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PAGE 13 THE SEATTLE STAR MONDAY, APRIL rea -- —_—___—__— hon ya Sa = Bae Acta s - = e 2 aid — —_———— ¢ 99 , e ilejer is the Jonn McGraw o estern Daseba BY LEO H. LASSEN And Bill Essick is the Huggins t . seem to be almost extinct in the national gan few between. ‘They are the life of baseball LY) ihe RE are two types of baseba Killefer gets the most out of | while Essick There's too much -lady-like baseball these da 1 anagers who “make” their thang AP - The manager who “make h nd the as to have a corking good ball club to win. Given the the high-salaried diamond performers are too prone to They win because they ase bal a i 1 club that “makes” the manager ven, Essick gets wonderful re Killefer, with his get lazy when they're not in the game and there get the most out of the men t under the | John McGraw is the former type dominating personaiity, has fin “in the money toa much handshaking and peanut eating in the 2 , ; ciate ¢ 4 filler Huggins is the | Y any times with an inferior clul vards ] N Killefer Seatt e has the bes anager ‘ - The McGraw type, the driver, the born of Next to Killefer ranks Bill Kenworthy as a leader of = league, He's smart, a leader of men and yers who wouldn't hustle for a fe like lacking the driving personality of the leader, he needs Killefer and the Iron Duke. _for them whether they win or lose. Every te Killefer has always finished “in the money” and wh a classy ball club to be up in the race. can't be a winner, but every team can hustle. his present team is getting away to a poor start, é ; Ly ri = The colorful managers like “Hap” Hogan, one of the | largely to poor traini conditions, the Seattle manager N the Pacific Coast league we have the same opposite [' S too bad that baseball hasn't more men of the class immortals of Coast league baseball; Joe Cantillon, will have a hustling team for Seattle fans and if the : types of McGraw, Killefer, Kenworthy and the rest of them famous “Pongo Joe"; Jakey Atz, the Texas wizard, and present crop of players won't do, then he'll get the ' “Red” Killefer is of the MeGraw school They really belong to the “old school” and their species Jack Dunn, the baron of Baltimore, are too far and men that can deliver. _ Brady and Crane Make Yanks and [Salt Lake Indians in | Takes Two _ Up Fine Keystone Pair — i tien Bad Start. Off Tribe FACIIC COAST LEAGUE t Li These Indians Give Seattle Best Combination Local | Team Has Ever Had; Weakness There Has Cost | } | Fast, but inexperienced as a baserunner, yew yor Jimmy Welsh, Seattle's great young diamond : prospect, is being taught the finer arts of n one of the big ajor league se t powe Many Ball Games in Past early © LIFF BRADY and Sammy Crane givé Seattle the best) the paths by Billy Lane, a master base | pair of tossers that have ever guarded the keystone sack for the Indians. ; Second base has always been a weak spot in the Redskins “defense. Such men as Bruce Hartford, Claude Derrick, Bill Stumpf, Spencer Adams and Clyde Mearkle have been sta- Yoned there from time to time and none of them were high- | class infielders from a defensive standpoint. : Bill Kenworthy was the best keystone man Seattle ever —— |had and made up in hustle and hitting strength what he might have lacked in class, But Brady 1 over from | fielding standpoint. He hasn't power at the plate that Ken and Rated as the m thief, and Red Killefer, manager of the \in the Ameri league, t jubs have been filling Redskins, who was a sweet baserunner him- floundering St. Louis E place five games the Yank while self a few years ago, The cameraman shows Billy Lane demonstrating his sliding tricks to Welsh under the direction of Killefer. > the slump of t as been more Husky Crews to The Univer crews were tice here this afte je started them 4 ms; while the In | strength of the league Neither the Yanks nor the able to get the ¢ a ity of Washington their prac n, following rom thelr pitchers. with the collapse of their r |\staff, the champions ‘hy |/nursing a first class t worthy has, but he m hard to pitch to, ys the kind of ball that Gaur LAKE CITY, attle was beaten t rday by Salt Lake 6 slump.