The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 30, 1909, Page 2

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i NSE io thi ain ae if ranauaeegenepenimnmneeehessin dna nteansaanantarnansieneriengennorinibrimn ° HKG TAK Oot CAME ROM Ties Bunch Hits on Pitcher- Manager Ike Butler and| Begin Climb Back Up} To little Neal Rall, 5 feet 4 Inches of grit j{nttelder wubstituting for the great Lajole ‘and Cleveland team, goes the joy of making baseball history Rall made a triple play unasslated—the first one in the history utility the and brains, a Terry Turner of And while the big crowd was etill cheering itself hoarse, standing enon other madly on the back and al Hall, the firat batter up in the the first ball pitched to the fence on chairs and boxe tearing hata to pl beginning of the for a home run When Noal Ball geta to be |toothloas and spectacied, he will re¢ to be that day, at 2:23 in the Four hite—a homer and a dout two asalata, and the unassisted triple the day, and pounding a, (his same Ne next Inning alam rhoumatte, of his life yeara old lame. 1 the greatest moment at Cleveland, O. among them—nine putouti and playe-this was all's record for WORLD’S LIVE SPORTING NEWS/T NEAL BALL'S UNASSISTED TRIPLE PLAY MAKES BIG LEAGUE HSTORY of the big leagues. | | THE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1909. Re ce ance oe name eae cam gem ama mee NEAL BALL NEAL BALLS @REATDAV® A TRIPLE PLAY UNASSISTED il HOME RUN fl TWO BAGGER. , OPUT OUTS 4 HITS / oneal [ee RARER RE . and Stahl on first started with the Ladder, \* Young's arm shin | * UNASSISTED TRIPLE PLAYS * Cerack—went MeConnell'a bat, \* IN MINOR LEAGUES. #4 furious smash over second-a Pel Wt rein Turke/® — *May 8, 18TS—Panl Hines of #| clean single with one run aswured, | Sup another here yesterday, | * Providence * Bat noth was Ball, tae sub sone the Timers out 4 to 3, Seat. |* AUgUSt 18, 1902-—Harry w/ atitute shortstop, dashing for It. It tle took the lead early and mar 1|*% O'Hagan of Rochester at # Was too quick for him to figure it ‘ , Se seas 4 , |® Jorsey City # out, He Just Jumped blindly for oP stay to tne HOO hem ther (® June 10, 1904—Larry Sobla- #| tho fying sphere, ‘The ball hit the | ie oarce cate ewate |* fey at Portland, Ore # outstretched fingers of his eager sles i® Sept 6, Mureh at New @ glove, It stuck. One out - | * Bedford, Maas &| Hoe was leaping toward second po. A.B] ® = *Diaputed & base when he got the ball, One 0 1 il® % more Jump and he had touched sec: | PR 22 ond base, Two out | : FERRE NEN EM MEM NSH Se Stahl, runing from firat,| ; Boston was playing against the | was charging Into second. Bo quick $0 Naps, Cleveland had two runa,|/had the play been worked that he ¢ , 1 ©) Boston with a man on first and didn’t have time to eb his speed, | > 4 0| second and none oat, little MeCon-|One more jump by | Hand} $ nell, the hard bitter, at bat, looked the ball f# shoved against Stahi's - j likely to tle the score, at least ibe. Three out | ‘| Cy Young had two | three balls on MeConnell And then the Cleveland rootera) strikes and who had been watching anxtously, | Knowing BR HPO A. Fi the next ball thrown would moan | went entirely insane—10,000 yell "pet TAR tae ee | ® | something doing, Wagner on second | ing maniacs Wy BS Be ae : ‘ t : ) 2] DIAGRAM SHOWING HOW NOW HISTORIC PLAY WAS MADE, Capron, if OY Se oF ae » . lackey, ib. @ 12 20 ¢ | NE Sane. ‘ ey % 1 | MSCONMELL= WINER CAUeNT AL BA § Pi weeeie 8 8 i. TRIPLE PLAY Totals “ ‘ 7 at 6 ‘ Bcore by innings Tacoma eeoH1T0008 Beattle ede dz 0% 4} Summary: Double play—trby to | Dashwood. Two-base hit--Capron. | ‘Three-b hit—-Hurley Racrifice | hite—Lynch and Kellackey. Le | dason— Tacoma, §; Seattle, & Str | out-—By Hutler, 2; by Allen, & j on balls ofA oft Butler, 3 Time of ee 1 hour, Umpire—< 20 minutes. | th At Vancouver, alee [STRAIGHT DOPE FROM| Seattle at Taconia Portland at Vancouver, Aberdeen at Spokane. FIGHT FOLLOWERS GRANDSTAND H OWN IL ARTHUR JAILED FOR JOY RIDING, HE) FLASHES GIX $1,000 BILLS | AND TALK6 NOIBILY (Ty United Press) | DETROIT, Mich,, July 90,—Jack) Johnaon, the colored gentle: oft} pusilisiic fame, sprang & poser on the local police department yeater:| day when he was arrested for] speeding his automobile Johnson's bond was fixed at $26 With an expansive grin theh negro indicated his willingness to ante. | Hauling t his wallet Johnson chuckled merrily as he careless flung @ roll of greenbacks on the sergeants donk The officer pleked up the money and nearly choked with mish ment when he discovered t the wad or tod ef w bills.) each of which was of $1,000 denom-| ination The effort to secure} change for one of the bills nearly bankrupted ¢ od, John-|} son made t eoaelon tp a little pla “agent. He b | reiterated his promise to corer “f | jetta § forfeit for the fight and uttered dire threats of Swat he would 40 when he got Int ring | with the Los Angeles b Aker. | Base Ball & Choller % % Standing wf the Clubs, SS SE OE Se ee BY THE RINGSIDER. | It fs even ata | BAN FRANCISCO, Jaty 20.—| Berger had a hot arcument erdeen } erful Increase in the number! done, Jeffries’ popularity went to Vancouver . of native-born Missourians alnee| smash, the box office recelpte fell ‘Tacoma BY TIP WRIGHT, | "He tah takes the ehance Ji Jottrles posted $5,000 as a for Off. and the retired champion was @ | Here's the little bese ball problem Come on in,” he shouts in Hinch-| felt to bind a match with Jack| hopping mad According to one @) which happened tn # Cleveland. | ™an's ear. Johnson, Those skeptics will yelp, *tory, be had actually made up bis ACIFI COAST 3] New York game the other day. 1| Hill tries for home. The throws| “Show me” until the dog te actually ergy yor weeks ago sot to fight Slam mentioning It because It's one|are perfect. He ie thrown out at| dead, that Is to aay, until they nee| bot the eriticiem that was being | t a kind which * up contin: | the plate by tnehes |Jeff and Jack seated in oppoatte| heaped upon him got through his ually In the great national game. Porting, the next man up, dies on) New York is one run to the good/ a long fly to the outfield. The next LEAGUE corners of the ring That Jeffries’ sincerity should be | Pelled by the force of public sentl SeSoedoseoesooosoooooos At Portland. PORTLAND, Ore, July 20.—The locals’ long winning streak ended esterday, when by tnabllity to hit Wiens smereaky. Oakiaad downed fortiand played 5! innings without a score against them. RH E Oakland ... a @ 1 Portland .. os 8 8 Batteries Whaee and ©. Lewis Garrett end Piehe: Los Angeios . a Batteries: Hitt and Brown, Hoe gan; Kovstnor, hia jf and Grendortt | | | | Won Pet Ee Franctaco 9 664 land ‘ 564 Angelos 560 | e 191 Vernon 345 At St. Louis. H. E. Chicago .. +8 8 3 Bt. Louls . AP OM Haat Batteries: Brown and Archer; Beebo and Phelps | At Pittsburg. | H. E. Philadelphia aid T @ Pittsburg od 9 8 Batteries: Moren, McQuillan and Dootn; Phillipt, Brandon, Leever| and Gibson. Standing of the Clubs, | Lost. Pet.| itabure ve e.sees u 14 hiea go 20 6 $63) ow ork uM nginnatl 4 fiadelphia 7 St. Louis ..... 40 Broo lyn 13 ston. . 63 AMERICAN LEAGUE At Philadelphia. First game— R OH. EB. Cleveland ... seveeel 7 1 Philadelphia 2 7 2 Batteries — Sitton and Bemis; Morgan and Thomas. Becond game: H Cleveland 6 2 Philadelphia ..,, 14 2 Batteries: Rhoades and Kaste ly; Coombe and Thomas. | At New York. | iW ¥.| trolt 6 3} lew York .... il 2 Batteries Willette, Work and §chml4t; Beckendorf, Doyle and Sweenoy At Washington. | Becond game i, # JOago ...... a6 6 @shington . wae. Sf Batteries: Laaynut 1% y Jury jit safe and thr j ting pair Smith and Sullivan ne fd and it ts getting dark body on bases Bill Hinchman, the Naps’ big left fielder, knocks @ beau- tiful long fly to the outfield, between center and right. He two, three bases—then the problem larises for the man who t* coaching at third bese, Should Bill try to stretch tt to a homer? One run will tle the score, and give the Naps a chance to win. | makes one, | after'a long chase and ts relaying it| home, There ts a chance that In the re- taying home, one of the throws will| the ball, ft would be an easy fly to| ® the continual press agent chirp take a bad bound. The Neps are|the outfield, With not hitting Slow Joe Tile may be the only Doyle well. | score, But the grounds are wet and heavy and Big Bill le a poor mud horse, and ts plows along hia course. It's @ problem for the coacher Question gles to the outfield to try and head off the runner if he tries to » Answer ment. If the team in the fleld has a fair lead, man noore and by batter to try for second t this time will get thie runner trying to score la better than ¢ to second to pr base as he wo man will score # at first hin chance taking an extra good bet that a batter Is held tainly it will r With no-| man up is thrown out at first, Now « lot of people in the grand | ina. stand were ready to criticiae the) Ment that Berger's statements aroused, he decided to at least post his forfelt. Thin, of coruse, he can draw down at any time he soos fit | doubted ia not in the leaat surprise His actions throughout have been of the preas agent variety. For this Jeffries la not being blamed as ac! “noncbeet,” they sald. “Hfe|much by the Eastern critics an is| If he dors, he will be the most ould he cid Hinchman on third, | 8am Berger, the big fellow's spar thoroughly despised man that ever that he could have scored on | TOS partner aod manager. Sam, it) "oo honore in the ring If he Porring’s out.” \is charged, repeatedly gave the doesn't and goes through with the Stallings, the New Yort: managor,| Pees typewritten statements re Neht—well, t alt until the battle | didn't agree with them. garding Jeffs alleged intentions | '* over. “If Hinchman had stuck on thira,”| ¥ithout the least provocation, his Hemphill has gathered in the ball | he told me after the game, “our|#0le desire being to keop the botler-| Lew Powell is now a 16 to 6 shot whole policy would have been|" rename before the public.) over Chick Hudson and the Indica | changed, Doyle sent In slow ones to| Jeffs friends, so the story goed, ! tions are that before they step into ehance to| ones that Perrin, Perring, hoping that if he a4 hit) Hinchman on} third, he would have sent fast, close | bit Inside the diamond.” So there you are. It's taken me five minutes to fig veady panting as he ure this out and tell you about it “secrete WHY 1S JIMMY M'GUIRE SAD? jure ft out and decide. one he has to decide in one second. ! PRIMARY LESSONS oy — so, Afr "on 7 BASE: BALL & bluff throw to the plate Sometimes a quick throw to julre more than a ain Did he use bad judgment? rz Suppose there is a runner on second and the batter sin- In it polley for the fleide If he Is a good throv r, This is a situation requiring lightning thinking and judy it Is better to let the to load the first or necond to get the man do well to play hit the ball it in @ pretty whoreas if the Cer endeavor nless the chance en, the flelder ent the man who on the throw tn. md on a aing! tting home is bir malls and the of a double play is better with a runnor ving from firet to second than from second to third. (To Be ¢ —=—_= © CITY COPS WILL HAVE | STRONG BALL TEAM Stung by the charge that he was afraid to announce the line-up of the pollcemen’s baseball team, Seargeant of Pollee Clarence G. Carr yester day morning gave out the personnel of his team, with which he hopes to mop up the firemen’s team next Sat ntinued.) | irday at Dugdale's bail yard, at the| Florence Bromley benefit Sergeant Carr says he has a rat of twirlers In Robert Ha «en and Bill Landon. The sergeant himself at one time was a profes O'Brien, Obl and Street, Blanken ship At Boston, RM. Bt LOWS sessrccdccerses 6 ‘ Boston 8 7 1 Batteries: Bailey and Criger; Wolter, Karger and Donahue At Washington, First game H. EF.) Chicago 6 4] Washington 10 23) Batteries Burns and Owens; shnson and Street, | Tacoma |Monday should jonal ball player with a hefty and wicked whip, Clarence will de the backstopping for th firat base will be Bill Carr, brother of Clarence. Mike MeN: ed in fast baseball company, ts tout ed as @ second Tealey Raymond, and Md Hagen, the big, husky patrolman who nearly had & serap with Doe Roller, ts billed to cayort around third base, H, W. Follrich will cover md. Tho flychasers picked by Captain Carr are: J. P. Smith, Tommy Wright, Sergeant Bill Bear ing, J. L. Ja and Henry Hardin Carr and put in stiff practice yesterday afternoon and they came back full of fight and confidence, Those firemen are in for a delightful drubbing if con fidence and fight count for aught cops, On iia colts some ABOUT TRUCK EAGAN, Anxious Fan-—The Wagan ro ferred to in the sporting extra of have been Bngle, the mistake being the operator's at Truck Kagan to atill play jing in the Const league. Boston Americans have more than a team of pitchers in uniforms every day, Alphibetically they are Arellanes, Burchell, Cicotte, Chech Nourse, Pape, Ryan, Schiitzer, Wol- ter and Wood. ould have had to| LS | Cver since Motuire cai clout | he has worked w a brawny | woes, amee, who once travel | than ever beaged Berger to change his tactics, | the ring at Dre and tomorrow night the price will go to 2 to 1, unless there is a sudden influx of Seattle money The Northern ing without coming through with |eomething that looked like money was creating a strong sentiment prscene Joft. ithey are expected to get down on rcs see ree Of all sad words of tongue or pen,} The saddest are these, “| can't land Be: From the Musings of McGuire, OAKLAND, Cal, July 90.—Jim MeGuire, the Cleveland America scout, Is a sad, ead man Jim ta 4 nice old gentioman and were ho |inelined to the use of intemperate | has enough language bh provoca | tion to ind oe in a few well chosen |worda not fit for publication | . | ‘The anawer is Ben Henderson the Oakland outlaw pitcher, whose view scoording to the laws of the baseball Medes and Persians, jbelong to Cleveland, Henderson, who has a deep sense @ loyalty, otttia wa Lo cause of the magnifico) manner in which they have | him the const Bien jand main on Henderson, but Bénnio can’t hear him, and to adé@etedim's Hendorson ts showing getter In a recent Bérlés ho capped the climax by striking out 89 men In three consecutive games, | | pite hed by him, which the @opestors think is a world record, In addl to setting thin strikeout mark Henderson won all three gamneg, two | of them being shut-outs. Can you blame old Jim fortbelng | sad? refuses to desert the tion BENNIE HENDERSON, ee == torrents. ‘Chie "stabl tamoes in baseball Baden Ind,, two yoars ago. enecnemereet | Binghamton, N, Y,, lost @ valuable ances of other baseball men in the past few years Individual clubs this year, All three Pete McNabb, pitcher for Baltl.|men were takey suddenly. George more, killed himself and his whole) B. Dovey, president of the Boston family in Pitteburg several years! Nationals, was taken with a | ago, Martin Berger, of Boston, did | hemorrhage and died within a vory |the same, ending the lives of bia|short time. Ierael Durham preat president and two presidents of wife, two children and himself, Hd | dent of the Philadelphia Nationals, Delehanty, Philadelphia's great’ died at Atlantic City this season, BENNIE HENDERSON IS DEAF The sulelde of Harry Pulllam,|™an when Van Zante shot himself president of the National league, )MOt #0 long ago. recalls to