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MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1921. | | J | ns on Yanks: Players, Giants Yanks Have Power, But Giants Are Smarter; Los An- = Wins Coast Pennant; Seattle Winds Up in ourth Place; Other Baseball News BY LEO H. LASSEN TOP a baseball fan on the street and ask him who is going to win the world series and nine out of 10 will tell you the Yankees. Ask baseball players and they will tell you the Giants. Here's why: The Yankees are a burich of the strongest hitters ever gathered on a ball club, but they have pitching and that’s about all. It is a known fact that ny, do not play smart baseball and that Miller Huggins, the man- ager of the club, fs @ manager jn name only “ part of the tinie and the players do nearly anything they p : over the! On the other hand, the Giants have almost as much hit- hington (a Power as the Yanks, they have a better defensive resulted ig mis- team, an edge in the pitching and then they have a the opposition, th jleader in John McGraw, who is boss all of the time. blocking bunt an loo es ve ball pee ire Lon paris, pogueee nee ey are @ short of dynamite when Ruth, Meuse), iP, on the play early in ay ‘ game Peckinpaugh & Co, are hitting the agate. A glance at Girone teen 0 scores show this, apante Pass." “The Giants have a great deal of power with such men team, of course, 8 Youngs, Burns, Meusel, Kelly, Bancroft and Frisch in the chance to get linew and they have sli; tly the best of the pitching with Their de | Douglas, Toney, Nehf and Barnes, being given ay edge over Saturtay, buf Mays, Shawkey, Hoyt and Harper. with a lot of hitting, if the on the of | It’s going to be a great sertes, players run true to form. Los les Wins Coast Flag ‘Weil, the race te tn, with) three Beattie pitchers were hit hard Lee Angelica the winter, af Dre/ and their matés gave them goofy dicted, but the race Was not de-| support elded until the fins! day ef the) The Indlass came back in the season. Sacramento gets second | second tussle and won out, 6 to 6, place, San Francisco third an@ Se | after the Seats had a & to 1 lead. ,attle fourth. The Braves tied tt up in the efghth Seattle could have fMnished tn | with four runs aha won in the fourth place by a double win, But) ninth, the Seals stepped out and wallopet) “Lefty” O'Doul, the league's lead Seattle all over the lot in the first! ing chucker, had a weird week here, game yesterday, Winnt 9 to {| pitching in thrée games and not Tim Scott pitched good ball while! finishing one. Francis Must Keep His Head “Up” it Ray Francie expects to Makt)/then, too, he doesn't watch ot * runes hes ‘ot ot etuff and ~ a ut? « wilt have to keep his head up Better! Ji ihe experience that @/ll come While he's out there on the pite®-!in time he should make « good nol pitcher. of the time it seems that; But up there in the American he acts with thé) league where «mart ball players bet when it fe hit te him, doesn't) hang ott, he'll have to keep the men are Out and) old bean on the game. Kind of Publicity Sam Francieto Seals wWere;ie printed it's bound te tell on the wrong players fn the long fun, because ge lt Bid st ft prewda everconfiaence The Seals finally cracked under the leng etrain here Saturday when they started a young riot with | Umptre Croter tm the seventh inning after Dee Waish bad been called out on strikes. Sam Agnew, Jim O’Connell and Chatley Graham shoved Croter around freely and & mob gathe in no time. The climax came w' O'Connell chose Croter and got the Worst of it, taking left on the thin, None of these men were on the field yesterday and they will robably all draw heavy