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ing Fitzke Eligible that Bob Fitske, @eclared ineligible by last year, ts Northwest here this morning Ament given out at Geach Borleske yesterday Teske sald no action would be pressed, claiming that Fitske was Protested before the game was Played Tt was Fitzke's drop Beat the Misstonartes tts first morrow, on the in years. The Matthews, a: y tricky offensive. in N. W. Games, Claims Matthews Coach Matthews of Idaho says crack halfback. the Coast @onference because he play el conference That's the only answer he gave to the state Whitman by kick that BY LEO H. LASSE. HE University et! Idaho football} team will Coast conference football circles to- the University of Washington team for the first time Dd Vandals, but tust, are being coached by : Washington Mentor last season, and they be counted upon to put up & par- | The Idahoans arrived here ng and were due to go thru the workout at the Stadium this Men Light but Speedy Coach Matthews Is Bring- Moscow Team to Face Washington “U” Bor make bow In facing gridiron this will be Idaho's second game of season, the Vandals nan last week 3 to cher who booted the until next game of the season defeated the U. Montana here. ‘center. Slevers and Bartlett. crack backfield man and last Saturday, has been do- ineligible by the Coast confer- year because he ‘at Wyoming last year. day's game will mark the beating o. Bod winning for the iy, the Purple and Gold eleven & S$. Idaho tackle to tackle the Wash- line is pretty well set, with | and Grimm at the tackles, | pand Kubn at guards and Wal Coach Bagshaw will his ends from Hall, Petrie, Du ‘will probably start at quar. with Abel and Beck at the) and either Bryan or Harper at Baggy has Hill, Sherman, | and Zeil for backfield re- h Matthews issued the follow. Vneup upon the arrival of the! squad here this morning: left end; Voha, left tackle; left guard Kline, cente: ha ; Hausen, right tackle; B. rs, right end. Stivers, quarterback; Kleffner, left | | | ington here tomorrow. No. 3, H. Breshears, hal No. 5, Hubble, guard. gene ine Draw Bout They a fback; re: Jones and Seattle Josephs in | Loses in | Play West a Hurry Side Today A Quintet of Vandals These five fellows play big roles in Idaho's football team, which plays Wash- No. 1, Goff, center; No. 2, Neal, guard; ; No. 4, Capt. Brown, fullback, tackle or end; THE SEATTLE STAR Taylor to Tacoma Bout is 50-50; | Indians Drop_ Contest to/Colored Star Is Franklin | cm ne Josephs Trains for Da- vis; Other Ring News COMA, Oct. 13.—Jack Josephs and Morgan Jones boxed a fast stx-round draw here last night. The going was even thruout the tiff. Jimmy Rivers was given an un. popular decision over Archie Stoy In the semi-windup, the fans figuring a draw. & Salt's gym this afternoon for his | bout with Travie Davis, at the Are- na here Tuesday. Josepha will be making his last start in the North in Minnesota, Davis is working In Everett and will be in Seattle to taper off hie . | training tomorrow. Young O'Dowd, the popular Aber. | Josephs was to work out at Austin | ing on them by a 8 to 0 taily In Bees in 56 Fourth Place |fan Franctece .... Vernon : Low Angeiss fait Lake Beattie day, the Galt La {56 minutes. It te a new Const Rudy Kallio let t jthree The tallies, defeat division, EATTLE lost in a burry yeater ke Hees tramp thought to be league record. he home folks west, before returning to his home | down with three bingles while Joe! | Datley was potted for 10 hits and) eliminated Seattle's chances of finishing in the first Mainstay in Prep Grid Game RICE TAYLOR was to play West Seattle in the prep football [race today, at Denny field. The | Franklin champions didn't get off to m very good start In the league, [two weeks ago, when the Garficid Babes held them even. West Seattle lost ite first game to Roosevelt, but the Indlang showed good defensive ability in their battle with Broadway last Saturday. v undoubtedly will lor the be whole works, and {t Is only a ques | tion of whether West Seattle can stop the colored star. Taylor should get more help from his mates than he did against Gar field, The big boy can't do all the work alone, but