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Secure eects 2 ie mes | | PAGE 20 BEAVERS WALLOP SIWASHES BACK INTO OLD TIME SLUMP |Z PACIFIO COAST LEAGUE SOMEONE APPLIED | GREASE | AGAIN Seattle got going for a day, but @kidded badly again on Thursday, fand the Beavers cracked ‘em for an other game. Errors, poor hitting and miserable fielding are the three things the local team suffered from in the game lost to the Buda, 3 to 0, Everything started off most beautifully, and} Behorr pitched shutout ball for three innings, when he talked long and joudly to his honor the umps 4 Tris Speaker Had the Greatest W HITMAN TEAM THE SEATTLE STAR Vernon Low Ap fon Fr Beattie halt Lake City Oakland s+ FRIDAY, OCTORER 1, 1999, benini of His Cniak Career | TO ARRIVE THURSDAY Whitman college grid hopefula ar their big battle with the local Uni veraity of Washington football eleven on Denny field Saturday. Whitman, according to thetr | ia” Norleskie, which mays that coach, “? than ever before, the Mi ful aggregation. The crak Whitman team that held the gigantic jonary school has & power a 18-7 score @ few yearn ago, threw perenne tame an Ja fright into the Washington camp | r. ee that took all-the over-confidence out yen came Sweeney, and he GN of the men, and served only as the fairly well until Murphy | started start of one of Gil Dobie’s mont ‘Walking on the ball =~ hy Fepeas i successful seasons. Rorleskie, who ep aeeee tn: the eighth; There ie He | soached this same eleven, states Whe describing in detail any of the that this year he has an even more game, Read tho box score and let powerful aggregation, while Wash the Imagination do the F ington’s grid hopes have not ad Portiind— an BH. TO om vanced a single step ° of ate KY ALWAYS Sis iT oie © 3 That a Doble-conched eleven was pe tes Sey ae held to a 17 score by a Borleskie- H t H H H coached team is md, but a team ea fle }facen Washington next Saturday, 1B OER, coached by Borleskie, that he claims oy tay Be lim the best he has ever turned out BR MPO AK jin his long years of experience. , aa wee HB eal | Washington no longer has the great OF titan il Doble. A mw, but experienced ri~ss 4s | man, in taking the reins at Washing ee TS ee BS ton, Whether the coaching ability | Middiewon, ‘rf 2-03 8 2 2 8 of Leonard Allison and his anniat ov agp ined ok Fir a Saas ae aes ant, Lorin Solon, are on a par with 1 9 10 2 ¢ those of Gil Doble, will be at a tent Bs Pa Po Bg lin the Whitman game Saturday. te ie 8 | Whitman has probably the big: oe Soe ee | west advantage of any school on the BB SS | Coast, because of the fact that the ey ae oer ing [freshman ruling does not prevail e 7 8 |there. Men can be brought in from epatied for Adaime In seventh Batted for Sweeney in cigbthy YRae foe Zamioch in eighth. oes Bits Summary: Strack out—y Seborr 1. by Kallio’ ve Cooper 1 By Sweeney 4. by Cooper Bi poe Fuses on dalls—Off Sweeney mn. Three- me along in their grid practice. The a plafe— Adams | ee Indians abe. 18 bi ee, ie toa | volinstahs eal aiven’ thie Htak site Fiue:; Kallio to Blue Sacrifice nite—|/ vext to Lake Erie, Speaker is the biggest thing in, around OF | 1.4) practice yeaterday afternoon. As | Kaito, Cunningsham. stolen dasee—| next to Cleveland. this is only the fourth night out for ee ee anes, at be * #8 &% * * & * * the babes, it speaks well for the} BY DEAN SNYDER Ithat the basehall wort has called | progreks that they are making. Up until this year ‘Tris Speaker him the modern juggier, But in| Coaches Wick and Tidball are out Tke Dorgan, who had charge of the publicity for Tex Rickert at the | F. Dempsey-Willard fight at Toledo, js back on the job at Madison Square | Garden for Tex and will handle all/ the publicity there this coming sea- gon. Gene Delmon: great showing ‘with Willie Jackson a short time ago has earned him a return engagement to take place at the Armory A. A. Jersey City. Gene id a credit to the boxing game and a good little fight er, who will be in demand at the New York clubs, as the fans like a! twofisted boy who is in there trying ,all the time, ‘The Star's missing relative editor jall parts of the country and played | there their first semester in school | This, of course, is not saying Whit man does such a thing, but only | moe" to show the big advantage that they it. |FRostt TRS SPAKE ke | STEPPING After losing his star infielder, Chapman, Spoke pulled his| The Freshmen are ate pping right believed in his heart that batting was reality he bas only proven that |¢very night in uniform and aren't the biggest thing in baseball. brains plus a heart that never gives |“fraid of getting them solled when Now, with the gray of age begin-/| up will get results. coaching the youngsters, ning to creep into his hair and a| He has been hailed as a great field-| Altho some men look better than year’s experience as manager of a er ever since he broke into the game | Others, It Is hard for the coaches to ball club that has fought and been| with Boston back in 1908, ‘He has | pick anything that resembles a prow within sight of the coveted pennant | been known as one of the best bat. | pective squad as yet. rive in Seattle next Thursday for |} is stronger |) Washington eleven to} Loe Angeles . anennees # 4 > clean, on the square, wholesome and| ‘ 2 “gna ssasster, | distinetively American, Disloyalty and dishonesty aid what — n on, x |All tho sluggers in the American fan Francisco ecenceceeacee # 8 | !#RU® Could not do—drive Eddie Ci Vernon . crisis: & 198 1 | Cotte from the box. }220 p. m. AMERIGAN rupted hin baseball idols, But no boy will say today he has lot faith in baseball, He is just one more factor of a public eager to re Pudiate the slightest suggestion of dishonesty and anxious to back up the efforts to maintain for baseball % | the reputation it has had for years PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE, jt : Batterie’ la we. and Agnew; eal) ‘Thus one of the idols of American ood, Plerey a avermer, boyhood fell from his pedestal of mm ® | fame ’ 2 fat Take City To my mind, this constitutes one of the saddest features connected with the baseball meandal, Even this, however, will not rob the average boy of hin Interest in and love for} baseball. Boys go in to win. No sus picion of crookedness ever enters | their heads. It is the hardest thing | under the min to corrupt a boy #0 that he will lose @ race or throw a game, Thousands of youthful players on These two teams are hunting | the city lots and members of the) ganes with Seattle teams averaging | country town teams from Coast to) 158 pounds. Seatile managers are | Coast will nee in the baseball noandal anked to write to H. V. Goodwin, | only proof of the things they have manager of the hospital squad, and | always believed; RAILORS TANGLE Bremerton footballers will open their fall schedule Saturday when the teams from the Naval hospital and the Navy Yard Apprentice school tangle at Athletic park at George Munro, of the apprentices. That you can’t play the game TO THROW FOR SAINTS Oct ST. PAUL, Minn., , Fred Coumbe, 1 Internationa! league champa, ig | SAW ‘HIM FIRST,” SAYS BILL WICKS TOLEDO, Ohio, Oct. 1 present secretary of the Toledo bane. | | ball club and who was serving the) Baltimore club in a similar capacity | in 1913 when along | boy as the “Babe,” -BiNl came Johnny Kilbane, crooked and win. ‘That murder will out. And that you can't mix fn bad|a cross-country run on Thaskegiy. — company and get away with it since April, he has gone a step deep | Many of She former Senttlo high | pane school stars are distinguishing them. | But from this time on take off| selves in practice. Stars from schools | of this and other states are showing up as well and the opposition for er into the great game, No player has ever come as near) playing super-baseball probably | than Spoke has done this year, ‘TEST Pr c tense and. defense | short of marvelous, In spite of the’ general rule that that is Little ters who ever stepped up to the He has set a clip both on the of-/ |your hat to the GREAT TRIS SPEAKER, also one of baseball's | amartest and most successful mana- gers. Jock