Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, June 27, 1913, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
THE BIORNING OKEGONIAN, FRIDAY, (.JUXE 27, 1913
IEAVERS PERCHED
111 FIRST DIVISION
Double-Header Victory
Oaks Puts Portland
Coveted Position.
Over
in
'HIG' AND KRAUSE PITCHERS
McCrcdle's Men Trounce Champions'
Two Star Hurlers, Killilay and
Abies, and Pile "Cp Hits
Enough to Win Easily.
Pacific Coast League Standings.
w. Ij. pc.i w. Xj. pc.
Los Ang's. .48 34 .B83Sacramento S7 40 .481
San Fran'o.45 41 .523Oakland 3 48 .476
Portland. . 88 40 .4&71Venice 38 47 .447
Yesterday Results.
At Oakland Portland 6-6 Oakland 8-4.
At Venice San Francisco 7. Venice 2.
At Sacramento Sacramento 7, Los Ang-e-les
5.
SAN FRAXCISCO. June 26. (Spe
cial.) After a long uphill fight, Port
land Is In the first division. A double
victory over Oakland today on the
Oaks own ball park was instrumental
in boosting the Beavers to third place
and knocking the champions down to
next to last. a
The scores were 5 to 3 and 6 to 4,
and showed Higginbotham and Krause
to fine advantage.
"Hlg" pitched the first game and was
always in front. In the early innings
ne was a bit unsteady, but once his
teammates gave him a lead he did not
falter. Killilay, on the other hand,
was hit hard and often.
In the second game Krause had to
battle until the seventh before the
Beavers showed in front. In the sec
ond Inning a bit of wildness on
Krause's part and a costly error by
McCormick. which let in two runs,
gave the Oaks a 4 to 1 lead. Harry
Abies pitched a good game, but a
series of boots and some timely hit
ting in the seventh proved his un
doing. Derrick's Finger Smashed.
Derrick was injured in the second
lning of the first game by being
smashed on the finger while at bat
and retired in favor of Speas. who
played a bang-up game at first. In
game No. 1. with two out in the first
'inning, the Beavers proceeded to score.
Rodgers doubled and Speas single
scored him. The Oaks tied it in their
half.
Portland went into the lead in the
. third and was never headed. With
one out Higglnbotham and Chad
bourne scratched hits. Derrick was hit
by a pitched ball and Rodgers drove
In Hlg with a single.
The Beavers took another run in
the fourth when McCormick singled
and Fisher doubled. The Oaks also
showed in the fourth, when Coy and
Hetling doubled. Round five saw the
Beavers take a commanding lead, when
Lober's double scored Speas and Korea.
Beavers Humble Abies.
In the second game, with Harry
Abies and Harry Krause billed for a
southpaw duel, the Beavers rushed
into an early lead. Doane beat out an
infield tap and scored on Rodgers' dou
ble. Krause struck out the entire side
in the first, but ran into a peck of
trouble in the second, four runs scor
ing. The Beavers scored one in the sixth
on Kores single to center and two
more errors in the seventh let 'the
Beavers score four times and cinch the
.game. Scores:
First same
Portland - I Oakland
B H O A E
BHOAE
Chad'ne.m
Derrtek.l.
Rodgers.2.
Speas. 1-r.
Korea. s. .
I.ober.l
McCor'k.3
Fisher.c..
Hlg'ham.p
Doane, r. .
0 0 f-.eard.2. ..
3 O 4 20
4 0 '2 O 0
4 18 0 0
4 2 8 1 O
4 1 8 00
3 1 1 0 0
2 O 4 2 0
2 0 2 4 0
2 0 0 3 0
1 0 0 0 0
110 0 0
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 00
1 O'Gardner.l.
4 OiXess.l. . ..
0 O'Coy.r
8 lHatling;,8.
0 0 Zacher.m ..
2 OiCook.s
1 1 Mltze.c. ..
1 O'Killllay.p.
0 OlBecker. ..
cchirm . .
Christian,!)
t.risp,c.,. ..
Totals. 38 IS 27 14 2 Totals
30 6 27 12 0
Batted for Mitze In elKhth
Batted for Killilay in eighth
Portland 1 o 1 l 2
0 O 0 0 S
IOC 1 13
nits 2 o 3 3 3
JHK:na 100 1O0O1 0 3
m 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 6
ituns Rodgers, Speas, Kores. McCormick,
liipglnbotham. Ness, Coy, Schlrm. Stolen
oases LnaQDourne, Ness. Five runs, 12 hits
vii ivuitiay in innings. Two-base hit
ttoagers, b lisher. Coy, Hetling. Kores. Lober.
Lnaooournc iilcginbotham. Sacrifice hits
uok. iiicaer. j-wiae on balls Oft Hlggln
Dotnam i. orr K.illilay 1. Struck out By
iBniHuuuiajii o, rummy l . lilt Dy pltch-
xyti i ic-iv. xaiKKiiiuomam, Dy Jvilillay. Jjou
ble
r iiici- iu jicuormicK. Ijezt on
basrs Portland
Oakland 2.
Time 1:35.
l-mplres Bush
and McCarthy.
