The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 12, 1924, Page 12

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PAGE 12 ATINEE Shows for Nomads of Baseball Are Saturday | Shifted Like Chess Men oT A ONDAY fA 12 924 STAR - —_—————$<—_—$ THE SEATTLE FIGHTS MAY BE TRIED OUT BY SEATTLE PROMOTERS, 58 Runs Scored by Sunset Hill Squad|Behind the Home Plate Afternoons? Every Year Sees Changes for Great Army of Average Ball Players, as Dictated by Powers of National Idea is Mastic) Accord- Game; Where Some Boys Are Pastiming This Year | Wise Councellor, Derby Favorite Star Loop BY BILLY EVANS . me area cla cal, A Run Record M ing to Dan Salt; To Use BY LEO H, LASSEN t ie makiog bs Ball Park VERY year secs the great army of baseb Ts Broken‘ on 6 pena performers moved about in the various « mmoa 4 — Es a may be ¢ leagues like the pawns in a mighty chess ] gon ) out in Seattle during the sum W. U. Messengers Fall ex ere ne . . is mer months, a t 1 Ba | 4 ¢ ae focal fiat Each succeeding season sees vast changes Before Crack Ballard Shows in th ark on Satunt in the personnel of the teams of the Club; Georgetown Wins i afternoons w the Indiana country, particularly in the many lesser z c + serblge ae caér ob aimee minor leagues. / than bigtime px says-Caruso In these smaller circuits are the hundreds rs ge oe. : thout smoke of diamond tossers who lack some one quality . ' ape cA for quite a time ¢ the lack to put them in the big show, the blue ribbon a. of opr tum fa ties ays Salt,/ leagues of baseball. | a) BIIEE canton porters sction| And in these organizations are found many of the stars of ark re | gage — Would patronize matinee shows, 1| Yesterday, ball players old in diamond service who have no eag t . oath hink, if they we t other means of making a living and must keep on playing in EVA exchange Later in the summ when the] order to get by k f 2 . ‘eather becomes more certa even T . + | ta t 4 ae anak the balk park may be The box seores of the various leagues reveal the Many : : - the regular thing changes that take place, and the wandering men of baseball, | e 1 come ¢ The fans would be 1 in the! true to the custom of all nomads, have shifted this season as ague star with stands with the ring ¢ ,they have in the past, and iH. B reak © home plate This w cia pe ma con acres anaes . coe Pale, : always will ‘ ' : pugs an t we weather { Game Chatter |: sey diel i you find Bobby Coltrin p « I t okies haye Home Sunday . for Bloomington. Remem e P ott i PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE : f " Recently, while sitting on the 4 Ban Francisco "He" TSE) Renae Bad & wonderful day Sunday ‘ ying : ; bench of the home club prior to ; Vernon : > te yo epee PP mene: boone . m3 5s if 704 | the start of the game I over. t hea * fie hie : A ® se a =. ' rm. H. B.| heard the following conversation q | ‘ ’ ¢ club «. 6! about two highly touted recruits: 9 is Sox > F " ‘ 1 Cady played a year with Sacra z Pe ee vento in t ague, lingered a the American oanc n the Western league and/ oe a * % * bd % *% 17 = y g a third club, 4 is now back in the Three! circuit. | ge ad recently pitched q 4 . , Down in the & rm league you So ax not to divulge any — : se" Poor, but Proud Were _—‘Seattle Is ris ti ot ments the ee’ tor dnastee € (e Rohwer's hi was made oft of | {nd me orc . a ie ee | , _ 6 tt rs discussed, % ‘ 2, Oaklawn |Pinen Pitcher Jess Winters and it went |Jolinston, who guanied first base for | WwW The. big fellow can't hit laseball mame); Ban Fran Chiwtes! Wekord un ve} Yam Ya at Memphis. Bruce ~ Hor ers. “He's sucker on @ curve : same). 