The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 21, 1923, Page 21

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FRIDAY, wee RIDAY, SEPTE PTEMBER » 192% =, WIDER RANGE, IS GIVEN ARMY AND NAVY FOOTBALL MACHINES | » * Horses:| Ask Mars Cassidy He’s Vet Starter Never Bets BY BOB DORMAN Sees A SPRINGS, 'N, Y has stood at the barrier Both Teams to Play Two Games on Alien Fields | Army Meets Notre Dame in New York and Yale at New Haven, While Navy Plays Princeton and Penn State Away From Home ° | “H | range in playing schedules this ye | school elevens have ever enjoyed before, anes to thou} ~ ‘The West Point team plays Notre Dame at N | For 26 years Mars ( A thorobreds away on the journey t a ry than the service has ‘spelled joy dr sy and Yew York, |Colored Boxer Will Meet Army and Navy football teams will have a wider | rub AR * * & "HOWARD EHMKE SHOWS PITCHING GENIUS WITH BOSTON RED SOX | Greg ane Tighe ey ne ‘the Good Old Da ays A STORY OF OLD | TIME FIGHTERS Duncan eld MacDonald. As Told to Tom Olsen ee ev ‘Harry Wills to Attemp t | ModernWay | j Set-Ups, the Same as/ Did Luis Firpo \Big Righthander Having W onderful Mound Season |Traded by Detroit, Ehmke Has Turned in Greatest Pitching Feats of the Season; Wins 20 Games; Other Baseball News HERE are some great pitchers in the American league this year, but Howard Ehmke, the lanky right-hander 3Zoston Red Sox doesn’t have to play seeond fiddle to of the EW YORK, Bept, 2l-After jany of them. i Fande—the journey that has even! Yale at New Haven in its two big games before the classic having tried all the wrong why CHAPTER VI. | Traded by Detroit to the Boston Red Sox, Ehmke hag Wesited "TS ee att for pom | with the Navy at New York, in the book, Harry Wills, the ¢ MM next opponent was Con Orem been the whole show with the American league cellar club. And for 26 years Mars Cassidy has! The Annapolis eleven will play Princeton at Baltimore ored freight wrestler, is going about |4¥4 Orem was a blacksmith from | He has pitched a no-hit game and followed it up with a one- went the ho away, with the’ and Penn State at State college, Pa., in its two big pre-|(,,, modern and approved mothod| Pilon, Mont. and had vom, hard hit battle against the New York Yankees, He has won 20 ORO Aut b ht ad ween me fight on | > 4 Knowledge that penny of! liminary’ battles. o¢ ettinie a crack at the world's! iver) ccocone ih Butte, and games for the Red Sox. ae his money is dey on the re The Army is partial to southern teams this year, meeting) vein thought he would give me @ good| | And take it from your Uncle Dudley the Detroit Tigers ?: | Tennessee, Florida, Alabama Poly and the Arkansas Aggie: $) Words, challenges, Inj ona and | fight | | could use those 20 games very nicely. Add 20 games to the ; "Can't afford to bet on ‘em," he! on its preliminary schedules, eae having failed to get him|,,'@ challenged ma two or three} \"Tigers’ win and take away - a 6 ‘ ht m > ros ist | aving faile 4 Unies, and I retuned did not want § flock of runs v ; says, “I'm T might t Lebanon valley end | Bethany complete the West Point 11 Hint ‘ Jack Dempwey, | to mates tis ma ah with Orem, ; that many defeats and loo} san ale tempted to g » 1 was be) of games, while the Navy meets William and Mary, Dick-] ie kas daisan » out and ariy 60 years old. Sut tel where they would be! | GRIMES BACK tng on a shad of It ingon, West Virginia Wesleyan, Colgate and St. Xavier, be-| )¥!" himself into a 4 1 where 0 Deralstent that J could nat Ehmke and Ty Cobb never | WITH CONS the big first * t tt t Ment himecié into . t 6 mes, le And it’s a tough job at the best! sides the big three tiffs listed, sar etitee ta here ! : : | could get along and the ¢ ieor- |, ss aa eth dfenvd ago Cubs, has been an to senda bunch of thorobreds awa The annual Army-Navy fuss