Portland
1 Oakland
0 A El B
1 0 0!I,eard,2. . 5
1 0 lSchirm,l. . 4
5 3 0Ness.l. ... 4
8 2 O'Cov.r 3
2 4 1 Hetling.S. 3
001 Zacher.m. 4
1 2 l'Cook.s. ... 4
7 lOICrlsp.c... o
2 0 OlAbles.p. ... 3
:Mitze,c... 3
. !Parkin,p.. 0
Guest . 1
B
II O A E
.14 11
0 4 0 0
0 9 10
0 0 0 0
0 0 5 1
3 3 0 0
2 10 1
0 0 0 0
10 2 0
0 6 10
O O 0 0
0 0 0 0
7 27 10 3
Chadb'e.m 4
Doane.r. .
Rodgers,2.
Speas, 1 . . .
Kores, s. . .
T,ober,l . . .
M'Cor'k,3.
Berry, s. . .
Krause. p.
Totals 37 11 27 12 4 Totals. 34
Batted for Parker in ninth.
Portland 1 0000140 0 6
Hits 2 O 1(0 2 2 2 1 1 1
Oakland 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
Hits 02110101 1 7
Runs Doane 2, Rodgers, Speas 2 Krause,
Coy, Zacher, Cook, Mitze. Stolen bases
Poane, Rodgers, Speas, Leard, Schlrm,
Mttze. Mx runs. 10 hits off Abies, taken
oui in nintn, no outs, one on. Charge de
feat to Abies. Three-base hits Zacher.
took. Two-buse hit Rodgers. Sacrifice
'Its McCormick. Chadbourne. Base on
balls Off Abies 2. off -Krause' 4. Struck
out Krause 6, Abies 5. Hit by pitcher
Ness. Double plays McCormick to Rodgers
10 spws; nores to Koagers to Speas; Het
ling to I.eard to Ness. Passed ball Berry.
J-ert on bases Oakland 7, Portland 7. Time
a:oo. empires aic earthy and Bush
WOLVES WIX IX HEAVY WIND
Angels Play-Ragged Ball and Ixse
to Sacramento 7 to
SACRAMENTO, Cal., June 26. With
a heavy wind sweeping the field, Los
Angeles arid Sacramento put up a
raggea exhibition today, errors figur
ing in every Inning that runs were
made. Sacramento won, 7 to 6, thanks
to the bunching of four hits with three
Los Angeles errors in the fourth, after
the visitors had taken a three-run lead
in the hrst frame. Score:
lios Angeles Sacramento
U II O A E ! B H
Howard.r. 4 11 0 OlYoung.s.. . 3 1
Ellis.l 4 1 0 0 0Lwls.l 8 0
Moore.l.. 5 2 8 0 1 Moran, m.. 3 0
M'Egart.m 5 1 9 1 1 VanBn.er. 4 2
Pae,2... 4 12 8 1 K'wo'hty,2 8 0
Metzger.3. 4 12 2 0 Halllnan 3 4 2
Johnaon.s. 3 14 4 trTennant,' 3 1
Boles.c... 3 0 1 1 O'BIlsa.o 4 1
Toaer.p. .. 8 10 2 0' A'ellanes.p 4 2
2
1
U
0
1
0
0
2
4
vi u(ci . a u u u VI
Q'odwin" 110 0 0
Total.. 87 10I4 13 4' Total... Si" 27 10
-canea tor Boles In ninth; batted for
imw in mnm.
Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 1
. ts 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 31
WIBIIIBHUI ...u V u b U 0 3 0
Hits 1 0 0 4 0 3 1 0
rtuns Howard. Moore 2. Maggart. Good
win, Lewis. Moran. vanBuren 2. Kenworthy,
' X u Dases fiiills. John
son. anBuren. Bliss. Three-base hit Mag
.guru Two-base hits Johnson, Halllnan. Sac
rlfice hits Kills, Moran. Kenworthy. Sac
Tifice fly Tennant. Struck out By Are!
SCENES FROM -NORTHWESTERN
WJttlUH JHAK1S.EIJ IRST APPEARANCE OF VANCOUVER TEAM.
r !? AV?""" tflsis k i
I vl tu , , tLi ?
K6 :-i
R53l l" SELLS STOCK
1 1 r ,v ...... . . ra 1 i
IL iVTit 1 1 Spokane Traction Company
ft ri7lk J W$V ' Tnk-PR Ovpp Inriiane
n&?t Y i it-' I I w.w. . tun! lv.
iiK , -1 1 v i-y 1 1 .
I it U UMAIM-Jt LAnliLLY NOMINAL I
ICS I a 4 1 it - v -vW-i I
jfrCl 1' ' ? " -1 i 1 Retlrlnsr wne' Disheartened by
1;'' 1 " '-v' " I Failure or Club to Play Winning
Is - ' 2r&J'& s ' - ',7M I . Ball Purchaser Xow Be
ll 'v. I J . fB(v2 - J I
i A -, ' S Songht 'or Team.
I m II-
Itf'- '.''1 "rfll SPOKANE, Wash., June 26. (Spe-
, l'K $ I i1al claI-) Ownership ot the Spokane base-
, - t?S't. ",Jf'!ti 1 bal1 team nas nominally changed
y, iT.5 1 han3s- The Spokane Traction Com-
1 jyA-, V-tf I Pny, which is believed always to have
I -'-'. .' ,,i I had a controlling interest in the stock.
