oc-plain-dealer 1923-07-18
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BASEBALL BOXING SPORTS
LIPTON TROPHY
SLOOP RACE ON
TODAY'S PROGRAM
(By International News Service)
SANTA BARBARA, July 18.—With a tropic sun over head, fair southeasterly winds and a smooth sea, the third day's program of the annual regatta of the southern California Yachtling Ass'n was opened here today with a yawl and schooner race to Santa Cruz Islands and return.
The schedule of events was featured by the handicap sloop race for the famous Sir Thomas Lipton trophy this afternoon.
The channel islands were visible to the naked eye and the weather was claimed ideal for sailing the light rigged yawls, schooners and marine rigged craft.
AUTUMN AIR RACES
BY NAVY PILOTS
WASHINGTON, July 18.—Completion of plans for participation in the international air races at St. Louis, Mo., on October 1, 2 and 3, was announced today by the navy department.
Navy pilots will compete in three races—the Pulitzer trophy race on October 3, the Liberty engine builder's trophy race on October 1, and the Merchants Exchange of St. Louis trophy race on October 2.
BASEBALL TODAY
Pittsburg ...001 000 400—5 8 0
Boston ...000 000 100—1 .6 1
Cooper and Schmidt.
Marquard, Fellingim, Genewich and O'Neil.
ABOUT TO PLUNGE FOR NEW RECORD
Miss Sybil Bauer.
There are mermaids and mermaids and Sybil Bauer. Sybil is a swimmer of no mean repute, in fact competition with her usually such a fight needed.
Battling Skii he water wagon again coming to America would just about fighter; the "boot" would run into h
BASEBALL TODAY
Pittsburg ... 001 000 400—5 8 0
Boston ... 000 000 100—1 .6 1
Cooper and Schmidt.
Marquardt, Fellingim, Genewich and O'Neil.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis ... 010 200 300—6 12 2
New York ... 000 210 010—4 9 1
Sherdell and Ainsmith.
McQuillan and Snyder.
Cincinnati ... 310 300 001—8 14 2
Brooklyn ... 000 100 003—4 12 3
Donohue and Hargrave.
Dickerman, Decatur and Taylor.
First game;
Boston ... 000 005 001—6 12 1
Chicago ... 120 000 000—3 5 1
Ehmake and Pleinich.
Robertson, Leverette, Lyons and Schalk.
Chicago ... 001 031 001—6 11 1
Phila ... 211 000 111—7 15 0
Chicago. — Cheeves, Dumovich, Keen and O'Farrell.
Phila. — Weinert and Henline.
American League
New York ... 111 000 100—4 11 0
Detroit ... 010 000 000—1 7 1
Batteries: Hoyt and Hoffman; Holloway, Cole and Woodal.
Wash'n... 000 000 010—1 2 0
Cleveland ... 000 000 22x—4 11 0
Batteries: Johnson and Ruel Morton and O'Neil.
Phila. ... 000 000 000—9 1
St. Louis ... 000 100 01x—2 5 2
Batteries: Heimach and Perkins; Shocker and Severeld.
COAST
Portland 0 1
Salt Lake 0 0
Portland—Reckert and Onslaw.
Salt Lake—McCabe and Peters.
San Fransisco—Scott and Yelle.
Los Angeles—Lyons and Byler.
SPORT SNAP SHOTS BY JACK KEENE
No ball player ever liked his hits better than did Briacoe Lord. One day Briscoe hit a ball against the center field fence, but the fielder by a great run, got back and picked it off the wall. Lord was sore. As the two teams exchanged sides he said to the man who has made the catch:
"Why don't you stand outside the park and be done with it?"
"I got it, didn't I?" was the grim answer of the outfielder.
"Yes," crane back Lord, "and some day you'll be late for supper getting time Tom was known merely as Mike's younger brother, but after they separated Tom became a star on his own hook. It was not until he left Mike that he attained much success.
Tom low has a style that is nearly perfect. He has become a remarkably clever boxer and a scientific hitter who plants his blows where they will do the most damage. He has enough stuff to beat Dempsey, but few persons believe that he has the courage to perform at his best against the hard hitting champion.
Miss Sybil Bauer.
There are mermaids and mermaids and Sybil Bauer. Sybil is a swimmer of no mean repute, in fact competition with her usually hustles someone's reputation—and Tagging All the Bases
(By I. N. S.)
Two homers netted the Giants four runs and helped them beat the Chicago Cubs 7 to 3.
A six run rally enabled the Robins to defeat the Pirates, 6 to 2.
