The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 5, 1922, Page 12

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/ 1 i PAGE 12 Tribesmen five Great Day With the Willow Gardner Is Found for 10 Hits in Opener, but Wins, 6 to 4; Burger Hurls Shutout Ball and Blanks Angels in Second Encounter BY SEABURN BROWN ITH both clubs playing airtight baseball on defense— W but three errors cropping out in the double bill—Seattle took both games from Los Angeles in the opening of the series here yesterday, winning the first tilt 6 to 4 and the second 3 to 0. Seattle's swatsmiths had a great day at the platter, Gardner and Burger, tho hit with consistency by the Angel sh rs, tightened in the pinches. er proved no puzzle to the visitors in the opening | uelee, his delivery being nicked for 10 hits, but the “old fox” | had the Indian sign on the south THE SEATTLE STAR Home-Run Craze to } FRONT JACK KNIFE SEATTLE ‘INDIANS OPEN ANGEL SERIES WITH ‘DOUBLE. wicroyp Leonard WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, Winner Is Closely Pressed by Milton wr 3 e 133 38 WaneSoon Larry Lajoie Star of Yore, Declares Speaker Type Superior to Ruth's BY HENRY L. FARRELL W YORK, July 6 (United Press) Larry Lajole, the old hero of batters of all times, ought to know something about hitting. In @ recent interview with the Unt ted Prony correspondent in Cleveland, he discussed the present-day batters with the old timers. erners when danger threatened, and the support accorded to both the big right-hander and Burger was steady Fig at times sensational Messrs, Lyons and Crandall, who} performed on the knoll for the brea, mys rg Pot. | Angels, were as lambe ied to the| 32.421 | slaughter, insofar as one Bill Stumpf, | ge MI | Seattle first baseman and home plate | b 4 jpilferer de luxe, was concerned. All| “ Bil did was to step to the plate) 2 2 {seven times and bang out six hits ev | during the afternoon, tn addition to} a partect exhibition around the in- itial m FO. A. | “Brick” Eldred, too, boosted his Ae TR stick average. He hit a home run in| oe the first game, ax did Manuel Cueto. | Fr ee The opening battle was more or | ia * less of a succession of long base | 3 : knocks and runs, with the Indians; : 3 Piholding « comfortable lead all the @ ¢ © Ol way. Te ie in 2], Gardiner Kept the state clean un. | HP Gd. ht [tit he wtxth frame, when a triple by | eo3 Lyons and single by McCabe scored | s 4 *\a tally. Rallies in the eighth and 723 Siminth periods accounted for three : ' 1} more. Si 08 ‘The second game early developed 2 2 fo Sian the earmarks of a genuine pitch. 1 e ing duel between the veteran Ole TS te Tp yj} Crandall and Lefty Burger. This 48 91 15 ft /aituation endured until the sixth in- @1021—4/ning. when singles by Adams and 2222 2-10' Barney and doubles by Lane and) S22 E Sif] etarea drove in threw scores. tor—-Lyohs| Crandall kept the plate clean for! Lyone 3. | the remainder of the afternoon, while Bases on dalle Off t-von* | the Angel baserunners all died on the Rite—Lyona, Stumpf. Two-base hits; Paths. Moremsé. Conte, Twombly, Tobin Car-| The Killifer clan waxed dangerous il Gearifien Bite——Ceste, ‘Stumpf. a in the third frame of the closing he Legg hoe — ugnt | Joust. Three successive singles put ‘eteattng Barney. Double plare—Wisver-| Burger in a hole, but the effort ftv. hath te ene te. a Manabe te one! wae am the southpaw bore down ‘ i, . ‘Byron, ‘Seeent Gane HPO, A B. > eee f a b ay Si , 3: 3S we ED ne : 2 i e:. ? o th *« : ’ ’ TB F | n. A eaterday’s hero—Wi apertar. ‘2°? Siar throw to the gg tam, | eee: tee wees ¥ aye | lor the a a8 Robins, amd the game ended Sail. | at ; Rogere Hornady hit Bis 19th homer : nd gave the Cardinals « 6-t0-6 victory H the Reds in the second game, esp ¥ had dropped the first sensi 3 een @ Grove in both rune that en- | fatter Jack | Quinn had beat them 4 to @ in the opener. | | cnn Bae and White So tne, Tirowns: losing” the fire | ==. 