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ra PAGE THE-SEATTLE STAR ATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, i Seattle Wins Fourth Straight From Portland Guttormsen (__Gxmviee crib” Wins for St. Paul Minor Loop Champs Vean Gregg Best Since - : wh Takes 26th Max Eakins “) Team That Seattle May (OUR BOARDING ar Ahern] Win of Year Football Followers Think ' bas i ————————p, Seattle Holds Top of cpa U Quarterback Play Has Lots of Scrap 2 q { \S HOW 1 WON MY TITLE » League by Tre Gent Will Make History “UNCLE. AMOS, ~ BY SOVE ALIN, V4 OF “SMOKE EATER HOOPLE” / 4 Lead; Three Games Yet ~~ BY LEO H. LASSEN |Ed Shave, Veteran St. Paul Scribe, Tells About East- anni pcp lia MILAD.~ DID 1 \'| A FIRE RAGED IN ATEN PACIENO GhanE NEATTLE football fans want to \ | ern Minor League Champions for Star Readers; T GROW UP % case SEVER TELL YOU | STORY CELLULOID FACTORY * etormoe Saints Anxious to Come; Big Series Looming | A FIREMAN ! osu WHEN 1 USED ‘TO 1 WAS TRAPPED ON WE a r BE A BRAVE | | ROOF. MY ON LAI a By AD ele THEN. 1 CAN RIDE FIRE FIGHTER ?« | | WAS THE ROOF WATER TOWER es (Sporting Editor St. Paul News) ON TH’ HOOKEN rhs ; ew Editor's Note: Whih the big prot between St, Paul, Eastern minor LADDER AN’ GO I WAS BATTALION SUBMERGING MYSELU a back’s booting league champions, and Seattle, probable winner in the Cast race, hang i foe tae CHIEF OF ENGINE | T WAITED FOR THE ROOF ability, but from ing ftre, interest ts being manifested in the St, Paul club. The Star is rs TO ALL TH’ FIRES HOUSE NUMBER COLLAPSE, + WITH A CRASH ton LAM 10 PLAY apg apetcne printing today a stery of the Saints by Ed Shave, veteran sport scribe AND 1 WON'T HAVE : THE. <! GAVE. WAY, AND ie rortiand, three : of the St. Paul News, Sto STAND BACK Sad re WENT IN THE WATER ; sine Francie (UN TH crowns / L TOWER,~~ IMAGINE THE \ CHEER THAT WENT UP WHEN The Indians have three games tht After an absence of nearly @ veer) American association, at present also victor over the far- { J FLOATED OUT 10 THE oe? ee - the Angeles and makings of the Seattle ring, Tot Morgan,| famed Baltimore Orioles in the junior world’s series are, like| STREET IN A FLOOD s four, The Tribe must win a: "best kiecke foatherwagnt & weit WOM) Alexander the Great in ancient history, seeking and sighing] § é ‘ ~ OF WATER ! eS two of those games to absolutely rc ge=,, ||. ee ee mee te young Washing quarter four. See B ERR =P Ss Se has done in ’. PAUL, Minn., Oct. 18.—St. Paul's Saints, four times in actice some of TOD woReay ‘the past six years the champion baseball club of the 3 mare gongs Mame pe ingle cinch the Coast league fag tr Se for more leagues to conquer. j jorman, of Portland. s the main las “ae 2 Rakin at the Cry : show.-| The fighting Saints, so called because of remarkable abil-| irs ae, A nd @ double bit “1a ggg ox n by Mertesok ity to come from behind and win out, pulled one of the | g ernon s, a husky tackle, was il ge ge th greatest surprises in baseball this year, first by winning the while Oakland and Frinee alse the best rp that ever play two games. al down a Washington pennant, second by beating Baltimore. | \ j d High and far aver ‘FEATHERS TO |” ‘The Saints won the flag by ability to knock off the club 4 a g if et ee, fait fn the eee that was giving them a run for first place, Indianapolis, St. wean} Laat a has kicked Just once | TOP SMOKE | Paul won seven out of the last/ Ruth M. 1 >} =% | Z J would pare the Redskins’ lead te this fall, a 50-yard | | ten games played with Indian-| ’ : , a@ half-came, heig japolis when the series meant . " \ ; = _— eer eke vetitontee |Morgan and Gorman Are the flag. | Show Sunday +h u¢ HY exShald Seattle tone 2 th Das been practicing the booting art Meeting for Coast! The Saints went into Indianapolis Rabe Ruth, the home-run king Z hy), mI i} beaten out by both the Seals and 4 2 asn't had lin a crucial series of five games.