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Your Seattle Indians made the debut of Jack Adams an auspicious affair | diamond yesterday than the locals have | tae when they downed the San | showed at any time this season. A fair cisco Seals in the first game of the | crowd was on hand for the festivities and series, 3 to 0. the crowd caught the enthusiasm of the Of course the club got some swell pitch-| players. : ee" | ing from “Lefty” Burger, who held the; Any team looks better when it’s winning | powerful invaders to three hits, but the | than when it’s losing. of Opener' : | Set lS my ble Plays 4 iP BY LEO H. LASSEN NE of these days “Lefty" Burger will be sending his letthanded shoots over big league plates if he continues to dish up the brand of hurling with which he was de- ceiving the San Francisco Seals yesterday. Burger let the Visttors down | with th hits, two by Bert Et. one by Joe Kelly, the latter ‘The Indians, im the mean- Ricked Oliver Mitchell, the leading hurler, for three runs ‘in the third inning. The Braves made singles, four of them of the in- variety, and with a sacrifice fly, y punched over their three tal- j ‘Outside of the one bad inning, | it pitched swell baseball, too. Tobin opened with a single to Kil ff and was forced by Burger. Lane out a hit that rolled too slowly | Kamm to handle. Crane beat out Dingle to Rhyne, the Frisco short: | making « great stop on the | base side of the keystone) ‘Then Hood and Eldred fol-| ‘Towed with singles and Wistersil “galled « fly to O'Connell, three runs} coming over. | } | Altho playing with a badly © foot, Sammy Crane gave and giris a wonderful deme @f keen shortstop play handling a flock of chances cleanly He started two double plays. ar with Cueto starting another. the © attle keystone pair figured in thre double killings. Kamm, Kilduff ar Ellison completed a double play the visitors, making four for the ‘That's baseball as she is p ELLISON NEARLY SPIKES STUMPF Ellison ,the big, husky first sacker @f the Seals, led off with the first bit for the enemy in the fifth fre He was caught off of first by the Beattie battery and finally, nearing gecond, he was trapped by Tobin's peg to Cueto, Ellison started to Gash back to the first base station and Cueto relayed the apricot to Stumpf. Ellison, realizing that he Was nailed, slid at least five feet from the bag, kicking high in the air with his spikes. Whether he was trying to spike Stumpf, or trying to Kick the ball from his hand, it was hard to tell, but it looked like danger ous and unnecessary tactics. Ellison Was roundly razzed for the stunt by the first base bugs ELLISON CAN HIT But passing on from this incident, | this baby Ellison can certainly hit. | He picked up two bingles off of| Here are the champions of the third annual Star-Wi oodland park tennis tournament:| @ingle to right that Hood pl ‘was a terrific trip | doubles. No. 7, Dick Vander Las, mized doubles. No. 8, Viret Scott, junior boy doubles. HITS LEAK No. 9, Simonne Bourque, women’s singles and mixed doubles. THRU KAMM — " Plenty of hits were leaking thru VANCOUVER, WASHINGTON Willie Kamm, the $100,000 prize boy | at third base, yesterday. Several fingles, hot grounders, just esc aped | hig reach. He handles the ball well, | however, and started a double killing Neither he nor Jimmy O'Connell, the $75,000 boy, looked well at the} plate. Kamm hit into two doubie| Plays and O'Connell whiffed twice} with men on bases. a | RHYNE AND KILDUFF | PLAY WELL | = Seals have as good an infield hp there is in the league. The work | sonn colline hit two singles, a double Meunel ( of Hal Rhyne at shortstop and Pete jana triple in fo Parkinson (Phils) 8 Kildutt at second, was high-class, | the How Home Run | Hitters Rank Up to Today |] Williams (Browns) 19 Hornsby (Cardinals) 16 Miller (Athletics) 13 Walker (Athletics) 1 Ao RACE meet of 10 events on the ark county fair grounds track will take the place of the usual July 4 ce bration at Vancouver, Wash. Williams (PP Wheat (Robins) 9 27 innings without being scored on, Ruth (Ya 59th Infantry, will be the first rac ing event In Vancouver in three r times up, and ti year the Athletics, 4 to J Ainsmith (Cards) 8 both fellows turning in great stops. oe @ ovtlar | Totals 1921 1922 Walla, the kid outfielder, showed! 