The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 7, 1921, Page 9

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> « te ot TUESDAY, JUNE uss 392}. —— THE WORLD OF SPORTS COAST GRADS KEEP| KILBANE DETROIT TIGERS IN RACE BY LEO H. LASSEN ORMER Coast league players are keeping RAIN PUTS K. O. ON’ STAR ‘NET PLAY Rain hung another k. 0, on The " Btar-Woodiand park tennis tourna- Ment again yesterday, only a few Junior matches being played. Nearly the same schedule that was effect for Monday will be on tap Piasatays results follow: JUNIOR SINGLES S Baward Butler and Herbert Rivers defaulted. \s ras Dix di a4 Herbert Bhrke, 6-4 pam Olin and Vivien Klug each set, 6-4. Vener 8 founy defeated Nelson tn ‘And second set was 2-2 when MB. Klinker 2, and the second halted play. jodinson vs. James Scully. jiiiam Waltz and Bleanor Stephens rand Erma Frazie’ a Alice Taft va John Jones. 2n6 Clyde O'Reer ve ood G, A. Lalsure. at's. M. ‘William Olin vs. Vivian Klug. Joe Livengood vs. winner, Sculty-Rob- 2 ‘Armand Marion va Richmond Smith. ‘Thorndyke and Turner vs Lagerstrom and Johnson. Rite Meyer and Ruth Marcuse ve. Alice ana Prank Skinner ve va winner, Willtem Diin-Vivian eee AT ¢ Yr. M. and Mra Bourque va Dorothy Little. jesketh vas. Langiie and i Beengel and Somers vs, Robinson and Gleason and Dyer va. Hakanson and ‘Wirmer, Klinker and O*Rear-Livengood lan and Vander Las. AT? P.M. Dofethy Little and Doris La Violette Fe Sangere and Hills ve. winner, Hover end tengel and Somers. ‘Knust and Tilford vs. Allen and Nel- hoes and Smith va winner, Thormay | and Turner-Lagerstrom and Johnso Wetson and Munn ve. winner, Hakan- gon and Sch r-Gleason and Dyer. Seuens and Mawry vs. White and! Koslow: *"/ hurling ace last year, | better grip on the ball. Bruce Hesketh and Bill Nollan of Armand Marion of Broad- | way, and Joe Livengood, of Frank- | lin, considered the best tennis bets best basketball and baseball players ever turned out at the Pine street tution. Meister won four major let- next to Bruce Hesketh, of Lincoln. Hesketh won four major letters and ® tennis emblem. HARKNESS JOINS MACS “Spec” Harkness, vet hurler, who ‘was with the Portland Beavers back fn 1913 or thereabouts, has joined the Rose city team again. He was &@ battery mate of Gus Fisher, also with Portland again, when Mc. Credie’s clan was the class of the Coast circuit. Ham and eggs at Boldt's—Adver- tisement, Read My Article in Saturday's Star WE BOTH WIN Tam now devoting my “entire time tal prastion vii now served the people "here for twenty and made good dental work can guarantee, guarantee good. mt fe, not yt ete with Che jentists, nor do I operate on you: jocketbook or sell jon. I give two do! ental work for every dollar I re- ceive—so you save a dolla: and making my ou conversa- lars worth of @ dollar, and our interests are mu- Posen evenings till 9 ind ® en evenings and Sunda: ai 12:30 for people whe werkey® EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 8 ,Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap.— Cuticura | the Detroit Tigers in the race for the American league “peanut.” The Detroit club is hitting over .300 as a team and Harry Heilman, former Frisco first sacker, is showing the way with the stick in that league with a mark over .400. Bobby Jones, is hitting around .820 for the sacker, Tigers while Johnny Bassler, former Frisco third chief Tiger catcher, is batting about the same mark. Bassler was with Los Angeles last year. Lew Blue, Portland first baseman in 1920, is also hitting within the charmed circle for the Tigers. And Suds Sutherland, Portland) is acting in the same capacity for the Tigers. He has won seven games out of eight starts, And then, too, Cole and Carl there are Rert Hollings, former Coasters, who a) showing well on the mound, as is)“Red” Oldham, Ty Cobb® himself, is hitting the onion over the .400 mark and {t/ looks like he is going to make a| grand fight for the American league | leadership again this season. ‘The fans are pulling for the Tigers and! Ty and the Coast grads are helping the star of stars pull thru. LIVELY BALL MAY CHANGE RULES The lively ball in use in baseball now may change the pitching rules in the big show, inasmuch as al- lowing the pitchers to use resin on their fingers in order to get a RAPP IS FAILING WITH STICK Goldie Rapp, the New York Gtants’ third sacker, Is said to be| going great in the field, but. that| he has been a bloomer with the stick. Rapp came up to the Giants! Golden Bears Suffer First Athletic Setback When the ifornia crew lost to Princeton, in the East, Satur- day, it was the first major defeat handed a Golden Bear unit this year, The cage team lost a game to Washington and one to Stam ford, but won the Coast title. The Golden Bear crew won the Coast title by defeating Washington by || half a length. | LEONARD WINS FROM KANSAS HARRISON, N. J., June 7.