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TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 19: _HARRY WOLVERTON SAYS COAST LEAGUE NEEDS CLASS B FARM FOLEY a SLIGHT FAVORITE 10 BEAT CHALLENGER TONIGHT A Nomad of Base CHAPTE i ae the iron in the blood The setting for the first ti black and his of youth, die in baseb: thé papers wh town in the Sc to hear of hir China any day DUGDALE ballyhoo artist and was twice Baseball and he still re he was connected with western circuit. Since I had seen MeCinakey bere tains t the youngster of 40 years ago. that keeps us yourig, Dug!” John MéeCloskey Louisville, Kentueky, meeting last fall, A nomad of Saseball Over 60 years of age, his hair is After the mihor Teague session, | saw his holdings in Salinas & small minor le What af organizer John w: He had all the gift of gab of a cirnival He served as player, maiiayer, director &h eye th Nashvillé, where he managed the eltib four years ago. tp hit him in the eye and cost him the sight of It In years McCloskey is no longer a youngster, but tn spirit he is stil! 28. ball R LXX and the ery in the brain speaking. Was at one of the hotels in at the minor league where I met McCloskey me ina food many years. that’s MeC loskey. | still coal | eye still snaps with the fire} He has lived and will undoubtedly | in up| rue | 1 wouldn't be surprised rere McCloskey had given uth. n trying to start a league in|‘ now, —and ist a tonvincing. \ and promoter in he pepper that he had when the Tacoma elub in the old North-| the Louiavillé meating hé had toat A fou! Wednesilay Dugdale will tell of the famous Guggenheim marathon. — > NIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu- série, Ore, Marth 20.—The Physical education, according to'a re- | Woman strident, and even the faculty Of the University of Oregon, js to be Gvided for with the developmient of & huge athletic plant, to be the Working laboratory of the sehcol of Physica! education according to a re- gent Anriodncement by Dean Jobn F Bovard. head of that phase of the! university's uctivity, A kreat tract lying on sloping| ground {s to bé terracéd and| re will ba built a bew baseball! football and soccer gridiron, tennis courts, a 22-yard straight. | Away anda fine new fymnasium. fields will tie dedicated to vars . freshian and tntra-mural sporta| and constriction Will be started im-| ti for & great portion of the de- | ‘Yelopment already have been com- pleted and much of the money nects- Ba for the work has teen provided. | plan for the imost part is spon- | fored by the Associated Students of| Modern Athletic Field Is Planned by Oregon thé university, According to the attankerfient as worked dut by etigineers in charge of the work the tract will be terraced in five steps. the first to include Hayward field, recently dédicated, néw baseball diathond, at least 20 cé- ment tennis courts and the new £20- yard atraightaway. Work on the new diamond will be started immédiately #o that it will be ready for the spring baseball season, if possible. The new straightaway, tipon which work Will start at once, will be tan- gent to the Hayward field oval. The néw tennis courts will occupy prop-| erty now owned by Camipbell Church jot Eugene, who has agreed to tease the plot to the students. The three middle terracts Win be divided inte four Intra-mural baseball diamonds and varsity. afd freshman football and soccer fields, The fith terrace will be the site for the néw gymnasiim. The gymnasium te ex- pécted to be oné of the finest in the West. IE: début of college players tn the majors in ustially attended by goime interesting incident. ‘The immediate Aiiccess of Frankie Frisch and George Sistér has offered many opportunities for the sport writers to gritid Out readable tales ut theae two stars. I# 18 doubt, however, If any col: lege player éver iad as big a first e in profemdional vitcles as did edder Sitton, who years ago starred at Clétisen college in good ota South Carolina. > Graduating in June, he practically won two minor league pénnin@® in his first year out and finished by Joining the big show beforé the base- Vall curtain was rung down for the year. In 1903 Vedder Sitton was the ace Of thé pitching staff of the Clem- son baseball teant. ‘The