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PAGE 16 Fine Scrap Put Up by Local Boy) Loses Verdict by Acci- dental Fall in Eighth; Leads From Fifth On BY TOM OLS RTLAND, Or April 9.! —Pinkey Mitchell, of Mil- waukee, still the world’s junior welterweight cham- pion, following his 10-round victory over Bobby Harper, the popular Seattle challeng- er, here last night. Nine count, scored by Mitchell in the eighth round, was the fac- tor that decided the Rose City is |. judges in favor of the cham- | pion. It was an interesting ; exhibition, both boys enter- ; taining the big crowd with| clever boxing th e 10 rounds. The nine cov » over Har per was not considered as a knock down. Mitchell had the Seat im a bad way in the eighth ses sion, landing several hard blows on the face and body. As the round Reared the close, whirled Harper tel) to the floor @own for nine counts. Boy's decision to stay take the count. hoping to recover himself sufficiently to finish the round and the fight and overcome the margin, cost him the verdict. Mitchell piled up an early lead on Harper, but Bobby was coming back strong from the fifth round on, and | many expected him to cop the ver ampion about and Bobby | Marper stayed | The Seattle down the dict. HARPER TIMID The first round was taken up} with the customary feeling-out with | Py neither boy having an edge. Harper Meemed timid, while the champion > displayed plenty of confidence. Mitchell won the second, third and “fourth rounds by a good margin. tried to box with him, but the Milwaukee man was too good “in this department. The Seattleite "failed to make any impression as an | Infighter, which ‘s supposed to be strong suit. eam came back in the sixth jsession and won it by & small mar. | He also took the sixth, while | geventh was just about even, Bobby having the slightest | ‘The Pacific Coast boxer was inning to use his infighting a bit er ReRORS ce TACNNRRHN, i abe bothered by this. Thecham- hung on repeatedly in these and the crowd: voiced its/ I at his actions. | was in the eighth round that fight was decided. Harper was} . the round for the first TMminute, when the champion landed} ® fight and a left in rapid succes ‘sion on Bobby's chin. Harper stag- : about, and Mitchell was on ) like a panther. The Seattle hung on; Mitchell whirled about Bobby fell against the ropes sipped to the floor. He re- 4 polsed on one knee, and ey hard {n the remaining sec- © onds of the round. He was still on @ueer street when the round ended, went to the wrong corner be- being ushered to his chair by ninth, and won the last round good margin. He landed eight left jabs in rapid succession | fn the round. “Mitchell's welght was 143% da, while Harper weighed The champion was three or | ~ inches taller than the Seattle and had the edge on the reach. large crowd of Seattle fans} “who were here for the fight, altho ippointed in not seeing Harper ® victory, or at least a draw, satisfaction In his show- Against the titleholder. MATCHES START Elimination matches for the Unt. Wersity of Washington tennis team ‘Started Monday. More than 30 men Bre playing daily in an effort to be| fone of those who will reach the| nals. his Grows Hair } or Money Back absolutely guaranteed Saturday. and} 6; Hal Condon, Jeffettes Elect Head the leading figure in the ccupnien INDIANS LOSE OPENING TILT TO LOS ANGELES BY 5 TO 1 SCORE BOBBY HARPER LOSES DECISION TO PINK MITCHELL IN FAST GO? } They’re Favored to Win From California . r. as. \ a wie ww “~ Entering their final days of training, the University of Washington crew is primed for a victory over California 5; Max Luft, 4; Harriso: of Division the Husky shell From left to right the men are: Capt. Don Grant, coz; Al Ulbrickson, m Sanford, 3; ; Roland, France, down the course stroke; , and Harry Joh BY JACK HOHENBERG [402 comes trom Lincoln. Harry | WOMEN’S division was created| Breaking all records for the 1924 = pened pec an eng 7 a in the Jefferson Park Golf club,|crew season, the University of! nos away Harrisedd Sanford te yesterday afternoon, when 27 of the| Washington eight negotiated the | oi0." 