Evening Star Newspaper, November 25, 1921, Page 31

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“SPORTS SPORTS. Crop of Initial Sackers in Majors of Low Grade : Johnny Wilson Will Meet All: Comers: MANAGERS LOOK IN VAIN |LANiAM SETS RECOR) |MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPION | 2 i tobdor, [SMTH MO TRANTIE |\ . booh s B Bl 2 L 3 . Tommy Gibbons, 8t. Paul light-heav: | c'm:;rm world, "'"m;flfil F OR D F]R, BAQEMEN GETS LmI‘E FROM l ITLE g e Dowd o o%en:| Only one'club abeut the District of | $mit in & ten-round ontork LI ehl. - i een. """Ida“c"' N a“ ‘hnk(‘olumblu went through with a golf | Billy DeFoe of Ft. Paul ahd "Andv | : A tonleht. Gibbons declared today {event yesterday, the drizzling rain ey of Baltimore will be principals I he anticipated no trouble in defeat-| wpich fell most of the day prevent- |in another ten-round bout _— ing Georges Carpentier, whom he ex- | [ oi“Pojlou arg of the Seot(ish game A Bankers' Bowling League record pects to meet early next year, 8nd from playing to the usual holiday ex- Tendler mfi;pl Agevedo. e & - fell last night when R. Lanham, o . ihat he is anxious tc meet Jack)gent [ Sisler Is Class of American and Kelly Tops Bunch | goxime. for siivos & Co. agamst | Will- Risk Crown to Replenish Exchequer—Harry |bempsey as soon as possive. "W, w. smith and 4. C. Train tea || PHILADELPHIA mL"yfi"’u’i"fi'i- ‘z‘;m_ = a National Metropolitan on the Recrea- T = . BOBTON, Novediber 26—Mike Gib-{in eiEhteen-hole handicap match play | Lew. Deodler, a lightwel In National—Peak Reached in Sums tion drives, hit the little pins for Greb’s Fistic Ability Highly Regarded O e e alaht, meets | LSaInR bar tourney at Golugbl, &rit’ | gave Samncl ikeoveds of Cullforgls sooh a set of 379. The total exceeded by 3 Tominy Robson of Malden here v.o-' wiil receive prizes. Pacific coast boxer was forced to quit d decision bout. in less than a mimite after the opening Paid for Players. seven pins the mark established Followers of Boxing Game. koo i ? e y earlier in the season by Sam Gheen *i | Ellis Wins ‘Wrestling Bout. i ’”L’fi._ Pete Herman, the former bantam- of Washington Loan and Truat. Lan- e M, e o e om: | “Demon” Ellis defeated Joe Turner ham had mes of 134, 124 apd 121. 3 “Hibbs & C took all “""l\ mes ? pelled to cancel all of his bouts for|in a wrestling bout at the Capitol Al Walters, the Red Sox catcher, is playing with Harry Hellman's BY JOHN B. FOSTER. of ' tha matoh with the National Met-{. BY FAIR PLAY.. the present because of a broken bone | Theater last night. wining two falls Mission team in the Cailfornia Win- A_[OR league managers are looking for first basemen, and they are | ropolitans. EW. YORK, November 25.—=A repurt wa's curren‘i bout Madison | In_his right hand. * after losing the first. ter League. " & likely to be looking for them still when the. gong sounds the ms'rucr LEAGUE. _ N Square Garden today that Johnny Wilson will shortly come forth — - . 7 > H optomg of the 1922 scason. Fading roses in the autumn this year . l\t»lln:i' "Toi 120 to defend his title against all comiers. Wilson needs ‘the mon€y. . T 5 s — i were accompanied by fading first sackers. No need to ask for the flowers | Kourroush. 113 87 That’s the answer. He is getting nothing out of his champidnship as the 3 - oi yesteryear. They withered long since, and the big league clubs are |Stewart. 105 108 1-_'1, g T . ST 3 ® situation stands now. He is not making as much money as a bum third- cluttered up with the poorest assortment they have had these many SEMRE TS 08 - : rater. The moncy he was to have received for fighun‘ Downey is still moons. | Totals.. 483 523 Sos h s . ! 2 eld up, and no one seems to know whether he will get it or'not. The s :lle\‘e:et is one first baseman who stands forth as a mountain peak out MOUNT PLEASANT LE bets are that he will never see the money. This won% be Tex Rickard's T er is ea v the superior of all the first-base chaps. Next onds. s | fault, precisely, either. There is a rumor c ted with that fight " to him in the American League is Blue of Detroit, but probably the really Bobel.