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EDNESDAY, aM AY. MAY 2. Ed Maier in Dutch | | Are ° ed in 1919 D sshe ell, 18 Exceeded Player Limit on Then; Big Row Looms a Over Landis Verdict bigned BY LEO H, LASSEN esti UBT when everything seemed to get back normalcy in the! mi league again we er th rumpus vatened when the mil. Seattle bal lub was Biber, i s broken t again worse mil han ever icCoy, The newest tangle td the decisoln of rea. LS adge Landis, commissioner of base- actual ba Ray French and Jesse $525,. Deyle cannot play with elther the New York Americans or the Vernon the club beca the deal for them was consumm i after January 15 when Coy, the majors and the Coast league t ot were forbidden to make any player rope deals. Landis has made them free = to age only It was Vernon owner, © the Partland meet and esolution that any team playing men ob- last. majors after January | thing $500 and every a wn out of the art in asi ps that It was Maier and first to break the rule fied to t the first time that Maler | mar. en the league rules, accord- itzer- ing to Charley Lockhard, president of | iage, the Seattle club. rego. THE 1919 vidual TROUBLES Back in 19 when Vernon was the pennant winner Maier had more than hey. the 20-player limit on his roster. He rie kept some of his men on his ranch and a couple of others at his brew ery, juggling them around as he pleased, according to Lockhard, and Fs when he was called on the carpet at F sw special meeting by the league di- rectors he wouldn't show up. He was ousted them as a director of the cir cult. It was charged that he had more than 26 players on his roster. The present trouble developed out of the failure of the Jakie May deal falling thru last winter. May was slated to go to the Yankees for sev- eral play: Doyte and French among them. Doyle and French had been put twice oh option by the Yanks| and this time was the last that they | were eligible to be put out on optic as they became the property of the third time under baseball rules. But the Yanks couldn't get th players demanded by Vernon and the Then the Yanks offered Doyle and French to several of the Coast league clubs after January 15. When they were finally sent to Vernon it is charged that they were sold outright to the Tigers, thereby violating the Tule laid down by Landis that no such were'to be made until the op- draft troubles of the ma- minors were settled, a meeting of the be called immediately and xd ig Five"—Seattle, Port- Take—will vote that the player re- lations be reinstated with the majors and that all players accepted by the Coast league from the majors be sub- Ject to draft. Lockard points out that several clubs, including Seattle, need help Coast league and majors will benefit from it, he says. TENINO LEGION TO HAVE SHOW Young Sam Langford, of Seattle, and Bud Martin, of Centralia, light- weights, have been signed to box s6rt COLLARS Will not-wilt, sag or shrink, and are very easy to launder 35c each —-3 for $1.00 ppllede by the Makers of ARROW Co! club with which they were placed the | | land, Oakland, Los Angeles and Salt| the melee a draw. from the majors and that it is the| only way out of the mess. Both the| there on. h Lont. * Me rounds in thw main event of the| Th? battlers bad the boys and 1% Mickey Walker Tenino American Legion smoker, on |#iris standing on their seats during it Friday, May 11. Other bouts on the|the last threo cantos. Bt senses i Boxes Thursday card are: Johnnie Hawks, Tono,| -Johnny Mack shaded Frankie | Sacramento 14 CHICAGO, May 2.-—-Mickey Walk- vs. Eddy McCarthy, Olympia; Felix feattle . 