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STAR’S kiial Is | Scene of | Carnival. — | Racing Program, Div- | and Junior Events) SWI Taam sor neon NR NR AI RS MMING ME nari ajptinioncinmntniasetatal paren 3. Big Swim Carnival WHAT~—Seattle Star’s Third Annual City Swimming Meet. WHERE—Lake Washington canal. ET HOLDS SPORT SPOTLIGHT SATURDAY Brass Tacks on Star’s| Billy Lane Is Playing |The “Rabbit” Is Showing Seattle Fans How Base- THE SEATTLE STAR F ine Ball 4 a RA Ne a a, Oe an a é is 68-yard \Betterton. UAL Fortier Riese, Ores La Nev George Biock, Alex Kane. be rectified by calling the sporting der 14, “Yard dash for women. Rackstroke for boys under 18, 50-yard (det 38, 50-yard dash for men, 60-yard | on Bill for Day stage is all set for the finale) DL of the Third Annual Star City : meet to be held in the tomorrow WHEN-—Saturday HOW TO GET versity car and walk Washington canal way kinds of races and diving will be on the program with men’s and women’s mile mara- climaxing the day. first event will get under way "$30, promptly, and Manager 1 Henry and his large staff of officials promise to run the oft in snappy fashion. will mark the finals of Nog Twenty-third ave. ; line. right at stadium to canal. should take this route. to south bank of canal. Get off at end.of All contestants should report at 2 p. m. ball Should Be Played BY LEO H. LASSEN ILLY LANE ts at 2:30 p. m. THERE—Take uni- to stadium. Turn to playing one of the grandest All contestants ved eter ¢ ball that any in dividual player ever dined up in the Coast league The little In dian flychawer is doing everything in manner. Wilitam 49 car brings spectators juniors who held their pretimi- week ago at Green Lake Interclub interest ia high as Mt. Baker, Sow- Madrona and the West Green and Neptune club members ‘after high clud score. gwimmers are asked to report at the starting raft not tan 2 p. m., so the events be rattled off one after the Fadden, crack Crystal Poo! champion, will give a spe- performance from the diving platform after the regu- events are over, “s meet is a regular reg A. A. U. meet and all swim. over 18 years of age must ‘their cards before they will be Josephs Showing Up Well Welter Who ‘Licks Sacco and Harper Here Today for Davis Bout ACK JOSEPHS, the crack Minne. apolis welter weight, has de. monastrated that he is no flash in the skillet when he stepped out the other night and won a close decision In Port land from Bob Harper, His vie tory over Harper was his second straight win in the Northwest, the tourist having de feated Jimmy Sacco in Vancouver, B. C., last week. .| Josephs will do his stuff for Seat- tle fans Wednesday with Travie . | Davie furnishing the opposition. As Davis fought draws with both Sacco and Harper and as Josepha lick- ed both of these fellows, Davis can be insured of having a large evening next Wednesday, Davia started training two days ago and in now at the height de his heavy work for this important mice. Josepha will start working here this . |afterncon at Austin & Salt's gym on First ave. Josephs’ workout will give the fans some line on his style and quite « ‘crew of the bugs Is expected to watch him work. The principals In the other five bouts are alwo down to the grind for Wednesday's mitt fest. dasn. , Katherya Brown, Mester Bast- H-yard dash. for novices-Peari Bten- Breiyn Grosse, Pear} Webster, Roth Nina Le Neve, Phytiie Putnam, Lewis, Geraldine Cramer Mile marathon—Audrey Oritfen.. Hee- Piees, Mrs. J. 8. Wailer. GRLs EVENTS Sé-yard das, f° girls under 1¢— nitwid, Mildred Follett, Haxe! Bro Monoh, Katheryn McLean, Ey- Brisbane. ‘M-yard dash, for giris under 1$—Agnes Nera Brownfield, Hazel Brown, Stenmoe, Fear Stenmoe, Theima Evidently golf is a matter of tam and experience. Which means that no instructor can make a champion, This is clearty indicated by the va- riety of methods. jewing and the upright, the alumi- num putter and the cleek, the ab- sence of that old standby—the mid iron—from the bag of Sarazen. Hagen'’s straight-faced driver, Sa- razen’s short and jong drives, Var- den's bongrel tron and Travers’ jig ger, for approaching, all to prove that the cracks have by 00 means agreed upon sticks or methods. Most clubs are chosen ag a result of experience, but an indeterminate quality causes the initial selection. A golfer will spend hours looking over clubs in a shop, suddenly one strikes him as having the right “feel.” Or he will borrow one from a friend and if the first result with it is splendid, no amount is too high to pay for it. If not, it ie uselens. Every champion has his methods and his own pet sticks. Considering all ef which we are too prone to accept.them at face value. Few of ux jean drive like Harazen or get out of trouble ke Hagen. Neither will their clubs help us. It is entirely a Meyard back stroke—Neva Brownfield, Speidel, Bianche Stenmoe, Mer- Lewis, Pearl Stenmoe. M-yard breast stroke—Grace Miller, Stenmoe, Doris Hageman. BOYy EVENTS dash, for boys under 14—Pete Jim Barrow, Thomas MeMahon, and Dumas, Gersid Haughen, Tom ‘Se-yard dash, tor boys under 1¢—Iack Te, Weiter Khodes, Don Ha Strena, Laurence Bishop, Al Fortier. 10t-yard Ggsh, for boys under 15 ve Joeison, Jim Flett, Jack Rogers Stena, Jack Torney, Joe Newsur. S-yard back stroke — Dave Joeison ie Kogers, Vic Strona, Arnold Fingle- Bon Ai Fortier. . ‘Tom Retterton, i Joelson, Bob Strens, Waiter Rhodes, Fancy diving —t0-foot board — Billy in Witter, Jack Hogers, Jack Bod Strens, Gordon McKay, Any mistakes in these lists should Ctitor' of The Star between 6 and 7 ‘™. Friday, or between 9 and 10 a. Saturday without fail. ‘The order of events follows: Men's novice race, women's $0-yard race, 50-yard dash for boys 50-yard dash for girls un- 00-yard dash for men, 100- od for our own particular needs, We have to cut the cloth differently for every customer, as the tailor puts it. That is well to remember when we read the enticing offers to do as the champions do. Wyard dash for boys under 16, 60- Yard dash for girts under 18, 100-yard breast stroke for , 50-yard breast stroke for women, 109-yard dash for Boys under 18, 50-yard backstroke for under 14. ‘There te the Mat! matter of working out the best meth: | crashing the onion, running the basen like a wild man, leading the league In stolen bases and cover, ) ground as any fielder in the league. Me bas the mont ate and powerful throwing arm of any fielder in the league, Coupled with all of thie natural baseball ability, Lane tops off the whole works with « winning person- ality. He i cert Seattle fans, Lane is no longer a youngster as he ts 29 years olf. If he had piayed this brand of ball three or four years be in this league Yesterday's hero—Joe Bush won his eighth straight game and ran his season's total up to 19. He also hit a single and » double and scored one run, the Yanks beating the Tigers, 7 to 1. | ago he wouldn't right now At that it's pretty safe to say that | Lane ts playing a» good ball today as & lot of players in the majors. Tillie Warner hit his 28th homer with two on and helped the Athietiés beat the Indians, § to 1, Pratt singled in the 10th Inning | and drove in the run that gave the Red Sox the fir me from the White Sox, 3 to 2. Boston won the second game, 5 to 1 the Indians, Billy has been the shin- hing light and his work stampa him as the best all-around fly chaser in the | Coast etreuit Laven's wild throw in the ninth let | ANOTHER BIG in the rum that gave the Robins an | DAY THURSDAY § to 7 win over the Cards. Lane had another aweet afternoon ‘Thursday. He picked up four singles Mogridge shut Browns and walked once. He fanned on a for eight ok winder tal called third strike on the other trip eight runs in the ninth and beat to the pan. He scored three runs be siden, The Rabbit had Catcher King of the visitors wild yenterday, and bill made him look like a big busher by his speed on the runways. Washington, § to Hubbell doubled and scored the! only run, winning his own game for the Phils aguinst the Reds, 1 to @. ELDRED CAN SOCK PILL Eldred has been hitting well over 300 all season, but he had one of his biggest days of the year Thursday. Mia four bingles, two triples, a dow bie and a