The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 17, 1921, Page 12

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TRIO OF P. C. LEFT FIELDERS CERTAIN Editor's that Seattle's t Others will follow from season ne Bingham, at present, is being fie ured on as the regular Seattle left) | fielder. | Portland has no left ficiter yet. | They are fixed for left fielders} Just their tossers—a big question mark Salt Lake is much in the same fix. Young Haugher looked pretty like they are for most of} Bood in the fag end of the 1920 COMMERCIAL LEAGUE ®eason and he may have the job Shookume ie agai Coderwatt 16d CONNOLLY | ON Inewer 7 = " | Driver Mm 1) ‘i | Miller 162 18 In San Francisco there has been | "sey aaa 16 @ jot of talk about trading Con-| cas. 800 088 Rolly to some other club, But Tight now he shapes up as the Tegular Seal left flekter. While “Dixie” Carroll, the South @rn league graduate, ts almost a @inch to play regularly in the Los Angeles outfield, it's no sure thine} bet that Manager Killifer will play him in left field. If Killifer plays |} regularly “Red” will undoubtedly play center field, with Carroll inj feft. Otherwise Carroll, with his | Thompses peed, has the call for the center! field berth. “Rube™ Ellis may! stick on the job, but he's mighty ”’ doubtful. } Kopp, Miller and High three of the best outfielders in| the league last season and ther's BO reason in the world why they shouldn't be on the job again) this year. RAINIER PARK TO MORE PEOPLE | After alterations planned for the Bergman . as oete Beattie Coast league park are made! Crescent Mie. Co. ‘the local baseball plant will seat | Srertet sete 18 143 bout 17,500 people. The right field Bleachers are to be no more. The seats will be moved to left field The grandstand will be extended to! the right field fence. The seating | last «year was about 12,000 Ire DONT BLAME um™M _ 4Gréagy? Keel the Cincy ont-| and we don't blame him, judging from the ball teams that the Philly) chub has put in the field during| the ‘ paht "few s Years. Neale has written Prexy Baker, of the Quak-/ ers, asking for a transfer to an other club, stating that he can't Play well In the Philly park be iso STECIAL MATCH Shepard and to the Cincy Reds, where he played | a year or so and then he was/| shipped to Milwaukee in the — fean association, where he pastimed for t past few seasons And now comes word from the! Eest that he has teen sold to the Nashville club fn the Southern league. American association scribes NEW YORK, Feb. 17.—s0 in track and field sports Inst in the Coast league to wear civilian | “jt in difficult to say when the clothes this seaton, This means! jute limit of hum that the job of captain on the! durance will be reached.” Frisco club is more important than| Keener competition, Vernon Tigers this year. Sam Agnew has the for the job. Catcher | the enactment of state laws r inside track fleilder who was traded to the Phil: | hark 202 190. Adelphia Nationals, doesn’t relish Duns 181 the idea of playing in Philadelphia ise . cause he bats lefthanded and he would have to look into a mass} of white shirts in the bleachers. | Harry, He thinks it will affect hin hitting. | Thompson wants to be transferred to some 44 Pittsburg Pirates. ODeseen . 168 ese $86 903 859-- 2 HUHN a she Renton Kagien SLIPPING Ii. Jouee avy 308 Emil Huhn, the big catcher and Wade 1473 196 first sacker, who played with Se |5™5?..; 18 180 attic a few years ago In the North. | a ‘western league, must be on the seo 873 9 toboggan. From Seattle he went |~ “The Greatest Fight I Ever Saw” his is the first of @ series on the greatest 9 bowing celedrities and ringsiders ¢ to time BY LEO Hi. LASSEN : BY JOW WATERMAN NLY three Pacific Manager of Bud Ridley Coast league clubs have def The greatest fight that I ever saw, | initely lined up| Or ever expect to was the battle their left fielders | between “Battling elvon and Ad for the coming | Wolgast at Point Richmond, Febru: | ary 22, 1910. Dootsors journeyed up to Renton and