|score of the first game was iso been ttt ee aE | Fura ea qth ‘Sie Huggins blamed the poor start of /10 and the second, 11 to ¢ Fre Me ale 20eee Angeles he'll Seattle fana all! is Yanks to the bad weather in| In the first game, Frederick m: ere — for him. Brady knows what it's! Boston, but he offered no explana-|made two home runs and Sheehar eet calltoca e qr rey [lant abou new man | tion of the reason why the we r €ollege cight on Lake Washington |/|that tho Indiang have. next Saturday. Crane, w he's right, doesn’t | The Varsity will work for the || have to take a hack seat for any-) Poughkeepsie, while || body. Ted Baldwin is playing grea Callow will select a ||ball at third and gives Crane a Junior Varsity eight, which will || chan: to move nearer second, also race at Poughkeepsie. he can figure in more dow HUSKY BALL | TOSSERSTO 2c2ceccet| Meeting of &% The 7 Figgety = vistT ©: A. C—_____— E University of Bey Diamond Dust } Star League conditions did not handicap the F Sox as well and Jenkins |ACORNS DROP __#r/1nd Jerking," BOTH GAMES \attle. but didn’t prove effective. H SAN FRANCISCO, April ¢ Was succeeded by Vic Pigg, who y Welsh, Rohwer, Vitt, La San Francisco defeated Oakiana |PUt little better.” Hulvey aad Pond ltwice here yesterday, § to 4 and s(¢" bared the mound duties for Salt Lake Jim Bagby pitched the first inning for Seattle in the second, bt knocked ¢ It’s double plays in revolve around sec © pinches base | cod “— — — _ xreseneasthcnstsegneenensestnesenaataset SS Sebi eee ksi Beating Clubs That Turn "Em Loose Joy to Tossers saves your close ball games. t of the box after the scored seven tallies Perey Lee Jones, who succeeded i|him, met with mediocre success McCabe went the entire route for AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww oF baseball team will take to the) 5 Chicage .s ‘ i 10 | SnEEeEnEnEeeenetiee Salt Lake in the second. (ead this week. ‘The Huskies tangle | ra) ] lg t Detrott Se ane Firet game— » with O. A. C. at Corvallis Friday and Pre gta A sob pte Groh. The : n on | Boston . 4 i BY BILLY EVANS } No doubt there was a decp rooted ANGELS WIN |Seattio see Piitertay. Oc Monday and Tuceday |* nt third Daseman, hit a hom- |THE first organization meeting af | Wathington : RANGE how ball players like | Ambition on the part of Young to Lake © / Coach Graves’ inds meet the Uni} >, dg ot fal syd waned ‘Thestar Baseball league will | Lplsdeipnie H H Gbicegtet: clue ‘Chak ae Turned | show Boston fans and owner that he | TWO CONTESTS | |». Pigg and 7 Eversity of Oregon. got by for the Gisnte|D@ held this evening in The Star of- | Ne ee I heca loci | was far from thru, If I properly in.) LOS ANGELES, April 21.