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About The Klamath news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1923-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1925)
r Page Ten Sahmlay. August 22, 10 SP70RTS DONE BRWK paHB Boy NQOK4N C BOO w N IMWMMMM 111 luck may have been following! Wood and figuratively annihilated , IMS. and I Hut Kerr and Hay Schalk Eddie Collins wr outstandingly square In the hkiik of rorruptionisl ! who wore Comlskey'a colors la that some special honor might. j hare been paid thrm. Kerr aland about as high and Connie Mack most of Hie season . that pair. while ho was making hit usual! This year Ihey were figured, as un heroic effort to net his new White 1 beatable. Imagine, then, the shock thu s a. ..e. r- i ...,. ... - -Etohut higher than second divi- the tennis official, received when figure doesn't seem big fclepnanis nigner inon ' Vincent Itichards and the veteran the work of a major league pitcher. Tv M w.ih ,nh,rie. to Smn.y I U Nor is William, gave he. a de- nut In that world series, with ..moat back,, what with injuries to fcammy B. orr ,,,,, cinp,r,n5 bohd bin, Cray. Joe Hauser and half a do. n c.she lng. others, and a few attacks of the grip ,,.!, only iwii K.iuii-n , -.. ..- ho While Sox. lie won In spite his support, so you see what sort lof ball he pitched. In 1921. his last season, whin the While Sox were a sort of semi-pro- . .. . j , ... UIII1IM . . - 4C8-SIOHUI BUUUU, IM Bdl i av i j via ' - tho balance of the season some time ago because of injuries. Jimmy Poole stepped into bis shoes, and . fc. Mi,la the fun almost forget i I Hauser and his big bat. tk i. nnthinr mysterious about Little Pick Kerr, the star of the the success of the Athletics to date. baseball world in 1919. when thej The club, as a ball club. Is hitting j White Sox won a pennant, finds a at a .S00 clip. The pitchers are de- lot of new tricks to the big leaguej p.KIS. Aug. 21. (railed News) KEN WILLIAMS IS LEADING BIG TIME If. R- KINGS food limmv O'Connell To'Itac i organised b.a.b.u" . I'srred by Judge l.andls afl.r coa ook Ko-lnstatenicni! '""' ".r.d hm. linn I. ...- .k. , ... last fall. Jimmy still refuses D j0 KAN KIlANtlStO, Aug. I I. -'" "hwii 6,wa U nited Nrw.l-Jli.niiy OVonnrll j "" ""' still holds the hope that soma day Al I'rwnl O'Connell la alevrdnr. lag oa ik. . M life rtl' Bui a....... '" . tk.iT and hebee jeebees thrown in. But right now he Is tilling pretty) or was when this went to press. For unless you consider Joe Hauser. Connie has his entire strength avail- able right now. Hauser. of course.1 WHITE SOX MAYS SHINE NEXT YEAR WITH DICK KERR St. LouU Swatter Now Ha Total Of 33 Circuit Clout For Seaon in in games tor them, but that he has now lost much of what he used to have. 'American Girl May Try Channel Again big league pay. And the fielding is good. In addition to these much-sought . lu last week. virtues, the club has the added one: But tne crepe nangers learnea a cnannei again this year. of being a harmonious one. lesson from their advanced dope on MlM Kderle denied that she bad It's hard to beat that comblna- Dick when he first joined the Sox j made any definite decision. NEW YORK, Auc 21. f United News) To ditto. ck Kerr won R KeR Hornsby has hit UIJ nit the odds are'"" ..... ; nonicra, ivvii iiiiiiih poor second with 25. while Hartnett of the Chicago Cubs is close on his heels with 21, and Meusel of the Giants trails with 23. The rest of the home run swatters in the bin lea gues are way down the list. Will one of these athletes become the new llrerlng the kind of pitching expect- game, despite his tew years absence,..! an) not pannng, I am just think- ed from big league hurlers receiving, from organised ball. The little lei- maUera over," Gertrude Ederle low Is off to a bad start. He didn t : toM ,he United News Friday when therefore do much the two games he was used. quMt0U,u sbot the report that shelgabe Ruth, and find Work in ' l.l ........... t n I .n Ih. k-nwllah .... . . .11.... -- -- tne movies, anu misceimntruuM 'checks in the mail as the or iginal Babe did? They will not. In the first place there was only one copy of the Dabe. lie caught the jackrabbit ball on the nose when tion. Wally Hood, who was tried out twice In the majors and found want ing both times. Is hooked to return to the big show next fall as an out fielder with the St. Louis Browns. The Dodgers were the last ones to turn WalUe back to the sticks. Is Tyrus Raymond Cobb sick and tired of lefthand pitchers? May be. At least be is centering his efforts right now on landing some good de pendable righthanders. He Is anx ious enough to get some good north siders that he is said to bare offered Jack Dunn of the Baltimore Orioles a cool (50,000 for George Ernshaw, one of Dunn's best, it not his best, pitcber. Cobb has a right to be disappoint ed in southpaws. Last year he thought he bad a lefthanded hurling staff that could side-arm the opposition to death. Earl Whltehill. Edwin' Wells and Bert Cole, by all that was true and holy, seemed ready to do It alone. Then Cobb obtained the reinstate ment of old Dutch Leonard and his