The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 26, 1919, Page 16

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THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919 Wn weY PERK Leap a GUY SAYS “IN 6 * GGAGE CAR"! VCR We -_ \ UNK GOT Hit OUT ON “THE ROAD AND TH’ BEST HE DID WAS A MILE, IN 1S TUNUTES! HE WENT Bacy To TH Guy An’ SAYS” WHERE DID THAT SKATE Eve@ TRavel A tuLE vl] \ ra (Ey Bugsy! DID You — \ \ | ee Kn” a ; ’ ie N _ Tigers Step Into First Place; Other Gossip of Baseball | Here and There George Kelly and Leo Strait Star in the International League; Will Tigers Hold Lead on Road? Seattle Squad Invades Salt Lake Next Week; Club Home for : P | Month Stay in August. 3 ily 4 | : WELL HE BOUGHT A HORSE! TH Guy TOLD MY UNK KE WAS 4 FAST ANittAL! THAT HE MADE A TILE IN 2.15 ese SNO Fain! ae POOL OM hah Se ee -wtwunnt ARN \ With Tris Speaker at Helm, Other Clubs in American Fear I ndians | sae Seaweed Home Runs in ND Sixth Wallop Seattle Crew 'Borton and Fisher Knock Fohl Will ‘Still Remain With Team to Coach Young! | Out Circuit Clouts in Fatal | ' Pitchers—Return of Veterans to Game Will By Frame; Murphy Stars | 4 : si | Big Help to the Cleveland Club—Team on Trail ———— of White Sox. | How Coast Pe BY FRED TURBYVILLE Clubs Stand I} N. E. A. Sports Writer. onde] Won Speaker, new manager, is putting the jazz in the re Cleveland Indians. Keep your eye on that team. ‘ The Cleveland fans’ one big wish has come frue. Ever H since Owner Jim Dunn came thru with cash and players, | totalling $55,000 for.the wonderful outfield star, 90 per cent of Cleveland fandom has hoped and prayed that Speaker would be made manager of the club. He now holds that job and Cleveland is happy. He was made man- ‘ager following Lee Fohl’s resignation. One hundred per cent pep—on the field and at bat— the Indians are off to a new start. The team is gi Its outfield ranks with the best. Its infield is very strong. lIts catching staff is the ey of seven other clubs, And its pitching crew is fair. With the responsibilities of managership on his shoulders Speak er is hammering the ball, and bids fair to climb back into the .300 class, | where he has been these many yea Indians’ $55,000 mpenaonenn hao "High School Mentor | | Returns to Lincoln | - “* BY LEO H. LASSEN | Shades of Nero! Cans’t believe what thou lampest!) take another glimpse at that standing of the Coast} ie clubs today and wonder why the exclamation. Y's :e e Vernon Tigers are leading the Coast league procession the first time this season and the Los Angeles tribe) looking up at another club for the initial performance | the race got under way. Who would have ever dreamed that the Angels’ mag- ficent lead would dwindle to nothingness within the of a couple of weeks? In fact, one terrible week ith Vernon in Los Angeles and the first four days of a ei paste seat Ti Wain tink taal Miro, homie: rane, panied: hein’ nento series spelt second money for the Angels. ‘spent in the training camp at the | two doubles wrecked the Seattle club The road wrecked the Angels and in spite of all the) Presidio, and part as a war worker for the fourth straight time. This ip the Seraphs were handed by the schedule makers,|i" France. He coached at Queen . eee . be eam Phe home; the Angels are in second place today. This is|atntetic mentors who ever held down |and High had doubled predicting that Vernon will win the pennant, because | such a job in local high school cir-| Seattle squeezed over a run in the it Los Angeles crew has its heart set on -bringing home| ¢'**. He made his reputation as eighth frame, but the Northerners Lost a “4 Vernon Los Angeles San Franciseo Salt Lake City Sacramento Kland aT 470 | “s 462 “ 440 + a7 377 ale Wells LOS ANGELES, July 26.—The| This is Ernie Wells, local high| Same old comedy was enacted here | school athletic coach, who will re-| Yesterday, when the Seattle club fell turn to his old post at Lincoln high | before the Vernon 7 in hool next fall, after an absence of | the best game a League e rag and they have one powerful ball crew. The next four weeks will decide the Coast race beyond la football | many winners at the and North End in He has his men playing coach stitution, doubt. Vernon goes on the road for a month’s jaunt next the game all of the time, and is loved circuit and survive they shou Will the Tigers be able to hold up? Nana esviaa it ciate e can take the trip around the Northern end of the “"? Pine '* clean Id