Clenison nine had a big season and Sitton’s Work atood out very prominently. He was A senior that year and immediately after com- ricement he joined the Jacksonville ib, which was then a member of thé Sdtith Atlantic league. BRO’ TAL Thoroughness Characterizes our methods ip Svery transaction, and our cys- on Knvings Acconnty ascoteu's subject to i: eck Ate Cordials, ate Ae Inv! Reoples, Savings Bank FAR ATTEN nm eM # LET I CEL EY Fat Take Fast Bteamers mt Colinan Dock REGULAR SCREnULE Attia Dail: eg )PECIAL NIGH From te (6 Brem iaturday ti Sunday, Wed: yay) alg UTOMODILE FERRY Ae Fang ca ba EY EY EX EX ED EY RAV WARD RO tr 20-YEAR-OLD RECORD FOR QUICK RISE STILL GOOD Jacksonville was in the midst of a hot race for the pennant. Vedder Sittdn pitched them to the lead ang they Won thé rag. At the closé of tht Sally season, Bitton was sold to the Nashville ctub of thé Southern league. Hé reported deciding game of the Southern pen- naht Fact, He was facing the veteran, Theo Britenstein of the New Orleans Pals, and upon the result of the gain’ de- pended the leadership of the league. When the dust had cleared away thé final weore was: Niashville, 1; New Oriéans, 0. ‘The Southern season wns over ther and Sitton went straight to Clevelapd Tidifins 6f the American league, where he broke th at once. work for Cleveland. From college to the thajor leagues winning two minor Teague pennants in the interim, 1s sure traveling somé, Vancouver Evens Up Puck Race ANCOUVER, B. C., March 20.— Smothering the Ottawa Henators, 4 to 1, here last night, Vancopver’s | ® Maroons evened up the seriés for the Stanley hockey cup in the second tilt of thé five-game series, The Western club showed a Gom- plete reversal of form over their ex: hibitfon in the snitiel game tat week, which was won by Ottawa, 1 to 0: The visitors put up a stubborn Battle, but the Viiicduver attack proved too spetdy, Vancouver Outhwa Lehman . 6 Benodict Cook .. D Gerard Dunpan .D G, Boucher F. Bouther. ; Nighbor Harris Denanng Maokay . Broadbent kinner : Witehman ¢. Denenny, Glaney rken Hellman |Cotch eh Penalties: Pleat period — Vancouyor, Houoher, Cook and Harti, all 2 minutes Ottawa, Broadbent, 2 minutes. Hecond - Ottawa, Broadbent, 3. ininutes period (2); Vancouver, Aklnner and Cook, 2 min- Third period—Ottawa, Hitchman, 2 Vandruver, Duncan, 1:15 Skinner, 2:37 Parkes, 14 106i thia acide Ottawh, Bow: KISSES SPOIL BASKET SQUAD HAMTRAMCK, Mich), March 20 The high school here Just now has no basketball tem), It did hive a good teani, A young girl, ndiiiting the quintet, kidmed three of the playern ‘he thre’ were Aidpended, ‘The otli- ere refried to play without théin, Now no one Is playing at Nashville fust ih time to piteh the | the | He stayed in major league company | for quite a while, doing some fine) Is Meeting Dillonin. Return Go, | Fotmer Win and Heavy! Wallop Give Edge; En- tire Card Attractive BY SEABURN BROWN ESPITE & bhéak-| ing idea now per: | meating 16ea1) quartars Whore fiktle goasip ts] the order of the} day to the effect that Dandy Dil fon has & bit too} ly much experience | and Hng erat for IC “ae ’ Vie Foley, now] that Dillon thoroly aceli mated aiid FeaMY tH Atop at hie beat, | money i# béhind Foley} orthwest and Cana-| dian bantamweight champlohihife |iwhen he swaps willops with the Minnéapolis boy th the main event of tonight's ring show An Shakéspedté might have sald, T pinch is the thing.” And. bretiiren, this. Vancouver boy has me of thé atifféxt kicks In his leat er mittéey that haa ever been dis | played locally by a lad in the 120 pound claes. | Dillon js plenty fast énough and clever bough, er, to extend the champion to the tmit, and it ts far from {mpoaslble that the decision of & couple of weeks ago be reverned |tohight. Dilidn looked bettér in hit | ko with Georgie Lee than if his first \"*ai appeaFince with Foley, All in all, tt looks like a, bahg-up |battio, with almost imperceptible | bdile favoring the champion. All of the glove artinta wound up their training sunte at Austin & Salt's gymnasium Monday afternoon MICKEY HANNON SUBSTITUTES Wheri It was Afinounced Monday that Johnny Fugate, who was to Kavé riét Joe Black in the six-round sertit-Wittdup, had been forced to quit j the ting game