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DAY, MARCH 2, THUR Ben Paris Loses Out for Title C Basketeers Run Away From Opposition in Second Period BY LBO HH, LASSEN NING away from their op. R ponents in the second half, the | J Pattery C team walloped the Ben Pars Billiard quintet at Collins play field last night, 19 t elinehing The Star Junior Basketball trophy The Armory boys led at half time, $t 2 but in the second period they J seven frid while th peat that the Paris team could as a lone field goal and free Te Ren Paris team was undoubt edly weakened by the loss of Chee iiott, one of the best gu in the feague. Elliott was unable to play because of il Last night's game markec sonsecutive win for the I in The Star ealtzed thru the preliminary se with seven straight wins and peat the Dandy Baking Co.. Cubs and ~ loop. then Collins m Paris in the finals, ttle of the season wa checking of the > close Battery five. They held the Ben Paris team to a lone field goa: Vic tor Be Row scoring just before the whistle blew to end the game, the tall being In the air when the game ended “Army” Rakenbus, the big center of the Battery club, led the scorers with five feld goals, w Shultz scored three from the field and one from the foul line. Don Ripley proc a good floor game, while the checking of Frank Shillistad and | Ralph Etchey was tight. Reggie Bird and Dave Kopstein were easily the best men on the floor | for the losers: In the first period both sides checked closely. Bird scoring two free throws and Ripley and Bakenhus dropping in fiekt goals for the Rat- tery five. Schultz scored one trem | the foul line for the new cham BATTERY BOYS PILE UP POINTS In the second period the Armory squad began to snag the baskets with | regularity with Schultz scoring three Jong shots, tossing © one from mid floor and another over his head with one hand from the side. Bakenbus did some good work on short shots, caging four of them. ‘The score follows: Battery © «+ Riptey ¥ Rebnttie Ceacsevee Vakenbaoe a Sniilistad ° Btteney is for Feldman, r hus 5. Ripley 1. Setul Free throws—Bird 2, devul —Beb Morria, Umplre--Spencer Hf. In the preliminary game the Stacy Shown five had no trouble in de feating the Yes\er Cc. 37 to 5. -. BASKETBALL RESULTS New Haven — Pennaylv re tained lead in Intercollegiate race— Yale 16. Pennsylvania 31 Princeton Princeton Dartmouth, 27 to 19. Trenton—Penn Freshmen defeated Lawrenceville, 37 to 15. defeated Pittsburg-—Panthers jolted West Minster, 52 to 15 Pittsbure — Duquesne defeated! West Virginia Wesleyans, 59 to 24. Chester—-Penn Military college de- feated Drexel institute, 36 to 26. is, S$. D.—South Dakota Sioux Falls, 28 Purdue 27, Wabash 37 Buffal Lafayette Bultalo—Creighton U 38, Um. FRESHMAN MAT FINALS TODAY) Freshmen ‘Thursday Mat team which will meet the Ev YMCA be picked and a captain elected fol lowing the tryouts dition to the wrestlers will compete | soon. A team will Everett lining s for his first y A number of prom meet up other hnot is ng men piers. have been reporting regula THIS BIRD HAS LOTS OF HOPE Harry ner, a young Brooklyn semi-pro, net a record in perse Verance. When the first contingent Of the Brooklyn Dodgers left for the > all s camp at Jackson ville, , Fisher was among them, altho os has no contract with the | lub. He is traveling at his own expense in the hope of showing Man- ager Robinson stuff to deserve show, BOXING DEAD IN AUSTRALIA | that he has enough Australian reports sa that the boxing game iv temporarily dead in the Antipodes. Everybody seems to hanker for the Bet going, but there are few men of | any class available. Judging from|{ the American second-raters clean up every time they invade that CMtinent, ring talent must be shy BELGIAN WANTS WELTER TITLE Pete Hobin, a Be Igian, is the lat et European ir r of the Amer-| fan ring, Hobin enjoya quite a Teputation on the other side as a Welterweight miller, according to the press notices, and is anxious to combat Jack Britton for the welter Weight championship GRAYSON WINS MARATHON | oh PAS, Man. March Mak ng the 200-mile run in 24 hours and 1 minutes, Hill G jrayson, driving C. B. Morgan's dog team, won the an ual derby here yesterd Theo Gore Dupas wan w 4, and timed at hourw 