—Ben- ny Leonard, world's lightweight champion, defeated Rocky Kansas, of Buffalo, here iast night, in their 12-reund bout, The champion outboxed and out- smarted his challenger, but the Buf- falo boy deserves a world of praise for the creditable showing made against the Jewish champ. BIERMAN TO COACH AGAIN MISSOULA, Mont., June 7.—Rer-| f? nie Bierman hag renewed his con- tract to coach the University of Non- tana football, basketball and track teams again next year. Bierman was a grid star of some note, and his Montana teams have attracted con- siderable attention, particularly in Seattle. PULLMAN LOSES STARS Fourteen Washington state ath- letic letter winners are expected to graduate this spring, baseball being hardest hit by losing four letter men. LUKONOVIC - GOES STRONG Tom Lukonovic, Seattle pitcher, is hurling great ball for the Tulsa team in the Western league. He fanned 10 men in a recent game. from St. Paul in the American as sociation, where he led the league with his team mate, “Bubbles” Hargrave, with an average around 240, The Giants are said to be after Heinie Groh, of the Cincy Reds to fill his place. TOO BAD THAT | STROUD IS LOST Reports from the San Joaquin valley league in California say that Ralph Stroud, leading pitcher in the Coast league last year with the Salt Lake Bees, is pitching great ball for one of the valley teams. Ig's too bad that Stroud is lost to the Coast league and to Salt Lake, because he was one of the few good pitchers that Salt Lake had on its roster last year, A pitcher of Stroud's caliber would be a mighty help to Gavvy Cravath's cellar aspirants right now. PORTLAND SERIES OPENS TODAY Seattle opens Its first series of the season with the Portland Beav- ers this afternoon. The Beavers have been getting theirs in the shins ever since the season opened and Seattle figures to clean up. Those Beavers, however, gave Seattle a bad drubbing the first time they met last year and you never can tell in baseball. Pet. | ard ts going to be out. Oakiand . Los Angeles Salt Lake Portland . Los Angeles at San Francisea. Oakiand and Vernon at Los Angeles, St. Louis 11, Philadelphia @ Broekiyn 7, Chieage 4 Boston 6, Cineti Philadelphia St. Louis 5, Detroit 12, Philadelphia & ‘Washington 1¢, Chicago & Boston 7, Cleveland 6, MARTIN TO MEET MORAN TERRA ALTA, W. Va, June 7.— Bob Martin, heavyweight champion ot the A. BE. F., will meet Frank Moran, of Pittsburg, in New York July 1, according to an announce Wient made by Martin's manager here today. JOE GANS BEATS KID ALBERT DETROIT, June 7—Joe Gans, the New York negro middleweight, de- feated Kid Alberts here last night when he knocked out the St. Louts boy in the tenth round of their schedulet 12round go. HE Chevrolet “Four-Ninety” at the new price is the talk of the automobile world. This model places the comfort and ef- ficiency of motor transportation within reach of everyone. Chevrolet Motor Company Retall Store Third Ave. at Blanchard Street Elliott 4056 | Rickard SAYS RICKARD MAY LOSE BY JOHNNY KILBANE Featherweight Champion While Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier are training under a/ heavy mental strain, don't forget that Tex Rickard is carrying a big load¢ too, Rickard is holding the bag—the money bag. Whether anybody comes to Rick- ard’s extravaganza on July 2 or not he is going to be out close to one million dollars, For the Dempsey-Carpentier match ia the most expensive ring show of prize fight history. Rickard called it a Million Doflar fight in the beginning and he's mak- ing it just that, Dempsey and Carpentier are going to split a half million dollars between them, it is generally assumed. There's the first half of the Million Dollar bank roll shot Add to this the amusement tax of | DB $100,000 to be collected by Uncle! Sam, plua another $100,000 for the |. state tax. ‘The arena will cost in the neighbor- hood of $100,000, Publicity for the fight will set Rickard back from $25,- 000 to $50,000 more. Fight insurance adds up the count. ‘Then there are the pretiminaries to the main ga. They'll cost another $25,000, Also it’s customary te peel a few more bank notes off the dwindling roll for the referee. And Rickard} wouldn't think of handing a referee for his Million Dollar Show anything | less than two or three thousand. Total these items up and you have close to a million spent. So far the advance sales are heavy. All the $50 pasteboards are gone. | Rickard says he's tried to keep ‘em | out of the hands of scalpers. But no matter how hard he