becali#e of family ob- Hettoas to that tine of youthful én deavor, Mickey Hannon stepped for-| ward t 7m the breach Menern. Austih and Salt were for- | tutiate in having & boy of Hannon’s | ABUlity around to fait back on in the| titiergency. Huarinon has not boxed | often in Seattle of late, but the fans | know him a4 & hard-socking, clever Fingst@r, and, on paper, thé bout tutfers hothing by thé change. Anothér strange gthalatdt will bit under thé local are Nght for thi first time when Johnny Hawkes, © more Or lemy unknown bantam, nisets Sailor Eddie Budi th the foubround dpetial éveit of the éveniiig. | BUELL 18 | COMING FAST Buell, while just a bit under the Class of boys like Foley and Dillon, fs good for a epectal event OF rem! windup berth on any Northwest fight ménu. Ho has been stepping fast of late Ana hay made up much of thé | ground he lost Whén Foley Feeently | kayoed him j Ih the second bout, Barney Goa. dard and Young Foaseé, a pair of well known preliminary boys, will Suiggle the gloves. Young Battling Siki and Spark | Pluk White, colored weltérs, are bill- |éd to open the evehing’s éntertaih- | ment. Wizard of _ Hoop Game Has System ASSAIG, N. J., March 20.—Aftér all, the Fulés necessary for suc- asin life Rré the same as thone es- tential in turning out a winning basketball teath. How absurdly simple they are, and yet, as friend’ of Prof. Ernest A.| Blood, coach of the record-breaking Pacsale high school team, potnt out, | how plain, how clear, and—yes, how harih! “Prof,” aa the stidént® affection: ately call him, now holds the world’s rheord by having hid team of Juven- Hies Win 114 cotisseutive games, And here are his riiles for success —the riles of life intérpréted into basketball language: “Tak the offense and put the oth- ers on the defense, for the best de- fense is an offense.” “Pass the ball, don’t dribblp.” “Get your opponént chasthe you ahd then he cannot Watch the ball.” fake two baskets to the other téam’'s one.” Those few words, géntratéd into action, did the tadk that has mado “Prof's” fame extend the length of the atid. Coach BI660 14 not ohly that, He {a pliysical director of All Passate nehools, And he feels that crenting the star teim that he ha’ wad only a logical otteoms of his entire thvory, to make “mien” than playera who angzle the barkétball rootérs, Hé ine Jalkte on turning out “boyd that count.” Youths who make the high school teams have that goal set be- fore ther in an early year, and when they roach thle stake of life they know It will be Impokitble tor them to bé one of his players tihlena they show, hot only alana of phyntent flertness, but thental and meral ataminia As well, And #0, that’s abolit nil to thin tt. te story of life and basketball in the little town of Pastalé, We might mention that before coring to Pane tale, “Prof was conch at Potsdam, N. Y., where his barketball team woh 104 games and lost only six, three of them to the world-famous profér: Monal team, the Buffalo Gérmans. Hut his friends may: Why mention 11? Wherever he would be, It wotild be the same, Mor “Prof” liad an ideal, | He merely 1# expressing: It CHICAGO, Mare man, Chtenae banter, paper decision over Joe Lynch, ban: 20—Toe mur WOH A hoWa: For Conch Blood is more anxious ‘thm champion, taking six of the 10 round? TH His Title Is at Stake in Tonight’s Mitt Fest Vic Foley, holder of the Canadian and Northwest bantam- | weight titles, is to defend these honors for the second time | against Dandy Dillon tn the siz-round main event of the bor-| ‘yalleved: ing smoker to be staged at the Crystal Pool tonight by Austin | & Salt. Johnny Farrell to Star | Within Next Two Years BY BILLY EVANS F youth is to continue to hold sway In golfdom, one cannot over: look Johnny Purrell of New York. This youngater, who th getting tho benefit of Jim Barthes’ experience, seeinh Hestined to cit A Wide swath th golf circles thaide of thé next two years, if not pooner, Recently Farrell performéa th a nubibér of jolt totirnament: tn the South, and hin work has béén one of the olitstariding features of the play of the many profesdional stats how tourlhg that rection. Farrell { in a sense a protege of Jim Barnés. The vetran is ary fond of the youngster, ahd whe paired with him during & recent in vakion of Cuba as well A# in many of thé Southern matched, Ih company with a halt dozen golf professionals, I watchéd & foursome match at the Miami, Plan, Country club courts recently, th Which Mike Brady and Tommy Armour were pitted against Leo Diegel and Johnny Farrell The golfing famé of Brady and Diogel han been @atablished. Rrady 18 ne bf the ranking dlfera of the country, a veteran star, Diege! Youngster who had Arrived, whilé Farrel! js coming fakter than per haps any other golfer in the coun. try. 16 ts jut abotit ready to take hin place among the truly greats. alot 12. Atiour han Just tied proréasional, | I wan amazed at the attittide of tho profeasionals rélativs td this foursomé. To them Farrell tals the tentér of atttaction. Théy were much intereited in thé Work of this Spectacniar youngiter, who hita = tong ball and is steady on the greens. “Ho's A great boy and looks like a bur champion.” “A great golfer now ahd getting better every day. If he continues to improve and holds his sams, look out for him this sutnmer. “He'a a better golfer Hirht now than Gene Sarazeh Wad a sbitr Ajo.’ “A fihe bey With & freat golf tem. perament and the Aabiity that must go with It to make a champ.” Theké and & score 6f Other Millar compliments were handed to Farrel during the fotind of play. Tha lead. ing pro playéte of the Cduntry seém a whit in thi bellef that Farrell fi a coming champion. And while thé gallery Waa alvidlig ita attentidn amdng the — three Yotinger pinyéth, Diegel, Parr) and Armour, thé Veterin Mike Brady was pinyinit stendy, brilliant g6lt, At the fina the cards showed | Brady with thé low medal score There ty no petting Aieay trom Mike Brady th match pity. Despite the fact that Brady ta tha hardduck pinyer of golfdom hé te weldom out. aide the money. POOL KING TO EXHIBIT HERE SOON HTING Clayton Byéts, Pacifié coast pocket billiard champton, Ralph Gresnteat, world’s title holder, will play a néries of exhibition matches in Seattlé on Thursday, Fr day and Saturday of this week, ao- cording to finnouncemént of Edgar &. Spears, manager of Greenléufs tour, Tuesday. The champion Has bedi playing At Portiand during thé past few days. ‘Vie Thuradity gimes Will be staged at Wakefield's Seneen st, billiard hall; thé matehés of Friday and Sat- urday at the Wakefield parlors oh Pike at., Spears stilt, Mach of the aftérhoon and evening éxhibitions will be fo for 160 points. MOSCOW WINS BASKET TITLE MOSCOW, Idaho, March 20.— MoseoW won the Idaho state high wehodl basketball tit by defeating Oakley in the tle-breaking game here last Alht, 21 td 15. ‘Tho ‘victory was deciéive, for Oakley waa leading, T to 4, nt the close of the first period, but thé Northérn five rallied, with the game al! but four minutes dyer, and piled up alk points in rapid succession, Nedros hid Woody were Moscow's fieavy performers, while Larson and Hunter did most effédtive work for Oukley. TILDEN PICKS PARTNER HROOKLINIG, Mash, March 20.— Miss Hazel Wightman, one of Amer ca Breateat terinié players, has to: eopted ah invitation to play with Wiliam T, Tliden, the world’s charh- pion, at Wimblédon anit the Olymplé gates In Paris next yaor, MHILLY REGULARS WIN LEBSBURG, fit, Mareh 20 ‘The Phillies’ regulard took — thelr fourth conmeutive gamo from ‘the Yannigany & LO ty NY, SOX ALL PRESENT SEGUIN, Texas, March 20.—With Fa Collins and Bob Falk both due in camp by the middlé df the week, only two fegulira will be ththsing from the Chicago White Sox. linctip in the week-end battle with thé Glants—Chartéa Roberton, pitcher, tnd Ernie Johnson, shortatdp, DONOHUE IN FORM ORLANDO, Fla., Match 20.—Thé Reds today were jJubliant becausé of the Wonderful pitching of Petd Donohue yoeatérday at Lakeland hgaltist the Cleveland Indians. Peter the Gréat did Hot permit a hit in thé fivé Inninkt he pitched. ¥ ADAMS MAKES GRADE AVALON, Cal, Mafch 2h “Sparky” Adama, diminutive rookié infielder for the Chicago Cubs, till be given first call for shortstop and third base tn practice gates this work, Matinger Bill Kiefer aie nounced, WARD IMPROVED NEW ORLEANS, Mafeh 20.