The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1922, Page 14

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“Troubled With Pitching ‘TER being ou his arm. strength and effect. But couldn't stepped out ot their most effective h ‘trying to coax back the old Schellenback, still a young tender again next year if meanest spitters in the | one of the hardest men The Ti would have c season. ‘TTLE and Portland, the two Northern cities of the Coast are the only teams tn the that haven't decided defin to retain their managers for season. is still some doubt tf Char- Pick wil! be back at Sacramento spite of the tnct that Prexy says he will be. Jim Boldt won't say definitely © Jack Adams will be kept or While the same goes for the i directors in regards to Middleton, Both of these VITT, the third sacker of the Salt Lake team, ran the field during the the season. A vet- and « smart toss. & managerial himself next year. Portland the reins of the Port of Jim taken indication that follow sult. mistakes ? 5 ci i HT ij it : i a + Bs § : i SEATTLE HOCK Two Jobs Left Open Vitt May Be Manager ° . Situation Klepper sell out his | dis, there is no denying the fact that | the Portland Beavers | Kennis is a hustler on the bali field | start, Bill Kenworthy and that the Beavers would have restored to| been a powerful factor in the Coast fm baseball and he| league race ff the Iron Duke had/| playing second base and been handling the club all year. E _ Former Star Expects to Return to Hurling ‘Hand, Schellenback Was Forced Out of Game; Loss of Star Practically Cost Tigers Pennant This Season; Gossip of Baseball BY LEO H. LASSEN it of baseball for a year because of an injury to his pitching arm, Frank Schellenback, be back on the Tiger roster next spring. In 1921 Schellenback was hit on the elbow with a batted ball and it partially paralyzed His wrist and fingers lost their former Vernon ace, expects to he couldn't grip the ball with He made an attempt to pitch this spring, make a go of it. When he of the picture the Tigers lost urlers. “Schellenback pitched off and on in independent games in California this Vanier, doctoring his pitching hand and cunning. fellow, will make the Tigers a/ he is right. He had one of league before he was hurt and to hit in the circuit. ome closer than they did to} the flag if he had been O. K. and in his regular) With May, Dell, James and Doyle he! “would have rounded out one of the best staffs in the ‘minors. fellows took charge of their re- spective clubs and finished the sea-| fon in pretty good fashion. Jack Miller, at San Francisco; Bill Essick, Vernon; Red Killefer, | Los Angeles, and Duffy Lewis, Salt | Lake, the leaders of the first divt sion teams, are all cinches to re turn. Cal Ewing and Del Howard, Oak.) land bosses, would settle the talk that Ivan Howard won't return by saying officially that he will be on the job. But the boys will gosatp. Vitt can still play a mean third base and he hit well over the .300 |mark this year, thanks to the Salt Lake cheese box. Vitt, with hin even disposition and | baseball knowledge, would make a/ pretty nobby manager for a Class AA club. i Should Kennle get back into the game next spring the Rose City team will figure in the pennant race, be- | cause Portland has the nucleus for a good team, and with the players com ing from the New York Giants on the Rube Walberg sale they should| Present a strong front. Mulligan Mulligan. They won't stop to think that Kamm ts» on his way to great- ness while Mulligan ts on the down sie grade, never having reached the returns | heights, the to play| Baseball bugs thruout the coun-| in has|try are the same, they set « stand- fatal af Middleton, @ young pti tor Coffeyville, th ‘Western leugue, this year, itcher ° Bob Coleman, who piloted Terre Haute to & pennant in the Central league this to manage the San! Antonio team, in the Texas loop, next ‘Yaer. year, has been sig _ WAVERLEY MAY The Waverey Golf club of Port Janda, one of the leading organiza tions in the Northwest, is consider. 18-hole course. The crowded condi causing the new move. DELL HURLED Jengsue season was pitched by Weine! his long diamond career. SALT LAKE DID During the 1922 season the Sai Lake team, leading club hitting fo ‘was ® jump behind with 10.3, to make up the league pitching, who South- , has been re-| @alled by the Cleveland Americans for © ADD 18 HOLES ing plans for the building of a second tion of the present 18-hole links is BEST BATTLE} ‘The only no-hit game of the Coast) to revresent the Vandals at both the TALL CLOUTING the season, cracked out an averaxze of 10.4 hite per game. San Franciscu ard and everybody must live up to it. They have jong memories and mean tongues. Mulligan iq bound to hear a« lot of unkind conversation if he doesn’t deliver, and—woll, if his disposition hasn't improved any he may be In| for a large spring, summer and fall | ‘in the Golden Gate. Nick Williams to