The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 25, 1923, Page 12

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PAGE 12 THE SEATT oT TUESDAY, SEPTEME * Little Chance of Harry Wills Ever Fighting Champion Fi BY HENRY L, FARRELL win the championship ¢ EW YORK, Sept When th decided that know at has slipp IN Harry Witls bad no legal rights to force his way Into @ contest for the world’s heavyweight chamy ship with Jack Demp t what little chance t Wills may eld wu a martyr, tp th stances seemed t t against his chance the champion and a fort but when the ¢ opnsidered nately, t ig colored fighter no one to blame but hin eed or t He had many supporte » the time he sought t ‘ ed out to build him prevent the Dempsey-Firpo fight at a time when all the ally in the bout arrangments had been eted and when Tex Rick ently decided then that ard had spent more than Q00 in pret 1 and that was good f rangements. It placed him in tho position of a be © Was offered $1 sport and it cost him a lot of public sympathy ne of the bouts on the Had Wills been that aggressive in forcing the issue and Jeas Willard appeare a year or twu ago he would have had a crack at Demy er ng that he was ey be Firpo and he would have hid a better chanc hing t ked like a preliminary Graves Is (OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHE = Mae Star Gridders Missing | This Year Valuable — 7. <a eget Oars . ; ~\ . gs Accents DONT BE INSINUATING WA:MA «THEY Look as Coach BREAKING IN “THESE pig hse ay i ccelay Bina. teers MORNE URE DSKINS ( ‘OMIN OM TO FINIS Jos SAM! i) CARPE OF RYE BREAD Now, G I | E | I JEW SHOE F '. mci 4 ’ tant Football Tutor i NS BEATER AS NOU DO! = MACK L LET BUS WERE You OUT. BROAD 1 * E ONLN WORE 'EM Ace Is Great Help to Head IMPINGE” Wh ‘eM? | Lo Wo A LAUNCH Cosch Bagshaw Tiree come net DAY AN'“TH! LEATHER IN) | 0 f , ice, | T hr ee Week BETWEEN INNINGS. Football EM AIN'T ANY GooD & Tubby") Graves, the LCAN Do & BUCK AN i : | VA witg wrthour rT a ae eye Jah wrt" | Play Wind: OBSERVATIONS ort BASEBALL DE; | Fame Is UFTING EM _{ ers BY DE DUGDALE : Fleeting University of Washington : as a ‘ | STRETCH “Too FaR a SIN Ek Vernon, Oakland and) that tne club bas done re i i f |New Names Will Flash Portland Will Play Se- cor everyt on Grid Horizon With SOMETHING To EATY attle Club in Turn the tatiana i 5 hake s Coming Season NAME in football is fleet than i The Ct reason Bagshaw ; - , v a | cnintante Graves, who ap parently does make x effort to be 4 + s aa Fix on W . - acs eee GRAV humorous, usu. : : i nee many | real cont it Pie a r tas y throw and don't| ny BO d football fans can ally gives forth a line of . eat # eight | et akere t t xmart hurlers make 7 talk that packs a laugh in it \ t 1 | This is what the football men . | BA -severeing y wonderful year Merlir Y n should hit like Paul Strand need. Bagshaw is racing against { ; c ng at every pite | d time in forming a powerful f tt ! hy goed You n't # ‘ ‘ rt d r a 2 r 8. a remember eleven to face an unusually \ ' } ry 1 work b t y f shing ars under Gil strenuous schedule. Bagshaw \ = I power, ‘ knows that there's nothing ahead but work, work, work. But Bagshaw also knows that “all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy That's why he’s glad that he has } : é f “Tubby” Graves nd. Graves, : ? r i ss é ‘ eta oaatd sie : ; ig va With his Southern d t, produc LE ; si weit ‘ inti rapicte Riracqaee ee the effect that relieves the strain aa : beep eC" | regu oli: followed thel aaa & to ba And “Tubby n't overdo it - Fs a bunch of players in big college but the dai siae Seabee players are “soon He only has something to say when 2 < a " v a1 players told me tha it means the most USTER BREAKS IN ALL“THE TIGHT STUMBLES a celine , r did have much stuff and got In addition to this trait, Graves i® = the f tin t * E MAY, \ p mut with the Seals because they made knows what he's talking about in| % rut ut of the game with lot of rt for him, His showing regards to football. He's a crack| . - 1 < njur a are t ar