30). jun aie | fair sex golfers who get their play-|three-mile course, Tuesda 1S) how Wal . pel a oth Balting ing.on the municipal lin 4 ajminutes and 43 seconds. This may/i.0. yay Luft isa Bremerton: ber Meeting in the clubhouse <ijmean everything or nothing Réland Wraned ediete from Mente officers and completed plans for the! To Coach Rusty Callow, of the | aq, Pred Spin the one Thuy coming season. z Washington crew, it means who does £ come from Washing Mra, Leland Carpenter, who was|Callow says that a swift wind blew |ion resides tn Medford, Ore tion movement, was electéd « 4. This same wind blowing against the| que FRESHMAN This honor also places her at California eight, Monday, may have | FROM THIS CITY head of the handicap committee, |had some effect on the 18 minutes Frank Horsfall, rowing thrée in which is composed of the following effectively, and Mitchell was|ment and the usual events that are the handicap committee are going to see to tt that the Jeffettes are kept | In a word, Captain Carpenter and and 66 seconds time turned tn by interested spectator, it seems as if the Washington crew must cer- tainly win, by reason of the re- the frosh shy well known links devotees: Mrs. F.| Bears . ss shal 6 comes ©. Hanlon, Mrs. C. ©. Hulen. Mra! Catiow matntains, from Whiat he | (7 yh Headey. herrs 8. Anderson and Miss Margaret) has seen of the Californians, th@|\, trom s mnlah; ‘Sonja Scott. |they have better inboard work than | ro, Quast, Mary Ted Keith A schedule will be drawn up with-|the Huskies, Ridgefield: Thomp: Centralia in the next few days, which will in-| “7 think they are a smoother|s err Merced, Cal, and Powers, cide .a club champlonahin, tourna: | working shell, from. what I have|aupeng se en | seen,” says Callow. “And I know |)" "™* atest |isted on other such programs. {that when we line up against Call Team matches with the other club | fornia, Saturday, we are going to be OOD CARD of the city will possibly be arranged |in for # hard race.” x =< for. From the viewpoint of a dis- Ll ED FOR AMATEURS in} In the lone Seattle Fred Spuhn, 7; Dow Walling,, | n Dutton, bow. HUSKIES MAKE FAST TIME Hood Sore OVER THREE-MILE COURSE About L.A. Raw Deal LITHO he has signed to play with Los Angeles again this year, y Hood ia sorely disappointed in he failure of the L. A. club to make & deal with some big league club. Hood thinks that his big year of last year entitled him to a chance in the majors again, He had one ch with Br yn, but wae sent back. Hood di © & remarkably fine 1 ear with ¢ Angels in 1923, h ting around year and lea the league in a field Incidentally Los Angeles has pretty fair outfield this year with Hood, Cedric Durst and Babe Twom- bley on deck for duty. It will be ono of the hardest hitting combt- pations'in the SEALS WINNERS OVER BEAVERS SAN FRANCISCO, April 9.