1 ; ' ' J J ' I has taken over the management of the
-tlelenlor Nabbed at Third Base in
the Sixth Inning. 2 Ingersoll. Seat
tle Youngster, Who la Said to Be One
ot Finds of the Season. Ingersoll Will
Pitch Today. S Walsh, New Van
couver First. S acker, Last Year W'lth
St. Paul.
lanes 4. Base on balls Off Tozer 2, off
-s-reuanes a. rassed ball Bliss. Left on
oases Liom AngelfB l, Sacramento 0. Tlm
8:05. Umpires Held and Phyle.
TIGERS AT MERCY OP BAKER
feeal Jfitcher Helps Win Own Game
by Slaking; Three Hits.
LOS ANGELES, June 26. San Fran
cisco made it three straight games
irom Venice by taking a one-sided con
test today. Jess Baker was too much
for the Tigers in ail stages but the
seventh inning, when four singles
netted the Southerners two runs. Baker
also starred at bat for the Seals,
curing two singles and a double in
four trips to the plate. The score
San Francisco I Venice-
H r O A E
B H O A E
Mundr'ff.r
0 1 0 OiCarlisle.l.
0 2
0 4
Charles.2..
Johns'n.m
1 3 8 0'Kane.m... 4
0 0IBayless.r. . 4
0 0!Brashear,2 3
1 0;Lltschi,3. . 4
1 0Hosp,s 4
2 0Patters'n,l 8
3 OlElllott.c. .. 3
0 OiKoestner.p 1
IHarkness.p 1
McDonald" 1
1 2
2 0
0 1
0 4
1 10
1 4
0 0
0 O
0 0
0 0
llogan.l. .
McArdle.l
Corhan.a..
Cartw'ht,3
Schmidt.c
Baker. p. .
Ferguson, p 0
Totals. . .31 10 27 10 0 Totals... 82 B 27 13 1
-saiiea tor narkness in eighth.
San Francisco 0 04300000-
Hits o o 4 20 n i v 1.
-10
Venice 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0-
"its 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 0-
Kuns MUndOrfr. Charles Jnhnfttnn fa,i
Wright. Schmidt, Baker 2. Bayless. Hosp.
j.-v hub iim , runs on A.oeuiner in 4 in
iiiugB, i mi ana no runs orr Harkness 1n
innings; charge defeat to Koestner. Two
base hit Baker. Stolen base Lltchl. Sac
rlfice flies Hogan, Mundorff. Base on balls
un iiaKer i, icoestner 2. Struck out
Baker 5. Koestner 2. Harkness 1 nn,.hi.
plays Brashear to Hosp to Patterson: Kane
to Hosp. wild pitch Koestner. Hit by
IDAHO TOtKXEY CONTINUES
SSen's Singles Play Eliminates Sev
eral in Leiviston.
iJtwisiUN, Idaho, June 26. Play In
the men's single for the Idaho state
championship in the Northwest Tennis
Association waa continued today. Scores
ioiiow:
wood defeated F. Kettenbach; 6-2,
D -J-.
K. Scott defeated Marshall 6-1, 6-2.
Melxel defeated Bartlett 8-6, 6-1.
Gray defeated Lambdln 6-3, 6-0.
T. Scott defeated Wright 6-3. 7-5.
O. Thompson defeated Pettingill
default.
A. Peters defeated. Rank 6-0, 6-0.
by
a. Jvettenbach defeated Needham
Crozler defeated Sheppard 6-1, 6-1.
a. jvettenbach defeated Crozier 6-2,
o-u. -
Hoobler defeated Carnahan
fault.
Eaton defeated Hoobler 6-0,
Sommers defeated Mitchell
fault.
by de
6-1.
by
de
The temperature of steam at a pressure
of one pound
a square inch Is 216.3 Fahren
neiu
LEAGUE GAME YESTERDAY,
SPOKANE. Wash., June 26. (Spe
cial.) Ownership ot the Spokane base
ball team has nominally changed
hands. The Spokane Traction Com
pany, which is believed always to have
had a controlling interest in the stock,
has taken over the management of the
team and Joe conn, whose holdings in
company are not large enough to
dictate, steps down and out. This
explains in part the recent retirement
of Captain Ostdiek. who nrobablv know
Cohn would drop the job. George Farr,
n official of the traction comnanv.
which owns the baseball park and has
tne oniy canine within half a mile.
will assume nominal charge, but prob
ably not for long. The traction com
pany is said to be seeking a purchaser
of the ball club, one who will tie up
with their park and until the purchaser
appears will try to give Spokane a
good ball team.
Money May Be Spent FT eel y.
The traction people are not slow to
spend money when it must be done,
as Is the case with the ball t
present constituted, and probably will
make good the claim that a winning
team will be gotten together if half a
chance is given.
Joe Cohn retires because be Is nr a
rich man and cannot afford lnns-Ar tn
help pay the losses of the team. Ho la
also disheartened bv the failure, rf th.
team to play winning ball. Aside from
the drawing powers of a winning team
and the added revenues therefrom,
Cohn hates to lose a ball game. When
the team Is on the field he forgets he
Is owner and is a fan as ardent as any
in the grandstand.