Malone is again out of the hospital His leg apd arm are coming along nicely. Jock will be places on the Frosh varsity will be| keen, BIG BOUT ON AGAIN CLEVELAND, 10-round battle between Jack Britton Ohio, Oct. 1—The r playing managers usually slump in| "4Y to start boxing in November their work, as a player he has play-} jed the best game of his long and | bright career in the majots of 13 seasons, His individual style of going after balls in the outfield ts developed so |that the crack of the bat tells him instantly the exact spot where the ball will settle, | GREATEST CATCH | Tris admits himself that he made ee night, has been postponed until tonight. | responsible for the postponement. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUB BASEBALL | Rainier Park PORTLAND vs, SEATTLE TODAY—Game Cali: Take Fourth Ave. Farewell Performances ‘wants to locate “Windy” Windsor.|the greatest catch o fhis career this e ~ a Bud Ridley’s old mer. Windsor’s |season. It happened at League park. | New Washington folks are worried about him. Lost) (Cleveland. The ball was one of} im a great city and no meal ticket, they think is dangerous. Next to a rattlesnake In August) ‘and a few Const league umpires, a couple of our local about the biindest things one can think of. . Billy Wright ts the most decetving Dattler in appearance when it comes | to weight. Ho looms up like a heavy | schedule. || Admission $2.00, plus his pleasure starts Blongside most of his opponents, and| Last year, when his batting aver I tay Seats limited. r A yet he scales only 148—so he mys.|age dropped below the .300 mark by with the first pi If such is the case, Billy is being| four points, he was disappointed, He ful—no_ disagreeable Unjustly criticised for picking on| wondered if he had seen his last Seats Reserved at tongue burning when small men. Wright is willing to step on the scales any old day any ne doubts his word. Al Lippe {fs after a match with Champion Johnny Wilson for his freat battler, Jeff Smith, and both the Garden and the International Sporting club have put in a bid for the bout John Welsmantel, fhe Broadway Sporting club in Brooklyn, is after @ license and will hold forth at the same arena which bas a seating capacity of 5,000. AMUSEMENTS __ Eiliott 2525 THIS WEEK—MATINER SAT, “ROADS OF DESTINY” Greater than “The Eyes of Youth” Eoven., 25¢ to 81. Mats. 27¢ to 50e PANTAGES Nights, 7115 MOORE @&frrrum CIRCUIT HARRY FOX with Beatrice Curtis Wallis Clark and Co; Dewey and Rogers; y Kings; Billy Shone; Wastiska and Un- derstudy; Three Lordons TWICK DAILY—2 PALACE HIp = tion Ackerman & Harris py New Show of VAUDEVILLE umpires are! who conducted | , | Job all the bigger. Hotel Grill Room Tuesday, October 5th Wednesday, October 6th Thursday, October 7th At 8:30 P. M. those long screaming drives, headed for the scoreboard, that he gathered in over his shoulder, running with the ball. } | At the bat he has fought the greatest sluggers the game has had in years. Along with George Sis! Joe Jackson and Babe Ruth he has tried to finish the year as @ 400 hit- ter, and be’ll miss it but a few points when the curtain rings down on the To the purchaser of a Marcee De Luxe— days as a star hitter, i TOGA | HELPS | Then, when the togn slipped from | the shoulders of Lee Fob! onto his shoulders, his playing took @ spurt that has never been headed. The objective which he sought was to lead Cleveland to its first pennant To do so he couldn't accomplish it all with the managerial reins, Early in the season a peculiar freak de veloped among Cleveland players. They seemed to be follow 2 Speaker in every department of the game, When Spoke had a good day the other Indians also played at a} swifter stride. When he had an off day their spirit lagged and likewise their playing, HIS JOB BIG Time after time it has been nald |by players on rival clubs that if |Speaker ever hit a bad slump his team would drop out of the running as pennant contenders, following the undertow downwards That has made the Redskin pilot's He couldn't slow |up. He has had to outdo his former self in brilliancy to 1 breaking in. It is & joy te own one of these exceptional pipes. Hotel Office A SPRING CIGARC —INc.