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THURSDAY. KILBANE SAILS FEBRUARY 28 THE CLEVELAND, Feb, 2.—Johnny Kilbane, world’s featherweight cham a ae pion, will sail for Europe February 28, on the 10th anniversary of his winning the championship from Abe Attell, Kilbane will confine his af tour to exhibition work, boxing with Al Zelmer, He may defend his f crown abroad if the proper financial inducements are forthcoming No Matches have been signed, FEBRUARY 2, 1922. SEATTLE IDEs PLAN COLLEGE HOCKEY MELEE Efforts are being made to schedule an intercollegiate hockey game between the Washington sextet and the University of British Colambia for Vebruary 16 at the Seattle Arena, A series with Vaneouver and Vietoria will be arranged and the winner of the Coast championship will be eligible to play in Montreal for the Allen eup. SNARL OF VERNON TIGERS WILL BE HEARD THIS SEASON 112 ‘New Tossers — Signed Idahoan Cinches Honors Essick Is ‘Who’ s Who Info on New\Mets Win ‘ Building Minnesota Grid Mentor) and Leave | Fine Club Bill Spaulding Learned His Football at Wabash; Has Basement Had Great Success at Western State Normal | | School; Succeeds Dr. Williams College | Hoopers | to Play The Loe Angeies clsh is making © big effort te obtain Art Vietcher veteran National shortstop, whe is now in the Southern city. Leo Dre : Third-Frame Spurt Gives|Gordon McKay Is Syre of Washington Cagers Tilt| Pray be made ht he aye he | Walter McCredie Is Kept en, of Infield; will BY BILLY EVAN Seattle 3 to 1 Win Over| Coast Middle Title When| With Pullman in First) Xseeu"sin' "porns ot nim st | Busy Looking Over Like- NIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA hopes to re- Farrell Beats Colimas Game of Series Tonight | short atom, F-— immy MacCau- Victoria; Rowe Stars ley to one Of the ings. Have Better Pitching he ly Bushers at Office gain lost football prestige. — | 7 § i ion, Bill Spaulding STANDINGS BY LEO H. LASSEN ITH the Coast titte almost within| Meports from Philadelphia « 1E8% are the days when the EO. H. LASSE As a step in that direction, Wo Tied. Pen ie Hert MeCann, Port ; AS IL. BSSICK Is} has been selected as head coach, to succeed | vancouver ae 8 Oe OEe es se Oem their" greap- tne ne Washing has been loaned te 4) City club young busher's thoughts —< managers in the Who is Bill Spaulding? Until the wires vf Kay han a clear | this season tonight at the local var-| rhe peste Ask Walter Mee reftie—he knowst i minor peg carried the story that he was Minnesota's grey poe Ag right to the Coast | sity gym at 7:15, The doors will by! Me The boys may think lightly, bale : j bess won two new coach, little was known of him as a guorelenn hoskny pend dats ae one ~ or m. and the game they certainly are tough on the eae — : championship. will start & 5p. m. \~ v straight pennants! national football figure. i the | Mets asd The TUah 6] Conch Wienden Wit ctert ttl oun pets at Jim Boldt’s baseball and then tas Dr. Williams for 22 years has been foot-| Pein gree pers: glows slinger up- five regulars as usual, which means quarters, in the Arcade building. break uD saa | ball coach at University of Minnesota. Biil/ wane th tae a wet the dope and that Nicholson and Lewis will be at High school phenoms, small great keystone y frame and rang} beat Marty Far | the forward berths, sislk at center | heroes and embryo Ty Cobbs fi a ( combination at the end of the 1920 season, seli-| ing Johnn y! Mitchell to New York Yan) kees and Bob} Fisher to the Amertoan amociation. The latter Was prominently mentioned tn the/ big baseball scandal that year. Im 1921 the Tigers, with their Weakened infield, dropped to sixth! Place, but they finished the season | with more wing than defeats. And ever since the last Coast race jet the Tiger master has been building up his club. His latest addition is Leo Dres| sen, one of the best minor league| first sackers in the business. He has played with St. Paul in the American association for sevérul Years. He's a lef-handed fielde and hitter, a darn good base run ner,’ leading that league several| times, and a leadoff hitter in the ® batting onter. He'll lend a lot of speed to the Tiger infield. KEYSTONE HOLE } IS PLUGGED Then Essick wil! have Car! Saw-| yer at second base. He will sue-| ceed Edie Gorman, too light 4 hitter for tha Coast loop. Ray French wil! be at shortstop. French is a greatly improved ball Player and he should work weil with a man of Sawyer’s ability at the keystone station. The veteran “Red” Smith, who had one of his best seasons in} 1921, will zbe-back