The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 4, 1925, Page 17

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NOVEMBER (EDNESDAY, SEATTLE § He’s Back in Game at Center for the Huskies eddick and Cliffe Sign Ack REDDICK. - waght champion Harry Whybrow, and Bud Ridley The Seattle ir wstal Pool, to provide new canvas for as the boxers in card were over the cover- | Doug Bonamy, star center | for the Washington Huskies, i lineup again after three weeks sojourn on torn in many places. By Leo H. Lassen NEW boy mad |game and Bagshaw has been giving him 7 attle ring bugs FIRST TITLE BOUT IN CAL. Michigan Gets Off to Speedy Start i in Game | out the feats of CHICAGO MUST STOP GRANGE | Cardinals Saturday. of giving Rite Morgan fights Mike Ballarino for the world's Jv LTHO defeated by Pennsylvania, Chicago ts still very for the Big Ten football | will be the first : aan the return of le zed boxing in ip the fourth round, went home early retaining a real southpaw fiag, and tt was onl) until the knockout theae teams tled | gon } He shoots that wild against the Windy City boys. Gel sticks bis right out as was out of his Davis Punished ~ ok a terrific Neating. going fea nine count by the con- wildswinging| p Pennsylvania, the team that In the fourth Mis usder another flock of body aati he was a pretty sick boy and Morgan, his boxing js being made a favorite over the | score. Morgan plans an invasion of East if he wins the crown, as it will be necessary, | then some, for him to step into the at him to the! big money on the East coast. Batting Race. Same as 1910. The oats out of Tris Speaker| a chance to Mtting venga ‘SAMPSON NEW | WALTON HEAD local chapter of Isnak ‘Waltons re- gay last Northwestern ant Big Ten game, Towa tangles with Wisconsin. | Frayne Robbed fmmads of superior fighting tn- Rktocks a ¢ fats what the judges slipped meets Butler, lays Franklin “Franklin ad Test for West Seattle Squad| league-leading t by & unanimou: Shase was named vic 2 | cording secre Brave Marty Foley a terrific) ror the 1925 American long service | ting championship recalls the stellar | im the hinge and the Se-| battle Ty Cobb and Larry Lajoie fy was so badly stung that | on lke a mortgage Referee Schacht could bry fole, made treasurer waged back in 1910. The only difference was that rs Portland Ice Season Opens | November 25 the a league. > bat in the last two and Roosevelt and Broadway tangle in the week-end games of | header—failed like Speaker, had led the fi all the campaign. ed a one-point mein the first round, Cobb still retain. Po "I enabled frat, chance 45; aoa the Roost uda , by defeating Frank lin, year fete practically cinched the as the Indians will have one game left to play this year. Rooneyelt and Broadway havo alim a big margin. | i erribly eck, but he’s fat and terribly font iieaker . thus making the second De | | troiter to beat out a Clevelander in | Tabit surprised everybody|two of the most He | ting races ever staged in the John-| sonian organization OUR BOARDING HOUSE | Tabit Shows Punch atick-wielders Me tubsileie’ a: prince. - will be hopelessly out of the| for the most part and traded MRith George McCormick and | Was all over they called the thing a draw. hard, McCormick even it up in the last two BY AHERN McDonald, a smart With an educated left Frankie Hansler 2 Hansler was the aggressor EGAD,~NoU MEAN “To GAY “Akt YoU NEVER HEARD OF AN “DAMIR OVIG POLI"Pue MY WoRD WELL, I'LL ASoURE You OF HIS MUCH, FT ISTHE MOST SAVAGE AND TREACHEROUS OF BEASTS \) ALL AFRICA! —~ EGAD,~I RECALL A DAN WHEN ONE ATTACKED ME ON THE VELDT ~ IT WAS MINUS A Gs, KNIFE, OR WEAPON OF ANY KIND, 4 GAVE FOR A CAM OF ALUM WHICH L GED FoR INGECT STINGo,— AO-THE “OVIS POLI" SPRANG kT ME, I DAGHED THE ALUM IN 11S CRUEL SAWS, AND \NOTANTIY 1S MOUTH BECAME. GO PUCKERED, WAT IT COULDNT Bite, wove THe! n TART WAG A "ON TLL waver CARRN A FEW PINCHES OF ALUM I MY VEST POCKET, we THEN WHEN MY MISbUS STARTS"T" SAW ME, TLLDES DUST GOME ON HER A NARRER ESCAPE AN QUICK-THINKIN' ALL RIGHT! iy to have his nose and chin toting gloves for his pains. Jones, the popular amateur his pro bow and knocked Black in the four-round i Jones is a southpaw |. The K. O. came ANOTHER SMART WAY \o-T'-THROW A HUNK OF “TAFFY CANDY NN THEIR MOUTH, AN MAKE THEIR TEETH Ae y oe? and Lonnie Austin, PICKER vp’ ARGUMENT! “fom Glory |: to Trouble Outstanding hero of the Serie® wax Max Caroy, Mar of the Pittsburg club the series, the final game found Carey a tough custo. mer in the de star making Max's giory Shortly after nhittea from Of the ball field to the In the fifth gam: the star athlete to No tll effec ta are AR * fs Si cadoaceiemmemnedl | Locals | Punt | | Far i | Washington Has Many | Kickers; Nevers Does | | Stanford Punting TEN Stanford and Washington oper hostilities in the stadium Saturday the Huskies wil | have a slight