romp home. The schedule, | er, again favors the Angels to regain their lead as y are on théir home lot ers are roaming about. Tigers Here Soon The Tigers will be in Seattle in weeks. Whether or not “Fat Arbuckle, the mevie comedian, pilots the Tigers, will head his : here is uncertain now, but one ing is sure, and that js if he does the park won't be able to hold fans. fore coming to Seattle the Tigers ip Oakland and then jump to) Francisco for a-week. With the right on the heels of second this series is going to have a bearing on the future of the race. | Tigers jump to Portland before ing home after visiting Seattle. | the meantime Los Angeles will aying host to Portland, Oakland, e and Sacramento in turn. , during the next two weeks the favors the Angels, but with Seraphs in a slump, figure it out Watching Leadership Race attle fans are watching the prog: (of the first division teams, and they are pulling for the locals) out of the cellar, the first fight is taking all of their at-| n«right now. ~ chances of the Siwashes for a division berth are cooked now jess a miracle happens. In fact, he highest hopes we huve now is sev. pth place for the local crew. The e is playing the strongest club in league this. week, and they will lucky to get out of Lox Angeles They play in Salt Lake City week before returning to the pasture, where they open with After Portland come the Oaks and Sait Lake in turn. FRANCISCO i HAS CHANCE __ With Los Angeles leading the Meague by « big margin two weeks ‘80 it looked as if the San Francisco club's goose was cooked as far as the 1919 in was concerned, but since ' the Tigers have pulled the Angels ' from their lofty perch the Seals are Very much in the race. The Golden Gate crew will be up against some Strong opposition during the coming ‘week, when they play the Sacramen- to Yippers, who have had a sudden #econd wind. The Yippers plowed thru the Oaks and have spanked the Angels several times this week, and a@re now in fifth place. The Seals have « powerful attack a good pitching staff and strong re- serve strength in Corhan and Zam- lock. Corhan can fill any position in the diamond except first base, where Zamlock can put up a good game as well as pitch. So Graham hasn't much to worry about as far 4s injuries go. Seaton, Scott, Couch, Baum and Smith are a corps of the} strongest pitchers on the circuit. WILL CLYMER TRADE BIGBEE? Bill Clymer is wiiling to trade Lyle Bighee, according to reports from the South. Bighee is still on the suspended list for alleged failure to keep in shape. It is ra- mored that Clymer tried bard to trade Lyle to, the Seals for Roy Corhan, the Seal infielder, last week, but Graham wanted too much side money. Bigbee started the season like a world beater, but something snapped in his head over his success, and he hasn't been of much use to the club for some time. FRENCH IS PLAYING BENCH Young Ray French, whos showed 80 much promise here, is on the bench for failure to hit,...Ray went to £ the plate over 30 times in the South - without rapping out a single hit _ Perhaps his hitting will pick up when the club returns home, because there is no doubt about his ability as a ~ fielder. SEATTLE INVADES SALT LAKE CITY sastrous week in Los local squad will Lake City next play their last for a month’s stay while the } Old Hans Wagner | } Was Some Player, | Yodels Muggsey | j “I consider Hans Wagner the ‘| most valuable all around play: who ever wore a spiked shoe,” ) says John J. McGraw. ‘ “I believe Jimmy Collins had ‘ the surest pair of hands I ever saw. “L have never seen a man in the pitcher's box who equaled |} Mathewson in all around ability. |) _ Roger Bresnahan was the great- jest catcher I ever saw, always |) excepting Buck Ewing. “I have never seen an out- ) fielder who was Tris Speaker's i superior, . |) . “Amos Rusie always appealed |, to me as the speediest pitcher I ever saw.” ) t i } { ‘ | ( \ 4 4 § eee series of the season in the Mor- mon cheese box, Salt Lake has had wonderful success on their home lot this season against every club, except the Seals and Oaks. The Angels dropped five out of six games to the Bees on their home grounds, and the Beavers dropped seven straight games in the Mormon hangout. Doesn't speak well for the Seat- tle gang. Earl Sheely, Bill Rum- ler and company are right at home in the grammar school en- closure in Salt Lake, where every ordinary fly ball to left field drops over the fence for a home run, IN