-c 10 ... Fokes Eol l“l Wthh may make an interesting story somg::m:n“" ed iy next best is Kelly of New York. —| A New York writer says that Gib- Kelly is a right-hand first baseman, III bons ought to fight Harry Greb, b"l more than a light-hitting clown, and if he played a game th: zzled - sofitaire ‘ust ;“”:’“;“l‘l "l”“ IHREE AMERICANS LEAD leady for any one who Is class to! uen the buffer of the jewel setter he Totals.. 497 402 Totals. . z‘:xl':.a:s‘ N RIDERS ON FKENCH TURF RLYE AL, 3 o e e a clown, bu | : team ‘Where the left-hand | e Tt | atticion 13? E :m' Y Y rious clowns that don't make people | naturally superior. Few | ey e N rlders | Giddings.. 80 90 101 Barnholt. 100 92 6 laugh. He is a bundle of actlon over | outhpaws credit for much of rench turf at the close of |/, 77" 108 102 92 Clark. 100 o1 LOS ANGELES, November 25— |any route, and the fighter that can anything in athietics. seidom pause season. They are —— 796 506| Eddie Hearne of Los Angeles won|slow him up is vet to be found. 10 think that the left-hand first base- Loulx, with Totals.. 473 488 482 Totals.. 3 | the®250-mile automobile race yester- | When he was sparring partner for | man is the old master of that job TBRMINAL R. R. Y. M. C. A. LBAGUE. ;day and Thomas Milton, second, took | Jack Dempsey, then in training for, M;_en he is thoroughly expert. ,,,m s Unfon Transfer. the lead in the national champion-,the Willard fizht, he was the only | ixcept Kelly in’ the National | $7 Andrews.. B9 84 91| #hip on seadonal points. Frank El-|man who could make Jack step, and } League there is nothing bespangled. D 1 R MeConmeii 78 B4 1021liott took thi ; schmandt s o fair first baseman. | o ride for the late W. K Vander- 3 50 deett! 1 30 8| Sarles, contending againgt mn‘::"rorqfizkhn"hm'i‘ Jnaha e | ! 1,647 molr;‘wol‘l!m;‘mn once made a threat :‘. g:m:;‘ afo‘s‘ o the championship, was forced out of | You ask any open-minded follower 1 to Fixe to heights but the threat —_— nge. the race in the 180th lap. Jimmy [of boxing about Gréb and vou will ! ¢ & delayed pass in foot ball. w & L H RR o SR Murphy finished fourth and Harry|get nothing but kind words about 3 Dearth ot mpion Players. e . HARRIERS ANNEX ! roias.. ; Hartz took fifth place. the Pittsburgher, He could win two S Everybody knows that there is a | Hearne's time was 2 hours. 16|championships right now. if he got &r dearth of champion players. | SOUTH ATLANTIC T|TLE, i minutes 55 seconds. Four 'of the|the chanée. Hecould take the mid- w, however, have stopped o' think | B ALTIMORE i s Big Race to War Zone. thirteen drivers who startéd —were | dleweight title from Johnny Wilson, i s hat a famine there is of first base- JALTIMORE, Md., November 25.—| xpw ORLEANS. La., November 2 foreed out at various stages. and what he wauld de fo pbor old i NEW i The track was slippery from show- | Batting Levinsky, hi th War Zone, at 30 to 1, won the Thanks- | erg twhich fell intermittently in the ||m,. hfu,.ellnxy' chl‘:::::l:'ms;:n n;! giving day handicap, feature of thelfirst hour of the grind, but thejthis country, would be too cruel to! L to the recsiyidE oh . opening day of the winter racing sea- r-!:edrl q);en’;ruva: 'lgeeedkv.v‘;-xh B‘:'::; ribe. Brennan apparently doesn't L cxtcher. is impertant University of V vas |fon at Jefferson Park yesterday. War = o . who weighs b At R onma Hopkine Cmineraice | Zone is owned by A: F. Dayton and was | goncerned, from 110 t6 112 miles an y v pounds less - than ast summer scouts were poking 1” niversity of Maryland, fourth. | ridden by Jockey Miller. Rapld Trav- " Knockout . and Tom Gibbons their heads into the underbush of | Ve, % Immediately after the race an-|ghow: ! the bush leagues looking for first ine Booth of Hopkins fled the eler was sccond beaten a length. and | ,oyncement was made that another | seraps 'nf“fidid l?:een{"e;-‘::u?sr lr‘:nb' men, and 'without them it Iy ‘out o | For_the fourth time 1n seven years the ‘question to have a really great|running Washington and infield. The first baseman is a8 im- | the south A ) odBtbyc portant to the receiving end of the oty i alleglste 85¢ fia] h Ky . " basemen. Every wime a man wWould | fverany Dulshed frgt eovering the lLischy B was thifl ganctioned meet would be held at|Tord®yan 4"y annr—m-lnndl. sin - . Mention the word first baseman ini4y seconds. Summar: e Cotati, Callf., December 11 and that b & clever patterns— front of a scout he would halt in| S 5 i irginis 500 points would be awarded to the| Benny L i t his tracks and point like a hunting | ron s j.opkins. 