3. and winning aMvivanwe | ‘The Yanks dropped the firet game to} the Athletics, 2 to 1, and won od 6 to 4. | The Cubs took « pair from the Pirates | at #4 and 8-0, both ‘ ‘The Indians er ends from the Tigers, jes: Mitchell and Yelb Ba | jana and Elliott. Molla Mallory in Semi-Finals; Wins Over English Star H. EB. , . . ms Sacramento . . iff. WIMBLEDON, England, July Vernon Z 6 2 4 6|} 5.—In.@ drizzle rain which made Batteries: Penner and Cook; Gtlder|| footing insecure and good tennis and Murphy. | aimost impossible, Mrs, Molla tis sen R. H. £,|| Mallory, American champion, || MO MMEE cas os idenerivercse @ ‘ 4{|] worked her way into the semi. || At Uakiand . || finals of the British national Batteries: “Kailio and Jenkins; Mrause| ier. end Ko championship here today. Mid nn & Mrs. Mallory defeated Miss ait Lake ‘ 2 @ilp, : : r / poe : 73. 3] | Easington, 6-2 and 64. ‘The |} ’ je: Thurston and Antingon,|| American title holder had little || cones and Koehler difficulty in winning the first set — a but she was hard preased in the AMERICAN eager second set when she drove into |} et: Lauts “ the net repeatedly | jw York .. Oe Chicago Detroit . oar ee Washington and Gharrity, NATIONAL LEAGUE | ually forthcoming when | values of | building | for | do I never take on | many athletes do when they tempo Efforts by premier hatters to be come Babe Ruth's successor are re sulting in more home runs, but are causing the lows of many ball games, | beenuse they strike out or lift pops in the attempt to put the bail out of the park. Singles were plenty good in my day,” he said. “We wanted to get on base and we employed any method to get there, If a bunt would work we trie¢ that and if a wild piteher | was in the box, we always tried for & pase “To try to knock the cover off the ball every time up was unheard of, No manager would tolerate it." Lajoie believes the home run craze will pass away because it will by overdone. “Walt untit the batting averages of | these home run hitters begin to dwindle and then the fane will want to see the consistent batter—the player who tries to win for his team by getting on base any way he can. “The pitchers are solving the weak. these distance hitters, } neesen of slowly but surely and if the batters easy marke. “Any man who can drive as many dalle out of the parks ae Ruth has done is certainly deserving of great | credit, but a batter of the Warner or | more dangerous.” Speaker type tw fi PHIL KRUG EATS WAY TO SUCCESS EW YORK, July 6.—Phil Krug, welterweight boxer, who has de. feated such fistic stare as Mike O'Dowd, Mike Gibbons, Lou Bogash, Georgie Ward, Dave Rosenberg and | IE Jiramy O'Gatty in the short epace of 15 months, has a unique explanation for his success. Krug doesn’t eredit his man. | ager, his own natural speed and ring ability, his brains, his training methods, his nationality, or any one of the half-hundred explanations us a fighter steps from the mediocre glass into | the limelight He says he has literally eaten his way to the top! Here's Krug’s explanation “From my earilest recollection 1 have always given serious thought | to the care of my physical seif. | “I am careful of my diet at all! times. i “T never deprive myself of sleep for foolish pleasure. | “T never use liquor or tobacco, con atdering them bad for the attainment of & perfect physical body “Even in the war, where 1 served in Uncle Sam's undersea fleet, I avoided tobacco, though it seemed as it every man used it | “Proper eating and sleeping are the essentials of a fine and healthy | body “I regulate my diet according to the United States government calor: | showing the relative food | the different articles of aily consumption. “Many of them with great body. alue were not to my liking but I made them a part of my diet | and soon acquired