The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 28, 1919, Page 16

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THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1919. \\ OMNS\ AAW MOOS (ANCOVA) NEW LEADERS [IDAHO TOWN ow || Ina \ N NX IN A.B.C.PIN | PUT UP COIN WO ike MEETINEAST _ FOR BIG MIX v Seattle Will ‘YE y stern Rales Try to Shatter | BREAK EVEN ( Swimming Marks || Hage Ball on | _ IN TILT HERE " | vern Next wry oRes The final matches of the billiard | : | Bi H lid | staged here by key Battle 1g FOLIA AYS | Yrrre 20% semeter 00a, weer be staged at Brown & Hulen's par. an all-day battle of words, Kennedy, of Les Canadiens, lors today with matches at 4 and § p.m. Class AA strength until May 1, and! fight for sixaman hockey rules, for Saturday's hs ‘with the Seattle Metropoll- |to make 16 instead of 15 men the| ‘The teams played thru 80 | player limit, and adoption of the 1919 | broke even, with playing schedule were the matters | both balkline games and Cochrane accomplished at a hurried meeting of | running ahead in the three-cushion of scoreless hockey on 5 and Kennedy contended the Pacific Coast league directors) tilts, Schaefer won the balkline con: last night. tents, 200 to 77 and 200 to 100, In the mix of the world’s Seattle will appear at Ban Fran: |threecushion games, Cochrane won, i" WIELDERS SEATTLE PIN SMASHERS IN LEAD IN MEET VANCOUVER, B, C., March 28.— TOLEDO, Ohio, March 24—Two| POCATELLO, Idaho, March 28-—- the lists of | abeolute The BE. N. Brooks bowling team, of rade wrong ayy 4 ger tod pe Ae re pppoe — Seattle, rolled into first place in the! Copping two strugsles from the! nowing congress tourney today | $160,000 for @ cash offer ex Northwest bowling congress being | Blectries, in the Cominercial league | stort Lindsay, New Haven, Conn.,| Mckard if he will stage the Willard held here, when it toppled over 2,872 | bowling play last night, the Ameri went into first place in the all | Dempsey fight here over the 20- pina, Just one point in the van of the |can Can Co. five kept on their win: | events, with 1,933. He rolled 644 In| round route was made today at @ Chauncey Wright team, The Seat-| ning way. The scores follow: lhe nveman event, 619 in hie aow-| : tle players rolled consistently, the | Amertoan Can Company cay | Die And 690 in his singles, Eis 690 poeer elie) yer ger arson the yesterday's play the stare | lowest score being 642. ize es $82 | put him in a tle for third place 1m) tn and Montana. A Schaefer copping| Sammy South, of the Brunswick: | 7% = 8 the individual events Oe ied se tate fund “= | Balke squad, of Vancouver, in 108d ison . 1 9| Otto Keluseh and Bric Barnes.) 0. york to treat with the pro ing the individual scorers, with a Farmer . 140 S| Rochester, N. Y., took the lead in| count of 617. The Prunswick-Balke | | moter. bd eatensond we Intermountain interesta intend to equad in in second place, with Rube's cafe five, of Beattie, in third place ‘a continuation of Wed- wage & hot campaign to bring the claco, Portund at Los Angeles, Ouk-|25 to 21, in the afternoon and barely | Beasley and Martin, of Vancouver, [fight here July 4 Permanent land At Gacramento, and Vernon at|reached the wire ahead of Schaefer |*F@ leading the doubles tourney paceman cians | TIGERS AND LOS TIGER | headquarters are to be opened here | to direct activities along this line in Salt Lake in the opening games.|in the evening angle match by a | Blalr . leading the Ringles, with a Decoration day Portiand will play at} “. | count o! ANGELES TEAM TO count of 38 te PLAY PRACTICE GO)*"S ficte ray, pronident of the re Seattle, Oakland at San Francisco, ee Athletic Sacramento at Sait Lake, and Ver BUSH MAY SIGN 108 ANGELES, March 28—Chi-| cently organized Pocatello cago's tamed Cubs and Los Angeles’ | club, who is a prime mover in seek- on at Los Angeles. . Portiand fans will see their team TIGER PACT TODAY DETROIT, Mich, March 28.