|| of baseball, will make his firs / Angels. They're ny years, but he hasn't had) = Feather Title Tuesday | Vinning three; they took four out of! Seattle appearance in an. exhibi Z Ae } f Angele, ‘Ther're et te 345 Gmattdntty of kh in regular ate jars tha king in reg Be tie clipe setae five near the end of the season at}! tion here tomorrow afternoon ’ His kicking will be watched close- Sts MORGAN a0 Jee Gorman jg. Paul. |] along with Bob Meusel, his fa « | acral mars cs the Stamena game. 30 are ding up their training | With Baltimore the Saints lost!| mous New York Yankee team i < pe LAND, Oct. 36, —/gaa el be cppased by a Montanan [Over the week-end for thelr six-|three, won one, tied one at Baltimore || mate ay , i WE neared {ts goal as champions Fremned et, who had the healthy |" d erweight scrap at the /and came home facing the huge tank | Both Ruth and Meuse! will bat > aH ne Pacific Coast league when ’ Idaho ol Tuesday night with |of winning four games and losing|| for themselves and for the pitch 4 1 4 the tribesmen from up North scored pesrean Coast title up, providing |but one, and they did It ors j , : sinattinn t Gorman weighs in at 128] it ‘The famous players are per over the Port. 5 or und |ONLY FAIR forming with picked semi-pro || B f | ‘and WALTER IS WONDER Morgan is making his first start | PITCHING ‘ clubs. The score was: BACKING UP LINE |here in nearly 4 year. Both he and | HE Saints did not have a hurling Seattle 5, Port better defensive cen- | Gor have fought here many staff. There is not a star pitcher , ri heats lon the staff. The club won by tight|/®#o a# an utility infielder, handled | 2 é eg ag: oe Iflelding, not heavy hitting; the team|the place nicely. He is a Washing It was Ven with his superior reach | senses ability to bunch | tack, |ton boy, living at a small town sixty | Grege who eee in competition spiral that made e fans gasp be avera 46 yards in the game. It ought to be a duel worth seeing : enter playa are & ‘ ia 4 favorite over Gor land has fast tase running. Miles from Beattle re ae e e- line, and he has . altho the latter packs a good “9g or Nic | Danny Boone. shortstop has been iW. shi a Beavers yester. Si reuters qenshtat cy eo-ipeach’ ind bu Jong sxpecience in| CR MDIe® tums Mameane Mick AL), DEnay Boone. sbertston, Das bees Three | Barnstorming Teams ashington Is A hives eae ponent's plays that iy uncanny. ex him dangerous. | 4, er, dipiafed remarkable |formerty with the New York Amer nings Walters has developed into a fine fous! iraw A Year ago ren eng var agers | fetes Boone is the brains of the Clashing With bad for the grand en his passing leaving nothin; |two and three a game often, but man-|infield, and while not a sensational | \@ old ‘sont Es fe Sacred, nod Neiks eavally gved|"rrank worden, the ‘Clee. heari-| {TU seas nite neue tet, bat AD a ye wes and bs cas ot the| of TO olfers ea ere Montana Today é the early tn on the defense. weight champion, meets Roc uch fashion that they held the or-| leagues’ best in double plays nings, he came When Washington takes the field|stramaigia. in the six-round sem ‘ * Boone, however, is not with | ba the vored to thru in master- today keep an eye ch Walters when|windup. Rocco took a dive in the ere are seven hurlers in the club now, He was hit in the dec t the N GREGG ful style, Montana has the,ball and you'll find| gest round of his fight with Tiny ral Pideey, Gh-yenheld voteres head by a pitched bail in the. |\Duncan-Mitchell, Hagen-Kirkwood and eetcean| CRSA RR the wa J got its two in the thing him mixed up in most of the plays wo months ago, but he's! from