fines from resident McCarthy. Seattle Indians ut of 14 from the champions at Los Angeles this year and the tribe copped eight out of 14 here Loe Angeles wee the only teare tn the league to hold an edge over the logaia on the stason's play. We bea: Frisco by came, kiead bd: three, Gacrameénto by two, Bait Lake by seven, Portiand by 11. We broke ‘- 7_ ew WAGN TS Shei’ } licliay Ji ‘© ‘ team, playing under the Bagshaw regime, didn't make very good impression Sat- urday in spite of the fact that e Sun Dodgers defeated the inth Arty Corps by 24 to 7 ally. The army team held s to a 10 to7 last f i ef j j erie was weak and couldn't do a: with the heavy army op 5 S ; the 4 24 i} i i n ast Cis im 22 4 is Hy $Tis a g i oy i a 1 b ib inet 4 lat igi # f 4 i iH teh g8 BY HENRY L, FARRELL NEW YORK, Oct, 2.--In New York the Glant fang are Yank fans and the Tank fang are Giant fans. It remains for the series to prove which haa th® greater hold. | Even money prevails in the tittle betting, a the two Manhattan clubs get ready for the annual fall classic Frotesalonal iblers are offering 9 to 10 and allowing the bettor to take his choles, A ict of frenk wag. ers are being made on individual 49 PLAYERS LISTED FOR [iret have Ruth ets atoms run jduring the series. BIG SERIES| Forty thousand are expected at jeach gume. The Giants have sold NEW YORK, Oct $—Glant and/in their boxes and reserved seats Yankee players eligible to play in the ana the Yankees have only a few world’s series are: reserved seats left. Pitchers: Giante—Nehf, Toney, ee eens ed Galleo, * RUTH SETS ne, Mae wate nk tee HOME RUN MARK AT 59 Babe” Ruth, home run king of baseball, has set a new mark of &9 home runs for the record book. He slammed his 59th circuit clout yesterday tn the final game of the sca- son tn New York, hitting it off of Fullerton in the third inning. | Every game will be viewed for Star fans by Evans. ditor, Seattle Star, ORAN RETURNS TO STATE TEAM Mike Moran, crack halfback, hes Pullman again, and the ‘fashington State football prospects much brighter, Moran, a vet- n of three seasons, had stated he didn't expect to return to this fall, CING MEET 5, OPENS TUESDAY @ five-day running meet will der way at the Western Washin; n fair at Puyallup tomorrow. On indred horses are ready for thi pening of the events. Men’s and Boys’ Clothing HATS, SHOES, FURNISHINGS One PricemCash of Credit 1427 Vo Chas. 8. QUERY .ii vcs Fifth Ave. Devormer and Hoffman. Infielders: Giants— Kelly, Raw- lings, Bancroft, Friech and Kopf: Yankeee—Pipp, Ward, Peckinpaugh, McNally, Baker, Fewster and Mitch. ell Outfielders: Gianta — Young, Burns, Emil Meusel, Brown, Cun- nitgham and Btengel; nke—Bob Meusel, Miller, Ruth, Roth and Hawks. seinse tor maven RS a ict ee MISS BRIGHT, 1604 4th, cor, Vine real |* véteran, THE SEA USTING off the bench somewhere among the pennant. winning teame is a down-hearted rookie who may in the next few days leap to un forgettable glory, thru the medium of the approaching world series. History proves that It has been donefrequently, In fact the se) ries in which no rookie makes the big Jump from the bench to the cet tor of national attention ia the ex ception rather than the rule. Who'll it be in 19217 . ee | PROBABLY no rookle ever had @ j stiffer introduction into the big |serfes than did Carl Mays, present Tankee hurler, when he was @ rookie 1) ae of the Red Box equad in 1916, In the firet game of the series be tween Boston and Brooklyn Ernié Shore apparently had the game | rowed up, for the Red Sox were load ing § to 1 when Brooklyn came to bat in the ninth. Thon came a great Brooklyn rally, Three runs had been unded aordes and