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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 19, 1923. 14 BRINGING UP FATHER lRrtstroa By George McManus V. S. Patent Offlr ) s Regular Chosen for Hoop Team, With Follow. to Others Seven ftptcUl to Th Tribune. LOGAN. Deo. 18. of the Utah Ajapi y member Seven ''t 1M basketball squad uer officially picked thl (Dick) afternoon by Coach E. Roraney after the regular practice In the Smart gymnasium. Tomorrow another squad member, and probably two, will be chosen, while the remaining two or three will not be selected until after the Christmas holidays. Captain Newell Sanders, Cantril Nielsen and Warren Hawtey. the niy letter meu back this year; Glen Wor(Ked) thington, Floyd Thomas, Kills Wade and Harold Williams were the chosen seven Cep tain Sanders le an Kaplan landed three times With hts outstanding plaver at guard and was landed toft, without. a return. ahrrnsr "ftrer tmaiTmou' chotcw foeth to the head. Kaplan bounced his quint last year. Thomas, simultaneousHerman chin off ' and be right will other probably Wade, anly with th bell guards, and it I likely that still ROUND SIX other guard will be placed on the Herman started to aig with the Nielsen and Flash Hawley, squad. in a hard exchange and champion with WUJlams, will be used In the both landed damaging punch. Herforward positions, and Hawley will landed his left to the face and change off with Worthington at cen- Mar- man they clinched. They wrestled around ter, If any changing need be done. th ring with one arm free. it is regrettable that most of these Herman scored with right to head Is members of the squad do not ttv in and the crowd yelled for action as 1 .op an and will not have a chance the wrestling continued. The bail , to remain here for practice Monday found them clinched. and Tuesday before leaving for their ROUND SEVEN homes. Coach Romney has arranged for those who are here to hold work They met In a clinch. Herman Louis outs in the Hogan high school gymKaplan NEW YORK, Dec. 1. (By the Asscored with short punche t the body nasium. They both missed lunging leads, then f I roes ) The world'a feather- 4 sociated The moet difficult task before the Kaplan shot three from a distance on Aggie cnerh will be to break his new weight crown atill rest Jauntily which Herman could not evade, punchthe head of Louis (Kid) Kaplan, Comen into college bail ing recklessly at the head and body. K nnecticut', Idol of the ring. He sucright to the stomach doubled KapHerman landed three lefts to lan. Yellowt Reach East cessfully defended his title tonight by the face a th bell rang. battering hie way to a convincing ROUND EIGHT. fifteen-roun- d Girls Catchball victory over one of hie Kaplan greeted Herman with a foremost and moet persistent chal the face as the round to smash Th tophomor irlrl' cstohhall m-r- ls lengera. Babe 'Herman of California. th conventional opened, following at East hlffh closed wtth th clinch. They tugged and nulled at KAPLAN SETS PACE. fourth period Yllow defesttns in a clinch and the crowd other each Before a crowd of 14,040 fane In the Red players by a the third booed to 11 and wlnnlnf the new Madison Square Garden, Kaplan score. of 1 period Herman staggered th champion rUrht to meet the third period Tel epiked Herman's threat, as well as with a right cross, but Kaplan came Play-of- f for thsjany suspicion that hla hold th f low squad In th back strong to the body, Herman's title. Both Yellow Mima have was slipping a bit i won two driving right landed to the face a games and lost non. ThjTh Kid belled his somewhat drawn the bell rang. title contest will b played next week, (appearance by setting a slashing pace ROUND NINE. The second gam of th aflrnoon front start to finish, driving Herman They locked In the usual clinch. t was between sixth period Reds and to rover with a swarming, aggnsesiv Kaplaa opened up. with both hand th second period Tallows, won by onslaught and Piling up a margin flying, and drov the chaJlengAr about which left no doubt rtf his triumph the Rede. 23 to I. the ring, the first good skirmish of the The winning fourth period players in tit minds of observer fight. It was a slugging, mauling battle are Marian Olllett, Dorothy Crawford, They battled away at clos quarstart to finish, hut except for Mildred Newhart, Helen Flatting. afrom ters until Kaplan broke away and few flashes it lacked the color and Pauline Porter Edna Miller, Helen landed heavily to the head with both that featured spectacular exchanges Olsen. Geneva Wevtergren, hand were locked at the th six encounters between 'They previous Green. and Edier Margaret Gladys these consistent bell. rival Kaplan Mrintyr. ROUND TEN. furious at offensive attempts Th winning sixth period Reds ar kept in Kspian leaped and landed bis left Viola Mathews. Mary Mar. Winfred Herman in retreat and resulted failed who to the y Herman's challenger, face and the challenger