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eninge seit enn sein nase PAGE 12 JATTLE STAR MONDAY BY HENRY L. FARRELI i] to fight { : 34 remy . « : I t " } ** Uncle Sam I EPTEMBER 24, 1923. in Big Share of Huge Fight Purses °.° i Depending on Wilson Everett Boy Should Fill in Halfback Berth on Varsity Squad CINDE ~ IT DOES ¥ { NOT MATTER “10 ME } | WHAT TIME You COME || HOME AT NIGHT BUT } I WISH You WouLD | PLEASE “TAKE OFF OUR ROLLER SKATES! “ | A BT QUIETER = | at hana football at Es ; like a million dollars in the fros game with Pullman here, st sea son. Whether or not Wilson can make the grade a oO t onfe . player * tok big fellow has had rien®e, and he k i“ about. With anc the backfi: ‘work uy he has the of tur the rk are taught } Tf Fred Abel ts the regular ter, Wash triple-threat mer back fh as Abel also The year’ oye, Marston Is do Abel a a4 ee arnwn ane! Winner of Wilson to kick thru and if he does| Of course there is the fullback job 2 $ ~ “AGO, Se t4.—Jes Sweet- to fill, but flanked by such men as os AC i RO ster carrie als of the i i will have an ordinary et by at National Amat Golf to! Flossmoor club to the imitting defeat to Max of Philadelphia here 1922 champion was stymied 38th green and lost a five-foot ost him the ma THAT HE WAS IN BAD WA ad Ted at the ACK DEMPSEY, in Chicago the | ™orning round, twoiup bee Marston WYO other day. acknowledged that he sachowacmiyt pi ‘a cs ea Was in serious trouble tn the first ym there to the finish the match Tound of his fight with Luis Firpo. pad nigh Dae kot “IT can't deny what 100,000 per. $0ns saw.” he said. “I was in trou- ble, and very serious trouble, in that TOM GIBBONS first round. "When the gong sounded for the WOULD LIKE | nd of the round. I didn't know whether I was afoot or horseback FIRPO “It was all I could do to find my TO BOX igorner, I didn't really know what} in Tom Gibbons in Los Ang eee ne, Untill somebody "Goused “The only thing I want more ee Barb cold sleek eet gear ‘than a match with Firpo is a return es ee po wae | mate h Dempsey Worse off then I, and I was all right |™4\0m ° bee wi as thas again.” }1 am too small to fight a big bear| oes. like Firpo—that he would kill me| AIRPLANES TO But those, peugle thought COMPETE SOON tii: sicod no chance with Demp ‘Twenty-six army airplanes. wall| sey—that I would be knocked out in Participate in the international air|a very few rounds r e held t. Louis fro “I don't wish to 3 Ott. oh Mega tiie ave igo pale my business, and I know that 1] , piloted by officers of the regular | could box all night with a ponderous army and the other by a lieutenant | man like ot tark yeaa teh aa ees reeetve corns Viera eh |on September WHAT'S WRONG, ANDY? —|_““A8 between Carpentier and Firpo) have a decided adv 4 SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 24.—The |#* 40 opponent Tl take Firpe.” — | nog nang University of Cualffornia arsity football team defeated the Califor /' VERNON WINS ma Alumni eleven here Saturday, game. LOS ANGEL! rday. The svores irst game P | Portland eeeeeceneeeres B 13 Ha 0: I: + Fi ht |Vernon ..., VE OY Pg cries Jack Dempsey was not the || st only member of his camp who |} engaged in a fight on Sept. 14. |) Pc Johnny Dempsey, his brother, || Vernon : 6 Td engaged in three due to the excitement attendant and Onslo “arson upor the world’s championship || sirname wick Kearns, manager ot | HARRY WILLS ckert and Onslow; k and Hannah ‘ond game R; H. 5. ome with a policeman who be- came too officious as the Demp. sey party was making its way to the ring. Then, between the first and Hecond rounds of the big fight, || Kearns, excited and badly wor- ed, collided with Jerry Luvadis, the trainer, and swung one on hia chin. THURSTON Harry Wills, the negro heay weight title contender, will meet | New York Sept. 27, LIPPE IN TUSCON Al Lippe, noted boxing magnate ond one-time manager of Abe Attell, is in Tuscon, Ariz, to spend the hoping to better his health HICAGO, Sept. 24.