The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 2, 1922, Page 10

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ton nor Oregon elevens When U.S. C. this year. urn Mor F Big Deals eat Prexy to Meet With Wolverton and Williams in East . from t y state the Philadelphia are negotiating th Bill Kenworthy for services as a player next season. eee LEO H. LASSE HE big guns the minor leagues will assemble in annual session at Louisville, Ky next week, and before the con- vention is over Seattle baseball fans may expect reports of some more deals af. fecting the In- dians. Jim Boldt, Harry Wolverton and Nick Wil- three of the Seattle will assemble there to talk with major and minor league regarding deals that will the Redskins for the I ve @ smart judge of ball 2 jas a large field of acquaint dm baseball and he will have ) track to @ lot of players lesser minor league lights have. & couple of outfielders, a and a new infield. camp in March. Louisville is Some real in news for Seattle nc that Malls is still uneettied ax ag & Coast league job for 1923. be big southpaw has been given Cleveland to make a for himself with a Coast league % » | he hasn't swung any trans- b yet. bie understood that Los Angeles only club that has made @ proposition. Salt Lake is market for a southpaw, but ¢ given Maily a tumble yet fs understood to be partial ying In Sacramento again next but so far nothing has come we HEADING SCHOOL Crawford, one of the greatest that ever toted a bat to the ts chief instructor in the base. uit school recently instituted In Los If Wahoo Sam can teach a how to massage the like he can the schoo! ix bound success, NEEDS SPEED around the kePstone sack is : need of a good ball club team became really great with ‘& g00d keystone duet Seattle came back into the league in 1919 the team has stability around second base mber the class of Rhyne and ff on double plays for Frisco summer? Remember Johnson ‘Krug of Salt Lake? Remember, ‘Fisher and Mitchell of Vernon? Tv were some combinations, they put their teams in the race i new Yankee baseball stadiam seat 80,000 people. Bt. Louis Cards are the latest to the bidding tor Joe Boley, crack shortstop. “Doc” Lavan is @s al! thru as @ major leaguer his passing leaves a big gap in the infield. in priming Gene Vaila, for the next big sale was lear that Sammy was on the market the Boston nis put in & bid for the former Be- sttle infielder, offering infielder Ford 3 Piteher Oeschger for him. FORD WINS RELAY EVENT “LONDON, Dec. 2—Helped by Stevenson and Tevis Hubn, for Princeton stars, and Mosely, for. Houth Carolina runne Hed Cambridge, 3 to 2, in their UW relay meet Pasadena Wo S the University of Southern California has played neither the Washing Comparison is scores against teams they both did play. score Turkey day it gave the edge to the Trojans. Northwestern football follower must admit that smeared the Washington State Cougars under a 41 to 3 Even the most biased 41 to 8 is much more im of | Oxford | ¢ STAR DECEMBE SATURDAY on the gridiron this season, the only basis for al Washington scored and the 18 to 0 tally that jive than the 16-18 tots igeon made against the Cougars. Oregon finishes the regular season with a record of 1,000 in the percentage table, but it must not be forgotten that Oregon played no California team Oregon tied Washington at 3-3 and Washington was beaten by the Golden Bears by a 45 to 7 count. U. S .C., on the other hand, held the Bears to a 12 to 0 score has had in years. beat Washington's weak BY LEO H. IINGTON has gone thru a toughest schedules a a team defeated three tim Washington eleven ¢ acquitted themselves splendidly, turning in the But the eleven is green. two, and if the Purple and Gold can win the Coast title in that time, then let the Seattle boys go South, a true representative of the West. LASSEN hard season, playing one of the And oregon would like to play Penn State because Hugo Bezdek u ed to er went thry. The boys be at Oregon best season Washington There would be nothing gained, however, except a lot of publicity, which Give it another HERE would be little glory in Washington going South to play State, Of course, Washington would like to get a crack at quad last year 21 to 7. es in the East this year the team Back in His Real Stride e After a mediocre off-year last season, Frank Foyston, the great center of the Seattle hockey team, is back in the form that made him one of the greatest stars in the puck game. His playing has been a revelation thus far this sea- son, and he is easily the shining light of the games played to date. i | | | | | |Morris, Walker and follo today the St. Pats here next week will undoubtedly be ready. Many Intersectional Grid Games Are Slated for 1923 * | | BY HENRY L. FARRELL | with several Southern teams 'TH Bernie Morris in the hospital with a touch of ptomaine poisoning, Jack Walker out of practice ing an operation on his nose, and Jim Riley on the sick list with an injured nose and a bad foot, the Seattle Mets have their first real hospital list of the season. Morris is said to be resting easily at the Minor hospital but it is hardly likely that he will play