Luque, the Cuban pitcher, ran his string of season victories to 15 by winning a double header for the Cincinnati Reds from Boston, 4 to 3 and 9 to 5.
A single and double in the tenth enabled the Cardinals to defeat the Phillies 2 to 1.
Uble was invincible, Cleveland met Maya's submarine offerings to 20 hits and buried the Yankees, 15 to 9.
ATTACH FIGHT FILMS
LOS ANGELES, July 18. Further complications were injected into the fight over the fight films of the Dempsey-Gibbons match at Shelby, Mont., today when C. J. Hubbell, coast manager for the International News Reel Corporation, acting as assignee for the corporation, filed an attachment suit here to recover $5,000 for services performed in making the film.
LAST NIGHT'S FIGHT
NEW YORK. Harry Caten, New York, knocked out Johnny Buff, former bantamweight champion, ninth round.
YESTERDAY'S NATIONAL Player Club Snyder, New York Groh, New York AMERICA Hauser, Philidelphia Brower, Cleveland Durst, St. Louis TOTIONAL National 321; For best result Classified ads.
No ball player ever liked his hits better than did Briscoe Lord. One day Bris hit a ball against the center field fence, but the fielder by a great run, got back and picked it off the wall. Lord was sore. As the two teams exchanged sides he said to the man who had made the catch:
"Why don't you stand outside the park and be done with it?"
"I got it, didn't it?" was the grim answer of the outfielder.
"Yes," crumple back Lord, "and some day you'll be late for supper getting that far away from the plate."
That Dave Shade, the recently crowned welterweight champion of New York state, is not a real welterweight at all is the assertion of Geo. Ward, a Jersey welter, who has challenge Shade. The two have met a number of times. Ward winning one bout when Shade stopped in the eighth round, saying that he had injured his arm. Ward declares that in their bout at Boston Shade came in at 153% pounds. He calls attention to the fact that Shade is growing rapidly and soon will no longer be able to make a pretense of being a welter-weight.
Gordon C. Locke of Denison, In., 1922 all-American quarterback and baseball star of the University of Iowa for the 1922-23 school year, was awarded the Big Ten medal by the faculty for the greatest scholastic and athletic proficiency in the graduation class. Aubrey Devine, 1921 all-American quarterback, won the honor last year.
Tom Gibbons denies that his brother, Mike, taught him all he knows about boxing. According to Tom it was only when he stopped trying to imitate Mike and followed his own style of battling that he got anywhere in the ring.
The two brothers always had styles that were entirely different. When Mike first stepped out and astonished fans with his clever boxing Tom was a rough slugger. He was much stronger and tougher than Mike, who was a delicate fellow without much endurance.
Finally Mike and Tom quarrelled and went different ways. Up to that time Tom was known merely as Mike's younger brother, but after they separated Tom became a star on his own hook. It was not until he left Mike that he attained much success.
Tom Low has a style that is nearly perfect. He has become a remarkably clever boxer and a scientific hitter who plants his blows where they will do the most damage. He has enough stuff to beat Dempsey, but few persons believe that he has the courage to perform at his best against the hard hitting champion.
There are two reasons why Tom's courage is doubled. One is the fact that he is a brother of Mike, who always backed up when his opponent rushed him. Mike disappointed in all his important engagements and it is logical to assume that Tom has the same failing.
The other reason for thinking that Tom is not the essence of determination was the way he backed up when the light hitting Harry Greb mailed him around the ring in New York. Every time Tom stung Harry with one of his spiteful shots to the body the Pittsburgh gritted his teeth and rushed harder than ever. Instead of pressing his advantage Tom curled up and let his comparatively harmless opponent take the lead way from him. Gibbons now explains his poor showing that night by declaring that he had a bad cold and was in poor condition. This may be so, but he did not mention it at the time. It is rather late to resort to an alibit of that kind. It seems that the Gibbons boys always become ill before their important battles.
If Tom had the fighting heart of a Harry Greb he would be the ideal opponent for Dempsey. Gibbons has speed, skill and hitting ability and is tough enough to weather a blow when one does get through his defense. He is a wonder at protecting himself at close quarters, where Dempsey does most of the damage.
A new umpire on trial in the National league is Charles Patrick McCafferty, who is an old hand at holding the indicator but has been out of the game for some years past. He has been working with Hank O Day and Charley Moran.
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
TENNIS GOLF
JINX OFF JOB WHEN LEONARD GOES ON
By MAX KAZE
(I. N. S. Staff Correspondent)
TANNERSVILLE, N. Y., July 18.