the Quaker interfer. uld be worked up to a better degree today Why Cobb | | of Game Never Content With Stay-| ing in Rut; He Tries to Improve His Style BY BILLY EVANS O matter how great one may be in any line of sport it ts al ways ponsible to improve 0. In golf Wal ter Hagen typt fies all that ts worth while. He lookn the part of a champion and plays it, Yet Magen never is satisfied, he is i always trying to | afd something of ah In baseball Ty Cobb nds out as the greatest player of all time, Taking into consideration all departments of the game he is the ideal player There have been few greater bane runners than Cobb, While now he| lacks nome of his old-time speed, he oti) is figuring what t# best to do when he reaches first base In the batting end of the sport, Cobb always hay been preeminent Bince he entered the American league this prowess always has been & source of trouble to the pitchers Constantly feared by them, he has! been called on constantly to face the beat pitching that could be offe ‘This has meant « series of ducts “oti Wits between Cobb and the pitchers, in which Cobb always has had the edge. In a measure psychology has triumphed, for Cobb has always feared the pitchers lesa than they did him USING A NEW STYLE Most players with Cobb's abitity at bat would have been content to rent on their laurels, but not Cobb. This spring I noted that he was using a different style, 1 couldn't figure out the change, but realized that he was hitting at the ball in a different manner, I asked about it Pi ' have changed my style slightly,” he replied. “A tow ball always bas been hardest for me to hit. For the last two or three years that style of delivery has troubled mo more than ever. “Altho I have been hitting at low balls for 17 years in the majors I decided to see if 1 couldn't devise some way of making It easier, MADE THEM HIGHER | “After much experiment I discov. ered that & crouched postition, in which I bent my krees considerably, enabled mo to hit these balls with better muccens, In reality I made the low ball higher atmply by bending the knees when I assumed my position at bat” ‘The fact that Cobb hit around 400 jin his 18th year in the American league makes it seem as if his new style had helped some. | George Sisler of the St, Louts in the greatest all-around player that has entered the American league since Cobb's arrival. Sisler is a modest chap who wears his honors in a quiet way, Recently I read o most interesting statement : Brown, fullback; Vesear, right|deen lightweight, will do his stuff An. ® A | The teams were expected to line | credited to him, in which he said again in the second main event with 4 $. 3/49 as follows: as. abe “Cobb is my model. Except when “This lineup was subject to change | George Burns, of Portland. }wunort. rf se oe -apppseensing rar apetier {I cut loone at the ball and slug I > cig Burns will be making his first bow Strand. ef oe 248 ftpeide! (C}| always like to try to place my hits iy 7 here Tuesday, He is a main event ie Rivers | as Cobb does, I can't Washington didn't announce my ' Schick, if EN og Nell boy in Portiand. Riley, 1b .. oe ee mastered place hitting as he haa, Uneup. Senki a1 o¢ oe : jenking, ¢ . Dare| but I am learning and believe I am tes tonnes, with the records) senior Walters, one of the finest | **il% » pee § #1 texan Trererter | making progress. To my mind place ieser Wakes Vere From battlers who ever entertained Seat-| m3 19 “Si seamen hitting in the secret of batting.” 165 ° 1 1| tle fans, is leaving with the U. 8. Ss. / AB, & A ©. leypner Taylor} Such a staternent will merely add 4 H 33 | Idaho for California today. , 4 ; ¢ | Benamy (Cc) Carrolileo the great popularity Sisier now +4 1 —_— Hood. if 40 1 6 ¥ enjoys, becaune he is a real sports { 1 2| Mike Pallarino and Vic Foley are |tenorr. rt ra) © ¢| Roosevelt's strong team will make | in, “a ° : 32) boxing 10 rounds in Vancouver, B.|O'" ** 4 4 : Si its second appearance of the neason $ Hi 24|C- tonight. They boxed a six-round [Brana 2 * 6 3; Sie morrow, pinying Broadway at Den. 2 1 #/ draw in § Tacoma recently. 