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The Register from Santa Ana, California • Page 10

Publication:
The Registeri
Location:
Santa Ana, California
Issue Date:
Page:
10
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10 SANTA ANA DAILY REGISTER, SATURDAY EVENING. OCTOBER 30. 1037 ft PAYOFF BY HAPRV GRAYSON Sports Echter, NE A 'ast'v Ster.rci vos the first time Brsvw rf 1 nro. St ei manager Ly boss of thi fired him. son si trium tip Stenpal's era m'staKr sn I Carey trade Casey, a bora one Hi defend the aardonii i lid river, "There ttst 1 dins becauei 4 our boys 4 maybe there he is why.

Uni- would not ci man on third not of pot me a ners on tl rd ca DONS WHIP POMONA IN FOG, 14 TO 0 oooooooooooooooooooooooooo Riverside Topples Saints by the TUSTIN PLAYS SCORELESS TIE Huskers TH This Off! Underdogs BY HENRY MeLEMORE (United Press Staff Correspondent) Home On Crutch Cookmen Moke TWO Touchdowns In 2nd Half. Tie For Lead rn d. that is me. A team like that pet a lot of runs a lot of naiiy one of third when lebody on it tors That hit there re than one e. We could ny time you i three run- the team for bound to me tune or ORANGE COUNTY LEAGUE W.

L.T Pet. Brea-Olinda 2 0 0 1000. Ijagnna Beach 1 1 Tustin not .500 Gerden Grove 0 1 0 ,000 Ban Juan Capistrano 0 2 0 .000 Yesterday's Results Brea-Ohnda. Glendale Reserves. i non-conference).

Tust in. Lacuna Beach 0. Garden Grove, bye Next Friday's Games Brea-Olinda at Laguna Beach; at Garden Grcve; Juan Cap- istrano, bye. STENGEL VASTLY VORE THAN A CLOWN Stengel never thout ar an.cw'er but he is vrisl!) more than a wit and a clown There is a lot of lucscbal! knowl- CASEY STENGEL Aims To Do Well at Boston edge stored between what he calls his pair of palm-leaf fans. Cooper Stenge! went to the Giants Osterman father late in his colorful playing career, but John McGraw was his Arnold idea of a great leader from the V.

Linker and in his serious moments iCasey tries to put Little Napoleon's practices and theories into effect. In reviewing his years as an active he was all of that and then likes best to say that McGraw tarried him on three pennant Bill Tustin Farmers pulled a surprise in their Orange County league opener at Tustin yesterday by holding the vaunted Laguna Beach Artists to a 0-0 tie. The Farmers outgained and outplayed, but couldn't outscore the Artists, whose running attark was stopped cold by the aggressive Farmer forward wall. Tustin was i deep Laguna Beach territory most, of the game, once driving to the 5-yard line. The first quarter saw the ball see-sawing back in the middle of the field.

Hollo Beck, Artist scoring threat, broke away for 16 yards on first play hut was bottled up for the rest of the game. Tustin got a break as the quarter ended, a clipping penalty on a kick return putting the ball or. Laguna's one-yard line, where Beck kicked out to the 31. A pass and three line bucks placed the Farmers just short, of a first down on the 21, and Laguna took the ball there. Larry Monrov.

ace of Tustin's ball carriers, returned one of Beck's punts to the Laguna 28. and then in three plays, drove to the 6. Again Laguna Beach stiffened and recovered the ball there. Laguna's big threat came late in the final quarter when a fumble gave it the hall on the 39. A pass, Blacketer to Beck, made 14, but alert Tustin secondary men batted dowm further Laguna passes.

As the game ended, the Farmers had the ball back on the Artist Laguna Beach played without the services of its key lineman, all-county Hank Walker, who was on the sidelines with injuries. Lineups; (01 Laguna Bch. Tustin (0) Lawson Monroy Kiersy Winkler W. Linker RT-. Babeock Mickelwaite McKnight Hatehez Van llenen McClelland Henry Delaney Beck Brandt LINCOLN, of you who doubt that this is the most bizarre football season since halfbacks wore handlebar mustaches and sponsors wore bustles should bs in this prairie town today.