—San isco trimmed the Portland vers to the tune of 22 in the opening Coast league game of the ts from the out busy during the 1924 season sedation’ takes’: Carnal ba. Ne. am cht amateur shows at |"0@08, held here Tuesday. It was a Mrs, Martha Culp, concessionaire wad except a young cyclone, agen ig toon eee weil! be [Pretty pitcher's battle between Gard at the Beacon Hill clubhouse dining| ould have made three minutes | the Au & Salt gym will ner and Shea, Shea's support being room, was the hostess at a lunch for; difference between the crews, |the only diversion for Seattle box-|better. The score: nH B those who attended yesterday's Meet-| ‘Phe Washington shell is a power. [ing bugs until such time as outdoor Portland . $8.4 ae | ful unit, and exhibits more po- ows can be held at the Beattie | “a2 Francisco a9 3} ba i i | tential possibilities than the |pati park Batteries: Gardner and Daly; hea E elght-man team from the unl-| Poughkeepsie shell of last year. Lonnie Austin haa scouted the “nd Yelle versity got trimmed by the! It will require plenty of work to [amateur ranks thoroly and an FET ITN Meadow Parkers, in Tacoma, last Sat- urday. with the short end of a 16-4 score. Art Gerbel lost two points and his HARBACH AT FIVE The U boys returned home| over, bring these possibilities out, how GIBBONS DISPLACES nounces that of the best stmon |west In compe | Among the smile. He recovered the latter when| Coach Ky Ebright has switched|are Lom Swat he finished counting the gate re-| Mike Gibbons, freshman captain last | Donald Eni ceipts in the Nicol-Westland match, | year, to Edwin Harbach’s seat at | Raub, TF yesterday. five. Gibbons has been rowing tn /die Jordan, May 17 will find these teams play- | ing on the varsity links In a return| practice here. engagement. to Gardini of Boston last night ex- tended after two hours of grappling. \ of the remarkable hes Ess d |p Massage, guaranteed in to stop falling hair and to row new hair. It costs you nothing Prov fails. Supplants old-time tonics. ¢6 that hair roots can be revived, new life. Embodies new principles d new method of applica which combating miecite hog te fro You pie no J your drug or a 0 store about it and the b 90-day treatment guarantee. Advertisement rah pe Tuesday that EXTENDS LEWIS j PHILADELPHIA, April 9.—Rena:| FIVE MEN Wrestling Champion | trangler”” Lewis, getting a draw/are from Seat the Bear shell during nearly evor against the Hu FROM SEATTLE e men on the Washington crew ‘a Franklin high alumnus. | by a 600-424 ac a | Horemans | night tle. Al Ulbrickson {a Hal Con of OUR BOARDING HOUSE I MUST BE GETTING BACK~To WARM UP CLAUDE'S SUPPER» I JUST STOPPED IN “TO“TELL You THAT “THE COMPANY CAME AND “0K MRO. HEMLAW'S PIANO AWAY, «1 SAW Wo NEW WASHBOILERS Goile ISTO MRS. “TOBIN'S HOUSE,» You CANT TELL ME BUT WHAT THAT HUSBAND OF HERS IS USING ale OF THEM “To MAKE BEER! AND MRS. FLETCHER ISNT GETTING ANYTHING NEW THIS SPRING, AS 1 SAW THE DRY CLEANERS STOP AT HER PLACE Jame ATUKT MRS. GARNEN 19 1H’ HAVE You NEIGHBORHOOD NOTICED tr MRS. GAREY OR io IT Just me 2s BUT “THE DOESNT SEEM TO BE] \WITh LETTE ANN NEWS ANNMORE! Cue, Lioyd & Ebright announced | fart Brack. Gibbons would row | — ies. | HOPPE — | NEW YORI the first block commanding he will present some re In the North tition Friday. boys he will pair off in, Charile Kutcheral chern, Dick Butler, tandal Clements, Ed Dub Hohman, Mike M Fred Wolaver and 1S LEADER April 9.—Winning |" 8 1,600-potnt match | ‘ore, Willie Hoppe took lead over Edouard Belgium, here, lant K, of “BY AHERN) Bod COULI BLINDFOLD HER, AN’ site! KNow “TH’ FEEL OF EVERY DOORKNOB ON | SCHELLENBACH PITCHES WELL SACRAMENTO, April 9—Falling on the offerings of Hughes with glee, the Vernon tossers scored four runs | and a 91 ory over the home team, Tuesday, Frank Schellenbach twirled fine ball for the winners, The ler, ACORNS SCORE WIN OVER BEES. SALT LAKE, April 9.