The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 14, 1923, Page 11

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THE SEATTI ATURDAY, JULY 14 It Has Been a Great Week of Golf for the Northwest 1 close today the The amateur events Golf is fast becoming the game that John Fan, himself, can actually take part in, and participation makes followers more quickly than anything else. Too many of us are content to sit and watch trained experts compete in athletic events, while we should be doing those stunts ourselves for our own physical and mental good. ONE of the greatest golf tournaments ever staged in the West is drawing to 4 at Seattle Golf club, where the P. N. G. A.’s annual session has been in progress, in the men’s and women’s divisions will wind up the program It’s been a grand week of golf for the Northwest, and the influx of stars from all parts of the section has given the affair plenty of color. The been admirable. Just Pork and Beans BY PAUL MALLON ENTY-THREE American ath fetes next Saturday will swarm Inte the Queens clud, | show the best track and field stare ef Oxford and Cambridge how geod the United States The American team, 34 Yale and 10 Harvard track ts the best States ever Dination clash. Weak spots in the team are the two mile run running high jump, det Oxford-Cambridae feam tx not any better off two events, and that makes matters even. ‘Two former American athletes are Starring with the Oxford-Cambridge wang. Billy Stevenson, former Princeton quarter-miler, and national cham pion at that distance in 1921, wil <Ompete in both the furlong and ty quarter. Tevis Huhn. entrant in the bur dies, & an ok! Princeton man, (oo, and the British are enthusiastic over ‘Abramson, the English sprinter, One of the best developed there Fecent years, the Londen sport rn say. In the recent Oxtord Cambridge dual meet he defeated Mlevenson in the 440yard run, after Winning the 100-yard and the broad imp. ; Milligan, another © always good for 156 iille and clone to 4:70 in the mile The Americans are Wed by Chap qMAR, and Gage, quarter milere: Hut man acd Durant. hurdiers; Comins, Ea Scholpp and Douglas. The five ex > pteted to do most of the scoring composed team that the sent over for the « The only posal and the the are scene of the Olympic games Of 1923 will be finished soon at Colombes, France, The seating ca- Gaclty of the stands will be 79,000, | thé French Olympic committee as ounces. Special arrangements are being tude in the construction work to care for the comfort of the scores of ‘athletes gathered from all over the world. MERICAN professionais and am. ateurs got an oppo tise those corrugated clubs ‘American open championships wh! have been running this week at wood. prt series be staged within the haughty confines of New York It's great for the subway fans who can ride to every ike another wilt ELL, it looks vate wo fare, but it help the game United States. ‘The hack «i n Omaha, whose representative judgment is highly re pected in covery newspaper office. ‘SiN not die of heart failure or sw Jow his cizar watching the scoreboard if the Giants and Yankees win again The Western magnates are jaing to do something Apparently everyone is heiple fort the smooth machines b om the dollars which have accumu fated from record crowds both at the Polo grounds and the Yankee sta eium. A New York {x so blase and short sighted that it doesn't realize there fy anything out bey the Palisades but great open » No Metropolitan sport writer believes, will say, that the game is in jeope because New York is monop< aii the pennants But it won't be long now. York cannot continue to stage its own private world series many more years—if baseball tinue the national game—and the " belief among some of the boys that when the (ide turns it will stay turned for a considerable length of time. ‘The quicker it turns and the longer ft stays turned the better it will be for the game. OVER ANGELS SACRAMENTO, July 1 mento won from Lo Yeaterday, & to 0 The score: Los Angeles . Sacramento ..4 Batteries—Wallac there ng New to co as ¢, Thomas, Han ACORNS BEAT PORTLANDERS OAKLAND, July 14—Oakiand again won from Portland yesterday ‘The score was 6 to 6. The