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we PAGE 12 Utility A Men Are | Capable Osborne, Emmer, Welsh Fit Into Regular Lineup &é Western Imvade East in Jume ation Western athletes to the competition will begin soon, ship crew leaves late this month of The atest Eastern tercol Washington's champi gre ' ; to defend its title on Hudson, Stanford, California and ; Effectively the University of Southern California will send their : BY LEO H. LASSEN crack track and field teams to the national championships in Cambridgt >) TEAM is . Z bead stronger than California is sending a star tennis team to the nationa’ its substi events, and there's a possibility of Wallace Scott and nd the Seatt jans Bruce Hesketh being sent to this tournament if they win the Coast title for Washington. : Se ~ ‘att ests." Northwest Tennis Will | a My hound, and he You can put him any field without weake: 2 power N Lack High Class Stars| ie ORTHWEST tennis competition will be very colorless this season unless there is a sudden influx of high class| ful Seattle outfield, Frank Emmer a can fill in at , 7 ‘ar | racquet wielders to this section shortstop or thi md he idn't ar a look so bad in oe aore eee In the past few years there has been but very few real} played second base. players developed and with the sss amp out of Marshall! Jimmy Welsh can play at either! Allen and the loss of Harold Van Dyke Johns and Mayme any mam lo ws bs outfield. He} MacDonald to the East, the competition is bound to suffer. long eg Nate co te ; sent chn| Leon de Turenne, Wallace Scott and Howard Langlie are} with the bat, Wet ed Co —— the only players in this sec-| + This leaves Elmer Bowman in re-, ” The tion at present who would be arerve for fst base able to hold their own in big} apg aoe seagate ease 3 E 1 league competition. | : of thelr seats with hig ex There are many good players who Thibition at second base Friday and pe, Npronet A gd ” “A Ae SBaturday, while Clift Brady was on Ore: SORT SETS: : wan:| wet tomrnainemix, sats. on tha Bote ihe bench. Cutshaw looked terribly |. pranctece «... ; ol bape: tn. Waneotver, 3 Gs the wet alow and his arm was woefully | Ver #3 | ram Verlay-of Vietatta, 1. 0, Cattin ghar fell down at ha » <44|Wolfard of Portland, and several | a Perhaps with little more 4 sth lothera, Sout ther a yer Wwork he may come around. Red 4 aia Waste team. ae OKillefer figures the veteran earns 408 ls al stone tee’ Tae sehis beans as a ane b. «. | fornia travelers be bitten by the same Sen aewt Bmaaer, Welsh and Osborne bug, the tournaments in the North-| aertity the auetins fl t are bound to suffer consider. mueeem end they should guarantee bly, Irving Weinstein, who cleaned Eoapee crib good reserve strength for ip everything in sight last year, ts phe year. going East with the University of . r= California team and Mrs, Willlam “WELSH GETS DISTANCE i siecmermllia- ~yr SOCmMBR fe Los Angeles, is also plan: ON HIS HITS Cineinnalt ...... ~u 447 | nig to go East |@ W's surprising the amount of dis New York 6 ' -€4) ‘The younger tennis generation Fiance that Jimmy Welsh «ets on reckirn i ¢i¢| Must be given more attention in the This hits, considering that he's ono |1 2 ‘ 411 | Northwest than ever during the next pot the few choke hitters in the |? 1 499 | fow seasons so that more high-grade Pieasue. jf 2 racquet stars may be turned out. Since the advent of Babe Ruth Tana his home run feats nearly every RESULTS hitter in baseball got the homer Qbee and started swinging from the . BUD FISHER — iaiepeededied ce eer | PONY WINS sire ne tere mets|"A cen x | PREAKNESS and yet he gets plenty of power. | px, RnR 1 2 Aldridge, Pi | ‘ 1 , 1) m 0 * Tex Wisterzil was another choke | Cinct A ree IMLICO, Md, May 12%-—Nellie, Whitter who used to get quite a bit]. Mitchell and Mentine; Donoghue and) Morse, “Bud” Fisher's 3-yearold | “of distance to his hits. cidashas |filly, captured the famed Preakness | Most choke hitters aro binglers| at st Louts fm 4. B./ stakes here yesterday In a driving et the Clyde Mearkle type—short | N** Yor . 