single, were all socks that made the apple fairly groan, Little Dynamite can certainly pound that Stengel scored one run and drove jin two others with two triples, the Giants beating the Pirates, € to 3. The Cubs beat the Braves, 7 to 2, and moved up into a te with St. Louis for second place. eee Midred’s fivet triple serenched thre left center, his second againet the right field fence double Sino went to right center and bie single was over second. heme Prank Tobin may have his tauite as ao catcher, but he is showing a jot of clase in blocking runners at the plate. The other day he and Wafty Hood turned In a darh of a-play when they nailed Wolfer at the plate, Tobin biocking off his man. Agal ‘Thursday Tobin blocked Hale from the rubber while slapping the ball on him. It was big league execution. ind utility Nowider outfield y might as well left him behind the plate y had « terrible time trying to hold the pitched onton THREE CLASS BUNTERS Barney, Spence Adams and Hood Gre three neat bunters. All of this trio can conceal their bunta and Shis te the eet Wee thc ton wate Gale they make life minerable for the jong whi enemy pitchers. Barney in particu oe eee ee, ee jar, is bunting well. He beat out m't been hitting | a pair yesterday and so did Hood p tare B®) Adams kicked thru with a sacrifice on his only trip to the plate CALIFORNIA NET STARS WILL MEET) It's funny how some players can bunt and others can't, Take Brick Eldred. He's one of the poorest bunters in the league, except when bunting threebase hits. BY HENRY bL. FARRELL WHAT A United Press Staff Correspondent | sacniFICk 18 REST HILLS, N. ¥., Aug. 18 Time and time again the writer Two resplendent rays of Califor-|has heard fans remark “that's a nia brilliance will shine on the) good aacrifice, anyhow,” after some courts of the West Side tennis club/ nitter has advanced a runner by here this afternoon. nearly taking a leg off of some One will come from the setting |intieider, A batter in not credited sun of a grent career and one will be a shaft from the dawn of one promising to be the greatest. Mrs! May Sutton Bundy, cham pion of 1904, the 35-yearold mother of a sturdy family of five young asters, will play Miss Helen Wills, 16-yearold Berkeley girl, who ts wearing her hair up for the first time. The winner of the match will go into the final round of the woman's national championship tomorrow to play Mrs, Molla Mallory for the crown of America’s tennis queen with a sacrifice hit unless tentionally bunts his man The hit must be a bunt. In he beats the bunt out he is cred ited with a hit, and in cmse the fielder makes the play to get the baserunner and all hands are safe the batter is given a sacrifice nit, The batter ts also given a sacrifice hit when he bunts and moves a man along and a fielder grra on the play. Also, in regards to a sacrifice fly. No sacrifice fly Is credited to a batter unless a base-runner scores he 10-yard backstroke for men, 100- backstroke for wornen, 60-yard iroke for girls under 18, high ing for men. S-yard breaststroke for boys un- for women, fancy diving for under 18, mile Marathon for Men, mile Marathon for women. The officials will be as follows: Starter—Frank Vance. Timers—Heck Edmundson, Jimmy Atbuthnot, C. L. Utterback. Fadges of Vinivh—Joe Siedler, Jack Moen, Ray Daughters. Diving Judges—Norman Bartell, Frank Vance, Jimmy Arbuttmot. Manager of Meet—"Dad” Henry. Clerk of Course—Seaburn Brown. Announcer Druxinman. OLDRING NOT BIG SUCCESS Rube Oldring hasn’t been much of & success a5 a baseball manager. His Richmond team i» so far behind in the six-club Virginia league race that |#"4 against the club Y °1 ~ol. | Years. Jar with gerd gag out of the cel |” rhe first Jake Schaefer, besides eeeerectntnoneieeity | being a great player, wes s wanderer RUETHER IS over the world, His frien LUCKY BIRD legion in all great cities of the unl- verse, Jake used to may that home Whe with him was the spot where he Waiter Ruether won his|hung up his hat, He wan at home With game the other day for|not only from Piccadilly to t Brooklyn he was presented with a|Channm