edge in punting. Geor Guttormsen, var ity quarter, hax| TeLMea 2) been getting aw: 'A HOAG, Ban Franctaco heavy with long punts; welght, took stck some months thin season andlago and went to the mountains to mes His average uperate, When he back been high hidden behind hin Hows In every w Guttorm: | dis even his be friends nen has played didn't ken hi His manager had the beat of k due wanted him to go into the ring Ernie Nevers, Stanford halfback,| with it but Al save “Nothing do | doen the booting for the Cardinals, | ing Then departed with the| j but his average this season has not| remark that had to see a bar | been s0 good. ber he used to know when a kid, Guttornaen has made several punts for 60 yards this year and hla | long high spirals make it hard for the opposition to return them with any marked success. | Washington ts well fixed oe re Hugh Beckett, Harold Bidten Loute | | Tesreau and sey wight Army is Get Kelly? MLK in-Montana is that Bill By Peter Salvus Kelly, the Grizzlies’ scpaveaged bad "Cts the Cougar’ » the ato will get the appointment to} West Point in the near future |men association wAich ts planning With his wonderful ability on the|a state le campaign the ex | Rridiron, Kelly would make the East | term of the predatory animal. | sit up and take notice as he would Constant ravages of the have some real help on a Cadet/ cougar in the mountains and in eleven the winter, when It is hungry, .| Kelly has one more season “of| upon wild game life has Jed | compet left at Montana the body to make efforts for its L pad in extermination, 1D ped in Oregon they say that} 4 meeting will be held this eve- | Dick Smith tried to introduct} ning at § o'clock in the Chamber |the so-called Notre Dame system | or Commerce building to plan al year/and that when it flivvered the Ore-| method of attack to prevent the eleven had to fall back on! ravages of the animal. R. I. Alt- jformer tactics and the Webfooters| kins, famous big game hunter, will |didn't have time to find them-| give a lecture on the cougar. aelves. ee 8 Oregon, at that, did much bet HE indignation of Seattle hunt ter against Stanford than in the| 2 s Calltornia game nnd they should} — ef 8nd game followers in the be in better shape when they play | Northwest has been aroused over Washington later in the season he action of game commissions: in | 1 ‘tie @ Kittitas and Yakima counties. With the idea of not allowing outsiders Preores coaches have different |to enter and hunt methods, not only in their ays. tem of plays and such, but in| | their methods of direction, Some,| like GU Doble and Enoch Bagshaw, believe in the driving method. Howard Jones, of U. 8. C., ifferent idea You don't hear a teacher yelling | open dates on game birds only for a day or two at a time. The season will be closed for two or three days and the ban will be raised from 24 to 36 hours, barely allowing hunters from Seattle time to get over the line to hunt. has a Trojan-Idaho game last week, naye | 4 that the U. 8. C. men gave him| and Norm Limbarger mado the loss trouble than any team in years,| limit on Chinks and Hungar- | Which was quite a contrast to the! ita (here ae report wighecrate . | Cougar-Husky game in which there} Conditions. ne season closes : . | November 10 and upland game conference running when the final | whistle is blown. Twenty-five of his best men will entrain with “Pop” Warner. Appre- | hension that Captain Ernie Nevers, star fullback, might not be in the best condition, was declared ground. loam today. Nevers was touched slightly by a cold as were Halftack | Dick Hyland and Ward Pulsen, tackle, but Nevers’ allment has gone and the other two are expect- ed to be in shape. It {s upon Nevers that Stanford's hopes of victory chiefly rest. The flashy star has been called 60 per cent of the Cardinal team. Oppos- ing him are Elmer Tesreau and George Wilson, two of the finost back field players on the Qyast The Cardinal squad has been im proving. With every man playing his best gamo, scouts who have seen both teams in action, predict that the Cardinals will win by at least two touchdowns, But the little word “If” may prove the stumbling block upon which the Cardinal hopessare dashed to pieces hunting has been found. ROM the “most valuable” player in the American Jeague to the gont of the world’s series was quite a drop for Roger Pockinpaugh and his horrible showing in the classic with the Pitts- burg Pirates practically meant his passing from the Washington Senators. Peckinpaugh $s capable of play: ing better ball than he did in the big games, and whilo he is f veteran of from O. A, young Meyers, who filled in so well Sune Pur pares at third base when Oscar Bluege {CENTRALIA Is wan knocked out, and he has Deacon Scott, Scott, like Peckin- STILL IN RACE) paush, ts a veteran’ and chances CENTRALIA, Nov. 4—Altho beat. | “'O