2 31 ¢/ finish, leading home Harry Payne #efilts over the infield and hits push. |" [00 waison beam “and pagder,| Whitney's Transmute and the Ran-| Wed thru the defense Gowdy; Petter, Sb |. Bell and Gea-|Cocas star -yearold colt, Mad Play, = rales which Onished in the orler named. On solid form the Rancocas entry | stood out and that form was backed | - Boston-Pittaburg game postponed; rate. | “KRUG WANTS AMERICAN LEAGUE *|Piay drew No, 20 and Bracadale No. 1. All 4; rain. field. No team in the history of| baseball has ever been able to win consistently with the defensive jine| thru the center of the field weak. It's the backbone of the “defense. ames post po ee All dun credit must be given to the daughter of Luke McLuke for IDAHO TOSSERS the filly ran a phenomenal race, BEAT MONTANA (coming trom behind tn the atreteh | MOSCOW, Ida, May 13—a nit |‘? W!n H TED BALDWIN CAN | batter, a base on balls, Fitzke’s long GRIP BAT THIS YEAR [single and Berg's error paved the Fans can’t understand the hitting|way for the victory of the Unt Power uncovered by Ted Baldwin | versity of Idaho over Montana unt- BALL GAME BY FORFEIT HE University of baseball team received a set-back jin the Northwest Conference race yesterday when {ft was announced Washington COONEY COMES FROM MIDWEST this year. The Seattle third sacker| versity here yesterday, 4 to 2 Jimmy Cooney, new shortstop of| that the first game of the Whitman gays that he can grip a bat, some-| The score: R. H. E./the st. Louis Cardianis, has been in| series had been forfelted to the Mis- oo gpeingers coy ara agen Hee : 2 | : the American association for the | stonartes. Washington: won the con-| e hand early in 1923) tee ** . |Past few years, playing with Mil- . and it affected his grip on the wil-| O'Connor and Long; Fields and|waukes. ‘Tha nmmociation hen any | test, but it later developed that Terry low. But it doesn't bother him any | Kinnison. |Dawnon, Husky outfielder, was not |up some fine shotratops of recent More, and aggressive Theodore in| ee a |years, Glenn Wright going to Pitte-|ssible to play. according to Confer Tied tide batting hie tiows with | PENN. EIGHT: [Walter Clorbor pata 0 the een’ the first Whitman game, however. Men on the sacks, which counts. | TAKE HONORS [browns from one of the AL AL clubs Rect CAMBRIDGE, Masa. — Pennsyl-|* few yearn back, vania university crews swept the! cek's serien at | {ifoo events of the triangular retin |O’LEARY BOXES Seattle opens a w , YOUNG CARMEN }with Harvard and Massachusetts Onkiand today and the | TACOMA, May 13—Young Car. Redskins | will be looking at the best pitching Malls, | varsity races, with Harvard second in| mon, Portland Ightwelght, meets | Tech here late yesterday. Penn won | the 150-pound, junior varsity and/ they have seen this year. Krause, Kunz and Boehler are/tne varsity and 160-pound races, and| Mike O'Leary, of San Francisco, in |Tech second in the junior varsity|the six-round main event of the werking in turn and they're the | race, Eagles’ smoker here Thursday night only real reasons why the Oakland club is up in the race. They have been doing yeoman service on the! ‘ound. { OUR BOARDING HOUSE | | LOCAL MEN JVANCOUVER. Wash. aay 13—| t Against the inexperienced Se- attle four, the Oregon Agricultural college polo team had an easy time fn the tournament yesterday, win- ning, 16 to 5. The Aggies were better mounted, it appeared, and they worked well on defensive teamwork. The Seat- tle players were permitted to take the ball for many long rushes down the field, but the Aggies succeeded in breaking most of them up. Today's game between Boise and Camp Lewis, the leaders of the tour. mey, is looked forward to with great interest. NELLIE MORSE | NOT IN DERBY CINCINNATI, May 13.