Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
aeetDAY, MAY 13, 1921. q _ outfi ielders—A TICKETS NOT EVEN | PRINTED YET BY EB M. THIERRY YORK, May 13.—-The big rush has begun. coeeznecy'® trying to me Tex a5 crowds are falling afl over! themselves trying to fet to him. ‘Those who don't want jobs want con- gessions, and those who want neither jobs nor concessions want tickets. It's ruining people and gold around Madison Square garien. Up there im the tower is barricaded the man) Ys putting on the Dempsey-Car- ener million-dollar fight. "A broad shouldered “office boy” and five fights of stairs stand ve-| | tween thd crowd and Rickard j the money laden postman See ee 00,000 has arrtved And tue Uckets aren't even the arena tmnt built yet! as if we'll sell the tickets first I wish te enter the events marked with crom tp The park tennis toersament: Men‘s stngtes. . Cunningham r Woediand Women’s singtes. —...-__-___.. | | Meme Gembiee eenven- oan 2a sno nea = a - (Name doubles parteecr) Women's éoubles..... -..-..--.. (Name éeubdies partner) Miwed doubles. . 220. 20 n .ne 5 one ne me ne ne ne cn ee ne eee ne emnn es eens (Name doubles partper) eemcee ence ene eneee ces meee none ene: sone cane en enemeonqecesce=- » (Address) 1 can o'clock om Saturdays, after......... Crew te Beys whe had not reached ther (Prone) play after. ...........e'cbock on week days after........--. ..e'cleck en Sundaya hoars) 18th Birthday by Merch 1 192) wishing te compete in apecial beyw tournament fll in with X here Entries cose Muy 13 end wi! be eocepted at The Star ar ot the tennis department at Piper & Taft's NET ENTRIES CLOSE IN SIX DAYS Only six more days are left before the entry lista for The Star- Woodland PREP BALL MEN START SECOND HALF Ballard plays Rroadway at Broad. way, West Seattle meets Queen Anne | know la ot THE SEATTLE STAR AST LEAGUE| ary 7 ey era yyy peel Hack Miller OCTETTE OF BASE HIT COLLECTORS LEAD WAY IN COAS Yaa aker*s “Seattle i is well represented among the leading hitters in the Coast league in the games layed so far, with Spencer, Cunningham and Middleton ranking high. Hack Miller and Dennie Wilie, of Oakland; Bert Ellison and Sam Agnew, of San Francisco, and Del Baker, of Portland, are the other big bat leaders. It is interesting to note that the leading hitters so far are almost entirely confined to catchers ani nrew, Baker and Spencer x eit catchers and the others fly cops. mn Ellisor a PAGE te Tae Soencall d JOHNNY KILBANE SAYS CHAMPION JACK DEMPSEY IS “STAGE STALE” BY JOHNNY KILBANE Featherweight Champion of the World. There's an “untraining” as well as the usual training that | Jack Dempsey will have to put himself thru before he can get into shape for his fight with Carpentier on July 2. For Dempsey has been on the stage. And when you've said | that about a fighter, you've) weakened him, fistically speaking. said a bookful. It has robbed him of speed and Bad a has made him a poor judge of dis-| Fier preter png Boren: Mig tance. It will make it a far tougher went into vaudeville, But 1 soon | 10> for him to get Sipe learned what every champion should |C2fPentier. It will mean a lot o! that the stage is the worst! Utraining™ to get these weak place in the world for a hoxer—and | Nowmee ironed out before he can real I quit. A champion must keep him. |'¥ Desin to get in shape. self always in condition. That meana| The 22 months I spent in the army mut daily, with emphasis | Pounded into me the lesson that a it means regular food |Champion must always be In shape. and regular hours and temperate, For when I hooked up with Frankie habita, {Brown at Philadelphia just after a | getting out of the service, my ability ry nid |to Judge distance and my speed was a |no far gone, owing to lack of con- Tn Nauderitie he ts mubjected to! cant training, that Frown knocked countics nights IN a cramped | me down before I could beat him. sleeper, late hours, different, and) 4 MUST BE often Indifferent food in every town, and worst of all, he is robbed of any | PLAY . opportunity to get in the daily work.| And thin deaptte the fact that I out so vital in keeping in condition. | "pent all my time in the service Continual public appearance tn.