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PAGE 16 THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, MAY 31, 993. Pe MCCARTHY TACTICS NEARLY BROKE UP LEAGUE, SAYS LANE~} IVE members of the at Poughkeepsie, BY AHERN] Yes~ aw You'Re STILL DIZZY FROM SPINNING « WHY SAY, You NEVER LOST ANN~ “THING BUT YOUR WAY Threatened |{OUR BOARDING HOUSE to Secede SNV MACK, LOAN in Frisco “TH’ MASOR A NICKEL AN'T'LL SHOW HIM Salt Lake Prexy Talks on} ae ZA WAI~MLAD~ 1 COULD PUT Nou “to scori) Wr GAMING FoR HUGE STAKES! 1 REGARD DICE AS CHILDISH AS MATCHING coils » BACK IN “We EARLY NiWeTYS I CAUSED Europe on Bikes of Washington crew, immediately after competing in the national rowing cham- N. Y,, on June 28, will join the crew of the §, 8S. Leviathan, sailing from New York 1, and then will make a tour of Europe on bicycles. The oarsmen, Sam Shaw, Fred Spuhn, Roland Franee, Max Luft and Don Grant, will all buy bicycles in Paris. From the French capital they expect to pedal to Milan, Italy, then to Rome, They will come back up the Italian University n 2 pionship to Cherbourg, France, on July How FAST rt cal SHAKE TT AWAY FROM Special Meeting Held Recently BY LEO H, LASSEN HEN President MoCarthy took | the high-handed stand that he | Mid at the special meeting of the Heague in San Francisco recently ! Tefsing to recognize the Seattle club, and ve for a tie so that the relations with the majors could | Mot be restored and tho player limit ut, it nearly broke up the | The “Big Five” went into » In & meeting of their own aft Adjournment of the regular me @nd there was strong talk of se Bion from the league which would have broken up the Coast loop. So says Bill Lane, president Mie Salt Lake club, who ts he With the team this week. *But' I advised against ft at the Time, because it wouldn't get us any Place in the long run, altho we Gould easily get another club in the Pircuit and start a six-league club of our own. "McCarthy knows just as well he knows anything that he's golng to get the ax when the league meets In November. And he's just trying fo stick to his opposition as long as he can. “The so-called ‘Big Five’ advised the Seattle ball club to take the| / Matter of his refusing to recognize | the club into court, ay it is purely | "&® business matter, and is not vio- | lating the unwritten law of baseball that diamond matters shall be kept ‘ut of the civil courts. ' “As long as the Seattle team ts Playing in the league and the other clubs are taking 40 per cont of the Tecelpts out of the gate, then Seat- tle is certainly entitled to represen- fation in league affairs.” WHY BALDWIN PLAYS WELL Ted Baldwin, Seattle's great young third sacker, still has a lot to learn ‘about the fine points of third base Play, but he is a willing worker and the reason for his ability to field at Whe hot corner is because he ts al-| SWays out in front of the ball. You'll have to take Charley Pick’s Statement for that, and as the colonel Mis a mean third sacker himself he ‘knows something about hot corner of as | Pay. When Pick was here last week with = Hthe Senators he said that Baldwin robbed his club out of more base than any other player in the M of a game in that first encoun- yesterday and also hit a few at S HALL VISIT Ross Hall, the genial and likewise HIM Wild “This MINGTREL Pilg PoNG 4 Sle MAJOR STEAMG 'EM ABOUT Ble STAKES ==" Hiram Connibear’s Daughter Will | Christen Washington’s New Shell T June ington crew co: QUITE A FURORE AT MoNTE CARLO WITH MY RECKLESS ABANDON AT “THe ROULETTS TABLES !~ MIND You, wh Te SPINS OF “He WHEEL T Wot) A FORTUNE, Hed) PLANED IT ALL on ONE SPI AND LOST! “HE CROUPIERS CALLED ME "ONE SPIN” HooPLe! ee BY TOM OLSEN Hiram Con HOME 1M "TH’ DARK 0 GAMBLER!» HA-WA- “TH ONLY “THING Nou EVER PUTA | DIME ON, WAS A WET BAR Is third base started and it | welt had two mi |the brakes and had | thraout ‘the afternoon EN-YEAR-OLD CATHERINE CONNIBEAR, daughter of the late University of Wash- y ach, will christen the new shell “Husky” at Madison, Wisconsin, on} 16, just prior to the race between the local crew and the University of Wisconsin jon Lake Mendota, it was learned yesterday. | Catherine Connibear and her mother, Mrs. nibear, are