Scout for Tribe; Well Known Here Nick Williams, former Portland and Spokane Northwestern league pilot, and a scout for the San Francisco Seals last year, has teen signed by Jim Boldt to scout for the Beattle Indians next year. Williams is figuret to be a big help in building up the Seat- tle Coast league club next season. ‘2 climax of the high school football season is being reached his week. Tomorrow Garfield and Roosevelt will tangle at Denny field, and Sat- urday will see Franklin meeting | Queen Anne and Lincoln playing | Ballard. The situation has been hashed over thruout the past week, and the fates of the Garfield, Lincoln and Frank- lin squads, chief contenders, hang in the balance. if all of the leaders win, Franklin | will have a slight edge for the titie, - | The Railsplitters -must then beat | Broadway the following week to cinch the honors. IDAHO NAMES ITS ADVISOR Dean M. F. Angell, of the college IN‘ THE SEATTLE STAR BY CLUB HANDS VICTORIA SHUTOUT TRIMMING SCHELLENBACK MAY DO COMEBACK WITH VERNON COASTERS) Here We Have N. W. GRID TITLE STAKE Champion Mickey Beating the venerable Jack Britton for the welterweight title put Mickey Walker, 20-year-old Jersey kid, in the fistic limelight. Here are the latest pictures of Mickey in street clothes and ready to toss the leather mittens. Schaefer and Cochran Win York this week. BY HENRY L. FARRELL w YORK, Nov. 16-—Tex Rick- used to have no trouble In getting boxers to work for him. All he hed to do was dangle large sacks of coin beneath their noses, Madison Square garden had such # corner on all first-class bouts, little promoters yelped about restraint of | trade. In a year this changed and Rickard recently got a call down from the commission for not staging first-class bouta. “The only thing they‘re looking for now {is setups—smaller purses and sure-thing opponents,” Rickard de. clared today. “After much expertence I have come to the conclusion that Buro- pean boxers were afraid to come over for any money. I made Carpentier a standing offer of $150,000 to come over and meet Tom Gibbons, but he passed It up, and was knocked out by Sik! for $16,000. “Then I offered Siki $75,000 to come over and meet Kid Norfolk or any other American he wanted. He got himself in bad, and now he can't earn a cent for nine months. “For a long time I tried to get Jimmy Wiide to come over and de fend his fyweight title with Johnny | Buff. When Buff lost I made hi: what I thought later was @ foolis' offer to fight Pancho Vilia and he turned it down. “For four fights in England, Joe Beckett couldn't get what I offered him for one bout here with Torn Gib. |bons and additional money for other bouts if he made a e904 showing, but he didn't even answer me.” Another difficulty encountered In | FRENCH CUE CHAMPION Champs and Star Battlers | - Play Safe; Villa Fights | Champion Hits His Cue Form Schaefer Easily Defeats Conti; Cochran Noses | | getting championship bouta brought | inited Press Staff Correspondent) |@bout by de tendency of the title; [holders to put thelr crowns on ice! lana work In heavier classes. Joe Lynch, bantam champion, wants to fight featherweights; the lightweights want to fight weiter weights and the welters want to | work among the middieweight»—any- thing to play safe. Pancho Villa, the American fly weight champion, gives an example of this tonight In the garden. Th are several good flyweights who have been after him for @ chance at the title, but he is going to meet | Abe Goldstein at 116 pounds and if he loses he still retains his title ; Willard Put on Exhibition for Hollywood Fans HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Nov. 16.— Several thousand fight fans who saw Joss Willard box four exhibt- tion rounds here last night, today seemed agreed that Jens still is a long way from being a match for Jack Dempsey. It was the first appearance of the former champion since he emerged from retirement and started training for his promised renewed assaults on the cham- plonship. Willard still required a com- fortably large belt to encircle his waist line, but he was plainly in far better physical condition than when he came here from Kansas several weeks ago, flabby with flesh. of letters and science, has been ap- pointed by the University of Idaho r| Pacific Coast and Northwest con- Dell in the closing weeks of the! ference meetings, to be held soon. schedule. Incidentally it was the first hitless game that the handsome Ver- non twirler ever worked in during THEY’RE STILL GETTING “AIR” Another college athlete has been discovered on the charge of falling for the filthy lucre, Tom McCann, Iilinofs pitcher, has been banned from university athletics because he played with the Aberdeen, team, in the Dakota league. He claims he needed the money to compete his edu- cation, it r Third Base Only Position That’s Worrying Ty Cobb al Ya club, third base. Bobby Jones and Fred Haney will fight it out for that position. If