against Walker and Riley, however, Victoria Beats St. Patricks Puck Kings Riley on Sick List} Downed by Island Men Cougars Turn in 7 to 3 Victory Over Toronto Club CTORIA, B Dec champion St. Pats, of To ronte, ran into @ snag he lant night when the Vietoria eam bowing « fine of od nmed the visevor | ‘The play wax even the first period, but then the champion Bea ponst ail Next season |, Harvard already has announced! hockey club weakened and thé probably will nee ax many, if not [that Princeton will be on the 1923 !home boya went into the load £2 ROMAMY iD ves an soahy, If BOL Sciggule anid that wpolied a tot oC| warey Cameron, the vetorin de than the past season 1 wames| run for the scandal mongers. Enough | fense man of the champlonn coord . ; | dates on the Harvard schedule nit three goals for Ble team. wi Opposition of the “big three” to in-| heen announced to indicate that the! Dunderdale, Oatman, Freda boas tersectional games hax been proved] Grimson will | to be but a rumor and the stand of | western tearns ve no gy }and W. Loughlin figured in. the and that Centre will seoring for the Cougars War Over Draft Is in Sight 'Three Big Minors Refuse to Re-Establish Draft System BY HENRY L. FARRELI N** YORK, Dec or aga the draft will be one of the invuee when the major league owner and the minor league magnates get ether in their annual winter ses ally the major league owner et the pick of at “0 of and oby to get high class. | ‘That is the whole argument in the | draft | | THREE AGAINST IT The Pacific Coast league, the American ciation and the Inter nationa: ue have been able to defeat a moves te by the majors to force them to agree to a modified form of the draft Aw far ax the Pacific Coast league is concerned, it already has voted against any restoration of the draft In the past two years the ( magnates have been paid close to a half-million dollars for players, and they want to continue having ar open market for their players The American ai ation inf vitally interested, ex ‘ the moral effect that it might have in holding up the prestige of the roinors. The association hasn't been | developing players for wera) years | | DUNN STARTS | SOMETHING Sines Jack Dunn has agreed to and has started breaking | powerful Baltimore club, the Inter | national league may not desert the ranks of the antidrafts, ax was threatened last summer Peeved because of the siump in buninens 1 by Baltimore's an nual feast o' | pennant, session and warty running away with the met in special 1 Dunn if he didn’t break up his team they would vote |to restore the draft | Baltimore sold Bentley to the | Giants, but the other stars are still jin the fold, and if Dunn doesn't | show that he has plans for disposing | Of them, the Internatic | will pull away from the “Big Three.” the probably | MAJOR- MINOR WAR Looms Uniens Commiarioner Landis has developed plans for an amicable set tlement of the controversy, a major hinor war may develop at the meet Ebbets, the owner of the would like the draft price reduced to §7 1 of $750, wanted the majors to boycott the minors last year, but it wag learned that some of the mag club, who nates feared they would have to class Ebbet's team as one of the minors 1 they wanted to retain his friendship. Ban Johnson, the American league president, has been doing a lot of talking out in the West at bombs that he is going to throw, ete. Per haps he has a piece of H. BE. that will blast the minors out of their duxouts. Johnson's campaign, how es seems to be against Commissioner Landis, and if they ever go to It out in the opening it will be an Interest jing bout to watot Johnson, no doubt, could recruit nome ie orn g the American | gue club owners if he went out > get” Landis, but he wouldn't get much help among the National league magnates The American league boss is still said to be suffering from the wounds sustained when Commissioner Lan dis had the audi purse for the ti series and dispow of it without say ing @ word to him or John Heydler the National league orexy Another Grid Star Fails to Produce on Major Diamond the Western conference will be| not be on the achedule known today Notre Dame and the Army prob-| »Visteris Rébeaise Another famous football star sper: a the A Fowler onc # failed to make the eague hae attitude of either group is of | ubly will in New York, if thelc. Loughiin ae os a " at : ca tu fe leag tle consequence, however, because| west Point officers will let the ca-| ehlin hens , aseball grade. ‘Tom Davies, an the “big three” does not monopolize | aets go away from home for three | Mt™ Right Wing All-American halfback with Pitts the East on the gridiron and there| games, It is permitted at the naval| mene” cemer |] burg two: years ago, has been |are many good teams in the Middle | geademy latenaaee P e|] farmed out by the New York West outside the conference | With both the Gtant and Yankee | Dunderdate ub Giants to Toledo in the American Southern teams also becoming | stadiums opened for football next {Anderson ub association, Davies is an all | e draw € « the Kaa a sty ah Rar rounc ertor er on th i es Srawing sards jn the Kast fall, New York may get to see some