16 minutes. BATTERY: C le Enoch | afternoon for places on the | ~ land require the use of the old course | a chance in the big | gloved gladiators to | 1922 Indiana Youngster Is | Prodigy of Golf Game |Melvin Harbert, Six Years Old, Is Showing Great| Form; Drives From 75 to 100 Yards; 'Every Sport Has Its Prodigies. BY BILLY EVANS ERY sport has ‘ts child prodigy. For years Wilie Hoppe was known as the “Boy Won- der” of the billiard game. As a matter of fact, Hoppe was still known as the child phenom long after he had outgrown his boyhood da: | Bobby Jones 1s around the 20 mark today, Ever since he Was 13 Bobby has been the “Boy Wonder” of the golf game. Tt seems that once a player acquires a child phenom title | he never grows up. Jones is still a kid in golfing circles, | Once again the state of Indiana comes forth with scme-| thing different in the world} The elder Harbert hax never taken of sport. It presents the golf- pee tom “omg pains ei hin son | ing marvel of the age in Mel-|,o° qo thines and. that’ le wbout alt vin “Chick” Harbert, 6 years! Ho askx no odds from anyone and | of age. goes off by himself on the course | which is handled by his father. | ca girs fo the son of E. K. Har) "i, youngster drives from 18 to joe ho is the professional fcr the! i900 yards at every whack. That is j Marion, Ind, Country club In his | very remarkable, when one considers case it would seem that “Chick's \ his age and wine. Hest of all, he gets| Proficiency in golf was a heritage direction to his driver | His dad is authority for the state ment that “Chick” has played a num ber of the most difficult heles on the Marion course in par | The youngster tn just about ready to claim the championship for his Age and weight and ix willing to de. | fond it agwinst any who dinpute. | from his father, } The youngster has the earmarks of @ great player. He has a perfect | | Stance, plays naturally, and seldom jmakes @ mistake in judgment or ex ution. He also says he never asks any adviee from his caddy since he carries his own clubs. | | | i ! | } j Saat Cotas Soni 1 dM, wt in = BY RARL A. FRY | Piper & Taft will again introdace int. Lake Sammamist [Springs Pe 50 feet dort hay deveral rafts, their anneal content for the | 20 feet wide, Upon hb he approval af the theasands of fisher- [12 by it-foot shacks th ntain stones men im this lorailty, Over $200 in | and Vishing ta the be distribeted during | applied to Lhe kes by many loon! | Prison "are te | the seasen among the iucky anglers. tt during the p: Frises for beth trout ond base fellow t. t the season. starting with the re and & bountiful supply opening day, April 1. anglers may keep fire alt and protect them from the me: Mare? ating. and epertamen should pot fall to Wednesday found the start of the which Piper & special prises for catches brought in from Lakes | Semmamish and Lake Washington, | Vor the finest catch of trout die played at the sperting gueds store i dering the month of March, Piper & | | Fatt will ward « Taft rattan trout | bee nt ih padded leather strap, | | hb bodies need a lot of warm end, warm them nt clear condl warmer periods we are very apt to find res wi and for the finest display of base = Seath Bend anti-beck lash casting exinte iting Mul | and v of foatures for fishi auRht fish, € the} the raft stunt pu being taken on eggs and ¢ Sulphur WESTERNERS ROUTE IS | ONLY FORU TOOROUGH RELAY MEET | APPARENTLY the weather man 0 ¥ Western and Pacific i to have the final decision as to} colleges and universities will be| the course over which the Washing |in attendance at the annual Wash ton-California crew race will be | ington relay carnival. April 29. Final rowed this year. Coach Leader has decision of Coach Hee Edmundson | |tried out the new suggested course, |and Graduate Manager Darwin Mele | which will cross the lake and end in| nest is to include only the following the Lake Washington-Lake Union| schools, to whom invitations have canal and hax decideg that only on! been extended: Washington State a rarely calm day is the course pos-| college, Willamette, Oregon, O. A. C.,} sible. Idaho, Reed college, Montana, Call If the weather permite the new fornia, Stanford, U. 8. C, and British | course will undoubtedly be used, ax | Columbia. it will allow thousands of spectators | fore colleges are expected to com. to see the race from the canal banks. | pete than at Jast year's carnival | The proposed course has nearly four| which was won by W ashington. miles, of straight rowing, making \t | stanford is expected to enter this) ideal for the oarsmen. A slight sell | season and may bring Morria Kirk on the lake would make it impossible | sey, the «print fash. California prob to row in the east-to-west direction |apiy will go East again this year and will not compete. U. 8. C. has] not replied, but Coach Edmundson does not look to see the Southernegs coast | | from Leachi to Madrona. If the race is rowed to end in the leanal, the locks will be closed tojin action here traffic during the time required. Both | Aino washington has many of the | varsity and freshmen have been) srang who competed last oan working out over the course thi®| binundson is not optimt about week the meet. Weather conditions will t, rz largely determine the strength of the | FIGHT AGAIN it evo shape: but rin cold will set them back of the t Johnny Wilson, middleweight | who train farther south | champion, is matched to fight Mike |MeTigue in Fhode Island, whieh is! poys CLUB MEMBERSHIP about the only spot on the map Ce reinngd eer o rane |where Wilson isn't barred, some car aake agp gsi reggae yi o ly April bership © » late John A pace pre a menawy ” | Kugariff in the an Francisco Golf and Country club according to Eastern gossip. Hol tod: to | |C. H. Barber, of San Francisco, for $1,300—the highest price yet recor [WALLACE MAY _[#:20¢-to nicnent orice vet, record COACH REDS, ° Veal, gee toe akaby FEW YANKS HOLDoUTS — | re i } | shortstop for the St. Louis Browns. HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 2. may land a job with the Cincinnati| Wally Schang is expected to sign a| according to} Yank contract here today Sam iger Moran of |Jones and Erin Ward will then be Cincy is looking ‘for od man and|\the only holdouts. Carl Mays signed Wallace is #aid to be his unofficial] a new contract yesterday and Babe | choice Vreutn has agreed to terms SEATTLE METS FAVORED Ithe | final Reds as assistant coach an Kastern wire. M | Seattle’s hockey team will enter the big playoff series with Van- | couver for the Coant title tomor- row night at the Arena slight | favorites to win. Local hockey | | bugs who risk the coin of the | | Meta in that big ly was something | R0alg to 2 This time it will be different, | Vancouver will enter the big | games minus Smokey Harris, one of the best wing shots in hockey. | He is out with a broken nose. | ‘This means that Jack Adams will shift to right wing and that young Ernie Parks will have to take care of the center job. With Alf Skinner on the right | wing the Vancouver forward trio | series! The like 13} realm on the puck games are making Seattle 10 to 6 favorites | to win the first game and 10 to 8 favorites to cop the series. The Mets will eriter the game at! top strength, This means that Jack | Walker, the master of the hook! check, will be back at his old place t rover, Jack has been out of sev al games, suffering from biood will all shoot from the right side [poisoning in one of his bands. But| of the tee, which will give the | line is back again. | Settle defense a big edge. | Wor awhile it looked like Walker| Mickey MacKay is the man that | would have to watch the big series |the Seattle team must watch, The} from the sidelines as he did last) brilliant rover of the Vancouver club year. And how Vancouver did smear | is playing the game of hig life now. (Harry Wills Fights Kid Norfolk; * + Win Means Title Bout for Wills larry Wills, who lost his title as champion of the colored race and considerable of his ae sige at the hands of Bill Tate at Portland recently, will have another chance to bolster nis chances for a bout with Champion Jack Dempsey tonight, when be meets Kid Norfolk in a 15-round battle at Madison Square Garden, New York. Norfolk is the Harry Greb of the chocolate-hued ringmen, shifty and hard to hit. If Wills can kayo him, his stock will soar to its former height, but if he loses, or merely wins on points, the great negro battler will be practically thru as a world’s