The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1912, Page 2

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aS THWESTERN LEAGUE toe Athletic Park BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3 o’Cloek p. m. SPOKANE vs SEATTLE Admission Mo and Soe. Yeslor Car, VEGETABLE, SILK UNDERWEAR AND# HOSIERY tour ka Like HK, Cunt# Owe Theatre full of the best of USED FURNITURE never saw such a steht an halt Houses = furnishe complete GIBSON-GHANDLER come to ua Prof. Raber Hotel Ethelton Our rates are in keeping with the times; $4 to $7 . The and $1 day jear all large theatres. Phone W 472. Investigate the special fea- tures of tl» SAMSON MARINE r cure jon. You shout / s keep wonderful remedy ir house traveling bag. and drunk like tes. Pleasa t the taste, better for the stomach. ir druggist sells pure uru and guaranteed SCOTCH STOMACH 50c REMEDY AT ALL GOOD DRUGGISTS Temedies he sells CURED OF BOWEL AND STOMACH TROUBLES “T have been an invalid for the} last nine years, not being able to do MY own housework, much of the ime being confined to the bed, not being able to be on my feet and was constantly getting worse. My stori- ach and bowels were in very bad condition. When I began takin) treatments of Dr. Swick I coul- scarcely walk to the corner of the street to take the car, but began to improve with the first End In & short time the stomach and jowels were in fine condition. and in six weeks I was a new woman, and ‘was doing a1} my oye housework.” RS. V. N. DICKENSON. The above cure was effected with- ‘iving a drop of medicine. Wa can do as much for you If you are troubled in like manner tf you wilt Give us the opportun: SWICK SANITARIUM 2s A Seattle, Wash. “lit were a case of curtains for the} -ltory fielding and glue-louse piteh treatment, | NEWS AND STATISTICS if | Pro! nal Sporte Fostered STRAND RETUR AND WALLOPS GIANTS Paul Strand, the Spokane hurler, came back yesterday, and, what's more, he came back wearing bells, and, what's yet more, the Seattle Giants heard the merry, merry tin- kle of those bells, which }ingted out the music of 7 to 4 in favor of Spo kane, At that, Strand was not suchamuch when it came to keep- ing the Giants from making bite They gathered ten nits off his de livery, more than the Indians gath- ered off Fullerton and Schneider to- gether, and yet the Hraves drove Fullerton from the box Whaling touched off the fireworks for Seattle in the second, putting) a homer out of the field with one on, and It looked at the thme as if} Indians, but Powell did the home| run thing in the third, and then all was quiet until the fifth, with Strand going atrong. A combination of fertiliser fac- ing threw the game away for the! Giants in the fifth, when the In- dians lald four runs across the rab- ber. Chick blamed the sun when he muffod an easy fly, and Raymond had nothing to blame when he let @ grounder craw! all over his system but into his hands, Then Fullerton started his great American promen- ade stunt. He walked Cooney, fill- ing the cushions, after two were down. Next he forced tn Strand by walk ing Ostdiek. After muro bi. seats Cooney, Fullerton gave transportation, and that forced Mel- choir across for the fourth run. With the odds heavily against him, Pete Schneider, the ready-relief ar- tist, went in to finish the game, but the odds remained the same. In the eighth Cooney walked for the fourth time, He was caught be- tween second and third, but Shaw clonted him on the back with the ball and he scored. BY CY YOUNG, ‘The very best advice I can give to any young ball player ts—use common ho sense, The player with natural ability who uses horse sense is bound to make & reputation that will be a lasting credit to himself. No one outside of baseball has the least idea of the temptations thrown in the way of a player; and unfortunately, the better the player is, the