als: Wiest “pane ) Senne | Iowa, part champion of the West-| of the biggest game» of the seawon, |Cameron, 6:0 lotorla, Fredoriokaon jern conference, can have two games| he Army Navy go N almoat eure {20m Mocking, 18:31, Second period | nd AVY game is almost sure | 7" Meeker jin the East next season, a, Dun 18; 4, Vietoria Yale ha#|io be played at th offered them @ date and West Point Yankee stadium. |ontman, 7 would like to have them visit the| ie Py \from Prede corte, | plainy. Aw there in a “gate” at Yale] ROSENBERG IS fremnas i and only expense money at West| at ne A yg Fry yng oe Bia dared GIVEN 30 DAYS | ‘er, »» make the choice. NEW YORK, Dec. 2—Dave Ros. | utes If Princeton invites Chicago to! enberg, former world middleweight | h* sry \ continue relations, it is probable that | champion, of the New York commis: |shots; Bt. Patricks one 8? free lanother two-year game schedule will) sion, was et down for 30 days for Keferee — Micke Jon | be reached, but it is understood that | fouling Mike O'Dowd in their recent . |the Tigers are not considering Chi-| fight. Rosenberg was suspended, PROVIDENCE, it. 1 ale 9 on their schedule |previously for now fighting O'Dowd, | die Shevlin, Roxbury, middleweight, BEARS WON'T CHANGE THEIR V.RDICT: BERKELEY, Cal., Dec. 2. —Petitions from alumni that the University of Califo) jfootball team reconsider its refusal to accept the invita- tion to play the post-season game «at Pasadena New Cornell may be invited to take u!and now he gets theair for fighting | won a 10-round decision from Phi] Years day won't change the place on the Princeton card, along nim, * | Bloom, New York, attitude of the university of- to hold up the | nes of the world’s | F Oregon wants the assignment, let them go, if they get the invitation. Let U. S. C. have the honor (7) that they Penn get. It would be more to the credit of Washington to refuse this year and as real game as champions of the West. that only wait until, Columbia Showing New Series Today of Fistic Movies / series of the boxing classics of the opens at the Columbia thea Reginald Denny ts lead again in the H. ©. Witwer's stories The new Pushers here today. the playing reated BIG TEN IS MAKING OUT | SCHEDULES Behind care | | (CHICAGO, Deo. 2 fully guarded doors, loonference coaches today Western for 1923 Several difficulties were way of a quick solution of the prob lam, but coaches declared that all difficulties would be quickly ironed out Altho Chicage conmin have been the Michigan and Wis best drawing cards in the Big Ten during recent years, no less an authority than Hurry Up” Yort, of Michigan, says that next year Minnesota and Ohio State must be given grave considera- tion Minnesota has at last obtained « real athletic organization,” Yost said ‘They bave the basis for # real team next year. Ohio will also be heard from.” SIKI MUST BE GOOD BOY NOW PARIS, Dec. 2—"If he is a good boy meanwhile.” Battling Siki can have a new license as a boxer when his nine months’ suspen h he serv the has announced CHET THOMAS WITH OAKLAND | cravei. 1,500,000 feet of lumber, of Chet Thomes. formerly catching! Which 21 miles of oak planking in the International league star with Cleveland and Boston in| WeMt into the seats alone next year, succeeding Chief the American league, bi been ateenat An idea of its size may be gained Bend e for « trial with the Oakland Coaat-| from the following | er. er for next year. He has been play-| It has a seating capacity of 63-| Abbott was offered the Se- pic! Valley league in California re | ehird i & tlle before Harry Wolverton was cently Pee Nansen» | Tt, apreads over an area of 10/ Signed. — Abbott w IMORAN LEADS (“its main entrance is 89 feet nigh t. worked with gem CENTRE AGAIN DANVILLE, Ky 2—"Unele | Charley” Moran has signed a new five-year contract to coach football at Centre college. Plans have been approved to build a stadium to his | honor at the ; ‘GIANTS SIGN college NEW YORK, Dec, 2.--Rafael Quintanno. nh shortstop on with the Havana Reds, and G. H Redfern, collegian from the North Carolina university, both shortstops, have been signed for trials with the New York Giants for next spring HOQUIAM FANS TO SEE KRACHE HOQUIAM, Dec, 2-Two hundred Hoquiam fans are planning & to Tacoma Thursday night ser Ted Krache, undefeated Hoquiam lightweight, fight Morgan Jones in a six-round tus in the City of recently stopped here to Ve Destiny Krache Jones in three rounds ficials, according to reports |given out here today. The Bears have been dis- jbanded and have — broken training and as they played 'a hard season and for two | successive years trained thru the Christmas holidays, the couching staff won't con- uld Hold Empty Glory for Washington would be turned into a boomerang if MINOR LEAGUE MEETING IN LOUISVILLE HOLDS BASEBALL STAGE | was good enough to le | Pinnell and Phillips each received a turkey for their efforts. The Leather | dorea | Columbus Team Has Failed to Win Big Tem Confer- up his! out the Big Ten football schedule | in the! lingo its towers and the last scaffold boxing federation | pus, | | SHORTSTOPS |" gridirons, and an indefinite num. OW | acre the stadium proper. of