score: Portiand .. Onkiand .. P) Batterien—Hehroeder, ‘olwell, Mails and Read 16 Olympic Team to Stay in Chateau The entire United States Olym pie team participating in the 1924 gumes at Paria will be quartered at a large chateau nituated in an immense park overlooking the River Heine, some few miles from the stadium at Colombes, where the gumes will be held Eekhert and Two Hard OUR BOARDING HOUSE eattle course has been in fine shape all week for the best kind of golf, and the weather has Such high class tournaments as the PB, N. G, A, are the finest kind of advertising for the city, the state, and the section, and are the best kind of an inducement to incite Oscar Dub and his brothers and sisters to athletic endeavor—far too dormant in these hectic days of motor cars, airplanes, big business and fast living. BY AHERN Weeks for H ome Club Indians Biffing Alien Soil SPENT A MOGT ENSOVAGLE AFTERNOON QUT IN “THE FIELDS AND Woops WITH A PARTY OF CELEBRATED BOTANIGTS = WE GATHERED A REMARKABLE COLLECTION OF WILD FLOWERS "10 USE IN REGEARCH STUDY » AN H'LADS, WHAT MIRACLES , NATURE PERFORMS, Face Sacs and Beavers on h ugh weeks on the road # ¢ the Be the biffing Beave Sacramento and Beattie have thelr two gertes this seas teams taking the « yarda own back Seattic w neg they will fa bey take on The ft fixed » Lefty B Delt fine howeverr are bet and Wel» Hurger to Hans, reer, ¥ kiek } Hilake thru at h me. JOHNSTON AND THE UMPIRES “Dee | The veteran Seattle never turns aroun Johnston has the system first a at the 5 |aquawike on balls and strikes: hin say while looking at Turning around and lett know that business, ac the ump |the beat give you any you do. | It's the old aaying about discret fand it pays to get along DON'T FORGET CONTEST FOR INDIANS Seattle fans ah Stacy shown waienh to be player Is Getting Under Way Here Today ...' | RECORDS DON'T MEAN MUCH ‘The othér day, while gotng th Inst year's baseball record book ran across Fred Wlake's pitching marks for Rochester in the Interna. jtonal league tn 1928. Her wanked) oy), sixth in effectiveness, having an) jy, earned run # and be! }won 27 and nine games He wan wi OF w ting three Sunday mate we! the finals of the Oregon state meet are being st Monday wit! ree i amen verage wid pitches: league MEN'S ENTRIRG ‘CHAMP SURE THAT HE CAN BEAT FIRPO Ke with Fi heavyweight mri Mre oF WoOMRN's be an easy § tespects, but he looked wide ition JONION ENTRIES of times Inst ni to the | Stes description, and if he dangies his and leads with his mre, it ought seemed to me last nix lard had been alive and had any ncher, according right in a match It wil at was going hind been able with to he easy ht that if p to kayo Firpo sever steam his rye he ought to r fighter thar nuse he has n he fina that won't lefense.” terrible wallop B any good with no SALT LAKE IS AGAIN BEATEN SALT LAKE CITY, July 4 Francisco came from behind h yesterday and trounced Salt 14 to 9. | The San Francisco . it Lake Batterie McCabe, Gould all unwound. nOve ENTRIRG san TODAY'S son SINGLES ¥ Motive Lake MEN'S ft . HOE ae Langlie tin WEISMULLER HAS BROTHER Altho Johnny th great swimmer, 1 competition for nome time the ily who iw expected to ke |to Johnn's who has ability of late ETROIT, July troit-Phitade has been rene After smoldering for a number of years it has been fanned into flames t wpiking of Third Bi man Fuconda by Ty Hack in the letles were winning eriew Cobb, in g spiked Frank Baker rm. At another time rt trouble of hiw fi » the name He i Pete nother member n the fore 16-year-old in athle brot showing TOURN The Y STARTS TODAY Cal hole medal | Mt golf rney starta|to r Coronado, been some rare handieap 4. ohiia ‘The old De baseball feud intent on the part of Cobb, the thletien so the incidents a bitter feeling existed between | di the clubs regarded ed. nd Philadelphia tana b ed up over the matter that Cobb | threatened with bodi appeared in that elty Cobh am ) ‘was |on Cobb, harm when he | In number | 1 left cut dayn when the Ath and to third, h th Jack Barry ut necond, wa. of werie tection in While the affair, Cobb spent mana.unpleas jin making « play so lant hours in the Quaker city badly spiked by ¢ that he wax out! In the