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PA 12 Popular Gob Battler Is Star of Big Card Walters Nearly Stops Young O'Dowd in Fourth Round of Semi-Windup; Jack Josephs Robbed in Bob Har- per Fight, Harper Getting Decision; Green, Also AILOR WALTERS is fighting his way fast towards the main event class, The husky gob lightweight won his third straight semi-windup last night when he} staged a ninth-inning rally and nearly} stopped Young O'Dowd, the willing Aberdeen bo Cracking O'Dowd with two terrific right hooks on the chin, Walters had him dizzy.! Then he hooked his left to the side of the} jaw and O'Dowd crumpled on the floor, He} took a long count and got to his feet. The bell soon sounded | and saved the Aberdeen miller from a K. 0. Walters is a fairly clever fellow with a terrific kick. He is an aggressive cuss and has found favor quickly with the bugs. T tight or so more and he'll be ready for a main event. looked like he must have hed a ma chine gun tied onto hix elbow In the main event Ad Schacht} \Mobre did a lot of rushing around, went temporarily insene and §8V¢/ but it didn't mean anything. He Bob Harper the verdict over Jack | did all of his leading with his chin. Josephs after six fast rounds, Har} Moore must be given credit, of | per had plenty gf supporters, but the | course, for making a whirlwind fight house howled its disapproval. fof it, but Green won from here to Josephs tied Harper up when he Ethiopia and back tried to infight and the Seattle boy! Moore subbed for Sammy Friaz, did most of his effective work with) who was overweight his left mitt | Bring on some more of your Ta Josephs socked with both hand*/ coma ringsters for Soldier Woods.| and won the last three rounds by/ The Windmill made Blackie Elting | hard bedy punching. {Play dead dog in the fourth round! This is one verdict each, Josephs|of a wild mix. The Soldier was haying won tn Portland. lin @ particularly wild mood last ‘The first round was even and Har-| night and missed a couple of mil per took the second, but Josephs} tion swings in elegant style. The held a shade them there on. | victory marked hix second K. 0./ Kid Johnston, the Olympla slug-/of the season over Tacoma oppon-! ger, and Sailor Martinez put up an-| ents. other swell fight. There was a world Dede Burkhart, Sultan light-/ of action crowded into their bout/ weight. beat Kid Hagen in the and it was pretty even all the way./opener. The winner's lefthanded ‘The draw verdict was well received.! style bothered Hagen, who forgot | They stugged thruout the four/to fight most of the way. In the rounds and the fans got a big boot) third round Hagen looked like 4 out of their tft. winner when he cracked the Sul- Frankie Green hit Eddie Moore!tan boy on the chin for a knock: with everything but Colonel Bost-| down, but Burkhart came back} wick’s new derby and Schacht called | nicely, it a draw. Last night's smoker had more ac- Green pumped left hands at Moore|tion than any shew of the reason, | eo fast in the fourth round that it!as every bout was a fight } Yanks Just \Henderson About Set Has Edge for Honor on Bears Gotham Club Gains Full ‘idtbditne 6... Tien Game on Browns in the) Against Champions on Tuesday Games L. A. Field New York Yanks are just! ‘((XLOOMY GUS" HENDERSON, ‘ about “in” again in the Ameri-| who first came into fame in can league. They licked Herman Seattle with his conching work at Pillette, former Portland heaver, by| Broadway high school a few years} one run yesterday in Detroit while’ ago, has a grand chance for fame the veteran Walter Johnson was|this year. pitching Washington to a victory) His University of Southern Call over the Browns in St. Louis. fornia cieven is shaping up weil} This gives the Yanks a two and/and he plays his big game with the! @ half game lead and with the! University of California in the new ry. By te gg o Fagg stadium in Los Angeles. like it’s all over but the shouting.) Soy thousand