the Pacific Coast league; | third game at Baltimore and was Melhorn Duets Want to Pick Up Loose Change on of Washington were sched-| mes, Bachse homed snd’ Fx eae | mebody nearer his own ward Merritt, another veteran sent to his home at Pittsburgh 7 . f ‘ashington w sched: | vingies brought in another tally. SHIDLI sins Tosaday | defthander; ‘Tony Faeth, Clift | and Koenig, a 19yearold lad, Seattle Fairways This Fall uled to meet on the gridiron for the| geattle scored in the fifth, when MAKING GOOD Eddie Huffman, who looked very! Markle, Adolph Holtzhauser, filled his place. Boone's jons is ~ fth time Saturday afternoon in the|Red Baldwin doubled and came ia Harold Shidler, the former Lincoln | gooq the other night, stopping Heinle] Herb McQuald and Oscar Roett- keenly felt, altho Koenig fielded BY ALEX C. ROSE | The Koff was set for|on Osborne's single and-Roosevelt backfield star, is mak-| Zimmerman, takes on Sam Wiggins.| ger, right-handers. Faeth was in | nicely and hit hard. UWE ensthe ewaliows ‘wing thelr way’ te the munay-@cuih; tndionting | 445, o'esour With two men out in the sixth, img food on the Washington squad. |, ight heavyweight from Everett,| the Coast league for a couple of Charely Dressen, third baseman, the approach of winter in thin section, word comes trickling over the) pou, Baldwin again scorched out another Some thought that he wouldn't be} i, the four-round special event years, being traded by Cleveland |Wa# secured from a minor } Be wt res thatthe barmetarsing golf protessienala are headed fir the’ Pace Both teams a ed by in-\double. Before the haze had cleared fast enough for a varsity back, but} “awe our-round preliminaries are| along with Dick Niehaus for (three yearn ago and has been de Northwest to pick up whatever loose change that can|J™ George Wilson was not ex-|Seattle hard three more. Then, in the Seattle youngster is showing | ing lined up by Dan Salt and Lon-| Walter Malls tho year that |Yeloped by St. Paul. Ho was tirst| be had. {pected to y for Washington, while|the ninth, Becker poked out anoth- plenty of ability and is considered | “1. "Austin to complete the card. Malls pitched Cleveland to |&n under study for George Arm : er homer, scoring Seattle's fifth run. one of the first-string backs. |atrong, but grew better, and last year yee the American league pennant. FORE, ® Today's game was to start at 1038 Shidler has the right kind of foot-| Faeth waa traded to Meblie by |W8s a regular, Armstrong being sold . George Duncan and Abe Mitchell, the famous Brit-|Capt. Ex nn ix not in the best inh players, will lead the 1924 parade, followed @Y/of condition. Both were i hall nerve—the gridiron game is no} Vernon and bought last winter |{0 Kansan City, Dressen has been Walter Hagen, the king of all golfers, and Joe Kirk) crimmage during the ps ehild’s play—and has the makings W t Si d by St. Paul, this being | ¢ | sold to Cincinnat! for $35,000. He in| wood, trick-shot marve | rizzl 8 & good backfield man es 1 ers | Aaa el, tah lng his hens lone of best hitters on the club But, according to the very est reports, t McQuaid came from Cincinnati | | a — = 1 < w tour of the Northwest, na: Al but the game was said to have HUSKIES WILL MISS B if K jand was formerly in the Coast|THE OUTFIELD planning a tour of the Northwest, namely, g KICKS ea uays | Roett yore ona LINEUP | noxa, formerly of the Inglewood Country clu dlbeen hard-fought. Montana tir. |league was secured ‘ Altho Leonard Zeil wasn't a ve year from the w York Yankees! The outfield consists of Cliff Lee, | recent winner of the Missourt open chan h » and | weapons are a dangerous pa . . p good ball carrier, the Washington | P | ]t wan formerly in the Western| peepee t Dick! “wild” Bill Methorn er Bobbie Cruickshan : unter in Halfb halfback of last year's eleven will be in rep ] lieague. Holtshauser was last jBruno Hass, deo Riggert, Dick ‘ Thene are, undoubtedly, three very high-class duo rin Halfback yeer 4 Jatt “hrt y Sweet, + missed in the passing gume and in EST SEATTLE belittied her|!anded by waivers from Kanaas City.