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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1928. THE SEATTLE STAR 7 STAR TO CONDUCT HUNT FOR WASHINGTON HEAVYWEIGHT HOPE * 8 % * WASHINGTON’S BASKETBALL HOPES HINGE ON OREGON MELEE Qe Daten, OF | | Chaney’s Powerful Left Arm Spells D-E: Le Disaster to Scores of Fighters| Tourney May Find | Bob Is Lazy; Irish On Edge The Me with the Tonight Is Real Test As Told to Leo H. Lassen CHANEY of Baltimore ee, wound of his scheduled elght-round fight with Young Sam Langford of Seattle. Referee Moe awarded the verdict when Langford grabbed Bercot around the neck with his left hand and started hitting with his right, violating the rule that forbids hold ing and hitting. The house was packed with fans and Lonnie Austin, manager of Ber- cot, was willing to let the fight go on, but Moe called it a night's work, put on his go-to-meeting vest and coat and departed to his pool room. It was all off, altho the fan aquawked long and loudly in vain. It seems that the best thing for Moe to have done would have been to warn Langford and then let the fight go on, as it was a rather sickly énding to an otherwise splendid card Langford was not in very good condition, taking the fight on a Gay's notice, when Harry Anderson Was taken ill. Bercot had won the first three rounds easily, altho Lang- ford crawled into a shell behind his arms and was hard to hit. Langford! out Doc Snell in the fifth round of the semi-windup. Snell put up a| great battle until that session. Mack} packed tod stiff a punch for him and weight, and Mickey Hannon, Seattle | boy, fought an interesting four-round | session to a draw. Neither had an edge, Hannon‘s aggressiveness off. setting Serano’s boxing. Barney Goddard, Seattle entry, swung thru four rounds from | their knees to a draw decision. Sailor Pierce, of the Pacific GENE TUNNEY WINS BACK HIS TITLE FROM CHAMP BY HENRY L. FARRELL NEW YORK, Feb, 24—Gene Tun- ney, hero of the marines during the war, joined Stanley Ketchell, Pete Herman and Joo Lynch last night fn that little group of “formers who came back,” when he defeated Barry Greb in a 15-round bout in Madison Square garden and re gained the American light heavy- weight championship. ‘The decision was popular in the New York section of the crowd that packed the garden to the rafters, but it was not unanimously ap- proved. Several competent critica thought Greb had won and others that the Worst the Pittsburg boy should have been given wag a draw. It was the unanimous opinion that ft was a very poor fight, and if preliminary boys had been, furnish. ing the exhibition instead of cham- pions they would have been thrown out of the ring, Greb and Tunney milled and wrestled like two awkward freight handlers, There were only about three good, clean blows landed, Tun- ney was rocked once with a right hook to the jaw and in the 14th Grob almost hit the floor from a right hook of Tunney‘s, U.S. NAVY YARD F ‘Take Fast Steamers at Colman Dock stoxenpt Bunday SPECIAL NIGHT SERVIC From Seattle to Bremerton Bad daturday and Bundey, 9:30 P.M. Bg Friday, Saturday and[*] ty P.M. * nurs 1p fai ‘a re * [*]irsssonger Fare, 80¢ Round Trip[*| my NAVY YARD ROUTE ["] Cotman Dook Main 1908 A NAVY Y YARD OUTE pion, won a 12round decision trom out of three, jeasily at Roosevelt, |the Teddies were badly crippled. rs contin: | these periodical flops don't seem to dampen the enthusiasm of the boys ued ir winning streak by defeat knocked the Wenatchee boy down | ing nklin, 27 to 13, at Lincoln with stomach punches, and when he! Garfield walloped West Seattle, 14 got up he knocked him out for keeps.