Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SALT LAKE NEEDS TRIO OF OUTFIELDERS, ONE INFIELDER AND NEW MANAGER FOR 1921 T the start of the 1920 pennant race in the Coast league, Salt Lake pre- sented a lineup that promised to finish mighty close to first place, the baseball scandal that rocked the Maggert and wrecked the Bees’ won- derful o- fense and they drop- ped into the second vision. T for Salt ow, 1921 Lake way over a Mighty gloomy r 3 APPOINT ; riot Tho Hees must replace Ernie John WOON, pilot of tho present season and HOHE Of the best shorstops in the mi ‘mors. (Phe Utah club must appoint a @nanager and they also face the task Assembling a wrecking crew for season, because Johnson, Hood. rt and Rumler won't be there Hwith their big bats in the spr Fohnson goes to the Chicago White where he ought to make good off the bat. It will be the Aamo te eo His other trial was with the Louis Browns several y he didn't hit hard eno: : ON PLAYED INDE! "L BALL Bee pilot played wonderful ball field all year and also hit over and ranked with the leading Stealers in the Coast circuit. Bees have the nucleus for a Infield next year. Ear! Sheely Undoubtedly be back to cover base. There has been some talk PiSheely getting a trial with the Dodgers next year. If the fellow goes Salt Lake will face tough job in‘trying to re him, as Earl was the best bit im the Coast circuit this year ma he was also there from every an. asa fielder. ty Krug. who will be the first ‘, for the managership job in ® Mormon village, will be able to |. care of second base again. @ smart ball player and he's of those rare gems—a good field trip Ernie has made to the ma-| Coast Bill Rumler, who were di-| outlook | | | _ BASEBA DON'T involved But Bees Harl and the scandal, league cost in the LL FANS WANT WORLD SERIES FEW of the master minds ABOLISHED tm baseball seem much fMurried over the recent scandals, and various rash ideas pertaining to the national pastime are destroyed. other. This possibly would prove as the big series. series is worth months of waiting. | With the announcement that WI- | am T. Tilden, IL, has decided to go home for a rest in Philadelphia some of the lustre of the exhibition of the being put inte circulation. Sr Some great Intellect advocates the abolition of the world's series, because it has been proved that a few of the players in one series were crooked. A lot of cashiers have absconded since banks were founded, too, but nobody is suggesting tat all banks be It is urged that the regular American and National league seasons | close in July, and the various teams In the two circuits tackle one an- interesting, but not as entertaining The annual classic is a mighty important event to the average fan. It is the big thing of the year in baseball. New Orieans, or the Western Washington fair to Puyallup, the world's Like the Mardi Gras & to To do away with it would be a grave mistake, = tacit adminston, besa tage eprom sei - enough to cope suceessfully with the ‘comin Exhibition ‘Leow Lustre; Champ Won't Play they sail from Vancouver, B.C. No | vember 11, for the Davis Cup match in Australia. | Tennis critien my that Tilden ts master of every stroke known to the THE SEATTLE STAR BIG BOY SAVES TITLE FOR TRIBE THE ‘DUSTER’ “BALLARD AND LINCOLN FACE HARD GRID TILT the firwt crucial gamen of the prep football weason at the Coast league |ball park this afternoc The kick (f wan wet for 3:20 |" Ballard joome as the dark horne n the prep race, and they face their ee eee rmer Nroa@way end. Young Dirk Peek, emother former | Droadway eridder, # turning out for the | University of Washington frosh squad. “Rotties” Naseford, firet sacker, wM captain the Lincoln baseball tomers next epring. “Teaner” Walby expects to take football squad. hold down the eeoter job on squad amt is expected catching in basctall. ii tain of the beskes ball end mecbal of the foothal! cap With Jame Douglas, forward “Molly” MeCarthy, guard, back basket ball prompec bright at Queen Anne thie year ja niche that the Coaster would Uke | | to fill tn baseball. ‘The Washington pitcher earned | the name of being called Walter the Great, you'll remember, Well, thin kid from the Pacific firmt big test when they tackle Lin on The Beavers won thelr first gar » by the margin ¢ hdown, f class. and they showed a In was held to a ncorelesn tie | k tin but the Halley ated that they will have to for the annual honor Both te lineups in the ce off with their reg SPORT-) ING EDITOR OF THE'S PORTLAND N 3, IS‘ Aly SEATTLE VISITOR. BILLY demons an strong una ave their atr 1 and they w Har forces. | us follows William says that while Port land is the city of roses it's no reason why their ball club down | that way should be a bloomer. la The teams will line up Broadway and Went Seattle tangle ast league ball park urday at 2 p.m. Broadway was to a moreienn tie Queen A while West Se dropped its opener to Franklin by a 6 to 9 count.