2 6 1 2) ny field at i p.m TIGERS ARE 1 ; a na ae | Dailey, Dp. » 6 2 @ The Rough Riders showed a world 2 - ft e SS 7 of power in their opening game, in JUST ABOUT ae # COAST TEAMS sete came’ °° 77 1% fl which they walloped West Seattle. ; 3 1 2¢ * @~ 8) Broadway has a big team, but hasn't OUT OF IT Al I at 1 19 | umoothed © : : | BOOKED a3 1 @-19 | amoothed out all the wrinkles yet. & 3 is] Hits 10 368 ' ERNON is practically eliminated FOR MELEES)."::*’ sic tom the coat agua o 1 cas {a ru ” ¥ Ke. " wie teh ae ae | pattey. ‘Twa-bace hite—iigln, Hood *|SERIES FILMS race. The Angels threw the hooks * 4 HE Idaho- Washington football) dacrifice hits—Kearnn, Kallio 2. Rune AT PALACE HIP }i0to the Tisers for the second time ° 1 od 1 " € t : i nu! game will hold the Coast grid. batted infin “ Vite ‘auaht stealing Giants’ this week in their second 14-inning _ i jfron spotlight tomorrow, but there| Pte mee tee ee a3 ana ceenue| struggle. ‘The San Francisco Seals are many other important games $6 minutes. Umpires—Kason ana | %*cisive defeats of Miller Humgin#’| i. cased their lead to two and a SOUTHERN HAS scheduled. | Finney prima donnas are shown in moving| hait games by beating Oakland Washington State will be ket -—- pictures rushed to Seattle by alr “ 99 | making The Tigers must win all of thetr DAVID HARUM jits first start of the season with PA Bevaps e bs > % ¥ | plane and f. mall, which will @P-| remaining games and the Seals lose Bob Allen, president of the Little |Gonzaga in Spokane. at tas bens are 7 pear at the Palace Hip, starting/ an of their tiffs for the Tigers to Rock club, was the David Harum! Oregon plays an important game! fattertes and Han Dumo- | Saturday. finish in front, Of the Southern league this year. He| With the Multnomah club of Port-|¥ich. McQuaid and Baldwin. Nick Altrock in comedy stunts.) Salt Lake cinched fourth place by @0ld nearly $100,000 worth of talent | land at Eugene. Eee One : a 2 ® views of notables in attendance,| beating Seattle yesterday, while fo the big leagues, including Pete The Oregon Aggies are slated to| g.7 "teen t ¢ 9| crowds waiting all night to gain| Portland has cinched seventh place, Lapan, former Seattle receiver, who | Play Willamette and should have no| at Portiand 6 11 Olentrance and other scenes of in| handing the collar to Sacramento, went to Washington. | trouble winning. Batteries: Kane and Stanage; Crump: | terest enliven the picture. aoe California tangles with St. Mary's|*T 8P4 Shandeling. ‘ i and Stantord plays Santa Clara ‘The score nom ® TOWN THROWS ¢ University of Southern Call-| Oakiand De kesiet Fe ae | rs " Why MAN! ff (zn ,! 9 60 to he mat win) * weigen "tae oil There’s Nothing JIMMY DOWN puoi emer an 1"; Co - i ay, nd Agnew ina Name, But Jimmy Hamilton, former Van. How’s This Bet? JAMAICA, Oct. 13.—If you're not superstitious, give this o1 KRAFT BREAKS TEXAS RECORD LUKONOVIC IS BACK IN CITY) They ve got ‘he the : PEP= Clarence Kraft, veteran Texas| Tom Lukonovic, Seattle hurler, has||a ride: First 6, Jamaica—Fri- 4 league first sacker, set a new home|returned home after pitching this|| day, the 1%th—-Black Frida run record for the Lone Star loop|season for Denver in the Western || Owner, Bud Fisher his year by smacking out his 324! ie pastimed with the Fort ‘Worth OUTFIELDER ‘IS ONE LUCKY GUY opion. Outfielder Rhino Williams has par league STROLLERS Jhats a Cigarette! SEALS RECALL ROOKIE PLAYER Clarence Gillingwater, a righthand ARMY AND NAVY PL Both military service schools will ( ig for 10¢ ° . ticipated in the three Dixie series |ed hurler, has been recalled by the Playing in the Kast tomorrow. |that has heen played. In 1920 he|San Franciaco Seals from Saginaw avy plays Bucknell and Army rth, in 1921 with lays Alabama Poly. played with Fort Wor Memphis and this y ar with Mobile. IMPORTANT EW YORK, Oct, 13—Fall’s fistic curta® raiser—and it promises to be one of the most important heavyweight bouts the season—is scheduled for tonight when Billy Miske and Tommy Gibbons, rival St. Paul fighters, are to meet over a 15-round route, Eyes of Jack Dempsey, Har- ty Wills and possibly Battling Sid, world light-heavyweight champion of Sen turned towards t for the victor. ginning of an eli test among big doubtful privilege