The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 2, 1919, Page 10

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f PpaGr 10 Ke << mus y A Great Day ram It. } Pete Compton Is Signed by Seattle Club Pete Compton, a hardhitting | oo pra is — Wei ? ( if Fe ee ee ee sein Need Pitchers Manager Bill Clymer, pilot of the ‘Box, is still on hunt for a couple of ers who can pitch and a| r who will be able to fill Coat | requirements before he i to start talking about his "s chances in the Coast league. Pitchers are the big pumale to any “manager. A couple of good hurlers _will just about make an ordinary Sean club, while Iack of good hurlers Pwill put a hard-hitting team in line for the junk heap. At the present time the Senttle has just about three hurlers are ready to go the distance. y are Eastley, Rowman and is. And the opening of the sea- fs less than a week away Cy Falkenberg, the string bean urler, has not had time to loosen his trusty right arm, according to from the Seattle training} rs. Needs Warm Weather i With a Jittle more warm weather, wer, the veteran can be expected put over some good games. Not much is expected of Miles . the veteran from the East, al-| h he might be a dark horse and| Geliver some good games. | Bowman and Mails are the two looking mound prospects tn the ttle camp at the present time. ey is also in pretty good shape, Lyle Bigbee is said to be coming much stronger than pre-season predicted. tween the United States Golf asso: | Marshal} and Land are doing fairly | ciation and the Royal and Ancient behind the bat, but there is still) Ci, of St. Andrews, whose rules r vement. er cables, tor Sasener Clymer’s| 20d regtlations, unofficial tho the wilt mbtedly be forth.| Pedy be, have been the law and | Chen the big leagues start| der of the links thruout the Brit: | j ia ning work h empire for more than a century | Aitedts jana a half. With the pat of. Jack Knight.| These differences seemed to be new Sox infielder, and Walter! nearing settiement when the ener: | @ hurler who worked in the gies of every Britisher were turned tonal league last season, the | to graver direction. And it may be looks much better this morning. | yet another year before the rules of | what Schultz will be able to do} gol¢ committee of the R. and A. is) ins to be seen. ready for a session with the U. 8. Gus Gieichmann, the first sac G. A. There has been a perfectly | - . Golf needs a league of nations. For several years before the big war there had been differences be | who’ was due for the hook| to question the authority of St. h Jack Knight was signed up,| Andrews as the ex cathedra lawgtver | cause of his {inability to hit the| of the game. haz been going at'such a cood Founded in 1754, it is not only a “im the training camp that he “royal and ancient” institution, but stick with the club. Bert Nie-) its influential and widely represent , the veteran second sacker. has! ative membership—at least, from its | shown anything to holler about! own domain—has given it an undis- his work so far, and Knight may | puted sway in the, council of golf moved to second base, with, Moreover, the golfing world is in chmann holding down the first|debted to it for the comprehensive Job. and, on the whole, eminently satis | factory code. ‘Al WILL _ MEET MOORE OR HERMAN American golfers never questioned the authority of St. Andrews until it made the exceedingly unfortynate ruling against the Schenectady put- ter, the weapon that Walter Travis used with such deadly effect to win LONDON, April 2.—Jimmy Wilde | the British championship 16 years an agreement to meet Pete |%s0. In the light of Travis’ triumph, n or Pal Moore for the world’s | the subsequent declaration of the ight championship, it was | legality” of the putter that he made inced today by C. B. Cochran, famous was doubly unfortunate. | xing promoter. There are not so many Schenectadys They will fight for a purse of|in use nowadays—William H, Crock 000 and will be required to make|er would not part with his for its 7 pounds ringside. Wilde's back-| weight in gold—but the vagary re are reddy to wager $10,000 on| mains that this “putter is perfectly ' regular in American tournaments, Wilde, British flyweight cham-) but anathema on British links, on, won 4 decision over Joe Lynch, a: ican bantam, Monday night.