244 Will Lead West Virginia. winner there, thus holding the ! pe wun\ed‘t%“;;dnu::‘lo;l?:r‘l?rl:e:f ;-;'hgmu.l:;gn:;:l >3 With_all the research and at- | i MORGANTOWN. W. Va, November |award of the seasonal championship tention paid to digging up something i 15 e :‘ % u > ith, left tackle of !prize in abeyance until that time.]g¢ “r.’..l‘.?"'.‘né"‘i’néfi’ f‘:‘:"r{m“r:::: good not a first baseman was dis- b , 25 I 5 Virginia University foot|Xfilton has 19.0 pomts and Sarles 8 injured right. He says that covered who distinctly promises to P R v ) [ ball team, Ay elected captain of the'g,. second W th. he d e kipdle any conflagration on the dia- | {rore. Washiner o,k cleven for 1032 Immediately after| e YT I B e nd of a bi b as, yiam s L1 Shands, V| he game mm Washington ai ef " - Bt tonm by reasonTOr his Lireis vl d Tor: 13, (4 | fee o veaterduy. He Ia & Sophormbre Sets Dirt Track Mark. cisions a fighter Is likely to get. This, A first baseman of the skill of Frefl . v b M {in the college of agriculture. JACKSONVILLE, November 2. coupled with the inerease in hemnsz.. Tenney would be worth so much | MeDondld, ! Sig_ Haugdahl clipped one and two-{i8 rrying the echampion. who money to the St. Louis Nationals or) i fifths seconds from his previous half- 't want to risk a perfectly goed the New York Americans, or even i 0,V an i Plant Walks to Record. mile world record for aulmnol&lle this fust b";'““se l‘ud«’-&"‘ llr’"srnm Plitsburgh. und Fitisbureh hasone | 7 YORK. N 25— William | racing drivers when he negotiated a | Of the requirements of their jobs or e best flelding first basemen R oy 2T mationn) (dirt track in thirty seconds here|have been reached by gamblers, Dlaying Dese hail, tist the awascs of | ————— T T o ey titlen "sot | Yesterday o it ny ome of those te ight b daet ex Rickard has been trving to get Sl e oL THREE RECORDS BROKEN | ey by vhiSiersy. Y35 |OMNSON STRIDE AHEAD | iiors vl e o ‘ 1IN Y. M. C. A. BOYS’ RACE ! sreci"f:26:50. "Was e L sey. But nothing but silence comes et At K TRCVIRGE TR IN 10-MILE ROAD RACE | 35t,56, 5500, 18°, s, £330 e Conservative owners in the major leagues feel that the peak has heen | mocor rund condunted annually by the DETROIT, Mich, November 25.—R. |lard battle. K « C. A. were shattercd b Earl Johuson, of the Ed i right, 1 - Teahel in the offer of laree sums for | junior. intermediate and senior ath- WITH D. C. BASKETERS | | Ciib 0¢ Bradaock. Fa. swon the thive | === actien has set in "which will be felt esterday. Sam Martin of West- annual Irish-. Amerlcan Athletic Club Tore In the weat than. in the. cast I School won the senior run | fenmite "rosa'run yeaterday. “His | SPECIAL There is more genuine base ball 10- | onds o ihe wnrilal; clipping 40 sec- | Cduxrean Helghts Vankees onpened| time wes 53 minutes 4E4-5 seconds. i MONTH OF X0 ere T £ | he mark established by John | their season at the Congress Heights! A stride behind Johnson was Charle: Vmfilz :}Pn day in the middle west than in onelGioss’in 1513 Maranian of Fech Homn | Au ¥ ov L. (Chuck) Mellor of the Logan | wE'ARE WARING & SPECIAL PAICE O or two cities of the east. Continued | raaieo Gities of the past. Gonmtipued |was second and Garrett, unattached. ) Square Athletic Club of Chicago. | California Tops and T third League, 108 . s Close on Mellor's heels was Albert repugmant fo the westorn iden 0” Frizzell of Tech was first in the|Yankee center. tossed twenty goals|Smoke of Peterboro, Ontarlo. | Craftsmen Finish sPoft The flrat big sale ebveqmile intermediate race. with Hoag of | from scrimmage. {ook place in buse ball was resented | Wegtern socond and Miller, unattach. | Al A tén-round Bolt bitween., Willis ied, third. Friszell's time of 6.082 tan basketers will visit the} ;. opeon of New York and Jimm) was created then which has lasted for | {owered b 2 S c v 36 3-5 seconds Rob. Washington barracks tomorrow night all time in the mational sport. The |Dumre record made jast yeas wha'3|for & game with the Engineers. Play | Hanlon. the. crack =Denver light- The Acme Auto Top Company . man who first paid a_large sum of | puf 8 record made 5 fo & weight, is to be the star feature ur 1421 Irvl S!. NW 8 record fo will start at 8:30 o'clock. ving | money for ‘the transter of a vall | Sunior half ‘mile made in s vf'n'i; the big_ boxing show at Madison vlayer lives in New bettered by Dougherty, who yester: Holv Name Guild cuint went tolll e it for two purpose: : ran the distance in 3.28. Litsey was| hiladelphia yesterday and defeated cent conversation. second and Fountain {nird. the Claver Catholic Club, 36 to 23. The I knew I was getting a good ball Dayis brothers—Everett and Edward player and the other for the reason e —scored well for the winners, the that I had watched the course of P.