—Los| ney Seco: Sen ‘The Huskies wound up the Whit- fice, at 7:20 o'clock, All managers dest, | Nothing gives Urban Shocker, Yman series Saturday with another serene of teams desiring to enter the cir Chicago 6, Cleveland 4 the St. Louls Browns, more deligh! ‘Prictory, winning the game by @ score) Four runs scored on « rally in the| ult are requested to be on hand at| Detroit ¥, St, Louie 2 ot |terpret the incident that happened | Angeles won both games from Ver- | i the first meeting of the two clubs./non here Sunday. The scores wer | The game was played at Boston and|§ to 2 and 7 t lof 6 to 4, after a rally in a late|sitth inning gave the v the season. } Washington 12, York 3. oa trimming the New York Yan! wing into the fourth inning Cleve nH B ' to 4 victory over the Indiana Tris} I¢ there aré not « #uffictont num x. ‘Lo ri . | land had @ lead of a couple of runs, | < 5. al = . “ ‘ mn NATIONAL LEAGUE ep c the Bt. Le {Vern 2 | _ faning. Sorekse Grvpped Kamm’s fly and get hle|ner of teanin represented, plans. foc Won Leet. Pet. | Tne pitching ace phd Youll |it had drizzled in tho third inning} Styers.” ost ‘ava fvenenbech | DDRUXMA l E 4this season will be definitely |‘ ‘ «¢7 team by the Yankees almost as @/ tne gourth was started Becond game B 2, B! Poshing over two runs in the pint! - COMA | Cin . 2 bad piteh Such treatment has) 5 Toe j inning the Cards beat the Pira {a | droped. Be : : IY cai te eer — ne Seen i md ; reas [Vernon ..s...1 sys ee ee} BEATS COPPERS COAST LOOP 3. Hornsby got two hite in four times _ —— st tb 3 9 {Always rankled, in Shor reas | Realizing that the veteran jceGfandall and Byler: | Sellars, Keck,/ The Druxman’s All-Stars hung up up. owt se $ Cruse, Christian and Murphy. ee EAGLES WIN Philadelphia 112 ‘3s8|° man players cortalaly Uke to | [pune Was 8 valuable pleco sf iol inte naan a victory yesterday over the Seattle IN HITTING: Babe Ruth got his first homer of the | ANOTHER TILT. i eres “| trim clubs that turn ‘em loose, | siring to jeopardize his condition, | TELEPHONE ATHLETES MEET | police department tossers. The lads IAN. FRANCISCO, April 21.—Galt | cootner, vet the enter’ pitencrs Sent| The Seattle Eagles vw in| et ow 1 iin thay ore ee, the ance’ | Lwalked out to him and off- | | The Telephone Employe's Athletic |trom Fifth and Pike scored five tal. Lake has five sluggere ranked | to pleces and the Senators won, 12 10 8-| ¢our1n ethlight Baia hep | that they often turn the trick hand remarked to him that jt | ®Ss0ciation of racy aie Stage Al ties, while the Coppers were on! | stra ctors peanon a! ’ H was raining pretty hard. jmeeting tonight at the Telephone x among the first 10 hitters of the | Broadway jeld is pretty . able to count three. Bae aa ee tac weans|. shbety Ring oxtcluaesa ieee way pasts id Sunday when s tie Tas in then that -Catehen atnvs hae j building. All members are urged to d oa rding to averages|t2*T Sd the Phils took ao six inning |) > “efeated tho crack Wehhier-Os. | GREB SUMMONED |L o-etlt and Second Baseman Pill sm y, jattend, Wiggins twirled nice ball for the baseball, according fame trom the Robins. Cy Williams |WO0d nine of the Tacoma Semipro| NeW YORK—lHarry Greb, mid. Ww : will” play. their heade D' T you dare call this game, | —_——————_ winners, striking out 13 men. Her- made public today. Bot his first homer of the season. | league by the ncore of 2 to 1. | dleweight ‘chs : . RED ERERONG OE - Deay. nee RB was the immediate an mpion, who lost on a/oft for Boston when facing Cleve- Norfolk in Boston on|iind this season lay night, as been summoned) ‘Those two athletes were turned bver Duffy Lewis, famous pilot of the It was a pitchers’ duel between | rou! to Bees, leads the league with an| Four hite bunched off Aldridge in the | Clen Pleasance of the Eagles and} gay average of .581 for 11 games. Lindi.| fifth inning gave the Reds three runs! chief” Bender of the loners. ba ape More, Balt Lake, is second with .556.