—Onkland, cellar champions during 1923, opened | |the 1924 season with a win againat | | the Salt Lake club here Tuesday. |The score was 8-4, Walter Mails| {pitched a pretty contest for the | Acorns, Tho score: R. HB.) Oakland 8 10 4 {Salt Lake 4 8 3} | Batteries: Maile ‘and. Baker; Pon- | der Singleton, Muloahy and Peters. [BOWLING OPENS IN VANCOUVER VANCOUVER, B. C., April 9.—No high scores wero rolled in the open- ing day of the N. I. B. congress, at jthe Pender alloys, last night. B, Boo, Ltd., was the leader at the end of the evening's play, with. 2, Johnston, of the same team, high man, with 209. Drawing in tho intramural sports at the University of Washington was completed Tue The first base ball game will start promptly at 6 a.m. April 28, | fielder'a choice WEDNI Doc Crandall Bests Win First Gregg When Seattle Prep Tilt Inner Defense Blows West Seattle Takes Great | Red Baldwin Makes Only Score for Tribe by Hitting Battle From Teddies; Home Run in Fifth; Capt. Sam Crane Wrenches Weinzirl Is Injured Knee in First Inning Favorites TEAM STANDINGS BY LEO H. LASSEN ein » ee Sporting Editor of The Star arenevey OS ANGELES, Val., April 9.—Doc Crandall and Vean Ht Beattie Gregg, who have been pitch I e@ mar - ears, toiled on the kne t ¢g of C Fra ° West Seattle, joint champions as closer than the 1 for 1923, took a flying leap at | Gregg’s support the gonfalon this season by de | the fifth inning, feating the strong HKoosevelt went the ball g : “i nine at Roosevelt, 96, In the the score the tif t ro other three games, Broadway t into a bad’ hole ; beat Lincoln, 64; Ballard took Golvin sneaked p one from Franklin, 64; and Gar ets Ce one . field bit the dust at Queen Anne, © a ¥ : P _ 5-2. All the games were hard and Cran F fought and closely contested. Babe Twomt k tie Ae tent for © walk t Fiea |¢ : e. WEST SEATTLE, 9; hit a expected ik Emmer, eo, t t " me|he should have sh field, bring a tr hs what proved Twombly 2 9 It was «@ hectic © in the sock a gy O having @ decided advantage until the |ANGELS SCORE 23 4 ninth inning | FIRST RUN fis ans That ninth w terrible blow to} Los Angeles scored the first run ee SS Roosevelt's pennant aspirations. Bur-|!n the fourth, when MeCauley dou- | * ay oe a) roughs started by pumping out a |bled against the left-field fence, and |! ont Hae Oe 4 Jj three bagger. Sypher, playing the|Bill Whaley singled to right Piumam XS is aes } squeeze play to perfection, brought| Red Baldwin evened it up for Be |1Weish . ae 28 him in, Willis struck out, but|attie in the first half of the fifth| rote - a ee | Morse walked. Sypher pilfered third |by @ rifle home run over the left aden 7 eid Sane jfield fence, It was Seattle's only|_ E Thornton bunted and Bypher was|TUO of the game, and the homer | D7gmblen rf .... | t home on the play. LaChance|¥°" Red a large case of soap and | w 4 6 ced the runners around, Bou-|* “ilk shirt, y , ders wound up the proceedings by|_ Los Angeles counted again in the ° thumping the horsehide for two bags, |'8#t Of the eighth, with Bill Plum ° } scoring Morse and Thornton esate son Bred the Indianr, Gress : i Lou Weinzirl, Teddy center field Hood heires, pal Ba = hitter. . é er, burt bie knee during the elgbth|intieia out and scored che tren | Teteee ‘i eae ' eg co: when Krug| ‘Batted for G : and was carried from the singled to right {Batted for j ngren was the sensation of the) £mmer filling in for Ted Baldwin, |S*at nan scoring three doubles, @ sinél® |reguiar third sacker, out with a bum |z2%,-.. ar and taking a walk out of five —— ankle, was the victim of the only | _Hite ’ 9 at bat. The Teddy third aacker CT ibaq break of the game, batting the | }charse < na respon tainly looked good. The score: a critical chance he looked bad at the | *ble for Plommer ae § | Dlate and struck out twice, once with | by, .truek ° { Weat theattl aa 1/@ pair of Indians on the sacks. ese 2. ner ‘ | itatteriens” siveei iaGhAnce and *rP4-| Ten thousand Los Angeles fans | Trem McAuley. 