The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 10, 1922, Page 5

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Both ‘Men Plans for Have Real | Star Swim Southpaws| Meet Loom a Making. Ce oa ad ha | Water Carnival to Be taged Again in Au-| feats-Other FRieeT eos gust BY LEO H. LASSEN OXING ertticn wilt tell you that a good left hand Is and defensive Weapon in the ring, particularly ‘in a@ short, fast contest. Many times, of course, a K. 0 Puncher will beat a jabber and knock him for the loop, but according to the book the left-hand boys lead the league, When Jimmy Duffy and Travie Davis meet in their six-round battle at the Arena Tuesday night two of the best left hands in the welter- weight business will try to outsmart each other. Duffy is trying a comeback after his disastrous trip back East, in which he lost to Bobby Barrett and Lew Tendier, But when Duffy went East he trained down eight pounds! in 11 days and his two fights here with George Ingle and Ed Pinkman ‘were the only bouts he had had in months, It showed poor manage ment, In his two starts here Duffy won ing the boys boxing skill the likes of in _& Seattle ring. Duffy is essentially a short-bout fighter. He has been trained tn the four-round game on the Coast. fact, he beat Lew Tendler for four rounds. There is no excuse for his showing with Barrett, who stopped hima in four rounds, James simply forgot to duck. But after a long rest Duffy ie starting up again and, with youth end speed in his favor, he still has a Sweet chance to climb to the top of the ladder im the glove Davis, when he is right, is one of the best mitt slingers in the business. He showed that with Jack Britten here, and he also showed that he can fight when he has to when he lined up with Bobby Harper last Tuesday. Both Davis and Duffy have won- @erful left hands, Davis using his southpaw mitt both In jabbing and hooking, while Duffy is a bit the fast- er and must be given the edge in G Twenty-Four 5-cent Packages of the New Little A new right. | without working up a sweat, show-| which they hadn't ever seen before | ILANS for the Third Anggal Star city swimming meet, which will be held during the first two weeks in | | August, will be laid soon and prepa Will get under way * Henry ,manager of the 1921 | moet, [handle the reins again, | fine job of it last year, the success | of the meet being due largely to his untiring work, Present plans call for preliminaries in the junior girl and boys’ events at both Madrona and at Green Lake, with the senior men and women’s | jevents and the finals of the junior | swima to be held in the Lake Wash. ington canal. the best offensive | "ns for the big water carnival | aquatic critic, ‘Swimming Stars May Come Here Plans Being Made to Bring Weismuller and Other) Stars to Seattle N the interest of aquatics and that the Seattle world’s greatest ere in the} water, C. ¥ Northwest spent Friday in Seat | Ue. ag ees invited by The Star to/ have He did a/ athietic club, the new marvel of th Arrangements are being made to Johnnie Weismuller, Chicago e swimming world who has set more national and international records into brackets within the last year than any other swimmer, to appear at the Crystal Pool after his compe. ition In Ran Francisco It ig Don Vicker’s ambition to have his protege, Metrie Konowaloff meet the champion In a 60-yard competi tion, The Chicago marvel swims the distance in 29 seconds while the local footwork, an the showing of the "twellter has been clocked time and again men here, doing the distance in 20 fiat, With Tn matching men of the caliber of} competition it is thought that Metric Davis, Duffy and Harper, the local Hleague class, The fans would not | support the bush league smokers that were in vozue last winter, under the jodious Pavilion agreement, but, as |the writer has stated time and again, Seattle i one of the best boxing cen- ters in the country. Rube Finn, whose familiar figure |for some time, will do battle with | Larry O'Brien, a tough heavyweight from Snohomish, in the Both boys are hard sockers and fig ured to please the lads who ait in th: [dollar