more alfuring the temptations he finds it hard to re. sist, even if he hi to be a aa bm Rn on | Young fellow with a lot of will , . ightetied | Power. Manat Satle e eak ot toe Right living and a clear brain wt Rimseif out of the hole, Sracae thing happened In the | are the biggest helps a man can ninth frame, when Whaling started |have in any kind of business; with some fancy stickwork, but|certainly in baseball they are # could not make the circuit, as player's stock in trade. Chick’s grounder to Altman ended Every player should save his be ton too soon. money, [f he isn't spending the oe same teame will play at 3/toney he earns on the diamond o'clock this afternoon, and it will be|he ix not nearly so apt to go the second free day of the week for | Wrong. The temptation to a young women. Cadreau, the real Indian, later, expecially in the major league, will hurl for the Indians. where he probably feels the allure ‘The official score Ay an. ‘ > . . 1 1 Strait ° Mann. of . Moran, rt Raymond. se ‘Whaitng, © . Pulierton. p | My Idea of nothing at all—The |eent—get that word “gent"-—who ~jlealia up the nownpaper oftice in the middie of a baseball game, wants gite know who's pitching for both ¢)aides, bow many runs have been Sehneider, Do. - +++ le Sl ewncen =! ol connunwoekt Fe *i mado, who made ‘em, and whether Sit think Seattle will win. Let the sibeademan proceed with bis bloody §| duty. Zimmerman, ef . Cartwright, 2D . When “Muggsy” McGraw and ~|\“Bonehead” Merkle were given *\ their nicknames, I figured that the | limit of baseball monakers had been SleonutnenSZ SheewvenuctenZ Sl ewccceeue? isis : reached, but a sport writer in the Mann. Home| Tacome Times goes ‘em one better rune—Whaling, keon, Powel! facrt-iby christening some Tiger player fice hit—dimmerman. Stolen dasse—-| (whom we must adinire) “The Tame Fitenery’ S| Tripe with the Weak Stomach.” Ah, 2 hite ott] well, we can't all be popular like out} that. Shaw, Moran. Cooney 4 rune and 6 hit ; 2 rune an 1-3 Innings a; by Hehm son on halle Fw = at 8; off Schneider #; off Strand 2 This same writer has thie to say pitches—Hehaeider, Strand 2. Hit oy | regarding a TigerdHant game in Se pitched ball—Myers, by Behnelder, Cm-| jattle last week: ™“‘Sightless Tom | my’ Moran is again on the rampage. | Lynch was booted out of the park pire--Moran FRISK’S HOMER IS THE WINNING RUN VANCOUVER, B. C., Ang. 7.—It required eleven innings yesterday afternoon to settle the difficulty be- | tween the Champs and the Victoria | Bees, and in that frame Frisk poled | the pill out of the field for the win ning run. The game was a splendid battle between the opposing pitch-| ers, Williams and Smith, and netth- ss er had a shade the better of it until| Owen Moran, the English fighter, jthe four-sacker ended the contest, | #ay® he is disgusted with his recep | tion in America, and ts going back sjhome. Can't understand why. By- ijery place he went he was showered with full swings, short jolts, neat uppercuts, dainty jabs and an ocea- fons were awarded in favor of Seat tle. Whatever Lynch may have said to Moran was perfectly right banding out bum decisions all week and is a cheese to even the Seattle fans.” I think that statement is harsh on the cheese. Seore by Innings Vancouver « Victoria Boston 6. Cle Chicago 2. sional haymaker from the right Philadeiph heel. Detroit 6, COAST LEAGUE RESULTS Loe Angeles 4, Oakiand 11, Portland 6, “Sporting Editor Star: Were |points won in the Olymple games jat Stockholm by Canada, South Af. \rica and Australia credited to Great L, 0. HENDRICKS, Prop, oO Britain or the colonies?