Wednesday, June 10, 1925.
Good Arm Vital in Baseball Hal ".
MICKEY WALKER lslc
OVER HARRY GREB,
THE TOUGHEST OP Gr
! 4A Il.n nre" V r7Vrf
Snappy Sporting Notes
II
HARD WHILE THE
M
' CHICAGO. June 9.
New) Jack Scott,
(By 1'nited
the habitual
nine. If the Pirates had won they
would have superseded the Dodgers,
because the Brooklyn team lost to
the Cards in St. Louis. S to I, eren
with Daisy Vance pitching. Alan
Sothoron pitched (or Rogers Horns
by's team.
The Reds moved closer to the
Pirates. They beat the Phils again
in Cincinnati, 3 to 1.
There were only two games in
the American league. The Athletics
setting the pace, kept step with the
swift career of the Giants, winning
Zev To Return To
Race Track After
a Long Vacation
NEW YORK, June . (United
News) After a season of placid
domesticity on the velvet acres of
the farm, Zer, the greatest money
winner that ever trod the loam of
an American race track, will bo
I brought back to the track to chal
' their thirty-second victory at the ex-1 lone ih h.n.iir.n .. r... .v.- .....
rfaHllA . h. lo. ... r " Ml'
"'"' ""jpenseoi toe Tigers. In Philadelphia, son's honors.
(tine oesi piuuer in me .-auunai oris 10 i. i ney nave lost is, and Sam Hildreth, trainer of the
"jubilee circuit, won his ninth vlc-'tne'r record Just matches that of horses owned by Harry Sinclair, has
.tory Tnesday. when he served the! tne Glanta' wn e considered far been so encouraged by Zev's sp-
!gun for the Giants In t t to 7 win """"" ,Be " laB at pearance that he will start (raining
tover the Cubs in Chicago. It was
(one of the ceremonial games of the
National league, of which there will
I be .many before October, celebrating
'the, fiftieth anniversary of the lea
.guej Judge Lsndls and a lot of old-
tlme Cubs were at the cigar box
rpark of the Chicago troupe to adorn
(the exorcises.
J Scott ' has equalled the work of
'Walter Johnson is far as the season
'has gone. " They have each lost two
.games in eleven starts.
Scott was tossed away once by
the Braves, once by the Reds and
.twlce by the Giants. John McGraw
took him bai! this year on proba
tion, and Jack has out-pitched the
men who were regarded as the star
! regulars of the team.
The Pirates had a chance to In
vade second place when they met
the Braves again in Pittsburgh, but
muffed 1L The Braves fought them
for eleven Innings and won out.
the start of the season.
The Indians whipped the Red Sox.
3 to t In Boston. I
BERT COLIMA GETS
DECISION IN L A
LOS ANGKLKS, June 9 Bert
Coltma, roast middleweight cham
pion, out-bolod Henry Mrlcar in
nine rounds out of ten in thrlr
right here tonight.
Jackie Fields scored a knock,
out over Billy Young in the first
round of their battle. '
him at once. Hildreth believes the
three-year-old champion of 191S will
stand training, and shake up the
handicap division later In the season
although experience on the turf fur
nished little material for optimism
Zer has been in the stud since
early In the spring.
uray i.ag ana Purchase were
brought back to the running by Hil
dreth after they had retired, and
both of them broke down, although
Purchase won two food races before
he collapsed.
American Association
MHlwolkee 4, Toledo 10. '
St.. Paul I, Louisville 2.
No other games scheduled.
A booster tot Klamath county
and Klamath Falls and every legit.
tm.tc. Indiufr thrn(n thi'! th
scoring three runs in the last in- Klanath News. .
i DONE BROWN
Pitcher named Riffle, with the
University of Kentucky, ' pitched
no-hit, no-run game against Centre
' . ' '
college the other day. The Centre
sluggers tried to shove across a
, -run but couldn't make the riffle.
..The weekly batting average fur
: nishes some interesting slants on
i the American league race. Out of
some eighteen or nineteen players
:' who : have played fairly regularly
to date and who have held up a
batting average of .310 or better
five of them can be reckoned as
newcomers. '
; These five men are Ben Paschal
of the Yankees. Al Simmons of the
Athletics, Earl Combs of the Yanks,
.Gordon Cochrane of the Athletics
and Ernest Vache of the Red Sox.