| Grantham gota double, a triple. and Dick Cox, Portland outfielder, is|home run. Friberg, Mats end /Lorue third with .520. were thrown out of the game for dis- ls: other ‘neven puting the umpire. C+ poy a el Druxman, young son of Harry ‘ Capt. F. V. Broger, U.S. A, of Se! D swer, 11 hold this two-run lead to} 9 t Druxman, brought luck to the team thar idles sicitebe 4 aH ats|Camp Lewis, led the marksmen in ne: finish unless the park floats | © in his first appearance as its mascot away, If I ever wanted to win a ball | ‘he sectional Olympic gun tryouts a 1 1t0 appear before the boxing commis: |to Borton, a tail-end ball club of last| came, thi ie the one held Friday and ‘Saturday at Fort|_, The score— 7. oe sion tomorrow. He will be asked to! year, by Cleveland, a pennant con-|" «When it started to drizzle in the |L@¥ton. \ police +3 . : explain an agreement he is said to/tender, considered to have a good|tnird inning, 1 prepared for a real | have signed to give Jack Delaney a) chance to finish Inside the money | rain. I just chased to the club house} EVERBTT, April 2 Wiggins and Hobbs —Tealey Ray. |*"* Neary file Danbom, Walsie TE | pales chance at the title, {thie year. pigee: . | : : pal (ai CE ES SE ss Sheehan, Salt Lake, .458; “Fred- | - ——— vad nod se year, fand slipped on my rubber shirt. It|mond's Bellingham Elks defeated the erick, Salt Lake, .453; Rhyne, San eae me ee posted NIPPON A Cc | TICKETS WILL | mi inarily respecte Lagan ee Jean rain cats and dogs and it won't | Everett Seagulls in the first: game BROTHER GETS JOB 3 5; | fe . Pruett | sip aged j be ie, but things ati bother me. of the Northwest Washington Baso- y Francisco, 419; Lesile, Salt Lake,|failed to hit in four times up. Pruett lb CHICAGO—Ticket : ppg hears oth r ‘ashingto | Jimmy Johnston is no longer the : a ; i ec for the Carpen-| Boston this year are different. Prost *) \e 7 5 | 7 an KK, ‘ ; Bra-| blew up in the fifth inning when De- T rd Don't call this game if there is aj ball league here yesterday, 7 to 1. y 0 400; Koehler, Sacramento, 400; Bra-| flew vp in the fifth inning BEATS MEIJI | tier-Gibbons’ fight at Michigan City, |dent Bob Quinn and Manager Lee| chance to finish it.” echt bd | aaa bes manager of Johnny Dundee, feather 2il, Portland, .400, and Eldred, Se- ‘attle, 385. ; } d “ Rankin twirled nice ball for the win-| weight champion. Jimmy th Bek oe a aes a beagle Ee hundred baseball fans | Ind 1, will retail at from $5 to | Fohl are men well liked to play! 7 had to smile at the Precautions | ners, allowing but four hits. ljob over io his Syeuepics breting PHONE ASSOCIATION MEETS |°°% ‘%¢ Nippon A.C. of Seattle de-}$25, Floyd Fitzsimmons, match junder, Incidentally, Boston promises! Young had taken. | ‘ ta * om é We played the aia per maecanaee vege. 07 Charley, after being named mate! BON STEIN IS. The Pacific Telephone & Tele- Fi ri mf Dwar tees sees be: | maker, aed today. _ better things Ht a wa way, } nine innings in a drizzle and Cy held} L, H. Reld was high in the Sunday | maker for the Cromelt A. C. club. i F i e ie ‘ © theiitt > yes | es nd ithe two-run lead to the finish, | Shoot of the Seattle Gun club at Fort | But if you don’t thi y " f staph Co, Employes Athletic asso-|the Coast league park. The local) OMAHA—Battling Sik! and Batt | q ‘4 5 ut if you don’t think Jimmy is . Pe al | MA 3 find Batt Well do I recall such an inci- | It will bo interesting to see what| Lawton yesterds eo 1 jally i ny GOLF LOSER |ciation meets tonignt at 5 o'clock|Japaneso players made thelr four|iing Monror, Omaha, meer light | dent that Involved one of the |o'Neill and Wambaganns don Inn amaenan oe Fred Sumner was financially interested in Johnn VANCOUVER, B. C, April 21.