The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 7, 1922, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE 14 spearing the ous man, game at Pasadena. "S football regime be in forward line, ‘ Cranmer. last football, and the great) ‘ ‘le also loses Berkey and Muller, first of the Big Three foot-| % ball classics is on the for Saturday, when the undefeat Forty-eight “barnyard golf” lanes are being laid out in Waterfront park, situated on the shores of ‘Tampa bay. Giant palms have been planted alongside the courts, which ‘Will serve as a protection against the sub-tropical midwinter sun. St. Petersburg is spending $10,000 | fm laying out the new playgrounds for tts winter visitors. A clubhouse of Oriental design is being erected forthe use of the horseshoe devo. tees. The lanes are 40 feet in length and the pegs are Ford axles buried in coettatinate cat | MITCHELL SAYS BIT ABOUT RUTH Fred Mitchell, manager of the Bow ton Braves, says Babe Ruth should have used a lighter in the world series when the nt pitchers kept | offering him slow be Is | “He should have tried to hit sin-|Hugh Duffy, with a contract to run is playing golf and] 1 of home a sles inste rung and he a « lot his te California to Lose Seven Players From 1922 Eleven BY LEO H, LASSEN ORWARD passes have pulled two games out of the flames in Frank! oval, if But Smith will have the nucleus for another strong backfield, at that The equad that year lost But) 1, cay bring Witter back from 4971 the team lost most| tackle to play fullback. He also will including| have Nichols and Spaulding and Latham, Barnes, McMillan | Dunn for backfield work. | ‘Then he will have Imlay, the frosh When the present season is history) quarter, and Evans, sub squarter more Bears will have played| now, for the pivot position. Mell and Hufford are expected to combination will be broken | take care of the wings. Perry should plug one of the guard he loses Erb, his master! jobs, and Horrell will be the regular center. Callfornia’s big need next year will Dean and Clark,|be a man to replace Morrison and center, will) Nisbit, and another to take the place ‘of one of the regular guards. ie Harvard Meets Princeton in First Big Three Game But Princeton has been showing boards |® World of fighting power, winning eg) he Chicago game largely on fight- ing ability the meet wi mark. | Zeil, Hall and Pi the be well over the $5,000 | And in Zeil Bagshaw has a fine passer, a fellow baseball and who can shoot it far and accurately. Dont forget, either’ that Washington has two fi Presidents are California has developed the aerial Brick Muller, the greatest passer in the game, as the ace of the attack, The Washington trio of Roy Pietre, Wayne Hall and Leonard Zeil,| however, will keep the California defense busy if they are doing their stuff as they have done in other games this year. Hall, in particular, has been in the spotlight Pietre, with his speed, size and reach, is a danger- who Bears Won’t Play With Presidents at Pasadena : IR some reason or other California refuses to play Washington and Jefferson ; an thosen to represent the East again for the New Year's It will be remembered that W. & J. outplayed California ' Jin that scoreless tie last year and an off-side ruling after a President player had scored a touchdown was all that saved California from defeat. } Penn State's defeat at the hands of the Navy last week and W. & J. victory over the powerful Lafayette team makes the selection of the Presidents seem very likely again. TIGERS SEEK — CRACK HURLER The latest baseball rumor has De- angling for right-hander of the Philadel It would take quite a wad of cash and a couple of classy performers to wean him away from Athletics, just about the pitching staff of that troit erack phia Athleti the club, HARVARD COACH| SOX GOSSIP. Slattery, IN baseba oa being mentioned as manager for Bos. ton’s Red another season, tight sitting cs ach, Sox in is one th Eawin use Harvard Romme! va of the the mean Rommel, etre Will Give Bear Defense Plenty of Trouble Passing Game Has Won Two Contests for Washington in Last Minutes of Play; Bears Are Leaving for Seattle Today; Washington Making Final Preparations for Big Test of Season; California