Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 15, 1911, Page 4

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SPORTS OF THE DAY COOPPOOOOOO®OO®O®O® © Tuesday’s Baseball Results. ¢ o R R R R R R R R R R R ) Louisville, Aug. 15.—Columbus won the second game of the series from Louisville by rolling up six scores in the ninth inning. Cheney’s support was ragged, while Liebhardt was backed up by fast work. Grim- shaw's heavy batting featured. B wHR Louisville ol 9 - 4 Columpus . ... ..11 10 3 Cheney and Hughes; Berger, Lieb- hardt and Walsh. Milwaukee, Aug. 15.—The home club bunched their hits off Gehring and Chech, winning with ease. Bar- rett, who went to bat for Cutting in the second, made a home-run, the ball bouncing into the bleachers back of third base for four bags. Lewis’ shortstop play and Marshal's throw- ing featured. R. H BE Milwaukee . 9 11 0 St. Paul . ... .4 1 3 Cutting, Harrington, Marion and Marshall; Gehring, Chech and Land. Indianapolis, Aug. 15.—Indianapo- lis won from Toledo in the ninth in- ning on a single, a base on balls, a sacrifice ,and Hoffman’s safe hit which brought in the winning run. R. H BE Indianapolis . 4 10 0 Toledo . ... csvevesd 8 0 Webb, Schlitzer and Ritter; Ying- ling and Weeden. Kansas City, Aug. 15.—Cravath’s home-run over the score board in centerfield, scoring Altiber ahead of | him here gave Minneapolis the lefld; the American association, defeating Kansas City. Four made by the locals were costly, each counting materially in the final re-| sult. H B Kansas City e 105 Minueapolis O I ) Powell, Brandom and O’Connor; Leverett and Owens, Smith. National League. Boston 13; Brooklyn 9. Pittsburg 1; St. Louis 3. New York 3-5; Philadelphia 2-4. American League. St. Louis 1; Cleveland 2. Philadelphia 1; Boston 2. Chicago 2; Detroit 0. Washington 3; New York 0. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. National League. A L. Pet. Chicago 3 .626 Pittsburs . 40 .616 New York ...... 41 .598 Philadelphia . 16 .558 St. Louis ..... . 47 .5b8 Cincinnati . 56 .451 Brooklyn . 64 .379 Boston . ..... 2 80 .238 American League. w. 3 Pet. Philadelphia . .. 38 645 Detroit . .. 41 .621 Boston . 53 514 New York . 54 505 Cleveland 55 500 Chicago . ...... 54 .491 Washington 64 413 St. Louls ....... 75 .305 American Pet. Minneapolis 569 Kansas City .. .562 Columbus .552 St. Paul ....... .487 Milwaukee L4175 Indianapolis .466 Louisville .448 Toledo . 444 POPOPOPOOPOOOOO®O £ N4 BASEBALL NOTES. ® PPPOOOOOOOOOOOO D “Big George” McConnell, the Rochester pitcher, has won 22 out of 25 games he has pitched. Nap Lajoie and his big bat are working in the same old way and keeping Cleveland on the baseball map. v The New York Giants fall down when they hit theroad, but at home McGraw’s hirelinugs are a hard out- fit to beat. b Joe Cantillion must be giving “Rube” Waddell the vacant pocket- book treatment. ‘Rube” is pitching winning ball for Minneapolis. President Comiskey of the White Sox has signed “Flame” Delhi, a Cal- ifornia pitcher. Must be easy for a pitcher with that name to warm up. With Dooin, Magee and Titus out of the game, the Philadelphia Nation- alg have been going fast—Ilike a one- cylinder go-cart going over the Rocky mountains. Bill Dahlen’s Brooklyn team made a swell showing on the wester ntrip. With a little better break in the close ones Bill and his Dodgers would have made a cleanup. The Detroit Tigers lost seven out of ten games in Philadelphia and Boston, but took home a barrel of money. The total attendance for the four days in each city was 186,000, Cuts and bruises may be healed in about one-third the time required by the usual treatment by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment. * It is an an- tiseptic and causes such injuries to leal without maturation. This lini- ment also relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For of the errorsf sale by Barker’s Drug Store. KONETCHY HAD TO BE COAXED Star St. Louls First Baseman DIid Not Want to Leave $12 Job In Candy Store to Play Ball. Ed. Konetchy, star Cardinal first baseman, had to be coaxed to quit a $12-a-week job In a candy store to play professional ball. Pink Hawley, old Red player, manager of the La Crosse team in the Wisconsin-Illinois league in 1907, was