The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 28, 1919, Page 8

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TH OW A FINE rie THE SEATTLE thc see a OCTOBER 28, 1919. as An’ Te GAL ASKIN’ FOR KLE NOw! | GOSH" WHAT L I HAVENT E In ENGAGED YEH SHE OUGHTA HAVE A RING ANT PARTICULAR WHAT KIND OF A RING ITIS,AS LONG AS ‘ i773 4 RING! KEEPS A RING OW! WELL TAKE A RIDE MERRY GO ROUND AND GET THE ‘ BRASS (21NG: ON “THE ) SIX BASEBALL MEN SEEK JOB AS SEATTLE BOSS| Killefer Is Eligible and Swells List; New Man to Be Named Soon Gandil, Wares, Mullen, | Killefer, Leard, Ganzel and Herr in Running for Post; Walsh Will Not Be With Club in 1920 Chase; Expect Gardner to Deliver; Other News BY LEO H. L/ EN BROADWAY AND FIRAWNISILIIN IPIRIOMIED FOR BIG TUSSLE oo | | Wants Job Here IX candidates are seeking the job as baseball | pilot of the Seattle Stwashes for the 1920 Coast league pennant chase. leader of the Salt Lake Bees during the past year; Wild Bill Leard, former Seattle North- western league chief; John Ganzel, manager fj of the Kansas City Blues in the American association du “Chick” Gandil, first bas season just finished; ring the Eddie Herr,} man of the Chicago White Sox; Clyde Wares, Seattle second aif sacker, and Charley as the Moses of the local gang,| out the season Mullen, who finished | have applied for places. ade Killefer, leader of the Los Angeles tribe during the! two years, is also eligible st candidate, according to Dame Rumor. h | of the seven eligibles who has not openly applied for) _ e Job. All of the rest of them have sent in requests for |* for the post, and is the strong- | Wade is the only Chick Gandit Th “Chick Gar ox first sacker job as Seattle baseball pilot ai, White is Gan dil is a former Coast leaguer and die ‘Herr, who quit the Salt Lake bunch a few weeks has been in the big show for many because of a salary difference, has been after the job seasons. He played with Washing the past couple of weeks, according to President Jim ‘" Yefore Joining the Sox er, ‘sm Loge Herr gh bai Seca | F Wi ll FI as a leader while he was wi Bees here, as he} ur Will Fly When Seattle his men ride over him roughshod. It was Ernie John- and Marty Krug who ran the Salt Lake club, according Boy Performs Casey Is Out ‘for Win in His > reports in Coast baseball circles. Johnson is now the) er of the Bees for the coming season. Mi Leard was with the Beaumont | — b. in the Texas league last year, Mivvering with the locale in| training. Bill is well known ittle fans for his scrappy play He led Seattle to a pennant in : : @ last real year of the Northwest-| Bout With Joe Rivers t league. Hill has seen his best as a ball player, and would the team from the bench, if Ww ‘ ~ pis given control of the Seattle | fieer we eon aga gcd hf cifie Coast Baseball league. 4 Ganzel Is Veteran Here's his line-up: bas been a teader in minor WHO IS HE? SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. %&—Who's MeCarthy? Everyone and his brother 6 @ little information on ance, there in much at stake when Joe Rivers, the Mexican lightweight tackles Harry Casey, the local 13% pounder, at the Crystal pool Wednes day night. It means more heafiline bouts In this section for both boys. | Little Joe has been in the fight) |game for a long time and is one of |the leading members of the society jof swat, but this is the first time that he has ever shown before — fans '¥ Casey, who will tome gloves |ing in Seattle He can hit and | swing from the floor When he hits! |the long count. | weight crown, but he gave the title |think about. He gave Ad |the battle of his life when Ad was champion, in a 10-round nodecision affair. Rivers is winding up his training Harry Gardner, the big hurler who|today at Austin & Salt’s gym on| While no title hinges in the bal Little Rivers never wore the light: | to come out to the as his folks live in Los He figures his playing | in the big show are just about the lot, Killifer is the only one is not seeking the job. ie best fitted for it, and is one of @ best players in the circuit. He getting along any two well with it Powers, of the Los) club, over the failure of the to cop the Coast league fiag.| ‘s contract with the Southern Tan out at the end of this sea- and he is now a free agent. appointment of the 1920 Se “manager will be made at the meeting of the club's direc- to be held when Bill Klepper from the league meeting in nia. The new pilot, if Mullen ned, will undoubtedly be select from this group. NEEDS INFIELD ‘The Seattle club had four sec- Wares at second and at first were all second Mullen played both sta- ‘Football of Class | | tap” this ° Outside of the ‘varsity staging & warm contest, the 3 Franklin-Broadway affair will worth 5 erson’# money. The Franklin- Broadway 5 fension takes place Friday out at the oT ball Ae 3. & Taft BRING THis | Witt repair 8 AD He is ibe | |expects to have one of his big years | entered was obtained from the Sacramento Club thru the Malis’ trade, is on his land. He was taken ill in the heat of the Coast league race and went He is taking things easy and next season. JIMMY WALSH WON'T RETURN Jimmy Walsh, who held down an outfield job with the Seattle club during the past Coast league campaign, will not return to the local elub next year, ac- cording to Brewster. Jimmy wants to play in the International league next year. JACK KNIGHT IN EAST Jack Knight turned to the season and ¢ again next season. league. nd his family re He is a veteran player with |something above the collar button He should} besides a thatch of wool make a reliable utility man for the locals next year. | BRENTON W. ANTS: MORE } Herb Brenton, Seattle hurler, says |' he wants more money before he will @ Seattle uniform again why he should get it is a riddle. F pitched a couple of good games wh he was here, but that lets him ov We wouldn't burst into tears if Bren ton didn’t return. Brodel, who stroked Boat club crew, and the Atlanta Boat club, the Union Durche! of two promi- nent New York rowing clubs, have Columbia university and will be eligible for the freshmen eight. Austin, a 180-pound school- boy oarsman, will also try place on the junior eight, 10 (AND 2F0R 25¢ Your Patronage Appreciated Pay Checks Cashed TORREY & SEARS’ BILLIARD PARLOR ranch in Oregon, just outside of Port. | Just for al First ave. his stunts before a large crowd of fans. Rivers says that he can travel at top #peed over the «ix two-minute rounds encounters. Young Ketchell, the Milwaukee mi¢ Gieweight, in the semi-windup. sounds like a battle, Ketchell in, making his first bow before local ringdom. In the other bouts on the card Pat | Williams, lightweight, meets “Red” Gage; Billy Joyce, 128-p6under, tackles Irving Gleason and Young Griffo takes on Les Haynes in the lourtain raiser. They are light weights. t the close of the| to be out here! Jack likes the} Lew Tendler meets Joe Welling in Milwaukee soon. ‘Tendler may be seen in action in fe attle in December. He Is the chief con © for Benny Leonard's lightweigh “Sailor” Haynie will not be able to come North for some time, He was planning invasion of the North- west. He would have met either Jimmy Storey or Travie Davia if he could have made the trip. He is from San cisco, and claims the Coamt welter title. George Lee, t bantamweight, t« cording to teports mannger, Ea De Vine. recelved from Morris and for Onk- | The bont between € Willie Meehan, sehed | land Wednesday ni has been called off since Carl was hammered | by Ole up bere, Al Norton will meet Wild Willie Webb instead, They are heavyweights, Al Kaufmann, the New York heavy weight, is in the movies in the South | | ely eelebeity ta the ul | ah | anna” with Mark Piekford, Clay Hite, local promoter, ts in com- | munication with Charley White jadd 45 who is after the} | | notte @usky skinned visitor, te a/ Heal oor per learned tile wth wish | win back their title with the odds 5 to 1 against ’em. jthe mark it is generally a case for! | |holders of the past 10 years a lot to/ | Wolgnat | | | Hs has been used to longer|”0 One ever would die. ) Lloyd Madden, the local boy, meets | ever, | More about the monkey glands. Suppose we all live forever, or as long as the monkey|thing that the American Trapshoot ng association will have to decide at its annual meeting next month three years the event has been held | race holds out. Think of the possibilities neinnati might win another | The ,000 more seats at the Polo Grounds. the losers every fall, Heavyweight champions wouldn't have to get old and the dopesters couldn't write columns on YOUTH vs. AGE. The heavyweight champ could hold his title forever. They say golf is an old man's game—then we wouldn't have any golf. No one who could afford a monkey gland j te ould want to play golf. All would want to play tennis, leap- | frog or hide-and-seek. PRePeTuAL emoven Eddie Cicotte and Slim could keep Sallee on winning games. Hans Wagner could return and ex- hibit his bow legs and bald head. It would dispose instanter of one of the burning questions, of the day—awhat to do with aged and decript fighters, now that prohibition has settled over the land? Formerly the white apron was waiting for them. They'd never have to retire, bu. could live on to bor no-decision bouts with their sons and grandsons. Some of them! rposely get old and lose their title and then slip couple on a monkey gland so they could return and But there'd be glickers in the woodpile. would out a There wouldn't be any classes at the running tracks. They'd all be two and three-year-olds and you'd see the same faces and feet in the derby year after year. There are so many nice things to think about when they, e He has been going thru| get this graft perfected Then there are the unpleasantries. And unless they build homes faster than they are building now, it would be more congested than The landlord would keep on raising rents, This | his | In that case we'd favor not allowing the landlord any! |monkey gland, Let him die. The human race is a round trip commuter—from Ape to N—from MA N to Ape, the tickets read, Star Backs Will Oppose Each Other in Big Tilt Two of the best backs on the Pacific | Dailey, of Washington, and Bill | aesere, of Oregon, will be seen in | action wheh the University of Wash ington and regon elevens horns on University Field Saturday afternoon, | inter-collegis ate | Coast, Erve HECTOR GETS 60 DAYS! Young Hector, Bremer- ton heavyweight, is banned from appearing in a Seat- tle ring for 60 days from the date of October 17, ac- cording to a decision handed down by, the Seat- tle boxing commission last night, after a lengthy ses- sion. Hector was banned for not fulfilling a contract with Austin & Salt, in which he agreed to meet Frank Farmer, the Tacoma battler, on October 17. lock | Both men are clever open field | runners, with Dailey being the faster lof the two, Steers showed that he ranked favorably with the best of the old backfield stara by his work on the Lemon ar en squad in 1917 inst the ‘California eleven In that game the Webfooters were returned the victors to the tune of 21 to 7. Steers ware all three touchdowns and kicked all goals, In both of the games that Wash ington has played this year Dailey has shown his class, His ability to skirt the ends in both contests was |the outstanding feature, Steers showed that he has lost none of his 1917 form by his work against the| - | University of Idaho and Multnomah | ‘The trio want to Ole A n, the big Tacoma heavy- weight. going South for a while |yet. it ota to headline the next smoker at the Northwest Athletic elub | here Stanley Willis, welterweight, and Toughey Wing, lightweight, of Port- land, want to mix things in Seattle, according to reports received from the Rose City, K, ©, Kruvonky, the San Francisco | heavy, who wont trom boat Smith the other ‘night, will not ble to come to Seattle to meet Farmer because of a bum hand, injured in the Smith go, Basketball will be entled for in the city schouls soon, , club squads, revs te hi Oregon has the advantage over | Coach Hunt's men when it comes to the rest of the backfield, Hollis | Huntington at full was a member | of the 1916 aggregation that humbled Howard Berry and his Pennsylvania eleyen, Huntington showed the wise ones that he was still to be reckoned with when he scored all four of Ore. gon's touchdown against Idaho. For halfs, the Webfoot aggregation | boast of a collection