championship contender. In view of Dempsey’s recently announced willingness to take on the negro champion, tonight's bout has attracted nationwide interest in boxing circles, “They Never Come Back”; French Idol Proves Old Ring Axiom! ‘Session Sends Most Great Fighters to Oblivion; One Punch on Chin for Slee Rule; Jack Dempsey’s Punch Ruined Georges Carpen- Few Exceptions Prove Ru tier’s Title Chances. O kayo smash to the jaw, after he has worked his way to the top, almost in- variably sends a fighter back to the has-been class at a much faster pace than he came up. pemingly, a fighter can take all sorts of jolts on his way to faine; but after he is BY SEABURN BROW) riding on the crest of his career, for some unknown psychological reason, one sudden re- verse will rob him of his effectiveness and confidence and put him where he started. Few champions ever come back after they are once kayoed, and few near-champions remain long in the first rank after one trip from the ring to their dressing room on a stretcher, Georges Carpentier is the latest prominent example, Frenchman was by far Less than a year ago the colorful the !romantic person of Champion 'Jack Dempsey. Morvich Must “Barnyard Golf” Overcome Do A terrific beating, ending with o ° PO '\\iayo tn the fourth round. he Is the Genuine to Cop Derby erased Carpentier’s name from t ‘Old Man’s G. ’ Precedent in aiainst Morvich, ||Rewspaper headlines, Stories of ans Game the horse favored to win the an |Carpentier’s heroic feats during th Golf was for years called “an nual Kentucky Derby to be run |iwar, bls refinement, bia . so old man'« game,” but all of the off on the Churehill Downs track, || polish, his courage, no longer major links titles are held by men at Louisville, May 13.—Morvich is |/lapped up by the sporting publi in their physical. prime. To horse. at presetit’ a” beavy: ‘Paverite tol corn || shoe pitching, the tithe of “old come under the wire first, but not || FADES man’s game” munt be awarded. At inane this eiepet Yelk Une take _— the recent American champion ince the filly Regret led the field, The European champlon’s “color '; , at ; in 1915, has a winter choice ver j] whip tourney, at St. Petersburg, has faded. So hax his superb con-|| jw the “ A goit’ tts ified the dope by copping the a. a: barnyard go! title was jfidence. He doewn’t want to mect!! won by Ch . 7 classic, Morvich, who finished | mn by Charles Davis, of Colum |} Tommy Gibbons. and bas side ys last season ax a Syearold, has || bus, 0. Davia ip no child, admit- 3 jstepped all offers to that end. He! ting that he ix at | . 4 never Been beaten |prefers to remain in Europe. fight-|| was one of the veanset cue Pp main in Europe, fight!) was one of the youngest contest jing for small purses, knocking out!| ante! | second-rate heavyweights and match | thru they longs for an-! world's cham: | Soccer jing his weight and strength against! - lighter boxers of the firet rank Cc t e Sometimes reports drift Ukely that he] docs. After lant July's experience, | to BALL arventies is neu ae a neavrweient| ltite contender, whether be real-| cables that Carpentier jother crack at the Pionship. It is not eva ies izes it or not. Another chance would end even more disastrously the last for him, and result All-Star Junior and Play at Teams Picked to Play at in complete pugilistic oblivion | Filly Miske was a highly-touted law dangerous heavyweight contend Woodland Park er until Dempsey punched him to BY ALEX C. ROSE jsleep in three cantos. Since the F curtain will fall on The Star! Mieke haw gone back a long way Soceer league Sunday with two! pie still fights among the best be jallstar games at Woodland park. |eause he in broke and needs the The juniors will clash at 1p. ™./ money; but he loses occasionally with Jack Hall handling the whistle.) now to men who would have been The two senior teams will Ket tO! eaxy for him before he collided with gether at 2:30, with Bob Lemon offi. | youngster obtained from the Philly Athletics, decides to report. Geed shoristops are hard to find. Portinnd may be temporarily witheat = goed shertfielder, tai the Rone City has nothing on Seattin The Indians haven't had a shert-patcher since they Feemtered the league back in he