For a champion who is about to defend his title against admittedly the most dangerous contender, in a year that has seen the eclipse of a numbq of other champions, Benny Leonard today is unusually carefree and exuberant.
To say he is confident of the outcome of his bout with Lew Tendler at the Yankee Stadium in New York next Monday would be superfluous. As well one might say the Woolworth building is tall, or some equally obvious fact.
Leonard laughed when he was minded that 1523 has been a "jinx" year for champions, has witnessed the passing of Johnny Kilbane and Jimmy Wilde and less of prestigeby Jack Dempsey.
"Well, I've thot about that," he admitted, "but you can tell my friends that Leonard is one champion that will get by."
Weigh Too Heavy for Welterweights
Mickle Walker, welterweight champion of the world is going to give away a lot of weight when he meets Harry Greb, August 6th. Walker will weigh 146 while Greb is to make 160. That is a lot of weight to give away to an opponent with as much ability as Greb possesses. Welterweight must be scarce to make such a fight necessary.
Battling Siki has fallen off the water wagon again. Siki talks of coming to America. Such a trip would just about finish the big black fighter; the "bootleg" stuff that Siki would run into here would K. O. a
OKLAHOMA WANTS LABOR DAY FIGHT
ENID, Okla., July 18.—An offer of $200,000 was wired today to Jack Kearns, manager for Jack Dempsey, for a match between Dempsey and "any logical contender" for the championship to be held at Enid Labor Day by Burt Austin, wealthy sporting goods dealer.
Austin reresents a local group of wealthy oil men in making the offer, he said.
The offer also included 25 per cent of the moving picture rights and 10 per cent of the gate receipts.
LOS ANGELES, July 18.—Not expecting to receive any word from Jack Kearns regarding a battle in the near future, Jack Dempsey was today packing his grips for a fishing trip.
"The only fellow in the country outside of my trainer who will know where I am will be Jack Kearns," said Dempsey. "I want a complete rest for a week or two."
HUNDREDS ATTEND SERVICES FOR GIRL
Funeral services were held yesterday afternoon from the First Methodist church in Fullerton for Miss Electa T. Montague 23, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. C. R. Montague. There was an attendance of several hundred, and an elaborate display of floral pieces. Ministers officiating were Dr. Clyde M. Crist, and Dr. Will A. Betts of Santa Ana, and Dr. John Oliver of Whittier, and Rev. A. G. Gunnett of Fullerton.
Interment was in the Loma Vista cemetery, Angus McAulay funeral director. The Eastern Star had charge at the grave, and the congregation joined in singing, "Nearer My God to Thee." Members of the Methodist ladies Sunday school classes were honorary and active pall-bearers. Rev. Montague is pastor of the First Methodist Church of Fullerton. Miss Montague had been in ill health for more than three years.
BABE CATCHING UP
DETROIT, July 18.—Babe Ruth of the Yankees, smashed out his twenty-second home run of the year in the seventh inning of the New
Mickle Walker, welterweight champion of the world is going to give away a lot of weight when he meets Harry Greb, August 6th. Walker will weigh 146 while Greb is to make 160. That is a lot of weight to give away to an opponent with as much ability as Greb possesses. Welterweight must be scarce to make such a fight necessary.
Battling Siki has fallen off the water wagon again. Siki talks of coming to America. Such a trip would just about finish the big black fighter; the "bootleg" stuff that Siki would run into here would K. O. a mule. Siki belongs to France, let her take care of him.
The Los Angeles and Vernon teams made an even swap of their 3rd baseman. Vernon gets Charles Deal and L. A. Red Smith. Neither have been going well this season.
Deal has never been really satisfied in Los Angeles and Smith has been kicking over the traces with Bill Essic so it is said.
Both teams will benefit by the trade but Vernon looks to have the better of the deal. Charlie Deal is a real ball player and to our way of thinking his pinch hitting makes him a valuable player than Smith. Smith has either slowed up or he has not been delivering his best. He looked very slugish in his work Sunday. Both at best and in the field.
Jack Dempsey wants $750,000 for his end of the returns of a Firpo match. Just imagine that amount for not over 45 minutes of labor. The fight may take place in Argentina; if so it will mean that that country will donate heavily to the Dempsey coffer.
Jack knows that his money grabbing is making him unpopular, but what is popularity when the money can be had. There is coming a day and very soon, when champions demands must be in reason.
The commissions will have to take hold of championship contests. The champion is entitled to the big slice but the promoters and the challenger are also entitled to something. There will come a time if a champion demands are not within reason he will forfeit his championship.