at third. This infield will compare favorably with | any in the circuit. Ping Bodie will be added to the outfield. Bodie will inject a lot of Yat Black River Falls, Wi |eeason at the Knights of Columbus Spaulding, who succeeds him, for 15 years has coached| Western Normal school, Kalamazoo, Mich. Spaulding first played football on the high school team From there he went to Law-| rence university, where he played for two years. ~ | After two years at Lawrence he gave up his college career and went to Chicago, where he obtained a position with one of the big packing concerns. Coach Cayou of Wabash, who had seen Spaulding play at Lawrence, finally prevailed upon him to finish his col- lege course. He entered Wa- bash college. He graduated from that institution in 1907 Spaulding played halfback and near headliners tn the realm of basketball, foothall and baseball Spaulding has the gift of getting the Jimit oat of every man under} was one of the best men in the nis direction, | West in bis day. The year he cap His «uncanny = magnetiom soon | tained the Wabash Giants, as they! wing his men over. Hoe haa. the were known, hig team inside of faculty of discovering in each’ in. three weeks beat Notre Dame, 5 to dividual bis proper place in the }0; Purdue, 14 to 0: played Tilino&® gamewinning machine. & scoreless Uc, and lost wo Chicag: 5 to 0. With only a limited Western State Normal school, Spaulding has been turning out Success has in no way changed Spaulding. He has never lost his @xtreme modesty. Ho baa that sim ple direct frankness that is more ef. fective than all the bluff and bius enrollment re markable teams, fear after year. |ter in the world His teams bave walloped Michi-| ‘Those who know Spaulding pre fan, Notre Dame, Michigan Aggies | dict he will do big things in @ jand scores of other headliners angi footbail way at Minnesota, Collins Cubs Tangle in Big Game With Jewelers ITH @ place in the finals for/the finals The Star league junior bas! In the first game between theas | ketball title at stake, the Collins two teama the ¢ ina boys won at Subs and the Stacy Shown ecagers | Collins piayfield with @ 20-t0-19 tally will meet for the second time this! rhe teams are expected to line up| | an follows: hall at 7:00 tonight up four goals, of reli here a few which, by the way, three were| and only one be- doesn't coincide with the Seattle hockey board of strategy's notions on the subject of how to win puck| tunslen | Seattle played purely defensive hockey for the first two periods, and for the greater part of the last A spurt in the early minutes of the last third snagged two goals, mtv. | ing the Mets « commanding lead at} that late stage of the game. Victoria then slipped one Holmes for their only tally ot ee evening. before Seattle sewed up the} game with a third marker. Robby Rowe played a brilliant game, scoring a particularly difficult | meal from the sideline, despite his came knee. | SUMMARY ° Lb iD n iw orrie nw Reore by periods Vietoria Beattie ves. 1: 8 tora, Moeking, 11:12, 4, Beattie, Riley, 12, Pemeltios Tiewt parted one, Meeking, ¥ minutea, Third “satel Cations | mittens. Far. turns weeks ago. rell then and Bryan and Crawford at guards. The Cougars will start the game with Sayers and Frie} at forwards, | Seattio tajiies| around and beate Bert Colimas, the Clana at center and Sor@hseon and| | Callfornia contender, the other night| Loomis at ruards. The game teams meet here to hit around 250 in the Colifornia Mid-winter league, Tt eeems that the Vernon club has picked up & good pitcher in Jakie May, McKay will make his aixth start morrow night in the final game of | the moundman ebtained from the Texas longed to th#lin Lon Angeles. Visitors. | The pusitistic/in Seattle next ‘Tuesday night when aphorism thating boxes Johnny Wolgast at the! the best defense! Pavilion. Wolgast is a agate seam te a good offense! tomer, at leant he waa when fought around here a couple of yiare| This fellow McKay ts one of wf! coolest workers in the ring that Seat. | tle fans have ever seen in action and) he's mighty clever with the leather While Welgast in figured to give McKay an interesting argu: | ment, the champion looks like the} winner [RAY BATES IS DISPOSED OF | Disposal of Ray Rates is the lat eet move on Prexy Boldt’s part to) make room for the flock of promt». ing baseball material the Seattle club ts cornering. Bates was sold yester-| day to the Oklahoma club, of the! Western league, It ts figured that the veteran, while still armed with «| wood batting eyeg, is getting old ana! ile & bit slow for a Claas AA infield -|INDIANS SIGN | TWO RECRUITS, BA Cutting, sodthpaw first base-| man, and Sherman Thurston, recruit | pitcher, will be tried out by the Se | | tle club this season. Both hail from | {California. Thurston is @ brother of} the series, ~ HIGH SCHOOL CAGERS WILL : MIX FRIDA ROADWAY and Queen Anne wil! furni#h the prize game of Fri-| day's achedule in the prep basket-/ ball league, meeting for the second | Uumne thie season ®t Broadway | Im the firt game of the year the| Quays won 23 to 18, but only after the hardest kind of a fight. The! Quays will enter Friday's gums) favored to win because the Tigers have been werkened by the los of Spot Johnson, regular guard, Franklin will journey to Bailar, | and the reorganized Lincoln tram will travel over to West Seattle tn jthe other games of the day COLLEGE STARS __ | IN BIG DEMAND Almost every club In the two major leagues has several college players on ite payroll. A number of them, like George Sisler and Frankie riegh, have come direct from their; college teams to the majors. Uniess the draft dispute ie patched up, the college field is certain to be more carefully looked over than ever be fore by the scouts during the coming | season. of in & trade for Btumpy Edington and Booty Alcock. Me won half of bie eames With @ rank tail-end club, leh, former Reattle player, d Mewark last season, will ¢ Raitimore Orioles In the tonal league thie seabes. dimen | hit around 370 for rk and ranked; aa one ef tho etare of the cireult. Jimmy Ww cago Oub Anueles 1 pumpking ef m fielder, however, rank- ing a4 one of the best My-chasers in the minors Detroit Tigers are counting on mm Piette, Hy! Johnson, Car! Hol Pert Cole, “Red” Oldham—ail for Comsters—es reguar burlers tis GREB GEATS WALKER GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, Feb, 2.— Harry Greb won every round of a 10 round bout from Hugh Walker, Kan. sas City heavyweight, here last night. Greb sealed 163 pounds, and eave away nearly 20 pounds to Walker. CASI WIN AGAIN Knirhts of Cotumbus won a fast Moasketball tilt from the Sunset Ath | hither, thither and thence are ing at the local headquarters for ¢ tracts these days, and it's up to Walter to give them the east west. An even dozen youngsters been signed by the Seattle club far, and all of them will be to the Seattle training quarters, | Stockton, Cal, March 1. The newcomers signed are: Bert Babb, right-handed p | Oregon Agricultural college. rs team, Will oe tain of this s jin June <a A. EL Henke, southpaw pit from Springfield, Minn, Hugh McKenna, shortstop, o, college nine. Spencer Adama, infielder, Utah, L. T. Bell, southpaw pitcher, dondo, Cal. KE. HL. Froelich, right-handed , Butte, Mont, | Floyd Bordertde, catcher, son, N. D. George Brovald, shortstop, | ‘a, Minn. | _ W. L, Sweet, | Port Angeles, Wash. Herbert May, right-handed | Bakersfield, Cal, E. J. Cutting, first sacker, mento, Cal, H. T. Tackett, right-handed er, Central California, ¢, right-handed ESTLING dates for the versitg team have been | Bounced yes bh Jimmy . ‘The first tmatches will be |alumal grap; [intercollegiate wrestling will be Kick to the Vernon offensive, some-| srnese teama are tied for second Ri a Mecsin "Piuste toe Mickey Uiz: | Hollis Thurston, Ree twirler, and han| TORONTO INV OXFORD etic club five on the Knights’ floor at Corvallis, Ore,, with the O thing that Vernon has lacked, evet | piace in League No. 2, the Battery W. Loughiin tor Waldersen [been given hig chance mainly upon! Oxford university is considering an | last night. The Caseys took a long Aggies, February 25, and Oregon fn pennant-winning days. Bodie|(: team leading this division. The oe eee key, {oF | the recommendation of his brother, | invitation from Toronte untverstty to} lead in the first period, and were be net at Eugene February 27, win probably take care of the left! winner of winner of tonight's fame will enter Riley. Riley for Morris, Victoria, Halder-| Cutting has @ feputation as » take part in a crew race at Toronto| never headed, final score standing at final tournament scheduled is 5 field jor. " va ton tor W. Loughlin, EPs, tor | PONY sticker, \next summer. 20 to 17. W. 8. C in Seattle, March 18, CHESTER ON tint te —__—_———< —_—$—$—$—$—$ — me Jom EXPRESS CALIFORNIA [!is' ice Reteree—Pred ‘Yon REAL RIDERS DEVELOPED Chet Chadbourne, one of the best flyhounds in the Coast loop, will! be back for centerfield. 4 Then Easick has “Chicken” Hawkes, a speed metchant, Pete TOPS PIN SCORING) CLEARED OF SUSPICION) | | : Schneider, who showed promise of | ‘ALS in the Commercial league) FDERKELEY, Cal, Feb. 2.