| instructing the boys in boxing. But creanes the danger of a champion |! boxed in my uniform: I wasn't on | being wpolled by the “good fellows” |the diet I was accustomed to, and | who like to hang about him. boxing in the army was work. on the daily into shape for | Jack Dempsey has been practically | ‘That's another thing that a borer PREP DUAL TRACK MEETS SATURDAY Franklin high school will compete in its second dual track meet of the #eason tomorrow afternoon when they clash with the Broadway Tigers on Denny field at the university. To- morrow morning Queen Anne and West Seattle will meet on the same field. The Quakers are expected to win more first places than the Tigers, | but they have not as many men to | come in second and third as Broad | way. There ts much more interest taken this year and a big crowd ts ex | pected out at both of the prep dual meets tomorrow. The Queen Anne-Weat Seattle af- |tair gets under way at 10 a. m. and the Franklin-Broadway meet starts at 2 p.m. COUGARS WIN | FROM OREGON EUGENE, May 12.—The Univer. sity of Oregon was defeated by the Washington State College team here yerterday for the second time thts | week. The score was 7-1. Ten er |rors by the local collegians paved the way to the Cougar victory. Skadan hurled good ball for the win- ber. Queer overnight—nobody has named a Scent cigar after Prof. Einstein. — | Pittsburg Preas. by the high school pupils in track | | Judge Landis ib making so good as, head of baseball players are urging their organization, that the bililard him to govern France is so enthusiastic over | Suzanne Lenglen’s tennis, it would lke @ beginner, ern Auto is always among the first to reduce its prices to | bet she could make Bill Tilden look | STILL FURTHER Unless all signs fail Dutch Reuth- er, under the fatherly handling of Uncle Robbie, will be a game wip- ner this season. A fashion expert says women have forgotten how to sit gracefully. That comes from standing up for their ' rights —Detroit Free Press. REAL PAINLESS the very lowest pos- park tennis tournament close. Post-/at Queen Anne and Franklin enter Inactive since he are just beginning to go up. few more weeks “Thirty Acres” Wil look like a war munitions town Bon jem on the arena cost: u* sai Rickard. “Maybe po? te make it big seh pgp an arena for Ree tees at bpeirg 60,000. But ll make the arena larger if neces- ‘ eee i Tickets wilt run from $6 to $50. this basis, the total receipts can e top the million dollar mark. | | That will be more than twice the ipts at the Dempsey-Willard cht in Toledo, which feil something hort of a half million. rWe're in a better location here,” ex. “A few minutes’ ride In the n Tubes will take you from York to either Grove-st. or Sum- we. station. “Thirty Acres” is half way between these two stations. reason I picked this site, in New York's back yard, was fact that three railroads run ‘There is track space for 240 cars. So even if the hotels full, people out of town can in the Pullmans.” eee Tare they coming from long dis-| to see Dempsey and Carpen- mix? Look at one day’s mail, more than gix weeks before the fight! This single day brought 672 reservations from out of town, each calling for a _— That's $33,600 in one A special order has come from Chi- ago for a block of 200 top-priced ‘The fans are coming in a special train, of the 20th Century ‘A. A. Schwab of Los Angeles has A\ @ reservations for a special train ag.a50. Special trains have also - nged from Spokane, Dallas?’ Worth, Tulsa and Kansas City. eee Tome pessimist wondered if blue “reformers” would try to stop big battle. “Haven't heard of any movement ” smiled Richard. 5 not worrying, either. He has mnor Edward I. Edwards and or Frank Hague of Jersey City ind him. Everybody that knows me,” raid seriously, “knows I'm arranging 2 contest—one that I hope will g0 a sufficient number of rounds to gatisty the crowd. I don’t care who wine.” A change for the better In the ailaround public attitude toward the big bout has come since Rickard, after severing relations with Charles B. Cochran and William A. Brady, nnounced that the $500,000 purse | been eliminated now both Dempsey and Car. biter have more at stake. ‘The fier will get 26 per cent of the| Bross receipts, the lover 24 per cent. og the gate is $1,000,000 that Means $260,000 for the winner and $240,000 for the loner. The aren cost of $100,000 will boost the total fight cont to $700,000. Hewides that there will be buge amounts to be * | be . win the world’s heavyweight tively no entries received after that date will be accepted. Entries are coming tn fast and| ‘number around 75, but they will have to come in faster than that if the 300 mark is reached. All that fs necessary to enter the meet ts to fill out the entry blank and mail it to the