Three of these men were with
the teams named before this year.
Cochrane and Vache made their
debuts this last spring. The three
who preceded them, however, re- i
celved their first real chance with
the beginning of the present cam
paign. 'Which puts them about In
the same category.
Simmons was sent away by Con
lie last year for more seasoning.
When he was recalled there was
etill a sneaking suspicion that he
might not stand the gaff because
of bis freak hitting style. One
can't be a bloomer and hold to a
. .350 average and better past Decor
ation day.
Combs was handicapped last year
by a wealth of outfleldlng material
In the Yank bailiwick and by ad-
ranee press notices. He realized
last spring that his future rested
entirely with his playing and not
. with these press notices. The Ill
ness of Ruth gave him his chance
. to bring his light out from under, a
bushel.
Paschal, once an Indian,- was
.brought up from the Southern as
sociation last year with the rep of
being a terrific clouter. He re
ceived his first real chance to dem
onstrate his ability when assigned
to Ruth's place In the Yank out
field. How he not only fielded well
and batted consistently but tried to
emulate Ruth as a home run hitter
l Is well known.
Cochrane came out of the Pacific
Coast league at a time when the
' big league bosses and general pub
lic were losing faith in the "pne
noms" of the Sunset section teams.
He Joined n team that bad one of
the game's best catchers based on
' early performances ready to go
.again., Cochrane nonchalantly staov-
ed that ' man, Cy Perkins, on the
. bench and proceeded to demand
( his place In the backstopping sun.
- The fifth man, Ernest - - Vache,
with the Boston Red Sox, Joined the
team last spring from the Dallas,
Texas club, with little noise, as
compared to 'the fan flare accom
panying the arrival of some re
cruits to the big show. Sent into
the ontfleld by Lee Fohl, Vache
proceeded to slam the old pill at a
merry pace. - . - -
There may ' or may not be a
warning for some of the old
codgers in the showing of these
young men. Slsler, Cobb, Speaker,
Heilmann and the other standbys
still hold their places among the
leading hitters. But the names of
these youngsters are beginning to
stand out in bolder type In the
weekly reports.
"Yankees Need Loyal Support,"
says a New York headline. That
and Babe Ruth, two or three pitch
ers ana lour quarts., of concei
trated morale and pep.
Gibbons Will Quit
Ring for Keeps Is
Word of Ed Kane
if uf" r i mMr
CJ
, "Pusaeu.
I fAiu.es i"
4-1 LafX. W -m a j
A good throwing arm is s vital
necessity, according; to tradition,
If one is to sun-red in baseball.
Hut Riggi Stephenson, one of ;
the hardest hitters sod best all
around players fat the bis; I
Icspics, is a might valuable
nun despite an arm made crook- ,
td by a break, received In fooU
bill. And Russrl Miller, with !
crooked arm, is the star pitcher
of the Ohio State L'iiivenity
team.
COAST LEAGUE
NEW YORK, June 9. (United
News) Eddie Kane, manager of
Tommy Gibbons, doesn't care enough
about money to bustle up another
match between Gibbons and - Gene
Tunney, In which Gibbons might be
hurt. On his getaway from Chicago
today, after clearing up the business
of laAl week's bout between the two
pugilistic examplars of perfect be
havior, Kane said he had advised
Tom to retire.
"Tom would like to fight Tunney
again, beat him. and then retire in
good order," Kane said, "but If
have any influence on him he'll
quit now. He made a great record
and he went out clean. He's well
fixed so there's no need of his going
on any longer. I could make some
money for myself, the manager's
. . jvu tuuw, nfflnni mm t . i .
., . - ii.ua miKKiun
through some more fights, but I San Francl,c0 g
. mil luucn aooui money.
Kane expects to go to Europe late
In June and probably will take
Sammy Mandell, the Rockford, 111.,
lightweight, front runner In the
competition for Benny Leonard's
title, with him, for a vacation. They
will tour the British Isles and the
continent.
By WR8TIUIOOK PKOLKIt
NEW YORK. June . (Dnlisd
News) Mickey Walker b likely to
hit Harry Ore on the Up and spin
him clear dowa to the belt lint
when they fight at the Polo Grounds
un the night of the nineteenth, whlrh
is leas than two Weeks sway, or If
the fight Is postponed, on July t.