4, rraves scored four rune in the} | American 221 24 the boys and girls a flash of speed | sighth and one in the ninth, and won || National 207 «216 in going down to first base, but he|¢ ooklyn Robina, 6 to 4 | SEBS ree Tune a couldn't hit one safely tree Philo beat Tue Gleets, 9 tos, [Aubrey Boomer of France won the|i" Vancouver and the srounding ——_______- towns. | im the first game, and dropped the | French open golf championship second, 8 to 3. |which ended Wednesday with pi i : TAR 2 of 286 for the 72 holes, Th nounced this week- will inelude Kolp let the Indians down with four three or four stoke races for profes: scattered hits, and the Browns won, 9| American entries, Van Vleck "A feds liga ‘ OF SPOKANE r ping the firet two games |Mayo, had cards of 314 and 319 re. mse ney n the pty PL of the series spectively and were not in the|.{ncouver and the pd Boareg ‘ saa Coffman and Waiter Honeyman in «let the Tigers down with Portland. Bert Bag} POKANE, June 29.—Wiguring in| {ee feeble hits, and the White Sox won ver, B, C., one of the bert known a1 racing men on the Pacific Coast, wilt three inn: jatches, A | iT q Tiiien,< Seattle junior tonne gar, | 99 Tices rune im tne {EASY AS ROLLING OFF | cnter ct toast four runners in tne bure scored @arried off major honors in the open. | *#xth inning and four in the « th, and A LOG THE etake race: fing day's play in the Inland Empire | **t the Cubs. 7 to 2 ae tournament, which opened habe pad " ag |/PERFECT f kA aed el ; race, and there Wednesday. | will be classes for hunters ie In the junior division he defeated Two DINNERS | SHAVE | Captain K. B, Wise of the 69th ‘ Herbert Hamblen, 6-1, 61. In the! FOR CHAMPS |\WITH A | infantry hag arranged f men's singles he won from Henry | dition has been started. Space will the track to ac 000. automobiles be provided ts commodate some am, which will be an to be on eer et that Heol pinses| No. 1, Marian Soule Henderson, women's doubles. No. 2, Melvin Dranga, junior boy ‘ THE SEATTLE STAR Redskins Playing With New Spirit for Jack Adams BY LEO H. LASSEN | Redskins played, bright, snappy baseball. | There. was more pepper out there on the | body must be the loser. = “INDIANS DOWN SAN FR SAN FRANCISCO, 3 70 0, IN FINE GAME Burser Is (Star Tennis Champions | ' Fri a O | ” y re An | ane Box ay) 7 - sve 3%] Junior Base ists | ‘ i 2 8 $66 6 8 6 0 met 8 ‘Art on onday pee ie 3 , 5 ean, tue Rhyne, © + 8 e423 = se Kinautt, tea 8 - ae oe ; Re Dos ed ¢ oes ‘Middleweights to Mix at Mi helt.» 9 6 oe 8 i es ee ° i Sand . so 8 é 4 Bete : > Morse, W. & W ei Bee ihm. ePO. © © 1.900] Pearson we o 4 : 1 ° i 909 | Lewls, en he . 0 1 BY SEABURN BROWN ree 4 2 ‘400 | Muier, These Bros. 34 1 8 ING followers are iste : 3 “690 | Mitenait a 8 om generally of the Pag H | Hyman, ecm opinion that ts | i 3.9007) Omith, Kite : 1 2 Jimmy Clabby, |£ a : 1 $a idieweight, is ry ’ : 2 : : the down . ° ‘ grade. Jimmy | 8 ° S 24.) oR ce in one man, how: | ° 4 og j i. : 887 | Burke, W. & W. es pid in cael 3 (863 |MeGilivray, Hiltm'a 1 ¢ 1 » y & 6 -T22 | Stitte, W. P. 4 1 ’ to arguments | vamy along that tine Barvaris, Three Hiro. 1 8 8 +) ee 2 Todd. W. & W as : im et . 2 6 © 1000/%. Jones, Fremont.. 2 4 1 fast ae I over L 1 ° 1.000 |1. Jones f 4 5 wae in my life.” 1 ° ° 1.000 | Pepin, Hillmans | he says, “For the past few 1 ¥ fly Miteheli 4. by Bur 48 6 Leela w. fee eet - | terweight, Clabby was one of the best | Micely off of the fence. The other doubles. No. 3, Mrs. Roger Bragdon, women's doubles. No, 4, Earl White, men’s doubles. | gion vail park here today for staging » to cente No. 5, Armand Marion, junior boy singles. No. 6, Frank Kozlowski, men’s singles and | the Fourth of July fight between | | RACING ON THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1922. Every team can’t win all the time; some- | past, but no city will patronize baseball | when it’s evident that the players are out But the fans will forget a loser if the | there simply going thru the motions. men are playing the game. Seattle was Jack. Adams seenis to have’ put. nil playing the game yesterday with a differ-| spirit in the club. It is too early to predict ent it. } ‘ ° aoe al is the best baseball city in the anything, but if he can keep the boys Coast league when the team is playing pepped up he will do wonders for putting | baseball. It has supported losers in the | the game back on its feet. ~< 2s SF 358°333_ Basess onthe 1)! haven't done much boxing, and the 1. Hases on batie- layoff has hurt my judge of distance | off McWeeny 1. Hit by pitched and timing, but that condition is just Stand temperary, and a few mo workouts will put me a» fit as a fiddle.” Clabby In #lated to box in a local ring soon, meeting Gorton McKay | « at the next show here, July 2 | PACIFIC COAST LEAOUS He ta one of the few fighters who we Bases on baile eokand Has Slipped but Should Win From Tendle BY HENRY L. FARRELL ,ere figuring that Benny Vernon nn were famous ten years ago who are ra EW YORK, June 29.