| Wade and Waller Christensen. Lee and local golfing fans would like to see all of them | Sweet the goal-kicking from the field. { % McQuaid, Roettger and Holtzhauser | was purchased this year from Phila n action, but it is doubtful, very doubtful any clu Washington Montana | Washington has been getting some | cellar opponents, Queen ANN) ara trio of wild men. The former|delphia for $7,000, and hae alrendy will come forward with the necessary guarantee re-| Westrom E.R Dahiberg | good results from forward passes, | wit 20 to 0 score Friday at|lacks nerve when the game is up to been drafted | quired to ¢ an exhibition match wi even one! 1 Dut there isn’t a man on the squad 1d. The West Seattle men|him. He has started but few game: i | ROSE team of the barn-storming 1924 monarchs [Be who can hold a candle to Ziel in his| his year, but he hag been a good | Short. stocky lad who has been! ‘The directors of the Seattle Golf club have already turned down the | Walters accuracy in tossing the leather. finisher, Roettger shows great | With St. Paul for four years, being | offer to have the Britishers appear at the North End links. The fact that | Mc! Guttormsen is a better punter than | quite an Promise, but has a sre wrist which| Purchased from the White Sox. / their course Is being remodeled may have had something to do with the | c el, but Ziel's ability to boot long | dubes t were when they bucked|/causes hin’ wildness. Holtzhauser ich club had secured him from | deciding against an exhibition, but the chief reason probably date: place kicks from the field in the|poosevelt. Captain Thornton in the|Won many games at the atart of the | Milwaukee two years, when the Hagen-Kirkwood team failed to put in appe BE pi % was 4 big scoring threat that season, then flivvered and was use-| Riggert has been with the | +5 piay an exhibition match at the North End that had been scheduted | S84 j the Huskies haven't got now. | and advertised for several weeks, That left a bad taste at the Seattle! orticiais—Ke j ‘i *Batted for Jones I H E « — still another combination of well-known Ii 41 wecerceus lo romwer Venue teuwng 3 svesdpihe by Cleveland. Haas is| that strutted into this game w improved lot over the my Ey] FERFELSERX GT FEY ARES AEA TER EES ESERS CoERSENERGE SE SEEES BESEETER ES GSE ce5 RUEES ED EE RPERE RUE ESDP ENS T RELER OE ERELEC EEN RUVEGT ERS first quarter made a touchdown by |) iat month Saints for over ten years. He , ait dropkicker|@ Short, snappy end run from the} once was one of the league's | Goi¢ club ax well as among the reat of the golfing fraterni leree; Dixie Fines th Score by: innings and Hugh Beckett and Harold Shid-|15-yard line. O'Daniel made the on 2 best outfielders and a good hit- | Maybe Inglewood, Rainier, Jefferson Park, Earlington or the University >!) Woodward, ro ler have been doing the place kick-| other two tallies. ELD bed ied Dir agp Oe te |clubs will come forward and plank down 500 bucks In front of one of! | Portiand ~ pe ep hot In Ziel's class} oisen Anne made a final stand jon NY NEI first baseman, be- rigs Aly also cannot hit In | these globetrotting teams to display its wares, but not the Seattle Golf| MEUSEL HAS BEST AR) |: Sees Vecusalnnna amelie pa long shot 4 jd tongx to Detroit, and tast year| : 5 club | Bob Meusel of the New Y ane recoeeanee oe jin the last quarter with an aerial | as in the Southern ‘association.