The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 12, 1923, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

9 ght eattle (Hock- ~ Ice = under eouver, Pposing the first ‘on both lar line. © Coasty severy tart the pher and ie, Cook i, and mm and Positions, Harris Wwe and se, with i} season y night sip major defeat i AKETe- tn the PNebraska defeated first of A field ‘account- be the ck led sin Sat winning bowl- : ® MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1928, Garfield-Roosevelt Tilt Means Much to Ballard Bulldogs and Teddies Will Meet in School Grid Contest This Week; Ballard Has Yet to Face the Strong West Seattle Eleven BY JACK HOHENBER LLARD, by virtue of an exciting victory over Lincoln, has assumed a commanding position in the high school If Coach Brigham's Garfield eleven succeeds in downing the Roosevelt outfit this week, then Miracle Man Pease will have annexed his second pennant, Should Roosevelt win the Garfield game, then all eyes will be focused on the Ballard-West Seattle contest, the West Seattle has been coming certain to give to the Beavers a hard football r: ce, last game of the season. right along, and Multnomah Is Victor in Club Game SIAN FRANCISCO, Noy, 12.—Pig skin fate settled at least one argument over the week-end, Multnomah club of Portland today sat atop the heap as club champion of the Pacific coast by virtue of its win at Ewing field here yesterday, 14 to 7 over Olympic club of San Fran- claco, California still is monarch of the Southland, having humbled Unt- versity of Southern California, 13 to 7, while Stanford continues her prog: ress with a 14 to 3 victory over Ore- gon, Washington defeated Montana tn decisive fashion at Seattle. Idaho sprang the surprise of the week-end by beating Oregon Aggies, 7 to 0. Multnomah's victory over Olympte was clean cut and deserved. The Portlanders scored in the first five minutes of play, and it looked for a moment as if they were going to run Away with the game. Receiving the kick-off, Multnomah marched cheer- fully down the field and finally show ed Workman over for the touchdown, gained entirely by straight football. ‘Jenno converted. Then Muitnomah got tired. Olym pie, when it gained possession of the ball, started a march of {ts own Need! ced the Multnomah lin: for repeated g the second quarter, a bes Needles to P. Smith—she the break of fumble could be mac down. Captain K Multnomah came the third quarter, b the tide of battle swt tators had visions of the Olympic booting Chu roke thru, block p the bou ball, raced 3: well screened goal for a series of gains FOOTBALL FACTS BY BILLY EVANS THE QUESTION Ais th ive team In posses sion of th D while B is th de fensive team. On the first down o ot halfbacks the it several times. ball, regains downed seven where the p caused a serious disp down it was when « A team secured por ball seven where the pla ANSWER been first do passed ee 1 to have an A the double ed as a gain. HARVARD IS STILL HAPPY AMBRIDGE PRINCETON IS NOT SORROWFUL J itowever, re ron SUSPICION | by three inches. That was the last year, [FOLEY AND Important Prep rub, If Ballard loses, then the season will close in a tie, with Roosevelt coming in on the other end of things. That's the dope, as It stands, The Bulldogs, frosh from thelr feast on Tiger meat will be In a fine way to down tho Roosevelt cloven and finish as runners-up. No achool except Ballard and Roosevelt has @ chance for the pennant, BY KNUTE RO Notro Dame Coach ICKING my favorito play is @ difficult task in the modern | kame of football, The new game of: fers so many possibilities that a cer: |tain play which would be highly fu | Yored under proper conditions would be foolhardy under others, Doing the proper thing in the Pinch is the test of a field general is and his team. Often poor judgment " - Say in the selection of a play when much Gs z JARFTELD WINS i at stake proves to be the turning FROM TIGERS s 7 point in the game. Saturday's two ‘contests, both, ¢ When Notre Damo needs only a cer see thrllere iy na | {ort distance in order to retain pos si 01 ‘oadway ANd) session of the ball he pi the West Seattle gang spilled the|" LN aad lM beans by eliminating Queen Anno| from the race. That Queen Anno| contest proves that the West Siders| can play football with tho best of them. ; Apparently beaten by the echolar-| ly toe of Ted Craigin, Tiger place Kicking ace, the purple and white boys uncorcked some terrific foot-| ball, Those three points amassed by Broadway looked mighty .good| to the Tiger supporters for a time. McGuern started around left end in the second half with the whole Broadway team on his heela Just| once held exalted positions in the na- as he was tackled, he opened his! tional game. They are Amos Rusie, arms and polnted down the field.