For here in Lincoln, where the buffaloes used to roam, and where seldom is heard an unfriendly word, a football team that holds a decision over mighty Minnesota is the underdog in today's betting. The team is Nebras coached by that plain-spoken soldier, Major Biffer Jones. And the outfit the Nebraskans are underdog to is Indiana, a team which was beaten by Minnesota 6 to 0. This set-up in itself is enough to brand the season as daft. Time was when any eleven that could hold Minnesota to five touchdowns, much less beat was spoken of in terms bordering on the hallowed.

Nebraska licked the Gophers in the first game of the season, by the neat margin of 14 to 9. Now how in the name of goodness does Indiana rate the position of favorite? I asked this immediately upon entering Lincoln and did not lack for answers. Pessimists leaped out at me from every corner, and proceeded to paint a dark and dismal picture. They told me that the Corn- huskers had their "game of the season" against Minnesota and never would reach that form again. They also mentioned injuries, particularly the blue ribbon set of bruised ligaments and tendons that belong to Quarterback Johnny Howell.

Howell is the chief, in fact he's all of the Nebraska attack. He is the runner and the passer and the kicker. Unless he can go the route against Indiana, Nebraska's forward movement will be practically nil. The pessimists fail to see how the Cornhuskers can remain in the undefeated group. Indiana it here with practically the same squad that gave the Huskers such a gosh-awful fight last year.

And that was a Nebraska team that had Sam Francis and Lloyd Cardwell carrying the leather in the backfield. Indiana, coached by McMillan, have Vernon Huffman this time, but from all reports a gentleman named Corby Davis has more than replaced the brilliant Huffman. Corby, who likes to go into a game with five days growth of beard on his resolute chin, has no weakness. He is a terrific runner through the line, being able to carry his 200 plus pounds with the speed of a back. When a refense tightens to stop his battering, he starts throwing the ball and he can toss it with the best.

He has several fine receivers including Kenderdine, captain and end. The game wi! be played in rather unusual weather for Nebraska. In late October, that is. It was 87 on the playing field yesterday, and the men who gaze at the heavens say it is likely to be almost as warm today. A crowd of 36.000, a sell-out was to watch the proceedings.

Indiana move into Lincoln until late this morning, as coaches have learned that Lincoln on the eve of a big game is so noisy that even guards sleep, and when a guard can't nothing can sleep not even a Jack Torrance. BY 9-6 DEFEAT CITRUS BELT LEAGUE Pomona Santa Ana Chaffey San Bernardino Riverside Re lands Results Riverside. Santa Ana. 6. Pomona.

47: Redlands. 6. Chaffey, 12; San Bernardino, 6. Next Friday's Games Santa Ana at Pomona; San Bernardino at Riverside; Redlands at Ohaf- fey. Orange Defeated By Jordan; Colonists Win; Oilers Lose Two sustained marches in the second quarter gave Anaheim as SUNSET LEAGUE Excelsior Harbor in a 12-0 Sunset league Anaheim struggle at Newport Heights yesterday.

Given impetus by several short passes from Woodrome to Nunez, Jordan Orange Newport Harbor w. L. T. Pet. 2 0 01000.

11 0 .500 1 1 0 .500 II 0 .500 0 11 .250 01 1 .250 Substitutions: Tustin-Wolfe. Ml- drive went 65 years sawa. A. Blacketer, Adair. CAPISTRANO FORFEITS TO BREA-OLINDA Their thin ranks thinned still further by injuries, the San Juan Those better acquainted v-vitbi Cougars forfeited to Stengel would like to see him in a Brea-Olinda yesterday.

This gave favorable managerial position, but the Wildcats their second Orange he scarcely can have any more league victory and put them in luck in Boston than he enjoyed first place, a notch ahead of Tus- iixi Brooklyn. tin and Laguna Beach. Stengel bumped into the same: Arranging a. non-conference oid trouble in Flatbush, of course- test with Glendale high school's X)ebts, on slant bickering between reserves. classy club the Ebbets and McKeever fac- ran wild for a 37-6 victory.