of stars, Cap. tain Brandenburger, Vincent Jacob- berger and Kd Trowbridge being the regular halfs, Brandenburg has been out part of the season with a sore shoulder. He has recovered | enough to go in against Washing. ton Satur Je and | Trowbridge are tall, rangy fellows, shifty and adept at hitting the line For subs Coach “Shy” Huntington 1 on two letter men in Francis erger and Merle Blake. Coach 4 men are going to find a veteran backfield against them, no matter who starts, cobberger ‘The gridiron title of the Fast wii be decided next month, when Col. gute und Harvard tangle at Boston, | tourpament If no one ever got old\ FOUR CITIES (nto), City, N. J Amerte shooting classe in | pennant, even St. Louis and Cleveland might win one or two. | try ciub, and no matter how ideal the fans wouldn't die of old age and John McGraw could | conditions may be elsewhere, it will| be quite Impossible to surpass the fa cilities of the local ity of the trapsh Hughie Fullerton would stay young and could tip us off to) the lant Franklin High Is Real Contender Ea Poip Land at ‘Stake i in Friday ‘Co 0 erent! Yor the first Ume in the history ball during the past few weeks lof the school Franklin is a contender| Wright and Taylor will take ¢ jot the guards. for the city gridiron honors in the|"" ,',e "era pert Cole, basket® They face the acid test) war and Wise, will line up. This when they run up against), shitty pair of players, Cole, with the powerful Broadway team at Dug-| his basketball training, will be hard dale's field. Franklin won three straight and Broadway two. It was thought at first that the game could be staged at I field, but this is imponsible, it would kick up the field too much for the big Oregon-Washington tit which is billed for the next day Coach Rese men too hard for the big struggle und is taking no chances of having his men out with injuries before the kickoff of the most ortant battle of the year While Franklin has been adver tised an having a light team, the line wi SEEK ANNUAL TRAP SHOOT Toledc i the 19 Four cities 1 Cleveland Chicago. Atlantic wa an handicap trapshooting Just where the trap witli be held in some: | woe! | In the backfield Caccta, the quarter, 0 at the Bouth Shor Frankia Giteeutle. ‘oun He is one of tt best men in the city this year. jobs, with McGill holding down the fullback place, Turner, at Broadway, is nog ready to announce his lineup as yet but will wait a few days before giv- ing it out. Strizek, at half, Rice at center and Martin at tackle, are the big boys on the First bill eleven this year The Lincoln4gueen Anne game wilt average up well with any squad! be ¢ played on Saturday at Dugdale’s. in the City league this year. Ahner Ce and Ty Mo at tackles two of the best linemen in the y. West, at has been playing good foot club, The major notern would prefer hiengo site, but thone interested sport contend tha berg i# not driving his a change t benefit the game in arousing fer interest in territory that is ed fertile a trapshooting field as at in the know believe that At City will be awarded the plum. Lat’ go boy Boldt’s French pas- try. Uptown, 1414 3d ave; down town, 913 2d Ave. ae a eo C= / They Know Men always know whether you come to CHEASTY’S for your furnishing and haber- dashery. For the things that one buys here have an individuality quite unlike those purchased elsewhere. They are smarter and more tasty, for one thing, and immediately stamp the wearer as a man who knows. You will make no mistake to come to this store of stores for your necessary stock of new winter things. Every man needs new Shirts, Neckwear, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Underwear and Pa- jamas right about now and the exceptional values offered make it mighty good judgment to buy now. Neckwear Hosiery Pajamas Handkerchiefs Night Shirts Manhattan Shirts Where “‘Values Tell’’ Cheast MEN ‘6 & YOUNG MEN'S WEAR O.C.GRAVES. Pv, SECOND AVENUE AT SPRING STREET Underwear YS For Well- Dressed Men Hl of Choice Cy AUR CONT Le to stop. a will be the hope of the: man and Piggott will be at the backg” 1

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