— Reports that Nellie Morse, winner of the Preakness, will run in the Kentucky Derby Saturday apparently are in- torrect. Nellie’s name is not among | the 152 3-year-olds nominated for the | 1924 Derby. Bud Fisher, owner of Nellie Morse, nominated two— Mr. t and Comic Artist. 0 po0000000000000 —) There's Always ° S Something Doing o AT THE ZERO 214 Jefferson Street Just Back of L, C, Smith Bldg. Card Tables, Pool, Cigars Candies, Soft Drinks Fountain Lunches So ——Pay Checks Cashed—— «00000000.0000M0 PREP TOSSERS | PLAYING TODAY The usual four games wero being played by the high school baseball | Wore billed as follows: Broadway vs. | Roosevelt; Franklin va. West Seat- tle; Queen Anne va. Ballard; Gartiela | va. Lincoln. | } BY AHERN || A TEL WMO Be SURE AN’ BRING HIG SCALES! = SO MANY OF THOSE SUNK DEALERS HAVE A HABIT OF MAKING A WILD GUESS AT “TH’ WEIGHT! SEE \F THERE'S ANYTHING IN “THAT DARWIN THEORY f= SWCE YOU AGK~ “THERES A FELLA COMING “ToMORROW To LOOK AT MY CARI» JO THAT GASOLINE CARDET- SWEEPER You HAVE FOR SALE 2s ARE YOU STILL ASKING $300 FOR tT OR HAS YOUR FEVER DROPPED TO NORMAL APTER A GOOD NIGHTS REST 2, 00000000 00000 o ° ° ° 0 THE SEATTLE NDIANS’ RESERVE STRENGTH LOOKS GOOD IN GAMES AT HOME Marty Krug vot. [by the training geniu Sam Hil | tee 3 s W *t Pet. | ‘bed “ghop? ‘Gfans that he fold a pttaner, [Ree York ae too jdreth and the riding genius of} Frank Jacobs, The Star's cameraman, “shot iteher, second eacker and’ out-|poten (ccccccccctr cs }} P18] Barle Sande and Laverne Fator. | while he was heaving one of his famous iT. eac Boston Peobace is . | B fielder to make a contender out of |S. Louls .. 118 10 sag; That Mad Play and Bracadale his team. | Chicago ry ¢74|went down to defeat might be ex- M ihe ot 1 The Angels have been weak in| sehiAeton 19 12 485 | plained by thelr post positions. Mad alae the box, at second and in center | pniladelphia ‘ * LOCALS LOSE second, STAR Ted Baldwin’s Favorite Stunt 7 Ted Baldwin, Seattle's third sacker, | tientin underhanded throws to first base on a slow|price he must pay. hit ball during practice the other day. Baldwin is the best man in the league at this stunt. | WILL SARAZAN ANNEX ONE BIG GOLF TITLE? Entered in Three Major Tournaments and], Figures to Win One of Them BY JOE WILLIAMS © forecast of the golfing season would be complete with- out @ consideration of the prospecta of Geno Sarazen, erstwhile Italian caddy who soared to fame two years ago at Skokie. Sarazen is one of the giants of American golf, a bril- Mant shot maker and a courageous match Player. He proved ment. his enduring qualities as a top-notcher last feason by repeating In the P. G, match play tourna- Of all the champions who started the season in the throne room, Sarazen alone was there at the finish. No other major champion was able to repe Sarazen Js entered in tho British open this year as well as teams this afternoon. The games| professional tournaments in this country, heavy against the Indiv: 6 two big and while the odds are always idual tn golf, the Itallan seems in a fair way to win jat least ono of these three big baubles, Sarazen is as fino an all-around golfer as you'll find in the game. He hits @ golf ball as weil and with as much form as anybody. He is superbly rouscled, has powerful wrists and is well up among the game's longest swatters. It is a treat to watch him tear Into a shot with driver and brassie, with launching an attack. | his right shoulder going out after the hall in a manner of a Dempsey At Pelham Bay last fall, during the P. G. A. tournament, Sarazen reached the 274-y: ‘ard home green over a tricky falrway pine successive times with perfect shota. A Tennessee rifleman couldn't have been more deadly, Sarazon failed to qualify in the British open last spring. This was not wholly unexpected. debut in England, obstacles tion of success American stars always have their troubles on thelr Tho wind-swept courses and the fast greens are mean Sarazen will know what to ex; pect this year and a greater por. 8 should crown his efforts. Sarazen djd not fare well in the American open last summer at Inwood, Nor was that exactly a surprise. Defending champions seldom do. Just the same, Sarazen is a real star and he'll be in the thick of the fight this year, LOCAL EAGLES LOSE CONTEST ERETT, May 13.