The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942, November 01, 1925, Image 7

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    TWO
fcs
THE KLAMATH NEWS
(Every Morning Except Monday)
United Newt and United Prest Telegraph Service,
SECTION TWO
Six Pages
KLAMATH FALLS, ORE , SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1925
WINS n a r no.VF IN j YALE defeats'
Price Five Genu
by
LINE UNTOUCHED
Navy Sauatl Defeated
W Wolverine Pack
Jd " lOj 54 toO
Putting At-
Stretches
Ult Co
B;2D QUARTER WINS
27 TO 7
i WEST POINTERS
Old Eli .Takes Cadets Into
Camp By Decisive Win
Score of 28 to 7
kkhii v Kn:i.n. asn aiiikhi.1,. .
Ml.li.. Oct. 31.- Hulled prcai orizzlies, Tail TwiMed for
THOMPSON
('illTi'HHIti'Ml )
DUD UNIVKK
uul opening up
I Willi her goal llim mill uiicriitcd
after five games, .Mli lilKun's crack i
fuulbull machine today Increited
Its season's total srore lu lto by
malt herlnit a vullinl bin widely
OHlt-liintiil navy team under u score
i.f f4 lu 0. i
Twenty Points By Aggies
In Terrific Onslaught
,, , . . .. , - ..... nun- wa accounted tor me
l.r.llnal. won want pus.er pierced the navy linn noon ami gained an advantage, that tourhduwn tilnrccpting
,u Oregon mil-If, a total of eight touchdowns Mm.tiitius could not overcome. The sprinting SO yard, lo i
t
I
Y.M.K HOWL, NKW HAVKN.
Oil. 31. (United PrcMO-Outclats-ing
Hut uruiy in any phase of mod
ern football, Yale mured an lin
presslvo victory over the cadets
! today. 2S lo 7.
COHVAI.I.IS. OH. 31.t'ltcd! Thn army waa ao badly outclass-lr.-M.i-
In terrific drive in ll,,.!,.,, ,, nlv ,,, , W.,n.
second quarlvr. the Oregon Antrim: h..r n,.i.i i.iri... i i
The Wolverine back, led li piled en twenty uolnta aiulnxt ll.oi,.. ... i.... ,
k i:t..nn f.i... .. . .. . " I "i -"" "" "-
- i ..-.. r ti-uniuii. uncanny lor- .Montana imzmea here Hi urinr. i ..... .. . .
a pats and
At ins rim . wiitia I lie Michigan line repeat i d I v final score waa O. A. ('.. 7: Mon.
in roti'trucled held off th navy back field qmir- tana. 7.
-.lng atu. k by ti Hamilton. Honk.. Hhapley and Th. . .. i...j ... .
dry field before a large limne-rom-'
Inn crowd. Although the tun shone
tliiougli the cloud, the weather waa'
unite chilly. I
The Angle tcored four touch
downt and converted three of Hid
kickt. while Montana rrotaed Hip
lint once and converted Ita lone
kit k.
Tlu- first tcoro rams when I.tiby
O. A. C. caught a punt on Mon
tana's 30-yard llnv. and raced
through a broken field for a touch-
, , . .. . i dowu. Deninan converted.
vcieai 01 state louege is
OF 36 ASSAULTS
GAINING 363 YDS
wmAJTRAMBITAS HERE
Alleged False Alarm Stages
Strong Come Back In
Penn Defeat
Willamette Defeated After;
Battling Northern Team '
Through Hard Game
I had otnatted Kllppln.
it, sunturd'a
le for all Ain-!
i. did not ttart i
t called upon
HUH-
B LOOMS FORTH AS
TITLE CONTENDER,
f.MlllMll II lit II
(turn 1t,
vt ( alK-irnin '
it (IM nut net :
iiy to lif up'
plajr. Wnrtur'
in lil tin it, and
uni thtf Mine
plaKd naltiiit
t wpfk.
rfpfntrdl)" by
Ilr. uml Itn
Kaitmt Ihr An-
SAGE HENS GIVEN
FOOTBALL LESSON
Colorless Contest DUhed Up
Before Los Angeles
Gridiron Fans
Another Notch Toward
Coast Honors
The aecoud touchdown came on
: a pant, Deninan to Ward. Dcnman
( niltird the kick for goal. Again a
mighty paw of fifty yard. Schul
I nicrlrh to Ward, gave O. A. C. an-
oilier touchdown, which Luhy con
verted. Tho A Ft it let' fourth touchdown
r.niM In IKm llilrd iilinrter when
aghl a tlar of ington .tme college thla afternoon j ,ilhy miku thrUKU ,ir,y de.
