The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 6, 1924, Page 16

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1b 16 THE SEATTI Home Plate Behind the| PHIL TAYLOR IS EXPECTED TO TAKE INGLEWOOD PRO JOB ’ Pia evans | Expect N.W.OpenChamp( 0UR BOARDI: rome, ayer” or bO Acce pt Seattle Offer Meson eye| Victoria Golf Club Professional Certain to Take Job o ba » at Inglewood; Talks Over Work With Greens Com- ’ u mittee, but Withholds Decision Until Wednesday ‘A f F ure A ; varia BY ALEX C, ROSE Weleliyys ‘ resu « hook.| HIT, TAYLOR, Pacific Northwest open golf champ | | Fe ~ UKE “ egy and professional at the Victoria Golf club, Victor is é Kyun shyt a C., is expected to take up the pro duties at the local AIM t bal wood Country club, succeeding Al Espinosa, state open char pion, who resigned the position two months ago to go East he upever y| Taylor, who gave notice to his present employers several creat weeks ago that he was look for a new berth, arrived in Seattle yesterday, and made it known to the Inglewood ce! s I officiated that he would like to fill the vacancy at the lake shore two of them course. A meeting of the greens committee, one of whose pla ed many duties is to get a professional, was called in the after- ack noon, and at the conclusion of the session, the Victorian ex id ‘**| pressed himself as well pleased with the offer, but decided Shaggy de ;to withhold his decision until tomorrow, when he will ye < ores ecm: a nea ooke Portland and turn to this city, He re two negliger BY AHERN |) Rusty Callow Shakes Up t NG HOUSE v || aut ; op aa eee a at Ae Shell} \ | -n; ' F { Crew Coach Shifts Walling and Sanford to Second A 0 | LIER Boat and Replaces Them With Brown and Abel; 4 - Four-Mile Spin Taken Monday; Former Stars Here © }| 4s | A ita, ead ot sack] BY JACK HOHENBERG \ 1| iq GOING UP H SOACH RUSTY CALLOW made good his promise to shale Dow Walling, 6, and Harrison Sanford eir seats ip we first boat and put 200-pound Charlie Brown and Dennie Abd i ™! ‘ h in their places. Callow says that this is only a series of me # \ changes whicl going to make in or that hi \ aut changes which he is going | rn, { crew may be the very best that the material afford la Kennie Meserve, stroke of the junior varsity, was out for the night and Keith Enloe was shifted in his place. Walling from his berth at No. 6, worked away at his oar like a Troj scarcely taking notice of what went on ayound him, 7 - |shakeup such as the one ip stigated by the coach Monday, is bound to put fight in the heart of every oarsman out, he that went om vor mile pra enance of making « play on th ohne: frog ' | turned home last night eee tags? a —% i sso 8 Portland we o || will mev to Inglew 44° ing down of the coaching launch, 1 Backing up a play bs really te eben Aca gestae f the bus it te"net ht rae were manneg I pet H appreciated until the player faily ‘ . . 1 K Sai thing ‘ t pie i to back up, and the play goes aa ee whe : pees “ ‘ ‘: 2 wrong simply because the ball ive | ae Ee ho : 5 os took a bad bound oa ning ‘ tor r y a I the SElan td Ane y . las to (GAMES THIS Writ A ; os down towar a 1 lecidedly fe oy a “ 2 hit to an i hrow tot oe peg at Kan Francisco k tin ter parte, ana in o| V SPER GEOR ore cons ——— on oo a ee majority of cases it is, the action of etter: realy “ os Mt 6.847 | verg, 2; Bill Walker, bow; and Hal the catcher looks like a waste of B ll = . ; De 4 Lag Pt pinch: Faget " , ok a Team : Ss Boston : : 4 It is when the throw is bad, and e a cite veined the cateher fails to back up and re t irr veh af angle Seat Is Victor IMSISS LEE — } sii FORMER STARS CU AMDIO HE . Lael » 412 ARE VISITORS CHAMPIONS “THE ae a PE Hee, Al Skibeness, member of the 188) Jout when Cook, Washington |third sacker, popped an easy fly to one) Star Teams play. PO SE Langile at second base. Langlie . ' attempt was made to cut down|tre not hounes would do on well performer in golf f A runner at the plate. Being of no for } muffed the ball Tesreau un best ecord t NHE Star junior baseball eague use'in the center of the diamond, it 5 mad cia : © rescue and did his teama Ww was up to the pitcher to get back of the catcher, to take cure of the throw |” jrowever. the Huskies already } axt elht fir follow eaule-' be if it got away from the backstop, |. ite te. Sa tha Dinan