Elysee on the other side, bu $1599 bonus, When he wins his 20th battle he will receive another extra check trom the Dodger club, EMORIES of other great sport days when the first Jacob Schaefer, the wizard of billiards, was the daddy of all the ivory-rolling ex perts were received at Chicago last week when the sterling trophy em- blematic of the championship of the world which was won by the late Jacob Schaefer in the international tournament in the Cooper Institut New York, in January and February, 1879, just 43 years ago, was dug up at a warehouse. It was sent to the company for safe keeping some 20 years ago. The trophy was brought out of its hiding for shipment to Mra. Ja- cob Schaefer, wife of the old cham | pion and mother of the balkline champion, young Jake Schaefer, It was successfully defended by the wiz all comers for some frofi New York to San Francisco on his. His great skill and the profes jon he tuilowed made iim @ wane 7 b] OLD BILLIARD CUP BRINGS OUT MANY REMINISCENCES after the catch. FRIDAY 18 VETS’ DAY Friday will be Veterans’ May at the hall yard. The game will be preceded by the big parade Saturday ahd play will not be called until 3:30 p. m. that afternoon no chance to settle down, Due to his nomadic life Jake, Sr. won many| BRAZIL 18 champion emblems and often gave| WEIRD FIELDER them away. There was one prize he Frank Brazil, Portland second cherished above all oth h sacker, is one of the most weird field. ab Others, however, | ery that has ever played here, Twice and that was the trophy he won this week he has got mussed up on when he beat the greatest field of bil | Texas leaguers, keeping the outfield jliard players of the world at thatlers out of the play, changing his period {mind, and then letting the ball drop. That 1897 tournament, Jn fact,|He is also troubled with a poor brought out men famous for years|throwing arm. His one asset is that |before and after. They were: he can hit and even in these socking Jacob Schaefer. . days Bravil ja valued because of his George ¥. Slosson. ability with the mace William Sexton, Maurice Daly “HAPPY” KUEHN WILL GO EAST Louls (“Happy”) Kuehn, crack Portland diver, plans to enter Colum- bia university, in New York, this term, Kuehn is now holding the job of head life guard at one of the Port land beaches. Albert Garnier Thomas J. Gallagher. A. P. Rudolphe Of that mighty hort Slosson, Daly and Gallagher are all that remain. When Jake, the famous wizard, died in Denver on March 8, 1910, his} widow went to Chieago to make her residence, A little later she moved to Alameds, at. where abe 20 | FORREST CADY IS FLIVVERING Francisco bay. Forrest Cady is not much of a suc cong aS a Manager, ‘The former Sac: ramento catcher, now head of the Augusta club, is having « hard time keeping his team out of the base ment in the South Atlantic league. YESTERDAY'S HOMER HITTERS Walker, Athletics, 128. Carey, Pirates, 1—10. R. Russell, Pirates, 1—6, Rice, Senators, +—s senmational| pour: | nly in solid with | During the present home stay of | | the Longwood Cricket club, in Boston, Ma meet, ris Williams and other two big events left on the calendar. The } A 1 * | f | FACIEIC COABT LEAGUE a on. Lost. Pet } fan Francisco . 60 RS | 1 «6b Loe ie " * | “os U1 me “ ut ie a j s 8k aT] s THE SCORE ' Aw HH. PO. A es ay a oe ee s Pe aa | . S79 s Se ee Yaa S| See Sake | 4 ie Sas s oe ae eo ¢ 6 @ ee O35 | o 8 6 @} i | LE ee ee | THAIS eee ee ete ee AB. R, Ht. PO. A. B| Lane, if . 3.4.59 6 ip oo 8 ee ik Gee ee ee 7 Midred, ef... Sie ee hae Be May | Wisteraii, 20, wae ee Far Ray | w i Soe Ber we hae Oe ae Se ey Oe ies i ay has ee ae | Tota sous 8 oT 8 Beore by innings | Portiand ores eer1 os! Mite D220 11 8 Oda! 4212106 0 te P2RSLAT I Ome Summary: Innings pitehed—By Cote- man 1%. At bat-—Oft Coleman 6, Hits | batied—Olf Coleman 3 Kune soored—Ott tor Coleman i, Kune respon | man 3, Burger 4, Walberg % Struck out My Coleman 1, by Burger 5, by Wal bere 1s Bases oo baller-OtT De Walberg. Hit by pitehed bail—Wisteratt, | by Coleman, Walberg, Passed ball K | | Stolen = bases ih Biared, Barney dred, Wiate Hacrifice hite—s Adama, Runs batted to Orr 2, Winteraii 3 Toxin, Hood, Caught . Kidred, Double piay ood. Time of geme- 106, Umpires—Pinney end Kason } . BeSUiTs The ecore— nH &) Vernon Sx Oe At Han Francisco ... BS ee Batteries, May, Gilder and Manorh Boott and Agnew eries, Thurston « | | oe ts ef ‘ 4 | | RESULTS nm At Philadelphia Ba Unie, Hasty and Perkina Gene Sarazen, new ope \golf champ, plays a full iron and O' Nest; | ten Bagby | shot. Notice the distance of | the ball from the body and}, The score eda | that he always keeps his head A: xew York eee | Jee: Duden, ‘Moore and Bassler Bush and Schang. | First game Rr down. Then maybe you can}. *' drive as far as he does. MIDDLETON | Faber and Bcbatk "Ss land waiters | NOW LEADS _ (iecors eine non ef | 4tALIS | Chicago 1 ae ee } | me . eee PORTLAND) Leverette, Hodge and Yar yan, Fergueon Chaplin, AMES MIDDLETON, Portland] tt 2 pitcher hug b made manager | st. 1 3 lof the Beavers for the reat of the| At Washington i} foot | nattorte 4 Bevereia Mogridge He succeeds Al Demaree, who has | ™°*** : | been given a vacation by an order} . from John H. Farrell, charging him ee ad with playing against Ineligible play- |New York . 4“ 687 ore Chicaxo 4 hes on ®t Loule o | Middleton ts a veteran pitcher and | fy, howls 4 lan experienced player innatt . ‘ | He is the fourth manager Portland | Brookiyn 66 has had this season, Bill Kenworthy | Philadelphia 4 $ getting the air from Judge Landis, |°°"°" ae Demaree getting the gate from Far- | RESULTS | rell, and Tom Turner resigning. | The score— nm i aa New York iw ies n At Pittebure a 10 SARAZEN AND Natteriee! MeQuilian and Smith; Mor 4 | rison Adams, Carlson, Glasner and | FRENCH PLAY |". | ei = =A The score— rR HH Bw +. Boston 9) Re IN BIG MEET "8: ‘a taad 1a ss: Oeachger and O'Neill; Stue- | ITTSBURG, Aug. 18.—Gene Sa. |1and, Jones and O'Farrell razen, New York golfer and! ny gcore. : * nu 8 {American open champion, is proving | phitadeiphia . “eee ears |himaelf no flash in the pan At, Cincinnatt s iica me: dover? | corked his a Batterion: Hubbell and Henline; Couch, | has worked his way to the] Batteries. Hup |Oakmont finals here and ts meeting ws | Emmett French, of Youngstown, ©.,| ‘The score— RO BE. in the 36-hole finals of the profes: | Brooklyn +8 10 1} |xlonal meet that has been in progress | eee ee eg mith | |for a week here, The big match is | and Deberry; Doak, Pertica, North, Sher- | | being played today. dell and Clemons | Saragan defeated Be Crutk. | Sa BORER |shank, 2 and 2, in the semi-finals |yesterday, while’ French disposed ot | CHARLEY HALL | John Golden, 8 and STILL WINNING) ' eye ped ypu Charley Hall, veteran American | {pitch for the Boston Red Sox and| | who also worked at one time in the | jold Northwestern league, ts hurling LAY PLANS | FOR SEASON |S eae BATTLE bowlers will soon start | the season started. crashing the pins in the City HEADS BLUES Wilbur Good, who pastimed as an outfielder with the Philly Quakers | © past two sea- | for a number of years, is now mana. stem a 185 av-| ger of the Kansas City team, in the American assoctation, “He has suc ceeded Olto Knabe, another former Quaker, S league The first meeting of the league will held Wednesday, at the Ideal al- | leys, at & Pp. ™m. be A 12 or 14-team league is planned, on the samo handicap basis that has | been in vogue f sons, Under this ¢ erage in werateh, Another big season iy expected by City league officivie | Big Tennis. Tourney to Open Monday The first big national tennis tournament in the men’s division gets under way Monday on the courts of The pick of the doubles teams in the world will play in this The Kinsey brothers—Howard and Robert—William Johnston and J. O. Anderson, Richard Nor- Watson Washburn, William Tilden and Vincent Richards, are some of the crack teams entered in the competition. Armand Marion and Leon de Turenne, of Seattle, are representing this dis- trict in this event. The men’s singles championship, at Philadelphi Indians Go Wild at Plate |Tribe Trounces Portland With Deluge of Base Hits Under 12-3 Score IRTLAND pitchers were tossing the base-hit delivery Thursday and Seattle romped home with an- other victory. The count was 12 to 3 after the smoke had cleared. “Lefty” Burger was on the mound for the Fndiane and his offerings were pounded right merrily, but 3) George tightened in the pinches and three runs were the besy that the opposition could garner. Brick Eldred, with two triples, a double, a single and a walk in five trips, was the hitting star of the ame ‘ Billy Lane continued to play won- derful bayetall, banging out four singles and working the enemy hurler for a walk. He also scored three runs, The tribe scored in every Inning | tut the sixth and eighth. The sev- nin was the fat frame, the merry Redmen cashing in five juicy count: | ers in that inning. Ralph Coleman lasted two innings on the hill for the tourists and Lefty Walberg finished tt up. ‘ fg finals in freak putters has ap- parently not yet come, for after nearly every shape of iron, wood and sluminum had been exhausted in an éffort to give goifers an im- plement that would hole a ball re- gardiess of the player's skill, a Chit, cago professional has come to t front with a putter made of gas pipe. Following the school that favors the smothered putt, as ably demon- strated by James Barnes of New |York, formerly national open cham. | Tiger outfield with Veach, Cobb pion, this golfer took a fiveinch piece of two-inch iron pipe and sawed it in two lengthwise. angles, then he roughened the convex side of the pipe so that it would grip the ball. Instead Of leaning forward so that the putter comes down on top of the ball, as Barnes does in using a |straight-faced putter, the user of the gaxpipe club may get the same effect. The new putter ts not patented, and may even be barred by the wise- acres of St. Andrews, But if it is stand erect and jlegal, everyone can make his own, VANCOUVER, B.'C—Sir James Aikins, lieutenant governor of Mant- toba, r Bar association. and the Davis cup matches are the To the con-| jeave side'he soldered a shaft at right | Women have been granted thi jected president of Canadian | PAGE 17 ——a Failure of Danforth Is Blow to Browns Hurler Is Back in Bush Southpaw, Expected td Star With St. Louis, Ig Shipped to Tulsa AVE DAM FORTH'S fail ure to pitch wime uing ball haw been a big blow to the St. Loiud Browns, The big southe Louis by the Con lumbus can for couldn't the Al } league grade and he has been shipped to the Tulag |club, in the Western league. x Danforth hag been charged with | tampering with the onion right but Umpire Owen was the first rR cial to catch him at it. He was sum pended 10 days for the act. #4 | Danforth was counted upon heaw | ily in the Browns’ fight for the jin the American loop, but been of ‘any value to the ans. fe This ts Danforth’s second in the American league, as he fiw vered with the Chicago White It is very doubfful if any big jane will experiment with him MAYBE HE DID. MAYBE DIDN* Maybe Ty Cobb slipped a cog two in letting Bob Fothergill away from him. The portly | \fielder is now hitting .414 for | Rochester club in the Inte: jleague, But even with a 400 stiell | mark in the minors it's hard to fig ure out how he could break inte | Heilman on the job. SINGAPORE, Aug. 18.— | voting rights as men. | j | | \ fie ry | now | $102 Arcade Bidg. Say— what makes the concern us so mi give you so exc YOUR price that customer for life. If you will select will be treated tn vince you that th of course, there si derful range selection here ver, _ Shaner & Wolff It's not the amount you spend, so much you get for difference economy and clothes extravagance. Whether you spend $25, $35 or $50 doesn't as to the tremendous variety and won- of sizes and styles that make your money, that between clothes uch as whether we can eedingly good value at you will be an 8, & W. your New Sult here you such a way @s to con- at is our big aim. And, imply isn’t any question y easy, About Raincoats The weather has broken now and you might as well enjoy the service of your Fall Overcoat at onee. Smart Gabar- dires from $25 and styl- ish Whipeords from “Just a Step From Madison”