His team has had bad weather onni.
tions from the opening of the training
season; been deprived of several prof
itable Sunday crowds; has had the Alan
races and circus attractions to buck
at nome, and in addition has lost so
many games in the ninth inntno-
nii n iiiingiy surrenders the reins.
s Life on Team Expected.
To
prove that a better ahnwino- -
to be made, the team pulled out vli-tnrv
In the 10th Inning today, something it
" "warn accomplished before this
season, it nas added a new nhnrtetnr.
nizBimmons, trom California, and he
will bolster up that side of the field.
It, has released Daly and soon will be
nu. ot otner oeaa timber. Johnny Wuf
in is expected soon Irom San Fran-
l week the races end and the
weather should settle and the attend
ance is bound to improve and with
it me spirits of the team. Meanwhile
the men are sure of their salaries and
Spokane and the league Is assured
tne opoKane team will stick.
Notes of the came.
umpire Burnslde, ousted from the Eastern
jri-aiaie League, waa tried out by Fielder
Jones yesterday. He got in bad with the
fans In the second Inning and they rode him
-oiinn ana Bancroft fielded streak lly.
xney cornered tour errors between them but
o.ow ma.ua some remarkable plays.
Heister. Klppert. Bennett and Frisk
fielded sensationally for th visitor
In the eleventh Coltrin forgot to go back
mm cover tnira on Frisk's bunt and the
.ccu-Bjta .ippert sailed from first to third.
uiunc, uio tie a moment later on
tinnkers two-bagger, so the slip didn't
figure in the run-getting. Heilman showed
mmaeir wiae swaxe tn the melee for h
came in irom leit ana almost got a putout
Kb uiini Due.
jess Garrett watched the game from the
stand. He has quit baseball for keeps and
win return to business.
Hynes pitched a brilliant gams, but t
did Hall. It was no fault of Hynes. how
ever, that Portland did not win by a 2-1
score In ths usual nine Innings. Frisk tied
tne game from second on a grounder that
coltrin spoiled lor Bancroft
Konnick might have tagged Fitzgerald
out at the plate, when be brought in the
winning run in the eleventh, but he dropped
the throw at the plate after Melchoir-s hit
to center.
COLTS DASH MY
WITH GAME IN 1ITH
Slugging by Melchoir and Pe
ters Turns , Apparent
Defeat to Victory.
FINISH IS SPECTACULAR
Vancouver Ties score in JNinth on
Error and Takes Lead on
Clean Hitting in Eleventh,
Only to Lose, 4 to 3.
Northwestern League Standings,
W. L. PC! W
L. PC.
Seattle
44 28 .62ft Victoria. .
S9 29 ,TSS2 Tacoma. . .
33 30 .524,Spokane. .
33 38
v ancouver
33 40 .452
Portland. . ,
25 45 .357
Yesterday's Results.
At Portland Portland 4, Vancouver
(11 innings).
At Seattle Seattle 2, Tacoma 1. v
At Spokane Spokane 5. Victoria 4
(10
Innings).
BY ROSCOE FAWCETT.
The rapacious Portland Colts downed
Vancouver in the first game of the
flood" series yesterday afternoon by
i score of 4-3. It took 11 fiercely-
contested innings to inspire the Ca
nucks with the trills of the swan song.
and the finish came with all the cli
matic qualities of a pardon to a con
demned prisoner about to drop on the
gallows.
It Was all of that and then some-
pitching duel between Hynes and Hall,
with melodramatic fringes and a sun
shiny spotlight.
Matt Hynes deserved to win in nine
innings. 2-1. But a miiup between
Bobby Coltrin and Dave Bancroft in
the ninth inning permitted Frisk to
score from second on an infield
grounder. In the extra time the bat
tle waged on and on up to the start
of the eleventh, when the visitors
scored one run on Kippert's single and
Brinker's two-base swat.
Tough one to lose," was on the
lips of 700 sadly-disapointed fans
when the first Portland man up in the
last of the eleventh filed out to center.
Error Gives Colta Chance.
But the alibi club had an adjourn
ment in store, for, when Scharnweber
permitted Fitzgerald's grounder to
squeeze between his legs, he started
something that ended in two runs and
gave Portland the game.
Fitzgerald stole second on Heilmann s
strikeout and scored the tying run on
a terrific slam to center field by Mel
choir. The latter legged it to second
In safety on the throw to the plate,
which, .by the way, Konnick conven
iently dropped, and scored the win
ning run on a two-base whack up
against the right field fence by "Nig"
Peters.
Hats off to Melchoir and Peters.
More power to them.
Peters Joy-producing wallop came
as the finish to a whirlwind game
that fairly scintillated and bristled
with brilliancies. Twice the Colts re
tired the Canucks on double plays
when anything else would have spelled
ruin. Once it fell to the lot of the
visitors to return the compliment.
Hynes In Fine Fsrm. .
Hynes and Hall both pitched air
tight ball, each allowing eight hits.
Up to the ninth Hynes had been
touched only four times safely, and
one of those was a scratch,- due to- his
own sluggishness in throwing to first
on a grounder by Brinker. He deserved
to win in the usual course of events.
"Vancouver scored first in the second
inning on a poor decision by an ap
proval umpire, Mr. Burnslde, a single
by Walsh and Coltrin s error. Port
land jumped into the lead by tallying
one in each of tne second ana tnira
frames. Hits by Mohler and Hynes
brought one in the second and Ban
crof t s triple and Fitzgerald s splash
to right the other in the third.