mind similar perform The Nationel league has lost its hide and, stung to the quick and im-/ it is t a little pee we stuck the harpoon in and broke it off. The Water and Light team will cross bats with the Municipals at Dugdale’s park this afternoon, The game starts at 6:30 M. Stanley Re i, prosident| and owner of the St. Louls Nation-| ain, Will remain in Seattle Ui] Mon day. M. Stanley ts the oldest in the boatness. He haa be aging clubs for over a years man. score of the Cleveland slug a tine beside the Then he makes | Nap Lajole, r, always dr ate with his bat uff to bunt so as to draw the a infield in. This done, he slams the ball Morgan, the Philadelphia Amert can league pitcher, usen a bat atx inches longer than anyone else in} the league, and he stands about} two feet from the plate. He does! very little damage with the willow. | as | him strong Heth boys are ready | for the scheduled 16-roand battle, as | are the other fighters on the card] with the exception of Tony Bllva,} who was knocked out In three! rounds by Dick Wheeler at the Por-) j | tola club jast night sports think highly of Hudson and) | two. '$2.50 No. 465 or 466) Sllva was to have met Roscoe Taylor tn the 10round preliminary, | but in view of the showing last} night @ substitute may get the fight Clifford and Harrison, who clash in the semi-final, expect a short battle, each predicting that he will win by the kne LONG BEAT HAYES (By United Press) LAKE FORBST, NL, July 30.—A heavy rain storm yesterday in-) terrupted the play for the western tennis champlonahip. When the rain began, Long of! California had defeated Hayes tn one set and won five games in the second, as againat his opponent's The storm later abated and Long | ry the mitch, defeating Hayes} |, O4 D & M Catchers’ Mitt | $1.25 induces ou won't fler Aug mente for be able to save on aif vat 4 10¢ Keach loather palm Cateher's Mitt he Tho No. @56X extra quality tan leather, tmp ry eket Catoh napa 1 lacing and e Mitt Se | napa ta reinforced O26 pa tan Jeep 107 horsehide palm, Yu athor back and fingers,” Mitt Age | $2 horsehide leather | atan leather back and t a Mitt 81.00 $2.00 No, 660 black eordovan, extra | large patont reinforced Mitt $1.00) $2.60 No, 692 horsehide leather palm, Yucatan leath back a] finger, improved tnced be and reinforced Catcher's Mitt @1.25 $3.00 No. 04 horsehide leather palm, Renton tan leather back and finger Mitt sine) $3.50 No. 694 horsehide palm, calt- | akin atrip, nton tan back and finger Mitt $5.00 No, 614 calfekin palm, and fingor, Improved Mitt No, 616 double sewed horse padded lmproved: Mitt ear5| leather | 8175) back and retne | o* Fred M. Spinning 1910 SKOOND Avie, Take Na Chance Come here—to a store everyong speaks well of—to a store that always yp dersells its competitors—to a store you know uses everyone alike, This Suit sale differs from others in more ways th one—differs principally in the fact thas the total Suit stock is on sale at Nat There’s No Reserve When we say there’s no reserve we that you can pick and choose in this sto and blacks are included at discount price for that matter, every suit in the store is ine When we say: “Take no chances; this is the! store” we mean to tell you that every suit iff store is marked in plain figures—that's the of inal price—deduct one-fourth and you have th present prices. And here they are: = $15 Suits Now at $1 1. $18 Suits Now at $13. $20 Suits Now at $1 $25 Suits Now at $18. and if you are not mighty well pleased wi purchase, you can always GETYOUR MONEY BAG A SPECIAL EXTRAORDINARY) MEN'S OXFOR $3.50 and $4.00 Oxfords, in gun metal bloods, tans and ee combination close at. caeeuenee w; $4.50 and $5.00 Oxfords, al colors and i 135 to close at. shown in our stock; tf qoute 615 to GI9 First Avenue On the Square Opposite Totem ®

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