. Pl'I.I.MAN, Wa.h.. Oct. 31.
Il'nlted Prettl --Wathlnglon loom
ed more than ever a a DoMothlo ron-
l.tid. Murphy j ,rnir (r ,h pm,.tr rK, ft.
1 ball title w hen the .defeated Wath-
I at him. and
liking up aouiii
He figured In
belpg on the
long pataua
til Oregon
-"' " ""H .i.l hi o. , ..... . ,,.
IU" repeatedly , Th ,....,, .. ..-!.. ......,,.
lromlliottart.trorlngltpolnt.ini Mntllnl, wor,., ,my irh-,
tho flrtt quarter. down when Kelley carried the hallj
Today'a game glvea Waahlnglon j acrnN after two brilliant paaaea and
Iwn wlna and no defeat In the conat j a penally parried the lirlazllea to
tonferenre. Stanford ha three vlc-i within tcorlng dlttanre. Hwpet eon-
lories and nit ilefenta and t'allfor-'verted ihe go.il.
nla one victory. Ktanford and fall- ftf.ni,. In niiarler-
inuciioown fornla have each been beaten bylo. A. C 0 2 7 n-57
i the non-conference club of San 1 Montana 0 t) 7 0 7
francltco, however, while Wath-!
Ington'a cloteM approach to defeat! To read Tho Klamnth News day
f lime liegan.
I I -oil hack to;
I"', tnd a for-
"l H'klllg Ihe;
l.OS A.NtlKI.KS, Oct. 31 I United
Press) The t'nlvertity of Califor
nia gave the plucky Pomona Sage
Hens a football lesson at the Los
Angeles coliseum thla afternoon,
winning handily in a colorless con
test by a tcoro of 27 to 0.
Tho acore waa Dot an honest ln-l
dlrator of the comparative strength
of the two teams, Ihe powerful uni
versity eleven playing listless foot
ball, and appearing to assort Its
strength only on demand.
A small Los Angeles crowd of
about I11.UOO watched the perform
ance, cheering and rhuckliiig when
tho college team managed to wig
gle through the beefy California, linn
for a slight gain now and then, or
when a Sngo lien broke away for a
flrtt down, which occurred on rare
occatlona during tho contest.
The licars marched through the
Claremonl team in rapid fashion for
two touchdowns, after wearing down
lly IIKNItr I.. rAflltKl.I,
(t'lillifl Pre rorrmponilrtit
r'HA.S'KXI.V KIIOI.I). Plfll.ADKL
PII1A. Oct. 31. (United Press)
Ited Grunge. 24; Pennsylvania, 2.
That was the result of sixty min
utes of battling over thla mud-soak-1
cd field this afternoon. The
"Wheton Iceman" mnklng his first
appearance In the east, strutted his
most amazing stuff to the red and
blue eleven, and that hitherto un
defeated team for two aeajtons went
down before Illinois.
It waa a Grange they said,
"couldn't run In the mud," who
atreaked through the ankle deep
mire for gain after gain.
It was Grange that his critics de
clared was a false alarm who turned
back Pennsylvania's Taunted attack
without moving a hair on his sorrel
topped head
FAI.KM. Oct. 31. In one of the
hardest fought grid battlea ever
played on the local field, the Wll-
lamctto foclball team went down
' rt A 1. tut t 10 f 1 It hotnra Whllm.nl
Ihia afternoon.
For the fimt two quarters the j
game was scoreless with much of 1
the playing lu Whitman's, territory.
FOR FIGHT WITH
STARKEV NOV. 3D
Battler Looks Fine After Long
Auto Trip, Will Work
Ont Today
NOTRE DAME GETS
FOURTH VICTORY!
FROM GEORGIANS
Varsity Players Not Used, Bar j
One, During - Whole
Game By Coach
ATLANTA. Ca.. Oct. il. Notre
Dame won its fourth consecutive
The famous Illinois back carried Kame ,rom Georgia Tech here this
tho ball 36 times and gained 363 afternoon ,13 to 0. but the tef
yards. He made one run of sixty of "ghi.ng Irishmen that dojd
yards for a touchdown; a second I toem w" ,he ,ec"4 airing squad
of the Oclden Tornado.
Not a Georgia Tech varsity play
er was put into play until the
final quarter, and then Williams
substituted for McKae for a few
mlnutea. Coach Alexander of Tech
did not announce his reason for
the sudden change In his lineup.