recent series between Phila of the game for a number of weeks. | delphia and Detroit Cobb was thrown Regardieds of whether there was|out at third base, In attempting to was under poll world te section and of California who are invading the play A that have ot i avoid t. | Dressed himacif very strongly wainat timely Ven» I Kiow “Mose WILD FLOWERS ! » You AN “THAT «RUM FLEET You SAIL AROUND With, WERE OUT I “TH WOODS PACKING BASKETS OF \ELDERBERRIES ' JAY begins today in the annua] Washington state tennis tournament to Pay His Bet _ HARBOR WILL STAGE LINKS te mptonabips ed at the Grays Harpor Country Aberdeon it a Auku nt was made he club to bat asaur bas the sand will be ading pro that they aria tain goes down ity Pat the boys it that ut on ie p ‘ome in Aber and we'll eee if and a - GOA KEG UP 6 CHE] iioWER DOSE OF “THOSE COLLIGION COCKTAILS, MATOR Be KEEP AWAY FROMIMAT RED FLAG, oR “H! NEXT BUNCH OF FLOWERS YOU'LL COLLECT WILL WAVE A COUPLE OF GIUFFED DOVES Saturday and es will be confined largely to local entries as most of the stars of the| professional, abot a Northwest are still in Portland where me Jumps in Slough Dell Loses First Game to Bengal Wihees quired He Mand the x and won ne on the bill 4m beautiful game be Letty harged ¢ laced De was tnade while h w. Toman disappeare as the last man was cal THe sconr no ‘ d sent out by the |" mmmittee. They be away well 8 entertainer “So =) FRISCO LINKS OPENED TODAY he re Lincoln Park ka In San Francisco are opened today, Mayor matructed 0 formal Rolph will perform the ceremon the touch very high. 1 the throw 16 he came into the Riconda, who han was cut on the arm that Riconda ox Cobb, feot, brushed third baseman topped on Riconda's uch & Way am to twle Serious trou erted «by of players atory ts to his Athletic wotting the ‘0 doing foot in the viniting pla way narrow! interference and umpire a ‘obb's notions merely whether intentlonut wocidental, have again atirred up the old foud that for yours Lane to Umpires MOTHER ADVISES FATHER "so you really think a machine would reduce | Where can 1 get one?* I Jes’ saw a steam roller go down ntreet.”"—Roston Transeript maw my the iking of Riconda by Cobb Stirs Old Time Feud |FENCERS WILL [Made every meeting between the two jclubs a heetic struggle. Mack's men | openty rt they intapd to make trouble, Wo shall see. A number of | players have threatened to got Cobb, but so far the confined entirely Th ma jury Kor an r efforta have been to conversation | fact that Cobb te an outfielder him almost immune from in An infielder ts in dan but It Ia rather Hto make the k unpleasant fer an outfielder If the Athleticn are to make trouble for Cobb it lookn an if they would by forced to neek m battleground other | than the ball field ‘ always Jones Leads Open Field in Big Play Atlanta Amateur Leads Field at End of Third- Round Play INWOOD COUNTRY CLUB, Long Island, July 1—Hobby dones, Thyeareld amateur, ap peared, late today, a lhely win ner of the national open golf champlonship of the Unite Slates The youngster, turning in a brililant 76 for his afiernoon round, fourth of the champion. ship, had » total of 296 for tte more This looked good enough to win, altho others, including Jock —Mutehison i Bobby Crulkshank, were wlihin strik d “mir Jock Mutetite the first day's play, fel badly and took at #2, 10 strokes Jones was better for & total of ' Crutkshe taking a 7 Jock’s Francis Y. turned 5. Walter Hagen, pretty 73 for a total t gthepet don the Jack Forrester, Ragiewood, N teed I his morn roupd, bringing his'‘total to 225. ‘orreher was the last man out in round had 6 in with the leaders wikshank, with 222 fo Jones and p third © with and ss and f A th afternoon round par. He had thts pa the who chance to & eave second place Hutehison Je in es nth firet with only the to oan EAS SESE dropped further back noon when he turned his f 49. He would have to come back in 32, three under par to the Jones. © ite ver pat © holes of the after on the t the man havi to cate nes Walt to make w Hage p five at : te er par a chances are hance Hobby the but he was f ° first fi e and hy wae eliminated as a when he did his first n 49, four over par 4 have to come after back under par, to