—Mont big ean Kid Gleason of the Inague twirlers are poor ned Ago White, Hox considers 4 Vhureton one of the best rele batsmen, But this does not Loic iatie i pitehers in the big show, Had hold good for Pitcher ‘Thurston he a better fast ball he would of the Chicago White Sox. be @ regular starter for the He's such # dangerous man at White Sox, He has a most de- the bat that the White Sox are ptive: fadeaway, a good cilrve and a fine change of pace, but werlounly thinking of converting hin fast ball lacks a bit of the him into an outfielder or trying old him out a1 first base, Thurston is the pitcher who Washington (OUR BOARDING HOU N {YeX, I HEARD \ OuT WHAT COMING OFF LAGT NIGHT WHEN HE CRAGHED Ne 4 AT FIRGT L THOUGHT rr WAS A FoX- a HOOPLE | YoU GOUNDED 20S TCARD « (7) TRVING" RUSH “TRN “TO COME IN SF B Cine RATTLES IN WITH ‘ MILK BOTTLE [Sports Told in a Line » “W" crew cox, returns from East, Soccer meeting at Chamber of Commerce, & p,m. } ¢ Waterman joins John Pepe as Tacoma ring p Seattle lost to Oakland Saturday, Bast beats West four out of five tennis matches Saturday, Glenna Collett, Canadian golf queen, beats Mrs, Gavin two up. Ninety-eight frosh turn out at Idaho for football. My Dear One wins $10,000 purse at Toronto, Greb-Downey fight at Cleveland Sept. % Willie Ritola wins two-mile Manhattan steeplechase, Joe Lynch ys. Joe Burman in Gotham October 12 California varsity beats alumni, 3 to 0, Saturday, George Dauss, Detroit, holds Boston to two hits Saturday, Live badger given to acific college * Davis, Columbus, makes 46 horseshoe ringers In 58 pitches. Airplane races booked for St. Louls October 1.3, George Lampson vs. Joe Martinson, heavies, at Portland Friday, Close Game Expected to ** im nmm| Open E rep Football Year: ACK HOHENBERG gue is all set for a big season with tent to mat Broadway and Ballard tangling in the first encounter | “it: i's: HE High Se pal le at Denny field. Neither school looks to Hsp emia antage in this opening tilt and to all ap-|cooper. ‘tome. it should be a good battle, Coach Pease has a green team, but the Bengals are handi-|—Welsh (0 Jonnate capped by injuries, so the honors are even, 3 to 0. A crowd of 17,000 saw the BOTH GAMES | !o: The possible of Capt. Frane, owing to a shoulder injury, was not Sept. 24—Vernon| enough grief for Coach Lichtenberger. won both games from Portland here) Lou Hull, is out with bad bruises and two or three charley Hull is a hard plunger and is just getting on his Culliton, substitute full Now his fullback, , i8 also out with injuries and| 1 tooks tke Buse Artott’s ere ee lit Fob as if Guy Meister may be switched to fullback with | har'bee sone cut bc ran Butler and Linder at the half- This is all con- Deckman | Called upon to’ pitch the ble ¢ back posts. “ On the following day MONA Gevssessesveers d 6) -8|Jecture, tho. four other /ago, With hin hitting Gar. |*bould atick to the outfield and perfect | 3 | hin fielding. Ho can hit well enough to} Id and Franklin locking horns in| wet by in moat any league. | [schools will awing inte fist fighta—all Batteries — Yarrison, Sutherland] hoard decision ind Whitney. | Gideon Roosevelt | |lete, meeting West Seattle in the second, | Russian gentleman with riding ability when hook up with the Indians, Dempsey, engaged in two fights, | TO BOX SMITH. fullback or left end any | ¢ boys and girla will be | Homer Smith in a 10-round bout in I, » busy trying to figure the |* tfield- Franklin tussle looks | ) but Coach Brigham's stars | socks on the chin from San Francisco may fall down and let the Quakers |“urink the pant w shod, atrongent |far as the Solona were concerned lineup In the field, since thers have consequence, | Veit. Coumbe, Salt welghtened ; MAY quit HURLING: retired the Philadelphia team on nine succesalve strikes inning, all of the pitches BOUIN HOLDS WORLD'S MARK DAN McMILLAN The World's record for the longest run in one hour, ® good hitter and » Sox lack a punch, ot all surprising it h team tried to use » pouition where Bouin of Wrance, » wolf enthusiagta, Walter Mails Twirls Oak- land to Victory in Sec- ond Contest in South «e mound, won the first game hed Oak m Yar Oakland Innings pit Blake 4 jDite—Latayette 2, Mall Sacrifice hite—Hrubake Double plays to Tobin: Baker to Brubaker; Maderas (unassisted) ‘5, Umpires Carroll and Casey haa beon doing duty in the ow }regularly lately, and when he haw a heaver doesn't look like he did a y lity Arlett 1 Strand pushed Halt 1 for the seanon, of his great ability, Los fans aro hollering for a new and ara: thie It} | | UDR: Altho Sacramento took some awful Merlin Kopp. Played brilliant ball, and the Hitle sao outfield atar was the whole che may be ® goofy lefthander, ont @ harder worker In the league th Of | thM™ same fellow, What he lacks In tal at [ent he certainly makes up for tn hustle Walter Golvin has been doing most of the firat bane playing for Ta A, recently Art Grieg tn Junt about thew. | COULDN’T PLAY J.