took two out of | three from the Eagles’ team, but lost the match by 32 pins on the total. ate ra bon 590 2616 many | long-#tanding records were shattered | year that the age -of athletic perfection gay he ts stil a pretty good catcher and it's hart to ficure| med to have been reached: out how he was watved out of | However, William J. Brigham, for- the league. |mer star runner of Harvard, SS a scaena | Nove the supervisor of track athletics GRAHAM ONLY PILOT roa gah a belives that it was WEARING “CIVIE: hac Pye Aaa Tharley Graham, San Francisco! books now that cannot be broke pilot, will be the only manager! he said today to the United Press abso- ; n strength and en increased in on most teams as men aren't al-! terest and the fact that men are spe lowed on the field unless in unl-| cializing in certain events are help. form. The new captain of the| ing to lower marks, he believes. Beals hasn't been named as yet.| Daniel J. Kelly, instructor in phy» Roy Corhan, who has held the) {cal education at Harvard, gives cred. job for years, will play bo the | it for the advancement in athletics to equir ing physica! training in the schools, ' “In Every Respect” ;- says the Good Judge You get more genuine chew- ing satisfaction from the Real ‘Tobacco Chew than you ever got from the ordinary kind. The good tobacco taste lasts so long—a small chew of this class of tobacco lasts much longer than a big chew of the old kind. That’s why it costs less to use. Any man who has used both kinds will tell you that. Put up in two styles W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco Le Cnn HO) BroatwavaNew Bork Cty | fights “ever saw,” Wolgast came tn the ring first and) had to wait quite awhile be |ehampion was carried into th ont back of Abdul the Turk sneered then, and made that famous remark which proved to be a proph eey He had to be o a im | they'll have to carry him out,” 1 prospective line | The Hegewich Dane was then in| way quite a bit of bad feeling b up follows: }the heyday of his career, 133 pounds | pw the tee, end Gach one bad Seattle — Bill|of aggressive fighting machinery |tnreatened an early knockout Cunningham. nd lehtweight champion of the] yor six rounds it was a nip and Portland—? world, while Wolgast had just) tuck affair, with both fig ata Salt Lake—Iill| reached the top and was bein con-| fast clip. Then Nelson took the | Haugher {sidered a serious contender for N and seomed a certain winner, expe Vernon—Hugh | son's crown, because he had seored| wally when he dropped Wolgast in High | victories over Lew Powell, Teddy | tne nd round. The betting then San Francisco | Peppers, Henri Piet and others. 1 that Ad would not stay —Joe Connolly, | It was a miserable afternoon so Oakland—Hack Miller. far as the weather was concerned, | » stalled around for a few Los Angeles—"Dixie” Carroll. | when the two finally came together, | rounds and then went out and gave Sacramento—Merlin Kopp. The fight was held in an open-air) Nelson the most unmerciful beating Of this array of outfielders) arena and it had been raining and|a man ever received in the ring. But Kopp Miller and High are cinches/|drizaling all day, Newsboys were! he could not floor the Rattler, who for those jobs. | selling year-old papers for 60 cents.) was on the receiving end ot we CUNN! |wo that people would have something | gast's left—oing #winh, swish, untl BE SmIFTED. = dry to a on, or with which to cover | Nelson's fac sked like a “Ham There has been some talk of | their holiday hats, And just before | burger.” fF Kd Smith finally (Gunningham being shifted to|the main event part of the fence/ stopped it in the 40th round and Some other Coast league club, fig-| caved in with a bunch of fence rush-| gave it to Wolgast. It certainly wax Wring that a change would do | ers who were sitting on it. Jone great serap. the Seattle fly chaser good, Cun-| —. ‘CITY CAGE. CHAMPS WIN STANDING OF TH peal) Southwick ’ x : , 5 ¥ 2 en ‘ Rainter-Noble Most rf Silent Prats ? Kix Club ? The MacDougall