sporting editor of The Star. It will also be accepted | at the tennis department at Piper &| Taft's. Entries for the junior meet can be made on the same blank. The details of the meet have been printed time and time again. The) full rules of the tourney will be pub. lished again Saturday and, tennis players planning to enter the meet should watch Saturday's Star for) final announcements. DELAY IN RUTH TICKETS Tickets for the winners of the “Babe” Ruth contest have not yet been put in the mail because of an unavoidable delay. The 20 winners should receive these pasteboards| within a day or two. The tickets are | being given to the winners by the Seattle ball club and will be good for any Coast league game. They picked Ed Rommel, of the Athletjes, to strike out Ruth first in a regular American league game, and he did. CHAMPS START OUT TOWIN - ‘The Washington Mutual Savings"! Bank team defeated the Bank of California team by @ one-sided score of 27-2 in @ game played last night at the Rainier Valley park, The game was featured by the heavy! hitting of Pascoe, Hanson, Vander} Lag and Hughbanks. Bingham, of | the Washington Mutuals, struck out 12 of the opposition. | Bill Tilden asked the home town citizens of Philadelphia to spend $50,- 000 in the building of tennis courts, and they will paid for upkeep of the arena, attend ants’ wages, etc. ° / One “small” item in Rickard’s ex penses is $10,000 he has just paid as a premium on a joint accident in surance policy of $100,000 on Demp sey and Carpentier. Rickard has paid this premium for | two months’ protection; he can col. j lect $100,000 if either fighter breaks a finger or a leg, gets sick or in any | way is prevented from appearing in the ring July 2. If either dies, Rick ard is out of luck, for it’s strictly | an accident insurance policy. Another item will be $25,000 | purse for a first-class preliminary to | the big bout. Fu rd denies it will Benny leonard and Freddie Welsh. | The New Jersey boxing law per-| mits 12 rounds, WITH NO DE | CISION. | Which makes it a tougher job for | Carpentier than for Dempsey. Had you thought of this: | | a That to cham plonship Carpentier must knock | Dempaey out; but to retain his title | Dempsey will not be compelled to} knock out Carpentier? jand the bout was stopped | man states tains Lincoln at Columbia in the high school baseball game scheduled | All games were | for this afternoon. to get under way at 2:30 VARSITY TRACK MEN OFF FOR MEET Sixteen University .of Washing ton track athletes left last night for Pullman, where they will com- pete in a dual meet with the track sttars of the Washington State Col lee. The university team defeated the Cougars last year by a 77-54 score, but all hands are out over at the Farmers’ school and will try to make it their duty to see that it is not duplicated. RIDLEY HURT . IN N. Y. FIGHT Wort reecived here from Joe Waterman, manager of Bud Ridley, Pacific coast featherweight cham: pion, states that Ridley tore his ear in his bout with Bobby Michaels in New York Wednesday night that he was forced to Ridley’ bouts for the next four week. Ridley will fight one of the preliminaries of Dempsey Carpentier fight, July 2 HOGAN TO MEET BETHEL Johnny Hogan, the popular Ta- coma heavyweight, will take on Bill Bethel of Seatthh in one of the bouts of the Cascade Athletic club's amoker next Tuesday evening. The main event between Lee Anderson and Terry Keller will heavyweight go. cancel The slogan in the is “Watch Alexander.” Grover, the Great seems greater than ever this | spring. TO OWNER unity newspaper: ond-hand monu ment, slightly used. Great bargain | for a family of the name of Duffy.”— Boston Transcript. BEGGAR SILENT FOR 32 YEARS SURPRISES POLICE BY TALKING PARIS, May 12.—A beggar at the gates of Notre Dame Cathe dral hag silently appealed for alms for 32 years, N new patrolman arrested him the other day “Don't place a charge against him,” the inspector ordered. “We know him well. He's deaf and dumb.” “T hate to contradict you,” was the surprising statement of the beggar. “I can talk and hear as well as you.” “During the 32 yearn I've kept silent and earned my livelihood by the deception, I've heard #0 many lies, so much decep- tion, that I'm going to tell the truth now if I spend the rest of my life in jail for it.” meen beat Willard in| must remember—toxing and train. 