Chittle, Paulin Staples, Mary Armany effectiveness In attack backed away. Three rights straight Anderson, Margaret hlmeelf, except strong. Sadi In th tenth and fourto the face forced Kaplan to clinch. Youngberg and Wanda Paltry. Thee two rounds Herman landed squarely to Kaplan's The loetng second period Yellows teenththerounds. only ones credited to Herface and In backing away be tripped are Eleanor Worthen. Estella Berg, war he staggered the while man, and, and turned a complete back somerPaulina Oswald. Wilmer lee. Wilma champion a bit, In both, with solid A fierce charge with sault. both Tnes Borena. Can Claudia Bloem, to th chin, he succeeded only rights hands drove Herman outside the non, Jean Chrlstopherson. Navine In temporarily thecklng the Kid's Herman ropes. Gilmore. staggered Kaplan Kindling and Marian warming drives with a right cross juat befor the Herman held the champion even in bell. two rounds, the third and fourth, but in ROUND ELEVEN. Ralph In th remaining eleven th ConnecFive clinches opened th buz saw" bad hie rival hankhis rival s belated attempts to ratlv, round, A. C. Cross Country Run ticut ing away from a steady hammering that the honors were fairly closely then Kaplan staggered Herman with to th head and body. divided in the butt six rounds, de- a swinging left. The champion Wat Special to The Tribe. They NO KNOCKDOWNS. spite th fact that Kaplan carried off eontlnuaiiy on the aggressive of them. Both flung caution to punched away to the body with HOGAN, Dec. 18 -- Ralph Farrar, a were no knockdown In eplte four even. Both honors exwer more two-m- il the winds wild runner of th Utah Aggie ofThere and miming jn frequent the vicious swing Indulged In by when frequently than they were landing. 1925 track team, won the annual fa?l both took two changes, abut the toKid, even but Herman battlers, Fverv was other clinches and the He stung run. right charge head, nearly by has been acrobatic) plunges to th canvas eno always came back to square ac- the bell found them locked. presented with a gHd medal awarded in the tenth round, when he Mum- counts or take the edge again. William bled and turned a hack flip, and ROUND TWELVE. annually to the winner. both ahoued m&tks of battle as Walt hers was given a silver medal for again in the final round. whn h Kaplan scored with h!s left and up the final Tound in a bounced finishing second and Blon To man bounded to the floor and up again, they woundexchange. a punch oft Herman's eye. Herman was th third place award, a bronse after dodging a Kaplun awing. Kap- hashing from cuts over hie right eve Herman sent a crusher to the heart.medal. lan's shiftmens had Herman twing- bleeding The countered with a twoand while champion around the Kapmouth, Du to the lateness In running the ing wildly the first half cauliflower ear bled freely in fisted attack to the head and body, tlonal to hav its wayo on a contest off this year, It took place on of the fightthroughout at such times a they lans the only to eye started to swell addition which tually agreeable basis, the right champion's th Indoor track in th Smart gym- were not locked in clinch and In drove Herman to th ropes tematlv will b for th latter league some effects of Hermans nasium. Thirty times around th the latter half the champion had suf- rib showed itself. to rule to a bell It suit beU a th as the Just rang. adopt oiosing rang d ficient stamina In reserve to check pounding trak wm the distance run. would tend to Improv the effectiveBantamweights clashed in two ROUND THIRTEEN. would no but of ness to title doubt, the pitching, preliminaries fight, continued to punch away no end of trouble in a postwith Nick Quagerelli of New York, at Kaplan Herman's had eye and missed as cause season settes where the hurlers of 128, gaining the Judges' decision over a he landed. leads Hernn each team would be held to a strict Tommy Jones of Atlanta, 125, after many th of the standard cod. which Johnny Fllmvi of New York, Ach blow. interpretation 124 won the verdlt t over Willi Kspian clinched after Th American leaguers don't want They tugged and pulled at each other to tamper with the present scheme, Makel. Washington negro, 126. and the crowd booed They wer still for the very good reason that a letJackie bnyder of New York, 126 In a clinch at th bell down of any kind will bring on ancaptured a close decision over Jimmy ROUND FOURTEEN. Sakamoto of Japan, 128, in a other epidemic of trick pitching such encountef. Kaplan tor into his chAllenger with 0M was stamped out after several Dick "Honeyboy" Finnegan won the both fists, but Herman blocked and years of effort. Give certain hurler uppercut went a of powdered resin with which semifinal bout on a foul from Bobby clinched. Herman but a driving left sent Kaplan I to bag massage a new ball and in about Garcia, soldier boxer from Camp wild, to Herman to started the rope. a week thbv'd have the batters Holabird, Md., In