The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1925, Page 7

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{tDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1925, Tar c eSpeed Burners By Wee Coyle WASHINGTON GREATEST QU@RTERBACK yall alked out of I 8 ee these stars bring t of the wonderful stars of by days on the Northwest gridirons used to thrill the spectators with | wonderful running As a youngster, playing on the old acre lot back of the James street power house, I can recall such fellows as Bill Winsor in the old Seattle high school days who could run hundred yards close to ten flat, and who put fe the hearts of visiting high school te . ® COYLE “Baldy” Cole, the miniature Washington quarter along in nineteen hundred, who used to bur BOx ay a Weight Making It Shade Smart ug to mak in The stiff train ing program necesaary in re ducing poun 1 as fight Dempsey is 30 of his man afte at may be co Jack ms made most ark and after th: sti others were the 30-year mark Dave Shade is getting smart, The nian welghs 154 pounds at and he has decided t the middiew tead of woak ss to make 1 0 way c fous’ experts in the he wo fight edo beating Harry Greb than ker will ever have. Edwards Will Be New Pilot for Rainiers ie PAUL EDWARDS, known man-about-tow quite some golfer, will succeed Alex Gray as captain of the F olf nd Country club for the 2 months. a well m and nier ¢ next Club President Bob Thompson also a ed the following ap- pointments last night: Greens com- mittee, Ray Ogden, chairman, Paul Edwa H. Bowers and C. le Creelman; house committee, George Buck, chairman, Clarence Jones and Leslie Knight; handicap committee Paul Edwards, chairman (ex-of. ficio), teve Dwan, C. Brower and W. A. Blair; fina commit- tee; Ben I B. Mor teur BERCOT AND UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN | toony to the ner . s coe’ ALLIS, Oct. 10.—The Oregon |CALIFORNIA, 1 Angeles, Oct f Aggies broke loose with two oR ND, dre. 0. 31 MILLS DRAW): 10. Mike Armstrong, former ers m er a) ‘ay nen | ‘igh pee touchdowns in the last quarter of coach at Drake universit ced S' a a | their game with Gonzaga, Snider VANCOUVER, 6, Oo ia--{ta Sah tebe envenity a] FIGHT OFF od in ‘Sh a uci tom Yan eu, uh Goma Bi Dode Ht ttle welterweight, | camo with tho l of South BOSTON, Oct. 10.—R: caused shortsto», have been re couver C., occupy the st intercepting pa and Schulmerich Ei h battler, ern California Trojans today. postponement of the King mon. by the Philadelphia Ameri: |iignt in Nate Druxman's at| kicked a field goal that gave the tide fo a, draw i ht Utah Is expected to the Tro-| Jim Maloney bout scheduled at) cans to the eOrtand Club OF! Uh6./ che it Crymeal yt next Tuesday| Aggies 16 points Robbins had ljans a good stiff game, but Conch | Braves field last night. The match | Pacific Coast - eam I yas AN- | evening, three of the eight box: | snared a pass for an Aggie touch Al voted for a draw! Howard Jones’ eleven Is, given 1 be held tonight, weather “per-| nounced today at the Beavers’ head ers on the bill) down in tho first quarter, This pro- ver the ‘odds to win. | mitting. quartets hail from the| vided O, A. C, with 22 points, while @ Northern city Gonzaga was being held scoreless. — Vic Foley,| It was the first game Gonzaga has 3 ° Canadian — bans | lost in the Northwest in two seasons tam champion ImAro ews: a un ers re Olng who fights DUNDEE UITS ° Young Nation Q i s ‘ {sta, a Filipino, Tita 3 Pp sale and grouse formed his kill; A L LARSON and Ernest Larsen, |MPVIE season on upland game bir¢ a ; NEW YORK, Oct. | 10.—Johnny By Peter Salvus | ene seoond tia, ; 3 Hole: brothers under the hunting coat fn Yakima, Kittitas and Okanc mn oe Pape Dundee has petitioned to withdraw A ba flat ve t ‘Skagit . | date Jonly, have different shooting tastes. |? seus will open wate In ah tdat ea. baie ste his ae ae WA Babe roving to be the mecca of nim-| eo Gian ag the season opens on Hungarian erman, scheduled for the Polo coms to popular place on duc tle clrele os rods from Seattle as the migration rpour seems ES: ular rich | Al made the limit on du a enaiee | partridges and Chinese pheasants on Ircleg in West-| grounds on Monday, declaring he has of ducks js under wa areittae huge hoon. ttade (Har Ernle went after grouge and Chins: Octobor 26 and closes November 16 orn Canada and) nad” ditticulty tn making the 126 a | 6 tim have be e ere The Yah ne also made a mit wee ., 7 The shotgun artists have been |" Chinks and Hugarian pheas- | 1M SMaet ST uine Berieet || (ie ecre Only, rained the) kn qn SIE NST oe eres ta sel EE AST NE getting their share of the birds P and » are Al's game shoo ) E the samo date, with three Chinks é arely inside that weight last Monday ants are plentiful and grouse ai de ‘ Snohom | % ; pression on Hast Ss 4 a rtnened sinee the season opened and Iso included in many catches, was banging away In, 0 | nd three Hungarians as the limi | Draenidi ri Canddacwine when the bout was postponed, many limit Kills have been re- orgs Zwecklo bagged the tmit| lh ble jimit onl Me | followers and here | W ported, ce hen it on Chinks, He was| Harry Johnson caught his limit on} October 25 to November 10, in- | followe The Skagit flats abound with alse Min. Checry: Valley ducks on the Skagit fints. jclusive, Is the season in Okanogan.| Hector McDonald, former new ILLS WORKS huntin ige 1 much of the| Kent, famed for its Carna ution | LS We % bt ih ea | |boy tn Vancouver, who hold# am PwTROIT, Oct. 10.—Harry Wills, shooting {s done on private grounds. | milk, js also the land of the ChiRks \rrWwo demon 4 anlesmen from TPHERE have only been about eight Jtour titles g@ore, will ppear | colored heavyweight, stepped four hee ain Gave ineny con pane RET: Banat entches of deer reported this sea \ exhibition rounds here last night here hitting ; without | George Cowell had Chineso pheas \; fhe a Fe a aa at son and tho hunting for tham 4 Inst George bk sreven lone against Jeff Clagk of Joplin, Mo. h may be out | jorge Cowell he 1 Nick Feok pped ehinning a as Bharath nese boy eDonald holds the ippeared in Rood condition and » use of w land fe lants three days in a@ow as a result) )) 4, Fords to take a trip to| Ye oar The deer are found on Hvelahtcandfiywelght tition ( Wills appoared food condition and lof his hunting session near Kent Rec Re ay the Olymple peninsula, but going \ ‘H Abel fends an impressive exhibition of veys guns} of his Ir Whidby and by boa 5 i neou nd has ¢ out of hil 1 cy fias a bigger appetite ufter thom means plenty of hard mmunition Hardware | | Roy Stan! 8 iy Oe ee aeeated| Whidby istand ts noted for its | Jolass to fight In tho North oF hunters, pre alt of his |than Cowell, salmon fishing, but the MeKay one seems to be hunting bear,| Harvey Holliday ts the third bodaptionalista belongs sant not done behind the | twee Ehle, of Don's cate, helieves| lustlers uncovered ¢ but it has been reported that they |or on Tuesday's card, who calls| ‘Ted Iraynoggot Senttle, should e ie tia < Baer oul: Bir A ltr sting fresh things for hia monu.| to make a feathet be aro plentiful in the wooded hill Vancouver Iw home town, Holll-}run into som® tough competition | plans to go out Sunday Inia |iehle has made the limit twice on| Seriously, duck hunting on Whid-| It is still a little early for bear meots Kid Abregon, a Fillpino,|in Young Peter Jackson, of Port first trip he came back with 10 |Chinks, so if one buys ehicken there | by island is considered a on) hunting, as they have not become] from Los Angelos, In the curtain:| land, Jackson holds two decisions | ducks, caught off the mud flats {and it starts to talk in Oriental lingo. | the Skagit, and is proving popular | hungry enough to come down from | raiser Abregon 18 a mmemiben jover Frayne, and the local boy ack of Everett, |blame Don's marksmanship. [with the nimroda the high hills, tho fighting troupe to which Wants to reverse them, Four Coast Shade a much better | of the Gridiron; PAGE 7 ag F Gold Borlesh i i tche 1 ha i ND then, later in th “Sap” Latourette, the speed king of the Uni A Jack Connors, of I { versity of Oregon, way always a thorn in the side ve er, the colored of old Dobie. Sap had speed, could dodge like wonder in an open f | rabbit and had a good football sense big Jay the old | Y t had « t prac writer’s opinion, was on¢ yainst Ore | h ‘ high or college, that has ever been seen on a local field Do r t k a inyone ¢ h ‘ fc Smith could run in the open, he could buck the | the whe excep H 1, “H could heave a pa with speed 1 accuracy, a could runs like a de } a greyhound ! tt form interference such as ha been seen before or harp eye } a fe f } i ni d gone ince It is hame that Smith never played colle for a touch r old Tomr Wand played “La football; he would have been a sensation tourette i ractice and wi ost h i . Sap” didn't have much of a chance in tha e, but (oes down to Dobie day Washing he gave the W ngton © of thr