a taste for them “If you want be perfectly healthy you must what's ¢ you, not what you like. “1 have found that by eating as T loore fat, as so jes chart, cat od rarily cease training. “The result fw that training for a bout is not hard for me, just being | a part of my daily living | “] never have to tax my by forced denial in the eating or undergo hurried reduction b use heavy perspiration | “Roth of these tend to shorten the atrength matter of | means of violent exercine to c “a full elgat hours’ j absolute necessity | “And to derive the best results| from your sleep, you should lie with | your body north and south } sleep ts an : ‘Wor, toat, pet.| “My uncle, who was a aclentiat - New Tork “a m4 447} eave me this advice many years ago. First game— me 2 bey sag be 4 69) The electrical currents which pans | eta BE | SF from the like to the unlike poles of oie a reeageperde | ae the north and south are extremely | man; Hasty and [Pitteturs a a | beneficial to the body In sleep, and Second game— a Et | where the body is In a north and New York ¢ 17 6! south position, can pass through Philadelphia . im ‘ ry rR on. £ | much easier. Batteries: Jones and Hoffman; Naylor, Ww Mm” 1 1} Harrie and Perkins. o. 33 at and sleen correctly and you! shi Donohue and Wingo, | will find yourself filled with a new | (Piewt game ker and Clemou rs te joy of living.” Cole and sale. Sherdell and Ainemith. | on sa by TO TRY RING| Detroit .... 4 " H. £1 Lots of baseball players have Batteries: Coveleskie and O'Neal ae ae jon, Johnaci a 12 achieved fame on the stage—but re een Aonenen Ae @ Hubbell, Weinert and Hen- | “Rip” King, Portland backstop is out 2 Fillingim, Ovachger and| after another type. He is showing #o First same— R. much cleverness with his fists that ulengs 5 R. H. 9. | Doe Burke, Portland trainer, is train ou Waitéries: “Roverison ‘ana 8 : ing him with a view to making him a it, Shocker and Severed Becond game Chicago Bt. Louis ; Batteries: Faber and Schalk Shocker and Severeid Danforth Aldridge First game R 2 on and Jonnard. Boston ... . - At Washington 2 8 =| Tho score. a at B les: Quinn and Ruel; Erickson, | Brookiyn hit 6 1 6 Puillipe and Gharrit ee 4 game rR Ww, 6 and aoe Cie Mae ard 6.4 Washington , e called Batteri Fiercy and Ruel; Francis ia isih inning; wet grounds.) i | heavyweight defunct Western Intern eral years ago, boxer with a wallop. speed, cleverness and the rest of it SCHINKLE BACK | ON THE COAST Ad Schinkle, who came from the| tional circuit to the Sacramento outfield, is serving his second period as a Coaster. Sev he was a pitcher on the Salt Lake club, the Cleveland Indians and one of the! while | treacen The front jack-knife dive is one of | pointed continue the free swing they will be | lbaxeball Hube Waddell, | However, [short game and a few for their all | most likely candidate for Jack Demp-! *printing re jsey's heavyweight title came to a sudden stop here last night, when/ sprinter, it was sald today. | Bill Brennan easily outpointed him} The new marks he made are: | |in a 12-round go. | Sixty yards, 61.5 seconds | The bout wan a no-decision affair, | Yards, 71-10; 80 yards, 74.5; 1 but Brennan had the better of the ex. | yards. 17 yards, 121-5 seconds, | changes all the way, in the opinion Paddock also equaled the mark of of newspaper men at the ringside 93-5 seconds for 100 yards; { ~~> Kayoes |Murphy Takes Lead From Milton at 200-Mark, Kansas late Blows Out Tire; Broken Connecting Rog bess Forces Out Eddie Hearne ACOMA, July 5. —Breaking the Speedway record with an average of 97.6 miles an hour for the 250-mile di a? Italian's Seconds Toss in| Sponge in 8th Round; Wel Sau meee 2 ee ee Aileen Riggin in a front jack knife dive. The large dotted line indicates the direction of her body when photographed, | while the small diagram shows graphically the whole course of the dive. j BY AILEEN