—~! wild Angels will give the Southland | ing the bout, presented a certified its first taste of what approaches | check for ae toward the $160,000 real baseball tomorrow. guarantee. © remainder was against the Angels July 4. On the ‘The two teams will meet Saturday quickly subscribed by ee ee ea be pel ong Miyh 8 | Donle Bush, holdout shortstop of, the and Sunday in exhibition games at | tives of commercial and business or . > Tigers, was here today for a meeting < it ay ee ace tay games | With President Navin, to settle thetr . | differences regurding salary, Dteh said he wanted to get the matter SAN FRANCISCO, March 28.— Agreement to extend tho time limit \tor reduction of playing staffs to! + eee 140— 464 It 486 1 vegulart; game, ded in a draw, and, accord. [TIGERS GO THRU WORKOUT IN RAIN! MACON, Ga, March 25. Despite a rain which turned parts of the - 2696 it. Near “a F292 ae field into ponds, Manager Jennings be : eee rat| ganizations of the larger towne is gave his Tigers brief but hard work pam gee g Coersmgperny. yon igaadice ned f “rompatoreed outa In the morning and afternoon. 10 OE a i is eae iid coniiasiennt —_ | follow: Sacramento at Vernon, Oak: | Jennings wants to crowd all practice a9 a a av m land at San Francisso, Los Angeles | 114 pomible into the next ten days, at Rssepates are | BACKSTOPS ARRIVE jat Portiand and Salt Lake at Seattle, |" the end of which the series with the | Walker . : - | BT. LOUIS, Mo. March) $a | : “Fa tke to either be stened or| paves in due to start | : Prexy Jimmy Brewster, of the lo-|Cardinal staff of regular backstops | traded, and 1 don't wish to be traded. | Men. Anes, Harry Hellman and|__Tetele $357 )cai club, is making final prepara-| will be here by tomorrow, Fram Seattle baseball fans will more) Detroit is the town I wish to play ard tmantes noctvets to tho efter | tions for his trip to the Sox training | Snyder and Bill Dithoefer will join jthan get their share of the holiday |tn,” he spid. | Howard itntee appeared in excel.| If you value yuur watch, let |quarters, at Taft, Cal. He expects to| the club when released from the baseball dates. According to the! it is believed Bush will sign before |jent condition, and expect to round| Haynes repair Liberty | be on his way to the sunny South by| army tomorrow. Mike Gonsales is |schedule adopted at San Francisco | tne day is over. | lent Bm then Aa Sunday. | going his condits in Cuba. | yesterday, double bills will be staged | ~- BB 41-2) into playing form soon. _ theatre A event = —— joning: here on Decoration day, the Fourth jot July and. Labor day. Portland! | will play the locale on Decoration | | day, and the San Francisco Seals will | be the opposition on Independence | |day. Salt Lake will be the guests of | the local club when the laboring man | takes « big rest, in September. Seattle ball fans are extremely lucky to get these dates, because it isn't every city in the league that ‘will get all three holiday dates, by a long shot. ir eag tet Where 5 The Store of Choice j i z g tt } g i it f: 4} g 3 { Ah f : i 1 Li i _ WHEN you purchase a Pipe do not run the risk ef future disappoint Ment by a hurried selec- tion. ‘The ITALIAN Briar is worthy of-your careful consideration. “The rich coloring—the i HI & 8 ss BNA G-SIKKING One of the mysteries of the swim- ming world is the fact that Chicago has never produced a championship woman swimmer, despite its many facilities for the sport. But now Chicago thinks the hoo is about to be broken. Swimming enthosiaste of the are claiming that on . Mise Emma Sikking ought to champion- | son. as instructor at the Y. W. C. SERIES DOPE Bl ence nenunen® Bl eorneenuwewenP D Sinnreersticteinal & training at its present quarters, at Abe Bowman, the big American as- sociation twirler, is making a big hit with Manager Clymer, according to word received here from the Sox) training quarters. The big fellow ts! bending ‘em over in mid-season form. | The other twirlers on the pitching corps are going good, too. Matis, | | Eastley and Faikenberg have been | standing the hitters on their heads | with their offerings during the last couple of days. The Seattle team will continue | Taft, Cal, until the start of the sea ‘The diamond at Taft is pretty rough, according to complaints from | the players, but with