Southwick cage five made it eight straight for the season and 22 «straight for the pant two years last night Elks club, when they downed strong Puget Sound Paper Box five, 30 to 23. The MacDougay team Ie@ thruout altho at tme led by the scant margin of one point The shooting of Dick Frayn and Ralph Smith for the winners and the work of Clary Attleson for the los ere featured The second game waa a walkaway de for the Northe feated the Sile rn Life team. It t Frats, 49 to 16. THE SEATTLE | | | | _BEAT METS AGAIN STANDING OF THT TAM Won t 10 BY AL C, Rost & burst of «peed, Uncorking lied owith high-class combin: is cow ation, the Victoria hockeyists dumped the ttle team further away fron mnant before a packed |the local Arena final score was Vic The better form lant night's 4 first two pert Dunderd: lant night t * toria 4, visitors have than they never display ally when the m the houce at The tle 3 hown od in in the Oatman i Meeking combine ee STAR INDIANAPOLIS, y r "ale rica'n favor necond to én “4 the | nue 6004nile of the dway, May 80 last of the milli Palma Soe the has met De battle on road, nl yone to precede In filing his entry, not named the car b it is generally bellev Hallot from th ’ Palma has be chtintine” nd will ape nat Low An ing birthday at French car. He har ed by Karnest Balle Indianapolis track and hill, “VICTORIA [DE PALMA FILES ENTRY FOR AUTO SPEED CLASSIC, PUCK MEN Feb, 17--Talph international star and one | Grand Prix in July i © drivers, | © ninth an jonal sweep Motor Eddie Mearne, jonaires and who in many a specd is Uh Ralph in enter rm De Palma has ne will drive, but od that thin will no Paris factory en driving the ister for two the champion om on Wash the wheel of the also heen select his BRITTAN | SPURNS | $20,000 BID ¢ a charm Moone Johnson, playing | rover for the Aristocrats, was ¢ a) the outatanding figure on the toe hin poke-oheck putting an end 4 |g many raids by the eager Mets. The Seattle players mwemed a Nt tle stale, and it way only in the nig minutes that they showed thelr true form, but the hard tries from Foyston, Riley and Tobin in thelr search for the equalizer, were turned aside by 1 r LINEUP AND SUMARY a " 2 mi for Fred Fred. Beattie, Tobi Morrie | Referee Fred ton. ’ 1 1 114 ughite Moeking for | erick in for MacDougall south uget Round wick (20) Pa ox (23) Smith (19) ood? Hipley (4) orase 18 a Attionon (9) 4 W. Woode (6) <... Wan Der Las (2) Davidson (€) a. La ou Rogers peer Beckett Sebstitution®: MacDeugall-Routhwiek | None Puget Seand Paper Box—Teeer| Last night's virtory wae the foarth for Beckett. sceresive win for Victoria against on Seattle. It's lucky for Seattle that Northern Life (49) lent Prats (18) has Hirether Lester's Sanders (3 Blue Sunday Cohorts Active in Baltimore RPALTIMOR Feb. 17.—Plue Sunday's cohort have surround ed Oriole park, the home of Jack Dunn's famous ball players, They are secking to obtain enough signatures to a petition that would put the kayo on Sun. day baseball in Baltimore. tut they pulled one “Merkle” tn their fight with baseball they started circulation of petitions on the Sabbath day. HAS THE LIMIT BEEN » REACHED IN TRACK RECORDS? BY HENRY L. FARRELL | structors, and the fact that trainers | are always adding to their nowledge by close atudy own hg “Boys are beginning to learn the | fundamentals of track athiotica eartl er in life than they did 20 years ago,” he said, “Formerly it waa only in € ee that the star athletes really were developed, whereas today pre | Paratory and public schools all ove the country and the t have physical trai lads are imbued with st and spirit of emulation ng an in. ath: fore.” DO YOU WANT YouR TAXES REDUCED? Then Elect Business Men at the Coming Election of Councilmen It costs the City and County about $1,000,00 per day maintain and oporate for their emp ing th this fleet, to own, automobiles yes, By eliminat unnecessary cars from and substituting our service for business purposes, it would mean a saving of about $100,000.00 a year to the taxpay