tie Jones, imp SOCCER PAYS IN ENGLAND a money-making the Britixh slew evidenced by the fret that an English club cleared $41,910 fast Nearly a quarter million was taken in at the gate, and the club also benefited by the sale of proponit is nenEon layers. | CANADA NEEDS Reichle Stars THLE JACK Tt Bore July 14—Speaking of 1923 recruits who have made he grade in the big leagues, don't fail to include Jack Heichle, stellar outfielder of the Boston Red Box Yor Keichie, a graduate of the Unt versity of Hitnots, has come thru with « vengeance. A beavy er and an exceptionally clever man ina pinch, the former college star has done yeoman service for the Chance entourage in ite efforts to keep out of the cellar por That he ewings by the fac ing the apple arour being right up slong with the lead- Hut it isn’t only at the plate that Relchie stars, for be it known ba! mean he is manmag the 215 mark jthat be ts = pretty nifty fielder as well; gets over the territory fast, a sure shot on Oy balls and packs rifle-like arm. Reiehie comes from the same school that has turned out quite « cluster of major league celebrities, two of the tnost famous, perhaps, be. , Ing Garland (Jake) Stab, old Wash- ington and Boston American league player and manager, and Carl Lund- gren, who pitched for the Cubs back in the was grabbing pennants and world’s championships with reckless aban- *s all predictions prove very ng, Retchie has a most promising are in the diamond pas Sh PACIFIC COAST LE. Won fan Pranctecs ‘ ee oe one rey pet “4 Lake Bal NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen, iset Peers) ‘ “ os ‘ “ con Chivage “ a8 Mreoklym o..5 6.5 bin Mm. Levis . Toston Philadelphy 283 i, Philadelphia +. &, Brooklyn: 1 AMERICAN 1 FAST RUNNERS | with the Olymyp a fund already appropriated ef the Canadian xames team, Dominion ath. turning their attention to. the 1924 Olympiad. Canada| will have a fairly food team, but} there seema to be a lack of aprinters At present | TOD MORGAN IS | for expense letes are wards COMING NORTH STAR MAY COME) Tod Morgan, the hard-hitting Bureka, Cal., featherweight, in on bis to Seattle for a number of ring Ho will be the gulding wing of Dantel I way ApPeArances under Sait | | OFFEER $11,000 | AT COUNTY FAIR) Premiums and stakes totaling than $11,000 are offered at! Stockton at the second annual night horse show held in conjunction with the San Joaquin county fair August more COMPETE SOON) The world's foremost fencers are | arrivipg in L jon for the inter national fencing tourney that will be staged July 19t of 1 FLOYD PICKED JESS WILLARD Moyd Johnson, the heavyweight who waa knock out recently by Jou Willard, ploked big Jeux to atop | Kirpo in eight rounds Thursday night, 4s us 103 RESULTS Detrolt 4 BRITISH TENNIS Brian 1. C. Norton, South African tennis player and one of the British Empire's foremost. netmen, plans to compete in the United States this year, Norton wax the best Engliah player at the recent tourney Shoots Wife, Kills Self, in Bank Lobby MEMPHIS, Tenn, July 14.—C, P. Nichols, a druggist, today shot and seriously injured his wife and then committed suicide in the lobby of ® bank building here, A deputy sheriff had just served Nichols with divorce papers when he started shooting. Shelby Fight Sets One Mark The Dempsey-Gibbons fight os tablished 01 re d, anyway ‘That was for low betting. > porta in Chicago and atate that moat beta w and $10, and none were known to KO an hikh as $200, ya when “Peerless” Chance | Wimbledown j Egan Will j Play Steil in Finals |Veteran and Youth Tes Off This Morning for Amateur Title Egan led Steil when they made the turn, two up. He made the nine holes in 33, while Stell mac them in 37 Egan lost the firet and third hole, and won the fourth, sixth, peventh and ninth Egan was playing wondertul cell, while Steit's work on the putting green was faulty At the halfway mark of the IBtole finaly for the women's championship, Mrs. Sweeny, the Vancouver star, led M Hat joran of Salt Lake City, six up. Both women were playing their tee shots long and straight, but Miss Halloran's work on (tie putting green was decidedly off color, On the seventh and ninth green, she took three putts. | BY ALEX