short an outfleld: er one Sunday, and was told Konetchy could play. Hawley called Konetchy Ed. Konetchy. out of the grand stand and induced him to play right field. Konetchy made three hits. Hawley told him to report at the park next day for prac- tice chasing fli¢s. Konetchy said he couldn't; that he had to work. Haw- ley got Konetchy’s boss to let him off a week, and promised the player $13. Konetchy didn’'t go back to work. He hit over .300 and was bought by the Cardinals. PITCHER SMASHES STHIKE-OliT RECORD POOCIIOOPOOOOOOO & WITH THE BOXERS, ® B R R R R SRR R R R ) Jack (Twin) Sullivan and George Cotton have signed a box in Buffalo the latter part of this' month. Kid McCoy, who says that he is a genuine “come back,” . will meet “Gunboat” Smith in San Francisco if some promoter will stage the bout. Jimmy' Clabby will make another trip to Australia under the manage- ment of Hugh MecIntosh. He will leave fo rthat country next month. Fights Scheduled for Tonight. Frankie White vs. Louis Newman, 15 rounds, at Creeds, Colo. Buck Crouse vs. Jimmy Clabby, 12 rounds, at Boston, Mass. Matty Baldwin vs. Johnny Frayne, 20 rounds, at Salt Lake City. DO PITCHERS WORK ENOUGH? Some Baseball Men Think That Twirl: ers Have It Altogether Too Easy. SJ'Ilfled Quickly If Hit. Now and then a little curiosity 1s ex- pressed as to whether the modern | pitchers obtain work enough to keep them in good condition. This doesn’t refer to thelr physical condition, but to their pitching condition. The custom has grown upon mana- gers to shift pitchers in a hurry if they happen to be batted hard when the game is close. For that reason almost all ball teams are carrying more pitchers in comparison with the actual work that they do on a ball fleld then they ever did. If occasionally one of the pitchers who happens to be hit hard were to | be kept in the game instead of being | sent to the bench it might be that the team would rally as quickly be- hind him as it would behind a fresh itcher, and it frequently has been demonstrated in baseball that a pitch- er may be hit hard in one inning and after that hold a team to almost noth- ng. Buy it now. Now is the time to Dbuy a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is almost certain to be needed be- fore the summer is over. This remedy has no superior. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Martin O'Toole, Sensational St. Paul Twirler. Says the sporting editor of the St. Paul Dispatch: “We are in receipt of a letter from John B. Foster, editor of the Spalding baseball publications, in which he shows us where we were wrong when we announced that Marty O’'Toole had tied up Rube Waddell's strikeout record of seventeen. Mr. Foster points out that Waddell’s mark Wwas sixteen, and that in modern base- ball no pitcher in Class A or big league baseball has ever gone higher than seventeen. Mr. Foster is a recog- nized authority on the national pas- time, and when he says that O'Toole holds the record with his seventeen “whiffs” we are ready to believe him. Mr. Foster first informed F. H. M cauley, manager of the 8t. Paul Spald- Ing store, that in quoting the record as given in the Moreland book we were wrong, and then he followed up with a letter to us, informing us that the official scores of that game in which Waddell established his mark gave Rube credit for sixteen strike- outs. That settles it—O'Toole is king.” SAMUEL CROOKSHANES DEAD Father of Beltrami County Men Pass- es Away at Crookston, Late Saturday afternoon Samuel Crookshanks passed away at the home of his daughter, Mrs. A. B. Carlton, on Lincoln avenue, after a general breaking down, which had been in progress for the past year and a half. Samuel Crookshanks was one of the pioneers of Crookston, and was the last surviving charter mem- bers of the M. E. church of Crook- ston. He was 80 years of age, having been born in Ireland in 1831, and went to Canada with his parents when but six years of -age. He came to this section in 1878, 23 years ago. He resided.here first and then locat- ed on his homestead south of Euclid, where he resided for 20 years, com- ing to Crookston 11 years ago. He was married at Toronto in 1862 to Miss- Martha Love, who died here four years ago. Deceased leaves eight children and three brothers. The children are Mrs. A. B. Carlton and Elizabeth Crookshanks, of Crookston; Mrs. Fleming and Sarah Crookshanks of Los Angeles; Mrs. Louis Hancock, Fosston; F. J. and 8. R. Crookshanks, Clementson, - Minn., -and James of northwestern Canada. The brothers are Rev. Simon and-James Crook- shanks of Ontario and John of Mani- toba.