the Port Hope team, is given a In case the open ends of the/trial with the Calga Tigers of stadium are ever closed by addi-!the Prairie league. | Monal seating facilities, it has been | | estimate Washington was defeated are scared stiff they won't Coast champions, they can play in a post-season no excepto 1p his professional duties at the University Golf club to take up lar position at the San Antonio Country club, Texas. Weather ms in Texas were to Chet’s liking, so his stay there was short. From San Antonio be went to Chicago, where he has successful time during the past seven years, operating very had « very three indoor golf schools These schools are still doing business, but Owner Chester Horton is in Seattle, arriving here last Saturday for a stay of at least six weeks, during which he will assist Bob Collins of the Collins Indoor Golf school in the Cobb building. Dering bis long experience as a golf professional Horton bas turned out many star players and on several occasions helped the great “Chick” Evans to improve his game when he (Horton) was in charge at the Edgewater club, where “Chick” was then toting caddie bags. ‘The bogey competition at Inglewood last Sunday resulted In a tie) first honors, J. Horner and L. Fifer each finishing six up on the olonel.” = Mrs, BK. Kne six dewn to bogey, but that 4 the women's field. That “six down” brought is Horner and Fifer received for their “six up.” a gobbler just the same a R. Pinnell, with a 77-11-66 score, won the medal play competition put on by the Jefferson Golf club, last Saturday and Sunday. Sid Phillips came next with a card of 87-18-69. A large field of starters took part. The holiday attraction, a match play against bogey competition, at the Seattle Golf club, last Thursday, was won by M. M. McEiwaine with a card of five up. The fine weather brought out an unusually large crowd, there being over 50 out to try their skill against “Old Man Ohio State’s Big New Stadium Has Been Jinx ence Struggle This Year in the New Stadium; New Field Seats 63,000 People; Some Figures on It COLUMBUS, Dec. 2.—A colossal structure of gray con- crete, it stands, quietly awaiting the coming winter sports and another season on the gridiron. It is the new Ohio State University stadium whose offi- cial opening was marked by the defeat of the Buckeyes at the hands’ of Michigan on Oct. 21, 19 to 0. a That was merely the beginning, for Ohio State lost every © fe conference game of the Big Ten staged within its walls this F season. From a title-holder in past seasons, the scarlet and gray eleven had descended to a receiver of sound wallops its first year in this graat amphitheater of the middle west. The size and importance of her stadium has not been diminished by | Ohio State's poor record, however The last concrete has been poured Sign Abbott Manager offered job with Seattle will lead Reading club in International. ings taken away, leaving a mam moth horseshoe anding in an open field back of campus buildings. Here are a few of the statistics compiled on its construction by the E H. Latham Company of Colum: | the contractors, who were <j the job for $1,341,000. omplete it, it took: 4,300 tons 14,000 tons of cement, 17, 33,000 tons of PENCER ABBOTT, one of the most successful man- agers in the minor leagues jof recent years, has signed |to manage the Reading club awar T of steel, 000 tons of sand, success in the Western and | Southern leagues. JOE GORMAN | VS. LEOPOLD Joe Gorman and, Joe Leopold, crack Coast featherweights, clash in one of the best Portland ecards of the year in a 10-round bout in the. Rose City Monday CALGARY, There are 82 other entrances. Fifty-two” portals the lower deck and 29 on the upper deck feed 112 aisies so that the stadium may emptied in seven minutes. Its ne is 70 feet in diameter, Ther 21,000 seats in the covered por on de are tion In addition to the varsity football field within the horseshoe there are 100 tennis courts, 23 baseball lots, tracks with 100-yard planned for the field lying outside ber of cinder straightaways recreation Dee. Hills, crack amateur center foe man 2.—Wilfred sd that the entire seating ca pacity could be made to approach 100,000 people. ARMY AIMING AT BIG GAMES WEST POINT, Dec, 2.—The Army eleven wants games next fall with | Yale, Iowa and Notre Dame. An Oc: | Frank Farmer ts how tober date has been accepted for the| [gure out Yale game and negotiations are pending with Lowa, Not Dame,} lst year, Johns Hopkins and North Carolina Rercott, the Monroe logger wht koing so well lately in North= welxht circles, meete a tough hut im Frankie Britt jn Tacoma ‘Thur day. He jumped intd the semi-windup which is some pping. sierra sider it. Fred Zwickey and Oakland Bill Harme Jare settling down to the training. Sentiment here is that the! for heir ouheround bout aes University of Southern Cali-| Peer ® fornia is a cinch for the hon-! ors following their over- whelming defeat of Washing- ton State Turkey day while Oregon and Washington, fought to a 3-3 tie, | Johnny Dundee must be wat. He took a beating. trom est wat a vamed Hart the other might in

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