—Because|has one foot off the lightweigt ‘ throne. still ready and anxious to mix with! ‘ one of the smartest old heads the test ‘th oa metas et | 4 in the boxing game and one of the| Implements of doping are ee \ring’s greatest. boxers—Jack Brit-| used to figure that the light WAS GREAT Ty | ton made him look bad, th folks champ has taken on two WELTERWEIGHT a *| | chan of losing his crown in | tight with Rocky Kansas at c nH ® EXTERMINATO! |gan City on the Fourth and ‘ In his prime, when he was a wel |in the month against Lew Tend A é ringsterw in the universe, He beat |*‘aitierice: Bette and Byler; Doyle and ,\GAMEST HORSE in Jersey City | Mike (“Twin”) Sullivan, Jimmy Gard. | turer Figuring that Leonard was at | ner and the Dixie Kid. His claims to | Sin eas a =m 2 IS Cc L A I M E Di against Britton with no wel supremacy were well founded, and | fac o wae on mae oon hyroge: ii : eta he was generally recognized ag the} ‘preat| BY BOB DORMAN Benny ted pen hadi ded Te world’s welterweight champion ton, J | W YORK, June 2.—In Ex-/ i au wet for a fall. In 1910, at St. Paul, he put up the, +, ; ars | terminator beats a heart whose} there is no doubt that Leon inaet notabin Chat GF Wh cavens cite: cet y 6 Mp | Rameness might well be envied by | is not as good as he was two ¥6 | At Portland 1 7 4) any human. ago because he is not one of tho ning a ten-round decision over Mike | 'yetteries: | Dumevich and Baidwin | For this T-year-old chestnut gel4-| unusual athletes who improve with: ing ignores distance and weight. | ag, atlil inthe ehiftiest boxer the AMERICAN LEAGUE | track conditions and opponents, and) Leonard blames his poor showing weight division ever produced. | Won, Lost. Pet. | Just goes out and does his best al-| against Britton on indoor training: | pons, who then wae—and prob. abby says he was never beaten | At. Loule 438 #6 | ways | He prepared for that fight in a” in the welterweight clase. He fought | “** York ee cae 42] So far this year he has won six|New York gymnasium to help his Ae a 146-pounder, without a reverse, 3 a3 si, OUt of seven starts, with the top/trainer get started in business. until he grew too heavy to make the s 34 493 weight always his portion | Indoor training, especially in New poundage and began figh middie 87 tet] His best has brought him into sev: | York, long ago has been proved to] weights , He Wi fenth place on the roster of the| be bad stuff. MORE COIN , | World's great money-winning horses,| Jack Dempsey tried it for Bill FOR WELTERS . | The score R HM. Ej with a total of 430. | Brennan and Tom Gibbons tried it At the time Clabby fought Gib-|X**y Ter $ 3 $| Mis last victory shoved Lemberg | for Harry Greb and the results are bona, both men could eanily train to|'pireriee, sore and Mottman; John. | Ut Of Seventh place and if he wins | unmistakable the weiter I but Go mafiy geod leon asd Picinict | his next t he will take sixth; Any day in the week Rocky Kag- welters and few good middles | | piace from the great French money | *as is a tough proposition for any” winner, Sardanapale lightweight, but Leonard should $| Gene Wayland, trainer of Ex./ bave no more trouble with him than terminator, says he had in the past. He's an iron horse. Added weight | Against Tendler it will be a dite or a heavy track, conditions that/| ferent proposition. By long hold other horses back, make no/the Philadelphia southpaw is difference to him. | most probable contender, and He just seems to call on a secret i} will have heavy backing even if [reservoir of strength and does will have to go thru one of well as if the conditions were favor. 20-decision affairs able With two hard fights in his “The one race he lost this year was | ™, Leonard ought to approac! graced the ring at that time that it Was more profitable to fight in the ¢ division / The country was full of middie. | weights who didn’t scale much ove: 150 pounds in those ¢ Clabby | | ‘Gibbons and 1 met in the ring | four times. Two of the other fights | decision affoirs, and once!’ we battled to a 1i-round draw ' # he feels. Jack A man in as 0! Britton, welterweight champ today [but by a nose. old time form against Tendler, doan't have to help himself around “He is unlike most thoroughbers|‘f his foot work is anything with a cane, and he was boxing whe ret.