| Dan MeMillan, the former Univer: sity of California tackle and crew captain, was unable to compete in the Alumnl-Culifornia football game registored | last Saturday because of injuries he received in early practice, for Indians} Were pce tiarticonlp yD Ea 8 | & The, my a es (/npopular | penis = |B: regitey |the 28th ho day, hin cup of § Neverthelens, the f rule guther, the sound pannir meet, at the Seattle Golf club course, stymie to show th putter. |well so long as it is kept within) “1 nope not. bounds of consistence consistengy on the and b rule is no rea Stu likews association hi |tions of the country are playir another home ||!) ke, and raised /survivers of the sectional qualify Angels have hopes of| {ting young Adama from the Chicago | peating the obing, Gel, It was Luque win t SALT LAKE IS sient coor TWICE WINNER SALT LAKE CITY, Sept, 24 Salt Lake won both games from . Wally indians raliied behind Kawards and! Hood hit three home runa in. the won the second game, elahtly in the Phils, € tot Salt barest, Matlin heavywolght, knogk: ed out Maroll Netlos, form champion, in the first round with! gait Lake Nght to the body and @ left) Wallace, Hannah and — Byler to the Jaw, Gould and Peters, Oregon Aggies Register Crack Prep Grid Player Wesley Schulmerich, star halfback of the Columbia uni versity of Portland last season, has decided to enter the Oregon Agricultural school. He was one of the most- sought-after players in Coast prep circles last season, Notre Dame, Harvard, Cornell and several other big schools making him overture He weighs 210 pounds and can do the 100-yard dash under 11 seconds in his football tog Schulmerich won't be eligible for Pacific conference competition until 1924 as he must serve this season as a frosh player PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE in Golfing jis 34 BY AL Stymie—W ball Hes in the your opponent's | Salt Lake 4 of your putt.” endy golf and righ T new champion a top-| NATIONAL LEAGUE and worthy of the hor Wan heat the ear ~ York , ‘ Bobbie Jones and|©* ulmet; and when he lifted |/(ijcage” crown from Sweetser’s brow on). Louts . final text Satur. | Brooktyn was filled; but, | phi t that the aty: al took much of the| fine performance. | in American golf t# ad: ular and at ions, or wherever golfers | AMERICAN LEAGU nile come in for Won St. Loule 9 (second game In the recent Pacific Northwest saw enc unfair al golf devote gh of the | onic ws of the | Pi Bos | unquestionably unsettled con. | RESULTS 10 rule is} Was 1 concerning the stymi es nd the sooner the Only plishes {t altogether 6, Wash ountr games played. GAMES THIS WEEK | Vernon at Se certain official quarters, the} Onakiana Portiand eve Salt Lake at San Francisco, till exists that, whatever in| Salt Lake at : side of the Atlantic) © pense Gt 108) Anema iin hand with the pol eat Britain xe fot: XS « JACK ISN T re we have sanctioned our Schenectady putter, barred f QUITE SURE competition In England and Scot land. As the result of this legisla WHAT IT WAS. tion American players, when they go abroud to compete in championships | PACK DEMPSEY or international match are com to fall back upon the old style Being bound to tradition ts all very | laugh: There putter” problem |to fight,"t why the United him out, Dempsey replied: olf is making itself felt in no uncertain | anyhow, a shove or a punch, when manner along these lines, and golf|two men are as close together as we | rul be unless extremely blind, should | were, is practically the same thing ab ARE PLAYING" 4AM COUNTRY SUB SOLONS IN TIE champion: wn | bent prof golfers start the WwW */ qualifying round for the Tey TILT | ITH Ss. F. ship of the Professional Golfers'| SACRAMENTO, Sept, 24.