Sato M ° . effect Instead of being in the proper! si. nce dangerous efter ihe wav few weeks lore he LEAGUE NO. I Place, the pitcher was merely @ apec:| "0 Eyea emis home run to the Canad Thee others Dye W va tator, standing in the center of the|°™ ; gee r|_ His present title, that of Pacif eenwoor Aprovemnent club at amond. The ball got away f jeenter field is accounted fo a r nwood = Impr ci amon oie eng hay from three of the Washington tallies in iba champion, came at | Lower Woodland ® the catcher, taking a bad bound onlin tnirg. Hits by ‘Tesreau, Malone |the end of fo rounds of golf} Suneet Hill I y at club vs the last hop. This enabled two run-| 014 Shager and a walk to Lewis|4t the North End ant Western Union J at Wall ners on the bases. to reach secondand|.cunted for three’ more in the 1 two 73's in the first | Walla third, and Jater they scored on c finn, day's play and came back with a] Fahey-Brockman will be idle. base hit wiiich decided the ball gamé.|" ya's Nolan, former Lincoln high|7! and finished with a 78, gtving } LEAGUE NO, 2 The pitcher tells me that it was | oll atar pitet great ball for the | /m @ tatal of 295, which was one’ Mere Cubs ve Loule's Prer the first tinte in ‘his long career in! iors” Don Wallingford, ‘im left better than that of Hon|Dry Cleangre at Walla Walla the majors that he failed to Properly | iia tg’ another Heattle Rite star, and| Junior Advance club ys. Seattle peor ye = eles to oe plate, It |Tesreau and Freddie 1 Mi ae the [three st an the marki Boys Walla Walla cost him pall am |aters for Washington Sore: | lune up by the professional he iw) Art town Cubs "1 { R H E |coming to succeed, namely, Al Ew |at Georgetown school g ‘ AGGIES BEAT _| siosinsio CE [oto thi ned etn seh the Vash ion State 5 0 nm «& Word, what in the Victori above brackets ia the home club and IDAHO SQUAD) itteries: Teareau ana oya; Nolan|Golt clun's iooa, in t wood |ls responsible fer'the-signing up of Inglewood He registe a i | local dmate on tam t Cubs ys. Georg CORVALLIS, Ore, May 6.--The |and Mitchell Country club's gain their grounds. They Oregon Agricultural college nine} - the sporting editor of The Star Wed won from the University of Idaho} The two teams were to play the HE draw for match play to de.|nesday between 11 a, m, and noon an team here yesterday, 6 to 1. {xecond game of their series on Den cide the char hip at the|to what time they have their The score— 1: ie | ny fielg, starting at 3:30 p. m., today,| Seattle Golf club waa unnounesd | erounds é ‘The season get away to a good ae Ye oa | seis sot iia: Sab toe Poor: COLLEGE SWIM _ |72,, Tor ‘inesn va ‘Davin, stat eta sunday clone “ames Ueing TEAM MEETING «= Ayer wer va. F Ruswell y | . | ampbell vx. MeMicken, Van DRANGA LEADS Will hold its second meeting of the | TUY! Vv". McHiwaine | [Mieovar ts Yosce. mies ase FROSH TENNIS junder the direction of h Jimmy | ST '-, never put my name oj Mel Dranga, by virtue of succes Arbuthnot. The “U" swimmers sive victories ¢ Percy Lee and have only a shert time in which to was this all that Jim| Bud Marion, has captured first man get ready for their meets with the| Forde had to say the other dayjon the freshman tennis squad. Oregon Aggies and the Crystal Pool | When he found that, after making | Dranga, a former Ballard high ten will be hard at work a “two” on the fifth hole at Ingle-|nia luminary, has showed well in wood, he had holed out -with the! his tits on university courts, |MERCER A " Cc wrong ball and that the right ball,| Tho fresmen ‘ate going to enter |marked “Jim Forde,” wag still re: | competition immediately. \ Tomorrow | WwW | Posing in the near vicinity of where | they play Ballard on tho university | ‘ INS GAME [5s holed mashie shot had been | courts. ‘Thursday they will enter | the Mercer Athletic’ Club °four-| age, Jim sald all he could’think |tain the strong Seatile ‘Tennis club jReyed to Pearson Sunday aNd) oe ana, believe those present, it wus | juniors, headed by Howard Langile a-plenty. Jof Roosevelt The University swimming team batt am ; Slugged their way to a 16-to-6 vie- | tory over the home towners, Jacob- Winnces, suiting Ave ‘nit, Sue st ENGLISH CLAIMING GOLFING j safeties. Pearson shows their visit-| By Joe Williams ors a wonderful time and the M.