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Patterson Is f §6©Light in Shining Tribe Loss leattle Takes Bad Beating From Sacramento and S Slips Back Into Fourth Place, but the New Third- ® Sacker Still Plays Brilliant Baseball BY LEO H. LASSEN UT OF THE WRECK of the bad drubbing | Sacramento handed Seattle yesterday, the final count bei Bill Patterson, ng 9 to 2, shone the work of Seattle's new third sacker. This big fellow looks better in every game and he played a mighty sweet brand of base- ball around that third sack yesterday, In the first inning he made a nice pickup on the run of Merlin Kopp’s bunt and tossed out the fleet Solon outfielder with a nobby heave to first base. He robbed Kopp twice more during the game, throwing Merlin out on another bunt in the fourth and then he picked his foul out the air right on top of the third base boxes. srson also looked well at the plate, crashing out a pair singles. He was robbed of a hit by Sheehan when the to first sacker his hard-hit ball in rth and Kopp happen- to camp right under his) fic smash to left in the) lerson ts covering a world of ground third base for the In- and he ts also taking his cuts the ball up at the plate ie certainty looks like a million and when he gulns more ex: he should be a valuable ings and got by in good until the eighth when the vis- found his delivery. for five and counted threa.rune. Ray ach with the and strikes. with the officials on such de- gor is only a waste of young catcher, the plate for the Jhand for today's argument. Both teams have played a lot of bad base ball in the first two games of the series and they should be settled down. by this time and should play jthe kind of baseball that they are capable of playing. TRIBE BACK IN FOURTH PLACE ‘The tribe ts back in fourth place in the Coast league race today as the result of the spanking handed them by Sacramento yesterday, The gang moved up into third place by winning Wednesday, but Sacramento moved back again Thuretay. A win for Seattle today will find them back im third. ALLEN : IN NET FINALS TACOMA, Aug. §.-~ Marshall Allen, Cart Gartner, Irving Weln- stein and Charles Stickney are the seom#i-finalista in the Pacific North west tennis tourney here, Miss Jose. phine Pollack, Miss Fairchild, Miss Fraser and Miss MacDonald are the semi-finalists in the women’s singtea. The plny tm the semifinals ts scheduled for today and the finals will be on tomorrow. TUNNEY WINS FROM BURKE NEW YORK, Aug. 5&-—Gene Tunney won a judges’ a ion over Marty Burke here last night in their 10-round go, Mike Gibbons was named winner over Augie Ratner in their semifinal bout, Earl Baird of Seattle and Johnny Murray fought another one of their sensational 10-round battles as a pre Hroinary. ~|EARL SMITH SUSPENDED ST. LOUIS, Aug. 5.—Earl Smith, catcher for the New York Giants, who was fined $200 recently for an assault on Coach Dolan, has beep in- definitely suspended by Manager Mc- Graw and sent back to New York. McGraw said he was buspended for infraction of the training rules, but did not give detalia, EVANS IS ACQUITTED PORTLAND, Aug. 6.—The Mult- Homah grand jury late yesterday re turned a no true bill in {ts hearing of Bobby Evans, Portland boxing pro ,| moter. Evans was charged with the the fourth he fly that See @ hollow tooth and three runs came over. next inning he made a pretty catch of a would-be Tex: , Truly, the Duke had a} day Thursday. Is A at BALL PLAYER Pick, the Sacramento | sacker, is a real ball player. plays swell ball around third and he's one of the foxiest hit- 4n the Pacific loop, and he's| one of the best base runners. | gtole second and also pilfered! during Thursday's matinee and the trick on Jack Adams, one} ithe best throwers in the league. | ier Serax ts | D HITTER | Young Sheehan, the husky | : fellow who is filling in at for the Sacramento club Fritz Mollwitz 1s out of the with an injured hand, a good cut at the bail. laruped the longest hit of lay’s engagement when he d @ triple to left field in fourth, 4 MbTES’ DAY oday is ladies’ day at the ball DDAY id and also i» free day for the! A big crowd should be on larceny of a diamond ring from Miss consistent with Good Tailoring $30 SUIT With Extra Pair Pants Many good patterns to choose from. 304 Pike St. C0. FZ 2V5; Hariey-Davidson Motorcycles CAUTION! 