| Then there is the more vexatious lost to Pal Moore in the Anglo-| and important question of the sty- in service tournament. mie, which, as far as American golf is concerned, is gradually passing into the discard, simply because the American golfer is devoted to the four-ball h, where stymies can ibs Down St. | Louis “Reg” Squad) not obtain. But the stymie ts saga ANTONIO, Texas, Aprl 2—) sti) part and parcel of the ada “goots” fooled the St. Louis | mant rules of golf; we still recognize | regulars yesterday. The! i+ in tournament matches, and the nd stringers won, 5 to 4. The practice game the day before @ seven-inning tie United States Golf association thus | far has taken no action against it. There seems little question that on | a referendum to the golfers of the| United States, the vote would be rwhelmingly in favor of the abo lition of the stymie. Yet there are thousands of golfers who would deeply regret the elimination of a distinctive feature of the game, in| which the element of luck, the main | Sround of complaint, is quite bal REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS. In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaram teed 15 years, EXAMINATIO? $15.00 Set of Teeth..... $10.00 Set Whalebone Teeth. 38.00 Crowns . $8.00 Bridgework $2.00 Amalgam Filling. E Painless: Extracting | au work guaranteed for 1% years. Have impression tal and get teeth same Hxamination and adv. Ree whose work is still 4 who have tested our work. fou are in the right place. Bring this ad with you Open Sundays From 9 te 12 for Working People H OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS « 2% UNIVERSITY st, Opponite Vrancz-Patesson giving ‘good sntiataction. hen coming to our office, be sure co | T MIGHT’A BEEN | TOO BUSY To BOX FOR SOLDIERS — BUT 500,000 | play | have also | will | of times here recently. | yesterday. | land | Golf Is in Sad Need of League of Nations anced by the element of akill to over: | | come it | As far as the Royal and Anc Py club ix ce erned, it may be a few more centuries before it would seriously ent of anni hilation of one of the cheris ditions of the game tra The Western ¢ its last amateur championship, two | years ago, attempted the first serious elimination of the stymie rule, sub- stituting a rule whereby the ball nearer the hole must be holed out first, but its practical application | proved so unsatisfactory that it was [abandoned before the final in the tournament was reached. The sub- sed FOR THE MA wy BOX FOR THE SOLDIERS ND SAILORS Tennis got under way at Lincoln high school yesterday, when 13 net! candidates answered Coach Green's first call, Taylor and Hill, veterans, | are expected to try for If amociation, at} squad. on the ball nine net game this season the city meet, Thir THE ATTLE STAR—W VCore STOP An Somemus N WHO REFUSED | Fo it ne al SRE. places on the Hill is trying out for a place Franklin will enter at w Coach Reseberg after insistent pleas [sequent ruling of the Western was! that the ball nearer the hole could | ite owner, But the weakness of this rule ts that the lifting of a ball is a violation of the cardinal principle of match that the ball must be played where It les or the hole tn lost. 8. G. A. and the Western been at loggerheads for several years over the definition of an amateur, a difference of opinion on which neither body is Inclined to give way one inch. ‘It would mem, . that we must put our own order before we can ap- proach the shrine of St. Andrews G. INGLE AND SCHUMANN TO MIX THURSDAY The which will be staged over in Tacorna Thursda night looks like an attractive program on paper. Helnie Sc mann, Coast lightweight champion, defend bis crown against George Ingle of Seattle, in the main event. This should be a good bout. I iw a hard man to fight, because of his strong defensive tactics. A large delegation of Seattle fans ia expected to visit the county hamlet to take in the show. Young Hector will get a chance to show just how good he really 1s when The U. smoker card ring | he tackles Ole Anderson in the semi- wind-up. Hector has fought a couple He knocked Steve Reynolds out, but didn’t look so good against Frank ndall, |Yanks Take Fall Out of Brooklyn JACKSONVILLE, Fla., April 2.