8 Hastford Birmingham. Nay] ] OUISVILLE, May 12—How long) Turtle was t foal to Ment G martal aa sroken over the outside of the ¥y HOW THE SERIES ENDED Bates is at Chattanooga. Cueto, | | calico breeding stand up in| but Uiat meant # we, f Meut wo ames The * ate at the knee, § Woo Won vey, Ma Huhn, Devormer 1 ne ® NEATTLE « od eries from |Anien ( “He hits a fast ball delivered one of the mest | #"d Lapan are names well jor in the hope of th : : N mes to tw on bove the waistline han, and simply a In the|known to N weste te win the hisi Ken i of " ver, w Ww ked the Be ¢ } r Van | mu ‘ou get it inside. Never i 4 game and the bett fayorjt ‘our anked ~via 15 to} Re Ww as tch high and inside on Dod Paskert, on e poking € t 1 fr ed to : € (Nai ms ' i * a be ns pve pa o as a deluge of ba — “He's a fast ball hitter pure and the ball before ' : ; at ‘ ee cay 4 t in ram-| Due i tanding, the] simp x in the curve, keep it care in America : bs A " f frame « h | cum ¢ Low Fre w and slow up on him and I don't | Ted Baldwin ha eel oes ar - old os sag : ; Dey ¢ t MI think he will hit his weight pot, {Ne Rite bet ‘ll fie pase tle, waa offered ° - 1 4 The othe; her concurred in the New Tork « S| Over the weektend Welsh hit twe|cure, Jimmy Wal red ia a not say . n Downs. His e ~t t ‘ xpr was f Boston + ‘ jw. The former Beattie < 4 ri ¢ egrets ? . ion th lifted . a me Leute . } piloting Jersey City. He has been Tom Bradley, mayor of Lexingtor And Bradley, the good mayor, w nathia thai | The conversation then shift a ase? with Newark and Baltimore since | Ky. happened to be near when bids! paid $100 for tho colt's dexpined old Dadias ‘ ; to another likely youngster, with 4 Be ed ea tee ewe loos talker exiioa: tac TRARY si fatheA “ardied aaa wold sany piteners wed | MAJOR STARS || ths piteier who tad been tisten: Philadelphia pinth c ghat’ ssaad ce dh | Oscar Stanage, once the kingpin} “Well, she's worth a hundred dol-| Wise Counsellor to Fred Burton of we Mathetee! ian | ing during the orating. ss? stunt that saved possible trouble, Detroit backstop who flivvered with |!4r just to have around the back | Chicago for $65,00 es in the second game | SEP eee ae eee ee Los Angeles, ix now with Toronte, |¥ard,’’ concluded Bradley And that's the story of the calico of the lot, | (PPLE other fellow is tough to fig- : | -Ypiladelphia 19 Fines tae our pamgia the first! in the Western league are many| 80 Rustic wan sold to the Laxing-| bred runner on which milito | ure. He's one of those free a. 4 1 wR other names that bring baseball ton executive because nobody else | probably be bet to w " 2 swingers who looks bad on a bal! Miller, Tortlanst outfielder, rebbed | Memories | Would have her of the American turf r 4 land then hits the same kind cf a ball |Tobdin of a tript with @ one-handed Art Griggs, Tubby Spencer, Jack é BTS, Y ro Say "oN ah o out of tho lot the next time you jeateh in the first [bath Knight, Bill Rose, Sam R Bert Bases, With throw tt. re " Whaling, Joe Dalley, Clarence d d H t “I have worked on him from oot Tet| Portland won Saturday's game, 12 te| Hooke monickers that need no oe | AVA EYSON aN aw to scent. gn srecr siinie; aia Be Woden, Tee . t 660 | stuel: in the first tnning planation here | is i pre good hitter to me. I have 4 10 $3) 4 | Jack Beatty 6 a Seattle first 1 fi tf T tl Pitlette found that he usually takes the first eran J cciascuc esses: Mention toleg tected te ene ae Sritied to Lon ga P ay or e Ube) ies | |ball and I always try to get It over : Pittsbarz 1% 4 {59 | California today, Heattle being booked for | stint Teague. Josh Devore, one-time 4 - _ be A : | for a strike. Then I start working, 2 ee ¢ ii fh] oentna, ana Ferhand ter tom Aoecien” ete ontnialéer, ws rand Tapia | BY ALEX C, ROSE —pertormance, which mve (0 O/T EADERS TAKE | on him. iy a [ ‘St. Louis 7 18 Be} manager. I iornpoN HAW 4 ».; Members a full 1s-hole links | + . hi . he q . | | 5 ; G t W and Det An. | en | He hits them much better on the RESULTS IEVERET I IS Roxy Middleton, for years « Coast | derson breesed into the finals of| everything went off in tip-top BOTH GAMES inside than the outside of the plate pr At Chicago— nH. &.! Joutfielder, has caught on with Bill|the Jofferson Park Golf club cham manner right from the jump, when FRANCISCO, May 12.