The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 30, 1922, Page 18

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PAGI | GREAT RACE IS EXPECTED AT TACOMA SPEEDWAY ON TUESDAY SEATTLE SUBSTITUTES PLAYING BRILLIANT GAME OF BASEBALL Subs Come In for Big Crack Auto Praise as Tribe Wins Pilots to Redskins Make It Two Straight by Defeating san Enter Race Francisco Seals, 14 to 1; Indians Are Hitting Viciously Against Visiting Hurling BY LEO H. LASSEN O team is stronger than its substitutes. If that’s the case the Seattle club is well fortified. When the Indians scalped the San Fran-|° the world’s fastest speed stars and cisco Seals to the proud tune of 14 to 1 yea-| ‘welve barking ng care are all! terday the utility men played a big part in| the victory. Sam Crane, shortstop de luxe, who has} | starter been suffering from an injured foot, WAS | put @ permanent wave in the check | forced from the game in the second inning.) 64 fing, tiashos his banner of can} Ernie Schorr, a dangerous lefthanded hitter, | over the heads of the screaming cars| A Dozen Classy Pilots, | Headed by Jimmy Mur- | phy, in 250-Mile Event} Wash TACOMA June 30—~Twelve | set for the Eleventh Annual National | Motor Classic to be held on the Ta July 4. When! Fred Wagner, the man who coma speedway on was sent in to bat for him. The Seals coun-! y crom# the line next Tuesday, | wane » ta Tharley See righhanded | Tacoma’s fastest and greatest race | tered by jerking Charley See, a righhande 2 Ba gh neta Ewe ypering ed flinger and inserting Fritz Coumbe, one of} their southpaw stars. Manager Jack Adams countered this} move by putting Tub Spencer, a righthanded sticker in Schorr’s place. The strategy worked and Spencer worked aes Gs ane aaae at eeencel Coumbe for a walk, a run being forced over. stars as those gathered this year at Then Spencer Adams was put in to run for Spencer, and} Tacoma. Never before has the field ™ , a ssi " when} be¢n #0 evenly matched for speed is only speculation. fumbled momentarily, With such drivers as Jimmy Mur ing the throw to second knights of ® splintered trail wilt] burl = their mounts for a purse} amounting to $26,000, Seldom in the history of the speed game can one Adams beat to Murphy's prize berg. winning Duesen Eddie Hearne, wil! | *Schorr He was touched up for several hits, | rspencer but only once did the Seals break | 5 Hix tutor Adams. se endeavor to keep ‘Adams was then inserted tn! A toe Garton Joe Thownn. Jerry Wee Crane’s place and he played sweet 1 Aortic par . | F derlick, “Howdy Wilcox, Eddie as at thertatop ve groan HOD aS Hearne, Tommy Milton, Art Klein, water in the gai n } Frank Elliett, and Ralph Mulford to Hood was hurt colliding with Pete) PACEFIC COAST LEAGUE entertain and thrill the crowds, vist Kilduff at first base Ed Barney was} Won. Lost. Pet ; sent to right field and he fairly tore! Veron si 1) earth ap arnedber oP aerate. — ee le for the reat |#2®, Franciece 1 84 [400] sured of « fast program. > een the app! Or _ one BS a ” 5 | Cliff Durant comes to the fore with a Angele : ¢ the announcement that he is to be gion Oakiand “a 48 att > ie i nat rina cote | Portia 86 43 Laan |the winner of Tuesday's contest. | " ne big fellow is a terrible Seattle 8 48 459) 80me are inelined to look curt | stop when played regularly, but he | sacramento 33 54] with respe to the 0: xiend “| + fs & good utility man and he has/ THE sconn Anca ag tg oc aban pale snepee nay a0. | laying A real brand of base.| 8&2 Francisco AB. RH. PO. A, & | lonaire is driving the same car Tom been wing - ee ae eee licens, is ce my Milton won the National cham. be ada Murphy's absence from aie vt : 9 | Pionabip with last year, This will be eon EA a Fm he the curtain for Durant’s racing car. Mannie fo ae — wight Dane {O'Connell ef ve @ ©} er, and like atl stars should do thin 3 on saw conlioocgmal ad ponte wiped ‘ : ij}is “absolutely his farewell appear . is y ance After the Tacoma race he! 2a ‘Tex Wisterzil bes aeen bevel me a contd 4 Will devote his time to handling the | soit poe aor "ohne prada joao. H © ¢/reins of the Durant Motors Corpora vin . Weller, 1b 2 ® °) tion of California. i swe ccmiast me bc — yhoo be cae ee b s| Jimmy Murphy comes to Tacoma ee Pens regular od t hina (com on " ° t ry e| With the glory of four consecutive : pe 1. 