9) ler; Garion and Alexarder. | thronged to the ball yard to ses the |X: 9 re bene bite—La | 5 opening day festivities, « remarkable | batted tn—Wh: BALLARD, 7; |erowd in epite of the threatening | C&¥eht stealin be FRANKLIN, 4 |weather. The day was cold and |22QUr Umpin co ee Your runs in the ninth inning cloudy. broke a 3-3 tle and gaye Ballard 4) After the usual fag raising exer-/ win over Franklin at Columbia play: |cises Mayor Cryer pitched the first field by a score of 7 to 4 The Quak-| ban, Jack Dempsey aingled and Sher- ers forced ono tally across in thelr ire Traeger looked foolish behind the half, but were not able to catch UD/ plate, Agnes Ayres, movie star, um- with the Beavers. | Pired. The usual pictures were tak- Womach muffed a grounder t/en and the battle started. It wasn’t | start the ninth, putting Gaffney 00) very thrilling contest, the cold first. Bratast delivered with a single. | weather dampening the pepper of the Frank Morse then took a J0n€/ fans chance, walking Seymour to fill the/ sayy CRANE bases. Gaffney scored on Harper's 18 INJURED | grounder and Henry Bendele drove ed | Sammy Crane pulled up with a another run, Bendele scored on ® | bad knee in the first inning when be! after Harper WA | crashed into Whaley, who was sliding | thrown out at the plate. Franklin into second. He stuck out the game, | jmado ite last run when Pinch Hitter | limping badly. He played brilliantly ltvan Lotayvelt walloped one for three | in spite of the handicap and made a sacks and scored on O'Leary's s!0-| one handed stop with his bare hand gle. of Twombly’s grounder in the third inning! that was a wonder, nearly flagging the speedy Angel at first | base. Ray Rohwer made a dazzling run. ning catch with his gloved mitt of | Jacob's high foul in the fifth and/ Whaley, Angel centerfielder pulled a | |eomersault catch in the first frame piri for Pants For aa Occasions 2,000 PAIRS ON THE RACKS "Ready made for you” Men's and young men's trousers for work, dress or school wear. Attractive patterns, good mater- well made. Unexcelled "32.95 $3.95 $4.95 Large selection of exclusive suit BROADWAY, 6, LINCOLN, 4 Pitcher Jerry Reynolds helped win his own game against Lincoln, yes- score RE E on Bowman's fly that saved a pair!| patterns and fabrics, $5.95 to Vernon 7 10 1 |terday, when he doubied In the fifth is runs. $9.95. \ sacramento .... 1 9 o nning, sending two runners across! Ralawin looked sweet behind the | PANTS STORE COMPANY Batterles: Schelienbach and Han. |tb® pan. Broadway won after @/ nate, holding up his pitchers in fine 704 FIRST AVE. nah; Hughes, Thompeon and Koeh.|Reated duel, 64. ‘The ecore: | |tyle. He'll doit he catches ike | Broadway } ut aed; T QUEEN ANNE, GARFIELD, Helpless before the masterful twirl. ing of Bruce Johnson, the Garfield Bulldogs dropped their opening en. counter to Quéen Anne by a 52 score, The Quays nicked Foster for three runs in the first inning. The ae | Garfiela | qusea An Battertos | per: Queen Anne: mon. and Hop Johnson and Dest. { 09000000000000 2 There’s Always Something Doing AT THE ZERO 214 Jefferson Street Just Back of L.C. Smith Bldg. Card Tables, Pool, Cigars Candies, Soft Drinks Fountain Lunches —-—Pay Checks Cashed—— 00000000000000 0000000000 000000000 debled fe Som * Cem « Come em + om cee SSS ee ey 2 - a - e ee Smart. Hiesor Sor Sar saris Ses COLL LAR Low, Comfortable t~ Cluett,Peabody & Co.Inc Tt a good cigar Flakionak (irand St aS + be ee aw a wf TOT OT OOD Oe Oe Oe Oe oe ee ee te ee 9S 1 O21 SS 2 Hs Or Ho oem] Pr