—nrin Ward, the l6ho occupant of thé Yankeo hoxpltal, ta Improved and 14 able to He abound the hotel but it will be severtt days bofore ho dai Work, STARS TO COACH NEW YORK, March 20,—"Tacka* Hardwick ahd Charley Buell, two of Hatvird's greatest football stara, may be seotired td Assist Peroy Hivehton ti eoaching thé Columbia football teat, Busy MONTGOMERY, Ala, Maren a0, ‘gnnie Mack's A teati will play MilWatikeo here tdday fd His B tonm will tackle Univirsity of Ala. hatha at Thekalooaa Wednesday, VILLA WINS GO PHILADELPHIA, Mareh — 20, Piticho Villa, formar American f woitht champion, outpointed Young Montreal, Providence Pantam, in Jolght, round, no-decision bout, Tribe Is | Sold by | Magnates = New Owners Promise Pen- nant Contender; Wol-| verton to Stay at Helm) | With the salé bf the Beattle bass ball club to Charles R. Lockard, for: | mer vicepresident of the Los An Keles ball club; Wade (“ted”) Kile fer, former manager 6f the Angela, and John J, Sullivan, Seattle attor ney, Seattle fa er promised & team of pennant Tuewday Lockard, who will Aucceed Jame | ® prenidént of the Indians, | r money, brains hor | Jenergy will be spared in developing the Ind a first divis Details of the purchase. the eontrolt baxebell ag club. | puts to aun) & interest of th regation in the hi Los Angeles capitalists, were | Tuend Lockard, who was busi ness mandger of the Los Angele club, re nated William Wrigley. Jr, In the other elty, The chewing kum man owns the Angela and the} Chicago Cub Killefer, one of the best managers the Coast leagté has ever had, will become sécretary-treasurer of the hew Indians Killerer, whilé iahaging the An has always délivered a first divinion team, none of his turnoute falling below third place. The two! Southerners réAigned from active management of the Southern club Yast Friday. geles, where the hale of the stock held by Jamba R. Boldt and other minority stockholdérs Waa Consummated. Kil- lefer stopped off at Bin Jone to it the Indian clib the “double-o” an make suggestions on what ‘ook will be retained. John J. Sullivan was attorney Por the, Beattie ball club, and was active in defending the club against damage | sults brought ak a remit of the raid on Coast Weagne gamblers, E. BH White, Seattle talior, and] Stacy Shown, feweler, are also aaso- clated In the tiew Indian ownership. The five, torether with two minority | stockholders to bé selected, will act an directors. Transfer of the club ownership, it} marks the end of the) reign of Willlam H. McCarthy as| President of the Coast league. It wil! | also mark the end of McCarthy poll-| chem, narhely, opposition to draft by | the big léagies, which has kept the | Coast tongue in a turmioll sincd tts | Organization. Bullivan ah Lockard wit leave | | Thursday for San Jose, to confer with Killefér and Harry Wolverton, | who will be retained as manager, it is announced, Tremaine Will Beat Joe Lynch BY BHLLY E ARL TREMAINE 6f Cleveland ts destinéd to bé thé next bantam: Weight champion of thr world, Trémaine’s fight against Johnny Curtdin At Madivon Squaré Garden recently, convinced ine of that fa In his déclaivé défeat of Curtain, & cléhn knockout, Tremaine retpoved one of thé leading contsaders! one of the bigest obstacles in his chm- palin fo get & match with Champion Joo Lynch. ‘Tremiiné hie coms very fast. Ho has {mprovéd one huhdred per cent during the.piat year as a result of clevér handling by his manager, Jimmhy Dunh, @ past master 1h the fistic art. Ih other words, Tremaine hha arrived. If Trémaihé ta able to get A bout With J66 Lynch in 1923 I feel posi- tive that a néw champfon Will be crowned: ‘Tre nains ts now at the top of his game. It ts hard to figure how he ever can be any better, As & matter of fact, I believe that Tremaihé could take Johhny Kilbane with the weight at 122 ringside. One thing 1 do know ts that Tremainé 1é a far better man than Criqui, who it 18 reported will shortly meet Kilbane. Tremaine would have no trouble with Criqul. Tremitine has everything & cham: pion must have, includisig that one véry great asset punching power, How thé little fellow can Hit! I think ho is the birdést punchér ih the country for his woight, and I do not except the great Jack Dempsey when I maké such & statement. ‘Trothainé Had thé old english to his punch. When he hits you it bofes in, Let me exfilain what 1 mean by english of his punches. I will sé & bakebdll illustration to make my polit clear. In basetiill I have seén many pitchers with equal speed, yet therd was a widé difference in the tiatter of their effectiveness, In basebitll it is the pitcher With the “zip,” the hop on his fast ball, Who ts most effective, Some pitchora have gobd speed, but to use the parldiice.of the ball Field for Such a Loop say ry Class B League BY LEO H. Ss w At the Training Cainp of the Seattle Thdisns March 20.