that Barris “Will give Meyers on last Saturday by Hoquiam, tho | Very chance big make good, Centralia prep eleven still has a DES Sil chance to win the Southwest Wash- | QPENCER HARRIS, by \ oe ington high school championship, Seattle flychaser, who. 1a At Raymond {is the loading team at| the property of the Chicago White Sox, Is wintering here and plans to join the Leavenworth basketball team again, He has played on that club for several seasons, the present time, but if Centralia in able to bout the Raymond eleven, it will put the former team back in the lead, te ee Some Crop j ght Kicking Edge — David| to ma Cougar Kill jetracna “Sport iad [the gun. james some of the circumstances of | games officlating they have made | | York ooper’s Body Punches Stop Davis in Fourth Round Frisco Huskies Will Have Sli Boxer Good nald Beats Hansler in Speedy Four- Binoand Bout High School Football in Need of Better Officials Varnell and Morris Are Classy Performers, but Rest of Crew Lack Ability; Henry Blake Cites Inci- dents; Field Judge Is Needed By Henry F. Blake HE need of a field judge in high school games was never so forcefully brought out as in the contests last Satur- In the game between Garfield and Roosevelt, a Gar- field back caught the ball behind his own ‘ . q goal line or on his line—it could not be de- termined accurately as there was no official n r enough to decide on the play. The play was ruled a touchback. Dixie Fleager, prominent Seattle referee, told the writer that he had offered his services as a field judge at all high school games, but nothing came of his offer. Woodrow could be used as an official in that capacity, as he knows the rules and was the only official in the Lincoln-West Seattle game who saw a Lincoln end catch a punt by his own team, thereby interf ing with a West Seattle man’s opportunity a fair catch. There should have been a 15-yard penalty on the play, but the other officials failed to observe the infringement of the rules, BLAKE He recap Referees Are Bad WEST SEATTL man was; It would haye been an education for them to have watched George arnell work in the California-Ore- Kon game, Tut Imlay was twice Jone great fault found with hish|Gowned by tacklers, but was up on nchool referees this year is that they| hig feet and running again have whistle before the! Varnell and Bobby Morris are the play has been stopped and in many | cases when a man had been thrown best pair of prep officials and their uddition to the staff this year has to the ground and was not in the|done a great deal towards speeding grasp of the tackler up the games f c-tha: daattion sports | Coaches Teach Players Right Way WICE this year timekeeper has erred at games the|time an end was playing way out firing |near the sidelines waiting for a pass when the referee blew his whistle and ordered him back in the line in The most grievous mistake |was when a team had time out for Up against such a state of af- Jan inj and a coach was on the fairs, the high school athletic | fel The timekeeper shot the gun| beard cannot expect to have the marking the end of the game students learn anything about Another time wad when the the game, and if they do not referee was taking the ball back learn they will not be able to after an incompleted forward play it correctly and intelligently. pass. In neither instance did the It is not the fault of the coaches referee call for another play. | who teach the players right, only to In second team and freshmen|have their work undone in the The officials governing high are ludicrous, At school athletics are to blame. one! Tunney-Godfrey Fight Turned Down by Gibson By Henry L. Farrell Wills and Floyd Johnson, said YORK, Nov. 4—Plans to] that Wills was willing to accept Eh New| ‘Tunney for that date, but that heavyweight contender, and| ibson refused, on the grounds George Godfrey, giant Philadelphia} {hat it was an outdoor attrac- negro, in the big feature match of} {ion and that neither of | the N EW | on for this | at his pupila in a class room,” says| There is no just rea Jones, “and when I have to yell] action, according to local sportsmen, jat a man to make him understand | who have been dicapped by the {then it's time I gave up coaching," | ruling. ‘The two counties abound | | _ Jones doesn't use Sunday | with game birds and there is no school methods, but he has a | danger of the extinction of the ban on swearing on the field fowl and after a warning or two he eee bounces a man from the squad KANOGAN county fs yield- for profane language. | ing plenty of action for George Varnell, who refereed the) siaitie nimrods, Roy Stanley ylOVE LEAGUE GOSSIP. sy Leo N. Lassen. many years he| Oregon Idle; sull has good : baseball left in After Aggies | pee "in. ‘ +4 | PECK «But ho is thru EUGENE, Nov. 4.