—Crookston Times. Los Angeles is 130 Years Old, Los Angeles, Cal, Aug.” 15.—The Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady of the Angels and the 130th anni- versary of the founding of Los An- géles, were celebratec nere today in accordance with an annual custom. It was on this date, in 1781, that Felipe de Neve, governor of Alta Cal- ifornia, gave to the settlement the name of Los Angeles. Seemed to Give Him a New Stomach |{ “I suffered iIntensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good,” writes H. M. Youngpeters, Editor of The Sun, Lake View, Ohio. “The first few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets gave me surprising re- lief and the second bottle scemed to give me a new stomach and perfect- ly good health.” For sale by Bark- er’s Drug Store. /A well known Des Moines woman after suvffering miserably for two days from bowel complaint, was sured by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Stop in at the City Drug Store and .get a free sample of ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP. The surest and most economical treatment for eczema, pimples, dan- druff and all diseases of the skin and scalp. Do not neglect this. They will give you prompt relief and put you on a’road to a cure. Good for infants as well as grown persons. |Erickson” Rest i& Lunch Room 1 205 Bel(r?mi Ave, Open Day andNight .Meals at All Hours —_— {NURSE A, SMITH Q.C.H.L.O.5. KAISER HOUSE 609 Bemid]i Ave. Matemnity and GeneralNursing GET THE PIONEER FOR NOTHING | HOW? Save [. O. U. Notes These notes or trade marks will be accepted for their listed value in payment for the Pioneer. If you are unable to pay the full amount with these 1. 0. U. notes or Trade Marks, you may pay the small differ- ence in cash. The labels and wrappers on these goods are the same as money to Look Here! We’ll Do More For $5.00 in wrappers and labels and 1. 0. U. notes we'll give you a receipt for the Daily Pion- eer for 1 year and a you. tises in the Pioneer. Cut out the Coupon, fill in your name and send it to us. Coupon you’ll find in another place in this paper under the head-== EXTRA SPECIAL. A partial list: Cocoa, Cocoa, Cocoa Chocolate Chocolate (Silver DO IT NOW STOLLWERCK BROS. (0ld round can), 30c size Save front of wiapper..... (Gold brand), (Milk) Chocolate (Goldbrandckng) 25csize Save front of Wrapper. .. (Princess) 25¢ Chocolate (Maltese 25c size Save front 26¢ size Save front Cross) 5¢ bd. sweet) 5c-size Save front of wrapper. . Chocolate(Silver bd. sweet)10csize Save front of wrapper...... size Save front of wrapper. . size Save front of wrapper “Chocolate (Maltese Cross) 10c size Save front of wrapper.. 'Chocolate (Gold brand sweet)5csize Save front of wrapper.. Chocolate(Gold bd. Sweet)10c size Save fron. of wrapper Chocolate(Gold bd. sweet) 15¢ size Save front of wrapper.. Chocolate(Gold bd. sweet) 25c size Save front of wrapper........5-8¢ Chocolate(Gold bd. milk)6c size Save front of wrapper. . Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 10c size Save front of wrapper. . Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 15c¢ size Save the front of wrapper. Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 25c size Save front of wrapper Chocolate(Silver bd. sweet)15csize Save front of wrapper... Chocolate (Silver bd. sweet)20c size Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 5c size Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 10c size Chocolate(Silver bd. milk) 15¢ size Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 20c¢ size W. F. McLAUGHLIN & CO. size Save front of package........3-8c Coffee Coffee (XXXX) (Blue Shield) 15¢ E. S. BURNHAM COMPANY Jellycon 10c size Save back of packoge.........1-2¢ Canned Clam Chowder 10c size Save wrapper .. . 