|Dan Broutnérs and Bill Darien There, Chuck Carroll, star tackle,| Rusio ranks as one of the greatest was pounding down the field with! pitchers of all time. Ho had a fast only Linder and LaBracho between! ball comparable only with Walter him and victory, Linder missed and| Johnson's amokiest and a curve with LaBrache was taken out by the in-|4 whizzing hop. terference. Carroll romped across) tunate enough to have been a boy of the goal no with the winning six/ 99 or 30 years later than ho was he points. Geal was missed. | would have drawn a 000 salary Unfortunately, Umpire Boyle, see-| and had bonuses, World's Series « 3 Garfield took HERE are three ex-ball players serving In the capacity of special officers at the Polo Grounds who ing @ Broadway man offside, had/ and vaudeville contracts to swell his blown his whistle, just after the) pankroll Play had started, and tho Broad-} put Rusic was of the pioneers. He way eleven, holding to a faint hope,| payed big league when salaries were was arguing the point. Captain t. With all MeGuern, however, declined — tho} 1.5m: ous powers he earned bare penalty, and the game was won. ly ax much as a rookie first breaking That is, temporai Ted Crale-}into rast company. Hoe lived in a day in, standing on the 8% yard line,| sent a mighty chill up and down the backs of Garfteld rootera in the n ball pl igh-stepping, uous spenders with no idea of era were The Pet Football Plays of Famous Grid Coaches Boots and Bingles in Stove League Battles Had he been for-| value of a dollar or what might | THE SHA that I always like to hoar the alg: na} for: The right end charges the defen- tive tackle out. Tho right tackle and right guard charge the defensive guard in, ‘The center checks center The loft guard and, left check tackle. Tho left end thru for secondary, Back No, 1 takes defensive end. Rack No, 2 helps on defensive tackle. |Back No. 3 thru hole for secondary Back No. 4 receives ball on direct pass and drives thru hole, ‘This play is invariably good for from two to tackle capable of carrying out his intulttons. But Bill learned his ethics of base ball and life in the wildest days of baseball. He was a “good fellow” and a spender, and he hax come to the same position as those slower thinking pals who are now with him in uniform, THERS have come to sadder ends —Rube Waddell, tottery Jim Mutrio, living on a Me in his grave; | |Graw pension; the one-time million. John Day, dying in a a & dirty tenement, All of them have not been fatlures, jtho. Hana Wagner is w Fred Clarke is — wealth 1 to do. man. Doc Scanion, the former Brooklyn pitch er, is @ successful physician |Pultz, John M. ¥ nings are er Dave ard.and Hugh Jen lawyers, Ni Jake Stab last few rol s of play. He ely death last year appen when thelr big league days place-kicked true, and the ball sgil-|DAPPen when thelr Dig. league day most a m John ed for the goal-poats, Referee esis graded | 8 camo gove sy! His steel-museled crumbled with the years. Hin blind Ing speed left him and his curves no longer had a “break.” So hoe d f baseball altoge nd at last ame a laborer in a lumber yard Working with the section gangs ho had time to think of the glory that Frank Murphy shook his head, for} the ball bad missed the left pole WEST SIDERS DOWN QUAYS be: dices a had been his and to curse an unkind or. T fate for having been born too a dwell mdder and wiser, T Fa march down the f Fina McGraw heard of his bro the tmarcoil and plight and brought him to New York the pleasure of fina! 0 loved the ga pved I been opposed to McGr diamond many time had booted a 22 in the first) Queen Anne. jon t weeks remain, and prep| John admired the burly man w ball will be over for another| been the greatest pitcher of his Jand gladly provided him against a | poverty-stricken old age. bg end, goal, early Rusle the AN BROUTHERS ts the second member of the triumvirate. A slow-moving first baseman- if the speedy fielding type that Cominskey originated and Halo Chase brought to the highest peak of developmen’ thers de pended on sheer beef and power to him thru MORGAN IN EXHIBITION lassy an exhibition of boxtn: ahting as one would ca: ere was dis! erd on hand | yeaterday ver little Can: meets Johnny at the Crys- | bier never 0 Chari y card t Dan was a slugger, a Ruthian sort r who could hammer a base- Were of maule ball untold distances. young man now, carry! powers that