8 poll pond pend cme Hee | ~ ~ | victories trailing him. On top of that pepper they wi Lape Scr | . i 12 J} | the speed world has not hushed talk Rainier valley stands in true Seatt od adhe @ 6} !ng about his sensational victory last | style. 6 @ ® e}year at the Grand Prix Murphy — 2 ’ bd ® ©) will make fast company for the reat GARDNER PITCHES Siace $ Slot the field, Harry Hartz only FINE GAME ee Se i ¢@/amiles, and says “watch my amoke” Harry Gardner pitched a good ey 2 ¢|when asked if he hopes to win the game of ball for the Indians Thurs- P : 2 ®\ race. Hartz ix driving the duplicate day. an ar) eo 8 eae ae oe a thru, Jim O'Connell making the | OBES wa. Jing him out when it comes to grab-| around in the seventh on his lazy Totele is 13 | bing the prize money. Harta ts Single to center and with the aid of, *Matted f 24 Hearne’s former mechanictan. tReplaced Schorr In second. two singles by Rhyne and Agnew i Se finer SHatted for McWeesy in ninth, Gardner ts one of the most effec tive hurlers in the business when he | s settles down to pitching Ralph Mulford, at the wheel of Frank Elliott's Leach, ts expected to do his share of chasing the end of |the rainbow where liew the golden | pot. Elliett has consented to allow INDIANS SCORE See | Mulford to use his car. AT WILL | Temmy Milton, still hopeful of | winning the national championship |this year, in spite of the fact that he sat on the rail for many weeks because the A. A. A. ruled him off ¢|the track for an alleged misdemean or, looms ible victor of has won for acoma and h with every ‘The Indians started off with one run in the first, two in the second and one in the third. Then they Blew the Md off in the fourth and put the game in the ice box with six |< hits, good for five runs before a man |< was Hut. Two more came over in the #eventh and a trio in the eighth completed the scoring. Charley See started on the mound for the visitors, the former Seattle outfielder being wild and inefective ‘Then Fritz Coumbe went in and wa pounded hard. Doug McWheeney finished the game in a blaze of base |, hits and walks } an & po Tuesday's race. Mite two years straight at 1 ts thoroughly familiar board and nail of the Tacoma speed | way LENGLEN IS_ WINNER OVER ELDRED CAN i LONDON STAR) #4»: June 30.—Rod-| KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 30 SOUND Bats | ; \ert Ww. Tins srmer all. | Chick Evans met Fred Wright of Los When st comes to hitting the ol |_ WIMBLEDON, Eng., June 30.—| American guard at Swarthmore, well | AB#*Is and George Von Elm, of Sait apricot consist little Brick El-| the score rn wn. 2 | Kat MecKane, one of Britain's| known football official and sport | ake City Is paired with Clarence lan yang oe ote R HB | pest in the Wimbledon tennis | editor of the Evening Ledger, died at | Wf of St. Louis in the semi-finals praise. The chunky fielder is lead. | At Oakland championships, went down to defeat| the Norristown hospital today. Of the Weetern amateur golf tourna ces aie ont eee anlisttertes: " Cantisid, “Kuna, Hampton | toda Suzanne Lengien, Euro-| Death resulted from injuries mus-|™¢Mt here today, Brick picked up three hits yester.| pean champton. tained last Sunday night, when his | BNR ES 8 oe day, two singles and a lous triple| The score R #. B.| The champion’s steadiness over-| automobile crashed into a truck. HOOD'S NOSE BROKEN to center. And besides he was play a Angeles eee : . came Mins McKane's gamenes: | While sliding into first base in ine fighting baseball, arguing over |*‘:! - Soe Under the eyes of crowds which | LANDIS IS PANNED jyeuersay's game” wih the Gan decisions all afternoon ton and Freemes jbroke all records for tennis attend-| wasHINGTON, June 0.