people will pack | Only the biggest kind of an upset cati beat the Yanks out of their|/Ux® im the South, and the game peene etvaighe, bunting, will be a grudge fight, as it will} With the Giants almost a cinch|%@ Northern California pitted | in the National the jokers can start|*##inst the South and there's no| pulling that old line that “New | love lost, brother, between L. A. and/ York” will win the world’s series! Frisco. again. If Henderson can break the rec-| jord of the “wonder team” it will CAN “BABE” be. a big feather in his cap and | he’s very apt to, as Andy Smith| Both Ruth and Williams hit hom i find it a tough job to fill the runs yesterday, the Bambino hay-| berths of those linemen who gradu ing 34 and the Brown star 39. With/ated. Such men as McMillan, Ste-| only a few days remaining it looks|phens, Barnes, Latham and Cran-| like Ruth will have to forfeit his|mer aren't turning up every day, crown. Not to detract from the - fine showing of Williams, Hornsby and Walker it's a safe bet to say that Ruth would be far out in front if it hadn't been for his many sus-| pensions this year. Ruth may not be any gazelle as a fielder, but he} can sock that old onion. VERNON HALF ” She Won, L 0) Pet fan Francisco ..... 440 GAME BEHIND Vernon ; 7 6 . om Angeles .. 73878] While Frisco and Los Angeles gai Lek re p+ 4 206 | were traveling yesterday the Ver-|Oakiand -. + ae non Tigers beat Oakland and gained | Seattle % 438 | a half game on the Seals. They} 14 ans are but a half game behind the)" leaders today. Frisco has a tough| 71 series on with the Angels as the| Oak Angel pitchers are bound to make) ren ys pis, the going rugged for the Golden| need; Doyle and Murphy Gate team even in the Frisco park. | Oh the other hand Oakiand has ,,Th* score— ¥ been a soft dish for the Tigers all| x, sacramento |... 2... s season. It looked like Frisco would! Crumpler, and check in when they swept the| Fuhrman; Prough and Cook, boards with the Indians two weeks AMERICAN LEAGUE ago, but the unexpected showing of | i ae, Portland in knocking Frisco over|New York .. ‘ for the odd game last week mad or emncd oe se 1 back in the bunting! Chicago” HY r4 Clevela rT 0 secs Washington is 1 ge iy ca Boston treeic aes IN SALT LAKE Seattie opens its last round trip| The score— RH. &. Of the season today in Salt Lake.|%e™, York teevere oe The Indians have always played!” watteries: Jones and Bchang; Villette with pretty good success in the Bee park, but the club hasn't been and Woodall. going any too well lately and with| w in % a series with Vernon coming up|Aat St. Boule ae next week in L. A. the club may | Batteries: Johnsén and Pieinich; V come home facing a fight to keep|#4*F Kolp and Severeid. out of the basement The score— Le ee jan seseiniesieannsinas Boston . ioe eae HARVARD SETS RU At Cleveland | : 3% 7 1 CAMBRIDGE, Mane, ‘Sept. 20,--1, Batterie’ Perron’ wid’ tue; Win “Objectionable language and conduct at the games of many non-Harvard NATIONAL LEAGUE ticket holders have made it necessary | x, Se ee to restrict the wale of season tickets | * aT) for the future to members and ex-| 6 ‘abe members of the untversity,” the Har-| se shan vard football committee has de-| i Peet creed. Piilladelshia. so ass Simelphdoscidhie Siiletin Boston + oz ans COLD HALTS BOUT The score RoW. FE NEW YORK, Sept. 20, — Cold | Pittsbure ’ eu 6 weather caused the postponement of a ee " atterien: the middleweight hampionship bout | wraser' {1a in Brooklyn last night between Dave - a yee ete nd Schmidt; Ring, Rosenberg and Mike O'Dowd. The score— rn HM, SB. ¢atlenaeticrewasel |8t. Louls : si 6 a esi At_Boaton 4 19 6 JOE LEONARD WINS Batterion: North, Sell, Doak and Ain HOLYOKE, Masy., Sept. 20,.