Toston Red Sox now hare two t sackers, both 3200 hitters, Joe Har- ris and George Burns were both obtained : | Dempsey’s bone-crushing wallop from the Harris may oy pay i be w eid because b The teams, as picked by the writ pk ag il hitting is needed er, were balanced up as near ax] ST tet | Pane Spubiindesiuk-the hans tar the * eas Willard has evidently seen! jimmy Richardson, Beetle secretary. is They are not the official all-star ne. | the Nght at last Within a week | on bie way to the Seattle traini lectiona for the year, as all of the|*fter Demipsey gave him the worst|St Stockton. He teft tase t. referees have not submitted their | beating & heavyweight champion | dete. ever received, the supergiant bat Sunday's games are not Scotch.| tet Was a. subject for the joke [English melees, but «imply contesta| WTiters. Willard has spoken of hack" several times; but between two squads picked from both | “coming Jack Adams. T divisions. ’ [he knows better, and just likes to] gad Archie ane ee a “am ‘anew The teams will line up as follows: | tlk SENIORS The lightweight cla has devel Team No, 1—Fletcher, goal; Pur. | Ped few superiors to Freddy Welsh, I tell 3 . os van new, alth: vis, Watts, backs: Simpson, Kelly, former champion, in cleverness, mean edie ie poh |McGrath, halfbacks; W. Dowie,| Welsh never had a punch, but was better control of Burns, Forgis, Cornthwaite, Kemp. |" Clever he had litte trouble with | ton, forwards: Fitzpatrick, Martine-| the contenders for his crown until sen, Richardson, Pond, spares. |the greater Benny Leonard knocked |, Team No, 2—Piteon, goal; Gal) bim out in nine rounds. braith and Upton, hacks; MeKillium, |. Welsh was smart. He quit right Abbe White halfbacks; Stronge, | there. He is successfully running a sas’ ehgeae Se te x | Bennett, Weston, Barwicke, Car |@ health farm and gymnasium now, | won't report until May this micheal, forwards; Maront, Patmore,| and never makes any foolish cracks | McKinley, McCall, spares. about regaining bis crown, altho in ompneine McGrath and Galbraith will cap-| point of age he is still in his prime.| Don't be surprised if O'Doul te turned the Vernon Tigers tf he doesn't rade for the Yanks, unless he doubtful if Once in a while they “come back” in the ring, but the few exceptions | merely prove the rule in the two teams. The squads will be paired off as follow Team No. 1 junior Smith (South Park) Maguire, Merz, backs: Breen, | BROWNS’ WING y hitter tien ichols, Corning, haifbacks: Caston, | - Newcombe, Berg, .Cella, . Gimuess, | CORPS SIGNED Clarke Griffiths, Washington lead- | forwards | ; , says he won't consider @ trade for ton, goal: Peters, |,.MOBILE, Ala. March 2.—Whe o " "| “Dixie” Davis signed his 1922 con: | |W pet Seen tiger Bs ca so tract with the St. Louly Browns here | Nt f Knowies, Landstrom, W. Griffiths, | 7°sterday, Manager Lee Foh! heaved wee ging back. ta eae a gud ; a sigh of relief, as the signing of Da- | - ree » ebhieeis “Witt. be oi ea }v' completes the Browns’ hurling | Duffy Lewis, Salt Lake manager, is phe . iad spares will be named! corps, and the holdout nightmare, #0 | ane for a first class first base omorro mn er sark | ft a& the pitching staff is concerned, an tha seaioh. genie, while, the Cowan EAR CHAMPS ar team was the only junior team|50 BOOKMAKERS TO DO BATTLE to be outfitted, so t asked tir unterms| ARE SUSPENDED | ‘The sport of “following the ponies” Bryan Downey, who thinks he is will not be | middleweight champion of the world, to w KIRKWOOD LIKES U. 8. A. | was given quite a setback this week |W!!! meet Ted Block of Detroit in Joe Kirkwood, Australian profes. (jw New York, and more than 50 heck |@, 20-round go. at Indianapolis on sional golfer, arrived at San Fran-| makers are now out on bonds of| Maren 13. The dispatch says that cisco this week with his manager.| $260 each, following arrests made|Bl0ck claims = the middleweight Kirkwood announces that he intends | this week. The men are accused hse gpa of “the: Pacific “coast to take up permanent residence in| violating the provisions of the Locke Block’ is. undoubtediy”.