the sixth round of swap punche with th champion and squawking Ilk trimmed suckers. a slashing go. which wa interGarcia was disqualified by Referee a thrill wa started, AMBITION. A WORTHY Kid McPartland for hitting low after rupted by th bell. ROUND FIFTEEN. being warned three times previously (Ad tn Philadelphia Bulletin.) for the same offense. CHAUFFEUR, colored, wanted to jAbhlng clexerly with his left, HerUp to that time Garcia held a lead man held th champion off In dodg drive traveling salesman out of town. chiefly as a result of knocking Finn of one American Legion. Ing Kaplans punishing fights, gan down for a count of nine in the second round, but the Boston boxer rallied after this to score effectively with sharp shooting lefts to Garcia's Jaw and body, botn slugged away furiously in every round and twice had to be separated after the bell rang. Th crowd booed the dlsquaii fylng decision for several minutes. Whst happened, JackT What hapBy AL SPINK. CHICAGO. Dec. 18 The finish of pened?" ROUND ROUND When Jack told th great John L. Sullivan, perhapp the most tears cam Into Bully's truth, eyea whll of ver lived, when eomt his staunch friends called on popular fighter that ROUND ONE. Mm to eome to the front and tell how Th hoys met In a clinch to start he fell before James J. Corbett at It happened. Then the old warripr the fight, the champion broke awav New Orleans, was one of the saddest staggered to the front, and grasping and landed his left to the head and sight ever seen. the top rope with one hand and smilHerman scored In the Infighting that Th Olympic clubhouse, In which ing through his tears, h said: followed. backed Herman Kaplan "Th old man went tip against It with a weak left to the face and the fight took place, was a big, square one too often. H was beaten, Kaplan rushing left and building with stairstep seats built all Just by aa American." Herman scored to the face with his around and a single gallery above right. Two of Kaplan's leads went them. The ring was pitched tn th But Just as Sully got hla cam wild and he was forced to clinch. fall, flv years later. --of Qrbtt, Both were missing frequently. The center and was floored with liver th his conqueror, and It wag even a bell found them m another clinch. and. ssddof fall tba th other. ROUND TWO. Into th big building to e Bully Indeed, not one, but twic did t Kaplan sent Herman to the ropes fight Jim Corbett there gathered the see Corbett fall, and fall hard, and tha wr a hard falls as any fightwith a right uppercut. Herman moet wonderful crowd ever assembled er evr received. Jarred the champion with hla left jab or a at this Th f!rt fall was at Carson City scored at other with his right to the any Herman prise fight when Corbett met Bob Fitsslmmon head. Kaplan started one of his country. buxx-saattacks, chasing hla chal The odds were 4 to 1 that John L. a tlm when Corbett wa champion lenger around the ring There was would whip Corbett and ther wr and when he wa looked on ss Invincible and is th second waa six much clinching and wrestling. Kapg of gambtor willing year later when he fell before Jim lan staggered Herman with a left to plentv to lake a chanc on the short end of Jeffries Ban Francisco. at the face. They mer dancing aroimd the proposition, although all of the at the bell fancy looked on Sully as a copper rivROUND THREE. Corbett's full at Car eon City was eted cinch awful one and all aorta of people Kaplan bore Into his challenger Up to this time John L bad never an with both fists Dying and drov Her- known defeat, and so when he top- took part tn th mourning Among mourners wr Bill Brady, his th man to cover. A stinging left caused pled over In the twenty-fourtround the challenger to wtnr. Kaplan was nd dug his no and fsc into the manager; BUly Delaney, who had trained him for all hi battle; his doing all the leading, with Herman river sand. It was an aRful surprle almost entlrelv on defense Herman's to him as w!l as a fearful shock to abrothers,of Tom, Harry and Jo, and others. hot Jab was bothering Kaplan and hla those w bo had wagered their last pennose began to btof. A short left to nies on him. Up to th sixth round Corbett the fac sent Herman off hts balmopped up th ground wtth Ms ance befor the bell. Nln out of every ten men who enopponent, but from then on Fits beROUND FOUR. tered the Olympio club that night gan to brae up Ind ther was conwith them th Sullivan sternation tn th Corbett rsmp whn. Herman sank bto left to the cham- brought a broad bend of silk with an In th fourteenth round. Fits landed colors, pion's riba but raiseed a right that solar plexus. and clinched to sav hlmeelf. American eaglefellIn the oorter. tahen Bully As Corbett lav on th ground, his every man lit th The referee warned Herman for hold- orowd on was bent rid of band getting covering th soot that had re ing on- - Kaplan (washed his right colors is quickly as poaalhl rofved the awful blow, and