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ampion Seeking Revenge : Flash Anxious to ‘ Feud; Leonard Says He Is Bankrupt By HENRY L. FARRELL YORK, Aug. 25.—Another even greater tennia battle Mile. Susanne Lengien and Molla Mallory for the world’s championship probably will DAY, AUGUST 25, 1922. ZANE LENGLEN PLANS THE SEATTLE STAR TO MEET MO LLA M Indians Winners in Pair Acorns, While Sluggers Pound Out Double Win BY LEO H. LASSEN AKLAND, Aug. %.—Your In dians are head. ed for the first ALL PAGE 21 LORY IN U.S. Everett Grid Star Joins Golden Bears “Scoop” Carlson Will Play Under Andy Smith, In- stead of Enoch Bagshaw; Ed Barney Prevented Orioles From Breaking Record; Other Gossip AKLAND, Calif., Aug. 25.— oop” Carlson, ranked as one of the greatest high school players in the country, for the past four years at Everett High School, has regis- tered to enter the University of California. Carlson was slated to follow Coach Bagshaw to Wash- ington, and his loss is a keen blow to Washington football. The University of California stadium won't be ready for this season, and the annual Stanford-California grid classic ; division, Wal \ it ‘ ‘gaged In the United States next loping the Oaks | will be held in the Palo Alto oval again, hile the French girl sald she two straight Fa never play in America again, Thursday, Bess Ea Barney, Seattle outfielder, beat nr Mubr, manager of the French jovi: tt “ the tamsous Baltimore Oricies out of AMBITIOUS team, made the state. past hia club ore’ ° J ae ine o ghamaniny . He PITCHES “bo inte fifth ja world’s record in 1021, It was qummer on on errané of WE SHOULD Loosen UP in the p Harney’s hit in the ninth inning in — chase, Jt marked | Buffalo that broke the great winning IN SEA’ Busanne does come back next BY BILLY EVANS “Never saw @ pitcher with so much the thirdlstreak of the international eham TTLE fre will no doubt make a jot| Sam Jones of the New York Yan stuff get hit as hard as Jones did straight WD! pions after the Orioles had chalked! A 1, SHEPARD, welterweight, for- [Americans eat the nasty things | kees is one of the greatest pitchers today.” tg cer anf) straight | victories. Jack merly of New York, now in Se- said about her when she retired | club, The scores | Bentley wax working on the hill for}attic, is going to step out and an- her match with Mra, Mallory satay be one wr ns al He had expressed my sentiments) 21. 9 to 4 and 7 to 3 |the Baltimore club and Bentley is|nex the championship of the Pacific Forest Hills last summe ay soun o a rather exactly. Salt Lake is but a couple of jconsidered one of the finest south: | Coast, is the calm and startling an- cinch if the French star |f¥Ony statement when you consider “He iwn't pitching naturally.”| jumps ahead of the Redskins, and/ paws in the mine He bad held! nouncement of L. L. Gordon, who is back for the third meeting |‘P4t, since early In the year, Jones added Dineen, himself a great! with the Seattle boys going like a| Buffalo to two bingles. When the| handling him the American champion, con weg cg the least effective member pitcher in his day, “He's working| million, the dream of Jack Adams|ninth opened the first two Buffale| shepard will start his campaign ‘will be more in her favor, She | the New York pitching staff. too carefully. He should loosen up|to jead the Puget sound club into | men were retired and Bentley walked |against Eddie Roberts in the main have the opportunity of acclimat-| Sam has a great fast ball, a cork: and cut ‘em loose. He should let the! tne first division before the 1922 | «third, The runner stole. Barney | event of a Tacoma show on Sept. 28, Derself and getting into proper |ing curve, a tantalizing slow ball and batter do the worrying.” curtain falls may be realized, was next at the plate and he dropped | says Gordon. to play: @ deceptive change of pace. In ad The next day we talked to Jones! geattie hurlers turned back the|® Texas leaguer over shortstop. In| Gordon ts anxfbus to get his man all doubt, Mile. Lengten is!dition he is a smart pitcher and a along the lines of our conversation.