14 Canned Clam Chowder 25c size Save wrapper.. veenl 1-de Canned Clams 10c size Save wrapper... ceeee.12e Canned Clams 25¢ size Save Wrapper..............1l l-de Clam Bouillon 10¢ size Save front of carton. veneaale2e Clam Bouillon 25¢ size Save front of carton. . Clum Bouillon 50c gize bave front of carton. .. Beef, Wine and Iron 25c size Save label from bottle. ... Beef, Wine and Iron G50c size Save label from bottle. THE CELLULOIDSTARCH COMPANY Cellulold Starch (laundry 5c¢ size Save front of box Celluloid Starch (laundry)10c size Save front of box.. Save Save Save Save Save ANGUS WATSON & Skipper Sardines (In oil) 15¢ size Skipper Sardines (In sauce)15csize Sea Queenbd.(DressedCrab)18csize Sen. Herringlets(in sauce)20c size Herringlets (In olive oil) 20c size Save Save Save Save Save front of wrapper. ... front of wrapper....... front of wrapper... front of wrapper. .. front of wrapper... $1.50 cash order on any merchant who adver- It’s the 30c size Save band from package.... COMPANY complete side label on can.3-4c complete side label on can.3-4c complete side label on can..lc complete side label on can complete side label on can..le THE KAISER MANUFACTURING CO. LTD. Kalser Wax Padandcloaner10csize Save top of box. More to follow ee..3-4c “e1-2¢ .1le 1-2¢ Mother Knows What To Use HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh For Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Sprains, Strains, Stiff Neck, Chilblains, Lame Back, Old Sores, Open Wounds, and all External Injuries. Made Since 1846, Atk Antody Price 25¢, 50c and $1.00 All Dealers oz fitvrini.co. - New-Gash-Want-Rals ' -Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all “Want Ads" for hali- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceut a word will be charged. SEVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED WANTED AT ONC wral housework. Will, pay $ per week now. A strong girl of 14 or 15 years will do and can have chance to go to school later. Mrs. V. M. Owen, , Minn. WANTED AT ONCE—A man with a team for vy and agreeable work throughout the year. A residence and geod barn will be furnished. 2 A girl for WANTED—G eral house work on farm. at W. G. Schroeder’s Store. w. woman for g Inquire it girl for gen- 5.00 per week. TED—Compet eral house wor 608 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Girl for general house work. Inquire at 602 4th St. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Case stands and racks number 6, double news stand with rack for 8 full sized cases. Good as new. Sell regularly at $3.756 ‘We have 6 of these at $1.50 each. Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co., Bemidji, Miun. FOR SALIZ—Good sound team of young, well broken horses of med- fum weight. Also buggy and har- nes: 0od Largain. Address F. A. W, Pioneer Office, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE birds; “German Warblers,” phone corner Ir- vine avenue and 18th street. Min- nie Merriman. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE oh cases, triple cases, and lead and slug cases, 40c each. Pioneer Publishing Co, Bemidji. FOR RENT FOR RENT— ven room house with large screen porch and large barn. Lilectric lights in both house and barn. Will give possession last of week. Have also for sale a pony, bugey and harness and two fur robes. Apply 1013 Dewey avenue. FOR RENT—House at 511 Third street. George Ostrander. FOR RENT—7-room house for rent. Inquire A. Klein. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited .op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only sevep day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succedding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. Talk to the people In prosperous . North Dakota through the columns of the Grand Forks Herald; read every day by 30,000 in 150 towns and rural routes in the northern half of the state. Classified ads, for sale, help wanted, exchange, real estate, etc., for 1-2 cent a word each insertion. Send stamps to The Herald, Grand Forks, N. D. POINT COMFORT—The finest sum- mer resort in Northern Minnesota. Lots for sale and cottages for rent. A, O. Johnson, Turtle River, Minn. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129, WANTED—To rent—A good house. Will take year lease. Inquire at this office. First class table board at 515 Be- midji Avenue. A i | !

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