Will Bring Two Complete Teams to Stadium | Merriwell fashion for Washington this year and it will be this same! forward pass threat that the Purple and Gold will bank on against California Saturday in their great battle at the Stadium. game to almost perfection wi by his great work can handle the leather like ne passers in Wally Dailey and Fred ——1Abel and that the forwa tirely around Zeil. his men carefully for game and his fellows w the Bears, win, chance and w with Washingt top-heavy favorites to there’s always « this threat Ment the and Berkeley team HILL, EXPECTED TO START Because of hin defensive play! ability, Hay Pullman. GENERALSHIP |WEILL COUNT Charley Erb, veteran Californ jon the Bear varsity. He of the team this year, Erb tw quarterback of unusual ability in | Fecting his team the ball, but is in there to direct t play alone. Opposed to him will Fred Abel and Wally Dailey, play! their first varsity football. Calif is ence in this department FULLBACK STARTER 18 QUESTION Bagrhaw jback & Question Bryan, Sherman and Du all expected to be ready Saturday. Bagdhaw is « for acth pected out the game. BEARS HAVE THREE VETERAN LINESMEN California lost both the Los Angeles sp the merchant Chicago Cubs next year. and an injured leg in mid-season, that he wound up the season with batting mark of .297, a fair mark f his first year in fast company. CATHOLICS TO Notre eleven has f cessfully assed a hard game su in beating but the Catholics face bigge test of the season so in the Army at West Point. Th game should be one of the classios the intersectional schedule. 19 GO UP FROM raity men itime The Texas league ganization a Class 19 men to the A ¢ sent season pass attack doesn’t center en- Bagshaw. has been drilling this have plenty of tricks to show California is going into the game! but} there may be a surprise for here Saturday. Hit) ts favored to start jat left half for Washington Satur ~|day, which will leave Bill Beck for first string reserve for this position. Hill played a bangup game against quarterback. is playing his third year | — aptain nia will have a big edge in expert | selection to start at full: | Harper, | Bots rm | keep fresh men in the backfield thru | fullback last year, and haw put Beam Much is expected of Arnold Statz, by Statz was handicapped by a broken finger At BATTLE ARMY Damo's undefeated football TEXAS LEAGUE : ma Conversation | jors at the completion of the 14 more," says the venerable Mitchell. league, saying nothing about 192% ste fal dy i th in a rd ill ith on oe pia SHERRY SMITH NEEDS HELPER Now that Waiter Mails has been a a He seldom carries] given permiasion to make « deal for he | himeelf with a minor league club, be| Cleveland has only Sherry Smith, ng |the Brooklyn veteran, for southpaw ‘or. | duty. Tris Speaker is trying to land & good portsider for the Indians Can W Cue Kings to Battle on to tackles, one guard, one end and the center of last year's team. But they etili have ‘Berkey and Muller, veteran enda,| ext ee fand “Fat” Clarke, crack guard of the [1921 squad. Then Smith has made & tackle out of Witter, a promising | Hoppe Will Be Central Harvard and Princeton elevens The Tigers will be handicaped by th : . 4 . * clash at Cambridge. | the lack of a good quarterback. Tho| St the ae ae and Dean at the | Figure in Big Tourney On the strength of their records| Crimson has a big edge in the gen-| |” fiahtin iz org vd bare Morratl in New York go far this season Harvard will en-|eralship department, having Capt. | perth aa ia ow — © center ter the big game favored to win.| Buell to direct the eleven, ve de woe primer expected to ITH the California-Washington has a much more impres-| On the following Saturday Prince- rica football game grabbing most of fecord and the boys who hand|ton tackles the Yale Bulldog at} o : oe Spex 0 gl ut the football dope my the Crim-| Princeton and a week later Har-| QUIN 1S be aa |the sport limelight these days, not] gon shapes up as a more powerful|vard and Yale get together in the/ ia Kobo ; Tie is @ . « been made of the + , wae td Kuhn is bound to be a tower . eggs git squad. eae Ae On of strength on the Washington line | Dillard tournament that gets} Saturday. This giant sophomore|under way in New York Monday - 2 2 guard playing great football for | night ! 