living in Dixon, Hlinois, where they went shortly after the untimely death of the great crew coach here. | Coach Russell Callow, the present Washington tutor, who learned under Connibear, made the suggestion that it w the shell that will carry the} Washington oarsmen in the| race against Wisconsin on June 16 and at the National Rowing rae ar at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., on June 28. University officials promptly extended the invita- tion to Mrs. Connibear and her daughter, and received a vould be very fitting i f the daugh ter be selected to christen | | California Star MILTON IS WINNER OF AUTO RACE SDIANAPOLIS, May 31-—Tommy ke a mile sweepstakes automobile race, | will receive $28,500 for his victory. | the fire for him by i third | talttes. worked the mound for the visitors. | Malawin, tb eo-ca- Ritchie, @ serovar Milton, two-time winner of theSt0. | aci!® peninsula to Vienna, Austria, and then to Hamburg, German around the British isles Take Two From Bees Fred Blake | 1 over th yenterday at the et orghard, butting out the enemy 8 to ¢ ad B winn nd game EAN and turned in a Lake Bee GREGG toubl i bad a world of atuff in game a ever St ‘ Baldwins gre nd Ray featured the ke had w tough looked like but he pul ‘ itt tiff I > getting ||), another 4 him the Bees o eating for him, together and after scored twice the first and h, he put on them In band 0 in the fe ‘The Tribe pulled the game out of bunching hits | the thelr nd battery errora in necond fourth for five and N John Singleton and Dick McCabe Firet Game gad AN. RK Halt Lake— uP wor | pion i 1 1 i » TEE, D eevenmees elececoces> te 8 Litl vite Nuns responsible Wek Outre Ver || Essick Favors ¥ and ¢ hasn't j Judges’ VERNON LOSES LOB ANGELES, Angeles took both games Memorial Day double header from Vernon here yesterday, ‘The scores were 3 to 1 and Tho scores (first game and Byler, @eeond game). Jim O'Connell at Gone Valla in a better ball r than Jimmy O'Connell, but of the Tigers, excluded from this list doem't say that Valla isn't 1 playe the play ah of the speedy Italian ex- mely well-—but he doesn't care rd the fielder his he likes Heattio §, i an rating above ell has @ world of nat- y," nuyn Eanick, “and he how it in time, He hasn't off to a good start, but he me, and when he does he be & sensation, Valla has re dash about him, but he 4 th natural ability that ‘Connell has,” Angeles Los Angeles 3 New York Pittsburg Cimeinnati +. Louis |Phtiadelphia . BEATEN BY BERNSTEIN: EW YORK, May 31.—Jack Bern Yonké ¥., won the | decision over Johnny Dun of New York tn a bout for the 1a's junior Philadelphia i nen) d game) ure 10, Ch 14, ? tein, > New York 9, Bri lightweight Dundeo cham title nship. New York Phitadels Cleveland ¢ piled up a big lead early | Detroit fight, but his opponent |& i Washington strong and made a@lnitenie Pidred. was the | Boston ¢, Pi | Bt. Louls 19, | Detroft 4, st. | Cleveland. 7, Chicago 1, Ch New York 6. New Tork 9, TWO CONTESTS May 31.—Los of the 2 to 1. TWI hellenback and non San Francisco 6, Oskiand 4 Cincinnati 6 AMERIC. Fike | COAST LEAGUE Won. 1 ‘ a o ne t Lake 0 (first game) (fret Vernon 1 (firet mai Vernon 1 (second gm: NATIONAL LEAGUE RESULTS 6, Be Philadel (firat 4, Boston 1 Chicago 4 (first game); hieago 3 (second game). St. Louls 3 (firet game, 10 Bt Louls 9 (second ‘ooklyn 6 (second gam: LEAGUE Won, Lost. Pet. 19 ose 68 Ait 20 AN ee Tae 406 Caught stealing —Pearce, 3 394 16 37 20 ‘pin ;| bouts. The boys are improving after ashington 6 (second gam PORTLAND IS CE BEATEN They expect to conclude their trip with a jaunt Star Aouateur Show Booked for Friday ‘Redskins 11 Fights | Booked on — Big Card INETEEN Jeather pushers will fight it out in the amateur ‘|\finals of The Star's city amateur boxing championship tournament at Austin & Salt'’s gymnasium tomor- “lrow night. These boxers represhat seven divisions ranging from the 95- to 105-pound class to the heavy- |welghts, The 19 boys remaining in |the running have earned the right to participate in the finals as the “|result of thelr showing in the two series of preliminary matches the past month. These boys are all winners in their respective divisions. The lineup of matches will be: Heavyweight Championship Jack McDonald vs. John Burdnick. 