|to $, at West Seattle, insuring the Mack looked like a million bucks. Indians of another season in the/ Art Serano, the Tacoma light-| basement. lght- | Ba weight, and Young Fossee, Everett |, ® Torney, from the ‘former inane fith, Akron, In 4 LOxvound bout. 20 to 15, altho} n Railsplit The scores follow mi club, west it Officials in for Potts, Harrison, referee; Hawley, goes Johnny Lombard, Philadelphia, vite! a iv ru ( Sohiity | Sephard, Allentown, ight. McINNIS TO A'S? phic sora NR eal isa wolght, and Goorge Brown, New| PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 24,—John i , : York, fought @ alx-round draw. P, “stuffy” McInnis, who was un-|. In ® gamo at Detroit, Hodge was = —————— conditionally released by Cleveland | 40!ns a eae Aesth hi : ; ith | Was enjoyin, ‘nt lead wi SOX RELEASE PAIR a few days ayo. may play, with) Fo" simaelt into a jam by & foolish Besa apy yan rf ccd Sy loreal Mack, manager of the White Hle-| >It of by-play, phants, is negotiating with MoInnig,| Of ate years there has been much a alec ag Hee el Leone ; complaint by the players over rough ra , Haro x ay. ‘The coner Bubser, first baseman, goes to Kal ORE MINNIS TALI a aca Feqponuiuie, for. much amazoo of the New Central league, LY Mass., Fob. 24,—"Stuffty sonaltten fay ustiallyy when a ball hits and Roy Ostergard has been turned | McInnis, former Athletio star, reli, rough aurface, It ls rendered un gver_ te Nashville of the Southora | used by tho Cleveland Indians, sn] f1° rouan p nse iok not sure that he will accept torma Pay. < (plaid i with any major league team, Hel, In the game at Detroit, with a has recelved a fine offer to play|*unner on second and the score very SOCCER WINS semi-pro ball and may accept. clone, Hodge decided the ball in his PORTLAND, Ore, Feb, 4— possension was unfit to be pitched. Peto Sauer of Nebraska won from WALKER BEATS GRIFFITH Instead of gotting the umpire's ‘Tom Grant of Spokane, Wash. hore| SCRANTON, Va. Feb, 24—Micke |. Kk Hodge simply threw the ball last night Jn nm lght-heavyweight| ey Walker, world's welterweight} !to the Detroit dugout wrestling match, taking two falls! champion, outpointed Johnny Grifyl ‘Che umpires were more surprised jon the chin during tho past month or two condition Lake Washington links one of the Closest trapped courses in the coun-| of the funniest plays of the year In than anyone in the park over Hodge's from Old Man, Snow, but o got their recreation The Jefferson park, ington and Rainier courses have owded since play was re/ st Thuraday and tho same will undoubtedly mark to-| iy |day’s opening at the nd, Lu Inglewood and University fairways. | | Hopper (2 rr | This coming spring will mark the beginning of the biggest bit of re- sling work ever put on on local At the North End the arena of the Pacific North- championship meet, July 6-14, nen outboxed Pant Colfma in the first]; inclusive, a crew of workmen have! shops. Later on he worked with] “Mac” simply couln't swat the old) round and then tried a lot of fancy mn tor Mor been kept busy for several mgnths,|Tom Bendelow, the internationally | apple. He wasn’t what might be | stuff, Colima just kept plugging| . referee, mann, Joutting out ‘new fairways, bullding| known golf-course builder, During | termed a “whiffer,” usually being| along and then landed one on Pierce's |" P!* | tees and putting greens, and within, his five-year term with the great/able to make connections, with the chin. It decided the fight right then| incom (27) Frankiin (12) [th® hext few day« the finishing |Bendelow, Lynch was placed inj ball, but he couldn't drive ‘em safe. | and there. Potts ( r Wilson (4) | touches, such as trapping and bunk-|charge of several new courses, Ho was elther popping out or send- Until the goofy fintsh of the main,| Torney >. Kawasoe (3) lering, will be started. - ing measly little taps to the infield. event the Eagles’ show was one of | yecutcheon o § Dare (2)| | Inglewood, which will assist her} With his knowleilge of course con-| McBride was a consistent “200” the most interesting of the North-|starret (2) a ‘Kono (4)| sister club in handling the crowd| struction, the newcomer will doubt-| hitter, seldom getting much above| west beason. Ek bccge | SE the big July meet, is just|less make some alterations on the| that figure. In his second season | 1 L$ Scij] waiting till Old Sol gets back on|Grays Harbor links in the near fu-|in the main canopy he accryed a Substitutions—Spailer for Dare! Joyce | his good behavior again before start-|ture, but what most golfers are| batting average of but .16 ing (2) for Torney. Hyman for Potts, Torney |ing operations that will make the/ anxious to know Is, “Can he play|53 hits in 90 games. Incidentally | with fectorate are resting easy again! | either in a pinch or out of one, Btter having a strenuous ty searching the country to find some. one to fil! the vacancy created when | Earl Dean gave up the Job last fall. °| In other words, fellows who |around the .225 mark. ihe Position, but he backed out for! former manager of the Wash- tome unknown reason and Lynch)ington club, and for many| Way signed up this week. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, 32)Years shortstop on the same} years ago, Lynch came to America| team. his parents when but a few| In the parlance of the months old, and, except during the| George couldn't war period, when he served over-| hat,” seas in the British forces, game. “hit the size of his and hurlers thruout the Amer- |} he has} ican league had a happy faculty of been here ever since, His profes-| passing men, when in a pinch, just | sional career started 17 years ago,|so ax to get at McBride, and in when he learned the art of club-| variably the strategy worked to per- making in one of the big Eastern | fection. golf?" He modestly says he ts not} much of a golfer, but that “stunning” stick work earned the records | Louse his release from the St. Lous! It is doubtful if there was ever a more lamentably weak! ” Willie Black wns listed for | hitter to grace a big league plate than was George McBride, | ¥/ ‘a master brain and. the abliiyean | ings, do well to massage the agate Cardinals. That was in 1906. Two | | years later he got on with Washing. | |ton, where he finished his major |teague playing days. Coupled to his batting shortcom- McBride was anything but a fast man on the sacks, seldom pil- | fering over 15 qushions a srason. Nor | was he a good “waiter.” All of which | probably accounts for the fact that | McBride usually batted in eighth po- sition in the Nvtionals’ lineup, But McBride, nevertheless, hung on to his job with bulldoglike tenac- | ity because he was a good man! afield. He could pick "em up around | | short with the best of them. He had} a stout whip and was fast at getting | over territory. In addition to this he possessed a good baseball head, | knew the game, and was a tireless | worker, And thus was George McBride kept on the Washington payroll for dver a dozen years—simply because he could field. He was a veritable} bulwark on defense, the discredit of figuring in two licity, yet a few weeks later Ward, Simpson, 2 min. of New York, played the same trick with () runner on first and the Yankees leading by but one run, A rough ball that didn't sult him was the cause, The second incident caused Prest-| royston dent Johnson to Issue a bulletin to | Riley the managers telling them it might | be advisable to inform their players that the ball was always in play un. Ul the umpire ruled otherwise, BOX DRAW SAN FRANCISCO, Web, 24,—Poto Daloy and Sallor Goldman fought an uninteresting draw as the main event of last night's foursround show here, minutes, utes, Second period Third period~None, Seattle (2) Holmes Rowe . Rickey . Walker Vancouver Duncan Skinner Boucher Mackay Harris Fraser... MeCarthy ond period Pirat period—No Vancouver, Dune attle, Riley from Walker, period=-Seattle, Walke' 1:82; Vancouver, Macks Vancouver, Duncan, Cook, 4:21 EDMONTON, a4 toria Cougars took second the Coast puck race by monton here last night, Vics The ple beating Wd- b to 4 JOSEPHS DEE ay LOS ANGELES, Keb. 24-—George Lavigne won « decision in four rounds from Jack Josephs of Minne: apolis, at the Hollywood boxing show LAWRENCLH, ata f Web, Billy Murphy, Lowell, feathery won & 1O-round decision from Willie Greb fought foul all during the | empire try. Inglewood's putting greens are| show that in the West Baden open | — bout. He was warned at least two| at 0) TT Broadway tan) | te eat ever; the wide fairways will| championship in 1919 he finished | FIGHT KEEPS dozen times by Referee Haley and (s) Weick’ (2) |b eaually good this summer and| second to Mike Brady, who led the M t. N | several times: Greb took the call-|Hagist (8) .0....0.08 Nelson (9)| when the bunkering work is done,| field with a total of 288 for 72) ets ow } down #0 much to heart that he of-| Day (10) -c0c.