55 2S For 2%, Lbs. Guard Your Health! Protect Your Pocketbook! Malt Syrup This is a fair retail price for any STANDARD BRAND OF MALT SYRUP. WHY PAY MORE? PACIFIC BOTTLERS’ SUPPLY CO. 307 OCCIDE NTAL AVE, NOTHING SECTIONAL ABOUT JUNIOR NET MEET any part of the country is el dents of the city th Divers Will Be Coached “Dad” Henry Will In- struct Divers at Munici-| pal Bathing Beaches “Dad™ Henry, director of The star | swimming meet, announosd yester- | @ay that he would coach any diver) who expected to enter the meet. | “Dad" has volunteered to coach divers at the South Green Lake bath | ing beach on Thureday evenings, be- | tween 7 and § o'clock. He will coach the Lake Washington diving pros pects Friday evenings during the samo hour. “Dad™ will also answer any ques tions pertaining to The Star meet during that time, | any junior, sentor or novice who | plans to compete in The Star tm should take advantage of the oppor. | tunity to get some expert coaching | free of charge, “Dad” has judged | mMAny national and section high and/ fancy dives, and he is considered one of the bestinformed diving oritics in the Northwest, Batries are How open for the meet and will close a week from tomor. row, ‘The preliminaries for The Star Meet will be run off in the Green Lake and Lake Washington bathing Deaches, and the finals will be staged im the Lake Washington canal. A mile race will wind up the pro gram for the finale, The course wil! be arranged so that the finish of the |” mile race will be in full view of the | « spectators. Entries for the mile race will open | August 15 and close August 19. All entry blanks should be sent to) the sporting editor of The Star. Ruddy Ryan continued hie geod field- ing for the Sacramento team Thareday making slice running Getehes of fies | hammered out by Chartey Bee and Brick | Kidred, Ray Bates wes sent in te pinch hit for the eighth, Dut the best | 9 could do was & soaring Tn » runner? seored from third. fast, and Adame had time 4. VERNON BEATS THE LEADERS LOS ANGELES, Aug. 5.—Vernon again beat the league leaders today, and Yelle. | /ERNIE JOHNSON HITTING STRIDE Ernie Johnson, Salt Lake gradu- late, has finally hit his stride with | |the Chicago White Sox. The former Coast league shortstop ace ia crack- ling the ball at a 314 mark for the | Windy City team. His playing in the | field is also improving, according to |reports from the Illinois metropolis. | © LL TODAY |] Sacramento vs. Seattle : Game Called 2:45 PF. M. Reserved Seats at 2138 Artade PHONE MAIN 3001 to Park wy Dalley 1, by Penner 2 figen, Ryan, Pick, Keowort Three-base hit—Sheeban. Sheehan to Orr, Btolen basee—Pick 2 Eldred, Compton. Charee | responsible for—SHehorr 6, Dalley 3. Fr cls @, Penner & Umpires—Basoa and Fitters. Man Franctece . Sacramento . ai ( | Oakland Vernon . Sait La Portiand . Philadelphia Pittabure . Brugey; Hamilton and Brotbern. igible to come to the North west and take part in them, Star Swim Entry Blank T am © registered member of the A. A U. sad wish to enter the following events in The Mar swimming mest: MEWS EVENTS aNTORS JUNIORS AND WOVICED 100 yur@- Gach (free style)________ ¢60-pmrd dash (free style)... -——aem- Wor Boye Under 14 Years 10O-pmed Gnah Corenst strona \o) sO-7yerd deem (heck stroke). vere Quam (under weter> Peacy Giving (10. boned) .____. Life eavimg — ——--——.—__- WOMENS EVENTS bO-perd Gash (bark stroke). -- mem For Boye Under it Years Pascy diviag (1¢-(t board)... ns Migh divmg (reguier A A OL rel Life saviog ee (Pree BETO). men nnnnm Wer Girte Under i¢ Years 0-pard dash (free atyie)...... 100-gar@ Gamh (Tree style). Yor Girls Under 16 Years O-yard dash MORE). . mewn 20-yard Gage Corenst strom) __ se-yerd Gash (hack stroBe)-— Yor Girle Ueder 16 Yours 60-yard deen 10 peré Cosh (mide over ermd. SO-7Ora acd (£100 BtYIe) -manmenmnmen For Nevices Fancy Grieg (19-1. board). Migh Giving Geguias 4. 4 Vesey diving GO-M. beard). Lite eaviag Cried Retrien cles at 6p m/Angust 11 and wil be received watil then of The Star etfien Batrice are free A. A. U. menberehtp te 15 comin, and cam be fited with Mart Frye ot Piper Tan's Swimmers wader 16 need met register with the A A. UL . PP uneererouP First Game ©} cteveiand | Cleveland Washington... ah 1 Hattertee: Morton, Caldwell and 1 | O'Neill, Sinault; Srickson and Gharrity, nn EK a Ge ee .4 10 Hotes, Mo- Phormahien and Heeturwscouel a «| eceeronccecets! 2 3 Cy pod mana The score * ° y: Btrack out b . t. Bases on balla Mt tcherr 2 Twe-base bie Ms Doo! Batteries Shocker and Severetd: Rom- met, wu Keefe, Freeman and P Paste’ balh—Cook. BEAVERS BEAT. SALT LAKE PORTLAND, Aug. 6.—Portland won another game here yesterday, beating Balt Lake by the score of ‘The Beavers knocked Gould and Polson out of the box, Paul Stmnd taking over the work. The soore— Portiand Galt Lake Wa ttortes: Polson and Byler. nee piiched— By bat 2 ni ‘Time of game PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE ‘Woo. Lost rm. * om Angeles . RH E ©. 2 2s oe Ss Fisher; Gould, BATIONAL LEAGUE hi oa oe Newsy Lalonde, one of the great jlacrosse players of the world, has been named manager of the Vancou- ver, B. C., Terminale team. The Van- couver team is playing & series of vanes with New Westminster for the Minto cup. _ Batteries: Mendows, fedewick and to Unless there is a residence clause of at least one year included in the rules governing the sectional junior and boys’ tennis tournament in the Northwest the term “sectional” becomes more Of a joke than anything else. These tournaments, held every year, with the winner of the junior division going East to compete in the national event at Boston, is supposed to be for Northwest boys, and they should be. But under the present ruling any player from These meets should be for Northwest boys, and allowing outsiders to enter them freely does not make it a sectional tournament, but makes it an open meet. Like intercollegiate and interscholastic sport and other “closed” sports, players should be resi- are representing for a definite per iod of time before being allowed to compete. Big Field Entered Washington S$ tate Net Tourney Should Be “the Best in the West” One of the largest and best fields lever entéred in a net tourney in the state of Washington signed up and are signing up for the Washington state tennis cham | Plonships, which begin August ® at club. ‘Tennis stare from nearly every jeity on the Pacific coast are entered, as are several Eastern sec- tional champions, The entries close August 6. filed at Piper & Taft's, Spaiding’s or at the Seattle Tennis club The entry fee this year has been lowered to $2.00 for seniors and $1.00 for those who compete in the boyw’ and junior championship. The regular five senior events and singles for boys and juniors will be offered. All boys who have not reached their 1#th birthday by | March 4, 1921, are allowed to sign up 45 @ junior, Three challenge cups will be competed for in the tourney, besides the regular permanent posseusion trophies which are to be awarded. The challenge cups are for the men's «ingles, men’s doubles and mixed doubles. | #iven in all events A special prize Will be awarded | the most satisfactory umpire of the tourney. ‘(OAKLAND WINS TWO OAKLAND, Aug. 5.