145 to 150 Pounds Rocco Papi vs. John Carroll. 135 to 140 Pounds Jimmy Dunn vs. Tony Cella. lightning Melody vs. Freddie Burnett. 120 to 126 Pounds Dick Butler vs. Milton Lovell. Waller Williams vs. winner. 110 to 116 Pounds Larry Hannon ys. Leo Barrett. Tommy Green vs. Dave Manning. Don McEachren vs. winner, 95 to 105 Pounds John Wiglin vs. Hun Isaacs. Johnny Brill vs. Bud Bercot. The contestants In the middle- weight class have not yet been an- nounced, All of the boys boxing in the semi-finals and finals tomorrow night are training daily and will be the pink of condition for their three weeks of working and tomor- row night will find some pretty highly polished amateurs winging into action, Several of the battlers have displayed marked ability, . A great deal of interest is center ing on the tilt for the heavyweight crown between Jack McDonald and PORTLAND, May 31,—Sacramen-| John Burdnick. McDonald has been to won both games from the Beay-| undergoing a thoro working over at ere hero yesterday, The scores (first game): R. H. B.jand sparring mates. He has dis- the hands of competent trainers inertiy scout for the Cincinnat! Reds Of this amount $20,000 will be firnt | * isa Seattle visitor. Hall has sent up| quite a few men from this league, | whom are Babe Pinelli and nmy Caveney. ’ Hall was particularly impressed by Vean Gregs’s work on the mound. Hall thought that Vean Jooked better out there yesterday Sacramento ...... |Portland .. Yellowhorse, +9 14 23) played exceptional ability and will +3 8 4}make his debut as a professional if Thompson andjhe is successful in winning the Schang; Sutherland and Daly. amateur title. Burdnick doesn't (Second game). R. H. E.| possess the polish of McDonald, but Sacramento . 11 2}will have the advantage of 10 Portiand 3) pounés of weight, height, and is a Hughes, Thompson, Canfield and|tough, hard. punching, big fellow. Koehler; Schroeder, Middleton, Lev-| Both boys have won two matches erenz, Crumpler and Daly. to date in the tournament. F prise money and $8,500 for leading in | nism the first 100 laps of the race. Milton | ht also Won the first money in 1921 and |} is the only driver to twice carry off | ni the first prize in the classic contest. | he Other prises were: Ln 4 Hartz, second, $10,000; Murphy, | third, $5,000; Hearne, fourth, $3,500; Corum, fifth, $3,000; Elliott, sixth, | ,, Loa Angeles er, Jolly and Hannah; dall and Baldwin, reply of acceptance. | ‘The shell, altho not formally chris- | tened, was given its first workout) Tuesday afternoon and came up to every expectation of both the coach and George Pockock, the maker. te Cran te «. Orr, Tohwe Nohwer Caugh ate +Dout on to P 1:8, mon * batted In hie, Kidred. an, S BENDER SIGNS Cc. A. “Chief” Bender, former etar piteber of the Philadelphia Athletics, has been signed by the Baltimore Umpires CREW LEAVES ferond Game NEXT FRIDAY AB. tt a | than he did at any time last year. | with men on the sacks and ho is CRANE HITS BEHIND RUNNERS Not only is Sammy Crane hitting The ball at a harder clip than he ‘ever did before for the Indians, but he is getting those base blows hitting behind the runner with tell on hit and run plays. ‘s en hits count. The boys Click the agate for a base blow and then with the enemy far the lead and with no one on the mean much, but hitting} is hitting now is ef-| , the Virginian sheriff, saw Ray Rohwer catch the fly for the final out in the second game yesterday he heaved a great ‘sigh of relief and walked toward the clubhouse a new ball player. Biake has been in one of the worst slumps that any pitcher has experi- enced in the Coast league, losing something like eight or nine straight games. Blake has showed plenty of stuff, but has been wild and unable to win. His team mates gave him the glad hand when he reached the, bnech. Biake has showed the right kin dof stuff by not whining about tough breaks: The win may mean the turning point for him as the sheriff has the stuff. Game Chatter |! Marry Gardner and Pudgy Gould, ers. are due to pitch Thurs. matinee, Blake wan in fine fottie after the third, the Bee tting only two bingles off