Dempsey. The St. three times. BATTLE ON egal, will be onight’s mill, in view of a possible opponent or all being found in The bout will mark the be- mination con boys for the of meeting Paul boys have met Each contest was in the Mint league for another trial. He was found wanting this spring IN GOTHAM of the no-decision order, but the popular verdict favored Gib- bons, This time Miske is favorite, He has put on weight and has beaten some good boys while Gibbons seems to many of his supporters to have slipped -back | « little. The slightly longer route—they used to meet in 10- round affairs—is considered ad- vantageous to Miske, couver Northwestern leaguer, piloted Charleston to a pennant in the South. Atlantic league this year, but threw up the Job because of the rotten sup- port the fans there gave the team. Ho {8 now in St. Louis, — Y, M. Cc. A. CAGE. LEAGUE PLANNED Plans for organizing a Northwest- ern Y. M. C. A, basketball league will be laid at Tacoma, Oct. 20. | Teams from Seattle, Everett, Bell. ingham, Portland, Spokane, Tacoma and Aberdeen are expected to be represented, PHIL DOUGLAS IS FINED $10 BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Oct. 13,— Phil Douglas, former Giant pitcher, wan 4 $10 by Judge Martin in police court here ‘Thursday on a charge of disorderly conduct, A fish, found neither a tail fin nor a back fin for belancing; it swims at great speed by means of a rippling movement of its large lower fin. m Brazil, has for propulsion | Is King | one’s | ¢ hiro | When Joe Beckett Can Do This Then Page Slow Music |; LONDON, Oct. 13.—Joe Beck: || ott, England's heavyweight champion, was awarded the de cision over Fiank Moran, Phila dolphia, last night The referee stopped the fight in the seventh und save Moran from further punishment. | THREE MEN IN GOSSIP LEAGUE) Three Dame Kumor ing the rounds in Philadelphia yarns are go IDAHO TEAM MAKES COAST CONFERENCE BOW HERE TOMORROW 4 \Jim Thorpe Organizes All-Indian Grid Team FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1 Former Carlisle Star Puts Redskin Team in National Football Association; They Play Under Name of Oorang Indians; How They Line Up BY ARION, O., Oct. 13. ARTHUR WELLER Natives of Manhattan are right, Redskins still terrorize the region of Ohio. Whoever’d have supposed that, jof the home of President Warren G. inja powerful tribe, formed on a union basis by premier mem within a stone’s throw Harding, pow-wowed spite of the fact that Irving Wil | bers of other tribes, all over everywhere! helm brought the Philly Quakers out | National ment for | ¢ the ague bas the first time in year stern | scribes have bim ca 4d aw “dy lvy Wingo, Bert Niehoff and Art Fletcher ar the position RALPH WORKS | said to be mentioned for | Ralph Works, former Detroit pitcher, has signed a three-year con. tract to coach baseball and basket ball at the University of Southern} California |TWO GREATS IN | GAME TWILIGHT | Walter Johnson and Grover Alex ander, two of the greatest hurlers | |that ever toed the rubber in base |ball, are due to pass out of big jleague baneball, Both had fair sea sons, but if they etick more than another season each in fast company | it will be an upset |BABE ADAMS TO QUIT FOR GOOD Habe Adama, one of the greatest comebacks in the history of baseball, te going to retire. He will stick to) the farm next summer. The famous | | Pittsburg pitcher didn't have « very | 00d year this season and he admits |that Pop Time has finally nailed him. SAME FIELD ID IN BILLIARD MEET | About the same field that played | in the national championships last | year will be entered in the balkitnw billiard title play in New York next month. Jake Schaefer, Willie Hoppe, | Welker Cochran, Edouard Horemans and Roger Cont! have entered so far. | | Either Sutton or Morningstar is ex | pected to be the other ey BURKE MAY BE RED SOX BOSS Jimmy Burke, assistant manager of the Boston Red Sox and former pilot of the &t, Louis Browns, ts maid to be in line to succeed Hugh Duffy as Box pilot next year. What Gifference doos it make with Harry | Frazee on the job to sell the players? 