With Capt. Douglass Wyckoft out
if the game, because of Injury re
ceived in the Alabama ccnteat laat
Saturday. Tech coachea possibly
of 14 yards for a touchdown, and a
third of 24 yards for yet another
touchdown. The other six points
for the victors were made by Brit
ton, who smashed through center
on tho one-yard line.
Seventy thousand fans sat freci
ing in the standa and saw 'what waa
believed Pennsylvania's greatest
team completely humiliated. Per
haps not completely, for Pennsyl
vania saved a shut out when Bier-
Bt-kl, the "crippled tackle." t-aped j figured they nsrtr'Mthe'bhance of
through to block one of Ilrltton's 1 defeating the South Bend eleven
kicks behind his own goal line, j and did not want to gamble.cn
Brltton fell on the ball for a safety. ' further Injuries to tho rec:ilars.
Looking fit as a fiddle and feel
ing in fine shape for hie coming
battle with Kid Starkey. In the
10 round main event scheduled on
the card of Matchmaker Johnnie
Sylvester in the Scandia Hall Tues
day, night, Johnnie Trambltas and
his manager M. Hollander, arrived
in Klamath Falls last evening.
Trambltas and his manager drove
from Seattle to this city, leaving
the Puget Sound metropolis Friday
morning, making Rose burg Friday
night and completing the journey
yesterday. :"
About the first thing Trambltas
asked on arriving here was: "How's
the fishing?"
"Never mind - the fishing." says
Matchmaker Sylvester, Its that Sun
day afternoon work out yon want
to be thinking about or you'll find
yourself fishing in the -funny sec
tion. Trambltas looks good and Is not
suffering from his fight with Mln
nick. which was the last one he
had in 'Seattle on this trip. One
week from his battle with Starkey
he is to fight Harry Whyzrow. the
Australian hurricane In Seattle, ao
be la keeping himself tit. .
Last night the visiting battler did
little or nothing In the way
of training after the long trip from
Beame. lais morning no win tawu
a little road work and at 3 o'clock
go after some rrast work in the
gyinnaa!unt Dflirt- ScSitdla'l lalU
This hall is rightly called the Scaa-
HWInnnt n. PtlM t'lvi . i
wns a He game with Nehru-id .v
nmah through
"M" next touch.
'"ml halt Ship
paif tcoriMl
the game
t tklca.
I 0
7 14 35
0 0 3
lights ftir the Cougars.
Washington backs turo off tackle
and around end ut Ihe opening of
the game, until Kliner Tctreau
crashed over a touchdown In the
first eight mlntili's nf play, (itil
torniMen converted lhc goal.
Washington's second touchdown
Football Scores
11 M Oregon's 1 . ,, ... I formed on happenings of importance
I't took It over, """'' " throughout Ihe world as well as In
1 ffilan.l kicked' n """ u i Klamath Kalis and vicinity.
I mg men on win neuuio iniin. wmim-
' U....i ... Cl.nti -.rn tin. lirlehl
'" a paining !
territory, mul i
'lie of piny was,
Intercepted a '
'Ichr-it. Jonetj
"nt plain and;
p and Oregon!
rmi t,.. 31 yard
Jones scoring
Iter day Is lo keep thoroughly In- the Kago Hens during Ihe first 10
minutes of play by keeping largely
on the defensive until Karl Jabs,
giant fullback, carried the ball over
after a succession of lino bucks, for
the first two limrhdowns.
:torious
umbia 11
came when Cutting, Washington end.
Intercepted a Cougar pass and raced
1)0 yards for a touchdown. Gntlorm
kpii kicked gonl as Hi" first qunrtnr
ended.
In tho second quarter Cutting
took the bull over on a forward
pans, but Outtormsen fulled' to
convert.
Washington Stale played good
hall In the third quarter, koeplng
tho pigskin In Washington terri
tory most of the lime. Knrly In the
fourth quarter Gntloriiiten kicked
. pretty field gonl from the 32-ynrd
lire after liitorrepllng a Cougar
pais. 1
Michigan. 64: Nnvy, 0.
Chicago, 6: Purdue. 0.
Wisconsin. 12: .Minnesota, 12.
lows. 28; WnbaBh. 7.
Ohio Stale. 17: Wonster. 0.
Missouri. 23: Amps. H.
Northwestern. 17; Indlnnii, II.
Ilnrvifrd. 14: William & Mnry. 7
Cornell, 17; Columbia. 14.
Pittsburgh. 31: Johns Hopkins, 0
Syracuse. 7; Penn State. 0.
Yule, 2; Army, 7.
Pennsylvania. 2: Illinois, 24.
Durtmoiith, 1 1; llrown. 0.
Princeton, ID: Swarthtnoro. 7.
