The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 31, 1923, Page 12

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BY HENRY L. FA RRELI THE SEATTLE STAR I ** Some More Fuel for the Old Hot Stove Diamond Loop °.’ ee of clubs the 4 FID pout 3 Gleason ty F than » 4 & lt of —_—_—_—_—— and prom: backfi ered. Thi more from coaches BY AHERN Bellman ma t+ [ OUR BOARDING HOUSE thin featu In play! formance: Bagshaw Working on * New Formations Valuable in Line Washington Guard One of Best Men in Coast Conference ITHOUT a good am ¢ to f the saying it. There isn’t the g' ight to a guard's position on be tr tleld nd pos where t ers in thos re is to a back One of t the Washington el man, the powerful ( who fs playing ¢ sitions for Washington this was discovered by Tubby ( Year and played in th game and in every other gam ing. He is a regular again t} Beliman is ideally built for being heavy and built rath the ground, with plenty speed enough for a fast With Jimmy Bryan makes up the best pair that Washington has had ‘The playing of these two make possible many of the t gains of Washington's great field. of the guard fk ar. He in year © guar ot ye CLUBS SEEK BIG MEET a California golf put in bids for the 1924 California open championship, which promises to attract a large! number of Eastern professionals again this winter, ‘The clubs which are see title event are: Rancho if club, | Brentwood, Hillcrest, Los Angeles and Flintridge j The Los Angeles Chamber of Com- | merce is behind the event and has| written all the big clubs of the East, | asking them to have their profes. | South sionals entered in the tournament. |} According to, word received here, | Gene Sarazen, Walter Hagen, Jim Barnes and Joe Kirkwood will enter the tournament. Hagen and Barnes have arranged their winter tour schedule to be in Los Angeles a few days before the tourney Starts. Hagen and Kirkwood plan to play in the Northwest on thelr tour, but their itinerary has not been definitely arranged as yet. URBAN SHOCKER TO BE TRADED | ST. LOUIS, Oct. 31.— Rogers Hornsby is not to hog the local base ball limelight when the winter trades are announced, according to rumor, which says that Urban Shocker, the great spitballer of the Browns, is to shake the dust of the Mound City ~ he — we ATOR SAILS BACK IMHO PORT WITH BUSTERS TROUSERS = SS) en the hy jabbed tim and they anded just at the be a mil Tilealer with a left tly. Gorman axing to the he it was Gorman’s re SECOND ROUND | or landed & stiff right ing to the rete roughing in ducking in» Jand righ roan’ gettini the Portiander Innded « stiff right Kile FIFTH ROUN hing mar FOURTH HOUND Ties nded « left h x for hed again and resorted brushed Gorman with his man tried for an opening, did no damage @h: att to hook RIE Gorman I Winner in Poor Bout ‘ Alabai Riesler Fights Like He's ; in Trance; Queer One *"**" in Semi-Windup ‘ J aa RIESLER le highly a Angeles welght, to be er flivver in Dartmouth MIGHT HAVE HAD OFF NIGHT jer t r n off. h A good might have br Ha Harvard Maskel! Have here wit have @ Seattle ring — reputation, but you show more than a rep to get acronn Nobody aquawked Schacht gave it to G A queer one wan Frankie Brit semi-final, Britt ¢ with ad foo! when Reforve man pulled in the Macke sixround Hiinoie i Wee Indiana lowa " " Kalam Ka Al asa coverat’ rth ped Macke in the third Macke fell claiming a foul. In of ating Macke out and h s him examined, Referee man asked boxing commis h what to do. comminaton let Macke Ko the dressing for examination and Dr Hanley announced that there was no ot foul and allowed Macke to come back and finish the | fight, It robbed Britt of a right earned K. O. and Macke should have been disqualified, As far as the fighting itself was nay; |concerned the scrap was the best of jthe night. Referee Whitman gave the decision to Britt, which waa the| |popular thing to do, but it waa al | pretty tussle all of the way outside of that mix-up in the third] round Britt fought his usual hard, ag: | Rreasive fight and he found Macke to be a cool, experienced worker with lefts to Ais 1 body blow ends) to the stead thi 1a o King Lafayetio Wash, & Jeft Nip Ark Hinen trace. 