—Judge|FTBi#Co Seale, Wally Hood, S« alas | cam ance in England, the match got un-|pandis, grand arbitrate anmiae® atti outfielder, collided with Pete ELLISON Aan Lee der way with Mile, Lenglen the fa-| 2>%*. Srand arbitrator of baseball, | kiigutf, Seni firstsacker, and suf 3 N AND | v Lost. F “ \ | was sharply ked for his reported i b KILDUFF BOUNCED 8 aa “38 56 | vorite In the betting. Miss McKane, | ecturea' 1 players on their | °°! * Proken nose, ert EI , ; r, was heavily backed at odds als by Clark Griffith, president a a st 155| Mile, Lengien’s shots were beauti- | statement issued here todas nd cheved thom te tw asian’ ‘ , “as } sland ‘4 /tul in the first set and she won = Bos! : 4 «2g easily at 61. The crowd became} . _ Miller too, ° r " Bl at t “ tg / } , A he secon it iti : $; when the little British girl took the m e ok well in Jones, a ‘ first t games of the second set the field M Jack watched ss . A teat tebe’ hit , w Mile. Lenglen then rallied and tied ral bi eak t m at ‘ [the score at three-all, t first, but he didn’t do anyt to ‘ RH. E . dogg Feud Mssindwiah tinectt ‘5 ns speed with long kills from all parts r] A REAL ap jalloway, Na ant | Miss McKane captured the seventh | the eighth | Wilile Kamm showed the Seattle NATIONAL | Re wae ne ee pene, Beats . F Amid steadily increasing exctte-| Wy Hilte Get fos 9160 co ee etOO | ow York .00s-osccesse 6 4° 424} ment McKane rallied and took | ourth He taeaed a ty erd: Ae {E 7 is * ref the ninth Mile. Lengien then in. | < Mineo ef the pa eel -4 creased her speed, and, playing with | in a Pair of Snappy Seal suiciie’ tos ; Innatl Zea] the precision as a regularity wp ima | Sport Oxfords and throwing he , hoard J ri 10 styles featured Kamm did the tr so easily that |? Ble * ’ ")” : ’ Miss Elizabeth Ryan, the Califor 1 peared cig t r 6 score k HM. E./nia girl, won another h when at He also looked better the plat Li burg 5 he defeated Mrs, McNair at 4.6, ter, picking up t singles and ries: Haines and Ainamith; }6-3 and 6.0 Jim O'Connell got a luc Tex ‘ | WIMBLEDON, Eng., June 20. Seaattes ani didd't do or Big ihe scare rn. wu. £./Appearing in the Wimbledon te | « m Jtourney for the } ie 8 j tourney for the first timo, Mrs Brown and Black Calf at A Sjurstad Mallor American woman at Batteries “nd M a All Goo ‘} | RE ia rag eam Jchampion, easily defented "Men All Goodyear. ‘Welted AND LEADOFF MAN | aioe arte of England, 6-0, 6-2, in her Dean Mathey, of the United State ‘Chai fielder, is the | A tet gt y ‘ tented OL. nited Stat “Chain-store values that ' an c Cage beat them all une ny ey und with & speed he : = knack of driving the ball BASEBALL PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE SAN FRANCISCO VS. SEATTLE TODAY, 2:45 Lane walked three times yesterday and doubled. He iso singled two bases and scored ides + ing field cutting off two sure nd holding them down to by fast work in the field In addition, Lane has the strongest 108 ANGEL and most accurate throwing arm in DE sE Te toate IUBLE HE Reserved Seats There ian't a more valuable out fielder in this loop than one William Lane. at Ladies and children Saturdays, free every dny exerpt Sundays and Holidnys THE SEATTLE STAR Manager Jack Adams Made manager of the Seattle team Tuesday night, Jack Adams, Seattle’s vet- eran catcher, has pepped up the Redskins into a real ball club again. The hundreds of fans who attended the two defeats handed the powerful San Francisco Seals will testify that the tribe has showed more real ginger in these two games than they did in all their other appearances here this season, || Adams is off to a good start, and may he keep it up! Be CHICAGO WHITE SOX ‘Pale Hose Making Grand Fight for High Honors in American League; Unexpected Pitching Strength Is Making Windy City Team Contender 2 | HICAGO’S White Sox will bear watching. Hopelessly vutclassed—on paper—with Urban Faber the sole pitching dependable and the club as a whole a “mere shadow of its former self,” Charles Comi | ball club started the 1922 season with scant prospects of fin | ishing higher than last year, when it wound up out of the y cellar by one match. ‘ > During the winter trading and buying season the count | was combed for hurling talent. stead of improving matters, the club apparently lost ground | thru a failure to come to terms with Dick Kerr, one of the | best left-handers in the American league, and constituting about 50 per cent of the mound power. But—look at ’em now! Yesterday, for the first time in many moons, Chicago om cupied third place in the percentage column. pitcher who wasn’t figured as much in the pre-season ores. over, put them there Wednesday afternoon by holding De | troit’s powerful sluggers to one run in a three-hit game. P FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1922, ARE DANGEROUS NOW BY SEABURN BROWN key’s revamped Pitchers were scarce, Ip Leverette, a Harry from beat | | HOMER SMITH IS IN DUTCH P. NEER LOSES TENNIS CROWN { Some Eastern sport writers are| PHILADELPHIA, June 30.—Phil [panning Homer Smith, after his | Neer, last year's intercollegiate ten showing against Billy Mieke. Miske | nis champion, was eliminated from kayoed Smith in one round, so easily | further competition for the title this that opinions that Smith laid down | year when L. E. Wililams, of Yale, jare being advanced | doteated the Stanfard rocqueter, 63, | - 6-1, in the semi-final round. Wray Brown, Washington univer [ROGERS TO BOX | ,.\""2 Bee, Wathinrton votwer. MACK JULY 4TH jim the finale, Brown defeated Wal ter Wesbrook, of Michigan, in the semifinal round Frankie Rogers, local welterweight. and Billy Mack are slated to box 10 rounds in the main event of a emok er at Astoria on July 4 VON ELM MEETS G. WOLF. TODAY SPORT EDITOR DIES “Distributor” VERAL CIGAR NOTE: ™« is only one priceforaWm.Penn —5¢ straight—$5.00 per hundred —$50.00 per thousand. Please do not ask your dealer to sell for less —he cannot afford to do it. 209 Third Ave. S., Seattle And Robertson, of no-hit, no-run fame, is no flash in the |}pan. He created quite a sensation when he pulled the trick early in the season, but the consensus of opinion was that he would soon crack and pack the old grip for the tri farm. He hasn’t, as yet. October. Hodge is a good prospect. He isn’t burning up the leagua, | but he pitches consistent ball and is able to take a turn in the box regularly. And Ferdie Schupp, whose sun was supposed to have sa |with the passage of time, has been rejuvenated in some manner. | The sox are dangerously close to the second-place Yankees, | who compare in paper strength to the Chicago men as the proverbial mountain to the molehill. And no astonishing distance separates the Windy City pastimers from the St. Louis leaders. To be sure, the Sox lack the class to be seriously consid- ered as pennant prospects, yet a game won on the ball field is worth more than a pennant won for a club by dopesters before a season opens, and it cannot be denied that the club has stood up well so far, mainly thru unexpected pitching strength. Were Dick Kerr still taking his turn on the mound, it is aimost certain that the lowly Sox would finish one-two-three, The Great American Smoker was waiting for it—an old-time cigar at the old-fashioned price, 5-cents. Then came the Wm. Penn. The success of it was dramatic. As soon as it was displayed by retail dealers, wherever it was shown, it caught the eye and fancy of the Great American Smoker. Its popularity has spread like a wave of prosperity. It is today the largest selling 5-cent cigar in the land. There is real reason back of it. Manufacturer and dealer both had cut their margin of profit to the Wm. Penn is a cigar at least a year ahead of the times in smoking quality for the price. Long domestic filler, select binder, and Sumatra wrapper. Seems like old times when you lay down a nickel for a 5-cent cigar. The nickel seems a lot bigger in your eyes after you have lighted a Wm. Penn, and begun a smoke of old-time satisfaction. Step up and try one. CO., INC. p to the In fact, Faber has had trouble in starting. The league's most effective hurler in 1921—a wonderful record when it } is remembered that he had a seventh place club working be- ; hind him and making runs for him to win on—Faber has just ® | | about broken even so far this summer. But there is appar- ] |ently nothing wrong with him and he will win a flock of ball games for the pale hosed warriors before the curtain falls in He put a Wm. Penn in his mouth, smoked it, and Reis We

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