were a host of men who tillated possibly foremost,-was Nig Borleski, the pre CY Washingtc er ho } r possit man coac trong-running half of the ties as an of ee Coyle Tells of Them | in’t wh . : | Later days brought Bud Young, Hap Miller, ¢ | Noble, and a host of others r t most perfect op Big Hurler Sought by Hornsby Mound Ace Wants to Play in East and Deal May Be Made Soon OHN big MILJUS, t right - hi r of th tle Indians, m ear the Louls Cardi next year, is Men to Go to M ajors| Vy JASHINGTON, MeWeeney, A Maurk ington — 1 Archdeacon, Baltimore, and Pitch Morrell, New Haven, Conn. Baseman ( polis, and Lundgren, Birmingham. New York—Pitcher Curtis ton, St. Paul Clevela ~Catcher Ma it Lake. go—Outfielder Lee Anto Detroit—T. F. Maj McCarthy, Water bury, Conn. Philadelphia—Pitcher Joseph Pate, Fort Worth, Texas. NATIONAL L Falls; Outfielder Joe Bu: susta, G Boston—Third Baseman Harry Ri- conda, Portland. Louis—Pitcher vester John son, Vernon, © Third Baseman Tom Taylor, Mem Outfield er ‘Chink’ T Cincinnati — Pite UTAH GRIDDERS | PLAYING U. S. C. CHARGE EVANS st ae {Matty Comes “Back Home” honors to Christy M Huskies to Leave on Tuesday Little Practice Time for Nebraska Game, Next Saturday OACH ENOCH BAGSHAW ¢ IN GOL FRAUD 50552 defraud t t I ed into Ba = ©) PARTHEST Tur 4 MADE TO EAST . t Ea - es H ave made fi : long road trip, change of : : climate, and the lack of enough 8: 3 practice time, will place Wash profit of § ington under 1 handicap eb ois D> ¢ the « © hand, aye be pla the ome fiel | jaunt ins. CAN NEBRASKA STOP WILSON ate i ce Wii eedy halfback ; gv Nebraska stopped the great th “Kea” Grange in his tracks Pa aan when ft played Ilinols and the Cornhuskers’ line was impreg- nable. ¥ - ze Whether or 1 be CLAUDE RIX ° a in the TINS COP’S \ GOLF TITLE ts#, 4 WEAK POINT ATROLMAN CLAUDE RIX b The Washington line, which came the “Bobble Jones of the tho weakest part of the F ation this seaso will t police departme: Friday, by aying ite a defense and of. tue of a three and one that ts con ed one of the aga! Patrolman Bill 1 t in th Middle West final match of the policemen t Ed Weir, captain and all- ournament, played on the Beacc American tackle in 1924, is thy Ne Hill course nucleus of the askans’ de » course records ¥ fense and his leadership on the 1 no clubs line accounts for much of its this m: but the strength. b result was in doubt. ur 1 the Nebr: AMO success: |», to them from fully, Bagshaw's {der © ex the last quarter. La to experience one of tt troke allowance. games of en s0 In the semi-finals Lane defeated A. Le and Rix uy the custard by out a blue slip BEAVERS GET to 4 the Crystal Pool Tuesday night. Canadian They i ight Here Tue: day eel Vic Fotey and Young Nationalista (inset), two of the best antamweights in the West, headline the next smoker at They will battle over the sucl round route, 0.4.C. WINS ; RingBoys OVER GONZAGA 4 Bo JACK DEMPSEY LOOKS BAD IN EXHIBITION 60. Champ Not Impressive in Six-Round Bout Joe Williams, Fight Expert, Watches Jack Dempsey Go Thru Exhibition Paces and Reports Champ “Thin and Drawn” By Joe Williams EW YORK, Oct. 10.—I watched Jack Demp- py box in six one-minute rounds the day af- ter he signed the historic document binding him to defend the heavyweight title against Harry Wills somewhere in Michigan, some- time next summer for some amount of money providing somebody doesn’t stop it. Dempsey’s wind was bad. He hadn't gone thru four of the brief rounds before he was puffing beautifully: in all the better known octaves. This didn't mean anything. Roadwork and train- ing will overcome it. And besides he has no immediate battle in view. But Dempsey did look thin and drawn. That is not easy to understand. He has not been working hard enough to shake his frame of all surplus flesh. He is underweight and for other reasons. Maybe the trouble with Jack Kearns, his manager, and protracted! egotiations with Wills have 1 7 eroughtinin presen ape Freddie Still | pee, ree |: . DIVINE Cama IELD, Be truth. If he weighed 18 ville, IIL, © was heavie Fulton contin- Johnny Kilbane, ex-feathe tricks in a bout champion, thougt ; night with Sergeant to 180 pou Ki cing knocked out in champic round. Fulton was Jown three times before being counted out a because “he needed the advertising.” The significance of this is that Dempsey has a film Barnstorming Dempsey nstorming. Any enterprisi municipality the presence of the Mar barnstormi Jesiring sa Maul 1 humorously styled, er, as ho is st can $5,000 on the line. put on six|!2 Cold storage, and a sustained) one-minute boxing | two] ballyhoo is necessary to successful against a boy" and four | promotion. ainst hi: ing partners. | Dempsey today is easily It is nimeatine to study the | the ring’s best dressed battler, The condition. He told Kilbane he was er, or anything else. Rainy Day Gives Series Bugs Chance for Gossip By Billy Evans Oct. 10.