were his same arn ago, ht, and Tod | facing a lively ball and the sort of fic Coast featherweight | pitching that has become common in a, ished the entertain. | the big leagues, ho would be Ruth's | greatest rival ‘as the first gym workout for| Certa he was a more powerful in some weeks. Foley, conched | hitter than the players who have sach, Tod's | challen Babe's kingahip—Ken a month by Spider F stepped back not a whit, ters swapped 4 and when fand Cy ams, Hellman, Hornsby and the others, 3 F) s 3 were both nomic game day. | diamond. His work was | with his hitting powers and now hi n in the g! rounds police too, has found a hav uniform of the Polo oticeable In working ic found himself nm with one of # in the world, Mists Dahlen, ing said featherweight ni | shortatops tactics that the latter | and for a time manager of the Broc lyn N nl League team. Dahlen s ten offered a 20-| wan the reverse of Brouthers, He hip match | was a ca na Thi fle hampior ler Farr boxed with sev nesters and finished with a role A Fa primed joe the eaet hm > much one more k make ———— land the match if it should go thru olden oppor the charmed over have his eak into king Farr The c card follows: | ive verr=| Arnacoptes Poet Very fallor Rollo Fred Welsh,| lights. | AHARLES L, GANT, editor of the c Small vs. Bert Dunbar, light J Guemes achcomber, a weekly vA. ly Qullter, ban-|into print this week with a al denunciation of attie sportamen, ht vs. Bobby Pierce, 1 His poetical lines fc | The game hogs from Sea they PHILADE 12— | again, my ar, and you'd Ge Bu seman for the neet such cattle, tho you Boston ¥ 8c xious to take for a year, On their ne a Ww t the managerial game. He bristies, rT had exp to nga as th es of the game ng should be enlled me hter, nutend of game prose re r not find on land or water, such lent Qi at Ir 1 nerve; the aky’s the nd they and the for Chinese Doctor 4 Her Spectaiiat Game Hog La There 1 Me Hee Wo 108 dames 8 od Ave, Beattio habeas tas gly shah al and loon. Old Mud Heo he a © Doub | r who became a fall ‘9 would have been rf ween the diamond a mental, m rity. Some o thers to te r they touch with i} Midas-like fingers scom his 400 batting aver world’s series has again brought to the fore the question as |to whether he or Rogers Hornby s |the greatest necond baseman tn tho game Frinch fs a more flashy field than the big Texan, He hasn't the smooth, ¢ nena of Lajd i but a jabbing, terrier style t en ball in ¢t He give © to retire but he doosn’t of the imp than La more likely epeed any Ho | last the 1 lightning a lot of errors. 1 hitters: Hornsby hit type |for when slows up ho'l Both ar In ity 384 to Frisch's creted In his Ing figur extra baso hits than the h rach neason 250 and he had ee. far more Fordha |_F Hornady. much faster than the Texas sligger Hornady ts one of the speediest men steals n lot more bases than but ft fen't because ho js In baseball. He once beat Me- Millan in a 100 but stolen bases mean litt ons the offense ", 80 McGraw always has had a love for base stenling ball pl so he ts As they stand at the moment Hornat a shade higher than t omy excellently with C r 1 Lajoie, the two be sackers in baseball history FROSH PLAY TODAY " University of Washingtor Seattle Game Hogs Blamed Bitter daughter and neat, they because meet the > me and her yan | They've fenced the which fill ea and then thelr |the « 6 like some old wing shot |mallard or helldiver de luxe, who |camo up here from Ballard to guar stole O, God who ns please help us if You love us, to The game hogs from tle, the me again th he mvd flats rat : men, checks tackle and lo trick of earning} «| STAR Four Great | Teams Still Und efeated | Illinois, Syracuse, Michi- gan, Cornell Stand Out as Leading Elevens | BY HENRY L, FARRELL BW YORK, 12 -— Iilinola, run No’ Syracuse, Michigan and Cornell | surviving another folting week, oc cupy the heights of football as the season pulls into the third down atage. These four great teams stand} alone at the present time and tt ts! not improbable that they will finish | the season the same way. Notre me fell down before Nebraska, Washington and Jefferson and West Virginia are undefeated among the Hastern teams, but both have} engaged in one tie game. | Cornell, leading the nation with! points, stands as ottensive team in the and per: | haps in the country, while the Syra- ou eleven holds the defensive hon. orn by still possessing an uncrossed goal line One field goal, soored by little Wil- Mam and Mary, contributed the only points scored ninst Syracuse, If Syracuse is able to win the two remaining games on the