{in that he t# totally lacking in| What it used to be Tendier’s del 1 was a kid in knee trousers, I feel new york 636 “He is as placid and kind as some | eft will have a hard time getl Ph kreat, and my 32 years don’t hamper |! Louis tS" | little boy's pony, and like a pony | YR é by me in the r Path . 2 «| he is always nosing in your pockets | umblings are coming from Ji neers . : $ povleaiesiy sey that they don't want the Leone] PLANS LAID , 11 1 21]. “He has won most of the import.| Sicyled qony be toreed io etch a } quan jant stakes country, “MMONE | cient to the N: z a FOR BIG MIX Kentucky Derby, the Ken: | eo New Tet . Vola RH. & andicap, the Independence} ae CINCINNATI, June 29. — Plans were going forward at American Le. « i 1/Handicap and the Hartford Handi \NEER DEFEATS Mea WwW and Hen- | cap : Viurra, Cauaey, Jonnard| “We failed to get a race with} ANDREW MORGAN Jack Johnson and “Tut” Jackson econd game rn. 4. B.|Man o° War PHILADELPHIA, June 29.--Phil] anmed by common pl court | Philadelphia o) it is my ambition that a purse|Neer, intercollegiate’ tennis cham- tceda, Winahinata aan. Ga 5 14 1 be hung up this fall for a race be-|pion, defeated Andrew Morgan of burt promoters today unoed they had r tween him and the tant, $-Yens old the University of Pennsylvania, “4 |reached an agreement with author. Jas decided in the Tatonia Special, |6.3, here yesterday ities. that gggence Maga R OH. 3 We will gladly take weight for| James Davies of California was de 3 heavyweight title bout a sube thing : age, and then concede the other horse |feated by Wray Brown, Washington | here Vance, Mammaus and De-|tWo pounds, no matter whether it is/university of St. Louis star, 6-1, 14) " en een tee | Morvich or some other 6-4, in yesterday's matches, which : The re rn uO: “We think that Exterminator is,marked the fifth round of the tour CHICK EVANS HER bandon ty “e| the greatest horse of all time.” Ines ‘ The meet, which is sponsored by the |. ¢ ri Keddie Held, St, Louis, and Robert | Mile, Yvonne La Mar, French ~ ard | McKee, Des Moines, were eliminated | woman, who claims to be the cham: Work of putting the track in con.| bY Evans yesterday, and H. R. John. | n boxer of Europe, has There is much Interest in the meet | of Vancou:| The Portiand Hunt club members | the 59th | Infantry band of 60 pice eter an winid Gorn, | Mra. J. Wheeler is entertaining the | hand and furnish a concert previous | Fert , 60, 6.0. r 7 7 aoa x to the racing. All net proceeds of | de Turenne in the men’s doubles the t & Wheeler Star Junior base | p 4: Benttlo boy figured in his third vic.! ball league champions at dinner at | brproved | Pil nadia ho saree over to the seer, apteating T. Seott and Cecil| her home Friday nignt | i e | y jontety ‘upper, 6-2, . Jim Boldt, president of the Beattie | , 7 } 5 Favorites won their matches easily Coast league ball club, will banquet le 13 ‘SANETY RAZOR” | WEDNESDAY 8 OME BONG in the other first-round play. the club a week liter, See ney aaret eaeear, AM | Stengel (Giants) one; tot At Chicago IS FAVORITE, 1, sion an igo. KANSAS CITY Mo. June _ Chick Evans was favored to retain | ON SALE FOR THE FIRST TIM 2 iene ae tee tase Se!" WOMEN BOXERS . of the Western amawar ait tourne:| WANT TQ MIX plon wor ston, St. Paul star, lost to Francis H. | been challenged by Mrs. Carrie Kel jaines, Omaha, in the second round. | ley of New York, who claims the! Von Elm stayed in the race| American supremacy, says a New with two victories ‘York dispateh, BASEBALL PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE SAN FRANCISCO VS. SEATTLE Thursday, June 29, 2:45 DOUBLE-HEADER SUNDAY, 1:30 Reserved Seats for Saturday and Sunday Now Selling $102 Arcade Building. Phone Hiliott 2866 the Worlds Smartest COLLAR. VAN REAL, the coolest collar of the season, i on sale at leading haberdashers today. Becav the temperature is higher these summer days this new VAN HEUSEN is a trifle lower, front and back. Ask your dealer to show it to you today. Smarter than a stiff collar, more comfortable than a soft collar. 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