—The biggest need of the Pacifié Const league is a farm for its, Sporting Editor The Sta AN JOSE, Cal. youngsters. own territory in talent,” s: cireuit,” it. supportifg. [California Is Lo sé, Stockton, Fresno, San Diego, Bakersfield d San Francisco Could Make Up the Desired ay Wolf Wolverton speaking. “The Coast leagu ally that it needs a smaller league within its” ays Wolverton. There is a field open in California now— say San Jose, Stockton, Fresno, San Diego, Bakersfield and San Francisco as a tentative declares Wolverton. could be given a Class B rating in organized baseball. teams could be subsidized by the Coast league if necessary until they got on a paying basis, which wouldn’t be long. The Coast teams could send their youngsters to these teams for development and it would be up to the Coast loop to keep the teams evenly balanced 80 as to keep up the interest. “The squads should be confined to young players with an experienced basebali man in ¢harge of each club. two stars could be developed in a season the money oe could be put in a sinking fund for the league which would help_pay the bills of any clubs not making a onc oa I sincerely think that if @ season or two things fold bal | absolutely self. ‘As things now stand there is no than the Mississippi valley and the small towns in that tion don’t want to take any chances on paying transportati Lookard eaiib diréct to seattte, | £OF youngsters to come from the Coast.” gical LASSEN is so situated geographic= which to develop its young “The league The If one or Class B league heater — Rookies to Feel Knife This Week BY LEO H. LASSEN | N JOBE, March 20—The mah-| agerial axé is due to swing on} tome of thé rookies now in the Se-| attle trainihg camp within a few | days Manager Wolverton th &till carry- ing & inrge squad in hopes of piac- ing some of his youngsters under option with slowér leagues, but he hasn't Been successful yet. THS club | te carrying six catchers at présént; 1 Yaryan, Tobin, Ritchie, Dill, Viant | and Maloney. The lattér thres have } litt!é charice of sticking around much longer. Two first basemen will probably |be carried, Both Doo Johnston and Jimmy Welch being on thé réilar Squad. Of the rookie infielders, Hiatry Baldwin, third sacker, ‘and Bill Ramage, shortstop, stand the best chance of sticking. Bud Davis and Clyde Mearkie will hardly make thé grade. It is hafdly Nkely thit more than four outfielders will be carried and it's hard to figure how Erhlé Schorr can beat out Ed Bar- ne: y. Wolverton hasn't sald yet how mahy outfieldére hé Will carry. Of the other outfielders Young Oliver find Dennison have ho chahvd of Bticking, lacking ékperiéice enough to break Into the Seattle lineup. There is a fdck of young pitchérs With the cinb yet, Praul, Pi Plummer, River, Leonard, who |s dus in camp this week, Brandt, all promising young hurlers. Wolver. ton hasn't éven intimated that pitchers are to go, but several must be let out before thé season starts, Monday war a light practice day and the players were to forget about ‘baweball today, taking up the grind Again Wednesday. NEW COACH IS WATCHED AMBRIDGE, Mass., March 20.— Ono of the beliefs of Clarence William Martia, new track coach at Harvard, is that in order to produce @ good track team, one must have a young army of candidates from which to select. The track world is watching Mar: has & reputation of turning out win: ners AS edsily O& A hungry prize fighter Uisposes of & juicy beefsteak, Among his prothges are Shields, thtercollegiate mile Winner last year; Romig, winner of the in: térediieginté cross-country run tivd years back; Barron, hurdlér of thé 1920 Olympic team, and Helfric, Who capttired the honots in Mist year's N. A, A. U, half-mile run Iaat sum: iner, Martin caiié to Marvard from Pein State. His theory