schedule, Against Colgate and Nebraska, {t vAll | have a better ttle to the top ranking |in the Bast tn Cornell, which has | played only two heavy games, with | Colgate and Dartmouth, and has only | | the weak Penn eleven ahead, | Yale ptill stands as a strong team, | but even if the Ells beat Princeton and Harvard it will not entitle Yale to a ranking with an undefeated | Syracuse team. Weat Virginia ranks next to Cor nell in point scoring with 246 points. Syracuse has scored 223, Colgate 217, Army 216, Notre Dame 202 and Michigan 184 Tryon, the Colgate back, leads in individual scoring with 78 points from 13 touchdowns, PENN WORKS FOR BEZDEK (| PHILADELPHIA, Noy. 12—| Pennsylvania, smarting under the beating administered by Lafayette, | today for thelr an-| h Penn State Satur y Dern, quarterback, | of the game with an for the rest of the nen. will be the only man who 1 be unable to start against the Lions. beran a drive nual game da Jon | \MIDDIES’ PLAY _| | SATISFACTORY | ANNAPOL Nov. 12,—Satlafied | h the shown by the mid. shipmen in the game with St. Xaviers Saturday avy coaches i work t for the big} 7 the year with the Amny.| The coaches were most pleased with| the return 1 of Rarchet, who} wild In the 8t. Xavier game. nays there Circus owner “re no | more great clov Proving that he | hag never seen George Harvey in ac | tion. | Jah. A magic number to re- member, from January to December—44. 44 is a Sumatra-wrapped cigar made of mellow, carefully sea | soned tobaccos. 44 Clear ta made by ~onsolidated Cigar Corporation, New York ed by LEWIS D ALLEN & il Pine St Seattle, Wash Branch ALLEN & LEWIS Portland, Ore, The Union National Bank Hoge Bidg. Lumber and Mfg. Co. FIN DOORS, COLUMNS, ETO. [fyou ou ly an Eastern Commodity, you get the commodity -- the East gets the money. Uf you buy 2 Western Commodity-- You get the commodity and the West keeps the ~money to build up the Start Reading This Anywhere Build the State by Buying at Home! faciete Candi e VIMOST IN ONPFECTION i... Candy Co A Firm Booster of Seottle Pacific Northwest Products “Alwaye” Gopa Gold Shield Coffee eked to retnin all the eth. Blaauw-Hipple-Blaauw, Inc. Recognized by American News- paper Publishers} Association ‘Tacomn - Seattle ~ Aberdeen ‘ranelsco OF SEATTID Resources Over $10,000,000 Second and Cherry Buffelen Buckwheat FLOURS Ask Your Grocer ne Main 1194 WP. 0, Box 1505 NENG MIN Centennial Mille Seattle PLASTER Li- BOARD WASH. BLDG. PRODS. Co. SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. SKINNER & EDDY CORPORATION Creosoted Douglas Fir Northern Life Bldg. Seattle, Wa. AMERICAN PAPER Avutors for Ohio Matches and DIant Brand Line of Brooms Port Improve —————————— Northwest Products | KENWORTH Right in the West” 506 Mercer, Seattle Garfield 3545 PER TON $6.55 AT BUNKERS Black Diamond Furnace Coal PACIFIC COAST COAL co, Seattle A NORTHWEST PRODUCT OF MERIT Dry-Sox and Billy Buster Shoes Products PACIFIC. CREOSOTING COMPANY BATHING SUITS SWEATERS KNIT GOODS SEATTLE COMPANY Senttle, Washington Start the Day Right Roman Meal Porridge A Ba Dbiished 1858 PUGET MILL CO. Seattle tt LUMBER DOUGLAS Mills nt Gamble and Port Ludlow yaxhington, Us 8. A. Xyents Pope & Talbot Sar, Francisco The J. M. Colman Company Colman Creosoting Works Iding, S11 Firat Ave Wa SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Wertern Store, Seattle, Wash. World's Largest Manufacturers ot HINGTON HENRY DISSTON & SONS, Inc. ice Branches nd, San Francisea Bette Pacific Pacific Northwest Products Committee BARAT EZ Rapid Senttle, Port The Largest Manufacturers of Saws in the World Seattle Pacific Door & Mfg. Co. Detail Mill Work a Specialty SH OOLBOY BUTTER All Grocers —_—_—_ Seattle & Rainier Valley Railroad Co. SIS Rainier Ave, 4? THIRTY- ex and BLEND'S ‘NINTH SOUTH Family Ranges Patented Western Made for Wentern People F. 8. LANG MFG, CO, Seattle Inc. Seattle, FRY) DELICIOUS TODD DRY DOCKS, Wash. SHIP REPAIRS OUR SPECIALTY HAM AND DELICIOUS BACON orthwent Deserve Your Pat BLE every purpose, pastry MAH D ‘Bverything the Name Impties™ FRYE’S WILD ROSE LARD than ordinary lard. oducts That ronage Don't Ask for Crackers—Say SNOWFLAKES PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT Co, FLOUR As good for as for bread, FRIEND” CONCRETE || WAS FOR PERMANENCE AND NT ASSN, Organization to tend the Uses of ent Brand EGG NOODLES Pour A Nat BARTON & CO. Committee Hams Bacon Seattle Chamber of Lard Commerce SEATTLE, WA\ { PORT OF SEATTLE Orne and Operates Publio Wharves, Worehouses and Cold Storage Plante STIMSON BU wvaa ‘CKWHEAT Ree 3 rers of

Other pages from this issue: