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About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1913)
4 (S American League Managers l U u A l ¡ÍA ií ’ L j OLIVER AND HIS COHORTH WILL INVADE THE MAM I WH RING TOW* AND EMM AV OK TO AN NEX ANOTHER II, WILLIAM Pllll.ll' SIMMS LAKEVIEW. April 32 The rumor (Paris Correspondent of the I'nltcd that a gam«* preserve has recently WALLA WALLA, Wash., April 22. With a record of victors over every Press * been created In th«’ northern part of 'I he Western Tn-State Basebail local team t his iiedit, Cale Oliver PAIIIH, April S3. America's na Lake county seem» to be quite prev I. eague opened today in Walla Walla, like a certain gentleman of other days tional game of bn «elin 11 alent, but apparently the report« «un not In xubstantlnted. found root In France, Boise and North Yakima. Pendleton named Alexander, ;s sighing fdr more «orb!- t«j <•* i. .« r He lias decided to teams ar«» now out tor The preserve In question 1« «aid to piayed her»-. Baker at Boise and La 1«: ive hi i.i’tiv«’ heat In search of and around Paris. On<< comprise all territory In the county Grande at North Yakima. gain« . . n«l Sunday will indie up bls prominent sporting clubs in Frame, north of towii«lilp 33, un«l to affect The Walia Walla Bears carried off «pill toe? ers on the train anil Invade the Racing t'lub, with important deer and i«iitelope only, which would the muslin at the close of last season, Weed. grounds in the llols de llolougne. make It unlawful to hunt such unl- b«-atiiig Boise out by a narrow mar Garxtt Van Riper will go along to Colombes, and elsewhere. hue takcu a mul« In that section ut any time of the gin. Pendleton and Boise have great handle the indicator. great liking for the bull and bat. and i year, regunlloK« of op< n season. ly strengthened their teams this year, Speaking of the pitching staff ot Township 33 runs east an«i west the famous Hols Is resounding with an«l they have hopes of finishing first. the Weed team, the Summit Lookout Ju«! at the south end of Hummer Luke II «’ queerest cries It ever heard. Two new teams have been added to makes the following remarks: un«l takes In nearly all of the rimrock "Slide. Monsieur, elide*'; "a bas the league this year, Baker, Ore., and "Weed's pitching staff now includes 1'umplre! I- . . I mi' Fool I'.Hl country west of the lake, which Is North Yakima, Wash. Harry Ko« h of Sacramento, who uses considered a good «1« <«r country by (foul la pronoun« «-«I "fool" tn the his south wing. Koch was released French), These und nil sort of oth- HportHinen Frank Chance is wearing a head by M'< redie because he already had er expressions hit' -rto I nown only gear and umpires looking after the a surplus of southpaws. And then to the Yankee fan, have been udded LIGHT ME* AKE Chicago Cub battles are wearing full there is Anthony, who leaves Marrys- WORKING I. K.HT to the French youth's vocabulary. suits of armor. And, after all, it ville of the Trolly League, who secur- T E llooscvelt am! I) B'ltguss, M)H ANGELES. April 22 Llgbt wasn't the head that Chance first had ' ed a position in the factory some time American men in b.tvinuas here, orig ' work was carried on today trouble with. The "bean hat" he wore ago. but delayed his arrival until the for the in..l«d the Idea Th / tracHated and I wo Johnnie» K Uhan*] an«l Dund«e — v hen the Yankees and Brooklyn Weed boys began to fear he had paas- «oiii'eiiM.d Into as aimpl. form us pos In preparation for their twcnty-rcund Dodgers were "exhlbitioning" before d ’is up. Anthony is famous through sible, Hie rules of the g.inie. and gave bout for the featherweight charnpion- the season opened didn’t save out Central California for his spit Cup.«-» to Hie students of lite Connor- i.blp next Tue«day night Chance's knee when the Peerless ball. cel college, which Is near Burgess' KHbane Miid Venice lle.vn expe't leader twisted it in a swing around office Little by little enthusiasm wns t« entertain a big crowd at th« train first base. They say it was a very . TRACK MEET IS worked up until the youngsters In ing «amp Hundu), when the champion , slight strain, but it may mean a lot NEXT ON TAPIS nearly every school In Paris has wl’l extend hltnnelf a bit for the b< to the poor, hoodooed Highlanders, caught the bug «fit of his admirer:«. for they had expected to start a Mc- The approach of commencement Then other Americans volunteered Dundee already 1« down to I |Graw-like season with a run and a week is causing the field and track their servlc««« as couches Tod Hloan. l-oui’d», und 1« going very light on the r'ish from the opening day. Figuring athletes of the high school to put in Ion $25,000 yearly for a sound and more time each week limbering up the famous jockey, organized a team roud work. at Die .Maison l.nlltte training stables, I whole Chance, the ex-Cub will do and getting in shape for the coming the members of his team lx«lng a mix Hln<-«> th«* Athletics have shown four well to carefully nurse a knee that is. inter-class track meet, wmen is to be ture of French. English and Amer ¡first class young pitchers In addition comparatively speaking, worth •it an annual feature of Commencement Ito I'lank. Bender and Coombs, they ican stable boys least $10,000 of the 25 thou. Week. Valentine Flood, formerly a Prince | are being picked far and wide to beat All of the classes have developed Mack now has ton I 'Diversity coach, has staked off a lout the Red Sox i men who will be strong competitors ball groun«| on the itaclug Club's three veteran« and four fine young various events, and with the Pole Champ in form the that grounds ut Colombee. and is giving sters to work with, und back of them is being shown in early the hardest hitting ball club in either bls services to trams playing there. practice, several bid fair to shatter It Is amusing to watch the French league If thia combination tsu't I the school records. boys throw from the outfield, and i enough to w in. there's lio fore« sating pitch. They can bat latonlsblngly | any result Until Gunboat Smith and Lute Mc well, but they throw like girls. Carty hook up there will be no way It requires the centcrfiebior. short iof obtaining any line upon the best stop, second baseman and pitcher to American heavyweight in the pale get a long drive to center back home, face class. and when each man muff* a ball and These two now stand out, and the has to »crumble for It before he can fistic public is waiting eagerly for I’.tss .1 on the batter has ample time tbeir clash. Smith's admirers believe for about three tour» .if the bases. the hard hitting California will end And when a pitcher hits a batter the the cowboy within ten rounds, as Mc game stops for a tlm<> while apolo Carty isn't clever enough to keep out gies ar«* made. Then, too, a French of his way, and no man seems strong man does so hate and perfectly loathe enough to soak up his punches and to soil his clothe« or even to disar keep his feet. Wells, the clever Brit range It. ton, wasn't fast enough to keep away Also, the average Frenchman, al from Smith, and McKay, the Cana though famous for Ills bravery when dian giant, wasn't big enough to ab facing cannon or musketry fire, is— sorb his wallops. In any event Mc well he shrinks from taking a chance j Carty has his work cut out when the <>n barking his shin, scratching his | two clash. And McCarty isn't the hand or turning a charleyhofse. and it only near champ with a worry at can lie imagined how ludicrous would tached. Willie Ritchie is even worse, be a gam«* of baseball In which the as he has two coming at him. Willie thought of these minor matters were at present is undecided whether to meet Joe Rivers, a slashing slugger, put ahead of thoughts of the long end of n score. Much conditions do or Freddie Welsh, who is a marvel for speed and shiftiness. In other not make well for speed, and In sev- JI in in y Callahan. Chicago words, Willie isn’t decided as to oral gniiies played about Paris the Joe Birmingham, Cleveland whether he would rathqr run the risk ball hud to be knocked a mile for the George Stovall, St. Louis of getting his block knocked off or man to beat even the frenxled throw Frank Chance. New York partake of an equal risk of being of a Parisian Infielder or «hart out- Jake Stahl, Boston. fielder to the bug. In other words, Of the eight managers In th«’ Amer outpointed. Quite an engaging prob- Clark Griffith. Washington j tern, at that. there's no such a thing at least there ican League, four believe they have Connie Mack, Philadelphia hasn’t been shown so far of beating a chance to win the penant and the Hugh Jennings, Detroit out a bunt or n short hit. NEW YORK, April 17.—Now that world's championship. The fans of Alter the baiter one® lilts the bnll the big campaign is under way at last I heir cities have hopes almost as Ty Cobb, the most valuable player ¡the main argument which seems to and P has landed any where but In strong. Jake Stahl of Boston, of In baseball, had not up to Sunday | Marc S. Wbight icrown the _ ______ National League race, is the mil of a tidder, a spectator can course, expects to repeat this season. signed with the club for the 1913 sea The annual breaking of the world’s whether York or Pittsburg has whaihor New Yorh 1.-11 right then whether the runner Connie Mack, who led the world’s son. Cobb demands a salary of $15,- record for the pole vault has gotten the greatest pitching staff. There has • will be thrown out. And Just Imagine champion Athletics for two years be 000, the largest amount ever asked by a basi'biill game without close de The Indictment "luck of ambition” fore Jake Stahl won. is confident Ills a ball player. President Navin of the to be a regular thing in track and been more debate over this question cisions. _ has often been bunded down against tenm will round to Its old form. Clark club has said time and again that the field doings. Champion pole vaulters . than any other single incident con- And It Is totally Impossible to got It young men who take pnrt In nthletlc Griffith of the Senators of Washing business in Detroit does not warrant come and go as regularly as the sea nected with the National