- The Yanks evened up the stiema of Saturday's defeat by Wilbert Robinson's Dodgers, 4 to 0, Lewis, in pearance in a Yankee uniform, com piled a batting average of .500, ‘Larry Doyle Hits Hard in Practice GAINESVILLE, Fla, April Four hits and four runs in four | times at bi ry Doyle's rec ord in the ting fest. Fit teen hits were garnered by the reg ulars in seven innnigs WOMEN’S BOWLING MEET OPENS IN TOLEDO, OHIO} TOLEDO, Ohio, Miner Ladies’ team, Toledo, was the high five after tne first night of rolling in the Women's American wling congress tourney here. ‘This team gv punt STAGE SHAM MELEES NEW ORLEANS, La., April The monotony of two weeks routine stunts will be broken for the Cleve Indians tomorrow, when stack up April ‘The ulars shutting out | | men. and hurdies at the South Br on the part of track enthusiasts at) the Mt Baker Institution. Caceia will coach the ‘There is a lack of pole vaulters! ud school Caccia in expected to be the main | stay of the Franklin track squad in| iq for a berth with the Seattle| natural tendency in certain quarters | Played or lifted, at the option of! the city meet. He ix a «printer, and| Neal Ball is expected to place in the city meet Coach Powers, of Broadway, has his track men out doors now, and the men are fast getting into condition. The first track seasion of the season will come in the first week In May, and while the Pine st. coach ts not making any predictions, his squad in expected to be near the top when the final count is taken of the track | records, Dick Frayn, Broadway athlete | vho was injured in the last basket all game of the season when blood poison set in after his nged up in a scrimma | removed from the bop home and is said to be coming along in fine shape. He was expected to jing baseball this year. | year at the Pierce | hold down the center field position of the ball squad, but there doesn't weer to be much chance of his play It is his last First Hill school Raseball prospects at Queen Anne look rosy now, Billy Wright, last year’s scrub twirler, is filling the bill of pitcher tn good style during the early training period Jim Marquis, the Broadway pitch er, is rounding into good shape and expepets a good y He made a r. | good impression last year with bis work on the mound. Twenty basketball letters were at Lincoln high school yes Frayley, a star on the Ballard bas- ketball team, is maktng good as a pitcher on the North End crew, ‘SCHUMANN TO | his first ap-| | | the | against the reg: | Herman A BOX EASTERN GLOVE ARTIST} bet ckson, New York light was scheduled to fight “Pink Mite 1, of Milwaukee, here, “has wired Clay Hite, who is staging a show at the Arena on April 11, that the illness of his wife will prevent him from coming to the Coast. When Hite received dirge, he immediately Heinie Schumann, the tler, to meet Mitchell hun & good serapper, and is expe give Mitchell a battle Schumann meets George Ingle noma Thursday night, In the semi-windup, Hite has lined die Pinkman and Morrie Lux this little signed up acoma bat in Hddie will try a eome-back to the ring in the Arena show. It is the first time that Edward Brewster has battled here for a long time, and local fans are wondering just how is now Kid" Herman, the Mexican velterweight, may also fight on the ard, which will make it a good look ing setup if he is put on the bill has been @ headliner in his other fights in Seattle this year. | greatest gam: the clubs were even snd may formnke the; | ' ‘k team in cided by | 4 v| underclass | EDNESDAY (im aren { lito sre | DA + anaeienninens Series a Tie; “Fla” Did It he greatest ckey nerion over wicaren ends in a y aw, because five of Lew Car om, Bastern cham pions, are down with attacks of fn fluenza, The deciding game of the rie which was scheduled for last night at the local Arena, wis 4 off yenter day, when Hall and MacDonald, two of the visitors, were taken to @ local pital, suffering with the “flu ager Kennedy, Lalonde, Couture and Herlanquette were con fined to their beds with slight at tacks The Seattle Mets were ready for | ur id have claimed the suse of the Canadiens’ in: | ability to put a team on the joe, but under the conditions, President | Frank Patr of the Coast league Jeclined to claim the title for the} ant champions | r was scheduled | Weatern , rules were big favor | on were twouall, | howed their su enman game Hard Fought Series ‘The games pin n Seattle mark. | ed the hardest fought ttle tilts ever | played, At times the players fell hausted on the ice from the terrific pace net up by the teams 6 clubs played to ten twice, The of the series was play when the squads “ od last Wednesday batted for 80 minutes oa And then, on Saturday at game lime 1 the Canadiens won out the overtime play ‘There in absolutely no chance of the neries being finished, ax the lean: on the Arena has expired and the tc | haw been taken up, The money ro ing to the players will be divided on Under the propored | was to have out a in an even basi« regulations, the money been aplit 60 per cent to the winners and 40 to the losers. Willing to Play | Manager Kennedy, of the Canadi ne ling to