Next tions, a poor organization, senility Friday, Brea tackles Laguna Beach. the seat, and a -----------------------------mediocre club to begin with made the situation intolerable. Casey actually was happy when he drew the pink slip and for not managing the Dodgers in .1927. Excelsior, 26; Huntington Beach. 6.

Jordan, 13; Orange, 6. Anaheim, 12; Newport Harbor, 0. Next Games before Don Wallace took the ball Anaheim at Huntington Beach; Ex- four times in succession to crash eelsior at Orange; Newport Harbor across from the one-yard line. al Jordan- Anaheim moved 4 5 yards for its A flurry of the last second touchdown which Beebe I few mlnutes of climaxed by made on a 10-yard pass into the 8 lateraI after a successful forward flat from Woodrome. our in in 61 Newport Harbor closed gamely, hammering down to Anaheim's one-yard line in the last quarter.

The Tars had a first down at that point but Anaheim's line yield an inch, and the Harborites ended up on their 7-yard line. Excelsior looked like a cinch to win the new Sunset, league's first football championship today after walloping Huntington Beach, 26-6, at Excelsior Friday. Bob powerful band, beaten only by Loyola of Los Angeles this season, rolled up three touchdowns in the first half and added another in the last quarter. I i boFged down on the 17-yard line NEW Armstrong, Bfacb bushed over its Recovering a Jordan ruled the world featherweight ranks today as the first undisput- BEES -MIGHT AS WELL THEMSELVES Stengel has Fette, Turner, MacFayden, Lopez, Fletcher, Tony 25-year-old Negro from Los Angeles score in the third period on a pass and Gene Moore in Boston, and be able to find when he wants to make a ed champion in eight years. Henry, who always But what eas.iy might be the- gives the fans a fight, put on one nucleus of a very fine club will of his best for 11,847 customers remain nothing more than that as Madison Square Garden last long as the present situation exists night with a six round knockout in the Hub, where the actual over Petev Sarron of Birmingham, owner does not choose to put The crowd paid 234.70S.28 to see that went for a touchdown, gave Jordan high school of North Beach a 13-7 decision over Orange's Panthers at Jordan yesterday.

The defeat virtually eliminated Orange 4rom the Sunset league race. Jordan cashed in on a break to score in the first quarter. A wobbly punt hit halfback. Bob Welch, on the leg at 10- yard line and in a wild scramble for 1 tie free ball Jordan recovered on Orange's 3-yard mark. Rechow, fullback, bucked it over in two attempts but his try for point was wide.

Orange tied the score in the fourth period after an earlier march lb ore money into the organization. But Stengel can be depended upon to get the most out of the material at hand. And his outfit will play entertaining baseball. The biggest benefactors are tie the fight. Both men had claimed the title, Sarron boasting N.

B. and feireign recognition while Armstrong bossed only California and Illinois. By his victory, the little over the goal from Eddie Free man to Putnam. Two long runs, one good for 80 yards by Barnes (who beat Anaheim with a last week) and another by Castle for 40. accounted for two of Excelsior's touchdowns.

White intercepted a pass and traveled 20 yards for the third and 40- yard pass to Henson went for the fourth. ering a Jordan fumble on Jordan's 30, the Panthers drove to the line from where Nelson Krueger passed into the end zone to Oscar Gunther. Ed Gould's try for point was wide. Jordan's winning points came with less than two minutes to go after Meyer's punt slithered out of hounds at midfield. A pass put the ball on Orange's 30.

Another pass to the 20. followed by a lateral to Schiect. a tackle, was good for a touchdown. iddleweight driver itistrx. and is life in Nati belt baseball writers who only brown man attained the first un- I disputed rule since Bat Battalino outgrew the feather class in 1929.

Barron started confidently, bewildering Armstrong in the first round with his jumping jack tactics and a whirlwind attack. Armstrong staggered Petey with a hard right to the chin in the 5 of 1938 second then drove him to the as good with a left hook- Barron puffed in was visibly hurt. Armstrong won the third, but in a furious toe to toe exchange, one of his punches landed low, go ng nowhere and Referee Arthur Donovan gave might just as the stanza to Barron. The little Alabaman came out Bob fighting and held Armstrong even in the fourth. This was Petey's last stand, for as they came out for the fifth, Armstrong connect- ed a straight right to the ebin i weorge Donald, totally blind, that buckled Barron's knees.