— Foot Firing @ real slugger, and Ham Hy-| bowling am last night were ball | prefibulonaiion:” shiebek LAST YEAR i att, a tremendous hitter, for the| rather below the average. Two men,| |, i ’ utility roles. Schmidt, of the Lumbermen, and| “Bich have stirred the whole country, | 1s Jason of 19fi In racing elr| Edide Creasman, of Electric No. 2,/ hit the University of California today. Whether or not Hughey High will} clea produced some sensational | be back Yor left field remains to| bowled 607 and 600, respectively “Crip” Toomey, sensational | jockeys ‘be seen. High couldn't finish the} Totals: y halfback, voluntarily admit Prominent among the season's) season because of an injured arm | Skookume $7 having played professionally fof) new stars in Charles “Chick” Lang. | i. that may put him out of baseball nike he Selma American Legion team in| Many racing experts credit Lang | ‘6 i High was one of the best fielders| Parton & Co. their championship game last month. | with being the bent Jockey since the Wa Ss Tr er 1 in the” lenque last year, a pretty|Biectric No. 1...... #97 Toomey, in the light the expose | days of Tod Sloan. Some compli Tae Shite Gol Gs heddy ba pager | dineriean den. Kc | ing on in the Middle Went and | ment. | ‘ t i HANNAH press é 902 084 904—2090| East, told his story to Lute Nicholas, At one meeting IM the South he} : BEHIND PLATE Public Market 149 tos 199—2468| graduate manager of the university, | rode 29 winners in 27 days. He at-| ues or Behind the plate will be “Truck’’| Maptetnes mar ae oT) before the finger ot suspicion could | tracted a following such as no other | Hannah, a real receiver. Hannah | **attie Times +. 9 8 be pointed California, Toomey | joc key bas ever had at the New Or- | : f <a jnaid in playing for the Legion team | jeans meetings. He has since con 99 yanked with the best catchers im/ mectric xo. 2 ...... 949 #47 he fully realized that his active col- | prea the circuit last year and his bat-| Puckett Co. 3 909 tinued his gogd work. | ting was powerful, as Seattle fans — ee cempetiove Sars SO In speaking of Lang’s great uc: | ill remember. Ronemee . - yd 48) No definite statement has oomelcens at New Orleans, one of , : Essick 1s building up his ‘pitch.| ao 03 | from the university official, an@ 1 8/ heskmakers who had been fng staff, too, He had added a| Lombermen ont s—2713 | thou he matter will be dropped. | hard hit remarked | Game fillow Ray Giider| D2 Marche “aa 9242606) inasmuch as Toomey voluntarily! “This fellow Lang is the beat | maed 4 - made the admission, and at the same! horse at New Orleans. The bettors | and Jakie May. The latter jooks| |time announced his retirement. No|no longer pay any attention to the| - turning in good work in the WILL RUTH | other university «men took part in the] form of the horse when he is up. | eee yen shen he game. all they want to know is who ix has Weiser Dell and Frank Shellen- back as his main eventers, with Willie Mitchell as a ponsibility. Bill James, former Coaster, has been obtained from the American| Aesociation and Tony Faeth and Slim Love are holdovers DEMAND THE YANK PARK? MID WEST BY HENRY L. FARRELL | GRID MEN EW YORK, Fet Some of} OSED Lang going to ride | Another youngster riding Ike a/ veteran {# Austin McLaughiin,- son of the once worid-famed Jimmy Me | Laughlin. . 1 Pete Walls, Eddie Kummer and Gantner are other Soungsters who | these days, soon, Babe Ruth will 92a Values to $60 ‘ap | profeaniona | |shoes with the Yankee nein. |"Big Ten” conference athletes, | CREW DATES Schellenback and Dell are two of| saunter into the Yankee office with |are making good with a vengeance. | q the leading hurlers in the league|a— , AYLORVILLE, M., Feb. 2~ i edtaer alone fe incbnes W be er | d 3 and if Ed®ick can develop two good| “Well, what d'yuh say?” ver Hoover, coach of the Taylor. men to work with them and the| Whee it comes to giving an an-| ville professional football team in the | rest of his team delivers as ex-|#wer, there probably isn't club |game at Carlinville, Iil., November | | Wiad ted |New York that would care to swap ism against prominent i { | CARDS SIGN" Babe is due for a new contragt} He charged, in a series of ques-| GLEN WARNER |, 20% terms. He's been working |tions to coaches and athletic direct | ARE SHIFTED ea for $20,000 a year, but he wasn’t #0, ors, that Gordon Locke, fullback, | | AIO ALTO, Cal, Feb. 2—Glen| good when he signed the parchment |and Aubrey Devine, quarterback, all [FIT final date of the