13 er, welterweight champion of tho ¢ Britt in another great scrap in the) oakiand i7 De Lisle, Bucoda, vs. Gig Weaver, engernn a world, is billed to box Morrie Centralia; Connie Parsons, Galves- semi-windup, the Pittsburg battler peers Schlaifer, Omaha welter, over the ton, Ys Eddie Brock, Centralia;|doing nine-tenths of the leading. RESULTS 10-round route here, Thursday Grant Inman, Tenino, vs. Young |pritt, however, countered well and| Portiand 7, Seattle 6. night. Johnson, Portland. made a great fight out of it. Mack,| Bacramento 14 Batt Take 11 semaine with Mickey Hannon and their| Qakiar’. t. eroe angeles, team |manager, Matt Matthews, are leav- agora em reel Star Chatter ling today fora trip’ thru the — Ortent, where they have several NATIONAL LEAGUE [fights in tin. om Won Sart | Home team managers In. ‘The Harry Anderson and Sam LAng-| Hoston wit 6 1616] Star Jengue unable to obtain ford fought another draw in. the | Chicago “8 § 611) their grounds for Sunday should fyur-round special event, Anderson |Cinoinnal fT $0} | inform this department before offsetting Langford’s harder Nitting |p Louis | ie s i429] changing their grounds, ass by some clever glove work. Philadetphia +4 7 abs changing | their grounds, as Jack Kennedy, of tho Soldier |Prooklyn «++ S19, 331) Star schedule, Card Tables, Pool, Cigars, S| woods species, won the only de- gicciag Candies, Soft Drinks, leision of the night when he beat) pitt nite #,, Bt. Louie 2. Chester Todd, sub outfielder with Fountain Lunches Jack Morgan, of Chicago, in the| New York 4, Brooklyn 4. the West & Wheeler team, has left |second four-round bout. Daieage. pSperpreld ois for San Francisco, where he will Filipino Yolas and Joe Bellew, ao make his home, green, but willing bantamweights, AMERICAN LEAGUE an Jopened the show with an interest: | Won, Lost. Pet.|. Ray Grayzulis, crack pitcher of cleveland 10 4 TAA) Loute's French Dry Cleaners, has fhe ST wagers 5 fH jet tor'‘Chicago, where he will stay JIMMY SACCO Philadelphia . Ki , «545 | indefinitely, Boston .. — MAY BOX HERE > haa ale y ers | Tho Asahi Cubs-Lincoln Park Chicago .: i 9 Pirates tio game of last Sunday SHE Sk ) McLeanMay Race Here | Next Fall World’s Ice Now at Moore, Perform on Coast King of the Steel Blades Champion, May BY TOM OLSEN STANDINGS BY HENKY L. FARRELL PO! D, May 2.—The Bea if OBBY McLBAN, world champion | Is LEADER IN ORIL1© occ. iy 4 y YORK, M Pp: ‘ i into nd plsce bees i | ico wkater, will be seen in com wa « fo Dem Fz agp pot ij petition in Seattle, Vancouver and evelt oo kuin " : | tiated by the Patrick brothers and NDWICH, England, May 2 lard . . 4 the end of the wee Ve started the contest | Pete Muldoon are completed een st. ‘ Jock § it SEA Me Pap 5 i] McLean is appearing on the Or-| Robert A, Gurdner, captain of the . ot 8 pion’s manag ae ete if pheum vaudeville bill at the Moore| American Walker cup team of ama Ww } eA } wai he 0 he : i theater this we teur golfers, led in the first round |, See Gibbor manage bott Tesar rer the cteran i} The champion skater expressed 4 of the St. George's challen cup pia are to accept the terms of the p © score stood 7 to 1 when the a4 doxire to skate here at the Arena and Woodland bie Yorkéra are te lock ten: chegee if in the Canadian cities this coming play here today, | Booseve tnt thru | erenz, on the mound for the if winter Gardner tumed tn a Tb for the) ¥ os toate tates t's nz, on th pund for th i] “V've never had the. pleasure of|first 18 holes, three above par for|,,°% Sew ntepped into first stared outside | Beevers, was bit quite freely by i7 ~ } |skating here before,” McLean id) tne course place in igh at vasa | | tie, 1 lians from n on until the | ‘i 1, a li 4 race y a oii 4 he fifth, hen ie was a Ou! or bs last night, “and would phi i shaerd Later in the morning Dr. 0. P.