(Ireb has been training for a lick
ing for tnors than two years, and
by this tints he ought to be In fine
hup to get ono.
drab received several favors from
nature. Including one set of rubber
ankles, which really had mors to
do with his winning bis fights and
the middleweight championship, and
with keeping Dim oft his back In the
ring, than anything he csrrled In
his fists.
The minute Greb's ankles lose
their spring sums one will hit blm
on the Up and spill him.
In return for favors received, Oreb
has socked mother nature on the
mush, or kisser, at every opportun
ity. This fellow doesn't trsln. He
has had such marvelous vitality
that be hain't toned It necessary to
train. The ankles would carry him
through.
Mickey Walker Is young, tem
perate man of 14, a husband, a pop.
with a pretty smsrt appreciation of
what happens to good fellows when
they haven't got It any more. He
has had some horrible examples to
study In his nsilve Jersey neighbor-
nooa, wnere t name weinert was a
grilt guy one day and a has-been
(he neit; where old Ie(er Maher
lay on his back In the public ward
of St. Mary's hospital, Hubokxn,
laat year, with his future and his
fortune both blhlnd him
Orssu,,, I
whM "rtttai aJ
"l-roLm i
Oloboueaj,
1,4 slam
lnnk.4 ..... "
i7.
Of Weight I,
lofroM.
! an
snuiUf, orssk,
riowsr,, tq, , '
AIM tut rsir K
site. "
Wsllsr wttlnj
He ilw hlm
H allo), ai
to tu tnu
that Harry ton
Wslktr wID trut
live at boat.
Ores, is wm B'
tl dowatevi a a,
the eabarttt at fcl
do his traiBlag. a)
In a gymaulia rig
a sort of aubio
broksrs plir ItJ
ball, twice anils'
cauie Doboty ku (
proof cigar tut a
the shontri. )
This fight trffl k(
thaa any et Ik Be
the one wlik Bn,
with Olbboai. ?
A paper wimc
opportanlty teens
thty desire Osn
Nows i
Score
Portland .. - S
8eattlo j.i. 5
Batteries Levereni. Burns
Tobln; Dumovich, Hasty and Baldwin.
Score
Sacramento Salt Lake .
Batteries-
n ii e. I f PAMOUS fans '1
and I It .t5 rsNI eJVJL U U f Tlirt iomr)Mm r I
R. H. E. I -Beat vM6 . SE, rtW"tJ.'j
Ponder, Hulvey and Peters. j 'tY' ' fVf ' ' I
Score- R. H. E. ! & Hfev JfHU3 & J'- " ' 'I
Batteries Root, Mllstcnd, Ram- i I A .3 ' ' VCijt l
sey and Sandbcrg; Griffin. Goary "y. ft&TfVK
Vernond ."'ZZ'ZZ"ZIa -t s -Wawsl gl " t
Batteries Foster, Pruett. IH-lan-
-J "" ' ey and Byler; Barfoot, Ludolph and I ' II ,
C-v, " Hannah. ! ' " II- 1 fl
' ?V HOW THEY KTAND ' II l 'tt
1 A . nil It I - . u. I -j sant -sksaaBa sw - tsr 1 1 1 1 1 I lift II trw I r I 1 1 1 "
, 2 600 Dotroit 3 9 2 ' ' -"Z&J& j&SlJ- ' ' LZlf
"eea z 2 6oo' : k 2zzZ2Z&z JsL '
Mt. Shasta . 1 3 250 ( i .. u -" " ,t; if
IN OUR OFFICE " - , ,
, Jr ' J
f DOtt'-l'tlXl "Hi I" 'SO the BOSS tOT SlClt. I 1 ri v-" ' , urtjN'T
ZkA AMOTVVCR: ) I SMELLIN6 ClGWcS. HHAt 1 f TWE BtS I Mfc'Ct Ue 0G )?.
?V Cl6Mc: J VloE ' HE SMOKE 'EM A uVt POfe A HARPC' ;
; ; r.".- " ' '' Voo caifi ' ' ''
I BRINGING MP BILL gg1
Mgy - "THIS- FtoNO , ( NUWlM B- CATT3-I ANYTHING 'iVtYojW I EXPECT 1