seems to bear this out. miaity nae . by 2 t lige couch, and can show’ mot any Billy Evans Tells H ow Unassisted PREP GRID [ect pe mat | OU cam suit seat cout un| Ae in, tment with baseball, because the baseball star is much in the forward line. ball go, | Francisco in. The ‘champions |tiruout the United States this fall. weegte orem Triple Play Was Made by I nfielder BANQUET: AT. [sates : seeoct ot co 6 | ove tea, Sri ne teen aati nae a But Graves doesn’t confine his| BY BILLY EVANS Y TONIGHT, for th son | a team can go inte the|Taylor, Navy end; Roberts, Centre activities to football. He is also the a elise s enemy and mop up Stein, . fieed baseball coach at the univer. OSTON, Sept. 25.—To George Burns of the Boston Red Sox goes the credit of pull- pe orate HITTER of Yam Yary a Step: the: Wonka id teas ey eens yer Se CAaiiioe “| cakieclun aad sity, and had a crack team wear. ing one of the most unusual feats in baseball, an unassisted triple play. It was my t banquet will heki 4 uidn't try to g th r | Locke, Iowa fullback; Bowser, Pitts- Bea ce ss Gels, it seri. prod fortune to be the umpire in the game, rendering the decisions that made: the play |°snins Mt the ¥ , ai : has panera jcbrybecihy de). ay ha a Ta rin ne Wiicgt: Gigteitgtiie “and oa i legal . Mine js a is " a Me jeham mah De J the s : | y pl jump into the lime- Mire iavorstte account tie thans| Burns, in making the unassisted triple play against Cleveland, showed that he pos- f . ave ‘ aa cht ‘Casey pulling out light and in a few years very few selves. |sesses a keen baseball instinct. To my way of thinking, the triple play, as executed by |' the t eunrd e best a pg aba cs hh en Ca aT | Burns, stands out as one of the mo: t _Uunusual of P ince he was required to dash sip Ber : ton Plans for _ igie'iing Pees ton ct we, mane SO DUTLE OF Gilmour Dobie Series Are sry fireman ‘he Aol sop Rain May After Yanks = | 0°0 | i = al Lingers With Coach Logg Be ery © Announced aa Sr eee o% ay Halt Play | pasa ee BY pect yn bie i BY JACK HOHENBERG ey er With Lutzke on first, Stephenson | HE spirit of Gilmour Dobie, as personified by Coach Won Lost | E Butch Boyle, tackles; Wayne Nake rdinclos', EW YORK, Sept. 25.—The first). second, no one out and Cleveland i n Ss O uth Hall, onda; Wee quarterback Dave Logg, center under the old master, hovers over | sacramento game of the 1923 ae bapa Pals Huss Gant thie Tot decided | Re |Ray Eckman, halfbacks; Walt) Lincoln high school as the first game draws closer. At the|' between the New York Yanks an Fee tl denice. aaa oe 'D® cL MC . Sept P Shields, fullback start of the season, it was thought that the big red eleven i of the National league | t© play tend ° “s Me Ssaiat oil be played in New York|bat tried to sacrifice, but twice Rain threatened to hamper “ was a thing to be scorned. Not so. For the spirit of on Wednesday, October 10. fouled the ball off, making two|Progress of the Californian golf} |\PANCHO VILLA Gilmour Dobie still lurks in Coach Dave Logg. Details of the conduct of the s¢| ine and putting it up to him|championships being played here BOXES OCT 8 Logg has succeeded in welding a team out of next to no les were announced here this after-) today the 300 ‘golfers entered ° material at all. To start with, he had Jim McMullen, tackle;} yorno.°A"2S THIS WEEK Kenesaw M. Landis, com. | Pancho Vila, world’s flyweight | M&bEr y on at Seattle the eo eeuaball, after a con,| Brower is a left-handed bataman.|were out early. and ready to start| eile lac abou to nnd 3y Scott, guard, and Capt. Bob § choettler, vend. |. Then) Oakland at Portland | membered. | No games played; teams trave A and fast do i * : Balt Lake at San Francisco, alg of the Nation.