is booked for New York GO enti wern'r * «the | ine pips feted ge with | gia Peach didn’t get the right |pnex in. the eup for a couple of yy tha perfect start. Yovember 24, |position that he was established 04 |twa-ounce slov | “You big atiff, I thought you eoula| kind of work out of Howard. | weeks after being out for a long time J A Peane |> = ‘ Sots There was fo particular Interest | Cant |" But under Frank Chance Khmke|with a sprained back. Hie hitting Ss : AS Reea a reas in this match. Hut before the fight! No one had tried that on me before | hax worked wonders in spite of the | isn't soca net up yet as he’s afraid Bame of ‘e tothe Or ‘ Owsley, the tte, | “ cgi-|club of misfits that he is pitching |to extend himse ; i > William Owsley, the mayor of Bu in the ring, and I was greatly aggi-| club of misfits th , | pohaereiteias APennem cant petty toni earn POX Rickard Gambledon ne ey ener wt ae ne ano es Se F | vd basins tapi ty lel it with my much olde: al. | twee 1@ round, the angrier 1 got.| cee le i thent;'and sometimes they can’t even oe d W too rough with my much Mdor rival. | tween ihe round, " ang “ . | wat SrART d # Jo that, ed the ‘ | Ho ap the second round started, 1] . Tc wesiatanet Argentinian an on ‘Tocetivners hing ae tse eet ad sere 21am Rdg . ; r , > t didn't do me much good, be] sailed into C od him|..4 bad start bas fust about bee i Ree: week. THN hy gaa 1 Bred Tex Rickard must be thoroughly satisfied. He placed aug I was mot expocting a. hardl cut a9 Sesae round | he SSpecttatie Maye +o yb: 4 birrier quietly, and wait patiently} } ...” tela saw hofara he was ready to flaht 4 feht hth They were in the second dl jer { the word, when they are off like al] Firpo in the ring a year before he was ready t i On So. -the x rie fat wan. baeedic tie aml some time, but then started a we ind hot. Dempsey, put him in despite Firpo’s protests, got him |/tho trial horses that we d by phiin nya Brett } understand that ome of the lead-| gergul spurt that put them jn- th jed “But you can't tel! @ horse’s qual}! whipped, and thus got the money. Luls Ange! Firpo in hiv campaign: | nhitheater: in het that the} ("8 Mshters today resort to thislrace, And it-was just their. tough n- his actions at the barrier. 4 , . Wills haa been matched to fight c te hat th | muathod Bemy Leonard, the Jight 0} Iocan tay Seno AS DOA BS Now he can use Firpo again with Dempsey a year " «| houwe Was much over $200, luck to hit a «lump the same time} ir ‘Man o' War, who I think was the ms Homer Smith at th lo Queen mi iien ‘titas. tas eanicede tastes | ‘cight champion, Js @ BOOd CXAMPIE line New York Giants did. At that | ig greatest horse that ever raced on an|| from now—and get some more money. 5) | bi) Mile hatin Rt salts sevey bh eots Yoeu Wapelenie) kaa ones ke 2. there's still an outside chance of the | American track, was a hard one to! Meanwhile Rickard and Dempsey and Kearns can be |/smitn is tho one who caused pote wi de wf: 2a result, The remarks are made with only | segs winning, altho they have font | Ee handle, | Ho was Cull of temperament, |! picking up @ little “chicken feed.” pceribad ai uAepaat G earg a PE lade bie eden on dee T oti ee Se aL Ape opponent feDt- | some precious sround during the past . impatient of restraint, and just burn sail f ntaying 10 rounds with Firpo when | *P 5 ng mad, to forget ai) the ring tac. | ira i the to get away. Time and again he A fight with Harry Wills will be very profitable. ‘Then Bouth America the On the offensive as woon ax T m4 | them, and to become worked tay into a |"°" “Se - pn ‘1 would plinge thru the barrier, and|| another one with Tom Gibbons. 