& tiff .eon: this Gophtes ntgamnbling ta |tender for the toreador champion- ship of the entire country p DATE SET FOR FOR COAST PUCK TITLI He will undoubtedly be ed March § has been set as the date the pivot of | The latter youngster has the Vancouver offense and detense,| some great hockey in the pinches |r the opening tilt for the Western rs and promises to develop into one |"9ckey tie between the champions The big series will settle one qules:| of the stars of the game, of the Pacific coast and Prairie tion. That is the superiority between cording to officials of the Boh Archie Briden and Gordon coast title by defeating the Univer. Fraser will be ready for duty. sity of California here on April 22, it champs on the peut play the © Prairte March 11, most conspicuous figure in glovedom, not excepting the less ants when | does PUCK TITLE GO) | Happy Holmes and Hugh Lehman.| This series will be the rubber be Referee Ion couldn't make up his|tween Seattle and Vancouver, both}, The first kame will be played in | mind as to whom to place at goal on] clubs having won two playoffs dur-|{"@ home city of the coast cham his all-star team, and so he left it to| ing the past four seasons, — pions, the second two or three days a Vancouver seribe to pick the goalle, | later on the Pr airie m's ic nd he picked Lehman. Any Seattle] The Prairie league teams are fac nope would have named Holmes on jing a flock of games. before they de |VARSITY CREW ris showing on Seattle ice, which h elde their tithe I nonton cinched been super-hockey all year. Total! first place last night by hooking Cal- GETS INVITE goals in the two games will count | Rary’ 11 to 2, Now Calgary and Re-} University of Washington is In re- and it's a matter of goulles that will | eina will play a homeand-home se-|ceipt of an official invitation to take decide it [ries tonight and tomorrow night for|part in the annual intercollegiate | econd p The winner of this|crew regatta to be held at Pough- With Jack Walker back in the | series will play nd-home se-|keepsie, N. Y., June 26, It is pen game, it means that Seattle will | riey with aturday and{believed likety that the university be well fortified with subs for | Monday for the title, The winner jauthorities will consent to the trip the first time in » long while, | will come to the Coast March § and {unless Washington wins the Pacific Only Two | Yank Jobs | | Are Open New Yorkers Need Out-! | fielders and Third Sack- | (ers Look Strong Again | CNY two positions can be consid ered open for competition on the ew York Yankee squad even at this jearly date | Of course the American league champions will have to find a couple) of capable outfielders to replace Babe | Ruth and Bob Meusel during the | firet month of the season unless | Judge Landis lifts their suspension, | {but when ftuth and Meusel report they are cinches for two outfield | positions. | On the other hand, young Miller | is far from certain to hold the cen ter field job permanently aa hig hit | ting fell off during the closing weeks of the neason Bo far “Chick” Fewster and Roth ro the best prospects for outfield |duty, altho Manager Huggins is ex- pected to wwing a deal within the next few weeks that will plug up his outfield, ‘The other position open iw third base, Mike McNally is a light hit- ter, while Frank Baker han slowed | up in the field, No real prospects are in sight, altho the Yanks are understood to be dickering for How- jard Shanks of Washington. Fiverett Scott is a einch for short, is Aaron Ward for second. Wally Pipp isn’t the, best first sacker in the business, but he is a steady per- former It will be hard for new pitchers to break in with the Yanks The Gotham club will have one of the strongest hurling corps in the ma- jors, with Joe Bush, Carl Mays, Sam Jones, Waite Hoyt and Bob Shaw- |key doing the right-banded flinging. and Harry Harper and Lefty O"Doul counted as the reguiar southpaws, The catching department just about closed with Wally Schang | in the role of chief receiver. Al is also!by ‘Devormer, Coast’ graduate, showed PAGE 11 QUINTET CINCHES STAR BASKETBALL TITLE BY WIN Praise Is ”: Killing to New Stars Press Spotlight Makes Go- ing Tough for Young- sters; Rapp Case Cited HW YORK, March 2—Killing bald players with sweet not words is every season some promising player finds such poison, From all early indications the dowe will be hand- ed