ers A 60 or 90-day trial 1s all that ts needed to prove thia, SEATTLE TAXICAB COMPANY MAIN FIVE SIX HUNDRED 1221: The rd Ave, *COR.UNIVERSITN: « Witeon (19) | jes which has never been seen be- | mnber » the eaoad luster j affect his play. © total strangers, The “Moose” eag dayo—tone 9 | Played a better came th to the fans lant night x. The work Mohnes and Walker w and BIG PREP HOOP GAMES | BOOKED CHICAGO, Feb. 17 interscholastic basketball cham ton the side of the eve part of the game seemed lertokeon, the league sensation v inet Old Father Time and “Moose” Johnaon of also claamy. rirts hap The national npion ship will be held at the University of Chica. March 10 to Teams from all sections of the country have entered the contest ¢ teams to repr i be m e pure records submitted. | bes comparative chowen ‘Twenty-four quintets from 1 |ferent states were entered in lyear’s championship, which we on the ba records wil dvertisement ANNOUNCING FURTHER REDUCTIONS IN PRICES ON OUR MADE TO ORDER CLOTHES Many patterns now priced at $24.50 304 PIKE ST. enent ona of the country sia of 1 1 dif last | nt to} Crawfordaville, Ind | nn JOHNSTON BEATS TILDEN SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 17 Wil Nam Johnston defeated William Til ~ | den, his Davis cup teammat in two |straight seta, 11-9 and 6-4, in an ex hibition tennis match here last night. | Juicy Steak, go to} in| —_ BETHLEMEM, Pa, Feb. 17.—TMar | old Brittan, highest er in Amerioa, can’t Me fer of § Landon. pald goo be bought r play turned down a reported of. 0,000 from the Chelsea team, | Backers of English oecer can't pay “I Huth” salaries, They were sharps: ¢ against odds in trying | to buy Brittan Bethlehem Steel Co. What been m 6 known Ife'» the #tar blond forward of the team. ary he's pald has never | It's figured to stack up with that of our big league | base Rrittan ts speed on the nor or prima donnas, j He's & marvel ot} field. Players regard him as the hardest | }man to stop In Amer . LIKE | He's called the cor Often he gota the takes it unaided to goal and shoots it keeper never has a ¢ Bethlehem team could kick Like the with their make-whi! Brittam on th tingham, FE nd, grounding by using a ball PRO AT VENTEEN | At 13 he was starring on a Sunday |held last evening 000 mark and may go over $50,000, achoot eleven No, 151 Is the measure | Tex Rickard said today. | Atit he waa a pro. . and altho but an out —— He played wt ti the Cheleea soar | ned account of it « be obtained | U. Ss. DECLINES three years before filling a three-year |! the city last evening, it is the engagement with an English battery |opinion of the sportsmen that the| NET BID jin Fran propored act, presented by a joint) NEW YORK, Feb. 11—Becanse no| In 1920 he vinited Philadetphia, links up, even more! players would be availabie at that! The steel company eigned him than before, the gume and time, the United States Lawn Tennis | quickly |eame fivh interests with that of the | association has been forced to decline | English offers can elit on. jcommercial fishing industry and ac invitation to compete in the cov. Brittain ts #tilt sticking to Rethle- | cordingly places the administration | ered courts championships in Copen hem, with its steel and (ts millions of the game laws almost entire hagen April 2 to 10, : ‘ within the hands of the commercial | —<—< interesta JOHNSON Action, quick and plenty of ft, in the idea of the local club needed to CAN’T 1 | son NEW YORK, Feb | champion.” In a manager, the world turn better condition todi has been neys that |As for W I can take them a wtrong enough to t more of the same b masquerading jers,” he wrote, “I pe get any jt am just the nays form he "I can be ever put ile and t and let the public |do, 1 cannot see J a champion.” WE HAVE DEPOSIT VAUL Come and examine “abe Ruth” Amertean vacant DEMPSEY “can't eee Jack letter to Al Lippe, boxing to the ring and that and strength, stronger I'm lable to bust like T. N Teams having the |for the time to put the fuse to it rica. of noc ball in midfield, the mouth of the no fast the goal: | hance to eave it He's the most prolific soccer on Brittan has played ever since 4 | sandlottern, | ft equipment, so lots of Not got his soccer & wtuffed bag for “ SEE” 17.