—~San }A curve ball doesn't trouble him |p wees ‘ =") AGAIN LOSER |tiater’atectts | te sara Luh Ge uy Mm | Praiant Salen apes inte” te | pha, ERANCHACO, May 2am] CE edie as see ern league. Middleton ha in} tive victories in the semi-final play|2¢W area open to play by !yirnon here yesterday 1f'to Sand | found a half.speed ball was most ef. | ON DIAMO) D the Western South Atlantic t Bill Doran and Leo Gaskell. |"™acking a drive 200 yards down! ,. : fective because he takes such @ j Bie sete a | circults since pastiming } pion Haw ¥ on middie of the fairw “Bill penalitic | |hard swing.’ j £ St. Lou ‘GHAM, Ma 12.—The| Down in the Texas league, Rob tol, president of t Port 1 | Nate work. . . B AM, May 2 u five and fe er " a + NUBELLINGHAM May | 12—The| Down in the Teaas league, Bobtive end fou wee de tia ea ts Sa SALT LAKE AN | sg hia iat arias wet ds 4 Gon-land Bloedel-Dondyan baseball clubs) best b tenler, ix with Fort Wo: of the day, added one of the many | the game and the conference lwere the winners in Northwoat|® cinto Calvo, the sleek-h With the exteption of Dor surprises during the proceetings by| | EVEN e BREAK) ended. However, it is apparent At Cincinnati— Z. | Washington league games played| Cuban who used to play for Victoria | piay, the exhibition on tap was very |Presenting Smilin’ Ray Ogden with SALT LAKE CITY, May 12.—Sal that a bush league recruit is up Phitadelphia . © | yesterday. and San Francisco. | high class, and if yesterday's victors|® PAlr of golf clube, Nor Was this\| Lake took the first ame from Sac. against it if he has a weakness Cjacinnat! ‘ The Elks disposed of the Everett! Slim Love, Don Rader, Pete Riley, | display the same brand of golf when |#!l that the Portlander pullel That |ramento, 14 to 10, but lost the sec at the plate. Once the pitchers ‘arison and Hentf han “ >, * r tt ter. |ond, 18 to 15 ‘ | aad Hargraves. club by a 9 to| 4 score, Rankin| Bill Pertica and Lefty Crumpler—/they meet in the 36-hole final test | “#lk of his, delivered at tho after-|ond, 1 1 get wise, they tell the world E twitled nice balf for the winners,|™0Te familiar tossers—are all in the] next Sunday, a close result will be|4inner meeting in the club's dining ——= i "I Texas circuit + A }room, in the evening, was by long 4 d received nich s rt ne outcom _ ANGELS AND eae receives nice support, both, ial: ii4 Jim Middleton, the manager] Yesterday was not Bill Doran's |Odds the best bit of golf talk ov ian “teat -.-| Stanwood Stanwood | "2° Eegonyt Portlead out of the} day! The veteran linksman was sad. ACORNS DRAW| be pushed the hitting and ‘one departments. the doubleheader here yesterd: tossers. 5 to 8. | It’s a groat life, this base all bust. OUR BOARDING HOUSE this young man.was going can be surmised from his score at the end BY AHERN | BALLOON TIRES, TELL ‘em NO, tT HAS PARACHUTE TIRES} “THEYRE ALWAYS GONG DOWN !- than two-up. Many holes were halved in par figures, and when the turn was made the match was all-squar with both players cracking 'em right down the middle. Anderson, who learned his golf on the Beacon Hill links, took the lead at the 14th, and, | following halves on the next two, won the right to a finalist position by wininng the 17th hole. ‘A drive and a long jigger-shot landed him within three feet of the pin, but he missed his putt for a 3," but he won thé hole and the match when | Gaskell failed to rattle the bottom of |tho cup with his fourth shot, HEADLIGHT! = WHY, L WouLDN-T GIVE YoU S75 AN’ “TEN DANS “To LEAVE TOWN, FOR TT! = FOR $300, AN “TH’ GUY WHO TAKES IT KT THAT PRICE COULD ALMOST BE CONVICTED FOR BURGLARY! SSSA TT SS heard jn this city. Too bad that : t t tat tee | Meeting was not eeting of LOS ANGELES, May 12——Los|Twins took another on the chin from| 221i, when Duke Kenv ly off col iat from ie f : Pres ip phe a3 ares head a ve ague-lead rt a > ° to the finish, and the result was that |& * n atern| Angeles and Oakland broke even in|tho league-leading Bloedel-Donovan|tuened, ix tolling for Fort W \Haw had easy sailing all the way,| Brothers, it wan interesting, ever his seat that enthusiastic audience | jhollered for more. | At this point B. F. Ivy told them job, and getting results al ady He clubs Is 1,000 in the Interclub match! Everett batting ‘The 29-man team from the Skagit Country the links yesterday and tried to cut homesters’ average, but Roy as’ siickers were much too strong, and the shades of night found visitors on thelr way Mount Vernon ward, carrying 11, points with them, but leaving 69 points with the en- omy. club visite the HEY say that golfers walk all day and talk all night, or, in other | words, they have the hoof.and.