Georg Herman's far and th ebaLfrnrer tfcns in the crowd The threw Its Siler, the veteran refer, 'Counting gallery gav ground. A solid right art falton the seronde ever blm, the eon w m toned Kaplan's chin by a hair and green bands w?t toward th and they oasi fluttering pathetic. fe tars wer bursting from Herman a Soviet toppled bv the fnc gladiator In eJood. and In eoch th eve of his brother end Bradv Of Kaplans countering right. . They down on him a greet number that they might hav wss gron g In snrutoh, Tbe Jo i were wrestling St the bell. his shroud. erred of th fight bv Crrttf mrset the ROUND FIVE, It was from under a mas of these Joe of a fortune to hnflr Cortntt 223-23- 0 MAIN STREET They clinched At etas quarters celrtT that Bully groped his way Imnoes.ble by Flsafmmons A toft Jshtwhen he had recovered a major both plsvd for the bodv s th way u looked a Aw That part Srd a right cross staggered tbejof hie qu,,brlum. and it wa then hrfore No wit waa In roe! vj. campton. but he rsiftod and sailed I that k said t Jaca McAuLffe, bis dmr and J m and his hundrods of into Herman with vtdeus charge chief aond. war broken hearted. admirer X Kaplan Defends Feather Title Against Challenger 1 IGNORES 040 040 INCREASING 040 040 YEARS - 040 040 PENNOCK HAS GREAT SEASON Champion Wins Over Herman by Wide gin; Aggressiveness Telling Factor; Leads League in Innings Pitched, and Is Sec Clinches Mar Bout. ond in Earned Runs. (Kid) k By IRWIN M. HOWE. seems to hav, called to th attention of Herb Pennock that h It getting old. Apparently hot knowing that he Is on th dltn tide of 10, the Yankee It Officially Siren eecond place In tha earned rua column of the American leagu during - the past Season. , In holding the runs per game to MS during th season, just on point more than Coveleskle's g mark, the Yankee hurler furnished one of the paradoxes of the sport, consld- erlng that Me lost more game thenwon, his record being sixteen vietories and seventeen defeats. From this It can be easily deduced that Yankee went hitless behind him most of the time. It can also b gleaned that, regardless of what his mates did, he was the same old Herb, and the feat must go down as on of th performance of th season. Despite h fact that Pennock was on .he wing id n percentage, he came near being he winning pitcher of th Yanks. As it was, he was second to Bob Shawkey, wh earned ihe dubious distinction of winning hurl No eh Final tm league-leadin- er" with a record of 11 and li, not counting Ihos pitcher who forked In a few inninga. Pennock's performance might adorn a tale" of perseverance, unusual In pitching annals. With nothing to look forward to except eundown and pay day, th slim- - southpaw never let up. and he gave all he had. When th season wound up he had tolled In more Innings than any other pitcher In th league. 192. which feet, coupled with what his mat did not do. makes his record all the more remarkable. In Innings pitched Pennock went to th peak during th past season. In his thirteen years of baseball ht had never worked harder, He approached It the season befor with 388 Innings to hie credit. It Is on record, according to critics, that Herb ha been "through several times. He was done with the game right after he broke In In 1911 with the Athletics, when he won on and lost two games. He didnt Improve his chances th next season with a He fooled record of one and one. them In 1914 when he won eleven and lost four, but the next season with th Athletics and Red Sox he ran up hla earned runs to 8. 97 per game. He lost two games for Boston the next any, and was - tBuo"!""!- Recalled. Pennock broke even In 1917 without doing any of the Iron man" stuff of later years. H cam Into his ewn In 1919 Wllh a record of slx-h- e ,nd eight, did hot do so well In I920, and had tough seasons In 1921 1922. When he was traded to New York. There he Joined a real team and won nineteen and lost six. In 1124 he won twenty-o- n and lost nine, but analyz hts work and it will be seen that h had his greatest year last season. No wonder smart baseball manager are roping In the veterans. Pennock f roved the author of "youth must be served" all wrong. 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A cheerful smile and a new hat go well together Also WHILE THEY LAST NOTE This is a drastic reduction on several hundred Suita and Overcoats, selling regularly around Iff) and over. high-grad- e eure-thin- THE REASON We have done a phenomenal volume of business on $30 to $35 Suite and Overooata, and found It difficult to obtain more, good but our reliable manufacturonea, ers have cooperated with ua to give Salt Lake Men and Young Fellows these Unequaled Come, early and get the pick. h im-p- ir Super-Value- s. fol-In- ht -- 0; Give good clothing for Christmas you know it is reliable from Z. C. M. I. Mens Shop Xnuui Chopper rsiso vn rni'ci BO. 111-11- sr:ZZZ sTre: t MAIN STREET r , thta r J N Good News m: A -- i I |