-e0t Tagieyernti® | Inglewood will be an honest-to-good-| holes, three strokes better than JIM AUSTIN tered to fight Haley and squared off |NiweGy see tetater | DOSS golfer’s paradise. Lynch. Such notables as Jim | in front of him. Boers by ‘periods Out at thé Harlington course| Barnes, Jock Hutchison and Bob 1 ing in WI TH BROWNS, Even if Greb had been close to| Roosevelt . ++ § 7 %-30)many changes are ow in the McDonald followed Lynch. | winning the decision, his foul work | PyeTty i" irsadway, Grummete (ay | making and a few Tthinor altera aR IS 24.—Jimmy Aus- | probably would have influenced the | tor Weich. tlons are being considered at the} "A fellow can’t be a dub and make asemen tin Is to again be a member of | judges against him. | Officiais—-Norquist, referee; Haag, um-| sporty nine-hole University links,|that kind of a showing. They do the Browns, His signed contract has | Greb' could not have gone much |>!F* |but the biggest contract of all is| say this Lynch chap is quite a trick- ICTORIA, B, C., Feb. 24.—The | just been received at the offices of | further. In a 20-round bout he most| Queen Anne (15) pattara (2) | the construction of the new nine| shot player. Well, anyway, from Vancouver Maroons retained |the local American league club. ertainly would have been knocked | Butler (6) r Sungaby (7) | holes at tho Rainier Golf and Coun-| ali reports the Grays Harbor club|their place at the top of the Coast} Past 4) years of age, having out out. Tunney started with a wither | Bolstad (5) cre eser Bite Brateett| try club. Most of the clearings have | did a fine stroke of business when league by beating Seattle |lived his usefulness as a regula ing body attack that had Greb alt |AUMIS (H)F.-.-0-- 08 {acobaon | been made for this addition, which | it secured Jack Lynch and his com-| t night, 4 to 2, Jimmy Austin ts still regarded as a puffed, bruised, welted and cut/cady . f Wella | When completed will form the*first|ing {s a weleome addition to the| samonton (1) Victoria (5) | Most valuable asset by the owners of around the middle before the 10th| Score by periods half of the 18-hole course, Play on| Northwest professional ranks, ‘This | Winkler Fowler |the Browns | fonts: Queen Anne «.. 15 P48 this new area Is not expected before | is his first Job on this Coast, He | Simpson +16 Loughitn How come? Business Mana Greb was so indisposed that the|” subs nc Mardin tor Jecobeon, | NeXt Year. was connected with the Bay View| kout /Sepldthitten | Bobby Quinn, whd directs the affairs bucket had to be lifted twice for him. | Kelly for Brown Jack Lynch is the new profes} Country club, Michigan, for the past | Gaane : Meeking |of the club, explains everything in a} After the 12th round he hung on for} Officlals—Bobbie Morris, referee; Dick at the Grayy Harbor Country | three AADOR ss oon s Oatman | few wor his very life and in the 14th he just | Mune" umpire ee —— |Campbett *aeb. Dunderdate| phe gpirit of Austin makes him a missed being knocked cold. NEW SWIM MARK Brandow:; sub yaluable man to the Browns, A ‘Tunney was on top of Greb every HODGE AND WARD STAGE Bostrum ‘sub. player like Austin means much to time the Pittsburger’ elected to do) PHILADELPHIA, } 7 ond periods; Vilofis, eredstiskeon from (Mueten ys snuvccay we FeO A ae, something besides hold and clinch,|new Intercollegiate record for the BIGGEST BONERS OF 1922 Mocking, 0:46; 2, Hekimos, Gagne. froma |feat he fights even harder. He had the edge in at least nine|200-yard breaststroke swim was Victoria, C, “The spirit of Austin becomes the rounds and Greb did not have a sub-lestabiished by Hardin, ‘Tiger star, Hine year in the majors pro-|act, ‘There was nothing for them if spirit of the Browns. Austin is car. stantial margin in more than four. | io prince hetads # duces one or more bonehead] to do but score the runner from | Ken f°) Vietorta ried because he. Js an optimist who tA TEA EOE RAIS when Princeton defeated the Unl-|diay« that stand out as the classics | second, as the rules give the right | erickson, 4:48 Eakimor, Kents from |believes only in vetory, His cheery TATE WINS eae PR idrtect pit at Anpath of their particular time. to advance two bases on a ball | Slmpron, 4.61; §. Victoria words on the coaching lines are often | NEW YORK, Feb. 24.