The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 17, 1919, Page 20

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THE SEATTLE STAR HEY BUGSY! You Svow tte TWe WANNA BUyA doc! OWELL DOG a= —_— 7 — CHE ap ?_S ‘ a PAGE 20 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1919. TAR PORTS THER HE's f BUT WHY 13 HIS TAIL So SHoRrT? . HE GAVE ONTIL tT Hurt! Gost! 1 WONDER WHAT A PLATE OF HAM AN’ EGGS yt WILL COST 100 YEARS , From NOW: @ Victory HOUND! ‘TACKLE MUST |HART GIVES HAVE POWER | SEAL STAR AND ACTIVITY, INFIELD JOB. BY WALTER CAMP Wille Kamm, San Francisco third (Most Van Football Coach) jh on D. Si In base a tani jart? Are mone Star Coast league squad. the run combined with activity, He should have the ability to carry an Inter Hob Meusel, the Tiger Inflelder, for third with ferer back and slam him into the runner, He should be ever alert to shifted to the outfield on hurry a forward pass and still not Jet His He must never oung Hector Leo Cross Meets Frank Farmer in Pool Battle Bremerton Heavy Fails to Show Up; Cross Saw Real Are Base Bandits Slipping? BY ED BANG Sporting Editor Cleveland News a single base was stolen pation im that | Strangely enough Chapman gay Ainem the only players to gp tempt to steal in the first game Detroit, August 26, “hit oll.” stole second on Ainsmith tm the age, ond game, but was nipped when iy pilfer third. Shorten pay dirt against O'Neq easy picking. baserr is given a Kreatest amet Is power : Hart's elr pur eveloped suc favorite bane local fane, 4 btaiis aggregation team fot 4. OF the runner fool him. th 0 { at Action in France; Casey Meets Rogers BY LEO H. LASSEN Young Hector, the Bremerton heavyweight, flivvered again last night by failing to show up at a meeting of the boxing commission after he had promised to come to Se- attle in an effort to get a place on tonight's card with} Frank Farmer at the Crystal Pool. Whether or not Hector | will receive his original six months’ sentence of exile from | Seattle ring activities was not announced last night. By side-stepping the match again, Young Hector showed that he wasn’t overly anxious to meet the bald-headed| battler from the Pierce county metropolis of Tacoma—the hamlet that reminds one of Seattle because it's so different. Leo Cross, just returned from the American Entertain- ing Forces in France, which staged one-night performances | at Chateau-Thierry, ete., for the Heinies, is not afraid to He whould fight | lowe p 4. ing finally we all the uld always be ed fighter on defenn a clean up charge tackle should re from the opponent, but the block comes first In working on guard. a tackle of power can actually drive the guard completely in, and may poenibly do more on certain work by hitting hard and then glancing off, and may get a | secondary coming acrona. runs with the ball, hy ar shoulder tow have On offense remember that a block is more ef fective the more it conceals the ball | j If he ever tust run an his) Mitche lake, second firet bare Tigers, shortstop, K Fourn Sea) base; Kamm, A bas; third Crawterd fheid eter Meu Arvel An Tigers, rig’ catcher Beavers Gould, Oldham Solons: pitehers utility outfielder; utility infielder Johnac Leen should grab all he can. body behind him (Copyright, 1919, N. FA) Brown Tees; Rumier He must go straight at a forward passer and Oo) fast and hard. There is always some- | bases were sto pitchers, close leveloped by the bility hold runners to first b At events there is no disputing the t that base ing isn't what it was #0 very long ‘ As proof ention. tha rere slipping or the and catchers are bination that halts them b the men op th get th bearings we nee the of the | Cleveland, thr |two with the the White Sox lieve it if we the are usir runways r 4 but cite in- t eight games in with the Athletles, Tigers and three with You wouldn't be- told you how few en in those games. Chapman tried to Speaker second, but stance | On nte Augus st game with Chi even got gay with Saal iver was cut down at * swell throw when he gp dvance on a near » Not @ stolen base wag gy Thus you see only three bases en in eight games, five of the tests being between the g teams of the league am that ean afford to take most chances figuring in the othe three. Yep, the base stealers any sUpping. ‘ . and when hy ifie drive an he ¢ z stopped them. Not took liberties with ta ter er Lats go buy Boldt’. French paw step within the hempen circle with the logger who has} try. Uptown, 1414 34 ave; down made Kapowsin famous. CpCes With « big entry list of boxers, Sen Oklahoma heary Ole Anderson here pe the bear at 235 1 ander the weather. His manager. Druximan, is planning an active campaign for him as soon as Bob ts in condition again. i js fie Everett welter, will be me for = couple of weeks strained tendon. He would mateh with Joe Siminich, » here. ied az “Pat" the Onkiand heary- ing @n invasion of the “ae plann Has nothing on the appear- ance of our Jersey section in the Knitwear Depart- ment which ts indeed a “riot” of