INTERNATIONAL Remember Leo Strait, who used to | hold down the right field fob on the | Seattle squad several years ago? After leaving Seattle Leo played in | the New York state league for sev- eral years and now he is holding} | down an orchard job in the Interna-| | tional league, and is‘stinging the ball | | for a mark well over the .300 margin. | STRAIT | VERNON MEETS OAK CREW | Traveling at top speed, thd Vernon | Tigers will invade Oakland for its first series off the home lot in many | weeks. The Oaks have a much stronger club than when they faced the Tigers in Los Angeles. Roy Gro ver has helped the Oak infield whith | is playing much steadier ball now. ‘The Oaks may make the going rough for the Arbuckle outfit. ROGER BRESNAHAN | IS BROKE | | Roger Bresnahan, one of the great- | est catchers who ever put on a glove, | |is broke. He has lost $25,000 as pres: | ident of the Toledo club in the Amer. | ican Association, which loss he at | tributes to the inability to sign up} ile | spite of the fact that he is over 40| | years of age | | LOS ANGELE:! | ENPERTAINS BEAVERS | After five out of six weks on | the road, Los Angeles will return to their lair next Tuesday to open a six-game series with the Port- land Beavers. Since the wreck at Salt Lake City the Beavers have been finding the going mighty rough, “Dixie” Walker, the temperamental outfielder, left the team last week after the series with the Bees, and his loss isn’t going to help the Beavers any. The Angels are in for a month's stay on the home lot in which they hope to make up their lost lead, GEORGE KELLY | STINGS BALL George Kelly, nephew of the fam- ous Bill Lange, former Chicago | White Sox outfielder, is playing with Rochester in the International league | staged He has returned to} 4 If the. jungle |Y bis men for playing the game, | =| WYWIIN) Ws Y LY ROPR CH Frankie Morphy, Coast flyweight king, leaves for Los Angeles the first will make h He has notified the moters that he is coming, and ex- pects to land a couple of ‘seraps at the Golden Gate, where he plans to stop over u couple of weeks. Young Brown, who livan bere soon, ix on bis way to Manilla, where he fight before the Olympic |club in September, Charley Hulen, who made the trip Bast | to see the Dempsey-Willard disaster, making quite a stay of it. Charley ts now in Manhattan, where he is seeing | the big buildings and everything. Jack Dempsey mays there is no of him ever fighting in Lon- after that Jimmy Wilde verdict Ps havi handed the verdict to Willard, altho it's @ 100-to-1 shot that he would never have left the arena whole, dack treats his opponents nico and gentle, like « typhoon, Leo Houck is still lining wp good matches In the South, The actor, boxer, ex-sailor, etc, ix expected home by the time the fall boxing season opens here, Chet Neff, who is, making a big hit in the South, may be lined up with Richie Mitchell for a 10-round set-to at El Paso, according: to re- ports received here, Neff has been fighting for a long time, but seems to have reached the prime of his career this season, Frankie Tucker is stil! fighting around on and Los Angeles. pected to return to Seat{le in the near future, With the fall season but a short time away, local fans are talking about a match between Earl Baird and Joe Gor- man. It looks like a whale of a go on paper, If both boys are in condition, Biddy Bishop, formerly sporting writer on aging Dick neck of the tall uncut soon, accord- ing to reports from the, City of Destiny, his former home, ‘Here's » bout for Young Hector, Chet Me’ time a new Chet is Chet has Tacoma, where he plans to conduct class train fighters, according to Tacoma ad- tyre is at it ag day dawns, it » nizing an athle Every COLLINS MEN FALL BEFORE DAY OUTFIT With the score 2 to 0 in favor of the Collins Playfield in the ninth in ing, the B, F. Day Playfield squad a rally and put over three | counters, knotting the count. Safe} bunts by Lassen, C, Dodge and Sow. ers and a two-base wallop by Bill} Dodge turned the trick, In the tenth frame Lassen doubled to left, stole third, and scored on C. Dodge's roll- er to shortstop. ‘The final count was with the Day | men leading. | Dodge hurled a good game | of ball, the Collings men collecting but one seratch hit. Tho garve@ now stand oneall be tween these teams, ‘The deciding game will be played at Lincoln play field, on August 5. The B. ¥', Day boys’ team walloped the Denny field squad, 13 to 4, in the afternoon, The