tries, scalping crews always do a certain amount of business, While the high-priced eeats are taken it is the cheaper ones that are | the stickers. They won't be taken— if at all—until the day of the fight. And it’s the cheaper seats that is really gambling on to make his little profit. If his arena is packed to the gun- wales on July 2 he'll pull out with a Uttle silk. But if his arena ts sparsety popu- lated when the curtain goes up Rick- He's spending close to a milton tn the hopes of getting it back. That's about all Whichever way money tide flows Rickard will néver whimper. is a sportsman to the core, nt 1981 by Newspaper | PROS TO MEET IN GOLF TODAY GLENEAGLES, Scotland, June 7. —The best of the English and Scotch professionals will meet the American pros here today in the! thousand guineas professional golf | tourney. INDIANA BEATS PURDUE LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 7.—The University of Indiana defeated Pur due University in baseball here Yes. terday by @ 5-1 score in their regu- lar Big Ten conference game. HERZOG IN A. A. Buck Herzog, former National league star, is playing second base regularly for Pants Rowlands’ Col-| umbus club in the American asso- | ciation, In spite of Herzog’s ap) pearance in the lineup, the Colum bus squad is in the basement in the league standing. RL ano Mike Gibbons vs. Al Sommers on July 4 Gibbons, the St Paul Phantom, who is doing a real comeback, is booked to box Ab Sommers, claimant to the Coast middleweight title, 20 rounds, at Alan, Idaho, on the Fourth of July, Sommers claims the title on the strength of his win on a foul over “Rattling” Ortega, in Butte, Mont., recently. Mike The South Seattle team has epee ite name to Georgetows The Three Brothers team has protested the win of the Louie's Preach Dry Clean ore Sunday on the grounds that the um- pire misinterpreted a rule A man wae On second base with outs, and the next hitter clicked the onion for a round trip, missing second The umpire } ruled out the first run, while the Three | ers contend that the out at second | ¢ runner had scored, he umpire said the runner lly out when ho missed @ umpire and the managers th teams are axked to report at tar office Thursday night at 8:36, settlement will be made 1° Washington Park-Youngste will be the feature miz of Class B games Sunday, The winner of this tiff Will be among the first four, The game 4 booked for Youngtown for 2. m. for last. Bun- | day, when tt should have been postponed. This game will be rescheduled at the end of the season, The Thres Brothers and Louie's French Dry Cleaners are having @ terrible time in Class A. The Three Brothers won their first game, and the Louies protest. ed It on the registration of s Three Hrothers player, Bunday the Lot | Brothers protest od it was allowed won and the Three ‘The complete Class B schedule for Sunday follows Washington Park vs Youngstewn at Youngstown. Georgetown Cubs va Pirates at Walle Walla, Collins Jumtors va Queen Anne Aerials Mercer finid. Shamrox Cubs va Chan@ers at Jeffer won park rt Cigar Co. va Mightand Park at ba. eeerman Grocery va, Bulldogs at Lin- park. SHEA WEARS GOGGLES .- Young Shea, the sandiot pitcher picked up by the Sacramento Solons recently, wears glasses when he pitches. He's the only goggied tos ser in the big Washington circuit. CANADIAN PACIFIC tle Pier 1. Feet of Tester" attle Pier 1, Feet ef Yesler Way 9:00 A. M. DAILY FOR VICTORIA 2? VANCOU- VER, B. 11:30 P.M. DAILY FOR VANCOUVER, B, C., DIRECT FOUR TRAINS EACH WAY—EACH DAY ‘Threugh the Phon BK F. L, STURDEE, Ge: SON MOTORCYCLES EY pekratte HIRSCH CYCLE CO. 303 E.PME ST. THERE ARE STILL MEEHAN PINES FOR TITLE BOUT AN FRANCISCO, | June 7, — Fat wants the ings.” some of “poft pull down half a million shekels at | William = se@s no | reason why he| shouldn't get some “gravy.” the memory of two decisions over the world’s heavyweight still bright, the roly-poly fighter is starting on the uphill grind another crack at the kingpin. Once upon a time the fat boy was cousidefed Dempsey's most formidable opponent. But, it’s said, | poor management lost him his jchance for the crown. | JUST | CONTRAST Now Dempsey, champion of the world, is taking up quarters in At. lantic City, while Meehan “trains” at a little combination fruit, vege table and soda fountain store here. Dempsey strolls along the board walk and thousands stare. Willie hangs over the counter and hopes somebody will drop in and order a bunch of onions. Willie his kept In shape by wield. ing a cheese knife and a dill pickle | spoon. Such 1s the turn of the wheel of | fortune. His new manager, “Windy” Win-| sor, the “deaf and dumb" man, has matched him with Andy Schmaeder in