Notro Dame, 13; Georgia Tech. 0.
Missouri, 23; Iowa Slato, 8.
Kentucky, 16; Center. 0.
Colorado. 14: Colorado .Mines, s
Badgers, Gophers
Battle to Tie Game
MKMOItlAI. STADIUM. MINNEA
POLIS. Oct. 31. The Badger and
Gopher fought to a 12 lo 12 tie
here today.
Coming from behind. Wisconsin
put her famed aerial attack to work.
In t ho flnnf period nnd played the
mnroon and gold to a stand-off. II
wns tho third consecutive tie game
for the rival schools, which have
met on the gridiron 35 tlmoB.
PRINCETON EASILY
WIN FROM SWARTHS
NKW YOKK,
s Columbia
I- gridiron disup-
"y- Tho blue
"l" greatest uh-
k-ilde ffelghts In! PALMKH STADIl'.M. PltlNCK
n before Its hit. 'TON. N. J., Oct. 31.--( United Press)
y the narrow I Princeton easily defeated Swnrth-
more In Palmer atndltnn this after
noon, lint the tradition that the
Kumo little Pennsylvanluns alwnya
scorn on tho Tigers, was upheld.
The scorn wns 1!) to 7. Cnpt. Wil
cox for Swti-rlhmore. rupnatedly
bucked tho Princeton lino for short
gains and finally ripping through
Incklo for a touchdown In tho lust
quarter.
I" In the fourth
""V Gil Dohle's
Hirotigh lo vlc-
wllh llio lull I on
Hue. Columbia
n I ho fourth
I Itn yard that
oluinbla.
MES GAME
PS 12 TO 0
"ft. ill. Nob
avenged I ho do
year by Okln.
'liinlnuieil Ihe
'''.ding position
f"ey conference.
o.
r"rn hifhi.
"liouldorcd the
"i"! offon
y for victory
"lofente of the
MIK'.WiO MAHOONH Vlt'TOIlH
ovkh renin k i xivkhkitv
CHICAGO, Oct. 31. Couch Htngg's
('lilciigo inarming kept their slule
clean In lltn big ten championship
fight here this afternoon by defeat
ing Purdue, six to nothing, but II
wns only nflor ono of tho toughost
gattioa Rtagg's warriors havo gone
through.
'' For a few moments In the second
period, Kornwcln and McCnrty broko
through for long gains and McCnrty
went over for a touchdown'. Tho
attempt for an extra point failed,
Carload of Sulphur Just Received
From San Francisco
This is a commercial grade of sulphur for
use on alfalfa.
The price will be as follows, as long as the
! fnrk lasts:
In sack lots, 110 lbs., per sack $ 3.00
1000 lbs : - 2175
In ton lots, per ton ; 45.00
Don't delay your orders on this, a3 the
earlier the sulphur is applied the better the re
sults for the following year.
J. W. KERNS
Moline Distributor .,..'
Farm Implement., Cream Separator.,, Milbng
Machine., Fencing, Hay, Grain, Ferfwd Seed.
1303 So. 6th St. , n Pho,,e 5S7'J
Klamath Fall., Ore.
BOXING
Scandinavian Hall
Main Event 10 Rounds
KID STARKEY
Klamath Falls, who fought a sensational draw two weeks ago with
the flashy Mike DePinto of Portland
VS.
JOHNNIE TRAMBITAS
Trambitas has fought Jimmy Sacco, Dode Bercot, Ted Krache and
Spug Myers and beat them all
THIS WILL BE SOME FIGHT
aaaaaassasaataaaaasaaaaaaasasaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawatasaaaaaaaaa 0
SEMI-WINDUP 6 ROUNDS 150 LBS. -
CHUCK SAMS-vs-EARL ST0LZ
Klamath Falls' 150 lb. Sensation Bend Wildcat
This is a re-match demanded by the public after witnessing their last battle
Special Event, 4 rounds, 140 lbs.
W.Harrington
The fastest 140-pounder in this
neck of the woods
VS.
Jack Crim
Preliminary, 4 rounds, 160 lbs.
Henry Burke
Klamath Falls' Cave Man
VS.
The Toughest We Can Find
8:30 Sharp
TUESDAY, NOV. 3
Under Auspices Klamath Falls Boxing Commission
LADIES WELCOME
Tickets on Sale at The Mecca, Waldorf and the Smoke
Ringside $3.30; Reserved $2.20; Gen. Adm. $1.10
J. SYLVESTER Matchmaker
For Those Who Missed the Last One
DON'T MISS THESE FIGHTS
3C
nnd there wns nn more scoring