| Pittsburgh gossip has it' that the | former getting five scrimmage soals T. Barnum with a great deal of in- | Pirates are to have a house-cleaning, |and caging seven of sixteen shots For Dver 40 Years terest from the time that I was a boy | with no fewer than five players t- | the foul line. Vi s and I made up my mind that he knew | ting the gate. Fet | four goals from l':-lmn‘::n:éud fnsde Satisfaction Guaranteed more about advertising than any or Money Refunded. referred to as getting notices in the rnum always was doing something that got his name talked about. 1 fig- CII‘ w. w ured that hiring a big ball player, after first getting the other club to sell, would |n ll unfortunately for me it got the club g that let the player go so much talked about that the public nearly talked them out of business. You sec I'd forgotten all about the element of sporting pride > that is also called local pride. 1 found d § that hiring a ball player wasn't like hiring an actor. 1'd really taken away something for which the other city had fondness and they didn't hesitate to let me know it. Then to protect our club I went out and bought another player for the same price. 1 figured the road. We made some money, but I've wondered sometimes if it wouldn't ‘have been better if I had kept my hands ST. LOUIS, November 25.—The foot terday, was called off and they de- cided to play hockey instead. A recent injury to a pla; Y h l b l ' R et ou cant help but like them P .| |20 forI5¢ Borillonts Co; 120 forise Zenlortis | Grafer C. Caughey of the Pittsburgh A"::ll:[mh \mxucl.ll':on v\'ouhthp ten-mile tcati champlonahip of the Alleghen _ === (i champlonship of the Allesheny | ) S E] EEE—m Bk e Iiit’s a Hess Shoe—it’s Bl a fashionable shoe. Hess have leaders— pacefmakers of fashion in Over Sixty Styles in All Fashionable Leathers, . 3 [] most moderately priced—quality considered. N.Hess Sons, 93 1 Pa. Ave. man_in public life. They didn't call get_the ball player talked about and the P"ce 'sh that if I could double the home crowds off in the first place.” NU I g ball game between two fim teams at cribed as one of the for Track Title to Caughey. vesterday. He covered the distance in the reputa- B Men’s Foot- l—aammlml. R Sale! Silk-striped | - madras shirts HE beauty of silk stands out bold on these shirts; they’re backed with a firmly ; -woven madras, and you know the satisfaction in wearing : shitts that keep their fineness of texture and richness of % color. . First quality thruout——tailored to wear and to look right to the end. Sizes 14 to 18. Let us estimate on turning your touring s car or roadster into a closed car. It Is Hard to Associate a Price Like - $35 With a Quality Like Solid leather shoes :(. Kuppenheimer ‘ Suits We ask that you see the evidence of this system of short-profit merchandising— a whole store full of the very latest models of these best of good clothes. one hour, three minutes and twenty- five seconds. (MxJ‘/;-l n.) {CHAS. E. MILLER, lnc. A4th St. 4 Doors Nerth of H St FORGET the little price; the big things to consider are ' that these are genuine leather shoes with pliant leather uppers, high-power solid leather soles and built accord- “ingly thruout, Plenty of styles in ” Black or tan Scotch grain Black gun metal Black or tan kid Brown calf Cross or wing tips; English or conservative lnsts; All sizes. 4Men's shops, main Boer.} This extra-value-giving drive includes Overcoats NS it advertising in those days. It was; club, too. It worked out that way, but 1 could afford to lose on the crowds on (Copyright, 1921.) Lindenwood College, eduled y CIGARETTES the jJust-minute change. The hockey | NNETTE, Fa., November tion of style wear. BRUCEWO0D The collar with the * new roll front 20¢ each—4 for 75¢ Duofold Manhattan xnmmn 5 Stetvon - Hats

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