the opening of the season but a couple of days away, it would hardly profit the local mag- nate to transfer the club at this late | date. Wg [_JESS’ SINGLE‘) BE Bl wsiweincee les OF WOR 1S ME OW SHUCKS ! FOR ONE WHOLE FIOHT | ONLY ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND BUCKS '* Us Kids’ Who Play Ball | Have Real Kick Coming BY HUGH 8. FULLERTON | Us kida who play baseball, foot- ball, tennis or basketball have a kick coming. Congress has soaked @ 10 per cent tax on every darned thing we play with, excepting snow balls, and last year the tax either was nothing on the majority of things or 3 per cent. There are 22,000 uniformed kid teams in the United States and this | tax is going to put us on the bum |for fair, Congress pulled an awful | boner. thought it was taxing rich sportsmen and the major league ball clubs who could afford it. Instead of that it soaked us kids who have a hard time scraping up money to get balls anyhow. The professional baseball clubs in the United States don’t buy the | goods. All of them together buy }leas than one-half of 1 per cent of |what is made, and they get cheap | prices because they advertise the stuff. Kids under 18 buy more than 60 per cent of what the manufac. turers turn out, and it is us they soaked hard. ne 'EM WHO | CAN PAY IT | 1 is all right for a guy that can pay a hundred dollars for a gun or five hundred for @ motor boat or fifty for a fishing rod to be taxed | good and plenty. That's what I call | sporting goods. But congress ought to take the tax off what I call j athletic goods—the stuff we kids | use. Uncle Sam is trying to en. |oourage athletics and urging the kids to go in for games, and then it congress takes a rap at us, fair, ‘The tax is going to put a lo of kid teams out of business. If tie fellows who athletic it ain't | So0ds had been alive and told the | Senators and congressmen what what the tax never would have been }put on. But the manufacturers |have been so busy making athletic! equipment for the soldiers and sail-| ors they hadn't time to pay atten. tion to us kids. ATHLETIC Geops | A NECESSITY | We've got to stand the tax this spring. Gee—think of paying 60! cents for a 50-cent glove and 30/ cents for a quarter ball, But in| June congress meets again and wheh they start changing that tax| schedule we want the congressmen | to remember that there is a big dif-| ference between sporting goods and athletic goods, Sporting goods are @ luxury and can afford to stand a| tax, but athletic goods are a neces. | sity, Uncle Sam says so himself. | The 16 makers of sporting goods | in the United States sell about $12,- 000,000 worth every year and the! 10 per cent tax would be $1,200,000. | This year the army and navy bill will buy almost half of what is made, #0 Uncle Sam will pay that much of the tax back to himself. But a dollar to a kid is bigger than a mil-, lion dollars to Uncle Sam, You know what the Boston kids said to Gen. Gage when he butted in and tried to stop their games on the commdns? Well, these con.! gressmen and senators who taxed us Ought to hear the same thing. At} least that's the way I feel about it. | | Pitcher Al Gould, who was turned over to New Orleans in the Southern | league by the Cleveland Americans, | is reported to say that he refuses | to play in the South and wants to come to the Coast to hook up with some Pacific Coast league team. i ., dash. KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES SS SS WN] They are new men that come back from overseas; made new by vigorous military training, by new ideas, new con- ceptions of things. That’s why the new spring clothes are so totally different —new lines to conform to new figures — new spirit, new for men who know have wrought eel pealing assortment ever presented. complishment of the tailoring art. Take a look at the wonderful showing of these new Spring for the young man. clothes at Cheasty’s. The world’s greatest makers of cloth- Remember — 20 per cent reduction still effective on OVERCOATS. Come now! As Always “Values Tell’’ ge -C.GRAVES. 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