Amazed spectators here by The Californian had his oppon- And ent vainly trying to cover up with gloves and elbows in the sYth. Henry charged him to the ropes and belted him with a left and I then a right. Barron came back only feebly and Armstrong pulled up a left hook from his knees that rocketed straght to Petey's chin, Barron dropped to both and as be pulled one foot to the floor, it looked like would get up before the count have to follow Case) around to gam reputations as humorists. Few can spin a yarn a- well as the round-- to jaho started Kansas City, wound up sj baseball. The Boston may not finis as fifth, under the vast1) more serious Bill McKechn.e This ear, hot at least they will not lie dull And when your partciuiar, you Hell enjoy yourself.

'Perhaps that is why old Quinn hired Casey Stengel. BLIND BOWLER WHIZ ing 114, 122, 124. 125, and li al! after only 19 lessons. S. A.

Netters Begin League Schedule Against Pomona £at those Barbecued £eef Turkey Ham Sand- ches, made by Chef La Argo. Drive in 2208 N. Mein, Open 7 A. 2 A. M.

Phone 5753 to The Santa Ana Tennis club opens its official season in the Citrus Belt league tomorrow, battling Pomona's defending champions on the high school courts at 10 a. m. Other teams in the crcuit are San Bernardino, Riverside and Redlands. A different system of scoring will be in effect this year, according to word received by Johnny Cress, president of the Santa Ana club. Fifteen points go to the winners of men's and women's singles, doubles and mixed doubles.

Second matches count 14, third 13, fourth 12. Santa Ana will line up as follows: Men's singles! beginning at 10) Toby White, No. Walter Blair, No. Robert Blakemore, No. Marvin Jacobs, No.

Kenneth Ranney, No. 5. Men's doubles: Bob Heath and Carl Aubrey, No. Don Ritchey and Gordon Knight, No. Carrol Merrick and Harold Lewis, No 3.

singles: Marjorie Lauderbach Blair, No. Kathreyn Williams, No. 2. Gil- more and Mildred Ward play mixed doubles. will Santa hope of winning a football championship its first season in the Citrus Belt prep league was dim today because the Saints stumbled against Riverside, 9 to 6, at Poly field yesterday The visiting Bears ran the Saints ragged throughout the first, quarter and put over touchdown just, before the end of the period.

When Brusca kicked goal it really meant the ball game as Santa Ana failed to add the extra point after it had scored in the third quarter. last two a in the nature of a gift, coming in the last minute when the Saints were so desperate they even passed from behind their own goal. Halfback Collins stepped clear out of the end zone on one of these shots and this gave Riverside a safety. The Saints play two more league games but their next at Pomona tell A about their case. Pomona is supposed to have the best team in the conference.

If Santa Ana could slip over a win it would put them in direct line for the championship, despite the Riverside sethack. Riverside Vigilant Riverside brought here a rugged outfit that smelled out all of Santa pet plays and seldom gave Coach Bill Foote's hard-running backs a chance to get started. The Bears were particularly vigilant against passes, although much of Santa Ana's aerial attack went out with an early injury to Collins who did not. reenter the fray until the last, quarter. Taking the kiokoff.

Riverside reeled off a pair of first downs, then punted to Santa Ana's 19. Collins kicked back to his 46. Miner circled his right end for 25 yards, putting the ball on the 21. Miner and Brusca made another first down on the 10-yard line. This attack petered out when Wilson was thrown out of bounds on a.

fourth down pass but the Bears got right back in position to score when Bill Musick. playing safety, fumbled an exchange of punts on the Saint 23. The Bears were given a first down on the 11 because a pass-receiver was tripped. A shovel pass behind the line to Thompson 'took the ball to the one, and Brusca jammed it over on the taking the ball from center while two of his backs pretended to confer about the play. Gifford kicked goal.