out this year to Glenn Killin- ger, “all- Amer- can” back, three letter man and ¢ of the best athletes developed at Penn State, where they build them rat The nicest things in the sport vocabulary were written about Kil- linger while he was running wild over the Eastern gridirons, and hard- ly had the cheers from the sidelines subsided when his baseball virtues came out to be extolled in print. Before he had signed a contract Hugo Bezdek, his coach, said he was ready for the big leagues. Fred Mitchell said he was sure to make good, Several New York scouts said he was the ripest thing in the coun- jtry. Before he has done a lick of work with the Yankees down South the word is filtering North that he is a lovable, clean-type athlete and a sec- ond Frank Frisch. If he makes any | kind of a showing in the early games he will be exploited to the skies. The same thing happened. last year to Goldie Rapp, He was killed sweet words. The writers with the team measured him for a uniform too big to fill. They expected him to do much and when he found himself | well in the closing weeks of the *ea-|cut out for a job beyond his ability }eon and should have a lot of work|he slumped until the Giants traded this summer }the third catcher. When Ruth and Meusel get back in the fold, with the powerful pitching the Yanks will have, they look like | jean league IITHSQUAD ENTERS STAR | JUNIOR LOOP if eleventh team has filed Its entry in The Star Juntor Base. ball league. The latest squad to en ter ts the Falcon Athletic club team, The squad will be made up of for- Mer eervice tossers now living in the University district Other teams expecting to enter should file their applications with the sporting editor of The Star by phone, mail, or cal] at The Star. The next meeting of the league will be held at The Star March 10. Further details can be obtained from this department. CANADIANS ARE AFTER A COACH ‘The Canadian Amateur Athletic union is planning to obtain a good | national track coach, who will at- tend the principal meets held in the Dominion in the next two seasons and scout for likely material for the Canadian 1924 Olympic squad. The | coach will also train the best pros. | pects he discovers, according to ten- | tative plans. } Real Painless Extraction Free Daily In order to (whalebone) introduce our new plate, which is the | lightest and strongest plate known, | not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. See ee 88 teed for 15 years, | en in the morn- | me day. ination and eae free. none w the Test ef Time Most of our present patronage | recommended by our early custom +, whose work is still givin When coming to our office, be sure you are in the right piace. Bring This ad with you Cat-Rate OHI Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Ovpeaite Fraser-Paterson Co. CREDIT - GLADLY 2 otis CLOTHES FOR MEN & WOMEN EASY PAYMENTS | FOUNTAIN LUNCH NOW OPEN—NEW HOME OF WAKEFIELDS—BILLIARDS GREEN BUILDING—FOURTH AND PIKE Al Hoffman will be |nim to the Phils—the worst punish- ment in the National league. Marty O'Toole was killed by a ballyhoo, Coming from the Ameri- can association, booked ag a phenom, the team to beat again in the Amer-!anq the highest priced player in base- ball, he flivvered Rube Marquard came near doing the same thing after he wae afflicted with the Utle of the “$11,600 beauty,” which soon turned into the “$11,000 lemon.” The fang expected too much of him, and it was only by great courage that Richard De Marquis was able to stick it out. MILWAUKEE, W March 2.-~ John Layton, Sedalia, Mo. retained his’ world three-cushion billiard title here last night by defeating Alfred De Oro, 60 to 44, in 68 innings. lA Championship Hockey Big Play-Off Series Vancouver vs. Seattle Friday, March 3rd 8:30 P. M. Reserved seats now $n sale at the Arena office, 1210 Sth ave. Phone Main 2493. Ice Skaters, Attention! Ice Carnival and Masquerade Tuesday, March 7 Boat Schedules —SAVE MONEY= Travel by sfeamer TACOMA DAILY, 9% 11 a.m. 1, 3,5, 7p me Special ‘Sat. and Sun. Trip, 9 p. mm S0c FOR SINGLE TRIP 80e FOR MOUND TRIP VICT. PorRT ANGELE SAN JUAN ISLAND POIN BELLINGHAM- ANACORTE NN PORT TOWNSEND RAIL AND MILL HOQD CANAL POINT PUGET SOUND NAVIGATI ION SL MAN DOK BARBER SHOL