The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1925, Page 13

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1925, rL TAR » Pirates Regain Batting Form and Win From Champions Covey Still Ham pered by Back Walter Johnson May »: ore | .* . . . BOB MORRIS WILL UMPIRE NEBRASKA GAME cr Champion| eee Helps Pirates i in World’ 8 Series Local Official Is to Pitch if Series Is Tied By Billy Ev: leskie la kie wa $ great rg gAMe, wor exhibitions of the is best OOVIE PROPER ft T attr » Coveleskie's ineffective ss to lack of pr Usiz almost exc strain r an needs four and is even er with five days between rest Walter Johnson, despite his shutout in the fourth game, suf- fered because of the same reason. Both Johnson and Coveleskie have had at least four days be- tween starts during the regular season, I knew f and, added to this ge was tho injury to my leg. which greatly affected my pitching stride,” remarked Johnson to me/ efter the game. JOHNSON SAYS HELL PITCH Johnson takes exception to the gen- eral impression that his leg injury will keep him from starting another «ame. I will be in there for the eventh game if it goes that long. eve I will be able to turn the F = back for the third time.” Pittsburg richly deserved to win. For the first time in the series the Pirates looked like the really great team they are. The batting power of the club was in evidence from the very start of the game. This punch made it possible for MecKechnie to use the speed of his players to ad- vantage. Bpeed has seldom figured nently in of the teams wall, promi ® world’s series until one had its back to the I umplred the series won three the shout- of the first four gam the series was all over but DISREGARD SAFETY PLAY IN GAME ‘The New York team of that year ras one of the fastest aggregations of the game. © Just: be. »s went to the field for the fifth game, McGraw instructed hits players to throw away the safety first tactics and take every possible chance on bases, Almost before the Red Sox could realize the change in tac- ties, New York had the game sewed up with a five or sk-run lead. Eventually the series were tied up by the Giants, and had it not been for Snodgrass’ mem- orable muff of a fly ball, they would have won the series after {t looked to be in the bag for | to | been | his team for a Wins by K. O. Paul Berlenbach Stops King Solomon in Ninth | Round in Gotham assassin temporari the Ne weight champion ship of the world, dminiate red a troun Panama ing K te HV Harris, spp that in the by a © Osh i the nd won fighting to the first Double ris to Judge to Coveleskte ith to Traynor, 8! u, 1 Aldridge veleskie ‘ Aldrid, Yoveleskio. Lef Washington eakie 9 ty 6 © off Ballou tn 2 off Zachary tn Time, 2 Umptr sler at plate; Owens at first; 3 at second; Moria: lig margiy ured Ji atte is maje: the third Paul we with a lefts to blows aty sent success! the head a in the cline ing under was tho by a mile. He rs 6 for br fei oan hy ee had his op ponent ath in the} | fourth, | It was fast growing dark the fifth Solomon landed two Beavers in | Town; Open |i oe ee 3 With Tribe’ weathered a rain and eta the seventh. tgs t CK HANNAH, and his Po 1 Beavers, to 4 ended he the jumped back neries this a Pacific ounded, baseball and in fts for king's eut one was sw lipa of rig , ae were game of a Ray home hitter de luxe, tovvie with Frank Brazil! in denting the right field fence. t-heavywelg nds heavier than who weighed in at 172 wer the « run pion, COAST | beck Gloucester, of Seattle team: fw to wind up the season in Port land, but Seattle ROHWER isthe place this | Gax season for the first time in yearn. | Hs anager Red Killefer is p! ve his rookie pitchers, Cheka and Frank Bowers, of work while the Beavers are here| as to get them seasoned under Steve plenty | eo Portia Clift Brady, who was injured sent home b: Jeorge Cutshaw will take his patel second base the re ¢ the hice, cs mmce. ca |(WADELL 18. f work PASSING ACE)! cae Wadell, halfback for the Willam Jette university gridders, is Buliba SQUAD fee cite sc ON DEFENSIVE |*:",": manager team, ng defense. He Trapp, of Edmon: for Art Shore, a Beastie a 9000 THs WEEK Beattie AMES ast week, re Ba Killefer and It and in a rookie in Brady's} figures stron, Wadell 60 yards a pasa. ack recently a brok passing sed the ball field to ¢ WINS SHOOT w omplete hag secured Bob ton in exchange forward The hockey Muldoon is prophesying seanon AGGIE GRIDDER INJURED BADLY) CORVALLIS, Ore, Oct. 13—Rob bing, first-string