0e Cc S the Purple and Gold uhn will] Can Willle Hoppe, once Peerless come pretty close to being an All-| Willie, come back Coast man this season ‘That's the big question of the tour ry 4 nament STEADY LINE |years, fell before Young Schaefer ‘ i i ae hee Bil Grimm and Bob Ingram are| last year (ORSESHOE pitching is develop-| concrete blocks and wunk nto the | going be mighty valuable in that} nday the same sextet of t ing into an all-year major|ground. ight inches of the peg) came Saturday because of their ex-|cracks are expected to start |i sport. protrude above the sand. pertence. The veteran tackles, both | balkline tournament In the North it goes big during the| James T. Flower, vice president Of | stars themselves, will have a - ide Schaefer, Hoppe. the ational Association of Horse " . 7 he summer months. In the South it ee ing influence on the rest of the line sr Cochran, Erick Hagentocher holds eway from November until peel nner sl vs na a “gyre Experience counts a great deal in a | Germar ampion; Roger Conti and Akron, early in November, to| big test like the California game. suard Horemans, apd cies i hich stages /t#K¢ charge of the preliminary ar tn iy a Petar ‘anv ‘diate ‘Nini ws. Fae wiles stage ngements for the fifth annual na By bane M a , once, the player with the highest a national tournament och y tournament scheduted tor | MUCH DEPENDS Gtanmey average taking the heuer Will soon have the finest horneshoe | ti. week of February 22 | ping av © e mg ‘or the seasor Pitching courts in the world. Prizes to be awarded winners in UPON SPEEDER ‘4 big pot ot Prize me will be divided among the first three finish ers a lor The Const longi Ita poorest sew: to the big show ' | been nent up to ‘st; Kamm, May and Walberg will re | port to faster company next year sin} Im 1981 12 paatiners were grad | aated. of} | Southern writers think that Seattle | wa ve Marty Krag } or |weveral eoasons in the Weatern league DUNN WOULD ACK DUNN, one of the greatest managers in minor leagues, would lose money if he should leave Baltimore for the big show Dunn owns the majority of stock in the taltimore Interna ona) kkague team and is the considered sulding genius works. No mas afford to pay jor league team could LOSE COIN of the he makes at Baltimore Dunn, wtralght whole flags, ha» started to break up his famous Orioles by selling Jack Bentley. He will probably Dunn the money have to sell Joe Boley, Jack Og den und Mervin Jacobson, too who has won four or have the rest of the league International league enforce the draft over his head, IN MAJORS “* | southpaw, will return to Frisco, There wore indications that he will be let out when hoe was one of those mentioned as trading material for Frite Moliwits, #ac to first aacker. is Gusto ts expected to be ands Jur first sacker next year. stuffy Melm * slipped rapidly, and the big Oakland boy ts due to’ take his place, Guisto fin= he season for the Indians in automobile by fellow citizens of J, is honor of bis having Kea X [piloted Han Mramelece 10 «Const league The California Bears have a great forward pa: as their ace, but the Bears will have to stop the Washington trio that has pulled two victories out of the fire for the Purple and Gold. On the left is Roy Pietre, the giant left end; in the center is Leonard Zeil, the pi and on the right is Wayne Hall, the Tris Speaker of the Washington team. SEATTLE STAR /EBBETTS AFTER ARNOLD STATZ } Charley Ebbetts is try range a trade with Chicago for Ar |nold Stats, ring the veteran Hy Myers for the Cub flash, Myers still has @ lot of good baseball left in bis system, but seers to have got in a rut with the Dodgers to ar illie Hoppe Come Back? TUESDAY, NOVEMBER ing ace, BY HENRY ican league ba run hitter ball career | Late in the bone. He we At this time i also was broke in the last race was one of the big surprises of the sea- son. The and ‘Tigers. with Derril! Rip” Collins, ought to be one ship next year PIRATES WENT STRONG Aft y finally got going past | fe | Horace er Ford, the Boston Brave star if a deal can be made it is understood. McKechnie is to part with Barnhart, Hamilton, Yellow