| Garfield » by & 9 to 4 con ving on which | yarrison, The last Beaver pit ¢ Hy, | {2 Bet the opportunity, I underslwn| Willing of Portland bettered Gard-|test- With the exception of Gur-/B™ rerorad te levy a stale auaw | put a halt to the In 4 oy crs ipecd — on. OF Yl ner’s score for a 74 field, the remaining six teams in|™me? e oe ey Of the receipts |twirled four innings opular out here ‘ ra war rellef fund, are i | Duriog the past winter, McLean Wethered, the ‘British star, |the league are a ted econd 4 Page ' Tenedls \ing the visitors a bingle. hus net up five new world’s records | go 76 rgo V, Rotan, Hous-| Place with two wir en z e | Gardner substituted Jon the ice. He shattered the old|ton, Texas, was right behind him |‘? thelr cre as @ |and finished the gi | | marks 50 yard 5 yards, 100|with a 79, rang ig, HOE a le eo A ee fine shape, ; | yards, 220 yards, 440 yards and 880 Ra of San Francisco | ie Nony tapes 4 aE town, it is being pointed | + aS we H STARTED | bested Roow It tmpoes ible fc KARLY siiralcel aa ond it" ie hampionship when bi of ork of Cay ler, leader of {cess wit rge numbers of Ne ce io mon ioe aoc tmaiat COVA LEAGUE) ie ssinsa “Cut nie xenon vain of x i ,f } | and held them an Tee, TO HOLD MEET cautine-oan ay douseahs in| Reasor that'an arena to seat | 4 % | | turned profs astonal. Pa ee |e vet only 40,000 is being planned ‘and | j |. Me became a profes 0 Led SAN FRANCISCO, May 2.—Five| pPranklin’s lons to Lincoln was one |that the receipts would have to go | Ja chance at Oscar Mathieson, the | owner cific Coast league buse-|o¢ the big upsets of the day. ‘The |OVer a million dollars to pay the| j ‘ [dighiy-towted Murepeas a @ issued requests for | contest developed into a pitching |tWo fighters, the state tex and the | Src | skater, McLean promoted the match ue meeting to be held | quel between Captain Leonard Pat-|Price in the arena, it ts considered | 9 |—that brought Mathieson to this fearned today.” Pat-| reel of the Quukers, and Captain |!tpoeaibie here. 3 s y and defeated the European owing of Ouk nan Tyete, of the Railsplitters. | Mike Collins and Loy Molumby | = + ae ) races out of 12 at Chicago Lockhart | pincoln. got five bits and Franklin |@pparently are sincere in thelr of- | 30 1 @38 and Milwauke i tne navy an|°t, Beattie, and Lane of Balt Lake jhad to be content with one less {fer, bec Jack Kearns would Bs 5 308 | enlisted in the navy “#)/are sponsoring tho call. President} It took Ballard ten fonings to|never bother about talking to them os ee » and came © 2 an ensign. am H. MeCarthy not re-| win a ragged contest from Broad. |!f tle words of the promoters were | —' apple { RACED wa @ call’ to attend the meeting. | way Zoth widen erred frequently. |"Ot backed. by ready cash. | 6.7 7 ee 4 4 | | MATHIE he Tha will do #o within the next! ftoosevelt. made 13 errors in the| Tex Rickard today he consid- 4 for Tesar in fifth, | ‘ Two years later he promoted 4D-| ag» or two is considered certain. | ne Anne game, which aided the |¢red the staging of the bout possible | a Sec” 07 iasiags i went to Christiania, Norway, meet the European. McLean won all) of the races, with the exception of the 10,000-meter race, The 10,000-/ by Mathiesen | the tracks to” Pos spute abc : the skaters, McLean! to continue with the by the Judges after Mathiesen ad gained a lead of nearly @ lap, The Yankee skate hin rival on the final The rac | ital took estimated at 100,000 pernons saw t | | rival skaters in action. The king and queen of Norway, the American am-/ bassador and many other notables| were