end for the Oregon | Aggies, may bo out for the season as a result of a sprained ligament jin his leg incurred in the game here with Gonzaga Friday. He was }taken to the hospital as soon as he| | was forced to leave the game. | Cooley won the! Or | been completed after several weeks ot competition. Wallace Harmon was second LETTER FOR | Rosebu p shoot son soon in Portland and a favorable! open cpoeopce is a letter at the office of the Sports Department of The Star for Bobby Harper, Se attle boxer. Tho letter may be obtained by haying Harper call at The Star. ttaburg team worked on the theory of McGraw and thereby in prolonging the McKechnie apparently made n to his athletes that this was ame that must be won. The ed it more decisively other game of the series VERGUSON OR REUTHER TODAY T had a chat wit efore the verter h Stan’ He would Covey start with Reuther. I uld haye done it under ‘ances, but he want 1 it if possible and realized looked Coveleskie ns y Harris game havo to The present position of Man ager Harris as to his pitching staff is none too enviable. For the first time in the series, the Pittsburg batters lived up to ad- 6 dope hy taking plenty of liberty with Southpaw Zachery’s stuff. The Pirates were touted as fond of left-handers, It must teuther in toda he Pirates win, be elther P'erguson ® gam Harris would have aiternatt to come ack with Johnson after only a. two rest and a ad leg Not a ery pleasant prospect for the game itt leader of the s, tut loean believ six games will be or 0 other than lay he © more than necennary MICHIGAN ACE GETTING WELL ANN HARGOR, Mich., Oct, 12 Ne Domhoff, varsity quarterback who wa first few lay oon be able k In the lineup of f Michigan gridders, ac hool'n physictan injured in 5 of prnct the o be } niversit another | and should | the| A00KS: ‘SLICES on Seattle {airways BY ALEX C. ROSE 7 AS: ee Dr. b. F. Ristine’s golf game is so good now that he wonders what's the trouble when he fails to put ‘em dead to the pin from any distance |up:to 200 yards | There's no | headquakes ‘The fairways of the Seattle Golf club are beginning to look in tip-top condition. Harry Hotchkiss has g to Florida, Fred Jackson, who sells bonds for a pastime and plays golf for a livi in decidedly off form if ho finis 18-hole round with less than 12 a four-ball igor counting for these me to all an beans to-the-good in rote game | There's quite a ; similarity between Larry Cunningham and Ted Ray, lthe great British professional, Both | smoke pipes while > playing. | | Many Inglewood months, but |loud sweater Joutfit that Dr. J. in the other day With Bill Jackson it’s different. If he 1s 12-to-the-bad he Is tickled to | death that he is that close to break. | ing even. noises have been heard at during the past few fone compare with the | | and stocking-to-match . Moore appeared Aside from having added some 30} yards to his shots, Harry Young has | perfected a perfect follow-thru. | Judging by the looks of the tall! youngster the yardage and follow thru medicine has improved his Haying found the right way to) putt, Jick Weber is now working | on a scheme to cross his hooks with | his #lices so that ho can find tho| health | fairways. ‘ | A bad memory, says Ted Owens, | in equal to two strokes in the al or one putt. ‘Tho only thing that Tom Mo: | George has been able to hang on to this last three months is @ slice that gives hin caddy a nore throat yelling ‘Out of bounds!’ Bill Elliott, the Inglewood so@bh: | spent over $200 on golf lessyns thi but, he saya, it was money | well spent. Hoe won The Star eclec tle tournament paw ‘onr, | Tommy Barwick, one of the best lsoceer players that ever hit t Northwent, is being quite some pump. | iin oy a goiter, Walter Hagen and| According to reports, many golfe: Hobbie Jones, however, ara not jiv/are finding birdies much able to got excited over this state-| get off the course than on the men these daye course from w in the “Stuf fy’ McInnis Back With Pirate Crew FRED CLARKK Fred Clarke orld series games with Washington. was the manager of Pittsburg 1909. Clarke u orld series of former manager of the Pittsburg Pirates) erickson and now vice president of the club, is aiding Bill McKechnie} the bench in directing the play of the Pirates in the when they played| ana Ydamundson will make tho trip, watch ¢ against and drea underp hang wan in. the bi BOB HARPER| «twin! By Frank Getty ITTSBURG, Oct. 13 nen John Phelan McInnis was a in the olt fishing town Mass. he used to