|. Christensen in a California rest | However, be that ax it may, if any one or all of these Duncan-Mitchell, | ee og ber aA < ce 4, Rachac & ep WHAT ABOUT attack, |Neun wag one of the league's lead. |2ert: He Is @ great leadoff man, and) iagen.Kirkwood, Expinosa-Melhorn combinations are afforded the oppor-|A™meticans has the strongest and | chac Home ROY PETRIE LINEUPS AND SUMMARY ing hitters and base stealers; hi | oor eit oa fone siren ved | tunity of appearing here, local golfing fans and fanettes will get a real/most accurate throwing arm in the |T%e-bave nite apiny Petrie is phy‘ ny Saniored| i deatte (29), Queen Anne (8) I main trouble wa that he took tas | ea atee ne ies nes ane | feat because every one ix a high-class linksman. __|majors. He literally throw strikes |10 Renton to Poole: Northwest has ever had. Big and| Tele eme at “soyeer caught oft haces po dae being land scoring runs. He may be sold| on every ball from the outfield. Fk tr Rene Ds Dana the nates aoa ine 3 ee — to Cincinnati or Washington. A AS 2 f Aerial Attack Wins Contest in ° 1 ° 2 foptbe on the team, Petrie isn’t |Woadbridge 0 playing with the regular eleven be.| {Daniele - ef | M RtX BERGHAMMER, ver | TH. ooks and Slices on ras Pr te oes ek wal See tear e teena of tos coe | Ler ita! tered me sprng| H for Matthews’ Idaho Eleven ee tack And this aekaon De bas 7 aesce iy ‘perieds ‘ club when the league blew up, [landed when Mike Gonzales, st.| eatt e’ S Fairways pha aceasta rac eae [eee hemreen ge ton. If Petrie ever finds himself|Queen Anne. 1 6 sory Me on June 6 at Mil Paul's great catcher, was sold 10 fev Nebha Rierttnt ent Ripken ait two beanttiall Sakae for 21 and : poskivns RUE frac idea von ie J | nttack, the Idaho Vandals took their |99nt two Beautiful passes 100 Ae te with his natural ability ‘he'll be the|_ Scoring —West Seattle Gacusan 4 lec i aa best tackle on the Coast orslen. psi ranter-ainy| piny. Louis. Dixon's work behind the BY ALEX C, ROSE [Rounces his score his play a | second consecutive victory from. the | Tara passes helped Reset tia |the second time. This also came urlay 3. Queen Anne: None. Hap Morse, second sacker, who| plate has been the surprise. Mana | Washington © college Cougars EEN TE Substitutions—Wert Seattle: Patten fo A . | Bill Irvine, the genial president of |Wonder {tf it is another case of) £ 6 wan secured trom Memphis two year len als 0 thes “i by a score of 19 to 3 here Frid Ma yearn ger Allen also dots some catching. line Arctic club, found a golf coat|"Wrong number diy lta oS here eee |via a swap around right end, Cam ee intercepted Hale's long pass | Pickerei!; Southern for Thornton; McGee at Gpetier @hack ‘corkecrew. {| : afternoon, Three Vandal touch- Los Angeles Wins |for Woodbridge. Queen Anne: Alexan ae the jecrtu pommel Bate tor eoswets Moree downs came in the last 10 minutes + Me for Pebbles; Kraukils one of the pockets, He returned the| Stan Frederick, the fashion plate or . ) and plunged 42 yards for the Over Vernon Club for Alexander {coat of the Cheasty store, was out sport-(°f, Play, Remet, understudy forte MAUR as te iteked otty Gal LOS ANGELES, Oct. 18—Buneh-| offic Bobby Morris, ret Dixie Ing 'n loud pair of plaid stockings, | Skippy" Stivers, quarterback, was | touchd ze a ed hits won an 8 to 6 victory for|Fleaser. umpire; Tramp Murphy. head Sy Jeala , ES-/the outstanding performer of the |Sal in the tries for point. Los Angeles over Vernon here yes. | im man; O. B. Patzoid, timekeeper. | Inspector Joe Mason must Ll ore it was part of his checkered | came coring two of the three vote Position ferday. Penner was driven from} Saturday's first game, with Gar nN . |some pumpkins on the golf course, | Creer jtouchdowns for Idaho. The other |itausen the mound in the fifth inning. | field opposing Ballard, was to start Down at police headquarters they), ni eee eae was made by Cameron, left half. | Tapper Sind . H. B+lat 1 o'clock. Broadway and Roose. } z a | call wim “Per Joe.” | SETTING READY | Play started in the first period | 7, 5° Vernon Pi suas ates f | Joo Newberger quit taking in |{With the promise of being anything jc. Hutchinson. - Al nigel tek ae 4 {seh wecente Cneeen | Fred Henwood, Bob Johnstone's|| money and Herb Schoenfeld cov. || \}put sensational, and continued that | Carson, Thomas, Swan. ; |aswistant, ts still busy feeling around, || ered up his elephants und they |way thruout three periods. Few and Murphy; Crandall, Lrasicte Green Is 2 trying to find out if his five-months:|| engaged in a little cow-pasture |/P&SSeS Were attempted, both by . : : old son, Bobby, has uncovered his|| pool, Just keeping in trim for the || {daho and Ww C., but none was |Bueklin .. : cs | Beaten by Bercot! veacu Faits 10 DELIVER over 400 for 1924, again loudy the fitst tooth. grand opening of the Washington |(f0" Substantial | gulns. Taane out | ptoteninaens eget Ser ote a Salt Lake Batters Frankse Green, veteran negro| The failure of Bobby Veach to de-| National league and wet a new rec || Golf and Country ctub’s course, |/Dlaxed the Course, in practically |¢or Cameron, York for R. Stephene ie |bantamweight, lost on a foul in the/liver for the Boston Red Sox may ord of topping ‘th Vincent Miller says If he could | next spring | adie’ soda |e season a etry saton for Datielee Way to 9-1 Victory |tnira round to Buddy Bercot, Monroe|mean the passing of the slugging |° Pring that organization for! oo.ordinate bis driver, approach. |%————————————_—___x |f Idaho's yare sis in en Leberg Te ten a ee oe Ty, een SACRAMENTO, Oct. 18.—Sait | Youngster, in the bouts held at the | outfielder to the minors, Veach cont | five successive years, He ix the most| and putts he would tackle Sam — jgeme series ages Fa vat raat |for Reed, Glann tor Jacky, Waldert SF Lake smashed {ts way to a 9-1 yvic-|Austin & Salt gymnasium, last night.|the Red Sox a sum close to $25,000 | consistent batsman in the majors, Russell without a handicap, | Frank Ryan, the fruit king, is ao )U"8 b: Ms ‘ ore Sweet, Keller for Cady, Hjertoos 3 vay . Co ore came the second play | er, F. Kramer for Hjertoos tory over Sacramento Friday. Jercot lead the way thruout the|and wasn't a profitable investment. | disgusted with his golf game that heli by Se eth poribey pore a pag etn ea cr walterts Gee. Ty a, an, | bouts ed | EXPERTS OVE : 2 i : ot | BAS decided to Ko to Dr. Rodger Dun: |! "Geo. Varnell, Chicago, reteree} 9 42 Kennie Gouyd boxed to a draw| VALUABLE UTILITY PLAYER | NTS OVERLOOK BASSLER Waites nae egy "aice °F ham to get straightened out fielihentay tne pone oak eatin Ipartiete Bpokane umpire; Willan Mur ievessse 1 4 {With Jimmy Lucas tn the semi-wind-| Jimmy Dykes of’ the Philadelphia! 1 Picking All-America teams, the | (te OB tL Teas Ot Colors than peta diiioctr Seas suisrbe halaman aes ane Batteries: McCabe and Asbiti;| UD. J Athletics, capable of playing any po-|@xPerts have overlooked Johnny Bas. |}Vealer UNA Has ms “Tell that Irishman that all the | Twitchell and Shea. Other results were: Leo Bradley | sition in the infield or outfield, is|sler of Detroit. He ts a fine receiver | ; yucca UErh: oe ate R d ] Ch S d f |beat Owen Ramano; Andy Marrinello| perhaps the most valuable utility ’ \his game." ‘This from Alex Gallo. adica ange uggeste or d the hardest hitting catcher in| With a out that cost at least | beat Jack Thompson; Eddie Jordon pif bere ecocchier a0, Ith a xgou at least | vay. The sure way toput pep into your Job || won over Kid Ward by a technical |qentally he ie ine tha doe