Limited to a single first down in the first half. Santa Ana snapped out of it in the third quarter. Several exchanges of kicks left the Saints on their own 43. Musick punted to the 13, from where a 15- vard clipping penalty put the Bears on the one-yard line. Higashi returned Miner's punt-out to Riverside's 24.

Musick Gets Away Musick hit right tackle for 5 and the reversed into left tackle for 17 and a first down on the 2-vard mark. He went across on third down, diving high over the pileup at center. His try for extra point was blocked by Center Clay, however, so Riverside continued to lead, 7-6. Santa Ana had two chances in the last quarter hut couldn't capitalize on either. A pass from midfield (Webb to Piper) put the Saints on 24 but the drive ended with an incomplete pass into the end zone.

Riverside fumbled the ball right back, McClure recovering on the Bear 24, Piper got away to a first down on the 14 but again passes that fell incomplete choked off the rally. then gradually forced the Saints back and finally they were passing from deep in their own territory. It was at this point that Collins vrent clear out of the end zone to the Bears their last two points. Lineups: EASTERN JAYSEE conference exhibition that was nncan- W. L.

T. Pet. .809 .800 .730 .667 .333 .250 .000 won Ana 2 Bernardino 2 Pomona 3 Riverside 2 Fullerton 1 Citrus 1 Chaffey 0 games count half-game and half-game lost. Last Results Santa Ana, 14; Pomona, 0. San Bernardino.

37; Chaffey, 7. Riverside, 20; Citrus. 0. Taft, 19; Fullerton, 0. (Non-conference).

Next Friday's Games Riverside at Santa Ana; Chaffey at Fullerton; Pomona at San Bernardino; Citrus at Long Beach. ullback Casey punted out. from behind his own goal line to Mercurio who returned the ball 6 yards to the Pomona 49. Timken sneaked over his left atckle for five on the first play and then with second and five in a baffling change of pace, he picked his way 24 yards down to Pomona 20. Just as he was about to be tackled.

Timken lateralled to Mercurio xvho sprinted 20 yards and over the goal for the second score. A lateral (Timken to Tlaying in a fog so dense that Mercurio) around the right Back home with a broken toe and trail of tennis conquests longer than her name goes Jadwiga Jed- rzejowska (just call her Jaddy), sturdy Polish star. After a triumphal tour of the nation, Jaddy ran into a double fault trying a high lob shot to play her handbag into a train rack. Shown aboard the Pdsudski leaving New York, much of the action was screened from the 4500 spectators, Santa Ana junior football magicians last night put on a phantom act of running, passing and laterals fn a brilliant second-half rally that turned back Red Raiders. 11-0.

This hard-earned victory sent the Dons into a tie with San Indians for the Eastern conference lead. The Braves slaughtered Chaffey, 37-7, at San Bernardino. Big. powerful McLennan smashed his 190 pounds through right tackle for the opening score late in the third quarter. McLennan's 2-yard, off- tackle smash culminated a 45-yard drive in which Oliver McCarter and McLennan teamed up with some smashing ball-carrying.

McCarter broke into the open from the Pomona 42. hurdled the center of the yards the 25 for the longest run of the drive. A pass (Mclennan to Erwin Youel) was good for six LOYOLA FACES 0, she said the "best sportswoman in I yards to the Pomona 13. the are American tennis McCarter Breaks Raider Hearts players. McCarter then broke Pomona's heart.

He started around his right I end and was apparently stopped for a huge loss but reversed his field and ran left end to the Pomona 6. On third down Mclennan crashed over. Erwin Youel kicked goal. On the last play of the third period. McLennan intercepted Quarterback pass on the Pomona 46.

Coach Bill Cook sent in entire new team with Bias Mercurio and I.arry Timken slated for ball-carrying duty. The Dons march straight down the field to the Pomona 1 1-2 yard line where they were stopped short, of a touchdown. A pass Bias Mercurio to tackle Cy for a 20- yard gain was the most spectacular play of the drive. Larry Timken also put on a nimble-footed ball- KEHE (780) will broadcast the Loyola-USF game tomorrow. LOB ANGELES A special squad of "air should be on guard Sunday when the Ivoyola Lions meet the University of San Francisco Dons at Gilmore stadium at 2:15.