staff seemed complete. But Cole, by the end of the 1924 season, had convinced Cobb he was not to be depended upon. Cobb final ly let him go this season. Neither Whitehill nor Wells bit a winning gait this season. The only dependable pitching he has had from his portside department has come from the venerable Leonard. . WhitehiU's failure to get going this year was a body blow to the Tiger hopes. He was tho pitching ace of the team last season. Those who have been watching the International league races of late years say that Earnshaw is the best righthander that circuit has produc ed in many campaigns. Whilo Earnshc-x is bugglug tin righthand honors, Tom Thomas is said to be the cream of the south paws In the league by many yards. ' a An eastern sport writer, arguing that Ty Cobb bus "slowed up," says it would be impossible to state the exact number of games which Cobb has lost this year through "slowing up." It would be quite Interesting In out opinion, to state the number of games the Tigers would have lost without Cobb In the lineup Cobb may be slowing up. It isn't reasonable to suppose that a man after 22 years in the big show would be in his prime. But Cobb has not slowed up to the point whero his presence In the lineup of his team weakens that nine's offense or defense. Not by many, many moons. While tho trial matches staged by the United Slates Lawn Tennis association mean little, perhaps, to tho tennis world, they do, however, product) some Interesting tennis, and once in a while some startling up sets H ..... 1. .. . I ... ..iuim Muuiciu nas oecn maac on tho trimming LIHIo Hill Johnston handed Vincent Kkhards In one of those matches just after Itichards had conquered Australia's biggest stars, Gerald Patterson and James Anderson. But the defeat of Little Bill and Big Bill Tllldon In the doublo trials was equally interesting, when the dope is dug up and studied. The two Bills have been teaming It In the doubles for many years. Back In 1920, after they had won all the single matches from th Australian team In the challenge round of the Davis Cup matches, they paired off In the doubles and won that match handily Last year they proved once more .hat their play in doubles was match less. In the cup matches they took pn Gerald rattersoa and Pat O'Hara some eight years ago. They said he couldn't cut the buck. But he did for several successive seasons, and he'll bo at it again. He spent three years In the dis- There is considerable uncertainty in the Ederle camp. Men acquaint ed with the channel are advising Gertrude that the water is too cold and the season too far advanced for tant offing of baseball because he!anolher atiempt, but she Is reluct- wanted as much money as he was worth from one of those good-sport club owners, Charlie Commiskey. whose team he saved from utter dis grace In the crooked world series. Charlie didn't want to pay Dick that much and Kerr, being stubborn, simply quit. Judge Landls told Dick he would have to spend one year entirely out of baseball before he could come back to the White Sox. The judge must have had little to do. The general Idea of the judge's job in baseball is that he Is there to keep the crooks out, not the conspicuously honest men. and Kerr was conspicuously honest in the world series of 1919. As a rule. It isn't necessary to hang medals on them because they are honest, although a few medals would go a lontf way in the process. ant to admit defeat without another try. The Frenchman Poullet has delay- it was first dribbled into the game, and he out-slugged them all from an even start when the home-run was a sensational event like spavin on a cast-iron bronco. At that time ed the start of his attempt to swim the customers didn't know the Jai-k-the channel, because of his Inability rabbit bail existed. Now they do to obtain a tug. Joe Judge Of Senator Badly Hurt By Beanball.Tlllle Walker and George Kelly DETHOIT, Aug.' 21. United Xes) Joe Judge, first baseman of the Washington Senators, "braned" In the second Inning nt the Friday game with Detroit, was "resting casyV Friday night, at tendants at St.. .Mary's hmpitul said. Reports that Judge was suffer ing a ronruv.lon of the hraln, were denied after an X-ray examination. and home runs are discounted 75 per cent. If you don't remember, the rec ords will, that Cy Williams and were fairly ablo home-run sluggers, too, In the period when Babe Itulh was celebrating. But there was only one reward and that one went to the fellow who took first place la the new trade, tho Babe himself. Kon Williams for three or four seasons has been knocking at least three times as many homers as Homo Hun Baker .smacked in his greatest season. But he has never been given promlnont mention. He wasn't Babe Ruth Come On Fef Let's Gl , ' 'i v I Zj Root for the HomeT' Used Car Bargains 1921 HUDSON COACH m DODGE SPOUT TOURING (Balloon Tires) I Both in First Class Shape CASH or TERMS Si Acme 400 South 6th St. Oarage FL pa LILLY'S UNCLE I . PlRx r?fJkx IfetH Jtltv ifk IN OUR OFFICE -7" 1 5& ? (.OH, MOW1. J (witn5V ' iDOyEWKVft s w I'CROSEl HMSJV C&, war. m. ,ca T.iom i u - -.- re r Mm IrAO--'