—Clonio| jardin swam the distance in 3 min.| , TO Pitcher Hodge, of Chicago, and esis ang tif bee ar much pub Tekton trom Ce Loughlin, 213%, i eel valde LnbATer Altered er TORRE Tate, Canadian Nghtwolght cham-|uten flat, clipping 8 2-6 seconds| Second Baseman Ward, of New York, play 8 ch pubs} Penaition: iret pertod — Oatn 28 E s hita.” There you have the reason for Jimmy Austin's presence in the lines up of the St. Louts Browns—his fighting spirit. THE GOTHAM PRESS Herald—Grey held the advan tage over Tunney in the major- ity of the 15 rounds, ‘Times—Tunnoy carried off nine of the 16 rounds, Grantiand Rice — worst, Greb might draw. Tribune—A draw would have been just, i American—Tunnoy easy victor, || sane of a cleanout ld beating » at his own®ame. | World—Greb used everything but) Mexican spurs. | On last | night's showing Tunney can al ways lek Gre Nows-A draw would not have At the y have got a last night Brady, Syracuse, rain hy? Oe } country than Criqui. Y BORGE doubt Girne am tea | C ontender sare for Squad CHAPTER L. ve. But «left nem te one m4 : HE greatest pennant fight that the old N ayn | the best lef s in the busine | | 4 orthwestern bes t arms in the business» : , the Yankees has 1 league ever knew was staged in 1902 when Butte beat | any bust Following Lead of Star's Irint If Oregon Is Defeated, Seattle out of the championship. A sixinch movement of that left Sister Paper in Port- Ir the Washington Decides The league made more money that year|*™ ‘5 generally worth from $2500 land, the News Bol ba Title With Idaho than it ever did again and it was some |‘ $590 Think of It BY LEO H Iria sweet season. George Chaney ts a fighter, A UE T'S the night to = e tweigh re ' C XING tourna F ° “ Seattle walloped Butte four out of five |"#htwelsht resurrected from tly ment for onde . ante t's hin gton games in the next to the last week of the | P¥s"™t ap heap by that clever weights, to be a 1 wed asi five, season, and it looked like our team was |'itte handler, Sammy Harris of Bal part of the rage te e Huskies : x . ae tumore. weekly boxing # & Cf e must trim the going to walk home with the flag. But yada ries Pe mE, Rees, shows in Seat-|| will never reach n because Oregon cagers Butte went over to Spokane and won six) °™’Y ° ~ betes tle, is to be con ¢ his indifterenc ot heirs te straight games from the Indians and beat | *‘#ht 8"¢ Aid well. Hoe got Into ducted by The!| aggressiveness and e at the he feath ht a tackled us out, | CRO Seaeree gM cas and tacnes attle Star, in Irish Meusel is the op ity of abe Johnny Kitt of Cleveland. He n effort to find || ponite of Bob, a real fighter. Mc a, Washingt We were so sure of the pennant that year dait'eabha's | & Washington|| Graw might make such a player ) ympasiieet ale that I ordered the souvenir cards printed | ehhaae tii whe white bh }) stay in the race and after Butte won out we had to cross|,oy ie w., on: Any big, am Fors ve out. the word “champions.” It certainly | ,. 4 A inh ye egh Ramee LL DEFENDS TITLE If the Huskies was a sock on the chin to lose that flag. reek too ihe Seckoke waakl the tours t sending in his| Ls pata Reb hes ih ot , siete “a I never like to cry over spilt milk, but I) ana iy 414 Chaney | name, address and weight to the Us est ghustew th, Mortimer | M night the Northwest Dugdale always claimed that we were gypped out Of | Harris got him then, started him PRUNE betee. 