| ony, Gardner beat Buxz Ariett|the mad scramble for the ball the | acclimated and in the pink of con- } Most finished woman player in great fielder, He diognosed his own trouble When | without much trouble, due to some |Oriole fielders let the winning run | dition before starting him here, but world, and she demonstrated that] Despite all this he has not been| Whenever he enters the box he|/Chicago club was the opposing team. | he simply said tall “hitting by his mates, Ariett |®!de over the plate, Barney, who is | would like to send him against Travie all doubts by the beating she |®ble to win with any degree of con. | feels certain that at some time dur |For five or six innings Jones went When I start a game Tam won|, driven from the mound and ja lefthanded hitter, says any clubber | Davis. Mra Mallory in the recent | sistency since the season opened. As|ing the game the opposition will|slong beautifully, then the Sox | dering what inning the blow off will youhg Miller and Kiley, a pair of |!2 the loop is lucky to get a foul off} ‘There's a rocky road to travel in championships. |a matter of fact, it has been a very /break loose and drive him to cover. | staged a rally netting a half dozen pappen in.” southinnnts fintahed * the lof Bentley and Barney ts quite proud | order to grasp the 145-pound honors fhe Lenglen-Mullory feud was the | difficult, matter of late for him to|The dread of what he believes is the runs, and Jones went to the showers.| In recent feries at Detrott the | 70UDE mayhem geet send “Gh 1D EDS | of hin fout ‘ on this stern and rockbound coast. advertised row of years and if/finish a game, Inevitable t# constantly with him. | After the game, on the way to the| Tigers got to Jones for three runs eget “gp rert arene one troubie |, neidentally, Bentley's defeat in| nut a man who t# willing to take on meet again they ought to fight! If he doesn't falter in his pitching |dressing-room, I was thinking about|{n the first Inning. He held Detroit beat bid ina tiale tes Chk 4 it game was the only tussle that|Travie Divis In his first start must in Rickard’s Jersey City sta-| Huggins to remove him from the/to start the trouble some of his|Jones and his inability to win, I|scorelens the rest of the way, finally | . tay - : ts hee pana he lost during the 1921 campaign.|be given credit for the courage of . Ineup. teammates start it by making a cou-| wondered at it because he had all| winning, 4 to 3, gg 5 rr me y one ba een ME) Baltimore tied the mark of the Cor-|pis convictions—whether they are ‘Mile, Lenglen comes over for! How come that Sam Jones, with| ple of errors. his old-time stuff that once made| Often a game of that sort restores | | ie seventh, when the Howarditer | sicana team of the old Texas league | right or wrong. » American championships next /#!! this stuff, cannot win? I have worked several games back |hiin one of the hardest pitchers in| the much needed confidence. It may|>UAched four hits for two runs be | which was made in 1902, . the tournament ought to| Just another of those pecullar|of Jones this year in which he had|the American league to beat. prove fo in the case of the Yankee | for A man was out. But Vean — y ea bell'ringer as the British stars, /Phases of baseball, Merely another jeverything when suddenly the oppo-| Evidently Bit! Dinneen was think: |star. ‘The failure of Jones to win stare down and pitched himself! 11_ Colwell, former Vancouver, B Kathiene McKane and Mrs. /¢ase of Old Man Psychology exert-| sition would start hitting him all/ing about the same thing. As hejconsistently has handicapped the | OW! C., hurler in the old Northwestern probably will enter. ing his influence over Sam Jones. lover the lot. came into the umpires’ quarters at| American league champs greatly. 