—San rancixco won the first game from © today, Sixty-four players from all se Sacramento here yesterday, § to the tournament They are the ih urpaman ah r the score stood 6 and 6, [ing rounds which were adopted] Scores (Cirst_ game): TH. E. |this year for the first time to cut] ei umonto -c. i down, the fold: of entries Mitchell and Agnew; Prough, 5 E Canfield and Sehang. (Second game) RH. B, . | San Francisco sere 6 O11 Major Talk | stam ve MoWeeney ‘. let t m1 win andthe Rede outa | fleld, Thompxon and Koehler, ame off the lead Of the Glante ti Wt pltehing the Tray teh and € Lox Angeles here yestord: ia a&econd game, Four runs « the Cubs to beat! Los Angeles. Lake vos Dh, eet 6 9 NEILES KNOCKED OUT ry NOMH, Sept, 24—Marlano Bar Peter envh Los Angeléa vos ve A 18 70.614 4 496 459 Cleveland 10 ( first Lap 9 (nec jbut t | better schedule break. They play the | , asked in Chicago | ¢ if he thinks Firpo will be a bet- |ter fighter in a year, replied with a| That guy is as tough no’ right now as any man I ever want ise the Royal and Ancient| ‘Then, asked if Firpo had knocked Golf associations keep the stymie ‘ociation +should do} “1 don't know. When a man is fighting on the ropes, as I was, he This is an age when public opinion | may be hit and not know it, and, | by eee! a | Golden Bears in action in this section | this year. | to wee the warning and! “Tt went ou thru the ropes, that's | WATCHING | hoed it, the point, and I'm here to tell you that a man has to be pretty fast and . pretty strong to put me thru the! Diamond Dust |PRO GOLFERS im sige" 5,008 ih" ( j comes here with #2 excellent reco: |a few vete j started the jthe Uni “| day. Shea, Hodge — and/ Ritehie; Hughes, Yellowhorse, Can.) red on a ratly in the| Scores (first game): FR. HM, a! ‘Thompson, Wallace and Rego, | Duchalsky, Singleton and (Second game) RH, RB, BY AHE aN) Preliminary Grid Games Open Saturday I COULDNT FIGURS * Seattle Breaks ‘Been: With Oakland | Washingto® ® Books Two Grid Tilts Nearly Every Major Team Will Swing Into Action This Week me Oregon will take c Salem while the Stanfe Pullman on the same | LOGAN GREAT WING Res AN Clara colle ‘ored two touchde am, was one of in st football last but ai dn't get due credit be cause he was playing with a minor college. Logan play for the Olympic club team of San Francisco n. this se 8? 423/ QUARTERBACK | “Scoop” Carlson” ts” the regular quarterback for the University of California in practice sessions now. he Everett boy called the sign: aturday in a workout that the Bears had with an alum gregation. } Carisoh is an experienced man, wl teachin h bali under Enoch Bagshaw at Everett, where he starred for four years, NO OFF DATE FOR | WASHINGTON | To show that Washington's f ball schedule this year is the tough jest in years the Purple and Gold jeleven is calléd upon to play on 10 consecutive Saturdays without a sin- [gle week’s rest. And every tough jteam on the Coast is scheduled with | the exception of Idaho and Stanford. | BETTER BREAK FOR IDAHO Last year Idaho played every ma jor engagement on a foreign field, season the Vandals got a Oregon Aggies at Boise and Whit- man and Montana at Moscow. They ake a two-week's trip to California to wind up the season Against Stan- ford and U. 8. C. CALIFORNIA COM TO PORTLAND California comes as far north as Portland this year, playing Washing: }ton State at the Rosi him out of the ring, or merely shoved | Rose City, “They tangle on October id you can count on a flock of Seattle fans tak- ing in the big game, because it will jbe the only real chance to see the EXENDINE of W. 8. C., fans thruout pea lyr | the pra binds ad are watching W, 8, 3. this y as Coach Exendine from Georgetown university, whi he had wonderful success. He g a better schedule break than the | Staters had last year and has quite ans to work with, ‘CARLSON PLAYS The second game was called in) FOR CHAMPIONS the twelfth because of darkness, as Glenn “Scoop” Carlson, former Everett high school football.’ star, game at quarterback for versity of California Satur: Nichols, Dunn and Witter completed the backfield, WHY SHOULD M SeCoMH BALD? wom NT Information given ae ‘oftices or by mail, Addre and stamp your return, A. Parke Male’ ny "Scalp Speelatist PARKE'S wie REMevy 108 A Metropole Bldg, 214 Jefferson St, Just back of L. C. Smith Bldg. Card Tables, Pool, Cigars, Candies, Soft Drinks, Fountain Lunches Pay Checks Cashed