96 The Mar, in the finals of this year's cham: | honors ¢ the flag. | @ lightweight and a bunch The contest is to be managed bY | pionships tomorrow as a result of a Washi also win this We had Ike Rockenfield on our club in 1901 and in the | knockouts soon won back pepe Ce ae ee deg |nard-won_ victory J pias will eee s 2 : | popularity. He had learned a the veteran boxing firm n &\Couler, who made holde champic at the loca spring of 1902. He played third base and then turned to | A Nis Goober’ nd task gate ee Salt, who will stage the bouts lected éonelt, a0 week second basing. He was a wonderful player, but was on the self | Lonnie Austin, veteran boxing in-| — 4 # into tonight's bench for a time in 1902 and Tacoma was hard up for left arm did the rest. Ho} structor, who i# bringing Bearcat) srw yorK Feb. 24.—Joe Dugan The Oe ‘ yi nocking the or als Yode Bercot to the Mol. maw a FOO. whcrv00 DUEAS | D1 6 4 players. gages tree phy PEL oo emery 8 a 4 Erin Ward, Yankee Inflelders,|"teecnt toad trip and thie i the 4 There was a rule in baseball then that no players could be loaned, but | 0" ran up a string of 14 knock praia Fe oun NOeeer ae at|have signed new contracts. Dugan ¢nal game of the jour They 4 to help Tacoma out we let them have Rockenfield for a few days with |°U“ od cit can Bhp velghta and will pase | Yolunteered to play second base ant rte tronger for | the private understanding that he was to be returned to us on a day's | pig bohcea ed be 3 Pt agen pecs a Peatfeations sack Hered Manager Huggins may shift Ward yids espinal Botice. They agreed. {F “3 wang s 2 ow ‘ ne c Weareetis netibaet 7 "lover to third, where he prefers to |b town The ght mt two tournament. cs Then one of our star infielders injured and we called for Rocken "4 ; |p! | ] e¢ 2 ee tes renee ahem cane tary couuint Ancram for ¥ >| malnuteal & Geabey left, traveling not | A championship belt will be offered Z 3 o |, -O- Ax (C. waa, olteninieced: Sata ; Phat & blow that . | im than six inches, caught Rice | and the winner will be under bond to PS Fre sk ng both to Pullman gid 4 We had to play an outfielder at second base for most of the rem ody I gegs wi reablvnmebe red, yp cn ta dace see gare Seowrh, ‘f, Wochent Y., won| Oregon is expected to. start thele ; ays of the season. The loss of Rockentield virtually beat us ot a7: the geek lott tookreard. oft $4 gee ota Re sonar from Tony Zill, Youngstown, n 12| regular Uneup of Rockey and Zim & the pennant. “ | \inaheve? Seth | wean ctooke! teal This idea is not an original one! rounds. Young Ketchell, . won|}merman at forwards. Latham at 9 We had.a wonderful club that year with Jack Hickey, Billy Hogg and |heavyweight’s. So do his shoulders with The Star. this newspaper fol-| easily from Sallor Packie, Rochester, | center and Chapman and Shafer at 4 Jess Stovall doing the pitching. What a trio they were! | He's short and slender of limb. He lowing the lead of its sister paper in| w, y | guards, 4 “Hogs broke his arm in Portland, one day late in the season, and we |can make 140 pounds easily, I keyeee to Wis adit. And sthey're) abd peomotérh won't. pat him on] Tey he Pordans News,” CREE EE EPSP TS Washington's lneup for tonight is 4 @amed a hurler named Gus Shock, from Everett, who was quite a| The knockout star js now 22 |coming slowergand me ton the | with wams, ‘The fans are too wiee| under the leadership of Billy] BC Feb, 24.—"Jocko” Con-|a bit unsettied as Coach Edmundson pitcher. He wouldn't sign a contract, but insisted on $25 per day. We|won't quit until he hag a od Ughtwoights are Afraid of him | tor that. | Stepp, sporting editor of that pub: | lon, d star of the Harvard| may start either Chuck Frankland F paid him that patie 1 agri Ughiwelg® cation, the News uncovered the | basebal last year, has been|or Bruce Hesketh at center, Frayne, 4 But can you !magine it, neither Stovall nor Hickey would stand tor | ] “Oregon Giant,” Jack Horner by|awarded to the Boston Braves by| Lewis and Hesketh are all eligible 4 Shock pitching! Playing five games a week this pair of hurlers alter | name, who towers something over|a decision of Commissioner dis. |for forward duty with Bryan and Mated the hurling job and finished’ the season, Shock was carried 10| 44CQQCrS in | aix feet in the air and weighs a Ut-|The Rochester International le ‘Crawford being cinches to start at Gaye and then we dropped him. tle less than a horse. Portland's fis-/ club also claimed him. guards. Imagine pitchers being that jealous of their hurling that they wouldn't “4 . tic colony is naid to be quite exctted | ee es vay The doors will open at #45 as usual Jet any other mound man break in! Try to find pitchers like that today. | te e un over Horner and predicts a bright] sgANFORD UNIVERSITY, Feb. 24.