—Oukland took a pair of games from Los Angeles here yesterday, Both games were | close, the first one being 41 and the second 9.8. Firet Came n ae Sere | los Ab ie 1 43 4 reuse and Koehier; Lon Dumovich end Stange. if : Becond Game— Oakland ...... Loe Angeles Bai ° | ae ries mn, Winn, Kremer and Koehler; Reinhard, Hughes, Thomas, Dumovich and Baldwin, CHIEF BENDER’S TEAM SLIPPING For the first time since he began | to Manage the New Haven team in |the Eastern league two years ago, |Chief Bender, the veteran pitcher, jis tn the second division, resting in fifth place. He has won two flags in @ row in this league and he must step out if his team is going to fin- ish in front again. = |QUINN WOULD BE AN UMP! Jack Quinn, who has been playing 20 years in various baseball leagues, wants to quit playing this year and become an unipire. He is now pitch- ing for the New York Yanks. He was with the Vernon Tigers a few years ago. Follow the Crowds the KNICKERBOCKER CLUB'S DANCE Leschi Pavilion SATURDAY NIGHT . e , Sclupp and Tay- ve and Hargrave If Yo This MAN To clean up our genuine GBD pipes we are giving our friends notice. The assortment is somewh: full values are there in French and Italian make. Better secure more than on these prices: ABSOLUTELY ONE-THIRD OFF—86,00 PIPE $5.00 Pipe for $3.33—$1.50 Pipe for $3.00-—$3.00 Pipe for $2.00— $2.00 Pipe for $133 Get them now, while the getting is good. Spring Cigar Co., Inc. 707 First Ave. 1406 Fourth Ave. Four Reasons 1, 2. 3. freely and evenly. fragrant. seer cigar at 2 for 15c. u Smoke a Pipe |} * Ad Is for You choicest grown. Buy two John Ruskins today, the best and biggest cigar at 2 for 15 cents. To-morrow you'll buy more. at Umited as to shapes, but the SOLD BY LIVE DEALERS ur In this famous ne for they cannot last long at FOR 841.00 707 Third Ave. J BUILT 910 Second Ave, 418 Pike St. BY HAND Why you owe it to yourself to smoke John Ruskin Built by hand — each cigar burns Each cigar is mild and delightfully You get the equal of a2 for 25c. ~ % The Havana tobacco used is the for ¢ 8 cents each LLEWIS CIGAR MANUFACTURING CO, NEWARK, N, J. Independent Cigar Factory in the World. BOURG & NEW, Ine, Seattle, Wash. CIGAR in Meet have} the grounds of the Beatle Tennis) Entry blanks can be obtained and First and second prises will be Ring Game VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. most thrilling boxing contests Cal., tonight. ficlals called it a draw because of Edwardy great ninth-round rally. ‘The surprise of the night was the weight of the boys, as it wan believed that Ridley would be the the two. But when th: the seales Edwards tipped the beam }at 122% pounds, while Bud scaled 121% pounda. on the verge of a knockout in the seventh and again in the tenth. Danny mate a wonderful comeback in the ninth, taking that round by @ good margin. Edwards, who was bleeding from the nose and mouth, resorted to holding and hanging on | tactics to save himself in the final round, ‘The sensation of the show was the fight put up by Ted Snyder of the U. 8. Marines. Qutweighed over 20 pounds and floored seven tiines in the firet round by Jobn Nolan, Snyd- er came back and beat bis opponent badly in the second and third rounds, The fourth was even, but the handicap of the first round knockdowns waa too great to be overcome and Nolan received the de cision. The other bouts resulted as fol- lows: Noodles Knox stopped Boy McCaslin in four rounds and Mike Mitchel] of Seattle fought a good draw with Billy Sharpe of Van- couver, AMATEUR BOUTS TONIGHT With 10 bouts, ranging in weights \from 75-pounders to middleweights, \Clay