in attendance. McLean has tried repeatedly to get another race with ir poner | since his visit to Norway, but with-| out success. With McLean In the act at the Moore this week are the skating team of Burke and Blue, Jim Thom: ax, his manager, and Trainer Pete Noble, BURKE IS FROM SEATTLE Jimmy Burke, one of the skaters in the act, was recently connected with Piper & Taft's sporting goods store here. Mcl can skates on « surface 15 by 30 fect. Tho substanco that ho skates on is painted onto the floor after being baked to 200 degrees temperature. McLaan, since becoming a profes. jsional, has directed his attention to. | wards the manufacture of ice skates. BOBBY McLEAN Champion of the ice skating world, Bobby McLean, of Chicago, is here at the Moore theater this week doing a turn on Orpheum vaudeville. He expects to race on the Coast next season. Dillon and Lynch Put on Great Draw Battle BY LEO H. LASSEN ig was a great six-round battle that Dandy Dillon and “California” Joe Lynch dished up for the fans at the Arena last night, Referee Ted Whitman correctly calling | | Lynch took the first three rounds and Dillon evened the} There was plenty of action crowded into those last three| sessions, |FIRS T CONTEST Dillon elected to take the aggressive in the fourth round! 108 ANGELES, May 2—with and he carried the fight to Lynch thruout the battle from | 4% Kremer twirling goed ball, ow: day in the opening game of the series, $ to 2. Krémer clouted out a homer in the sixth with one man on tho sacks. But while Dillon was forcing the going the husky Cali- fornian was countering ef- fectively. é The ‘The score: R WE Dillon had the fourth and sixth Oakiand rag Ther rounds by a wide margin, Lynch be- Fiery Vernon « 2 2 ing pretty weary when tho fight re Kremer an ider, Jolly and Murphy. ended, The fifth was pretty even. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE will not be played over at the end of the season unless it af- fects the standings of the teams, All changes in registration for | next Sunday's games are due at The | Star by 6 p. m. today VAN JUDAH TO CAPTAIN CARDS STANFORD UNIVERSITY, May 2—Nelson Van Judah has been elected captain of the Stanford unl- versity track team for this season, BACK WILL LEAD CHEHALIS FIVE CHEHALIS, May 1--Harry Back, SAN FRANCISCO, May 2.—Abo Matin, manager of Jimmy Sacco, lightweight, declared today that he wan in receipts of offers from Seat- tle and Tacoma promoters for the services of his boy, A Tacoma pro- moter is particularly desirous of signing Sacco for May 10, Matin declared. ELLANGOWAN IS ' CLASSIC VICTOR NEWMARKET, England, May 2. —The two thousand guineas handi- cap, first of the season's classic races, was won today by Lord Roseberry’ Ellangowan from a field of 18 start. ors. Kockando, owned by Lord Wolay- RESULTS New York 8, Washington 7. Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 Detroit 6, Cleveland 5. Wonton 6, Philadelphia 4 | CANTILLON 44 YEARS IN GAME MINNEAPOLIS, May 2.—Joe Cantillon, manager of the Minneap- olis American association club, holds the undisputed claim to the number of yoars spent in a baseball uni. form, He has worn and discarded ball togn for the past 44 years, WALTER HAGEN NOW MARRIED ington, was second, and D'Orway,| NEW, YORK, May 2.