|and the game will get under way future for him. “at 7 djat 7 | California won the fourth and|at 7:30, Monday Dugdale will tell aaak ihe war with the Coast league, the | | if Oregon can produce a heavy-| final game of Its conference basket | a a ae 4 tenurs of that circult here and the reorganization of the Northwest vb i me welght hope, so can Washington. | ball series with & 4 : ne on you he avyweights, send | night, to 17 ; “ arate ka ° | Quren anne eae ae | TOUGH RING | Roosevelt ' 1 an ode Bercot Wins on ae re M By ‘ aera a cBride Was Regular ROAD AHEAD Frankl ates j Foul in Fourth Round coe sacha IMMY DUNN, developer of cham- FE Gartiela : ae | D | lon laloe the ‘Svinios (ae i + 3 el esp it W eak Hitting pions, is of the opinion that the EVERETT, Feb, 24—-A strange;made an occasional dangerous lead, 16 leaders all won thelr games tn U e ; ‘ first real classy boy to meet the or of lemons permeated the at-| but for the most part was trying to the high school basketball race LMOST every ball club, especially in the big leagues, has} champion will win the title, j : g ; eres, oC bea on ts ches cover, yesterday, Qheen Anne trimming | Si , a at least one “set up” in its battle front. It isn’t a case of sour grapes with — Eagles’ club here last nig! in} Johnny Mack, the great little Pitts-| Ballard 15 to 7 in the featere game} Seattle's "Golf the year ‘round™)club! All of which means that Ho-| That is a player who never casts much fear into the oppo- Dunn. The famous manager of 4 M if 4 >, 4 Dode Bercot, the Monroe logger.) burg featherweight, added another lof the day at Ballard. slogan has taken quite a few raps|™Mer Brown, “Billy” Patterson and h th late h " hit fighters regards Kilbane as one of i ‘was given the decision in the fourth| scalp to his strtmg when he knocked| Roosevelt walloped Broadway the rest of the Aberdeen club di-|Sition whenever he steps to the plate because he can the greatest fighters of all time, a fighter never fully appreciated by the public. i “Kilbane is one of those fighters who happen once in every 50 years. Fast on his feet, clevér, the possessor his hard any time he set, explains why for over ten years Kilbane has towered over the featherweight di- vision,” says Dunn, “There is an end to every cham- pion, however, and sooner or later Kilbane must meet his superior. Jack | Britton, {he ‘old master,’ finally suc- |cumbed, It is the same with every jchampion, you can't postpone the finish forever. “Kilbane is getting old as fighters go. He hasn't done much work for several years, It is going to be harder for him to round into shape. In addition, the vitality of youth will be lackin, "e Dunn doesn't think so much of Criqui, the European champion, who is being Imported for a Kilbane bout. “{ don’t think Criqui will be able to take Kilbane. There are a half dozen ‘better featherweights in this T have a couple of boys who can beat Criqui.’’ Thoroughness Characterizes our methods ta every. transaction, and our cus- tomers are accorded every cour tesy consistent with sound bual- ness judgment. 4% Pald on Savings Accounts Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST. Boat Schedules 'rdm.,Colman Dock+Foot*Marion ‘ —-SAVE MONEY- Travel by sfeamer TACOMA SAFTY ~SPEED+ COMFORT DAILY 13,5 39 P.M 45c FOR Se FOR ROUND TE “re VICTORIA, B.C Port ANGELES? STRAIT POINTS ALLY, 12:00 Midnight (Does 0 ‘Through to Victoria on Snturdey Night Trip) AN JUAN. ISUAND POINTS on'et stra, from wm. Ly, vent PORT TOWNSEND, RAIL. CONNECTIONS AND MILL PORTS 8100 A, MA, 5100 P.M, HOOD'CANAL, POINTS UMSDAY, FRIDA my ht 0) PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION Co: COLMAN DOCK: Foot MARION hurt either man. PHONE MAIN 3993