Jones is able to keep physically fit, he will have the call, A bad stomach raised havoc with his game last year, Haney, whether he wins the third! from COBB says there is only one) infield and in a pinch do a pretty Gebatable position on his ball| fair Job in the outfield. Blue will be at first, Pratt at seo- ond and Rigney at short, In the outfield will be Cobb, Hellman and Veach. Bassler, Woodal and Man- fon will look after the catching. Tho pitching of course is a ques. tion. Cobb expects great things “Rip” Collins, secured from base berth or not, ts certain to be! Boston, Pillette should have another | retained, He is a valuable man to| good season and Johnson should ar- have around for utility purposes. rive with a bang in 1923, The rest; He can play any position in the| of the staff is « bit uncertain, Out German Chap N*™. YORK, Nov. 16.—Jake Schaefer, 182 baik-line billiard champion, bit his true form in his Roger Conti, young Paris billiard wizard, is representing oom’ match of the international France in the international billiard meet under way in New bitiard tournament here last night, beating Koger Cont the French champion, 600 to 251, Cont! handed Schaefer his only defeat Inet year. Schaefer had « high run of 196, the highest of the tournament to date. He went out in nine innings, tying the high average set by Willie Hoppe at 656.9, Weiker Cochran nosed out Erich Hagentacher, the German champion, in the early match of the day, 600 to 471, in 16 Innings. EXHIBITION GOLF MATCH ao IST when local golf fans were all net to attend the Walter Hagen- Joo Kirkwood exhibition match, scheduled to be played at the Seattle Country club today, Club Captain Sam Russell received a wire stating that they would be unable to arrive before tonight, so the match had to be cancelled. It ts just possible that one of the other clubs may sign them up for tomorrow, which is an open date in their schedule. The %20man team match at | Waverley on Saturday makes {it im- possible for the North End club to consider any other date this week for \une ble exhibition. With the calling off of today's match, fans are now hoping that there will ‘be no wires to upset the | plans that have been made for the appearance of the British open cham- pion and the world’s champion ltrick shot player in an 18-hole exht- bition match at the Beacon Hill {course next Sunday afternoon, MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 16.—After a national voting contest, Pinkie Mitch- ell, Milwaukee, has bees awarded a belt by the National Boxing associa- tion as the Junior welterweight cham- pion (140 pounds) and he has been ordered to defend !t under the rules of the association, NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—J. Fred- erick Byers, of Pittsburg, president of the United States Golf association, and the entire list of 1921-1922 offi. cials have been picked for re-election (WAKEFIELD’S| BILLIARDS SEATTLE’S LEADING RECREATION PARLORS 2 ROOMS 4th an@ Pike| 2ND_@ SENECA Green Dias. | neee2"S" Halen by the body's nominating committee, | THURSDAY, NOVEMPER 16, 1922, —— Oregon to Battle in Big Game Winner of Stadium Strug- gle Will Decide Honors of This Section D TURKEY DAY Art Duncan, the big Vancouver fese man, has come to terme with the champions, and will be tm setion night sgcinms ‘Visterio at ty. BEGARDLESS of! Washington) tussle in the sta dium Turkey day will decide | the Northwest champ tonship for the season, | Oregon faces @ hard hurdle Satur. | day in 0. A. C., at Corvallis, The Orecon Farmers have been downed by Washington and by Stanford, but they will be at full strength Satur | day, and nw tt is the big game for them fOr the season, they may raise to the heights and sock the Webfoot | ers. | Shy Huntington ts bringing his | team along slowly, The Webfooters showed plenty of power tn defeating | | Washington State, 13 to 0 They jdidn’t hit the Cougars when they | were at the top of thelr form, like Washington did, however | | Oregon also has defeated Idaho, | | Chapman's educated toe giving the Huntington eleven a 3 to 6 win. Oregon, not playing any Calffornia team this year, tnn't ranked in the) Coast conference standings, but, ) slong with Washington, the Lemon | and Green gang, is the only unde- feated equad in the Northwest stand- ings. Washington wil have a full week to recover from the Palo Alto trip and Oregon wil] have a week and a} half to set for the Washington struggle. Both teams should be tn | Uptop condition for the finale at the stadium. | WHAT'S INA NAME, GIRLS? The 1923 national women's golf championships will be held in New| York next year, the Westchester. Hiltmore Country club at Kye, N. ¥., by the United States Golf association. | It will be held late in September. } | SOLDIERS TAKE BAD WALLOPING The super-varsity football team swamped the Fort Lawton soldiers under ina the outeome of | s# the Stanford. | Washington 0 usual, tle season, ame