| JOYCE WETHERED, sister of the A, CJ's certainly appreciated the} ilustrious Roger, who holds the courageous player, but hardly of the championship group. | | In that match, Mrs, Letts was re-| turned the vic because of her treatment given them. British amateur championship, has| cot. consistency and a acy ae seore: R. HE. bse en pepea ng Ni ue Misa Leitch was not playing her Peas Hea ited gee Ps oad cy “atl ei igs fi tie shots at all well and was frequently "Datta ie Hunter a ‘4 Ww t nl et sean gall rin the world,” | @pped. She did not at any time | _ Batteries: unter and est; | grea ‘woman golfer: bid luring the fight look the J J during the fight look th art of a The Nature’s Doctor has ' Brown, Stevenson and Pearson. | We are inclined to agree that Mies ss supergolfer | been imitated by almost ‘ Te aR Wethered may be the best woman) {1 wax in the fall of 1922, tog, that Seerrene, but hes fever @ TRIBE PROTEST __|soiter inthe worl tn our estimate, atin Leten was insured ia ao eed been duplicated by anyone, however, we should leave the “by j dent and she hax been only mildly PU cere lems IS RULED OUT jar" ore” stia'Wethered was beaten nctive ance that tame, reaee | ‘ y . | by one of her'own compatriots in the | circumstances, it 1s hardly probable and develops the muscl: | LOS ANG The pro- | »3 reumstances, { probal riepadivas chan, preg s| , test of Séattl lied | English championship last summer | she iy the formidable player of old. | qi , 4 last week by Umpire ler | 4d on two or three other occasions} We rather have a_ notion that] pm The Straight Inside Line fon account of rain, was overruled | was given hard fights {Edith Cummings, American cham-| ial with theoutsidecurvegives ‘by President Harry A. Williams| It is probably no trick fo de-| pion; Glenna Collett or Alexa Stir Y plenty of room for five [here yesterday. The Indians were | feat Miss Leitch these days, and ajling, might be able to take Mia® y toes and width at the ball |playing Sait Laké in the Northern | victory over the former champion, | Leitch in hand, in her present golfing | Ql of the foot. town at the time. Jeven by such emphatic figures as 5| state, and Scniriae Hinting e) - i jand 3, is hardly sufficient to estab-| quite as decisive as the one Miss | 47 This shoe embodies all the lish one as a playe of extraordinary | Wethered handed out. | i |DODE BERCOT skill, and certainly not asa player of} Rather than proving that Miss | | WILL SCRAP | invineivitity. , | Wethered is a golfer of matchless | Dode Bercot, Monroe welter-| Miss Leitch began to slip trom the | brililaney, the result of the recent | { weight, makes his bow to Cailfornia | high pedestal of British superiority | London duct indicates that Miss Aj boxing fans tonight at Vernon,|in 1922 when she was most unex. fleitch, in her day one of the great- when he meets Eddie Diggins, rug-|pectedly defeated in the Americag | est of the greats. Js thru as a cham. ged San Francisco boy, in a four-|championship at Hollywood by Mrs, | Plonship contender. round bout. F. C. Letts, of Chicago, a fine,| Miss Leitch is some ten years older | =——-—|than her conquerer, and golf hap- [pens to be a game in which cham. | plonships do not come easily once |you've moved into the thirties. other scientific orthopedic features and yet has the appearance of a good looking stylish boot. No other shoe of this Quality and Character has ever nm produced for =e a ale HARD AT WORK PY Me Strand Theat (Men‘ Dick "oeock, brother of George fomen’s) jf | Pocock, varsity shell builder, is just Tocoms Sore—940 Pecitie | |completing a shell for Kd Leader at | | Yale to be used by the Blue at New | | London, soon. George Pocock, who |does his work at the Washington shell house, is working on a single souller, no Ohe month of experi. mental work will be done before | Pocock commences on his flock of | fall contracts, CN NNN NN Ala MONEY LOANED ON DIAMONDS American Jewelry Co, SECOND AvE. stablished 1889 THAT NEW ARATEX 8% COLLAR. A LOW BANDED DEEP POINTED COLLAR THAT IS FULL OF COMFORT: 3557 Each 3 for # 7,00 { | | Metal railroad ties have to be used | jin many parts of India; wooden ones | would be eaten by insects, Therg ar 40,000 unemployed boys Jand girls i. Jyondon, runner at ond, that the im Dyce TEBREA "he a oA b a 3 t MAJOR - ai ie tt arsh, bow mag portance ofthe play is made