|% the Telephone building to dis-|runs by bunching hits in the sixth | heavyweights, have been matched to| greatest characters the game has - — beadelhis Bon Stein, who was medalist in the {CU the summer athletic program. | inning. [fight ten rounds here on May 12 ever produced, the wonder pitch. | * British Columbia golf championship | _ Friday, was eliminated in the third | Tound by Jack Fraser, of Van- couver, at the Shaughnessy Heights | club here Sunday, ~— — _ er of all time, Cy Young. j } see | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ) equ: tmnt word wanted | a big’ surprise one morning to read that Cy Young had been traded BY AHERN ’ Harry Jones and Fraser were| oye Z Lg EZ Z | by Boston to Cleveland. © playing today for the championship. Zam ait ZA \ieS, 1 Ste, ~~~ ty A eu wer WGTEAD or % | Being traded by Boston was a dis- | . REP A . BY TH’ Way A | iis a edt ZA BEWG SS =D UP How'D ltinet disapointment to Young. How- WAGNER AFTER DUNDEE *uRs. Hoople —~ Nou'RE Not “HE g 1h tated a ald lever, if he was to be shifted Cleve. | NEW YORK. — Eddie Wagner, | : LEAST whteREGTED.«|7 7 | FT BE WHEN SHE MAKES land was his second choice. He would | “Philadelphia junior lightwetght, will | HAVE NOU HEARD HE ONL OTHER TIME “| WER Bow, IF WE DRESS |then end his career where he started Dost a $5,000 forfeit with the boxing commission today and challenge Johnny Dundee for a title match, his | manager, Max Hoffman, announced. | ANYMORE ABOUT HE -Th E OFN A Ocalan ete Pigalle WAG COMING HERE?! | Wp was on) GRADUETION i NOT THAT I'M fn eI ; NIGHT, WAITING FoR Bl WIERESTED, Y'know), 9 BTL Whe tee Nour DIPLOMAS! chest colds WONDERING | él \F YT WILL REST A) YOUR MINDS SHE at * UP i) OVERALLS, AN! {2 aM own LavTenvs, al | BEAVERS AND Nou cAUTELL WER WERE, SOLONS SPLIT VEARNING “10' UE- | SACRAMENTO, April 21.—Sacra- | | SWITCHMEN BY MAILY© Al | mento “and, Porttand divided the | double-header played here yester- Jay. ‘The Solons took the first game, 4 to 3, while the Beavers WILL BE HERE ‘ won the second, 6 to 2. “TOMORROW ! - pire game hone once | malite ana: Quarors SAGA View AG One man told another | Koehler ae about the new flavor de- |ortiand J ton a livered by La Palina’s Villette, ¥ | Yellowhorae, P lpyss Cochran; | imported Java wrapper. | | LARS y, eo, RIA | | cto Wha daeds Word-of-mouth advertis- / j . (agi) an . yl \ |VILLA WAITS eo to man—that’s fie Ly) WN | FOR GENARO| why La Palina made good. Natt | YORK, April Frank | CONGRESS CIGAR COMPANY | Churehill, manager of Pencho Vitta, Philadelphia world's fiyweight champion, an. nounced today that he was waiting | for Frankie Genaro, American! champion, to accept terms from two New York promoters who are will. ing to stage the match, gently—you don’t have to rub it in. Immediately fresh blood begins to circulate | swiftly through the obstructed The congestion breaks the cold is gone. Get a bottle from your druggist today and have it at home—35 cents. >>> foto > Washington and CIGAR fageepoe ae Saas mrt to SS AT SEI (2 sust Back of L.C. Smith Bids. ‘2 Card Tables, Pool, Cigars © Candies, Bott Drinks 2 © Fountain Lunches © © ——Pay Checks Cashed —— 2 #£0000000000000 < That Washington and the Nay Y THE ZERO N i\ may. tace before the Poughkeepsie | {ITS JAVA.WRAPPED defferson Street aH AI very likely, The toc: ¥ fh oa add Wy vA thorities have received ig del uy i} Annapolis that the athletic authori ties will decide tomorrow whether or | hot to consider a dual oar ra | 0 Ao Washington, ia Coach Callow, Washington mentor, | DISTRIBUTORS Gu, PME SUN WILL SHWE BRIGHTER —ToMoRROW ——e @ J) | tts gone on record an saying thta ho Spring Cigar Company, Inc, Hudean oie ow, tHe Navy botore 1200 Western Avenue : the Hudson classic, we 3 = : bla yp Ak Se Wh ‘ ee tae pan lad ec caaaen