on | the next eaten coll of hawser and| Meldern to th ships fade o tions and » th ring mackerel sky | the infield b is & pirate. Pit Thirty years and more have kone by since “Stuffy” dreamed those boyish dreams, and now he is » different kind of pirate, 4 most important member of Bill MeKechnie's fighting Cor- sair crew from Pittsburg. Mel | water. Every “stuffy mond and tol time ba weather to due to “Stuf grew Phelan pis is playing w hi in 1913, 19 PLAN Jay's game E, “his. throw js doubtful if in any of baseball MoInnis ed as much to a team's did in Mor a litt Ng arm, coaches Buty apparent MeInnis result of Ore 6 to 0, The much abou mo this we mascot to Conch: tory over W of the arg’s y n in fifth game r There were times when Me- Innis was nearly a whole team in himself, on the defense, As he played first base, there were eight other Pirates scattered around the field, but it’s brains that win ball games, and that was what “Stuffy” was furnish. ing—nothing else but Aldridge, who was constantly the October PULLMAN, With tho ex ton Stato col! pitching | be in hot | ¢ OUR BOARDING HO e Idaho V K jbad way for plitchern if Ak been taken out California Comes this happened, de across the id Vio hox tier, He waved ho most suitable dia. baseball. mud ve been dridge in had fy McInnis that | was not necess The old head—that’ 's what they on the shoulders of John Me’ playing baseball with the whalers of New Bedford 20 years ago. Innis, who started ans of baseball, serios of 1910, 17 and this year SHAKEUP Ore, Oct. 1 ho de gon's defeat Satu at the hands of Idaho. on are the Pacific ek, but they game not worry KOENIG OUT Wash ception of Oct. 1 ndal USE hero Saturday WELL LADG~1 HAVE APPLIED FoR PRIENT PAPERS ON MY INVENTION ts S50, \F Yoo WILL ALL GATHER HERE IN “HIG ROOM TOMORROW NIGHT, Nol) SHALL HAVE “THE WiGH HONOR OF HEARING THE DETAILG OF MY TRULY REMARKABLE \NVENTION, BEFORE tT WILL BE MADE PUBLIC le A MOGT SINGULAR EVENT, EGAD ! we) Wen pip Nou SA, ~~ -fomoRROW NIGHT 2? GORRY MAJOR, BUT I'M GOING DOWNS “Town AN! WicH "EM LAN “TH NEW CAR “TRACKS !» it was to pitch to} the post- teadied and whippped up a and it. was largely this played 1911, Oregon | threaten Coe “OREGON PREP a ing university are about and, Koenig, Cougar backfield star, the Washing. | lege football team will intact when it goes out against W ork in Contest Birch to Referee With Cochrane and Reilly Com- pleting Staff; Washington Team Leaves To- night, 28 Strong By Leo H. Lassen OB MORRIS, the crack young S& iron official, goes East with the Washing- ton Huskies tonight to act as umpire in the Nebraska-Washington game at Lin- coln Saturday. Morris, who is f. de- veloping into one of the most efficient gridiron officials in these parts, is the only Western man who will work In this contest. 3irch will referee and Cochrane will act s head linesman, and Reilly as field judge. | They are all from the Middle West. is rated ag the premier official in the Missouri valley. The Huskies were going thru their final workout today before entraining tonight at 7:30 from the King st. sta- tion on the Northern Pacific; | for Nebras Coach Da ss decided to ke 28 him, the follow- MEN corge W'! Geehan, Charleston, Figures on Monday Mix BACKFIELD ton, Tesreau Harold Shidler, CENTERS Doug Bonamy, Romeo Dauzon GUARDS Egbert Brix, Hed Cook, Bill Wright and Bob Thompso was shifted to last night TACKLES Brix, Pat Wilkon, Walden nd Mlarence Dirks NDS Johnny Cole, Jud Cutting, LeRoy | Schuh, Don Douglas and Kirk | Besides Bagshaw, Coaches Graves George Loule sin attendance thus the total re Rice Ray and Bob Shaw, , who fter gamo at $339,644.19. of base- of Mon. the clubs’ scrimmago Herma: The total kitty of the advisory counct} to date 1s $121,746.60. The clubs’ pool {s $350,252.21 . Foley Set | for Fight at Crystal: ITH Vic Fole; latter the role rance will trainer le the the in of the tr manag almer will with the boys, while dake and doo € ard deg Wash- ington fans, are planning to hop the rattler with the athletes to: night. Mr. and Mrs. Peterson of the Alaska Steamship Co, will be the only other Seattle fans to go with the team. tam champion, meeting Young! Jeft Kellogg, a Washington alum-|Nationalista, of Los Angeles, in the | nes in Red Cloud, Neb, has assem- "| main event a good program has be comprise the majority of the Wash. | Denaany toy, 1 abten sechele + . night's fight at Crystal Pool. Foley and Na tonalista are “Doe go along Canadian ban- Ingersoll Is Clean Victor ™® ASTORIA, Ore., Oct. 13.