|He pulls a ball hard and fast down|i¢ they could chwartz of Baltimore in B: e|Marvin Dixon, accompanied “| Sacramento at Los Ang ference with officials of the Na’ Tha theat hea tina. We the pltohers accompanied Sacr at Low Angeles. an. | 4 American leagues. : Willie Hunter headed the 1s | October 8 by Perry Jones x athe She, series will open at the riew|Work Inside on him. The veteran n : i a foi . on at | of soy ones ccppea Mines P. ets NATIONAL LEAGUE fs 0 ‘or Boston, was|the end of yesterday's play, turn-} ETIps he north end schoo! me stadium, and if the Glants | Jack Quinn, working for r f £ on Hour sig the National league | Pitching outside and low to Brower|ing in a card of 72, J, J Meltugh, | SILVER BOXES nd set up their stakes. So * peabriveeats Segt ~ m % under orders. Wrigh ithe PE ‘ar, so Pittsbur pennant, the second game will be Uasally- the first: tmeerwan hugs the |e right, Rudy Wilhelm and | AT HOLLYWOOD) far, so good. an O fi pues < > ‘ounds. Armstrong each showed with | And now, L hax uncovers Played at the Polo groun | gaat eds rit: Bearer tp. Buri | Jack Sliver, tho San Francisco| And new I ‘ bea Bro |knowing that Quinn was pitching} ‘A11 must play another 18 holes to. |lightweight, is on the card at Holly-| Ray Olson, three-year football and = 3 ‘The Yankees will be regarded as} am in games Nos. 1, 3| ' : on Fe the Giants, will be home | Outside to Brower, was playing about) gay hair Playing at Pebble Beach wood lay night baseball man at Union High school, | , to Majors team in Games 2, 4 and 6. 10 feet in fair territory. Had he been |anq half at Del Monte. | Bremerton, Olson is a typical Lin RESU If ‘the Cincinnati Reds should| Playing his usual position he would i coln quarterback, compactly mould: HE failure of the Coast league! chicago s, Boston win thee pennant, .the first two|not have come even close to making ’ “ Jed, a hard hitter and a clever doger to develop any outstandin| Philadelphia 4, Pittsburg 2 (first games ‘will. be ‘played in New York ides eh ey SIR LIPTON | Diamond Dust in the open fleld. He calls signals| young ball players thie year un-| fame): Pittsburg 4, Philadelphia 3 (see- vo ga rill be entl ou z to doubtedly means that several. star : ae A Es and thé next two games will be aah sant saa? fluently without ming to think y , the | > played in Cincinnati | the bal on Bene sprit te CHALLENGE : cade ave Jof what he is saying. Olson may | veterans in the P. C, loop may get lyn 8, St (first game); It will be decided later when the | "cone 00) ke 8 sure tit d ) not be another Ray Eckmaan, but} thelr chance with the big show. | Broc . Louia 3 (second game). A ; and the runners were off with the "i | suffic ) experience, | derstood oC zo | ‘ = remaining games of the New York- beret ae thi Bates Shien: wiitis outs DUE IN 1925 f she jwith sufficient work and experience, | It Is understood hee Chicago | AMERICAN LEAGUE Cincinnati series would be played) | ica hands managed to make a Z red thy for the champlonship|he may develop into a sensation, | Cubs are bidding for Elmer J eS eae: Lekk. Pot if they are necessary. eat Satan oti theater abort Loxven: Sept. 26.—Sir ‘Thomas 3 small et ast n Logg discovered an-|Seattle pitching ace, and Elmer is |S M48 888 sda enigige norceeay ini waa patedcp pd ; , lother prospect for the backfield, ajno kid c 63 Prices of admission will remain |*¢neate Piper Lipton says that he hoped next ; jenttle will see plenty of new young-| orn) Dronpect for : poh | RO ie D ; ‘i the same ai last year, if the weries|™Udway between first and second. | year to challenge for the Americ et, uilt nce Plenty of mew youne-| req headed lad by tho name of Roy| Wiz Kremer, great Qakland right- is played in New York. Luts ret wee caught, turcea one wt 1 In the meantime he 4 f Whitney, catcher, Carson, Christian and| Humphrey. Humphrey, who tx a|hander, Pat Shea, Beal star, Jakio | Wash ek bhatg will’’cost $6; reserved | "C7: eae ton that, Seeing | Was bringing back from America 4 : ruz, piichors, Miade, shor lespio| pole Yaulter, looks to have the|May, Vernon southpaw, and Waiter Raniphia ek ae seats, $5; unreserved seats, of the| and ae a erertaln to be retired, {8 Shamrock, 23 meters, with the B feed leakiron, outfielders, and Werke |g even though he weighs but | Oakland portsider, are ex-|Boston se. ..01.! at upper and lower