League race. sons. The latest word in pole vault McGraw is shooting Tesreau, Mar- Into their heads that sliding to bases i sports, hut such Is not the cnse with ton. who made a wonderful showing such a salary. ing is Marc S. Wright of Dartsmouth quard, Matheyson, Demaree and Ames I an Important adjunct of th<> game. Abel R Kiviat. the sturdy lltt'e f«’l- with I i I b team last season, believes he Chance in New York hopes to get college, who grasped his trusty bam A few days ago when Tod Sloan was low who was the first Yankee home can make one more step and win the against the enemy, while Clarke is into the first division this year, and boo in the Harvard stadium last June «It tiling his team he was Impressing In the history-making 1,500 meter pennant. His mainstay is Walter using Hendrix, Adams, O'Toole, Cam- will be content if he succeeds. Of and soared clear of a crossbar stretch-( oil the Frenchman the Importance of race nt the Stockholm Olympic games Johnson, hailed by many thousands of nitz and Robinson. It's a tough course Comtskey's White Sox must be ed 13 feet 2' inches from the turf. getting Hist anil of stealing buses. Inst summer. 'Kiviat Is all amh'tlon. fans over the country as the greatest angle. Bill Klem, the umpire, last reckoned with, and they may be well Later in the summer Wright failed to Tod went to but, and with a final ad Before th«’ Stockholm games his alm pitcher in baseball. Jennings in De- season picked Tesreau, Marquard and up in the race. Birmingham and win the world's championship at j monition to his pupils to learn speed In life wns to defeat John Paul Jones ; roit has not such high hopes as in the Mathewson above Hendrix, Camnitz Stovall, in Cleveland and St. Louis, Stockholm, but the winner on that oc In reaching bases by watching him of Cornell University, who at that past. and Adams or O’Toole, but many be may show something. casion, Harry S. Babcock of the New lieve _____ < liiscly, he swatted the hall out and time wah hailed as being In a class by that ___ the _ Pirates have the edge. York Athletic Club, failed to equal As the National League race promises made for first. As luck would have himself In the distances around the Quite n bit of discussion is on as shot put and hurdles, It's too bad Wright's record by about five inches to settle quickly between these clube, It the ball was quickly fielded and mile. This he did In the 1,500 motor to who will comprise the All-Amer about Jim Thorpe, it would simplify Harry Hillman, the Dartsmouth di- the flag is fairly sure to go to the one race In handsome style. Tod slid for it. ican (rack team which will Invade Au- matters and keep expenses down rector of *' athletics, predicts even which can show the best pitching. Instan'ly the game broke up, every Now Kiviat has another ambition, tralia and New Zealand In November, greatly if- —. I But what good are greater things from Wright this player abandoned his post and run and thnt is to break the world's rec returning to America in April 1914. P«»st mortems? Clarke has a veritable wonder in spring. Under Hillman's tutelage Claude Hendrix, but McGraw believes ning to the prostrate ex-jockey to ord for running th«' mile, now held bv William Ummack of San Francisco, Wright has twice cleared 13 feet In that In Jeff Tesreau he has another pick him up and excitedly ask him Jones. So anxious is “Klvle" to turn who Is organizing the team, says he Mrs. Willani Smith of Bakersfield how he cam«> to fall, and If he was thia trick that he Is seriously consid wants a sprinter cnpable of a good i is visiting relatives here. Prior to practice this spring, and with the add Welsh—a giant capable of pitching ering mnklng the trip to far-off Au performance in anything from 100 to I her marriage Mrs. Smith was Miss ed incentive of close competition, he fifty or sixty games and pitching this much Injured. st rnlla with the team of American 4 40 yards; a distance man good for Morgan. Her husband was formerly is expected to eclipse the mark he number at top speed. A slabrnan of Judging by the way Walter John athletes that will go to the Antipodes anything-from 880 yards to five miles, | connected with the local branch of made at the Eastern Olympic tryouts this robust calibre means a lot, and last June. son has finished up his spring work, next fall. Kiviat believes that in the and a man of nbility as an all-round | the reclamation service. if Tesreau can turn out this work Wright is scheduled for his first at with Mathewson and Marquard to he Is still able to push the ball from Ideal Australian air he will be able fiehi performer, who can be depended the pitcher's box to the home plate tn run the mile very close to I <nin- on In the pole vault, broad jump, I Kav Merrill, who visited the county tempt to make a new record in the back him up, the Pirate corps will Pennsylvania University Relay Car have to travel fast and far to get the utos and 10 seconds. without calling for a caddie. Jnvolin nnd discus throw, high Jump, seat Tuesday, has returned home. nival, April 26. edge ! Vault « . Champion Kiviat ► » I