Portland held the edge, 2-1, up to
the ninth, when Frisk singled, went
to second on Walsh's bunt, and tallied
when the Colt infield fell apart for
moment. The rest of the story has
already been told. Score:
Totals. 38 R32 14 1 Totals. 37-8
Two out when winning run scored
Vancouver 0 1 0000OO10 1 3
Hits 1 20 O 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 8
Portland Ol 1OOOOOO0 2
fills v V v J V V o
Runs Klppert. Frisk 2. Bancroft. Fltz
geralcL. Melchoir, Mohler. Struck out By
Hall 7, by Hynes 5. Bases on balls Off Hall
8. off Hynes 2. Two-base hits Mohler,
Brinker, Peters. Three-base hit Bancroft.
Double plays Bancroft to Mohler to Peters:
Hynes to Coltrin to Peters; Hall to Schar
ney to Walsh. Sacrifice hlts Heilmann
Seharney, Frisk. Walsh. Stolen baiB
Frisk. Fitzgerald, Mohler. Time or game
2:10. Umpires Toman and Burnslde.
IXDIAXS BEAT BEES IX TENTH
Fitzslmmons. 3few Spokane Short
stop, Plays Brilliantly.
SPOKANE, June 26. Spokane took a
see-saw ten-inntng game irom Vic
toria today by a score of 5 to 4. Hardin
was hit hard but was well supported
until the last inning. Kraft was steady.
Fitzslmmons, the new Spokane sh
stop, covered himself with glory
throughout the game.
The score:
Victoria I Bpokan
U H O A i.
BHOAE
Madden.1.
Rawli'gs.2 Lynch, m..
Meek.l. . .
Swain. r...
Alberts. 3..
Delmas.s.
Shea.c. .
Haxdln.p.
0 4
1 OMIllion.m.,
7 0!McCarl,l. t
0 0:Yohe.3. . . .
0 0 Wagner. 2.
0 OiCoulson.l. .
1 0'Pappa.r. . .
3 2 F'zs'm's.s.
2 O'Hannah.c.
8 12 10
2 4
1 1
2 12
2 2
1 0
0 1
0 3
0 0
1 15
1 1
4 2
3 0
0 0
0 0
0 8
0 0
S 0
2 0 Kraft 4
Totals,
Victoria
Spokane
Runs
Wagner. 36
8 27 18 41 Totals. . .39 14 80 21 3
0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0
0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Madden 2. Rawllngs. Swain. Yohe,
Pappa, Fitzslmmons. Three-base
hits Wagner, Swain. Sacrifice hits Mad
den Million, Wagner, Rawllngs. Sacrifice
files Meek. Coulson. Double plays Mad- I
den to Shea: Million to Hannah. Stolen
bases Fltzalmraons. Bases on balls Off
Hardin 3; off Kraft 6. Struck out By
Hardin 1: by Kraft 4. Left on bases
Victoria 10, Spokane 14. Time 2:10. Um
pire Casey.
VOtXG BEATS VETERAN
Mclvor for Seattle Wins Pitching
Battle Prom McGinn,lty.
SEATTLE, June 26. McGinnlty and
Mclvor, the veteran and the youth
hooked up in an exciting pitchers' bat
tle' here this afternon, the victory go
ing to the youngster, 2 to . 1. There
was lttle to choose . between the work
of the two hurlers. and Killilay, the
Seattle center fielder, twice saved Mo
Vancouver-- I Portland 5 to 4 in the second game of the series. J
BHOAE BHOAE The score: ft
Heister.3. 5 0 3 2 OBancroft.s 5 1 2 2 st !,, , pittsburn
Bennett.2. 3 11 4 0 FitzgeMd.r 5 1 0 O0 bt. Louis lttsburg
FrFsPkrt,m 4 i 1 OOMe'.c ' 8 4 0 0 Hu!n..2 ? ? 1 O0 Byrne.3. .. ? 0 W
Uii" f Til nnp.t.r.' I Tift in Magee.l.. 3 1 5 0 O.Carey. 1. . . 3 0 8 00
Sift!;- V OOiMohlerV 4 3 40 t'akes.m. 4 1 2 00 Viox.2.... S 1 1 40
ilif'l' i T 5 2?ti?rvi"" S A la WhUted.3 4 2 1 5 0 Butler.s. .. 3 2 1 21 X
K?'K t O 7 2 0;Colmny-S.-: 4 0 t 4 2 g'1 1 S JSSon'r" 1 V 1 00
Hall,p... 4 0 0 2 0(Hyne.,P.. 4 1 O 50 g.""" $ 0 J om4m M VV
Ivor by spectacular catches. The
score:
Seattle I Tacoma,
BHOAE( BHOAE
Shaw. 8... 4 11 2 0IFries.r 4 3 0 00
Nill. 2 4 11 3 0 McMullln.8 3 0 2 40
Stralt.1... 2 1 l-0 0IKeller.2... 4 0 121
Cadman.o 3 0 5 1 0Crum.m... 3 1 4 01
Killllay.m : 4 0 5 0 0Felts,l. . . . 3 0 1 00
Jackson. 1 .