—Thoe Everett Eagles won a slugging battle from tho Seattle Eagles by 10 to 8 score at Elliott park here Sunday. Tho Seattle lodge scored three runs in tho first inning, when Del Har. per cleaned the bags with a two- bane clout. Tho locals came back und scored three in the last half of tho frams, Both cluts rcored two in the one in the third and two in the sixth, The locals got the winning runs in the last frames, while the visitors were unable to seore, sverett has now defeated some of the leading clubs in Seattle, iseluding tho Ben Paris and Supply Laundry nines. a PLAYFIELD NET MEET ASSURED The Playfield tennis tournaments will bo held as usual at Woodland park this year, some time in July, according to Hen Evans, who has chargo of tho events. The dato hasn't been set as yot. Particular attention will be pald to the juniors this year, says Evans, RAILWAY NINE EASY WINNER The Great Northern Railway base- ball team easily defeated the fast Northwestern Mutual Fire Insurance nino Saturday on Hiawatha playfield | by a 10 to 3 count. Olsen pitched good ball for the win ners, and allowed but three hits, Dempsey, O'Conner and Bart fea. tured for the winners with three clouts each, The score— R HB Northwestern .., ee | Great Northern , +10 #12 0 Role, Lackstrom and Heath; Olsen and Whims, BILL STUMPF IS SUSPENDED Bill Stumpf has been indefinitely suspended by the Galveston club in the Texas league, No reason was given for the suspension, which was listed in the official report of John L, Farrell of the National associ: ation, R DEATH SAN PAULA, Brazil. — Benedicto Santos, negro heavyweight, who was knocked out Saturday night during 1 immagine ants seomghli a contest with Erminio Spalla, Buro. pean champion, was reported to be dying in @ hospital here today, \thletes to |Sam Langford Needs Coin to Save Sight Operation Necessary for Optic eran, Now in L. A,, Needs Money BY ED FRAYNE O8 ANGELES, May Bozing 4 men all over Ameri re begin ning to take Interest in the phys nd financial condition of fam 1, famous old negro heavy the most popular | black er laced a glove ‘One of the foremost pugilists of the world for nearly 20 years, he was ever a credit to his race. The Be jton “*Tar Baby that his actions would react to the erndit or discredit of millions who regarded him as an | dol Langford felt a trust had been |reposed in him and was faithful to t | HE'S NEARLY | BLIND NOW Langford has made many a dollar in his eventful iife, but circum stances over which he had no contro! left him penniless Tod he living in this city, dependent on odd jobs for his food and worst of all nearly blind New York city is preparing monster benefit to be staged at Madi son Square Garden for the kindly old ringman. Similar plans are under way in city for a show to be staged at Jack Doyle's, Fans thru. éut the country are taking an in-| terest in the Ethiopian whose proud. est boast is that he made ~ black world’s champion draw the color line. Both of Langford’s eyes are af. fected, one so badly that he will nover nee out of it agnin. The sight jof the right eye is badly obscured by | cataract formation. In time, this foreign substance will assume such | | shape that it can be removed, Dr. |Cunningham says. . When this op-| eration is performed, he will be able to see almost normally out of one} leye. FULTON