the bases were ied with enthusiastic Brooktynites when Manager Carrigan sent shore to the showers and called on Rookis/ Maya, It was a moment, even for Chief Myers, & heavy Robinson to Stage Workout California “Welterweight, Who Boxes Davis Tues- day, at Pavilion Today ALINAS JACK ROBINSON, the California welterweight boxes Travie Davis here, tomorrow night at the Pavilion for the Coast Utle, waa to work out before Beattie) fans at the Pavilion this afternooo at 2,00, lfornian arrived in Seattle yesterday, and worked out a little to get the train stiffness out of bis muscles. Jimmy Maléne, Cascade A. C. matchmak who is staging t how, looked good in bie workout, Roth hé and Travie should be in good cofidition, because both of them have been boxing considerably lately, Malone has completed his card for temottow night with Hadie Moore) and Badia sell, the two little ben tamweights who have fought here several times before, metting In the | 4! sermt-windup. Johnny Jordan bores Ray Gibbs, Tornmmy Sontag meets Joe Martison and Harry Levy tangjes with Billy Edwards in thé other, bouts on the card. WOMEN GOLF who | STARS PLAY DEAL, N. J., Oct. 3.—One hundred! and seventy ei women golf players are teeing off here today in the Qualifying round of the wamen'a na tional golf champlonsh!p. Alex Ster ling, American champion, and Ceell| Leitch, Engiteh links queen, were the favorites for the honors. HIBERNIANS WIN TITLE) ‘The Hibernians defeated the Non- fies at South Park yesterday, # to 0.) Washington pitched good ball for the inners, holding the Nonparetis to| four bingles. SPEAKER TOe TITLE ST hitter, and Jake Daubert, star ewats- man of the Brooklyn team, were up nemt in order, Myers beat outvan In field hit, but Mays anved the day by making Daubert ground to Scott, and the Brooklyn rally failed by one run Two years later Mays pleyed a big part in downing the Cubs in the ‘13 series, winning the third game and |the last and deciding game, both times by scores of f to 1. In the two games he allowed only 10 bite, eee Of BUSH ts another burler who unexpectedly leaped to fame. Connie Mack, Athietle leader, count ed on his two veterans, Plank and Bender, to pull him thru the 1918 series with the Glanta. But for the third game Mack found it necessary to call out Bush, & newoomer with the Mackmen that season, and a pitcher who had only one year of minor league experience. Ife had spent 1912 with the Missoula @font) team. Bush worked like a vet, opposing Jett Teareau, holding the Giants to five bingles and defeating them 8 to 2, He was the only Mack pitcher outalde the veteran pair to deliver. eee KORGE ROWE, substitute third baseman for the White Sox, | World Series Gossip: Famous Rookies foitied the team at the tall end of 1905 season, playing as substitute at intervals during 1906 Ordinarily & wenk hitter, Rohe, tn the 1906 world nertes, pounded out « | triple in tne fifth inning of the first |@nme that enabled the White Box to win 2 to 1, and put bim on the hot corner regularly for tho balance of the sertes, Again in the third game Rohe came up with the bases full in the sixth. Kling, the Cub catcher, warned him as he approached that he needn't expect another atraight high ball, the kind he had sonked two Gays before, Rohe hunched that | Kling was trying to work him for » firut strike, Hewes right. The first ball was straight and high—and Rohe pounded it to the right field wall for his second triple of the se ries, cleaning the bases and sewing up the game for the Box eee FORGE WHITEMAN, a veteran player who spent years in ob- seure minor lengues and who begged in vain for his chance in the big show, finally