'HUB PERDUE IS THRU WITH GAME Hub Purdue, for years 4 star with the Boston Nationals and more lately @ figure tn Southern league baseball, couldn't make a go of it in the Texas league and so he says he has quit the came for goed. BALTIMORE IS VICTOR AGAIN ST. PAUL, Oct. 13. —~ Baltimore needs but one more win to cinch the junior world's series. The Orioles Paul here yesterday, 5 Ogden let the American aaso- ciation champions down with two hits and fanned 11 home hitters. The Orioles have won four games and the Saints one. JIM RILEY IS TO GRADUATE Jim Riley, pastiming with Salt Lake here this week, has been re called for next season by the 8t Louls Browns, Riley will spend the winter in Se attle, playing hockey with the Mets again. \VICK RETURNS TO MICHIGAN Ernest Vick, picked as All-Amer. jean center by Walter Camp last year, has returned to Michigan to be LOUISVILLE TO SEE BIG GAME Michigan and Vanderbilt are to lay the biggest game in the Mid West and South tomorrow, meeting at Louisville. Other big games tn this section are: Ohio State-Oberiin; TMinols-Butler; Wisconsin-South Dakota; Minnesota- Indiana; Purdue: etre Dame. YALE HAS BIG BATTLE AHEAD Yale has the toughest assignment jof the Big Three on the gridiron morrow. The Bulldog is playing Iowa. Colgate locks gridiron horns with Princeton and may force the! Tigers to win, however, Harvard is to mingte with Bowdoln, PECK TO LEAD NATS IN 1923? Big league gossip has it that Roger Peckinpaugh is to succeed Clyde Milan as manager of the Washington Nationals next year in the American | |league, Peckinpaugh's day as a regular player is nearing the end of the string and they say that he's| [managerial timber. Milan's showing in the American loop was nothing to brag about this season. | HOD ELLER HAS | Hod Elter, who couldn't make tho | grade with the Oakland Coasters, | wound up the season in the Blue Grass league. | midable aggregation to jthe Olympic games at } succearfu! Yet Fourteen ‘tis true. ous appetites, miles from Marion a coterie averaging about 200 pounds apiece, and possessed of raven. makes its home. of chieftaing,y What’s more, the season has now arrived for this for. ally forth, hunting scalps. And a sight they are, too, when they take the war trai]! -all done up in hideous orange and maroon- TROJAN COACH the Oorang Indians in the} the colors of te, 4 @ ga the lineup—Joe Gu National Professional Foot-|' the lineup—Joe Guyon and Palp ball league. Walter Camp considered all of Gathering from all parts of the!these three as members of alk United States, the redskins have! America elevens a few years ago, 6: ed pes naan ee aRue,| Other members of the team are: been grueling dally at z Attache, of last year’s Sherman under the leadership of Jim Thorpe, ! coljege team; Long Time Bleep, of one of the greatest all-round athletes | Haskell university and the Fiathesd the world ever has known. reservation in Montana; St. Gow Li rhe National Football League of |™#! of Carlisle and Yale; Bout- aa The Natiopal Football Teague of) weil, Sanook, Downwind, Busch, 20 teams tneludes, bemides th¢/ton_ Woit, War Eagis, Running Oorangs, such elevens as the Chi-| Deer, Strongwind, Big Bear and 9) cago Cardinals and Bears, Minneap | Thunder, Buffalo, Milwaukee, © Clev Rochester nd, N. Y.; Columbus, 0., various others. Some of thene Oorangs have yet to meet on field of battle this fall. JIM THORPE LEADS It ball has such an organization is believed that never before! work. in the history of professional foot all former Carisle men MASCOT and/A COYOTE | The squad mascot is a pet coyote, the| brought from Montana by Nicholas Lassa, better known as Long Time j Sleep. It's a playful tribe, even when at Wrestling matches and long |runs are the regular thing. of|means nothing to the Indians to Indian stars been assembied as Jim/make a jaunt on foot inte Marion Thorpe's. Thorpe himeelf, a sensation im stil! engaged actively than one form, of sport. bar®@all season in Eastern league he autoed to Rue to assume command. of tribesmen gathered there. Stockholm, in more) tinues until evening, and it's then® After a)|that the redskins have their second and back, a distance of 28 miles. of|The warriors eat but twice a day, | Practice begins at noon and