Day boys have| won four out of five games. and 1s hitting the ball for a count of 340. In a recent game in Reading, Kelly smashed out four home runs and a couple of singles in six trips | to the plate, one of the batting feats } of recent years, Kelly used to play for Victoria in the old Northwestern league. He was sent up to the New York Giants, but was shipped back to the big minor for more experience, He is expected to be back in the ma- jors again next season. ‘The neighbors of a self-satisfied man are not always gatisfied with him, =| | thinks dangerous. Murphy for the visitors day were never | playing shortstop clicked out three hits for the and led the hitters. Brenton pitched a good game, with the exception of the sixth inning, when things happened so quickly | that | Seattle’ crew realized it Dawson held the visitors to three pingles Seatite R. HPO. A o 68 3 . ef Perring, Lapan » Brenton, p Totals ° | Vernon— Mitehell, Edington, rf °° se | He newnenns Dawson, p « ‘Totals Score by Innings Seattle .... Vernon . Summary: runs-—Borton, Mousel, High. Edington pr Brenton 2. Stru 1, Runs responsible ton 4, Double pi nh, Umplres—Finne: College Youth Wants to Box Jack Dempsey Drake Student Wants Crack at Champ; Is Big Fellow BY H. C. HAMILTON (United Press Staff Correspondent) NEW YORK, July 26—Drake University, Des Mojnes, Iowa, is about to set a new record in pugil ism. You can count back as far as you like, but you will be unable to find in the history of fisticuffs any mauler who eevr attained any great ness who got his schooling within the walls of a university. Now Drake students are out to batter that record into small pieces thru the presentation to the world of Carl Broadley, Broadley is a delicate youth of six feet, four inches, and 246 pounds, | His home is in Texas, where they | make ‘em decidedly rough, and he wants to fight for @ liviag—rather a high-flung ambition for a mere collegian, since box-fighters have begun to make millions in the game Off-seasons training Broadley slays and rounds up steers, whips the country-side, and trains for foot ball Coach Mark Banks, old-time foot ball star, believes the youth he is training daily in the Drake gym- nasium can take the measure of Jack Dempsey. He declares that in spite of his size Banks is faster than any heavywelght the world ever has seen, and in this class he places the new champion, even in spite of the things Jack has been doing to chanipionship aspirants for many a day Banks oopoo4e Stolen base— Walsh. Fisher Sacrifice Home nite. Me—D Brento: Dawson 1 —Brenton nd Toman, probably hasn't given boys fall when they gtop wallops with their chin from fists carrying the weight of a Dempsey, but he can be excused for that if he really he has unearthed a cham pion, for champions are practically as good as a young mint nowadays Takes Time “Broadley isn't championship ma terial right now,” Banks said in Des Moines, “but proper handling with in the next year will bring him around. I believe a session on the gridiron this fall will harden him a bit and make him a greater boxing possibility, “The big fellow is Just crazy to tight’and you can bet he’s going to exhibit around here this winter.” The Yale and Harvard varsity & oared shell crews have each won 26 races, the -war was over before the! ‘Two-base hits— | Dawron, | to} ‘the pennant and world series, much thought to how hard the big| Tris Speaker is 31. | Texas. lover .300 since he became a © of the best outfielders the big leagues have ever seen. He was born in Hubbard City, This is his fourth season with the Indians. |Dunn bought him from the Red Sox. Two players and c ‘the purchase price totaled $55,000. had starred with the Red Sox. Cleburne and Houston in the Texas league and wasgarmed jsince he jumped out of a Red Sox to Little Rock a part of the season. Pre He's been regular big leaguer. batting uniform into the He’s one, } Fear Indians | Rival clubs in theAmerican league the White Sox, the Yankees and | Tigers—now fear the Indians. Speak er’s promotion to manag means more to them than would have | meant the acquisition of another | strong pitcher, which the club has Owner | been after all season, h, For eight. years he iously he played ‘vith Rival club managers know that Tris Speaker {s one of the brainiest men in bas@ball today. He has been | Lee ¥Fohs right-hantl man ever | ngles Redskins, He is 31 years ol |the American league as well one, of the knows s any “is popular with his men, and Fulton WouldBe Essy Meat for Dempsey, Says Kearns By Jack Kearns *) name of Fred Fulton among the |} Fulton mateh first. when he takes off his gloves. he gets him in the ring and gives the awful lie he told on Dempsey cannot guarantee of the one punch he knocked him 1 will enough to get into the ring again beating than AVillard got, provid as well be tied to his side for all Dempsey. Europe at,all. He certainly will guarantee Fulton another thing. Some persons saw fit to criticize me a little for including the names of those that Jack Dempsey would like to fight as soon as possible. To those persons I will say that if as much money were offered Dempsey to fight Fulton as will undoubtedly be offered him to fight Carpentier, he would accept the Dempsey is not the kind of fellow to hold grudges. No matter what a man does or tries to do to him in the ring, Jack forgets it But Fulton he will never forgive, nor will Jack be satisfied until him the beating coming to him for to knock Fulton out in a punch again. He cannot guarantee that, no matter what kind of a dub he is going to fight. But he will guarantee to stop Fulton quickly enough to remove whatever doubt there may be as to the fairness out with in that first fight. If ever ke has nerve ( with Dempsey he will get a worse ling, of course, that Dempsey does not knock him dead with one punch, Fulton’s jaw was made for talking. That left hand of his may the good it will ever do him with I won't be surprised if Fulton does not come back from il not if he thinks he will have to fight Dempsey. ‘(Gamay MY YUM \'y { =| Pe) 4 y MM epoccesscetMtascesessdtbagssslirsed Ke | One way to reduce the high | cost of living is to make the va- | ecationist bring back all those big fish he says he caught. A bird down in Tlinois has pitched 65 consecutive scoreless innings, and his team wasn't playing the Athlet jes, either, Soon as Wilson leaves Europe, they begin giving us the worst of it. Look what they did to little Pal Moore, Now Detroit is making a bid for They want too much. Ford already Tom Hughes Quits Los Angeles Team LOS ANGELES, Cal, July Tom Hughes, once a leading Braves pitcher, uniform yester had quit baseball, 26.— toston turned in his Angel nd announced he Two years ago Hughes’ arm went back on him. ‘This season he started working out with the Angels, but after three months’ dally work and one trial in the box, he said he OSCAR EGG COMING BACK According to advices received from France, Oscar Egg, one of the great: est riders who ever came from Eu- rope to these shores, is now on his way across the Atlantic to join the cycling colony at Newark. Egg has shown his wonderful ability in nu merous races at the Velodrome and also in the six-day races at Madi- son Square Garden, He always has enjoyed a great popularity with bike racing enthuisiasts in this country, and his return here will be well re ceived, Few people will take advice unless charged for it. They have Henry wm = Ml H ) Eddie Cicotte, the veteran Chi- cago White Sox hurler, is lead- ing the American league in twirl- ing, with 18 winstand four de- feats since the start of the sea- son, Y} | Allan Southoron, who pitched for | Portland, in the Coast league, a cou- | ple of years ago, | with 11 wins ana jis pitching for St. Is in second place, | five reverses, H Louis now, Among the other high-ranking | hurlers who are well known to | Coast fans is Stanley Covaleski, who pitched for Spokane and Portland. He is the leading Cleveland twirler and has won | 12 games and lost six. In the National league, “Dutch” Reuther, Cineinnati, formerly with Spokane, is leading the field, with 10 wins and three defeats. Causey, the New York young- ster, has won 10 and lost three games for the Giants since the first gong soundes Grover Alexander, the Cub flinger, is ‘having a hard time rounding into |condition. He has won but five | games since the start of the season and has had the same number of re verses. | Detroit moved into third place in the America league, when the Yanks fell before the Red Hose again. The Tigers helped themselves to an- other win over Cleveland. Entries to the early closing light |harness events of the Lexington | meeting number 405, an average of 37 in V1 ri 5. One would be led to believe from current comment that Qllie Pecord as a referee is an excellent plumber, jis himself a star of the first water, | 49 | filly able at ail times to set the pace ( | for his players. [Major eich Chicago Cleveland Detroit ¢ New York . St. Louls Boston Washington Philadelphia . cHIc, Bt. Louis . Chicag ma ¢ Ratteries: Davenport, Gallia. Sothoron and Severeid; C. Williams, Kerr and) Schalk, , July 2 CLEVELAND, July 4 Detroit é 1 36 Cleveland * $i Ratteries: Dauss and Ainsmith; Jasper, | Philips, Uhie and O'Neill, Thomas, BOSTON, J { | fans and players believe there will be | LAKERS TAKE MIX IN | YIPPERS TAKE ANOTHER « | Owner Jim Dunn, of the Indians—| BOS Sunny Jim, they call him—has spent | Ho" York |lots of money to land a pennant in| ‘Batteries: B | the Forest City. He has had wonder. | Hannah; Ruth an |ful support from the fans, but the! | fans began to kick this year. In sev- ‘eral close games at League park the injection of certain pinch hitters or |pinch pitchers brought defeat to the | Indjans, Of course, there were many [tims when Fohl's snap judgment) | brought victory, but fans forget | thowe £0 easily. | Vets Return | Lately the team suffered thru the | |injuries of Chapman and Graney. Both veteran stars are back now andy jin fine shape. ‘ | Lee Fohl, a wonderful developer of | young pitchers, will be free to keep the Indian battery men going at top speed. That will be his job for the remainder of the season, and at the |same salary he drew as manager. | Jim Durm is no piker, | The team has had two bad slumps. | Two is enough for any team, and WASHINGTO Philadelphia Washington .... ‘ Batteries: Parry and McAvoy; son, Gill and Picinich. Eleven innings. NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘Won. New York . Cincinnati... Chicago . Pittsburg . Brooklyn Boston St. Loui: Philadelph New York sae ; 6. oe Batteries: Rudolph and Gowdy; and McCarthy, PITTSBURG, July Cincinnat! . Pittsburg Batteries: and Schmidt, PHILADELPHIA, July 26.— R no more, | There is fight in the team, Speak- Philadelphia ea Pe | . | Batteries: “Petter ani Wheat; jer himself is full of it. He's not a) |, Batte ¢ lrowdy by any means, déspite the re-| P*°kard and Adama |cent row with Chick Gandill, in Chi-| cago. : ping is necessary to win games, and ee nathees reser! it most always is after the half-way |ryero and Clemens |mark has been passed in an Ameri: | can league season. Brooklyn ST. LOUIS, Yet he can scrap when scrap-4 Chicago INFIELDER TO OAKS If the Indians can show their heels| NEW YORK, Juyl 26—The New to the other contenders this season, | York National league club today an- ft will be the first pennant for the | nounced the sale of Infielder Lance =) Ohio metropolis, And Cleveland fans | Richbourg to Oakland, of the Pacific | lare mighty hopeful. | Coast Teague. i asi ~—— —_____,——______.. jj go buy Boldt’s French Pas: ” | Let | try. Uptown, 1414 3rd Ave; down town, 913 2nd Ave. NINTH INNING SPREE} — SALT LAKE CITY, July 26—| THE SPORTING GOODS STORE Young Holling blew up in the ninth| inning after pitching a strong game | for the first eight frames. Salt Lake | Qe touched him up for a couple of bite ai Great for the Boys in the closing chapter that turned! Is that Y. M. ©. A. Boys’ apparent defeat into victory. The | ™ final score was Salt Lake 5, Oak-| W Camp up at Friday Harbor, Orcas Island, land 4 The score— R. E. Oakland ... ey a Salt Lake Cit t Cee eae Batteries: Holling and Elliott; Mar- kle, Stroud and Spencer. H. One of the “best and in. \ expensive” outings a boy fin, find. Partioulars at the Boys’ Department—Y, M. C. A. Piper ¢ Taft Tie THESPORTING GOODS STORE GAME FROM ANGELS} SACRAMENTO, July )26,—Wallop- ing the Angels, 5 to 4, the Solons pushed the Los Angéles crew into} second place here yesterday. The win was the third victory of the week for the home.team, Piercy pitched a strong géme for the Yippers. The score— Los Angeles Sacramento . | ‘The batteries: Pertica and Bassler; | Piercy and Schang SUTHERLAND HOLDS SEAL CREW HITLESS| SAN FRANCISCO, July 26.— Hurling great ball, Suds Sutherland pitched the first no-hit, no-run game of the season here yesterday, when he blanked the Seals without a bin- gle. Portlan won, 11 to 0, Most of the Beavers’ runs were made on er- rors, The score— Portland San Francisco . The batteries: Sutherland and Baker; Bromley, Zamlock and Bald- win, McKee, H. Your Patronage Appreciated Pay Checks Cashed TORREY & SEARS’ BILLIARD PARLOR 1430 3rd, Corner 3rd and Pike Lanch Counter Shop Barber Fountain Drinks. M. 2819. Card Tables When you think of advertis- tne. think «* The Star,

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