got it In 1918, too lete in Ute to be of great advantage to him. Whiteman, thrown into the Red Sox-Cub battle of 1918 because of Close Scores Feature First Star Soccer Tiffs Star Soccer Standings SENIOR DIVISION Team — Maple Leat Post . Went Beaitle Maas Eckarts Boeing Atreraft Woodland Park Postoffice 1 1 ® Won Goals Goals Lost Draw For Against Potnts ° s ° ° 4 1 1 1 1 ® 1 ° e JUNIOR DIVISION Team—~ Bouth Park ... Hawthorne Jui Ballard Juniors . Cowan Clear Co, Alien A. A... Louie's F. D. Highiand Park . Ben Paria Billiards . ee or orvwen cox Fs) Sl ewoece cweuroe “Bob Di +e) ‘Totals Matted ft +Maited for Dailey San Francisco .., me. wreos ds! eocesecesoce~ Btrusk out —Ry belie—ore n Tw Home run—Fitteerai¢ q . Kamm Stolen ok. Hit by pitehed Tanings pitehe. ba QUIT GAME): CLEVELAND, Oct. 8.—Tris i @r will not lead the Cleveland T in next season, according to & f@- | ( port going the rounds in baseball Gircles hore. Dame Rumor has jpeaker retiring from the game. HAGEN DEFEATS BARNES, 4-2 FAR ROCKAWAY. N. ¥., Oct. 3.-— er Hagen defeated Jim Barnes, |» 4 to 2, In the finals of the American fessional .golfere’ championship, , today, NEW YORK—Thru Cosmopolitan Research society of Brooklyn, $100,- 000 ts offered ‘for discovery of & Medicinal remedy for cancer. EDWIN J. BROWN. D. D. 100 Cotumbia s¢. For overt twenty mi Read my cle tn SS Star ext Satur Jeweler and Silversmith NOW LOCATED 1518 Second Ave. Announcement Between Terry and Boren Aves Batadlished since 1906 “Bquare Deal to AI” “Rath. Sruimpler, » . rt : eS pee cccorccceco tes @ 14 97 46 water tn ninth nning run scored. 1 Totate 4. i *Matted for Gillen Two out when Bore by tnnin San Francisco Tite. 3 a Goals Gonis Lost Draw For Against Points ° : 1 ewmuanason Coco n www oy, Tella Three-base hit ome fuh—Kelly Double plays sc Waieh to Cavensy to Muison; Kamm to Walsh to Bilson Tovin to Btumpt. O' Dow Whid piten Gefeat to Crumpler, Tim Umpires—Byron, Carrol! PACIFIC COAST_ LEAGUE Lost. Lee Angéiee Cre 6 San Frenctece Portland Sacraments ... AMERICAN New York 1, Boston 6. Chicago 7, Cleveland & St. Loule 13, Detroit 3. Washington 11, Pittsburg t. Louls rookiyn 1, New York 4 hicago 7-7, Cincinnati 6-@ ittebure 4, Bt. Louis 8 CUE STARS TO OPEN TOURNEY Ten of the greatest three-cushion ‘billiard players In the world are be- | ginning play today tm Pittaburg, In the American title play. Johnhy Layton, 1920 national champion, Bob Cannefax, 8. Denton, ©. 8. Oth Charles Weston, Augie Kieckhoféi Charles McCourt, Hugh Neal Pierre Maupome and Alfred De Oro are the men entered. The Beattie grammar schoo! socce) rece opened Baturday With 23 team at va./in action. Just Honest Milk Scientifically pasteurized by the most modern methods ina ‘we THE M most modern plant Your Grocer Will Serve You AYFLOWER DAIRY ELLIOTT 6210 DAVIDSON MOTORCYC io Pme HIRSCH t BOVE svt. » | West |@ 1to-l @raw at lower Woodland Boston's shor the hero of th He won the first game with hin hitting, @@tting two of Boston's five Dingles. In the thir me he robbed Dode Pankort of what was ticketed | for a home run, by a seemingly im: | possible ecateh, In the fifth his pe feet throw to the plate from left field cut off Mollocher with a Cub rtin, And in the eighth inning af the eighth game, with Boston leading by only one run, Whiteman saved the day by running far in for Barber's liner, grabbing the ball In one hand and turning a complete somersault. see ‘O BEWELL tw another rookie who was yanked out of college into national fame. After Ray Chap: man's injury and death in 1920, Tris Ppeaker of the Indians surprised everybody by sending for Bewell, on whom he had a string, and getting the boy