RIGGIN Olympic Fancy Diving Champion | town, Remember the toes) to keep the most interesting dives, and re.) quires a supple body. Good practice for this dive ts try ing to bend and touch your toon without bending your knees. This iv Keep in this position until nearing the water, then straighten out! emartly, entering the water head first, with the arms above the head and the fingers straight, with the good exercise for anyone forefingers touching. After standing at attention at the When entering the water, you lower end of the board, run and’ must be not tmrther than six feet, spring into the air as high a» pos | from the end of the board. nible At the top of your spring, bend Toemorrow—One and one-half som- A touc a your {forward at the hips # ervaatt di Walter Hagen Is Greatest | Golfer in Links History BY BILLY EVANS in the pictures, and read about in RY sport has at stated inter-| fiction, but seldom come across in vals its outstanding figure. In| real.Jife, Hans Wag-| Hagen is the Seal golfer. He ner, Larry LaJole, Grover Alexan-| looks the part and plays it. No task | der, Walter Johnson, Ty Cobb and scemg too difficult. He does his best | Babe Ruth have held sway jin the pinches, As a money player pe could do| he is without an equal, In all bie 0 aetna nay one elve |60lf tourneys the chief thought of made them the talk of the baseball | ')¢ other contestants te: | paersd | ~What's Hagen’s score?” agen has just won more golfing game has had its Jobn | +. by taking the British open | Jim Corbett, Bob Fits | championship. It is the firet time| Stanley Ketchel, Battling | 1, American-bred golfer has ever| Jack Britton and Benny |iuened the trick. He has so many | Other titles to his credit that he has| te employ a secretary to keep track Nelson, Leonard. | Corbett was the boxer, Fitzsim. mons and Ketehel packed a terrific of them. j punch for their weight eleon wan Recently 1 whe discussing base | known as the “Durable Dane.” Of | ball with several noted if pro: | the present champs Britton com-! fessionals. After they had quizzed | mands attention because he seems) ime with a score of questions about able to defy Father Time. Leonard] paseball I decided to get some golf is gener regarded us @ champion | ing information | who has everything. “Who ix the greatest golfer in th Billiards has had its Frank Ives, Jake Schacter, Willie Hoppe. At present the son of the late Jake Schaefer rules the billiard world. few players have ever stood out in the billiard game as Hoppe has states?” T asked “That is merely a matter of opin. | jon,” replied one of the pros, * wouldn't seem conceited I pick myself. However, no player is | tougher for me to beat than Hagen. I have beaten him, but not often, | Football bas produced any num-| “Hagens golf is really uncanny,” | ber of idols, but none greater than continued the pro. “I well remem: | Jim Thorpe, who, by the way, did ber a series of matches we played | not confine his athletic greatness to| prior to the opening of one of the| the grid tron western championships. Hagen, by | Now we come down to golf, the) the way, won the title that year | game that is fast developing into a First Hagen said he intended national Institution playing the course in better than has produced man great that day. Considerable mone was! In the game today are any ‘wagered and a big gallery followed | number of stars who stand out be-|him around. Hagen had a fat bet cause of their greatness on the links. on himself, He did ft in 74 | ome have won fame largely thru ‘The next day he «ald he would | their driving ability, others for their! play the course In better than 74 and he came right thru with a 73 around sound | “The day before the match he said ot the present galaxy of golf stars | he intended to beat and turned | Walter Hagen unquestionably is the |in a 69, Believe me, those three} most imposing figure in the golf |days caused me to have a lot of re. | world, the outstanding figure of the | spect for Hagen. Seemed as if he| game could set bis figure and then just} Hagen ts the style golfer you see! beat it.” | | PADDOCK BREAKS 5 RECORDS BRENNAN IS WINNER IN_ | MARTIN GO! rdw made here yester- SHLAND, Ky. July 6.