2 11
1 3
0 0
1 0
o 0 Hold'm'n.l S 0 8
0 0 Ruell.s 0 1
3 0! W.Harris.c 3 0 4
1 OiMcGnlty.p 3 0 3
0 0
2 0
0 0
O 0
Wllsonrr. .
Ram'nd,s
Mclvor.p ..
Totals... 30 5 27 9 01 Totals.'. .29 4 24
8 2
Seattle 0 1 0 O 1 0 0 0 2
Tacoma 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Runs Nill. "Wilson. Crum. Home
run Crum. Sacrifice hits Strait. Mc
Mullln. Stolen base Strait. Struck out
By Mclvor 5: by McGlnnltv 4. Bases on
balls Off McGlnnlty 2. Passed ball Harris.
Left on baseri Seattle fl. Tacoma 2. Time
1:15. Umpire Shackleford.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Cincinnati 5, Chicago 3.
CINCINNATI. June 26. Cincinnati
won the second game of the series from
Chicago today S to 3, by hitting Cheney
hard and often. Brown, wtule hit quite
frequently, managed to keep the drives
well scattered and was never in serious
trouble. The score:
Chlca
I Cincinnati .
B H O A El
a H O A E
Leach, m. .
4 2 2 1 O'Bescher.I.
4 0 0 0 0
Evers,2...
5 OjBates.r. . .
2 O'Marsans.c.
0 OjTlnker.s.. .
1 OH'blitzell.l
0 0. Dodge. 3. . .
1 O'Groh.2
3 0 Clark. c. ...
I 0 Brown, p. .
0 01
3 1 3 111
4 15 10
Schulte.r.
I erman, 3
Saler.l. . .
Mitchell. 1.
4 3 1 3 0 1
3 0 13 0 0
4 3 0 4 1
Hrldwell.s
B'nahan.c
2 1 2 3 0
4 3 3 0 0
4 10 2 0
Cheney. p.
Goode ..
Total. 32 823 15 0 Total.. 32 13 27 14 1
-Bates out. nit by batted ball In fourth;
"riatted lor Cheney in ninth.
Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 3
Cincinnati 1 1 o 2 1 000 -
Runs Evers. Zimmerman Mitchell. Bates.
Dodge 3, Clark. Two-base hit Mitchell.
oresnanan. linker. Dodge, oroh. Three-
base hit Zimmerman. Sacrifice hits Hob-
litzell. Sacrifice fly Saier. Stolen bases
nates. Tinker. Dodge. Lett on bases Chi
cago 7, Cincinnati S .Base on balls Off
Chaney 4. ort Brown 4. Hit by pitcher By I
cneney iwon). struck out By Cheney 3,
by Brown 2. Wild pitches Cheney 2. Time
-i:oJ. Lmpires Brennan and lason.
New York 5-11, Boston 4-3.
NEW YORK, June 26. New York
took two games from Boston today, 6
to 4 and 11 to 3. In the first. New York
overcame a four-run lead and batted
out victory , in the seventh. Tyler did
not allow New York a hit in the first
five Innings. Boston had many chances
to pile up runs early in the game, but
lost them by poor judgment on the
bases. Mathewson saved the first game.
and after holding Boston to three hits
in six innings in the second game, he
gave way to Crandall. The scores:
Boston
Maran'e.a
Myers. 1 . .
Connolly, 1
Smlth,2. .
Titus.r. . .
M'Don'd,3
I New York
E B H
O A E
2 0 0
4 OlBurns.l . . .
0 UShafer,3. .
0 OiHenog.S.
2 llFletcher.s
0 0 Dovie.2. . .
2 1 Merkle.l. .
0 Oj Murray, r.
1 0Meyers,c. .
0 OjCooper.
0 0 Wilson, c. .
2 Olnodg's.m
1 0'Fromme.p
;Crandall.p
; Grant .
IMathe'n.p
3 2
2 0
2 1
4 0
3 O
4 1
4 1
3 1
O 0
0 0
2 1
1 0
2 0
0 O
O O
110
0 0
20
5 0
1 0
Mann.m, .
Rariden.c
2 0
1
ymour.
0 O
0 u
0 0
1 0
2 0
0 0
2 0
Whallng.c
Tyler.p. . .
James, p. .
Totals '36 11 24 12i, Totals. 30 7 27 17 2
Batted for Rarlden in eighth.
Ran for Meyers In seventh.
Ran for Crandall in seventh.
Boston 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 4
New York 00000140 5
Runs Maranville, Connolly, smith, Titus,
Merkle, Murray, Cooper, Snodgrass, Grant.
First on errors New York 1. Two-base hit
Burns. Three-base hits Maranville, Con-
olly 2. Sacrifice hit Titus. Lft on
bases New York 4, Boston 4. Base on balls
Oft Fromme 3. Tyler 1. James 1. btruck
out Fromme 1, Crandall 1, James 3. Math
ewson 1. Hit by pitcher- Snodgrass, by
Tyler. Wild pitches Tyler 2. Hits off
Fromme, 7 In 4 Innings; none out In fifth;
oft Crandall, 4 in 3 Innings; oft Mathew
son, none In 2 Innings; oft Tyler, 6 In 6 1-3
innings; on James, l in 1 2-3 innings.