—Rainy the ideal bi Phere was plenty | around as the re sult of hole on any fast-hit ball to the In- | field, provided it is back. lected by manager Harris to do pinch hittin; drives the ball hard nd jncidentally isn't a Ty Cobb on the bases. Veach, weather is second guessing. of it being px the sec ond game during No doubt Manager Bill Me- the lay-off Fri.| Kechnie had his reasons for moy- day here, The| ing the infield i close. He chose to take a long experts picked to | gamble, decidedly fort on the part of the Pirates to} puss it ov Washington. runs would have scored. The game would have been tied and two run- to|ners would have been on the bases with no one out, ; un oe the} When a fellow pulls one and gets ANS werk refers | away with it, the happening is soon tople Ceres RecN Gtalsietan | forgotten. Only the moves that prove I sation at press head: | fatal‘are long remembered, For that quarters. This dates back to the|reason the question as to why the |final inning of the second game at! p ae . ai re Pittsburg. Mi aehACHe siding ail Pittsburg infield played in will soon be forgotten, to whether the infield shall be moved i) jin close or play its regular positions, Jare guided by tho s and inning. | In the much-dsicussed situation, Harris Panned In tho same inning Manager Stan- ley Harrls was taken to task for the bases were’ filled, no one out,| sending in Dutch Reuther as pinch tho first of the ninth and Pittsburg} hitter in preference to several other | leading by two runs, Baseball prece- | players sitting on the bench. True, jdent in such a situation is that the} Dutch did strike out ingloriously, but |infleld 99 times out of 100 shall play} I can seo no reason why the second back. The reason {s obvious. | guessers stiould take issue with the | | @With tho infield back, there is al.| Judgement of the Washington man- ways tho chances to pill a dgublo | Ager. Tt was argued that because of play on a sharp-hit ground ball of, bis long stay in the National league course, one run would score on the| the pitchers were wise to, Reuthers’ \two-ply killing, but the tenseness of | Weakness. Yet there is no denying, [the situation would be much re-| that Reuther can hit the pitt, Neved., | All things considered, I doubt Tho home team. that enjoyed @ if ever an American league club two-rtin lead at tho start of the in|! the history of the world sertes, hing ‘Would still retain a onerun| Will get mora chances to win ball gamo than did Washington in the second battle, Y ‘gin, with two out and on third only, Veach Is Slow If the batsman up in. such a evisis rlow of foot, the stage Is perfectly t to pull the pitcher out of the! a runner The Pirate to smooth the way for vietory, but the Sen take advantag f it. toft spot that slipped away, 4 by Washington ors failed to \ contours and capabilities of be r “a Dempsey’s two sparring part: gorgeous Carpentier at sar- ners—Jack Newman and Marty ial best was never his su- | Cutler, the latter an old wrestler | The champion dresses and Turkish bath magnate. The | in the most advanced modes, truth is they run wholly to | evidencing a definite passion for contours, | matching colors, to say nothing Dempsey can no more improve} of hair oils and gracefully {his condition working with these| arched eyebrows. fat dowagers than a fish can quick “I took him for an actor at first,” en {ts swimming stride on a sheet | blushed Kilbane. of tanglefoot | This writer has a suspicion Dempsey probably {sn't particu-| champion would rather have lar interested in improving his| take him for ctor than a i pieces some of | contrary to baseball’ precedent the so-called. but he got away with it, It’s strategic. moves} hard to blame the manager when of the second} he wins the ball game, : clash that went| However, had Veach, instead of to Pittsburg de-/ sending a long fly to center, drove spite every ef-|a ground ball thru the infield, two did a number of things” It was a rather” > . i : ae ot rs eceaigice’ ask |

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