seats and delight in the flow) }of crimson and the thud of shoulde! | blades on the resin. Boy McCasatin will swing his hefty wallops in the direction of Bobby Grey, a new welterweight from Den. ver, in the apecial event. McCass lin's style fs familiar to Seattle fans. |and Grey's action in his workouts in- miller will put up a tough tilt. Johnny Merkle of Ballard and Al Gower of Reston, welterweight», will mix mm the second bou' Stillman, Bremerton lightweight, and Dode Bercot, Monroe's fighting log- ger, are to open the show. Jimmy Duffy blew in from Oak- land last night and was to work out at Austin & Salt's gymnasium at 3 o'clock this afternoon, while Davis ‘was due to step thru his paces an hour earlier, IVE | promoters are finally getting into big! give the fans a run for their coin and | has been absent from the Arena ring | t he merton ; pean orp Sydlnpay nem jom chosen to lead the Indians on and Chris | | i] } can be forced to lower his time and! perhaps reach the line before the Windy City expert. Another event for the summer that Werner is trying to stage in Seattle, is that of having Helen Wainwright Olymplo diving champion and holder | of the most of the women’s national records, with her team mates Aileen Riggen and Edith MeGary, appear in competition tn Seattle. These three girls are all under 14 years old and are America’s fastest women swim. mers. They will represent the New third go.) York Woman's Swimming Associa. jon on their tour which will take In he most important swimming tanks | in the United States |INDIAN CLUB ELECTS BUTLER) At an athletic meeting yesterday | at West Seattle high school, Butler was elected captain of the 1922 baseball team and Archie Blox the track next spring. THE WEEK'S LEADING HITTERS American league—Sisler, Browns, 424; Stephenson, Cleveland, .419; Miller, Philadelphia, .294; Speaker, Cleveland, .363. National league—Hornaby, 8st. Louis, .585; Goudy, Boston, .37%; 1. Griffith, Brooklyn, .375; T. Griffith, Brooklyn, .370, 367. fans may witness the} THE SEATTLE SBILL ESSICK IS BEING TALKED ABOUT AS YANKEE MANAGER | GREAT LEFT HAND BOUT EXPECTED WHEN DAVIS AND DUFFY MIX Von Elm to Meet Stein | for Title | Northwest Golf Champion Meets Bon Stein in Links| Tourney Final BY ALEX C, R ICTORIA, B. C., June 10.—Geo Von Bim of Salt Lake City | will defend his title of Northwest | golf champion when he meets Bon Stein, the young Seattle star, in the final 36-hole match the Cot-| | Wood course here today, whieh will) ring down the curtain on the annual | | Pacific Northwest Golf association's meet started last Monday. Mrs, Hutchings, a grand golfer | from Winnipes, will oppose Mins} | Anderson, a former Canadian tive holder,.of Vancouver, B. women's championship final match which is at 18 holes. ‘The appear ance of Von Kim and Hutchings in their respective finals ix, according to the dope, ax both players have C., in the! been considered the class of the m all the way thru and it is almost a cinch that the Balt Lake | lad will retain his title and that the | Winnipes Player will be the 1922 women's champion, Of course, there for an upset but very remote | ix always a chan | the chances are thene cases | ‘The defeat of Mra, Fred Jackson jof Karlfheton was yesterday's sur- pring ax she expected to win against Misx Anderson, after she had gain Jed much a wonderful vietory over | Mra, Sweeney the previous day. The strain of that Sweeney match must have had its effect on the Barling ton woman in the home half of! yesterday's play because she lost ali| trol of her shots and missed many chances to win. Results of yesterday's play: Amateur championship, Von Elm} beat Watson five and three; Stein| | beat Spiers one up, Women's chan Pionship, Mrs. Hutchings beat Mr Crane four and three; Mies Ander- son beat Mra, Jackson two up; mix- ed foursome, Mr. and Mra, Ercel, Kay, Portland, 82674 Mra Bellingham, meet in the first) | flight final thin afternoon. Ted! Knudsen, of Inglewood, lost his! [third flight | John Hart at the second extra hole, and Dr. Clyde Mattice was defeated j ard, Seattleite, fifth flight finals by HM. G. Garrett, iP