bf having many candidates workéd to the ex- terit of raiding thé initial squad from 25 to $00 men. During his college day’ At Whit: man college, Walla Walla, Washing: ton, he made the enviable récord at ruhning 100 yards in § 4.5 séconds. After two Yelirs at that Institution, he went to Notre Dame aid then to the University of Pennsylvania, fibld, theit fast Oho 1d as straight he a string, others hive the hop on the fastyone that makes their déliviry hard to hit. ‘The hop of thé fast of 18 Ae atired by thé method of duliverng the ball; the éngilah én a pyhoh ts adquired In the aime Way. ‘Thee 1s sdme little twist of the whidt at the last moment that dos the Wotk. The english to the punch is what makes it effective, “Treimaliie’s punches are full df dynamite. Tremaine can hit ip better than straightaway, ‘There is a litt to hie punches, He cat fight the ble fel lows more easily thah boys his own héight, ‘That i why TL Wké his cHances should hé mest éither cham: pion bantim J66 Lynch or ehain pibn feathérweight Johnny Iilbaiie, ‘Tremaine is a champion, AU hy néeda is the big opportunity. FOUL REATS DEFOR LOWMLL, Mass, March 20.~ Johnny Cooney, Now Redford feath: or, won from Billy Defoe, St, Paul, pn w foul jn the fifth round, wheré ho also Was a star, (Star Succeeds BY RIVALS); Larry | ¥ Question ss to Doc Johnston Can Southpaws; Ort in BY LEO H. LASSEN AN JOSE, Cal, March 20- way things now shape up the will be ohly two left-handed hitte in the Seattle régtilar lneup. will be Doe Jéhnston and Ray wer. Rohwer looks just a8 good southpaw flinging as he does the starboard hurlers, but Johnston will bée able to hit the p siders remains to be seen, For several years Jobnston looked at nothing but righ tossing, Cleveland using the bat tin shift with Johnston on first right-handers and Burns southpawa Seattle has no man to shift Johnston unless it be Billy Harry Wolverton has been usi at various positions in during practice séssions. Th boys, however, are still vicki a8 the regular shortstop Crane at third ass unlegs Baldwlitproves to be a winner hot corner, In this event would play shortstop and Orr be utility man. : Johnston's great fieldi however, may maké up for of hitting against the southp Will Took at some mean lett ih thi# compahy, including , Letty Thonias, Paul Oliver Mitehbll, Hy Walter Malls, Harry Kran Leverenz and several lesser 1 ees ARM Srhtee ie Is iittte Hikettnood of € Mearkle being retained as one regular squad because his ti arm jsn't as strong as It sh fast And hits well row in order to fi pe as the second-sai a big part in steals. oul but tin's work with decided interest, Hé} YORK 'y ar, 8 out for Another chuse he played nat bay ble players last sekson whil off of professional baseball gels can get aldhg withon fies Have two Teft-h Perey Jénes and ‘The KS UT Irs bekinnlig t6 136k. Tike Milligan, slated for third b report td the Sah Frandi They'll have a hard. time fill Wie Kathit's Bhoes continiiés to hol aout Thers port here that Mulligan ih with some demi-pro team in ti’ for thé eayraiis S78) BARE ah With SOR cia Bob Le Gendre ASHINGTON, March 20,— 'Théré WAR mourning when Robert Lé Gehdre, Georgetown university's star trick man, graduated list sumniér—but fl: reddy the students have picked hia successor, ‘The new stat |e picked to duplicate Le Gondre's font of winning thé college Pentathlon ehatipionship of the Pennkylvanih Hliy carnival throes yeira Ih succession, * Pianaky is the new George: town star. Ho is speedy on the track in every distance from 200 meters to half a mille, In addi: tion, he has & record 6f over 22 foot in the broad Jump, and ts far from mediocre in other track under & doctor’ at p There is nothing sérious the with him, but Aif arm be brought along slowly, ves ane WELSH OUTFIELDER ay Wolverton may maké < my Welsh, his best reorult, over an outfidider becatise of his Welsh looks like the beat bét of a the rookies, He has boan play first hase and does a neat Job folding wround that first cushion, UMPS WANTS JOB singe a record of having cessfully urlipiréd In prdfession Toagiiok In Wertern Canada tor eral searons, W. D, Stuart, forme) of Calgary, Ja anxious to a i work for local semi-pro. a k events, season. Anyone Interested stuart by phon ‘