1¢| Herb Brenton was given nome | ieague days, has been given the gate Jones isnt winning because he| Recently Bill Dinneen and I um-|the Polo grounds he remarked to|he gets going, look out, watch the/terrible support in the field, and /ny sacramento, as he couldn't make Clabby, once great middie |has lost confidence in himeelf.!pired a series at New York. The! me: LYankees’ dust. he had the worst of the breaks, as quit fighting with $80,000 tn the hard old game of fight- when it was hard and when didn't run into six figures, He i @ now and his friends are try. ; to get up a benefit for him. got It and the horses took it from him. y Leonard, lightweight cham- is tired of being held up lightly Luis F irpo Can’t Stand Success; Hits Toboggan usual, in this tuss! Sammy Crane was given a rest Thursday and Billy Orr moved over to shortstop, Spencer Adams taking second. One game was to be played today, with lefty Burger being the prob Seattle hurler and young Jones doing the pitching chores of the enemy. Jones was particulary the grade. |CALIFORNIA HOPING FOR LITTLE BILL AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 24.—Call- iE ctaenpion: besintes man invtens| Wnt & of. erent » sixround Joust betwixt and |South American Champion Freezes to Lucre, but Laps |ettective srninst the Braves in se-|' formlans are looking ferward to ‘a teal champion with t ful ween Oakland » Pacific coast welterw: cham, * F 3 . ts ah the match between “Big Bill’ Tilden pe ote morn: warner Story ally nare fe agen (rar Up Wine When It’s Free; Sparring Partner Attests |''\' *"7 2° may sive them trouble Jess than two months this sum- Leonard cleared up $200,000 in fights with Jack Britton, Rocky Lew Tendier and Ever Ham | ny now claims that he is broke id that the track and Wall Street him for a million dollars. The of a million on anything ts ly good for the front page, Benny ts such a generally recog: d business man that many of the ter In his latest battles here—the Jimmy Sacco affalr excepted—than he did when he dropped his crown te the Oakland Shadow. With the exception of Duffy, Davis ts the best mitt slinger who han worn a bathrobe in a local ring In the past year, That's srying consider. able, but it is meant to take in all clases. The Everett flash is just as good a welter as Danny Edwards was a feether. Gordon McKay was | elever, but couldn't hit; same goes for Marty Farrell; Jimmy Clabby coulé both box and punch, but wouldn't. One of Travie’s outstanding assets is his ability t take ® clout on the “| chin without acquiring a sag in the knee joints. When the bell rang for His Thriftiness EW YORK, Aug. 24.—Luis Angel Firpo, the Argentine caveman, is now in the process of a “build up” for Jack Dempsey. The South American giant, who knocked over some of the best heavyweight divers last winter and in the early spring, is to be matched with Jim Tracey, former Australian champion, and then he is to be sent to London to tap Joe Beckett, the British champion on the chin. today. The Oaks are badly crippled, as LaFayette, Wille and Cooper are all out of the game with tnjuries. SS Fistety and “Little Bill" Johnston, which | should furnish the tennis classic of jsome years past, and some to come Johnston has fulfilled the predic- tiona of his friends, made earlier in the season, that he is “right.” and is playing the greatest brand of ten- nis of his career, They believe that he will reach his top form without gong stale at the very time he meets that he can “take” Til- for the news, the fourth round of Wednesday evening's main event, after Josephs had ‘ PAREETO. OOARE. Sapna gy een put in three-quarters of an hour thinking things over and getting his head) | / Hen Dempsey—unless something happens. os ee ha ae «de beghr py ~ ee ee oor clear, he uncorked « left-hand smash that rocked Davis from his blond 3 ee Gn deen Tee 58. 50g Len, OR BS Bereney tee thateh to the resin on his shoes. All that Davis did then was to counter; Something may happen. however, limmy De Forest started to train! tos angeies .... s see (the East-West matches and Pacific with a left that glued the seat of Josephs’ trunks to the canvas for some!as reports are coming from South | Firpo when he first arrived in the | alt Lake n ae |coast tournament. Tennis fans are thing les than ten seconds. America that his little success ts| United States and wae making good | Oakland 7a 456 | DOrticularty anxious te ben his show. hed going to his head and several of the| headway with him until Firpo aud: | Portland oo... REC bag Saetiage ecg aga gee wenegeat At Lege ate sw ‘gg ag Useggarg any time he oe [native papers are decorating hhim/|denty cancelled aff business relations. - the joy. in the thas‘ wolk “At cupies a corner rena ring, bugs there him i le PO A EB In body. He couldn't take Davis’ right hand and keep his equilih | th the raspberry. De Forest learned later that eome of |, Seattie— =|» ABR. HPO. A. | Jimmie Davies, of Stanford, who has rium; but he can hit some himself and is fast. A gamer boy never aie grtes the South Americans in New York | Adama mm . 2 1 @ 3 & ©) fought his way to the front on East- fought here. Commenting on fights In general.| had told Firpo that De Forest was a] Boot. rt. ie. 2 © # 19 1 #/)ern courts this season in a manner : the Buenos Aires Standard (an EN&-| friend of Dempaey's and was being | © ad $ 2 gE gf] wnich makes him a close possible ARK, N. J., Aug. 26.—In ail} After Duffy left-handed Davis out of his kingship here public opinion | lish language paper) discourses 44) paid by the world's champion to [2 2 fb & 6] rival of Vincent Richards among the eee protabittty’ there ‘win be | Yoleed the conviction that the Californian had the Indian sign on the local follows about Firpo teach him the wrong way to fight, 4 1 2 2 4 1} youngsters. Davies and Richards will} Where you goin’ with that 4 several man and would beat him on any day in the week. ¢ “The fight game in Argentine is} ite didn’t have a thing to learn | Tobin. © 4 2. 2 & 2 8! probably be the Tilden and Johnston | shoul? Sure he’s a ater. blooded Indian athletes in the 7 ‘ | Gardner, p ¢ 34819 OF z * young: sure booming now, thanks in no the East and West | row ay AO. trae ened field 9 | about the wrong way,” De Forest | grumpt, 1 @ @ 1 @ 0) of the E in a few years Only 78, but he drags a nasty ee 1 , In a four-round go the odds would have to be on Duffy. He fs a reason.|*mall degree to Firpo's mighty (7)) said, ‘ ~ —— <= -- -— =| hence. , . . ips to be held at Wee-| pie bet to beat Davis to the punch and outpoint him. It is a trick of |@chievements. Every fellow who has se iat sagdh oie: ete Ale Sila Mt gi Ghd oar on the Schuylkill at © Park here on September §.| some proportion to make a monkey of a man with a left flipper like that| taken 4 lesson or two in the noble| go many strange things are being], Oskiand— ABR MFO. 4. & . Philadelphia. If you'd ask rs % 1 t iT that it id | hota ii ’; ell Institute of Lawrence, | *40Ping the southerner got the pasta in him to make the| Pot ts « surprite te nee Iempecy and [amen wees Le 8 St. Lawrence Plan him—he’s James Reilly—he'd and the Phoenix Indian In & 10r0und session, with Davis directing his northpaw clouts te | champions look like suckers. Th@| Firpo in the ring next summer, Cather, ts 8 ee Called Prohibitive tell you that the first 100 of Phoenix, Ariz, have had] 0" Bois vion's midriff, he would have better than a 5030 chanee to |10cal boys will tell you without bat- ro eccrecase Kontaht, 1b P68 S00 8 years are the hardest in in these championships in| 1 ack for the natlonally-known loop. Nobody ever had much | tin 40 eyelash that there's only two ’ Shulte, rf 78 8 2 rays ‘The cost of the proposed St. Law- sculling. i mare aid are planning to be nock him for b iy top-aatyers tu the heavyweight claws | PHIL Ss LAWYER Koehler, © ss. 4 @ @ 2 8 rence project is prohibitive, accord. : ie Legare d chance to put the Oakland boy at sea when he was in this corner of p-aawy' ywelg' Cottey, et seere ere = nted again this year. the tall timber; but the astute easterners found his weakness and sent |!" ‘he World, one. of course, being | Grrgy y wyy, PD iciccers 8 0 9 8 8 0 | eee Mueee ane eee © Patasoni, the long distance] bit to the West to recuperate, FIRPO (we think we've heard his L ‘ORKING Fe oe a former New York senator, who ad CHAMP WANTS of Haskell Institute, who name before) and the other an Ameri-| NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—Comment oe ats eons Pann ian genres . gues jean ok call De 3 members’ counc! day. was ple Sem a bars Rogan ung woe lg bear ge ayes the Ao Loos gamed pa Gale ce wicors eomieees Vala. us the | ste sible bites. dentad tecatving To a 7 oie e| Acting secretary of the commission HALF MILLION the