—Walter Ha-| guard on the Chehalia championship TT fight up-and took a shade in the going in the last three. |OAKLAND TAKES | [ Dobie Signs for Ten More Years THACA mou I BOB GARDNER other race with Oscar Mathiesen and/ some warm developments are | pected to attend the confab. BOTHELL EASY WINNER homish was defeated by Botheli 8n on thelr home in a good co! id b a mound for the winners, struck n and allowed but three Both play jot Suni turnout. L. A. WILL AMATEUR BOUTS | LOS ANGELES, May been awarded the 1923 | Pacific Coast amateur boxing cham- |plonships by the Amateur Athletic ‘The events will be held: here goles hes union. May 22 and 24 West Side Nine Tops Prep Race Franklins Lose to Lincoln in Pitching Duel Be- tween Rival Captains reer ex ern decisively in chalking up thelr vietory. The Teddies used a trio of twirlers while the Quays | used two. IDAHO EVENS UP waist by Hotiel| —- AGGIES SERIES Schmitz, on the|_.MOSCOW, Idaho, May 2—The ‘out 12| University of Idaho evened up t hits, The |#eries @rith the Oregon Aggieh here yesterday by winning the their first game |? day and are ex-| contest by an § to # score, PEARSON WINS HOLD FROM POULSBO NINE second 2.—Los An- game at Poulsbo, ‘The home team led 4 to © at the first of the cighth, but Pearson came back strong and copped the contest. good bhi! “for thé’ winners. ‘and « good proposition, and he | peated that he would be in the ma ket for the card {f he did not have ¢ | No e|happens to Dempsey |OAKLAND JIMMY | PONOT FIRST TIME THAT VERNON OWNER HAS BROKEN RULES Will Sign Tribe Papers for Big Bout Jack Kearns Declares Ar- ticles Will Be Made by End of Week un Portland St Slugfest too much on his hands now, Rickard admitted ti he has Wiesins. Le desging Se Leverenz, ita i ste re pitcher—Gregg. Runs respopsible for— plans to match Dempsey and Jess |teverenz 4; Gregg 6. Struck out—Lev. Willard for a New York bout on|erenz 4; Gregg 1; ‘Tesar labor day and after that he will on ball attempt a Dempsey-Firpo bout: in , Stolen a Buenos Ayres during the month of |~ ember—figuring that nothing in the mean. time. SALT LAKE jloosely played IN SEMI-WINDUP | OAKLAND, May \2. The score; here tonight. Jimmy Duffy and | Sacramento Chick Roach will mix in the sem!-|Salt Lake . finals. Battling Ortega is also on| Fittery, Hughes, Yellowhorse and Ruth pitched | the card, meeting Midnight Edmund. | Koehler; Coumbe, Duchalsky, Kel son. ler, Baleholder and Peters. Trounced Indians, 7 to 5 2. Reardon and Finney. \SACRAMENTO Is VICTOR, 14-11 —Bert. Colimo | defeated the locals by a 14 to 11 Pearson defeated Poulsbo by a 9/and Racehorse Roberts, middie-| count in the opener here Pep to 7 score in an exciting 10-Inning | weights, headline the boxing show | PAGE 13 is-4 Opener ages an Early and Defeats Gardner 4: Yarrisom 6 Sacrifice Time—2:15. hite—Jobn~ Umpires— CITY, May 2.—Ina contest Sacramento H. B. m7 3 1 8 owned by Mrs, 8. Whitburn, third. The winner of the race is consid ered in Uné for the derby, gon, British open golf champion, | basketball team, hag been clected to way married Monday to Mra, dna] captain next year's flye, ‘Back is Straus, of West Long Branch, N, J.!a sophomore, Who Smokes Cinco? Survey No. 20, City of Des Moines. A section of the Cinco National Census. Male population 62,178. Cinco sales over 1,190,000 per year. 487 stores distribute Cinco. Des Moines Puts Her O. K. on the most favored cigar and adds her name to the long string of cities and towns that have elected Cinco to national leadership. Throughout the country, Cinco ranks first in popular- ity, first in flavor and smoke-satisfac- tion, first in most for the money. Last year Cinco sales ran close to a quarter of a billion—think of it. And Cinco is a much finer cigar than many selling at a higher price—mass production does that. If you are not familiar with this great smoke, just remember it’s an Eisenlohr creation, backed by 73-years of experience. It takes only one pair of Cincos to win your O.K, 2 for 15c pocket+ pack of ten for ” better still, a new-type Cinco T5c. \ My