tiled being followed for this metch that was not for the one in St. Louis, is that he was preparing to meet a great defensive wrestler then, while now he Is getting ready for a very aeeressive one. In two of the three bouts Jones has Untried, with Lewis, he has been able to score a fall on the big Kentuckian with his hook body scissors. Each time the pressure he put into the grip was enough to force Lewis to Klve ud beiore his snoui ders touched the mat, according to reports of the bout.

HARVARD DEFEATS EL SEGUNDO, 19-0 The powerful Harvard Military Academy squad crunched El Segun-do, 19 to 0, in a game Saturday. Hromadka scored the first tally on a 35-yard Jaunt, and the Mclnnls brothers tallied the next two. Harvard displayed a powerful forward wall In the game. Line-ups: Harvard. Johnson L.F.R.

El Begundo. Bmlth Lane MVHtt Flannagan (C Meadeg Newman Fleming Puchrick Cashey Baker Sun mime L.T.R. ChrlKman L.O.R. C. R.O.U R.TL.

BEL. Q. l.HIl R.H.L. Curlett Roberts Morthland Eidridfte Mclnnls Hromadka MoCreary Babcock O'Connel substitutions Ouenther. Evans.

Free. man, Lewis, Cerf, Mclnnls. Touchdowns Hromadka, S. Mclnnls and D. Mclnnls.

Goal after touchdown Eldrldge. SCORB BY QUARTERS Harvard 8 7 19 El Segundo 0 0 0 0 0 Officials Referee, Jemem umpire, Bchatt; timers, McOleery and Brown. STRANGLED LEWIS PAVLIFLOWER JSr'ALLEY NOTES crippled Hoo-slers in Memorial Field this afternoon and won their third conference victory, 21 to 12. Indiana rushed the Gophers off their feet in the last few mlnuts of the play and scored a touchdown but Brock-meyer put the Gophers in the lead with an 80- yard run which was finished after the gun ending the quarter had sounded. Minnesota came back with end runs and line plunges for two more touchdowns, but in the last few minutes Indiana unleashed a passing attack which scored another touchdown and its second drive was ended only when Hovde intercepted a pass on his own 9-yard line.

Thirty-five thousand little more than half-filled the stadium despite perfect football weather. The score: Minnesota Oayle NagursU Ola llcCraclten Unger TTotnskl plngwalt Burihart Jasper Waver Ross L.1 T. to. C. R.O.

T. RE. Kukala Appmann Ukkeltaer Tanner Hovde Kirke Pbarmer Hughes 1 oucnaownB Brubaker, Brockmeyer, Hovde. 2: Bennett. Points after touch down Pharmer, 2: Brockmeyer.

Substitutes: Minnesota Haycrart ror Oay. Brockmeyer for Kirke, Bardwell (or Hovde, Hovde for Bardwell, Arendze lor Pharmer, Pulkrabek for Oja. Frykman lor Naaurfkl. Burdick for Brownell. Indian Todd for Hughes, Brlner for HnJnackl, Catterton (or McCracken.

Shields for 61-hart. Bennett for Brubaker. Magnbosco for Todd, Matthew for Briner. Taunce. for Ross, McCracken for Catt'rton, Moss (or Shields, Jaiper for Moss, Brlner (or Matthew.

Duddlnt for ewthart. Baxter lor Briner. Fresno State Ties Nevada FRESNO. Nov. 10.

(Completing a pass for 40 yards and running througfi an open field for 10 additional yards, Fresno State Col lege came from behind in the last minute of play to tie the University of Nevada, 12 to 12, here this afternoon in a Far Western Conference game. Fresno State kept the air full of passes in the final minutes until a long heave, Renna to whelden, clicked for a touchdown. Renna failed to add the extra point on a drop-kick. The line-up and summary: Fresno State (1J. Nevada (II 1 Mores Kinnon McCullum Walthers Btlckton Lawlor Thomley Overlln Murphy Ambrose Towle Moore LB.

Bessey L.T. White LO. Whelden O. Quails SO. Hammond RT.

Glnsburg RE. Mosher Q. Orill t.H. Wilson H. Renna F.

SCORE BY PERIODS Nevada 0 fl Fresno State 6 13 12 scoring: Nevada Touchdowns, Murphy, Tupper. Fresno 8tate Touchdowns, Smith. Whelden. Officials: Referee, B. Abbott; umpire.