—Joe| smith; Miller, Mathews and Gowdy. Leonard, Wehtweight, brother of the champion, knocked out Jack Moran ia the third, Metevier and Winn, two rookie pitch= era, pulled the Indians to a double vic tory over the Ked Box, 7 to 6 aud 6 0 4. SAILOR WALTERS KICKS THRU THE SEATTLE STAR A AA A APA AA SEVEREID Severeid, St. Louls Americans— Has been the mainstay of the Bt Louls Browns back of the bat. He Works with litte or no effort, and } often hia real value to bis club in lens Sprarent because of the easy manner in which he #oes hig work Severeid is of an even disposition, | The happenings of the game in no ¥throws away quickly. way affect his play, He does his Pat Moran Fools Dope With His Cincinnati Pilot Rebuilt H gerous Club in National League Race—Coasters Helped Reconstruct Club } AT MORAN became manager of the Phillies | - . in 1915, succeeding Charley Doolin, who had piloted the clu Moran won ager of a team by winning th And again his team started slipping after winning a cham- pionship, falling to third plac 1921. “Moran is a one-year manager,” “He won the flag for Philadel-| phia with a team Doolin had built and he did the same for baseball then said of him. Cincinnati with a club of Mathewson’s construction. “He wrecked two pennant-! winning machines that he had little hand in making.” Despite bis failure in 1920 and 1921 the Cincinnat! club retained Moran as manager for this year and this season has seen him stage a really spectacular comeback. Pat | has just about lived down. the opla-| jon that he was a one-year manager and « team wrecker rather than a team builder This year he has almost complet- ed the work of building a new cham- plonship team and he has done it largely with minor league players. Of the men who worked for him when Cineinnatt led the league in| 1919 just seven remain. These are | Eddy Roush and Pat Duncan, out regulars; Rube Bressler and Greasy Neale, outfield subs; Ivy | Wingo, regular catcher; Jake Dau-| bert, first baseman, and Adolfo} Luque, pitcher. Hod Eller, Jimmy Ring, Dutch | Ruether, Jim Saliee and Ray Fisher, his pitching aces of 1919, all a gone. So is Heinie Groh, his third sacker ond captain; Larry Kopf, his shortstop; Morris Rath, his second baseman, and Bill Rairden, his other catcher His utility men of 1919, with the exception of Bressler, have faded from the Cincinnati picture. In the places of these men are George Burns and Eppa Rixey, vet erans, obtained in winter trades with other National League clubs, and the most capable crop of play- ers any club has vested in two years of minor league plucking for a mighty long time ‘The foundation of this season's surprising team was laid last y when Sam Bobne, Bubbles Har grave, Louie Fonseca and Pete Don- ohue were picked up. Donohue, now the most difficult pitcher in the league to defeat, was taken right from Texas Christian | University, to which he will return this fall as a sophomore. Fonseca was taken off the lots of Utah. Bohne came from the Pacific Coast | League and Hargrave from the American Association. These chaps all made good last year and to them this year were added George Harper, Western League outfielder; Jimmy Caveney and Babe Pinelll, Coast League tn. fielders; Johnny Couch, Coast League pitcher, and Cactus Keck, Western Association hurler. A few lenser lights from the minors also wera taken on and have been retained for minor roles, but this two-year harvest of Donohue, Keck, Couch, Hargrave, Bohne, Fonseca, Caveney, Pinelli and Har per, added to Wingo, Luque, Dau- bert, Roush, Duncan, Burns and Rixey, has made the Reda an ex- ceedingly strong team which has brilliant prospects for 1922 But for a miserable start this holdout, in. year, due to Roush's SANDOW BEATS O’DOWD ATLANTA, Ga,, Sept, 20.