7 , proc of the build u ans ure | Bet my be ariogs, te he neatly | freney In my fights, I never talked | yeac 18 CR: d { would have to be brought back: | Rickard is a great show man, just as great in his line |) pow ing made for to the 1 all of the blows Aimed atito a rival, because I thought thet |PENCH HITTER rs On the other bande as his backers, the Ringlings, aro in the cireus business, ||Tacine ‘cst wt | mi imi wan malt ek ee neat ars] Veh ar wet op some ana W Men’s é oth horse, wo' ae, vt " to knock off all f nde | as a boxer ie best way. But as 3 elda ri x urns the 4 thie troaa "And Tex, aside from being a good show man, one who i aia ho wlarted talking to me. He | there tx no rule againat trying to vex the Meteran eto utteder ey oung te chest against it, set himself like can see far ahead, is a gambler . . 1S The big colored fighter may get | "WOT at me, kide aaa daa on ad) an opponent by talking. to him, 1) 0 ee neck that onion and a runner on the mark, and wait tl He gambled with Firpo, and it was a@ sure-thing |! come piace now but he ie starting |< sah Reb Ciegh edt) bas ‘approve of the methods revs one of the yety best pinch bit-| assy c word, when ho would be away a3/| gamble, a gamble in which he stood to make big money iM |/rather tate 1 ho taken the! ° Lig ner ig hismed emer Lenanr’ and the other Mod-| ery in the big show. The legs and | quick ae a hss one show or twice as much with two shows. counsel of and done the Sn aothe slate the throwing arm may fall, but the | F t % a He won. Firpo made a good showing and can now be oe ieee rere, eae el estine 1678.1 usually, keen to thi ootwear q would ave had a fis —s end used in another show. with Dempsey | ago and’ he Sik A slee 'S d eibate 2 evil is trying ; andr . « it ve hewvewelnis 1 Pp as corers an RICK BURIED. ever’on the rest of the bunch. You |———— eset T . ] C led ; UNDER A Buaiei, : fs ls eet" TIJUANA OFFICIALS ARE Le acu oet ao me winl| EARL Bepel|77 has Meet (Parra ert al st ‘d But it ts a great game, for al |tveo 9 re ago, ts too well NEW YORK, Sept, 21--Mat- terfielder, ig undoubtedly one of the ty tadewes z| _ SWAMPED BY RESERVATIONS er’ yi ov | wor to sat tr srt teat lee | : ing that thousands of people are de vig 3H 2 0 ager for alloged violation of the the -Afistican’ league, ‘but Rice is yeas arid’ Fetaln ‘la forms nad eyed ame i ° i pending on you to give them an eve JUANA RACETRACK, Mex../the border course, while there willli, ni just bouts, more than a year|| State "boxing law, foll asleep while playing for Washington and doesn’t 4 run for thelr money, keeps your : 1—A 20th century ver-|be a heavy influx of owners who] 0", Mf. oul Mt og hh waiting for bis case to bo ealled ae bust into the epotiight ike « player | MAIaas eect wy “AHBEE : Herves tightened up, 1 have been| ~~ 8¢Pt eon uy ting [Will be racing In the West for the| MR eS vobettine In the future || in & Brooklyn police court today, IN W YORK, Sept. 21-—Ofdeial | cris gbility should. If he were 00, ° f threatening to quit and take a rest/sion of the problem confronting | 1/1 time, aro restricted only to the field ot|| He had to be awakened when his scorers often take umpires 10] yiaying on one of the Chicago or Peres ° for several years, but I guess the)"the old woman who lived In 4) ne invasion of tha Rewoomer#| ontenders that an be bullt up| | turn caine. | tank aa to their decisions Seldom, |New York clubs he would get plenty a fe Blde. ° old man, will stay with the game for}snoe, who had so many children lig traced directly to the liberality! io. championship material, Only|| _28e Manawgor of the theater for || however, do umpires have an oppor- |of publicity. read * w what to do” is jent Coftroth J which he was sparring, his man- Take Elevator to First Stop 0 i some years yet, she did not know ‘whi of President James Wood me ' hentiy to Sek that anet ‘ * [perplexing Jockey Club officials.jin fixing the big totals in mtakes | tine, eee at, Tne present) | ager and two wparsing, partners ||'N! Pul thé scertr!ob theipan. LUQUE BEST HURLER 9 bid bag B track is getting better @n4) Requests for stabiing at the track./and purses for the season, The sa pis sa i Hes nr ¢ he Pg ooh were released on balhet 625 each, ||} Nevently in & game at New York, IN NATIONAL batter, The ‘right kind of | which opens it xeventh anntal) purses will eum up $750,000 while] of yin 4 pe wd rill tig te when they pleaded not guilty to |) Howard Khmke of the Boston.Red|. Withott a ddubt Luque, the Cin- people are taking hold of racing to |season of thorobred racing Thanks-|for the six stakes there wil! bel Mri. rans titin, but Willy never] Sox sbut out the Yankees 9 to 0, al-|einnati Cuban, is the best pitcher in PS 4 day, and the touts and sure-thing| giving day,-is much heavier than|§74,500 sn added money, makine| having had a qhanes, dentrves thal lowing only one hit. It is on this nit | the National league, He oy abo gamblers are being eliminated. for any former season. There are|the grand total of $824,000, within) oo) Crack a | that th i and that’s what counts. Most of his 4 “Racing today ts becoming moresy 4s; galls at the track—enough |shadow of @ coo! million dollars. | a a8 Nate’ ve WIFE DIVORCES iaptrng esha hed disagree with the| cames have been low in hits and j and more @ matter of breeding. 1M-| considering ‘that about §90.must| Furthermore, the Tijuana meet: fer), “OU byoperly he | jotficial scorer, sagned uns, J's the pitches who porting horses from Europe has im-|10 given over an feed and “tack” ling will offer the horsemen the|* CHARLEY PICK |, Witt: the grat New york batter to} win und keep the enemy from scor- 4 proved the American thorobred. The| poms and quarters for grooms—|most lucrative engagement of the| | face Ehmke, sent a bounder to Third — best proof of that is the fact that) every year new records, which a few years ago would have been thought impossible, are being made, a “New tracks and old ones that have been idle for many years are being opened up. State legislatures which formerly frowned on racing. are permitting the horses to run. “With the elimination of the tough er following of the track, I believe that racing will once more become &s popular as it was in the old days. to stable about 900 horses, winter months. ‘The money distri Requests for stables have been! bution will exceed that of the New swamping the club officials even|Orieana and. Havana meetings, it at this carly date and It is reason-|(s sald, Horsemen realize the salu able to expect the demand wil!!brious climate at steadily increase as opening date|ideal for winter racing while the draws nearer. Many horsemen who|much shorter and casier shipment have raced at Tijuana in past sea- Havana also fayors the border sons will again be represented at! course, over YANKS, WITH FLAG CINCHED, PREPARE FOR EW YORK, Sept. 21—Prepara-|will be the Giants. tion for the world’s series, in| It is the third straight pennant which they have taken a pledge to| won by the Yanks and it is the first make a better showing, will occupy |time since 1909 when the Detroit ASBIDY is 56. For 36 years he hag been following the horses in their annual pilgrimage from South to North. His home is the hotels of the town where the horses may be racing. De | Tigers took three in a row that an d ite the monotony of hotel life, he|the attention of the New York | snecican jeague club has walked . apts ling a joke|Xankees for the remainder of the Away With three Malet shamuln ia always full of fun, telling season. The Yanks cinched the| , p to this one, or playing a prank on ships. American league pennant yesterday y While the Giants were idle yester- at one, : ‘ thi when they defeated the St. Louis) say on account of rain, the Cincin- K GOOD Browns. nati Reds had their mathematical OUTLOO: Maintaining stoutly that they | possibilities for the National league were caught last year by the Giants pennant reduced whew in a slump that came as reaction AT OHIO STATE they split even in a double header with the Sixty-five» members of the Ohio|to the pennant fight that lasted un-|iowly Phils. State university 1923 football squad} ty the closing days of the session.