fivemile run, and Mase Pol- = etree ae eulene'é cnamaie tas avand welt ert other day that it was quite obvious|the “fishing letter” from Phil Dour a ‘tee tetley ta anh that investigated the project for the] NEW YORK, Aug. 25—Jack na of Phoenix, who ran | mous x that Jack Dempsey wasn't at all com: | jas, Edward Launderbach, counsel Empiro state, He is now a member | nompsey will demand @ purse of Ear) ittebut i { Ni tat ations! Tinenmic at Pucnden| Bobby Barreit's record doem't make him a eandidate for the flstic hall/{O8a" uo the United tates, and | her tou tt a eater te otis | opposition to the canal," "| $600,000 to meet Harry Wills for the gummer, in expected to be a|°f tame. He has taken « ee bar ey ay See ees Yet Mam) started tm cleaning up the ring of the find out who interfered oith the|> tine : “Why waste millions on the st.| heavyweight championship, $250,000 in this event at Newark. Fett knocked out Duffy (then Hymie bape Tome Som dud pugilists who constitute Demp- |matis and prevented @ special delivery |_ Summary: Innings pitched-—My Artett | LAWFence and leave unimproved the | to be paid when the papers are signed , 's bodyguard. This fellow also| otter from being delivered to Mann. |% >¥ Miller 1, Runs roaponsible for--| Waterways of the United States?”| ana $260,000 before he enters the Another six-round Davis-Duffy go would likely have one of two re | °*”* e Kites &. Gather b, Mier & Mereck out - , ’ 7 remarked that once Firpo stepped|tauderbach said that Douglas had . ner e ruck OU! jasked the speaker, “There are not < CITY’S BEST sults: Duffy would win on points, or Davis by a knockout. thru the aforenamed ring, Dempsey | collected _ several nffadavite, and {tone ee bY Ariets Antete ont | Suttictent funds in the United States oe; SOE “WO reports Dare: tes 3 would either have to step forward} would have more to aupport his dp-|Miller 3. Stolen base—Orr. Two-basa/ treasury to make possible our own | 44Y- srencemm |. Judsing from ‘ie work of Wednesday night, Gnorting Harry Casey I8/and take hin medicine or quit the] peal for a hearths hetore Judge Lan, |it-—Sehulte. ‘Three-base hit Barney. | internal improvements and the St.| Jack Kearns, the champion's man- i thru for the present. A knockout, eapecialiy after « fighter ae mallied for | came forever. By Gosh, it's awful, | Mie as noon ae “osrtaln partion return | seritice hite-—sehulte, Hoed, 8. ARMS. | Tawrence pro abet! “would “let Sxpliin ‘whet he 4| years without taking « count, often spelis the end. Sometimes the stump] fiir it, to the city.” to ¢ er to Knight; Marelott pride Exaninesbib. Cente: Miata Sake tas SoC Altho Neva Brownfield of idly correct to say that she @ a future star—for she is already. In The Star’s ‘|speculation among |is temporary. Be that as it may, Casey had absolutely nothing but a will ing spirit to stack against Eddie Billings’ science in the semi-windup. the punch with a left jab. Silver can punch and is clever with his dukes, but his footwork is far from sensational, have been “in and outers.” They play brilliant ball one game and very poor ball the next The Salt Lake Bees have showed unusual strength when their record of last year is examined. Lewis hasn't the star aggregation that some of the other teams have, but he gets far more out of his men. And that spirit sometimes wins ball games when the fancy-priced boys fail to come through on an off day. The Been’ teamwork is good and the team gives great promise for the 1923 season, After Sacramento's showing Inst season, the team has proved a great the end of the season that they did jast year, is the question causit the fans at} present. ‘The Seals were quick to take the lead, and thus far have maintained it easily. They are not, however, out of the danger zone by quite a bit, and a slump, with Vernon up and| coming, would lose them the lead. ‘The Tigers are a continual menace, and while their general work is not as good as the Seals, their consis teney is the thing which may bring them to the top, The Seals are deal ing with a lot of high priced tem- perament. failed to come through and are play ing a poor class of ball, The Port land team, touted