—Sammy Sandow, Cincinnati, won a 12-round decision over Tim O'Dowd, with the Phillies in ‘15, steered them into, second place in 1916 and 1917, fell to sixth place in 1918 and was fired. | Then he moved to Cincinnati, Christy Mathewson, who had brought the/ Reds into third place in 1918. Again he signalized his first year as man- } work In the mame matter-oftact way } and seems to be at his best when / the going i hardest | American league pitchers regard | him as one of the most dangerous | batters In the league. He takes a | healthy out at the ball and hits’ em | hard. Has « good arm and gets his Pats right. ‘ handed 1922 Squad t Lean the Yankees and the Giants. a | Handled his pitehing in great shape Club and Made It Dane | ans scemed to nave « thoro working knowledge of the weaknens and | strength of the Yankee batemen. Snyder caught in six of the eight fares in the serien, He ied the WITH A SNYDER Snyder, New York Giants--Caught | Giants at bat with an average of remarkable ball in the series last fat! | 364. During the present season he has the back of the pat fellow, who thrives on hard work, been a right bait rately hard, NOTHER RING VICTOR TAREE GREAT CATCHERS ON LEADING BiG LEAGUE TEAMS MATCH Up. | Schang, Has done mainstay of the Giants |H® did alt He's & big, husky handed batter and hits the Throws fast and accu-/ | 286. catching during the present season. | keen’ batting, with an average of | handed pitching, and Schang is a fine receiver and has ja wonderful arm, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1929, a ve SCHANG ia New York Americans—jever, lack the accuracy of i the bulk of the Yankees’ | or Severeid. When his j ho runner can steal with any dag of success on him. the work inthe 1921 ‘se-| “grnans® oP right side of the plate ; paws. He is having one of His throws, how-' years of bis career. ‘ b to sixth place in 1914. H the National League pennant} . A = UR eX iq) replacing | e flag for Cincinnati in fea | he eighth inning scored the rum that ave the Yanks a ¢ to 8 viet Tigers e in 1920 and sixth place in| rinn's doubte and aeusei's tripte: tm | ‘y over le many close followers of |‘* pel ae, iauih inning ‘helped to. posh ever « over | juries and the newness of the ma-| {Mfgs cease thet enabled the Senators chine, the team Pat Moran has re. —_—_ built wo we the 1922 ‘Three singles In the finth tnming : Sr yg a Den: | save the Phils their only run off Giss Bent. won. nd the Pirates won, € tod ———< “Doc” Brown, sometimes referred to as the Mayor, was among those present at last night's fisticuffs at the Arena. The Doctor was so riled when Referee Schacht called the Green-Moore fight a draw instead of giving it to Green that he walked over to the ringside to admonish the blind Mr. Schacht. “You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Ad,” declared the Mayor. And besides Brown sald that somebody ought to give Ad a present for his blindness. This is no time nor place to reveal the gift, but Ad may probably get it if he calls at Brown's office in the county.city building. Among the notables in the ringside seats—John Low, Sammy Klein, Marfsh Wiley, Walter Fulton, Sam Lynch, Bill Klepper. Bob Cronin brought Pete Standridge along. Perhaps between rounds they were doping out how the Coast league teams will finish next ecason. Tiny Burnett was encouraging Dode Burkhart to relax during the rests between rounds in the first bout. Red Kneeland viewed the bouts from one of the cheaper seats, as did Ed Ives. “Doc” Kelton was noticed sitting on the lower shelf. George Carroll Jones were among those present better seats. and Casey in the Riley McCoy is going out after the ducks October 1, and he plans to take Sam Brown slong to do the quacking, a la Art Basel. Riley and Sam were practicing their quack act between sessions last night. Markey Lees was on hand all dolled up in a new pea-green overcoat. We can’t give you the lowdown, brothers, on how high he climbed for it until it’s been thru a rainstorm. More notables-John D. Carmody, Dr. Harry Shaw, Virgil Baker, of Olympia, Thomas Acheson, P. E. Sands said between rounds that he put Gene Sarazen thru his paces before the national open golf championship, and taught the champion his great follow thru. P Alex Rose is again running for mayor of Seventeenth and Yesler. He says he expects to win by sheer ability. That's a bum