| ‘The Giants, to win the pennant reported to.Coach Jack Wilce Satur-/the players are one in declaring | now, have only to win seven of Gay for first practice. With a dozen veterans available, Wilce has ex- pressed the’ opinign that “prospects are better than a year ago.’ they will win the serles this year They do not care what team the National league sends after them and they express the hope that it their remaining eleven games, even if the Reds should not suffer a de. feat in their nine remaining con- tosts. WALKER DEFI ENDS TITLE Mickey Walker, world's weiter king, will fight a 10-round no-de- cision bout with Jimmy Jones, the great Ohioan, at Newark, N. J., | October 1, Elgin Watch ELE LE This Elgin Wateh is a good time keeper and is cased In the new White Gold, DOWN 50c WEEK SLIME ELITE LL Se 1104 Third Avenue WORLD’S SERIES) Tijuana makes It|- | DONOGHUE TO RIDE PAPYRUS SOUTHAMPTON, Eng, Sept Steve Donoghue, Hngland’s lend: ing jockey, will rie Papyrus in the| International race to be staged in| the United States, October 20. PAPYRUS WILL SAIL SATURDAY LONDON, Sept, 21-—Papyrus, the derby winner, which will race in the United States, October 20, will gall from Southamptonon the Aquitania Saturday. DR. LOUGHNEY’ HUMAN BAKE OVEN Quickly Banishes Neuritis for Seattle’s Traffic Chief, C. Fuqua, His letter follows: SACKAMENTO, | Charien Pick, wife of the manager} Baseman Howard Shanks, The ball struck Shank’ glove, bounded against his chost, then dropped to the ground. Witt isa very fast man. After Bhanks had booted the ball veral Umes, Witt was finally de- clared safe on # yery close play at firet. The grounder was scored « hit by the official scorer, During the rest of the game not another New Yorker made anything that looked like a base hit. Tommy Connolly, veteran big league umpire, who has been doing | |duty for 26 years in the majors and who umpired the game, bas this to way about it; “If ever a pitcher worked a no-hit game, Ehmke did against New York, If ever an infielder made an error, Shanks did on Witt's grounder, It was a great pitching exhibition that will fail to got its proper place in the hall of fame, because the scorer erred.” Bill Dinneen, former star pitcher, now American league umpire, who officiated in the game with Connolly, sald; "I have made lots of bad decisions ut never one that compared with scoring Witt's grounder to Shanks a base hit. It was a bad error on an easy chance.” Johnny Evers and Joe Tinker, for- mor Cub star who viewed the game, expressed the same opinion as the umpir Tom Gibbons— His Confession Bopt; 21-Mra | of the Sacramento Const league baseball team, was granted an in-| decree of divoree here terlocutory yesterday, CALIFORNIA LURES GIANTS The New York Giants are expected to forsake their Ban Antonio, Texas, training quarters and will do their preseason work in 1924 somewhere | The Yankees will stick La. in California, to Shreveport, Frank OM GIBBONS was talking about the fight at Shelby. “Dempsey came very near getting me in the first round,” he declared, “and no- body knew tt, “I was just getting started and | led at him when he let go at me with his right hand. “I saw the punch 1 didn't see until it was way late to duek, and all I could do was jerk my head forward in the hope that the puneh would go oyer It, “But he caught me on the fore- head and dazed me. Hor a moment or two I just had sense enough to go into a clinch, and, while 1 was in the clinch, he ¢lubbed his arm and struck me a hard blew on the | back of the nevk--the jack-rabbit punch, you know—and when he hit me this second punch it cleared’ my head and 1 was all right again, known the coi dition in after that first punch=-G heteded NIGH but | halt | coming, it o too Prank ©, Vaqua excellent reaults, so TL any get baked, 1am enjoying the bakes immensely. FLQUA, affic Dept, Write for: Dr. Loughney’s Latest FREE Book Entitled “RHEUMATISM AND KINDRED DISEASES SE AND TREATMENT T have fist gotten extraordinarily quick rellef from an attack of Chronte Neuritis, To went to Dr Loughney with my arm in a sling. T could not use it, and the slightest movement of the arm eaused drend- ful poin and suffering that would bring out bends of perspiration al over me. I inquired of different p who had been patients of Dr. hney and they sang his pr d that To went up and took th eater dats Wake ‘Sytninta| send your mame and aad, writen! CHARLEY DEAN Mine at healing ana de spntn [tue all WON’T COACH NOT Treatment Dr. Offi itt Loughney's Bake Oven left me like magic, and as of my many friends axked me report Thad, thin letter wit te the tr Charley Dean, for three years « star backfield man on the University | of Southern California yar has resigned his position as couch of the he bikes I never San Barnardino high school eleven to go into business at Long Beach. * kk relief. b PA Ae i Sie AT wy JOE HARRIS HITS BALL VERY HARD OSTON, Sept. 21.—Who is the most feared batsman in the|A Good American league? Aypecsanty, ‘or The very mention of such a ques- tion brings to mind the names of such stars as Babe Ruth, Harry Heil mann, Tris Speaker, Ty Cobb and many of the other leading bitters, However, if such a question was put to the American league pitchers, @ great many of them would tell you that no player in the league makes more trouble for them than Joe Har- ris of the tall-end Boston Red Sox. Unlike most batters, Harris has better success against a fast-breaking curve or a spitball than against a fast one, Hoe has a wonderful eye in following the curve or spitter, and hits best the style of delivery that is usually resorted to in the pinch. “Lt is impossible to fool Harris on a curve or spitball,” remarks Urban Shocker, star pitcher of the St. Louis Browns. I have much more success against him when I bust a fast one right thru, or slow up on him,” KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS EVENING SCHOOL I RE-OPENS Monday, Oct. 1,’23 ‘All AreWelcome’ eT Everything free to all ex-serv- ice men and women of the world war, regardless of chureh membership. Moderate tuition fee charged non-service students. Supplies free. The School for Results COURSES OFFERED Arithmetic Accounting Commercial Art Salesmanship Journalism Radio Teleg- raphy Auta Mechantes Welding OFFICE HOURS On Monday, Wednesd day, from 1p. m. to 10 p, m. On Tuesday and Thursday from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m, On Saturday from 9 a m. to 12 noon Vor Information Write, Call or Telephone 916 EAST MARION STREET Phone BA st-8556 —ENROLL NOW— SPECIAL! SAXOPHONE With Outfit The Saxophone pictured” above has a wonderful mu ical tone, rich and full. It ts finished in quadruple silver plate and gold bell, The o1 includes leather case, music lyre and complete outfit with instruction book and four les~ sons under a competent in- structor, ‘The all-pearl keys are skil-' fully placed to eliminate | awkward fingéring, and the perfect action of thé Martin Saxophone makes learning easy for the beginner. This is an exceptional offer on SPECIAL TERMS $154. 5 $15 Down NAVY YARD B PORT ORCHARD HULS.N Public ing Typowriting Bookkeeping Apeak- 5: , cept Bundey, ee ieee aad nday only, SPECIAL NIGHT SERVICE AUTOMOBILE "yenay ‘ , sete Sarin an Sek

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