Last week both teams learned the value or grief of lost to Santa Clara, 7 to 0, when the intercepted passes. Coach Tom Loyola boys Broncos Intercepted a Loyola forward and dashed 55 yards for the only score in an even-stephen game. The same Sabbath saw the San Francisco team defeat Gonzaga, 7 to 0, by stealing the pigskin from the. air. Oldest opponent on the Lion's schedule, the Dons have played Loyola every year since 1930, when Lieb became head coach on the Playa Del Rey campus.

George Malley, in the first year at U.S.F. will bring a team to Los Angeles that includes several performers on the 1936 team which edged past the Lions, 17 to 14. The other battles have resulted in three wins for San Francisco, one for and two scoreless ties. Lieb has solved Loyola's quarterbacking problem with Senior Jim Rinaldi and Sophomore Al De Gaetano. The two backfields Sunday will stack up even except in the kicking department, where men have an advantage.

I.ieb himself saw Earl Bolster, San Francisco hack, hoot four high 60- yard spirals against Santa Clara and described him as a better punter than Bronco booting will be done by Jack Lyons and Rinaldi, the former having a more powerful toe but Rinaldi being more consistent. end added the extra point. Pomona Touchdown Nullified Hal Tucker, sub halfback kicked off to Smith, who returned the ball 28 yards to the Pomona 43. Drummond, reserve halfback, then out- sprinted the entire Don team around his left end for 57 yards and a touchdown. The play was called back, however, with officials ruling that Pomona w'as offside.

The only other times Pomona threatened was when Casey broke away for 35 yards early in the first period to put the Pomona team on the Don 12. The Don forward wall of Crawford. Boyd. Roquet, Joseph, Youel, Tauber and Faul stopped the Red Raiders short of a first down on the six yard line and Gray passed in-i complete on his final down over the goal. Mercurio and Larry Timken in a brilliant display of passing and running bagged what many thought was a touchdown two minutes before the end of the first half.

Mercurio faded hack to the 30 yard line from the Pomona 19 to pass to Timken for a completed pass over the goal. Timken, said, stepped into the end zone with his heel, thus nullifying the score. The Dons drove 31 yards before the Mercurio to Timken fourth down attempt. It. was a tough ball game- Bob Faul, Dave Phoenix, Erwin Youel, Bill Semnacher and Charles Mueller all were forced out with injuries.

It is doubtful if Faul, Semnacher and Mueller will be able to play against Riverside here Friday night. All received severe shoulder and leg bruises. Santa Ana Ends Shine Oliver McCarter, after a miser-' able first half, came back to perform in all-conference fashion in the second half. Mercurio and Timken looked to be the most dangerous threats on the Don (Continued on Page 18) DONS I4, POMONA 0 First Quarter FOOTBALL RESULTS 1 JUNIOR COLLEGES Santa Ana, 14; Pomona. 0.

Riverside. 20; Citrus. 0. San Bernardino. 36; Chaffey, 7.

Taft, 19; Fullerton, 0. Compton. Pasadena, 0. Los Angeles. Ventura.

0. Menlo, 14; Santa Rosa, 7. ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOLS Tustin, Laguna Beach, 0. Jordan, 13; Orange, 6. Excelsior, 26; Huntington 6.

Anaheim, 12; Newport Harbor, 0. Brea-Olinda, 37; Glendale Res. 6 South Pasadena. 41; Fullerton, 7. Santa Ana (6) (9) Riverside IN PASADENA BOI PASADENA Football teams from Occidental and Caltech write anotlver chapter in their venerable athletic rivalry tonight at 15 i when they clasli in the Pasadena I Rose Bow l.

Although held to a scoreless tie I by Redlands last week, the will be slightly favored over Stanton's proteges, ho have fail- ed to score a victory this season, i The Engineers were whipped by San Jose State last 48 to 6. season record thus far shows a weak offense and an exceptionally powerful defense. The Bengal goal-line has not been ed this year. San Diego contribut- ed the only blot on the once-beaten Tigers' record, when Bert Nichols of the Aztecs kicked a field goal I in the Oxy game four weeks ago. McClure Thompson Klepper Bazll Horton Fitzpatrick I Warhurst Maddoek Smith Moyer i B.Robinson Miner Bentley 1 Piper Wilson Musick F.