color—but every one “chock full” of qualit. tele” in the finest wor This is “jersey weather™ and an inspection of our stock will repay you. October 16. je Puy Cash for Diamonds and Liberty Bonds L0C1I0'S JEWELEY CO. G15 Second Ave. * Your Patronage Appreciated Pay Checks Cashed TORREY &,SEARS’ “BILLIARD PARLOR 1430 3rd, Corned 3rd a If your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding, you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis- fase, which is a menace to good health. We are the only Dentists in the Northwest who specialize in this dreaded disease. TExami- nation and estimate free. Special care taken of children's teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families, All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Hours; 59 a. m. to 6 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 12. rf No Stranger Here Cross is no stranger in these parts, tas he was one of the best heavy | weights turned out in Camp Lewis. | After leaving the Northwest training camp Cross took the big trip across | the pond» and battled Heinies and| |cooties for some months with the well known 91st division. Once in a | while Cross donned the padded mitts jand did some stunts in the ring jamong which was a alx-round win lover Bob Martin, the A. E. F. heavy weight champion, Another big feather in Cross’ pugt |listic cap was a draw bout with | Augie Ratner, now rated as one of the beet big men in the East today. After the Heinies had decided that | they were wanted at home and that the Yanks would look better back in| the United States, Cross returned} home with his company. He has been out of the service for three months) and this i# his first engagement: in| | the ring since his homecoming. Businesslike Cross looks like a well set-up young fellow and isn’t flighty above the col lar button and isn't playful like) Young Hector, He looks like he} means business, and unless we miss our guess Frank Farmer is in for a busy session at the Crystal Pool to night. ‘s Farmer is going about his prepara- tions for the battle with his usual nonchalance. Frank is never worried over a bout and usually manages to win, no matter what a tough reputa- tion his opponent may have. Frank is a prime favorite with the fans be- | cause they know what a deadly wal lop the old boy carries in his star. board mit. Old Man Dope also has Croas lined up as a tough hitter, too, so if looks like anything but a pink tea affair at the Pool tonight. | | CASEY MEETS FRANKIE ROGERS | Hurry Casey, another A. E. F. bat tler, is out for Frankie Rogers’ scalp | tonight. Casey has been hearing too) much about this fellow Rogers and asked for the bout. Rogers has been coming along at a mighty fine clip and has trained down to real con dition, This looks like a “He” bat tle on paper, and if the boys run true to form it will be worth the price of admission to the Austin & Salt opener. This is the first meet ing of this duet, and while they don’t exactly love each other, it is quite understood that each will make quite an effort to lick the other. OTHER BOUTS ON CARD |sortmmage line at right angles to it | In going down under a kick, he |should listen for the sound of the j kick If on the kicker’s side. He rust | Mot leave his man until he hears it If on the other side, he can merely bump his man and go down the field. On the defense, the tackle should amash the interference, us his hands hard, and when he goes down with it,’ town, 913 2d Ave. A Watch Repaired by Jones Is Always Right Telephone Elliott 2607 1329 FOURTH AVENUE third when Witt fanned. Nope, not! :. Gardner, Wamby ‘ot gay on August 24 and were nipp@l at second Burns and Dugan were Athletic vic tims of O'Neill's throw! In the final game of the series Wamby was picked off firet by McA and also | {nailed stes was duck soup for 0" That Seattle has the est billiard parlor in world? Come in and BROWN & Bob Martin, the A. E. F. heavyweight champion, has a fine chance of becoming champion of the world one of these days, according to Leo Cross, who fought him in France. Cross won a decision over Martin in 1918, but says that he couldn't do it now because Martin improved wonderfully. “Martin is a big, strong kid, who can take worlds of punishment and is game to the core,” says Cross. “He was easy to hit when I fought him, and I knocked him down for the count of six in the first round and I hit him as hard as I could, but he came back on his feet and I was lucky to win in six I think I hit pretty hard but I couldn't rounds. knock him out.” While the French have a few good ring men, as a rule the boxers from the land of sweet papa don’t know much about the manly art, says Cross. The French can't see infighting at all, and as soon as the men clinch the referee breaks ‘em apart. Such stunts as blowing a whistle 10 seconds before the round starts to clear the ring are featured in “One night Iwas boxing a big fellow in Paris and 1 hit him on the shoulder and he quit,” says Cross, “not that the Frenchmen