Lone; head linesman, Hlgglns. Fullerton is Winner, 14-0 Fullerton Junior College rode roughshod over the Long Beach Jaysee Vikings by a 14-0 count yesterday at the Norseman stronghold in a conference grid tilt. The result eliminated Long Beach from the titular running and sent Fullerton stock soaring. Long Beach (0) Pullerton (13 Davis Bolston Del Olorgio M. Curtis Oroom Oold Bchulte Danser Bogue Hughman RIeIr L.9.R.

West L.T.R. Beebt L.O.R. Talbers C. Sat'ehorn Jordan 8 1 Nicalus EUC A. Davis O.

Mobley Davis H.L. Ulldea r. Phillips SCORE BY QUARTERS Long Beach .0 2 0 0 Fullerton .7 7 0 014 Touchdowns Phillips. Goals after touchdowns Phillips Substitutions Long Beach: Jacobs for West, King for W. Davis.

Hadover for Becbe, Thornberry for Jacobs, Johnson for Hadover, Heaton for A. Davis. Ma-loney for Heston, Herman for Hlaley, Monk for Hadover, Powell for Henselman for King, Jacobs for Telbert. Kincaid lor Powell. Fullerton: Hatfield for Bogne.

Robinson for Holston, Hylton for M. Curtis, Peru-mean for Gold, McCormick for Roblson. Officials Referee, Foster; umpire, Gary; head linesman, Fog CIIAFFEY JAYSEES IN WIN OVER RIVERSIDE ONTARIO, Nov. 10. Playing an unusually speedy and steady game, Chaffey Junior Colleee won from the clever Riverside Junior College team' here this afternoon, 28 to 7.

The cams Rf-ftrtM mif. liv a tnrv for the invnrlpra uhn mnrrA nvuisu their lone touchdown in the open-Ine Quarter, and blankrrl The line-ups: Cihaffe (2Hi Riverside 11 Keich Abbott Peel Catherwood Johnson Miller Olendorf Killers Fletcher rr. Murray Ooet Evans. L.BR. L.T.R.

L.O.R. RKL. R.H L.H.R. Elliott Doming Filnert Hurt Lichti Gartner Walker F3. Macquairre BOORB BY QUARTERS Riverside 9 14 0 loo 1419 7 CHINESE BOOTES Pel-Sung Tang, a Johns Hopkins student, plays outside right for the Baltimore Boccer Club.

He was an all-China selection in 1925 and starred for three years on the Tsing Hue College soccer team. RESLXTS COlTS'f Bob Parham, Georgia Tech's star punter, and one of the best In the South, violates all the principles of correct form in kicking, according ta football exparU. soon parted by some of the paid customers. The Italian swore vengeance, shouting, "I'll see you at Third and BDring alter the show." "I'll bo there don't fret" wheezed Mohan, who at the time was Buffering from advanced tuberculosis and could hardly raise his hand. Sure enough.

Earl was on the field of battle at the appointed time, looking languidly uu and down the street while leaning against a water plug, but his foe didn't materialize. Here was a display of courage and guts that sure nittUe bravery look Ilk a grease soot. Harvard. Penn. Pickard L.K.

Gervln Barrett L.T. Uta Trainer L.O. Magal B. Tlckner C. Wcstgate W.

O. Kuen Clark ST. Bmlth O'Connel! HE. Olexy Crawford Q- Bhoeber French H. Murphy Guarnacola H.

Scull Harper 7. Opekun "We were simply outsmarted." lays the boy's father, Charley. Kearns even out-talked us on the eight My contract called for no Kearns suggested that manuel should try to do 175 ounds since Walker was really a liddleweight." Rpnnr Fmaniipl Is a srentleman irom the soles of his feet to the of his hat so he tried to oDiige or. Kearns. At mat time oenor mnmipl was laborine under the de- liKlnn that Armand was a liK'ftt- lieavyweight and not a growing oung man of twenty-three sum Armand was trained down as fine a shrill whistle lor Walker and i 'pn hA Kfpnnprt intn the rlna he ound that the stage had been set ery well lor waiicer, out not bo ood for the boy barrister.

"How about that wrestlers mat the floor," cried Senor Eman- ol aa ha caur hla Kfin Rink allTlOSt his in the padding. I AU he got ior nis protest was nu icho. xney rang ine ueu miu imanuel's speed was perrectiy or.rtnnffP(i Th xlnwpr and craft- Walker Just went ahead and xk his younger opponent iise ue as eating nis ainner. ha nrhnin nfTair woke the Eman- 'el family up. They realized that ie boxing game is maae up ot icks as well as ability.