—A, Shull.” A—The points figured two ways. One way was for the colonies and England separately, and the other collectively as Great Britain. English sportemen who were down in the mouth over the Olym pic game results remembered that Jonah came out all right when he was ™ a stmilar posttion, and they came out of it when their sculling champion, Barry, put {t over Rich ard Arnst, the New Zealander, for the championship of the world They consider this victory a refu- tation of the prevailing opinion that Pnglish athletes are passing into |the discard. | The Evening News of London had {ts feelings sorely wounded by ad verse foreign comments on English ffice Phone Bal. 475; Res., Bal. 974 S HORSE-SENSE WILL WIN IN BASEBALL SAYS ¥0 CY YOUNG PRACTICES WHAT HE PREACHES yesterday and several close dects-| He had it coming. Moran bas been} aring like a big hunk of) THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1912. DOPE AND COMMENT Amateur Gporte Encouraged EMERSON SHOWS HIS OLD-TIME CUNNING TACOMA, Aug. 7--Nat Emerson of North Yakima, holder of the Thorne trophy cup, showed yester- day that be had not lost his oun ning with the racket at the North western champlonship tennis tour ney, and his skillful work was the feature of the afternoon, Emerson and Russell defeated Laisue a Stenger tn the doubles, and experts pick them to meet etther Johnson and Fotrel! or Bason and Young to the men's double finals, Russell and Richardson, the Be attle players, both won their open ing rounds in the singles, Fotret! of Gan Franciseo defeated T. C. Fulton, who last year beat Joe Tyler for the championship of Idabo, 11-9, in the first set, Fulton wor t second, 64, and Fotrell the last, 6-8. May Sutton beat Minas Waterhouse of Portland tn straight seta, 6-2 and 61. J.C. Tyler of Spokane took the last two sets from Hwing, 60, 60, and Plorence Sutton held Mins Geraldine Pratt of Tacoma down to one game in thirteen. The first mateh In the third round of the men's singles was won by Ward Dawson of Los Angeles from Kelliher in straight seta of 60, 60. COMMENT FROM PRESS BOX BY FREO HENRY b BURLES ment of big cities for the first timo, is almost irresistible, The man who can pass temptation with out faltering, get his bank roll Into safekeeping, keep regular houre and refrain from being a glutton in either eating or drinking, will, with employs two clowns, following the And to think that many fans at natural ability, come out ou top, | yesterday's game thought before the with the respect of the publie and| battle commenced Mr. Paul Strand |*4in money to take care of him when|would be hammered from the ington team are Herman (Ger proceed Schaefer and Nick Altrock, comedians extraordinary, who carried as players, but who bay nothing to do but amuse the fans. Artie Latham was the original baseball cut-ap, in the days of Chris the je no longer useful as a player. Almost as many players are ruin- ed in the off season during the playing months. Too many young ore make the fatal mistake bd | loafing all winter, or of securing) employment at work which k mound in an early period. In the second apasm Melchotr hit & terrific drive down to Chick Chick made an elegant op and recovered the pill in time to kill off the Indian outfielder at the first) cops | } Von der Ahe and the St. Louls py tse tae and this Is polsen to station. ney ‘eum aaa atk ees Hug’ | | Thin may not tell upon them for a A fine example of the Spokane a bore re ae while, bat it 1 bound to the] brand of crabbing was pulled off| Si) Wit, Miuee i> hin players long ran; and of course, 1%) man/in the second wich Altman at the oie players. Jennings became the rage until fichacfer made him look like a counterfeit, before a Detroit crowd, and sent him fuming to the bench,/| declaring “That Dutchman ought| not be permitted on the field.” Schaefer and Altrock have passed the day when they are reckoned an big league players, but Clarke Grif- fithe, Washington manager, figures that they are worth more than the! salaries he pays them for the spirits they keep the team in and the m ay jot| bat and the sacks groaning. Fuller-| fong}ton