tn Palo ensiinaae Alto Baturday,| — Young Anderson, the new Victoria the Oregon! terward, te @ email fellow physiralty. vine has been named chief He didn't make much of an impres- sion inst wight, bat it wae the firet time out, and he’ be given « thore trial by the Aristocrats, Tom MoeCarthy, Aidn't @et in the Arena. He ts Juries sustained In practice Jim Riley took # 10-minute period tn | the second period tor talking back to/ Referees jon when banished for two min- utes. A big flere! horseshoe adorned the center of the tee at the Arena when tne fans started flocking tn | | ‘The Arena band has learned « new! plece for thie senaon HUSKIES TO BE PUT UP AT SAN JOSE) 'TANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal, Nov. 16—Quarters for the Unt-| versity of Washington football team, | en route today from Seattle to Call fornia for Saturday's game here against Stanford, have been engaged at Ban Jone, where the team will ar- rive Friday morning. Arrangements for Neht practice Friday afternoon | have been made. Campus dope points to a close game, with Stanford expecting to} win, Washington is reported to have a sharper attack, but @ looser defense than U. 8. C. which Stanford back- | era claim will be to the advantage of the Cartinals. The outcome of the game will prob- | ably decide what team will funk next to U. B.C. In the Coast confer- ence. ED MARTIN TO REJOIN CHAMP’: Denver E4 Marti Join Jack Dempsey ia going to re- vaudeville tour. | |The big colored heavyweight had a | Victoria jcouple of ribs cracked by the cham-| Sri University of Washington pion In the Northwest last year in @ trom Riley, 12:63. | sparting tiff with Dempsey. Martin | joins Dempney in Salt Lake Novem- ‘Recond period. 90.0 tally at Fort Lawton yesterday. ber 29. Martin is now in Portland. w. Loughlin, Riley. Third period You just CAN’T go A Businessl Suit! | | wear. Serviceable, | a price for every purse. Overcoat! No matter what style for every cent. Wool Overcoats, Rare style and comfort. | } $10. “Just a Step from Businesslike! That's the outstanding characteristic of this old established Men’s Clothing Store. And that’s true whether you consider the Clothing we offer you, the Prices we charge you, or the Service we render you. in selecting here because we DO know our business, and we realize that the biggest part of our business is to make and keep you a satisfied customer. For business men. New worsteds and other all-wool fabrics in the common-sense models that the business man wants to with extra trousers, at $35, $40 and $45, in all sizes, including many as large as “48 Stouts.” A style for every figure— A Businesslike Raincoat you fancy you'll find it here— and no matter whether you $65, you'll get honest-to- 1 Gabardines, and great big generous-sized imported A New Pair of Trousers will add months of wear to that old suit, Hundreds of pairs in all patterns, 916 SECOND wron ike looking suits, of Overcoat or ay $15 or value ipeords combinations of $4 to Madison” Mets Win Opener in Fast Play Six-Man Style Features; Holmes and Foyston Star; Score, 4-0 BY LEO H. LASSEN ED by Hap Holmes and Frank Foyston, the Beattie Mets wor their second straight start of the Coast hockey season at the Arena last night. Playing before the home fans for the first time the Muldoon men trimmed Victoria 4 to 0 In @ snappy battle, the Mets earning their vic- tory by outplaying the Aristocrats The cix-man game was introduced last night and it was much faster than the ol4 seven-man style. There are more solo rual and many more mubstitutions of players in this game. With the rover out of the play it ives the defense plenty to do. Holmen played a wonderful game in the net, stopping every variety of shot. His great work saved the game. FOYSTON STARTS SCORING Foyston opened the scoring in the © first period when he took @ pass from Walker on the blue line, the Blonde Wizard shooting high Into the twine, the puck going ever Fowler's guard, Foyrton tallied again a few min- inten later after a solo rush, scor- {ny an exceedingly difficnit angie | from the left wing, about 18 feet out. It was a wonderful shot The blonde captain of the Mets added the third counter just before the end of the first period when he took @ pretty pars from Riley from the sidé of the nets. Foyston shot hard and the puck bounded off of Fowler's pads into the side of the goal. FAST SECOND PEDIOD Both teams fought terrifically in the second period, the Seattle defense making some miraculous saves. Vie- toria had a slight edge in this ° Morris hung up the in the third nsession, scoring from right wing. Morris hed taken the rubber away from Wilf Loughlin in center ice and had skated down the right side of the ice. He let @ ter- rific shot go from about 10 feet out and the dise bounced into the twine. ‘The summary and Iineups follow: c. Fowler .... : Beore by period: Beattie . wiscxr

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