—Coach Dick at Washington, Smith of Oregon has ono week-end | unless baseball fans there ard differ: rest before the homecoming con-|ent than elsewhere, Thero is little test here November 14 with the/or no sentiment in professional Oregon aggiom Orexon has lost| ball. three conference games so far— Bucky Harris faces the task of Idaho, California and Stanford—| developing a new man for the im but Smith says he ts going to win| portant shortstop position, He has fighters the purse ee ees see out of Reigelh de dist the son, Were aban- y doned. toda match was worth, vhen Tunney’s| Following his knockout victories manager said he | Ver Tommy Gibbons and Bartley wasn't interest. | Madden, two boxers who had never ed. Promoters | been stopped before, Tunney jumped wanted the|t® ® high position in the heay match as the| Welsht class and became a legiti- main event of | ™#te prospect for a championship an nllatar show | fsht. Godfrey, for some reason, that {s to be| Seems to have earned a lot of re staged in Madi.| SPect from the heavyweight con- son Square Gar. | tender. den, December | Willis has avoided him for two 18, for the bene. | Years, Paddy Mullins, the manager fit of the New| of Wills, claiming that Godfrey is York Christmas| UNder the management of Jack fund, and they | Kearns, and that Kearns was using looked upon it as the best attraction | him as a buffer to keep Wills atvay was enough wrangling to make up a dozen contests. P| followers will have to work |that could be arranged. from the shamplonship, | see fast to get in some hunting Billy Gibson, Tunney’s manager, gm ‘ORD UNIVERSITY, Cal,| there. ate offered the peculiar excuse that the CALLAHAN I Nov. 4.—Bound for Seattle, the = 5 he North. | former marine had drawn the color S home of the Husky, a squad of big|/PYHE {alr weather in the North-|jin6 and that Harry Wills was the |boys from Stanford university, will| -- west has kept most of “the | onty negro whom he would conde- KAYO W INNER duc! a 90 high in the} seq; ht. {board the north train tonight for| ducks and geese too scend to figh OS ANGELES, Nov. 4.—Mushy Saturday's gamo, Jair for good hunting. With the| ‘Tunney has been complaining that |. eg eatea HRM ree | Coach Bagshaw and his crew are} rains starting, hunting for water-| the refusal of Wills to accept his k ett t Pal on f { New 0: | ; forced him te tale, ocked out Pal Moran, of New Or- Just as” confident that the North-| fowl will be much better. challenge has forced him to Idle-//ans for the firat tine the Orleans | west’s remaining contestant in the | In Kitsap county, on Whidby | ness. battler has ever taken the count of | tle race will not be out of the| island, or thereabouts, good duck Newark promoters, who jten in his life. | A hook from a clinch followed by |a swing to the same place immedi- lately after, made Moran go down, 'HUNTERS GET | GOOD RESULTS SPOKANE, Noy. 4.—Four hunters | enjoyed’a perfect trip last week and {returned here with four deer, killed near Colville, Wash. John Sprin- on the bench most of this 8e@:| For Dr. A.D. Lockand, Jack Mull son with the Vernon Tigers. When | gan and Walter Melcher were the he's in condition Slade doesn’t have | jycky huntsmen. to take a back seat for any of the | Alumni Banquet staged the recent flop between BAD knee kept Gordon Slade boys when it comes to fielding. A} winter's rest should give the in- jured joint a chance to mend. Regu- Jar playing ts what Slade needs, for Wednesday and he'll get {t if he's in shape we Heat Ente: ALUMNI representing prac. ies tically every college in the country were to meet at the wr Hal Rhyne reported to be the Pittsburg Pirates that Chamber of Commerce dining rooms this noon to help pep up interest in the Washington-Stan- ford tussle Saturday. The ban- quet was staged under the aus- pices of the King County Alumni sold to {t means the San Francisco Seals must develop a new man for shortstop, The Seals have been for. tunate in having wonderful stars|] association by Herbert Little, for that berth and they developed|| President. th themsefy Fr ‘dl George Guttormsen, Darwin ho men themselves. First there|! afeisnest, George Varnell and was Roy, Corhan, then Jimmy Cay- eney,and next came Rhyne. They were super-shortstops, all of them, see LL George Bochler asks is a Matt Hill were to speak. chance to work. fwo years ago he was with the Pittssurs Pirates after winning some,,{§ games of ball and a pen nant for Tulsa in the Western league. The Pirates used him Just twice in tho spring, six weeks apart, Boehler is a big, strong fellow who thrives on work, ‘The present world’s champions didn't give him a real chance, With @akland he has been a horse for Work and it ho gets any kind of a break on Mis second trip up next year ho should bo a winner, ‘There are tow pitchors in baseball who have more stuff than the big Oaklander, f. ld

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