—Bob| QANTA BARBARA, Cal, July 5.—| Martin's highly advertised cam. | ation will be made for of- | paign to establish himself as the! cognition of five new world’s | day by Charles Paddock, champion | onds for 75 yards, 'WILSON PUTS DEMARIS AWAY TRAVIE DAVIS WALLOPS GRAY former welterweight champion of the] yRUTEAND, Vt. June 6.—Johnny Const, wan awarded a four-round ver.| Wil#0n, middleweight — champion, ° Y knocked out Al Demaris in four} dict over Bobby Gray, of Denver, in| rounds here Isat night. ‘The go was the main event of the Eagles’ smok er here Tuesday is proved to be too fast for the Denver boy Some {dea of the immense cost of CARD MENTOR |some collegiate football wag con GOES TO REED | tinea in the recent report of a| NFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal,,| Committee of Yale graduates that! July 4—Charles 8, Botsford, for two hot criticism of the con. years in charge of Intramural ath-|duct of athletes at the New Haven scheduled for cision eight rounds, no-le. entered a letion at Stanford, han resigned to! ingtitution. In 1920 Yal take charge of athletics at Reed} ee ae ‘ale football re. college, Portland ceipts were $360,000 and in 1921 they were $540,000, Yet Yale finished with a deficit of $100,000, Botsford is the fifth of Stanford's athletic heads to resign recently. cently | effect that age it telling on him, and jelsion battle, he knocked out the|came in third; Jerry Wonderlic hardy Rocky Kansas, the squatty|with a Duensenberg, took rourth| OWNER OF Italian's second toxsing in the sponge | place, and another Duensenbers, | to nave him from further punish |with Harry Hartz at the wheel, cap | MORVICH A ment, after the lightweight |tured fifth .position. | vantage in | neventh round. |BUD CONNOLLY | any | Champion Is the Leader) 1 av Murphy, winner of this year’s Indianapoliy ICHIGAN CITY, Ind, July 6.—~| classic, won the 11th annual Tacoma track event here yey. After he was beaten by Welter: | terday afternoon. wolaht © hampion Jack Britton inen) Murphy drove a Murphy Special, regarded before the racg) - ney byt yin Bee as the fastest car in the United States, covering the distance I ite wore over preas gibes to the |in 2:33:55 4-5. [ Tommy Milton, whose former record average of 96.4 wag < broken by Murphy, finished a close second, timers cat 1 him at five seconds slower than the winner. Milton droves Leach Special. Roscoe Barles, an q determined to prove that he is mtill in his prime by decisively winning his! next fight He han! Last night, in the elghth round of & gcheduled 10-round, no-de- in ® Duensenberg, cham pion had battered him into paptane | news |Murphy won; but ‘Tommy Milton | Kannas, who stayed the Yimit with | pressed him at all stages of the race | Leonard in three previous bouts, and land led at the 200-mile mark. Tire | who gave the champion quite a bat-|trouble forced him out at this June tle on each occasion, was beaten ture, and Murphy's 100-mile an hour from the opening bell |pace gave him too great a lead to} He didn't have a chance ‘be overcome Once in « while his desperate ral-| paaie Hearne was forced fo aban- les would result in hanging a perl the race when a connecting rod on some far from vital spot on th® prove champion's anatomy, but Leonard) yriton looked ike a probable win- wan master of the situation thruout. ‘ner for the first 200 miles. He and He captured every round by @ Wid® | Murphy bettied for the lead on fairly margin, which wag slow and fairly |even terms until fourfiftha of the even distance was covered, Milton