joke unless you know that Alex is a barber, More notables——Ray Dumett, Stewart Thompson, Mike Piggott, George Watkins Evans, Harry Krinke, FRANK SCHIRODER SAYS THAT IF ALL OF HIS PERFUMES HAD THE ODOR OF SCHACHT'’S DECISIONS HE WOULD HAVE TO GO OUT OF BUSINESS. Eddie O'Neill, the Wally Reid of tho ringsiders, was in his usual place. Butch Erb was reported at the ringside as being ready to go on the stage. He's practicing an impersonation of Bull Montana, J. 8. Salmon and M. Harris left their Sweet Sixteen shop long enough to attend the leather-mitten party. Among the out-of-town ringsiders—Harry Hanson, Portland; Shanklin, Eddie Marino and Harry Humphries, Tacoma, Sharpe, Portland. George and Dick last bunch of notables—Oscar Collins, Joo Muller, Charles Dolphin, pb aoe Sam Bornstein, Dave Williams, Archie Huchinson, Stewart Campbet GOOD NIGHT! } i } | { | PAAMP ET Feathers Headline ‘Ballarino and Foley to Box Six Rounds There Next Week | MIKE BALLARINO | Lewin boy who is qui Tacoma American At , least didates gether to training. “ht is the Camp! thorp told ling personage up-Sound, will make | posed of 1 | his debut in headline circles In Ta focoma next Vie Foley, _ | C+ mitt-slinger week when he tackles . ~ joan't be the crack Vancouver, B.| makes. th It will be over the! team this usual four-round route. tackler.” Ballarino is a rugged and willing| I emp ing in at mixer. The winner of this bout will un doubtedly be seen in action in Seattle soon. Jimmy Rivers, the Tacoma light graces of Tacoma fans bi trimming Pat [Wil go on in the semi-windup with Morgan J Foley is said to be a comer. | Ne Wiliams of Seatt Europe in nes Chesterfields are t30 “different”—too ualike the average types of cig- arette—to jump into popular favor over night. But we believe Ches- terfield’s record for sus- tained steady growth surpasses anything in cigarette history. In the long run, quality does tell. otate it as our honest belief that for asked, Chesterfield the price of the greatest in Turkish Blend cigarettes ever o ered to Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. ‘Tackling Emphasized by. N. Y. U. Gridiron Coa It is comparatively simple for a football team to win all its games, according to Tom Thorp, former all: \and to be an adept at of the New York university squad. | time he takes an opponent Thorp's preliminary talk to the can- | last when he. catted ite a Cght-| pigskin chasers, “that a team com- scored upon. |u team that cannot be scored. upon |& tribute to a rival coach, Greasey | team of new material. Neale of W PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20.—win. }Weight who got back in the good |!am T. Tilden, world’s singles cham. | t week by |Pion, and William M. Johnston, Call. | ‘fornia star, are planning to invade | The champion does not intend to go fellow-Tacoman labroud niext wengon “The big element of a fensive,” said ‘Thorp, “is halfback and now coach | player must leave his it would seem so from | Washington and Jefferson | fall was one of the § biocking aggregations t ever produced. Each capable of leaving his feet as ing off his opponent. jueiversity, is going to hard blocking offense fi 1, good tacklers cannot be|no excuse wilt be. And it is obvious that | man's nat leaving to cut down an opp Thorp will have portunity to test theories in his first at New York wu i jasizing the value of block- the veterans graduated lasts eam’s offense, Thorp paid |and he will have to build i shington and Jefferson. dications are that the Vi |have a comparatively I | exceptionally fast team to und a bard struggle which § Syracuse on the latter's October 7. i ae | sad" Consecative’ game them to- discuss plans for the fall an the axiom of football,” | few York univers 0 oi < aten. Every man who ie New York university year is going to be a good | STARS PLAN TRIP 1924. according to Tilden. | beating esterfield CIGARETTES Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended