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RAIN HANGS K. O. _ ON SECOND DAY Rain connected for a K. 0. on most of the matches duled for The Star’s net tourney at Woodland park day A few of the faithful were on the job and a few es were played off with some good tennis being in r, in spite of the poor weather. . If the present weather { tinues to break into the schedule the tourney will have "to be extended beyond Sunday, the original time limit set. ) All first round matches in men’s singles must be played iby tonight, weather permitting. The North End courts hard and in good condition and if actual rain isn’t play can be resumed today. yester s matches the feature event was furnished Fletcher Johnson, former playfield champion and Rus- White, Johnson winning after three tough sets. White the first set, 6-3, but Johnson came back and won it, 8-6, 6-3. (T. Pope, of the University jon, defeated Eugene W Wwell-played match by a 62, 6-3 ct AT 12—NOON Rodi! Well and Ruth Marcuse va, Blanche Wickland and partner Gertrude Schreiner and Mra Dyer and Nollan and young wntil the moon came out, was finally declared wi ¢ Dragdon va eae ; | Mra Pocerson and partner three sets, by & 61, 36, 65 | Harriett Franklin and Katherine Rell vs. t. | Thema Wolff and Elen Backland ms and Burr had little trou AT 2r. M. ion and Marion in| Marton vs. mt Gefeating Marion and Marion in| Matton vs. Hale \N WIS BATTLE WITH MEVEA BOT WON THE FIGHT. PETER CHHLDS Portsmouth, he League) RETIRED A SIDE ON ONE PITC HE ENTERED Box WIT BASES PuLL Al Jor JEANNETTE WAS KNOCKED DOWN 32 Times —— THE SEATTLE STAR a eel LoRO BYRON SwAM THE HELLESPONT WE ONE HOUR (2130 vand3) Tut VRDHA-BAHUS of TKDiA HOLD BOTH ARMS ABOVE THEIR WEADS UNTIL 4HE JOINTS BECOME FIXED AND REMAIN IN PARIS —— EXTENDED FoR Lire ( +) MAK CAREY. ah oer ———S a 5 Runs AGAINST Tue PHILLIES ALTMOUGH HE DID NOT GET WIT. Sadly 25,1513, JOHN ENNIS WALKED ACCROSS THE UNITED STATES i 80 DAYS, 5 Hours (4000 sites) ’ MED BALL | HD PITCHED UP ORE BALL FROM WHICH A TRIPLE PLAY RESULTED, @nly doubles event of the day, 61. | Hesketh vs. Young Marion and Marion, are | Burr va. Jordan youngsters at the net fame, put A gt ~<A @ good fight against their opp va. Packer but the superior speed of the ATS P.M. Pea Ria proved their undoing Arnold va Batley Meyer won her first singles ch in the women’s singles at ‘Thelma Wolff, 6-1, 62 Puneh va Mec a ee — Jetterson va. Ripley Wilson va Barker AT 4 P.M. Donahoe va Seget LONGER Sit ; | 3 and Shephard va Mart and Lit | Disiey and Rie | ATSP. M Russell LaVake va Miller va Norbom aud Noyes BY HENRY L. FARRELL NEW YORK, June 23.—It used to meh LaVaho va. Mille the well known “Chinese puzzle” | Neider va Watson was bard to solve. It used to| Mactnnis ve. Carrie & hard task that was allotted to | Peley va Norbom equally well known “Philadelphia AT ¢ P.M But the king of all hard | Koslowsst ve. tinue French puzzle facing | Stevens vs. Vander Las Aung b Ruffeorn va Tuckett American fight fans. As em-) Hettcorn wekett Mi in Francois Descamps and|Dnity ve pester gee Carpentier, the French puz-| # Tees fs a baffier f orm"B” to “R.” on earaptoag Segal + ; eet “MBince their arrival in the United) — : ; ‘to add Jack Dempsey to their Robinson va Dorethy Little of victims, both Frenchmen Lowe and Grace Lowe va Mra f and Mra Ferris Fos! 1 J made so many contradictory) ATT P.M. Pgfatements that they have almost| Waller and Vander Las va White and ponahoe “etmased to be considered. | Johnaon and Bauer va White and Dao- “Out of charity and good sports hip Americans are believing thru unfamiliarity with the} ng language the European; ampion and his manager n't . at they were saying when ov Las ond Backiond ve. Poley and voiced that frequent—"“We will | nenson amd Van Stone va Williams and Mie the. world's champion was $$$ ——___— U.S. NET HOPES REST te Loe Neer va Koslowskt ana Carrie Olgham and Ruffeorn va Nelder and " and Thompson va LaVake and a | Vand Ba trial, the fans bore with ntier and considered his in-| of the studio, the stage and| circus ring as a legitimate field | recouping a lost fortune, But} reins 2 ort fortune! WITH TWO fighting. WIMBLEDON, Eng, June 23— ' (United Press.}—America’s, hope for : WATER STARS victory m the British national tennis § |championship reposes on the shoul ‘ON WAY SOUTH |\ders of William T. Tilden and ‘Anna Mayhall Wagstaff, Mitrie| Richard Norris Williams. Konowaloff and Lambert Sternbergh,| The unexpected elimination of the ) of the Crystal Swimming club, left|American champion, William M @6 the 12:30 train yesterday after-| Johnston, yesterday, placed the bur. fmeon for San Francisco, where they |den on two Americans who had been ‘Will compete in the tryouts in the| considered second and third choices. Far Western division for the Olym-} - Pig games. The tryouts will be held LOCALS OPEN at Neptune Bes atross the} bay from Sa June 26 is | IN PORTLAND "he Seat will enter only in the re expected | TODAY he local club. to make a + Mitrie Konowalotf, who lowered the anatase had a day off with the world's record in the 50-yard back | Shriners in Portland yesterday, while stroke Monday night, will meet the| V*!ting for the Beavers to arrive ™an who formerly held the record, | ‘0° their contest. The first game of Duke Kahanomuku. Kahanomuku the Portland-Seattle series will wet “and a party of seven swimmers from | U"der way today, and a large crowd the islands have arrived on the scene|'* ©xPected. Extra accommodations for the tryouts. | have been made in the Portland park i a |to handle a large crowd, as these Where is a demand today for 12) ©°#t league games will be a feat- bathtubs against one 10 years ago. | “F6 Of the Shriners week. as tsait if | Oakland pulled @ sleeper on the Where the best foodstuffs cost the |.400 clubs when they marched into Teast. Let's cat at Boldt's. | sixth place as a result of a win over - ——— Los Angeles. standing betw Seattle has .016 points her and removal from the cellar, which she has occu- pied for all the season Woodward, the former St, Louis Card twirler, will probably start to- day's game for Seattle. Seattle will open on the home lot next Monday, June 29. WRIGHT MAY FIGHT FOR SCOTT FUND Plans are rounding into form for | ‘Regal” Size || | the Star-Scott stnoker to be held at Liberty Park, June 20. The pro. ceeds of the smoker will go to the widow of the late Deputy Sheriff | Scott, who was killed in action while jon duty in a fight with bandits, | The fighters who compete in this | smoker will be payed for their serv- i so the fans will not see any | sparring matches. Lonnie Austin, | Nate Druximan, Clay Hite and Dan | Salt are lining up the bouts, | ‘The probable main event will be between Billy Wright, former Coast welter champion, and the winner of the Davis-McCarthy fight Wriday at the Arena. Wright 1s anxious to re. | gain his title again, which he lost to Morrie Lux during the winter, and | the fight would be a regular battle, ?enny Worth “A Bit.” | SAN FRANCISCO.—Boxing clubs | here refuse to permit Champion Pete | Herman to box on their cards unless he agrees to take a referee's decision. |The Coast stands pat against no-deci- wion fights as ya Pope and Packer | Ho tant the best pitcher in the world, but he claims a record that few can equal—globe-trotting | Jean Dale ts the bird we are talk ing about He first bobbed up at Dallas tn 1910, the Texas League club then being managed by Joe | Gardner | Between the close of the season |and the next, he belonged to enough clubs to do @ player a lifetime He was drafted by the Red Sox and | passed to the Cleveland Indians in { What They Say |i-— | DEL HOWARD Sam Agnew the ventriloquist of the Pacific Coast league clubs. Sam is also credited with being the beat receiver in the cireuit. Del Howard, manager of the “Why. you con hear Agnew showt- ing encouragement te his pitchers and th | bench of working om the coaching | > “ay voice can be head above ail others, Me is = wonderful man te have on « tell cia Me | makes his fellow players hustle with him. He lends them confidence. Nor does the score make any difference with him. His team can be away be- hind and fam still has the same old epirit. I wish = whole flock of play- ors like Agnew would come into the Comat longue. He is = credit te the come.” PROF. MENDEL | While golf haa bgen generally ae |remains for Prof. C. W. Mendell of Yale to culogize the Scottish pastime j= an unusual manner, He “The call for golf candid offers more than contest be. tween Harvard of Princeton, and more the chance to win distinction in college sport. It gives you the best possible start in a game you will be playing with the fresh hope of beating “Col. Bogey” when you are 80 years old. It is» life-long friend—a game, an exorcise, recree- tion; in short, an all-round sport.” CHICK FE it was ¢ career WSTER that ball While Fewster’s would be up bean b of the Yankees is certain it He is out of the hospital now and a regular patron at the ball park in altimore, where he is convalescing. k figures it this way “It will never happen again. T was unlucky, bat I will not be afraid. When th looping up 1 ht in to ment Haseball in d nothing like an aecl- to make me quit, 1 want to get going again and, most of . 1 want to help ‘ankees win pennant. DAVE ROBERTSON There are reasons to believe that Dave Robertson, one-time Giant and now with the Cubs, has been a vio tim of too much management. He was always rated as a potential .360 Chick player as a t by being hit with the the promising infielder won't hitter, but only once in his career did he surpass McG 200. Finally he with anew with Chicago. “1 suppose pal Graw has treated ance. My main com Graw was and is that he tries to handle everybody alike. It is a syn tem that will never develop a star. My baseball career up to d been @ disappointment to mont of all to mynel certain that 1 conld hi into m .250 hitter If let al fer to make infield hits, hit gets the infield Dave says ie thinks Mo- 6 with forbear- aint with Mo- 1221 Third Ave *COR.UNIVERSITY WHY JOIN THE NAVY? HERE’S REAL TRAVELER ig given credit of being | Oakland club, gives Sam this eulowy:| cepted as a grand old game, yet it} broke | aw and last year started | ) October, and then released to Sacra} |mento, who in turn sent him back | February 19 to Boston And all this time he never put on a uniform lie then had @ tryout with Red Box in 1911, sent to Pr dence, then back to Dallas, In 19 he went to the Cards, Montreal } 1913, | to Indianapolis in 191617, His next} trip wan to the coast with Salt Lake and thie year finds him again with his firet love—Dallas the]. web in then to Cincinnati in 1914.and Lewis, Couch and Agnew, j lon Angeles .. x) | cqaattarton— Ar et and Speliman; Crandall, Thomas and Daasier, mere then any ether ene thing. me pitcher be like any other pitcher, At Sacrameste— awe | 20 yom hai study them. Oo [Malt Lake .....-cemeecencmem 6 IL | — SS peer © wecaee © a | Sacramento . — «i ’ ' jemptation weet held | Datterian — ‘and ; & job that paid $25,000 = year if that |aoa' Co 2 alee: to me. New was net with some of the beet years ‘of my yore. playing life already 1 can not The Tigers nosed out the Seals felt whet the futare in store for jin an li-inning battle yesterday, 3 to 2. Dell shut out his opponents | ED BARROW juntil the ninth, when they tied the jcount with a couple of markers, ow, er of th at ie Decrem,, Seneee fo Baum was in fine form and held itraveling Red Sox, likes his club Ntaivty well, Read, what he says the Senators to five hits, the Bees jabout the American league race winning § to 1. Fittery was wild jin the first two innings, when he “The White Sex look better to me than Cleveland or Detroit. I don't see any other club unless it is my own Red Sox. If Cicot- | te can continue his pace the allowed five hits and four runs. Rallying in the ninth, the Oaks» administered a 7 to 6 beating to the Angels. A single by Miller and a double by Knight featured the rally. The Beavers and Rainiers will open in Portland today. | CAN SEE BALL NOW, | | SAYS MAC |; | ‘They are poling ‘ein out In big | mo ts league parks as never before. Gamen | Detroit Jabound in extra base hits day after | ’™adetphi |day. It has been suggested that the rabbit ball” may be in use, tht Fred {ullin, clore observer of the game, n't think so. He mays The boys are hitting barder be caune they can ee the ball, It used || |to be that by the time a pitcher had| |thrown once or twice the ball waa| \black as mud. Dirt, Neorice, tobac AMERICAN LKAGUE ‘Won. Laat 23 co juloe, resin and other things made 2 it so you could scarcely mee it when By a speedy hurler was working against Louls 2 you. Now you can see the fast b Pailadeiphia 1, Brooklyn 7 eo 10, New York « TO TEACH FOOTBALL IN CLASSES Football is a progressive «port like any other, thinks Coach John W Wilce of Ohio State. Wilce will teach 4 class in football at Columbia unt versity this summer, He says: “We are gradually working inte » specialized conching system. The old one-man coaching system bs by the boards sad le being re ® spe- and unless a pitcher has a lot of stuff on his fast one he has to fool you with a curve and good curve pitchers jare scarce.” /|EXPECT BURKE TO RISE IN RING GAME A boy by the name of Martin Burke is going to answer the gong in a good many rings in the future. He is from New Orleans, where the blood flows warm. Ffed Digby picked him up back in 1912 when he by corps of mon, enc | Was all arms and legs—an 89-pound| clatist In hie partcalar branch ef stripling of a kid. Fred thinks football age no In some eel wd = y Marvard @ down men are or | Marty's future 1s going to be pretty| ‘The thicage oo prigh fe sayn: ing point of Ohie State's 1920 eched- “Burke is unusually cool and col-| ule. jected under fire, and smart enough ring smart, I mean—to do the right We have been trying to get that 0 for five years. Coach Stagg has instilled auch # fine sportsmanship inte Chicago students thet it will al- thing at the proper time. He ts a| ways be an attractive game. wonderful defensive fighter, Jack . re Dempsey and he are great friends.| Rainier Heights and Tailored What he needs now is 25 pounds 7 more of weight. He's fast for his Ready wih Geraish the feature. bill in Star League baseball next Sun- day. Neither team has lost a game, and a lone by the colthiers weight, and ought to carry more weight. There is so much Irish in him that he is just a happy-go-lucky boy now. He looks like Fitzsimmons must have looked in his boyhood |“!!! mean possible elimination from days, They call him Red—The Irish | the championship race, A win by | B'ye—around New Orleans.” “SIS” IS YOUNGEST the clothiers will make a three team tie-up for the lead in League No. Two, Felix club and Tailored ST, LOUIS.—-Looking over the list| Ready have both lost one game. of present-day sluggers in the big| Should Rainier Heights win the leagues, George ix the youngest of the lot. He was 25 last March, feature contest, their chances of getting into the championship finals are good. Patricelli will oppose Don Hunter on the mound in the game. ‘The game will be played at Columbia field. HE’S JAKE’S COZ SYRACUSE, N. Y., June 23.—Dan- jel KE. MeMahon, promoter of Ro- chester, today wired an offer of $55,000 to Jack Kearns, manager for Jack Dempsey, for the titleholder to box Bill Brennan, Chicago heavy- weight, in @ 15-round bout in Ro-| TOLEDO, ©O.