jolub stil] has a stron | close. | Hilltoppers | place club four markers to the good STAR Quays Win Final Prep Ball Tilt Hilltoppers Slug Out Win) ,; in Seventh, Pounding Tigers for Five Runs OUNDING out an 8 to Broadway by a batting rally in th nth inning, Queen Anne clung to ite slim cha for all-city | high school baseball honors at Denny field Friday afternoon The Quays’ Anne ix leading by a frac ame, but pennant, for the ‘f game remaining with the powerful Franklin t i If Broadway wins, the title r school, but a Franklin win will hand the honors to the Quays. Until the seventh, the game was Broadway drove three runs across the plate in the second inning Queen Anne countered with two in chance for the jthe fourth and tied the score in the | ¢ fifth with a lone tally In the first half of the Broadway forged into a one-run lead, but Queen Anne's slaughter tn the seventh put the game on ice for the | five runs put the seoond- Broadway desperately tried to tle up the game by a rally in the eighth, but the effort was nipped in the bud after one run was scored. The oo nH. E Broadway..... 288 8 Queen Anne - 8 147 Batteries—Nakao, Griffiths and Burnsed; Brittain and MeKenzie. VIC HURLEY IS TRACK LEADER | Members of the University of Washington track squad have elect led Victor Hurley, star sprinter, to |lead the Sun Dodgers on the 1922 of Victoria. The finals of the Pacific North. west men's handicap championship of the Victoria Goif| KB. Woodland (22, of B.C. as the finals. Rarrett (8, club and H. Grand Forks, be the usual driving and approach- ing contests, It has been a won- in the sixth Might finals by P. E.|derful week of grand golf and ev.|\ feet Mulrooney of Missoula. Another) erybody seems to be of the same Gerald Shannon, of the| opinion that the 1922 annual meet Bigbee, Pitisburg,| North End club, was defeated in the|at Victoria will go down on the| records an the greatest ever, win over | | the Broadway igers have one) mains with the Pine st. | seventh | | ABR" | the | hits his stride | RUTH is on his way. season in Chicago Friday, tween himself and the leaders—Bing woe be to the Americ AVE DANFORTH turned tn his for the St, Louis Browns this yea Sox yesterday. This big southpaw mi deliver, He was bought from th | tion last fall, and great things were achedule is now over, |in pitching last year with a cellar team, | Will be doubly dangerous, HE death of Jim Dunn, Cleveland the most popular fellows in basel ‘The big boy hit his fifth home run of and he’s rapidly closing the gap be- | Miller and Ken Williams, Once he pan league pitchers: first good game that he has pitched | ar when he trimmed the Boston Red ay put the Browns in front if be can Columbus club in the American associa expected of him. He led the A. A Once he gets going the Browne owner, ball. marks the passing of one of | He did much to put the Amer-| joan league on its feet and he was well liked thruout the baseball world, | |The Indians will miss him, | TOHN McGRAW, New York Giant now with Cincinnati, the days of Honus Wagner. that Caveney is finally hitting the Coast league last year. year, He is just about the wh stopped by Cincinnati the other day sticking to the straight and narrow. jhard to deat | and he can wallop the is the greatest shortstop that he has seen since | Which is compliment enough and proves | UTCH” RUETHER must be watching his step in the big show this Ruether always had a world of natural ability, manager, eays that Jimmy Caveney, gait that made him the star of the| wle Brooklyn pitching staff. He was after winning eight straight games. but he had a difficult time But when he’s right he's certainly old onion, too. DR. HANLEY NEW BOXING BOARD HEAD 2LLOWING the resignation of Dr, Walter Kelton as head of the Seattle boxing commission, Mayor Edwin J. Brown has ap. pointed as his successor Dr. BE. T. Hanley. Dr. Kelton leaves the position of commission chairman with the glove | game in the smoothest-running con- | dition it has experienced in years. | Adoption of the Arena ring as the | site for all shows has enabled the [gate receipts to materially increase tand allow promoters to show higher- priced and better boxers than for | Wheeler, Earlington, and Mra, How-| is also scheduled for today with Dr.| erly. Beginning with Tuesday's smoker, six-round boxing will again be in vogue here, The four-round game final majch . against | ‘The wind up of the tournament will|'" at best but a makeshift; and the | change in number of rounds is the | final step in putting the game on Rade Roth bite hie ffth homer and Mensel hit his fifth homer, but the fox mauled Sam Jones, and beat FY the Yanks, 10 to 6 A Whole Carton of Luscious, Pep-Producing The Get Yours Today! Sun-Maid Between-Meal Raisins package, full of luscious, little seedless raisins, to eat between meals, at school, or at home. Rich in digestible, “three o'clock fatigue.” Pep Up on Sun-Maids Your friends and neighbors who are not now taking The Star will be glad to help you. Get only three of them to agree to take The Star for two months. All subscriptions MUST BE NEW, that is, people who are not now having The Star delivered to them. energizing nutriment—fine for A “natural, healthful candy.” A SWEETMEAT SE) it real candy food. SUBSCRIPT Oh, boy! 1 AM NOT NOW HAVING T S: RAISINS or Girl Wh SiN Main PAULSEN 2S 24 fuli packages—plenty for everyone. ION BLANK I hereby subscribe to The Stay for Two Months, and thereafter until I order same discontinued. 1 agree to pay the Carrier at the rate of 50c per month, HE STAR DELIVERED TO ME ADDRESS Subscriptions to Sun-Maid Raisins To Every Seattle Boy Just Three New 0 Secures Star —24 packages, enough to last a month, SUN DODGER AND BADGER CREWS READY | [JADISON, Wis, June 10—Both the University of Washington |and Wisconsin crews are putting the | finishing touches to their gruelling practice period and today are pro- nounced in shape for their dual race of Monday evening at 6:30. On their superb showing against |the 1922 California varsity, the far- wentern crew is a favorite, but Wis- consin supporters are far from hopeless, as Coach Vail's eight ts | fast and @ representative Wisconsin squad. In the mile and a quarter run, the | | Wisconsin crew has made remark- | ably fast time: but the Washington crew is figured as the stronger over the regulation three-mile course, MITCHELL BEATS RAY GLEN EAGLES, Scotland, June 10-—-Abe Mitchell, one of England’ most prominent professional golfers, won the Thousand Guineas cham- pionship here today by winning from Ted Ray two and one in the final round. GIVEN A Little Effort on Your Part and This Whole Carton of Delicious Raisins Is Yours and then some. Treat the Whole Family Have subscribers sign this Subscription Blank, then hop on a street car and make a bee-line for The Star office and get your carton of PHONE NO. per month. Collect No Money for the paper—our carrier will do the rest. subscriptions must be paid in advance at the rate of 50c Sun-Maids. on City Subscriptions. Simply take the order Out- of-town $150, 000 Price Set — by Owner |Ed Maier ‘Values Essick Highly; Miller Huggins Has No Prestige BY LEO H. ‘LASSEN N spite of the fact that Miller Huge gins, the mite” manager of the? New York Yame kees, led the rtham team to its first American eS league pennané — las t season, is now the American again, gossip not down that hig” days are num. ered as of the Yanks. And who is being considered aa successor? No other than Vii 3 Bill Essick, the silent leader of the! Vernon Tigers. " Essick has had wonderful as @ pilot in the Coast league, en ning two pennants in sucer sending a flock of players to the leagues and getting the most out) his men. The Tigers all swear by and his fine personality has the biggest part in his success. Essick js also a smart bail man and he handles pit with the best of them. Ed Maier, owner of the club, has set o price of $150,000 Exssick if the Yanks want him to their club. It's @ cinch that Essick never stand for the tactics of Mays, Babe Ruth, Waite Hoyt ai the other prima donnas on the ¥i kee club that have made Hi joke of baseball, BASEB PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE _ st N MAIN \Ib RAISING

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