Emanuel mild have knocked out Walker 'robably under ordinary clrcum- ances. whv Jack Thompson would have nmwH fipMs if he had had a "earns oacK oi mm eavy rug instead of a regulation mvas to work upon," says Eman- AFTER UZCUDUN Armand has hopes of building lmself up as a heavyweight nt- action here on tne umsi (e can get Senor Paolino Uzcudun an opponent here probably next inuary or eoruary. Arnold is built like a mlllion-dol- fighter. He has the physique il.oaV He hoS 'iced some of the best competl- nn AR a heavyweignt, oeieauug iie Boy Peterson five months ago. also went uw oung Stribling.

flrf flcht in the A1I1U1U uu antist church of Ardmore, Okla, three years ago. The churcn neia rbuui. urwn in tho Sooner State an athletic club. Armand played i tne foothau team, tne sauad and was the star heavy- eight boxer. The requirements i oi aKing mo iuucw attend Sunday-school every week id take part in cnurcn activities.

ih a fppt. 3 Inches tall Allium dwwu id he hita with a right hand like hricklflvcr He defeated Joe Woods to Denver having him on the xr four or five times. I ASADENA JAYSEE WALLOPS GLENDALE I GLENDALE, Nov, 10. Pasadena linior College continued on Its way ward the championship of the ysee League, downing Glendaie re today, 13 to 6. Pasadena scored ho firf-.

und third ouarters. ii j.l.'a tniinhrlAnm parnA In hp st few minutes of the second garter, when Woodrow coDington, Rillar Buccaneer naiiDacK, caugnt a isadcna punt on his own 20-yard ua and went eu yara3 mrougn a oken field to a touchdown, nnnt. Joe Edwards was the shin- light for Glendaie. He broke i dozens or pasaaena piays nemna Ie line of scrimmage. Kllnk near- created a second touchdown for losers tne lourtn quarter, lien he scooped up a fumble and iinnrt fiS vnrds before belne fought down from behind Just be- rt the game enaea.

tspeiiman ana 'iorpe were the bright itjhts for saaena. ine une-ups; Hf ndel J.O. (8) Pdn J.O. (13) ok KikUht 'ty ITS vnrfli rl iintoa tTR. U.K.

C. BO.U L. BEL. O. t.H n.

BfVfft Unvall Ai1 ill! Thorp re SCORS QUARTERS Harvard 0 0 0 0 Penn 7 0 0 0 7 Touchdown Scull, point after touchdown Scull, dropkick. Bubs Harvard: Putnam tor Crawford, Douglas for O'Connell, Robinson for Tlckner. Richards for B. Tickner, Parkinson for Tralnor, Burns for Pickard, Crawford for Putnam, Hugueley for Harper. Penn: T.

Barrett for Smith. Ra-towskl for Opekun. Gentle for Murphy. A 8-year-old child at Mow Cop, is believed to have the hoof-and-mouth disease. Phil Salvador has picked up pretty rood fame of checker! since joining the Banta Monica Ore department about a year or so ago.

Since learning to glide down the greased pole. Phil has had only one die call and this, he declared, was a bust, because everybody was home when the department arrived. The crack, ex-Ughtweittht gives It out that he is going to retire for good the minute they have a flra at one of the bin fianta Monica banks. Tt lfl now claimed thut flummv n.lr.i. changed his socks three tunes a day while training for the Jackie fields bout because he smelled de feet.

Cant. Carols, the rrlu'ed boxlns nrn- moter and veteran malinger; has taken Manny Trevlno unto himself. Manny is a cracking good 120-pounaer who has been going good in the sticks around Los Angeles. The captain Is going to give Darlo Barron a weil-merited lay-off. He feels that Darlo is in a slump and believes that a four months' absence from the gloves and training came will do him a world of good.

When he thinks Dario is himself again, he is going to take htm down east and match him against the best In his class. Great oratorical rivalry eslstg between "Beana Reardon and ''Gig" Rooney, and their dally conflicts draw big galleries in the lobbies of the various, downtown hotels. "Gilt's" eloauence has Im proved wonderfully since Jackie temporarily put Sammy Baker where the woodbine twlnetri and bis henchmen are lav- 1MK A lllttl UV Will UUL-bUriKUt "Beans" In a regular staged bout. Rear-dmi, however, foully had his voice registered over the microphone and found that his s's, ch's and i have the true ring of "English pure and undeflled." He is ready for Olgnam and his wonderful Celtic outbursts. The eubiect chosen is "Which is the more popular sport boxing or baseball?" The contest will coma off In the lobby of the Biltmore some day next week at noon.