C. ROSE ‘| , BEATTLE t going to produce | L a Northwest golf champion, Lee | Stell, the erack youngster of the | North End club, will have to detent the great Chandler Egan, from the Waverly Country club, today, in | the finals of the Pacific Northwest amateur titular event at the Se- attle Goll club, which mark the ending of the biggest and best golf tournament ever held on the Pa- | cific Coast | It has been « great week of golf; the majority of the feature matches being clonely contested, with the winners baviag to shoot par er ua er to remain in the race; and the Pacitie Northwe Association and the Seattle Golf club put 1 | show tiptop fashion. When Lee Stell and Chan Egan ({ this morning on their 3 hole journey, it will be a battle be tween a youth and a veteran, and, # if these high-class performers pro- | vide the shows they have been shoot” ing thrucut the week, the result will be very clone, because they * j have been playing In the carly THs | MRS. SWEENY AND MISS HALLEKAN WIN | Mra. 8. C. Sweeny, the British Co- jtumbia war, and Miss Florence | Halleran, the Salt Lake City phe |nom who won the medalist honors, will oppose each other in the decid- jing match for the women's cham plonahip, Thin match i at 18 holes, the pair tecing-off at 10:15 o'clock this morning. Like Steil and Egan, these members of the fair wex have ocen playing flawless wolf anc their meeting today undoubtedly attract a large gallery. In the other feature event on to Gay's card, F. M. Boloom, the pride!” of Grand View and the champion, of the lower Yakima valley, will em | gage W. D. Albright, from the Lew: tuton, Idabo, club, in a 3¢-hole tit for the Pacific Northwest handicap honors. Yesterday's semi-finals matches furnished the galleries with many thrills, The Egyn-Wilbelm battie was the star event of the day and © over in royal and ancient game ctuld be seen anywhere than was on tap when these artists from Portland got under — |way. It Was anybody's match right up to the home green, the fraction of jan inch often being all that marked the difference between a win or @ ~ jhalve. Off the tee, Withelm had the advantage but the shot to the green land the work on the putting areas found Egan at his best. His putts dropped more frequently than his high class opponent's or cise there would be another story to relate, Bgan won by the narrow margin of one-up, after one of the hardest fought links engagements ever played on a Pacific coast course, and long odds the greatest golfing ex (hibition a local gallery has had the | Pleasure of witnessing. Contrary to expectations, the other semi-finals match resulted in a rum away victory for Lee Stell against — Clark Speirs, the Inglewood star, who copped the British Colambia title last month. The North Ender went into” the lead early in the game and was |never in danger, the match at the 28th green when Stell bad & lead of cight holes. Speirs’ | was many strok rounds, while Stei }he showed in h Forrest Watson, Francis Brown Dr. Paul Hunter, SEATTLE HOPE Is ELIMINATED | Seattle's hope in the women’s | vision was eliminated — y when Mra, H. G, Hotchkiss, the | tle Golf club star, lost a great to Mrs, Sweeny, three and | Twodown at the sixth greeny }tocat Hight came back like a real |champion and made the turn alk ‘square, and went into the lead BY © | winning the 10th, This advantage however, was shortdived, as the |Canadian squared matters on the j next hole when she sank a short clipshot for a win in two. Mra. L, H. Palmer and Miss Hallery an had a woll-played game in the | other semi-finals match, but the Salt lake player proved more fin. ished than the Oregonian, winning fourup and three to go. Today's final test has all the ear marks of a real match, as this Sweeny-Halleran combination hae Thad the dopesters doing some tall |figuring ax to who Is really the best | golfer of the two, * Driving and approaching evel te are the special features of today’s closing bil, and with such long bit ters ax Francis Brown, Rudy Wil: |helm, Lee Stell, Ron Stein and eral others in our midst, the should be well worth sitting 19. tg, {it | no finer dixpiay of how to play the * 9

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