Brusca Score By Quarters Riverside 7 0 Santa Ana 0 0 6 0 6 Substitutes Santa Sawyer. Webb. LG Mercado; Hi sushi. Lowe. Webb.

Officials Mayes; nel! Uripe. Head Bishop. SHOOT AT S. 0. SAN Beil of Mldwick Country club and Lloyd Mangrum.

formerly of Sunset Fields, today were leading the State Open golf championship SOUTHERN CAL. HIGH SCHOOLS Long Beach, 13; Bakersfield, 0. Washington, 12; Huntington Park, 2 Jordan. 12: Banning. 0.

Marshall. 12; Roosevelt, 0. Manual Arts, 20; Polytechnic. 0. Leuzinger.

21: Compton Frosh, 6. Beverly Hills. Redondo, 0. Franklin, 14: Belmont. 6.

Bonita. 12: Downey. 0. Hamilton. 12: Venice, 7.

Bell. 7: Riis, 0. Gardena. 20: Narbonne, 2. Santa Monica, 13: Inglewood, 0.

Whittier. 13: Muir Tech. 7. Canoga Park, 20: Eagle Rock, 6 North Hollywood. 13; Van Nuys, 6.

Hamilton, 12; Venice, 7. Los Angeles, 41; University, 6, Jefferson, Fremont, 0. Burbank. Covina, 0. Lincoln.

6: Garfield, 0. Ei Montebello. 6. Chr.ffey, 12; San Bernardino. 6.

Pomona, 47: Redlands. 6. Coronado, 12: Oceanside, 0. Fairfax, 14; Hollywood, 6. Santa Paula, 31: Carplnterla.

13 N. Long Beh. Jordan. 13: Orange, 6. Monrovia, 13; Pasadena J.C.

frosh, 0, GENERAL Redlands, 6: LaVerne, 0. Santa Barbara 20: Whittier, 0 Willamette, 7: Puget Sound. 0. Ariz, Frosh. 13: Flagstaff Frosh, 0.

Duquesne, 24: Richmond, 0. Colorado, Washburn. 0. Tulsa. 14: George Washington, 13.

DePaul, St Louis 7. Drake, 46; Grinnell. 7. South Carolina, 21; Citadel, i Youel kicked off for the Dons to Smith, who fumbled, Khoaden recovering for Ponoma on the 39. Casey punted to the Don 14.

McCarter punted to Casey who returned 7 yards to Den 47. Cray lost but Santa Ana was offside Gray picked up 3. Casey crashed over left tackle and swung wide for a 33 jard gain to the Don 12Vi yard line. CcCarter brought Casey down with a shoestring tackle. Casev got 4 at right tackle.

Gray made 1. Casey over his left guard for 1 more to the Don 6 yard line. pass fell incomplete In the end zone. Santa ball on the 20. McCarter punted to Pomona's 43 but both sides were offside.

McCarter punted to the Don 49. McCarter intercepted pass on Don 30 and returned to his 47. Phoenix fumbled, McCarter recovered. lost 3. McCarter passed incomplete twice Second Quarter McCarter punted and Casey returned to Pomona's 26.

Casey punted to the Don 30. McLennan made 5, 4 and 8 and a first down on the Dun 47. McLennan hit his right tackle for but Santa Ana offside. McLennan lost 1. quick kick was blocked and recovered by Pomona on the Santa Ana 20.

Crawford tossed Casey for yard loss. Nesmith downed Gray, trying to pass, back on the Don 41 Gray's pass was incomplete and Casey punted to McCarter on the Don 6. Stanley hit center for 3 but Santa Ana offside so McCarter punted from his own one yard line to Casey on Santa Ana'a 38. Casey made yards over right tackle. Gray's pass fell incomplete.

Casey made a first down on the 27 yard line. Gray lost 2. Casey picked up 4. On a fake pass Gray was stopped for no gain. Roquet threw Gray for a 2 yard ioss and Santa Ana took the ball.