—Harry Daubert, chester late in August cousin of the Cincinnati Reds’ ta mous Jake, is playing with the Rail lights, semi-pro club, here, He plays shortstop. If you value your watch, let Haynes repair it. Next to Liberty Theatre. SONTAG - MAY GET | MIX WITH O’DOWD If Vai Bontag ts succesnful in hin! bout with Army Welch, of Bremer at Friday night, | chances are that he will be billed to | meet Mike O'Dowd, former world’s} champion middleweight, here woon. O'Dowd tx in Portland at p | and is expected to sign for a bout in| Seattle shortly. ing good for the last few months ton, the Arena, Sontag has been go-| and should put up a good match against | the former champion, if he weathers | the storm Friday night. Army Welch, the Bremerton middleweight, has been billed to figbt in Seattle several times, but has never t seen in actual fighting by the local | ring fans, Sontag has a way of his| own of stowing away the boys from | the navy yard city, which was dem: | onstrated by him in his fight with Jimmy Randeau here, a couple of weeks ago Johnny McCarthy, Pacific const welter champ, will arrive here Thurs day afternoon for his bout with Travie Tavis, the Everett miller. | Davis is a farmer Const welter! champ himself. He won the ttle when he beat Jake Abel, Billy Wright won the ttle from Davis shortly after that, Davin in training for the match in the Northwest Ath |letic club's gym, and is showing a | ot of speed and form. He in anxious to win the title back, but will find a tough customer in MoCarthy Bome of the doperters have it that the trip South may have the same ef fect on McCarthy as the trip did for Morrie Lux, but McCarthy has been fighting while away, while Lux was | back on a visit to the old home town | Joe Wopp, the Wally Reid of the! local ring, Is matched with a man| from the Philippines named Zuzu. If he's as wild as his name, Wopp| should be in for a large evening | Where “Values Tell” | } | This sale is for cash. | at regular prices, subject ing month. Cheast) ~ CLOTHES For Every Occasion Reduced 20% =| | “Values Tell” for... No new charge | accounts opened during its progress. Regular customers’ charge accounts may have clothing purchases charged count if paid by the 10th of the follow- Cheast The Choice of Men Who Know—Likly Leather Lug- gage and Hartmann Ward- robe Trunks John McGraw tas given his machine another overhauling. He not only tinkered with a big cylinder of his organization, but with the magneto, itself, when he swapped Arthur Fletcher, captain and veteran shortstop of the Giants, for Dave Bancroft, captain of the Phillies and rated as the best shortstop in the game, MeGraw felt that the vital He tried to buy Koger Hornsby from the Cards and failed, He tempted the manager of the Braves for “Rabbit” Maranville in vain, So when Cravath put his premier star on the block McGraw was quick to act, BANCROFT” FLETCHER Dave Bancroft has played five sea-, Arthur Fletcher has gone thra 12 | neane Giants, sharing in He is regarded |seasons with the + four world series. He has always g] as tho greatest defensive shortstop!) / 0 an aggressive player. Sing now in the game. This spring Dave | igi Arthur has captained the teams played in 28 games before making | arthur started out as brilliant as n error, accepting 186 chances. He ever this spring, He admits that a ix @ 250 hitter and a heady player at|«cherleyhorse” is responsible for his all times, McGraw believes that with | recent showing. While Fletcher is Bancroft playing shortstop for the| not happy in leaving New York, the Giants the team will take on @ new scene of his best years a ball eano in spirit, The Fletcher-Ban-| risyer, perhaps, yet he believes the croft swap may only be the first of | acquisition of Bancroft will strength- & move on the part of Muggsy to re-\en the McGrawites. He is 34 years butld @ faltering ball club. Bancroft old. is 28 years old. | eomeecttyepienneneeniartgntnammattiats — | The “Letters te the Editor,” published daily in The Star, are genuine epistion \ reorived trom its renders whe “break into print” to give their honest opinions om subjects of interest to them, As such they are net only ini » but om~ sons for the Phillies MUNCIE, Ind.—Tommy Teague i# & comer among the little scrappers of the country, He has boxed two no toreeting, decision bouts with Frankie Mason, | lightening, and are well worth reading. The Store of Choice | :: Town and country alike are now demand- ing clothes light in weight and cool in tex- ture. 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