play even with half of bis team in He propos ed to borrow players from Victoria, but the Br men refused to play inder such conditions All Of the exhibition Montr scheduled for West have been cance: The M were due to play an exhibition tilt in | Victoria Mor night | EX- TWIRLERS NOW PATROL BALL GARDEN ; Jamieson added to was w ay bed men of the the crew With Charley the let of the Indian outfielders, Cleveland now posseses four subur banites who have pitched in American league. Jack Graney went to Cleveland *s a piteh in 1908. On the firet of the Naps to New York that year he stuck his hurting hand in fro of a liner batted by and at once sought the services of a Red Crom unit 4.) | Gladstone hasn't done any pitching for the Tribe «ince then, | How good a pitcher Joe Woods Hix American league and World's series rebord« speak for themselves. | the | Trin Speaker has pitched in |American. Bil Carrigan let the «park plug of the Red Sox machine burl a few Washington In one of the closing | games of 1915. Harry Hooper also | pitched that day. | Jamieson has pitched in the American for both Washington and Philadelphia, He never won any ball games for Old Fox Griffith, he cop Tactician Mack runs in one inning on seven passes and two blows. Jamieson handed out eiphers the | rest of the way and in the ninth the | A’s rallied and shook for runs out Larry Gardner, new n, driving in the winning run. ‘r Smith never pitched in the n league but was consider a twirler oversens for his mping team. He and his brother Arthur used to form a battery in Milan, Ohio, He got hurt handling his brother's assortment of stuff and retired to the outfield, where he has | been ever since. CRANDALL TO JOIN GOLDEN of Rudy Kallio, Indi SAN ager FRANCISCO, th April 2.—Man of Seals baseball club, receive a sram yesterday |} from Karl Crandall, former third baseman of the Salt Lake Bi , that he will show up at I as soon as possibl Despite this acquisition, it is al most certain that Willie Kamm will start the season at the hot corner. Cubs Wallop High School Tossers, 8-0 aham, LONG BEACH, Cal, April 2 Claims of the Chicago Cubs to cham pionship baseball caliber were con das firmly beat the Long Beach. high 1 team, 8 to 0, yesterday. year ago the same hgh school boys held the Cubs to @ 4-tod score, | in | Three more Athletics, [was does not need to be told here. | innings of ball against | but | ed two out of three for Tall | Connie used Charley against the Browns on August 6 last year and | he beat Allan Sothoron, 6 to 4, going the dists and allowing 11 hits Mack shot him in against the} Mound City combination nine days later and this time he fell by the wayside and was trimmed by Tom Rogers | The last game in which Jamieson | was the responsible party was on }Auguet 19, against Detroit. Mack stuck him in to finish a game in which the score the end of the xth was 8 to in favor of the ers, who had gained all thetr | GATE SQUAD. established today. | A} we ¥ BECA 1 Don | ‘gh | iow NOTHIN’ | ‘| | Funny To SAY _— “EVERY TEAM SHOULD HAVE A SOUTHPAW No ball tearm can be said to have a real chance at the pepnant unless it has at least one good southpaw hurler, It may bat like the Tigers, and field Uke the Red Sox, but its pitching department will not be of pennant caliber unless it includes the indispensable portside {linger A great many teams get nowhere the race for the flag because 108 ANGELES, April ut. Bill Killefer now. The “pocket “ catcher of the Chicago National league club has been selected to act as field bom» for the Chicago Cubs this season. Manager Fred Mitchell appointed Killefer to this important post the first day the Cubs arrived at their training camp at Pasadena. It might be added for the edifica tion of those who are not “up” on baseball that the we om of Bill ax field chief of the Chicago club was a very good move on the part of Mitchell Killefer in undoubtedly one of the best liked bal) tomers on the Wrigley ball like @ book, and is probably one of the fastest players on the field, of “pep” from the first “batter op" until the last ball is pitched He also knows when it ix necessary |to make the players fight to win a the | came, when winning games count the moet, wherefore he is valuable. THREE STARS ARRIVE PHILADELPHIA, Morris training earn- Roy Grover and are now im the fold, estly with the Mackmen here. has been appointed captain, Mitchell club. He is a catcher by occupation, but @ regular fellow by choice; therefore he is very friendly with the other players on the team, and practically the whole squad) «wear by him. | True, Pill ix little, But he carries | la lot of influence. He knows bas- Pa., April 2.