had 3 and 2 on “Duteh” and) | Myers sat on the bench ready to | protest if the next call went against dolhis fellow player. The next ball) mer! was a foul tip, but Myers, who mis ugh} construed the call, rushed to the plate and began “crabbing.” Seattle fans will never tire of} | Raymond's work at short, Yester) day the little big leaguer went deep| after Altman's poke, making a per fect throw to first, putting Altman lout and Ineldentally robbing the Spokane player of a hit Leo Strait demonstrated hin abtl- ity in the fifth yesterday when he made 4 sensational dash for Myers lgoes into baseball as livelihood, he wants to as posnible. | A farm, | think, te the td to winter. You don't need hard manual labor, but the gets plenty of exerctss and reat to keep tn good condith PERSONAL SPORT _ SPARKS Arn & Allen and A. G. Douthitt, general secretary and physical di- jtlon of the 1 o'clock cl ordt- |nance. Artha’ is switching his auto to his barroom as a » j Ketter. Jong foul and trapped the pill white|fector of the Seattle Y. M. C. Aj f © 4th th @ championship in the tennis ‘Tithe on running Of & Fight angle With the) subies for the employed Y. M. C | A. officers of Washington, at the recent conference of the employed peculiar foorles yesterday, which officers of the Northwest at De wore difficult to score. Melchotr/!#ne Beach. They beat Secrotaries hit a speedy one to the manager| Perkins of Portland and Wood of which climbed his frame. Strand |Bugene, Ore,, in straight sets. hit a short My to Chick which the latter got hold of, but dropped be cause the sun Was in his eyes, matter with the ball club?” Indian- apolis fans answered aa follows: “Buy ‘em bigger bats.” “Try the needle.” “Hop their salaries.” “Pat a dictagraph in the dugout.” “ulld a fire under ‘om.” “Send for Detective Burns.” If you have any ideas why the Seattle Giants can't get out of third place, send ‘em tn. The brisk business in bai! players is an indication thar at sin- gletrack roads leading back to the Poth T. Raymond and Chick made When John Rieke, financial seo- retary got bome from thé employed os jotticers’ conference as red as @ Umpire Moran seems to be recov-| beet, he swelled up to a friend and ering hin eyesight. With one ex-/said, “I look Ifke a botled lobster ception he came through fn nice) now, don't I™ Friend answered, tyle. In the fifth Cooney had one|"Yes, you do. The only change, and three, The next ball over Mo-| however, is that you look boiled.” open country will be extremely busy | ran called a strike and Cooney pro-| about the first of April, next year. [tented vigorously. The xt one, a a - perfect atrike, bis “amps” said was HITS IN A BUNCH | ball, walking Cooney and at the GIVE COLTS GAME same time wiping oat Cooney’s fl feelings towards him. PORTLAND, Avg. 7 Touching | up the pill for five binglewin @ row in the last half of the ninth innitig|angora in his paddock. He drow a gave the game to the Colts yester-|total of four consecutive passes. day afternoon. La Longe was the | Myers lost bis goat to the Seattle feature of the game for Tacoma, | crowd, failing to get a single safe pounding out two doubles, which | rap, wave the Tigers their three runs. With the Waltons ~ F ett stopped off in Seattle on their By Hackle | way home from Delano Beach ye A party of motorcycle experts |terday and absorbed enough pep.