—Jack John Dempsey as 8 champion of going to re he is in lay than he ever at all the Demp- on the gloves he rest of them Hand finish up ake on a dozen kind that have around as box am filled with not dope. If 1 T. and ready see what I can| lack Dempsey as RECENTLY ADDED 1,500 NEW BOXES TO OUR MODERN SAFETY JTS. our equipment for the safekeeping of papers, bonds and other valuable H Entrance, corner Second | ave, at Pike st DENT In. order to intr | (whalebone) plate, lightest and strong |does not cover |mouth; you can b cob; guaranteed 15 fon and a | Call and See Samp! | examin: you are in the rig | this ad with you. 207 UNIVER: Opposite Fraser. PEOPLES SAV! REAL PAINLESS the and Bridge Work, We the Tent of 1 f our present patronage ts mended by our early custo- , whote work h giving | od’ watisfactic custo= | ra who ha tested our work. | hen coming to our office, be sure OHIO TINGS BANK ISTS ‘TEETH PLATES, | oduce our new which ia the ‘est plate known, roof of the ite corn off the years, | taken the teeth same day. dvice free. len of 1 in ‘late ht: place. Bring | Cut-Rate Dentists SITY s'T, team of four cars in the French |der the hood of 6 out (countless races, the fans admire hi framed Resta in driving and « more for bis sportemaniike attite De Palma gnined favor of the speed | the ambition o fevery race driver | nine years ago when victory fans in 1912 by defeat rather than |a 500416 victory, Incide turned into defeat, because tron victory. The Italian-American drove |driver has ever twice n tool could not stand the strain of # a Mercedes in the 600 nine years | event od teat on the brick oval for ago. Vor 495 miles he showed the| De Palma, in making his entry has | other four minutes, to all the American and foreign |advised T. 1. Mye “ r A decade ago a crow4 of 100, and drivers, only to have vic-\eral manager of the It F pr me for almost any autowll tory slip from his grasp and e@| Motor Kpeedway company, that hé| race or speed test would have $20,000 vanish, with two lapn of the hopes to be the first to hang up two grounds to have the predictor ph brick course to go. Hin “dago luck,” |five-century victories, aitho he ix not under the observation of an alien! he chone to designate misfor. | ¢ tical enough to state that he The Indianapolis speedway p tune, made him the favorite of al-| will win the event, which last r the century thousand ma most every fan carried a total cash award rut years ago and last year 125,000 fi ‘Three years later he wet a track | $100,000 pamed thru the gates to see the recor dand won the Indiana poll Il luck last May wae « ternational speed classic. The claasic, after an almost seven-hour | vented De Palma from be the first pale for the ninth annual 6069 battle with Darlo Resta and his fleet|to win a pair of Indianapolis races takes opened January 81 Peugeot. This time De Palma again |The same was true in 1919 when he ations are that a new drove a Merced While Ralph had | set the pave for the first half of the 4 will be made by the 1921 @ perth upd five miles an hour less un-|race, Aitho De Palma has won century, ? PREP CAGE TEAMS PLAY FRIDAY Bethlehem Soccer Star Sticks to U. S. Yankees will get the Giants’ Volo « erup. Pitcher Pat hea, who won 27 games for the Internationals, looks “pat” as © ae Se a | While both teams are practical ‘Trial of the White fex ban players | out of the running for the city ad Willard fant inthe March spot ugh |the Franklin-Breadway high ed Wey Geliat: ic reducing by plays | basketball squads mix in the handipl, The midget hasn't much | game of the Friday schedule. to work on. | These teams are strong rivals, ‘The scribe wh rhe can pick opening day |08 Franklin defeated BrVaeraae Mtehers two the in adyar Franklin in thelr firet game @ saree a besthes 40 guide h year, the