— CAS ae First Ave. 418 Pike St. 1406 Fourth Ave, 910 Second Ave. Street Car Tokens Sold 1221-Third Ave *COR UNIVERSITY d the way up. How well he has succeeded is shown from the point of vantage |from which the Tribe is looking down at present in one of the hottest fights that the American league Painless Dentistry Modern methods — high-class dentistry — low prices. These we offer you. Electro Painless Dentists Laboring People’s Dentists J. R, VAN AUKEN, Manager Located for years at 8S, E. Corner First and Pike, Phone Main 2555 ker has always had baseball | | bra ns. He is a strategist in the tru- est sense of the word. He has been | iled upon to juggle his outfield, his d.and his pitchers all season The Indians’ machine seemed headed for the precipice time after time, but Spoke rome to the oc casion in every case and saved the | Tribe from seerningly impending dis aster. | His work has been #0 wen The Kavanagh Hat $3.50 TWO sronns First and Madison done and Benny Leonard, scheduled for) Cold weather and rain was| Many _ persons consider nothing more than appear- \f ance when select- if ing a suit. Others if depend entirely 'f upon the feel of the fabric. Still if others have pecyl- jarities in style or the cut of their garments. Kup- penheimer Clothes please all types be- cause, though the buyer may con- sider a suit from only one angle, Kuppenheimer workmanship deals carefully with all. Kuppenheimer’s $35 to $85 featherweight champ, has signed for a vaudeville tour, which means that he will not defend his title for some time. | University of Washington haw Pitcher who is now a hire ling of Pat Moran at Cincinnati, return to St. Paul At the end of the season to help the Saints battle om BOXERS WORKING OOKLYN “| SCANDAL /’Qurarsacrs’| BROOKLYN bd ts 'T Bud Ridley and Bobbie Harper TEAM 4 r+ for their bouts with Joe Gorman and NEW YORK, Oct. 1—j club; Wilbert Robinson, ity und a number of players ents will "EM NOW the ago the that Vardon and five straight recently, JERSEY STILL Wicks, ON MAP livelier than ever in Jersey, his first call for fall track The first event of the season ing day. ——Cheastys= What Do You Look | for in Clothes. . When you fry on Kuppenheimer Good Clothes note the appearance. No matter what your physical type may. be there is a suit that will accord | with each charac- teristic. Then feel the excellent fabric —wool of high } grade quality. After that inspect the smart lines that make Kup- penheimer Clothes so popular. Kup- penheimer Clothes pass all such tests satisfactorily. Satisfaction Is Assured at This Store of Choice, Where “Values Tell” > Other Lines $25 to $65 Charles TI. Ebbets, president of the he sald, YANKS KNOW NEW YORK, Oct. 1—Not e9 usual headiine Announced Kay bad won again, but the Yank golfers are get, ting wine to them. The Britons lest JERSEY CITY, N. J, Oct dm Fans who thought the boxing game Ruth,| Would curl up and die in this stats |clatms the honor of tagging the big} When New York's law a round bouts went into effect, have another think coming. Things ane TRACK MEN CALLED Coach Heck Edmundson of te ( 7 FS Won, test - ies Hidley will be giving away a few|'% Investigating rumors that evel #40 Bem: piers ple an at aie ae i as SUNDAY pounds in his bout with Gorman, but a af 1 attempt to c New ¥ ea 4 does not neem to think thin fact will | 2° nun n° me declared today TS’ at BY BILLY SUNDAY make any difference. Grunan i @| iii. that report. ite 4 ” PTT (Copyri 135-pounder and comes from Los At-| gi ceroa smith vere qv si a8) ROANAKE, Va. The heart | geles with a big reputation | Brooklyn onteher, Sonera lphia nesses 108 of the average American boy will told a they cover Nala they NATIONAL LEAGUP cherish bitter enmity toward the das COUMBE proached by gamblers, been ap Won. tardly gambling interests that cor Lewis tomorrow ii will be SLERTEE EESEESES EER 2S ERERE SEE it st z Hf > 7 £ ze fs if é, be &3 41 i Pj pa hed Bd