| Who was it who said Port- 3 \land was the Philadelphia of CROSS COUNTRY the Wes RUN AT “U” | — rhe bir university ermneounery |p THEY CALL PHILADELPHIA run will take place the y | THE QU menard ore. Thankgingiving, ing to Track ach “Heck” Kamundson, ‘The men who expect to pete must b | training not later than thin week, | Hoth the start and the fintwh of the | | race will be at the stadium. The! | course will be run thru the campur Every night sees runners going over the course In training for this big| annual affair. Nevertheless William wears | a nifty mustache. | hela | by nne, day before ban iltiam Tilden, pion, ex the tennis cham f hin exhibitions to gO home to Philadelphia two rest. ancelled all Do you get what we're driv- ing at? We thought ea. WHENEVER THEY GO IN FOR LANYT! GIN PORTLAND THEY wm D 100K AT THEIR BALL, CL | slope shoots a ball just about as! ewift ag the Kansan did in his prime He does it left handed ich makes it all the better for the club sup porting him and all the worse for | the opportion. Iter the Great the “Durter” is shooting at it's no fault t love limelight I providing you've got the goods manufacture it wertany not M B They couldn’t go any deep- that’s the t's thi er. title | | Unless the Coast league adds on a few clube to Walter Mails Makes and Earns His Own Limelight BUT ANYHOW, BILLY EEMS LIKE A NICE FEL- OW, Poven if he does come from Port na. GOOD NIGHT! —8. A. WEEK —— Yole wi tangle with Weet Virginis turddy at New Haven. Insure your lenses against breals age. Ask us about it. 325 Prxe Street Neag Fourtn. yf American Davis cup tennis team | game and Seattle tennis followers | scheduled for the Arena November 6| were more than anxious to ste the has been lost. Tilden, recognized king of the courts in action. The Tennis champion of the world, says | way things stack up now William he has gone stale because of the | Johnston of California, Watson overamount of tennis playing that | Washburn, Eastern expert, and Sam Here are a few closeups of | -|October 12 Was Great named Gi seems to know the only prospects for the, fi ar. Lake battery t9 pretty care of. The Bees ha vers in Byler and Jen-| wethoreturn for the ¢ He led the league this year percentage of gams won and then there's young Thurston d be a real star in 1921. He ots of promise this year, his t in the Coast circuit, i a iley, Cullop and Leverenz, sturdy southpaws, will be fling | Wing for the Bees again and then the ons will have Gould and Reiger other members of the mound infielder, Ciree outfielders and are the needs of Salt and in these days of scarce ball the Utah club faces some going before the next Coast sedgon gets under way. —_— 6 A. WEEK — and Canter college WIN Alen ‘& lot of attention this week when Srgue at Cambriden —-& A. WEEK— penal and Titinots, two ondetented | fn the “Big Ten,” clash at Ann SMOKE MILDMAN CIGARS MADE IN SEATTLE SOLD EVERYWHERE ‘When a man fully appre- ciates 4 pipe’ he cannot a show it in movement or ac- ok his hands, his expression and m ace of satisfaction. fact is most notice- in the owners of famous Marcee de Italian Briar Pipes. is up to you to secure portion of this First Ave. 418 Pike St. g 1406 Fourth Ave. 910 Second Ave. Street Car Tokens Sold i at All Stores he has done since-tast spring and he won't join the American team until ° Day in Sports October TWELVE has rena But) | Riddle t-yearold@ colt i# the nearest) dans Rigbitdogn’ en thee tay Sade mendowsly important to sport these one bas added color to base |ball, another has settled all doubts fas tothe greatest horse in the work, | and the other has given our boxing @ new stimulus | Cleveland’s winning the world title in baseball will mean much to the game. The city had never had a pennant during its 42 years or more in Orgafiized baseball’ The gloats over its champions Ie a chil over = new top. It gives the whol | baseball world a new angie to an old subject. Had Brooklyn won the title, it would not have aroused the same wave of enthusiast, for the Dodgers have been pennant winners before. Man o’ War, by galloping a run away race from Sir Parton, at Wind sor, Canada, as shown that he is in a class by himself as a horse. It | means that his superiority will prob- ably be a barrier to his entering f | | HAD my doubts. ore | ABOUT THAT restaurant, } . . IT LOOKED like the placa. ee WHERE THE Englishman ees TOLD THE walter to bring. ee A NEW bill of fara eee BECAUSE ON the ona, cee THAT HE had. ee THE SAMPLES of food, oe. WERE SPOTTED against, I aes WRONG names, ' BUT ' chanced, ft. AND ORDERED a plate, ee OF CHICKEN soup, ; ee | AND WHEN !t cama, oe | | TASTED it and then, cee | ASKED