the sheriff. | Rohwer hit two mighty triples tn the first game, one going to left center, the Yongest ball hit there this year by a southpaw hitter, and the other bouncing off the right fleld fence. Fredericks, the promising young Teo it a double and a single you- looks pretty good at the piate, Ritchie eof the best plays of the first game when A to seore from second vin hit to right. Rohwer threw that ball in like it was shot gut of @ gun, and Singleton tried to [4d back to third, but Ritchie nailed im with « bewutiful throw to Bald- | will have three subs and the Frosh | win, and the third wacker sin d it on him in big league styloo 146 Bheshan got himaelt kicked out of the second gamo in the ninth when he wid something unkind to Umpire Ward on @ called strike, Tha count wan two and two, Coumbe took the swing tor Sheehan end sat down, Lane and Eldred putied the aguble Meal on MoCabe and Peters fn tha neo- Gnd game, Lane scoring. Welsh made n great stop of Lewin’ drive in the first game, getting the | boll at bis feet, It was a terrific mminek, 4 “Doe Johnston gave the boyw and girls along first base a taugh by imi- tating the mover ot Umpire Lord Byron, And the boy William ivelped it wong by kidding with the Doctor, The crew leaves at 930 a. m. Friday, June 8%, over the Columbian, of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad. The oarsmen arrive at Madison, Wisconsin, on the morn- ing of Monday, June 11, giving them five days to work for the race with the Badgers on the following Saturday. Immediately after the Wisconsin race, they leave for Poughkeepsie. They expect to ar. rive in the New York town in time fo a workout on Monday morning. SAME CREW AT WISCONSIN Wisconsin's crew this year is ex- actly the same as the one that raced Washington last year on Lake | Mendota. ‘ Coech Callow isn’t under the impression that his men will have things easy back there and will work them hard for the Wis- consin clash. The Wisconsin Washington race will come during the annual com: mencement week at the Badger in- stitution. Thousands of grade and undergrads will be in Madison at the time and the crew race is the big feature. The race will be over a three-mile course, the same as Poughkeepsie. Altho the Frosh will have no com- petition, they will be put thru their daily workouts with the Varsity on the lake. CALISTH. ON TRAD Coach Callow will put the men thru regular calisthenics en route East. He plans to have the men hop off at each station and give them thelr regular exercises, Besides the regular elght oarsmen nd cox for each crew, the Varsity two. Coach Callow has not yet| picked the subs. A spectal car will carry both} shelle. TO WASHINGTON WALLA WALLA, May 31—The University of Washington baseball team defeated Whitman here yes- terday before a big crowd by a 6 to 2 score in a fast. gume Har per, on the mound for the winners, allowed but two hits ‘The acore— Washington Whitman ... Harper and = Walby; Ward and Walthers, FROSH NET MEN BEST BROADWAY With the exception of one moteh, the University of Washington Frovh tennis team made a clean sweep of the meet with Broadway High| achool Tuesday, at the Tennis club, Dick Lang, of Broadway, bent! Lynch, of the Frosh, In the foa- tured ‘match of the day, Harry r.| Knutson, Norris, California pole vaulting ace, is shown above clearing the bar on a high jump. Norris will compete in the Pactfic Coast Conference meet at Pullman Saturday. Spear- row, the Oregon Aggie ace, is favored to win the pole vault, and Callison of Washington can hardly be figured out of the running. OAKLAND DROPS TWO TO SEALS SAN FRANCISCO, May 31,--Oak- land dropped two games yesterday to San Franciseo, The score of the morning game was 13 to 3 and the afternoon game, 5 to 4, Tho #eores: (Morning game) Oakland nh. oe DD San Francisco sold 211 Murehio, Arlett and Thomas; Mo Weeney and Agnew, (Afternoon game), Oakland San Fra H. B, Shaw, Frosh, defeated Danny Lewis, Broadway, 6-3, 5-7, 7% Murehlo, Colwell and Thomas; Shea, Buckley, Hodge and Yelle, one the University of} $2,200; Durant, seventh, $1,800; Sail. $1,500; Morton, 10th, $1,400. Wileox pulled $2,000 in lap money; Murphy, $1,100; Durant, Hartz, $100. Qa Mont., May 31.