clay cnx |the American league. His mark i4{#100 and a set of clubs that set. him |" Football; W ould Limit Plays day Isto getinto a || knockout; Clem Barry beat Simmy | coral ° ; aida save |buck $40, Elmer Duval, of Manca’s, | McKellop. : sae is ready to take up golf, |Seals Stkge Ninth | RADICAL change in_ the ‘tte new {dea 1s te thet a - heNarpier RAKTS . —-— method of football play is elevens on an equal : i DOONDY. CONES O25, MOORE HELPS PIRATES Elmer is trying to peddte off the Frame Rally; Win) being agitated, plays are concerned, It is belle Earlington Golfers Looks as If the Boston Braves had Moore, who was used in the out-|clubs that he bought from Jimmie] SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 18—Com.|| | The thought is to have a defi- such a system will prove be Col 1B et ae, gio apa ait tgs oy field during the fag end of the seayon| Dickson to his boas, They don'tling from behind to score two runs || Mite number of plays in football | fairer than the present time I olone. OEY erty ect he lave thy ctie, {because of hin Hitting, hme to the| mator his’ knickers in the ninth, San Francisco nosed|} Pather than a set limit of 15 min- During the present season se Colonel Bogey is in for a trimming | *%¢ pitches. but he plays the outfield p | _ lout Oakland, Friday, 9 to 2 utes for each of four periods eral coaches have agreed, to ty on the Black River links tomorrow! | Well and can tickle the old apple a la) Pittsburg club as an inflelder.| Arter a very pleasant trip Bast,| The score: RHE ¢ suggestion is along the | {Ut «iv echeme in some of thelr The members of the Karlington | Roser Hornsby Barller in the campaign he did great | many leasons and much practice, Dr, | Oakland sesesccce fT Off lines of the number of outs in | Tiinor games, also in practioe Country club are going to pit their re work in place of Traynor at third, |4, 1, Rintine ix really playing golf, | San 3 10 1 || Daseball. Twenty-seven outs are mie skill against the figures of this myth HEAVY BAT NO HELP aoe | fend ‘ Boohler, Kunz and|{ Supposed to- constitute a ball case {cal old gent, so well known in goif.|_ Outfielder Ken Williams of the St WILLIAMS LOOKS GOOD George Rourke reports a very | Head; Williams and Yelle, Ritchie. game, unless at the close of the The suggestion is such adi Ing circles, in an 18-inch hole match |LOuis Bown used a much heavier| Manager Lee Fohl of the Boston| good year in the insurance busl = ninth tnaing: the scoré {a tled. | hei that It is ne GAR create for the captain's cup, and just to|bat than usuil the past season with} Red Sox i# hopeful that in Danny| ness, His links cronies say that WELCH ON MARKET A set period of time offers op | ceived among the sy ta make it harder for him and easier | hope of increasing hia weme run| Willams he has picked up an out-| George would save a lot of money Rumor bas it that Conute Mack {| Rortunities galore for camouflage, | coaches, who believe in em tor the high handicap players, Club|total but failed to get results, flelder who will win a regular Job] if he would writeup hls fatal [nas already placed Outtielder Frank || Subterfuge, Just plain dilatory tac. | well enough alone. Honea “ Capt. Frank Atiins announced that next season, Williams was secured | all |Weich on the trade market, Welch || Every now and then a fag. | would be more than theca play will be on full handicap allow-) HORNSBY SETS NEW RECORD |trom Mobile and went. big. tho. last Ihaw the ability but lacks the dispoal. || Tut Violation of such a condition | have the scheme .t ance, Rogers Hornsby, in batting well month in the American leagu When ©. 0, “Chief” Myers an- tion to make the most of it crops out on tho gridiron out on ® A asibons ee abeceera scrimmage.