a# the dark horse of the pennant race this season, went touted as the “big gun’ club of the) league. When they failed to take the} lead dopesters said “Just wait,” and However, the | “Firpo .by the way, has been hav-! ing a glorious time since he returned to Argentine, They've been present Green is the emblem of fickleness. even gone #o far as to pour cham. pagne into hia innards, And they say, mind you, that "Lu" was never known to touch a drop of booze in ruddy dime. We figure that if Lu doesn't manage to capture the heavy: weight title, he’s at lefist certain to become a magnate.” o- One Rough-House Ware, a dusky xym fighter, will furnish evidence If anyone doubts that Firpo is thrifty. Ware was engaged to go to Arge tine to act as Firpo's sparring part. ner, Thinking that a peso was worth about five dollars, Rough-House thought he had stumbled Into Para dise when Firpo offered him 50 perom a month for his end, He nearly starved when he arrived down there and found that a peso was worth! affected in the same manner, fans believe. The Seal management ts confident that the pennant will float this fall In’ winning the 50-yard dash, free style, for boys un- |der 14, in The Star’s annual | DID WELL ] to Knight, Charge defeat to Ariot, Second Game AB. RK. H. PO. > Wisterati, ab Consistency of Veron 3228S a 7 “Loty of fellows who made the trip Pc ae a ae back on the ship with Firpo are ter: Brubaker, a ribly peeved with ‘Lu.’ ‘They almost Marriott, 3b * killed the giant with kindness and Scotane de ‘ naturally enough, expected that Fir- iret : AN FRANCISCO, Aug 25.—|pointment. Sickness has played {ta| po's gratitude would be exprensed in 0 Whether the San Francisco Seals | part, but by and large the trouble|solden dollars for parties at the end Q are pennant-bound, or whether they of the trip. Lulsto, however, stalked 2 wilt fail into the same slump toward | With the Oaks has been that they| oer th ghip without unloading a i. til or. Two-base hite—Hrown, Brubaker, Schulte. Sacrifice hite—Gregg, Hood Knight to Cather; Brown to Mite to Orr; Marriott to Knight, Left Keattle 3, Oakland 8, C Ane ‘The failure of the Angels to “snap| disappointment to the home, town | about 50 cents, Hie had te stoke his i rystal Pool junior SWIM! out of it” hag been the surprise of | fans, way back home ae Se | Mers, is but 13 years old, it is|\the seanon thus tar. The Angels were) Portland and Seattle have also) ~ EPs meeps | Philadelphia NATIONAL Double | Fourteen thousand spectes of moths and butterflies exist in Brazil. not deny the report, saying only, “it is not too muctt.” Sailor Kid Silver met a tartar in Frankie Britt, Wednesiay. The gob vith {lh fi oh. - — = tamveneacearmt had his right mitt unlimbered for his specialty—a right croas—all the WaY!| teeta abid. wate reopens Masset | ls. S Ss but every time he uncorked it Britt either stepped inside or beat him to| the aise of dinner plates, and they've Wood, rf YC )} J E I DC M EE THIS cited last season. A es si t Wednesday she entered | tigers are topping them handily now|up for a time and then plunged for {over Recreation Park, and will do|swim meet, Wednesday, Tom ae Louie. bo _ It’s hard enough to coax a horse over a bar when his rider dashes Gnd von them all,|and the Angels haven't & large|its old cyclone cellar position. This | everything possible to keep the team | McMahon's time of 35:1 was chicaso ba is with him. But it's harder still to get him to go over alone, tying stroke technique chance unless the Boalt toy ietend| the. internal’ troubles of. the club, tie Salt players. ao,'es someone ones |TeUaraed as excellent in view Sinetnnat HH Yet Whisky, the best trained saddle horse in the U. S. army, 4, = slump, Vern o h s a y :, ol y 4 * would do credit to maNy|the angels play phenomenal bull. !which have falled to lend the proper remarked in a singularly original [Of the fact that he is a novice | rowdy _ goes up and over at 63 inches at the mere word of his owner, re performers, Oakland has been another disap- esprit de corps, Seattle is somewhat fashion, you never can tell in the water sport, Boston 16 i383 | Lieut. Haselrigg; of Fort Snelling, Minn