}| Virgil Hall, Fred Merritt, Bil) | Daniels and “Doc” Canfield are rap- idly developing into volley ball ex- |perts at the Y. M. C. A. gym these }warm afternoons. With Walter Jenkins of the boys’ |department of the Seattle Y. M. C. on the mound and Applegate Walla Waila stopping the} Cooney had the Giant twirler’s beat the Oregon secretaries at base- ball at the employed officers’ con- |ference of the Y. M. ©. A, at De-| Jano Beach, 4 to 3. | A.M, Grille, ¥. M. OG. A. physical director of Portland; J. H. Smith \of Portland and FE. H. Lee of Ever-| Vort Cineinn Brooktyn 7 NORTHWES Ww. Lb yanc ow sor|tandemed to Amertcan Lake last|to keep them satisfied in the bushes} 8 oe $s1/ Sunday and dailied with tho fishing} for the next three or four months ie BE spe a ‘ie| lines for a while during the after-| _—— | Victoria 49 61 .448/Frin tos|noon, The party included E. Bers} Harry Kyser, the Lincoln high! Tacoma 41 ¢7 .412)Kacmto any reth, the racer, Mr and eS P./ schoo! sprinter, will be heard from : Tremper, Fred Mercer, C. amil-| when the school sports are resumed | oo oo pos Kern, Whittle and others. The next fall. He is keeping in fine ier ton. 70 486| size of the catch (if any) is not to|condition this summer by working a ast a 2 or be found in the records of the run.}out regularly and is covering the “7 47 Chicago Ot aie a }100 yards considerably faster than ‘4 64 63 soo| Reports from various fishing re|the average Arkansas train. fe S 4 eH 451) sorts in the western part of the/ cen | Boston. 27 70 (9T8I8UL'ule 92 6D P+ state have been received at Piper &| Ignatz Douthitt won nine first | - | Taft’s information bureau as fol-) places out of 10 in the athletic } YACHTS T lows jevents in the boys’ 10-day camp at 0 R. E Robe—Water clear and low, Fish-| Orcas island, Talk mp - ae sittin ti ling fine with royal coach, brown | off the old block, he has the origina Padget comes ¥6 rney | Backle, queen of waters and ogga,| block lashed to the mast. | lfor the holding of h race tween | rortson—Clear and low. Good + _ the yachts Spirit of SeattloGenn | With brown hackle, royal coach,| PITCHER WON THE GAME lvieve of BE tt and proba the queen of water, Professor, spoons.| Allowing but one safe tap and Alexandra of Vancouver, hdfe, on} 2, bass fishing is also excellent.|whiffing ten, Ira Wilson, pitching Gold Bar—Clear and low, Fine| for Columbia City Sunday, held the} a is aalek Oe Lp. ‘Ae | with gray hackles and spoons | Georgetown team at his merey the tere Giinbay H, ~ oad htg he urge North Bend—Clear and low, Fine| entire nine spasms. Score, 7 to 1 Ug “se 3 _ club, | with an assortment of flies, | Manager Murphy of the Columbia | wit be regalia » an Ly fachts| Skykomish—Clear and medium,|team is anxious for games, Kirk: | vere ke » cover theBourse | Good with gray and brown hackles,|!and = an@ Redmond preferred. Reuben Wood, queen of waters Phone Main 3912. Snohomish—Clear and low, Good - —4 BURNSIDES WON © WASHINGTON'S CLO DUE OF BASEBA Nick Altrock and Herman (Germany) Schaefer, practicing comedy stunts on the sidewalk. The Washington baseball club] amusement they give the public. example set by the late P. T. Bar-| this catering to the ridiculous is a good thing. The fun-makers of the Wash-|cheapen a sport which hold its own on its mert' heaves, the Washington secretaries} athletes, and after Barry won his race gave birth to this triumphant bleat: “Poor Old England’ was the jeer- ing title of a leading article in a New York paper recently, in dwell- iliclously on ‘England's duck’s e Olympic games at tockholm, Yesterday's result is a | vindication of England and proves jour contention that we have men |who would be world beaters were they properly trained.” “Were they properly trained.” |Get that? Were the Sahara desert well watered and shaded, it would be a world-beater of a place to live | Were it warm north of the Arctic jclrele, it would be a cinch to get to the pole, Salmon Bay Wood Co. Wood and Coat. Fall Weight and Measure. At Stimson’s Mill, Seattle, Wash. Everything for the camper, Stoves, Chairs, Hammocks and Baskets, at reason- able prices. BALLARD HARDWARE. Phone Ballard 19. OLD VETERAN'S STAND—— —TOYS! Big Assortment, Beat Prices, 633, Ballard Av. the TOYS! Come and See; TOYS! Imported Norwegian and Swedish goods, Anchovies and Sardines, tled Goods, wervice, n including Fish Balls, E Complete