Hite will stage bis fourth ema lteur Friday night show this even- ing at the Pavilion. A small admission of 50 and 76 cents plus war tax ts the charge, land the first bout will start prompt ly at 830, Adolph Schacht referees jail the bouts. The complete card follows: Jakey Kessler va. Donald Nevers, paper- weights; Pat McDonald vs. Ernest Knight, flyweights; Frankie Green ve. Young Walcott, bantamweights; Lioyd Ellis vs. Bob Caston, bantam- weights; George Burns va, Frank Matson, featherweights; Dee Webb ve. Frank Klepach, featherweights; Mike Murphy vs. Young Joe Rivers, lghtweights; Johnny Lewis vs. Fred Deckman, welterweights; Billy Lang ve. Battling Egb, featherweights; Clark Triplett Va Jimmy Smith, middiewelghts. » |SIMONICH WORKS FOR FIGHT Joe Simonich, who meets Dave Shade in the main event of next Tuesday night's smoker at the Pa- vilion, had a stiff workout yesterday afternoon in Clay Hite’s gymnasium before a good-sized crowd of fans |who journeyed up to the Pavilion to look over Simonich and Shade in Judges’ Decision Awarded Fighting; Ridley Outweighed; Other News of the approval as Ridley clearly had six of the 10 rounds. judge declared for the Seattle boy, while the other two of- avier of | is stepped on Ridley had Edwards | |main event between Shade and @ Dan Edwards and Bud Ridley Draw After Ten Rounds of Fast —In one of the fastest and ever seen here, Bud Ridley of Seattle shaded Danny Edwards, colored boxer of Oakland, The decision of a draw met with general dis- One their training. Shade, however, 4i@ not return in time to have a work. out ag be stayed over in Vancouver for the Ridley-Edwards fight He due to train this afternoon ehout an hour or #o after Simonich gets thru with his work. Clay Hite announces that a pam ticularly good card will support the monich, morrow. The Shade and Simonich fight should prove to be one of the best possibie welterweight bouts ever sgem in Seattle. Travie Davis will mest the winner the following Tuesday, Dave Shade ts the only lad in recent years who has floored Champion Jacke Britton for a nine count, and as both boys are extremely anxious to hold of Davin’ coast crown, thing considerably worth while is store for the fans next Tuesday night. SHORE HANDS CAVENEY PLUM — Ernie Shore, the veteran Amer {ean league pitcher, now with the fan Francisco Seals, says i Caveney, the San Francisco , stop, will rank with the greatest im the g@ume when he gets his chance — in the big show. Shore, who with Everett Scott and Roger inpaugh, two of the greatest stops tp the game, says that in : around ability Caveney is the better man. FISHER STILL CAN HIT ’EM ~ Bob Fisher, who played second — base for the Vernon Tigers last year, hasn't forgotten how to hit. He is busting the ball for a 340 average with the Minneapolis team in the American association. He was to the Millers for Carl Sawyer. yer has been out of the game since the starting gong, breaking a leg in one of the early series. LOUISVILLE IS LEADING RACE Louisville looks like the class in the American association in spite of the close race. The Colonels have deen in first place for some time, altho Minneapolis and Milwaukee are mighty close. OARSMEN WILL ‘The rowing auxiliary of the tle Yacht club was to be at noon today at a meeting at Bon Marthe tea room. It will be announced te q ree “In Seattle’s low rent district” If You offer, durin: example. Desire Exceptional Value in Clothes you should see the Suits we our Stock- Reducing Sale, at $9950 and $3950 while for $49.50 you can buy the very best Suit or Overcoat in the store— Fashion Park’s finest products, for We have recently received a splendid selection of Two-Pants Suits $39.50: They come in single and double-breast- ed models; also sports models. Shaner & Wolff 916 Second Avenue