-mouth Tonsilitis Decides It Everett | Thom: | the | Tho score was 7 oa h , word of it t went over bi and F the Acorns taking the first, § to 6,| The Mount ileen chi ea from|nons, and the nomads of the game,|ot the charmnion and that yeu) wos {is peel eco pagent Spey ge: ff) nd the Angels winning the second, | Sedro-Woolley by ® score of 6 to 2-\tha wandering men of the diamond | ouin? caammon. and th er to|Who had the pleasuré—it wan a 12 to 11. .The second contest went|It was Sedro-Woolley's first defeat|ara the lif blood of the national| overcome at the pace Hare Wes spine, {pleasure—of listening in on it. How 11 innings. this season pastime and make {t poasible, Tip only bad: tole. ¥ the sixth, | that fellow can talk! He was on ~ | where he got into trouble which cost |the floor for over an hour and go- | him a Some idea of how strong |!6 at top speed, and when he took One man told another about the mell fl delivered by La Palieee imported Java wrapper, Word-of-mouth advers: Jot the first nine Pretty fine} : Hit 7 Sp : shooting—with a big listed en |'0 go outside and get more—mem. | , a : es Wi DN va ot nt] fs watal jbers, Yes, the drive ts on to get g ee eee eZ one, ae HERES A pi ae Wate hie ‘HassDoraxt: waa lok van |another 250 meinbers added to the T e > ONE, BUS, ~~ iOuUL e-nided affair, the Anderson-Gas. | list. # Witt THO DOW TNS Wh Day 1 ° Api PA neater |kell tilt was something - |giving them a grand 18-hole course, MY COVERED WAGON! F Nou LADD! TH’ HACK HAS the top of their game and at no time | home,” Chairman Ivy and his co. IM LETTING rT Go LAMP ON YT FOR A during the round was the count maro| Workers are now very much on the | diseam Well, we're here to tell | PIILADE tA . the world that the crowd that at. | 4ADELPHTA, May —_ man ‘4 tended the opening of the new nine | Tonsillitis gave Becond Baseman on he i — that’s a holes at the Rainier Golf and Coun. |] Jimmy Dykes his chance to break Ww: La Palin: Br try club, Saturday, had certainly |} Ck into the Philadelphia Ath y . made good, a something real nice to hoof over || letles lineup after being relegated CONGRESS CIGAR COMPANY 2 and talk over during the course of |] t®,the bench Philadelphia 8 the afternoon and ovening’s good The way Dykes is going, It may || bests : thing worse than ton. || x >, 0000000000000 0 0]| militis to got him out Ee LZ ° During the winter Connio Mack a LY, i —) ; % A © There's Always | purshaaed Second Baseman Max || j ° i shop from the Baltimore elub || f) 4 Z > Something Doing oJ oe tin internationst league. He ‘ bE ZY o AT /] was rated the star of tho organi. || 3 . Z ° THE ZERO |} ation at that. position, , ZA om hi jalesen aitoa S|] Mack gave him tho berth at sec. || ¥ H S Just Back of L. C, Bmith Bldg, |] ON4 In Preference to Dykes. Ho || . | . ZF ms i doled | played second tn the opener, then 4 raat , = Card Tables, Pool, Cigars ©] was taken sick. ; Candies, Soft Drinks S|] Dykes was sent into the gamo ; 4 <2 ° Fountalin CAitiches || and he slarted the Athletics in ¥ IT’S JAVA WRAPPED 4 | S—Pay Checks Cashed—— O|| thelr winning ways, His fine work | 10c «2 fi { : . was instrumental in several vic. + 2for25c% 15¢ « 3 for 506 : ss TUS PUTS HS CAR UP FOR GA 2 ‘el I Le —- 000000000000000, | veers edhe re tb cote DISTRIBUTORS; Spring Cigar Company, Mine, 1200 Western Aves \ Phone EL iot-1264.

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