Horse, Brown, Rohwer, Col : lins and Lovelace in trades. Cooper and Morrison are said to be the only pitchers that are sure lof their jobs for next year. this winter, | SCHMIDT'S | CASE ing the fact that the Pi- (Citic Hope) Big Bout See Jot the club GORMAN AND BRITT TRAIN Joe Gorman and Frankte Britt are tuning up for their scrap in Tacoma Thursday night They box over the six-round route. Young O'Dowd and George Burna, the lightweights who fought a hi six-round battle with honors here, clash in the semi-windup. “RED” OLDHAM | MAY QUIT GAME “Red” Oldham, Detroit southpaw, expects to quit baseball this winter, aceording arts from An goles. business (New Met Player _ Showing Up Well in Puck Workout Tom McCarthy, Seattle's new forward, looked pretty good in his initial workout with the Mets at the A yesterday Hé can shoot from either side The Mets are going thru their paces twice daily and are getting primed for the opening of the son with the Ma ns Monday | | to re Los | hooky Yancouv roo | ACORNS CHANCE OAKLAND, |WHITMAN ON Oldham expects to go into/ DAVE SHADE | won a | Perry [ATHLETICS rates did not begin to work property Schmidt deserted the it & rather unusual Pittsburg that Dreyfuss wants to get rid of him, Schmidt i one of the finest catchers in the league, but he and Barney P rtl d Just before the clone of the season the team in 1923 and it gave rise to his boss cannot agree on what sal. Schmidt wrote to a friend in Cali. Battle "port (hat he wasn't friendly with Harper and Dav oo a eae aa ns EW YORK, Nov of the favorites for the shampice: | the balf-post in the race, the Pitty burg Pirates looked like the best team in the National league. Pittxburg fans felt if Bill Me-j Kechnie had been placed in charge of the team at the start of the sea non the Pirates would have won t ant | McK is going right out! er the championship next spring | he plains to make several) anges in the team, He wants « lcouple of pitchers, and a new in | fielder and another right-handed out may be in a Pittsburg uniform | said to be willing | 7, 1922. ALL AGAIN | aay Serious Injuries May Keep Slugger on Bench Heilman’s Broken Collarbone and Shoulder Make His Future in Baseball Look Hazy; Detroit and Pitts- burg Looming on Baseball Horizon for 1923 L. FARRELL 7.—Harry Heilman, Amer- tting champion of 1921, home first class and one of the best outfielders in the league, fears that his base- ended, according to word re- ceived from California. past season Heilman fell in a game between the Detroit Tigers and the Washington Senators and broke his collar nt back to Detroit where he had to have the bone rebroken and reset. t was found that his shoulder en. In a letter to his brother, Dick Heilman, in San Francisco, the Tiger star declared his shoulder was in such bad shape that he not only despaired ‘ of being able to swing a bat next year, but that he feared he] would never be able to play again. 4 As they finished the season, the Tigers good prospect for the 1928 pennant race, and the loss of Heilman, one of the main works of the team, would be a severe blow to Ty Cobb's chances of grabbing the pennant Cobb is rebuilding the team and the results he achie looked like a real | | Jimmy Burke, former Bt. Lows | Brown pilot, may lead the Boston | Red Sox next year, succeeding Hugh Duffy. Burke has deen easistant | manager of the Sox for the past sea- | son or two. | McKechnie. Previous happenings [do not support the story, however, las one of McKechnie’s first acts as manager of the team was to insist ‘upon meeting Schmidt's terms and get him back in the game. for N. W. Welter Title Thursday AND should Is Set for : colton Bears | rain, on a muddy field, kept the Cal- ifornia Bears busy for nearly an hour Monday, Coach “Andy” Smith advantage of the first wet/ 10.round route. It will be the second meeting “KW x of the pair, the took remarkable under the | circumstances, It was just punting | Dea as this that saved California | from defeat at Pasadena, last New Your's day performance Nov 7.