—With | an exhibition of splendid gameness, | Gee Ingersoll, Astoria welter- | | Welght, last night twice refused to! accept his fight with Johnny Tram-| bitas of Portland on fouls and then went out and won a clean eight-| | round decision. Ingersoll was gross-| ) (Mud ly fouled in tho first and seventh} NATIONALISTA | rounds. The Panama Kid of Van-| mayne, a local boy couver was knocked out by Youngs |twicg by Jackson, a colored | Denny OF meee |of Portland, and wishes to erase the |stigma from his otherwise clean rec- | ord. In ers, besides be- ing hard punch- ers, Nationalista is a favorite of the fight fans in the South, as Fo- ley ‘is in the North. Ted Frayne and Young Peter Jackson fight in the semi-final. the other bouts on tap, Billy ELEVEN WINS | sonason vs. Joo McKenzie, in tho LONGVIEW, Oct. 1%—The high|#Pecial’ event; Hector MéDonald, | school leven from Ratnier, Ore.,| fom Vancouver, B. C,, a clever fight- Saturday afternoon, defeated the p Tally Seaele Japan Longview high school team, 20 to| ngs Haxy eye oulcay: and. 7, Holmes, captain of the visiting! Abregon..open the show. Jeievon, was the star of the game, | making several sensational runs, | \ NEAR VICTORY CHICAGO, Oct. 13.—The Chicago Cubs entered today's game with the White Sox needing but one game to win tho Inter-city Utle. The Cubs won yesterday, 3 to 1, when Kauff- man held the Sox to five hits. Kid BY AHERN - COME ~To “THINK | OF 1% “ToMORROW =| NIGHT \9 OPEN FoR ME, ma GUESS TLL HUST UP A DENTIST AN HAVE HIM “UWE MV GRIND ORGANG!: NEH,“ NO GENGE IN WASTING AN EVENING tailored Trousers BOXING TONIGHT First Bout 8:30 Sharp Crystal Pool Second Avo, and Lenora St, National Athletic Club NATE DRUXMAN Presents VIC FOLEY | Canadian and Pacific Const Nanamweight Champion Young Nationalista Filipino Cyctone of Los Angeles, Cal. BOUTS Ladles Cordially Invited ey on palo at Druxmai vith Jon 4 V0. ys, Recond a in d& Salt, Ino., + corner Olive Nindside 4.20, Reverved $1.68 General Admission 81.10 1680 Ninth Birch | | both clever box- has been beaten | boxer | Co Be nple mplet chambers, at which the of the and golf e invited ot the of tt tract of elonging to © Ladd estate esent nine-hole side, will come ROSE board, a sprinkling the ning this 50-acre tract ht and—it will not cost yers a red cent. Sounds interesting! Municipal golf has always been # paying proposition in Seattle and it has always been a mystery to public links play- ers why the park board has always shut their eyes to the fact that the present courses need sprinkling systems. The money is there to do it with, However, cunsy golfers? are pleased that the powers that be are at least becoming aware of the fact |that Seattle is in need of more | public courses and that the players can pay for them. What could be | sweeter | The terms of purchase, which will amount to about $75,000, seem very |reasonable, and as there are two members of the board—three yotes p required to put over the deal— in favor of the proposition. quite safe in saying that | Seattle mun golfers are right v much closer to getting what y want than they have been for many years. 'NEW MANAGER FOR CHI CUBS | CHICAGO, Oct. 13—Joe McCarthy, |Manager of the Louisville club, | champions of the American associa- | tion, has signed a two-year contract to manage the Chicago Cubs of the National league. McCarthy will replace George Gib- son, who took charge of the Cubs a |few weeks ago. | PLANT TROUT | Approximately 3,000,000 rainbow trout have been planted in streams | and lakes of the Deschutes country near Bend, Ore. in the past few | months, Tho work has been com- pleted for the fall planting in those | waters. DEDICATE FIELD The new memorial stadium of In- |diana university will be dedicated | November 21, the ceremonial to pre- cede the Indiana-Purdue football | same. It {s to commemorate the students of the university who were killed during. the war. SPURNS OFFER Big Boy Buckeye, pitcher for ‘the | Cleveland Indians, has turned down an offer to play professional foot- ball with a Chicago pro eleven. Buckeye will work at his old job with a trust company instead and keep in trim by playing handball. ] What was the score of the Yale- Princeton football game last sea- son?—C. D. T. Yale, won, 10-0. is a finely made and very smart roportioned collar. QO¢ Cluett. ett Peabody & Co,Inc, BASEBALL Seattle vs. Portland Game Called 245 pom. Tronerve Seaty Niiacn-0160

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