4 Dallas Bt, Viatoy Howdoin #t. John’s Ither sixtit x BROADWAY Jabs BY JACK HOHENBERG U SDISMAYED by their cious play in the first half of |the high schoo! football season, ach Raleigh = Lichtenberger’s aright to the body and cal times. Jott even nd jaw in and they clin: on and A Trio of from his feet along with the Cardi. | nal star. Shocker may go to Boston in exchange for pitcher, or George Burns or Joe Har- ris, first basemen. The Browns are rorely in need of a capable first- sacker, as it is still doubtful if George Sisler will ever be of much use on the field again; and Shocker has had some little difficulty with the disci. Pline of the club, The rumor, an- nounced some time ago, that Horns- by is to pastime with the Chicago Cubs next year, is still rife. STILL AFTER ROCKNE’S MEN) Close upon the announcement from Notre Dame that the ‘ighting Trish” will not consider a triy: to the Coast this year for the purpose of tangling with one of the ust con. ference football machines, comes word from California that effort is sull being made to bring the Catho- lies West for a game with the win- ner of the coming California-Stan- ford game or with the Olymple club | of San Francisco. ready billed to meet California at Pasadena, but \t seems that the Southerners hope to sandwich in an other contest. COBB SEEKING NEW INFIELD DETROIT, Oct. 41 Hopes of welding a baseball club that can nose out New York's world champion Yankees for the American league ti- tle in 1924 are causing Ty Cobb to cast his eye about for a second bane. man to replace Haney and a whort- top to take the place of Rigney, uc: cording to persistent reports, Both mon are good, but not of champion: whip clans The Navy is all AUSTRIA IMPROVES Austria boasts 20 per cent more , @thletic clubs than before the war, Howard Ehmke, | | MATHEWS j ‘This {sa Navy year, You judge! wo by reports, optimistic and en- couraging, which emanate from the Annapolis campus, Last year the Navy lost a heart-breaking game to its traditional rival, the Army,| when Smythe, quarterback, in the Closing moments, returned a punt to tho 10-yard line, and followed game. This yenr the Navy is sald to be stronger in several tmportant respects and in Mathows, cente McGee, quarterba fullback, Couch Bob three bright gridiron olwelt atare. has YEA, BROTHER Jim Corbett writen that Mace In| troduced selence Into the wwe game. It was was Freddie Welsh who introduced foot racing into It, t with a forward pass that ended the| A K, and Barchet,| Hoosier coach Several changes have been made in your head, Navy Football S |/PURD LOOKS EASY SOUTH Rockne Sbgan intensive drill of the M'KER whole Notr dev OOSIER STAFF _ HARD AT WORK BLOOMFIELD, Ind, Oct. 91, sare working to get a} ILLIN ape for Hanover Saturday, after sorubs. next Satur ho lineup. nquad pract Before deciding on a tennia player's | put hin lint warriors t be convinced you will look at-| drill today, tive with a towel tied around | vidual atte: talwarts | as a mild workout, WORKED HARD. URBANA. backfield posts, keep their nose to the grindstone. The Bengals are in for a. Iittle excitement during the next threo weeks, for they are scheduled to of blood most of the sension, Helmeet the Garfield Bulldogs and the |gamely kept on coming and kept up/fast-coming Lincoln team. Coach [his aggressive pace, altho he was|Lichtenberger doesn't intend to blinded in one eye. make any mistake about those Lin- FONG IS colnians, elther, for he knows that KNOCKED OUT they are learning the game by leaps Ah Fong, the Chinese catcher, took | and bounds. a few too many from Roy Small,} During the week of rest the Pine |the Camp Lewis lightweight, last| Streeters are to indulge in scrim: night, and it was stopped in the third | mage and Ine practice, with George round. Small looked like a million|La Fray, line coach of the dollars Inst night, smacking Fong | eleven, on deck for action, Rollie | with a hard left hook time and time|Anks, a freshman and an ex-sailor, again as Fong kept coming in, He/is being oxperimentea with in the finally busted Fong on the motars| backfield, and he looks _ pret: and the Oriental went down, Hoe} fair, considering that he has knocked him down three times again | never before had an epportunity to and Whitman stopped it. play football, Lou Hull, fullba Babe Connors, ‘Tacoma foather-| {x looking better at his position ey weight, made a nice fourth-round ery day. comeback to even up his fight with] Guy Melster, star