Frank. Moran will be the Judge. Joe Richie, ex-featherweight boxer, Is tn bltr jokester at the Main Street Ath- teiie Club. Last Tuesday afternoon he lad everybody on the working floor dodg-ng him as if he were the Bubonic plague. He had some kind of a basoo hid under his handkerchief and every time he blew his ryose it sounded like on influenza blast, so the gang wasn't long In ducking to the dressing rooms.

Finally, in desperation, a paiooka heavyweight slipped up behind him and landed one on the button then the training floor grew busy again with scuffing feet. A regular frequenter of Osrlo Ourtls's Main street gymnasium, declared, last Tuesday afternoon, that Earl Mohan, who died recently In Los Angeles, was about the most courageous man ha had ever known. Be related a story about Karl getting into a jam with an Italian at one ot Dick Donald's Lyceum bouts a few years ago. They squared off. but were The line-ups: Loyola Eckenroth Re1g Dolan Sweeney Hanler Benshotttr Bttf'i'M Doherty 8.

liila Jfionan Torre Vegher McCarthy I.E. LT. L.a. C. so.

RT. RE. Q. LH, H. F.

purgent Miller Joyce Brown Donahue McEachen Fermnann Nolan Von Der Ah Koefler (C SCORS BY QUARTERS Loyola 0 7 013 Regis 1 0 0 1 PROFESSIONAL CAGE LEAGUE REORGANIZES NEW YORK, Nov. 10. (TV-A reorganized American Basketball League will operate in professional basketball this season instead of the proposed eastern and western circuits, it was announced today. After a Joint conference between the holders of franchises in the old American League, which recently withdrew to the Middle West, and the National League, which was to take its place in the East, it was decided to Join the two into one organization. The combined circuit will retain the name of the American Basketball League.

The league will operate teams in Chicago, Cleveland, Fort Wayne, Ind Rochester. N. New York, Brooklyn, Trenton and Paterson, N. J. John J.

O'Brien, former head of the Metropolitan Basketball League, has been elected "president of the new circuit. Not one of the twenty-six added starters on New York tracks won a race for which he was added during the current season. INC. Short 5t, H-Ut ifcweirafeioir EE? Moore Takes on Sheridan Friday Night On the strength of his two-round knockout of Mike Hector, Homer Sheridan gets a main event at the Hollywood American Legion stadium Friday night. Sheridan came to Los Angeles from Oklahoma and he took a semi-wind-up at the Legion stadium to break into Hollywood's boxing society.

What he did to the tough Hector was Just too bad. The knockout was so quickly administered and artistically done that wise boxing fans were one In the opinion that Mr. Sheridan Is more than a semi-wind-up fighter. Roy Moore of Long Beach, whit went to Australia and won all the titles there but those that belonged to the king's royal family, is fighting Sheridan and on paper the Sheridan-Moore boot looks like the best middleweight shot booked for the stadium this year. Sheridan has his eye on a fight with Colima but he is willing to work his way to that bout by meeting some of the gents Colima has shellacked.

The semi-wind-up fighters are Sandy Garrison, now a welterweight, and Frankle Forbes. Garrison did all his fighting in Chicago last summer and made good. Dutch Mey ers nas a cnance to sell Garrison's contract to Chicago boxing men but refused an offer believing Garrison will some day supplant Colima as his best bet. Frankle Forbes Is one of the best boys of his weight in the preliminaries. Other shots on the card are Joe Salas and Leo Lomelli In the special event.

Salas is a former national amateur featherweight champion. Jimmy Mulllns will meet Wendell Long in one four-rounder and Claude Varner fights Frisco Linda in another. POMONA SETS DATE FOR HARRIER RACE CLAREMONT, Ner. 10. (Exclusive) The annual Southern California Conference cross-country run will be staged at Ganesha Park, Pomona, on December 8, -according to an announcement made here today by Bob Strehle, varsity track coach at Pomona College.