YESTERDAY'S HOME RUN HITS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Player Club No Total
Snyder, New York 1 5
Groh, New York 1 4
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Hauser, Phidelphia 1 11
Brower, Cleveland 1 9
Durst, St. Louis 1 5
TOTALS
National 321; American 252.
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Director: The Eastern Star had charge at the grave, and the congregation joined in singing, "Nearer My God to Thee." Members of the Methodist ladies Sunday school classes were honorary and active pall-bearers. Rev. Montague is pastor of the First Methodist Church of Fullerton. Miss Montague had been in ill health for more than three years.
BABE CATCHING UP
DETROIT, July 18—Babe Ruth of the Yankees, smashed out his twenty-second home run of the year in the seventh inning of the New York-Detroit game here today.
Today's circuit smash puts the Babe only one behind Cy Williams of the Phillies.
DINNER STORIES
Cohen, accompanied by his wife, visited the ceullist to have his eyes examined.
"Now, Mr. Cohen," ordered the oculist, "close your right eye and read this sentence."
The patient read the sentence, whereupon he was asked to close his left eye this time and repeat the performance by reading another line of words.
At this point he hesitated. Removing his wallet, he turned to his wife and transferred it to her with a whisper:
"Here, Becky; you'd better hold on to this for a while. You never can tell when he'll want me to close both eyes at the same time."
"When I was in India," said the London club bore, "I saw a tiger come down to the water where some women were washing clothes. It was a very fierce tiger, but one woman, with great presence of mind, splashed some water in its face—and it slunk away."
"Gentlemen," said a man in an armchair, "I can vouch for the truth of this story. Some minutes after the incident occurred I was coming down to the water. I met this tiger, and, as is my habit, stroked its whiskers. Gentlemen, those whiskers were wet."—Tit-Bits.
For many people, mother's day and clean-up day are convenient celebrations.
It's all right to lay up treasures in heaven, but it's a pretty good idea to leave a little life insurance for your widow here on earth.
Read Plain Dealer Want Ads.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Hauser, Phidelapha 1 11
Brower, Cleveland 1 9
Durst, St. Louis 1 5
TOTALS
National 321; American 252.
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Wednesday, July 18, 1923
SANTA FE TOURISTS
Passengers leaving recently over the Santa Fe for eastern points from the Fullerton office included: C. M. Howard, Denver, Colo.; John Schulpbach, Highland, Ill.; F. W. Denny.
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ARE YOU SICK? WHY?
Chiropractic Adjustments restores HEALTH without DRUGS, MEDICINES or OPERATIONS
1. Slight subluxations at this point will cause so-called headaches, eye diseases, deafness, epilepsy, vertigo, insomnia, wry neck, facial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, etc.
2. A slight subluxation of a vertebra in this part of the spine is the cause of so-called throat trouble, neuralgia, pain in the shoulders and arms, goitre, nervous prostration, la gripe, disiness, bleeding from nose, disorder of gums, catarrh, etc.
3. The arrow head marked No. 3 locates the part of the spine wherein subluxations will cause so-called bronchitis, felons, pain between the shoulder blades, rheumatism of the arms and shoulders, hay fever, writers' cramp, etc.
4. A vertebral subluxation at this point causes so-called nervousness, heart disease, asthma, pneumonia, tuberculosis, difficult breathing, other lung troubles, etc.
5. Stomach and liver troubles, enlargement of the spleen, pleurisy and a score of other troubles, so-called, are caused by subluxations in this part of the spine, sometimes so light as to remain unnoticed by others except the trained Chiropractor.
6. Here we find the cause of so-called gall stones, dyspepsia of upper bowels, fevers, shingles, hiccoughs, worms, etc.
7. Bright's disease, diabetes, floating kidney, skin disease, bolls, eruptions and other diseases, so-called, are caused by nerves being pinched in the spinal openings at this point.
8. Regulations of such troubles as so-called appendicitis, peritonitis, lumbago, etc., follow Chiropractic adjustments at this point.
9. Why have so-called constipation, rectal troubles, sciatica, etc., when Chiropractic adjustments at this part of the spine will remove the cause?
10. A slight slippage of one or both innominate bones will likewise produce so-called sciatica, together with many "diseases" of pelvis and lower extremities.
Dr. Joseph H. Coleman
Chiropractor
6 Years Successful Practice in Los Angeles
250 E. Center St., Ground Floor
Phone 845 X-Ray When Needed
Dr. Joseph H. Coleman
Chiropractor
6 Years Successful Practice in Los Angeles
250 E. Center St., Ground Floor
s. m. to 8 p.m.
Phone $45
X-Ray When Needed
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