are cowards but they haven't developed the fight game enough yet.” Georges Carpentier doesn’t look like the man to beat Jack Dempsey, says Cross, who saw French champion in Paris the night that Mike O'Dowd, world’s middleweight king, challenged him. | In the preliminary bout« tonight, Philo Richardson, a hard-hitting 1o- | jcal bantamweight, will take on Mor-| |gan Jones, the pride of Chet Metn-| \tyre’s Tacoma bantams; Red Gage) [meets Dick Gard and Ernie Dailey | |tackles Jimmy Zine, The first bout lgets under way at 8:30, at the Crys-| tal Pool. | | |GREAT FIGHTER Jack McAuliffe, the former light weight champion, is a remarkable |boxer in more ways than one. Jack \fought during the days of the bare knuckles and also the gloves and) he held the championship for a long | period, retiring undefeated, an honor few fighters can boast of. | When the war broke out Jack went | to England and boxed an exhibition j with the late Dick Burge for one of jthe many benefits, That was in 1914 jand he was just turning the half cen- tury mark, Later when America got into the world scrap, Jack enter ed the service of the K. of C. and |did good work in France, teaching | boxing, ete. On his return to New| | York recently he helpe@ with the| boxing. shows for the wounded sol diers and to wind up with he boxed an exhibition of four rounds with iddie Fitzsimmons, the new York lightweight. Jack was born in 1866, so he is Just about 54 years of age, and still able to box an exhibition bout with & youngster, His last battle of note was in 1892, when he fought Billy | Myer, the Llinois Cyclone, for the championship, winning in the 15th| round, at New Orleans. He had| jfive more fights that year and then | retired until 1896, when he was matched with Kid Lavigne for six rounds in New York. It was a no. |decision affair and was Jack's last | | real contest in the ring, Sariy “patients Carpentier looked drawn and his skin was pallid, according to Cross, who believes that the French champiow is about thru. much chance with Dempsey now because Martin is too young at the game to protect himself against a Martin hard hitter like Dempsey. Erven “Crum” Dailey, the Everett boy, has been elected to captain the University of Washington football team for the coming year. whether the squad could have chosen a better man because Dailey is well liked by his fellows and plays the game hard. There isn’t much chance of bringing Pete Her- man, king of the bantams, out to Portland to meet Billy Mascott this year, according to Bob Evans, manager of the Portland boy, who is in town with Cross. Herman wanted too mich money for a no- , and the Portland commission couldn’t guarantee Herman more than one fight. Broadway Meets West Seattle oc Gridiron Battle Saturday ts| high school | will probably be decision contest, witness another school football le ie when Coach Turner's Broadw eleven Coach Murphy's West Seattle ele tomorrow afternoon, Broadway in the high | hopes to add another victory to the one made over Queen Anne last Sat- urday, but may have some trouble. as Capt. Kelly Hagen will be out of the game with kn injured shoulder Coach Murphy has a good chance to upset the Pine st. school's chances jh defeat nd, Herb Beak” Braun; right guard, Bert Mc- center, Perey Pedro Martin; left end, Stew White; ‘ann; guard, | right half, | Backer ter, Im order to introduce our new (whalebone) end strongest plate known, covers very littl teed 15 years, $15.00 Set of All_work @erning and Call and Sampice ef Ow aoe of our whose aun who have tested ere in the right place. Bring’ From Open Sundays OHIO CUT-RATE UMIVERAITE ST. b EXAMINATION FREE Teeth ie. . Painless Kxtracting 15 years. Have im: jay, Mxamina' Plate tion \o> Opmenito left half, Otto Strizek; quar- Wendell Ps ) plate, which 1f the lightest le of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the | Bridge Work. W. resent patronage ‘# recomme Grins Cd sotiataction, en com! ents wef oem! ing to our office, be eure ® to 13 for Working DENTI the wouldn’t have It is doubtful as his team rest since the by Franklin | Broadway lineup | as follows Right Mayer; right tackle, | them The Ben Kegtvet; McNeill; left lett tackle, | Chet Vincent; full, Jim| #0n, style? cob; guaran | The Store of Choice Pression tak ani by Aa! People STS Wenees-Patesnoa Om, & ie Why You Find Them on Successful Men of true values. style is incorporated Kuppenheimer Clothes, $35 to $80 Companion lines, $25 to $70 ‘Values Tell’’ There is a pertinent reason why you invariably find CHEASTY’S labels on the clothes of successful men. is the handmaiden of Good Luck. It is: plication, foresight and an appreciation That is why successful men come to They know that something beside thing sold here. Their money buys When you bu Most people imagine Success n’t. Success comes from ap- CHEASTY’S for their apparel. into every- not only style but value as well. y clothes why not let your money buy value as well as

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