The Ganesha Park course was selected test year by officials of the Southern Conference as a permanent route for the run, and both freshman and varsity races were run over it. More than 300 athletes, from the sevi Southern Conference colleges will clash In the meet this year. Coach Harry Trotter and Ills all conquering TJ.CIA. Bruins havs withdrawn Into the LVT league, but that probably won't affect the total number of entrants greatly. San Diego State College, Pomona ami Occidental will be favored to win the team trophy.

The freshman run will precede the versify pjRsh, dS If GAUZE KNITTED UNDERWEAR Shirts, Shorts, Drawers and Union Suits in All Models Philadelphia Kid" Broad teTIg a good one on himself. While riding in a street car in the City ot Brotherly Love, the conductor suddenly poked bis head through the door and shrilled. "Broad." (meaning street.) "Ah shut your trap what in the hell do you want with me?" snarled "The Kid." half rising as the conductor pulled the stop bell. Paul Mullen and George Hussey had an argument at me Manhattan last week as to weather or not mnvins tilMnra were taking of the Corbett-Fitlslmmons fight. George openly declared that he had seen the films in Toronto and Paul shot back "how could you see something that didn't exist?" Hussey then got busy and accumulated evidence galore substantiating his claims, but Paul would have none, of them.

Finally in desperation, the Inventor of Mulligan Stewa wrote to James J. Corbett and received a quick reDly from "Gentleman "anr were taken of the Corbett-Fitzsimmons in china they were. I tried to get the films, but they were burned up In a Are When Mullen recognised Corbetfg hand- writing ne at last capitulated with "well you bloomln' bucko, you finally, after many years, nut one nn Hussey is now modestly resting on his laurels and Incidentally Ritalng Master raui Aiuiieii. DAN O'LEARY WALKS TODAY AT PASADENA Dan OTieary, world's champion pedestrian, will appear this afternoon before the baseball game starts between the Hollywood A.C. and Pasadena Merchants at Tournament Park, Pasadena.

The veteran walker will attempt to circle the bases six times in five minutes. Old boxing records- credit Jack Jones and Patsy Tunney with hav ing iougnt a 276-round bout back In 1893. built around Leo Fielding, the former Carlisle Indian whirlwind. Powers, former Idaho star, is another important cog In Dletz's offense. Blewett has several good back-fleld combinations, but will probably start off with Zumwalt, Tyler.

Moll and Dyer, "Whitey" Murwin, star fullback, Is probably out of the game with a bum shouldet Royce Wheeler, who Blewett eon-tends could make any college team in the West, will bear watching in the Smoke-eaters line, as will Capt. Larry Casey, center, and "Red" iiasenauer, guard. A. Town Club, A. firemen.

Ortmes Harriis Hesenauer Cuwy t. Wheeler FYslier R. Wheeler Zumwalt MtlU Tyler Herdtn 1. 1 SR. I'tunn Bmiey Hii.vce ttirard Rowland Lrevee Powers Fielding r.

r. LgR. ROT STL. it lh n. II II Li insures cleanliness.

Knitted from the finest long staple, combed cotton yarn. Lastlong is healthful, absorbent, common-sense underwear. For your comfort's sake, try it this season. At your dealer's. He can get it from us if ho is out of it.

1ASTLONQ gives protection without un-- necessary weight. It has a clean, wholesome, body feel so soft, smooth and non-binding, that you wilUike it as soon as you wear it. The three-quarter leg union suit protects knees against cold and chapping and FIREMEN FACE CLUBMEN WILHOITE-EVANS COHN, So. Los Angeles Street, Los Angeles Phones VAndike 05SSS053 Distributors to Retail Merchants tf 941 fffeerefeee, K-J4 Styh, afoee not thow at rA nte. Two undefeated football teams hook up at Wrigley Field this aft ernoon wnen uoacn 'iione star" Dietz sends his Los Angeles Town Club squad against the Los Angeles Fire Department gridders.

The game starts at 2:15 pjn. Coach Bill Blewett's fire boys hold the departmental championship of the world, and Athletio Director Barnett is now securing a big final game at the Coliseum December 8. A defeat today from Dleta's high-geared outfit would Just about nip any such plans In the bud. In but five games the Smoke-eaters have rolled up impressive total of 203 points, and are yet to be scored upon. They smashed the New York Are laddies for a 57-0 victory before 65,000 Manhattan fans a few weeks ago.

On the other hand. "Lone Star" Dietz, one of the country's leading coaches for years, has lined up a powerful team, 1.

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