con- Leonard fought grimly, fiercely, — | nixtently held a lead, but was unable From the moment the men atepy to create an appreciable margin be- | to the center of the roped arena 294 tween his car and that of Murphy. faced euch other, It was apparent! Tne only injury to mar the race that the title holder was out to “get was that suffered by John Bresna- hie man.” jhan, mechanician for Eddie Hearne, Leonard used his left to good 94-/who was struck over the eye by a| the early nessions, J8-|nepbie hurled from the track by the bing Kansas off his balsnce time and | wheels of Ralph Mulford’s car. again, and following with victous up- r A crowd estimated at from 20,000 Percutn, Kansans apparently waite 49,000 witnersed the «peed classic. helpless against the varied attack. | With Kanéas rapidly tiring in the) Leonard rocked him! The “dope” ran true to form when TRUE SPORT} NCE in a great while « sportsman appears in the profes. sional ranks. Such as Ben lowner of Morvich, who sacrificed possibility of a wonderful record to keep bis word, Months ago Block promised Yorkers to give them the first |at his Kentucky Derby winner tnt | Carlton stakes at Apueduct. Twenty thousand fans went out the track. They did not know that |the great Morvich was not in and that he was facing almost defeat in spotting 15 pounds Whiskaway, the fleet Whitney Before the race, Block's told him that Morvich stood to jbeaten and that he ought to scratched. Block answered by saying that had promised to show his star thousands were there to see him, must keep his word. Morvich started. He was beaten SEALS HAVE A with right end left hooks and | eight lengths and humiliated, cravhing right eroea STAR AT SHORT (Biock teit'tnat he had kept his Badly daved by solid rmashes to While most of the attention of the| the jaw early In the elehth frame, {fang was centered upon the work of Kanane was ouickly besten into an Kamm and O'Connell, there was no Imoxt defenseless condition, and the | such thing as overlooking the work etnal knockout was prevented only | of Hal Rhyne, new Seal shortstop, by his manager's prompt action with | iast week. He got in front of all the sponge. which turned it into ®/ porta of difficult chances, and while technical one, jhe’s not a Jimmy Caveney, Rhyne's The champion seemed elated withia handy bit of bric-a-brac to tote his deciaive win, evidently regarding | around the circuit. it as a vindication of the charges that he ts on the down siting ‘SACS STILL IN HARD LUCK RO “Back to normalcy” for the mento Senators. Charley Pick crutches has been joined by the of the Solon base guardians, with an arm dislocated in and Marty McGaffigan with teeth troubles. No, there seema chance of the Indians slipping the cellar this season. In 1921 approximately 2,000,000 gal- lons of gasoline were produced a day. PACIFIC COAST BASEBALL (““texct: LOS ANGELES vs. SEATTLE _TODAY—2:45 _DOUBLE-HEADER SUNDAY, 1:30 A children (ander 12) Reserved Seats for Saturday ed free every day except end Sunday new oclling, 3163 9 | Saturday and Sunday (during Arcade Building, ' Lee Angeles series). Phone Elliett 2908 EMBRYO STAR? Billy Stepp, who chronicles sport | happenings of Portland, is setting himself up in competition to the| Frisco writers accredited with mak ing Caveney, Kamm and O'Connell worth big money. Billy doesn't wet | figures, but he tells the cock: | eyed universe that Bud Connolly, Beaver utility infielder, is a cinch to| bring loads of money to Portland club | stockholders after the kid has some seasoning. And at that, Connolly in his first year of professional ball, looks like a mighty sweet prospect MOZAR Mild as a May Morning —and as You’ve heard Mozart called a mild cigar. Mozart is mild It is to be mild. SCHWABACHER BROS. & CO., Seattle, Wash. Ine. AAO NNR QR ROLLA! Tecee

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