—|star, continues to make good. He Bobby Roth, |is holding down the shortstop job.| Rheinhart came nearer to expecta- Shannon, |He played with Roth |team last fall Killefer is guarding | they cannot produce a variety of | twirler, the left-hander will usually pitching. This was particularly true | win, merely on the changed variety in the case of the Detrolt Tigers a | of his delivery. few years ago when their lack of Pitchers like Ruth, Cooper and southpaw twirling, and consequent | Leonard, all southpaws, win because ability to serve ‘em up with a dif-|a braimy manager behind them ferent slant from day to day enat knows just when to slip them in to the opposing batters to slaughter the | break the monotony of the right right handers, hand pitching. Using a southpaw In three games out of four, with | after a right-hander makes the bail three. starboard and one portside | look all the more deceptive, oseeeidetinienseseensiierinanireterieteniorerenseyserecesntmacapaninanostsa mnie .KILLEFER NOW WASHINGTON MAGGERT MAY - CAPTAINS CUB. TO MIX WITH. P BALL SQUAD ASAHITEAM B. It's! YY INUTAH GARDEN The University of Washington| SAN FRANCIACO, April 2—Now baseball aggregation will stage its |that Harl Maggert, better known as first practicn tt cf the sensen, | SUAcmt.” Maat suer's Gulielier for the . bas been given permission by the San Francisco club to locate somewhere else, Harl will hook up with the Bees Jack Cook as wired Eadie Herr asking If he needed another outpatch man, and has suggested that Maggert turning out for a couple of weeks | be given the joh “Shacker” played Brinker has not picked his twirler for | pretty good ball with the local club the first game as yet. before the breaking up of the P. C, Roy Taylor, captain elect, is back! 1, jast year, and he would undoubt- in his old place in the outfield. when the collegians tangle with the Asahi team at the university grounds Saturday. It will give Cos h Dode Brinker a real line on his men who have been | edly be retained by San Franciseo if The Japanese team ix one of the | i+ weren't for the fact that Manager best Oriental teams on the Coast.| Graham now has seven outfielders, They just returned from a tour the Orient, where they won a major- ity of their games. nd they all look good. ‘SOX FINISH ANGELS LOOK | TRAINING AT LIKE STRONG | GOLDEN GATE } BALL OUTFIT | 222 22a ot 5 attle’s Coast league training camp “Watch out for the Los Angeles | will shift to Ewing field, here, Thurs- | team!” is the watchword of the Coast|day. President Brewster made the league pilots at the present time. Not change owing to poor climatic con- much haw been said about Wade Kil-| ditions at Taft. lifer’s squad of Angels, but accord| The Seattle team will arrive early ing to reports from the South, the| Thursday, and will work out Thurs- |team lined up by the redoubtable| day, Friday, Saturday and Sunday on | Wade looks pretty sweet on paper.|the local diamond. |Paddy Driscoll, the young infield ST. LOUIS, Aprit 2.—Arthur the famous Great tions yesterday Lakes naval training station football squad of the St. Twirling for one Louis Cards, the recruit lasted until May was sent in for a workout in the sixth inning. lthe keystone sack for his peta, | SPECIALISTS FOR SAVINGS | | 1604 Fourth Ave. MEMBERS OF WASHINGTON PROGRESSIVE DENTAL SOCIETY Why Spécialists? PECIALIZATION is a logical growth—the out- come of an increasing demand for higher effi- ciency. This is the day of specialists. When you want any one thing done especially well you turn to a man who does that thing specially well— because he does nothing else. N dentistry—itself a specialty in the beginning— the true specialist in extraction, or in the mak- ing of plates, as the case may be, is more efficient than the general practitioner in his particular branch. HIS establishment was founded and is flourish- ing upon the idea of specialization. The mem- bers of this firm are specialists—each in a separ- ate branch—one in extraction, one in filling and inlays, another in crown and bridgework and a fourth in dental plates. No work at the chair is delegated to employes. You meet a partner in the firm who has your interest and the interest of the firm—its reputation for efficiency and reliability— at heart. F you want your work especially well done, although not especially high priced, you may absolutely rely upon us. Open Evenings. Phone Elliott 4357

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