stands, $3, and} since Burns was between him and his bleacher seats, $1. |ebjective, Lutzke fell to the ground intentidn of cing her in home : i being gi rele by the T a paltry 135 or thereabou He |Pected to go up, and they have all — waters next year. ‘This boat, he v ’ | | was doging all of his tacklers and | been ‘voting for some time. RESULTS All the games will start at 2/ just as Burns was about to touch o'clock of the time prevailing in| him, hoping that he would delay the 3 Chicago 1, Washingto sald, had won some of the treay. | ver the 400 mark | leaving them in the dust during| Merlin Kopp, Sacramento speed Trak Bee |the city in which- the games are| piay enough to enable Stephenson to Louis 6, Boston 1 (first game); & peep ana dubee aces re é is - 4 *|tackling practice, Logg may try|demon, Paul Strand, Salt Lake |t Bogion s aessond tamtnee Speaking of the sporting charac , Jthae wilt . ty many |Him at halfback, Don Kennedy {s/Slugger, and Art Koohlor,: Sacra.| ow York 12. Detroit 4 aves. neha the ptt ter, of the Ameri ans, Sir Thorns | ; ba shidwitie Wallac the prove a time, mento ee are slated to Fo up,|poatponed rare adelphta double-header neg = ; sald | won the cup in 1926 the M and looks to b the baby who wil) ¢ e e ho mere youngsters — 3f Cincinnati wins the National] As Burns reached down and} ji iiany would be me pleased ei With a string of victories| soe weny i in the San Francisco | fall in at right half when time s felt : {PAN Jeague pennant the prices for ad-| touched Lutzke he almost slipped to] (eens Wane On as pleted . > » [Hneup, and the story sent out that he | cated | Wally Hood, 1, A. outfielder, ana} CHO VILLA fission. in Cincinnati will be de-|the ground. Regaining his stride 4 over Greco-Roman mat kings|mient’ nave to quit baretall because of | Mllec ‘ pie pera have always, been treated in. the he wetting th from an old {ac| Anderson looked good at th ieorge Lyons, movie, city. pitcher, WINS VERDICT \ cided. fater. iota tobe! pepe paul vety beat y by my opponents," | to his credit, Javier Ochoa, must be summarily denied er halfback post. Vinnie McCutch.|#r° Rolng to the Cubs and they! poston, ept. 26,--Paneh vin aetna racing back to second, *|was Sir Thomas’ tribute to the] S; ', j . vo {have both been up before. A tips Spt. 26.-—Pancho i, @ ottel Ov as & ae 4 » the! Spanish wrestling champion eon, however, is still in t 5 1 that he had better than an even} pe eny und he ndded that he| oe NG CHAMPION,| Louis Gulsto hax beon of Uttle use to] oA non the honors are hanted|, It certainly looks like the Coast | Verl’s fyweight champion, won the ——— A oe ti etire the aide unassisted. i y io > . » {the Oaks since joining the Tay Cit nyt decision over ' Major il aerated playing necond tor Bos.|!4 not wish to mect better sports. | 18 turning his attention to the |i. te wie tit atkot hea heen wut out, Vinnle should step up for his [league will send plenty of men up. | Redtord ina Se, Nw ton, had covered second to take a|™e" United States. Recently he \ot 0 eame with injuries share, too, Big Marvin Dixon wit] Yarrison and Jones, sold by Port: | night, ab aig ot isk 2 ; ‘phe {land to Brooklyn, have bee: Astacio b ‘\ fill in at fullback, of cours » have been. play- ter losing the first gai throw from Burns, who, however, has been performing in Me Tho Intest story tn Chicago ty that i : at ee ‘ the Firater beat the Phils, elected to try for the triple killing. UTAH GRIDIRON ico, meeting and throwing all) 3" Hopper; ‘veteran ic j/entire squad indulged in the rather ley aa ‘Mewheeney” Maia GEORGE CHANEY take over the management ¢ sui / Questionable sport of trying to Chester Fowler, rookie shortstop, Both he and Stephenson slid for the ‘ " Rete ae ; peers Fae cena tren: se; | Bath he ond Btepheneen ait for th) SCHEDULE MADE | comer. fae re ace he Sah eet Cay eee el LOSES GINEQUE, iS bemer, and batted the Reds to a 6-t0-4/4 second ahead of the Cievelander.