Time 2:10. L'mplres Qulgley and Orth.
Second game
Boston-
New York
B
HOAEI BHOAE
O 5 4 O.Burns.l. . . 5 3 2 0 0
Maranve,s 4
Myers.l. .
ConnoHy.l
1 10 11 Herzog,3. 5
1 1 0 Oj Fletcher, 4
10 2 llGrant.a. . . 0
1 O 2 0 Doyle,2. . . 2
3 4 3 OiMerkle.l. . 4
0 1 OOMurray.r. 3
0 1 1 OlMeyers.c. . 3
0 0 1 ljHartley.c. 1
0 1 1 1 Snodg's.m 3
1 1 5 0'Cooper.m. 1
0 0 0 0Mathe'n.p 2
O O OOlThorpe". 1
ICrandall.. 1
1 1
2 0
2 0
0 1
1 S
1 10
3 0
o u
smith, . .
Titus.r. . .
MDon'd.3
Mann.m . .
Sey'our.m
40
O 0
1 4
O 0
10
o 0
Whallng.c
Brown, c. .
Hess.p. . .
Noyes.p. .
0 0
0 0
3 0
OO
bwceney
10
Totals 33 8 24 20 41 Totals. 35 1S27 14 0
Batted for Noyes in ninth.
Batted for Mathewson in sixth.
Boston 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 1 2 3
New York 0 1 11 0002 11
Runs Connolly. Smith. McDonald. Burns.
Herzog, Fletcher. Doyle 2, Merkle, Murray
fenodgrass. cooper. Mathewson. First
base on errors New York 1. Two-base hit I
Smith. Three-base hits Merkle. Connolly.
Home run Doyle. Sacrifice fly Noyes.
Stolen bases Murray, Meyers, Cooper. Left
on bases New lork 3, BQ3ton G. Double
plays Mathewson, Fletcher, Herzog and
Doyle; McDonald and Myers. Base on balls
Crandall 2, Hess 2, Noyes 1. Struck out
-By Mathewson 3, Crandall 3. Noyes 1.
Hits oft Hess. 12 in 4 1-3 Innings; off
Noyes. 3 In 3 2-3; oil Mathewson. 3 In ts;
off Crandall. 5 In 3. Time 1:50. Umpires
Klem and Orttl.
St. Louis 5, Pittsburg 4.
ST. LOUIS, June 26. St. Louis by
scoring three runs in the last half of I
the eighth inning, defeated Pittsburg
1 OlOoleman.c.
4 O Hendrix.p.
Wagner..
Totals. S3 8 27 11 :
Totals.
6 24 10 1
Batted for Hendrix
In ninth.
Pittsburg 0 OOO 1 3 0 O 0 4
St. Louis O 0 OO 0 2 0 3 5
Buns Huggins. Maeee. Oakes Vhtttd.
Knoetchy. Carey. Miller. Wilson 2. Two-base
hit Wilson, Evans 2. Three-base hit Kom-
mers. Home runs -Konetphy. Sacrifice hits-
Coleman. Kommers. Viox. Butler. Sarrilloe
fly Hendrix. Stolen bases Butler, Care..
Lert on bases bt. Louis 6. Pittsburg u
Base on balls Off Bailee 2, off Hendrix 2.
struck out By -sallee 4, by Hendrix
Time 2:05. Umpires O'Day and Emslle.
Brooklyn 5-4, Philadelphia 2-2.
PHILADELPHIA. June 26. Phila
delphia s winning streak was broken
today. Brooklyn taking both games of
a double header, the first by 6 to 2 in 14
innings, and the second by 4 to 2.
Rucker, who pitched in great stylo in
the first game, was forced to leave the
field owing to the heat after making a
single in the 13th inning. Curtis
finished out the contest and also
twirled his team to victory in a duel
with Alexander in the second. Both
games were marked by brilliant field
Ing. Manager Uooin had his right hand
badly hurt by a foul tip in the second
event. The scores:
First game
Brooklyn-
Philadelphia
H O A E
u HOAE
Moran.r. .
1
1 0!Paskert.m.
8
Cutshaw.s
1 4
0 7
2 4
1 11
2 1
2 3
5 0 Luderus. 1.
0 01 Lobert,3. .
0 O'Magee.I. . .
2 UiCravath.r.
1 0;Knabe,2. .
2 1 Doolan. 8 . .
Stengel. m
Wheat.l. .
Dau-bert.l.
Smith. 8. .
Hummel, fl
Front 2 In.
The Sussex is the newest and, as yet,
tminutated wlCe sweeping front effect tbe
Spriag and Summer season's Ouu&r-fuid.
Like all
Ideilver
GoIIars
Has tne Linocord Unbreakable Buttonholes,
found in no oilier make.
t.J. V. IDE tt CO.. TROY, N.
Also Makers of Ide Shirts.
14
& 1 10
5 3 8
3 10
3 11
4 2 1
3 12
3 0 1
1 O 0
O 0 2
3 10
10 0
33244 ?"," - 7 v
jgftgCIT SUSSEX
1 M Sizes m( 2forS"
f3
e , Back 1 In. I
Iiuuuu m no euier maite.
GEO. P. IDJE CO.. TROT, N. T. I
Also Ma farm of Ide Shirts.