—Charley kett uttle pngrenia, Hoty pobicg ypu gc gr me While the punters were experi next year. Hackett was given menting with gravity and « wet ball, | | trial by Brooklyn last year Ba ain grnamaans yilpell ne ore on | lowed around all over the field, with the evident Intent much terra. firr passing the ball to scrimmage. of collecting as possible while Thon came the call Varsity and second LONG TRIP The Whitman college football | varsity had a sledding contest for a team passed thru Seattle today en | while, with quite a few fumbles | route to Reno, Nev., on the longest | mixed in, However, everything was | football trip | going nicely ti Charley Erb, captain | sionaries. ‘They sity |and quarterback, got his mouth full of Ne 2 on Armistice day and the |of mud. It took five minutes to ret) University of Utah at Salt Lake City | Charley back to normal, and shortly & week later afterward the serimm: | Today the team leay ended | for Seattle. Every man realizes the importance WINS BATTLE |of Saturday's meting. Far from be- | ing made overconfident by their vic. | BOSTON, Nov. 7.—Dave Shade|tory over Washington State, several | inical Knockout over Jack | f the California men expressed the here tonight in. the seventh |oPinion that Washington would b round of @ #cheduled 10-round bout. |More formidable than U. S.C. He referee stopped the tiff to keap | is the way Coach Smith apoke of the Perry from punishment. game. “T've said all along that the Wash: ington game will be the hardest of GET BU the season, | SHER will be lucky to win by} MILWAUKEE, Nov, 7.-—"Wild’’ points, 1 don't believe in Matthews, Milwaukee Am n as simistie stuff, 1 try to be sociation outfielder, has been ld to | sincere. Washington has team jthe Philadelphia Athletics, Cash and | that outweighs us, ‘They are play: | players are to figure in the transac. ton, at | ing home, they have had a Week's rest, We are not counting| in Mud Before Leaving one of the the rthw season when! > wee 7 Bob Harper and BY KEN CUTHBERT Travie Davis ERKEL Cal, Nov. 1.—A battle over the! scrimmage in a downpour of | Scrimmage on running up a big score. What I am trying to perfect ts @ strong — defense. 1 never worry about how good an offense a team has. But if they have a good defense I dé worry. Because a team with af impregnable defense can’t be beaten. We have a tough proposition before 7? . e ae om 0 e | Nah dD) ee gaaic iain net yp har toes nisl Y thidh ook win, et, ae . . a m they boxed s ie hina Nothing could have pleased the|much must not be expected. That — . js d draw here. It wax a battle all the | Bruin leader more than the dreary |'S my sincere opinion about the TOM TURNER way, Harper's infighting tactics and . for it may be under similar | Washington game. Davis’ long-range work making it a| Conditions that the big game with} ‘The California coach has sum GIVEN GATE | whisiwina bat | Washington is played Saturday. At/med up the situation about as ™ vy : s, 4 | Jimmy Duffy holds the Coast w «, “Andy” is expecting to en-|concisely as passibie. This en “ eet ake cae foe Turns | torwetght title, but he tights doe j much wetness in Seattle, nnd | thusiastic talk about the “wonder }the Portland Beavers last son, | 200Uts #0 weldom that the Portland |!# preparing for it j team’ has made some people think has b released by the Portiand| Promoters are billing Thursday’a| At the beginning of the practice, /the Bruins are invincible; they are Coast league club, Turner. drew | 0T@™! 4 the Northwest welterweight | Nisbet and N and only human and must be beaten down a salary of $6,000 last year | “Ue bout ting the soggy oval. Both get! some time. Probably they will con: and turned in @ $2,500 expense ac Harper is going pretty wel! again, | Off some excellent kicks, especially /tinue to hold the championship count. ‘This money will be used in| “ble Davis is at the top of his form Nisbet. One of the big biond’s boots /this season. But it’s going to be buying new players for the Beav-| went thi ull soaring for 60 yards, &/q great battle Saturday, Badger Pilot (CAPEAIS WILLIAMS of the Wit consin team is generally regard ed as one of the best hulfbacks i the Western conference, j May Lead So: Pratt | WASHINGTON AERIAL ATTACK IS BIG THREAT TO CALIF ORNIA™ ARRY HEILMAN MAY NEVER PLAY BIG LEAGUE B Purple and Gold Aerial Trio ing attack, with Brick Muller ee a eran 9°°°°9 ogszs @4 @etsF saa

Other pages from this issue: