The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1919, Page 12

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ver THe YO Ses AGQUT HER T on Boy rive Got Some Wier! SHE'S NO \ 7% PY Boop! AwoUT HER «know I THINKIN THOUGHT TO Ad‘ To 1eT Wife's AWAY, So T m HER A TELEGRAM ve AEALTH! JUST at QEPLY UHLAN, KING TROTTER, i IS GLAD WAR IS OVER | « ) ~ Walsh Moved | to Infield; Harper Here Derrick to Play Short; Team '§ . ‘Plays Portiand; Cole Is | , | i Let Go | ‘ i BY LEO H. LASSEN | With the announcement, on | eve of the Seattle club's weeks’ jaunt around the that Jimmy Walsh would “ brought in from center field ‘ } play third base, and that * would be benched, the for shakeup in the arrived, Es will hold down the center berth for. the locals in the game of the series with Portland Beavers, in the Or- “elty, on Tuesday. Derrick, the new infield | | from the East, he ‘ab: will be benched. This will Knight on second base and on first, } | | SENT | TO SOLONS | Cole, advertised as a pitch tho has been eating a few meals i the Seattle team, demonstrated | : ‘ } | Harper, the new outfielder, | not a Tris Speaker in the field. p the ability to bust the ball on| The horse-show at Santa Barbara, Cal. early in May, is the first event ‘nose, and may help the locals’ |of-the kind in the United States since war began. which has been woefully Uhlan, unbeaten world’s champion trotter, is among the entries, He} most of the time. is owned by C. K. G. Billings of Santa Barbara.. When he swept a mile | 3 a fdehind him in 1:58 at Lexington, Kentucky, in ‘1912, Ubian hung up a rec-| IN COMES } ord, that will stand for some ume to come. He has been worked little of | WITH BAT late, but his owner says the rest has only given him more pep. Paced by | Ing out six hits In his last/a runner the day after making the record, Uhlan covered the mile in 154%. | times at bat, Gus Gleichmann, | d as the hitless wonder on) base, has been knocking ‘em | “with the willow. In Saturday's! Gus collected a home run. : Big Revival at Traps in Pon tind wee'trt| 1919 1s Predicted for U.S.| i] fm four attempts, and walked) | last trip to the plate. ‘The trapshooting tournament sea-| the known ability of the contestants | son is on. Right now it looks as if/and will be done by professional trapshooting was in for its greatest | shooters, which also is something year, This same statement, how-| out of the usual line and looks like ever, will go for every competitive! a mighty good bet. or = | Brains and | Brawn Are Billed Here matches in 1920. The great war aid one good thing King, Clever, vs. Bartfield,| Fighter, at Arena Show | ELDRED STRONG Eldred, former Seattle out- is going great guns for the He is hitting at hia fielding has been 's trip to the Northland disastrous, the Southern- but four gumes out of in the Northwest. And picked to finish with by Southern critics. How Boots” Schultz, tho International Erecting Club Houses The erection of club houses ts one thing that shows the trend of the times, the interest in the sport. Ev ery day or so we hear of some or |ganization making an effort to | please ite members and secure ad. | Canadian cities. stack up against the league clever man, against Bartfield, o —It taught the young men of the United States and Canada that they a chulta, the International! The International _trapshooting Here Tuesday ‘two games here that he knows | *Urnament at St. Thomas, Ont., in oe June, will be shot in Pinafore park Putting on the finishing they should be going at a fighter. ‘clip if they are ever going ‘tor Bartfleld won over Frank Bar- ft up at all. rieau easily last week, and Bar- | Seattle Jany must give more attention to outdoor activities, And there are members of the Canadian government who be- Heve that every resident of the Do- minion should know how to shoot— and with this idea uppermost it won't be long before traps, where every one can learn to shoot without cost, will be in operation fn the pub- |e parks of no less than a dozen Sites sone ‘iti ego Stern It i# when the general public get to| touches for the battle which will | $0 win a lot of games in thin | realize the great value of trapshoot headline the Arena smoker Tues | it if he hurls the brand of baly|/2% ®% @ sport that it will make its| day night, Mickey King, Seattle Phe has shown in his first couple |STeatest advance. This despite the| middleweight, and “Soldier” Bart- ) games on the home lot. fact that trapshooting is today go-| field, New York welterweight, — ing ahead faster than any other! have pronounced themselves Weeks from now the’ Seattle | “Port ready for the fray. This looks will invade the stronghold of| like a good bout on paper, be- Los Angeles crew. When the cause it is matching King, a ————_— rieau beat King. Thus the dope The high schoo! baseball teams will into action again Tuesday in fourth games of the city series ‘ Be iy, which is leading the field . three straight wins, plays Lin- © eel in the big game of the day. _ Bob Cannefax won the three-cush- title from De Oro Saturday night When he beat the veteran Cuban in “the last biock of the three nights’ ve ‘Play. The final score was 150 points! a Hh PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Athietic Park figures to give Bartfeld a big edge. But King will undoubtedly give the > Yorker a harder battle than Barrieau did. King is clever, and it won't be the easiest thing in the world for Bartfleld to disturb King much in four rounds, King and Bartfeld are both ring veterans and both have met and de }feated some of the best big follows [in the ring, #0 it won't be a question | of experience when they cilmb thru the ropes Tuesday night. Bartfleld Awkward Rartfleld is about the most awk ward headline fighter who has shown held ages, Reoe Dike Sry § Larus this season, but he is in there J x after his opponent all of the time. | championships will have been shot.|-rhe Gothamite ia a strong believer All the state championships are im-| of the policy to take a punch to give | portant affairs, because the winner | one, nnd he managen to keep im of the state title represents that! ton of his man all of the time. state in the National Amateur cham: |’? S a om plonship event. No shooter in the|, King is an infighter and does his country would pass up a chance to| Pest work at close range boxing, Sos tie Matinied Auentaun’ Cade, which may give him an edge over | {the Kasterner, ‘The biggest of the special to ur _ MThe| Tloyd Madden han picked a tough | ditional ones by becoming more mod. jern. The Flint, Mich., Gun club is | now erecting a club house at @ coat |of $6,000. In Peru, Ind., the gun club is putting up one that will cost |$4,000. The Marseilles, Il, Gun club is putting up a place where 100 |can be accommodated. New houses are being built by the clubs in Ana- mosa, Ia.; Columbus, Neb.; Battle | . Mich, and Longmont, Col The Wild Life League, of Pittsburg, Pa., and the Kearney (Neb.) Gun club will build this year, May is the month when the State trapshooting championship tourna- ments get going in earnest. Thir- ments is the one at Lakewood. The | Boston A. A. and New York A. C,| assignment when he runs up against |( }team race is a feature event, ag | Jake Abel, the soldier welterweight, | well as the Lakewood 16 yards cham. |h0 comes here with a good reputa | plonship, but most interest will be | “on. centered in the Lakewood handicay,|, lloyd, however, never backs down | which will be shot on the yardage |‘" the ring, or hasn't in the memory | © entirely | Of Seattle's fight followers, no matter | class systern—something ‘Two | how rough the going is against him. | new in the way of handicaps. |handicaps will be i Shooters with averages from 90 to|t® mx it which has won him a home \%7 will be in Class A, and shooters | With the fans here. |with averages below 90 will be in| Gorman vs. Forbes Class B, Bach class will shoot for| In the other half of the semi its own trophies, etc.; 95 per cent| windup rugged Joe Gorman will ee shooters and above will shoot from| gie with Bert Forbes, who has just |22 yards, 92 and 93 from 21 yards|returned home from France. Gor- and 99 and 91 from 20 yards, In| man is a tough man to beat and has Class B, the 85 per cent shot will be| had a very successful season this on 16 yards, 86 per cent at 17, 87| year, Forbes, however, should be ber cent at 18 and $8 and 89 per) able to care for his end of the cnill- cent at 19, ling if he is as good as he was before | The handicapping will be done on| he went to war. | Kid Peterson and Mickey Brown Broa4way won the freshman-| are ready to settle their differences | sophomore track meet at the Univer-|in one of the preliminaries, They sity of Washington campus Saturday, fought a torrid draw at the Crystal scoring 6% points, Lincoln was sec-| pool recently and the Kid has been ond with 20 and Franklin and Queen |4fter another match with Mickey Anne each scored 7. Ballard finished | ever sinc last with 2 points, Jimmy Britt, former lightweight va king, who 1s in Seattle at the present time, will officiate as the third man ed in one,| He has always shown a willingness | ¥ much of an|in the ring of the main event. He. haw quite a reputation us a referee in Fat Batting Rally Nets | Locals Win Seattle Defeats Vernon, 6- 5; Rainiers Score Four Times in Ninth Chasing over rune in final frame, the ball annexed a wild and rabid exhibition of the national pastime by a count of 6 to & from the Vernon Tigers Hits and runs were so fast by the } frame that it was hard work keep up with their activities all the Seattle counters tered before a single man out Vernon had the last game of the series tied up in a and were leading by three runs when the storm broke, The game was a mix erable exhibition of ball and bor dered on grammar school xp at times. e wind was blowing pretty hard across the field thruout the which created havoc averager four Seattle being scored ain in the to And regis was put were game, however with felding In the fatal ninth Schultz started the rally that won the game, twirler dre a safety over first base. Then it happened. Three singles and a couple of walks tied the score. Daddy Chech was the rent to the mound tn place of long| score Visitors without could not Weiser Dell for the avall—the veteran stop the Seattle attack. mann, Seattle's first sacker has been hitting like a fiend dur-|portianders won the series four | morning, lacing out the | games to two. ing the past two days, won ne Or Dip OME os rss ‘f jtos, V | Saturday's melee, annexing the first | | offical home run of the season « Did SME PEPLy? WiveD BACK SEND ne SZo° DIP SHE ? OH ¢ any ae ge 1eNT meN = HEALTH! Jag NEVES ol Scoreboard. for Big Meet inGayParee Mammoth Stadium Under j Construction for Event; — Americans Enter <4 YU LUIMIYPUILUNY ID) ro, tnd} oe = cal Lon Anuelea ... Vranciseo ye | flalt Lake Oakland Vernon = ON, MOSM ttle dropped Saturday's mix to Vernon club by @ score of 4 runs non won the game in the first inning when they trotted four Paitenterg “SEALS SPLIT GAMES WITH BEE OUTFIT SAN FRANCISCO, May 5.—San Francisco won beth games of the | Sunday schedule here from the Salt Lake taking the morning Bigbee relieved Falkenberg in the | game by the score of 6 to 5, and the | “Cliy cise LEAGUE Cincinnati . Brook! th AMERICAN Gus Gletchmann waa the hero of | Chicago . er the right fleld wall, His double on hin next attempt Ht a foot from t top of the right field fence. PARIS, May 6—4United Press} Entries are being received from 21 ations for the inter-allied servies championship games to be held Bei from June 22 to July 6. Philadelphia » crew, at. Louie lant | sce Gun Gieich| son when they mnagend the Oaks by | ators who} a score of 4 to S here yesterday, The | had a big time with the stick in the ' Coveleskie and O'Neil game with a timely single to right. | Visitors Score First ‘The visitors counted thelr firnt tally on Murphy’s low throw Mounel’s ‘bounder and Cunningham's muff of Horton's easy fy. They added another In the fifth on Dell's double 4 Mitchell's single and Schang’s high throw to second base when Dell and Mitchell engineered a double steal The locals scored their first coun ter in the fifth on three singles and an infield out when crossed the plate as Hosp tossed out Schultz In the eighth the visitors added a pair of markers on Chadbournm double, Meusel's single and Hos; double What Seattle did tn ninth frame has already been told. In Hot Water Dell was in hot water most of the time, but the long Vernon beaver refused to crack untf the lart frame when he “blew” like & biizzard. Schultz pitched a good brand of ball thruout the contest and should have won without the need of six runs, as only three tal lies were earned off of his delivery. ‘The score Seattle Cunningham, ef . Fabrique, on > ] Anh FPO. Knient, Olete hmm Murphy, Sehang. © . Coleman, 0 fehults, p . *Mighes . eruecensenun Slercouuneous eoe--ceeeen Totals Fe Vernon, Mitenelt, ae ...... 3 Chadbourne, ef Mousel, rf . orton, 1b weeoeaP 1 3 scored 1 oap, © Fabriqur, Mitchell ye rique to Knight non, Cook to Horton Murphy to Knight Howp to Mitch Hit by piteher—Murphy by Dell, Mitchell by Schulte Ry Dell 7, by Behulte 2, by Bases on baile—Off Dell 5, off . off Schulte © Credit toms of Dell. Umptres—Bedford and kame to Viney. \|KAYNOR WINS GUN HONORS AT CLUB MEET Breaking 48 out of 50 targets, Frank Kaynor took the high honors at the Sunday shoot at the Green Lake club traps: C. W. Bandy tled with L. 8. Barnes at 46 for second money. L. H. Reid, George B. Baker, J. H Hopkins, Dr. C. L. Temp! 8. Searle have left for Ore., to take part in the Oregon state shoot set for May 5, 6 and 7 there. 20 19. Rarnes Davin Kerr ase Van Vieck . Chantrell W. H, Caratens J. HH. MeDiarmid . 8. Burt ¢ Trimmer Seott Copelani Dick Taft V. W. Galer ——— as an arbiter in the professional game, as all of his past experiences as an official in ring contests have been limited to amateur affairs, Makes Debut In the curtain raiser Win Gower will step thru his paces for the first time against Curley Valencourt, the sajlor trial horse. ‘Tom McKeown, the club referee, will officiate in all of the preliminary bouts. The University of Washington juniors won the interclass meet here Saturday. They finished first with 49 points, The sophomores were second with 46, 44} o—5| | ter also has been added to the Seal Gietchmann | is out with injuries NATIONAL L Philadelphia , |New York . Holt: ©" E.| patteries—Jacobs and Adams; Ben 3! ton, Causey and McCarthy. 4 frame, and pitched good ball| afternoon mix, 7 to 4, The Seals} took the series, five games to two. The morning's score; The games, which will constitute the greatest international athietia event since the Stockholm Olympia games, are open to any one who served in the allied force at any thne between August, 1914, and Novem ber, 1918. The American army is now bufld- ing the Pershing stadium, which will accommodate 40,000 spectators. The French government has donated the ground, the Y. M. C. A. will contribe 7 ute paraphernalia and funds and the contestants will be guests of the American expeditionary force whieh will defray the expenses of the eames. aturday. In Sunday's game young Coleman | si i made a nice play when he trapped | Salt Lake City ... +4 Edington's pop fly when the Vernon | 8% Francisco ....... 6 4 outfielder tried to bunt in the sixth.| The batteries: Bchoor, Willett and Byler; Creapl and Brooks, McKee. MP a | ‘The afternoon score Heck, Vernon third sacker, made a rR i pretty one-handed running catch of! @ait Lake City . . 4 rd Compton's bunt in the second frame |gan Francisco ..-. oe ee catching the local fielder by several! The batteries: Markle and Byler; ) feet at first base Seaton and McKee. PORTLAND IS ANGELS AND WINNER FROM | SENATORS IN OAKLAND MEN) ~ EVEN BREAK PORTLAND, May 5.—Tying the| LOS ANGELES, May 5-—Loning in the eighth and forging | the morning ne by unt of nine | AMERICAN LEAGUE Uons, however, is entitled to suggest ahead in the ninth, the Portland|runs to one, the Angels came back | petroit suse 472 |@dditional sports. crew won its first series of the sea-|in the afternoon and hooked the Sen: | Cleveland is 1| The Americans have voluntarily the tune of 4 to 3. Wolter! patteries—KHhmke and Stanage;|relinqujehed the natural advantage they would have thru a smaller per- entage of casualties by stipulating .6 ow y that no championship will be | 12 16 «© 3 |awarded to the nation winning the Naylor and Me-| most events. Championships will be” limited to individual events, The | | American entries will be recruited llargely from winners of the St. Louis a\can expeditionary force cham CHICMBO oo cccecccesescee & 5 © | ships now being held. i Batteries —- Sothoron, Lowdermilk| Trophies will be awarded in sep A. Francisco orehard, He replace 1 Ben oy SSP uae and Severeid; Cicotte and Schalk. | arate — barges wae Harry Harper, who is now a mem hg SR say — donated a statue of Jason ber ofthe Geattlo team Merb Mas |r rn ne ee golden Seece. Gen. Pershing give a pri : rifle team competing. Premier C yw |enceau also will donate a prize. Chicago [Cincinnati .... F 1 Ratteri Weaver, Martin, Carter and Daly, Killifer; Sallee and Rari den bo Pittsburg St. Louisa | Batteries—Cooper Meadows, Sherdel and Snyder. Boston ..+ Brooklyn ...++ Batteries—Regan, Scott and Wil-| son; Marquard and Kreuger. 71 Events The program will include 71 events. Each of the competing ma- four mafetion, | one for two bases. In the afternoon | Philadelphia .. x. | Crawford tacked up three safe blows | Washington . t/and hung up two fn the morning. | Batteries—Kinner, teens . 10 3) whe morning score—- RF. H. E.|Avoy; Johnson, Hoviik, Craft and Hatteries: Hollings and Elliott; | sacramento ovvece ~% 14 © Agnew. er, Lakanovie and Koehler | Los Angeles 4 1 3 - — Batteries Gardner and Fisher; Pertica and Kol Joe Connolly, former Tacoma out:| The afternoc fielder, hax won a home in the San | facramente A The seome— Oakland Portiand core— o— Rey & Viewry Pond sul help | bring back our heroes to us. John Harland Rush will coach the! Cornell football team this year. garden, replacing Biff Schaller, who Foreign Connections No matter to what part of the world you wish to forward money, you will find the Foreign Department of the Scandi- navian American Bank splendidly equipped and efficiently able to handle your requirements. With the cessation of war activi- ties, many countries which have been cut off from communica- tion with America are again made accessible; and we are now able to accept reniittances to these points, among which are Finland, Bulgaria, Turkey in Europe and Asia, Black Sea ports, Czecho-Slovakia, Roumania, Servia, Palestine, Syria, Belgium and Alsace-Lorraine. To Scandinavian countries the exchange rates are about normal. Our policy of continually extending our connections, one of the features of our Foreign Department, is proving most valuable to manufacturers and merchants of the Pacific Northwest’ The immense resources of this Institution of Service, its membership in the Federal Reserve Bank, and its feature of Guaranteed Safety for all deposits, make it an excep- tionally able business ally, both for foreign and domestic pur- poses. May we have the pleasure of serving you? Largest Savings Institution in the Pacific Northwest Alaska Building, Home of the Scandinavian Amsrican Ban! $1 rity Capeerene Rncnaiiag $21,000,000 SCANDINAVIA AMERICAN BAN Member Federal Reserye Bank’ Seattle, U.S. A. Second Ave. & Cherry Si} *° oe eee) i «4 ees t ] - "

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