Tigers are out for gia ‘ | In the other games of the day _ Pinkey Mitchell i shouting at Bl) coin p * Ballard at Ballard saegetd, Zuker? oe 5 “ii; | Queen Anne mixes with West jat West 8 | Anne are f: tle, Lincoln and Q vorites to win. w he feels about it into the ahs Gham “cncsoets hist ORE VS. sc MOOR Horols Britten e pinks ays of rac oe I, , thinks 100 dare, of racine TREMAINE lp @ sched 2 | AND, Ohio, Feb. 17. SEATTLE | tials sicie: kam Grom, | Moore, Memphis fearnerweight, Bamn ie halls from | meet Carl Tremaine, Cleveland, 7 , and | the main ten-round bout of a box |show here February 25. They the Internationa!|to weigh im at 119 pounds will cost $192 | o’clgck. SPORTSMEN, /TO OPPOSE ‘GAME BILL Reserved cush men in Engiand MARTIN VS. BRENNAN 'W YORK, Feb. 17.—-Bob Martin BY EARL A. FRY will win from Bill Brennan when That the game legtelation present; they meet Friday night in Madison | ed by the legislature yenterday at| Square Garden, in the opinion of Olympia is far from being the rec-| Billy McCarney, manager of the late ommendations suggested by the | Luther McCarthy sportsmen of the state for i In the early betting Brennan ts a was the sense of the meet Of the | slight favorite. Sportsmen's Axsociation of Advance sales have pansed the $20, ombat legislation that is detri mental to their interests, and accord ingly the sportsmen have 4 mast meeting to be Prews club nday which time details of will and hunters of the country. All Se at th nf King county sportsmen are invited to attend. Members of the legislature are also expected to be here Game and game birds came up for | ussion at the meeting last eve &. and many constructive ideas © offered that will help material ly in the future propogation of game arranged held at th afternoon, at the bill full be presented to the fishermen $1,000 TO ANY CATERER ANYWHERE IF HE CAN P BLANC'S MUST TAKE SECOND PLACK—Charles J. E. Blane, 50c 10 and birds in this county. vain all ER Frank Bryant, formerly chief dep- NCHMON FRENCH DAE uty state game warden, presented Served Doty cave er the members an idea of the value the game and wild life of the wtate as compared with the com mercial fishing industry, pointing out the fact that, in reality, the out door and reer nal lines of the| state surpase the present value of the fishing pack No need “dig up” a “tip,” ‘cause it’s figured in the price, WHE UNIVERSAL CAR That Dependable Ford Quality FORD durability began back in 1908 when Henry Ford started experi- menting with vanadium steel and heat-tre: ap processes, He knew that a more exact tempering of steel for motor car building must be worked out. Vanadium, it was learned, when added “ molten steel, gives to that steel a greater toughness and adhesivene: And now other alloys have been found which are superior to vanadium, With the Ford Motor Com- pany, constant progress is the daily companion. The Ford products— Car, Truck, Tractor—grow in quality daily. Heat-treating tempers each part so that it will be t withstand the wear or tear to which it is sub- jected. Ford chemists and analysts have created formulas and standard specifications for every individual part of the Ford car—not only for the steel but for everything from pneumatic tires to top. Ford durability isn’t a matter of accident; it is a matter of painstaking thoroughness in laboratory and factory. The Ford is a car of precision —of standardized values. Order your Ford car now. No matter how fast they may be made the demand multiplies faster. Order today for we can make fairly prompt deliveries—Runabout, Touring Car, Cou Sedan, Truck and Fordson Tractor, . ‘ ny Alfred G. Ayerst, Inc. 1830 Broadyay, Corner Denny Way Kast 126 Hugh Baird Central Agency Co. Fourth Avenue at James Street A. F, (Bert) Blangy, Manager L.M Cli East 320 Broadway and Pike St Queen Anne 74 315 Nickerson St, Clark-Baker Motor Co. Wm. L. Hughson Co. Beacon 532 10th Ave, S. and Jackson St, East 404 500 1. Pike St, ‘atersun Ce,

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