annual : Warner has signed a five-year con-| three years ago. American football stars of the Iowa Washington-California crew re. For hundreds of Men 's and | tract with Stanford university, it! ‘Those who like to speculate about |team, played professional baseball;|gatta has been set for April 22./ 0 ~ Atl m1 r y ell; | gem 7 " 22. | 9, 66 ae) ° ‘was announced today. Watner, who|“insida matters” predict that the/|that Tlinol« athletes played profes-| Washington wished to place the re | Young Men’s Quality Suits has a two-year contract as head foot-|American league ¢hampions will|sional baseball against them and | gutta April 29, but exams at Califor. | ‘ ball coach at the University of Pitts-|have to go all the way from $50,00| therefore couldn't “squeal” that sev-|nia prevented this arrangement. The | and Overcoats. a burg, will act as advisory coach for|to $75,000 to get the swat king.on a/eral Wisconsin football stars are pro-|race will be rowed over the Lake the Cardinals during that period, ac-|long contract fensional ball players; that Knute) Washington course Y Q cording to Stanford authorities, after| Both the Giants and the Yankees Rockne, Notre Dame conch, knew| ‘The relay carnival was originally both i which he will become head coach at|may have some little negotiating get-|two days after the Taylorville-Carlin- | seheduled for April 22, but will now ou re ae and the California school for three years. | ting their regulars on new contracts. 'vitle game that his men had played, |te moved up to April 29. All Coant mone uying yo i Andrew Kerr, assistant foottmil |The champion clubs of both leagues|and that Michigan and Ohio) State|and Northwest colleges and univer ° y by buy Sch ur Suit and coach at Pittsburg, will be head/are receiving signed contracts In| have professional stars. laities have been Invited to partici rceoat a th mentor at Stanford for the next twolevery mall, but the names of the - pate and the majority are expected to | vercoat at e easty store. years, with G. EZ. Thornhill, one of |regulara are not conspicuous, while Ww send teams. Centre college's coaching staff, as a8-|the rookies are making a dash (,| THYE THROWS ‘Washington will have all the big| sistant coach Van Ghent, present Stanford head conch, is expected to accept one of mveral offers made to him by other colleges. MAT CHAMPION MAKES IT PAY Stanislaus Zybezko is one of the} few wrestlers who seems able to; make ‘big money out of the game.| Most of the heavyweight wrestling | stars are forced to wrestle often be fore small houses in order to keep the wolf outside the ropes; but the champion, while he wrestles often, in Varlably wins and invariably draws down « reasonably heavy purse chance tor wat! PINK GARDNER another slice ot! PORTLAND, Feb. 2.—Ted Thye | ceaseaaat of the world's profeanio’ middlewelght wrestling champion ship, hurled ink” Gardner, of nects ¥., to the mat in two of three in a match here get in and cinch a many think will be the championship spoils. JOHNNY EVERS JOINS CHISOX |; CHICAGO, Feb, 2.—Johnny Evers will probably finish his baset falls out night dner won the firtt fall with a last I days} ¢ in the livery of the American league.| toe hold, and Thye the last two with | Evers has a tant man|a trip-lock and an arm-sciseors, re-| ger with the Chica ' OX, | xp 7 The bout was rated a and will use his brains in aiding the! one of the fastest and moat canny “Kid” Gleason to win ball/ ular taged here games with hardly any ball playe Evers has spent a major portion| Recause of their knowledge of the of his ball career, first as | "touch system,” American typiste are player, and later as manager, in the| «aid to surpass those of Great National league. | Britain, Pacific meets in the track season on | the Stadium cinders this season. The Northwest and Coast Conference meets will both be held at Seatthe. HEAVY SKULL SPOILS FIGHT | PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 2.—An odd necident caused the referee to stop the Lew Tendler-Mel Coogan light welght bout here last night, when, tn sidextepping of Tendlers. n the first round, ran into him, head-on, their collided, Both were badly shaken | up, and Coogan's head was cut, The | referee stopped the bout and declared | it no contest, one Co punches on heads | Cheasty’s. SEE SHOW WINDOW ‘DISPLAY We are determined to make this February the greatest in the history of It is this desire that has caused us to offer high a remarkably low price. east AVENUE AT SENECA SWLFRE DERICK VICE | (REBIGELOW PRES. EMER. ade clothes at such