Timken made 6 but Santa Ana was offside. Mrrcurio made 3. Mereurio's pass fell Incomplete. Mercurio passed to Stanley for lu yards Roquet punted to Casev who returned 15 yards to 35. Pomona was penalized 15 yards for clipping, so Casey punted to midfield.

Timken made 1. Mercurio ran end for 8. Merncrio hit tackle for and a first down. Murcurio 3. Timken went off right tackle for 4 and 3.

Mercurio made a first down on Pomona's 24. Mercurio lost 2. Mercurio passed to Stevens for 7. pass to Stanley incomplete. Mercurio passed to Timken for a touchdown (cut officials ruled that Timken had one foot in the end zone and Pomona took the hall on 20.

The half ended 0-0 after two plays Third Quarter Youel kicked off to Casey who returned to Pomona 34. A clipping penalty forced Casey to put to McCarter who returned 11 yards to Don 41. McCarter made it a first down on the Pomona 45. McCarter made McLennan lateralled making 8 around his left end to McCarter who went all the way to the Pomona 19. McCarter over center for 5.

McCarter made 1. McLennan lost around left end. McCarter's pass to Joseph knocked out his hands. Casey punted to McCarter who returned 5 to Pomona's 45. McCarter mode 3.

McCarter got away for 20 to the 23. Mclennan picked up 2. passed to Youel for 6 on the McCarter tried his own right end. reversed his field and ran wide around left end to the Pomona 6 yard line and a first down. McLennan made 3.

McCarter hit guard for 1. On third down Mclennan crashed over his own left tackle for a touchdown and Youel kicked goal, Ana Pomona 0. kicked off to Smith who returned 23 35, McLennan intercepted Gray's pass on Pomona's 46 as third quarter ended. Fourth Quarter An entire new Don team came on. Mercurio ran his right end for 3 and Timken made it a first down on Pomona's 36.

Mercurio lost 9 around his left end, then passed to Leivermann for a first down on the 22. Timken picked up 6 and Mercurio made a first down on Mercuro ran end for 4. He hit right guard for 1. Mercurio made 3 more. Mercurio ran wide around left end but was inches short of a first down on the Pomona U2 yard line.

Casey punted to Mercurio who returned 9 to the Pomona 49. Timken shut over left for 5. Timken weaved through his own left tackle for 24 yards to the Pomona 20 where he lateralled to Mercurio as was being tackled and Mercurio ran the remaining 20 yards to a touchdown. Mercurio took Timken's lateral around his right end for the extra point. Santa Ana 14.

Pomona 0. Tucker kicked off to Kmith, who returned 28 to Pomona's 43. Drummond circled his own left end and ran 57 yards for a touchdown, but Pomona was offside and the score was nullified. The hall was taken hack to the 37 and Pomona was forced to punt. Casey kicked out on the Don 40.

Mercurio punted to Casey who turned 6 yards to Pomona's 21. Drummond passed to Reynolds for a first down on the Pomona 39. Drummond passed to Booth for 1 yard. Drummond threw two incomplete passes. Drummond's punt blocked.

Drummond recovered and returned to Pomona 39. but the Dons took ball on downs. Wilson made 3 Santa Ana was penalized 15 yards for illegal shift and Wilson punted over goal. Joy threw Drummond for a loss. Drummond threw two incomplete passes and finally punted to Wilson on the 44.

The game ended after two more plays. tournament at the end of the first 18-hole round. Both took a five- less-than-par 67. LOOK LOOK Fishermen Attention! 234 Glorious Sport Days Opportunity of a lifetime for $1,000 worth of HEALTH and PLEASl RE for a $50 eighteen month (1 12 Yr.) and exclusive membership on Fishing Boat OCEANIC at Newport. All tackle, gas, oil, lots of live bait.

Boat has own net so plenty of bait assured at all times. Only 25 members accepted. Hurry and get your membership See BOB AFFLICK, 315 East 1st. Santa.

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About The Register Archive

Pages Available:
644,837
Years Available:
1906-1977