Omaha and Jack McCoy in Butte, Mont. He also has been offered a bout with Porky Flynn in Boston. WOULD @fEAN LONG TRIP All Willie hopes for is that Car. pentier doesn’t upset the dope |July 2, Because, says Willie, that |would mean a long trip across the ocean before he could become cham- | pion. “Willie is short and stocky, just the kind of a man to beat Dempsey,” says the “silent” manager. “Demp- sey is a hip puncher and is at his best when fighting a bigger man than himself. He can't hurt Mee- $1.85 SAVE YOUR EYES Failing Eyesight Restored by Our System IT 18 THE SOMETHING RE- SIDES GLASS IN OUR GLASSES Don’t Pay Exorbitant Prices A pair of our for either y-five cents, in- tion, pe OT DESTROY YOUR iv BY WEARING OVER 25 YEARS’ BXPORIENCE 11 YEARS IN SEATTL U. S. OPTICAL CO. ely Optical Speet 1203 THIRD AVE. Glassen Repaired and Drok: Lenses D a Wilke Meehan | 7 one pull, Mister | / champion | Vy, Local Flyweight Out to Prove Win Over Neil So Willle’s going gunning. With |” tol Bud Manning Swinging @ clever pair of mitts, Bud Manning, local flyweight, is out to prove that he deserves the decision over Eddie Nell of Ana- cortes when they battled to a draw here a few weeks ago. Manning really won that fight, but Referee David cajled it a draw. Manning boxes Nell at the Pavilion tomorrow night. CACCIA BACK FROM RIPON Rinaldo Caccia, former Franklin high school all-around athletic star, is back in Seattle after attending Ripon College for a year. Caccia, altho only a freshman, made two “RY” sweaters during the past sea- son, Caccia played football and was a member of the track team. misitifisininitiine ILLINOIS BIG TEN CHAMPS MADISON, Wis, June 7.—IIlinois champs here yesterday when Wis- consin defeated the University of Michigan by a 7-6 count, became Western conference baseball | [ANACORTES ‘BOYS FACE RING TEST | HERE ” Ray Scribner and Eddie Nell, the Anacortes bantamweights, face bouts here Wednesday that will either | make or break them in the ring game |in the Northwest. Scribner faces the toughest assign ;|ment, as he is booked to go Up +| against Danny Edwards, the clever | hard-hitting Oakland colored boy. 7| The “experts” are saying that Scri- _|ner will never Jay his “ace” on B& | wards. That ace is bis right hand, Scribner carries a mean punch for ® little fellow, and LF he connects, he'll win; otherwise Edwards figures te win, because of his greater expert ence, Nefl tangles with Bud Manning. When Neil boxed Manning here, @ few weeks ago, he showed that he couldn't take them in the tummy. He must develop his =e cles or else perfect a defense body wallops if he is going to keep winning. Clay Hite has made up @ card fem turing little fellows, Joe Harrakan and Johnny Fiske, the feathers weights that put up such a whale a scrap a few weeks ago, are a to top the card. Pat Williams, local lightie, goes om with Charley Jordan, another Ana cortes boy, and Charley Davidson and Filipino Kid Martin open the fem tivities, WE HAVE RECENTLY | ADDED 1,500 NEW BOXES TO OUR MODERN SAFETY BEPOSIT VAULTS. | Goh Til Tin ewe ol Kemebeen $1,132,730,200.00 par value in Liberty Loan Bonds that have not been exchanged for permanent coupon- bearing securities. All Liberty Loan Bonds that do not have interest coupons attached should be ex- changed at our Bond Department for new ones, Liberty Bonds kept for our depositors and the interest coupons collected when due without charge. Our Only Branch Is at Ballard DEPOSITS GUARANTEED by Washington Bank Depositors’ Guaranty Fund of THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, The Scandinavian American Bank Seattle, Washington Long Service You can expect fit and expert tai heimer Good Clothes. “CHEASTY’S” STRIKING DEMONSTRATION EVENT IS CAUSING VERY FA- VORABLE COMMENT. long service, good loring in Kuppen- The quotations are as follows: Kuppenheimer Suits—Price last fall for same qual- ity, $65. This spring’s Special price ....... 2.2.05. price, $45, ~. $36 sees Kuppenheimer Suits—Price last fall for same qual- ity, $70. This spring’s Special price .... - price, $50, ee mace ce wesee $39 Kuppenheimer Suits—Price last fall for same qual- ity, $75. This spring’s Special price ........ .sceees ceenene price, $55. $43 Kuppenheimer Suits—Price last fall for same qual- ity, $80. This spring’s price, $60. Special price 2... aes. . $47 Good News for the Women “We have just received a new shipment of Luxite Hosiery The shades that you li large assortment—White, Russian calf, navy blue, black. ike can be found in our African brown, cordovan, silver, cloud, camel and 75c to $2.00 the Pair $23, $33, $37 for Three Very Fine Groups of Good Suits _ ,

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