con- the | meal. La| The training camp and the club the} house in which the Indians live is jon the Oorang Airdale kennel Besides Thorpe, two more former|farm of Waiter Longo, chief spom captains of Carlisie are included | sor of the eleven. Everybody’s All Excited Over Yale-Iowa Grid Mix BY FRANK GETTY Ew Out of or more husky Hawkeye warriors to test the mettle of }Ell in the year’s big intersectional football battle East and West are stirred over contest son, Fair weather ts promised as a late Indian summer had not provided, and 60,000 spectators expected for the contest. The Yale-lowa game tomorrow called society, old-time football roes and pigskin fans from all parts Some have come from the Mississippi val of the East to New Haven. ley, scene of Iowa's conclusive tory over Western conference oppen BIG TEAMS GET READY FOR “CLASS” BY JACKSON V. SCHOLZ EW YORK, Oct. HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 13-— the West, not unlike young Lochinvars of old, come eleven gridiron an never before in midsea 13.—The grid. ents last year. It will be inspiration against tra- dition when the big teams mect. The Hawkeye eleven will be carrying the 14 /of footban supremacy. Old Elp will be dug in to defend the claim. Picking « winner is easy. Only a the | tie can baffle the prophets. Coach Jones’ men should triumph. for| Brother Howard directs the Iowa |the battle, crackling football air such |team and Brother Tad the Yale elev- yet are en, so it will be all in the family, however it comes out. Out in Ex- cello, Ohio, where the Jones boys hail from, Mother Jones is all excited; no less the townsfolk, who are split 50- 60, the entire hundred of them. Yale will be severely handicapped by the probable absence of Doc Jor- dan, her captain, and two of her field generals, Beckett and O'Hearn. The blue lineup is otherwise upset by. early season injuries, but Tad Jones will have two bright young men hitherto untried in a big game upon whom he can rely. Captain Gordon Locke of Iowa will ibe the hardest man to stop that Yale has tackled since George Owen plowed up the Bulldog line last fall. ‘The kickoff will be at 2:30. has he vie: | West's challenge to Eastern claims © oN ~~ sto" ss? cr ped eed@st y af pe assistant football tutor for Coachjare now faced with a man-sized | oat steak in the shape of the Iowa RP ERE NIE as 2 eleven. It's hardly fair when the iron hors d’oevers has been duly served and more or lens relished tn} Eastern football circles, The big schools are now awaiting the second course which, it is hoped, will consist of some palatable species of fish without many bones. Bones at this time of the year are to be strictly axpided because a broken tooth or so is a serious handicap when the meat course is served later in the season. All but Yale. Poor Yale! Some- body played a rather unsportsman- lke trick on the wearers of the Blue by sneaking a couple of handfuls of pepper into their consomme and the first two swallows were somewhat of a surprise. Not only that, but they other members of the big three are only beginning to dine. Harvard will mix things with Bowdoin tomorrow, which will prob- | ably be no more than a short work- out for the Crimson team. Princeton is a bit apprehensive over tomorrow's engagement with Colgate, The Colgate eleven, under the coaching of Dick Harlow, former Penn State star, may have absorbed a brand of football which may prove very annoying to the Tigers in toeir present fase of development. TERRY MARTIN DRAWS CURTAIN | NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—Terry! | Martin and Irish Curtain pee a |fast 10-round draw here last night. BOSTON TEAM HORSE RACES Special |PUYALLUP). SATURDA Five events—one at one eaow Event 2 P. M. WINS BATTLE Boston college trimmed Fordham! at Boston yesterday, 27 to 0. BASEBALL Pacifle Coast League SALT LAKE SEATTLE — TODAY, 245 — DOUBLE-HEADER HIT BIG SCHUTE | Setuitny and uty. 1 P.M. in admittod Ke * mile, four at two-thirds of a mile, by America’s fast- est runners, now at Puy- allup, en route to Mexican tracks, General Admission 25¢ Grandstand 25¢ Free Auto Parking Space Auspices Western Washington Fair Association |S aaa