AUTO POLO and
AUTO RACES
Bob" Burman
The Man Who Drove the Fastest Mile Ever Traveled by a
Human Being, Will Pilot His Giant
300-Horsepower
ISlitzera Beraz
LN THE TWO-DAY MEET OF THE PORTLAND
AUTOMOBILE CLUB AT THE
COUNTRY CLUB TRACK
Tomorrow and Sunday
AUTO POLO
The latest and mos thrilling form of sport for motorists, will
be played each afternoon by ten experts.
Fisher.c. .
Rucker.p.
Curtis. p. .
Meyer. ..
0 10
1 2
0 0
0 O
0 O'KlIIIfer.c.
4 O.Kixey.p
1 0 Seaton.p. .
0 Oj"Dolan. ..
ItMiller. ..
2 1
1 0
3 0
0 0
00
O0
t Becker. ..
Totals. 81 10 42 14 11 Totals. 50 1142 23 2
Ran for Rucker In 13th.
Batted for Rixey in seventh.
tBatted for Dolan In 14lh.
$ Batted for Seaton In 14th.
Brooklyn ....1 1 0000-0000000 3 3
Philadelphia O0000101OO000 u 2
Runs Moran. Wheat. Daubert, Smith 2.
Luderus. Lobert. Two-base shit Wheat,
Smith Three-ba6e hit Moran. Lobert. Hits
3ff Rucker. 10 In 12 innings; on" Curtis.
1 in 3 innings; off Rixey. 5 in 7 Innings; off
Seaton, o in 7 Innings. Sacrifice hit Magee.
Sacrifice fly Cravalh. Double plays Hum
mel, Cutshaw and Daubert; Doolan and
Luderus. Left on bases Brooklyn 7, Phila
delphia 11. Base on balls Off Rucker 2.
Rixey 1, Seaton 2. First on errors Brooklyn
1. Philadelphia 1. Hit -by oitcher Lobert bv
Rucker. Struck out By Rucker 4, Curtis 2,
Rixey 2, Seaton 4. Time 2:10. Umpires
Rigler and Byron.
second game
Brooklyn-
1 Philadelphia
H
1
O A El -
H O A E
Moran.r. . .
Cutsbaw,2.
Stengel.ra..
Wheat.l. . .
Daubert. 1.
Smith, 3. . .
o o paskert.m.
12 0 0
1 2
1 0
2 3
2 13
1 0
1 0
2 5
0 0
7 OILuderus.l.
0 OiLobert.3. . .
0 0;Magee,l
0 0;Cravath,r..
2 0 Knabe.2. . .
3 0. Doolan, s. . .
0 0 Dooin.c. . . .
2 OiKllltfer.o. .
2 14 0 0
0 0
0 o
0 0
6 0
Hummel, s.
Flscher.c
Curtis. p. ..
3 0
1 0
1 0
4 0
lAlex'nder.D 8
Totals.
.37 11 27 14 01 Totals... 30
27 15 0
Brooklyn 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 1
Philadelphia O 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 '.
Runs Cutshaw. Stengle. Smith. Hummel,
Luderus, Magee. Two-base hit Cutshaw,
Smith. Hummel, Fischer, Luderus, Magee.
Stolen bases Wheat, Daubert. Magee. Sac
rifice fly Knabe. Double playe Cutshaw
to Daubert. Hummell to Cutshaw to Daubert,
Left on bases .Brooklyn 6. Philadelphia 3.
Base on balls Off Curtis 1. Struck out
By Curtis 5, by Alexander 3. Wild pitch
Curtis. Time 1:30. Umpires Baron and
Rigler.
Tommy GaHney Loses on Foul.
CENTRALIA, Wash.. June 26. (Spe
cial.) Tommy Gaffney, of Salt Lake
City, lost to Chet Neff, of Seattle, on
a foul last night, the low blow being
struck a few seconds before the end of
the last round. The fight was pulled
Beer
y Test
7
Flavor and Quality
It isn't the bottle the water
nor any one thing that makes
good beer it 's a'combination of
good brewing and best ingredi
ents that makes
Hop Gold Beer
so delightfully flavored and so
superior in keeping qualities.
It never causes biliousness be
cause it's always well aged.
No Mefal XiO
ntouch -zz
HI You
don't like
one does.
skin; no
RflRIS GARTERS
are so made that no metal can touch you; the
locking fastener insures your garters staying up;
the rubber cushion loop prevents tearing the
hose. Paris Garters are the best
Have more than one pair to change for freshness as
you change your linen.
Lcoijir the name PARIS en the back of the shield
A. Stein & Co., Makers Chicago
off before the Centralia "M" Club, and
was one of the best ever seen here. In
a four-round preliminary Joe Hennessy
and Young Jose, of Tacoma, fought to
draw.
That
Fishing Trip
?
Every
of the
fisherman worthy
name is going some
where on the Fourth. And
now that the weather has
settled, the fishing will be
very good on all the fa
vorite streams. So that it
will depend a good deal
on the angler having the
right kind of good tackle.
Selling tackle that catches)
fish ts one of tbe best
things vre do.
Backus&'Morriis
223 Morrlor Street, Bet lit & 2nd St,'
This
by the
Star Brewery
(Northern Brewing Co.)
Portland, Vancouver
metal next