—/ Blackfoot Indians living on a} reservation near Shelby today de tend the coming fight. Meeting in a mammoth pow-wow es. pecially to discuss the big holiday |, event, the redmen voted unanimous. ly that they wished to see tho} heavyweights clash, If they are granted permission, the Indians, several hundred strong, will attend the event in a body, to- gether with thelr families, it was decided. ‘ F. C, Campbell, superintendent of | the reservation, sald he would ask Washington officials to permit the Blackfoots to witness the contest Champion Jack Dempsey was planning to rest today, and tomor- row will leave for % week's fishing trip. Unless present plans are changed, he will not box again this week. Yesterday, before a crowd of 2,000, the champion walloped fivo spar ring mates during 10 rounds of tor- rid boxing, Ho finished the work- out in apparent good condition. Dempsey's exercise today consist- ed only of a long walk, taken early |this morning. He said’ that he was | | not the least fatigued or sore as the [result of his hard workout yester. day. j} He spent most of the day prepar- ing his fishing tackle and seemed eager to be off to the mountains, Tommy Gibbons Js here for an ex. hibition tonight, He assured friends that ho is feoling in fine shape and declared ho expects to win his July 4 bout with Dempsey. Gibbons . will establish trafning headquarters at Shelby on June 4, ho announced, Tim McGrath is introducing some- thing entirely new for present-day fight fans, He is coaching and training Pat Tester, heavyweight of “Spldor’ Kelly, in the way he did ‘Tom Shar- key and other heavyweights in the old days at San Francisco now, Ho has Loater run several miles in Goldon Gate park every day. ‘rain Jers ofthe present period don't he- \Neve in that. They've heard talk Jabout fighters leaving their fight on | the row | But Tim, who has trained most of |b the great, old-time fighters, belloven in road work, und plenty of st, and ho believes in plenty of other kinda of work, Dempaey-Gibbons fi | Predericks, rf sis: er, eighth, $1,600; De Cyatria, ninth, | Lesiie, ab . str ~ manded that they be allowed to at. | Bisk* » on baile ared. Ne, of thrilla all the way team, of the Sawdust Marry Taylor's Fern Hill toam, Tacoma City irague, @ 3-to-1 beating on the Union Mills grounds pn Decoration | Burke for Fe gathered three of the game, making, but Was nipped at the plate by playing right fleld for the MIL men Sawdust leaguers came right bi gamer, | pany | Bucoda. Fern Hill of Tacoma nold. wiap winning byw wie decided in the 100 Inning. flvld pitobed good ball for the winn whe Humphreys and Haterbrook wha the club of the International league. e ° Totals a0 6 ‘Replaced Sheehan at bat in nint Runa teaponalble tor Btruck ont—Blake Binke, Stolen ba Two-base bite Welsh, ‘etors. Fredericks, Withoit, Crane, Caught stealing of game—1;50, Umpires Byron, Amateur Results ON WINS UNION MILLS, a1. ell pinyed game that furnished plenty the Union Mills league, handed of the Ward and MILLS M ley Lyman of the Mill team and olghth the Fern Hillers hits for their lone tall Another rin Was in tho rat halt of the beautiful atop and throw by Harpell The « in their Hid by mixing a couple misplaye by Fern Hill, over the three runs that proved ugh fo salt the game away In Hunday's Sawdust nber apany low ol Lumb hile Mumby I Mutual Lumber company play at The soore— nt pion Mille. Lee Burke and Lyman and Gustafson; Ar Raleigh and Pateros » ‘Tharriauit, played wood bait ing the longue, W nce, Trestor In thh occupying the cellar The #00 ALeron Gobin and Bryin} Hope and Logan, GOODYEAR CLALLAM BAY, Sunday, oof f to, Tho camo Daw mound work for the lowers, << pad ) \\ iG <i \( AR S) Vy Stand Pat on 44 OULD so many men be smoking 44 excl sively, if it didn’t strike them as being just about right? From the standpoint of to- baccos, aroma, workmanship and price, 44 is a good cigar to stand pat on, 44 is a Sumatra-wrapped cigar made of mellow, carefully seasoned tobaccos. 44 Cigar is made by Consolidated Cigar Corporation New York Distributed by Alten & Lewin, 1120 Pine St. Senttle, Wash, Branch of Allen & Lewly, Portland, Ore, 44—Now in handy packs ‘of five—37c