THE waiter, | cee "18 THIS chicken soup?” roars AND HE came | pry town | Harty, team captain, will be the boys to exhibit their tennis wares here. . ture races. Yet it proven that the thing to a perfect horse we have aye § vw And Carpentier, by deciatvety teat. to boxing. If the Frenchman hadn't fotten over the American “trial | |horse” bie name would have been mond so far an boxing In this country la concerned. But now they can go ahead with a proponed Dempsey. Carpentier battle without blushing. All of these turning points In sport came grouped on the date of October TWELVE. No wonder it made his. | tory. ana that’s that, ——--- - i] Temeons ay | STEVENS’ $3 | 1" Lay Cost. Private Haile Day and Kvening | Young Lady Assistants | 4th and Pike. Mais 3911 Danced tn leading places | Wed mtnrwledguens wo KC. 8 It didn’ sound AT ME with this, oe “IF YOU can't tell. see WHETHER IT is or not, oe WHAT'S IT matter, see IF IT fan't?” “ee WHICH WAS kinda hard, ee TO FIGURE out. eree BUT I guese he's right, eee ALL THE same, nobody, cee EVER QUESTIONS my taste, 7+ IN CIGARETTES, ee THEY JUST grab ona, ee LIGHT UP, emfle and say, eee “THEY SATISFY.” eee t @ pe ample from that clean, white Chesterfield package, and you'll put in a standing order. No guess-work about it — Chesterflelds do satisfy! While we use only the finest, silkiest Turkish and the rip- mellowest Domestic tobacco It's the Chesterfield blend that does it, And that blend has ‘em all stopped! It can't be copiedl ing Levinsky, will serve as a brace | vatoe time athens | “Duster” Walter Mails, At! the ball park he looks like the} picture at the top—very seri-| ous and wondering whether! he'll win 1 to 0 or 2 to 1 or by! some other small margin. Center picture shows him as leaving the club house after winning a game—contented, | tired and half smiling. Bot-| |tom is the expression he| wears the rest of the evening —animated, chatty, and smil-| ing full blast. BY DEAN SNYDER | “Duster” Walter Mails doesn't be | lleve in being Just an ordinary guy or a noargreat fella. He craves the spotlight full dinat. | The world series fuxt conduded so lhappily for Cleveland and so fury for Brooklyn, gave the kid from Hcatifornia Just what he craved. | The “Duster” earned every dollar |in hin $3,986 check. The kid pitched real ball when he | hit the big league white way. Hix jaix straight wing for the Indians, at the fag end of the achedule with-| out a turn back gave Speaker a pen hant winner. | CHUCKFUL OF | CONFIDENCE {He jumped into the big series with all the confidence in the world and| whipped U Wilbert Robinson's ro-braced ofts, Walter didn’t win his Brooklyn game, but he was | not called in to it until after it was Dodger gravy. If he had atarted in| that third game at Ebbets Field, the | series would have been over just one | day sooner. He took his turn tn Cleveland and| the score was only 14, but in the| Coaster's favor. HE MAK) ir } Malis hag made his own Mmotight. | Why shouldn't he walk up and down in it? Ho has more faith tn himacif aa a | pitcher than a faith healer. | ‘Three men on the bases and none Gown don't worry the kid any, In fact, he rather likes thone headachy situations, Like the Rube Waddell of old, he would call in all the fielders to stand admiringly around | while he attempted to strike out the next three men up and rotire the side. | WORTH Lor A ieft arm like the one Malls owns | ig worth several thou’ all right. It's} a cihch bis 1921 contract will show | a big score—for Walter. | Cleveland has been In need of an} effective southpaw for a long time. | If Mails had been in an Indian | uniform all year the Speakerites | would have been far enough ahead by the time the final dash set in that | Jim Dunn wouldn't have had to make up last minute world series | plans, | \M AKES BALL nor When he throws a bafl ft hops. His delivery is easy, Nothing phony |about It. But he starta the ball on ts Journey platewards with an odd ittle snap, That's what makes the batting averages of opposing players shrink | He gave Manager Speaker the beat he had every time he was called up: on. His work was just as careful | anid effective as a relief pitcher ag if| he had been eiven the honor of start: | ing the game, Walter will winter tn Callfornta, | where he will work In a sporting | coods store in Sacramento, He'll! be back bright and early for training in the spring. The passing of Walter Johnson— famed speed king—this year leaves taken advantage of the great sale we are now having in clothes and hats? We are offer- ing every suit and head-dress in our matchless stock at a dis- count of 25% Do not wait! You know the quality of Cheasty clothes—just take off 25% from the regular price and the best suit or hat in Seattle is yours. **Values Tell’’ SECOND AVENUE AT SPRING STREET