mani-|“~ [Nf Ace, Rearly piehed. him: N21. Ta " to ——— —_$—$ nes crews, wane i Jout of a tall game yeaterday, when |jinks S : : 7 "§ 8 y ee eg. ts |he picked up the little pill und he ie - ———$_______— a a Bib ts solar ela It seems that fate ordains the | "t@*d Steen feet over second bene rives a long . (@) ke an | Fran .on the H. F. Alexander throw shalt be wild the very time | D#*mitting three Cougar runners ti cues’ Booking of Standing of JOHNSON IS Pecan n, at, x, fomorron enjoyed ‘hima the player falls to back up. Such | {.9"" We anngieg sar ia WINNER IN RY. , 61f. 6 (thor ¢ workoyt. Tie was the luck of a certain pitcher Tha Weeds tere 440 esd cens un of the St hieago 1 injury fo his arm who rarely fails to back up every gall ge vey acted ar Lea. Halloway and Be which is now healing grafic, M hatryeree | NET MATCH At Cleveland " : P OMPLETELY rsing his fo 5 3 is itt a tg Lotte shea FD Tt. Louie , GEORGE POCOCK 4 of former - matches, Captain | Cleveland» «+00 - ists at ered, Ed- WATCHES SHELL 8 J] Fietche Johnson, of the Washi: yatt T of Joh 7 . + Ls h *a 1M f John Camp a te team, defeated Joe Liv ie sa ee of Bremerton, LEAGUE NO. 2 good in & heated. thivabast batlle on lean nvent a new type : 2 Ne x tried out by one am c The t gariner, Bu Per st night. George M os 6 ngood | kine; Shawk net of those whe vas U oY team action relied thea’ the tise improvement et int m, but awakened ormer an ses yet. It dit m to stand up under the # s it should have shell is a little longer that used and has a body mon pe of a salmon than any bellying out in the middle ; ank ws’ HARRY GREB IS_ lastnight, ‘Tille Herman of Lox) 7S The lanky | varity captain sravss . | . KAYO WINNER from his lethargy with a sudden WARNIE SMITH attack of well-directed yolleys In the|: Pittebur Boston BEATS ADAIR second set. Livengood was caught | pat bl completely off guard, but made a|6t. Louis CHICAGO, May 6.-—Warnie Smith, dexperate struggle to regain his| Oklahoma City welterweight, won | bearing» « over Barney Adair of New| Play seo-sawed back and forth un 10 rounds at Bast Chicago | til Johnson finally captured the set, obs and Hartnett; Angelen won from Alex Trambitas of | juring the third set Mie Saree ee eae WASHINGTON, May 6.— Hany Portiand, Ore. in the semi-windup. | Sizzling back hands and nearly im. | Philadelphia s 16 2)Greb, world's middleweight cham possible returns of hard serves fea-| ,, Dean. Gearin and Snyder; Mitchell and | pion, stopped Jackie Clark of Alles. tured the play. It was all Johnson, panne |town, Pa., in the second round of the] PREP LEAGUE \the score being 6-0. | At Brooktyn— R. H. E./bout at Kenilworth, Md, near het, ri MEN PLAYING. ...22°,'22222 {9 for of the varsity — $s if 42 Fjlast night, ‘The fight was stepped captain gives Washington another!” yoxamara, Luca and O'Neill; Grimes|to save Clark unnecessary punish Four games are scheduled In the| good man to count upon when the/ end Taylor | ment. high school league tod: Hallard|championships are held. Johnson, ~ was playing Garfield at Ballard.| besides pounding away at his work | GOLDSTEIN WINS CORRECTIC Hrondway was playing Queen Anne on the courts, has found enough time! DETROIT, May 6.—Abe Goldstein,| Eawin Reichle pitched the gamed at Broadway. Franklin was playing| {to throw hin studies “for a loop.’ | world’s bantantweight champion, won |the Georgetown Cubs in the Star Roovevelt at Roosevelt and Lincoin| He recently was made a member of| the decision over Clarence Rosen of| league Sunday, the announcemélll was entertaining West Seattle at) Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic| Detroit here last night. Goldstein |of the batteries for this game being Lower Woodland | honorary. | knocked Rosen down three times. faulty. Babe Flaquenti caught. eS ee ee ee ee ‘e | Five Things Men Want In a Shaving Cream By V. K. CASSADY, Chief Chemist SBE 38 IE a) 2 GENTLEMEN: We asked 1,000 average men what they most desired in a Shaving Cream. Then we spent 18 months to meet those ideas better than others had done. We made up and tested 130 separate formulas, ad- vancing step by step. We who did this have spent our lives in soap-making. And we have created some of the greatest soaps in existence. The result is Palmolive Shaving Cream. 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