back of the TI Bud Oliver, Seattle scrapper. Con-| ger outfit, was out in uniform: for nora floored Oliver with a pip of athe first time in three weeks last |left hook and won the last round In| night, and took an active part in a walk, Oliver had held the lead) «crimmage. Meister is out of train. up to that time with three short| ing, however, and is not expected | knockdowns. jto round into his real form before Billy Quilter shaded Young Fosse det the Everett boy, in the opening fight | which was called a draw, ‘They put up a pretty good mill, the local sorrel-topped boy carrying the fight most of the way. A fair house saw the show, which was staged by Nate Druxman, JOHN LEVI IS GREAT PLAYER Iiveryone in the Middle Weat who has seen John Levi, of the Haskell were leading at | Indiins, In action says he ts the! froitest hwek they have ever seen, | {2 €Md of the fret round of the {When under way tn the open fiotd| World's 18,2 balkiine billiard cham: o Danie edit eet todky/ |e, is practically unstoppable, and in * | throwing the ball, punting, crashing oting yesterday to- the! the jine, he is hailed in a class by he contest with Purdue himself. iy Is looked upon here _— - a |GRID LEADER | QUITS GAME Captain “Mud'! Knox, of the Uni versity of Des Moines — football) With hin |squad, haw dropped out of the game , Bob Sh'pke| for the remainder of the season, ow Hu gruelling |ing to parental olyjections and foar kiving considerable indi: | that some Injury might Ineapneitate nition fo understudies for! him for a tryout next spring with tho Pittsburg Nationals | plenty of opposition, There were no lagging moments, Britt's left eye wan badly cut In the fifth round and it was a mai ty YANKS LEAD ‘INPLAY FOR UE CROWN W YORK, Oct, 31.—With one defeats, Willle Hoppe, the champion; Welker Coch: jran and Jake Schaefer, the three BARCH victory and no UE TILT | American starters, BEND, Oct, 31.—Coach plonships, In yesterday's. matches Cochran defeated Roger Cont! of France, 600 to 457, and Schaefer won from Hdouard Horemans, Helium, 600 to 461, Schaofor came thru with an ayer ago of 16 9:16 and high runs of 88 and 82, while Cochran averaged 20 jand had a hgh run of 86, This afternoon Roger Contl plays rich Hagenlicher, the German champion, and Hoppe meets Cool: ran tonight in the mcond appear anco of the champlay. I MEN + IM, Oct, a1 tleally intact SLER TURNS OUT TIGERS HARD WORK TO STRENGTHEN TEAM inauspt- | | Broadway Tigers are continuing to| 1922 | Saturday’s Schedule for U.S. Gridirons E At western Minneapolis Comvatlis Philadelphia @ itt fend ru Stanford . Syracuse Tennessee | Tex Ruperior Penn State . Tal | Myracuse xville Austin Annapolis Los Angeles Collegeville Lake ville a Westminster Wooster Davis & Elk Bue Occtder + -Mawe. Agri Salem . Williamstown | Wilmington Phillips Exeter Worcester Wor. Poly Rhode Island... Worcester \ Yale UL 8. MILA. New Maven | Williams Wilmington wen heed Jthe Lincoin game. He may be used | Jagainst Garfleld according to Coach | Lichtenberger. | Cragin, phenomenal place kicker and punter, took his work with the} of the outfit, Cragin makes mistake of running thru the| erect, instead of running low, | man of his build should run. | | La Brache and Bill Calvert ran the jteam thru its paces from quarter. | | back, LaBrache doing the major part Jof the work. Jay Culliton, reserve | Prospect, showed well during the| short time he played at halfback. Whatever happens, the Tigers won't be up for material next year, | for Coach Lichtenberger has a whole | host of underclassmen, who are near: | |ly as good as the first stringers, | playing on the bench. Ted Bankhead and Jumbo Great | house, the tackles, performed in good | shape and look to be rounding into] jreal form. Runte can be counted on | to give these boys plenty of com: petition. The Broadway eleven has been playing good ball in their contests, but a lot of stiff opposition has tak- en tho heart out of them, tempo- The line coaching of George who was no slouch of n linesman in his football days, seems to be taking effect, and with Coach Lichtenberger directing the offensive play the Tigers should prove trou- blesome to their two last opponents. 