1919, for he spent little time in pre | ing for a fight always must be play paring for either Miske or Frennan. | If he makes work of it, he will never He went Into the movies shortly | be a muccean For a man can't put after he won the title, and he/the whole-hearted enthusiasm into Jumped from that tmto vaudeville, | his work that he can into his play. staying on behind the footlights un-| And that holds good for the baseball Ul the Ure to go to Freddy Welst’s| player or the man in any other jfarm for the beginning of his train-| branch of professional sport as well ing. Ho's stage-ntale. as for the boxer. sede | vaudeville experience has (Copyright, 1921, N. EIGHT GAMES BOOKED FOR STAR LEAGUE Because all of the teams have not; The Chandlers’ Bootery merts the informed The Star yet as to when! Eckart Cigar Co, team at they play Sunday, the complete list | Walla. cannot be published until Saturday.| ‘The South Seattle Juniors tangle The big game ef the day is the| with the Bulldogs at Lincotn park Loule French Dry Cleaners-Three| tome team managers who have Brothers Dye Works tiff, which is net | for Woodland park. This game ts) sunday should do so not later than 7 billed for 2 p. m. on the upper Wood 2 m. tonight. land park grounds, The Shamrox A. C. and the Stacy FE. A) | Water. | in| the | also be bad | National league | Shown nine will meet in the poral Clase A game on lower Woodland ) park at 12 noon. | Tho complete Claan B schedule fol- | tows: MAUPOME WINS FROM SIBLEY Pierre Maupome, one of the best | three-cushion billiard players in the ainter Athletic club vs. Shamrox/ country, defeated Chase Sidley, ond team at Woodiagd park. Northwent Youngstown A. ©. vm Pirates at|here last night in the final contest | Walla Walla at 2 p,m | of their 200-point match by the score Collins Juniors vs, Highland Park | of 60-43. The match score was 200: White Star Athletic club juniors at/ 173. The finals contest was played Hiawatha at 1:30, lat the » Pope-Sibley parlors. we | | | i ' || Gately’s Removal Sale Our New Location Will Be 1427 Fifth Avenue, Near Pike Street During This Sale We Are Offering Some Wonderful Values in Men’s and Young Men’s Suits Grouped in Three Lots, as Follows, at $18.50 $25 $30 Cheviots, Worsteds, Cassimeres, plain colors—also fancy mix tures—single and doublebreasted styles, | | MEN’S HATS REDUCED 26% All $6.00 Work and Dress Shoes now $10. 00 and ois: 00 Boys’ Suits. choice sine oie Open a Charge Account You Need Not Pay All in 30 Days—Strictly One Price, Cash or Charge—Gately's Renders an Intelligent Credit Service That Appeals to Intelligent People. 1113 Third Avenue BETWEEN SENECA AND SPRING STREETS Walla |? | not yet sent the time for their games | | three-cushion champion, | f, DENTISTS cover the fr ; you can bite corn off the ; wuaranteed 15 years. All work guaranteed for 15 years Have impressions en in the morning and get same day. | Examination and ad free. can See Samples of Our Plate Bridge Work. We Stand the Test of Time, st of our present patronage pmended by our early custo- whose work ts still giving satisfaction. Ask our cus- who have tested our work. When coming to our office, be sure ou are in the right pla Bring | this ad with you, Cut-Rats = OHIO Dentist 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Opponite Fraser-Paterson Co, 4MUSEMENTS PANTAGES Matimees 2:20 Nights 7 and © rece | mers, tome MOORE ?eine' RAP SAMUEL MORTON AND Gi v y DOCKST. rR David Sapernteins Curson Siatersy ny Concert Orchestra 1T—Julius satel RDAY MAT —“M joe” LOEW> LACE HI . Other nets cature Photoplay—All sible. We are now, therefore, glad to announce a_ sub- stantial further re- duction from our already remarka- bly low prices on (India and Pharis Tires and Tubes, of which we are fac- — tory distributers. tubes. You should see these tires and tubes at once if you are in need of either tires or You now have a chance to get the highest grade tire obtainable at a nominal price. Pharis Fabrics guaranteed 7,000 miles— Cords 10,000 miles. India Fabrics, 10,000 miles—Cords, 12,000 miles. Thin-Nose Pliers | Prices Just what you have wanted or been in dire need of many times. Get a pair now and be prepared. Price “WESTERN AUTO” the HEADQUARTERS fer Auto Supplies. FANSTEEL TIMERS trouble experiencedrwith Ford cars is ignition F, on account 90% of the trouble. The Famste: break actic the market. uteed omeyear, ue — Radiator Ornaments pce =ay ornament is very attractive We have a great many for you to choose from. “WESTERN Fea paia’ of its magneto ny other timer on Price .. . Western Ault odceney ' (110-12-EAST PIKE ST. WEST LAKE & LENORA