FIGHT | COST LEFT EYE Langford lost the sight of his left jeye in his fight against Fred Fulton jin Massachusetts in 1917. A blow on the head broke the lens and it never functioned again. By a coincl- a SDAY, MAY 13, 1924 Behind the|” Home Plate BY BILLY EVANS major was par tleu true of pitchers. The six. footer who welgh- ed 6 and 0 was be wed to have the j The impression EVANS prevailed that the mite pitcher couldn't stand the rain of the m and then some 5 }would mi good, but ways regarded as the ¢ It's different now. who shows it ‘ opportu make good gardless of his N MAKING « éomparison of the go004 big pitcher and the good lit tle pitcher, the edge of course gots to the husky indivi He tis able to stand more w That is the rgin of difference. | H class pitching {s now so scarce t & manager is content to nurse along the capable pitcher who is able to deliver consistently, pro vided he gets the proper rest in be. tween starts. | There is the case of Pitcher Herb | Pennock of the New York Yankees Tall, but very alight of stature, Pen- nock doesn’t look the part of the Jathlete able to stand the strain of big leagua pitching. Yet Pennock, who pitches intelli gently, wastes no energy, Is one of |the most effective twirlers in the | American league, if not overworked Ray Schalk for all time ex- ploded the theory that a catcher to work regularly in the majors must be a husky athlete in order to absorb the many shocks that are a part of the Job. Ww Chicago secured Schalk, is size immediately drew ad. verse comment. He might do as dence, Mike Collins, who managed | Fulton in that bout, fs now in this city and will take a leading part tn the benfit for Langford, For the next four or five Sam Lan. | darkness, years | ford has been sentenced to! He must have help or he| must go to the poorhouse, | Whatever Langford got for his he didn’t get enough for the | |POULSBO CLUB IS SHUT OUT | The Rilty Cigar Store nine copped | |its fourth game of the season with | in & to 0 win over Poulsbo. Clark, on the mound for the winners, pitched fine ball, fanning 10 men George Hurley and Jimmy Salle made several pretty catches for the Beattie club. Tho score: RHE | Riley Cigar $ -405.5°% |Pouisbo .. o 4 4) Clark and Paxton. Martin! and Fredericks, } GREB BREAKS HAND | PITTSBURG, May 13. — Harry Greb, middleweight champion, weigh- ing 171, won the judges’ decision over Pat Reed, 161, Boston, in 10 rounds. Greb injured his hand tn jhe has caught 100 or more first substitute, to be used only in emergencies, but never as the re; lar catcher. r The very thought that he might be asked to catch the deceptive spit- ball hurled by the famous Ed Walsh, drew little more than a smile from fandom and experts. Schalk sprang the first surprise when he handled Walsh's delivery with the greatest of case. When given the job of regular, he proved @ glutton for work, dispelling for all time the belief that size was neces- sary for a catcher. Since coming to the American league, Schalk has been the hard- est working backstop in the or- ganization. For 10 consecutive years ‘The athlete with ability, who ~// is slight of stature, need have no worry that ft will handicap his chance to win a big league berth. the final round and an X-ray will be jtaken today to determine if it Is broken, Hair Stays Even stubborn, unruly or sham- pooed hair stays combed all day in any style you like. “Hair-Groom” js a dignified combing cream which gives that natural gloss and well- groomed effect to your hair—that Combed, Glossy Millions Use It — Few Cents buys Jar at Drugstore final touch to good dress both in bust hess and on social occasions, “Haire Groom’ is greaseless; also helps grow thick, heavy, lustrous hair. B of greasy,harmful imitations.—Adve/ tisement. SEMI SOFT A LOW BANDED DEEP POINTED COLLAR THAT IS FULL OF COMFORT:~ 35% COLLAR Each 3 for $1, d