| saL LAKE CITY, Sept, 24 the bounce thin year he carried the ball, He showed that {ex#ctly begimers, pies i Ditlery over the Giants, cuttiog the lead : Wt LAKE + Sept, 2 ; at ray - fred ‘PHILADELPHIA, Sept, n 0 thee y Aw L waved Stephenson out ,the|sollowing 1s the 192% University o he has a yair of shifty dogs, run ——~ ept. 2 Cie. Ete dena! hame of Burns Wau enrolled in’ baso- aan tonial sane tl ie ples MARTY FOLEY LICENSE FEE ning thru man after man, until [ehiinees for tirstt-cam play: wore ex: |GwitEE Chaney of taltimors fost on Nine runs in the sixth, when 6 Cdlitevenail someone finally caught him around }eeedingly, bright. Delaney & thy | erm y “Kid” Brown in th Geto rbie, or te’ Yorke’ a"acg_ [Dell's Hal of fame sce that| Mountain Conferences ON S. F. CARD} FOR BOXERS |ine stoostrinin syn’ Tacs nd; yeespect,.wnllectather sein | Gree xounds hare Nt nian. : win over the Tike Revcead tut tlahrdd (nthe l erate “awk sWaek 7 hitman a pay aipisy the ‘Tacoma heavy-| profeasional boxers and wrestlers | Shoettler is taking care of right|fill tf at quarter should Olson be a Sehilebner's single in the 10th drove modern unassisted triple plays.| October 13—Wyoming University | of th wi ae 4 the semi. jmust pay a Heense fee of $6 in the |end, and er McMullen or James | out na 12,000 BO: MUCUSTe Overiha Rec fow.in the oucond be ha NICO | state of Pennsylvania. will be at right tackle, Scott should Lincoln is) alw to be feared, he French Boxing Federation in two runs that gave the Drowns a 4-2 | " al Ball, when playing with} ye ity , ec , ee en aging a tha | va uiat at, Salt Lake City Wednesday: night, Foley is down tol fill the bill at guard, Huns Krue.|Alroidy. thes dopostera até. atat Roverns 12,000 licensed pugilixts, game, after Boston had lost *the frat {Cleveland against Boston, turr October 20—Utah Frosh vs. Utah} meet a fellow » nate: ot tie Vee) Oey cee , poatera, a8 styrene Lihat, Fe same, 6-1, trick, Ball was playing short, caught | Aguie Prowh, dearg : Ww ger, clongated version of Kay Krue-|the hot stove league asgoing with soeetceneemen re Mitts bhi Routhar. We oa | lined rive, touched vecond and then] October 27—Utah vs. Brigham George Cbbons, HARRY ILLS er, his brother, and a former Lin. | Lincoln-Broadway gossip, If the form, uad"the Hovine took enone, |got the man dashing from first tol young at Provo, oo 31 YEARS OLD | <2! #2: {s the leading candidate | Tikers do népeat those two 70. do. hender from the Cards ut #- wecond. November §—Coll on Tdaho:-va for center honors. Harmon plays | feats, tt will be because they have 7-3, Bill Wambsganns, playing second |tytah at Salt Lake City, ach ie! JACK DEMPSEY Harry Wills, leading negro heavy-| left guard, with Perry Wones prac. |one of the best teams in the cit Alexander marked up his 21st victory |fF Cleveland in the world series} November 10—Utah Vs. Colorado INSURES LIFE iene iain yd roigbe 216 outer eae hen ee ec ee Ge | eae Hear ey eae PR aeafestens DIAMONDS when he pitched the Cubs to un $-7 vice] With Brooklyn, staged the play in ex-| College at Colorado Springs. Jack ‘Dempuey, while: tralniny for tes and weighs 210 pounds. | st jo should go well at t end, from any in the prep school league tory over the Braves. netly the same manner. Now comex! November 17—Colorudo University | Lula iirpo, took out. and. pad tn TWO LEFR-HANDERS Joo Dye, contending candidate for | Mis yea ’ i perv George Burns, former Cleveland} yy, Utuh at Salt © City 4 : 2 f ons one of the tackle posts, injured his ce 4 Ameri C reemagei matic, atlar s phat aad sa} cic yer, now.with Boston, pulling the. November. 20--Utay Aegloe’ va,! Carne tae catoument Ife in-} Of the ten ranking tennis players !ankle for-the thin tine during tueke| (The stsectiy-rtaiupbuba in En) val un evel? Box beat tho Seuators, one to nothing, trick against his old teammates, Utah at Salt Lake City ald with a check for $16, ane Sethe pte States, only two are ling practive lust night, and will bel land is one mile and a halt rf Pier Pees j je out for at least two weeks, Dyo's llength, a

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