'BERCOT WILL MEET MYERS Dode Bercot, Monroe lightweight, {will meet Spug Myers, Pocatello, Idaho, boxer, in the main event of the smoker to be held at the Crystal | 'Pool hero next Tuesday. The pair) met here before. |MEEHAN FAILS TO SHOW UP, Willio Meehan, the San Francisco | fat boy, failed to show up, so the} smoker in Tacoma for ‘Thursday | night has been called off. The F boxer was to meet George La of Omaha, OHIO STATE TO | START AGAIN COLUMBUS, Ohio, Oct. 11.-Ohlo State gridsters wore schedulod for a Wook of tackling and blocking drill, following thoir poor showing in. the | fundamontays of football against Jowa Saturday, | rest | the }lin as | | TO BE Bl work of t ly overioo! bali alwa: However, est set of As Coach Dame pu have a li Tust at East is Ch of the By Kastern € stepper on BOW MAD 18 FAST Bowma: title as he sprinters has won q U. sprint on Byraci champio past two selected a can Olym Bo’ heels to the game 65 yards very fh Mary ga: while sti Syracuse the field opposing G BUST! Bagey Building S ensive Around Backfield ~—a OBSESSING the most set of backs in the Coast con. nee, Enoch Bagshaw ts set of open plays for use 1 the Oregon Aggie game if he has to resort to tricks to beat the Farm. ers at Corvallis, In George Wilson, Elmer Leonard Ziel and Les Sherman he has @ wonderful quartet of mem, and they can do everything. Wilson and Ziel are exceptional triple threat men while Tesreau can pass and run from any d of formation, th his accurate toe on short place kicks and with his versatility i passing is also valuable, has another great th man on the bench in Pred Abel; who can pass, kick and fun with the best of them. Abel has bean impro wonderfully in his place p held a sto the lengt the Will covered fiat, whiel take into heavy fo George Guttormson fs also into a real triple threat rformer and he can step im the breech ff one is created, ‘There's plenty of beef in Washing- ton's backfield with lots of speed. They are equally good at line plays, or at passing and kicking. If Bagshaw is forced to open up against O. A. C. he will still have two weeks In which to drill his men jin still newer formations for the | California game. The Huskies Ee |the Montana game micrvenig ail the Montanans shouldn't force the | Purple and Gold very hard, S Bagshaw drille the first squad long and hard last ‘night im all sorts: of formations, running thra a full set of play: Be: He used Ham Greene tn the first string backfield for a while, replacing Wilson. Otherwise the squad Tined up the same as on the previous night with Cole and Du Bois at the ‘Pe- trie and Kuhn at tackles, Bellman and Bryan at guards, Walters at center. : : The first string outfit hasnt serim- maged since the U. S. C. game, They | may go thru a light workout tonight, but Baggy may not take any chances with his regulars, 9 ‘The club will work Thursday and California sport crities are : the praises of Bill Blewett, drop kicker, whose excellent work is oe pected to make up in @ the lack of offensive strength #! by the California football club in 18 early season games. In his seven tries, Blewett booted the 0 over the bar five times, It is pected that his educated toe will Andy Smith’s henchmen out of tt fire in case their offensive down in crucial games later © PROMOTERS OF _ SOUTH PANNED San Francisco scribes are the promoters for their alleged mis — treatment of Jerry Monohan, @ 1e&t 14 weight boxer, “Monohan, super boxer, was turned down many times: by the local promoters, altho’ was no reason for it,” one ae: of the fistic game writes, Monohat in to do his battling in the Bast duty ing the winter because of his ity to break into the California round game, says a late dispatel UPSETS STILL GRID CRITICS | Upsets have so featured the ear football games of the Pacific © conference that the critics are bee ing chary with predictions for 4 remainder of the season” i sy | Washington spilled the dope by # ming U. 8. CG, all of the California picked the po ford club to shove Henderson’ rther down the ladder, ‘Then again made monkeys of perts by downing the Cardin looks like the flag lies between 8 ington and California at this —but who knows what may 0000000000000000004 S BNJOY THESE — LONG EVENINGS AT The ZERO; 210 Jefferson St, Just back of L. C, Smith Bldg Card Tables, Pool, Cigar — Candies, Saft Deinks, Fountain Lunches Pay Checks Cashed 00000000000008 DOOO

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