excused from his studies at the University of Alabama to finish the season with the Redskins, Sewell, to the surprise of everybody-—except Speaker—came thru in fine shape, and hie timety hitting and fast field ing was responsible {n large meanure edness, prove for the shaking down the Indians | 4 handed the Brooklyn Dodgers in the money series of 1920, Season Starts Good Soccer Pla: Both Junior and Senior Teams in Openers | SY achres featured the opening Games of The Star Soccer league on the playfielde of Genttle | Sunday, all #ig senior teams And 10 \Juntor elevens being in action. Only one lopsided score was | turned in during the afternoon, th | Maple Leaf Post defeating the Post. to 0, The mafl men need considerable strengthening, seoording to Referee Arthur Shaw, in charge of the game. WEST SEATTLE WINS In the feature game of the day the Seattle sontors defeated the Woodland Park squad 4 to 1 at! Woodland park. The park team | layed with eight men, as three play era falled to show up. In the other senior @ of the Gay the THaas-Eckart Cigar the Boeing Aircraft club fought to/ park. It was a tight battle all the way. The Hawthorne Juniors, made for the most part of the Bea: grammar school champions of 1920, made a fine showing in their game ose the Highland Park team. wthorne won out $ to 1 in a well- played game. The Highland team hasn't had a chance to settle down; |to re ee yet, They played at SHU Washington Park tallied a shutout against the Ben Paris Billiard Par- jlors, winning % to 6, at Washington park. The Ballard Juniors and the Cow. |an Cigar Co. fought hard In @ 8:to.3 tle game at Lincoln park, The Falcon Athletie Club shut out the Allen Athletic Associition 3 to 0 in & wWellplayed game at lower ‘Woodland perk. while South Park nosed out the Loule’s Frefich Dry Cleaners by @ 2-to-1 score at Walla Walla. ; Private éancing lessons all dey at Bright's, 1604 4th, cor. Pine.—(Ad.) NO OD scctras H OH BOY! 0 NOTHING TRY INJURIOUS rr No SAND John Rusk BRUIT (LU Winn RY HAN THOUSANDS ‘Bears Just Strong}; by|* PATE B® Manage to Beat Club Coptera Sed efeats Olympic 14 to 13; Pittsburg Lost ALIFO NIA's wi football team doesn’t look #0 wonderful this season, At least not fo the games the Golden hey $i the Olympte Club of Ban Franci§es | out by a 14 to 19 score, A week Previous they defeated st. > 21 to 0 when they beat the same team 127 the year before. The only big upset of Satur game was registered in Pitt burg when the powerful Panthers went down to defeat before the Latayette College team by & 6 to 0 score. Nearly all of the other games ran true to form, $ at, “Chieaee—Cnieage i ornate os. ; napetia MG —Navy 40, Neth ‘State 6. ‘at. Washington—Georgetown 9, Labi Bon Volley 6 At Cambridge—Herverg 6, Moly Gfoss aAt, Watarette, ind —Waresd 9, Pure At Henover, %, M—Dartmoath 28, aids At West Point—army 38, Springfield cokt, ,Printeton—Princvon #1, Sirertie rot, Madioon, Wia—Wiseonain $8, law 7, Haven—Talo 14 University Of ogregey™ & *—tonken At Easton, Pa-tafagette 6, Pitts Office team at Lincoln playfield, 6 | yiber thorpe 6. University of Virginia 28, George’ ben 7 mai At hovth Band—Notre Dame a, pauw 19. At Berkeley—Univertity ef C 14, Olympto 1%, ss At Stan University 41, Mare Marines 6. At Hamilton, ¥. T—Colgate 1h i tenon N College, Peon—Pens 24, Gettysburg 0, At lows Ciiy—Unlversity of f Knox 14. At Olympia—Montesane 90, METROPOLITAN natht Seles “ROBIN HOOD” um > od 1) MI; } : of John Ruskin cigars are smoked in ra this Ruskin ts the at 2 for 15c, every day — best and beca hn ca Invest 15, in Ruskins | and you'll be roewnthe y I John Reis | is the Hand, solid cad delighefullt Sarees OF