Ine of Heinz’s Pickles and Bot- Gold Shield, Crescent and Polger’s Coffees, Prompt Although Ja¢k Johnson has only been in the saloon business little more than a week, John McWeeny, chief of police of Chicago, has start ed a sult against the negro pugilist for keeping his place open in viola (WENTY-FIFTH AVE. GROCERY Ballard 231 25th Ave. and 67th St. N. W, The Philip Carey team wentdown to defeat before the Burnside Giants Sunday, by the lopsided seore of 19 to 4, BOTHELL DROPS ONE Kirkland won a@ close game from | Bothell Sunday by the score of 6-4, LOWMAN & HANFORD WIN Lowman & Hanford put the rollers under the Hellevue-Medina nine to the tune of 11-9 last Sun- day. Southpaw Duncan's slab work was the feature of the game, GAS CO. WINS EASILY Winslow was completely out classed by the Gas Co, Sunday, and the Seattle team trounced them, 10 to 4. Burchardt's tossing for the Gas Co, was the feature, Burchardt striking out 14, Pearse of the Gas Co, was & sensation with the atick, rotting six safe raps out of six Limes ut the bat, with brown hackle and No. 10 Wil son spoon, Monroe—Clear and low. Fine with files, eggs and Tacoma bait Duckabush — Clear and low. Splendid with white miller, brown hackle, queen of waters, worms and ones. ’ Index—Clear and low. Good with royal coach, king and queen of wa ters, brown and gray hackles, at Piper & Taft's has returned from & week's excursion on the south and middie forks of the Snoqual- mie, with his family. He stopped at Ted Whitman's ranch, and says they had to fish but a few hours ch morning to keep a family of eight supplied with the best fries ever caught, He says that there are plenty of deer, quail, grouse and bears on the Whitman ranch, and that Ted ts building a bunk house to entertain Seattle hunters this fall, 8. M. Ellerby, the fishing expert | IROQUOIS BEATS 8S. & W. With Hemrich twirling a pretty fame, the Iroquois nine defeated the Shaner & Wolf crowd at West | }Seattle Sunday. Batteries—Hem. j rich and Schubert; Dean, Kastner and Kastner, MANCHESTER COPS IT. Manchester walloped Eagle Har- bor Sunday by a score of 10 to 5. Taylor started out on the mound for Manchester but his balloon as- cended at the end of two innings, Harmon as the ballast held them safe for the rest of the game, HIGH VIEWS WIN The Highland Views defeated the Regulars yesterday by the score of T to 3 K, OF C. WINS os The K. of ©. team visited Port Towns@d Sunday and beat the Townsend Cubs, 3 to 1. Knights of Columbus .. & Townsend ,.. 6.665 sees 8 2 6 3 1 ihe Indep endent Brewing BGM. crown To 1411 Third Ave, Where we nerve you wa Bleaed Tamales, Chile Cog Carne, 2d and Pike Instramental Entertainment Meet and Evenings, MEALS AT ALL Hours a la Carte, HIPPODROME, NEW DANCING Fifth and 5 Cents 7 Pune Per Compl It fs an open question whether It certainly tends to is able to ts. Hotel Milwaukee team Heat A New Hotel, C ententiy Lecsted Met and Cold Over $26,009 Worth of High Clase Purnitere te Roms Water RATES Mingle Keoms, per week . Hoom and Bath, per week. Inspect this hotel — Everyuhing completes beautiful lobby and correspondence rev CORNER SEVENTH AND XING ae $19,000 Dining Koom im Connection These new Bradbury Suits just belstle wit newness, both in styles and materials, All| new fall shades with a strong popular browns. The coats are full] in both twoand three-button models, trousers with three-toch cuffs with a¢ tion leather lined belt and material to” te. All the Credit You Wan “Ach—Ald Deutscher lager— es giebt Kein Kopfweh” is brewed from the finest quality of im- ported hops—is properly aged by long, natural storage—giving that same cate flavor for which the high-grade foreign beers are noted. Delivered to you in pint or quart er any liquor store, or by telephoning Ait 4. the plant, Sidnoy 75. _ SEATTLE, WASHINGTON

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